Take samples from the previous sample
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Hi all, I have set of data, the size doesn't really matter. Lets call it x1. I want to take a random set of values from x1 and lets call it x2. Then take random samples from x2 and call it x3. So on and so forth. I am not really sure how to do this, I have tried a couple of things, but without luck. Any help is appreciated. Also, I have access to the statistics library. The things that I have tried made use of the function randsample.
Thanks.
2 Comments
Azzi Abdelmalek
on 10 Aug 2015
Can you give more details? how many sample? when do you want to stop?
Accepted Answer
Star Strider
on 10 Aug 2015
I’m not certain what you want, but this is one possibility:
x1 = randsample(99, 15)'
x2 = x1(randsample(15,10))
x1 =
76 68 83 17 87 16 35 30 53 62 26 38 8 98 40
x2 =
8 53 40 38 17 83 26 62 35 30
The only constraint is to be certain that in ‘x2’ and beyond, the first argument to randsample is not greater than the length of the vector created in ‘x1’ or the earlier vectors.
2 Comments
Star Strider
on 10 Aug 2015
Edited: Star Strider
on 10 Aug 2015
One option is to put it into a loop:
x{1} = randsample(99, 15)';
for k1 = 2:10
x{k1} = randsample(x{k1-1},15);
end
All the vectors are the same sizes, but since they are cells, you can experiment with them to get the result you want.
EDIT — To use randsample with replacement, include the third argument as true or 1.
More Answers (1)
Azzi Abdelmalek
on 10 Aug 2015
x=1:100
k=1;
out{k}=x
while numel(out{k})>10
n=numel(out{k});
idx=randperm(n-1);
out{k+1}=out{k}(idx);
k=k+1;
end
celldisp(out)
2 Comments
Azzi Abdelmalek
on 10 Aug 2015
the new samples have different sizes, you can't avoid cells. Why do you want to avoid cells?
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