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What's the difference between a TimeTable and a timeseries?

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Albert Passy
Albert Passy le 20 Nov 2017
Commenté : Peter Perkins le 21 Nov 2017
R2017a. Title says it.

Réponses (1)

Albert Passy
Albert Passy le 20 Nov 2017
Modifié(e) : Albert Passy le 20 Nov 2017
Ok - answered my own question. Timetables are a type of timeseries, but the data can be of hetrogeneous type. In a timeseries object, the data must be numeric.
  1 commentaire
Peter Perkins
Peter Perkins le 21 Nov 2017
Depending on what you mean, that may not be entirely correct. The terminology here is difficult with only one font to work in.
A timetable (the class) is not a timeseries (the class) in the "isa" sense of class hierarchies, although both types are intended for time series data. You are correct that a timeseries can contain only numeric data, and only one data array. A timetable can contain multiple variables (a.k.a. channels/signals/...) each of different types, and so is more like a tscollection ("time series collection") in that sense.
Also, the "arrayness" of a timeseries array ts is such that (since about R2010) ts(1) is one "time series", ts(2) is another, and so on. The "arrayness" of a timetable tt is such that tt is one "time series" and, for example, tt(rows,:) is a subset of that one "time series".
Really, a timetable is like a table whose rows are each tagged with a row time.

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