Effacer les filtres
Effacer les filtres

How can I check for semicolon termination of my own function

2 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Jan
Jan le 21 Mar 2011
My function does something and then writes information to the screen by using
function a = say_hi(b)
a = b;
fprintf(1, 'Hello World');
end
I would like to check if the line in the script that called this function was terminated by a semicolon, such that merely does a = b in that case. Is that possible?
Kind regards,
Jan
  1 commentaire
Doug Hull
Doug Hull le 21 Mar 2011
OP said in answers instead of comments:
---
Thanks Walter,
I understand what you say. Let me rephrase the question. I could do what I want by defining the function as follows:
function a = say_hi(b, print)
a = b;
if (print == 1)
fprintf(1, 'Hello World');
end
end
But then I would have an additional input parameter, which is undesired. I am looking for a keyword such as 'nargin' that is available inside the function space to check for its termination i.e. '\n' or ';\n'.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Réponse acceptée

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 21 Mar 2011
Semi-colon does not suppress anything explicitly printed: it only affects whether the value of assignments are automatically printed.
  4 commentaires
Jan
Jan le 22 Mar 2011
Hi Walter,
I am not sure that I understand the paradox, the semicolon is either there or it is not. I was wondering if I could check it just as I can check the input and output arguments. See my answer below.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 22 Mar 2011
With eval, I could construct a clause that had a semi-colon if and only if the test said that there was no semi-colon. Remember Matlab is interpreted and what is to be executed can be constructed on the fly.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Plus de réponses (1)

Jan
Jan le 22 Mar 2011
I just realized that I just want the function to output text if I use it without assigning the output argument. So it would look like this:
function a = say_hi(b)
a = b;
if (nargout == 0)
fprintf(1, 'Hello World');
end
end
The reason I did not want the 'print' argument in the list, was that maybe I want to increase the number of arguments in the future. I would not want the 'print' argument somewhere in the middle of the list, but at the end. As that would cause backwards compatibility issues, I could use an optional input argument 'DisplayOn' to solve it (rather lengthy):
function a = say_hi(b, varargin)
print = 1;
if nargout == 1
print = 0;
end
if size(varargin,2) >= 2
for j = 1:2:length(varargin)
param = varargin(j);
value = varargin(j+1);
if strcmp(param, 'DisplayOn')
if strcmpi(value, 'true')
print = 1;
else
print = 0;
end
end
end
end
a = b;
if (print == 1)
fprintf(1, 'Hello World');
end
end
  1 commentaire
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 22 Mar 2011
Your first function can possibly be rewritten as:
function a = say_hi(b)
if nargout
a = b;
else
fprintf(1, 'Hello World');
end
In your second function, you should use strcmpi(param, 'DisplayOn') and for the value, instead of looking for the string 'true', you should look for non-zero values, to be consistent with how parameters are defined for the Matlab libraries.
I believe there are utility routines that can do the parameter parsing for you; you can find examples in nearly any of the Mathworks-provided routines.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Catégories

En savoir plus sur Logical dans Help Center et File Exchange

Produits

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by