Better way to keep dimensions using reshape from extracted struct array?
6 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
HEllo
I am wondering what is the best way to extract the data from an structured array in matlab and keeping is dimensionality if I use reshape while processing it.
Let's say I have the following struct array
load('data.mat')
myData.data.b
In order to extract all b values I would do
[myData.data(:).b]
But this rises the issue that the dimensionality of b is lost, since now it is treated as an vector. If I do reshape to try to recover that dimensionality I will get
bb=reshape([myData.data(:).b]',[],2)
which is still not the original data, because all even row are swapped compared to original. So the only thing I came up was to undo that swapping on even rows via
bb(2:2:end,:) = fliplr(bb(2:2:end,:))
Hence I wonder whether there exists a better way to extract b from the struct array without having to do the reshape + even elemen flip.
thanks in advance,
Bes regards
7 Comments
Stephen23
on 20 Aug 2024
"I didn't know that I could use it in that way!"
You can use comma-separated lists with any function.
Accepted Answer
More Answers (1)
arushi
on 20 Aug 2024
Hi Javier,
To extract data from a structured array in MATLAB while preserving its original dimensionality, you can use a combination of array manipulation functions that maintain the structure of your data. In your case, since each element of myData.data(:).b is a 1x2 vector, you can use reshape and cell2mat in a way that respects the original organization of the data.
Here’s a more efficient approach to extract b values from the struct array without manually flipping rows:
- Extract Data into a Cell Array: Use arrayfun to extract the data into a cell array, preserving the structure.
- Convert to a Matrix: Use cell2mat to convert the cell array into a matrix.
bMatrix = cell2mat(bCellArray');
bOriginal = reshape(bMatrix, [], 2);
Hope this helps.
See Also
Categories
Find more on Structures in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!