Interpreting varargin name-value pairs.

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Chad Greene
Chad Greene 2014 年 5 月 1 日
回答済み: Kevin Schroeder 2021 年 7 月 20 日
I've been writing a lot of functions lately. I like allowing the user to declare options in my functions using name-value pairs, but I have not found a good clean method of interpreting varargin. Here are two methods I tend to use, but both feel a bit clunky:
% Method 1:
for k = 1:length(varargin)
if strcmpi(varargin{k},'fontname')
fontname = varargin{k+1};
varargin{k+1}=[];
varargin{k}=[];
end
end
% Method 2:
nk = 1:length(varargin);
for k = 1:length(varargin)
if strcmpi(varargin{k},'fontsize')
fontsize = varargin{k+1};
nk(k:k+1) = [];
end
end
varargin = varargin(nk);
Is there a better standard procedure for interpreting a list of varargin arguments?

採用された回答

Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski 2014 年 5 月 1 日
Yes... Use inputParser
  8 件のコメント
Chad Greene
Chad Greene 2014 年 5 月 1 日
Sean: the inputParser looks promising, especially for a long list of possible inputs. If I were using it to get font name and size from a list of varargin it'd look like this :
p = inputParser;
defaultFontSize = 12;
defaultFont = 'times';
addParamValue(p,'font',defaultFont,@ischar);
addParamValue(p,'fontsize',defaultFontSize,@isnumeric);
parse(p,varargin{:});
font = p.Results.font;
fontsize = p.Results.fontsize;
Above I've used addParamValue instead of the recommended addParameter because R2012b does not recognize addParameter. Now, is there a way to keep track of which varargin arguments have been evaluated? In the original post I had lines that delete names and values from varargin because at the end of the function sometimes I like to put all the leftover varargin arguments into a function. For example,
function [h] = myfunction( varargin )
% Parse inputs:
p = inputParser;
defaultFontSize = 12;
defaultFont = 'times';
addParamValue(p,'font',defaultFont,@ischar);
addParamValue(p,'fontsize',defaultFontSize,@isnumeric);
parse(p,varargin{:});
font = p.Results.font;
fontsize = p.Results.fontsize;
% use leftover varargin:
h = plot(1:10,11:20,varargin{:});
text(5,14,'this is my text','fontsize',fontsize)
end
The function above does not work, but it's a design that I would like to get to work. I'd like to let the user create some plot with any plot options and format the text with a command like
myfunction('linewidth',5,'fontsize',30)
Cedric
Cedric 2014 年 5 月 2 日
編集済み: Cedric 2014 年 5 月 2 日
Hi Chad, almost there, look at the KeepUnmatched and Unmatched properties of the parser. You might also be interested in functions fieldnames and struct2cell if you want to build a comma separated list for passing unmatched param/values further.

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その他の回答 (3 件)

Kevin Schroeder
Kevin Schroeder 2021 年 7 月 20 日
If it is of any value to others, I have always used a switch case nested in a for loop.
function myFunction(varargin)
for setting = 1:2:nargin
switch varargin{setting}
case 'SettingName1'
value = varargin{setting + 1}
[]; %do stuff with value
case 'SettingName2'
value = varargin{setting + 1}
[]; %do stuff with value
case 'SettingName3'
value = varargin{setting + 1}
[]; %do stuff with value
otherwise
[];
end
end
end
Functionally it should be similar to the nested if statements, but it looks much cleaner.

Justin
Justin 2014 年 5 月 1 日
I'm always a fan of cellfun.
inputExist = find(cellfun(@(x) strcmpi(x, 'fontname') , varargin));
if inputExist
fontsize = varargin{inputExist+1};
end
I have used this or something similar before. You can wrap this in a for loop that goes through your expected inputs and instead of assigning them directly to fontsize you could assign it to a structure like:
inputs.(currentName) = varargin{inputExist+1};
Let me know if that makes sense.
  1 件のコメント
Cedric
Cedric 2014 年 5 月 2 日
編集済み: Cedric 2014 年 5 月 2 日
STRCMPI does work on cell arrays, so there is no need to use CELLFUN. Yet, it is likely not to be suited here, because Chad would have to test for all possible parameter names for both the function and the internal function. Using the parser and its Unmachted property is more flexible for this reason.

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Alexander
Alexander 2016 年 7 月 17 日
Dont use inputParser if you need to codegen - it is not supported in R2016a.
  1 件のコメント
Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski 2016 年 7 月 19 日
With codegen, you won't be using variable number of inputs since everything needs to be defined.

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