How to update struct array fields with mutiple values

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I am trying to update a field value in a struct array. For example if I have 1*10 struct of A with a field in it called B, I want to replace the following loop with another method:
for iLoop=1:10
A(iLoop).B = iLoop;
end
I tried:
[A.B] = deal(1:10);
And also:
A = setfield(A,num2cell(1:10),'B',num2cell(1:10),(1:10));
But none of them worked (the first method assigns the whole (1:10) vector to each 'B' field in the struct array. The second one crashes). Does anyone know how to make it work?

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 5 Mar 2012
Edited: Walter Roberson on 19 Sep 2019
t = num2cell(1:10);
[A.B] = t{:};
See comments for the case where the struct does not already exist.
  6 Comments
breathi
breathi on 19 Sep 2019
Walter,
please edit your answer and insert the solution you posted in the comments.
It was driving me nuts to find out, that only an existing struct array can be filled with your current solution, just to find out a few angry debug steps later that you posted a comment and that this solution could just create a new struct array by explicitly using length(t) as the left side input.
Thanks.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 19 Sep 2019
For the case where the struct does not already exist, there is a different method that can be easier:
A = struct('B', t);
where t is the cell array from above. This also permits you to store to multiple fields, and to leave some fields empty, and to put in non-scalar values.
A = struct('B', num2cell(1:10), 'C', [], 'D', num2cell(rand(2,10),1));

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More Answers (3)

Andrew Newell
Andrew Newell on 5 Mar 2012
What timing! It happens that the File Exchange Pick of the Week is the function disperse. If you download disperse and put it on your path, you can use the following command:
[A.B] = disperse(1:10);
  3 Comments
Bradley Stiritz
Bradley Stiritz on 15 Sep 2018
Thank you Andrew! disperse() is just what I needed.
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 16 Sep 2018
Edited: Stephen23 on 16 Sep 2018
"disperse() is just what I needed."
Actually Walter Roberson's answer does exactly the same thing, without requiring third-party functions.

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Tom
Tom on 12 Feb 2018
Edited: Tom on 12 Feb 2018
This works perfectly, until you have a field in between.
[A.B] = t{:}; %Great!
[A.B(1).C] = t{:}; % doesn't work
Anyone have a suggestion on how to make it work this way?
  1 Comment
Mohammad Tabesh
Mohammad Tabesh on 13 Feb 2018
If your question structure is that A has 10 rows, each have a field B which in turn has a field C that you want to update, I suggest creating an intermediate structure array similar to B, assign the values there and then assign that to field B:
D = A.B;
[D.C] = t{:};
[A.B] = deal(D);

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Mitja M
Mitja M on 25 Jul 2018
I would highly appreciate the solution to the following problem, which I believe is highly related to the previous, but I somehow don't find the appropriate solution.
I have the following variables:
AA, 1×3 struct array with fields: bb
bb, nx6 double array
cc, nx3 double array
n for all three bb and cc arrays is equal to 100 right now
Now I would like to change the fifth column of all three bb arrays to corresponding column in cc array. It can be correctly done using the following for loop:
for i=1:3
AA(i).bb(:,5)=cc(:,i);
end
Is it possible to achieve this without the for loop.
Thank you
  1 Comment
Mohammad Tabesh
Mohammad Tabesh on 26 Jul 2018
Hi Mitja, I suggest a similar approach as I suggested to Tom.
BB=cat(3,AA.bb);
BB(:,5,:)=cc;
BBB=num2cell(BB,[1 2]);
[AA.bb]=deal(BBB{:});

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