Clear Filters
Clear Filters

generate k-ary sequence

6 views (last 30 days)
Bear
Bear on 30 Nov 2014
Edited: Star Strider on 30 Nov 2014
Hey all, I want to thanks the people who helped me on the binary sequences. Now, I am in a difficult position to figure out a k-ary sequence. A k-ary sequence is one in which every element is an integer from 0,1,...,k-1. For example,{2,2,0,1,1,3,3,3,2,3} is a 4-ary sequence. The elements in 4-ary sequence are randomly spotted. Therefore, I want to print out all the possible combinations. I am new to the matlab, could anyone help me to figure out how to code this?
  3 Comments
Bear
Bear on 30 Nov 2014
I want to input k value, and generate all the possible combinations of k-ary sequence. Such as the 4-ary sequence above there, there are total 1 zero, 2 ones, 3 twos and 4 threes. But their spots in the sequence will be randomly. I want to print out the all the unique combinations of 4-ary sequence.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 30 Nov 2014
Do you want to save a combination that does not appear, but that could appear, for example (using 0,1,2,3) you might have a combination of (1,2,3) but you don't have that in the data, or you might have a combination of (3,2,1,1,2,3,3,2) but you don't.
If you're allowing sequences that don't actually occur in the data, how long can these sequences be? Any length from 1 up to the length of the array, or even longer???

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Guillaume
Guillaume on 30 Nov 2014
For reasonably short sequences, use unique and perms (same as for binary sequences):
kseq = [2,2,0,1,1,3,3,3,2,3];
allp = unique(perms(kseq), 'rows')
For long sequences, perms becomes inefficient/unusable. This thread got the code for a more efficient uniqueperms by John D'Errico.

More Answers (1)

Star Strider
Star Strider on 30 Nov 2014
This seems to do what you want:
k = 4;
s = perms([0:k-1]);
  4 Comments
Bear
Bear on 30 Nov 2014
I think you are close to right, but as the 4-ary sequence above there, there are total 1 zero, 2 ones, 3 twos and 4 threes. But their spots in the sequence will be randomly. I want to print out the all the unique combinations of 4-ary sequence.
Star Strider
Star Strider on 30 Nov 2014
Edited: Star Strider on 30 Nov 2014
There may be as many as 4^10 = 1048576 such unique sequences, so get another several reams of paper and a dozen or more ink or toner cartridges first.
I limited my results to 210 to demonstrate that there were no repeats in that number of sequences.

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Numeric Types in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!