Get maximum number of outputs from anonymous function

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Luca Amerio
Luca Amerio am 20 Okt. 2017
Kommentiert: Stephen23 am 20 Okt. 2017
Hi everybody. I would like to call a function from within another function. The problem is that i don't know a-priori the number of output variable of the function i'm calling. I can evaluate it with nargout, but once i've done it, how can I call the function with that number of outputs?
function varargout = myfunction(fun, varargin)
% Do some stuff here
funName = func2str(fun);
maxnargout = nargout(funName);
[??] = fun(varargin{:})
% Do some stuff here
Using "eval" I could do something like
eval(['[ varargout{1}' sprintf(', varargout{%i}',2:maxnargout ) '] = fun(varargin{:})'])
but it is utterly awful!!!!

Akzeptierte Antwort

Cam Salzberger
Cam Salzberger am 20 Okt. 2017
Hello Luca,
That's a somewhat tricky one, and I agree that going the "eval" route is not the best way. You can get around it using some tricks with cell arrays. Also, I believe that you can use nargout directly on the function handle.
f = @max;
x = rand(3);
results = cell(1, nargout(f));
[results{:}] = f(x);
-Cam
  2 Kommentare
Luca Amerio
Luca Amerio am 20 Okt. 2017
Wow! It was rather trivial! Didn't think to use the typical [cell{:}] syntax for the output.
Thank you very much
Stephen23
Stephen23 am 20 Okt. 2017
@Luca Amerio: you can use comma-separated lists anywhere that you would use a comma-separated list of variables. Very handy!

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Guillaume
Guillaume am 20 Okt. 2017
Use the conversion of comma-separated lists to cell array (or structure):
maxnargout = nargout(funName);
out = cell(1, maxnargout);
[out{:}] = fun(varargin{:});
Or if the outputs of fun are meant to go into the varargout of myfunction, then replace out by varargout.

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