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could anybody help me how to solve the error in the following code

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code:
global q;
m=[10 20 30 40 50];
n=[60 70 80 90 100]
for t= 1:length(m)
for r= 1:length(n)
A=rand(m(t),n(r));
n_=ceil(n(r)/m(t))
C=repmat(diag(1:m(t)),1,n_ )
unused_rows=1:m;
t=1;
while ~isempty(unused_rows)
n_rows=ceil(sqrt(randi(numel(unused_rows))));
rows=unused_rows(randsample(length(unused_rows),n_rows));
[~,idx]=find(ismember(unused_rows,rows));
unused_rows(idx)=[];
[C,C_part]=cluster_rows2(A,C,rows);
CP{q}=C_part %indxing all cells/groups
q=q+1;
end
end
end
All_CP=[cat(1, CP{:})] %combine all cells/groups into one cell
------------------------------------------------------------------
function [C,C_part]=cluster_rows2(A,B,rows)
global q;
A_part=A(rows,:);
B_part=B(rows,:);
%sum along the the vertical axis to get indices for the non-0 columns
non_0=sum(B_part);
%Repeat the vector back to the same size as the partial matrix. It will be
%converted to a logical later on.
non_0=repmat(non_0,length(rows),1);
%create a copy of B, as that is the basis for C
C=B;
C_part=B_part;
%for all non-zero columns, replace the 0 positions with the values from A
C_part(non_0 & C_part==0)=A_part(non_0 & C_part==0)
%paste the edited partial matrix back
C(rows,:)=C_part;
CP{q}=C_part;
end
  4 Comments
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 19 Jan 2018
"...how to solve the error in the following code"
Simple: do NOT use global variables.
Prabha Kumaresan
Prabha Kumaresan on 19 Jan 2018
Ok.I stop using global variables.could you help me to concatenate vertically E_part together with respect to m and n.

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Accepted Answer

Jan
Jan on 18 Jan 2018
The old problem of global variables.
global q;
...
CP{q} = C_part;
Now it seems like your q is not a scalar. It is impossible to find the reason for this, because by declaring it as global, the value can be set from anywhere.
It is impossible to fix this code for you, because you did not show the part, where q is defined. I recommend to omit the global and use a standard variable:
q = 1;
If you need it in cluster_rows2(), provide it as input argument.
It looks strange that
CP{q}=C_part;
appears in the subfunction and the mainfunction also. Defining CP inside cluster_rows2() is meaningless, because this variable is not returned to the caller.
  5 Comments
Jan
Jan on 19 Jan 2018
What is the purpose of the square brackets in this code:
All_EP=[cat(1, EP{:})]
Where are the "E_part"s coming from? I do not find this in your code.
? [] concatenates the included elements to a matrix, but here you provide one element only. So omit the useless brackets:
All_EP = cat(1, EP{:});
Now you ask for "vertically concatenate all E_part with respect to t and r". I do not know what "respect to t and r" means here. But "cat(1, EP{:})" looks good for a vertical concatenation. What is the problem with this command?
Prabha Kumaresan
Prabha Kumaresan on 19 Jan 2018
sorry it was my mistake its not E_part its C_part I want to vertically concatenate with respect to m=[10 20 30 40 50] n=[60 70 80 90 100] which means all C_part of (10,60) together (10,70),(10,80),(10,90),(10,100) followed by (20,60),(20,70),(20,80),(20,90),(20,100),.......

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More Answers (1)

Torsten
Torsten on 18 Jan 2018
Initialize q to a value (e.g. 1) at the beginning of your code.
Best wishes
Torsten

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