Correcting date strings in cell arrays

조회 수: 3 (최근 30일)
Richard Bibb
Richard Bibb 2012년 1월 8일
I have a CSV file containing some financial market data.
The CSV file data looks like the following
1763753202,D,EUR/USD,2011-11-06 17:00:12.500000000,1.382700,1.382900
I am using textscan to read this data in as follows (to get the last three fields)
data = textscan(fid,'%*u %*s %*s %s %f %f','Delimiter',',','HeaderLines',1);
This gives me the timestamp as the first cell in the cell array. My problem is that I need to ensure that the data format is consistent so that I can convert them to serial dates. The code that wrote the CSV files appears to have a fault in it when the timestamp is exact to the second. This means that instead of getting
'2011-11-06 17:21:34.000000000'
I see
'2011-11-06 17:21:34'
Is it possible to fix this in a vector type statement or do I have to loop over all stamps and fix them individually? (speed is of essence as there is lots of data)
  댓글 수: 1
Jan
Jan 2012년 1월 8일
I see, that somebody has added the tag "for loop" - this might be the problem. Using a FOR loop would slow down the processing remarkably in this case!

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

답변 (1개)

Jan
Jan 2012년 1월 8일
C = {'2011-11-06 17:21:34.000000000'; ...
'2011-11-07 17:21:34'; ...
'2011-11-08 17:21:34.010000000'};
This can be directly converted:
Num = datenum(C);
So what is exactly the problem? You can create the date vectors manually by:
Str = sprintf('%s ', C{:});
M = sscanf(Str, '%d-%d-%d %d:%d:%g ');
M = transpose(reshape(M, 6, []));
Num = datenum(M); % Better: datenummx(M)
But I do not see a big advantage compared to using datenum directly.
Matlab's date functions are powerful and inconsequence they are slow. A dedicated M- or Mex-file can be much faster. E.g. datenummx(M) will save some time already, because it calls the underlying Mex file directly.
[EDITED]: Another method is appending the fractional seconds manually:
index = (cellfun('length', C) == 19);
C(index) = strcat(C(index), '.0');
But it wastes time to modify the original string list.
Some timings:
C = cell(1, 1000);
for i = 1:1000
C{i} = datestr(now, 31);
end
C(1:10:end) = strcat(C(1:10:end), '.000');
tic;
for i = 1:10
Num = datenum(C);
end
toc % 3.62 sec
tic;
for i = 1:10
Str = sprintf('%s ', C{:});
M = sscanf(Str, '%d-%d-%d %d:%d:%g ');
Num = datenum(transpose(reshape(M, 6, [])));
end
toc % 0.038 sec
If speed matters or you want to reduce your CO2 production, use simple string conversions instead of the really smart datestr function or the automatic internal conversion.
  댓글 수: 1
Richard Bibb
Richard Bibb 2012년 1월 8일
I guess you answered my question and showed my inexperience. I was using a conversion template as follows
>> timeStamp = datenum('2011-11-06 17:21:34','yyyy-mm-dd HH:MM:SS.FFF');
??? Error using ==> datenum at 178
DATENUM failed.
Caused by:
Error using ==> dtstr2dtnummx
Failed on converting date string to date number.
>> timeStamp = datenum('2011-11-06 17:21:34.000000000','yyyy-mm-dd HH:MM:SS.FFF');
>> timeStamp
timeStamp =
7.3481e+005
Clearly it seems bright enough to figure tings out on its own. Not sure how though.....
Many thanks

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

카테고리

Help CenterFile Exchange에서 Data Type Conversion에 대해 자세히 알아보기

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by