Use string to define variable
10 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Hugo Policarpo
am 9 Aug. 2025
Beantwortet: Hugo Policarpo
am 9 Aug. 2025
Hello guys!
I am looking for a way to name a variable with a string name that will be changing according to the T and V values
My code is the following:
-------------------------------
T=15; % input variable T
V=1; % input variable V
load('FRF_T15_V1.mat')
load('FRF_T15_V2.mat')
load('FRF_T15_V3.mat')
formatSpec = 'FRF_T%d_V%d';
filename = sprintf(formatSpec,T,V);
x=eval(filename);
XP=(x{3,3});
save ('XP,'XP')
-----------------------------
I would like for variable XP to be assigned according to the input values of T and V, e.g.,
FRF_T15_V1_XP=(x{3,3});
And then save it as
save (' FRF_T15_V1_XP,' FRF_T15_V1_XP ')
Thanks in advance for your help!
Kind regards,
Hugo
2 Kommentare
Akzeptierte Antwort
Stephen23
am 9 Aug. 2025
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 9 Aug. 2025
Storing meta-data in variable names (or fieldnames) is a very bad way to design your data, which invariably forces you into writing slow, complex, inefficient code that is much harder to debug than if you stored that meta-data as data in a variable (because meta-data is data):
But if you insist on this anti-pattern data design, something like this is probably the least-worst way of doing it:
T = 15;
V = 1;
F = sprintf('FRF_T%d_V%d',T,V);
S = load([F,'.mat']);
C = struct2cell(S);
X = C{1};
S = struct([F,'_XP'],{X{3,3}});
save([F,'_XP.mat'],'-struct',S)
However, treating meta-data as data in its own right (which it is) would be much better data design (it would make your code simpler, more robust, and more efficient).
See also:
3 Kommentare
Weitere Antworten (3)
Steven Lord
am 9 Aug. 2025
Can you dynamically create variables with numbered names like x1, x2, x3, etc.? Yes.
Should you do this? The general consensus is no. That Discussions post explains why this is generally discouraged and offers several alternative approaches.
Meg Noah
am 9 Aug. 2025
Bearbeitet: Meg Noah
am 9 Aug. 2025
There are many ways to do this. Here's one that shows how to make the format of the T and V values have the same width and will sort based on the value of T in the directory. Just change the '%n.n' to the largest width of your number range:
% for the character array version
fname = @(t,v) ['FRF_T' num2str(t,'%3.3d') '_V' num2str(v,'%2.2d') '_XP'];
for T=[1 3 5]
for V=1:2
fprintf(1,'%s\n', fname(T,V));
end
end
% for the string version
strfname = @(t,v) strcat("FRF_T", num2str(t,'%3.3d'), "_V", num2str(v,'%2.2d'), "_XP");
for T=[1 3 5]
for V=1:2
fprintf(1,'%s\n', strfname(T,V));
end
end
Siehe auch
Kategorien
Mehr zu Structures finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange
Produkte
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!