strings and numbers for a numeric array name

I am using 6 numeric arrays in my project, their names are: block1, block2 , block3 , block4, block5 , block6
i execute the same function for all of them, i need to make this in a for loop, but i failed to index the elements of the arrays, i tried this:
for i=1:6
h = ['block' int2str(i)];
eval(h)
end
for row=1:BRows
for col=1:BCols
if (h(row,col) >= 316 && h(row,col) <= 20)
h(row,col) = 0;
elseif (h(row,col) >= 21 && h(row,col) <= 40)
h(row,col) = 1;
end
end
Would you help me please

3 Comments

No h(row,col) can possibly be simultaneously >= 316 but <= 20.
Meanwhile, consider:
h(h >= 21 & h <= 40) = 1;
i tried it but this error occurred:
??? Error: File: fg6.m Line: 86 Column: 40
The expression to the left of the equals sign is not a valid target for an assignment.
any other suggestions?
The problem is, that your "h" is *not* the contents of block1, but the string 'block1'. Avoid EVAL.

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 Accepted Answer

Rather than doing it like that, I strong suggest you used cell arrays, as described in Doug's answer here: http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/143-how-do-i-make-a-series-of-variables-a1-a2-a3-a10

1 Comment

actually i have a problem with cell arrays in my project, i can't use them

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More Answers (1)

Please explain why you cannot use cell arrays. "eval([block, int2str(i)])" is such an ugly approach, prone to errors and it has remarkable drawbacks for the processing speed in Matlab. I cannot imaging why "h=block{i}" should be worse. Embedding an index in the name of a variable is not smart. Better use an index as index.
Btw. you do not want to do "eval(h)", but:
eval(['h = block', int2str(i)]);
As you see: The EVAL approach is prone to errors!

6 Comments

am dividing a image into blocks then plot a histogram for every block
so to plot a histogram, i need a numeric array not a cell array and couldn't convert from cell to numeric using cell2mat()
block{1} = rand(2,2);
block{2] = rand{3,4};
disp(block{1}) % <== as you see "block{1}" is a numeric array!
Consider the curly braces. With round parenthesis "block(1)" you get a scalar cell.
Has my Do Not Eval been impressive enough?
Here is an example of code that uses numeric array embedded in a cell array, and then makes histograms from them.
block = cell(2,2);
for i = 1:4
block{i} = randn(1000,1);
end
figure
for i=1:4
subplot(2,2,i), hist(block{i},25)
end
Think of a cell array as a container than can hold many other type of MATLAB objects. When you use curly brackets, you are accessing the contents of the container, which in this case is numeric arrays.
hi
i need to use a database of 100 images each one's size is 256X384. every image is divided into 6 equal blocks(128x128)
and i want to access the pixels in each block.
how can i do this using a for loop or any iterative mean on arrays or cell arrays in matlab
Thank you
knowing that i want to keep record of all blocks ( not to overwrite on old data)
@yasmine: Please open a new thread for a new question.

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