The find
function in MATLAB returns indices where the given logical argument evaluates true.
Thus I'm wondering, why are the returned indices of type double
and not uint32
or uint64
like the biggest index into a matrix could be?
Another strange thing which might be connected to that here is, that running
[~,max_num_of_elem] = computer
returns the maximal number of elements allowed for a matrix in the variable max_num_of_elem
which is also of type double
.
find
can return indices and values. I assume you are asking about the data type of the indices, not the values.double
is Matlab's native type. Almost everything uses it and returns it. This was a design choice and in many cases make it a lot easier as one can directly use the values returned in equations without having to convert them. The only issue is thatfind
likely won't work for for matrices with more than2^53
elements.2^48 -1
. That is still way more than anything you'll ever need, as it amounts to a vector of 256 tera one-byte elements ((2^48-1)/2^40 = 256) or adouble
vector of size 32TB (terabytes as in 1024 GB!). Keep in mind that on Windows, that is even larger than the memory limit allowed by the OS: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa366778.aspx . So I dont see the problem here :)find
then. I was simply quoting the largest double integer before they start not all having exact floating-point representations.