fprintf command issue. tricky columns.

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Burners
Burners el 1 de Oct. de 2012
Comentada: Sara Pierson el 1 de Abr. de 2021
a=1:5;
b=90:94;
fprintf('Variables A : %.f | Variables B : %.f\n',a,b);
Consider the script above.
Variable a are the small values. I want to print all the variables on the LEFT COLUMN. Then variable b on the RIGHT column.
However with this sequence of fprintf the variable a results in an entirely different order.
1 2
3 4
5 90
91 92
93 94

Respuesta aceptada

Honglei Chen
Honglei Chen el 1 de Oct. de 2012
Editada: Honglei Chen el 1 de Oct. de 2012
The trick is [a;b], like this
fprintf('Variables A : %.f | Variables B : %.f\n',[a;b]);
  1 comentario
Sara Pierson
Sara Pierson el 1 de Abr. de 2021
THIS WORKED FOR ME! Thank you! (I am using matlab 2020b btw if that helps anyone else)

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Más respuestas (1)

Burners
Burners el 1 de Oct. de 2012
What i want is, the same style as my vectors are arranged
1 90
2 91
3 92
4 93
5 94
  6 comentarios
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 7 de Sept. de 2019
fprintf(fileID,formatSpec,A1,...,An) applies the formatSpec to all elements of arrays A1,...An in column order, and writes the data to a text file.
If you have R2016b or later you might also want to look at compose(), which does not have this same behaviour.
Rik
Rik el 7 de Sept. de 2019
The fundamental point is that Matlab arrays are column-based. We might read row by row when we look at an array to be written, but Matlab doesn't. Maybe there should be a warning to this effect in the doc, but as far as I'm aware there isn't. If you want to avoid ambiguous situations, you should provide each input as a separate array.

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