Is there a function that returns a vector or array or list of values obtained by applying a function to margins of an array or matrix?
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For example, assume x is a vector of length n, and y is a vector of length m. I would like to construct the matrix the (n x m) matrix M(i,j) = f(x(i),y(j)). Of course I do not want to use loops!
Btw, in R, there is such a function (called apply).
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More Answers (2)
James Tursa
on 9 Jul 2015
Edited: James Tursa
on 9 Jul 2015
A bit clunky, but this works and makes no assumptions about f being vectorized:
n = numel(x);
m = numel(y);
M = arrayfun(@f,repmat(x(:),1,m),repmat(y(:)',n,1));
1 Comment
Bruno Remillard
on 9 Jul 2015
John D'Errico
on 9 Jul 2015
I'm surprised nobody mentioned this.
fun = @(x,y) sin(x+y);
x = 0:5;
y = (0:2:6)';
M = bsxfun(fun,x,y)
M =
0 0.84147 0.9093 0.14112 -0.7568 -0.95892
0.9093 0.14112 -0.7568 -0.95892 -0.27942 0.65699
-0.7568 -0.95892 -0.27942 0.65699 0.98936 0.41212
-0.27942 0.65699 0.98936 0.41212 -0.54402 -0.99999
3 Comments
James Tursa
on 9 Jul 2015
Good as long as fun works with column vector inputs.
John D'Errico
on 10 Jul 2015
Easy enough to ensure that X and Y are always the proper shapes.
M = bsxfun(fun,x(:).',y(:));
James Tursa
on 10 Jul 2015
Edited: James Tursa
on 10 Jul 2015
I guess I wasn't clear. bsxfun passes column vectors to the function, so whatever the function is, it must be able to deal with column vector inputs (i.e., it must be vectorized to this extent). That was the only point I was trying to make. It is similar to the f(X,Y) used in IA's solution ... f must be vectorized for this to work.
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