How to perform logical AND on intervals of contiguous locations
1 visualizzazione (ultimi 30 giorni)
Mostra commenti meno recenti
Arturo Camacho Lozano
il 23 Set 2020
Commentato: Arturo Camacho Lozano
il 30 Set 2020
I have the following problem. Let's say I have the arrays
x = logical([0, 1, 0,0, 1,1, 0,0,0, 1,1,1, 0])
y = logical([0, 1, 1,0, 1,1, 0,1,0, 1,0,1, 0])
Array X has three intervals of 1's with indices 2:2, 5:6, and 10:12. I want to apply an "interval AND" operation to X, based on Y, in the following sense: for each interval of ones in X, if any element in Y is zero in that interval, the whole interval is zeroed, i.e., Z = intervalAND(X,Y) should be the same as
z = logical([0, 1, 0,0, 1,1, 0,0,0, 0,0,0, 0])
Let me explain. Since all(Y(2:2)) = 1, it produces ones in Z(2:2). The same happens in the second interval (5:6): Both Y(5) and Y(6) are true, producing ones in Z. However, there is a zero in Y(10:12) which zeroes the whole interval Z(10:12).
I know how to do it with a for loop:
d = diff(x);
pos = find(d == 1);
neg = find(d == -1);
z = x;
for k = 1:length(neg)
interval = pos(k)+1 : neg(k);
if ~all(y(interval))
z(interval) = false;
end
end
However, I need to vectorize it to make it run faster (I am working with huge arrays). Does someone know how to compute Z without using a for/while loop?
4 Commenti
James Tursa
il 24 Set 2020
Is the algorithm running on each column individually, or running across the entire matrix as a whole? I.e., does the 1's logic extend across columns?
Risposta accettata
Bruno Luong
il 24 Set 2020
Modificato: Bruno Luong
il 25 Set 2020
x = logical([0, 1, 0,0, 1,1, 0,0,0, 1,1,1, 0])
y = logical([0, 1, 1,0, 1,1, 0,1,0, 1,0,1, 0])
code without loop or groupping, on my bench test about 3 time faster than Stephen's accumarray solution
i = find(diff([0 x 0]));
n = histc(find(~y), i);
j = [1;-1]*(n(1:2:end)==0);
if x(end)
i(end)=[];
j(end)=[];
end
z = logical(cumsum(accumarray(i(:),j(:),[length(x),1])));
10 Commenti
Bruno Luong
il 26 Set 2020
Modificato: Bruno Luong
il 26 Set 2020
Faster. It does not create unecessary elements to accumulate then removed.
The one before is still OK if you prefer readable code.
Più risposte (2)
Mohammad Sami
il 24 Set 2020
You can group based on the values of x.
gid = cumsum(x ~= circshift(x,1));
if(gid(1) == 0)
gid = gid + 1;
end
a = splitapply(@min,y,gid);
z = a(gid);
1 Commento
Matt J
il 25 Set 2020
Using group1s from
>> xg=group1s(x)+1;
>> yg=splitapply(@all,y,xg);
>> z=yg(xg)
z =
1×13 logical array
0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 Commenti
Vedere anche
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!