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For Valentine's day this year I tried to do something a little more than just the usual 'Here's some MATLAB code that draws a picture of a heart' and focus on how to share MATLAB code. TL;DR, here's my advice
- Put the code on GitHub. (Allows people to access and collaborate on your code)
- Set up 'Open in MATLAB Online' in your GitHub repo (Allows people to easily run it)
I used code by @Zhaoxu Liu / slandarer and others to demonstrate. I think that those two steps are the most impactful in that they get you from zero to one but If I were to offer some more advice for research code it would be
3. Connect the GitHub repo to File Exchange (Allows MATLAB users to easily find it in-product).
4. Get a Digitial Object Identifier (DOI) using something like Zenodo. (Allows people to more easily cite your code)
There is still a lot more you can do of course but if everyone did this for any MATLAB code relating to a research paper, we'd be in a better place I think.
Here's the article: On love and research software: Sharing code with your Valentine » The MATLAB Blog - MATLAB & Simulink
What do you think?
One of my colleauges, Michio, recently posted an implementation of Pong Wars in MATLAB
- Here's the code on GitHub.https://lnkd.in/gZG-AsFX
- If you want to open with MATLAB Online, click here https://lnkd.in/gahrTMW5
- He saw this first here: https://lnkd.in/gu_Z-Pks
Making me wonder about variations. What might the resulting patterns look with differing numbers of balls? Different physics etc?
![](https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/discussions/uploaded_files/25341/image.gif)
spy
![](https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/discussions/uploaded_files/21805/image.png)