How can I detect the number pressed from a dtmf tone (.mat) file?

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I have a DTMF tone that is a .mat file, it just consists of one button press on a telephone and i want to be able to detect the number pressed and output it to the command line. How exactly can I do this?
I posted an example of the .mat file
  3 Comments
Elliot Wyllie
Elliot Wyllie on 1 May 2021
I have, none of them really worked for me and none used a .mat file
DGM
DGM on 1 May 2021
A mat file is just a container for any sort of variable that matlab can hold. The mat file just contains a vector and a scalar specifying the sampling frequency.
Using this FEX submission I just randomly picked:
load('dial_0.mat')
thiskey = decode(y',1,fs,numel(y)/fs)
gives
thiskey =
0
Of course, the documentation and parameterization for this function is pretty terrible, but that's some kind of tradition on the File Exchange.

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Accepted Answer

DGM
DGM on 1 May 2021
Basing off of this example:
% this loads two variables:
% fs -- sampling rate
% y -- signal vector
load('dial_0.mat');
Nt = 205;
source_tones = [697 770 852 941 1209 1336 1477]';
symbols = {'1','2','3';'4','5','6';'7','8','9';'*','0','#'};
k = round(source_tones/fs*Nt); % Indices of the DFT
estim_f = round(k*fs/Nt); % Frequencies at which the DFT is estimated
tone = y(1:205);
% Estimate DFT using Goertzel
ydft = goertzel(tone,k+1);
% find the two most powerful frequencies
[~,sourcetoneidx] = sort(abs(ydft),'descend');
sourcetoneidx = sourcetoneidx(1:2);
% sourcetoneidx should contain one index from
% each group of source tones (first four, last three)
row = min(sourcetoneidx);
col = max(sourcetoneidx)-4;
% look up the symbol in the table
thissymbol = symbols{row,col}
gives
thissymbol =
'0'
  4 Comments
Elliot Wyllie
Elliot Wyllie on 1 May 2021
Edited: Elliot Wyllie on 1 May 2021
Jeez that stuff goes right over my head, im a bit of a beginner when it comes to coding and signal processing. Im assuming I would have to rework all that code to fit the .mat file because decode file seems to work based off the encode file.
DGM
DGM on 1 May 2021
Edited: DGM on 3 May 2021
At this point, I wouldn't worry too much about using the FEX code directly. Like I said, it's a mess and requires the user input a bunch of extraneous parameters because it was probably designed only to do a particular thing (yes, probably it was just made to recycle the tones generated by the encoder).
That's why I cleaned it up and reduced it to a simplified script that takes the mat-file as given. No parameters needed, just a filename (assuming your mat-files all contain variables called fs and y).
EDIT:
I cleaned up my suggested code and made a encoder/decoder set of tools. Hopefully these will be a better resource to the next person that has the same task:
There's no special toolboxes needed, and it should be compatible back to at least R2009b.

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