How to read an N-dimensioned matrix from a binary file

8 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Jim
Jim le 13 Fév 2013
I would like to write a Matlab script to read an N-dimensioned matrix created in Fortran. Specifically, the Fortran code wrote to a binary file using the following:
write(30) a, b, c
with the following declarations for a,b,c
real a(16,20,22,6,3, 2)
real b(16,20,22,6,3,13)
real c(16,20,22,6,3,13)
In Matlab, it seems that fread handles only a vector or 2-dimesional matrix fread(fileID, sizeA) where sizeA is a vector of size n or 2-dimensional matrix [m,n].
How can I read the N-dimensioned matrix I described?

Réponse acceptée

James Tursa
James Tursa le 13 Fév 2013
Modifié(e) : James Tursa le 13 Fév 2013
Read the variable as a 1D using the total number of elements (e.g., 16*20*22*6*3*2) and then reshape the result. Since Fortran stores nD elements in memory in the same order that MATLAB does (column major) this will work. HOWEVER, unless you opened the file in Fortran as a stream, you will likely get record headers on the Fortran side that you will need to skip on the MATLAB side. Probably 4 bytes, but could be something else depending on the source machine and compiler used. E.g., something like this might work:
fid = fopen('yourfilename');
h = fread(fid,1,'*uint32'); % May need adjusting
a = fread(fid, 16*20*22*6*3*2, '*single');
b = fread(fid, 16*20*22*6*3*13, '*single');
c = fread(fid, 16*20*22*6*3*13, '*single');
a = reshape(a,[16 20 22 6 3 2]);
b = reshape(b,[16 20 22 6 3 13]);
c = reshape(c,[16 20 22 6 3 13]);
  3 commentaires
James Tursa
James Tursa le 13 Fév 2013
Modifié(e) : James Tursa le 13 Fév 2013
Your open statement is not stream, it is simply a sequential unformatted file. Thus I would expect to see the record header as I indicated. Since this header is machine and compiler specific (not part of the Fortran Standard) there is no guaranteed way to know for an arbitrary file what (if anything) is there. The only thing to do in a general sense is trial-and-error until you discover what works. But installations I have used have 4 bytes up front (e.g., Intel Fortran on a PC) so I would start with that as a first guess. Give my code a shot and see if it works.
Jim
Jim le 14 Fév 2013
It looks like what you specified works. Thanks for the help!

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Aniruddh Murali
Aniruddh Murali le 27 Sep 2018
If I am opening a bin in Fortran using the following command
open(unit=1,file='24092018.bin',
1 form='unformatted',status="old",access='sequential')
is there a way to open the same file in Matlab?

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