Going from structure to matrix

So I'm trying to dynamically solve a matrix and have it so I can reuse it next loop however solve seems to return a structure that I can't dynamically cast back into a matrix.
The only code I've found to do it dynamically fails for reason "CELL2MAT does not support cell arrays containing cell arrays or objects."
%Matlab solver test
NumberOfMasses = 20;
lamda = sym('lamda',[NumberOfMasses NumberOfMasses]);
test = lamda * eye(NumberOfMasses,NumberOfMasses);
eqn = lamda * eye(NumberOfMasses,NumberOfMasses) == eye(NumberOfMasses,NumberOfMasses)*2;
ans = solve(eqn,lamda);
cell2mat(struct2cell(ans))%needs to be a matrix for next loop
Is there something I'm missing to Dynamically cast "ans" back to a matrix? (Preferably without writing code that dynamically builds strings and runs getfield() on the struct)

 Accepted Answer

madhan ravi
madhan ravi on 1 Sep 2019
Why not use struct2array() ? Note: Don’t Name a variable named ans .

5 Comments

Ahhh thanks, completely missed it. Only issue now is that I have to reshape it every time. Is there anything else I'm missing because this seems like a decent work around. (Just a lot of redundancy in larger code bases and it also fails if the matrix gets turned into a scalar during development)
reshape(struct2array(anz),[NumberOfMasses NumberOfMasses])
I just noticed the warning on ans after I posted hahaha
I don’t see any alternatives at the moment, if you get the desired result using reshape() then why not use it, anyhow you’re willing to use it in a loop??
>> anz = solve(eqn,lamda);
>> anz
anz =
struct with fields:
lamda1_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda2_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda3_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda4_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda5_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda6_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda7_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda8_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda9_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda10_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda11_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda12_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda13_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda14_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda15_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda16_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda17_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda18_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda19_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda20_1: [1×1 sym]
lamda1_2: [1×1 sym]
Look at the order of the fields: all of the _1 appear then all of the _2 and so on. Is that the order that you want the matrix to show up as?
I suggest that instead of converting to array, that you use:
subs(lambda, anz)
Dion Richardson
Dion Richardson on 1 Sep 2019
Edited: Dion Richardson on 1 Sep 2019
I'm prototyping mathematical functions that I want to later run in C++. My issue is I'm not great at maths so I often make mistakes and change parts of my formula. This occasionally means that in some cases weird conditions come up. The loop time is about 20-30 seconds for some of my code (which is fine for prototyping).
Subs works perfectly! Thanks so much, never would've expected that to be the case.
Thank you sir Walter!

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Categories

Find more on Mathematics in Help Center and File Exchange

Products

Release

R2019a

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!