How do I combine two cell arrays into one cell array?

>> Q{1}
ans =
'4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003535'
'4400002970000003536'
'4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003532'
'4400002970000003537'
>> Q{2}
ans =
'4400002890000146180'
'4400002890000146180'
'4400002970000000026'
I want to get a new cell:
'4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003535'
'4400002970000003536'
'4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003532'
'4400002970000003537'
'4400002890000146180'
'4400002890000146180'
'4400002970000000026'
I don't want to use the function cell2mat, because it is too slow for my program. Do you have any good ideas?

 Akzeptierte Antwort

Star Strider
Star Strider am 13 Okt. 2014
To get the result cell array ‘R’, for instance, vertically concatanate ‘Q{1}’ and ‘Q{2}’:
Q{1} = ['4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003535'
'4400002970000003536'
'4400002970000003533'
'4400002970000003532'
'4400002970000003537'];
Q{2} = ['4400002890000146180'
'4400002890000146180'
'4400002970000000026'];
R = {[Q{1}; Q{2}]};
celldisp(R) % Display Result

8 Kommentare

If i want to combine them from Q{1}to Q{100},i should use a loop ?or you have some good idea,thank you very much
Iain
Iain am 13 Okt. 2014
You could try: {[Q{:}]}
I try to use this,but i doesn't work ,Error using horzcat Dimensions of matrices being concatenated are not consistent.
Thank you Iain!
Simply doing:
R = Q{:};
also works.
Adam
Adam am 13 Okt. 2014
Bearbeitet: Adam am 13 Okt. 2014
R = vertcat(Q{:})
seems to work.
@pengcheng — It is a vertical condatanation, not a horizontal concatanation. The semicolon ; between ‘Q{1}’ and ‘Q{2}’ in my original code is important. It puts ‘Q{1}’ on top of ‘Q{2}’, not beside it, equivalent to:
R = {[Q{1}
Q{2}]};
Adam
Adam am 13 Okt. 2014
I assume he is referring to the more generic answer of {[Q{:}]} which does horizontal concatenation by default.
It is one of the many cases where someone asks a question using a neat example then when given a correct answer for that it turns out they actually want to solve the general case that wasn't mentioned in the example!!
@Adam — The vertcat function is definitely the way to go!
You’re certainly correct on your observation — in more Questions that I care to count, the instance in the question may have little bearing on actual issue!

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Weitere Antworten (2)

Josep Llobet
Josep Llobet am 1 Okt. 2021
Maybe this little function could be useful:
function [celltot] = juntar_cells(cell1, cell2)
celltot = cell1;
for ll_cell2 = 1:length(cell2)
celltot{end + 1} = cell2{ll_cell2};
end
end

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