How can I access the elements of one array with another array?

3 views (last 30 days)
I'd like to assign elements to an array in the following manner:
a = zeros(2,2,2);
ix=1;
iy=1;
b = [1,1];
a([ix,iy],:) = b(:)
Where ix and iy represent the position in the 1st and 2nd directions, a in it's 3rd dimension and b are the same length length. For my application ix and iy really need to be in the same array and the method needs to be applicable to N-dimensions. Is there a way to do such an assignment?

Accepted Answer

Stephen23
Stephen23 on 11 Dec 2018
Edited: Stephen23 on 11 Dec 2018
This is really very easy once you put those indices into a cell array:
C = {ix,iy,...,iN,':'};
a(C{:}) = b
Given a numeric vector of indices V:
V = [ix,iy,...,iN];
C = num2cell(V);
a(C{:},':') = b;
or
a(C{:},:) = b;

More Answers (2)

KSSV
KSSV on 11 Dec 2018
a = zeros(2,2,2);
ix=1;
iy=1;
b = [1,1];
a(ix,iy,:) = b
  1 Comment
Ryan Potter
Ryan Potter on 11 Dec 2018
Sorry, but I would like to be able to extend this to N-dimensions without writing:
a(ix,iy,...,iN,:) = b
The indices [ix,iy,...,iN] are generated programmatically the length varies.

Sign in to comment.


Guillaume
Guillaume on 11 Dec 2018
I'm going to assume that [ix, iy] is a 2D array, not a vector as in your example, otherwise your problem is trivially solved with:
indices = [ix, iy];
a(indices(1), indices(2), :) = b(:);
If it's a vector, you will have to convert your Nd subscripts into linear indices with sub2ind. Unfortunately, that means you can't use the colon operator. You have to explicitly list the dimensions.
a = zeros(2, 2, 2);
indices = [1 1;1 2;2 1];
b = [1 2; 3 4; 5 6] %shape of b doesn't matter
linindices = sub2ind(size(a), repmat(indices(:, 1), 1, size(a, 3)), repmat(indices(:, 2), 1, size(a, 3)), repmat(1:size(a, 3), size(indices, 1), 1))
a(linindices) = b
  2 Comments
Ryan Potter
Ryan Potter on 11 Dec 2018
[ix, iy] is a vector, but the size of 'a' varies programmatically as do the indices so the vector could look like indices [ix,iy,...,iN]. And I'd like to assign values as follows
a(ix,iy,...,iN,:) = b
I'll investigate linear indices in the meantime.
Guillaume
Guillaume on 11 Dec 2018
Edited: Guillaume on 11 Dec 2018
Ah ok, In that case, see Stephen's answer

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Resizing and Reshaping Matrices in Help Center and File Exchange

Tags

Products


Release

R2018b

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!