In old versions of MATLAB, there used to be a good reason to avoid the use of i
and j
as variable names - early versions of the MATLAB JIT were not clever enough to tell whether you were using them as variables or as imaginary units, and would therefore turn off many otherwise possible optimizations.
Your code would therefore get slower just by the very presence of i
and j
as variables, and would speed up if you changed them to something else. That's why, if you read through much MathWorks code, you'll see ii
and jj
used fairly widely as loop indices. For a while, MathWorks might even have unofficially advised people to do that themselves (although they always officially advise people to program for elegance/maintainability rather than to whatever the current JIT does, as it's a moving target each version).
But that's rather a long time ago, and nowadays it's a bit of a "zombie" issue that is really much less important than many people still think, but refuses to die.
In any recent version, it's really a personal preference whether to use i
and j
as variable names or not. If you do a lot of work with complex numbers, you may want to avoid i
and j
as variables, to avoid any small potential risk of confusion (although you may also/instead want to only use 1i
or 1j
for even less confusion, and a little better performance).
On the other hand, in my typical work I never deal with complex numbers, and I find my code more readable if I feel free to use i
and j
as loop indices.
I see a lot of answers here that say It is not recommended... without saying who's doing that recommending. Here's the extent of MathWorks' actual recommendations, from the current release documentation for i
:
Since i is a function, it can be overridden and used as a variable. However, it is best to avoid using i and j for variable names if you intend to use them in complex arithmetic. [...] For speed and improved robustness, you can replace complex i and j by 1i.
i
,j
,k
as the generic loop variable names. – A. Donda Apr 27 '15 at 13:48