How to replace element matrix with the other matrix?
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What if I have a matrix A (4x4) with a size of (1x64 cell), and the matrix B (2x2) with size of (1x64 cell)? And I want to replace all of the matrix A.
7 Comments
Amit
on 7 Feb 2014
what do you mean matrix A (4x4) with a size of (1x64 cell) and the same goes for B (2x2) with size of 1x64 cell?
Image Analyst
on 7 Feb 2014
I don't understand. Are A and B cell arrays, or regular numerical arrays (int32 or double)? Is A a 1x64 cell array and in every one of those cells is a 4x4 array of doubles? Your explanation is not clear.
Andi Tarigan
on 7 Feb 2014
Bjorn Gustavsson
on 7 Feb 2014
Wouldnt this do it:
A(2:3,2:3) = B;
Andi Tarigan
on 7 Feb 2014
Edited: Andi Tarigan
on 7 Feb 2014
Bjorn Gustavsson
on 7 Feb 2014
OK, this doesn't really work if you cant communicate clearly what A and B are. Instead of describing in words, paste the output of
whos A B
and in case A and B are a cell arrays also
size(A{1})
size(B{1})
Andi Tarigan
on 7 Feb 2014
Answers (6)
Image Analyst
on 7 Feb 2014
OK, so both A and B are 1 by 64 cell arrays. And you say "And I want to replace all of the matrix A." Presumably replace A with B. So you do this:
A = B;
2 Comments
Andi Tarigan
on 8 Feb 2014
Image Analyst
on 8 Feb 2014
A is NOT 4 by 4. It is 1 by 64. You don't understand the concept of cell arrays. I really really suggest you read the FAQ on it: http://matlab.wikia.com/wiki/FAQ#What_is_a_cell_array.3F
Plus, you and I must have different definitions of "all". To me, your "all" means a subset (2x2 out of 4x4).
Bjorn Gustavsson
on 7 Feb 2014
OK, then I suggest that (unless you definitely need the cell-array A as a cell-array) you first change A and B to 3-D matrices and put in B in A:
A = cat(3,A{:});
B = cat(3,B{:});
A(2:3,2:3,:) = B;
HTH.
2 Comments
Andi Tarigan
on 8 Feb 2014
Bjorn Gustavsson
on 8 Feb 2014
Well, are you sure that B is a cell array at the time you call cat and you have the same sized (2 x 2) arrays in all cells of B?
The solution I suggested works in matlab 2013a...
Jos (10584)
on 7 Feb 2014
0 votes
I suggest that you give a smaller example of A and B and the required output.
3 Comments
Andi Tarigan
on 8 Feb 2014
Jos (10584)
on 8 Feb 2014
So you want the central portion of B to be replaced with A.
What do you mean with "I have 64 pieces of both that matrix"?
Bjorn Gustavsson
on 8 Feb 2014
Well that's completely opposite of your initial description of the sizes...
B(2:3,2:3) = A;
Would be what you'd do for that. For the case that B is 3-D you'd modify it to:
B(2:3,2:3,:) = A;
Walter Roberson
on 8 Feb 2014
newA = cellfun(@(a,b) subsasgn(a, struct('type', '()', 'subs', {2:3, 2:3}), b), A, B, 'Uniform', 0);
I think.
2 Comments
Andi Tarigan
on 8 Feb 2014
Walter Roberson
on 8 Feb 2014
newA = cellfun(@(a) subsasgn(a, struct('type', '()', 'subs', {2:3, 2:3}), B), A, 'Uniform', 0);
Jos (10584)
on 8 Feb 2014
To replace the central portion of B with A try this
% example data
A = 2 * ones(2,2)
B = -3 * ones(6,8)
% engine
szA = size(A)
szB = size(B)
tf = false(szB)
tf(1:szA(1),1:szA(2)) = true
tf = circshift(tf,(szB-szA)/2)
B_output = B
B_output(tf) = A
Jos (10584)
on 8 Feb 2014
Even simpler:
% example data
A = 99 * ones(2,2)
B = -1 * ones(6,8)
% engine
szA = size(A)
i0 = (size(B)-szA)/2
B_output = B ;
B_output(i0(1)+1:i0(1)+szA(1), i0(2)+1:i0(2)+szA(2)) = A
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