in command window while displaying a cell, instead of showing arrays , shows how many characters there are
5 次查看(过去 30 天)
显示 更早的评论
in command window while displaying a cell, instead of showing arrays , shows how many characters there are in that array. for example:
RESULT =
'r-t ' 'had'
' KOR' [1x84 char]
'hgfhf' [1x84 char]
'1iopio' [1x80 char]
that shows how many characters there are in RESULT{2,2} and RESULT{3,2} and RESULT{4,2}
5 个评论
Fangjun Jiang
2011-9-18
I guess I don't really understand what you really want based on your question and all your comments.
To display a cell with long string, use disp(RESULT{3,2})
Or you can do: open('RESULT') will bring up the workspace editor.
回答(3 个)
Wayne King
2011-9-18
Hi Mohammad, I'm not sure I understand exactly what you mean here, so I apologize if I am not getting your intent, but perhaps you mean:
C = {'had','KOR', 'hgfhf','1iopio'};
cellfun(@length,C,'UniformOutput',false)
cellfun(@class,C,'UniformOutput',false)
You can easily combine the length and class queries into a single cellfun() call.
Wayne
Wayne King
2011-9-18
Hi Mohammad, Hard for me to debug without your splot() because I'm not sure what you are trying to do, but do any of these suggestions help:
One thing you can do if you really want to store the result in a cell array is:
RESULT{2,2}=sprintf('<matlab: splot(%s,%s) Not>',lab,dfi);
RESULT{2,2}
% or
fprintf('<matlab: splot(%s,%s) Not>\n',lab,dfi);
0 个评论
Walter Roberson
2011-9-18
This is not a bug; this is how MATLAB designed cell arrays to display on the screen. The same thing happens to numeric vectors and arrays: small ones are displayed directly and anything larger just displays the size and data type.
There is no option to modify this behavior.
Your best option is to write your own display routine that shows your data in the format you want.
3 个评论
Oleg Komarov
2011-9-18
You can write a function which takes an input and displays it to the cmd widnow through fprintf.
另请参阅
类别
在 Help Center 和 File Exchange 中查找有关 Cell Arrays 的更多信息
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!