Why Do I Get This Error for This Non-scalar Structure?

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I have this struct:
A(1).B.C = 'a';
A(2).B.C = 'b';
A(3).B.C = 'a';
When I execute the code below, it works
A(:).B
However, when I execute the code below, it throws an error: “Expected one output from a curly brace or dot indexing expression, but there were 4 results.”
A(:).B.C
WHY do I get this error and MATLAB avoids executing this code?
  1 个评论
Stephen23
Stephen23 2022-8-19
What do you expect the output to be? All of the field data concatenated together, or places into another container array (e.g. a cell array), or something else? So far you did not explain the desired output.
A(1).B.C = 'a';
A(2).B.C = 'b';
A(3).B.C = 'a';
tmp = [A.B];
{tmp.C} % cell array of fields
ans = 1×3 cell array
{'a'} {'b'} {'a'}
[tmp.C] % concatenate fields horizontally
ans = 'aba'
cat(3,tmp.C) % concatenate fields along some other dimension
ans = 1×1×3 char array
ans(:,:,1) = 'a' ans(:,:,2) = 'b' ans(:,:,3) = 'a'
... etc. etc.

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采纳的回答

Stephen23
Stephen23 2017-3-13
编辑:Stephen23 2017-3-13
Comma separated lists are really very simple. You use them all the time. Here is one:
a,b,c,d
There is a comma separated list containing four variables, the variables a, b, c, and d. Every time you write a list of variables separated by commas then you are writing a comma separated list. Most commonly you would write a comma separated list when calling a function or operator:
fun(a,b,c,d)
It is important to note that a comma separated list is not one variable! Sometimes we want to create a comma separated list from one variable: MATLAB has two ways of doing this, these are from a cell array:
cell_array{idx}
ND_struct.field
But both of these are still exactly equivalent to what I wrote at the top: they will generate this:
variable1,variable2,variable3,...
and remember NOT ONE VARIABLE. Therefore the syntax you used:
A(:).B.C
is an error because
A(:).B
creates a comma-separated list, exactly equivalent to this:
A(1).B,A(2).B,A(3).B,...
and it is ambiguous what role the .C should have on the end.
Because this
A(:).B
is exactly equivalent to writing this list of independent variables:
A(1).B,A(2).B,A(3).B...
and yet would you expect to write this list of independent variables:
X,Y,Z.C
and expect it to get the C field of X, Y, and Z?
  2 个评论
Rightia Rollmann
Rightia Rollmann 2017-3-14
This comma-separated list works
A(1).B.C, A(2).B.C, A(3).B.C
Why doesn’t the code below work, and just return values like the code above?
A(:).B.C
Stephen23
Stephen23 2017-3-14
编辑:Stephen23 2022-8-19
Because that is consistent with how MATLAB syntax is defined: the end field is not applied to all separate items in the comma separated list. See my last example.
Personally I generally avoid using nested structs for exactly this reason: simple non-scalar structs are easy to use, and the shortcut methods to access their data are simply brilliant. In case I need to use nested structures, a few comma-separated lists and temporary variables can often be used to access their content.

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更多回答(3 个)

Jan
Jan 2017-3-14
编辑:Jan 2017-3-14
Fllowing your comment: A(:).B.C not work?"
Because the operation ".C" is defined for structs and struct arrays, but not for a comma separated list. In A.C the opearion ".C" is applied to a struct array. In A(1).B.C it is applied to a struct. And in A(:).B.C it is tried to be applied to a comma separated list, but this is not defined.
You've struggeled a lot with nested structs. Although this might not be intuitive, Matlab does not have vectorized methods to process nested structs. This requires for loops and there is no way around - except for not using nested structs.
Of course it would be possible to implement this. I thought of doing this in a fast C-mex function, but then I stopped this due to ambiguities: What is the wanted result, when the nested struct contains struct arrays in different levels?
X =A(:).B.C(:).D(:).E
Or if C is a cell containing structs? How sould X look like? A general method must be able to catch this in an intuitive way, and this is not possible in my opinion. Therefore a function for accessing nested structs might look smart at first glance, but I'm convinced that it produces confusion and impedes the debugging. Therefore I stopped the development and decided to rely on stupid loops. Even if this might run some percent slower. Elegance of the the code does not rule, when it causes horrible debugging sessions.

Adam
Adam 2017-3-13
A(:).B
returns a comma-separated list of (in your example) 3 objects. You can't then further index these by adding .C at the end. Try just putting A(:).B on your command line and you will see why.

Mehmet Burak Ekinci
If the problem is concatenating array elements of A struct's B.C field.
You could use this custom matlab functions from file exchange. It is for getting values and plotting for nested structure arrays.
For your example:
>>A(1).B.C = 'a';
A(2).B.C = 'b';
A(3).B.C = 'a';
>>getNestedField(A,'B.C')
ans =
3×1 char array
'a'
'b'
'a'
  2 个评论
Mehmet Burak Ekinci
编辑:Mehmet Burak Ekinci 2022-8-22
Thank you for your response.
Out of curiosity i have compared run time of using comma seperated list method you mentioned, with the link i shared.
I would like to share that it is 4 times faster than the link.
For multiple level nested functions, using the comma seperated list method, something like that may be useful:
function structArray = fun(structArray, fieldName)
fieldNameTree = strsplit(fieldName, '.');
% recursively structArray become one level lower struct array, finally it
% will become the values at the desired field name,
% field values of the struct array are concatenated vertically
for i = 1:length(fieldNameTree)
structArray = [structArray.(fieldNameTree{i})]';
end
end

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