Clear Filters
Clear Filters

How can I quickly compare sizes of two Matrices?

75 views (last 30 days)
I have two matrices of different sizes I'd like to compare before performing calculations with them - basically, I want to make sure their number of columns match. Now, as far as I can tell, I would have to use size() on both and compare their second value of the resulting vector, but since I can't index matrices that are temporary, I have to save the size vectors to a new variable, and then compare the indexed numbers. Is there a way to do it not only faster, but also without having to create a new variable?

Accepted Answer

Stephen23
Stephen23 on 23 May 2017
Edited: Stephen23 on 23 May 2017
Use size's optional second input to pick which dimension you want to check, e.g. to check if arrays A and B have the same number of columns:
size(A,2)==size(B,2)

More Answers (2)

KSSV
KSSV on 23 May 2017
doc isequal..
  1 Comment
Jakob Gillinger
Jakob Gillinger on 23 May 2017
That's not what I'm looking for. The only thing I need to check is whether the two matrices have the same number of columns, everything can and will be different.

Sign in to comment.


Matthew Heberger
Matthew Heberger on 29 Dec 2022
Here is a good way to check that matrices A and B have the same size across all dimensions:
isequal(size(A), size(B))
This will return true if the matrices have the same size, and false if they have a different size. You can wrap it in an assert command if you want to raise an error and stop execution of the script when the two matrices are not the same size:
assert(isequal(size(A), size(B)))
Here is an example:
A = zeros(3, 1, 4);
B = zeros(3, 1, 4);
assert(isequal(size(A), size(B)))
% script will continue running after this...
This section will raise an error:
A = zeros(3, 1, 4);
B = zeros(3, 1);
assert(isequal(size(A), size(B)))
Error using assert
Assertion failed.

Categories

Find more on Operators and Elementary Operations in Help Center and File Exchange

Tags

Products

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!