3

Given two arrays, say:

A = [1 2  4 5; 
     6 11 3 54];

B = [2 2  6  3; 
     5 12 60 54];

I would like to generate the array:

C = [2 2  6  5; 
     6 12 60 54];

Using built-in MATLAB functions , i.e. in a single line, not in loops. notice that with real data, I'm talking about very large multidimensional arrays.

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  • 6
    As per this meta discussion: Possible duplicate of How to find the maximum of multiple arrays in MATLAB?. The answer is found in the body of the linked question.
    – Dev-iL
    Nov 30, 2015 at 10:14
  • 1
    @Dev-iL I don't think the question linked counts as a duplicate. Yes, it does have max(x,y) in the question body but it is in a completely different context. That question states that this command will return the array containing the maximum value (which is actually incorrect) whereas this question is about finding the element-wise maxima. Someone reading this question and not knowing the answer already, may very well not realise that that one line in the question of the duplicate is infact the answer as there is nothing there to contextualize it.
    – Dan
    Nov 30, 2015 at 13:41
  • 2
    @Dan would min instead of max be an acceptable dupe? We're still talking about an rtfm-able question. Nov 30, 2015 at 14:04
  • @AndrasDeak that is very close. The only difference being that it takes in vectors instead of matrices. Personally I wouldn't mind either way with that question. Agreed regarding RTFM on this one. If there weren't already over-complicated answers here, I would probably have just replied with that as a comment instead of answering to be honest. But the answers provided made me think maybe people don't know about that particular usage of max.
    – Dan
    Nov 30, 2015 at 15:17
  • Another similar question is this one: Find the max between two arrays and then concatenate the cells of the max array.
    – Dev-iL
    Nov 30, 2015 at 16:06

1 Answer 1

18

This is exactly what the max function does by default:

C = max(A,B)

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