How to solve this error "Not enough input arguments."

226 views (last 30 days)
Dear all,
I have this code, though, I have previously defined all the variables, it still persist a message:
Not enough input arguments.
Error in Riesgo_C (line 2)
aux1 = V_in(V_in(:,12) == BATT,:);
The function:
function [deltaSOC] = Riesgo_C(V_in,BATT,PV,IRR)
aux1 = V_in(V_in(:,12) == BATT,:);
aux2 = aux1(aux1(:,11) == PV,:);
auxD = aux2(:,[2;4;6;8;10]);
auxI = aux2(:,[1;3;5;7;9]);
p = polyfit(auxI(1,:),auxD(1,:),1);
deltaSOC = polyval(p,IRR);
end
  2 Comments
Adam
Adam on 14 Feb 2020
Functions have to be called with arguments actually passed in as they have their own sealed workspace, unlike a script. They know nothing at all about what exists in the calling workspace so you have to call the function as
[deltaSOC] = Riesgo_C(V_in,BATT,PV,IRR);
when you call it in order for it to have the inputs it needs.

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Jon
Jon on 14 Feb 2020
Your function requires 4 input arguments. You must have called it with less than 4 input arguments. Please check your code where you call the Riesgo function to make sure that you in fact have 4 input arguments. If you can not find the mistake, then please copy the exact code where you call the function and post it here.
  4 Comments
Tony Castillo
Tony Castillo on 14 Feb 2020
Because I have not made a call to my function yet, I just was testing it with the variables loaded in the workspace, might it be the problem ?
Jon
Jon on 14 Feb 2020
So then please copy and paste the command you are issuing to call it from the command line that produces the error. I think that you probably forgot to include one of the input parameters. You need to have 4.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (1)

madhu
madhu on 21 Nov 2023
Not enough input arguments.
Error in mylaplasian (line 6)
[rows, cols]=size(g);
  1 Comment
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 21 Nov 2023
Edited: Walter Roberson on 21 Nov 2023
You are running a function named mylaplasian which accepts one or more inputs, one of which is named g in the function. But when you run mylaplasian then you are not passing in enough parameters to put anything into the g slot.
You should rewrite your function to do something appropriate when the user calls it with fewer parameters than the maximum. For example,
mytest(10,20)
Input P was: 10 Input Q was: 20
mytest(30)
Input P was: 30 Input Q was: -99
mytest()
Error using solution>mytest
You need to pass at least one parameter to this function!
function mytest(P,Q)
if nargin < 2; Q = -99; end
if nargin < 1
error('You need to pass at least one parameter to this function!');
end
fprintf('Input P was: %g\n', P);
fprintf('Input Q was: %g\n', Q);
end
This code illustrates that you can detect that trailing optional parameters have not been passed in, and in that case you can put in default values if appropriate -- but that when the user has not passed in enough parameters for minimal functionality, that you should generate a meaningful error message to inform the user of what is needed.

Sign in to comment.

Products


Release

R2018b

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!