how can I create cumulative matrix.
3 ビュー (過去 30 日間)
古いコメントを表示
Hello a question please.
I have matrix P with size (452*500). I want to select random selection with roulette wheel selection. I write something:
r=rand;
c=reshape(p,1,[]);
c1=cumsum(c);
j=find(r<=c1,1,'first');
[j1 j2]=ind2sub(size(p),j);
end
but I want to remove part " c=reshape(p,1,[]);" and create cumulative matrix of p directly without reshaping it to matrix c. How can I do it?
Thank you.
0 件のコメント
採用された回答
Stephen23
2015 年 2 月 3 日
編集済み: Stephen23
2015 年 2 月 3 日
Something like this? :
r = rand;
jj = find(r<=cumsum(p(:)),1,'first');
[j1,j2] = ind2sub(size(p),jj);
3 件のコメント
Stephen23
2015 年 2 月 3 日
編集済み: Stephen23
2015 年 2 月 3 日
This depend on you and what you want your code to do. Read the documentation for cumsum, you will see that it always calculates the sum along one dimension (row, column, etc). Lets have a look at what the documentation says:
- If A is a vector, then cumsum(A) returns a vector containing the cumulative sum of the elements of A.
- If A is a matrix, then cumsum(A) returns a matrix containing the cumulative sums for each column of A.
...
- B = cumsum(A,dim) returns the cumulative sum of the elements along dimension dim. For example, if A is a matrix, then cumsum(A,2) returns the cumulative sum of each row.
So the documentation tells us that if you want a column vector of cumulative sums of each row (or a row of the columns, etc), then the answer to your question is yes, you can do it without reshaping the matrix p first. In every case it is summing only along one dimension, so if you want the cumulative sum over all elements of a matrix, you will have to convert it first to a vector, and probably the neatest way of doing this is using p(:).
その他の回答 (0 件)
参考
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!