Determine number of bytes per element under program control
27 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Does MATLAB have the equivalent of the C/C++ 'sizeof' function?
I have some code that can run on many numeric types, and I need to be able to calculate the number of bytes per element in a given numeric array, let's call it 'A'
bytesPerElement = sizeof(class(A));
I suppose I could do something like:
w = whos(A);
bytesPerElement = w.bytes / numel(A);
but I would be surprised if there was not a function that calculates the number of bytes per element directly from the variable class. I just can't seem to find that function ... entering the wrong words into the search engine, I suppose.
0 Comments
Answers (2)
dpb
on 3 Jul 2014
No sizeof directly that I know of, no. Wouldn't be hard to build one from isa, however.
An outline would be something otoo--
function bytes = sizeof(x)
% return size in bytes of numeric entity x
bytes = (isa(x,'double') | isa(x,'int8') | isa(x,'uint8'))*8 + ...
(isa(x,'single') | isa(x,'int4') | isa(x,'uint4'))*4 + ...
...
The rest should be obvious... :)
doc isa % for the various class choices
Some checking for invalid types would be good, of course...
3 Comments
dpb
on 4 Jul 2014
I tend to forget about the command form for whos ... good thought; simpler than the isa route, indeed.
Oliver Woodford
on 13 Nov 2015
Uint8 means 8 bits, so only 1 byte. A switch on class(x) is another option.
James Tursa
on 3 Jul 2014
There is a mex function for this, mxGetElementSize, but it doesn't do you much good at the m-file level:
Another way to do this assuming x is not empty (probably not any faster):
numel(typecast(x(1),'uint8'))
2 Comments
James Tursa
on 5 Jul 2014
As requested:
#include "mex.h"
void mexFunction(int nlhs, mxArray *plhs[], int nrhs, const mxArray *prhs[])
{
if( nrhs ) {
plhs[0] = mxCreateDoubleScalar(mxGetElementSize(prhs[0]));
}
}
See Also
Categories
Find more on Write C Functions Callable from MATLAB (MEX Files) in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!