How to save numerical array as file (any format) with different precisions (format) for different columns in the same array?
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Hi I am matlab 2016b user. I have one numerical array (950*2 double). When I save this, I want to save 1st column with integer format (no decimal point...I mean %.0f) and to save 2nd column with scientific notation with 16 sigifinicant digits....such as '4.123456789012345e-11'. This is important issue with processing speed in my code. So far, when I use .mat format (binary) with save' function, it gave 9 kb in file size. However, I may need to use no-binary format like...txt....csv...etc. When I tried fprintf and dlmwrite functions with diverse options, 26 kb was record with txt/csv format. I also saw some similar answers using loop for fprintf function, but regarding code running time issue, I hope I can hear another answer using for loop.
Do you know how to do it?
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Walter Roberson
2017년 3월 30일
Consider sending the files in binary, but also providing the person with a program that allows them to view the binary as text. With 6 million files, you can be sure that the other person is not going to read the text of more than a very small fraction of them.
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Guillaume
2017년 3월 30일
One simple way to write that matrix as text according to your specifications:
x = rand(950, 2) .* [100, 1]; %demo data, requires R2016b or later
fid = fopen('somename.csv', 'wt');
fprintf(fid, '%0.f, %.16e\n', x.');
fclose(fid);
추가 답변 (1개)
Walter Roberson
2017년 3월 30일
fid = fopen('YourOutputFile.csv', 'wt');
fmt = '%d, %.21e\n';
data = [round(YourArray(:,1)), YourArray(:,2)];
fprintf(fid, fmt, data .'); %transpose is important here
fclose(fid)
The text output will definitely be larger than binary.
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