Help with displaying the vowels
4 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Caleb Steel
am 10 Okt. 2017
Kommentiert: Rena Berman
am 30 Okt. 2017
Hi, I want to make my code to be converted to switch and case statements and have the desired output from the picture:

function [vowels] = locateVowels( charactercell )
isvowel=@(s) ismember(lower(s),'aeiou');
isvowel=@(s) ismember(lower(s),'aeiou');
idxV=cellfun(isvowel,charactercell,'unif',0);
vowels=cellfun(@(s,i) lower(s(i)),charactercell,idxV,'unif',0);
end
1 Kommentar
Akzeptierte Antwort
Walter Roberson
am 10 Okt. 2017
Hint:
x(ismember(x, y))
However, it is tricky to determine what the vowels are in English. See https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/326767-finding-vowels-in-a-string-the-user-inputs-and-printing-the-vowels-here-s-the-problem#answer_256208
3 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
am 10 Okt. 2017
vowels = 'aeiouàáâãäåæèéêìíîïòóôõöùúûüýāăąőűǻǽǿȺḯṍấắếớứ';
cellfun(@(s) vowels(ismember(vowels, lower(s))), test, 'uniform', 0)
The vowels list above is not complete; I got tired of going through the charts. Also, it is not impossible that some of those might have the shape of a vowel with a combining mark but might, in their respective language, not act as a vowel.
I did not attempt to sort the vowels alphabetically: they are sorted above by unicode position. For example in Polish, ą sorts immediately after a in the dictionary
Walter Roberson
am 11 Okt. 2017
The solution for in-order output of the vowels is:
vowels = 'aeiouàáâãäåæèéêìíîïòóôõöùúûüýāăąőűǻǽǿȺḯṍấắếớứ';
disp(cellfun(@(C) C(ismember(C,vowels)), lower(Test), 'uniform', 0))
Weitere Antworten (1)
dpb
am 10 Okt. 2017
Bearbeitet: dpb
am 10 Okt. 2017
Use the string a cell array processing features of Matlab..
test={'Opal','Otis';'Fib','Lupe'};
isvowel=@(s) ismember(lower(s),'aeiou');
idxV=cellfun(isvowel,test,'unif',0);
cellfun(@(s,i) lower(s(i)),test,idxV,'unif',0)
ans =
'oa' 'oi'
'i' 'ue'
Presuming this is homework, I recommend you fully understand how it works and can reproduce it without coaching/help if asked to 'splain how you got the solution... :)
Hopefully will provide some ideas on how to more efficiently find the locations and you can then build your own solution based on those...or, if is real problem and not homework, you're more than welcome!! :)
12 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
am 11 Okt. 2017
function [vowels] = locateVowels( charactercell )
vowels = cell(size(charactercell));
for cell_idx = 1 : numel(charactercell)
thesevowels = '';
vowelcount = 0;
thisentry = charactercell{cell_idx};
for str_idx = 1 : length(thisentry)
switch lower(thisentry(str_idx))
case 'a'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'a';
case 'ä'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'ä';
case 'e'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'e';
case 'ë'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'ë';
case 'é'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'é';
case 'i'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'i';
case 'ï'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'ï';
case 'o'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'o';
case 'ö'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'ö';
case 'u'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'u';
case 'ü'
vowelcount = vowelcount + 1;
thesevowels(vowelcount) = 'ü';
end
end
vowels{cell_idx} = thesevowels;
end
end
This is an approach I would never take, and is suitable only for an exercise in proving that one knows how to use the switch construct and cell arrays.
Siehe auch
Kategorien
Mehr zu Data Type Conversion finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!