Use of handle in matlab 2013b

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Muazma Ali
Muazma Ali on 25 Jan 2019
Answered: Guillaume on 25 Jan 2019
hi
I am wondering whether I can use the handle function in my functions when I am using matlab 2013b.
  9 Comments
Muazma Ali
Muazma Ali on 25 Jan 2019
well there is nothing wrong with the code I think..it was taken from a book.
Muazma Ali
Muazma Ali on 25 Jan 2019
well x is the local variable in the main function that the sub function can change..then I think therefore it is no need to have this as input variable

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Answers (3)

madhan ravi
madhan ravi on 25 Jan 2019
Edited: madhan ravi on 25 Jan 2019
%%%% The below can be in a command window or in a separate script file
h = counter ; % function call
h(0)
% ^----- x is zero , I suggest you to keep x as input so you can change it whenver you call the function
%%%%% The below should be saved as in a separate file named counter.m since you are using 2013b
function h = counter
h=@addone;
function y=addone(x);
x=x+1;
y=x;
end
end
  3 Comments
madhan ravi
madhan ravi on 25 Jan 2019
Muazma Ali's answer moved here:
i think u misunderstood..evry time I call h() the value will be increased by 1 and accumulated..that was what I need for my purpose..I am not interested in sending my value.
for instance the purpose if of counting the times one procedure has run
madhan ravi
madhan ravi on 25 Jan 2019
Edited: madhan ravi on 25 Jan 2019
Can you show where you are going to use it to count the number of times ? if so recursive call could suffice your need.

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Adam
Adam on 25 Jan 2019
function h = counter
persistent x
if isempty( x )
x=0;
end
h=addone;
function y=addone
x=x+1;
y=x;
end
end
would work, though it is an ugly way to program such functionality in general.

Guillaume
Guillaume on 25 Jan 2019
Does R2013b support function handles? Yes. Function handles have existed since before R2006a.
Irrespective of that Is it a good idea to create a function that return a self-incrementing variable on each call? Absolutely not. While it can be done using persistent variables (see adam's answer), this is antithetical of matlab design philosophy. The traditional way is to pass the variable to be incremented as input and return the incremented variable as output. Only under very rare circumstances should functions have internal state (and if so, a handle class would probably be better).

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