interp1 function not working properly

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Dominik Stolfa
Dominik Stolfa on 26 Nov 2024 at 14:23
Commented: Walter Roberson on 28 Nov 2024 at 18:34
When I have signal of 1:130 and I interpolate it over 1:115/130:115 it returns array of only 129 values.
  10 Comments
Dominik Stolfa
Dominik Stolfa on 26 Nov 2024 at 20:12

Thank you very much. Sometimes I can be pretty dense.

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 26 Nov 2024 at 21:34
You should have already learned about quantization and truncation error when you took your college math course on linear algebra or numerical analysis. Hopefully this FAQ entry will supply your missing knowledge:

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Accepted Answer

Subhajyoti
Subhajyoti on 26 Nov 2024 at 14:39
Edited: Subhajyoti on 26 Nov 2024 at 14:41
When you are creating the new range '1:115/130:115', it might not include the last point 115 due to floating-point arithmetic precision, leading to only 129 interpolated values instead of 130.
You can use 'linspace' function in MATLAB to generate linearly spaced vector. Here, in the following code snippet, I have used it to create 130 uniformly-spaced values between 1 and 115.
linspace(1, 115, 130)
ans = 1×130
1.0000 1.8837 2.7674 3.6512 4.5349 5.4186 6.3023 7.1860 8.0698 8.9535 9.8372 10.7209 11.6047 12.4884 13.3721 14.2558 15.1395 16.0233 16.9070 17.7907 18.6744 19.5581 20.4419 21.3256 22.2093 23.0930 23.9767 24.8605 25.7442 26.6279
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Refer to the following MathWorks Documentation to know more about 'linspace':
  4 Comments
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 26 Nov 2024 at 18:16
Edited: Stephen23 on 26 Nov 2024 at 18:20
"Can I somehow force interp1 to include also the last number though?"
The problem has nothing to do with INTERP1. Nothing you do with INTERP1 will make any difference to how many sample points you provide it with. Solution: use LINSPACE.
"I tried using double here and there but it didn’t help."
Correct.
Dominik Stolfa
Dominik Stolfa on 26 Nov 2024 at 19:50
Edited: Dominik Stolfa on 26 Nov 2024 at 19:50
Linspace doesn’t seem to work for my case: interp1=(1:115,x(1:115),1:115/130:115) I think.

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More Answers (1)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 26 Nov 2024 at 18:22
Like @Subhajyoti said, linspace would be the preferred way to get exactly the number of elements you want and to get it to end exactly in the number you want.
However, you said you want the last number to be 115 so there are two ways: either assign/overwrite the final number to 115, OR concatenate the 115 onto the existing vector.
v1 = linspace(1, 115, 130) % Best way.
% Using colon operator (less preferred than linspace():
v2 = 1 : (115/130) : 115 % 1 through 114.230769230769
% If you want the last value to be
% 115 instead of 114.230769230769 you can do this
v2(end) = 115;
% Or you can do this
v2 = 1 : (115/130) : 115 % 1 through 114.230769230769
v2 = [v2, 115] % Last two numbers are 114.230769230769 and 115.
  8 Comments
Dominik Stolfa
Dominik Stolfa on 28 Nov 2024 at 10:42
Interesting approach. I imagine this helps with the floating point error. This wil likely work only with large fractions right?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 28 Nov 2024 at 18:34
I don't know what you mean by "large fractions".
It works fine for 7/5
A = 1:(7-1)/(5-1):115;
A(end)
ans = 115
whos A
Name Size Bytes Class Attributes A 1x77 616 double
B = linspace(1,115,77);
[~,idx] = max(abs(A-B));
A(idx), B(idx), A(idx)-B(idx)
ans = 1
ans = 1
ans = 0

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