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Help parsing a string

3 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Russell Senior
Russell Senior le 8 Mai 2020
Commenté : Ameer Hamza le 11 Mai 2020
I need some help parsing a char array, hopefully someone has an idea. Matlab loads my table and the table header is not matlab compliant, so it creats a char array that is a property of the table column, and I need to parse that to get the proper table header name.
One of the char arrays is Original column heading: '(name='/mandySimulation_1/clock/simulationTime' type='DOUBLE' quantity='TIME' unit='s')'
So I need to create 4 variables, name, type, quantity, and unit. Each should have the subsequent value per the string. I tried using sscanf, but I can't figure out how to use it. Any suggestsion? I would like the name to keep the "/" characters because I will parse those later. It's a little easier because the / can be a delimiter.
The char arrays I'm working with are not the same length, but they always have the name, type, quantity, and unit variable name. Here is an example of another char array:
Original column heading: '(name='/mandySimulation_1/engine_1/longBlock_1/shortBlock_1/cylinderBlockAssembly_1/cylinder_1/ringLeakage_1/referenceDiameter' type='DOUBLE' quantity='LENGTH' unit='m')'
Thanks in advance for any help you can give.

Réponse acceptée

Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza le 8 Mai 2020
Modifié(e) : Ameer Hamza le 8 Mai 2020
Try this
str = "Original column heading: '(name='/mandySimulation_1/clock/simulationTime' type='DOUBLE' quantity='TIME' unit='s')'";
name = regexp(str, '=''([^\s''.]*)''', 'tokens');
Result
>> name{1}
ans =
"/mandySimulation_1/clock/simulationTime"
>> name{2}
ans =
"DOUBLE"
>> name{3}
ans =
"TIME"
>> name{4}
ans =
"s"
It will work, as long as the strings are in the specified format.
  6 commentaires
Russell Senior
Russell Senior le 11 Mai 2020
Thanks so much! I hope wherever you are working, they are paying you well!
One minor correction:
S(i).(match{j}(1)) = match{j}(2);
Should be
S(i).(match{j}{1}) = match{j}{2};
Then it works 100% perfect. Nicely done, and thanks again!
Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza le 11 Mai 2020
I am glad to be of help. Thanks for your kind remarks :)
In R2020a, both match{j}(1) and match{j}{1} works. Maybe this is something related to MATLAB releases.

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