Sort matrix by date
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simen ommundsen
on 8 May 2019
Commented: Peter Perkins
on 14 May 2019
Hello,
I have a matrix where the first collumn is date and the rest is different parameters like voltage and power etc..
The first collumn has for some reason been sorted like this: 01-jan-2019, 01-feb-2019, 01-mar2019 etc.
Is there some way that i can sort the whole matrix so that it goes like 01-jan-2019, 02-jan-2019 etc?
i have used the sort function on the datetime values and that works, but the rest of the matrix wont follow.
thanks in advance
1 Comment
Accepted Answer
Walter Roberson
on 8 May 2019
[~, sortidx] = sort(TheDatetimeValues);
YourMatrix = YourMatrix(sortidx,:);
13 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 9 May 2019
timetables happen to have the property that rowtimes are unique, so it is never necessary to refer to the second or further variables to break ties.
Peter Perkins
on 14 May 2019
Some timetables have unique row times. But it's not a requirement. In fact, in descending order of "niceness", the row times need not be
- regularly-spaced
- ascending
- sorted
- unique
- even defined
>> tt = timetable([1;2;3;4;5],'RowTimes',datetime(2019,5,[5;5;2;1;NaN]))
tt =
5×1 timetable
Time Var1
___________ ____
05-May-2019 1
05-May-2019 2
02-May-2019 3
01-May-2019 4
NaT 5
As a result, time subscripting works a little differently than indexing by row number:
>> tt('5-May-2019',:)
ans =
2×1 timetable
Time Var1
___________ ____
05-May-2019 1
05-May-2019 2
>> tt('6-May-2019',:)
ans =
0×1 empty timetable
The idea here is that timetables give you a way to read in your very messy data (using readtimetable, since 18b) and clean up the data all inside of MATLAB.
Row names in a table do have to be unique, though.
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