assert
Program customized run-time errors and warnings
Parent Section: equations
Syntax
assert(predicate_condition,message,Action);
Description
The equations section may contain the assert
construct, which lets you specify customized run-time errors and warnings:
assert(predicate_condition,message,Action);
predicate_condition | The expression to be evaluated at run time. It can be a function of time, inputs, parameters, and variables. |
message | Optional text string (with single quotes) that tells the block user why the run-time error or warning is triggered. |
Action | Optional attribute that specifies whether triggering the assert results in a warning or an error during simulation. The default action is error. |
The Action attribute lets you specify the assert action based on an
enumerated parameter value. A built-in enumeration
simscape.enum.assert.action allows three possible actions when
the assertion is triggered: error, warn, and
none. You can provide an enumerated value directly to the
Action attribute:
assert(u > 0,Action = simscape.enum.assert.action.warn)
or create an enumerated parameter and let the block user control the assert action:
parameters
assert_action = simscape.enum.assert.action.warn
end
equations
assert(u > 0,Action = assert_action)
endYou can use the assert construct in:
The top-level equations, including initial equations.
The
if-elseif-elsebranches of a conditional expression.The expression clause and the right-hand side of the declaration clause of a
letexpression.
When you use an assert construct in a branch of a conditional
expression, it is not counted towards the number of expressions in the branch, and is
therefore exempt from the general rule that the total number of equation expressions,
their dimensionality, and their order must be the same for every branch of the
if-elseif-else statement. For example, the following is
valid:
if x > 1
y == 1;
else
assert(b > 0);
y == 3;
end
The scope of the assert construct is defined by the scope of its
branch. In the preceding example, the predicate condition b > 0 is
evaluated only when the else branch is in effect, that is, when
x is less than or equal to 1.
When you include assert constructs in initial
equations, their predicate conditions are checked only once, after solving for initial
conditions (before the start of simulation, see Initial Conditions Computation). Use these assertions to safeguard against the model initializing with nonphysical
values.