Problem with the use of strrep command

18 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Ivan Mich
Ivan Mich le 6 Mar 2023
Commenté : Steven Lord le 7 Mar 2023
I have a problem with strrep command. I have noticed that this command no use for cell array with square bracket character ([])
Could you please help me?
  3 commentaires
Askic V
Askic V le 6 Mar 2023
Here is one example with cell array with square brackets and use of strrep function:
aa = {['first'],['second']}
aa = 1×2 cell array
{'first'} {'second'}
aa
aa = 1×2 cell array
{'first'} {'second'}
aa(1) = strrep(aa(1),'first','replacement');
aa
aa = 1×2 cell array
{'replacement'} {'second'}
Can you explain what problem could be here?
DGM
DGM le 6 Mar 2023
Modifié(e) : DGM le 6 Mar 2023
In that case, the square brackets have no influence over the processing.
aa = {['first'],['second']}
is the same as
aa = {'first','second'}
Since we're guessing here, other interpretations might include:
% an unintended concatenation
aa = {['first','second']}
... or
% the brackets are within the char vectors
aa = {'first [subexpr]','second [other subexpr]'}
Where either the brackets themselves are to be replaced (shouldn't be a problem), or the subexpressions therin are to be replaced (strrep would be the wrong tool).
Alternatively, my guess is that this might not even be a cellchar
% a cell of strings or string arrays might cause problems
aa = {"first" "second"}
aa = {["first" "second"]}
in which case the solution really depends on what's in the cell array, how it's arranged, and whether it should even be in a cell array.
But we'll have to wait.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Réponses (1)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 6 Mar 2023
That is correct, when called with a cell array with some char vectors in the cells as input strrep requires each element of that cell array to be a char vector. I'm using try / catch here so I can run code after the section that throws the error.
a = {'apple', [], 'cherry'}
a = 1×3 cell array
{'apple'} {0×0 double} {'cherry'}
try
strrep(a, 'e', 'E')
catch ME
fprintf("This call threw error '%s'.\n", ME.message)
end
This call threw error 'Cell elements must be character vectors.'.
Use cellfun or a for loop to replace the empty numeric elements with an empty char array.
E = cellfun(@isempty, a);
a(E) = {''}
a = 1×3 cell array
{'apple'} {0×0 char} {'cherry'}
strrep(a, 'e', 'E')
ans = 1×3 cell array
{'applE'} {0×0 char} {'chErry'}
  3 commentaires
Askic V
Askic V le 7 Mar 2023
Cool, thank you for the insight @Steven Lord.
Important thing to watch for!
Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 7 Mar 2023
More likely than not the code that generated the variable a did not explicitly assigned an empty vector into it, so it's easy to overlook that possibility.
a = {'apple'}
a = 1×1 cell array
{'apple'}
a{3} = 'cherry'
a = 1×3 cell array
{'apple'} {0×0 double} {'cherry'}
MATLAB needed to put something into the second cell in the variable a when I assigned 'cherry' into the third cell. It essentially chose []. In this case where I knew I wanted all the cells to have text data I might have preallocated the cell array with repmat to ensure all cells had some text data. That's not so much preallocating for memory (cells in a cell array are not required to be contiguous in memory like elements in a numeric array) but more preallocating with the expected types.
b = repmat({''}, 1, 3)
b = 1×3 cell array
{0×0 char} {0×0 char} {0×0 char}
b{1} = 'apple'
b = 1×3 cell array
{'apple'} {0×0 char} {0×0 char}
b{3} = 'cherry'
b = 1×3 cell array
{'apple'} {0×0 char} {'cherry'}
strrep(b, 'e', 'E')
ans = 1×3 cell array
{'applE'} {0×0 char} {'chErry'}

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Catégories

En savoir plus sur Characters and Strings dans Help Center et File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by