Format exponent notation: start with 0

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Arjan Lampe
Arjan Lampe on 29 Apr 2021
Commented: dpb on 29 Apr 2021
If I print a floating point f in exponential notation, I get, say:
>> sprintf('%10.3E',f)
ans =
' 2.091E+05'
Can Matlab always make the leading digit a zero, always, so:
>> sprintf('%someMagicHere',f)
ans =
' 0.209E+06'
I want this irrespective of the exponent.
(I know you print less significant digits this way)
  4 Comments
dpb
dpb on 29 Apr 2021
Yes, that's what P multiplier does...changes the displayed scaled factor for the exponent.
dpb
dpb on 29 Apr 2021
Yes, that's what P multiplier does...changes the displayed scaled factor for the exponent.

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Answers (1)

Star Strider
Star Strider on 29 Apr 2021
I am not certain what you are asking.
I wrote a little utility function for my own use a while back to do something like this —
a=-0.07639297;
expstr = @(x,n) [x(:).*10.^(-n*floor(log10(abs(x(:)))/abs(n))) n*floor(log10(abs(x(:)))/abs(n))];
Result_1 = sprintf('%+0.7fE%+04d', expstr(a,4))
Result_1 = '-763.9297000E-004'
Result_2 = sprintf('%+015.7fE%+04d', expstr(a,4))
Result_2 = '-000763.9297000E-004'
Putting a leading 0 in the format (just after the %) willl fill the numeric filed to the left of the decimal with leading zeros. See Optional Operators in the formatSpec section of the sprintf documentation.
Experiment with it to get the result you want.
  2 Comments
Arjan Lampe
Arjan Lampe on 29 Apr 2021
Ok, but then I need to know the value for the exponent ahead of printing. In principle it can work though, not as simple as I had hoped...
Star Strider
Star Strider on 29 Apr 2021
It depends on what you want to do. The examples posted originally had different exponents, and my utility function allows that to change.
The format descriptor syntax is the same, regardless. That is a property of sprintf, fprintf, and others (such as compose) that share that syntax.

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