Why does size(X, 100) return 1?

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Justin Montanaro
Justin Montanaro on 29 Apr 2020
Commented: Stephen23 on 29 Apr 2020
Here is a code snippet
X = data(:, 1:2); % X is a 2 x 3 matrix for example
disp(size(X, 1)); % displays 2
disp(size(X, 2)); % displays 3
disp(size(X, 5)); % displays 1
disp(size(X, 100)); % displays 1
Why does anything that exceeds the matrix bounds return a 1? Thanks.

Accepted Answer

John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 29 Apr 2020
Edited: John D'Errico on 29 Apr 2020
Because that is how MATLAB works. Any array of finite size is treated as one with infinitely many trailing dimensions of size 1.
So an array of size 2x2 is the same as an array of size 2x2x1. The 2x2 array is simply the first plane of an equivalent multidimensional array. That makes some sense, since if you asked how many 2x2 arrays you had, there is exactly 1 of them. In turn, that 2x2 array is treated as a 2x2x1x1x1x1x1x... array.
This is consistent with how vectors work, and how they always did work, even before MATLAB had multidimensional arrays (a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away.) That is, a column vector of length n has always been treated as effectively an nx1 array. Note the trailing unit dimension.
Could they have done it differently? Perhaps make size return a NaN if you look too far? I suppose so, but is it a problem as they did it? Size does what it is designed to do, and that is all that matters. The help docs for size do state this behavior.
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Stephen23
Stephen23 on 29 Apr 2020
"Because that is how Mathematics works..."

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