How to convert a 3D matrix into 2D matrix?

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Hi,
I am trying to convert 3000x64x278 into 3000*64 rows and 278 columns.
I do know that it can be done something like this:
for example A is of 3000x64x278 matrix so I can call its first matrix as
B=A(:,:,1);
to change it into 3000*64 that means every column under one column I can do
B=B(:);
so There are more 277 columns to fill, how should I do that?
Thanks.

Risposta accettata

Stephen23
Stephen23 il 11 Mag 2016
Modificato: Stephen23 il 11 Mag 2016
Use reshape.
>> A = reshape(1:4*3*2,4,3,2) % array of size (4,3,2)
A(:,:,1) =
1 5 9
2 6 10
3 7 11
4 8 12
A(:,:,2) =
13 17 21
14 18 22
15 19 23
16 20 24
>> S = size(A);
>> M = reshape(A,[S(1)*S(2),S(3)]) % matrix of size (4*3,2)
M =
1 13
2 14
3 15
4 16
5 17
6 18
7 19
8 20
9 21
10 22
11 23
12 24
  5 Commenti
Ioannis Matthaiou
Ioannis Matthaiou il 23 Dic 2021
Hi,
Solution update:
C=[];
for i = 1 : size(A,3)
C = [C; A(:,:,i)];
end
C =
1 2
3 4
5 6
7 8
9 10
11 12
The matrix grows inside the loop, which is okay.
Thanks.
Yiannis
Stephen23
Stephen23 il 23 Dic 2021
Modificato: Stephen23 il 23 Dic 2021
"The matrix grows inside the loop, which is okay."
Not really, see:
In contrast, reshaping an array is extremely efficient (no data gets moved).

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Più risposte (1)

jinhu
jinhu il 28 Mag 2023
The order of three-dimensional arrays in MATLAB is: row, column, and page. A two-dimensional array only has rows and columns. If two values are assigned between them, there is a dimensionality reduction issue that needs to be noted.
For example, A3 is a three-dimensional array, where A3 (:,:, 1)=[1,2,3; 4,5,6]; A3 (:,:, 2)=[7,8,9; 10,11,12];
So in the assignment of A2=A3 (:,:, 1), the result A2 is a two-dimensional matrix (a two-dimensional array) (a matrix of 2X3).
In the assignment of A2=A3 (1,:,:), the result A2 is a three-dimensional matrix (1X3X2 matrix).
Essentially, they should all be a two-dimensional matrix. Why does A2 become a three-dimensional matrix in the latter assignment, while the former is two-dimensional?
That is to say, the former should also be considered three-dimensional, how can it be reduced to two-dimensional, while the latter cannot be reduced to two-dimensional?
The main reason is that in a three-dimensional matrix, the first dimension represents rows, the second dimension represents columns, and the third dimension represents pages. When the third dimension is 1, it represents only 1 page, naturally reducing to 2D. When the first dimension is 1, it represents only one row, but each page has one, so from the perspective of the room, it is not reduced to two-dimensional.
The order of three-dimensional arrays in MATLAB is: row, column, and page. A two-dimensional array only has rows and columns. If two values are assigned between them, there is a dimensionality reduction issue that needs to be noted.
For example, A3 is a three-dimensional array, where A3 (:,:, 1)=[1,2,3; 4,5,6]; A3 (:,:, 2)=[7,8,9; 10,11,12];
So in the assignment of A2=A3 (:,:, 1), the result A2 is a two-dimensional matrix (a two-dimensional array) (a matrix of 2X3).
In the assignment of A2=A3 (1,:,:), the result A2 is a three-dimensional matrix (1X3X2 matrix).
Essentially, they should all be a two-dimensional matrix. Why does A2 become a three-dimensional matrix in the latter assignment, while the former is two-dimensional?
That is to say, the former should also be considered three-dimensional, how can it be reduced to two-dimensional, while the latter cannot be reduced to two-dimensional?
The main reason is that in a three-dimensional matrix, the first dimension represents rows, the second dimension represents columns, and the third dimension represents pages. When the third dimension is 1, it represents only 1 page, naturally reducing to 2D. When the first dimension is 1, it represents only one row, but each page has one, so from a physical perspective, it is not reduced to two-dimensional.
If a 2D result is required in the end, please use reshape processing.
  1 Commento
Steven Lord
Steven Lord il 28 Mag 2023
MATLAB does not display trailing singleton dimensions of an array. But leading singleton dimensions are important.

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