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New line after fprintf in a for/ while loop

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I have an if else statement in a for loop that displays a relative error if the iterations is between a certain number. The only problem is that i can not seem to add a \n at the end of the fprint if because it ends up freaking out. Is there a way to add a linespace for this fprintf within an if else statement without having this error? Thanks
  1 Comment
Les Beckham
Les Beckham on 28 Aug 2023
If you provide your code (or a simplified version of it that still exhibits the problem) along with any data needed to allow it to run successfully, you will be much more likely to get an answer.
What do you mean by "it ends up freaking out"? Is there an error message? If so, cut and paste the entire error message (all of the red text in the command window) in a comment (or edit your question).

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Accepted Answer

David Hill
David Hill on 28 Aug 2023
a=randi(100,1,100);
for k=1:100
formatSpec = 'a is %2g\n';
if a(k)>90
fprintf(formatSpec,a(k));
end
end
a is 96 a is 95 a is 92 a is 92 a is 99 a is 91 a is 99 a is 94

More Answers (2)

dpb
dpb on 28 Aug 2023
Edited: dpb on 28 Aug 2023
Certainly the if...else...end clause itself has absolutely nothing to do with handling a newline in an fprint formatting string.
To illustrate proper syntax we can make up just a dummy test...
V=rand(10,1)
V = 10×1
0.5726 0.9293 0.8324 0.9603 0.8983 0.5216 0.7049 0.5235 0.5645 0.6107
for i=2:numel(V)
if V(i)-V(i-1)>0
fprintf('Iteration: %d GT 0\n',i)
else
fprintf('Iteration: %d LE 0\n',i)
end
end
Iteration: 2 GT 0
Iteration: 3 LE 0
Iteration: 4 GT 0
Iteration: 5 LE 0 Iteration: 6 LE 0
Iteration: 7 GT 0
Iteration: 8 LE 0
Iteration: 9 GT 0 Iteration: 10 GT 0

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 28 Aug 2023
Let's say you loop over val1 to val2, and you want to only enter the loop if val1 is more than 5 and val2 is less than 80. One way to do it would be to check in advance and never enter the for loop:
if (val1 <= 5) || (val2 > 80)
warningMessage = sprintf('For loop iterators out of range.\nValid range is 5-80.\nNow it is trying %d to %d', val1, val2)
uiwait(errordlg(warningMessage))
return; % Quit routine.
end
for k = val1 : val2
% code to run if the values are in range.
end
Another way to do it is to check inside the loop and break out
for k = 1 : 999
if (k <= 5) || (k > 80)
warningMessage = sprintf('For loop iterators out of range.\nValid range is 5-80.\nNow it is trying %d.', k)
uiwait(errordlg(warningMessage))
break; % Quit for loop, or use continue to continue with the next k.
end
end

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