.mat matrix use in folder

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Frank Uhlig
Frank Uhlig el 27 de Jun. de 2022
Comentada: Walter Roberson el 27 de Jun. de 2022
I have saved a fixed matrix with a name in my current working Matlab folder on Mac. Now it appears as 'G.... .mat' there when I click on "open" in that folder; together with all my function m-files in there. it takes the identical 368 bytes as in the Mac finder.
How can I work with that saved .mat file inside the local m-files in this folder ?
I tried the 'load G... .mat' command but that does not work; I have tried to run some of my codes with 'G... .mat' in place of my general A matrix input. Does not work work either.
I then tried to see the contents of this .mat file by cicking on it in the local Matlab finder window: This shows nothing.
I have read and tried out all what is advised here and on the general internet. Nothing works for me. Why, oh why did I try to save and multiply use that 'G... .mat' matrix, rather than typing it in by hand everytime I want to work on it again ? Why, oh why?
  1 comentario
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 27 de Jun. de 2022
368 bytes for a .mat file is probably a .mat that has almost nothing in it.
For testing purposes, try using
whos -file "Fully qualified path to file goes here.mat"

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Respuestas (1)

Frank Uhlig
Frank Uhlig el 27 de Jun. de 2022
Hdere is what happens with your command:
>> whos -file "Godunov.mat"
Error using whos
Could not find "Godunov.mat".
>> ls
FU_ATMmfiles.zip runVICMatrRmmev.m
Godunov.mat
and so forth, all in that same subfolder of m-files
  1 comentario
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 27 de Jun. de 2022
Try
dinfo = dir('*.mat');
filenames = {dinfo.name};
nfiles = length(filenames);
for K = 1 : nfiles
thisfile = filenames{K};
fprintf('File name: |%s|\nCharacter codes: %s\n', thisfile, mat2str(double(thisfile)));
whos('-file', thisfile);
end
and see if anything shows up. If it does, then carefully compare the character codes for the name that looks like Godunov.mat to the expected character codes,
double('Godunov.mat')
ans = 1×11
71 111 100 117 110 111 118 46 109 97 116
Check for entries greater than 126, which can indicate unusual characters.

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