Is there a faster way to run my code?

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Hello ,
i wrote the code bellow . Is there any faster and more efficient way to run this code (not using for-loop for example or something like that):
for count1=1:length(r)
for count2=1:length(C)
distance(count2,:)=abs(r(count1,:)-C(count2,:));
dist(count2)=sum(distance(count2,:),2);
end
[dist_hard index_hard(count1)]=min(dist);
end
The problem here is that when r or C contain many elements the code is slow and i its more than obvious that i dont want that .
Any help would be valuable .

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 23 Sep 2020
[dist_hard, index_hard] = min( pdist2(r, distance, 'cityblock'), [], 2);
Note: the distance measure you are using is the L1-norm, also known as "city block".
  11 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 27 Sep 2020
Does C consist of only values 0 and 1? If so then the distance from r(count1,:) to C(count2,:) is
nnz(r(count1,:) ~= C(count2,:))
and you could vectorize over all C entries as
sum(r(count1,:) ~= C,2)
providing you are using R2016b or later.
If C does consist entirely of 0 and 1, then you can do your entire calculation as
[dist_hard, index_hard] = max(r*C.',[],2);
Note that in the case of ties in the distance, this code will pick the first of them.
Gn Gnk
Gn Gnk on 29 Sep 2020
Thank you so much for your effort !

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More Answers (2)

Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 23 Sep 2020
Edited: Bruno Luong on 23 Sep 2020
Use knnsearch if you have the right toolbox (I don't so the code is untested)
[index_hard, dist_hard] = knnsearch(C,r,'K',1,'Distance','cityblock')

Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 27 Sep 2020
Edited: Bruno Luong on 27 Sep 2020
For binary arrays
r=rand(50,8)>0.5;
C=rand(60,8)>0.5;
[dmin, index_hard] = min(sum(xor(r,permute(C,[3 2 1])),2),[],3);
index_hard'

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