Multiple outputs from anonymous function

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Morten Nissov
Morten Nissov le 10 Déc 2019
Réponse apportée : Steven Lord le 13 Nov 2024 à 16:36
I have a function of the following form
function [out1, out2] = demo_fcn( in )
out1 = in(1);
out2 = in(2);
end
which gets called by
[out1, out2] = @(x) demo_fcn(x);
but anonymous functions are not allowed more than one outputs. This is clearly a simplified example, the application is for a nonlinear programming problem where out1 is the objective function and out2 is the gradient calculation. I am not sure how I can structure this differently or in a way which is acceptable by MATLAB syntax.
Note the error messge is
Only functions can return multiple values.
  3 commentaires
Morten Nissov
Morten Nissov le 10 Déc 2019
Modifié(e) : Morten Nissov le 10 Déc 2019
I mean the error message did, but I can see i may have misunderstood it.
The purpose of the code is that I need to calculate an objective function and it's gradients with respect to an unknown value "u' such that the optimizer can solve for this "u".
For example my earlier implementation when I only required the objective function and not the gradients was
objfun = @(x) get_obj(x)
I guess the problem is I'm not quite sure how to adapt the previous version above to also create and output the gradients.
Edit: The intention is to use this in conjunction with fmincon by the way.
Guillaume
Guillaume le 10 Déc 2019
So, I'm a bit unclear on what you are asking.
As pointed out by Stephen, anonymous functions can return more than one output (as long as the function delegates the actual processing to a function that returns more than one output).
Yes, some functions such as your demo_fun can't be implemented as an anonymous function since it's made of two statements and anonymous functions in matlab are limited to one non-branching statement. However, you're never forced to use anonymous functions, they're just syntactic sugar that can always be replaced by named functions. You can pass a handle to your demo_fun to fmincon and others, so why can't you use demo_fun as you have written it?

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Réponses (5)

Pritesh Mody
Pritesh Mody le 4 Mai 2022
Modifié(e) : Pritesh Mody le 4 Mai 2022
The built-in "deal" function allows this. There is an example in the help for deal.

Star Strider
Star Strider le 10 Déc 2019
One option is to have the two outputs to one vector, then separate them in a subsequent assignment:
demo_fcn = @(in) [in(1) in(2)];
in = rand(2,1)
Out = demo_fcn(in)
Out1 = Out(1)
Out2 = Out(2)
This works, however I cannot tell if it does what you want it to do.
  3 commentaires
Star Strider
Star Strider le 10 Déc 2019
O.K.
The approach I used would clearly not allow concatenation such as that unless the outputs of the two sub-functions were in cell arrays. That adds the additional complication of recovering the double array from the cell array, however that is not diffcult.
I encourage you to experiment with that approach.
Benjamin Pepper
Benjamin Pepper le 13 Nov 2024 à 16:24
Was this solved in the end? I'm trying to implement the same code.

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gotjen
gotjen le 25 Juin 2021
Modifié(e) : Walter Roberson le 4 Mai 2022
Hey Morten, even though its years later I want to give you my solution to this problem. I use the matlab function disperse ( https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/33866-disperse ) which is availble on the File Exchange but should absoutely become a built in function.
disperse splits arrays into multiple output arguments. You can use it to conveniently get multple outputs from an anonymous function
f = @(x) disperse( [x, 2*x] )
[a, b] = f(1:10)
% a = [ 1 2 ... 10 ];
% b = [ 2 4 ... 20 ];
Nice pet example but lets do something useful with it.
Say we have a structure array, and we want to get the 3rd element from two vector members of that structure. We want to get them out as two arrays
% data is some large data structure we use to pass around parameters for
% our model.
[A, B] = arrayfun( @(s) disperse([ s.wavelength(3), s.absorption(3)]), data);
This one-liner avoids some ugly for-loop when all we want to do is slice our data structure in an unusual way.
  1 commentaire
Stephen23
Stephen23 le 18 Déc 2022
One-liner without any third party functions:
f = @(x) deal(x, 2*x);
[a, b] = f(1:10)
a = 1×10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
b = 1×10
2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

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Renwen Lin
Renwen Lin le 18 Déc 2022
try this
@(x1,x2)deal(x1+1,x2+1)
% T2 = grouptransform_easy(T, {'HA','HB'},@(x1,x2)deal(x1+1,x2+1),{'Grade','Name'},["Province","City"]);

Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 13 Nov 2024 à 16:36
When you define an anonymous function, assign it to one output.
f = @(x) svd(x, "econ") % Define f
f = function_handle with value:
@(x)svd(x,"econ")
When you call an anonymous function you can call it with however many outputs you want (that the code inside the anonymous function supports.) So since svd can return up to three ouptuts:
A = [1 2 3 4; 5 6 7 8; 9 10 11 12];
[U, S, V] = f(A) % Call f
U = 3×3
-0.2067 -0.8892 0.4082 -0.5183 -0.2544 -0.8165 -0.8298 0.3804 0.4082
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
S = 3×3
25.4368 0 0 0 1.7226 0 0 0 0.0000
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
V = 4×3
-0.4036 0.7329 0.5110 -0.4647 0.2898 -0.8283 -0.5259 -0.1532 0.1236 -0.5870 -0.5962 0.1937
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
[checkU, checkS, checkV] = svd(A, "econ") % Show that f did call svd with 3 outputs
checkU = 3×3
-0.2067 -0.8892 0.4082 -0.5183 -0.2544 -0.8165 -0.8298 0.3804 0.4082
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
checkS = 3×3
25.4368 0 0 0 1.7226 0 0 0 0.0000
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
checkV = 4×3
-0.4036 0.7329 0.5110 -0.4647 0.2898 -0.8283 -0.5259 -0.1532 0.1236 -0.5870 -0.5962 0.1937
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
This code from the original question didn't work because it tried to specify multiple outputs when defining the function and that won't work. [I'm commenting it out so it doesn't error when I run the code in my answer.]
% [out1, out2] = @(x) demo_fcn(x);

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