Azzera filtri
Azzera filtri

Logical operations on matrix

4 visualizzazioni (ultimi 30 giorni)
Brattv
Brattv il 4 Feb 2016
Commentato: Image Analyst il 4 Feb 2016
Hello,
I thought i had this figured but i am having trouble with logical operations on a matrix. The code is:
% Quantization stepsize
hQ = 12;
% Quantization levels
hQInt = [0:hQ:360];
% Quantization matrix
hueQuant = zeros(600,800);
for i=5:5
hueQuant(hQInt(i)< hue >hQInt(i+1)) = 1;
end
The idea: I am making quantization intervals with hQInt. I want to use a logical operation in the "for-loop", and i thought this statement said - "The index in hue where hue is larger than hQInt(i) and less than hQInt(i+1) is set to 1 in the matrix hueQuant". Just to mention it, the iteration index is set to 5 for test purpose.
The question: Am i wrong or is it possible this way? Any suggestions to how it can be solved without a massive for loop code?
  1 Commento
Stephen23
Stephen23 il 4 Feb 2016
Vegard B's "Answer" moved here:
Thanks to both of you for the reply! The solution by Kelly Kearney removed the need to loop and was chosen.

Accedi per commentare.

Risposta accettata

Kelly Kearney
Kelly Kearney il 4 Feb 2016
Modificato: Kelly Kearney il 4 Feb 2016
Assuming I'm understanding your intent, a better way to do this would be with histc. No loop necessary:
hQ = 12;
hQInt = [0:hQ:360];
hue = rand(600,800)*360;
[~,hueQuant] = histc(hue, hQInt);
  3 Commenti
Kelly Kearney
Kelly Kearney il 4 Feb 2016
Oh, nice! I hadn't noticed that addition, and both the last-edge treatment and the ability to specify which bin side is the included in the bins are much-needed features for me.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst il 4 Feb 2016
That's probably what is wanted. I never was able to figure out why they wanted to set hueQuant equal to 1 essentially everywhere. Both in code, and verbally they said that. That doesn't make sense to me.

Accedi per commentare.

Più risposte (1)

Star Strider
Star Strider il 4 Feb 2016
Assuming I understand correctly what you want to do, this statement:
hueQuant(hQInt(i)< hue >hQInt(i+1)) = 1;
would likely do what you want if you restated it as:
hueQuant((hQInt(i)< hue) & (hue >hQInt(i+1))) = 1;
  1 Commento
Image Analyst
Image Analyst il 4 Feb 2016
Of course hue would have to be defined first. And it's funny how they talk about a massive for loop when none of the arrays or sizes there, like 5 or 600*800, constitute "massive."

Accedi per commentare.

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by