- extList is a cell array of character vectors that contain the user's input list
- nExt is the number of extensions entered
How to ask the user how many file extensions to search for
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I currently have a script which find files in a folder with a matching string that the user inputs.
I also have code where the user enters the file extensions he wants the script to look for.
ext1 = inputdlg('Please enter file extension #1: **\*. ');
ext2 = inputdlg('Please enter file extension #2: **\*. ');
ext3 = inputdlg('Please enter file extension #3: **\*. ');
fileData = [dir(fullfile(fileLoc,char(ext1))); dir(fullfile(fileLoc,char(ext2))); dir(fullfile(fileLoc,char(ext3)))];
What I want to do instead of ask the user how many different file extensions he wants to look for and then ask for them accordingly.
(e.g. User inputs he wants to search for 5 different file extensions and the script asks for 5)
I'd like to do this instead of just hard-coding in how many file extensions he can search for.
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
  Adam Danz
    
      
 on 13 Sep 2019
        
      Edited: Adam Danz
    
      
 on 13 Sep 2019
  
      That's too much work (for you and the user).  Instead, the user could just list all file extensions in the first dialog, separated by commas.  Then you can separate that list into individual extensions.  
ext = inputdlg('Please enter file extensions separated by a comma: **\*. Example: txt, csv, ogg');
if ~isempty(ext) %check if user entered anything
    % Separate selections
    extList = strtrim(strsplit(ext{1},','));
    extList(cellfun(@isempty,extList)) = []; % get rid of empties (if any)
    nExt = numel(extList); %number of extensions
end
For example, in the inputdlg enter this:   txt, csv, ogg, xlsx
If there is a set list of possible file extensions, a better idea would be to use a listbox where the user can merely select from a set of options. 
12 Comments
  Adam Danz
    
      
 on 13 Sep 2019
				
      Edited: Adam Danz
    
      
 on 13 Sep 2019
  
			Hmmm, could you show us exactly what's in ext and the result of class(ext)? 
[update]
I just embedded the code from my answer into app designer and entered a variety of inputs including several extensions, 1 extension, and empty, and there was no error.  
More Answers (2)
  Nom
 on 13 Sep 2019
        2 Comments
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 13 Sep 2019
				So somehow ext is a character vector instead of a cell array of char.
As a general fix: after you have called
ext = inputdlg('Please enter file extensions separated by a comma:. Example: txt, csv, ogg: ');
add
ext = cellstr(ext);
Though you might have to check isempty() first.
  Adam Danz
    
      
 on 13 Sep 2019
				inputdlg should always return a cell array:
Where is the 'txt, pdf, docx' char array coming from?  I can't be the output to inputdlg.  
  Nom
 on 13 Sep 2019
        17 Comments
  Adam Danz
    
      
 on 17 Sep 2019
				I'm not sure how that solved the error you were getting. 
Notice at the end of this line you transpose the array. 
fullPaths = strrep(fullPaths,fileLoc,'')'; % Remove the header path
%                                  HERE ^
So when you comment that out, fullPaths remains as a row-cell-array. 
That causes the error when you try to horizontally concatenate the bottom line below. 
outputData = [{'Starting Path:' fileLoc ' ';
    'Time to Execute:' [sprintf('%.2f',overallTime+overallTime2) 's'] ' ';
    'File Count:' num2str(sum(finalFlag)) ' ';
    'Date' 'Size (kb)' 'File'};
    fileDates(finalFlag) num2cell(fileSizes(finalFlag) ./1024) fullPaths(finalFlag)];
   %|___column array___| {______________Column array_________| |____Row array______|
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