Is there a function alternative to get array/matrix/cell elements?
4 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Usually we access array elements by using "()". For example, if a is an array, then we can use a(1) to get the first element of a.
However when a function returns an array and sometimes we only need some element/part of the result, we cannot use "()" to get what we want.
For example, if function fun returns a 5*1 array, and I only need the 3rd element of it, it is impossible to use
fun(para)(3)
to get what I want.
So my question is, is there a function alternative, to get part of the result array/matrix/cell like "()"/"{}" do.
Like I can use
somefun(fun(para),3)
to get what I want.
Obviously, it seems not hard to implement a function to achieve these with very few code. But I want to know if there are any built-in ones. Thanks.
0 Comments
Answers (3)
Guillaume
on 17 Dec 2019
Edited: Guillaume
on 17 Dec 2019
Indeed it would be very nice to be able to chain indexing to function calls. I believe it's an often requested enhancement but is non-trivial to implement.
The best way to go about this is indeed to write your own function. Certainly if you want clarity. There is indeed a built-in function that can do it, all indexing ( (), {} and . indexing) is actually implemented by subsref. It's not going to be very readable:
%to get fun(para)(3):
result = subsref(fun(para), struct('type', '()', 'subs', {{3}}))
You're better off using a temporary variable than this. Note that since matlab is copy-on-write there is neglible cost to a temporary variable, even if the content is large.
edit: There are also some undocumented ways, such as getfield:
%to get fun(para)(3):
getfield(fun(para), {3})
Use at your own peril, it may stop working or send the nuclear missiles launch code in a future version.
4 Comments
Adam Danz
on 18 Dec 2019
@Dejia Kong, if you're going to use subsref() you should accept this answer since it's better than the one in stackoverflow. See Guillaume's comment above.
However, the cleanest and fastest and most readable solution (therefore the best solution) is to just use
result = fun(para);
result = result(3);
Adam Danz
on 17 Dec 2019
Edited: Adam Danz
on 17 Dec 2019
Matlab does not have offer that syntax.
Here's a simple way to use a pair of anonymous functions to achive that.
% Define the pair of anonymous functions
% INPUTS to outputIdx()
% - fn: a function handle (example: @cumsum)
% - inputs: a cell array containing inputs to fn
% - idx: selected indices
% OUTPUT
% - a row vector same length as numel(idx) containing
% values from selected indices of the first ouput of fn function.
mgeti = @(m,i)m(i);
outputIdx = @(fn,inputs,idx)mgeti(fn(inputs{:}),idx);
Examples
% Get the 3rd index of cumsum(1:10);
outputIdx(@cumsum, {1:10}, 3)
% Get indices 3:5 of cumsum(magic(5),2)
outputIdx(@cumsum, {magic(5),2}, 3:5)
2 Comments
Adam Danz
on 17 Dec 2019
Edited: Adam Danz
on 17 Dec 2019
For what it's worth, I timed all 3 suggestions 10000 times each (out of my own curiousity) using tic/toc on each iteration. Then I compared the median times.
% Inputs to all methods; not timed
x = 1:10000;
i = 3:10;
% The following is only for method 3
mgeti = @(m,i)m(i);
outputIdx = @(fn,inputs,idx)mgeti(fn(inputs{:}),idx);
% Method 1:
y = subsref(cumsum(x), struct('type', '()', 'subs', {{i}}));
% Method 2:
y = getfield(cumsum(x), {i});
% Method 3:
y = outputIdx(@cumsum, {x}, i);
From fastest to slowest (all were fast!): Methods [2,3,1]
- Method 2 was ~1.2 times faster than method 3
- Method 2 was ~2.2 times faster than method 1
- Method 3 was ~2.0 times faster than method 1
As Guillaume mentioned, method 1 is more versatile/robust since it accepts a variety of indexing (method 2 probably does too, I didn't tinker with that). In terms of readability, my less-experienced opinion is that method 3 (anonymous functions) is fairly easy to read.
[update]
Method 4 is by far the fastest and cleanest. It is 1.75 times faster than method 2.
% method 4
y = cumsum(x);
y = y(3);
See Also
Categories
Find more on Image Processing Toolbox in Help Center and File Exchange
Products
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!