Octave/Matlab: Adding new elements to a vector

MatlabVectorOctaveElement

Matlab Problem Overview


Having a vector x and I have to add an element (newElem) .

Is there any difference between -

x(end+1) = newElem; 

and

x = [x newElem];

?

Matlab Solutions


Solution 1 - Matlab

x(end+1) = newElem is a bit more robust.

x = [x newElem] will only work if x is a row-vector, if it is a column vector x = [x; newElem] should be used. x(end+1) = newElem, however, works for both row- and column-vectors.

In general though, growing vectors should be avoided. If you do this a lot, it might bring your code down to a crawl. Think about it: growing an array involves allocating new space, copying everything over, adding the new element, and cleaning up the old mess...Quite a waste of time if you knew the correct size beforehand :)

Solution 2 - Matlab

Just to add to @ThijsW's answer, there is a significant speed advantage to the first method over the concatenation method:

big = 1e5;
tic;
x = rand(big,1);
toc

x = zeros(big,1);
tic;
for ii = 1:big
    x(ii) = rand;
end
toc

x = []; 
tic; 
for ii = 1:big
    x(end+1) = rand; 
end; 
toc 

x = []; 
tic; 
for ii = 1:big
    x = [x rand]; 
end; 
toc

   Elapsed time is 0.004611 seconds.
   Elapsed time is 0.016448 seconds.
   Elapsed time is 0.034107 seconds.
   Elapsed time is 12.341434 seconds.

I got these times running in 2012b however when I ran the same code on the same computer in matlab 2010a I get

Elapsed time is 0.003044 seconds.
Elapsed time is 0.009947 seconds.
Elapsed time is 12.013875 seconds.
Elapsed time is 12.165593 seconds.

So I guess the speed advantage only applies to more recent versions of Matlab

Solution 3 - Matlab

As mentioned before, the use of x(end+1) = newElem has the advantage that it allows you to concatenate your vector with a scalar, regardless of whether your vector is transposed or not. Therefore it is more robust for adding scalars.

However, what should not be forgotten is that x = [x newElem] will also work when you try to add multiple elements at once. Furthermore, this generalizes a bit more naturally to the case where you want to concatenate matrices. M = [M M1 M2 M3]


All in all, if you want a solution that allows you to concatenate your existing vector x with newElem that may or may not be a scalar, this should do the trick:

 x(end+(1:numel(newElem)))=newElem

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionURL87View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - MatlabThijsWView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - MatlabDanView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - MatlabDennis JaheruddinView Answer on Stackoverflow