How to get the longest consecutive values in a column vector and the position at which it starts
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    Meghana Balasubramanian
 on 24 Aug 2019
  
    
    
    
    
    Answered: Benjamin Hezrony
 on 6 Oct 2024
            Hello,
Suppose i have a single column vector A'=[0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1]
I only want the longest consecutive values of 1's and display only that.
I'd really appreciate any help!
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Accepted Answer
  Bruno Luong
      
      
 on 24 Aug 2019
        
      Edited: Bruno Luong
      
      
 on 24 Aug 2019
  
      A=[0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1]'
i=reshape(find(diff([0;A;0])~=0),2,[]);
[lgtmax,jmax]=max(diff(i));
istart=i(1,jmax);
lgtmax % length of the longest sequence of 1s
istart % where it starts
3 Comments
  Bruno Luong
      
      
 on 24 Aug 2019
				
      Edited: Bruno Luong
      
      
 on 24 Aug 2019
  
			The terminologies are mine it doesn't matter for MATLAB syntax.
Actually my code is compact but difficult to understand, even for people who are initiated.
If you want to understand, you can split into multiple small and basic commands to analyze it and read the doc of corresponding command and experiment with your own examples.
[0;A;0]
Pad 0s at the header and trailer of A.
The command
diff([0;A;0])~=0
returns a logical array with TRUE whene there is a transitions (0->1) or (1->0).
And the TRUE positions must come in pairs: alternate in order of 0->1, 1->0, 0->, 1->0, etc ... since I take care to pad the arrays with 0s in both ends.
So by reshaping
i=reshape(... ,2,[]);
I'll get two-row array, the first row contains index positions of 0->1, and the second row of 1->0. You'll need to know about MATLAB major-column storage scheme for array to fully understand such trick.
Therefore the difference of the two columns is the the length of the consecutive 1s in A with this command:
diff(i);
By doing
[lgtmax,jmax]=max(diff(i));
I search for the longest sequence of 1s, and the number of this sequence is in retreived in jmax.
The last command 
istart=i(1,jmax)
just maps back the starting position of this sequence in A (since I pad 0 in the head, it's actually the position of the first 1).
More Answers (2)
  Benjamin Hezrony
 on 6 Oct 2024
        It can also be done in one line:
B = bwareafilt(A,1)
A classic function in segmentation!
https://www.mathworks.com/help/images/ref/bwareafilt.html#d126e42061
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