Optimize the FOR loop
Informazioni
Questa domanda è chiusa. Riaprila per modificarla o per rispondere.
Mostra commenti meno recenti
I am learning to optimize the following nested FOR loop, any comments are appreciated,
x=[537 558 583 606 631 655 666 700 722 799 823 847];
y=[48 216 384 552 720 888 1056];
z = zeros(1,numel(x));
for j = 1:numel(x)
for i = 1:numel(y)
if(x(j) <= y(i) )
z(j) = i;
break;
end
end
end
%ans
%z = [4 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6]
Risposte (2)
Sean de Wolski
il 28 Giu 2012
Modificato: Sean de Wolski
il 28 Giu 2012
If you can guarantee that the is at least one occurence of x(:) <y (:) then this will work:
x=[537 558 583 606 631 655 666 700 722 799 823 847];
y=[48 216 384 552 720 888 1056];
[~,z] = max(bsxfun(@le,x,y'),[],1)
4 Commenti
Ryan
il 28 Giu 2012
I have never used arrayfun or cellfun or bsxfun before and am trying to understand them and have two questions about this solution:
- Why do you need to transpose y?
- Is the ~ used to not waste space saving the max values because all you needed was the indices?
Sean de Wolski
il 28 Giu 2012
Hi Ryan,
For your first question,
bsxfun: please see my answer from a long time ago here: http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/16257#answer_22019
cellfun: Apply some function each cell. Can be useful sometimes for simple calculations, e.g: How many elements in each cell?
cellfun(@numel,C);
For any complicated function, just us e a for-loop, it'll likely be faster.
arrayfun: personal opinion is that it is confusing and slow and should be avoided.
Second question: exactly!
Tom
il 28 Giu 2012
I just compared arrayfun and bsxfun, the latter is a whole order of magnitude faster.
Ryan
il 28 Giu 2012
Thank you Sean and Tom!
Tom
il 28 Giu 2012
It seems what you're trying to is find the first instance of each value of x being less than each value of y. You can do this in using arrayfun:
arrayfun(@(n) find(n<y,1),x)
the first argument is an anonymous function. For each value in x, the find function is used to find the first instance of that x value being less than the y vector.
1 Commento
Tom
il 28 Giu 2012
Seeing what Sean said, this way also only works if there is an occurrence of for all of them- if there isn't then 'UniformOutput' has to be set to false, which means the output will be a cell array.
Questa domanda è chiusa.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!