suppressing the display of ans

233 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Dale
Dale am 9 Feb. 2012
Kommentiert: Nikhanze am 21 Dez. 2023
How can I suppress or omit the display of the "ans" when executing my function?
  8 Kommentare
Kavya
Kavya am 24 Aug. 2023
When you enter a command without a semicolon at the end, MATLAB displays the result.
>> x = 5 + 1
x =
6
Nikhanze
Nikhanze am 21 Dez. 2023
Enter k = 8-2; including the semicolon at the end. The result won't appear in the command window,but you can see the value of k in workspace browser

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Akzeptierte Antwort

Stephen23
Stephen23 am 26 Sep. 2014
Bearbeitet: Stephen23 am 26 Sep. 2014
It seems that the semi-colon is not the desired solution. If you can change the function, one solution is to use nargout and simply not define an output for nargout==0:
function x = temp
if nargout>0
x = 2;
end
end
when called in the command window:
>> temp
>> x = temp
x =
2
Some MATLAB functions do this, or have a look at calendar for a similar concept.

Weitere Antworten (7)

Wayne King
Wayne King am 9 Feb. 2012
Put a semicolon at the end of the line.
x = randn(8,1);
fft(x);
  4 Kommentare
George Fega
George Fega am 22 Apr. 2017
You are the best, dude! Thank you vrey much!
Le Yu
Le Yu am 31 Jan. 2019
That's exactly what I need!! THx

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.


Matt Tearle
Matt Tearle am 9 Feb. 2012
What Wayne said. But to dig a bit deeper: given that you specifically said "function", I'm guessing you might be confused by the whole local vs global variable thing.
If you have
function y = myfun(x)
y = cos(x.^2);
Then you say
>> z = myfun(pi)
The value of pi is passed into the function where it is assigned to the local variable x; the value of the local variable y is computed and returned to the base workspace according to how the function was called at the command line. In this case, the return value is assigned to the (base) variable z. Because there's no semicolon at the end of that line, the output from that assignment is echoed to the command window. So if you call it as
>> myfun(pi)
MATLAB, as always, assigns the calculated value to ans. Again, there's no semicolon, so you see the result displayed. Note that this display has nothing to do with the line y = cos(x.^2); in the function. If you leave off the semicolon there, you'll see that assignment echoed to the command window -- y = -0.9027 -- and the assignment to ans as well -- ans = -0.9027.
If the function has no return values, nothing will be assigned to ans:
function myfun(x)
plot(x)
>> myfun(1:5)

Allen Bibal
Allen Bibal am 25 Feb. 2017
Bearbeitet: Allen Bibal am 25 Feb. 2017
A=5;
B=4;
z=A+B;
disp(Z)

Pramod Bhat
Pramod Bhat am 9 Feb. 2012
It is not possible. Where there are no arguments MATLAB automatically makes "ans" a variable and assigns value to it. You cant hide it.
  1 Kommentar
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 9 Feb. 2012
Probably not correct. You can override the display() function, which is what is invoked to output a value when there is no semi-colon after an expression.

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.


Kenneth Cantos
Kenneth Cantos am 25 Aug. 2016
is there a code that can hide an output on the command window but the item to be hide will be needed on the succeeding formula.
for example:
i will set A=1+2 B=1+3
Formula:
Z=A+B
Z=9
I want to show only the result of Z.
thanks guys.

Niklas Berg
Niklas Berg am 13 Okt. 2022
If your output argument is called x for example just type
clear x
in the end of your function. Then x won't show as ans in the command window.

Kavya
Kavya am 24 Aug. 2023
When you enter a command without a semicolon at the end, MATLAB displays the result.
>> x = 5 + 1
x =
6
Optionally, you can add a semicolon to the end of a command so that the result is not displayed. MATLAB still executes the command, and you can see the variable in the Workspace browser.
>> x = 5 + 1;

Kategorien

Mehr zu MATLAB finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by