finding min and max values from a file

In a text file, I have a pressure listed. I am combining several files and I would like my program to find the highest pressure and lowest pressure. I think I use line=getl, but do not know how to format the line correctly, can you help me out?
Thank you!

Respuestas (2)

Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang el 17 de Jun. de 2011

0 votos

Please provide an example of your text file so we can help you. The task sounds not that hard. There are plenty of similar QAs regarding import text file for data. Once you get all the data, use min() and max() will get you the result.

1 comentario

Melissa Patterson
Melissa Patterson el 17 de Jun. de 2011
File_20psi.txt:
Pressure: 20 psi
FX: 1,2,3
FY: a,b
File_30psi.txt
Pressure: 30 psi
FX: 4,5,6
FY: c,d
File_40psi.txt
Pressure: 40 psi
FX: 7,8,9
FY: e,f

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Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang el 18 de Jun. de 2011
Thank you for showing the example. I saw you posted similar questions a few times. Not sure how representative are these text files to your real data files. Your problem is trivial. The data format in your text file is irregular. You need to read the file and do specific string processing to get the data you want. I wrote the function below just show it can be done. But I suspect that it won't apply to your real data files. I hope you can use it as a starting point to get your task done.
Copy the following line to create ParseText.m file thus create the ParseText() function.
function [PR,FX,FY]=ParseText(TextFile)
fid=fopen(TextFile,'rt');
while ~feof(fid)
TextLine=fgetl(fid);
if strfind(TextLine,'Pressure:')
PR=textscan(TextLine,'%s%f%s');
PR=PR{2};
continue;
end
if strfind(TextLine,'FX:')
TextLine=strrep(TextLine,'FX:','');
FX=textscan(TextLine,'%f','delimiter',',');
FX=FX{1};
continue;
end
if strfind(TextLine,'FY:')
TextLine=strrep(TextLine,'FY:','');
FY=textscan(TextLine,'%s','delimiter',',');
FY=FY{1};
continue;
end
disp('Un-recognized text line.');
end
fclose(fid);
Then run the following lines, assume you have the three text files as shown in your comment.
>> [PR.PR1,FX.FX1,FY.FY1]=ParseText('File_20psi.txt');
>> [PR.PR2,FX.FX2,FY.FY2]=ParseText('File_30psi.txt');
>> [PR.PR3,FX.FX3,FY.FY3]=ParseText('File_40psi.txt');
>> Pressure=[PR.PR1,PR.PR2,PR.PR3]
Pressure =
20 30 40
>> FX_ALL=[FX.FX1;FX.FX2;FX.FX3]'
FX_ALL =
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
>> FY_ALL=[FY.FY1;FY.FY2;FY.FY3]'
FY_ALL =
'a' 'b' 'c' 'd' 'e' 'f'
>> max(Pressure)
ans =
40
>> min(Pressure)
ans =
20

7 comentarios

Melissa Patterson
Melissa Patterson el 20 de Jun. de 2011
Thank you! You are right that I didn't post my complete files, but I was looking for an example that would show me the syntax and layout of the programming I would need. I am not a programmer and would like to learn, but everything is so incredibly foreign to me, I'm not sure I will grasp MATLAB anytime soon. Can you tell me why, in the pressure section of your program what the {2} means? I notice there is a {1} in the FX and FY sections.
Thank you so much for your time, I really appreciate the help!
Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang el 20 de Jun. de 2011
The {} is used to reference the Matlab cell array data. Cell array is a flexible way to put different kind of data together. For example, NewCell={'abc', 1,1:3}, try NewCell{1},NewCell{2} and NewCell{3} at the Matlab Command window to see it yourself.
Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang el 20 de Jun. de 2011
The reason to use PR=PR{2} in the code is because the prior line PR=textscan(TextLine,'%s%f%s') returns PR as a cell array. PR{2} is the pressure data that you want. You can put a break point in the code and then run the code line by line to see the results of every step.
Melissa Patterson
Melissa Patterson el 20 de Jun. de 2011
This has been very helpful, thank you!
Melissa Patterson
Melissa Patterson el 20 de Jun. de 2011
I am sorry, the following just emphasizes how little I know: I get the following error when I run the .m file I created with your program:
>> ParseText
??? Input argument "TextFile" is undefined.
Error in ==> ParseText at 2
fid=fopen(TextFile,'rt');
I pasted what you sent me, this is what it looks like:
function [PR,FX,FY]=ParseText(TextFile)
fid=fopen(TextFile,'rt');
while ~feof(fid)
TextLine=fgetl(fid);
if strfind(TextLine,'Pressure:')
PR=textscan(TextLine,'%s%f%s');
PR=PR{2};
continue;
end
if strfind(TextLine,'FX:')
TextLine=strrep(TextLine,'FX:','');
FX=textscan(TextLine,'%f','delimiter',',');
FX=FX{1};
continue;
end
if strfind(TextLine,'FY:')
TextLine=strrep(TextLine,'FY:','');
FY=textscan(TextLine,'%s','delimiter',',');
FY=FY{1};
continue;
end
disp('Un-recognized text line.');
end
fclose(fid);
Do you see what I did wrong?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 20 de Jun. de 2011
For example, use
[R20,X20,Y20] = ParseText('File_20psi.txt');
Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang el 20 de Jun. de 2011
Like Walter suggested, the code is for a M-function. You need to call it with an input argument 'File_20psi.txt', which is the name of the text file. The variable TextFile in the code will then has 'File_20psi.txt' as its value.

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