Is there a way to call MATLAB from a Linux command line that would use a command line data file as input?
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Kathleen
on 16 Sep 2014
Commented: Titus Edelhofer
on 23 Sep 2014
I'd like to automate a process by calling MATLAB from the Linux command line in such a way that the name of the input datafile is on the command line and I can eliminate the gui to locate the input file from my M-code.
Simplistically, I'm looking for a command that would look something like this: matlab my-m-code.m my-input-data-file.csv
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Sreeram Mohan
on 19 Sep 2014
Try
./matlab -r "yourScript" and things should work as you expected !
Some examples method 1: ./matlab -nodesktop -nosplash -r disp('sreeram') method 2: ./matlab -automation -r disp('sreeram')
hope this helps
--sreeram mohan
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Titus Edelhofer
on 23 Sep 2014
You are nearly there:
matlab -r myMatlabFunction('myinputdatafile.csv');quit
You only need to make sure that MATLAB "finds" myMatlabFunction.m either on the path, or by something like
matlab -r cd('/home/kathleen/myfolder');myMatlabFunction('myinputdatafile.csv');quit
Titus
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