concatenate array of structures with same field names

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Hi
I am reading datafile from a camera which spits out data in a certain format - about several Gb's in size.
The output format is more complex than the example below:
m = memmapfile(def_file,'Format',{'uint8',[8,1],'identifier';'uint8',[504,1],'Header';'uint16',[2^16,1],'Pix'},'Repeat',N,'Offset',0,'writable',false);
where N=8000
and this is the output
m.Data
8000×1 struct array with fields:
identifier
Header
Pix
so that m.Data.Pix has 8000 fields each with 65536 element vector
and m.Data.identifier also has 8000 fields each with 8 element vector
I want to concatenate each structure array example for N=20 is a script I adapted from the forum
M = CatStructFields(m.Data,1,1);
tic
Dat = CatStructFields(m.Data,1,3);
toc
To concatenate N=8000 for Pix (j=3) takes ~ half an hour.
There must be a faster way to do this. Any ideas here?
%%
function M = CatStructFields(S, dim, j)
fields = fieldnames(S);
M=[];
for k = 1:numel(S)
aField = fields{j};
M = cat(dim, M, S(k).(aField));
end
end
  1 Comment
gujax
gujax on 5 Jun 2023
Its way faster (like 7 seconds) if I dump the whole file using memmap as a uniform *uint16 into a Matlab variable and then sort out different fields.
But I ran the same using C++ and fstream where you can read a structure directly (where the struct is {identifier, header, Pix, ...}) and it was 10x faster than the uniform uint16 bit dumped version of my code.
So why is it that Matlab cannot use fread to read a structured file? Not sure how fread is implemented (does it use C++ fread or fstream?)

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Accepted Answer

Matt J
Matt J on 5 Jun 2023
Edited: Matt J on 5 Jun 2023
So why is it that Matlab cannot use fread to read a structured file? Not sure how fread is implemented (does it use C++ fread or fstream?)
I think it may have to do with the fact that Matlab does not assume that the field data in a struct array are of a fixed size. Therefore, structs are neither stored nor read in contiguously.
  9 Comments
Matt J
Matt J on 6 Jun 2023
I think it's because m is not of type struct, and so the indexing syntax I was using does not apply. You could probably do,
S=m.Data;
M2=cat(1,S.Pix);
gujax
gujax on 6 Jun 2023
yes that worked! Of course m is a filetype. The 'dot' in m.Data led me off thinking its a structure! Should have paid more attention

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