Edit entries in textfile with fopen

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Ben
Ben on 3 Nov 2014
Commented: Abdullah on 5 May 2015
I need help while editing a control file of LS-DYNA via Matlab. In the following picture the structure of my file is depcited.
I need to change the entry in row number 12 to a specific value. I usually generate my output files with:
fileID = fopen(filename,permission);
fprintf(fileID, '...');
fclose(fileID);
However in this specific case this wont work, because depending on the permission, matlab discardes existing content or just adds new content to the end of the file.
My question is: What is the best way to open the file and edit an entry in a specific location? Performance matters...
Thanks for your help!
Kind regards

Accepted Answer

Orion
Orion on 3 Nov 2014
Edited: Orion on 3 Nov 2014
Hi,
One way to to do this.
Read the whole contents of your file in one cell.
Modify the line you want (be careful to keep the syntax).
rewrite the textfile with the new cell.
% read the data
fid = fopen('Myfile.txt','r');
MyText = textscan(fid,'%s','delimiter','\n');
fclose(fid);
%reconcatenate in a cell
MyText = [MyText{:}];
% Modify the content : here, the 12th line, new string.
MyText{12} = '2.3';
% rewrite the file
fid = fopen('Myfile.txt','wt');
fprintf(fid,'%s\n',MyText{:});
fclose(fid);
You can't really just specify a line to modify.
  2 Comments
Ben
Ben on 3 Nov 2014
Ok, thanks for your help! I understand that I need to read the file into a cell structure, edit it in matlab workspace and write a new file. Too bad this reduces the performance more than I was hoping it would. Maybe i will find a workaround...
Guillaume
Guillaume on 3 Nov 2014
Edited: Guillaume on 3 Nov 2014
No, you don't need to read the whole file. Too bad you accepted the wong answer too quickly!

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More Answers (1)

Guillaume
Guillaume on 3 Nov 2014
You would have to open the file with the r+ permission, read the file with fgetl to get line 12 position and then write the value you want. That's assuming the new value takes up as much space as the old one. If not, you would have to read and rewrite the remainder of the file.
Note that ,as the documentation of fopen states, you must call fseek or frewind between read and write operations
fid = fopen(filename, 'r+'); %open in read/write mode
for l=1:11
fgetl(fid); %read line 1 to 11
end
%we're now at the beginning of line 12
%the following is optional and just ensure that replacement is same length as line 12
pos = ftell(fid); %get current position
l12 = fgetl(fid); %read line 12
assert(length(l12) == length(replacement))
fseek(fid, pos, 'bof'); %go back to the beginning of line 12
%if you don't do the previous check then just
fseek(fid, 0, 'cof'); %fseek to current position to make sure write succeeds.
fprintf(fid, replacement);
fclose(fid);
  3 Comments
Guillaume
Guillaume on 3 Nov 2014
You can vote for my answer by clicking on the triangle. That'll give me a little bit of credit.
Abdullah
Abdullah on 5 May 2015
thanks Guillaume for helping out, keep up the good work. Your code helped me out for automating a once time consuming and human-error prone updating of my code files in DSGE programing. now I can update the specific parameter values in DYNARE files for optimization, obtaining results and IRFs.

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