Class definition @ directory error

5 views (last 30 days)
Adi gahlawat
Adi gahlawat on 11 Aug 2013
Commented: Guillaume on 18 Jun 2015
Hello,
I am writing a script wherein a new class 'polynomial' is defined. When I run the script, I get the following error:
Error: File: polynomial.m Line: 49 Column: 10
A class definition must be in an "@" directory.
Upon typing which('polynomial'), I get the following output:
/home/..../multipoly/@polynomial/polynomial.m
Clearly, polynomial.m is in a directory called @polynomial, but I'm still getting the error. I'm quite confused by this. I am running 64bit R2012a on Ubuntu 12.04.
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks.
Adi
  2 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 11 Aug 2013
Is multipoly your routine? Or is it (for example) inside Simulink ?
Adi gahlawat
Adi gahlawat on 11 Aug 2013
It is my routine, I found the problem, kindly see me reply to Per Isakson below. Thanks for replying.

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

per isakson
per isakson on 11 Aug 2013
Edited: per isakson on 11 Aug 2013
I assume that
  • you created the folder "/home/..../multipoly/@polynomial"
  • you created the file "polynomial.m"
  • the keyword, "class" appears in the file "polynomial.m" (line 49)
Do you try to use old or the new Class-Definition Syntax; do you use the new keyword classdef?
Did you try
which('polynomial','-all')
  3 Comments
Jeremy Rutman
Jeremy Rutman on 18 Jun 2015
Edited: Jeremy Rutman on 18 Jun 2015
I had a similar problem . It turns out ANY folder with ANY ampersand in it ANYWHERE along the path will munge things up royally. I officially declare this a bug
>> sm = segmodel( 'PROFILE', '0.16', 'use_real_pose', false );
Error using segmodel
Error: File: segmodel.m Line: 1 Column: 10
A class definition must be in an "@" directory.
>> which('segmodel','-all')
/home/jeremy/jeremy.rutman@gmail.com/dev/clothes_parsing/@segmodel/segmodel.m
% segmodel constructor
>>
Guillaume
Guillaume on 18 Jun 2015
Well, giving syntactical meaning to filesystem paths was never a good idea in the first place, but I'm afraid Mathworks does not see it this way.
You can declare it a bug, but unless Mathworks completely overhaul their approach to paths, it's not going to change.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Categories

Find more on Startup and Shutdown in Help Center and File Exchange

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!