How to create an empty array of structs?
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Fred Sigworth
el 2 de Ag. de 2011
Comentada: Stephen23
el 25 de En. de 2023
I would like to make a loop that accumulates an array of structures, such as
array=struct([]); % The docs imply that this should work
for i=1:n
st=CreateAStruct(i);
array(i)=st;
end;
But...this doesn't work, I get the error, "Subscripted assignment between dissimilar structures." on the first pass through the loop. Instead the only way I've found to do this is the following.
for i=1:n
st=CreateAStruct(i);
if i==1
array=st;
else
array(i)=st;
end;
end;
Is there a nicer way to do this?
4 comentarios
Stephen23
el 19 de Oct. de 2021
Editada: Stephen23
el 19 de Oct. de 2021
Several "Answers" on this thread were written without a clear understanding of the actual problem and task.
As a demonstration and simple test case I wrote this function (below). To keep it simple it must be called in monotonic sequence with step 1 or -1, i.e. either 1, 2, ... N-1, N or N, N-1, ... 2, 1.
% do not attempt to preallocate array
for k = 7:-1:1
array(k) = CreateAStruct(k);
end
display(array)
array = CreateAStruct(1);
for k = 2:7
array(k) = CreateAStruct(k);
end
display(array)
Simple test function:
function sso = CreateAStruct(itr)
nmf = 5; % number of fields
nmc = 3; % number of characters per fieldname
persistent fnm prv
if isempty(fnm) || abs(itr-prv)~=1
fnm = cellstr(char(randi([65,90],nmf,nmc)));
end
sso = cell2struct(num2cell(rand(nmf,1)),fnm,1);
prv = itr;
end
Respuesta aceptada
Walter Roberson
el 2 de Ag. de 2011
You are correct, struct() is a struct with no fields, and that is a distinct structure that is not the same as a structure with any defined fields.
Workaround:
T = arrayfun(@(K) CreateAsStruct(K), 1:n, 'UniformOutput',0);
array = horzcat(T{:});
clear T
Also, if I recall correctly, there is a MATLAB File Exchange contribution to do assignment between dissimilar structures.
4 comentarios
tommsch
el 20 de Jul. de 2020
@Fred No need to learn arrayfun and anonymous functions. Those are magnitudes slower than plain for loops.
Más respuestas (11)
Philip Borghesani
el 13 de En. de 2017
Actualy the simplest and fastest solution to this problem is to not attempt to create an empty struct. Run the loop backwards to allocate the full structure array on the first loop:
% do not attempt to preallocate array
for i=n:-1:1
array(i)=CreateAStruct(i);
end
2 comentarios
Stephen23
el 12 de Jun. de 2017
+1 nice and simple. Just make sure that the struct is not defined in the workspace before the loop.
Jeff Miller
el 25 de En. de 2018
Unfortunately this doesn't work with parfor, because its range must be increasing consecutive integers. But this seems OK:
array(n)=CreateAStruct(n);
parfor i=1:n-1
array(i) = CreateAStruct(i)
end
Fernando Freitas Alves
el 27 de Mayo de 2020
Editada: Fernando Freitas Alves
el 27 de Mayo de 2020
Since R2008a, you can do:
array = struct.empty(n,0);
Once you cannot assign dissimilar structs and this struct has no field, this is useless.
A better approach would be:
array(n,1) = struct('field1',[],'field2',[],...);
0 comentarios
Dien Nguyen
el 11 de Abr. de 2018
Simple solution, use repmat to "repeat" "n" struct(s) as shown:
array = repmat(struct(field1, [], field2, [], ..., fieldN, []), n);
1 comentario
Walter Roberson
el 11 de Abr. de 2018
This does not satisfy the original requirement that the struct entry be the result of executing CreateAStruct with argument equal to the index.
Sean de Wolski
el 2 de Ag. de 2011
st = 1:10;
for ii = 1:10
array(ii).st = st(ii);
end
You need to set the value to a field of the struct since that's how structs are indexed. You could also look into using cell arrays:
doc cell
3 comentarios
Nathaniel Jones
el 12 de Jun. de 2017
Sean, using a cell array of structs results in the following error when attempting to assign structs as elements of the cell array:
Conversion to cell from struct is not possible.
At this point, you might want to use
cell2struct()
to convert from a cell array to an array of structs. However, Romesh's answer is a better option.
Samuel
el 3 de Dic. de 2013
It's easy. test(10,10) = struct; This creates an 10*10 empty structs.
1 comentario
Walter Roberson
el 11 de Abr. de 2018
This does not satisfy the original requirement that the struct entry be the result of executing CreateAStruct with argument equal to the index.
DAEHO KIM
el 5 de Abr. de 2021
when I pre-allocate the struct array, I do as follows
array(1: n)= struct;
for iter= 1: n
array(iter).a= "anything"
array(iter).n= "nothing"
end
3 comentarios
DAEHO KIM
el 6 de Abr. de 2021
Editada: DAEHO KIM
el 6 de Abr. de 2021
Thank you.
There is an application version.
% pre-allocate array structure.
array(1: n)= struct;
for iter1= 1: n
array(iter1).a= "anything";
array(iter1).n= "nothing";
% pre-allocate array2 structure in the array structure.
array(iter1).array2(1: m)= struct;
for iter2= 1: m
array(iter1).array2(iter2).e= "everything";
end
end
David Young
el 21 de En. de 2014
For a description of the different kinds of empty structs, and a function that allows you to create each kind easily, see my File Exchange submission emptyStruct
1 comentario
Stephen23
el 25 de En. de 2023
This requires that the structure fields are known in advance, which is not what the question requested.
Francesco Onorati
el 13 de En. de 2017
Editada: Francesco Onorati
el 13 de En. de 2017
array(n)=struct(field1, [], field2, [], ..., fieldN, []); % <-- as CreateAStruct struct
for i:n
array(i)=CreateAStruct(var1(i), var2(i));
end
1 comentario
Stephen23
el 19 de Oct. de 2021
This requires that the structure fields are known in advance, which is not what the question requested.
Bruno Luong
el 20 de Jul. de 2020
Editada: Bruno Luong
el 20 de Jul. de 2020
Been there, done that. The most generic way I deal with such situation is like that using a function CATSTRUCT I have created (attached here).
Usage is typically like this:
cellresult = cell(1,n)
for i=1:n
% do something first
% ...
% call iteration subtask that returns a structure or structure array
cellresult{i} = myfun(i, var1, var2, etc);
% do something else
% ...
end
dim = 2; % whatever elongation of structresult you want to get
structresult = catstruct(dim, cellresult); % function mfiles attached
The function CATSTRUCTS can deal with a list of structures that are all dissimilar, so very generic possible usage. The function MYFUN is allowed to return disimilar structures from iteration to iteration. This of course have some speed penalty when structure are concatenated at the last statement compared to stock functions such as horzcat, vertcat, cat(dim, c{: )).
The solution I propose does not require to know in advance the fieldnames of the structure.
PS: TMW can inspire of my small utilities and include in their next MATLAB releases if they wish.
1 comentario
Bruno Luong
el 28 de Feb. de 2022
Anotherway is to use the attached file AllocateStruct with the structure element has identical fileds
for i=1:n
s = myfun(i, var1, var2, etc);
if i == 1 % ~exist('sarray', 'var')
sarray = AllocateStruct(s, [1 n]);
end
sarray(i) = s;
end
Owen Claxton
el 19 de Oct. de 2021
Minimum working example:
struct_array_col = [struct()];
struct_array_row = [struct()];
n_structs = 10;
for i = 1 : n_structs
struct_array_col(i,1).name = num2str(round(rand(1) .* 100, 3));
struct_array_row(i).name = num2str(round(rand(1) .* 100, 3));
end
disp(size(struct_array_col))
disp(size(struct_array_row))
2 comentarios
Owen Claxton
el 11 de Nov. de 2021
Editada: Owen Claxton
el 11 de Nov. de 2021
Thanks Stephen, after encounting the problem actually described in the question I realised my error. Leaving my answer up just in case it helps someone. Personally, I went with the preallocation approach as I knew the struct fields (thus I could make an array with similar objects):
section_pieces = struct('type', '', 'slength', 0, 'radius', 0, 'sectionID', 0);
for i = 1 : num_sections
section_pieces(i) = sectionSpec(section_types{i}, section_lengths(i), section_radii(i), i);
% sectionSpec creates a struct with type (char array), slength (int),
% radius (int), sectionID (int) fields using some input arrays
end
Lihan Xie
el 25 de Feb. de 2022
Editada: Lihan Xie
el 25 de Feb. de 2022
The most simple way to get the struct array :
array=[];
for i=1:n
st=CreateAStruct(i);
array=[array st];
end
1 comentario
Walter Roberson
el 27 de Feb. de 2022
That is inefficient, as it has to keep expanding the struct array. Philip's code at https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/12912-how-to-create-an-empty-array-of-structs#answer_250471 is more efficient.
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