find how many times sequences are present in a string array

2 views (last 30 days)
Hi! I have
S={1;[1 631];[1 631 618];[1 631 618 574];[1 631 618 574 608];631;[631 618];[631 618 574]}
and
T={'1' '596' '674' '' '' '' '' '';'674' '631' '1' '631' '1' '618' '631' '618';'641' '617' '674' '631' '654' '629' '625' '673';'674' '673' '674' '673' '674' '618' '631' '1';'674' '618' '1' '618' '631' '627' '631' '';'631' '1' '631' '674' '740' '' '' '';'739' '740' '733' '674' '631' '618' '631' '618';'674' '673' '674' '1' '641' '' '' '';'618' '1' '631' '618' '631' '618' '631' '618';'674' '631' '618' '631' '618' '631' '681' '675';'674' '631' '1' '631' '625' '618' '631' '';'641' '642' '618' '631' '618' '631' '627' '631';'618' '631' '1' '631' '1' '618' '631' '674';'674' '673' '674' '631' '674' '' '' '';'674' '719' '618' '631' '618' '631' '618' '631';'674' '631' '618' '631' '1' '618' '631' '627';'674' '673' '674' '673' '674' '631' '618' '1';'674' '631' '618' '631' '674' '' '' '';'674' '631' '618' '631' '618' '631' '618' '631';'674' '618' '631' '616' '545' '1442' '1595' '';'1' '1595' '1' '1583' '550' '674' '' '';'674' '631' '1' '631' '618' '' '' '';'674' '631' '618' '631' '' '' '' '';'1' '631' '618' '574' '608' '1' '608' '618';'626' '631' '1' '631' '618' '' '' '';'674' '673' '631' '618' '631' '659' '633' '631'}
and I want to know how many times the sequences in S are present in T.
E.g.
  • First sequence is 1 --> I search it in the first column of T (present three times)
  • Second sequence [1 631] ---> I search 1 in first column of T e 631 in the second columns: they have to be present contemporary (they are present contemporary for 1 time)
  • Third sequence [1 631 618] --> search 1 in first column of T, 631 in the second columns and 618 in the third columns: they have to be present contemporary (they are present contemporary for 1 time) and so on for all the others values
I want like output the sequences and the number of times that they are present in T, can you help me?
  5 Comments
pamela sulis
pamela sulis on 13 Apr 2016
Edited: pamela sulis on 13 Apr 2016
I try to explain better:
first sequence is 1 --> I search it in the first column of T (present three times) Second sequence [1 631] ---> I search 1 in first column of T e 631 in the second columns: they have to be present contemporary (they are present contemporary for 1 time) Third sequence [1 631 618] --> search 1 in first column of T, 631 in the second columns and 618 in the third columns: they have to be present contemporary (they are present contemporary for 1 time) and so on for all the others values
Guillaume
Guillaume on 13 Apr 2016
Is that correct that T is made up of strings whereas S is made up of numbers? In that case, can we assume that the numbers are always integer?

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Guillaume
Guillaume on 13 Apr 2016
Edited: Guillaume on 13 Apr 2016
Here is one way to do it:
First, convert T into a matrix of number with str2double. The empty strings will be converted to NaNs, I assume NaN is never present in S anyway:
TT = str2double(T);
You can then iterate over the rows of S and use ismember or bsxfun(@eq...) to check for equality, only using the required numbers of columns from TT:
count = cellfun(@(s) sum(all(bsxfun(@eq, s, TT(:, 1:numel(s))), 2)), S)
note: in actually code, please use better variable names than S, T and TT.

More Answers (0)

Categories

Find more on Data Type Conversion 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!