Find if any string in a cell array is contained in a string
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TastyPastry
el 6 de Oct. de 2015
Editada: Kirby Fears
el 7 de Oct. de 2015
I have a cell array of strings, for example, C = {'bob','jack','john'}.
I have a test string T = 'The quick brown jack jumped'.
In this case, I'd like my output to be 2, since 'jack' is contained in T. There is a guarantee that only one string in the cell array will match any part of the test string, i.e. the output will be a single index.
What's the best way to go about implementing this code quickly? I don't want to loop through the cell array and check each time since this function is called as the user types an input in a GUI.
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Star Strider
el 6 de Oct. de 2015
You have to split ‘T’ into its component words first, but that’s easy enough with a regexp call:
T = 'The quick brown jack jumped';
Tc = regexp(T, ' ', 'split');
C = {'bob','jack','john'};
CLoc = find(ismember(C,Tc))
CLoc =
2
‘CLoc’ is the location in ‘C’ of the matching word.
2 comentarios
Star Strider
el 6 de Oct. de 2015
The same logic holds, but because ‘T’ has to be split into its component words, there would be no match with the phrase.
However, if ‘C’ were:
C = {'bob','jack', 'jumped','john'};
CLoc =
2 3
(I just verified that.)
So if you wanted to match phrases, you would have to figure out a way to parse the phrase from ‘T’ rather than the words. That would require you to create logic to recognise phrases. The ismember match would then work.
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Kirby Fears
el 6 de Oct. de 2015
Editada: Kirby Fears
el 7 de Oct. de 2015
Have you tested the speed of a for-loop or cellfun()? It's probably your best bet here unless C contains a really large number of strings. You can make the computation faster by ordering C from most-likely to least-likely to be typed.
for-loop:
idx=[];
for c=1:numel(C),
temp=regexp(T,C{c},'once');
if ~isempty(temp),
idx=c;
break;
end,
end,
or cellfun:
idx2=find(cellfun(@(c)~isempty(regexp(T,c,'once')),C));
If you involve Java classes, you could possibly speed up string comparisons. However, you can't avoid the need to search for every string in C within T. If C is large enough to try Java code, clever use of an iterable class might be the solution you're looking for.
Hope this helps.
2 comentarios
Kirby Fears
el 7 de Oct. de 2015
Editada: Kirby Fears
el 7 de Oct. de 2015
Perhaps the "replacement" part is what's not working. Try setting your KeyPressFcn to replace text with a fixed string like str='mystring' any time a key is pressed to confirm that replacement is working.
Hope this helps.
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