How to convert string to variable name ?
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Pradya Panyainkaew
on 13 Jan 2018
Commented: Walter Roberson
on 3 Nov 2022
I try to do like this
if true
Varname=matlab.lang.makeValidName(strcat('Indiv_Reg_',Month))
end
where Month is a input variable represent char '01,02,...,12'
My problem is I cannot refer variable such as 'Indiv_Reg_01' to get a data from this variable. For example, I cannot get data from Indiv_Reg_01{1,1} by using this code
if true
Varname{1,1}
end
How Can I fix this problem ?
thanks in advance.
1 Comment
Stephen23
on 13 Jan 2018
"My problem is I cannot refer variable such as 'Indiv_Reg_01' to get a data from this variable"
The problem is that you are hiding pesudo-indices in variable names. Turn them into real indices and your "problem" instantly goes away. Solving problems through better code design is always preferred to writing slow, buggy, hack code accessing variable names.
Accepted Answer
Jan
on 13 Jan 2018
Edited: Jan
on 13 Jan 2018
This question is an evergreen. The solution is easy: Don't do this. It is a shot in your knee.
See:
- https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/304528-tutorial-why-variables-should-not-be-named-dynamically-eval
- https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/57445-faq-how-can-i-create-variables-a1-a2-a10-in-a-loop
- and hundreds of discussions concerning eval in this forum.
Do not hide indices in the names of variables, but use indices instead: Let Indiv_Reg be a cell array and use the numerical value as index. This is much better than the indirection over the conversion to a string and hiding it in the names of dynamically created variables.
5 Comments
Jan
on 3 Nov 2022
"When we visit the site like this and post our questions, we are looking for a direct 'answer' to our question."
Of course. And the "direct" answer is often not the optimal solution, if the problem was formulated in a suboptimal way. This is the core of the already mentioned "XY-problem".
"We in general spend enough time (clicking, reading, and testing) and we still wants to do it for various reasons."
I cannot confirm this. The majority of users asking questions in this forum do not search before. Many newcomers tend to use eval and assignin folloing the wrong opinion, that this is useful. In the last 25 years I had many discussion about this topic and in all of them other methods have been fater, more elegant and reduce the effort for debugging. I'd be happy if all beginners read and consider Stephen's great summary about this topic,before they ask a concerning question, but this is not the case in general. If you a an exception, this is really nice for you. But as far as I can see, this is not your thread, but the question of Pradya Panyainkaew. He has accepted this answer and therefore I assume, it was useful.
Feel free to use assign in however you want. I'm not your teacher and you will not get any grades from me. But if you ask me for a good solution, I will suggest another method due to my experiences with Matlab and other programming languages. I have no problem, if you have another opinion. Feel free to post answers with your preferred method. Remember that I am a Matlab user as you are. There is no certificate or other sign, that makes me an "expert" - except that a certain number of users found my answers useful in the past.
"I rather unify parameters for all possible variations, still small size, and key inputs to a funciton are these versions predefined like m##### and p#####, respectively. I then load model and parameter mat file like M##### and P##### and pick elements from variables in the mat file loaded."
This is not clear enough to be discussed in detail. "m#####" looks like information is hidden in the name of the variables. As you know, I consider this as a bad code design, but this does not matter as long as you do not ask me for my opinion :-)
Have a nice day and I hope you find all needed asnwers in this forum.
Walter Roberson
on 3 Nov 2022
When we visit the site like this and post our questions, we are looking for a direct 'answer' to our question.
This site gets quite a lot of questions from students. A fair portion of the students are "looking for" complete working code for their homework or honours project, that they can submit as their own work, without having to learn how to solve the problems themselves. Does it follow that we should provide that to them?
More Answers (3)
Luna
on 4 Jan 2019
Edited: Luna
on 4 Jan 2019
Hi all,
I agree with Jan & Stephen what they said about eval function. Don't use it. Instead use struct and arrays with dynamic naming.
For this example I have created a solution you can check:
Month = '01,02,03,04,05,06,07,08,09,10,11,12';
monthsArray = strsplit(Month,',');
for i = 1:numel(monthsArray)
Varnames{i} = matlab.lang.makeValidName(strcat('Indiv_Reg_',monthsArray{i}));
myStruct.(Varnames{i}) = randi(20,1,1);
end
myStruct.(Varnames{1,1}) % should give you a value of a random number
myStruct.Indiv_Reg_01 % same result above
ps: if you are forced to name your variables use this. Otherwise use directly indices of your Nx12 array.
4 Comments
joe zhong
on 21 May 2020
In fact, this two solutions should be the "Accepted" answer.
We all know we should don't do something, but things just happened, and we need a real solution rather than "just redo all scripts you got".
Luna
on 1 Jun 2020
Believe me you will put much more effort to the solution you are asking for in your way rather than "just redoing all scripts you got".
You will spend time just for once redoing your code with indexing and implementing arrays. After that you will be free. Think that when you want to change a single variable name, that will force you to "redo all your scripts" again.
I only use eval if I'm running Simulink models with from Workspace blocks.
Don't use it if you really don't know what eval is used for. Here is some informations about justifiable usages of eval. These advices are from Matlab experts, at least they know some programming better than most.
Gabor
on 18 Feb 2021
Edited: Gabor
on 18 Feb 2021
Your answer does not work if you only have hammer and a screw available at hand (curvfitting tool does not accept structs as variable for eg.). In that case its perfect to use the hammer to pop that screw in fast :D
I found this:
assignin('base',var_name, value)
4 Comments
Stephen23
on 16 Dec 2021
Edited: Stephen23
on 16 Dec 2021
"In my case, I needed to create a list of variables in a very specific format so that they can be exported out to a different piece of software."
You write that you need "a very specific format" (by which I presume that you mean that the variable name needs to have a very specific format, as of course the variable format itself is an unrelated topic). The most commonly-used MATLAB function for exporting data which relies on the variable names is SAVE, but of course SAVE has the -STRUCT option which completely avoids the need for dynamically named variables, so you must be using some other export function. Which one?
In the interest of helping other users understand the need you have, would you be so kind as to provide some sample code, or a description of the file format, or something similar so that we can understand why your use-case has this particular "need" which cannot be fulfilled with simpler, more efficient code.
Govind Narayan Sahu
on 17 Jun 2022
Edited: Govind Narayan Sahu
on 17 Jun 2022
This works perfectly fine for me. Thanks a lot.
data = rand(1,8);
vars = {'a', 'b', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h', 'i'};
index_vars = 1:8;
for k = 1:length(vars)
assignin('base',vars{k}, data(1, index_vars(k)))
end
Anshuman Agrawal
on 19 Jun 2020
Edited: Anshuman Agrawal
on 19 Jun 2020
Hopefully, what you wanted to do was covered here.
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