Creating a cell array of size n

136 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Luffy
Luffy le 5 Juil 2012
I need a cell array of size n, like if n is 3, I need
C = {'red','red','red'}
If n is 100,
C = {'red','red',.......'red'}(100 cells)
I tried this,
C = cell(1,n);
for i = 1:n
C(i) = 'red';
end
This gives known error of conversion to cell from char is not possible.

Réponse acceptée

James Tursa
James Tursa le 5 Juil 2012
Modifié(e) : James Tursa le 5 Juil 2012
The most memory efficient way is the following without a loop:
C(1:n) = {'red'}; % Assuming C doesn't exist yet (EDITED)
That is because in the above line, all n copies of the 'red' string are reference copies of each other (like a shared data copy), so the memory footprint is smaller than filling each cell individually with a brand new allocated string in a loop.
Having said that, I strongly suspect that what you are attempting to do is futile. If you change any of the individual 'red' strings downstream in your code you will probably need to allocate brand new cell element variables anyway, so this pre-allocation of 'red' would be useless (actually wastes time) regardless of the methoud you use to create C in the first place (my method or with a loop). The only exceptions would be if you don't plan on altering C at all downstream, or if you plan to operate on each string "in-place" ... i.e., changing the contents of the string directly without changing its length, etc. Can you elaborate on what you intend to do with C downstream in your code?
  4 commentaires
Albert Yam
Albert Yam le 5 Juil 2012
See Jan Simon's answer. James just missed a '1:n'.
C(1,1:n) = {'red'};
James Tursa
James Tursa le 5 Juil 2012
P.S. My comments also apply to Jan's answer, since it essentially does the same thing.

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Plus de réponses (3)

Jan
Jan le 5 Juil 2012
C = cell(1, n);
C(:) = {'red'};

F.
F. le 5 Juil 2012
Your error :
C(i) = 'red';
C is a cell array, with C(i) you reach the place in the cell array and not the element which is in this place. So try :
C{i} = 'red';
  2 commentaires
F.
F. le 5 Juil 2012
I'm not sure but try also this :
n = 100
repmat( {'red'}, 1, n )
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco le 19 Mai 2021
Dear F,
thanks for your explanation of the cell array object.
Actually, it was quite tricky to understand.
Best.

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grapevine
grapevine le 5 Juil 2012
You have to modify your code in this way :
C = cell(1,n);
for i = 1:n
C(i) = java.lang.String('red');
end
Another solution could pass by using the function: char2cell, which is available on Matlab Central Exchange
good luck
  2 commentaires
Jan
Jan le 5 Juil 2012
Modifié(e) : Jan le 5 Juil 2012
java.lang.String ?! Why should this be converted to a java string? And CHAR2CELL seems not helpful also.
grapevine
grapevine le 9 Juil 2012
Modifié(e) : grapevine le 9 Juil 2012
Weird! it works for me. read the doc :)

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