Contain large&hetergeneous datasets : Cell vs Table vs Others
1 Ansicht (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Hyeong Seok Lee
am 11 Aug. 2020
Beantwortet: Gouri Chennuru
am 14 Aug. 2020
load dryer2;
z = iddata(y2,u2,0.08,'Tstart',0);
na = 2:4;
nc = 1:2;
nk = 0:2;
models = cell(18,5);
ct = 1;
for i = 1:3
na_ = na(i);
nb_ = na_;
for j = 1:2
nc_ = nc(j);
for k = 1:3
nk_ = nk(k);
[models{ct, :}] = deal(armax(z,[na_ nb_ nc_ nk_]), na_, nb_, nc_, nk_);
ct = ct+1;
end
end
end
Above codes are from documentation of ARMAX. https://kr.mathworks.com/help/ident/ref/armax.html
I made some modifications to variable 'models'
In my problem, the number of parameters is much larger(e.g. na, nb, ..., nz), and their range is much broader.
I want to save all parameters(na, nb,..) and their output(like output of armax functin in above codes), which are heterogeneous.
Which data types are the most fit to contain these datasets? Cell? Table? other else?
1 Kommentar
Akzeptierte Antwort
Gouri Chennuru
am 14 Aug. 2020
Hi,
In order to work with large data sets, MATLAB has number of tools for accessing and processing large data in many ways,
- You can use datastore function that creates a datastore, which is a repository for collections of data that are too large to fit in memory.
- You can use Large MAT files access and change variables without loading into memory.
- You can create tall numeric arrays, cell arrays, categoricals, strings, datetimes, durations, or calendar durations, and you can use any of these tall types as variables in a tall table or tall timetable.
You can refer to these links for more information,
Hope this Helps!
0 Kommentare
Weitere Antworten (0)
Siehe auch
Kategorien
Mehr zu Tables 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!