Hello, I am trying to find a way to execute an m-file from a string.
For example I get from a DB return the name myfunc(1,2) as a char and I want to execute the function myfunc.m with the (1,2) as variables. Does anyone have any solution.
Thanx in advance.
Georgios Mavropoulos

 채택된 답변

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2011년 3월 3일

2 개 추천

%somehow before this, DBString = 'myfunc(1,2)'
eval(DBString)

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Jan
Jan 2011년 3월 3일
Although I find arguments against EVAL every day, it is the most exact answer here. +1
There are other possibilities, such as parsing out the arguments and turning them in to a cell array of numbers, and extracting the function name string, and then using feval(FunctionNameString, Args{:})
Thanks for this answer. It just solved my long-term problem
Dear Jan, given your statement 'Although I find arguments against EVAL every day, it is the most exact answer here. +1', is there any other option nowadays or could you kindly elaborate on the arguments against using eval? Many thanks in advance!
Stephen23
Stephen23 2021년 1월 28일
편집: Stephen23 2021년 1월 28일
"...is there any other option nowadays..."
There have always been better options, not just "nowadays".
The fundamental flaw in the original question was not adressed in the thread so far, but is due to the poor data design: storing a function and its inputs in one string. Better data design would store its inputs as data in their own right (which is anyway simpler, is more efficient, and avoids superfluous, slow, lossy data type conversion). Then calling the function/script is trivial with one str2func call and then more efficient calling of the function handle thereafter.
"...could you kindly elaborate on the arguments against using eval?"
In this particular example, repeated calls to eval this string will likely be less efficient than repeated calls to the equivalent function handle (MATLAB's JIT compiler has no way to optimize the code hidden in a string, but it certainly can with a properly defined function handle called with properly defined input arguments).
On top of this we have the usual problems of disabling the static code analysis (which means no syntax checking, no tracing variables, no code hints, no tab completion, no input hints, no variable highlighting, etc.), makes debugging harder, is a security risk, and various other points that have been discussed many times before (quite easy to find by searching this forum).
Excellent, thanks a million Stephen! Wasn't aware of str2func, first time I've ran into this sort of issue. This helps!
Jürgen
Jürgen 2021년 11월 30일
for me 'Stephens comment' of 28th,jan. 2021 should be worked out more compact and moved to the top-rated answer to the question.
I was also searching for something like (list of) function reference defined during runtime.
The str2fun seems the way to go with respect to all the points in Stephens comment (code analysis, syntax checking, tracing variables, code hints, tab completion, input hints, variable highlighting, debugging, security).

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추가 답변 (4개)

Jan
Jan 2011년 3월 17일

1 개 추천

If you call RUN with a string, which contains the path, the file extension .m is removed. Without the path, .m is kept.
mfile = dir('layer*.m');
[trash, name] = fileparts(mfile(1).name);
run(name);
Or:
mfile = dir('layer*.m');
run(fullfile(cd, mfile(1).name));
Note: "mfile(1)" considers, that DIR can find multiple matching files.
Georgios Mavropoulos
Georgios Mavropoulos 2011년 3월 3일

0 개 추천

thank you Walter, I tried both of your suggestions and they both worked.
Thanks again for the help.
Dimitris
Dimitris 2011년 3월 15일

0 개 추천

I'm trying to do something similar. My output is an .m file. Like this:
mfile = dir('layer*.m')
So, afterwards I want to run the file named layer<something>.m But if I do as you say:
eval(mfile.name)
I get this error:
??? Undefined variable "layer2" or class "layer2.m".
Why is this happening? The file I'm trying to run, layer2.m, is in the current directory.

댓글 수: 3

You have to remove the .m suffix before you can eval()
As you do not appear to be sending input or expecting output, it is plausible that you are using scripts instead of functions. If so, then consider using run(), as that will remove the .m for you.
Jan
Jan 2011년 3월 17일
RUN removes the file extension only, if the name contains the path:
working: run('C:\MFiles\layer2.m')
failing: run('layer2.m')
I think, this is a bug in RUN: If "script" does not contain a path, "exist(script, 'file')" checks the existence before "evalin('caller', [script, ';'])". But if "script" is an existing file, the file extension let EVALIN fail. "evalin('caller', [s, ';'])" would work. (checked in 2009a)
Jan
Jan 2011년 3월 17일
Bug report is submitted.

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Dimitris
Dimitris 2011년 3월 15일

0 개 추천

I tried to use:
run(mfile.name)
but I got the same error:
??? Undefined variable "layer2" or class "layer2.m".
Error in ==> run at 74
evalin('caller',[script ';']);
:S I also tried
run(eval(mfile.name))
with the same results... Thank you for your interest!

댓글 수: 2

You can try using
eval(mfile.name)
Jan
Jan 2017년 11월 12일
@Hayatullahi Adeyemo: The variable "mfile.name" contains the string 'layer2'. The error message produced by run('layer2') means, that there is no function with this name in Matlab's path. Then eval('layer2') will not work also.

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