How can i change the precision using datenum?
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André Fernandes
am 29 Okt. 2018
Kommentiert: Peter Perkins
am 31 Okt. 2018
Im using datenum on some datasets to try to see the intersection between the data (using intersect function), the problem is that im getting different times with the same time (the last few numbers are a little bit different). I already saw some people using a different aproach but i don't know how can i do it with my data. Im posting the code im using:
horas = datestr(horas);
datas = datestr(datas);
timesteps = [num2str(datas) num2str(horas(:,12:17))];
timesteps = datenum(timesteps,'dd-mmm-yyyy HH:MM');
[c,ia,ib]=intersect(timesteps,time_interval);
hm0(ib) = hm0;
It should work but since it's not getting all the times, it fails and tells me "In an assignment A(:) = B, the number of elements in A and B must be the same.". But if i can solve the early problem it will work since i already used this function before. Thank you
1 Kommentar
Stephen23
am 29 Okt. 2018
To see the real datenum values download James Tursa's FEX submission:
Some useful discussions on floating point numbers:
This is worth reading as well:
Akzeptierte Antwort
Stephen23
am 29 Okt. 2018
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 29 Okt. 2018
The basic problem is that intersect tests for exact equivalency of floating point numbers (which is all that datenum's are). This should be avoided, for reasons that have been discussed thousands of times before (see the link in my comment). Here are some proposals for how to deal with this:
- Round the datenum to some number of decimal places. This sounds simple, but it can introduce artifacts into the data, and requires picking an appropriate number of digits to round to. A bit fiddly.
- Download and use my FEX submission dateround, which rounds to the nearest second, minute, hour, etc.
- Convert to datevec, pick the units/column you want to use (e.g. years to minutes), and then use intersect with the 'rows' option.
Personally I prefer the last solution: neat, intuitive, and does not involve comparing floating point numbers. Here is a complete working example, which demonstrates how differences in the seconds can be ignored:
>> C1 = {'2018-10-29 12:34:56','2018-10-29 12:00:00'};
>> C2 = {'2018-10-29 12:34:55','2018-10-29 12:01:00'};
>> V1 = datevec(C1(:))
V1 =
2018 10 29 12 34 56
2018 10 29 12 0 0
>> V2 = datevec(C2(:))
V2 =
2018 10 29 12 34 55
2018 10 29 12 1 0
>> intersect(V1(:,1:5),V2(:,1:5),'rows')
ans =
2018 10 29 12 34
Note that this is equivalent to doing a floor operation on the seconds column: to round the seconds up/down to the nearest minute you could either use dateround or do the rounding yourself.
2 Kommentare
Stephen23
am 29 Okt. 2018
@André Fernandes: I hope that it helps. You might also like to consider using datetime objects, which can probably be rounded to particular units and compared.
Weitere Antworten (1)
André Fernandes
am 29 Okt. 2018
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 29 Okt. 2018
6 Kommentare
Peter Perkins
am 31 Okt. 2018
This, from Stephen,
"Use datetime objects and tables to group the data within the required period."
is the correct advice.
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