how to pass keyword arguments to a function via a struct

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Stephen Vavasis
Stephen Vavasis 2023 年 1 月 16 日
移動済み: Walter Roberson 2023 年 1 月 16 日
In recent versions of Matlab, functions can declare optional arguments with default values that get automatically packed into a struct e.g.,
function examplefn(x)
arguments
x.a (1,1) double = 12
x.b (1,1) double = 7
end
With such a declaration, the function is called via examplefn('a', 8, 'b', 9) (or just examplefn('a',8)), and the examplefn function body can now use x.a and x.b as variables. Suppose I have written such a function, and its caller (rather than the function) has the arguments in a struct:
y = struct('a', 8, ,'b', 9);
What is the way to pass y as an input argument to examplefn? I'd like to be able to say something like: examplefn(unpack(y)). Obviously, I could spell it out: examplefn('a', y.a, 'b', y.b) but expanding in this way partly defeats the purpose of having optional and keyword arguments in the first place and makes it fragile to chain a sequence of functions that share keyword/optional arguments. Thanks.
  2 件のコメント
dpb
dpb 2023 年 1 月 16 日
At this time there is no syntax to do anything other than pass the name-value parameter pairs explicitly.
I didn't 'spearmint; you might be able to write an anonymous function that would do the unwrapping to the string to pass, but then you would have to revert to eval to execute the result; MATLAB wouldn't know what to do with the string as an argument list.
Stephen Vavasis
Stephen Vavasis 2023 年 1 月 16 日
移動済み: Matt J 2023 年 1 月 16 日
Thanks for all the responses! it seems that there are two possible solutions. The first is to use inputParser in examplefn instead of a function argument block. The second is to convert the struct to a cell array, and then use {:} on that array, which converts the cell array into multiple arguments.
Regarding the second approach, I can write an unpack function as follows:
function c1 = unpack(s)
arguments
s (1,1) struct
end
fieldn = fieldnames(s);
fieldv = struct2cell(s);
nfield = length(fieldn);
c1 = cell(2*nfield,1);
c1(1:2:end) = fieldn;
c1(2:2:end) = fieldv;
end
Then I can invoke examplefn via:
unpack_y = unpack(y);
examplefn(unpack_y{:})

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採用された回答

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2023 年 1 月 16 日

その他の回答 (2 件)

Matt J
Matt J 2023 年 1 月 16 日
編集済み: Matt J 2023 年 1 月 16 日
You'll have to go old school and use inputParser.
y = struct('a',8,'b', 9);
x=examplefn(y)
x = struct with fields:
a: 8 b: 9 c: 100
x=examplefn('a',8,'b',9)
x = struct with fields:
a: 8 b: 9 c: 100
function x=examplefn(varargin)
p=inputParser();
addParameter(p,'a',12);
addParameter(p,'b',7);
addParameter(p,'c',100);
parse(p,varargin{:});
x=p.Results;
end

Matt J
Matt J 2023 年 1 月 16 日
移動済み: Walter Roberson 2023 年 1 月 16 日
@Stephen Vavasis. Your unpack function is already available in Matlab as namedargs2cell.
  1 件のコメント
Stephen Vavasis
Stephen Vavasis 2023 年 1 月 16 日
移動済み: Walter Roberson 2023 年 1 月 16 日
Great! I will use nameargs2cell, thanks!

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