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How to expend 1 dim for array ?

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渲航
渲航 on 12 Jul 2023
Commented: Walter Roberson on 17 Jul 2023
I already have a vector s , which size is
Now want to change its size to for another function that normally has an input size of 4x4x4xn (n >=1). I tried this command:
s_expend(:,:,:,1) = s
but I found that the size of s_expend is still (Use command: size(s_expend))
It seems that MATLAB ignores dimensions of size 1 that are the last dimension? How do I implement something like expend_dim in numpy or unsqueeze in Pytorch using Matlab?
  1 Comment
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 12 Jul 2023
"It seems that MATLAB ignores dimensions of size 1 that are the last dimension?"
Not at all. If you check that dimension, you will find that it has size 1 (as do all infinite trailing dimensions):
A = rand(4,4,4);
size(A,4)
ans = 1

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Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 12 Jul 2023
Moved: Matt J on 12 Jul 2023
MATLAB does not exactly ignore trailing dimension of 1, but thinking of it that way is "close enough" for most work.
Every array in MATLAB is treated as having an indefinite number of trailing dimensions of size 1. A 4 x 4 x 4 array is treated the same as a 4 x 4 x 4 x 1 array or a 4 x 4 x 4 x 1 x 1 x 1 x 1 x 1 x 1 array.
When MATLAB is storing the dimensions of an array internally, all singular (length 1) trailing dimensions are omitted from being explicitly stored, and the number of stored dimensions (ndims) for any array is always the minimum of 2 and "the last dimension number that is not 1". Trailing dimensions that are size 1 are "collapsed".
If you look at an array and it is 4 x 4 x 4, ndims 3, and you need to check whether it is compatible with a 4 x 4 x 4 x n array, then when it makes sense to do so, MATLAB automatically internally replicates data to match. If you were, for example, adding a 4 x 4 x 4 to a 4 x 4 x 4 x 7 then MATLAB would do the internal equivalent of repmat(The3DArray, 1, 1, 1, 7) and add that to the 4 x 4 x 4 x 7. If you were doing cat(4, The3DArray, The4DArray) then that would work without difficulty and would give you a 4D array .
There are cases where you do need exactly the same size of array; in such a case you can explicitly test isequal(size(TheFirstArray), size(TheSecondArray)) . But if you are checking for arithematic compatibility then ndims(TheFirstArray) <= ndims(TheSecondArray)

More Answers (2)

Kanishk Singhal
Kanishk Singhal on 12 Jul 2023
Yeah, as you said MATLAB ignnores dimension of size 1, but if you do,
A = [1 2;3 4];
size(A,3)
You'll get 1 which I think is what you want. If you want to loop in the function you can use size to find the dimension you need.
Hope it helps.
  1 Comment
Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 12 Jul 2023
In release R2019b we enhanced the size function to accept a vector of values for the dimension input. So if that's all the data you need, no loop is required.
A = ones(4, 5, 6);
sz = size(A, 1:10) % Size of A in dimensions 1 through 10
sz = 1×10
4 5 6 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

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渲航
渲航 on 17 Jul 2023
Thanks for all your kind advice. The function I metioned actually accepts a Tensor to run so only checking the size of the tensor is not enough (the size mismatch will get an error).
The best solution for me is to change the tensor size from the to in the function param, in this case even still has the same size.
  1 Comment
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 17 Jul 2023
isequal(size(Tensor, 1:3), [4 4 4]) & ndims(Tensor) <= 4
should work for the original arrangement

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