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find multiple words in a cell

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Vincent I
Vincent I am 9 Jan. 2013
Hi, is there a way to compare and return a number for the matching words in two unequal cells?
A={'a','a','a','b','b','d'} B={'a','b','c','d','e','f','g','h'}
return C=3,2,0,1,0,0,0,0
Thank you

Akzeptierte Antwort

Ryan Livingston
Ryan Livingston am 9 Jan. 2013
A one-liner:
cellfun(@(x)sum(ismember(A,x)), B)
  1 Kommentar
Vincent I
Vincent I am 9 Jan. 2013
Fantastic, thank you . thats what I was looking for

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Weitere Antworten (3)

Matt J
Matt J am 9 Jan. 2013
If the "words" will really always be single letters, you could do it looplessly with
>> histc([A{:}], [B{:}])
ans =
3 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
  6 Kommentare
Matt J
Matt J am 9 Jan. 2013
Bearbeitet: Matt J am 9 Jan. 2013
And, although this is a new question, I feel that it is not far away for the initial question which I dont see why should require a new post
It doesn't require it, but if you post it as a new question, people have the opportunity to gain points from answering you (now that you've already accepted Ryan's answer), and so will be more incentivized to do so.
Jan
Jan am 10 Jan. 2013
Bearbeitet: Jan am 10 Jan. 2013
The decision is easy:
New question, new thread.
And:
Additional information to an existing question is added by editing the question and marking the changes by "[EDITED]". Then this is clarification and *not* a new question.
Hiding important information in deeply nested comments to already accepted questions is a bad idea.

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Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub am 9 Jan. 2013
I am sure that this is over thinking the solution and I doubt that using regexp is optimal, but I was curious how bad it would be.
x = regexp(A, cell2mat(cellfun(@(x)['(?<', x, '>', x, ')|'], B, 'UniformOutput', false)), 'names');
cellfun(@(x)length([y.(x)]), fieldnames([x{:}]))'
I is there a better way to do this with regexp?
  1 Kommentar
Vincent I
Vincent I am 9 Jan. 2013
Bearbeitet: Vincent I am 9 Jan. 2013
Solved my problem by doing the folowing:
A=TF(:,1).';
A=regexprep(A, ' ','');
A=regexprep(A, '_(\w*)','');
B={'aa','bb2c','bb25c','xy3c','m56c','etc56c'};
C=cellfun(@(x)sum(strcmp(A, x)), B);
Thank you

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Jan
Jan am 10 Jan. 2013
[EDITED, Jan, moved from comments to the accepted question]
ISMEMBER sorts the inputs and performs a binary search. This can be much faster and much slower than an unsorted comparison by:
cellfun(@(x)sum(strcmp(A, x)), B)
I claim without a proof, that a loop is faster:
R = zeros(1, numel(B));
for iB = 1:numel(B)
R(iB) = sum(strcmp(A, B{iB}));
end
[EDITED 2] And if you want to compare the leading character(s) only:
...
R(iB) = sum(strncmp(A, B{iB}, length(B{iB}));
...
  1 Kommentar
Vincent I
Vincent I am 10 Jan. 2013
sounds goood. Thanks for your answer

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