Elegantly refer to the second output from a function

226 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Xin
Xin le 9 Fév 2018
Commenté : jessupj le 12 Déc 2023
Hello everyone. I have a function (matlab function, say "ismember") and I want to use the second output from this function as index in a vector. For example:
data = rand(1,10);
[A,B] = ismember(1,[0,1,2,3,4,5]);
result = data(B);
My question is how do I skip the second line and directly use B in line 3.
Many thanks

Réponses (8)

Hank
Hank le 6 Fév 2020
Modifié(e) : Hank le 6 Fév 2020
I wrote two or three functions that allow me to do this. I agree, its much nicer to be able to one line certain values from builtin functions. I hate writing
[~,~,extension] = fileparts( file );
[~,imax] = max(x);
When i want to use extension or imax directly in a statement. So put these functions in your path:
function out = out2(fun) % gets the second output argument of anonymous function fun
[~,out] = fun(); % fun must have no input arguments
end
function out = out3(fun) % gets third
[~,~,out] = fun();
end
% make a function for 4 or 5 or however many output arguments you have!
Then call these with
ext = out3(@() fileparts(file));
imax = out2(@() max(x));
Note whats happening here is that you're wrapping up your original function call in an anonymous function with no arguments. Then this gets called inside the outN function and the correct output argument is returned.
The syntax is a little more clunky, but hey, its one line, it allows something like:
switch out3(@() fileparts(file))
case '.csv'; % csv stuff
case '.txt'; % txt stuff
end
  2 commentaires
Stephen23
Stephen23 le 6 Fév 2020
Modifié(e) : Stephen23 le 6 Fév 2020
See also this FEX submission, which is one function that selects any output argument/s and does not require an anonymous function (just a simple function handle):
Charles Daigle
Charles Daigle le 23 Mar 2023
what a silly way to say that this feature is not supported

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Jeremy
Jeremy le 22 Août 2022
none of these proved the requested solution. MATLAB is a command line environement. Not being able to call a specific argument from a function makes the programming more expanded. This really should be a option for all function calls.
Why not just use the solutions mentioned?
  1. As stated, it requires multple command line executions or a wrapper function that would be unnecssary if this was available by default
  2. If the comman [~,X,~,~]=func(A,B,C) has to be called in an m file just to be able to use X, X is now stored in the workspace
  3. If a funciton has to be writted to wrap "func", X has to be computed in func, returned by func then returned by the wrapper function, so inherently less effecient.
  2 commentaires
gotjen
gotjen le 22 Août 2022
Okay but
  1. Yes, this is the probelm we're trying to solve
  2. Yes, this is the problem we're trying to solve
  3. Returning a result from a nested function is not as time-expensive as you think it is. Even though its seems more theoretically convoluted, computationally its VERY fast.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 22 Août 2022
None of them provide the requested solution because MATLAB does not support the requested functionality.

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Arlon
Arlon le 7 Nov 2023
function ab=wrapTwo(f,varargin)
[a,b]=f(varargin{:});
ab={a,b};
end
extractACell=@(index,cell_array) cell_array{index};
data = rand(1,10)
result = data(extractACell(2,wrapTwo(@ismember,1,[0,1,2,3,4,5])))
  1 commentaire
Arlon
Arlon le 2 Déc 2023
Modifié(e) : Arlon le 2 Déc 2023
See Matt J's solution which is superior to what I posted here, his is the correct answer and does what the OP requested.

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Matt J
Matt J le 7 Nov 2023
Modifié(e) : Matt J le 7 Nov 2023
data = (1:8)*100
data = 1×8
100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800
result = data( argEval(2,@ismember,1, [0,1,2,3,4,5]))
result = 200
function out=argEval(n,fh, varargin)
%Get the n-th output of fh(varargin{:})
[argsout{1:n}]=fh(varargin{:});
out=argsout{n};
end
  1 commentaire
Arlon
Arlon le 7 Nov 2023
Great! This generalizes what I put!

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jessupj
jessupj le 12 Déc 2023
what i've been doing lately, in case it's helpful to anyone, is to make a class containing my most commonly used functions that i need 2nd outputs from
e.g.
classdef arg2
methods(Static)
function locb = ismember(varargin)
[~, locb] = ismember(varargin);
end
function imax = max(varargin)
[~,imax] = max(varargin);
end
end
end
etc. And then when i want the second arguments, i just call arg2.ismember or arg2.max. Easy, but it would be super nice if this kind of thing was built in.
Another place the second argument is really important is the output of ODE solvers. I often only need the second argument of e.g. [TOUT,YOUT] = ode45(ODEFUN,TSPAN,Y0) to pass into an error calculation/optimizer/etc.
For this, i find the easiest thing to do is grab the solution from the structure output using the dot:
ode45(ODEFUN,TSPAN,Y0).y % or .x (for time points)
  2 commentaires
Matt J
Matt J le 12 Déc 2023
Modifié(e) : Matt J le 12 Déc 2023
i just call arg2.ismember or arg2.max. Easy
You could also import them where needed, and then invoke them without prefixes,
import arg2.*
B = ismember(1,[0,1,2,3,4,5])
B = 2
C=max([1,3,5,7,1])
C = 4
jessupj
jessupj le 12 Déc 2023
@Matt J you are truly more fearless than i am! i would almost surely run something forgetting that these commands replace the default function use.

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James Tursa
James Tursa le 9 Fév 2018
Modifié(e) : James Tursa le 9 Fév 2018
Unless the function has an input argument syntax that specifies only returning B, you can't do this. You can throw away that A immediately with this syntax however:
[~,B] = ismember(1,[0,1,2,3,4,5]);
That won't prevent the function from calculating that 1st result, it is just thrown away immediately upon return so that it doesn't clutter your workspace.
  2 commentaires
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 9 Fév 2018
Right. Unfortunately there is no way in MATLAB to specify that you want to extract a particular output number of an expression and use that: you have to write the outputs to variables.
James Tursa
James Tursa le 9 Fév 2018
It would be nice to have an "argout_wanted" that can be queried from within the function to find out which outputs the caller actually wants returned.

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Grigory Tagiltsev
Grigory Tagiltsev le 9 Fév 2018
You have to call the function anyway. You can do [~,B] = ismember(1,[0,1,2,3,4,5]); and avoid A. It doesn't decrease a number of lines though. You can also cheat a bit and do [B,B] = ismember(1,[0,1,2,3,4,5]); in this case only the second output will be written to B.

Han Zerui
Han Zerui le 24 Fév 2021
Modifié(e) : Han Zerui le 24 Fév 2021
Define your own ismember function:
data = rand(1,10);
result = data(myismember(1,[0,1,2,3,4,5]));
function Locb = myismember(varargin)
[~, Locb] = ismember(varargin);
end

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