Meshgrid function different order
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I have this code:
x = 0:1:5;
y = 0:1:5;
z = 0:1:5;
meshgrid(x, y, z);
[x_a, y_a, z_a] = meshgrid(x, y, z);
Mesh = [x_a(:), y_a(:), z_a(:)];
Mesh =
0 0 0
0 1 0
... ... ...
0 5 0
1 0 0
1 1 0
... ... ...
1 5 0
2 0 0
2 1 0
... ... ...
0 0 1
0 1 1
... ... ...
But I wish Mesh was:
0 0 0
0 0 1
... ... ...
0 0 5
0 1 0
0 1 1
... ... ...
0 1 5
0 2 0
0 2 1
... ... ...
5 5 0
5 5 1
... ... ...
It seems that, with meshgrid function, x and y change first while z is constant, but what I mean is the opposite, x and y are constant first and z change. Is it possible with meshgrid function?
Accepted Answer
More Answers (1)
Guillaume
on 5 Aug 2019
1 vote
Personally, I think meshgrid is an abomination as it doesn't really makes its mind what order the dimensions are in. It iterates over the dimensions in the order [2, 1, 3] (and doesn't do more than 3).
ndgrid on the other hand iterates in a logical order, [1, 2, 3, ...] and works for as many dimensions as you want (or your computer can manage).
So, I'd recommend using ndgrid. With either, you can of course swap the order of the input to get them to iterate in the order you want.
2 Comments
Adam Danz
on 5 Aug 2019
+1 meshgrid has caused so much confusion.
Steven Lord
on 5 Aug 2019
meshgrid predates ndgrid, which I believe was only introduced when N-dimensional (N > 2) arrays were introduced to MATLAB in MATLAB 5.0 (December 1996 according to Wikipedia.)
I believe meshgrid was introduced in MATLAB 4.0 (1994) but there appears to be an older function named meshdom that looks very similar in MATLAB 3.5 (1990). I haven't gone any further back than that.
Of course, all those dates predate the start of my tenure at MathWorks by at least a couple years.
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