Sort row by row cell matrix?
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Hello all, I tried to sort a cell matrix, row by row with sortrows function but this sort all matrix instead of each row.
I would like to sort:
a=[{'c'},{'b'},{'a'};
{'c'},{'a'},{'b'};
{'c'},{'b'},{'a'};]
With this output:
a=[{'a'},{'b'},{'c'};
{'a'},{'b'},{'c'};
{'a'},{'b'},{'c'};]
Could someone help me?
Thank you!!!
2 comentarios
Guillaume
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
What a strange way to declare the cell array.
a = {'c', 'b', 'a';
'c', 'a', 'b';
'c', 'b', 'a'}
requires less typing. But if all cells are just a single character then using a char array:
a = ['cba'; 'cab'; 'cba']
is even simpler.
Why the really strange cell array definition? It is much easier to define a cell array like this:
a = {'c', 'b', 'a'; 'c', 'a', 'b'; 'c', 'b', 'a'}
Respuestas (3)
the cyclist
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
sort(a')'
5 comentarios
the cyclist
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
You need to do the awkward transpose-sort-transpose, because the sort command will only sort along the first dimension for a cell array.
Diego Makasevicius Barbosa
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
Editada: Diego Makasevicius Barbosa
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
the cyclist
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
I get a 3x3 output for that case, as expected. Maybe double-check that the input was really 3x3 when you tested?
the cyclist
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
To be clear, this was the exact code I ran:
a=[{'c'},{'b'},{'a'}; {'f'},{'d'},{'e'}; {'b'},{'c'},{'a'};];
sort(a')'
the cyclist
el 5 de Dic. de 2015
As verified by Image Analyst and myself:
a = {'home', 'apple', 'tiger'; 'onion', 'house', 'knife'; 'sugar', 'money', 'rich'}
sorted_a = sort(a')'
yields, as expected:
a =
'home' 'apple' 'tiger'
'onion' 'house' 'knife'
'sugar' 'money' 'rich'
sorted_a =
'apple' 'home' 'tiger'
'house' 'knife' 'onion'
'money' 'rich' 'sugar'
Image Analyst
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
Perhaps this:
a=[{'c'},{'b'},{'a'};
{'c'},{'a'},{'b'};
{'c'},{'b'},{'a'};]
charArray = cell2mat(a)
% Sort each row individually
for row = 1 : size(charArray, 1);
[~, sortOrder] = sort(charArray(row, :));
charArray(row,:) = charArray(row, sortOrder);
end
% Print to command window
charArray
The end is a character array, which is a heck of a lot easier to deal with than a cell array.
2 comentarios
Diego Makasevicius Barbosa
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
Image Analyst
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
Guillaume has given two one-liners - one for cell arrays and one for character arrays. I suggest you avoid cell arrays unless you really need them (like for mixed data types or strings that are not all the same length), and in this situation you don't need cell arrays at all.
Guillaume
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
a = {'c', 'b', 'a';
'c', 'a', 'b';
'c', 'b', 'a'}
num2cell(sort(cell2mat(a), 2))
is all that is needed. But as stated, if a was a char array to start with:
a = ['cba'; 'cab'; 'cba'];
sort(a, 2)
is so much simpler.
3 comentarios
Diego Makasevicius Barbosa
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
the cyclist
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
Can someone besides me please verify that
sort(a')'
does work for this case as well? I'm baffled why Diego can't just use this very simple solution.
Image Analyst
el 4 de Dic. de 2015
Verfied:
a = {'home', 'apple', 'tiger'; 'onion', 'house', 'knife'; 'sugar', 'money', 'rich'}
sorted_a = sort(a')'
a =
'home' 'apple' 'tiger'
'onion' 'house' 'knife'
'sugar' 'money' 'rich'
sorted_a =
'apple' 'home' 'tiger'
'house' 'knife' 'onion'
'money' 'rich' 'sugar'
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