Really! fprintf cell error

function []=printresults2file(shape)
fid=fopen('ChangyuLiu.txt','wt');
fprintf(fid, 'The number of entered objects was %d \n', size(shape,1));
fprintf(fid,'%s \t\t %s \t\t %s \t\t %s\n','No.','ID','Color','Area');
for i=1:size(shape,1)
fprintf(fid, '%d %s %s %f',shape{i,:});
fprintf('\n');
end
fclose(fid);
end
This is a sub-function I used to output a table in .txt file. However, the error kept pumping up as
Error using fprintf
Function is not defined for 'cell' inputs.
I wonder what's causing the problem.

6 Commenti

James Tursa
James Tursa il 2 Apr 2020
Modificato: James Tursa il 2 Apr 2020
What is in shape, specifically what does shape{i,:} produce?
Also, is fprintf('\n') supposed to be fprintf(fid,'\n')?
Some of your shape{i,2} or shape{i,3} are probably cell array of character vectors instead of being directly character vectors. Or possibly shape{i,1} or shape{i,4} is a cell containing a number.
Changyu Liu
Changyu Liu il 2 Apr 2020
The shape is a cell array that is created by a while loop, which contains four columns and unknown number of rows depending on the user input.
Please show us
disp(shape(1,:))
Changyu Liu
Changyu Liu il 2 Apr 2020
>> disp(shape(1,:))
[1] {1×1 cell} {1×1 cell} [3.1416]
James Tursa
James Tursa il 3 Apr 2020
So that is your answer, two of the cell elements are themselves cells, and you can't feed those directly to fprintf.

Accedi per commentare.

 Risposta accettata

James Tursa
James Tursa il 3 Apr 2020
What happens if you change this
fprintf(fid, '%d %s %s %f',shape{i,:});
to this
fprintf(fid, '%d %s %s %f',shape{i,1},shape{i,2}{1},shape{i,3}{1},shape{i,4});

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