How to "stretch" matrix
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Hello,
I was wondering if MATLAB had a function for doing the following. Say I have the following vector:
[1 1 2 2 0 0]
And I want to make a new vector which contains 1.5 times the amount of the present elements, i.e. "stretch" it by 1.5
[1 1 1 2 2 2 0 0 0]
Just asking before writing any buggy, inneficient code.
regards,
Daniel
2 Comments
James Tursa
on 21 Apr 2012
Is it always adding one more element of each? Or by "1.5 times" do you mean that you have a larger problem in mind like [1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 0 0 0 0] etc and would like the solution to be [1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0] etc? I.e., how generic is your real problem?
Answers (5)
Image Analyst
on 21 Apr 2012
Daniel, if you have the Image Processing Toolbox, you can do it in one single, and very simple, line of code:
% Create sample data.
m1 = [1 1 2 2 0 0]
% Now do the replication like Daniel wants.
m2 = imresize(m1, [1 9], 'nearest')
In the command window:
m1 =
1 1 2 2 0 0
m2 =
1 1 1 2 2 2 0 0 0
Of course you can change the 9 to be any length you want your output vector to be.
Richard Brown
on 21 Apr 2012
Further to Image Analyst's answer, you can do it without the image processing toolbox too (assuming m has an even number of entries)
m = [1 1 2 2 0 0 ];
n = numel(m);
m2 = interp1(1:n, m, linspace(1, n, 1.5*n), 'nearest')
0 Comments
Pippa Williams
on 11 Feb 2020
Another (perhaps simpler) option if you have R2015a or later: repelem ("repeat elements") will also do.
3 Comments
Image Analyst
on 19 Sep 2023
@Dana Monahan repelem doesn't do what the original poster asked, as far as I can see. @Daniel wants to "stretch" (resize) the array by 1.5 times. repelem() takes each element and makes duplicate elements. So, if you wanted to add one copy, it would insert the first 1 one time, then add a second 1 for the second 1, then add a third 1 for the third one. So repelem would give 4 ones, not 3:
% Create sample data.
m1 = [1 1 2 2 0 0];
% Now use repelem to TRY to generate [1 1 1 2 2 2 0 0 0]:
m2 = repelem(m1, 2) % Not what was wanted
If you gave a vector for the number of times to replicate the element you could do it:
m3 = repelem(m1, [1,2, 1,2, 1,2])
but that depends on you knowing in advance which elements should be replicated and which should not. I guess you could use a for loop to try to generate the [1,2, 1,2, 1,2] vector, but that gets complicated.
Dana Monahan
on 25 Sep 2023
Edited: Dana Monahan
on 25 Sep 2023
@Image Analyst, I appreciate the reply. I was rooting through this thread for a HW assignment for college. I actually ended up settling on a different solution as repelem doesn't allow for lowering the size of a matrix and because my proffesor asked I use the tools we had learned in class. I ended up using this:
function [ output ] = vecResize( v , multiplier )
%output = vecResize(v, multiplier) Streches/Compacts the given vector "v" by the given scalar "multiplier"
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
s = length(v);
ns = ceil(s * multiplier);
index = round(linspace(1, s, ns));
output = v(index);
Andrei Bobrov
on 21 Apr 2012
a = [1 1 2 2 0 0];
t = 1.5
k=[true,diff(a)~=0];
k2 = find(k);
k3 = [k2(2:end)-1 numel(k)];
k4 = k3-k2+1;
m = round(k4*t);
if all(diff(m) == 0)
out = reshape(ones(m(1),1)*a(k),1,[]);
else
out = cell2mat(arrayfun(@(x,y)x(ones(1,y)),a(k),m,'un',0));
end
ADD on Walter's comment
out = kron(a(1:2:end),ones(1,t*2))
2 Comments
Ryan Jones
on 7 Dec 2016
You can also use repmat and indexing. If n is + integer than simply:
m = [1 1 2 2 0 0];
temp = repmat(a,n,1)
m2 = temp(1:end)
for your particular example where you want a resizing of 3/2:
%n1/n2
n1 = 3, n2 =2
m = [1 1 2 2 0 0];
temp = repmat(a(1:n2:end),n1,1)
m2 = temp(1:end)
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