Diagnose and Fix Variable-Size Data Errors
Diagnosing and Fixing Size Mismatch Errors
Issue: Assigning Variable-Size Matrices to Fixed-Size Matrices
You cannot assign variable-size matrices to fixed-size matrices in generated code. Consider this example:
function Y = example_mismatch1(n) %#codegen assert(n < 10); B = ones(n,n); A = magic(3); A(1) = mean(A(:)); if (n == 3) A = B; end Y = A;
Compiling this function produces this error:
??? Dimension 1 is fixed on the left-hand side but varies on the right ...
There are several ways to fix this error:
Allow matrix
A
to grow by adding thecoder.varsize
construct:function Y = example_mismatch1_fix1(n) %#codegen coder.varsize('A'); assert(n < 10); B = ones(n,n); A = magic(3); A(1) = mean(A(:)); if (n == 3) A = B; end Y = A;
Explicitly restrict the size of matrix
B
to 3-by-3 by modifying theassert
statement:function Y = example_mismatch1_fix2(n) %#codegen coder.varsize('A'); assert(n == 3) B = ones(n,n); A = magic(3); A(1) = mean(A(:)); if (n == 3) A = B; end Y = A;
Use explicit indexing to make
B
the same size asA
:function Y = example_mismatch1_fix3(n) %#codegen assert(n < 10); B = ones(n,n); A = magic(3); A(1) = mean(A(:)); if (n == 3) A = B(1:3, 1:3); end Y = A;
Issue: Empty Matrix Reshaped to Match Variable-Size Specification
If you assign an empty matrix []
to variable-size data,
MATLAB® might silently reshape the data in generated code to match a
coder.varsize
specification. For example:
function Y = test(u) %#codegen Y = []; coder.varsize('Y', [1 10]); if u < 0 Y = [Y u]; end
In this example, coder.varsize
defines
Y
as a column vector of up to 10 elements, so its first
dimension is fixed at size 1. The statement Y = []
designates
the first dimension of Y
as 0, creating a mismatch. The right
hand side of the assignment is an empty matrix and the left hand side is a
variable-size vector. In this case, MATLAB reshapes the empty matrix Y = []
in generated
code to Y = zeros(1,0)
so it matches the
coder.varsize
specification.
Issue: Assigning Implicitly Expanded Outputs to Fixed-Size Variable
If you assign the implicitly expanded output of a binary operation or function to a variable of different size, the code generator might produce an error. For example:
function out = test(n) %#codegen x = ones(n,1); if mod(n,2) == 1 y = ones(n,n); x = y + x; end out = out + x(2); end
In this example, x
is an unbounded vector. Due to implicit
expansion, the plus operation on x
and y
results in an unbounded matrix (Inf-by-Inf). Assigning an unbounded matrix to
x
, which is an unbounded vector, results in an
error.
If you want to use the implicitly expanded output, assign the output to a new variable with the same size as the output.
If you want x to retain its size and not apply implicit expansion in the
generated code, use coder.sameSizeBinaryOp
(MATLAB Coder) to apply the operation. You can also call
coder.noImplicitExpansionInFunction
(MATLAB Coder) in your function body to
disable implicit expansion in the code generated for that function.
Implicit expansion automatically expands the operands to apply binary operations on arrays of compatible sizes. See Generate Code With Implicit Expansion Enabled (MATLAB Coder), Optimize Implicit Expansion in Generated Code (MATLAB Coder), and Compatible Array Sizes for Basic Operations.
Diagnosing and Fixing Errors in Detecting Upper Bounds
Issue: Using Nonconstant Dimensions in a Matrix Constructor
If you enable dynamic memory allocation, you can define variable-size data by assigning a variable to a matrix with nonconstant dimensions. For example:
function y = dims_vary(u) %#codegen if (u > 0) y = ones(3,u); else y = zeros(3,1); end
If you do not enable dynamic memory allocation, this function will produce an error in a MATLAB Function block. To enable dynamic memory allocation, see Use Dynamic Memory Allocation for Variable-Size Arrays in a MATLAB Function Block.