Can somebody explain me this answer?
1 view (last 30 days)
Show older comments
a=[1 2; 3 4]; a(3*ones(2)) ans= 2 2 2 2
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
madhan ravi
on 9 Sep 2019
The code copies the third element of a as 2 by 2 matrix, see the below example:
>> a
a =
1 2
3 4
>> a(:)
ans =
1
3
2
4
>> a([3,3;3,3])
ans =
2 2
2 2
>>
0 Comments
More Answers (3)
James Tursa
on 9 Sep 2019
Edited: James Tursa
on 9 Sep 2019
You are using linear indexing into "a". This matrix:
>> 3*ones(2)
ans =
3 3
3 3
When used as indexing, it means "create a 2x2 matrix result, and put the 3rd element of "a" into that matrix result at each spot". Since the 3rd element of "a" in memory is the value 2, you get a 2x2 matrix of all 2's as your answer.
0 Comments
Bob Thompson
on 9 Sep 2019
a=[1 2; 3 4]; % Dictates a matrix, 'a,' and it values. Is a 2x2 matrix
a(3*ones(2)) % Calls the elements of 'a' which are located at 3*a 2x2 matrix of ones.
ans= 2 2 2 2 % This answer is returned because a(3) is the element in the first row, second column, a 2, and all four elements of the ones matrix will call the same element of 'a.'
0 Comments
See Also
Categories
Find more on Matrix Indexing in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!