Dealing with multiline text
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I know how to open a file, access the data, and parse into arrays with regular expressions. What I want to do is somehow set a variable to a multiline text value and parse it in the same way. I would like to be able to do the following
x='line1 x 789
line2; y 483
line3{}
line4 1 4 7 9'
and then be able to parse each line of x. The goal is require a minimal amount of error prone editing to data being pasted from a file which will then be parsed into arrays. I don't want to create files for each text section. Is my only choice
x(1) = ...
x(2) = ...
etc Thanks
easily_confused
Réponse acceptée
Plus de réponses (5)
Walter Roberson
le 15 Nov 2011
MATLAB has no multi-line character string syntax. The closest it gets is
x = {
'line 1 x 789'
'line2; y 483'
'line3{}'
'line4 1 4 7 9'
};
There are possibilities such as
x = regexp('line 1 x 789|line2; y 483|line3{}|line4 1 4 7 9', '\|', 'split');
If you use char(10) (newline, sprintf('\n')) as the line break character,
x = 'line 1 x 789|line2; y 483|line3{}|line4 1 4 7 9';
x(x=='|') = char(10);
then you can textscan(x,...) and textscan will treat it as the input and will recognize the newlines.
KUNHUAN
le 13 Fév 2023
2 votes
A good way is to combine fprintf with [].
Adding \n and ... at the end of every line.
Press ENTER can automatically break the lines from the mouse cursor.
Make up spaces for any variables with the % sign.
Supporting array storage.
Example:
Single line text

Put the mouse cursor before "Matlab".
Press ENTER. Notice the line was automatically broken down.

Add \n to the end of the last line to actually break it. Run the cell again. MAGIC!

Put more variables in placeholders across lines if you want.

More lines if you want.

Put all the lines into arrays if you want (I think this addresses your needs! ).

Yet another workaround
join([
"first line"
"second line"
"third line"
], newline)
strjoin({
'first line'
'second line'
'third line'
}, newline)
easily confused
le 16 Nov 2011
0 votes
1 commentaire
Walter Roberson
le 17 Nov 2011
You can vote for them; that helps.
Benjamin Davis
le 16 Déc 2019
Modifié(e) : Benjamin Davis
le 16 Déc 2019
I created a File Exchange submission to address this exact issue. It brings heredoc/herestring syntax to MATLAB by parsing specially formatted comments.
For example:
%Source: https://json.org/example.html
%{
json << END
{
"glossary": {
"title": "example glossary",
"GlossDiv": {
"title": "S",
"GlossList": {
"GlossEntry": {
"ID": "SGML",
"SortAs": "SGML",
"GlossTerm": "Standard Generalized Markup Language",
"Acronym": "SGML",
"Abbrev": "ISO 8879:1986",
"GlossDef": {
"para": "A meta-markup language, used to create markup languages such as DocBook.",
"GlossSeeAlso": ["GML", "XML"]
},
"GlossSee": "markup"
}
}
}
}
}
END
%}
%this call parses the above comment
hd = heredoc();
%the heredoc is made available under the fieldname 'json'
obj = jsondecode(hd.json);
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