table of contents
MAT_VARREADNEXTINFO(3) | Library Functions Manual | MAT_VARREADNEXTINFO(3) |
NAME¶
Mat_VarReadNextInfo
—
Reads the information for the next variable in a MATLAB MAT
file.
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<matio.h>
matvar_t *
Mat_VarReadNextInfo
(mat_t
*matfp);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
Mat_VarReadNextInfo
()
function reads the information for the next variable stored in the open MAT
file.
RETURN VALUES¶
If there is another variable in the MAT file and is read successfully, a pointer to the MATLAB variable structure is returned. If there are no more variables, or there was an error reading the variable, NULL is returned.
EXAMPLES¶
This example program opens a MAT file named by the first argument
to the program, and uses Mat_VarReadNextInfo
() to
read the information about each variable in the file. For each variable
read, the name, size, and class are printed in a format similar to the
MATLAB whos command.
#include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> #include "matio.h" static char *mxclass[17] = {"cell", "struct", "object", "char", "sparse", "double", "single", "int8", "uint8", "int16", "uint16", "int32", "uint32", "int64", "uint64", "function", "opaque" }; int main(int argc, char **argv) { mat_t *matfp; matvar_t *matvar; char size[32] = {' ',}; matfp = Mat_Open(argv[1], MAT_ACC_RDONLY); if ( NULL == matfp ) { fprintf(stderr, "Error opening MAT file %s0, argv[1]); return EXIT_FAILURE; } printf("%-20s %-10s %-10s %-18s0, "Name", "Size", "Bytes", "Class"); while ( NULL != (matvar = Mat_VarReadNextInfo(matfp)) ) { printf("%-20s", matvar->name); if ( matvar->rank > 0 ) { int cnt = 0; int i; printf("%8d", matvar->dims[0]); for ( i = 1; i < matvar->rank; i++ ) { if ( ceil(log10(matvar->dims[i])) + 1 < 32 ) cnt += sprintf(size + cnt, "x%d", matvar->dims[i]); } printf("%-10s", size); } else { printf(" "); } printf(" %-18s0, mxclass[matvar->class_type - 1]); Mat_VarFree(matvar); } Mat_Close(matfp); return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
SEE ALSO¶
September 12, 2019 | Debian |