selection of the right VARARGOUT

1 回表示 (過去 30 日間)
Meh
Meh 2011 年 10 月 21 日
コメント済み: Walter Roberson 2016 年 10 月 2 日
Hi, Let's say I have a function called FUN with 4 outputs a,b,c,d, as shown below
[a,b,c,d]=FUN(x)
Then I want to get an answer depending on which output I want, for example, if I enter:
[c]=FUN(x)
I want to get the desired output, NOT just the one on the first column (i.e value of a instead of c).
Thanx

採用された回答

Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang 2011 年 10 月 21 日
In the new version of MATLAB, you can do [~,~,c]=FUN(x). See this blog http://blogs.mathworks.com/loren/2009/09/11/matlab-release-2009b-best-new-feature-or/
In old version, you have to do [trash, dummy,c]=FUN(x) and then clear trash and dummy.
Whether it allows you to have three outputs rather than the full four outputs will depend on how FUN(x) is written.

その他の回答 (2 件)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2011 年 10 月 21 日
There is, by the way, no (supported) mechanism for a function to find out the name that an output variable is being assigned to.
Even if there were, the name could be rather messy to represent, seeing as it might be coded as (for example)
[R{aFunctionThatReturnsALogicalIndex()}] = YourFunction()
If you want to be able to be selective about outputs in this way, you could pass the output choice as an input to the function.
foo = YourFunction(X,'std');
foo2 = YourFunction(X,'mean');

Matthias Schabel
Matthias Schabel 2016 年 10 月 2 日
編集済み: Matthias Schabel 2016 年 10 月 2 日
Is there a way to capture the tilde output arguments within a function? For example, I have a function that computes two quantities, one expensive and one cheap :
function [expensive,cheap] = foo(in)
...
end
I usually want to do this :
ex = foo(in);
but sometimes I want to do this instead :
[~,ch] = foo(in);
Computation of expensive involves computation of cheap. Is there a way to capture the tilde and not bother to compute expensive when it isn't wanted?
function varargout = foo(in)
varargout{2} = computeCheap();
if (isempty(varargout{1}))
return;
else
varargout{1} = computeExpensive();
return;
end
end
  1 件のコメント
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2016 年 10 月 2 日
The easiest way to do that is to make the expensive one the second output, after which you can check nargout . If the user did not specify multiple outputs then nargout will be either 0 or 1 (depending on context.)

サインインしてコメントする。

カテゴリ

Help Center および File ExchangeMathematics についてさらに検索

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by