I find a problem about accumarray(subs,val,[],@(x)sum(diff(x))), maybe a bug
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in the example of function accumarray, when use the diff ,it's so weird that the index of the val ,sometime the input value of x is Positive order ,but sometime is Reverse order,(u can run the code ,then pay attention to the value of y(the input value of x)),in the B3,u can get y(the input of diff ) like this
y =
103
y =
104
106
y =
102
101
it's so weird that 104 106 and 102 101,why it's not 101 102 ,it will lead to a wrong diff .
the code followed :
clc;clear all;
val = [101 102 103 104 105 106];
subs=[1 2; 1 2; 3 1; 4 1; 4 4; 4 1];
B1 = accumarray(subs,val,[],@(x)sum(my(x)))
B2 = accumarray(subs,val,[],@(x)sum(my(diff(x))))
subs= [1 2; 3 1; 1 2; 4 4; 4 1; 4 1;];
B3 = accumarray(subs,val,[],@(x)sum(my(x)))
B4 = accumarray(subs,val,[],@(x)sum(my(diff(x))))
function [ y] = my( x )
y=x
end
1 Commento
jacky chen
il 8 Gen 2014
Modificato: jacky chen
il 8 Gen 2014
Risposta accettata
Più risposte (2)
Sean de Wolski
il 8 Gen 2014
Modificato: Sean de Wolski
il 8 Gen 2014
0 voti
Explicitly sort either subs or vals (inside of the function) when you need sorted values in accumarray()
Example two and the note discuss this briefly.
1 Commento
jacky chen
il 8 Gen 2014
Modificato: jacky chen
il 8 Gen 2014
jacky chen
il 12 Gen 2014
0 voti
1 Commento
Roger Stafford
il 12 Gen 2014
The problem is not with the 'diff' function, Jacky. Accumarray exhibits the same anomalous behavior with other functions. For example, someone on the internet wrote
r = accumarray(subs, vals', [], @(x){x'})
with the non-sorted subs = [2,2,1,1,1,1]' and val = [10,13,11,14,12,10]' with the result
r{1} = 12 11 14 10
r{2} = 13 10
which shows directly the strange orderings the 'accumarray' sorting procedure performs with equal values of 'subs'.
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