Put a small matrix in a bigger one.

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Ayob
Ayob on 2 Jun 2013
Commented: Preet Lal on 20 May 2022
I want to put a small matrix (p*q) called B into a bigger matrix (m*n) called A. How can I do it. Matrix B should be put on the left-right corner of matrix A.
for better understanding take a look on this image:

Accepted Answer

chibole
chibole on 19 Oct 2016
function A = MatrixReplace(A,B)
[p,q] = size(B);
A(end-p+1:end, end-q+1:end) = B;
end
  3 Comments
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 29 Mar 2017
Be careful with this code. For one thing, it puts the pasted matrix in the lower right corner, not at some arbitrary row and column (row "i" and column "j") like the poster asked for. It also has no error checking, has no comments, and doesn't use descriptive variable names. Personally, I would not use this code in my company. For more flexible and robust way, see my answer.
chibole
chibole on 22 Jul 2017
"For one thing, it puts the pasted matrix in the lower right corner" That is what is asked in the question.

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More Answers (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 2 Jun 2013
Edited: Image Analyst on 2 Jun 2013
Try this fairly robust, more general code where you can specify the upper left corner and it will check to make sure the small array does not go outside the big array.:
% Create sample data:
big = ones(10)
small = 9 * ones(3)
% Get sizes
[rowsBig, columnsBig] = size(big);
[rowsSmall, columnsSmall] = size(small);
% Specify upper left row, column of where
% we'd like to paste the small matrix.
row1 = 5;
column1 = 3;
% Determine lower right location.
row2 = row1 + rowsSmall - 1
column2 = column1 + columnsSmall - 1
% See if it will fit.
if row2 <= rowsBig
% It will fit, so paste it.
big(row1:row2, column1:column2) = small
else
% It won't fit
warningMessage = sprintf('That will not fit.\nThe lower right coordinate would be at row %d, column %d.',...
row2, column2);
uiwait(warndlg(warningMessage));
end
  3 Comments
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 20 May 2022
If you know the size of the matrices to be pasted onto the underlying matrix, and the locations, then you can figure out the overlap region. Then just use normal indexing to get the mean. For example if you're pasting a 2x3 into the upper left corner of a 5x5 matrix, and a 2x3 onto the upper right corner, then the last column of the first matrix you paste will overlap the left column of the second 2x3 matrix, and they are both in column 3 of the 5x5 matrix.
Preet Lal
Preet Lal on 20 May 2022
I am not clear,
If possible could you please share a short demo code.

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Andrei Bobrov
Andrei Bobrov on 2 Jun 2013
Edited: Andrei Bobrov on 2 Jun 2013
Use function padarray from Image Processing Toolbox
A(padarray(true(size(B)),size(A)-size(B),'pre')) = B;
or
A(blkdiag(false(size(A)-size(B)),true(size(B)))) = B;

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