Converint between Cell arrays and Numbers and Strings
2 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Hello,
I am trying to convert a double cell array as shown to individual 8 bit cells. (I hope I have been able to frame the question correctly, if not please take a look at my screenshot)
I want to convert each contents to individual bits, like for e.g [10000111] to individual 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1
I have tried everything from cell2num, mat2cell, cell arrays and all but keep getting errors.
Please help me in solving this; also a little background theory on what these types of cells and 'cellarrays' mean would be a great help for next time!
Thanks,
Cheers,
kash022
2 Kommentare
Stephen23
am 25 Jan. 2019
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 25 Jan. 2019
"Converint between Cell arrays and Numbers and Strings"
"I am trying to convert a double cell array as shown..."
Nothing in your screenshot is related to cell arrays:
Nothing in your question is related to string arrays:
After using MATLAB for more than two years it would be a good idea to learn what the basic data classes are and how to identify them:
"also a little background theory on what these types of cells and 'cellarrays' mean would be a great help for next time!"
Why not try reading the MATLAB documentation?:
PS: this is not twitter. Please do not put ugly # symbols at the start of each tag.
Akzeptierte Antwort
Jan
am 25 Jan. 2019
Bearbeitet: Jan
am 25 Jan. 2019
This obtains the digits of a decimal number:
x = 10000111;
n = floor(log10(x));
out = rem(floor(x(:) ./ power(10, n:-1:0)), 10)
>> [1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1]
I prefer this instead of the indirection of letting sprintf convert the number to a char vector and converting it back to a number.
"Cell arrays" are arrays of the class cell. These are array, which can contain elements of different sizes and classes. See:
doc cell
Example:
C = {[], 1, 1:2, 1:3, 'And a char vector also'}
If you want to store the output in one array and do not want leading zeros, you need a cell array, because the vectors have dirrent length.
x = [1, 101, 10000111];
C = cell(size(x));
nMax = floor(log10(max(x)));
P = power(10, nMax:-1:0); % Expensive power operation once only
for k = 1:numel(x)
n = floor(log10(x(k)));
C{k} = rem(floor(x(k) ./ P(nMax-n+1:end)), 10);
end
Note: You are working with Matlab since at least March 2016. You are expected to be able to read the documentation of the cell command.
3 Kommentare
Jan
am 25 Jan. 2019
Leading zeros allow a simpler code:
x = 10000111;
n = floor(log10(max(x))); % Here the maximum value matters
out = rem(floor(x(:) ./ power(10, n:-1:0)), 10)
Weitere Antworten (2)
per isakson
am 25 Jan. 2019
Bearbeitet: per isakson
am 25 Jan. 2019
"cell array as shown" The screenshot doesn't show any cell array
Another approach
>> str = sprintf('%d', 10000111 );
>> num = reshape( sscanf( str, '%1d' ), 1,[] )
num =
1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1
>>
4 Kommentare
Jan
am 25 Jan. 2019
Exploiting the old-fashioned ASCII coding is less magic than calling sprintf, which is a huge library function. In very old Matlab versions, sprintf suffered from a bug, which allowed to gain admin privileges only by using strange format strings.
per isakson
am 25 Jan. 2019
>> '€'+'ab' % undocumented behaviour(?)
ans =
8461 8462
>> "€"+"ab" % documented behaviour
ans =
"€ab"
Walter Roberson
am 25 Jan. 2019
I do not think you have a cell array at present. I think you have a double array.
OutputCell = arrayfun(@(V) sprintf('%08d', V) - '0'), YourArrayNameGoesHere, 'uniform', 0)
2 Kommentare
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!