'How to' Matrix

I have an array with 0 s and 1s.
Example a colomn, 0 ,0 ,0 ,0 , 1.
Now the 1 is on the 5th row, I want to raise that to the first row.
So, in my code i want all the ones to go 4 steps up...
sounds easy, but how :) ?

5 Comments

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 12 Dec 2012
What if there is a 1 in the first 4 columns?
Also, should the new matrix have fewer columns?
TAB
TAB on 12 Dec 2012
Then what should be left in 5th column (or row in your words) ?
Jan
Jan on 12 Dec 2012
@Student: The question remains, what "raise to the first row" exactly means. At first I guess it is the "first column", but "raising" can be swapping, shifting, circular shifting, sorting, cropping or any procedure I cannot imagine currently.
Hello kity
Hello kity on 12 Dec 2012
I meant shifting, shifting the 1 on the 4th row to the 1st.
Jan
Jan on 12 Dec 2012
Thanks for the clarification, Student. And what happens on the right margin? Is the result shorter, filled with zeros or ones or with the value of the last element?

Answers (4)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 12 Dec 2012
Edited: Walter Roberson on 12 Dec 2012

0 votes

Have you considered circshift() up by 4 rows?
Azzi Abdelmalek
Azzi Abdelmalek on 12 Dec 2012
A=[0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1]
for k=5:length(A)
if A(k)
b=A(k-4:k-1);
A(k-4)=1
A(k-4+1:k)=b
end
end

2 Comments

Hello kity
Hello kity on 12 Dec 2012
Would you comment this code step by step, I dont get how you do this...
thank you
A=[0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1]
for k=5:length(A)
if A(k) % If A(k) is equal to 1
b=A(k-4:k-1); % store value from k-4 to k-1 in b
A(k-4)=1 % replace value at k-1 by 1
A(k-4+1:k)=b % shift value stored in b
end
end
Andrei Bobrov
Andrei Bobrov on 12 Dec 2012
Edited: Andrei Bobrov on 12 Dec 2012
other way:
a - your vector - row (eg: [0 0 0 0 1])
n = numel(a);
out = a(hankel(1:n,[n,1:n-1]));
or
out = hankel(a,circshift(a,[0 1]));

1 Comment

Hello kity
Hello kity on 12 Dec 2012
thank you,
afterwards i use Q=out(:,5);
Jan
Jan on 12 Dec 2012
Edited: Jan on 12 Dec 2012
Some ideas:
x = [0, 0, 0, 0, 1];
index = find(x, 1, 'first');
y1 = x(index:end);
y2 = [x(index:end), zeros(1, index - 1)];
y3 = [x(index:end), ones(1, index - 1)];
y4 = [x(index:end), repmat(x(end), 1, index - 1)];
y5 = [x(index:end), x(1:index - 1)];

This question is closed.

Asked:

on 12 Dec 2012

Closed:

on 20 Aug 2021

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!