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merge cells into a single one

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Qifan
Qifan am 28 Jul. 2014
Kommentiert: dpb am 28 Jul. 2014
I have a number of cells h={cell1; cell2; cell3;...cell100}, each cell contains one row but multiple columns (1*n, n varies across cells). Now I want a single cell g contain one row and the sum(n) columns. The basic method is g=[h(1) h(2) h(3) ... h(100)]. Since there are so many cells, it is not convenient to type all. Is there any effective way to make this by exploiting the index? Many thanks.
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Qifan
Qifan am 28 Jul. 2014
A simple transpose function works for cell array.

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Antworten (2)

Azzi Abdelmalek
Azzi Abdelmalek am 28 Jul. 2014
If your data looks like
v={1:3 10:20 4 100:105}
out=cell2mat(v)
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Qifan
Qifan am 28 Jul. 2014
Thanks, but actually I have h={1:3; 10:20; 4; 100:105} and I want to have the v you mentioned. The basic way is just too inconvenient to type.

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dpb
dpb am 28 Jul. 2014
Bearbeitet: dpb am 28 Jul. 2014
c={cell2mat(c)};
...h={1:3; 10:20; 4; 100:105}
Well, you didn't say that in the original. But the answer is the same excepting you must transpose c --
c={cell2mat(c.')};
I returned it as a cell, Azzi just left it as the array; your choice of which you want.
  2 Kommentare
Qifan
Qifan am 28 Jul. 2014
The transpose function works, but thanks for the help.
dpb
dpb am 28 Jul. 2014
.' is the transpose function as was pointed out that's what you needed to do once you revealed you had a column array instead of row. The ' operator is the complex conjugate transpose; for the cell array orientation the accidental use of ' instead of .' does no harm as it doesn't operate on the cell content, but it's a poor habit to get into.

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