problem to concatenate table due to "cell and non cell" error

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Hello,
I have a script that reads 2 TXT files to two tables (one is significantly larger than the other). then I add both table the columb 'detector' to the 4th column (both tables structure is identicle, and supposed to be the same types of variable to all columns). for some reason I'm getting this error : "Cannot concatenate the table variable 'detector' because it is a cell in one table and a non-cell in another."
the script works fine with smaller files.
is matlab chaneging the type of the variable due to the size?
this is the script:
Ge_table = readtable(hpge_file); %
Ge_table.Properties.VariableNames = {'time_stamp', 'energy','time_adjusted'};
scint_table = readtable(pmt_file); %
scint_table.Properties.VariableNames = {'time_stamp', 'energy','time_adjusted'};
Ge_table(:,4) = {1};
Ge_table.Properties.VariableNames{4} = 'detector';
scint_table(:,4) = {0};
scint_table.Properties.VariableNames{4} = 'detector';
coince_table = vertcat(Ge_table, scint_table);
Thanks!
  4 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 18 May 2020
I hypothesize that one of the tables already had four columns.
Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 18 May 2020
Hmmm.... but the variableNames being assigned only contain 3 values which would throw an error.
Perhaps we aren't seeing the full code.

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Accepted Answer

Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 18 May 2020
Edited: Adam Danz on 18 May 2020
One possibility is that the cell / non-cell mismatch is being caused by a different column in the table.
Here are two ways you can quickly see if there's any mismatches in variable types between two columns.
1) look at the first few rows of each table.
head(Ge_table)
head(scint_table)
If you're unsure what to look for, leave a comment that contains the content of those two outputs.
2) Look at the variable classes for each column, for each table. Do they match?
GeTblClasses = varfun(@class,Ge_table,'OutputFormat','cell');
scintTblClasses = varfun(@class,scint_table,'OutputFormat','cell');
  14 Comments
sani
sani on 18 May 2020
thanks for the explenation!
I don't think this will help in my case, since I'm able to load the files to tables, and even to add the 3rd column.
for some reason that I don't understand it gives different types for the same operation for each data set.
my suspition is that in order to utikize the memory better it save the 4th column in the larger file as char. from what that I recall, char takes 8 bits and float (thats how it define the 4th column in the other data set) takes 32 bits.
I wondering if there is a way to inforce it to save it as float? or, maybe I can define another X by one table (where X is the number of line in the data set table) and then join them?
sani
sani on 18 May 2020
SOLVED!
so, what I did was, instead of adding a new column to the table, I created a new table of zeros in the length of my table and than concatenate them. now it works:)

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More Answers (1)

Gabor
Gabor on 20 May 2021
I would add to check the missmatching table variables by comparing them by for eg.:
class(Table1.Column_name(1))
class(Table2.Column_name(1))
  1 Comment
Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 20 May 2021
That's what step 2 does in my answer except it checks the class of all columns in the table rather than just the first column.

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