Reshape 1D to 3D array

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John Cruce
John Cruce on 5 Aug 2023
Commented: John Cruce on 6 Aug 2023
I have a 1D array (365x1) that I need to reshape into a 3D array (365x1x1) to divide into 3D array (365x721x1440). What's the most efficient means of accomplishing this task?

Answers (1)

the cyclist
the cyclist on 5 Aug 2023
MATLAB arrays implicitly have length-1 dimensions after the defined dimensions. For example
% Define 365x1 array
M = rand(365,1);
% Length in 3rd dimension
size(M,3)
ans = 1
% Length in 31st dimension
size(M,31)
ans = 1
Regarding how that ends up being (365x721x1440), you'll need to provide more detail.
  4 Comments
DGM
DGM on 6 Aug 2023
Edited: DGM on 6 Aug 2023
I think we're getting confused by the suggestion of "reshaping". The way it appears to me, reshaping A is not necessary. It appears as this is simply a misunderstanding how to make array sizes compatible for arithmetic operations. Consider the example:
A = (1:4).' % a column vector
A = 4×1
1 2 3 4
B = 2*ones(4,4,2) % a 3D array with the same page height
B =
B(:,:,1) = 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 B(:,:,2) = 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
% you could expand A to have the same size as B
% A = repmat(A,[1 4 2]);
% but it's not necessary
A./B
ans =
ans(:,:,1) = 0.5000 0.5000 0.5000 0.5000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.5000 1.5000 1.5000 1.5000 2.0000 2.0000 2.0000 2.0000 ans(:,:,2) = 0.5000 0.5000 0.5000 0.5000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 1.5000 1.5000 1.5000 1.5000 2.0000 2.0000 2.0000 2.0000
So long as the arrays are compatibly-sized along their non-singleton dimensions, you should be able to perform elementwise arithmetic without explicitly expansion. If you were running a version older than R2016b, the recommended method would be to use bsxfun() instead of repmat().
Of course, I might be interpreting the question wrong.
John Cruce
John Cruce on 6 Aug 2023
You're excatly right. I was definitely overcomplicating it.

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