How many consecutive ones?
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Zhuoyi Chen
on 9 Nov 2017
Commented: Image Analyst
on 22 Feb 2019
Write a function ConsecutiveOnes to detect in a logical row array of any length the locations the length of the ones sequences. If there is a single one, the location of the one should be indicated with a length of one. For example, for the input array [0 0 1 1 0 0 1] the function ConsecutiveOnes produces the output [0 0 2 0 0 0 1]; for the input array [0,0,1,1,0,0,0,1,1,1] the function ConsecutiveOnes produces the output [0 0 2 0 0 0 0 3 0 0]
I am trying a recursion function, which should be sth like
for i = 1:a
function indicator = solve(inputArray1(i))
I know this expression is wrong, but I wonder how to display an idea like this.
2 Comments
Jan
on 9 Nov 2017
Edited: Jan
on 9 Nov 2017
I do not understand the intention of these 2 lines of code. A recursive function is possible, but much more complicated then needed.
You got this homework to learn how to solve such problems. Then it would not be useful, if the solution is posted in the forum. Try it with a loop.
Accepted Answer
Andrei Bobrov
on 9 Nov 2017
Edited: Andrei Bobrov
on 9 Nov 2017
out = double(diff([~A(1);A(:)]) == 1);
v = accumarray(cumsum(out).*A(:)+1,1);
out(out == 1) = v(2:end);
or
out = zeros(size(A));
ii = strfind([0,A(:)'],[0 1]);
out(ii) = strfind([A(:)',0],[1 0]) - ii + 1;
5 Comments
More Answers (2)
Jan
on 9 Nov 2017
Edited: Jan
on 9 Nov 2017
I'd start at the end of the vector and store the value. Then run a loop from length(a)-1 to 1. If the corresponding element is 0, the value of c is written to the element on the right and c is set to 0. If it is 1, c is increased by 1. After the loop the last value of c is written to the first element of the output.
a = [0,0,1,1,0,0,0,1,1,1];
c = a(end);
for k = length(a)-1:-1:1
if a(k) == 0
a(k+1) = c;
c = 0;
else
a(k+1) = 0;
c = c + 1;
end
end
a(1) = c;
Or the same with multiplications instead of the IF branches:
a = [0,0,1,1,0,0,0,1,1,1];
c = a(end);
for k = length(a)-1:-1:1
a(k+1) = c * (1 - a(k));
c = a(k) * (c + 1);
end
a(1) = c;
Well, this is ugly. Without good comments, it will take a while until its intention gets clear.
In productive code a vectorized method would be the best idea:
k = find([true, diff(a) ~= 0]); % Indices of changed values
r = zeros(size(a));
r(k) = a(k) .* diff([k, length(a)+1]); % Distance of changes
6 Comments
Jan
on 10 Nov 2017
@Zhuoyi Chen: Flags are thought to call admins or editors to care about contents, which conflict with the terms of use, e.g. if they are offending. You can use a comment to mention, that a solution is working.
@Andrei: Thanks. It is interesting, that your STRFIND solution gets faster, if the input contains less 1s, while the loops do not profit.
I think, although we have posted solutions of a homework, the overkill of 6 different methods has supported the OP to learn something new about Matlab. :-)
Image Analyst
on 10 Nov 2017
Interested in the method I first thought of?
v = [0,0,1,1,0,0,0,1,1,1]
v2 = zeros(size(v)); % Initialize vector of same length.
props = regionprops(logical(v), 'Area', 'PixelIdxList');
for k = 1 : length(props)
v2(props(k).PixelIdxList(1)) = props(k).Area;
end
2 Comments
Alexander Cranney
on 15 Mar 2018
bwconncomp may offer some speed improvements over regionprops. But I didn't know of either of these remarkable functions before seeing this, so thank you!
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