unexpected accumarray behavior
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I recently discovered the function accumarray. Example 2 in the doc for this function produced a counter-intuitive answer for me prompting me to investigate. This example is repeated below.
Example 2
val = 101:106;
subs=[1 2; 1 2; 3 1; 4 1; 4 4; 4 1];
B = accumarray(subs,val,[],@(x)sum(diff(x)))
B =
0 -1 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
Intuitively, the nonzero values should have the same sign. I was surprised to find that this is a built-in function, thus I was unable to inspect the code directly to determine the source of this behavior. I have a more illuminating example (below) that points to the source of the behavior in question but does not fully explain it.
val = [1 2 3 4];
subs1 = [1 2; 1 2; 2 1; 2 1];
subs2 = [1 1; 1 1; 2 2; 2 2];
func = @(x)x(1);
A = accumarray(subs1,val,[],func)
A =
0 2
3 0
B = accumarray(subs2,val,[],func)
B =
1 0
0 3
This shows that, for the subs1 call, the bin for position (1,2) is [2 1] when func is called, while, for the subs2 call, the bin for position (1,1) is [1 2] when func is called.
My Questions: Why is the order in which entries of val are accumulated into bins dependent on the bin location? How can I predict the accumulation order? Can a more consistent behavior be forced?
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Accepted Answer
Oleg Komarov
on 29 Sep 2011
Note If the subscripts in subs are not sorted, fun should not depend on the order of the values in its input data.
EDIT
[trash,idx] = sort(sub2ind([4,4],subs(:,1),subs(:,2)));
B = accumarray(subs(idx,:),val(idx),[],@(x)sum(diff(x)));
4 Comments
More Answers (1)
the cyclist
on 29 Sep 2011
Looking at the documentation example (but not yours, yet), it seems to me there is a typo in the documentation. I get B(1,2) = 1, not -1, when I do that accumarray(). That is also the value I expect.
In your example, I do not get the same result for "A" that you do. I get
A = [0 1
3 0];
This is just as I expect. The (1,2) element is the "accumulation" of the values [1 3], where you have defined the accumulation function to be the first element of the vector. Similarly, A(2,1) is the "accumulation" of [3 4]. Again, because you have defined the accumulation function to be taking the first element, that value is "3".
Does that help?
3 Comments
the cyclist
on 29 Sep 2011
I get the results I mentioned for both R2011a and R2011b, on Mac OS X (10.6.8).
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