How to assign a name to a Table given set of names?
1 view (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Hi folks. I have a long code which runs every time with the number of items a set. For instance I have a set: Subjects = {Name1,Name2,Name3}. My FOR produces 3 different tables/matrixes: A, B and C. So each time the FOR statement runs, it overwrites the tables generated for each different subject. Is there a way to insert a code inside my FOR statement to store each table/matrix (A,B,C) and name each after the subject? For instance, something like this:
Subjects = {'Name1','Name2','Name3'}
for i=1:length(Subjects)
A = magic(2)
B = magic(3)
C = magic(4)
strcat('A_',Subjects(1)) = A % These were my best attempts, But It doesn't work.
strcat('B_',Subjects(2)) = B
strcat('C_',Subjects(3)) = C
end
% Any help much appreciated.
2 Comments
Adam
on 6 Apr 2016
I assume you mean matrices rather than tables. A table is now a specific data type in Matlab so it is useful to be as specific as you can with terminology. Your code suggests these are simply matrices though.
Accepted Answer
Ralf
on 6 Apr 2016
Edited: Ralf
on 6 Apr 2016
Hi Edson,
would that work for you?
assignin('base', ['A_' Subjects{1}], A);
3 Comments
Guillaume
on 6 Apr 2016
Edited: Guillaume
on 6 Apr 2016
As a rule, do not use assignin, evalin, eval and similar. Do not create variable names dynamically and do not embed metadata in variable names. The metadata belongs in the content of the variable not its name.
Creating variable names dynamically is slow, is a nightmare to debug, makes subsequent code a lot more complicated, and may also not always work.
Adam's answer is a much better way of doing what you want.
Ralf
on 6 Apr 2016
Guillaume, you are absolutely right. Assignin and evalin are "quick and dirty" solutions. I must admit that Adam's solution is much better.
More Answers (1)
Adam
on 6 Apr 2016
Edited: Adam
on 6 Apr 2016
Taking your current solution and making minimal changes, rather than starting from scratch...
Subjects = {'Name1','Name2','Name3'}
for i=1:numel(Subjects)
A.( Subjects{i} ) = magic(2)
B.( Subjects{i} ) = magic(3)
C.( Subjects{i} ) = magic(4)
end
will give you structs A, B and C with a field for each subject containing the relevant matrix.
You can then get hold of these fields using dynamic strings in the same way I do above.
See Also
Categories
Find more on Data Type Identification in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!