Hey,
I am trying to read some data from a .dat file, by using the textscan function. The Problem is, that MATLAB outputs me a cell array where the cells contain the whole column of my data and I am not able to adress each element individually, which I will need for further evaluation. Sb knows what I am missing here?
Merry Christmans
Code and files:
datacell = textscan(fid, '%u %u %f64 %f64 %f64','HeaderLines', 1);
Data File:
% track# exppar1[Hz] lcut[dB HL] mlow[CU/dB] mhigh[CU/dB]
1 250.00000000 54.22407002 0.40618241 0.88538138
2 500.00000000 65.67426102 0.35505814 1.03196552
3 1000.00000000 68.89377754 0.33789152 1.14795756
4 2000.00000000 59.92227307 0.36044833 0.99198012
5 4000.00000000 63.79115269 0.39970735 3.14824276
6 6000.00000000 56.08308046 0.46312449 1.20653864
output of datacell{1}
ans =
1
2
3
4
5
6

 Réponse acceptée

Kirby Fears
Kirby Fears le 24 Déc 2015

1 vote

You've given textscan directions to read 5 columns where the first two are %u (integers) and the next three are %f64 (doubles). Considering that you are specifying data types per column, Matlab has to give you each column separately. It's standard to put the columns together into a cell array.
You can access row 5 of column 1 by indexing twice as follows:
datacell{1}(5)
ans =
5
Does this solve your problem? What else are you trying to do with the data?

4 commentaires

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 24 Déc 2015
MATLAB always leaves the columns separate for textscan() unless you specify the CollectOutput option.
Kirby Fears
Kirby Fears le 24 Déc 2015
Modifié(e) : Kirby Fears le 24 Déc 2015
Enabling CollectOutput with columns of different datatypes will be even more confusing to work with. It would put the first 2 columns into datacell{1} and the next 3 into datacell{2}.
Kirby Fears
Kirby Fears le 24 Déc 2015
Modifié(e) : Kirby Fears le 24 Déc 2015
If you're willing to make each column the same datatype, you can read your data into a double array as follows:
dataArray = textscan(fid, '%n %n %n %n %n',...
'HeaderLines', 1,'CollectOutput',true);
dataArray = dataArray{1};
Elduderino
Elduderino le 24 Déc 2015
Thanks was exactly what I was looking for, and didn't expect this cell array + 'regular array' syntax.
I guess I am just going to make some graphs, standard deviation and maybe look for correlation. Nothing fancy :)
Thanks again and a merry Christmas you all!

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