Pre-allocate memory to zeros or NaN?

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I'm dealing with large matrix size in a for loop and I currently pre-allocate the matrix to zeros before the for loop, however, this causes me some problems with some math equations I must apply on the matrix. So my question is, does pre-allocating the memory to a NaN matrix recommended? or does MATLAB not like that?
Update for clarification:
Example:
a=zeros(5,5)
for j=1:4:5
v=j;
a(:,j)=v+10;
end
So the problem is if I want to do any calculation with the rows, I will end up including rows 2,3,4 which are now 0, this messes up with my calculations. So I want to explore the option of creating a NaN matrix and using 'omitnan' in my calculations.
  2 Comments
KSSV
KSSV on 5 Aug 2021
It depends on what numbers you are going to fill into matrix. If you fill with zeros what problem it is causing? First what for the loop is?
Lina Koronfel
Lina Koronfel on 5 Aug 2021
The numbers are double precision. The problem is that I'm skipping some trials, so here is a quick example:
a=zeros(5,5)
for j=1:4:5
v=j;
a(:,j)=v+10;
end
So the problem is if I want to do any calculation with the rows, I will end up including rows 2,3,4 which are now 0, this messes up with my calculations. I know there is an option of skiiping every forth row but I don't want to do that because The code is pretty big and I would have to go to every line and change it. So I want to explore the option of creating a NaN matrix and using 'omitnan' in my calculations.
Please let me know if this is recommended, and if there is any harm if using NaN for pre-allocation. Thank you

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Accepted Answer

Chunru
Chunru on 5 Aug 2021
Edited: Chunru on 5 Aug 2021
If you have skipped some data and want to omit those data later on, then the preallocation with nan is a better options. Especially if you want to use some matlab built in functions (such as mean, std), options are available to omit nans. NaN is the part of IEEE arithmetic representation, it should not have side effect on preallocatio. The only side-effect is when performing calculation (NaN+2=Nan), but you are prepared to ignore NaNs.

More Answers (1)

Sulaymon Eshkabilov
Sulaymon Eshkabilov on 5 Aug 2021
Of course, you can do memory allocation with nan() as well alike zeros(), e.g.:
k=10; m=15;
M = nan(k, m);
...

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