Storing Matrices of different sizes

6 次查看(过去 30 天)
Good morning everyone,
I am working on a project where I sequentially run the same process with two different inputs through the use of for loops. Out of this process I get a vector and a matrix that I would like to store. I am trying to do this with mxnxp arrays but run into the problem that the matrices are different sizes for each iteration. Specifically the matrix seems to be longer for later iterations than it is initially. Here's an example of the code I am trying to run:
tstepvec=60*10:60*10:60*30; %inputting the various time step values for iteration
varvec=1:10; %inputting the various variance values for iteration
Y=NaN(length(0:10:60*30),42,length(tstepvec)*length(sigmapvec)); %preallocating Y
T=NaN(length(0:10:60*30),1,length(tstepvec)*length(sigmapvec)); %preallocating T
zzz=1; %initializing variable
for tbs=tstepvec
for sigmapix=sigmapvec
[Y(:,:,zzz),T(:,:,zzz)]=process(tbs,sigmapix); %running the process
zzz=zzz+1; %updating variable
end
end
So, again, my problem is that I need some way to store Y and T sequentially even if they are different lengths due to the step size. The biggest problem I believe is that the length grows larger as the iterations progress, otherwise Matlab would just tack 0's on the end to fill in any elements that were missing. One solution I can possibly think of but don't know how to implement would be to change the indices from colons to some other term that tells matlab to just fill in the spaces that are available instead of removing any that are extra.
Anyway, any help would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
Andrew

采纳的回答

Iain
Iain 2013-6-19
Your best option is to use a cell array:
[Y{zzz}(:,:) T{zzz}(:,:)] = process(tbs,sigmapix);
Alternatively:
[Ytemp Ttemp] = process(tbs,sigmapix);
Y(1:size(Ytemp,1),1:size(Ytemp,2),zzz) = Ytemp; ... etc
  1 个评论
Andrew
Andrew 2013-6-19
编辑:Andrew 2013-6-19
Thanks, that looks like what I need but I admittedly have never used cell arrays before. What is the syntax to call the matrix later if I need values from it to plot. For instance, I need to plot T(:,1,1) and Y(:,7,1) later on, would I just use T{1}(:,1) and Y{1}(:,7)?
EDIT: I figured this one out on my own, but how would preallocating work? Its not crucial but the process takes a good amount of time to run by itself so I am trying to be as efficient as possible with my code. Thanks again!!

请先登录,再进行评论。

更多回答(0 个)

类别

Help CenterFile Exchange 中查找有关 Loops and Conditional Statements 的更多信息

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by