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I have the following problem. I need to compute the permutations of a set; however, the set may contain two elements which are the same and therefore cause repeated permutations. For example:

Given the set [ 0 0 1 2 ], the permutations include these possibilities:

 1     2     0     0
 1     2     0     0

However, I would like to avoid identical permutations such as these. In MATLAB I can simply do this:

unique(perms([ 0 0 1 2 ]), 'rows')

But the problem here is efficiency - I am doing this repeatedly in a huge for loop and the sorting required by unique is too slow. So my question is: can I compute unique permutations of this nature directly without having to loop through the result afterwards? I am working in MATLAB but just a general solution would probably be helpful, although something which can be vectorized in MATLAB would probably be ideal!

As far as I can see existing questions do not cover exactly this problem, but apologies if this has been answered before.

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  • What problem are you really trying to solve? Why do you have a loop in which you need to find permutations of different arrays at high speed?
    – nibot
    Oct 28, 2012 at 14:42
  • Good point, perhaps I should have been more specific, although it gets a bit messy. I'm finding ways of corresponding sets of objects between images, although the objects have a class associated with them. I take 5 objects from at a time from set A, and find all the ways of corresponding them to objects in set B. I tackle the class restrictions by finding permutations within each class. This is why there are zeros: they represent an object not being paired to another, which is why I do not want to repeat such permutations.
    – devrobf
    Oct 28, 2012 at 14:55

1 Answer 1

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It would appear this is a regularly occurring problem. Here is a file by John d'Errico (uniqueperms) that seems to tackle it pretty effectively. As an alternative, there is another FEX submission here by Ged Ridgway; you'll have to profile a bit to see which one is faster.

Note that due to the limitations of Matlab's JIT, loops are not accelerated if they call non-builtin functions, so it might be beneficial to copy-paste the contents of these functions (and/or specialize them a bit) inside your loop(s).

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  • Ah that's it, thank you very much! My Googling abilities obviously need practice!
    – devrobf
    Oct 28, 2012 at 21:25

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