Display or print char data

x = input(Enter the grades: )
For i=1:length(x)
if x(i) >= 90
x(i)= 'A';
elseif x(i) >= 80
x(i) = 'B';
elseif x(i) >= 70
x(i) = 'C';
elseif x(i) >= 60
x(i) = 'D';
else
x(i) = 'F';
end
end
disp(x)
  • Input:[10 12 90 60 47 78]
  • output:[70 70 65 68 70 67]
  • # | When I turn on this code, it prints numbers instead of letters on the screen and gives me a warning message that the argument must be of type of char, is there an answer please? (Sorry, the first code wasn’t the desired)😅

2 Kommentare

KSSV
KSSV am 18 Jul. 2020
The code looks fine.....it prints the grade as string..
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 18 Jul. 2020
The code works for me... at least after I removed the _ that you accidentally had at the end of the line.

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Antworten (2)

madhan ravi
madhan ravi am 18 Jul. 2020

0 Stimmen

clear all
It worked for me after removing _ at the very end

4 Kommentare

madhan ravi
madhan ravi am 18 Jul. 2020
Bearbeitet: madhan ravi am 18 Jul. 2020
x = input('Enter the grades: ') % enter [10 12 90 60 47 78]
x = num2cell(x);
for ii = 1:numel(x)
if x{ii} >= 90
x{ii}= 'A';
elseif x{ii} >= 80
x{ii} = 'B';
elseif x{ii} >= 70
x{ii} = 'C';
elseif x{ii} >= 60
x{ii} = 'D';
else
x{ii} = 'F';
end
end
celldisp(x)
Adham Ayman
Adham Ayman am 18 Jul. 2020
Bearbeitet: Adham Ayman am 18 Jul. 2020
madhan ravi It's perfect, but is there a way to put them all in a row vector and without quotes.
madhan ravi
madhan ravi am 18 Jul. 2020
categorical(x)
Adham Ayman
Adham Ayman am 18 Jul. 2020
ok, thank you for great help :)

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 18 Jul. 2020

0 Stimmen

I would use fprintf() instead of disp(). I also wouldn't use the same variable to be a double, and a string, at different times. I think that's bad practice. Here is one way of doing it:
numberGrades = input('Enter the grades (inside brackets) : ')
for k = 1 : length(numberGrades)
if numberGrades(k) >= 90
letterGrade{k} = 'A';
elseif numberGrades(k) >= 80
letterGrade{k} = 'B';
elseif numberGrades(k) >= 70
letterGrade{k} = 'C';
elseif numberGrades(k) >= 60
letterGrade{k} = 'D';
else
letterGrade{k} = 'F';
end
fprintf('A score of %d is an "%s".\n', numberGrades(k), letterGrade{k});
end
numberGrades =
40 88
A score of 40 is an "F".
A score of 88 is an "B".
Another way would be to use a table with numbers in the first column and letters in the second column.
numberGrades = input('Enter the grades (inside brackets) : ')
grades = table(...
'Size', [length(numberGrades), 2],...
'VariableNames', {'NumberGrade', 'LetterGrade'},...
'VariableTypes', {'double', 'string'});
grades{:, 1} = numberGrades'; % Put number grades into column 1.
for k = 1 : length(numberGrades)
if numberGrades(k) >= 90
grades{k, 2} = 'A';
elseif numberGrades(k) >= 80
grades{k, 2} = 'B';
elseif numberGrades(k) >= 70
grades{k, 2} = 'C';
elseif numberGrades(k) >= 60
grades{k, 2} = 'D';
else
grades{k, 2} = 'F';
end
fprintf('A score of %d is an "%s".\n', grades{k, 1}, grades{k, 2});
end
grades
Enter the grades (inside brackets) : [85,77,96]
numberGrades =
85 77 96
A score of 85 is an "B".
A score of 77 is an "C".
A score of 96 is an "A".
grades =
3×2 table
NumberGrade LetterGrade
___________ ___________
85 "B"
77 "C"
96 "A"

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Gefragt:

am 18 Jul. 2020

Beantwortet:

am 18 Jul. 2020

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