How to calculate diagonal for NxN matrix ?

4 views (last 30 days)
Hi
I'm trying to calculate the sum diagonal from a square matrix (size NxN). For example: A = [1 2 3 4; 5 6 7 8; 9 0 1 2; 3 4 5 6]; %square matrix Then if you would rotate the matrix by 45 degrees and take sum of the rotated martix. Like: imrotate(A,45)
What I'm trying to do is to find the diagonal sum of A. Therefore I want to construct a vector of size 1x(N+2) or for this A = [1 2 3 4; 5 6 7 8; 9 0 1 2; 3 4 5 6] it would be an vector of size 1x6.
Could you please help me? :)
  4 Comments
Jan
Jan on 18 Sep 2012
Do you mean 90 deg instead of 45 deg?
Honglei Chen
Honglei Chen on 18 Sep 2012
I don't quite get it. Are you saying you want the sum along each diagonal? But if so, why is the resulting vector 1x(N+2)? Shouldn't it be 1x(2*N-1)? Could you post the desired answer for your sample matrix?

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Thomas
Thomas on 18 Sep 2012
YOu could use
sum(diag(A))
this is essentially
trace(A)
What does rotation by 45 mean
  2 Comments
Lily
Lily on 18 Sep 2012
Edited: Lily on 18 Sep 2012
Like if I would imrotate(A,45)
Thomas
Thomas on 18 Sep 2012
IF you use imrotate(A,45) you get a 9x9 matrix and not the 4x4 matrix you started with..

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (1)

Wayne King
Wayne King on 18 Sep 2012
Edited: Wayne King on 18 Sep 2012
Just use trace()
trace(A)
  2 Comments
Lily
Lily on 18 Sep 2012
Thx for the answer, but f I use trace(A) I only get the diagonal of the matrix A.
Wayne King
Wayne King on 18 Sep 2012
It's easy to say in general what an NxN matrix looks like for a multiple of 90 degrees, but what does it look like for 45? For N>3, I'm not sure what that looks like without padding the matrix with zeros like imrotate

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Operating on Diagonal Matrices in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!