The role of singleton elements in calls to the zeros function.
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Hello MatLab'rs,
I'm confused by the return of zeros under certain circumstances.
For some vector V, calling zeros will create a length(V) dimensional matrix:
>> V = [ 1:10 ]
V =
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
>> Z = zeros(V); % Z = <10-D double>
In my code I have a selectedDimLengths vector, each element of which can change from a singleton up to about 6 or 7, but often looks something like:
selectedDimLengths =
1 1 1 5 5 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1
>> Z = zeros(selectedDimLengths); % Z = <9-D double>
when I pass this to zeros I lose a couple of dimensions, down to 9 when I expect 13. What role do the singleton elements play here? Why?
Are the trailing singleton elements cropped somehow?
Accepted Answer
More Answers (1)
Iain
on 2 Oct 2014
0 votes
Matlab only really needs to know which dimensions are "nonsingular". - A scalar has infinite dimensions, all with a size of 1. - A vector has infinite dimensions, only one of which has a size other than 1.
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