identifying and isolating consecutive numbers
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I have a vector, for example, A= [1 2 3 4 14 15 23 24 25 ]
and I want a code that will identify regions of consecutive numbers and separate them into their own array. ie, a code that will split A into
B = [1 2 3 4] C = [14 15] D = [23 24 25]
I would like this code to be able to work on a matrix A of variable length. Any suggestions?
Thank you!
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Più risposte (4)
Walter Roberson
il 14 Giu 2012
3 voti
The splits should occur at places where diff(A) has 1's . (You can find the runs of 1's by looking at diff(diff(A)).
Once you know the length of each piece, you can use mat2cell() to break up the vector into cell arrays. (Writing to individual variables is not a good practice for something like this.)
1 Commento
Diego Tasso
il 14 Giu 2012
Follow what Mr. Walter Roberson said he is most correct.
Diego Tasso
il 14 Giu 2012
0 voti
Use regexp to do this, something like ( but not exactly):
[B] = regexp(A,'[1-4]','match')
repeat for C and D replacing [1-4] with the number ranges you want to isolate...this might work...not sure.
2 Commenti
Diego Tasso
il 14 Giu 2012
By the way this is the cheap inefficient way to get this done...I am sure you can create a loop to do so for you.
Guillaume
il 8 Ott 2015
regexp is a cheap and efficient way of locating patterns in strings. It does not apply to numbers.
A loop is the most inefficient way of dealing with the problem.
Frank Uhlig
il 5 Mag 2020
Modificato: Frank Uhlig
il 5 Mag 2020
0 voti
Here is a simple sequence that gives the adjacent integers without the non-adjacent ones:
Strat with k = [ 1 2 3 4 7 8 9 12 13 140],
>> k = [ 1 2 3 4 7 8 9 12 13 140],
k =
1 2 3 4 7 8 9 12 13 140
>> i = find(diff(k) == 1),
i =
1 2 3 5 6 8
>> all = unique(sort([k(i),k(i)+1]))
all =
1 2 3 4 7 8 9 12 13
And you have all adjacent integer groups united in ascending order.
Sorting the last output into individual adjacent integer groups now is another problem.
I know this is a very late answer but wasn't sure how to implement the answer by Maziyar because it uses a variable 'D' that is not defined anywhere. I ended up writing my own and it turned out well so I thought I'd share it.
A= [1 2 3 4 14 15 23 24 25 ]
assert(size(A,1)==1 && isa(A,'double'));
p=find(diff(A)>1);
ind=[A(1),A(p+1);A(p),A(end)];
% ind =
% 1 14 23
% 4 15 25
It takes in a vector A that would have a series of sequential numbers and returns a matrix where the top rop is the start of each sequence and the bottom row is the end of each sequence.
2 Commenti
Katerina F
il 16 Feb 2024
I am getting this error:
Operands to the logical AND (&&) and OR (||) operators must be convertible to
logical scalar values. Use the ANY or ALL functions to reduce operands to logical
scalar values.
Any suggestions please?
Eric Homer
il 16 Feb 2024
What's the data you are passing in. Can you please share what is causing the issue?
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