read empty line by textscan

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zhiwen wan
zhiwen wan el 10 de Abr. de 2019
Editada: Rik el 11 de Abr. de 2019
Hi Everyone,
I am trying to organize a txt file with 12000 lines, which is too large to use readtable. And i choose to use textscan.
But the problem is textscan just skip all the empty lines, but i need to the exact lines number of certain element in the original file.
I searched a lot online but didn't help. i tried code like this to delete all whitespace but doesn't help.
default = textscan(fid,'%s%s','Delimiter','=','whitespace', '')
Thank you for your help!
  2 comentarios
Rik
Rik el 11 de Abr. de 2019
Did you try either suggested solution? If you still have issues, we'll be happy to help.
Jeremy Hughes
Jeremy Hughes el 11 de Abr. de 2019
I know someone has already added a solution, and it's a fine solution for what you're doing. But I'm surprised that READTABLE has a problem. Can you attach a sample?
12,000 lines isn't all that large especially if there are only two columns.
If you have 19a, you might also try:
M = readmatrix(filename,'OutputType','string','Delimiter','=','Whitespace','')

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Rik
Rik el 10 de Abr. de 2019
Editada: Rik el 10 de Abr. de 2019
If your file doesn't contain any special characters, you could try fileread (which reads a file as one long char array), then split it with regexp. If you aren't sure about the encoding of special characters, you may consider my readfile function (which returns a cell array with 1 element per line, also for empty lines).
default = fileread(filename);
default = regexp(default,'\n','split');
%or:
default = readfile(filename);
The output of those two methods is equivalent if there are no special characters encoded in the file. The allowed characters are shown below. (readfile doesn't have this restriction)
% $%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@
% ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
% [\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~
  5 comentarios
Jeremy Hughes
Jeremy Hughes el 11 de Abr. de 2019
Editada: Jeremy Hughes el 11 de Abr. de 2019
default = regexp(default,'\n','split');
This won't work if there are \r\n windows new lines (or at least you'll have trailing \r characters.)
If you're using 16b or later, try:
default = splitlines(default);
It's a little more robust, and since it has only one job to do, probably slightly faster than regexp.
Rik
Rik el 11 de Abr. de 2019
Editada: Rik el 11 de Abr. de 2019
To make the regexp splitting more robust (which will be in my nest version of readfile):
CRLF=[13 10];
CRLF=CRLF([any(default==13) any(default==10)]);
if isempty(CRLF),CRLF=10;end
default = regexp(default,CRLF,'split');
splitlines will probably be faster, while the code I showed here is backwards compatible to R14 (v7.0, which was when regexp was expanded to support outkeys).
Edit:
I just noticed I had this line already in my function:
str(str==13)='';
So readfile already splits it correctly for \r\n files.

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Más respuestas (1)

Bob Thompson
Bob Thompson el 10 de Abr. de 2019
Editada: Rik el 10 de Abr. de 2019
I'm going to guess that the extra lines are not consistent?
Generally, I would suggest reading the entire file in as one string, then splitting it at the new line characters. The exact coding may be a bit off from the below example, but it should put you on the right track.
default = textscan(fid,'%s'); % Read the file as one block
default = regexp(default,'\n','split'); % Split the string into multiple cells at each new line character
  3 comentarios
Bob Thompson
Bob Thompson el 10 de Abr. de 2019
Yes, I do. Thank you for catching that, I was using repmat for other things recently.
zhiwen wan
zhiwen wan el 11 de Abr. de 2019
Thank you very much Bob, problem solved:)

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