Load concatenated .mat files in a for loop
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Jose Rego Terol
el 19 de En. de 2020
Comentada: woahs
el 21 de En. de 2020
Hello all.
I have this code. The problem is that, when I have 11 files, the for loop takes the file "spike 11.mat" before the file "spike 2.mat". In other word, the first file loaded is "spike 1.mat", then "spike 11.mat", and finally "spike 2.mat".
How can I tell the loop to take the first file, the second file, and so on?
Here is the for loop:
clear all, clc
% Specify the folder where the files live.
myFolder = 'C:\Users\usuario\Desktop\Lab\Amp_scripts\Spikes not analyzed\B2310\B2310\Exported_ROI_Second third_B2310.mat';
% Get a list of all files in the folder with the desired file name pattern.
filePattern = fullfile(myFolder, 'Spike No*.mat'); % Change to whatever pattern you need.
theFiles = dir(filePattern);
for k = 1 : length(theFiles)
baseFileName = theFiles(k).name;
fullFileName = fullfile(myFolder, baseFileName);
fprintf(1, 'Now reading %s\n', baseFileName)
%Call the function Spike_analysis
2 comentarios
woahs
el 19 de En. de 2020
The function dir usually returns the matches in alphanumerical order which means spike 11 comes after spike 1 (as would spike 10, spike 12, etc..) and before spike 2. Either rename your files such that they are ordered alphanumerically as you'd expect them to (e.g. spike 01, spike 02, ... spike 10, spike 11) or pad the filenames with 0's programatically and re-sort.
Stephen23
el 20 de En. de 2020
In fact no OS the MATLAB currently operates on takes into account the numeric values when returning the folder contents to DIR. On Windows the names are usually sorted into character (aka "asciibetical") order. Read these to know more:
Respuesta aceptada
Jose Rego Terol
el 19 de En. de 2020
6 comentarios
Stephen23
el 20 de En. de 2020
Editada: Stephen23
el 20 de En. de 2020
Calling natsortfiles on the full filenames is not required in this example as the folder is always exactly the same (i.e. myFolder). It would be simpler and more efficient to follow the examples in the natsortfiles documentation (i.e. get rid of cellfun and fileparts, and call fullfile inside the loop):
S = dir(fullfile(myFolder,'Spike No*.mat'));
C = natsortfiles({S.name});
for k = 1:numel(C)
fprintf('Now reading %s\n',C{k});
F = fullfile(myFolder,C{k});
% Call the function Spike_analysis
end
woahs
el 21 de En. de 2020
Agreed. I just tend to protect for different fullpaths but in this case, I don't see it being a problem to omit the file path unless you need to sort a set of filenames stored in different folders.
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