Understanding the syntax meaning behind (:,)
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Hey I am new to matlab and trying to do some math calculation to find the centroid of a cluster of data, however, I am running into syntax confusion. Can someone explain the (:,) part of this code to me, in both uses if possible. what exactly does it mean?
c(:, j) = mean(d(:, find(ind == j)), 2);
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Guillaume
on 11 Sep 2016
Others have already explained the meaning of the colon. I'll just note that the find call is completely unnecessary in the above,
c(:, j) = mean(d(:, ind == j), 2);
would produce exactly the same result slightly faster.
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More Answers (1)
Walter Roberson
on 11 Sep 2016
If c does not exist before the line is executed, then the code is equivalent to
temp = mean(d(1:size(d,1), find(ind == j)), 2);
c(1:length(temp), j) = temp;
If c does exist before the line is executed, then the code is equivalent to
c(1:size(c,1), j) = mean(d(1:size(d,1), find(ind == j)), 2);
In other words, when : appears by itself as an array index, it is equivalent to writing 1:end at that position, and in turn end is equivalent to size() of the matrix in that dimension . To put it another way, : appearing by itself stands for "all positions in this dimension"
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Brendan Zotto
on 11 Sep 2016
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