Assignment has more non-singleton rhs dimensions than non-singleton subscripts
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I am trying to execute a loop and getting this error how can i get out of it
% distanceOfAllNearestTargets = zeros(numberOfNearestNeighbors, 1);
locationNumberOfAllNearestTargets = zeros(numberOfNearestNeighbors, 1);
for ii = 1 : 1 : numberOfNearestNeighbors
locationNumberOfAllNearestTargets(ii, 1) = find(distanceOfAllTargetsFromCurrentPosition == min(distanceOfAllTargetsFromCurrentPosition));
distanceOfAllNearestTargets(ii, 1) = distanceOfAllTargetsFromCurrentPosition(locationNumberOfAllNearestTargets(ii));
distanceOfAllTargetsFromCurrentPosition(locationNumberOfAllNearestTargets(ii, 1)) = max(distanceOfAllTargetsFromCurrentPosition);
end
8 Comments
madhan ravi
on 31 Oct 2018
numberOfNearestNeighbors?
muhammad ahmad
on 31 Oct 2018
Walter Roberson
on 31 Oct 2018
Can you guarantee that there is only exactly one value that is the minimum distance? Probably not.
muhammad ahmad
on 31 Oct 2018
Rik
on 31 Oct 2018
A non-related note: I want to compliment you on the use of descriptive variables.
madhan ravi
on 31 Oct 2018
Upload all the necessary details , saves time!
muhammad ahmad
on 31 Oct 2018
muhammad ahmad
on 31 Oct 2018
Answers (1)
find is not guaranteed to result 1 value. It might return a vector, or an empty array. If you are certain there will always be 1 result or more, you can use the later inputs to find to limit the results it returns to either the first one or the last one. If that doesn't fit your situation, you should store the find result in a temporary variable and use switch (or if) to handle the three cases (so numel(temp_result)==0, >1, and ==1).
locationNumberOfAllNearestTargets(ii, 1) = find(distanceOfAllTargetsFromCurrentPosition == min(distanceOfAllTargetsFromCurrentPosition),1,'first');
6 Comments
muhammad ahmad
on 31 Oct 2018
Rik
on 31 Oct 2018
find returns a vector, which you try to store in a single position. That doesn't fit, so you have to pick 1 result from that vector. By using my suggested line of code as a replacement, find only returns the index to the first result it finds.
Try it out with a smaller example:
A=[0 0 1 1 0 1 0];
find(A)
find(A,1,'first')
find(A,1,'last')
muhammad ahmad
on 1 Nov 2018
Walter Roberson
on 1 Nov 2018
To do it in a loop, put a loop around it ?
We can see that you know how to write loops, so we are not clear as to what the question is?
muhammad ahmad
on 1 Nov 2018
Rik
on 1 Nov 2018
Try to make a small example that reproduces your error. You can attach a mat file with the actual data to your comment if you can't figure out a way to generate some example data.
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