A compact way to replace zeros with Inf in a matrix

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Would you be so nice to suggest me a more compact way to replace zeros with Inf in the following matrix? (maybe with just one line of code?)
% Input
A = [0 3 2 5 6;
1 1 4 3 2;
9 0 8 1 1;
5 9 8 2 0;
3 1 7 6 9];
% Replace zeros with Inf
[row,col] = ind2sub(size(A),find(A==0));
for i = 1 : length(row)
A(row(i),col(i))=Inf;
end
% Output
A
A = 5×5
Inf 3 2 5 6 1 1 4 3 2 9 Inf 8 1 1 5 9 8 2 Inf 3 1 7 6 9

Accepted Answer

J. Alex Lee
J. Alex Lee on 16 Oct 2023
Edited: J. Alex Lee on 16 Oct 2023
You can implicitly index "linearly" for any arrays - it will do all the ind2sub and sub2ind in the background:
% Input
A = [0 3 2 5 6;
1 1 4 3 2;
9 0 8 1 1;
5 9 8 2 0;
3 1 7 6 9];
B = A;
% Replace zeros with Inf
[row,col] = ind2sub(size(A),find(A==0));
for i = 1 : 3
A(row(i),col(i))=Inf;
end
% Output
A
A = 5×5
Inf 3 2 5 6 1 1 4 3 2 9 Inf 8 1 1 5 9 8 2 Inf 3 1 7 6 9
B(B==0) = Inf
B = 5×5
Inf 3 2 5 6 1 1 4 3 2 9 Inf 8 1 1 5 9 8 2 Inf 3 1 7 6 9
isequal(A,B)
ans = logical
1

More Answers (4)

Les Beckham
Les Beckham on 16 Oct 2023
Edited: Les Beckham on 16 Oct 2023
If you want to retain the non-zero elements of A and replace the zeros with Inf, then this is how I would suggest that you do that.
% Input
A = [0 3 2 5 6;
1 1 4 3 2;
9 0 8 1 1;
5 9 8 2 0;
3 1 7 6 9];
A(A==0) = Inf
A = 5×5
Inf 3 2 5 6 1 1 4 3 2 9 Inf 8 1 1 5 9 8 2 Inf 3 1 7 6 9
Note that your loop doesn't do this, it creates a matrix with Inf in the positions of the zeros in A and zero everywhere else. If that is really what you want then you could do that like this.
A = [0 3 2 5 6;
1 1 4 3 2;
9 0 8 1 1;
5 9 8 2 0;
3 1 7 6 9];
B = zeros(size(A));
B(A==0) = Inf
B = 5×5
Inf 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Inf 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Inf 0 0 0 0 0
  3 Comments
Les Beckham
Les Beckham on 16 Oct 2023
Edited: Les Beckham on 16 Oct 2023
You are quite welcome.
If you are just getting started with Matlab, I would highly recommend that you take a couple of hours to go through the free online tutorial: Matlab Onramp

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Matt J
Matt J on 16 Oct 2023
Allso just for fun.
A = [0 3 2 5 6;
1 1 4 3 2;
9 0 8 1 1;
5 9 8 2 0;
3 1 7 6 9];
A=A+1./(A~=0)-1
A = 5×5
Inf 3 2 5 6 1 1 4 3 2 9 Inf 8 1 1 5 9 8 2 Inf 3 1 7 6 9

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 23 Oct 2023
A = [0 3 2 5 6;
1 1 4 3 2;
9 0 8 1 1;
5 9 8 2 0;
3 1 7 6 9];
A(~A) = inf
A = 5×5
Inf 3 2 5 6 1 1 4 3 2 9 Inf 8 1 1 5 9 8 2 Inf 3 1 7 6 9
  2 Comments
J. Alex Lee
J. Alex Lee on 23 Oct 2023
by the way, on huge matrices this is actually faster than testing for zero.

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Alexander
Alexander on 16 Oct 2023
Only for fun. My maybe a bit old-fashoned approach would be:
B=1./A;
B(B==Inf)=0;
C=1./B
  6 Comments
Alexander
Alexander on 22 Oct 2023
Thanks @Stephen23 for the advice and yes, there are precision errors. But I think it depends on the problem you have to solve whether these are significant or not.
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 23 Oct 2023
"But I think it depends on the problem you have to solve whether these are significant or not."
I can't think of many problems where a more complex, slower, obfuscated approach with precision errors would be preferred over the simpler, clearer, much more robust approach using indexing. Can you give an example?

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