keep getting error Undefined function or variable 'stack', why?

4 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
JFz
JFz le 27 Jan 2017
Commenté : JFz le 27 Jan 2017
Hi,
I am using Matlab 2015b with statistics toolbox. But I keep getting Undefined function or variable 'stack', why?
Thanks.
  1 commentaire
Jan
Jan le 27 Jan 2017
Please post the line of code and the complete error message.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Réponse acceptée

Jan
Jan le 27 Jan 2017
stack(myTbl, 2:end)
The "end" can be interpreted as index only and then Matlab assumes, that "stack" is an array. When you want to use the stack command, Matlab cannot guess what end is related to. Try:
stack(myTbl, 2:4)
and then find out. how you can express the end as you need it.

Plus de réponses (2)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 27 Jan 2017
You're trying to call the stack method of the dataset class? Are you calling it with a dataset object as the first input? If not, MATLAB won't call the method.
FYI, I recommend that you use the table object that is part of MATLAB (introduced in release R2013b) instead of using the dataset object. I don't know how much functionality we're going to add to dataset going forward, but I know we have added functionality to table above and beyond what's available for dataset in recent releases.
  2 commentaires
JFz
JFz le 27 Jan 2017
Thanks! I am using the table object, like this: stack(myTbl, 2:end); But just keep getting that error.
Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 27 Jan 2017
The use of end may be confusing MATLAB into thinking that you're attempting to index into a variable named stack. You should change it to use the width method (or size(myTbl, 2))
stack(myTbl, 2:width(myTbl))

Connectez-vous pour commenter.


Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 27 Jan 2017
stack() from basic MATLAB is defined for tables and timetables.
stack() from the stats toolbox is defined for dataset arrays.
stack() from the Neural Network toolbox is defined for network objects.
stack() from the Control Systems toolbox expects a numeric first argument and models for the rest of the arguments. For historical implementation reasons it seems plausible to me that it might be callable with numeric arrays or perhaps with structures. It is the only Mathworks stack() call that I can see as potentially being invoked for numeric objects rather than specialized objects.
My suspicion is that you did not pass a dataset or table or timetable to stack() and that you do not have Control Systems installed, so it could not find an appropriate call.
  1 commentaire
JFz
JFz le 27 Jan 2017
Thanks. I just found something interesting here. I am trying the example here with stack: >> Test1 = [93;57;87;89]; Test2 = [89;77;92;86]; Test3 = [95;62;89;91]; U = table(Test1,Test2,Test3) S = stack(U,1:3) and no problem with this example. But when I type: S = stack(U,1:end) it give me this error: Undefined function or variable 'U'. In my case, if I use stack(myTbl, 2:3), it works. But if I use 2:end, it complains: Undefined function or variable 'stack'.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Catégories

En savoir plus sur Get Started with MATLAB dans Help Center et File Exchange

Tags

Aucun tag saisi pour le moment.

Produits

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by