run matlab function with arguments on linux terminal

Hello, do you have any idea how to run matlab functions from the linux shell specifying their arguments? what i tried was: { matlab -r myfunction(argument1,argument2) } but it doesn't work oO

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Hi Ayoub, what is the purpose of the "-r" and also how do you know what to even type on the terminal (what should I look up for this?) Thanks!
"-r" followed by something indicates that MATLAB should take what follows as a command to run.

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 채택된 답변

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2012년 5월 22일
matlab -r 'myfunction(argument1,argument2)';
Or safer:
matlab -r 'try myfunction(argument1,argument2); catch; end; quit'

추가 답변 (4개)

Thomas
Thomas 2012년 5월 22일
Adding to Walter's answers above..
you could also try
matlab -r -nodisplay -nojvm 'myfunction(argument1,argument2)';
-no display removes the Xdisplay and -nojvm starts matlab without hte Java virtual machine.
you could also try
matlab -r -nodesktop -nojvm 'myfunction(argument1,argument2)';
or use the abovewith the try-catch loop as suggested by Walter..
USMAN
USMAN 2014년 7월 15일

2 개 추천

I would rearrange the sequence of input arguments as follows:
matlab -nodisplay -nojvm -r 'FunctionName Arg1 Arg2; exit;'
exit will also exit Matlab and bring control back to shell
Martina Audagnotto
Martina Audagnotto 2018년 5월 21일
편집: Walter Roberson 2018년 5월 22일
Hi,
I have a similar question regarding running matlab with arguments on linux terminal. I want to run my matlab code on GPU and if I set the number of GPU manually the code run, while if i give the number of GPU as a variable of my function I get the following error:
Not enough input arguments.
This is how I run the function:
matlab -nodesktop -r "nodes=2; averaging_filament='single_filament_averaging_reikaparam_is40'; folder='polarity_TRIAL'; run streamline_tomo_GPU.m" ;
and inside the code:
GPU=[nodes];
No idea why is it not running :(

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I recommend converting streamline_tomo_GPU into a function with nodes as its parameter. Alternately, convert
GPU=[nodes];
to
GPU=evalin('base','nodes');
According to the matlablinux documentation, you should not use the option
-r
but instead use the option
-batch
I've tested this on MATLAB R2018b.
The command
matlab -nodisplay -nojvm -r 'somefunction(someargument); anotherfunction(anotherargument);'
did not run anotherfunction(). It did when I changed -r to -batch!
-batch is a new option as of R2019a. -r still works.

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