Why does my cellfun fails?
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Javier
el 12 de Oct. de 2018
Hello
I have the following cell where I would like to replace all 1 by 'true' and all 0 by 'failed'
a= [ 0] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11]
[ 1] [0] [0] [0] [0] [0] [0] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[ 2] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[ 3] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[ 4] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[ 5] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[ 6] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[ 7] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[ 8] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[ 9] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[10] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [0] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
[11] [1] [1] [1] [0] [0] [1] [0] [1] [0] [ 0] [ 0]
If I apply the command
a(cellfun(@(elem) elem == 0,a)) = {'false'}
I get s
a= [ false] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [1false] [11]
[ 1] [false] [false] [false] [false] [false] [false] [false] [false] [false] [ false] [ false]
....
The output expected, however if I try to apply the same command again as
a(cellfun(@(elem) elem == 1,a)) = {'true'}
it fails and matlab says
Error using cellfun
Non-scalar in Uniform output, at index 2, output 1.
Set 'UniformOutput' to false.
Which I don't understand, further if I set the value as indicated I get
a(cellfun(@(elem) elem == 1,a,'UniformOutput',false)) = {'true'}
Function 'subsindex' is not defined for values of class 'cell'.
How can I change the 1 to 'true'?
Thanks in advance
1 comentario
Kevin Chng
el 12 de Oct. de 2018
Editada: Kevin Chng
el 12 de Oct. de 2018
sorry, i'm curious how you assign your 'a' variable in MATLAB?
Respuesta aceptada
Stephen23
el 12 de Oct. de 2018
Editada: Stephen23
el 12 de Oct. de 2018
"...however if I try to apply the same command again as..."
You have failed to take into account that inbetween running these two commands you have changed the data. So while the first cell array only contained scalar numeric (which is a bad way to store numeric data), the second time you call cellfun the cell array now also contains char vectors (lots of 'false', to be precise). Of course when you compare 'false'==1 then the output will be a vector like this:
>> 'false'==1
ans =
0 0 0 0 0
and that is clearly not a scalar value, so your cellfun usage will fail unless you use 'uni',false and some more complex processing, or wrap the first argument function in any or something similar. Your third example give this error message
Function 'subsindex' is not defined for values of class 'cell'
because when you use the option 'UniformOutput',false then cellfun outputs a cell array, which cannot be used for indexing. So your attempt to use the output as an index will fail.
Here is a simpler approach using a numeric array (which it should be anyway):
>> m = cell2mat(a);
>> id0 = m==0;
>> id1 = m==1;
>> a(id0) = {'false'};
>> a(id1) = {'true'};
>> a
a =
'false' 'true' [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] [ 7] [ 8] [ 9] [ 10] [ 11]
'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 2] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 3] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 4] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 5] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 6] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 7] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 8] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 9] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 10] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
[ 11] 'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false'
Note that your row and column headers indicate that you should perhaps be using a table, or only storing the actual data (not the headers) in a simple numeric array. Then you could do this task very simply with some basic indexing:
>> c = {'false','true'};
>> b = c(1+m(2:end,2:end))
b =
'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false' 'false'
'true' 'true' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'true' 'false' 'false' 'false'
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