Combine multiple tables into the one

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Karina
Karina on 22 Apr 2018
Commented: Kyle Thompson on 10 Dec 2020
Hi I have a .mat file which contains 31 variables and all are 21600x5 tables. I want to combine these tables into the one table so that I can then export it excel.
I want to then repeat this for other .mat files saved in the folder.
So far I am able to loop through the mat files and I know how to write a table (as shown below)it is combining all the tables into one table where I am stuck

Answers (3)

Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza on 22 Apr 2018

You can simply combine tables in the same way as you can combine matrices in MATLAB, as long as dimensions are consistent. For example, if you have two tables t1 and t2 of dimension 21600x5 then

new_table = [t1 t2]  % combine them along column dimension i.e. new table will be 21600x10
new_table = [t1; t2]  % combine them along row dimension i.e. new table will be 43200x5

Since you want to access 31 variables in your workspace, you might want to use whos and evalin() to automatically access all the tables in the base workspace and combine them. As an example

vars = whos;
big_table = [];
for i=vars'
  if i.class == "table"
    big_table = [big_table; evalin('base', i.name)];
  end
end

This will load all the tables present in base workspace into big_table. This will combine the tables according to their names in ascending order (i.e. table axx will be above table bxx in big_table).

  3 Comments
Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza on 22 Apr 2018

@Stephen I agree, but this question was mainly about combining several tables into one big table. Therefore to make it general, I wrote the answer, as if, several tables are already present in the base workspace. In that case, magically accessing variable names is a convenient option. I addressed the issue of properly accessing variables in OP's other question, because that question is specifically talking about reading tables from mat files and writing to excel file.

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Stephen23
Stephen23 on 22 Apr 2018
Edited: Stephen23 on 22 Apr 2018

As I wrote earlier, simply load into a structure. Then you convert the struct to a cell, and it is then trivial to concatenate the contents of all cells:

S = load(...);
C = struct2cell(S);
T = vertcat(C{:});

And that is all. Why waste your time doing anything more complex?

Note that in order to concatenate the tables they will have to have the same variables but unique rows. If they do not have unique rows then you can easily loop over the fields of that structure to add a new variable to each table, or change one of the row values, or whatever you want:

S = load(...);
F = fieldnames(S)
for k = 1:numel(F)
    tmp = S.(F{k}); % get one table
    ... do whatever changes you want to tmp
    S.(F{k}) = tmp;
end

Note how much simpler it is to access the fieldnames of a structure, compared to the slow, complex, and indirect commands which try to access multiple variables in the workspace.


Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 22 Apr 2018
You might be interested in the table functions join(), innerjoin(), and outerjoin() for combining tables.
  1 Comment
Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 12 Sep 2018
Just to add to this list, vertcat() worked for me.

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