Olympic puzzle number one

Daniel has provided this nice puzzler:
clear = @()disp('Have fun undoing this (:');
Let's solve this challenge and restore the original clear command in as many ways as you find.

3 Kommentare

John Petersen
John Petersen am 31 Jul. 2012
Bearbeitet: John Petersen am 31 Jul. 2012
Would somebody please answer this so I can use clear again? aaaah... Thanks Mike!!
Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub am 31 Jul. 2012
Credit should really be given to Loren.
Jan
Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
Yes, extra credits for Loren. Extra point for Daniel for the link to Loren's blog!

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 Akzeptierte Antwort

Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski am 31 Jul. 2012

2 Stimmen

system('matlab &');quit

1 Kommentar

Jan
Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
Bearbeitet: Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
The rebirth method! +1 from Heidelberg!
On stage deeper: WinPower('rebootmatlab', 'which clear -all') I've always known that this tool will be useful for anything sometimes.

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Weitere Antworten (4)

Mike Hosea
Mike Hosea am 31 Jul. 2012
Bearbeitet: Mike Hosea am 31 Jul. 2012

3 Stimmen

  1. builtin('clear','clear')
  2. You can delete the variable from the workspace window (highlight and press delete or right click and delete).
I look forward to reading some more creative ways.

2 Kommentare

Jan
Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
Bearbeitet: Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
First! Thanks for taking the builtin out of the race. The workspace browser is an almost external tool to operate in the workspace. +1
Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub am 1 Aug. 2012
I wonder if the workspace window method method can be accessed by a java method from the commandline.

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Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski am 31 Jul. 2012

3 Stimmen

clear = rand(1000,500,700);
pack

2 Kommentare

Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub am 31 Jul. 2012
I like this solution.
Jan
Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
Relief by much beef. The weight-lifting method.

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Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub am 31 Jul. 2012

3 Stimmen

Missing from the obvious solutions are:
clear = str2func('clear'); clear();
and
feval('clear');

3 Kommentare

Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski am 31 Jul. 2012
Bearbeitet: Sean de Wolski am 31 Jul. 2012
Nice! I would've thought the str2func solution would have recursively called itself.
Jan
Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
Bearbeitet: Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
Re-identification using str2func is fine. I'm surprised that feval does not fail. Most of all: The first approach contains "clear" three times. This is the winner in synchronized swimming.
Mike Hosea
Mike Hosea am 1 Aug. 2012
If you wanted to leave the rest of the workspace undisturbed it would have been four mentions of "clear":
clear = str2func('clear'); clear('clear');

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Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub am 31 Jul. 2012

1 Stimme

Somewhat surprisingly the CLEARVARS function is not a solution and gives an unhelpful error message. I think the failure probably qualifies as a bug.

3 Kommentare

clearvars is just a fancy wrapper for evalin with clear.
edit clearvars
Jan
Jan am 31 Jul. 2012
Disqualified. Who cares, the most important thing is not to win but to take part!
Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub am 1 Aug. 2012
@Sean, my point was that it could be a slightly fancy wrapper that could catch this error

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