Problem with array filling

11 views (last 30 days)
thomas82
thomas82 on 17 Aug 2012
Hi,
I need to do this:
for i=0.1:0.1:360
j(i*10)=2;
end
but I obtain this error message:
??? Attempted to access j(3); index must be a positive integer or
logical.
Could you help me?
Thanks in advance
Thomas

Accepted Answer

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 17 Aug 2012
Besides the others all saying to cast your index to integer like this:
for k = 0.1 : 0.1 : 360
jArray1(int32(k * 10)) = int32(2);
end
I also want to say that it's usually recommended not to use i and j (though you can) as variable names since they also are the imaginary variable. Hence my new names in the corrected code above.
Also, there are some other ways that are more probably efficient and "MATLAB-ish" to do what you did, such as the methods below:
jArray2 = 2 * ones(1, 3600, 'int32');
jArray3(1 : 3600) = int32(2);

More Answers (4)

Oleg Komarov
Oleg Komarov on 17 Aug 2012
Edited: Oleg Komarov on 17 Aug 2012

Matt Fig
Matt Fig on 17 Aug 2012
Edited: Matt Fig on 17 Aug 2012
The reason you get this error is because of floating point arithmetic.
Look closely:
isequal((0.1:0.1:1)*10,1:10) % NO!
Here is the closer look:
x = (0.1:0.1:1)*10;
x==(1:10) % Notice the third return is a zero, here's why:
fprintf('%.16f\n%.16f\n',x(3),3) % Print out and compare...

Azzi Abdelmalek
Azzi Abdelmalek on 17 Aug 2012
Edited: Azzi Abdelmalek on 17 Aug 2012
in matlab index must be a real strict positiv integer
it does'nt accept x(0) or x(-1)
h=zeros(360*10/0.1,1)
for j=0.1:0.1:360
ind=int16(j*10) % convert to integer, for biger number, u can use int32, int64
h(ind)=2;
end

thomas82
thomas82 on 18 Aug 2012
Thank you for your answers, now I understood and resolved! Thomas

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