Storing values calculated in a 'for' loop in a matrix / vector

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I would very much appreciate some help storing values in a matrix. I am trying to do a growth curve (See: http://kellymom.com/images/growth/growthcharts.gif). For that reason I have to do quantile equations for a set of data (age and height). Currently, I've made a 'for' loop, which does calculate the value as intended, however it only stores the last result. How do I make it store the data as a matrix like:
Quantile 25 %
Age Height
  • 6 123
  • 7 129
  • 8 135
and so forth.
Thank you very much!
Note: male.data consists of two columns. First column is age and second is height of two thousand male participants. The file: age.height.mat is my data.
[EDITED, Jan, contents of the M-file from dropbox:]
%%Assignment 1 - Growth curves for men and women
clear all ;
clc ;
load age.height.mat
% Sorting the data to be plotted
male.data = sortrows(male.data) ;
plot(male.data(:,1),male.data(:,2),'r+')
male.growth = zeros(1, 73);
t = zeros(1, 73);
for k = 6:78
male.growth(k-5) = male.data(male.data(:,1) == k, 2);
t(k-5) = quantile(male.growth(k-5), 0.5);
end
% Note that t sometimes returns 'not a number', when a specific age is not
% present. That won't be a problem in my final script, as I am not allowed
% to publish all my data for copyright reasons.
  4 Comments
Tobias
Tobias on 14 Mar 2013
Anybody who can help me with fixing the dimension problem I am currently having?
"In an assignment A(I) = B, the number of elements in B and I must be the same."
male.growth(k-5) = male.data(male.data(:,1) == k, 2);
Tobias
Tobias on 15 Mar 2013
I would just like to add that I have solved my problem! So thank you for inspirational input
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Accepted Answer

Jan
Jan on 13 Mar 2013
Edited: Jan on 13 Mar 2013
Please do not start your code with the cruel killer. There is no benefit in removing all loaded functions from the memory by clear all. If you have a good reason to clear all variables, use clear variables or even better use a function, because it has its own workspace.
For storing the results in a vector:
male.growth = zeros(1, 73); % Pre-allocate!!! Optional but recommended
t = zeros(1, 73);
for k = 6:78 % Avoid using "i" as a variable
male.growth(k-5) = male.data(male.data(:,1) == k, 2); % Without FIND
t(k-5) = quantile(male.growth(k-5), 0.5);
end
  4 Comments
Tobias
Tobias on 13 Mar 2013
Edited: Tobias on 13 Mar 2013
After having debugged and writing the code you suggested, I got the following:
K>> size(a)
ans =
104 1
Which, as far as I understand, should correspond correctly with the 104 boys at the age of 6 included in my data. Even though the dimension of male.growth is 1 x 73 after the code:
male.growth = zeros(1, 73);
Isn't it supposed to automaticly change the dimensions of male.growth to the dimensions of the result in:
male.growth(k-5) = male.data(male.data(:,1) == k, 2);
Jan
Jan on 18 Mar 2013
@Tobias: While for:
male.growth = male.data(male.data(:,1) == k, 2);
the dimensions on the left side are adjusted automatically, as for:
male.growth(100) == 8;
the missing elements are set to implicitely, a vector cannot assigned to a scalar:
a(1) = 1:10; % ERROR

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