Name-value pairs
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Can anyone point out the solution to the error shown below (in the end)?
Thank you in advance.
function output = name_value_pairs(varargin)
if nargin == 0 || rem(length(varargin),2) ~= 0
output = {};
return;
end
for i = 1:length(varargin)
if ~ischar(varargin{i})
if ~isdouble(varargin{i}) || isfloat(varargin{i})
output = {};
return;
end
end
end
output = cell(((length(varargin))/2),2);
n =1 ;
for j = 1: (length(varargin))/2
for k = 1:2
output{j,k} = varargin{n};
n = n+1;
end
end
end
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Accepted Answer
Ameer Hamza
on 2 Oct 2020
Edited: Ameer Hamza
on 2 Oct 2020
You can use reshape
function C = name_value_pairs(varargin)
if nargin == 0 || rem(numel(varargin),2) ~= 0
C = {};
return;
end
C = reshape(varargin, 2, []).';
if ~all(cellfun(@ischar, C))
C = {}
end
end
6 Comments
Ameer Hamza
on 19 Oct 2020
.' is just use to change the array shape from row to column. For cell array, both ' and .' are equivalent. For matrix ' means conjucate transpose, and .' means simple transpose.
Chem
on 9 Dec 2021
The code is great, it only has one small bug, when using the line ~all(cellfun(@ischar, C)) it requires all columns to be of type char, however, the problem stated says that only the first column must be of type char, so a convenient change is ~all(cellfun(@ischar, C(:,1))))
More Answers (2)
Arthur Roué
on 2 Oct 2020
isdouble is not a MATLAB function. Try this :
isa(YourVar, 'double')
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Steven Lord
on 2 Oct 2020
if ~isdouble(varargin{i}) || isfloat(varargin{i})
Assuming there were an isdouble function doing what you would expect from the name (Arthur Roué is correct, there is no such function in MATLAB though a few objects in various other MathWorks products have methods by that name) what could cause this condition to not pass?
If varargin{i} is a double, the first part of the if condition is false so we need to evaluate the second part. The second part is true so the whole condition is true.
If varargin{i} is a single, the first part of the if condition is true so we don't need to evaluate the second part.
If varargin{i} is an int8, the first part of the if condition is true so we don't need to evaluate the second part.
About the only condition I can think of offhand where this condition could fail would be an object that overloads isdouble and isfloat to return true and false respectively. If someone's willing to go to that length to trick MATLAB, they're likely to encounter other unusual behavior.
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