"clear all" causing annoying warning messages

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Sarah T
Sarah T on 8 Aug 2017
Moved: Stephen23 on 10 Apr 2024 at 5:11
I am using "clear all" at the start of a ".m" file that I have written myself (lets call it "myfile.m"). When I run the file, I get three identical messages stating "Warning: The file 'myfile.m' could not be cleared because it contains MATLAB code that is currently executing." I don't want to turn warnings off, because I am writing my own warnings later in the file. Why does this happen and how can I prevent it? I am using Matlab version 2017a.
  2 Comments
KSSV
KSSV on 8 Aug 2017
Are you sure Clear all is placed only at the start of the code?
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 8 Aug 2017
Edited: Stephen23 on 8 Aug 2017

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Accepted Answer

Jan
Jan on 8 Aug 2017
clear all clears Matlab's memory in a brutal way. While removing all locally used variables might be useful for scripts, which are short hacks or prooves of concept, it is evil is productive code. Prefer clean workspaces by using functions instead.
Then clear all deletes all functions from the RAM, and the reloading from the slow hard disk wastes a lot of time. Doing this frequently means a massive loss of speed. In your case Matlab warns, that some functions cannot be removed. Perhaps they are callbacks of GUIs or timers, or the currently processed M-code.
In addition all persistent variables are cleared and many functions need a time-consuming re-initialization afterwards.
In older Matlab versions clear all has deleted all debugger breakpoints also, and anything, which impedes debugging is an enemy of teh programmer.
The solution is trivial: Omit the evil clear all. Instead of hiding the warning message, this is much more efficient.
  1 Comment
Sarah T
Sarah T on 8 Aug 2017
Thank-you. I have replaced it with "clearvars" and this seems to work fine.

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More Answers (1)

David Cazenave
David Cazenave on 9 Apr 2024 at 23:27
Moved: Stephen23 on 10 Apr 2024 at 5:11
You can still turn off the warnings, and then turn them back on before your 'custom warnings.' If that helps, Thank you ... Thank you very much.

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