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index exceed matrix dimensions

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seprienna
seprienna on 11 Sep 2014
Commented: seprienna on 11 Sep 2014
hello folks, I'm trying to run 2 different dimensional vectors by using weighted regions with a chosen factor. can I get some expert opinion on identify the error,please. your help is gratefully appreciated.Many thanks in advance.
x=train_data; % 882 x2 double
z=test_data; %882 x 8 double
distance_max=[];
for h=1:size(x)
for kb=1:size(z)
kk=x(:,h);
gg=z(:,kb); <-- this is where the error appeared
weightsum=0;
ww = [0, 1,1,1,1,1,0,0,1,1,1,1,1,0,1,1,2,1,2,1,1,2,4,4,0,4,4,2,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,0,1,2,2,2,1,0,0,0,1,1,1,0,0];
length=18;
region = size(x,1)/length;
for e=1:region
e_start = (e -1) * length+1 ;
e_end = e_start + length-1 ;
xpart=kk(e_start:e_end);
zpart = gg (e_start:e_end);
D1 = pdist2(xpart',zpart','chisq')*ww(e);
distance_max=[distance_max,D1];
weightsum=weightsum+D1;
end
results(h,k)={weightsum};
end
end
  5 Comments
seprienna
seprienna on 11 Sep 2014
Edited: seprienna on 11 Sep 2014
million apologies for the confusion adam. I was using the y for a different data but in this experiment, i'm using 'x' and 'z'. Can you kindly point out how can i avoid the dimension error please.
Rick Rosson
Rick Rosson on 11 Sep 2014
Two lines above the line that caused the error:
for kb=1:size(y)

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Accepted Answer

Rick Rosson
Rick Rosson on 11 Sep 2014
Edited: Rick Rosson on 11 Sep 2014
Please try changing the line
for kb=1:size(y)
to the following:
for kb=1:size(z)
Also, please correct the issue with size described in the answer provided by Adam.
  3 Comments
Rick Rosson
Rick Rosson on 11 Sep 2014
I think you want to loop over the number of columns in each matrix. So please try the following:
for h=1:size(x,2)
for kb=1:size(z,2)
seprienna
seprienna on 11 Sep 2014
Rick,thanks for the tips. that is the result i'm looking for. thanks again.

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More Answers (1)

Adam
Adam on 11 Sep 2014
Edited: Adam on 11 Sep 2014
size(x)
will return a length d vector where d is the dimension of x. In your case that will be [882 2] and likewise size(y) will return [882 8].
If you want the first dimension you can use
size( x, 1 )
to give 882, or
size( x, 2 )
if you want the second dimension only. You can use
length(x)
if you just want the longest dimension but don't know what the index of that dimension is, but I don't recommend using length for this purpose if you do know which dimension you want.
That may not be the only problem, but it will definitely cause problems.
  3 Comments
Pierre Benoit
Pierre Benoit on 11 Sep 2014
Well from what your code do, it seems that you need to use
size(x,2)
and the same for z.
seprienna
seprienna on 11 Sep 2014
it works!!!thanks you very much

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