Putting two seperate columns in to one variable and how to insert a Array into mysql
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Hello,
I have to question which you have seen in the title. My questions are:
- How can I put two columns into one variable? Example: You have column A and column B, but you want them both in C. I have no Idea how I can do that. Every time I tried they were put beneath eachother.
- How can I send the variable Data to my sql tabel. I know you need something like this: query= ['INSERT INTO ' table ' VALUES (' pk ',''' voornaam ''',''' achternaam ''')']; But with that line of code you can't send a array.
I hope someone can help me with this, because I need to know this for next week !!
b=0;
for i= 1:1:10
analog= readVoltage (board, 'A0');
writePWMVoltage (board, 'D3', analog);
disp(['analog= ', num2str(analog)]);
pause(1);
A(i)= analog;
A=A';
b= b+1;
B(i)= b;
B=B';
end
Data= [A:B];
2 comentarios
Geoff Hayes
el 11 de Abr. de 2019
Martijn - if you want to create a matrix from your two columns (so that they are "side by side") then change your line of code
Data= [A:B];
to
Data= [A B];
The colon operator (that you are using) is not appropriate in this context. If you want to create just one column of data then you would do
Data= [A;B];
using a semi-colon to indicate that B should be vertically concatenated with A. As for writing/inserting the data into the database table, perhaps try using sqlwrite or an equvalent method.
Respuestas (1)
Guillaume
el 12 de Abr. de 2019
Assuming that by column, you mean column vector use the horizontal concatenation operation , instead of the vertical concatenation operator ;, or [horzcat], or cat(2, ...):
%all of these do horizontal concatenation:
C = [A, B];
C = [A B]; %space works the same as comma. Comma is clearer.
C = horzcat(A, B);
C = cat(2, A, B);
%all of these do vertical concatenation
C = [A; B];
C = vertcat(A, B);
C = cat(1, A, B);
To insert multiple rows in mySQL, write one VALUES statement per row:
INSERT INTO tbl(COL1, COL2)
VALUES(col1row1, col2row1),
VALUES(col1row2, col2row2),
...
VALUES(col1rown, col2rown);
To construct that SQL statement in matlab, you could use:
%demo data:
A = [1 2; 3 4; 5 6];
columnnames = {'Day', 'Month'};
tablename = 'MyTable'
values = compose('VALUES(%d, %d)', A); %note that the format depends on the type of data you insert %d works for INTEGER only
select = sprintf('ISERT INTO %s(%s) %s;', tablename, strjoin(columnnames, ', '), strjoin(values, ', '))
6 comentarios
Guillaume
el 14 de Abr. de 2019
"I read it I need to de replace sprintf with something else"
Huh! Why? sprintf does the required job, the problem is with the query syntax.
- The name of the table in the query is table. The code you show has Data as the table name. There is no way that the exact code you show would have put table there, so you have been using a different code. In any case, make sure you've got the correct table name. table as a name for a table is utterly useless, it doesn't describe anything about the table purpose.
- As I wrote as a comment in the code %d as a format only works properly for integers. Your Voltage is clearly non-integer so you should use a different format. Possibly %g
- I made a mistake with the syntax of VALUES. The VALUES keyword is only needed once. Again, look at the mysql documentation to work out the syntax. I haven't used mysql for years.
So, the query should probably be:
values = compose('(%d, %g)', Data1); %format string to be TAILORED to the content of Data1
query = sprintf('INSERT INTO %s (%s) VALUES %s;', tablename, strjoin(columnnames, ', '), strjoin(values, ', '));
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