How to use a loop with datetime and store the datetime values?
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Hello everybody,
I want to create a time vector (datetime), that consists of the time span 02-Jan-2001-18-Apr-2012. Here every day should be sampled in 5 min steps from 9.35-16.00.
Example:
'02-Jan-2001 09:35:00'
'02-Jan-2001 09:40:00'
'02-Jan-2001 09:45:00'
...
'02-Jan-2001 16:00:00'
'03-Jan-2001 9:35:00'
...
'03-Jan-2001 16:00:00'
...
'18-Apr-2012 16:00:00'
I have 4124 days to create with 78 five minute steps per day. I already constructed the code to create the 5minute time steps for one day.
t1 = datetime(2001,01,2,9,35,0);
t2 = datetime(2001,01,2,16,0,0);
t = (t1:minutes(5):t2)';
However I don't know how to create the datetime for the whole time span 2001-2012. I tried to use a loop, in the following form:
for i=0:4124
t(i) = (t1:minutes(5):t2)+days(i);
end
However I get an error message, it seems to be not possible to store the created values in the way t(i), because I am using datetime here and not a double format.
Can anybody help me with this problem ?
1 Comment
Accepted Answer
Ameer Hamza
on 5 May 2018
Edited: Ameer Hamza
on 5 May 2018
Here is a solution without for loop
T1 = datetime('02-Jan-2001');
T2 = datetime('18-Apr-2012');
totalNumDays = days(T2-T1);
t1 = datetime(2001,01,2,9,35,0);
t2 = datetime(2001,01,2,16,0,0);
oneDay = (t1:minutes(5):t2);
complete = arrayfun(@(x) oneDay+x, 0:totalNumDays, 'UniformOutput', false);
completeList = [complete{:}];
5 Comments
Ameer Hamza
on 5 May 2018
@dpb thanks for your comment. I have edited the answer to convert the result to a linear list as that might be more useful in some cases.
More Answers (2)
Peter Perkins
on 14 May 2018
I'm a bit late to this party, but isn't it just this?
>> dt = datetime(2001,1,2:5);
>> et = hours(9:12)';
>> t = repmat(dt,length(et),1) + repmat(et,1,length(dt))
t =
4×4 datetime array
02-Jan-2001 09:00:00 03-Jan-2001 09:00:00 04-Jan-2001 09:00:00 05-Jan-2001 09:00:00
02-Jan-2001 10:00:00 03-Jan-2001 10:00:00 04-Jan-2001 10:00:00 05-Jan-2001 10:00:00
02-Jan-2001 11:00:00 03-Jan-2001 11:00:00 04-Jan-2001 11:00:00 05-Jan-2001 11:00:00
02-Jan-2001 12:00:00 03-Jan-2001 12:00:00 04-Jan-2001 12:00:00 05-Jan-2001 12:00:00
>> t = t(:)
t =
16×1 datetime array
02-Jan-2001 09:00:00
02-Jan-2001 10:00:00
02-Jan-2001 11:00:00
02-Jan-2001 12:00:00
03-Jan-2001 09:00:00
03-Jan-2001 10:00:00
03-Jan-2001 11:00:00
03-Jan-2001 12:00:00
04-Jan-2001 09:00:00
04-Jan-2001 10:00:00
04-Jan-2001 11:00:00
04-Jan-2001 12:00:00
05-Jan-2001 09:00:00
05-Jan-2001 10:00:00
05-Jan-2001 11:00:00
05-Jan-2001 12:00:00
0 Comments
dpb
on 5 May 2018
Edited: dpb
on 5 May 2018
dtday=[t1:datetime(2012,4,18+1)].'; % array of fixed start times each day
dtm=[];
for i=1:length(dtday)
dtm=[dtm;[dtday(i)+minutes(0:5:389)].']; % add the time vector duration for each day
end
>> [dtm(1) dtm(end)]
ans =
datetime
02-Jan-2001 09:35:00 18-Apr-2012 16:00:00
>>
Above needs optimization to compute and preallocate output array but shows at least one way...
ADDENDUM Well, hadn't tried since upgraded past R2012b I guess...
dtday=[t1:datetime(2012,4,18+1)].'; % array of fixed start times
dur=minutes(0:5:389).'; % the daily minutes as duration array
dtm=arrayfun(@(t) t+dur,dtday,'uniform',0);
dtm=dtm{:};
does work equivalently to other solution excepting cast to a full datetime native array instead of leaving a cell array of datetime arrays.
4 Comments
Ameer Hamza
on 5 May 2018
Yes, I noticed that it create a 2D array when I commented that. But I didn't mention it because conversion to a column vector is quite trivial.
It is also interesting to mention that you can avoid all this conversion to a single column at the end if you initialize dur as a row vector instead of a column. Try this
t1 = datetime(2001,01,2,9,35,0);
dtday=[t1:datetime(2012,4,18+1)].'; % array of fixed start times
dur=minutes(0:5:389); % the daily minutes as duration array
dtm=arrayfun(@(t) t+dur,dtday,'uniform',0);
dtm2=[dtm{:}]';
it will also return a 1D array.
dpb
on 5 May 2018
Hmmm...and I went to the trouble to create dur as a column specifically because I wanted end result as column! :) As noted, I tend to avoid cell arrays like the plague unless absolutely mandatory so hadn't ever really observed the specific behavior. Seems more than peculiar, but guess once aware can (if can remember to) use the other paradigm...thanks for pointing it out.
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