Combining two number to one number

Dear Matlab users
Im facing the problem of combining two seperate numbers into one number. Let's say i have the number 1 and 2 and want to combine them in that order, resulting in 12. Another example could be 4 and 6, yielding 46, or 3, 6 and 7 yielding 367.. Is there any smart or simple way of doing this?
Thanks in advance, Poul

 Accepted Answer

a = 1;
b = 2;
c = 3;
result = strcat(num2str(a),num2str(b),num2str(c));
result = str2num(result);

More Answers (2)

Use sprintf():
a = 1;
b = 2;
c = 3;
str = sprintf('%d%d%d', a, b, c) % If you want a string.
doubleStr = str2double(str) % If you want a double.

1 Comment

Simpler and more versatile to just have one '%d' specifier:
str = sprintf('%d', a, b, c)

Sign in to comment.

Poul Reitzel
Poul Reitzel on 29 Nov 2011
Exactly! Just went here to post my same suggestion! ;) Thanks

6 Comments

b = [3 6 7]
out = b*10.^(numel(b)-1:-1:0).'
Thats bad. It only works for one-digit numbers obviously.
How does this work?
out = [30 60 70].^[2; 1; 0]
[ 900 3600 4900
30 60 70
1 1 1 ]
Not sure what exactly you mean by "how", but the first column is
30^2 = 900
30^1 = 30
30^0 = 1
The second column is
60^2 = 3600
60^1 = 60
60^0 = 1
The third column is
70^2 = 4900
70^1 = 70
70^0 = 1
Or maybe one can just say the "how" is done by normal element-by-element operations that you should be well familiar with in MATLAB (as opposed to matrix operations which do not use the dot before the operater).
I was talking about this code. It returns 367
b = [3 6 7]
out = b*10.^(numel(b)-1:-1:0)'
I thought this would look like this
out = [30 60 70].^[2; 1; 0]
but it returns a matrix.
Why are the two codes different. How does the first code return a single number?
Well, it would be good if you had given that equation for "out" in your first post so we'd have known about it.
It's because the first vector is a row vector and the second is a column vector (because of the '). And you're using a recent version of MATLAB that does automatic expansion. Look up expansion here or in MATLAB to see what that means.

Sign in to comment.

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!