passing arguments between function files

Anyone know how to allow multiple files as input for one function file?

4 Kommentare

Jan
Jan am 30 Jun. 2012
Please explain any details of your problem.
anna
anna am 2 Jul. 2012
not going to explain this very well but;I have 2 function files, call them funcX, funcY which have as output 2 parameters, X and Y and I want them to be read by a third function file funcZ as input to form say, Z from those X and Y. What syntax should I use to pass them in those 3 files?
Jan
Jan am 3 Jul. 2012
Do you mean something like: Z = max(sin(0.2), cos(0.3))? max, sin and cos are functions also.
Usually it helps to understand the problem, if you post, what you have tried so far.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 24 Aug. 2012
(No obvious reason to close this question, but one of the Answers should be Accepted.)

Antworten (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 30 Jun. 2012
Bearbeitet: Image Analyst am 3 Jul. 2012

0 Stimmen

% Define a function to take mulitple filenames and return multiple outputs.
function [output1 output2 output3] = yourFunction(filename1, filename2, filename3)

4 Kommentare

anna
anna am 2 Jul. 2012
thanks! that seemed to help somehow but not completely...
Why not? That's how you define a function to take multiple inputs and return multiple outputs. You call it almost the same way, just don't use the function word:
% Call the function.
[output1 output2 output3] = yourFunction(filename1, filename2, filename3);
anna
anna am 4 Jul. 2012
thank you! and sorry, no, you're right, I know that much. i just didnt explain my question well. what I meant was that i have 2 separate function files that have as output X and Y and I want them to both be passed into a new function file, funcZ. how should i both call and define the function?
If funcx and funcy both return an x and a y, how about
[x1 y1] = funcx();
[x2 y2] = funcy();
zOutput = funcz(x1, y1, x2, y2);
or using an alternate interpretation of your wording:
x = funcx();
y = funcy();
zOutput = funcz(x, y);
(This is what Walter said except that I'm capturing the outputs into arrays in the main program first before I pass them into funcz.)
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 3 Jul. 2012

0 Stimmen

Z = funcZ( funcX(), funcY() );
disp(Z);
function Z = funcZ( X, Y )
Z = .... appropriate code ...
end
function X = funcX()
X = .... appropriate code ...
end
function Y = funcY()
Y = .... appropriate code ...
end

2 Kommentare

anna
anna am 4 Jul. 2012
Thanks!this seems the closest to what I wanted...but in which file should I put each line of code? its giving me an error for Z = funcZ( funcX(), funcY() ); which im putting in files funcX and funcY. should it not be Z = funcZ( funcX(X), funcY(Y) )?
this: function Z = funcZ( X, Y ) Z = .... appropriate code ... end i have in funcZ.
You said that X is an output of funcX and Y is an output of funcY, so you should not be passing X or Y into funcX and funcY
Put the following into testfuncZ.m :
Z = funcZ( funcX(), funcY() );
disp(Z);
Then put the funcZ code into funcZ.m and the funcX code into funcX.m and the funcY code into funcY.m . Invoke it all by giving the command
testfuncZ

Diese Frage ist geschlossen.

Gefragt:

am 30 Jun. 2012

Geschlossen:

am 20 Aug. 2021

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by