Is there a (default) Matlab function that behaves similar to the java method split(delimiter), where you can tokenize a string based on an arbritary delimiter?
3 Answers
There is a built-in function called textscan
that's capable of this:
>> C = textscan('I like stack overflow', '%s', 'delimiter', 'o');
>> C = C{1}
C =
'I like stack '
'verfl'
'w'
-
-
suppose the string
str = 'myfile.txt'
and we want to separate it on the.
delimiter. So(str0,str1) = strtok(str,'.')
would split the string on the delimiter specified in the second argument to 'strtok()`. The curly braces in the prev comment were a typo, sorry.– AruniRCOct 11, 2012 at 18:07 -
2@AruniRC: true. However, it only splits once, e.g., to achieve the split shown in my answer, you'd have to recursively call
strtok
, whereas thetextscan
solution is a oneliner (OK, 2, but oh well :) Oct 11, 2012 at 18:13 -
ah. always assumed (wrongly) that
strtok
would work for multiple-delimiters. so then - nice solution? :)– AruniRCOct 12, 2012 at 11:51
Here are more than one ways to split a string. One as Rody Oldenhuis has just mentioned, and here are some others:
1> Using the function regexp
:
>> str = 'Good good study Day day up';
>> regexp(str,'\s','split')
ans =
'Good' 'good' 'study' 'Day' 'day' 'up'
>>
2> Using the function strread
:
>> str = 'Section 4, Page 7, Line 26';
>> strread(str, '%s', 'delimiter', ',')
ans =
'Section 4'
'Page 7'
'Line 26'
>>
-
@robguinness Works fine in mine. Anyway, the function 'regexp' is better.– EastsunAug 29, 2012 at 10:25
There is a function similar to what you mentioned on file exchange in a package called xml_toolbox
.
It is called strsplit
.
strsplit('I like stack overflow','o')
ans =
'I like stack' 'verfl' 'w'
strsplit
that does it.