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A.1.8 Calling Octave Functions from Oct-Files

There is often a need to be able to call another octave function from within an oct-file, and there are many examples of such within octave itself. For example the quad function is an oct-file that calculates the definite integral by quadrature over a user supplied function.

There are also many ways in which a function might be passed. It might be passed as one of

  1. Function Handle
  2. Anonymous Function Handle
  3. Inline Function
  4. String

The example below demonstrates an example that accepts all four means of passing a function to an oct-file.

The first argument to this demonstration is the user supplied function and the following arguments are all passed to the user function.

 
funcdemo (@sin,1)
⇒ 0.84147
funcdemo (@(x) sin(x), 1)
⇒ 0.84147
funcdemo (inline ("sin(x)"), 1)
⇒ 0.84147
funcdemo ("sin",1)
⇒ 0.84147
funcdemo (@atan2, 1, 1)
⇒ 0.78540

When the user function is passed as a string, the treatment of the function is different. In some cases it is necessary to always have the user supplied function as an octave_function object. In that case the string argument can be used to create a temporary function like

 
std::octave fcn_name = unique_symbol_name ("__fcn__");
std::string fname = "function y = ";
fname.append (fcn_name);
fname.append ("(x) y = ");
fcn = extract_function (args(0), "funcdemo", fcn_name,
                        fname, "; endfunction");
…
if (fcn_name.length ())
  clear_function (fcn_name);

There are two important things to know in this case. The number of input arguments to the user function is fixed, and in the above is a single argument, and secondly to avoid leaving the temporary function in the Octave symbol table it should be cleared after use.


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