Dear,
I would like to add a new element in the first position in an cell array For example if ArrCell={[1],[2],[3],[4],[5]} is the existing cell and [new] is a matrix. I would like to get ArrCell={[new],[1],[2],[3],[4],[5]}
Of course, I can get this result using a temporal cell array and looping over all the elements of the existing one, but the quesion is if there an efficient way to get this result
Thanks in advance,

 Réponse acceptée

Adam
Adam le 18 Déc 2015
ArrCell = [ { new }, ArrCell ];
should work. I'm not at my machine with Matlab at the moment so can't double-check, but fairly sure that works.

5 commentaires

Luis Isaac
Luis Isaac le 18 Déc 2015
Great, It works!!! Thanks a lot,
Guillaume
Guillaume le 18 Déc 2015
Note that there is no data structure matlab that allows for efficient insertion at the head of a container (as you're doing here). So, while the above way is efficient in that you don't have to write much code, it's still inefficient in that matlab has to reallocate a whole new array and copy all the data in the background. So your insertion is O(n).
Of course, it does not matter if your cell array is small enough.
Correct answer would be:
ArrCell = [ { new }; ArrCell ];
Adam
Adam le 20 Mar 2020
ArrCell was a row array. You can't concatenate vertically a scalar and a 5-element row array.
new = magic(3) % A matrix
ArrCell={[1],[2],[3],[4],[5]} % A cell array
ArrCell = [ { new }, ArrCell ] % Adam uses comma
ArrCell2 = [ { new }; ArrCell ]; % Daniel uses semicolon
new =
8 1 6
3 5 7
4 9 2
ArrCell =
1×5 cell array
{[1]} {[2]} {[3]} {[4]} {[5]}
ArrCell =
1×6 cell array
{3×3 double} {[1]} {[2]} {[3]} {[4]} {[5]}
Error using vertcat
Dimensions of arrays being concatenated are not consistent.
Error in test1 (line 12)
ArrCell2 = [ { new }; ArrCell ];

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Plus de réponses (3)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 18 Déc 2015
But the big question is why are you even using a cell array for that instead of a simple numerical array. Cell arrays are complicated and use a huge amount of overhead. From what you've shown there is no reason to use one. I recommend this instead
Arr = [1,2,3,4,5];
Arr = [new, 1,2,3,4,5]

2 commentaires

Luis Isaac
Luis Isaac le 18 Déc 2015
I using a cell array because ArrCell is composed of vectors and matrices of different sizes, i.e. size of [new] is different, or could be different, than [1]
Josh
Josh le 4 Mai 2024
appreciate this nudge in a more efficient direction, i fallback on cells arrays out of habit and ease but switching over to numerical arrays where possible...i make animations and cells help when image sizes are changing at least but seem uneccessary when image size is fixed

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Fletcher Garrison
Fletcher Garrison le 3 Fév 2021
Modifié(e) : Fletcher Garrison le 3 Fév 2021
You can also use:
Arrcell = {1,2,3,4,5};
new = magic(5);
Arrcell = horzcat(new,Arrcell);
For future people looking this up:
testCell = {"one", 2, 10, "llama"}
testCell = 1x4 cell array
{["one"]} {[2]} {[10]} {["llama"]}
testCell = {"newInput", testCell{:}}
testCell = 1x5 cell array
{["newInput"]} {["one"]} {[2]} {[10]} {["llama"]}

1 commentaire

I stand corrected by MATLAB autofix. Apparently this is faster.
testCell ={"one", 2, 10, "llama"}
testCell = 1x4 cell array
{["one"]} {[2]} {[10]} {["llama"]}
testCell = [{"newInput"}, testCell(:).']
testCell = 1x5 cell array
{["newInput"]} {["one"]} {[2]} {[10]} {["llama"]}

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by