Column to row vector

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Malachi Boodoo-Joseph
Malachi Boodoo-Joseph on 8 Nov 2020
Commented: DGM on 31 Aug 2025 at 10:59
How to extract and convert a column to a row vector so say I want to extract 5;10;9;25 how do I convert that to a row when I extract it?

Answers (2)

Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza on 8 Nov 2020
You can use transpose()
x = [5;10;9;25];
y = x.'; % or y = transpose(x)
  2 Comments
Babak
Babak on 20 Aug 2025 at 16:34
Isn't there a function that could do this? Basically keep a row as a row and convert a column vector into a row. Ensuring if x was a row it wouldn't take the `transpose`
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 20 Aug 2025 at 18:30
Edited: Stephen23 on 31 Aug 2025 at 4:55
@Babak here are two approaches that work regardless of the input size:
x = [5;10;9;25]
x = 4×1
5 10 9 25
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y = reshape(x,1,[]) % more efficient
y = 1×4
5 10 9 25
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y = x(:).' % less writing
y = 1×4
5 10 9 25
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Babak
Babak on 20 Aug 2025 at 16:38
Edited: DGM on 31 Aug 2025 at 10:28
x = [5;10;9;25]; % a column vector
reshape(x, 1, length(x)) % a row vector
ans = 1×4
5 10 9 25
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y = [5 10 9 25]; % a row vector
reshape(y, 1, length(y)) % still a row vector
ans = 1×4
5 10 9 25
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% create an anonymous function to do the job
f = @(x)reshape(x,1, length(x));
% when applied to the previous vectors, the results are as before
f(x)
ans = 1×4
5 10 9 25
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f(y) % and another
ans = 1×4
5 10 9 25
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  1 Comment
DGM
DGM on 31 Aug 2025 at 10:59
Edited to run the code for demonstration purposes; added comments.
Note that there are few cases where length() can be used incautiously without inviting problems. Unless you're making sure that the input is strictly a vector, you're waiting on a confusing error about the wrong number of elements.
If you want to explicitly specify the output size, use numel() instead of length(). The usefulness of the output may be zilch for a reshaped matrix, but at least it avoids the confusing error and returns a vector. Specifying a slack dimension as in @Stephen23's example does the same, and is more succinct.
x = [1 2 3 4].'; % a column vector or row vector
y = reshape(x,1,[]) % to a row vector
y = 1×4
1 2 3 4
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x = [1 3 5; 2 4 6]; % oops we didn't constrain the input dimensionality!
y = reshape(x,1,numel(x)) % but at least we got a vector without error
y = 1×6
1 2 3 4 5 6
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y = reshape(x,1,[]) % same thing, more succinct, easier to read/remember
y = 1×6
1 2 3 4 5 6
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y = reshape(x,1,length(x)) % you're trying to fit 6 elements in a 1x3 vector
Error using reshape
Number of elements must not change. Use [] as one of the size inputs to automatically calculate the appropriate size for that dimension.

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