How can I export a matrix as a CSV file?
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Toby Feld
on 26 Apr 2016
Edited: MathWorks Support Team
on 14 Nov 2024
Hi, I have a 320x2 matrix with doubles. I want to save it in a CSV file in the following pattern: 234,2 671,5 735,1 264,2 346,7 ... etc. I googled this problem and found the function "csvwrite". However, when I use that function like this csvwrite('test.txt',a) I get the following: 234,2671,5735,1264,2346,7 What is going on here? How can I solve this issue? Thanks a lot, Toby
2 Comments
jgg
on 26 Apr 2016
Why do you want to export it like that? It seems really unnatural, and will be annoying to accomplish.
Accepted Answer
MathWorks Support Team
on 14 Nov 2024
Edited: MathWorks Support Team
on 14 Nov 2024
"csvwrite" is not recommended. Use "writematrix" to export matrix data as a CSV file instead. When writing matrix data to a file, you can specify the file type as part of the file name in the second argument of the function call: m = [234 2;671 5;735 1;264 2;346 7] writematrix(m,'M.csv')
4 Comments
Chris
on 2 Nov 2022
Look at your file hierarchy on the left you'll see a file that's been generated with the name you gave it. You can right click and show it in explorer.
More Answers (4)
Azzi Abdelmalek
on 26 Apr 2016
a=[234,2
671,5
735,1]
csvwrite('file.csv',a)
4 Comments
Bill Tubbs
on 13 Jul 2019
Being a Python user coming to Matlab I was a bit shocked to find that csvwrite truncates the data output.
csvwrite('u.csv', u)
File contents:
1000,957.6,917,878.13,840.9, ...
Then I happened to check the documentation and found this:
csvwrite is not recommended. Use writematrix instead. For more information, see Compatibility Considerations.
writematrix(u)
File contents:
1000,957.603280698574,917.004043204671,878.12608018665,840.896415253715, ...
Guillaume
on 13 Jul 2019
writematrix is fairly new and did not exist when this question was ask.
I was a bit shocked to find that csvwrite truncates the data output.
Any conversion of number to text will truncate the representation of most numbers, in python as well. As documented csvwrite has a precision of 5 digits. For more precision, the alternative at the time was dlmwrite. Interestingly writematrix also doesn't have an option of altering the precision and always use longg (15 digits of precision).
Jos (10584)
on 26 Apr 2016
You and your computer disagree on what to use as a decimal symbol: a . or a ,
I strongly recommend you to use a decimal point. Probably that means you have to change your locale / regional settings in the operating system.
0 Comments
Sindar
on 12 Mar 2019
It sounds like all you need to do is print a column vector instead of a row vector. This can be done easily:
csvwrite('test.txt',a.')
The '.' is important only if you have complex data
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