Unable to use structName.?ClassName for VideoWriter class

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Elizabeth
Elizabeth le 17 Sep 2025 à 2:18
Commenté : Elizabeth le 23 Sep 2025 à 1:44
I am finding the structName.?ClassName method of arguments validation does not work when trying to validate name-value arguments for the VideoWriter class.
I have a short function:
function myDemo(videoData,fileName,vwOpts)
arguments
videoData
fileName
vwOpts.?VideoWriter
end
disp(vwOpts);
videoObj = VideoWriter(fileName);
% Open video, write, close, etc.
end % MakeVideo
I would expect that calling this function with VideoWriter properties such as FrameRate would result in vwOpts being a struct that contains values passed to the function. However, I am getting the error:
>> myDemo(0:10,"myVideo.avi","FrameRate",20)
Error using myDemo
Too many input arguments.
I validated my approach by attempting to filter for arguments to the Bar() function by mimicking the matlab.graphics.chart.primitive.Bar example shown in the documentation and was successful.
I noticed I get this same error when failing to specify the full name of the Bar class, so looked for other methods of specifying the VideoWriter class, using matlab.audiovideo.VideoWriter as the full class name, with no success.
What am I missing about this approach? Is there a way of locating the full name of the VideoWriter class, or is there some reason I should not expect this example to work?
Thanks!

Réponse acceptée

Matt J
Matt J le 19 Sep 2025 à 14:37
Modifié(e) : Matt J le 21 Sep 2025 à 10:33
The .?Classname syntax only works on the class properties with public SetAccess. Unfortunately, the VideoWriter class does not have any such properties. FrameRate is also not the name of a property at all:
mc=?VideoWriter;
pl=mc.PropertyList;
table(string({pl.Name}'), string({pl.SetAccess}'), ...
'Var', {'Property Name','SetAccess'})
ans = 12×2 table
Property Name SetAccess ___________________________ _________ "Duration" "private" "Filename" "private" "Path" "private" "FileFormat" "private" "IsOpen" "private" "IsFilenameValidated" "private" "IsWriteVideoCalled" "private" "InternalFramesWritten" "private" "NumFramesWrittenToDisk" "private" "Profile" "private" "AllowedDataTypes" "private" "FrameIntervalToCheckError" "none"
  3 commentaires
Matt J
Matt J le 22 Sep 2025 à 18:31
Modifié(e) : Matt J le 22 Sep 2025 à 19:43
I think the best you can do is to let VideoWriter()'s argument validation do the work. You can use a try...catch if for some reason you want myDemo() to customize the error messaging,
function myDemo(videoData,fileName,vwNames,vwVals)
arguments
videoData
fileName
end
arguments (Repeating)
vwNames char
vwVals
end
nv=[vwNames;vwVals];
disp(struct(nv{:}));
try
videoObj = VideoWriter(fileName,nv{:});
catch ME
end
end % MakeVideo
Elizabeth
Elizabeth le 23 Sep 2025 à 1:44
I'm mixing the option inputs to myDemo() with other option sets, which is why I was hoping to use the opts.?VideoWriter syntax. However, I think with your approach I can make a separate copy of the options cell array, remove options that I know aren't applicable, and let VideoWriter do the remaining work. Thanks for the suggestion.

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Plus de réponses (1)

Chuguang Pan
Chuguang Pan le 17 Sep 2025 à 7:19
I think the options.?ClassName syntax is not supported within arguments block. You should specify each name-value pair individually.
function myDemo(videoData,fileName,vwOpts)
arguments
videoData
fileName
vwOpts.FrameRate
% vwOpts.optionname //list distinct VideoWriter option name
% ...
end
disp(vwOpts);
videoObj = VideoWriter(fileName);
% Open video, write, close, etc.
end % MakeVideo
myDemo(0:10,"myVideo.avi",FrameRate=20)
FrameRate: 20
  1 commentaire
Elizabeth
Elizabeth le 18 Sep 2025 à 2:17
Unfortunately, this use case is exactly the purpose of the options.?ClassName syntax--to automate the handling of properties so changes to ClassName can be seamlessly handled in other classes that use them. As discussed, I successfully used this syntax with the matlab.graphics.chart.primitive.Bar class, so problem is more specific to the class. I suspect it's in how the class is named in the myDemo() function, but I'm not sure because I haven't found the answer yet.

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