Index with min command

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SAZZAD HOSSAIN
SAZZAD HOSSAIN on 18 Nov 2012
Hi
I am working with the minimums calculated from two arrays in the following way -
NE = 100;
t = linspace(0,2,2*NE);
T = linspace(0,1,2*NE);
for ii = 1:NE
[val,index] = min(abs(t-T(ii)))
end
now i understand the value of "val", but i cannot figure out how the values for "index" are coming out. For my work the value of index is very important. I would really appreciate if someone help me figure it out.
Thanks
Hossain
  2 Comments
Matt J
Matt J on 18 Nov 2012
What doesn't make sense about the behavior you're seeing?
SAZZAD HOSSAIN
SAZZAD HOSSAIN on 18 Nov 2012
for each loop there is a min value. but i dont understad how the index assigned to the value is related to "t" or "T".

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Answers (2)

Azzi Abdelmalek
Azzi Abdelmalek on 18 Nov 2012
Edited: Azzi Abdelmalek on 18 Nov 2012
NE = 100;
t = linspace(0,2,2*NE);
T = linspace(0,1,2*NE);
val=[];
index=[];
for ii = 1:NE
[val1,index1] = min(abs(t-T(ii)))
val=[val val1];
index=[index index1];
end
index is the position of the min value in the vector t
  3 Comments
Azzi Abdelmalek
Azzi Abdelmalek on 18 Nov 2012
Edited: Azzi Abdelmalek on 18 Nov 2012
It's clear min value don't belong to t, it's the position of the value of t making t-T(ii) minimal. And I did'nt say it's a minimal value of t
Jan
Jan on 19 Nov 2012
Edited: Jan on 19 Nov 2012
Ok, then I confuse "index is the position of the min value in the vector t" with "...of the vector t". My English is not firm.
The problem of the OP is exactly, that the meaning of the index is not clear. So this point should be very clear, although it is almost trivial.

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Jan
Jan on 18 Nov 2012
At first you create a temporary vector:
v = abs(t-T(ii));
Then you find its minimum value and the corresponding index:
[val, index] = min(v)
such that v(index) has the value val.

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