Fast method count unique variables
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Ok so given an array of (n,m) dimensions populated with positive integers from 1:m and each row of the array will contain only one of each integer: so no repeats.
For example:
2,1,3,4
3,1,2,4
1,2,3,4
2,1,4,3
I'd like a fast method of creating arrays containing all the positions that the numbers fall into, for example:
One.positions = [1,2]
Two.positions = [1,2,3]
Three.postions = [1,3,4]
Four.positions = [3,4]
I'm doing this for arrays sometimes of sizes = [1e+6,30]; currently I'm using a loop moving column wise with accummarray and if the number exists in that Column it is iteratively added to an array.
Original Code:
% m = array containing sequences of integers
total = size(m,2)
A = (1:total);
intel_pos = cell(total,1);
for i = 1:total
for j = 1:total
if sum(A(accumarray(m(:,j),1) > 0) == i) == 1
intel_pos{i} = [intel_pos{i};j];
end
end
end
So obvious areas of improvement can be done.
Accepted Answer
More Answers (2)
Guillaume
on 3 May 2017
No idea if it's faster than your method, this does not need a loop:
m = [2 1 3 4;1 2 3 4;1 2 4 3;2 1 4 3]; %demo data
colindices = repmat(1:size(m, 2), size(m, 1), 1);
out = accumarray(m(:), colindices(:), [], @(x) {unique(x)})
2 Comments
Sean de Wolski
on 3 May 2017
Loops are not typically slower. This was true 15 years ago but with advances in the MATLAB execution engine and jit accelerator they are now at parity with vectorized operations much of the time.
Matthew Hickson
on 3 May 2017
Edited: Matthew Hickson
on 3 May 2017
Sean de Wolski
on 3 May 2017
Edited: Sean de Wolski
on 4 May 2017
I'd suspect a simple loop over columns with ismember would be very fast.
EDIT from Comment Clarification
tic
ncol = size(m,2);
nrow = size(m,1);
present = cell(ncol,1);
for ii = 1:ncol
present{ii} = unique(ceil(find(m==ii)./nrow));
end
toc
OLD
[~,m] = sort(rand(1e6,30),2);
tic
ncol = size(m,2)
present = cell(ncol,1);
for ii = 1:ncol
present{ii} = find(ismember(1:ncol,m(:,ii)));
end
toc
This is taking 0.9s on my laptop.
6 Comments
Matthew Hickson
on 3 May 2017
Sean de Wolski
on 3 May 2017
Can you be more specific? I don't understand the difference between "allowed" and "at a given position". Maybe a counter example with the same original data set?
Matthew Hickson
on 3 May 2017
Edited: Matthew Hickson
on 3 May 2017
Sean de Wolski
on 4 May 2017
See EDIT
Matthew Hickson
on 4 May 2017
Edited: Matthew Hickson
on 4 May 2017
David Goodmanson
on 5 May 2017
Hi Matthew, I have done a revised answer, which is about three times faster than the code listed above.
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