why is a blank ignored in strcat

6 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Ross
Ross le 15 Oct 2013
Commenté : Jos (10584) le 15 Oct 2013
as an example, the following code:
strcat(num2str(1,'%02.0f'), '-', num2str(2), ' ', num2str(3), ':', num2str(4,'% 2.0f'))
produces:
01-23:4
whereas I want:
01-2 3: 4
Seems pretty simple but ... would someone help please?

Réponse acceptée

Jan
Jan le 15 Oct 2013
Modifié(e) : Jan le 15 Oct 2013
'% 2.0f' adds a leading space on demand only, so you want: ' %2.0f'.
But this would be nicer, faster and less confusing:
sprintf('%02.0f-%d %d: % 2.0f', 1, 2, 3, 4)
To get around this ugly space gimmicks, which come from the backward compatibility to times before cell strings have been invented, I'm using a dedicated function to join strings: FEX: CStrCatStr. But this is designed for cell strings and for strings horzcat works sufficiently without deleting spaces smartly.

Plus de réponses (2)

Friedrich
Friedrich le 15 Oct 2013
Hi,
the doc states:
"For character array inputs, strcat removes trailing ASCII white-space characters: space, tab, vertical tab, newline, carriage return, and form-feed. For cell array inputs, strcat does not remove trailing white space."
So you can use:
strcat({num2str(1,'%02.0f')}, {'-'},{num2str(2)}, {' '}, {num2str(3)}, {':'}, {num2str(4,'% 2.0f')})
or dont use strcat and use []:
[num2str(1,'%02.0f'), '-', num2str(2), ' ', num2str(3), ':', num2str(4,'% 2.0f')]
  4 commentaires
Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 15 Oct 2013
I was talking to Ross. I know Frederich knows both methods and I agree with you about why Frederich answered that way. I was trying to point Ross towards the method that I find gives me much more control with much less complicated syntax.
Jan
Jan le 15 Oct 2013
@Image Analyst: I've inserted "@Ross" in your comment and have removed by concerning question.

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Jos (10584)
Jos (10584) le 15 Oct 2013
Modifié(e) : Jos (10584) le 15 Oct 2013
This used to be my workaround for the way strcat handles spaces:
strrep(strcat('AAA', '#SPACE#', 'BBB'),'#SPACE#',' ')
  2 commentaires
Jan
Jan le 15 Oct 2013
What about: ['AAA', ' ', 'BBB'] ?
Jos (10584)
Jos (10584) le 15 Oct 2013

I should have stressed the word used ...

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