Help to find errors of if loop?
Show older comments
Example Complex: for,if... loop;
clear;clc;
A=[400; 900; 200; 300; 100];
k=[4;1]; % index matrix
c=[11];
e=zeros(0);
for j=0:(length(k)-1);
b(j+1,:) = A(k(j+1,:), :); % call vector from index
if b(j+1,:)>200
c=union(c,b(j+1,:));
elseif (b(j+1,:)+100)>400
e=union(e,b(j+1,:));
end
end
I try to run the simpe above code to understand: if elseif loop.
Explanation of code (for ...end):
-j=0-->k(1,:)=4-->b(4,:)=A(4,:)=300 [get value from matrix A at index 4]
-j=1-->k(2,:)=1-->b(1,:)=A(1,:)=400 [get value from matrix A at index 1]
Finally we will have result matrix b=[300;400]----> GOOD
But for the (if ....elseif ...end), i hope that the result matrix e=[400], but when I run the code matrix e=[] ?????????? Can you help me where the error?
My understanding of all loops:
-j=0-->k(1,:)=4-->b(4,:)=A(4,:)=300
if b(4,:)=300>200 ---> c=[11 300]
elseif b(4,:)=300+100=400>400 : NO--->e=[]
-j=1-->k(2,:)=1-->b(1,:)=A(1,:)=400
if b(1,:)=400>200 ---> c=[11 300 400]
elseif b(1,:)=400+100=500>400: YES --->e=[400]
Finally: e=[400] : as my understanding? (How can i fix the code to get the result as my understanding)
4 Comments
Jan
on 30 Aug 2017
Note that there are no "if loops". Only for and while are loops, while if branches according to a condition.
Inventing an own syntax like
-j=0-->k(1,:)=4-->b(4,:)=A(4,:)=300 [get value from matrix A at index 4]
is not useful for a discussion as long, as you do not define what the symbols mean. "-j=0-->k(1.:)=4" ? It would not be smart, if I guess, what this means. Why is the valid Matlab syntax not sufficient to explain the problem? You can assume that the readers are familiar with it.
Adam
on 30 Aug 2017
For starters j = 0 is not a valid index into an array and
e=zeros(0);
just creates an empty matrix.
@Adam, the j=0 is not a problem as all indexing is done with j+1. Of course, rather than going from 0 to numel(k)-1 and then adding one to all the values for indexing, it would be a lot simpler to just go from 1 to numel(k) and not add anything:
for j = 1:numel(k)
b(j) = A(k(j, :), :);
is a lot simpler.
Accepted Answer
More Answers (0)
Categories
Find more on プログラミング 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!