Generating array of consecutive timestamps in double
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
I need to generate an array of consecutive timestamps, in double and yyyymmddHHMMSS format, for specified start and end times. For example:
timestamps(1) = 2.012082104000000e+013;
timestamps(2) = 2.012082104000100e+013;
...
...
timestamps(120) = 2.012082104020000e+013;
I wrote a working piece of code, but the str2double/datestr combination in the parfor loop is too slow (I used 120 seconds as an example, but in actual use, I will be generating about 10^7 consecutive seconds of timestamps). Is there a faster way to do this?
if matlabpool('size') == 0
matlabpool local
end
startDate = num2str(2.012082104000000e+013);
endDate = num2str(2.012082104020000e+013);
startDateyyyy = str2double(startDate(:,1:4));
startDatemm = str2double(startDate(:,5:6));
startDatedd = str2double(startDate(:,7:8));
startDateHH = str2double(startDate(:,9:10));
startDateMM = str2double(startDate(:,11:12));
startDateSS = str2double(startDate(:,13:14));
startDateVec = [startDateyyyy startDatemm startDatedd startDateHH ...
startDateMM startDateSS];
startDate = datenum(startDateVec);
endDateyyyy = str2double(endDate(:,1:4));
endDatemm = str2double(endDate(:,5:6));
endDatedd = str2double(endDate(:,7:8));
endDateHH = str2double(endDate(:,9:10));
endDateMM = str2double(endDate(:,11:12));
endDateSS = str2double(endDate(:,13:14));
endDateVec = [endDateyyyy endDatemm endDatedd endDateHH ...
endDateMM endDateSS];
endDate = datenum(endDateVec);
timestamps = startDate:(1/24*1/60*1/60):endDate;
parfor i = 1:length(timestamps)
timestamps(i) = str2double(...
datestr(timestamps(i),'yyyymmddHHMMSS'));
end
Thanks in advance!
3 Kommentare
Oleg Komarov
am 11 Sep. 2012
Why not serial dates as generated by datenum()?
Oleg Komarov
am 11 Sep. 2012
As you can see from my answer, the appearance of dates can be controlled with datestr() and I still recommend to store dates as MATLAB serial numbers produced with datenum(). I am posting an alternative solution to let you see how bothersome is to store dates in a different way.
Akzeptierte Antwort
Weitere Antworten (1)
Amarjit Dhillon
am 31 Aug. 2017
Let's say we want to generate timestamps in the format of yyyymmddHHMMSS for 10 days
1-Jan-2017 at 12:00:00 to 10-Jan-2017 till 12:00:00, This can be easily generated by below-written code
t1 = datetime(2017,1,1,12,0,0);
t2 = datetime(2017,1,10,12,0,0);
data = t1:seconds(1):t2;
datestr(data,'yyyymmddHHMMSS')
1 Kommentar
Peter Perkins
am 31 Aug. 2017
Amarjit, your suggestion to use datetime is a good one (the OP was from 1012, before datetime existed in MATLAB). But actually, there's usually no reason to convert it to text. Just change the format:
>> data.Format = 'yyyymmddHHMMSS'
data =
1×3 datetime array
20170001120100 20170001120100 20170001120100 ...
Kategorien
Mehr zu Time Series Objects finden Sie in Hilfe-Center und File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!