2

I am loading a sparse matrix in MATLAB using the command:

A = spconvert(load('mymatrix.txt'));

I know that the dimension of my matrix is 1222 x 1222, but the matrix is loaded as 1220 x 1221. I know that it is impossible for MATLAB to infer the real size of my matrix, when it is saved sparse.

A possible solution for making A the right size, is to include a line in mymatrix.txt with the contents "1222 1222 0". But I have hundreds of matrices, and I do not want to do this in all of them.

How can I make MATLAB change the size of the matrix to a 1222 x 1222?

3 Answers 3

2

I found the following solution to the problem, which is simple and short, but not as elegant as I hoped:

A = spconvert(load('mymatrix.txt'));
if size(A,1) ~= pSize || size(A,2) ~= pSize
    A(pSize,pSize) = 0;
end

where pSize is the preferred size of the matrix. So I load the matrix, and if the dimensions are not as I wanted, I insert a 0-element in the lower right corner.

1

Sorry, this post is more a pair of clarifying questions than it is an answer.

First, is the issue with the 'load' command or with 'spconvert'? As in, if you do

B = load('mymatrix.txt') 

is B the size you expect? If not, then you can use 'textread' or 'fread' to write a function that creates the matrix of the right size before inputting into 'spconvert'.

Second, you say that you are loading several matrices. Is the issue consistent among all the matrices you are loading. As in, does the matrix always end up being two rows less and one column less than you expect?

2
  • The problem is neither with load, or with spconvert. My original matrix, before I saved it, was 1222 x 1222, but when saved as a sparse matrix, some of the elements were of course omitted. Because of this, when I load it again, the dimensions have changed. The matrices have the same problem, but not all the same sizes.
    – utdiscant
    May 5, 2012 at 18:55
  • The matrices are saved in ASCII by both MATLAB, and C++ programs. They are saved in the format of 3 colums, where the first column is row number, the second the column number and the last one is the value of the element.
    – utdiscant
    May 5, 2012 at 20:34
1

I had the same problem, and this is the solution I came across:

nRows = 1222;
nCols = 1222;
A = spconvert(load('mymatrix.txt'));

[i,j,s] = find(A);
A = sparse(i,j,s,nRows,nCols);

It's an adaptation of one of the examples here.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.