\n Not Generating New Line In fprintf fid Command When Writing To .dat File
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I have a loop going and am trying to write output each time to a .dat text file appending it every iteration; but not getting a new line.
for minute = 18:1:48
thetaL = 15*(hour+minute/60+second/3600);
h = thetaL-alpha;
a = asin(sin(phi0)*sin(beta)+cos(phi0)*cos(beta)*cos(h));
A = atan((sin(h))/(cos(h)*sin(phi0)-tan(beta)*cos(phi0)));
fid = fopen('astro_conv_table.dat', 'a');
fprintf(fid, '%.0f %s %.0f %s %.0f %.0f %.0f
\n',hour,':',minute,':',second,a,A);
fclose(fid);
end
Everything in the code is working fine except the output is written to file in one long line as opposed to intended new line every iteration.
Thank you.
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Akzeptierte Antwort
José-Luis
am 4 Okt. 2012
Bearbeitet: José-Luis
am 4 Okt. 2012
I assume you are in Windows. The return of carriage for Windows is "\r\n". Try changing that. Otherwise, use wordpad instead of notepad. Or get any decent text editor, like notepad++, which is free.
4 Kommentare
Jan
am 4 Okt. 2012
Even on Windows machines "\n" is a newline. Only the "Editor" of Windows does not understand this correctly. I do not know any other software, which does not accept the CHAR(10) as line break properly.
Matlab's LOAD does not recognize the CHAR(13) line break when reading a file in ASCII format, but this has been used by old Apple software until OS-9 only.
José-Luis
am 4 Okt. 2012
Well, that is news to me. I guess things have changed:
Weitere Antworten (1)
Stephen23
am 12 Jan. 2018
The simplest solution by far is to fopen the file in text mode, simply by using the t option. This mode converts all newlines to \n when reading, and when writing converts \n to the appropriate type for your OS.
For the original question, all that is required is adding the t to fopen:
fid = fopen('astro_conv_table.dat', 'at'); % note the "t" !
fprintf(fid, '%.0f %s %.0f %s %.0f %.0f %.0f\n',hour,':',minute,':',second,a,A);
fclose(fid);
and it will insert the correct Windows newline characters.
1 Kommentar
Jan
am 12 Jan. 2018
While opening in text mode is simple, it is also simple to stay at char(10) on all machines and avoid to use the Windows Notepad. I prefer the 2nd way of simplicity, most of all if I want to discuss with a Linux or Mac user.
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