find the matching strings in tables

17 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Birsen
Birsen el 23 de Sept. de 2016
Editada: Walter Roberson el 24 de Sept. de 2016
Hi,
I have an excel file and I converted to a table. My table has a column called "Locations". The location column contains a long list of string like " Country1-Area1,CityA-52". I would like to rename the sites as follows: Area1,CityA-52. I tried many things to find the first "-" index number in a table. I thought if I find the first index number then I could read the rest of the string. Could not succeed so far. Since it is a table it is more complicated. Any ideas?
Thank you Birsen

Respuesta aceptada

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 24 de Sept. de 2016
YourTable.Locations = regexprep( YourTable.Locations, '^[^-]+-', '', 'lineanchors');
  2 comentarios
Birsen
Birsen el 24 de Sept. de 2016
Editada: Walter Roberson el 24 de Sept. de 2016
Walter, Thank you for the answer. You are right I had to give a demo. Unfortunately your suggestion did not work. It did not give an error but did not change the result neither.
Here it is what I have;
filename='BkgData.xls'
YourTable = readtable(filename);
Here it is how my table looks like
Country Locations ........
======= ======== ==========
'Argentina' 'Argentina-Area1,CityA-52'
'Belgium' 'Belgium-Area5, 346_6
.................
I used your code
YourTable.Locations = regexprep( YourTable.Locations, '^[^-]+-', '', 'lineanchors');
The 'Argentina-Area1,CityA-52' still stands there as a one piece.
Thanks again
Birsen
Birsen el 24 de Sept. de 2016
Walter,
I was wrong. I made a mistake when i tried for the first time. Your code solved the problem. Thanks again.
Birsen

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Más respuestas (2)

George
George el 24 de Sept. de 2016
You can use regexp.
a = 'Country1-Area1,CityA-52';
expression = '-.+$'; % a dash, one or more characters until the end of the line
[token, ~] = regexp(a, expression, 'match');
token{1}(2:end) % lop off the dashes
ans =
1×11 char array
Area1,CityA-52
  1 comentario
Birsen
Birsen el 24 de Sept. de 2016
George, Thank you. Your code works great when the string is a single line, but I have a table. Actually 'a" here is a Table not a single line string. In the table there are thousands of line like "a". I can go around and use your code but there got to be a easier way to split the stings and rearrange columns in Table. Thanks Again
Birsen

Iniciar sesión para comentar.


Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 24 de Sept. de 2016
What about using the strrep() function? If you'd given code for making a demo table, I might have tried it for you. You gotta make it easy for us, or at least that helps.
  1 comentario
Birsen
Birsen el 24 de Sept. de 2016
Image Analyst;
I can see I did not provide enough information. Thank you though. strrep() function is to find and replace the matching strings. If I had only a couple of line that would help but here I am trying to split hundreds of them and each time the string (country name) is different. And they are located in a Table column.
Birsen

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Categorías

Más información sobre Cell Arrays en Help Center y File Exchange.

Etiquetas

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by