Engineering Notation Printed Into Files
Show older comments
It seems logical to me that it would be easy to print values out into a file using engineering notation for the exponents, but apparently I'm horribly mistaken. Does anyone know how to do this? I have been googling and looking at help files for 2 days now, and still can't figure it out. I'm thinking it has something to do with the output format on fprintf that was clearly designed by a sadist, but what that format is I can't tell by any of the literature on the subject...
4 Comments
Jan
on 6 Feb 2011
Please specify the wanted format exactly: Significant number of digits, specific number of fractional digits, number of digits in the exponent, exponent a multiple of 3, leading +, leading zeros, "10^10" instead of "E010", or "e10", or "g10"??
Mike
on 6 Feb 2011
If you need the SI prefixes k, M, G, T, etc, then try out my FEX submission prefixed strings. It provides conversions between numerics and SI or binary prefixed strings (eg: 1000 -> '1 k'), with options to control the significant figures and trailing zero handling.
Star Strider
on 15 Jul 2014
A few months ago, I submitted a Support Request to add an engineering notation option to the available field descriptors. Maybe in a future release...?
Accepted Answer
More Answers (3)
Jan
on 6 Feb 2011
function Str = EngineersStyle(x)
Exponent = 3 * floor(log10(x) / 3);
y = x / (10 ^ Exponent);
ExpValue = [9, 6, 3, 0, -3, -6, -9];
ExpName = {'G', 'M', 'k', '', 'm', 'my', 'n'};
ExpIndex = (Exponent == ExpValue);
if any(ExpIndex) % Found in the list:
Str = sprintf('%f%s', y, ExpName{ExpIndex});
else % Fallback: Show the numeric value
% EDITED: Walter refined '%d' to '%+04d':
Str = sprintf('%fe%+04d', y, Exponent);
end
Please adjust the sprintf format expand the list of exponent names accoriding to your needs.
7 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 6 Feb 2011
format long eng
always uses a sign for the exponent and always includes 3 digits of exponent. That requires using %+04d for the exponent format.
Jan
on 6 Feb 2011
@Walter: Good addition, I'll include it. Do you mean %+03d?
Walter Roberson
on 6 Feb 2011
You need to include the sign itself in the count, so +04d for one sign character and 3 exponent characters.
Jürgen Stein
on 19 Nov 2016
Exponent = 3 * floor(log10(x) / 3 +100*eps);
There is a numerical issue with the code: If you try to print 1e9 the function output will show 1000M instead of 1G. This is due to the fact that floor(log10(1e9)/3) will deliver a 2 instead of the expected value of 3 because of the numerical accuracy of the log10 implementation. Try it! The dirty fix will help.
Walter Roberson
on 20 Nov 2016
R2016b, OS-X, floor(log10(1e9)/3) does give 3.
R2009b, Win32/64: floor(log10(1e9)/3) replies 3 also. log10 has been instable in R6.5, as far as I remember, but afterwards it has been fixed.
format long g
exponent = -200:+200;
value = 10 .^ exponent;
log10(value)
This replies integer values and the division by 3 works as expected.
@Jürgen: which OS are you working on?
Harry Dymond
on 15 Jul 2019
Edited: Harry Dymond
on 16 Jul 2019
A long time ago I wrote a function inspired by this post by Jan (thank you, Jan!), and over the years expanded its functionality. More recently I submitted it to the FEX; check it out: num2eng
Walter Roberson
on 6 Feb 2011
Let B be a vector of values you want to print. Then,
C = floor(log(B(:))/log(1000));
sprintf('%gE%+04d ', [B(:) ./ 1000.^C, 3.*C].')
This can be modified if you need a fixed number of digits after the decimal place, by using (e.g.) %.3f instead of %g .
If you need a fixed total number of digits (e.g., use more digits after the decimal place if fewer are used before the decimal place), matters get more complicated. You can get close to that easily, but that particular mechanism trims trailing 0's after it has truncated to the desired number of total digits.
Walter Roberson
on 6 Feb 2011
0 votes
Matlab does not offer any built-in formatting of strings in engineering format.
I have, by the way, seen at least two different "engineering notation"s. What format are you interested in? In particular, sometimes engineering format uses commas as thousands separators and sometimes it does not. (I have no idea what Engineering Format is like in non-English languages.)
Categories
Find more on Creating, Deleting, and Querying Graphics Objects in Help Center and File Exchange
Products
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!