This is a basic MATLAB operation. It is for instructional purposes.
---
You may already know how to get the row and column index from a matrix, and the logical indexing technique but there is another way to reference specific elements in a matrix.
Absolute indexing refers to specific elements with a single scalar rather than two (row and column). The upper left entry is value 1, the lower right is the highest value. MATLAB is column major, so you count down the rows in a specific column first, moving right as needed until you reach the end.
Indexing into a vector is really using this kind of indexing, but it is more natural feeling.
Use Find.
Given a matrix M, return the absolute indices where M is greater than scalar, LB (Lower Bound) and less than UB (Upper Bound). (See Binary comparison to satisfy two conditions)
Solution Stats
Problem Comments
Solution Comments
Show commentsProblem Recent Solvers254
Suggested Problems
-
Find relatively common elements in matrix rows
2151 Solvers
-
The Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything
577 Solvers
-
Is this triangle right-angled?
6390 Solvers
-
542 Solvers
-
6021 Solvers
More from this Author51
Problem Tags
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!
The test suite gives an answer.