Create Tables and Assign Data to Them
Tables are suitable for column-oriented data such as tabular data from text files or spreadsheets. Tables store columns of data in variables. The variables in a table can have different data types, though all of the variables must have the same number of rows. However, table variables are not restricted to storing only column vectors. For example, a table variable can contain a matrix with multiple columns as long as it has the same number of rows as the other table variables.
In MATLAB®, you can create tables and assign data to them in several ways.
Create a table from input arrays by using the
table
function.Add variables to an existing table by using dot notation.
Assign variables to an empty table.
Preallocate a table and fill in its data later.
Convert variables to tables by using the
array2table
,cell2table
, orstruct2table
functions.Read a table from file by using the
readtable
function.Import a table using the Import Tool.
The way you choose depends on the nature of your data and how you plan to use tables in your code.
Create Tables from Input Arrays
You can create a table from arrays by using the table
function. For example, create a small table with data for five patients.
First, create six column-oriented arrays of data. These arrays have five rows because there are five patients. (Most of these arrays are 5-by-1 column vectors, while BloodPressure
is a 5-by-2 matrix.)
LastName = ["Sanchez";"Johnson";"Zhang";"Diaz";"Brown"]; Age = [38;43;38;40;49]; Smoker = [true;false;true;false;true]; Height = [71;69;64;67;64]; Weight = [176;163;131;133;119]; BloodPressure = [124 93; 109 77; 125 83; 117 75; 122 80];
Now create a table, patients
, as a container for the data. In this call to the table
function, the input arguments use the workspace variable names for the names of the variables in patients
.
patients = table(LastName,Age,Smoker,Height,Weight,BloodPressure)
patients=5×6 table
LastName Age Smoker Height Weight BloodPressure
_________ ___ ______ ______ ______ _____________
"Sanchez" 38 true 71 176 124 93
"Johnson" 43 false 69 163 109 77
"Zhang" 38 true 64 131 125 83
"Diaz" 40 false 67 133 117 75
"Brown" 49 true 64 119 122 80
The table is a 5-by-6 table because it has six variables. As the BloodPressure
variable shows, a table variable itself can have multiple columns. This example shows why tables have rows and variables, not rows and columns.
Add Variable to Table Using Dot Notation
Once you have created a table, you can add a new variable at any time by using dot notation. Dot notation refers to table variables by name, T.varname
, where T
is the table and varname
is the variable name. This notation is similar to the notation you use to access and assign data to the fields of a structure.
For example, add a BMI
variable to patients
. Calculate body mass index, or BMI, using the values in patients.Weight
and patients.Height
. Assign the BMI values to a new table variable.
patients.BMI = (patients.Weight*0.453592)./(patients.Height*0.0254).^2
patients=5×7 table
LastName Age Smoker Height Weight BloodPressure BMI
_________ ___ ______ ______ ______ _____________ ______
"Sanchez" 38 true 71 176 124 93 24.547
"Johnson" 43 false 69 163 109 77 24.071
"Zhang" 38 true 64 131 125 83 22.486
"Diaz" 40 false 67 133 117 75 20.831
"Brown" 49 true 64 119 122 80 20.426
Assign Variables to Empty Table
Another way to create a table is to start with an empty table and assign variables to it. For example, re-create the table of patient data, but this time assign variables using dot notation.
First, create an empty table, patients2
, by calling table
without arguments.
patients2 = table
patients2 = 0x0 empty table
Next, create a copy of the patient data by assigning variables. Table variable names do not have to match array names, as shown by the Name
and BP
table variables.
patients2.Name = LastName; patients2.Age = Age; patients2.Smoker = Smoker; patients2.Height = Height; patients2.Weight = Weight; patients2.BP = BloodPressure
patients2=5×6 table
Name Age Smoker Height Weight BP
_________ ___ ______ ______ ______ __________
"Sanchez" 38 true 71 176 124 93
"Johnson" 43 false 69 163 109 77
"Zhang" 38 true 64 131 125 83
"Diaz" 40 false 67 133 117 75
"Brown" 49 true 64 119 122 80
Preallocate Table and Fill Rows
Sometimes you know the sizes and data types of the data that you want to store in a table, but you plan to assign the data later. Perhaps you plan to add only a few rows at a time. In that case, preallocating space in the table and then assigning values to empty rows can be more efficient.
For example, to preallocate space for a table to contain time and temperature readings at different stations, use the table
function. Instead of supplying input arrays, specify the sizes and data types of the table variables. To give them names, specify the 'VariableNames'
argument. Preallocation fills table variables with default values that are appropriate for their data types.
sz = [4 3]; varTypes = ["double","datetime","string"]; varNames = ["Temperature","Time","Station"]; temps = table('Size',sz,'VariableTypes',varTypes,'VariableNames',varNames)
temps=4×3 table
Temperature Time Station
___________ ____ _________
0 NaT <missing>
0 NaT <missing>
0 NaT <missing>
0 NaT <missing>
One way to assign or add a row to a table is to assign a cell array to a row. If the cell array is a row vector and its elements match the data types of their respective variables, then the assignment converts the cell array to a table row. However, you can assign only one row at a time using cell arrays. Assign values to the first two rows.
temps(1,:) = {75,datetime('now'),"S1"}; temps(2,:) = {68,datetime('now')+1,"S2"}
temps=4×3 table
Temperature Time Station
___________ ____________________ _________
75 20-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S1"
68 21-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S2"
0 NaT <missing>
0 NaT <missing>
As an alternative, you can assign rows from a smaller table into a larger table. With this method, you can assign one or more rows at a time.
temps(3:4,:) = table([63;72],[datetime('now')+2;datetime('now')+3],["S3";"S4"])
temps=4×3 table
Temperature Time Station
___________ ____________________ _______
75 20-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S1"
68 21-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S2"
63 22-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S3"
72 23-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S4"
You can use either syntax to increase the size of a table by assigning rows beyond the end of the table. If necessary, missing rows are filled in with default values.
temps(6,:) = {62,datetime('now')+6,"S6"}
temps=6×3 table
Temperature Time Station
___________ ____________________ _________
75 20-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S1"
68 21-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S2"
63 22-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S3"
72 23-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S4"
0 NaT <missing>
62 26-Jul-2024 14:54:35 "S6"
Convert Variables to Tables
You can convert variables that have other data types to tables. Cell arrays and structures are other types of containers that can store arrays that have different data types. So you can convert cell arrays and structures to tables. You can also convert an array to a table where the table variables contain columns of values from the array. To convert these kinds of variables, use the array2table
, cell2table
, or struct2table
functions.
For example, convert an array to a table by using array2table
. Arrays do not have column names, so the table has default variable names.
A = randi(3,3)
A = 3×3
3 3 1
3 2 2
1 1 3
a2t = array2table(A)
a2t=3×3 table
A1 A2 A3
__ __ __
3 3 1
3 2 2
1 1 3
You can provide your own table variable names by using the "VariableNames"
name-value argument.
a2t = array2table(A,"VariableNames",["First","Second","Third"])
a2t=3×3 table
First Second Third
_____ ______ _____
3 3 1
3 2 2
1 1 3
Read Table from File
It is common to have a large quantity of tabular data in a file such as a CSV (comma-separated value) file or an Excel® spreadsheet. To read such data into a table, use the readtable
function.
For example, the CSV file outages.csv
is a sample file that is distributed with MATLAB. The file contains data for a set of electrical power outages. The first line of outages.csv
has column names. The rest of the file has comma-separated data values for each outage. The first few lines are shown here.
Region,OutageTime,Loss,Customers,RestorationTime,Cause SouthWest,2002-02-01 12:18,458.9772218,1820159.482,2002-02-07 16:50,winter storm SouthEast,2003-01-23 00:49,530.1399497,212035.3001,,winter storm SouthEast,2003-02-07 21:15,289.4035493,142938.6282,2003-02-17 08:14,winter storm West,2004-04-06 05:44,434.8053524,340371.0338,2004-04-06 06:10,equipment fault MidWest,2002-03-16 06:18,186.4367788,212754.055,2002-03-18 23:23,severe storm ...
To read outages.csv
and store the data in a table, you can use readtable
. It reads numeric values, dates and times, and strings into table variables that have appropriate data types. Here, Loss
and Customers
are numeric arrays. The OutageTime
and RestorationTime
variables are datetime
arrays because readtable
recognizes the date and time formats of the text in those columns of the input file. To read the rest of the text data into string arrays, specify the "TextType"
name-value argument.
outages = readtable("outages.csv","TextType","string")
outages=1468×6 table
Region OutageTime Loss Customers RestorationTime Cause
___________ ________________ ______ __________ ________________ _________________
"SouthWest" 2002-02-01 12:18 458.98 1.8202e+06 2002-02-07 16:50 "winter storm"
"SouthEast" 2003-01-23 00:49 530.14 2.1204e+05 NaT "winter storm"
"SouthEast" 2003-02-07 21:15 289.4 1.4294e+05 2003-02-17 08:14 "winter storm"
"West" 2004-04-06 05:44 434.81 3.4037e+05 2004-04-06 06:10 "equipment fault"
"MidWest" 2002-03-16 06:18 186.44 2.1275e+05 2002-03-18 23:23 "severe storm"
"West" 2003-06-18 02:49 0 0 2003-06-18 10:54 "attack"
"West" 2004-06-20 14:39 231.29 NaN 2004-06-20 19:16 "equipment fault"
"West" 2002-06-06 19:28 311.86 NaN 2002-06-07 00:51 "equipment fault"
"NorthEast" 2003-07-16 16:23 239.93 49434 2003-07-17 01:12 "fire"
"MidWest" 2004-09-27 11:09 286.72 66104 2004-09-27 16:37 "equipment fault"
"SouthEast" 2004-09-05 17:48 73.387 36073 2004-09-05 20:46 "equipment fault"
"West" 2004-05-21 21:45 159.99 NaN 2004-05-22 04:23 "equipment fault"
"SouthEast" 2002-09-01 18:22 95.917 36759 2002-09-01 19:12 "severe storm"
"SouthEast" 2003-09-27 07:32 NaN 3.5517e+05 2003-10-04 07:02 "severe storm"
"West" 2003-11-12 06:12 254.09 9.2429e+05 2003-11-17 02:04 "winter storm"
"NorthEast" 2004-09-18 05:54 0 0 NaT "equipment fault"
⋮
Import Table Using Import Tool
Finally, you can interactively preview and import data from spreadsheets or delimited text files by using the Import Tool. There are two ways to open the Import Tool.
MATLAB Toolstrip: On the Home tab, in the Variable section, click Import Data.
MATLAB command prompt: Enter
uiimport(
filename
)
, wherefilename
is the name of a text or spreadsheet file.
For example, open the outages.csv
sample file by using uiimport
and which
to get the path to the file.
uiimport(which("outages.csv"))
The Import Tool shows you a preview of the six columns from outages.csv
. To import the data as a table, follow these steps.
In the Imported Data section, select Table as the output type.
Click Import Selection (near the upper-right corner). The new table, named
outages
, appears in your workspace.
See Also
Functions
readtable
|table
|array2table
|cell2table
|struct2table