When assignment is allowed?
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The question concerns the requirement of the sizes of the assignment between two arrays.
To my great surprise this is allowed
lhs = zeros(3,4,5);
rhs = ones(4,5);
lhs(1,:,:) = rhs;
I would thought the last statement would throw an error
"Unable to perform assignment because the size of the left side is 1-by-4-by-5 and the size of the right side is 4-by-5."
but obviously it's not.
Can someone points me to the official document that explains such assigment is allowed and how?
2 Comments
Paul
on 6 Aug 2023
The documentation on how assignment works is nonexistent as far as I can tell.
Will be interested to see if there is a doc-based answer, or if this is a case of "Matlab knows what you want"
Also works for other dimensions, so the leading unity dimension is not some sort of special case
lhs = zeros(3,4,5);
rhs = ones(3,5);
try
lhs(:,2,:) = rhs;
disp('success');
catch
disp('error');
end
the cyclist
on 6 Aug 2023
This would have taken me by surprise as well. I did not find this behavior in the documentation, but I did find it in this blog post from @Loren Shure. It is in the section "Retaining Array Shape During Assignment".
Accepted Answer
Matt J
on 6 Aug 2023
Edited: Matt J
on 6 Aug 2023
The relevant documentation is at,
Singleton dimensions are ignored when determining if the right and left hand sides have matching dimensions.
x=1:8
x(1:3)=[10;20;30] %assign 3x1 into a 1x3 data region
8 Comments
Rik
on 7 Aug 2023
It really does help for 3D images. The mri.mat example dataset is [row,col,color,page] (even though it is grayscale), but most other places will use [row,col,page,color]. This sytax allow subindexing and swapping conventions with relative easy, without having to use permute or squeeze every second line
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