Understanding the syntax meaning behind (:,)

4 views (last 30 days)
Hey I am new to matlab and trying to do some math calculation to find the centroid of a cluster of data, however, I am running into syntax confusion. Can someone explain the (:,) part of this code to me, in both uses if possible. what exactly does it mean?
c(:, j) = mean(d(:, find(ind == j)), 2);
  1 Comment
Guillaume
Guillaume on 11 Sep 2016
Others have already explained the meaning of the colon. I'll just note that the find call is completely unnecessary in the above,
c(:, j) = mean(d(:, ind == j), 2);
would produce exactly the same result slightly faster.

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

James Tursa
James Tursa on 11 Sep 2016
Edited: James Tursa on 11 Sep 2016
The colon : as a subscript simply means "all of the values" for this subscript. So e.g. c(:,j) is all the rows of the j'th column (i.e., the entire j'th column), and c(i,:) would be all of the columns of the i'th row (i.e., the entire i'th row). So the syntax
c(:,j) = etc
sets the j'th column of c to whatever is on the right hand side.
The syntax
d(:, find(ind == j))
is all of the rows of d that correspond to the column numbers that result from the find(ind==j). If only one ind equals j, then this will result in one column of d. If multiple values in ind equal j, then this will result in multiple columns of d. The last part of the syntax
mean(etc,2)
simply takes the mean of the first argument across the 2nd dimension. I.e., this averages the columns of the first argument.
So, taken as a whole, this syntax
c(:, j) = mean(d(:, find(ind == j)), 2);
will take the average of all of the columns of d where ind equals j, and assign that to the j'th column of c.
  1 Comment
Brendan Zotto
Brendan Zotto on 11 Sep 2016
Both are great answers, I really appreciate this. Thanks!

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (1)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 11 Sep 2016
If c does not exist before the line is executed, then the code is equivalent to
temp = mean(d(1:size(d,1), find(ind == j)), 2);
c(1:length(temp), j) = temp;
If c does exist before the line is executed, then the code is equivalent to
c(1:size(c,1), j) = mean(d(1:size(d,1), find(ind == j)), 2);
In other words, when : appears by itself as an array index, it is equivalent to writing 1:end at that position, and in turn end is equivalent to size() of the matrix in that dimension . To put it another way, : appearing by itself stands for "all positions in this dimension"

Categories

Find more on Creating and Concatenating Matrices in Help Center and File Exchange

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!