Hi,
Some python operators are already implemented in MATLAB, however I am unable to call them directly. Is it not possible? For instance: a = py.math.factorial(100);
a.__add__(a);
returns:
a.__add__(a)
↑
Error: Invalid text character. Check for unsupported symbol, invisible character, or pasting of non-ASCII
characters.
Calling __add__ within python is perfectly valid. If I try to execute a + a, MATLAB correctly returns a py.long (in this case, MATLAB calls the python operator as expected), however when I execute:
a / py.math.factorial(50)
It returns a double 3.068518756254966e+93 instead of a py.long. It seems that MATLAB is calling mrdivide instead of __truediv__. That's why I would like to call the operators directly. Am I missing something? Is it possible to configure MATLAB for reading the character underscore _?
PS: The current workaround is to use numpy:
py.numpy.divide(a, py.math.factorial(50))
which correctly returns:
Python long with properties:
denominator: [1×1 py.long]
imag: [1×1 py.long]
numerator: [1×1 py.long]
real: [1×1 py.long]
3068518756254966037202730459529469739228459721684688959447786986982158958772355072000000000000
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