Calculate values of struct of struct

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Julian
Julian el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Comentada: Julian el 5 de Sept. de 2023
I have a struct with several fieldnames, each of them is again a struct and has a fieldname "P". This "P" is an array.
I want to calculate the sum of all "P "s like:
s.s1.P = (1:20).'; % For simplicity I have assigned dummy values to the "P "s.
s.s2.P = (1:20).';
s.s3.P = (1:20).';
% ...
result = s.s1.P + s.s2.P + s.s3.P % + ...
I have already a solution with a for loop:
field = fieldnames(s);
result = zeros(size(s.(field{1}).P));
for i = 1:length(field)
result = result +s.(field{i}).P;
end
I also tried to use "structfun" but were not able to get this result.
Is it possible to calculate this problem with "structfun" or another function or is the for loop the final solution for this problem?
  1 comentario
Stephen23
Stephen23 el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Rather than forcing pseudo-indices into fieldnames you should simply use a structure array, as dpb showed.

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Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Editada: Bruno Luong el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Single line (work for fields with struct NOT objects of class, struct is NOT some sort of class)
s.s1.P = (1:20).'; % For simplicity I have assigned dummy values to the "P "s.
s.s2.P = (1:20).';
s.s3.P = (1:20).';
sum([cat(1,struct('sx',struct2cell(s)).sx).P],2)
ans = 20×1
3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30

Más respuestas (2)

dpb
dpb el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Editada: dpb el 4 de Sept. de 2023
The problem of using sequentially-named fields in the struct instead of an array of struct; there's no good way to process the resulting variables or struct fields programmatically when do so.
structfun applies the function to each field of a scalar struct so it isn't the tool for the purpose here, anyway, you're trying to process across fields, not within each. And, arrayfun is for an array but you didn't use an array to hold the similar data, you chose to use multiple fields instead. A 2D array would have been an alternate choice that could have handled easily...
s.P = (1:20).';
s.P = [s.P (1:20).'];
s.P = [s.P (1:20).'];
result = sum(s.P,2)
result = 20×1
3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30
Or, alternatively, as a struct array
s.P = (1:20).';
s(2).P = (1:20).';
s(3).P = (1:20).';
result = sum([s.P],2)
result = 20×1
3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30
  7 comentarios
Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Editada: Bruno Luong el 4 de Sept. de 2023
No
D=delaunayTriangulation(rand(10,2))
D =
delaunayTriangulation with properties: Points: [10×2 double] ConnectivityList: [12×3 double] Constraints: []
structfun(@(D)D.Points, D)
Error using structfun
Inputs to STRUCTFUN must be scalar structures.
Sorry my first remark on structfun on class is not applicable int the present context, since s is still a struct with 3 fields. structun can be applied on s.
Julian
Julian el 5 de Sept. de 2023
Yes structfun was used on s, a struct and it's not posible to use structfun on class objects.

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Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Editada: Bruno Luong el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Honestly I prefer the for-loop
s.s1.P = (1:20).'; % For simplicity I have assigned dummy values to the "P "s.
s.s2.P = (1:20).';
s.s3.P = (1:20).';
c = struct2cell(structfun(@(sf) sf.P, s, 'UniformOutput', false));
sum(cat(2,c{:}),2)
ans = 20×1
3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30
  2 comentarios
dpb
dpb el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Given the already bad idea of having created the sequentially-named fields, agree, the for loop is the way; as your example shows, to do anything else gets far too convoluted and undoubtedly would be slower besides.
At least with struct fields, one can programmatically access them w/o the eval abomination.
Julian
Julian el 4 de Sept. de 2023
Thanks for the solution.
Unfortunately, I already came up with this, but I didn't like this huge nesting of functions either.
I understand why you would prefer the for-loop.

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