How to stop the engine from incorrectly interpreting my code
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I switched from 2014b to 2016b, and I've noticed some odd behavior in the newer version. You can try to do something that is mathematically nonsensical, and the engine will find a way to change your request into something tractable. For example, you can add a row vector to a column vector. The engine automatically applied 'meshgrid' to your vectors and then does the addition.
(1:10) + (1:10)'
This is intractable and nonsense. Older matlab versions would throw an error. As they should, right?
This led to some long debugging. Instead of throwing an error, which would point me to my coding error, it happily came up with a nonsense answer and continued the program execution.
Is there a way to turn off this 'user interpreting' feature? I'd much prefer matlab just executes the code I write, and throws an error if I do something wrong.
1 commentaire
Stephen23
le 19 Août 2017
+1 "This is intractable and nonsense"
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Walter Roberson
le 18 Août 2017
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There is no way to turn off this feature, which is new in R2016b. Binary operations between vectors now mostly operate as if bsxfun() had been used.
The feature can be useful when deliberately used, but it can also make debugging difficult.
2 commentaires
Chris Wolf
le 18 Août 2017
Chris Wolf
le 18 Août 2017
Modifié(e) : Walter Roberson
le 18 Août 2017
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