필터 지우기
필터 지우기

Extracting data from an array

조회 수: 1 (최근 30일)
Royvg94
Royvg94 2015년 9월 28일
편집: Guillaume 2015년 9월 28일
I have an array of 69 x 1 cells. All cells are either 12 x 2 or 13 x 2 matrices. I want to make a matrix, with all second columns from the matrices in the array.
So for example:
This is my array: (I havent given names to the cells yet, but just for the example)
[y1; y2; y3; y4; y5.......]
y1 = 12 x 2 matrix y2 = 12 x 2 matrix y3 = 13 x 2 matrix y4 = 12 x 2 matrix y5 = 13 x 2 matrix
I want all second columns from y1 till y69 in a n x 69 matrix.
Thanks for the help!
  댓글 수: 2
Stephen23
Stephen23 2015년 9월 28일
편집: Stephen23 2015년 9월 28일
Some of the matrices have twelve rows, some have thirteen. How do you want their columns to be merged into one matrix: do you want to trim the longer columns, or pad the shorter ones? What value should be used for padding? Leading or trailing padding?
Royvg94
Royvg94 2015년 9월 28일
Oh sure, forgot about that, i want to trim the longer ones.

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

채택된 답변

Guillaume
Guillaume 2015년 9월 28일
You're mixing up terms and notations, so it's not clear what you have and want. My understanding it that you have a cell array (size 69 x 1) consisting of matrices (size N x 2). The notation for cell arrays uses {}:
carr = {y1; y2; y3; ...} %yn can all be of different size and even type
Because the number of rows in each of these matrices is different (either 12 or 13), it's not possible to combine these seconds column into a matrix. It is however possible to combine them into a cell array. This is easily done with cellfun:
carr = {rand(12, 2); rand(13, 2); rand(12, 2); rand(13, 2)}; %demo data
column2 = cellfun(@(m) m(:, 2), carr, 'UniformOutput', false);
If cellfun is too complex for you, you can use a loop. The cellfun above is exactly equivalent to:
column2 = cell(size(carr));
for cidx = 1:numel(carr)
column2{cidx} = carr{cidx}(:, 2);
end
  댓글 수: 5
Royvg94
Royvg94 2015년 9월 28일
Do you also know how i can fill everything until 13 cells by adding zero's ?
Guillaume
Guillaume 2015년 9월 28일
The principle is still the same, use cellfun or a loop to extract and do whatever you want with each column. In this case, simply add 13-number of rows 0 to the column:
column2 = cellfun(@(m) [m(:, 2); zeros(13-size(m,1), 1)], carr, 'UniformOutput', false);
column2 = [column2{:}]

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

추가 답변 (1개)

Andrei Bobrov
Andrei Bobrov 2015년 9월 28일
x = arrayfun(@(x)randi(56,randi([12 13]),2),(1:69)','un',0); % x - your array
n = cellfun(@(x)size(x,1),x);
nm = max(n);
m = numel(x);
out = nan(nm,numel(x));
for ii = 1:m
out(1:n(ii),ii) = x{ii}(:,2);
end

카테고리

Help CenterFile Exchange에서 Matrices and Arrays에 대해 자세히 알아보기

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by