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问题:
I'm trying to elegantly split a vector. For example,
vec = [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]
According to another vector of 0's and 1's of the same length where the 1's indicate where the vector should be split - or rather cut:
cut = [0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0]
Giving us a cell output similar to the following:
[1 2 3] [5 6 7 8] [10]
回答1:
Solution code
You can use cumsum
& accumarray
for an efficient solution -
%// Create ID/labels for use with accumarray later on
id = cumsum(cut)+1
%// Mask to get valid values from cut and vec corresponding to ones in cut
mask = cut==0
%// Finally get the output with accumarray using masked IDs and vec values
out = accumarray(id(mask).',vec(mask).',[],@(x) {x})
Benchmarking
Here are some performance numbers when using a large input on the three most popular approaches listed to solve this problem -
N = 100000; %// Input Datasize
vec = randi(100,1,N); %// Random inputs
cut = randi(2,1,N)-1;
disp('-------------------- With CUMSUM + ACCUMARRAY')
tic
id = cumsum(cut)+1;
mask = cut==0;
out = accumarray(id(mask).',vec(mask).',[],@(x) {x});
toc
disp('-------------------- With FIND + ARRAYFUN')
tic
N = numel(vec);
ind = find(cut);
ind_before = [ind-1 N]; ind_before(ind_before < 1) = 1;
ind_after = [1 ind+1]; ind_after(ind_after > N) = N;
out = arrayfun(@(x,y) vec(x:y), ind_after, ind_before, 'uni', 0);
toc
disp('-------------------- With CUMSUM + ARRAYFUN')
tic
cutsum = cumsum(cut);
cutsum(cut == 1) = NaN; %Don't include the cut indices themselves
sumvals = unique(cutsum); % Find the values to use in indexing vec for the output
sumvals(isnan(sumvals)) = []; %Remove NaN values from sumvals
output = arrayfun(@(val) vec(cutsum == val), sumvals, 'UniformOutput', 0);
toc
Runtimes
-------------------- With CUMSUM + ACCUMARRAY
Elapsed time is 0.068102 seconds.
-------------------- With FIND + ARRAYFUN
Elapsed time is 0.117953 seconds.
-------------------- With CUMSUM + ARRAYFUN
Elapsed time is 12.560973 seconds.
Special case scenario: In cases where you might have runs of 1
's, you need to modify few things as listed next -
%// Mask to get valid values from cut and vec corresponding to ones in cut
mask = cut==0
%// Setup IDs differently this time. The idea is to have successive IDs.
id = cumsum(cut)+1
[~,~,id] = unique(id(mask))
%// Finally get the output with accumarray using masked IDs and vec values
out = accumarray(id(:),vec(mask).',[],@(x) {x})
Sample run with such a case -
>> vec
vec =
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
>> cut
cut =
1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0
>> celldisp(out)
out{1} =
2
3
out{2} =
6
7
8
out{3} =
10
回答2:
For this problem, a handy function is cumsum
, which can create a cumulative sum of the cut array. The code that produces an output cell array is as follows:
vec = [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10];
cut = [0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0];
cutsum = cumsum(cut);
cutsum(cut == 1) = NaN; %Don't include the cut indices themselves
sumvals = unique(cutsum); % Find the values to use in indexing vec for the output
sumvals(isnan(sumvals)) = []; %Remove NaN values from sumvals
output = {};
for i=1:numel(sumvals)
output{i} = vec(cutsum == sumvals(i)); %#ok<SAGROW>
end
As another answer shows, you can use arrayfun
to create a cell array with the results. To apply that here, you'd replace the for
loop (and the initialization of output) with the following line:
output = arrayfun(@(val) vec(cutsum == val), sumvals, 'UniformOutput', 0);
That's nice because it doesn't end up growing the output cell array.
The key feature of this routine is the variable cutsum
, which ends up looking like this:
cutsum =
0 0 0 NaN 1 1 1 1 NaN 2
Then all we need to do is use it to create indices to pull the data out of the original vec
array. We loop from zero to max and pull matching values. Notice that this routine handles some situations that may arise. For instance, it handles 1 values at the very beginning and very end of the cut
array, and it gracefully handles repeated ones in the cut
array without creating empty arrays in the output. This is because of the use of unique
to create the set of values to search for in cutsum
, and the fact that we throw out the NaN values in the sumvals
array.
You could use -1
instead of NaN
as the signal flag for the cut locations to not use, but I like NaN for readability. The -1 value would probably be more efficient, as all you'd have to do is truncate the first element from the sumvals array. It's just my preference to use NaN as a signal flag.
The output of this is a cell array with the results:
output{1} =
1 2 3
output{2} =
5 6 7 8
output{3} =
10
There are some odd conditions we need to handle. Consider the situation:
vec = [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14];
cut = [1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1];
There are repeated 1's in there, as well as a 1 at the beginning and end. This routine properly handles all this without any empty sets:
output{1} =
2 3
output{2} =
6 7 8 9
output{3} =
11 12 13
回答3:
You can do this with a combination of find
and arrayfun
:
vec = [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10];
N = numel(vec);
cut = [0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0];
ind = find(cut);
ind_before = [ind-1 N]; ind_before(ind_before < 1) = 1;
ind_after = [1 ind+1]; ind_after(ind_after > N) = N;
out = arrayfun(@(x,y) vec(x:y), ind_after, ind_before, 'uni', 0);
We thus get:
>> celldisp(out)
out{1} =
1 2 3
out{2} =
5 6 7 8
out{3} =
10
So how does this work? Well, the first line defines your input vector, the second line finds how many elements are in this vector and the third line denotes your cut
vector which defines where we need to cut in our vector. Next, we use find
to determine the locations that are non-zero in cut
which correspond to the split points in the vector. If you notice, the split points determine where we need to stop collecting elements and begin collecting elements.
However, we need to account for the beginning of the vector as well as the end. ind_after
tells us the locations of where we need to start collecting values and ind_before
tells us the locations of where we need to stop collecting values. To calculate these starting and ending positions, you simply take the result of find
and add and subtract 1 respectively.
Each corresponding position in ind_after
and ind_before
tell us where we need to start and stop collecting values together. In order to accommodate for the beginning of the vector, ind_after
needs to have the index of 1 inserted at the beginning because index 1 is where we should start collecting values at the beginning. Similarly, N
needs to be inserted at the end of ind_before
because this is where we need to stop collecting values at the end of the array.
Now for ind_after
and ind_before
, there is a degenerate case where the cut point may be at the end or beginning of the vector. If this is the case, then subtracting or adding by 1 will generate a start and stopping position that's out of bounds. We check for this in the 4th and 5th line of code and simply set these to 1 or N
depending on whether we're at the beginning or end of the array.
The last line of code uses arrayfun
and iterates through each pair of ind_after
and ind_before
to slice into our vector. Each result is placed into a cell array, and our output follows.
We can check for the degenerate case by placing a 1 at the beginning and end of cut
and some values in between:
vec = [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10];
cut = [1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1];
Using this example and the above code, we get:
>> celldisp(out)
out{1} =
1
out{2} =
2 3
out{3} =
5 6 7
out{4} =
9
out{5} =
10
回答4:
Yet another way, but this time without any loops or accumulating at all...
lengths = diff(find([1 cut 1])) - 1; % assuming a row vector
lengths = lengths(lengths > 0);
data = vec(~cut);
result = mat2cell(data, 1, lengths); % also assuming a row vector
The diff(find(...))
construct gives us the distance from each marker to the next - we append boundary markers with [1 cut 1]
to catch any runs of zeros which touch the ends. Each length is inclusive of its marker, though, so we subtract 1 to account for that, and remove any which just cover consecutive markers, so that we won't get any undesired empty cells in the output.
For the data, we mask out any elements corresponding to markers, so we just have the valid parts we want to partition up. Finally, with the data ready to split and the lengths into which to split it, that's precisely what mat2cell
is for.
Also, using @Divakar's benchmark code;
-------------------- With CUMSUM + ACCUMARRAY
Elapsed time is 0.272810 seconds.
-------------------- With FIND + ARRAYFUN
Elapsed time is 0.436276 seconds.
-------------------- With CUMSUM + ARRAYFUN
Elapsed time is 17.112259 seconds.
-------------------- With mat2cell
Elapsed time is 0.084207 seconds.
...just sayin' ;)
回答5:
Here's what you need:
function spl = Splitting(vec,cut)
n=1;
j=1;
for i=1:1:length(b)
if cut(i)==0
spl{n}(j)=vec(i);
j=j+1;
else
n=n+1;
j=1;
end
end
end
Despite how simple my method is, it's in 2nd place for performance:
-------------------- With CUMSUM + ACCUMARRAY
Elapsed time is 0.264428 seconds.
-------------------- With FIND + ARRAYFUN
Elapsed time is 0.407963 seconds.
-------------------- With CUMSUM + ARRAYFUN
Elapsed time is 18.337940 seconds.
-------------------- SIMPLE
Elapsed time is 0.271942 seconds.
回答6:
Unfortunately there is no 'inverse concatenate' in MATLAB. If you wish to solve a question like this you can try the below code. It will give you what you looking for in the case where you have two split point to produce three vectors at the end. If you want more splits you will need to modify the code after the loop.
The results are in n vector form. To make them into cells, use num2cell on the results.
pos_of_one = 0;
% The loop finds the split points and puts their positions into a vector.
for kk = 1 : length(cut)
if cut(1,kk) == 1
pos_of_one = pos_of_one + 1;
A(1,one_pos) = kk;
end
end
F = vec(1 : A(1,1) - 1);
G = vec(A(1,1) + 1 : A(1,2) - 1);
H = vec(A(1,2) + 1 : end);