How to loop through a folder?

I currently have 24 folders within a folder and I was wondering if it was possible to loop through the 24 folders and extract information from a subfolder within the 24 folders.

1 Commento

great question. This is some of the trivialest things to do in a language and its incomprehensible how hard it is to do in matlab.

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Risposte (3)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst il 11 Mar 2014

4 voti

See my attached demo where it recurses through a folder and all subfolders.

13 Commenti

N
N il 11 Giu 2014
hi I love your code. I do have a question with it. If I would like to save the fullFileName, so it doesn't get overwritten every time, how would i do it?
Make it a cell array
fullFileName{counter} = fullfile(thisFolder, baseFileNames(f).name);
counter = counter + 1;
If I do this, I get the error:
Cell contents assignment to a non-cell array object.
Worked fine for me. See attachment.
N
N il 14 Giu 2014
thanks it works for me now too !
Mor H
Mor H il 4 Lug 2016
Thanks a lot !
Hey guys! this is exactly the code that I need but for some reason when I try to run it, it says the number of folders is 1 and then says that there are no files in the subfolders. What am I doing wrong? Thanks!
Vanessa Machuca
Vanessa Machuca il 16 Giu 2017
Modificato: Vanessa Machuca il 16 Giu 2017
I'm facing the same issue as Arantza. :(
I made a newer one to use the new capabilities of dir() to use to recurse into subfolders. Try it. It's attached. Works for Release R2016b and later.
do you a non recursive version?
Not sure what you're looking for. The program itself is not recursive - it uses the standard capability of the built-in dir() function. What I meant by recursive is that it finds files in folder, and in subfolders of those folder, and in subfolders of those subfolders, etc. until you've reached the deepest level of the directory tree.
What kind of problem are you having with the program such that you wanted to ask that question?
Rik
Rik il 10 Dic 2020
You can use the ** option of dir. What did you try?
Yes, essentially it's
filePattern = sprintf('%s/**/*.*', topLevelFolder);
allFileInfo = dir(filePattern);
See my attached m-file for a full demo with tons of explanations.

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Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski il 11 Mar 2014
Modificato: Sean de Wolski il 11 Mar 2014
You can use the dir command to give you the names and then loop over them.
files = dir;
directoryNames = {files([files.isdir]).name};
directoryNames = directoryNames(~ismember(directoryNames,{'.','..'}))
Now run the for-loop over directoryNames and apply your analysis to each

7 Commenti

andrew
andrew il 11 Mar 2014
i'm just wondering how do you get the specific files within the folders of the directory names for example:
I need to get a csv file inside the directory of each directory name '\results\statistics*\.v2*' and print the filenames in a column
Loop over the directory and use a wildcard inside of dir to grab all of the csv files. Something like
dir([directory '\*.csv'])
andrew
andrew il 11 Mar 2014
Modificato: Walter Roberson il 11 Mar 2014
I used the following code and it says the file was not found:
for i=1:length(directoryNames)
folder=directoryNames{i};
filenames=dir([folder '\results\object statistics *.v2*'])
end
Note: fullfile() is better practice than concatenating file substrings.
And if you were to construct the specification as a variable you could then
ls(TheVariable)
to see if the files are found that way.
why does
directories_names_list = dir('noise*')
for expt_dir = directories_names_list.name
not work?
why does
directoryNames = {files([files.isdir]).name};
work? its really cryptic? are u using list comprehensions or what dark magic is going on there?
Stephen23
Stephen23 il 30 Mar 2018
Modificato: Stephen23 il 30 Mar 2018
@Brando Miranda: "list comprehensions" exist only in Python. They do not exist in MATLAB.
The syntax in both your comments uses comma-separated lists. Comma-separated lists are very simple:

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see my code below but make sure that the folder which we are looping through contains only flolders and not files.

 cd pwd ; ## Or any other working directory you want
X = ls  ;
disp(X) ;
for itr = 1:size(X)(1)
	string_1 = X(itr,:) ;
	string_2{itr} = deblank(string_1) ;  ## This deletes the trailing blank spaces 			
end
for itr = 1:size(X)(1)
	cd(string_2{itr})
	cd ../
	# DO SOMETHING #
end
  end

2 Commenti

Stephen23
Stephen23 il 18 Apr 2018
Modificato: Stephen23 il 18 Apr 2018
This code has several bugs and could be significantly improved:
  • Do NOT use cd. Using cd is slower than using absolute/relative filepaths, makes debugging more difficult, and changes which functions/scripts are accessible to MATLAB. It is NOT necessary to cd directories where datafiles are stored because all MATLAB filereading/writing functions accept relative/absolute paths. Basically cd should only be used interactively, and NOT used in code. See:
  • Do NOT use ls for parsing filenames. This operator is intended for displaying a list in the command window, but parsing its output char array is a waste of time. dir is what the MATLAB documentation recommends and shows in all examples that require reading multiple files from a folder, e.g.:
  • size(X)(1) is not valid MATLAB syntax, and will throw an error.
  • string_2 is not preallocated.
  • A loop is anyway not required for deblanking the filenames: simply use deblank(cellstr(X)).
Rather than following this buggy code, I recommend that other users follow the examples shown in the MATLAB help and wiki:
Thank you very much. I am actually not a computer science student. So, just answered the query without considering algorithm and complexity. Anyway, I will implement your suggestions/ recommendations in future. Thanks..!

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il 11 Mar 2014

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il 10 Dic 2020

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