Building vector with for- and if statements

1 visualizzazione (ultimi 30 giorni)
Henry Eriksson
Henry Eriksson il 30 Mar 2017
Commentato: Henry Eriksson il 2 Apr 2017
My goal is to find all divisors of 30 and put them in a vector. My code right now looks like:
k=[];
c=[1:1:30];
for i=1:30
if mod(30,c(i))==0
v=[c(i)]
end
end
I am successful in finding the divisors of 30, but the output is:
v =
1
v =
2
v =
3
v =
5
and so on...
I want to put all of the divisors in one single vector v, what am I missing? I have tried searching for answers but I could not find any, maybe because I don't understand MATLAB code well enough.
Thank you for your help!

Risposte (1)

Roger Stafford
Roger Stafford il 30 Mar 2017
Modificato: Stephen23 il 2 Apr 2017
Make two changes:
k = 0;
c = 1:1:30;
for i=1:30
if mod(30,c(i))==0
k = k+1;
v(k) = c(i);
end
end
However, it is better practice to first allocate memory to v:
k = 0;
c = 1:1:30;
v = zeros(size(c));
for i=1:30
if mod(30,c(i))==0
k = k+1;
v(k) = c(i);
end
end
v = v(1:k);
Also you can probably make it faster:
c = 1:30;
v = c(mod(30,c)==0);
  3 Commenti
Stephen23
Stephen23 il 2 Apr 2017
Modificato: Stephen23 il 2 Apr 2017
@Henry Erikson: the k value is defined to have to value one; each time there is a valid output its value increments by one, giving 1, 2, 3, etc. This value is used as an index to allocate the output value into the array v.
"but how does it do that? Is there anywhere I can read about it?"
This is not some MATLAB magic, but a very basic usage of loops which could be used in almost any language which has loops. Some introductory courses to programming might explain this: search for "loop variable" or the like.
Henry Eriksson
Henry Eriksson il 2 Apr 2017
Very helpful, thank you! :)

Accedi per commentare.

Categorie

Scopri di più su Loops and Conditional Statements in Help Center e File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by