how to replace char in array with a double

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Seamus Herriman
Seamus Herriman am 9 Aug. 2016
Bearbeitet: Stephen23 am 21 Jul. 2025
I am making a program that converts Roman numerals to numerical values. My current code is below.
%%Roman Numeral Conversion
%Declare variables
I=1;
V=5;
X=10;
L=50;
C=100;
D=500;
M=1000;
%input Roman numeral
Roman=input('Roman numeral: ','s')
letters=cellstr(Roman')'
for n=1:length(letters)
if (strcmp(letters(n),'I'))||(strcmp(letters(n),'i'))
letters(n)=1;
elseif (strcmp(letters(n),'V'))||(strcmp(letters(n),'v'))
letters(n)=5;
elseif (strcmp(letters(n),'X'))||(strcmp(letters(n),'x'))
letters(n)=10;
elseif (strcmp(letters(n),'L'))||(strcmp(letters(n),'l'))
letters(n)=50;
elseif (strcmp(letters(n),'C'))||(strcmp(letters(n),'c'))
letters(n)=100;
elseif (strcmp(letters(n),'D'))||(strcmp(letters(n),'d'))
letters(n)=500;
elseif (strcmp(letters(n),'M'))||(strcmp(letters(n),'m'))
letters(n)=1000;
else disp('Not valid entries')
break
end
end
number=sum(letters)
text=sprintf(Roman,'= %d',number)
disp(text)
When I run this, I get the error below when I try to substitute the letter for its corresponding numerical value.
Conversion to cell from double is not possible.
Error in Roman_Numeral_Conversion (line 21)
letters(n)=10;
How can I avoid this problem?
  1 Kommentar
Stephen23
Stephen23 am 20 Jul. 2025
Note that you can replace two STRCMP calls:
strcmp(letters(n),'V'))||strcmp(letters(n),'v')
with one STRCMPI call:
strcmpi(letters(n),'V')

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Akzeptierte Antwort

James Tursa
James Tursa am 9 Aug. 2016
You made a cell array with this line:
letters = cellstr(Roman')'
That is why you are getting the conversion error. Make it a double instead. E.g.,
letters = zeros(size(Roman));
Then in your loop, compare with Roman instead of letters. E.g.,
if (strcmp(Roman(n),'I'))||(strcmp(Roman(n),'i'))
letters(n)=1;
elseif (strcmp(Roman(n),'V'))||(strcmp(Roman(n),'v'))
letters(n)=5;
:
etc
However, this is just a character conversion code. You still need to put in logic for when values are added vs subtracted. E.g., your code will give an answer of 11 for 'XI' as well as 'IX' when the latter should be 9.
  1 Kommentar
Seamus Herriman
Seamus Herriman am 9 Aug. 2016
Thanks! Yea, first I'm making a program that simply adds the Roman Numerals up. After I have that working, I'll proceed to adding logic for order.

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Weitere Antworten (1)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord am 20 Jul. 2025
Verschoben: Stephen23 am 21 Jul. 2025
Another way to do this would be to set up a vector and use indexing. Let's try it with a valid and an invalid Roman numeral string.
decode('MCMLXXXVI')
ans = 1×9
1000 100 1000 50 10 10 10 5 1
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
decode('DIMS')
Error using solution>decode (line 10)
Roman numeral string 'DIMS' contained invalid characters
function arabic = decode(roman)
values = NaN(1, double('z'));
values('ivxlcdm') = [1, 5, 10, 50, 100, 500, 1000];
roman = char(roman);
arabic = NaN(size(roman));
arabic = values(lower(roman));
if anynan(arabic)
error("Roman numeral string '" + roman + "' contained invalid characters")
end
end
  1 Kommentar
Stephen23
Stephen23 am 21 Jul. 2025
Bearbeitet: Stephen23 am 21 Jul. 2025
+1
The second NaN preallocation can be skipped, the indexing itself will generate the same vector:
decode('MCMLXXXVI')
ans = 1×9
1000 100 1000 50 10 10 10 5 1
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
decode('DIMS')
Error using assert
Roman numeral string contained invalid characters

Error in solution>decode (line 7)
assert(~anynan(vec),'Roman numeral string contained invalid characters')
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
function vec = decode(roman)
map = NaN(1,+'Z');
map('IVXLCDM') = [1,5,10,50,100,500,1000];
vec = map(roman);
assert(~anynan(vec),'Roman numeral string contained invalid characters')
end

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