Unique changing order(unique output values are reshuffled)
7 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
shaz
el 18 de Dic. de 2012
Comentada: Stephen23
el 17 de En. de 2018
i have cell array with data like '2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/7/2009',,'2/7/2009','2/7/2009','2/8/2009','2/8/2009','2/8/2009'
if i make use of unique to get only unique values the order is getting reshuffled
getting output like : '2/8/2009','2/6/2009','2/7/2009'
Desired output format: '2/6/2009','2/7/2009','2/8/2009'
1 comentario
Stephen23
el 17 de En. de 2018
>> C = {'2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/7/2009','2/7/2009','2/7/2009','2/8/2009','2/8/2009','2/8/2009'};
>> D = natsort(unique(C));
>> D{:}
ans = 2/6/2009
ans = 2/7/2009
ans = 2/8/2009
But the best solution is to change the date format for an ISO 8601 date format, which sort correctly into chronological order when you do a character sort. Once you start using ISO 8601 date formats you simply avoid all of these trivial problems.
Respuesta aceptada
Muruganandham Subramanian
el 18 de Dic. de 2012
b={'2/6/2099','2/6/2099','2/6/2099','2/6/2099','2/7/2099','2/7/2099', '2/7/2099','2/8/2099','2/8/2099','2/8/2099','2/10/2099','2/10/2099', '2/12/2099'};
c=datevec(b);
c(:,4:6)=[];
c(:,4)=c(:,1);
c(:,1)=[];
d=num2str(c);
d=cellstr(d);
d=unique(d)
Check this above code. But it's not effective way to do..here In unique(), it's not chosing in random way, it considers the data of first,which is sorted minimum(i.e. '10' is first than '6').
4 comentarios
Andrei Bobrov
el 19 de Dic. de 2012
M = datevec(b,'mm/dd/yyyy');
[Muq, ii] = unique(M,'rows','first');
out = b(sort(ii));
Más respuestas (4)
Muruganandham Subramanian
el 18 de Dic. de 2012
Editada: Muruganandham Subramanian
el 18 de Dic. de 2012
>>b={'2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/7/2009','2/7/2009','2/7/2009',
'2/8/2009','2/8/2009','2/8/2009'};
>> c=unique(b)
>> c =
'2/6/2009' '2/7/2009' '2/8/2009'
Are you expecting this?
Sebastian
el 17 de En. de 2018
I know it's a bit late for an answer, but maybe it helps others. If you want to preserve the order of the input of 'unique', you can use the second return parameter. Like that it works for arbitrary data (i.e. strings and numerals, basically every data type 'unique' supports):
a = {'2/6/2009' '2/6/2009' '2/6/2009' '2/7/2009' '2/7/2009' '2/7/2009' '2/8/2009' '2/8/2009' '2/8/2009'};
[~, uIdx] = unique(a);
a(sort(uIdx))
This snippet does the following: Store the indices of the unique elements of 'a' in 'uIdx'. Then return the elements of 'a' from the first to the last using 'sort'.
1 comentario
Jan
el 17 de En. de 2018
The problem of shaz was, that he wanted a specific numerical order, in which '6' appears before '10'. Therefore the data must be converted from string to double, such that the sorting works.
Steven Lord
el 17 de En. de 2018
Convert your date data into a datetime array, then call unique (with or without the 'stable' flag) on the datetime array.
C = {'2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/6/2009','2/7/2009','2/7/2009', ...
'2/7/2009','2/10/2009','2/8/2009','2/8/2009'};
D = datetime(C, 'InputFormat', 'MM/dd/uuuu')
unique(D)
unique(D, 'stable')
For purposes of this example I assumed your dates were days in February 2009. If they were the second of each month from June through October (without September) of 2009 swap the MM and dd sections of the InputFormat parameter.
1 comentario
Stephen23
el 17 de En. de 2018
"For purposes of this example I assumed your dates were days in February 2009. If they were the second of each month from June through October (without September) of 2009 swap the MM and dd sections of the InputFormat parameter."
Or avoid this pointless and confusing ambiguity entirely by using ISO 8601 dates.
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Dates and Time en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!