How to extract sequences from a table?

6 views (last 30 days)
Hi All,
I am adapting the example by Mathworks, Sequence Classification using Deep Learning,, to work with my own problem.
I have the raw data coming in as a table, and I'm wondering is there a way to split this up into sequences, based on the values in one column, rather than an arbitrary number of rows down?
My table looks like this:
What I would like to do is to convert this to a cellarray, of various double arrays (from this picture above it will be x cells each with 2*y double arrays, however, the real table has a few more columns, so it's just an extension of this).
Many thanks,
James
  4 Comments
the cyclist
the cyclist on 22 Aug 2023
Can you upload the data, or a small representative sample? You can use the paper clip icon in the INSERT section of the toolbar.
James McBrearty
James McBrearty on 22 Aug 2023
So, FCTable is attached.
What I would like is a cell array, where each cell element corresponds to a specific date (I don't need the date), and the contents of each cell would be the double array for each date.
Thanks

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Matt J
Matt J on 22 Aug 2023
Edited: Matt J on 22 Aug 2023
Calling your table T,
out = splitapply(@(x){x} , T{:,[1:10,12:end]},findgroups(T.tradeDate))
  6 Comments
Dyuman Joshi
Dyuman Joshi on 22 Aug 2023
"Was there something wrong with the format of the dates?"
The format hid additional information of the datetime values.
The dates might look identical, but the values for hour, minute and seconds were different for the same day. You can check that by using hms.
So, to make the data uniform, all the dates have been shifted to the start of the respective days i.e. 00:00:00
James McBrearty
James McBrearty on 22 Aug 2023
Thanks for this - I did convert the dateformat to 'dd/mm/uuuu', and I was hoping that would change them all to be uniform. At least now I know how to use dateshift in the future. Again, thanks so much.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (1)

Matt J
Matt J on 22 Aug 2023
Edited: Matt J on 22 Aug 2023
Another option, using varfun:
load FCTable
T=FCTable;
T.tradeDate=dateshift(FCTable.tradeDate,'start','day') ;
out = varfun(@(x) x, T,'Grouping', 'tradeDate','Output','cell')
out = 51×2 cell array
{46×1 double} {46×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double} {48×1 double}
  1 Comment
James McBrearty
James McBrearty on 22 Aug 2023
That is a great answer too, but the other one is preferred, having a X times 1 cell array.
Thanks

Sign in to comment.

Products


Release

R2023a

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!