How to create an empty struc with fields of a given struct?

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I have a struct A with many fields:
A.a
A.b
...
A.z
Now I want to create a struct B, with the same fields:
B.a
B.b
...
B.z
With
B=struct(A)
B has also the same size as A, and all values of A are also included. But I want to have an empty struct with 0x1 dimension.
Background: in a loop I want to sort out some entries of A, that fit a certain criteria and write it into B. If I do
B=struct([])
B(n)=A(m)
then the structs do not match. Therefore I want to create B in advance and then assign it.
  1 Kommentar
Sara
Sara am 18 Mär. 2014
A is not an array, so I don't see how you can do B(n)=A(m). Do you mean you want to do something like: 1) B.f = A.a, or 2) B.a(n) = A.b(m)?

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Akzeptierte Antwort

James Tursa
James Tursa am 18 Mär. 2014
Bearbeitet: James Tursa am 18 Mär. 2014
One way, which will give you a 0x0 struct, is:
f = fieldnames(A)';
f{2,1} = {};
B = struct(f{:});
Method basically obtained from this FEX submission by David Young:
CAUTION: From the description you give, it sounds like you will be dynamically increasing the size of B inside a loop. That will cause repeated copying that will slow down performance. If the number of elements of B turns out to be small, then no big deal. But if the number of elements of B turns out to be large, then you might experience a performance drag. In that case it might make sense to preallocate a size for B at the start (instead of 0x0) that is large enough to hold all the results, and then lop off the tail that you don't need after the loop is done.

Weitere Antworten (3)

Stephen23
Stephen23 am 23 Mai 2019
Bearbeitet: Stephen23 am 23 Mai 2019
The simplest and most efficient solution to the question posed is to just use indexing, e.g.:
>> A(1).x = 1;
>> A(1).y = 2;
>> A(2).x = 3;
>> A(2).y = 4
A =
1x2 struct array with fields:
x
y
>> B = A([])
B =
0x0 struct array with fields:
x
y
Using indexing we can also trivially obtain exactly the size requested in the original question:
>> B = A([],1)
B =
0x1 struct array with fields:
x
y
  3 Kommentare
Emily T. Griffiths
Emily T. Griffiths am 14 Okt. 2021
Love the simplicity of this. Thanks!

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Ben Oeveren
Ben Oeveren am 17 Aug. 2018
Bearbeitet: Ben Oeveren am 17 Aug. 2018
I often use
fields = {'field1','field2','field2'}
c = cell(length(fields),1);
s = cell2struct(c,fields);
  2 Kommentare
Donghoon Yeo
Donghoon Yeo am 23 Mai 2019
Bearbeitet: Donghoon Yeo am 23 Mai 2019
Easy and perfectly works for me
KAE
KAE am 20 Dez. 2019
I think the line should be
fields = {'field1','field2','field3'}
So you get
s =
struct with fields:
field1: []
field2: []
field3: []

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Binxu
Binxu am 22 Apr. 2020
Actually I just fond a super simple way similar to Stephen Cobeldick 's answer
It seems to me that repmat is a super useful tool for initializing many data structure.
summary =
struct with fields:
anova_F: 1.0172
anova_p: 0.4279
anova_F_bsl: 1.0156
anova_p_bsl: 0.4335
t: 8.7424
t_p: 5.9749e-18
t_CI: [2×1 double]
stats = repmat(summary,0,0);
>> repmat(summary,0,0)
ans =
0×0 empty struct array with fields:
anova_F
anova_p
anova_F_bsl
anova_p_bsl
t
t_p
t_CI

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