How to write function in matlab

2 views (last 30 days)
Paul
Paul on 21 Jul 2015
Edited: Paul on 11 Aug 2015
Hi all,
Dose any body knows how to write interpolation function (interp2) instead of using its command on matlab?
Best regards,
  2 Comments
Titus Edelhofer
Titus Edelhofer on 21 Jul 2015
Probably yes :). Maybe you explain the purpose of doing so? Fun, homework, missing functionality? Is using interp1 for doing this fine...? etc...?
Titus
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 21 Jul 2015
There are codes on the file exchange for interpolation. Why not use one of them?
Yes, of course it is possible to write your own interpolation code. But if your goal is to use a home grown code instead of one professionally written, this is a poor choice. And if your goal is to merely learn how to do interpolation, then do some reading. Learn about interpolation methods.
If you have some other obscure reason, then why not tell us? We might be able to offer better advice if we know what you are doing and why.

Sign in to comment.

Answers (3)

Torsten
Torsten on 21 Jul 2015
A starting point :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilinear_interpolation
Best wishes
Torsten.

addou abdeljalil
addou abdeljalil on 21 Jul 2015
m1 =E2(1:4) ; r1 =F2_pixel(1:4) ;
m2 =E2(4:16) ; r2 =F2_pixel(4:16) ;
p1 = polyfit(m1,r1,2) ; % interpolation degre 2
p2 = polyfit(m2,r2,3) ; % interpolation degre 3
y1 = polyval(p1,m1);
y2 = polyval(p2,m2);
plot(E2(1:16),F2(1:16),'o',m1,y1,'r-',m2,y2,'g-')
legend('...');
xlabel ('E2');
ylabel('F2');
title('.......................')
  1 Comment
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 21 Jul 2015
But this is NOT interpolation. It is NOT a replacement for interp2. Not even close.

Sign in to comment.


Alex Taylor
Alex Taylor on 21 Jul 2015
The relevant question that everyone wants to know the answer to is:
What is your reason for needing to know how to solve this problem without using interp2 in MATLAB?
I think if you answer this question, it will help everyone understand what exactly your requirements are for whatever it is you are doing. Unless there is some compelling reason why you don't want to use interp2, everyone is going to suggest using interp2 because you are unlikely to write a faster or more memory efficient 2-D interpolation routine yourself, especially if you are using a recent version of MATLAB.
I have answered a variation of this question in the past on how to do log-polar transformations of images, in your case it looks like you want a polar->cartesian transformation, but the idea is the same. However, in my answer, I used interp2.
  1 Comment
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 22 Jul 2015
Edited: Stephen23 on 22 Jul 2015
What exactly does "interpolation a bit different" mean? Different from what? How should it be different?

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Interpolation in Help Center and File Exchange

Tags

No tags entered yet.

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!