windows and mac differences in basic functionality readtable
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Hi,
I have a gui that runs perfectly fine on a Mac with 2017a, when I run it on win2017a (prior to compiling it) I get numerous errors. This one however I do not understand at all
Undefined operator '>' for input arguments of type 'cell'
I can trace it back to the line which reads in the data...
data=readtable(files(k).name,'FileType','text','Delimiter','tab','TreatAsEmpty',['UND. -60001','UND. -2011','UND. -62011']);
the Mac and Windows versions run this differently, the Mac honors the TreatAsEmpty, note on the Mac it requires double quotes (" ") around each argument to exclude as empty whereas the Windows version called that an error and wanted single quotes, it then does nothing with them. This leads to the array being a table in the Mac version of the GUI and a cell in the Windows version, I just can't see why some fundamental matlab basics would be so different between the versions?
Any ideas?
Best regards
Steve
close all
clear all
clc
AA=uigetdir('\\company.com\data\users\ProfileFolders\my.name\Desktop\');
A1=string(AA)
Folder_strings=char(strcat(A1,'/*.txt'))
Folder_used=dir(Folder_strings)
files=Folder_used
nFiles=numel(files)
nameHead=(files(1).name)
expressionA = 'P\H\d\d\d\_'
nameOfHead= regexp(nameHead,expressionA,'match')
nameOfHead=nameOfHead{:}
nameOfHead=(nameOfHead(1,1:5))
for k=1:nFiles
data=readtable(files(k).name,'FileType','text','Delimiter','tab','TreatAsEmpty',['UND. -60001','UND. -2011','UND. -62011']);
name3D=(files(k).name);
RN=name3D;
expression1 = 'M\d\R\d\_';
Z(k)= regexp(RN,expression1,'match');
%%Assign variables to data
vel_NS=data.Velocity_ms;%-NS.....Nozze Scan data
% vol_NS=data.Volume_pl;
% traj_NS=data.Trajectory_deg;
% noz_NS=data.ExpID;
vel_NS(vel_NS > 10)=NaN;%for awful data exceeding 10m/s this will remove them
end
5 Comments
Jeremy Hughes
on 31 Jan 2018
Hi Steve,
It's hard to know what's happening without seeing the file.
First,
I would look at the encoding, Windows and Mac have different defaults. Set 'FileEncoding' in readtable to make that fixed.
Second,
'TreatAsEmpty',['UND. -60001','UND. -2011','UND. -62011']
I think this might not be doing what you want. This is not an array of strings, but a single character vector. (although this behavior is the same on all platforms so I doubt it's contributing to what you're seeing.)
I believe what you want is a cell array containing each character vector you want to be treated as empty:
'TreatAsEmpty',{'UND. -60001','UND. -2011','UND. -62011'}
Unless you really want the single value 'UND. -60001UND. -2011UND. -62011' to be treated as empty.
Finally,
the file separators for Mac and Windows are different.
\\xaar.com\data\users\ProfileFolders\Stephen.Devlin\Desktop\ is using the Windows separator '\'. That can cause confusing errors.
Hope this helps,
Jeremy
Stephen Devlin
on 2 Feb 2018
Stephen Devlin
on 2 Feb 2018
Walter Roberson
on 2 Feb 2018
Where you used "" as the delimiter, you used a facility available in R2017a and later; your other system must be running an earlier version.
Stephen Devlin
on 7 Jun 2018
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