Add Variables to workspace from a struct
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Jimmy Neutron
le 19 Nov 2020
Commenté : Jimmy Neutron
le 24 Nov 2020
I have a struct called "Values" that has two headers - Name and Data.
My final goal is to export the variables as a .mat file that I would be able to use afterwards for other things
The ouput I want to accomplish is that it looks like this in the workspace when the .mat file is loaded into another .m file:
%Name Value
S1 [3000000x1 double]
S2 [3000000x1 double]
S3 [3000000x1 double]
S4 [3000000x1 double]
S5 [3000000x1 double]
So far I have tried to accomplish this as follows:
Names = {Values(:).Name}';
Data = {Values(:).Data}';
assignin('base',string(Names(:)),cell2mat(Data(:)))
But it give me an error
Error using assignin
Invalid variable name "" in ASSIGNIN.
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Ameer Hamza
le 19 Nov 2020
Modifié(e) : Ameer Hamza
le 19 Nov 2020
It is not a good coding practice to create a variable name like S1, S2, ... https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/304528-tutorial-why-variables-should-not-be-named-dynamically-eval. It usually creates complex, inefficient, hard to debug code, and In the long term, such a code is hard to maintain. Keep the code in an array format. However, if you want to do this, then try something like this.
Names = {Values(:).Name}';
Data = {Values(:).Data}';
cellfun(@(x,y) assignin('base', x, y), Names, Data)
3 commentaires
Ameer Hamza
le 19 Nov 2020
Yes, that was the mistake in my answer. I have updated it. Can you share your 'Values' struct in a .mat file?
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Stephen23
le 19 Nov 2020
Modifié(e) : Stephen23
le 19 Nov 2020
"My final goal is to export the variables as a .mat file that I would be able to use afterwards for other things"
Then creating variables names dynamically is entirely the wrong approach:
The robust and efficient solution is to use the -struct syntax of save, e.g.:
S(1).data = 1:3;
S(1).name = 'S1';
S(2).data = 4:6;
S(2).name = 'S2';
S(3).data = 7:9;
S(3).name = 'S3';
C = [{S.name};{S.data}];
T = struct(C{:});
save('myfile','-struct','T')
Checking the mat-file contents:
whos -file myfile.mat
"The ouput I want to accomplish is that it looks like this in the workspace when the .mat file is loaded into another .m file:"
The recommended way to load data from a mat-file is into an output structure:
S = load('myfile')
This avoids a number of bugs that can occur when loading directly into a workspace:
You can access the fieldnames dynamically:
Note that using numbered variables is a sign that you are doing something wrong. Most likely the data could be designed better so that your code would be simpler and more efficient, e.g. by replacing those pseudo-indices with real indices into an array (which could be a container type, e.g. cell, structure, table, etc.).
3 commentaires
Stephen23
le 21 Nov 2020
Modifié(e) : Stephen23
le 21 Nov 2020
"but I wanted to create a .mat file where once loaded all the variables were displayed right there"
That is exactly what my answer gives you. The difference is that my answer uses a more effiicent approach (i.e. no assignin or eval or the like), but it certainly gives exactly the same mat file (which is why I showed the content of the mat file using whos).
Loading into an output variable is recommended, but does not change the content of the mat file. You can load it into the workspace directly just as you describe.
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