Write a matrix to a file
writematrix( writes homogeneous array
A)A to a comma delimited text file. The file name is the workspace
variable name of the array, appended with the extension .txt. If
writematrix cannot construct the file name from the array name, then it
writes to the file matrix.txt.
Each column of each variable in A becomes a column in the output
file. The writematrix function overwrites any existing file.
writematrix(
writes to a file with the name and extension specified by
A,filename)filename.
writematrix determines the file format based on the specified
extension. The extension must be one of the following:
.txt, .dat, or .csv for
delimited text files
.xls, .xlsm, or .xlsx for
Excel® spreadsheet files
.xlsb for Excel spreadsheet files supported on systems with Excel for Windows®
writematrix(___, writes
an array to a file with additional options specified by one or more
Name,Value)Name,Value pair arguments and can include any of the input arguments
in previous syntaxes.
Create a matrix, write it to a comma-separated text file, and then write the matrix to another text file with a different delimiter character.
Create a matrix in the workspace.
M = magic(5)
M = 5×5
17 24 1 8 15
23 5 7 14 16
4 6 13 20 22
10 12 19 21 3
11 18 25 2 9
Write the matrix to a comma delimited text file and display the file contents. The writematrix function outputs a text file named M.txt.
writematrix(M)
type 'M.txt'17,24,1,8,15 23,5,7,14,16 4,6,13,20,22 10,12,19,21,3 11,18,25,2,9
To write the same matrix to a text file with a different delimiter character, use the 'Delimiter' name-value pair.
writematrix(M,'M_tab.txt','Delimiter','tab') type 'M_tab.txt'
17 24 1 8 15 23 5 7 14 16 4 6 13 20 22 10 12 19 21 3 11 18 25 2 9
Create a matrix, write it to a spreadsheet file, and then read and display the contents of the file.
Create a matrix in the workspace.
M = magic(5)
M = 5×5
17 24 1 8 15
23 5 7 14 16
4 6 13 20 22
10 12 19 21 3
11 18 25 2 9
Write the matrix to a spreadsheet file.
writematrix(M,'M.xls')Read and display the matrix from M.xls.
readmatrix('M.xls')ans = 5×5
17 24 1 8 15
23 5 7 14 16
4 6 13 20 22
10 12 19 21 3
11 18 25 2 9
Create a matrix and write it to a specified sheet and range in a spreadsheet file.
Create a matrix in the workspace.
M = magic(5)
M = 5×5
17 24 1 8 15
23 5 7 14 16
4 6 13 20 22
10 12 19 21 3
11 18 25 2 9
Write the matrix to M.xls, to the second worksheet in the file, starting at the third row.
writematrix(M,'M.xls','Sheet',2,'Range','A3:E8')
Read and display the matrix.
readmatrix('M.xls','Sheet',2,'Range','A3:E8')
ans = 5×5
17 24 1 8 15
23 5 7 14 16
4 6 13 20 22
10 12 19 21 3
11 18 25 2 9
Append an array of data below existing data in a spreadsheet.
Create two matrices in the workspace.
M1 = magic(5)
M1 = 5×5
17 24 1 8 15
23 5 7 14 16
4 6 13 20 22
10 12 19 21 3
11 18 25 2 9
M2 = [5 10 15 20 25; 30 35 40 45 50]
M2 = 2×5
5 10 15 20 25
30 35 40 45 50
Write the matrix M1 to a spreadsheet file, M.xls.
writematrix(M1,'M.xls')Append the data in matrix M2 below the existing data in the spreadsheet file.
writematrix(M2,'M.xls','WriteMode','append')
Read the spreadsheet file and display the matrix.
readmatrix('M.xls')ans = 7×5
17 24 1 8 15
23 5 7 14 16
4 6 13 20 22
10 12 19 21 3
11 18 25 2 9
5 10 15 20 25
30 35 40 45 50
Append an array of data below existing data in a text file.
Create two matrices in the workspace.
fibonacci1 = [1 1 2 3; 5 8 13 21; 34 55 89 144]
fibonacci1 = 3×4
1 1 2 3
5 8 13 21
34 55 89 144
fibonacci2 = [233 377 610 987]
fibonacci2 = 1×4
233 377 610 987
Write the matrix fibonacci1 to a text file, fibonacci.txt.
writematrix(fibonacci1,'fibonacci.txt')Append the data in fibonacci2 below the existing data in the text file.
writematrix(fibonacci2,'fibonacci.txt','WriteMode','append')
Read the text file and display the matrix.
readmatrix('fibonacci.txt')ans = 4×4
1 1 2 3
5 8 13 21
34 55 89 144
233 377 610 987
A — Input dataInput data, specified as a matrix.
filename — File nameFile name, specified as a character vector or string scalar.
Depending on the location you are writing to, filename can take on one of these forms.
Location | Form | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current folder | To write to the current folder, specify the name of the file in Example: | ||||||||
Other folders | To write to a folder different from the current folder, specify the full or relative path name in Example: Example: | ||||||||
Remote Location | To write to a remote location,
Based on the remote location,
For more information, see Work with Remote Data. Example:
|
If filename includes the file extension, then the
writing function determines the file format from the extension. Otherwise,
the writing function creates a comma separated text file and appends the
extension .txt. Alternatively, you can specify
filename without the file’s extension, and then
include the 'FileType' name-value pair arguments to
indicate the type of file.
If filename does not exist, then the writing function
creates the file.
If filename is the name of an existing text file, then
the writing function overwrites the file.
If filename is the name of an existing spreadsheet
file, then the writing function writes the data to the specified location,
but does not overwrite any values outside the range of the input
data.
Data Types: char | string
Specify optional
comma-separated pairs of Name,Value arguments. Name is
the argument name and Value is the corresponding value.
Name must appear inside quotes. You can specify several name and value
pair arguments in any order as
Name1,Value1,...,NameN,ValueN.
'FileType',text indicates that the variable names should not
be included as the first row of the output file.'FileType' — Type of file'text' | 'spreadsheet'Type of file, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of 'FileType' and a character vector or string containing 'text' or 'spreadsheet'.
The 'FileType' name-value pair must be used with the filename input argument. You do not need to specify the 'FileType' name-value pair argument if the filename input argument includes a standard file extension. The following standard file extensions are recognized by the writing function:
.txt, .dat, or .csv for delimited text files
.xls, .xlsm, or .xlsx for Excel spreadsheet files
.xlsb for Excel spreadsheet files supported on systems with Excel for Windows
Example: 'FileType','spreadsheet'
Data Types: char | string
'DateLocale' — Locale for writing datesLocale for writing dates, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of
'DateLocale' and a character vector or a string scalar. When
writing datetime values to the file, use
DateLocale to specify the locale in which
writematrix should write month and day-of-week names and
abbreviations. The character vector or string takes the form
,
where xx_YYxx is a lowercase ISO 639-1 two-letter code indicating
a language, and YY is an uppercase ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code
indicating a country. For a list of common values for the locale, see the
Locale name-value pair argument for the datetime function.
The writing function ignores the 'DateLocale' parameter value whenever
dates can be written as Excel-formatted dates.
Example: 'DateLocale','ja_JP'
Data Types: char | string
'WriteMode' — Writing modeWriting mode, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of 'WriteMode' and a character vector or a string scalar. Select a write mode based on the file type.
File Type | Write Mode |
|---|---|
| Text Files |
If the file you specified does not exist, then the writing function creates and writes data to a new file. |
| Spreadsheet Files |
|
When WriteVariableNames is set to true, the writing function does not support the write mode 'append'.
For spreadsheet files:
When the write mode is 'append', the writing
function does not support the Range
parameter.
If the file you specified does not exist, then the writing
function performs the same actions as
'replacefile'.
Example: 'WriteMode','append'
Data Types: char | string
'Delimiter' — Field delimiter characterField delimiter character, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of
'Delimiter' and a character vector or string scalar containing
one of these specifiers:
Specifier | Field Delimiter |
|---|---|
| Comma. This is the default behavior. |
| Space |
| Tab |
| Semicolon |
| Vertical bar |
You can use the 'Delimiter' name-value pair only for delimited text files.
Example: 'Delimiter','space'
Data Types: char | string
'QuoteStrings' — Indicator for writing quoted textfalse (default) | trueIndicator for writing quoted text, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of
'QuoteStrings' and either false or
true. If 'QuoteStrings' is
true, then the writing function encloses the text in double
quotation marks and replaces any double-quote characters that appear as part of that
text with two double-quote characters.
You can use the 'QuoteStrings' name-value pair only with delimited text files.
'Encoding' — Character encoding scheme'UTF-8' (default) | 'ISO-8859-1' | 'windows-1251' | 'windows-1252' | ...Character encoding scheme associated with the file, specified as the
comma-separated pair consisting of 'Encoding' and
'system' or a standard character encoding scheme name. When you
do not specify any encoding, the writing function uses UTF-8 to write the file.
Example: 'Encoding','UTF-8' uses UTF-8 as the
encoding.
Data Types: char | string
'Sheet' — Worksheet to write toWorksheet to write to, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of
'Sheet' and a character vector or a string scalar containing the
worksheet name or a positive integer indicating the worksheet index. The worksheet name
cannot contain a colon (:). To determine the names of sheets in a
spreadsheet file, use sheets = sheetnames(filename). For more
information, see sheetnames.
Specify the worksheet to write to by name or index:
name — If the specified sheet name does not exist in the file, then the writing function adds a new sheet at the end of the worksheet collection.
index — If the specified sheet index is an index larger than the number of worksheets, then the writing function appends empty sheets until the number of worksheets in the workbook equals the sheet index. The writing function also generates a warning indicating that it has added a new worksheet.
You can use the 'Sheet' name-value pair only with spreadsheet files.
Example: 'Sheet',2
Example: 'Sheet', 'MySheetName'
Data Types: char | string | single | double | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64
'Range' — Rectangular portion of worksheet to write toRectangular portion of worksheet to write to, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of 'Range' and a character vector or string scalar in one of the following forms.
Form of the Value of Range | Description |
|---|---|
' |
Example: |
' |
Example:
|
The 'Range' name-value pair can only be used with Excel files.
Example: 'Range', 'A1:F10'
Data Types: char | string
'UseExcel' — Flag to start instance of Microsoft Excel for Windowsfalse (default) | trueFlag to start an instance of Microsoft®
Excel for Windows when writing spreadsheet data, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of 'UseExcel' and either true, or false.
You can set the 'UseExcel' parameter to one of these values:
true — The writing function starts an instance of
Microsoft
Excel when writing the
file.
false — The writing function does not start an instance
of Microsoft
Excel when writing the file. When
operating in this mode, functionality for writing differs in the support of
file formats and interactive features, such as formulas and macros.
UseExcel |
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Supported file formats |
|
|
Support for interactive features, such as formulas and macros | Yes | No |
When writing to spreadsheet files on Windows platforms, if you want to start an instance of Microsoft
Excel, then set the 'UseExcel' parameter to
true.
'AutoFitWidth' — Automatically adjust column widthtrue (default) | falseAutomatically adjust column width, specified as true or
false. If you specify a value of 0 or
false, then writematrix will not
automatically adjust the column widths to fit the data in the cells.
Example: 'AutoFitWidth',0
'PreserveFormat' — Preserve cell formattingtrue (default) | falsePreserve cell formatting of existing spreadsheet, specified as true
or false. If you specify false,
writematrix will not preserve the cell formatting of the
spreadsheet. Formatting includes elements such as fonts, cell borders, and color-shaded
cells.
When writing datetime data to a spreadsheet file, you must set both
'PreserveFormat' and the 'UseExcel' Name-Value
pair to true to preserve the existing cell formatting. If
'UseExcel' is set to false and
'PreserveFormat' is set to true when writing
datetime data to the file, writematrix will
not preserve the existing cell formatting of the file.
Example: 'PreserveFormat',false
To set the 'PreserveFormat' name-value pair to
true, you must set the 'UseExcel' name-value pair
to true.
There are some instances where the writematrix function creates a
file that does not represent the input data exactly. You will notice this when you use the
readmatrix
function to read that file. The resulting data might not have the exact same format or
contents as the original array. If you need to save your array and retrieve it at a later time
to match the original array exactly, with the same data and organization, then save it as a
MAT-file. writematrix writes inexact data in the following instances:
writematrix writes out numeric data using long
g format, and categorical or character data as unquoted text.
writematrix writes out arrays that have more than two
dimensions as two dimensional arrays, with the trailing dimensions collapsed.
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