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Re: General algorithm to find systematically named files in sub-director
From: |
Markus Appel |
Subject: |
Re: General algorithm to find systematically named files in sub-directories |
Date: |
Sun, 09 Jun 2013 00:47:20 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:17.0) Gecko/20130510 Thunderbird/17.0.6 |
On 06/08/2013 04:53 AM, bondmatt wrote:
The LATEX portion is holding me up at the moment but only because I need to
bring myself up to speed on the language. If anyone knows how to put a
header on the table of contents page...
I am not exactly sure what you mean, but have a look at the
\addcontentsline command:
\addcontentsline{toc}{section}{This text will appear in the toc and look
like a section}
Depending on what is being tested the number of samples will vary. One
thought is a sort of brute force search through all 999 possible folders but
I am hoping there is a smarter way to do this?
If I understood correctly, you want to iterate over all files named e.g.
sample1.wav in all project_XXX subdirectories? IMHO the best way for
doing this would be something like:
files = glob("project_*/sample1.wav");
for f = files{:}'
disp(f{1});
endfor
glob gives you a cell array of all matching filenames and can also be
used to look in different subdirectories.
Cheers,
Markus