Perovskite (pronunciation: ) is a calcium titanium oxide mineral composed of calcium titanate (chemical formula CaTiO3). Its name is also applied to the class of compounds which have the same type of crystal structure as CaTiO3 (XIIA2+VIB4+X2−3), known as the perovskite structure. Many different cations can be embedded in this structure, allowing the development of diverse engineered materials.
== History ==
The mineral was discovered in the Ural Mountains of Russia by Gustav Rose in 1839 and is named after Russian mineralogist Lev Perovski (1792–1856). Perovskite's notable crystal structure was...
Yea, so apparently the atomic structure of perovskite is rather useful in engineering. Someone thought to name all those synthetic compounds "perovskite", rather than thinking up a good name and mention they have a "perovskite atomic structure" or something
There are many things in your code that don't make sense.
fileID = fopen(F);
imageFiles{end+1} = fopen(fileID,'%s\n'); % Append fileID to imageFiles list
This opens the file, then puts its file name in imageFiles{end+1}. This is the same as just doing imageFiles{end+1} = F, but more conf...
@CrisLuengo the FID is a number, not the file name IIRC.
fileID — File identifier of an open file integer
File identifier of an open file, specified as an integer.
Data Types: double from the docs https://ch.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/fopen.html?s_tid=srchtitle_fopen_1
Anyone else think something is odd here? Dude has posted 8 posts today, just after registering. No downvotes, positive scores everywhere. Posts aren't bad though, which is why I'm intrigued
@Adriaan fopen(fileID) returns the name of the file as used when opening it.
> filename = fopen(fileID) returns the file name that a previous call to fopen used when it opened the file specified by fileID. The output filename is resolved to the full path. The fopen function does not read information from the file to determine the output value.