Why does num2str not work for double digits

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Hey everybody,
why does
num = [0 1 2 3 5];
for(i=1:5)
X(i,:) = ['Hello Nr.',num2str(num(i))];
end
disp(X(:,:))
work fine but when I change num to have numbers with double digits like
num = [0 1 12 3 5];
it doestn't work anymore?

Accepted Answer

Star Strider
Star Strider on 24 Mar 2016
Edited: Star Strider on 24 Mar 2016
You can use a cell array, but probably the easiest solution is to use the sprintf function:
num = [0 1 12 3 5];
for(i=1:5)
X(i,:) = sprintf('Hello Nr.%3.0f',num(i));
end
disp(X(:,:))
Hello Nr. 0
Hello Nr. 1
Hello Nr. 12
Hello Nr. 3
Hello Nr. 5
  5 Comments
Star Strider
Star Strider on 24 Mar 2016
You need to add a few esoteric tweaks (such as a regexp call) to make that work:
Angle_Vector = [0 pi 19 exp(1) 20000];
legend_text = regexp(sprintf('Angle %6.3f\n',Angle_Vector), '\n', 'split');
figure(1)
plot(1:10, randi(9, 5, 10))
legend(legend_text(1:end-1))
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 24 Mar 2016
Edited: Stephen23 on 24 Mar 2016
"a good site for information on the formatting operator."
Why not start by reading the very helpful written MATLAB documentation:
Everything about the format string is explained there, with examples

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More Answers (1)

Guillaume
Guillaume on 24 Mar 2016
Edited: Guillaume on 24 Mar 2016
Your original problem is that you're trying to stuff strings of different lengths into a matrix.
On the first round of the loop, X does not exist. So the line,
X(i, :) = ...
instructs matlab to create a X matrix with 1 row (i = 1) and as many columns as necessary to fit the right hand side, that is 10 columns when num(i) is a single digit.
On subsequent rounds of the loop, X already exists so the line
X(i, :) = ...
tells matlab to fill row i and column 1:10 with the right hand side. However, if num(i) is two digits, then the right hand side ends up being 11 characters. At this point matlab tells you it can't put 11 characters in 10 columns.
Using sprintf with a field with forces all the strings to be the same length (as long as no number has more digits than the field width.
In general it's not a good idea to use a matrix to store multiple strings unless they're more or less the same lengths. All rows of a matrix have to have the same length, so shorter strings must be padded with spaces. Typically you store multiple strings in cell arrays, where each cell can be a different length. In your case:
num = [0, 10, pi, Inf];
X = cell(1, numel(num));
for i = 1 : numel(num)
X{i} = ['Hello Nr.',num2str(num(i))]; %I personally prefer sprintf to num2str
end
celldisp(X)
Note that it's then trivial to transform the cell array into a matrix of character with char. Matlab automatically pads the shorter strings:
char(X)
but to be honest there's no advantage to storing strings in matrices.
  2 Comments
Tomtom
Tomtom on 24 Mar 2016
Thank you for the answer. It seems sprintf is the better option. But to get it working I need these % formatting operator. For me the most confusing think in Matlab are these formatting operator.
Guillaume
Guillaume on 24 Mar 2016
Note that matlab inherits these % formatting operator from C. It's well worth learning them. Granted they may look complex at first but they're also incredibly powerful.
You should be able to find plenty of tutorials on the web about sprintf (in matlab, or C, the format string is more or less the same)

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