How do I assign 3D variables when third dimension has size one?

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Is this a bug? If not, how am I supposed to code this so dd1 has shape [2 3 1]?
>> sd1 = reshape(1:12,[4,3,1])
sd1 =
1 5 9
2 6 10
3 7 11
4 8 12
>> sd2 = reshape(1:24,[4,3,2])
sd2(:,:,1) =
1 5 9
2 6 10
3 7 11
4 8 12
sd2(:,:,2) =
13 17 21
14 18 22
15 19 23
16 20 24
>> for k = 1:2, dd1(k,:,:) = sd1(2*k,:,:); end
>> for k = 1:2, dd2(k,:,:) = sd2(2*k,:,:); end
>> size(dd1)
ans =
2 1 3
>> size(dd2)
ans =
2 3 2

Accepted Answer

Matt J
Matt J on 10 Nov 2014
dd1=sd1(2:2:end,:,:)
  3 Comments
Matt J
Matt J on 11 Nov 2014
Edited: Matt J on 11 Nov 2014
I doubt it's a bug. If dd1 and dd2 are not pre-defined, then note that your for-loop results are consistent with the "shiftdim rule" that I describe in your other thread.
The bottom line - it's just one more reason why its dangerous to define or modify the size/shape of an array through assignment.
Thomas
Thomas on 11 Nov 2014
Yes, your answer there (I had forgotten about that) seems to fully answer both questions. Combining the two we get the interesting MATLAB koan
>> it113 = rand(1,1,3)
it113(:,:,1) =
0.9572
it113(:,:,2) =
0.4854
it113(:,:,3) =
0.8003
>> vom113(1,:,:) = it
vom113 =
0.2785 0.5469 0.9575
>> it131 = rand(1,3,1)
it131 =
0.1419 0.4218 0.9157
>> vom131(1,:,:) = it131
vom131(:,:,1) =
0.1419
vom131(:,:,2) =
0.4218
vom131(:,:,3) =
0.9157

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