Given m, n, p, and q, create an m-by-n matrix made up of submatrices, each sized p-by-q (if possible - the last row and column of blocks may be smaller). The elements of the (j,k)th block all have the same value: (j+k-1).
For example, if m = 4, n = 7, p = 2, and q = 3, the matrix is:
You can assume m, n, p, and q are all positive integers. (They can have the value 1, however.) As in the illustration above, m may or may not be divisible by p, and n may or may not be divisible by q. It is even possible for m < p or n < q. The resulting matrix will always be m-by-n.
Solution Stats
Problem Comments
Solution Comments
Show comments
Loading...
Problem Recent Solvers96
Suggested Problems
-
Swap the first and last columns
22514 Solvers
-
Get the length of a given vector
12891 Solvers
-
Split a string into chunks of specified length
2053 Solvers
-
631 Solvers
-
Angle Between Analog Clock Hands
111 Solvers
More from this Author33
Problem Tags
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!