Assignment of variables by comma separated lists
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I have some trouble understanding the behaviour of comma separated lists. Consider
A = struct('number', cell(1, 5));
If I want to assign numbers from 1 to 5, I have to introduce an auxiliary cell array:
numbers=num2cell(1:5);
[A.number]=numbers{:};
The direct way
[A.number]=1,2,3,4,5;
doesn't work although numbers{:} and 1,2,3,4,5 return the exact same result when entered at the command line. Why is that? And is there a more efficient way to assign a vector or an array of values to a struct than using an auxiliary cell array?
Accepted Answer
More Answers (1)
Bruno Luong
on 7 Apr 2021
Use deal
>> A = struct('number', cell(1, 5));
>> A
A =
1×5 struct array with fields:
number
>> n=1:5;
>> c=num2cell(n);
>> [A.number]=deal(c{:})
A =
1×5 struct array with fields:
number
>> A.number
ans =
1
ans =
2
ans =
3
ans =
4
ans =
5
>>
5 Comments
broken_arrow
on 7 Apr 2021
Bruno Luong
on 7 Apr 2021
Edited: Bruno Luong
on 7 Apr 2021
In this case no, but yo could look at the doc of deal for cases where directly using cell does not work.
In older MATLAB, the syntax
[...] = c{:}
throws an error. The new syntax is just an convenient extension of deal.
Personaly I never use those shortcut syntax in my code, it is as dangerous as length(); squeeze, etc...
broken_arrow
on 7 Apr 2021
Tony Castillo
on 27 Jul 2021
Dear all,
I have a similar error message but in this case is because I just want to stack some values in a Bar plot, do you have any insights to overcome this?
Assigning to 2 elements using a simple assignment statement is not supported. Consider
using comma-separated list assignment.
Error in barconvariasVariables (line 20)
b2.BarWidth = 0.4;
energy_=linspace(1000, 3000, 12)';
cons_=linspace(900, 2300, 12)';
g_c= linspace(700, 2000, 12)';
HDW_c=linspace(100, 300, 12)';
Power_=linspace(1000, 3000, 12)';
Sp_ =linspace(10, 30, 12)';
EV_=linspace(500, 1900, 12)';
COF=3.7;
n=12;
U1=[energy_, (cons_ + g_c + HDW_c)*(COF-1)];
U2=[(Power_ + Sp_ + EV_), (cons_ + g_c + HDW_c)*COF];
b1= bar(U1,'stacked');
b1(1).BarWidth = 0.4;
hold on;
b2=bar(U2,'stacked');
b2.BarWidth = 0.4;
b2.XData = (1:n) - 0.5; % move bars left
xlabel('Months', 'FontWeight','bold')
ylabel('Consumption vs RES (kWp)', 'FontWeight','bold')
grid on
Stephen23
on 27 Jul 2021
[b2.BarWidth] = deal(0.4);
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