Usage of strcmpi in embedded strings
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suppose you have the following:
A = 'filename.exe'
B.B =
'whatisthatman.exe'
'nevermind.txt'
'ok.exe'
'\nevermind\filename.exe'
Is it possible to get the index of filename.exe that's embedded in that string with strcmpi?
댓글 수: 3
Image Analyst
2014년 1월 15일
That's not MATLAB code. Is B.B a cell array? Like this:
B.B = {...
'whatisthatman.exe'
'nevermind.txt'
'ok.exe'
'\nevermind\filename.exe'}
So the "B" field of B is an array of 4 cells, each cell with a different string in it?
Walter Roberson
2014년 1월 16일
The outer B could be a structure array with 4 entries; then the output would be structure array expansion.
T
2014년 1월 16일
답변 (1개)
Walter Roberson
2014년 1월 16일
No, strcmpi() always compares entire strings. "filename.exe" does not occur as the entire string in the 4th entry in B.B, so strcmpi() is not suitable. You will need to use regexp() or strfind()
Are you looking for the index within B(4).B, which would be 12, or are you looking for the index of the entry that contains the string, which would be the 4 ?
cellfun( @(S) ~isempty(strfind(A, S)), {B.B} )
would return [false false false true]
댓글 수: 7
T
2014년 1월 16일
Walter Roberson
2014년 1월 16일
tf = cellfun( @(S) ~isempty(strfind(A, S)), {B.B} );
B(tf).B
Be careful for the case where there are multiple matches.
Another approach:
T = regexp( {B.B}, ['.*' A '.*'], 'match' );
vertcat(T{:})
The T here would be a cell array that would have [] entries for the lines that do not match. The second line should have the effect of tossing out the [] entries. Again though there would be a problem if there were multiple matching lines.
Walter Roberson
2014년 1월 16일
You could change your code so that it does not generate NaN -- e.g., perhaps you could use '' (empty string) instead.
Walter Roberson
2014년 1월 16일
Bfixed = {B.B};
Bfixed(isnan(Bfixed)) = {''};
T = regexp( Bfixed, ['.*' A '.*'], 'match' );
vertcat(T{:})
T
2014년 1월 16일
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