How to have function mkdir read a variable?

21 views (last 30 days)
Can you mass produce sub folders in a parent folder using 'mkdir'and a variable? Can't figure out how have mkdir function read a variable.
Say we try to mass produce folders titled the following numbers:
>> x = [222990, 222991, 222992, 222993, 222994, 222995]
mkdir parentFolder x (doesn't work, just produces a single folder titled x)
mkdir parentFolder "x" (doesn't work, same issue)
mkdir parentFolder 'x' (doesn't work, same issue)
mkdir parentFolder [x] (doesn't work, same issue)
mkdir parentFolder (x) (doesn't work, same issue)
mkdir parentFolder ['x'] (doesn't work, same issue)
mkdir parentFolder ["x"] (doesn't work, same issue)
  2 Comments
Grant Kristo
Grant Kristo on 15 Dec 2020
Thanks for the link Stephen and furthering Alvery's first note. The link helps me understand "function calls". Starting to put the basics together using MATLAB. Seems the online course I took missed some basics.

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Alvery
Alvery on 15 Dec 2020
There is another syntactic form for calling functions.
mkdir newfolder
is the same as
mkdir('newfolder')
Since you want to manipulate the folder name, you need to use the second form of the function call, along with string manipulation. There's a second problem. mkdir, unlike many other matlab functions, does not work in a vectorised form. In other words, a single call to mkdir can only create a single folder. So to make one folder per list item, you will need a for loop. Therefore you want something like this:
for fileNum = x
mkdir('parentFolder', ['prefix_' num2str(fileNum)])
end
  1 Comment
Grant Kristo
Grant Kristo on 15 Dec 2020
Sick. Thanks Alvery. I'd run into the 'second problem: vectorised forms' using other functions and it's useful to know how to circumvent that. Didn't know there was a second format for entering the info either.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Categories

Find more on Programming in Help Center and File Exchange

Products

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!