- 'Format' governs what the output looks like
- 'InputFormat' governs what the input looks like
Datetime won't recognise some cells
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Matt Smith
am 28 Jun. 2022
Bearbeitet: the cyclist
am 9 Jul. 2022
I have a series of datetimes in the format 'HH:mm:ss.sss'. I am using the following code to convert from string into datetimes.
data.TimeofDay = datetime(data.TimeofDay,'Format','HH:mm:ss.sss')
In the attached .mat file, it contains the data file before and after the command above. For some reason, different values in the column are returned as NaT despite all rows seemingly being in the same format.
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the cyclist
am 28 Jun. 2022
Bearbeitet: the cyclist
am 9 Jul. 2022
Relevant for both your code and some of the answers:
In your case, I believe MATLAB would have correctly inferred your input format, if had you left it unspecified:
datetime(data.TimeofDay)
Akzeptierte Antwort
Cris LaPierre
am 28 Jun. 2022
For miliseconds, you want to use a capital 'S'.
load datetime-problem.mat
datetime(databackup.TimeofDay,'Format','HH:mm:ss.sss')
% corrected
datetime(databackup.TimeofDay,'Format','HH:mm:ss.SSS')
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the cyclist
am 28 Jun. 2022
Bearbeitet: the cyclist
am 28 Jun. 2022
Two minor but important changes to your syntax:
datetime(data.TimeofDay,'InputFormat','HH:mm:ss.SSS')
Note that I used
- 'InputFormat' instead of 'Format'
- .SSS instead of .sss
0 Kommentare
Voss
am 28 Jun. 2022
load datetime-problem.mat
databackup.TimeofDay
% original Format specification:
datetime(databackup.TimeofDay,'Format','HH:mm:ss.sss')
% corrected Format specification:
datetime(databackup.TimeofDay,'Format','hh:mm:ss.SSS')
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