I think that, what LuisMendo mentiones in his comment is the clue to your understanding problem, but deserves more explanation since it's a Matlab-typical, elegant but obfuscated way of doing things.
Normaly min
operates in one dimension only. E.g. min(Dpatch)
would return the minimum of each column. Or min(Dpatch, [], 2)
the minimum of each row. Now Dpatch(:)
flattens the matrix to a one dimensional array such that min(Dpatch(:))
will return the minimum over all the values in the matrix which is just a number. The same holds of course for max
.
Although there seems to be a n*n by 1*n division here, there really is only a n*n by 1 elementwise divsion. (By the way n*n divided by 1*n is defined as inversion similar to A*pinv(B)
, see help slash
).
Hence, as pointed out by AkiSuihkonen, your line of code just projects the matrix Dpatch
from its range onto the [0, 1]
range.
min(Dpatch(:))