Anonymous Function : asymmetric read/write behaviour
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Benoit Beaulieu
il 8 Nov 2023
Modificato: Benoit Beaulieu
il 11 Nov 2023
I'm trying to use function handles to create an equivalent to a "with" statement in VBA or a alias in Python but I find myself facing a behaviour I don't understand. maybe some of you could help me understand why I get an error.
Boiled down to the simplest, here's what I get:
a=@(x)x{1};
y={10};
a(y)
try a(y)=100
catch ME
ME
end
The reading part works well but the next line results in an error. Why is there an asymmetry while evaluating the parentasis?
EDIT :
The most efficient to create a VBA:with or Python:alias equivalent in Matlab I found is to do an actual copy of a structure subpart, make modifications and reassign the edited branch copy to its original structure as:
S=struct();
S.Branch0 = "Just Some Data";
S.Branch1=struct();
for i=1:10
% Setting up preexisting values in the structure
for j=1:10
S.Branch1(i).NotCopiedProperty{j} = i;
end
S.Branch1(i).CopiedProperty = 10:-1:1;
% Create a phantom copy of the whole branch
with = S.Branch1;
% Add properties to the phantom branch
with(i).NewProperty1='Some Text';
with(i).NewProperty2={'A1','A2'};
% Create a copy of the original data and the edit it
with(i).CopiedProperty(i) = 0;
% Overwrite the original subBranch with the phantom branch
S.Branch1=with;
end
disp(S)
disp(S.Branch1)
Limitations : If new fields are to be added in a loop, the "with" structure must capture all instances at looping level.
% DOES NOT WORK
with = S.Branch1(1); % Points to ELEMENT
with.NewProperty1='New Text';
S.Branch1(1)=with;
% DO INSTEAD :
with = S.Branch1; % Points to ARRAY
with(i).NewProperty1='New Text';
S.Branch1=with;
% STILL WORKS
with = S.Branch1(1);
with.ExistingProperty1='Replacement Text';
S.Branch1(1)=with;
2 Commenti
Steven Lord
il 8 Nov 2023
What exactly are you hoping to do with that last line? If a(y) returned 10 on both sides, what would you expect this command to do in MATLAB?
10 = 100
Walter Roberson
il 8 Nov 2023
They are trying to create an alias. So they would like a(y) to be an alias for y{1} including for assignment purposes. They would like a(y)=100 to act the same as y{1} = 100
Risposta accettata
Walter Roberson
il 8 Nov 2023
a(1) = @(x)x{1}
a(1) = @(x)x{1}.^2 + 3
a
When an anonymous function appears on the left of an = then it is a request to modify the anonymous function. If the anonymous function already exists then the request will fail unless the subscript is one of 1 or true or false or []
If you want to be able to use a syntax like a(y)=100 to mean y{1}=100 then you would need to define a class to do the operations, and y would have to be a handle class
There is no simple "syntactic sugar" in MATLAB that can emulate with
6 Commenti
Steven Lord
il 10 Nov 2023
If you only extract the Parent property once (since you're not modifying it in your second loop) the times tell a different story:
%%Creating a structure
s=struct();
s.Parent.Property1=100000;
s.Parent.Property2=1:s.Parent.Property1;
%% Measuring ct with direct access (pointer like)
tic
for i=1:s.Parent.Property1
% this line writes zeros, to the array while requiring some calculation
% time
s.Parent.Property2(i)=abs(s.Parent.Property2(i))-i;
end
m.direct=seconds(toc);
%% Measuring ct creating a copy of the sub-structure for every calculation
% "with" statement inside the loop to evaluate the impact on a sample greater
% than 1
s.Parent.Property2=1:s.Parent.Property1;
tic
with=s.Parent;
for i=1:with.Property1
with.Property2(i)=abs(with.Property2(i))-i;
end
s.Parent=with;
m.with=seconds(toc);
disp(m);
More time also means a greater memory usage as there are 2 instances of the structure or object at any time in the loop using the "With" variation.
It's not that simple. MATLAB does something known as copy-on-write, in which it only makes copies of an array when it needs to.
tic
A = ones(1e4);
toc
tic
B = A;
toc
If the statement B = A; made a copy of A, it would have taken a similar amount of time as the line that created A. Instead, the copy's only made when B is modified.
tic
B(1) = 2;
toc
How does this work with struct arrays?
tic
S = struct('A', ones(1e4), 'C', 1);
toc
tic
T = S.C;
T(1) = 2;
toc
tic
S.C = T;
toc
The lines that create or manipulate T don't interact with S.A at all.
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