Replacing Arrays and Matrices

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Dyuman Joshi
Dyuman Joshi on 7 Sep 2022
Edited: Bruno Luong on 7 Sep 2022
Is it a good idea to overwrite an array with matrix? For example -
y=(1:20);
y=y'*y;
Or over-writing matrix/array with a singular value
y=nnz(y>20);
Or both steps one after the other, in succession?
I tried to find any information related to this, but I was unable to find such. Though, there's a good chance my search query might not have optimal.

Answers (2)

Stephen23
Stephen23 on 7 Sep 2022
Edited: Stephen23 on 7 Sep 2022
"Is it a good idea to overwrite an array with matrix?"
There is no difference: MATLAB does not have a "matrix" class: all numeric arrays are numeric arrays, regardless of their size (scalar, vector, matrix, ND). Ditto for logical, char, cell, etc arrays. They are all stored as a linear list in memory, then only thing that changes is the header information giving the array size (this is also why RESHAPE is very efficient).
The MATLAB documentation does recommend "Create new variables if data type changes — Create a new variable rather than assigning data of a different type to an existing variable. Changing the class or array shape of an existing variable takes extra time to process."
But I do not see anything in the documentation recommending against reusing variable names in general. I doubt that reassigning variable names will be a significant bottle-neck in your code.
  5 Comments
Dyuman Joshi
Dyuman Joshi on 7 Sep 2022
My bad, I should have clarified this earlier. Case at hand -
y=(1:1e4)';
y=y*y';
z=nnz(y>1e4);
%assigning to a new variable
y=nnz(y>1e4);
%overwriting
Does overwriting take time compared to assigning it to a new variable? I think it might depends on the size of array being overwritten?
Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 7 Sep 2022
Edited: Bruno Luong on 7 Sep 2022
"Does overwriting take time compared to assigning it to a new variable? I think it might depends on the size of array being overwritten?"
No. The extra time is for MATLAB to clear the memory of the old variable, which is negligible and does not depend on the sides of either variable.
I already tells you in my answer below "nothing hurts" accepted the programming habit and memory footprint.

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Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 7 Sep 2022
Edited: Bruno Luong on 7 Sep 2022
IMO nothing hurts of using same variable name for different things.
But my experience tell me that is a bad habit of programming. Someone, including you sometime later, who wants to modify the code might get confuse with the homonymous naming.
The good thing in favor of such pratice is that the memory footprint is reduced because you clear out the( old) variable of the worspace.
  1 Comment
Dyuman Joshi
Dyuman Joshi on 7 Sep 2022
Edited: Dyuman Joshi on 7 Sep 2022
That's my first time hearing or rather reading the word - Homonymous!
I appreciate your response!

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