Using bsxfun instead of arrayfun for repeating function

조회 수: 3 (최근 30일)
JJP van den Berg
JJP van den Berg 2016년 11월 29일
댓글: JJP van den Berg 2016년 11월 29일
I am using a function that produces row vectors based on the RNG. Now I would like to repeat that function and put the rows into a matrix. I am currently using arrayfun, but that seems inneficient to me. Is there a way to use bsxfun to do this?(I included an example code to show what I mean)
Jos van den Berg
u=4;
v=5;
h=6;
cell2mat(arrayfun(@(i) myfun(v,u,h) , 1:3, 'UniformOutput', false )')
function y = myfun(v,u,h)
y = [u*rand,v*rand,h*rand];
end

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Guillaume
Guillaume 2016년 11월 29일
bsxfun serves a completely different purpose to arrayfun. One rarely replaces the other. Note that as of R2016b, for most operations, bsxfun is not needed anymore.
In your particular example, the whole output could be obtained simply with:
y = [u * rand(3, 1), v * rand(3, 1), h * rand(3, 1)];
or if you really wanted to use bsxfun:
y = bsxfun(@times, [u, v, h], rand(3, 3));
and as said, as of R2016b, the bsxfun can be replaced by implicit expansion:
y = [u, v, h] .* rand(3, 3);
  댓글 수: 3
Guillaume
Guillaume 2016년 11월 29일
bsxfun is only useful, if your unknown function takes exactly two inputs (scalar, vectors, or matrices) and returns one input. It's certainly not designed to repeatedly call a function.
For that, indeed arrayfun or a loop is the way to go. I tend to prefer arrayfun as it makes it clear what is being repeated and what it is repeated over, but an explicit loop can actually be faster as it avoids the cost of calling an anonymous function.
JJP van den Berg
JJP van den Berg 2016년 11월 29일
Not really sure how I got to this misconception of bsxfun. Thanks a lot for the explanation!

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