How to insert space between strings while doing strcat ?

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for eg: a='hello'; b='world'; strcat(a,b);
strcat(a,b) gives 'helloworld' But I need it as 'hello world' How can I do that ?

Accepted Answer

Star Strider
Star Strider on 31 Oct 2015
Use the square bracket [] concatenation operator, and including a space variable is the easiest way:
a='hello';
b='world';
s = ' ';
Result = [a,s,b]
Result =
hello world
  4 Comments
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco on 26 Apr 2021
Thank you Star, you know, the most simple things are always underestimated, but actually the most difficult to found.
Best!

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More Answers (4)

Hugh
Hugh on 21 Nov 2017
I like to use the ASCII space character for this situation, code "32". for the OP: strcat(a,32,b) Extension: I would be inclined to also include a comma, code "44": strcat(a,44,32,b)
I look up the characters at: http://www.asciitable.com/

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 5 May 2018
There is a trick to strcat. Notice from the documentation,
"For character array inputs, strcat removes trailing ASCII white-space characters: space, tab, vertical tab, newline, carriage return, and form feed. For cell and string array inputs, strcat does not remove trailing white space."
This means that if you have
strcat(a, ' ', b)
then the "trailing" space of the ' ' input will be removed, which will have the effect of running the entries together. The trick is to use
strcat(a, {' '}, b)
  3 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 6 Feb 2019
a = {'hello';'bye'};
b = {'dolly';'louis'};
>> strcat(a, {' '}, b)
ans =
2×1 cell array
{'hello dolly'}
{'bye louis' }
No need to replicate the {' '}
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco on 26 Apr 2021
Hello everybody,
all your solutions are brilliant, and lead to the same result.
Thanks for your help and time!

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Stephen23
Stephen23 on 1 Nov 2015
Edited: Stephen23 on 26 Apr 2021
The most efficient approach is to use sprintf:
>> a = 'hello';
>> b = 'world!';
>> sprintf('%s %s',a,b)
hello world!

Larissa Bene
Larissa Bene on 5 May 2018
strcat(string1, " "); strcat(string1, string2);
  2 Comments
Renwick Beattie
Renwick Beattie on 6 Feb 2019
I get the following error on the " character
Error: The input character is not valid in MATLAB
statements or expressions.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 6 Feb 2019
" is only valid in MATLAB from R2017a onwards. string() objects started existing in R2016b, but the input syntax of " was not enabled until R2017a.

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