How to rename a variable with a char

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Peter Knowles
Peter Knowles am 20 Sep. 2018
Kommentiert: Peter Knowles am 21 Sep. 2018
In my work space i have a variable that i'd like to rename, with a name that is held as a char.
I want to do this in a simple m file which I can run whenever required.
I have some code that works
%where label name is my newname and DataCopy is my variable
str = [Label_name,'= DataCopy;'];
eval(str);
But I keep reading not to use the eval command, i don't know why and frankly i don't care. What i do know is it works ok from the command but crashes when run in my program.
I would just like to find a way of doing this simple repeated task.
I've tried a few other options but just seem to end up putting the string into the data and not renaming!
  9 Kommentare
Adam
Adam am 20 Sep. 2018
Bearbeitet: Adam am 20 Sep. 2018
Working with struct fields it is very easy:
myStruct.( Label_Name ) = ArrayOld;
Then you can save these to a mat file still as individual variables e.g.
save( 'somefilename.mat', '-struct', 'myStruct' )
Then you can load the variables into a different session or workspace, ideally loaded as a struct then referred to again via dynamic string field names if needed, but if you really want you can load them straight into your new workspace as variables and work with them in whatever way you choose.
When it comes to loading in data in a Mat file it always involves things with potentially unknown names arriving in the workspace, whether they are field names or variables names so as long as your code knows what it is expecting then it should work.
Peter Knowles
Peter Knowles am 21 Sep. 2018
Thank you this works. It's what i was hoping for two easy lines of code that fit into the existing program without breaking anything. Nice :-)

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Antworten (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 20 Sep. 2018
This bad code works either from the command line or in a script, though no competent MATLAB programmer in the world would recommend it (not even me):
Label_name = input('Enter the variable name : ', 's')
DataCopy = rand(2)
str = [Label_name,'= DataCopy;']
eval(str)
% At this point we have no idea what the variable is called,
% unless we pull some tricks with whos()
% which I'm not going to go into.
% But we'll assume you typed in "unwise"
% so let's look as the properties of a variable called unwise.
whos unwise
unwise
% IMPORTANT NOTE: Like Jos said, if you don't know what the string is,
% then how will you use it later in your code?
  2 Kommentare
Peter Knowles
Peter Knowles am 20 Sep. 2018
i'm not a competent matlab programmer, my work involves building simulink model i rarely have to go into the code. I saw the example using eval, and i also see lots of comments saying not to use it i tried it in the m file that i didnt write, and it crashed. I just want to rename the arrays in a script so i can use them in my model, something i can do easily in the workspace window. Obviously renaming the 50 odd arrays manually would be quicker than getting a straight answer from here!
Guillaume
Guillaume am 20 Sep. 2018
quicker than getting a straight answer from here!
You're complaining about getting sarcam yet your comment and question appear very antagonistic.
You've had a very straight answer by Image Analyst. The answer he's written works and is the simplest way to rename the variable using eval. So, if it doesn't work for you, that's because either you're doing it wrong, or what you're trying to achieve is not what you've described. Either way, you can't complain that you're not getting the right answer if you're not describing the problem properly.
and it crashed
What does that mean? Crash normally means that matlab terminates and thus that you've encountered a serious bug. Perhaps, you mean it errors (completely different meaning!) in which case, you're not helping us by not giving us the error message.
Obviously renaming the 50 odd arrays manually would be quicker
Even faster would be to not rename the variables at all and continue using the names they already have. You say you don't want to discuss this, but this is the approach we would naturally take. Perhaps, your use case is special, but if you don't explain it, we can't understand what needs doing.
Disclaimer: No sarcasm was intended in this post.

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OCDER
OCDER am 20 Sep. 2018
"the output is a struct which contains fields and values."
S = otherPersonFunction(...); %Returns structure with fields and values
"I want each of these arrays saved into a mat file" Do you want it to be saved as "NewArray"?
Fields = fieldnames(S);
for f = 1:length(Fields)
NewArray = S.(Fields{f});
save(sprintf('%d.mat', f), 'NewArray'); %You'll generate 1.mat, 2.mat, etc each storing a NewArray variable
end
"Each array is then used in a matlab simulink model."
Temp = load('l.mat', 'NewArray');
NewArray = Temp.NewArray;
or just
load('1.mat') %will poof NewArray into the workspace - not recommended

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