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Saving struct to an Excel file

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Pete Marsh
Pete Marsh am 18 Sep. 2018
Kommentiert: dpb am 18 Sep. 2018
I have several sets of MAT files that have a structure that I want to save to Excel (each in their own sheet) for some analysis. I tried writetable(struct2table(statistics), 'example.xls','sheet',1) but the first three fields cause index errors, which I figured would happen. I'm not too familiar with working with structures so I could use some help.
Below is the structure that I want to save.
statistics =
struct with fields:
revision: 'Rev 2789'
ymin: 1
ymax: 2501
peakToPeak: [48×1 double]
peakToPeakdB: [48×1 double]
variance: [48×1 double]
variancedB: [48×1 double]
peakFrequencyMHz: [48×1 double]
centerFrequency6dB: [48×1 double]
centerFrequency3dB: [48×1 double]
bandWidth6dB: [48×1 double]
bandWidth3dB: [48×1 double]
pulseLength10dB: [48×1 double]
pulseLength18dB: [48×1 double]
RMS: [48×1 double]
  2 Kommentare
dpb
dpb am 18 Sep. 2018
What analysis do you think you can do more effectively in Excel than in Matlab? How about avoiding the problem by using ML instead and not have two separate tools for one job?
Pete Marsh
Pete Marsh am 18 Sep. 2018
This is acoustic test data and most of our tools for the analysis is in Excel. Since some of the others that will have to do some processing on it do not have Matlab.

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Akzeptierte Antwort

Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang am 18 Sep. 2018
Bearbeitet: Fangjun Jiang am 18 Sep. 2018
You can take a look at the example in the document. Use rmfield() to remove the first three fields. Since all the other fields are 48x1 double, you can export all the data into one sheet, instead of multiple sheets.
doc struct2table

Weitere Antworten (1)

dpb
dpb am 18 Sep. 2018
Bearbeitet: dpb am 18 Sep. 2018
s.rev='Rev 1';
s.ymin=1;
s.pkpk=rand(3,1);
s.pkpkDB=rand(3,1);
>> struct2table(s,'AsArray',1)
ans =
1×4 table
rev ymin pkpk pkpkDB
_______ ____ ____________ ____________
'Rev 1' 1 [3×1 double] [3×1 double]
>>
writetable however, will make each individual element in each array a variable in the output file which will be extremely unwieldy.
>> writetable(ans)
>> type ans.txt
rev,ymin,pkpk_1,pkpk_2,pkpk_3,pkpkDB_1,pkpkDB_2,pkpkDB_3
Rev 1,1,0.93268309594783,0.334217197485708,0.934040921888512,0.28744527318977,0.492382824642905,0.468898718730782
>>
If you're adamant about doing this, probably easiest is either the rmfield option and handle the non-array fields separately or convert to cell array and then write the resulting array and non-array data--
>> c=struct2cell(s); % convert to cell array
>> c=c(3:end).'; % keep only the arrays as row array, not column
>> m=cell2mat(cc) % convert to array
ans =
0.9327 0.2874
0.3342 0.4924
0.9340 0.4689
>>
That array can be written w/ xlswrite. If you create header variable line and space for the non-array data, then with some effort can make a useful spreadsheet, but I'm still wondering "why? all the trouble?".
Just convert to a table and use all the power of Matlab.
In fact, why not recast the whole thing to use a table instead from the git-go?
  2 Kommentare
Pete Marsh
Pete Marsh am 18 Sep. 2018
Unfortunately, I have been given the code that creates the MAT files that I have to use (not by choice), so I have very little latitude with what I can do. And since it must be shared with several others, I have been tasked to put them into Excel.
Thanks for the input.
dpb
dpb am 18 Sep. 2018
OK, I've "been there, done that!" in places where "rules are rules" whether they make sense or not.
Just figured I'd ask...

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