Write data to text file
fprintf(
applies
the fileID
,formatSpec
,A1,...,An
)formatSpec
to all elements of arrays A1,...An
in
column order, and writes the data to a text file. fprintf
uses
the encoding scheme specified in the call to fopen
.
fprintf(
formats data and displays the results on the screen.formatSpec
,A1,...,An
)
Print multiple numeric values and literal text to the screen.
A1 = [9.9, 9900]; A2 = [8.8, 7.7 ; ... 8800, 7700]; formatSpec = 'X is %4.2f meters or %8.3f mm\n'; fprintf(formatSpec,A1,A2)
X is 9.90 meters or 9900.000 mm X is 8.80 meters or 8800.000 mm X is 7.70 meters or 7700.000 mm
%4.2f
in the formatSpec
input specifies that the first value in each line of output is a floating-point number with a field width of four digits, including two digits after the decimal point. %8.3f
in the formatSpec
input specifies that the second value in each line of output is a floating-point number with a field width of eight digits, including three digits after the decimal point. \n
is a control character that starts a new line.
Explicitly convert double-precision values with fractions to integer values.
a = [1.02 3.04 5.06];
fprintf('%d\n',round(a));
1 3 5
%d
in the formatSpec
input prints each value in the vector, round(a)
, as a signed integer. \n
is a control character that starts a new line.
Write a short table of the exponential function
to a text file called exp.txt
.
x = 0:.1:1; A = [x; exp(x)]; fileID = fopen('exp.txt','w'); fprintf(fileID,'%6s %12s\n','x','exp(x)'); fprintf(fileID,'%6.2f %12.8f\n',A); fclose(fileID);
The first call to fprintf
prints header
text x
and exp(x)
, and the second
call prints the values from variable A
.
If you plan to read the file with Microsoft® Notepad,
use '\r\n'
instead of '\n'
to
move to a new line. For example, replace the calls to fprintf
with
the following:
fprintf(fileID,'%6s %12s\r\n','x','exp(x)'); fprintf(fileID,'%6.2f %12.8f\r\n',A);
MATLAB® import functions, all UNIX® applications, and Microsoft Word and
WordPad recognize '\n'
as a newline indicator.
View the contents of the file with the type
command.
type exp.txt
x exp(x) 0.00 1.00000000 0.10 1.10517092 0.20 1.22140276 0.30 1.34985881 0.40 1.49182470 0.50 1.64872127 0.60 1.82211880 0.70 2.01375271 0.80 2.22554093 0.90 2.45960311 1.00 2.71828183
Write data to a file and return the number of bytes written.
Write an array of data, A
, to a file and get the number of bytes that fprintf
writes.
A = magic(4); fileID = fopen('myfile.txt','w'); nbytes = fprintf(fileID,'%5d %5d %5d %5d\n',A)
nbytes = 96
The fprintf
function wrote 96 bytes to the file.
Close the file.
fclose(fileID);
View the contents of the file with the type
command.
type('myfile.txt')
16 5 9 4 2 11 7 14 3 10 6 15 13 8 12 1
Display a hyperlink (The MathWorks Web Site) on the screen.
url = 'https://www.mathworks.com'; sitename = 'The MathWorks Web Site'; fprintf('<a href = "%s">%s</a>\n',url,sitename)
%s
in the formatSpec
input
indicates that the values of the variables url
and sitename
,
should be printed as text.
fileID
— File identifier1
(default) | 2
| scalarFile identifier, specified as one of the following:
A file identifier obtained from fopen
.
1
for standard output (the screen).
2
for standard error.
Data Types: double
formatSpec
— Format of output fieldsFormat of the output fields, specified using formatting operators. formatSpec
also can include ordinary text and special characters.
If formatSpec
includes literal text representing escape characters, such as \n
, then fprintf
translates the escape characters.
formatSpec
can be a character vector in single quotes, or, starting in R2016b, a string scalar.
Formatting Operator
A formatting operator starts with a percent sign, %
, and ends with a conversion character. The conversion character is required. Optionally, you can specify identifier, flags, field width, precision, and subtype operators between %
and the conversion character. (Spaces are invalid between operators and are shown here only for readability).
Conversion Character
This table shows conversion characters to format numeric and character data as text.
Value Type | Conversion | Details |
---|---|---|
Integer, signed |
| Base 10 |
Integer, unsigned |
| Base 10 |
| Base 8 (octal) | |
| Base 16 (hexadecimal), lowercase letters | |
| Same as | |
Floating-point number |
| Fixed-point notation (Use a precision operator to specify the number of digits after the decimal point.) |
| Exponential notation, such as | |
| Same as | |
| The more compact of | |
| The more compact of | |
Characters or strings |
| Single character |
| Character vector or string array. The type of the output text is the same as the type of |
Optional Operators
The optional identifier, flags, field width, precision, and subtype operators further define the format of the output text.
Identifier
Order for processing the function input arguments. Use the syntax
, where
n
$n
represents the positions of the other input
arguments in the function call.
Example:
('%3$s %2$s %1$s %2$s','A','B','C')
prints input arguments
'A'
, 'B'
, 'C'
as
follows: C B A B
.
Note: If an input argument is an array, you cannot use identifiers to specify particular array elements from that input argument.
Flags
| Left-justify. |
| Always print a sign character (+ or –) for any numeric
value. |
| Insert a space before the value. |
| Pad to field width with zeros before the
value. |
| Modify selected numeric conversions:
Example:
|
Field Width
Minimum number of characters to print. The field width operator can be a
number, or an asterisk (*
) to refer to an input
argument.
When you specify *
as the field width operator, the other
input arguments must provide both a width and a value to be printed. Widths and
values can be pairs of arguments or pairs within a numeric array. With
*
as the field width operator, you can print different
values with different widths.
Example: The input arguments
('%12d',intmax)
are equivalent to
('%*d',12,intmax)
.
Example: The input arguments
('%*d',[2 10 5 100])
return '10 100'
,
with two spaces allocated for 10
and five spaces for
100
. As an alternative, you also can specify the field
widths and values as multiple arguments, as in
('%*d',2,10,5,100)
.
The function pads to field width with spaces before the value unless otherwise specified by flags.
Precision
For | Number of digits to the right of the decimal
point |
For | Number of significant digits |
The precision operator can be a number, or an asterisk (*
)
to refer to an argument.
When you specify *
as the field precision operator, the
other input arguments must provide both a precision and a value to be printed.
Precisions and values can be pairs of arguments, or pairs within a numeric
array. With *
as the precision operator, you can print
different values to different precisions.
When you specify *.*
as field width and precision
operators, you must specify field widths, precisions, and values as
triplets.
Example: The input arguments
('%.4f',pi)
are equivalent to
('%.*f',4,pi)
.
Example: The input arguments
('%6.4f',pi)
are equivalent to
('%.*f',6,4,pi)
.
Example: The input arguments
('%*.*f',6,4,pi,9,6,exp(1))
return '3.1416
2.718282'
, with 9
and 6
as
the field width and precision for the output of
exp(1)
.
Note
If you specify a precision operator for floating-point values that exceeds the precision of the input numeric data type, the results might not match the input values to the precision you specified. The result depends on your computer hardware and operating system.
Subtypes
You can use a subtype operator to print a floating-point value as its octal, decimal, or hexadecimal value. The subtype operator immediately precedes the conversion character. This table shows the conversions that can use subtypes.
Input Value Type | Subtype and Conversion Character | Output Value Type |
---|---|---|
Floating-point number |
| Double-precision hexadecimal, octal, or decimal
value |
| Single-precision hexadecimal, octal, or decimal
value |
Text Before or After Formatting Operators
formatSpec
can also include additional text before a percent sign,
%
, or after a conversion character. The text can be:
Ordinary text to print.
Special characters that you cannot enter as ordinary text. This table shows how to
represent special characters in formatSpec
.
Special Character | Representation |
---|---|
Single quotation mark |
|
Percent character |
|
Backslash |
|
Alarm |
|
Backspace |
|
Form feed |
|
New line |
|
Carriage return |
|
Horizontal tab |
|
Vertical tab |
|
Character whose Unicode® numeric value can be represented by the
hexadecimal number, |
Example:
|
Character whose Unicode numeric value can be represented by the octal
number, |
Example:
|
Notable Behavior of Conversions with Formatting Operators
Numeric conversions print only the real component of complex numbers.
If you specify a conversion that does not fit the data, such as a text conversion
for a numeric value, MATLAB overrides the specified conversion, and uses
%e
.
Example:
'%s'
converts pi
to
3.141593e+00
.
If you apply a text conversion (either %c
or
%s
) to integer values, MATLAB converts values that correspond to valid character codes to
characters.
Example:
'%s'
converts [65 66 67]
to
ABC
.
A1,...,An
— Numeric or character arraysNumeric or character arrays, specified as a scalar, vector, matrix, or multidimensional array.
Data Types: single
| double
| int8
| int16
| int32
| int64
| uint8
| uint16
| uint32
| uint64
| logical
| char
nbytes
— Number of bytesNumber of bytes that fprintf
writes, returned
as a scalar. When writing to a file, nbytes
is
determined by the character encoding. When printing data to the screen, nbytes
is
the number of characters displayed on the screen.
Format specifiers for the reading functions sscanf
and fscanf
differ
from the formats for the writing functions sprintf
and fprintf
.
The reading functions do not support a precision field. The width
field specifies a minimum for writing, but a maximum for reading.
If you specify an invalid formatting operator or special character, then fprintf
prints all text up to the invalid operator or character and discards the rest.
Example: If formatSpec
is 'value = %z
, then fprintf
prints 'value ='
because %z
is not a formatting operator.
Example: If formatSpec
is 'character \x99999 = %s
, then fprintf
prints 'character'
because \x99999
is not a valid special character.
[1] Kernighan, B. W., and D. M. Ritchie, The C Programming Language, Second Edition, Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1988.
[2] ANSI specification X3.159-1989: “Programming Language C,” ANSI, 1430 Broadway, New York, NY 10018.
Usage notes and limitations:
The formatSpec
parameter must be constant.
In formatSpec
, hexadecimal numbers must be in the range [0 7F]
and octal numbers must be in the range [0 177].
If fileID
has a constant value of 1
or
2
and extrinsic calls are not possible, the code generator
produces a C printf
call. Extrinsic calls are not possible when
extrinsic calls are disabled or when fprintf
is called inside a
parfor
loop.
The behavior of fprintf
in the generated code matches the C
compiler behavior instead of the MATLAB behavior in these cases:
The format specifier has a corresponding C format specifier, for example,
%e
or %E
.
The fprintf
call is inside a
parfor
loop.
Extrinsic calls are disabled.
These options and capabilities are not supported:
The n$
position identifier for reordering input
values
Printing arrays
Using subtypes to print a floating-point number as its octal, decimal, or hexadecimal value
When you call fprintf
with the format specifier
%s
, you cannot put a null character in the middle of the input
character vector. To write a null character, use fprintf(fid, '%c',
char(0))
.
Input argument types must match their format types. For example, if
n
is a double, code generation does not allow the following code:
str = sprintf('%d',n)
For code generation, first cast n
to a signed integer type such
as int8
.
str = sprintf('%d',int8(n))
When you call fprintf
with an
integer format specifier, the type of the integer argument must be
a type that the target hardware can represent as a native C type.
For example, if you call fprintf('%d', int64(n))
,
then the target hardware must have a native C type that supports a
64-bit integer.
Usage notes and limitations:
This function accepts GPU arrays, but does not run on a GPU.
For more information, see Run MATLAB Functions on a GPU (Parallel Computing Toolbox).
Usage notes and limitations:
This function operates on distributed arrays, but executes in the client MATLAB.
For more information, see Run MATLAB Functions with Distributed Arrays (Parallel Computing Toolbox).
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