So my question is: is there a way to fill the cell array zout without having to test for the type of variable generated by myfunc(x,y) ? Should I be using a struct in the first place (and if so, what's the best way to populate it)?
The answer provided by @NotBoStyf is almost there, but not quite. Cell arrays are the right way to go. However, the answer very much depends on the number of outputs from the function.
Functions with only one output
The function strcmp has only one output, which is an array. The reason that
zout{1,:} = strcmp(x,y)
gives you an error message, when zout is dimensioned N x 2, is that the left-hand side (zout{1,:}) expects two outputs from the right-hand side. You can fix this with:
[zout{1,:}] = num2cell(strcmp(x,y)); % notice the square brackets on the LHS
However, there's really no reason to do this. You can simply define zout as an N x 1 cell array and capture the results:
zout = cell(1,1);
x = 'a';
y = { 'a', 'b' };
zout{1} = strcmp(x,y);
% Referring to the results:
x_is_y_1 = zout{1}(1);
x_is_y_2 = zout{1}(2);
There's one more case to consider...
Functions with multiple outputs
If your function produces multiple outputs (as opposed to a single output that is an array), then this will only capture the first output. Functions that produce multiple outputs are defined like this:
function [outA,outB] = do_something( a, b )
outA = a + 1;
outB = b + 2;
end
Here, you need to explicitly capture both output arguments. Otherwise, you just get a. For example:
outA = do_something( [1,2,3], [4,5,6] ); % outA is [2,3,4]
[outA,outB] = do_something( [1,2,3], [4,5,6] ); % outA is [2,3,4], outB is [6,7,8]
Z1 = cell(1,1);
Z1{1,1} = do_something( [1,2,3], [4,5,6] ); % Z1{1,1} is [2,3,4]
Z2 = cell(1,2);
Z2{1,1:2} = do_something( [1,2,3], [4,5,6] ); % Same error as above.
% NB: You really never want to have a cell expansion that is not surrounded
% by square brackets.
% Do this instead:
[Z2{1,1:2}] = do_something( [1,2,3], [4,5,6] ); % Z2{1,1} is [2,3,4], Z2{1,2} is [6,7,8]
This can also be done programmatically, with some limits. Let's say we're given function
func that takes one input and returns a constant (but unknown) number of outputs. We
have cell array inp that contains the inputs we want to process, and we want to collect the results in cell around outp:
N = numel(inp);
M = nargout(@func); % number of outputs produced by func
outp = cell(N,M);
for i=1:N
[ outp{i,:} ] = func( inp{i} );
end
This approach has a few caveats:
It captures all of the outputs. This is not always what you want.
Capturing all of the outputs can often change the behavior of the function. For example, the find function returns linear indices if only one output is used, row/column indices if two outputs are used, and row/column/value if three outputs are used.
It won't work for functions that have a variable number of outputs. These functions are defined as function [a,b,...,varargout] = func( ... ). nargout will return a negative number if the function has varargout declared in its output list, because there's no way for Matlab to know how many outputs will be produced.
Unpacking array and cell outputs into a cell
All true so far, but: what I am hoping for is a generic solution. I can't use num2cell if the function produces cell outputs. So what worked for strcmp will fail for strcat and vice versa. Let's assume for now that, for a function which returns multiple outputs, only the first one need be captured in zout – Carl Witthoft
To provide a uniform output syntax for all functions that return either a cell or an array, use an adapter function. Here is an example that handles numeric arrays and cells:
function [cellOut] = cellify(input)
if iscell(input)
cellOut = input;
elseif isnumeric(input)
cellOut = num2cell(input);
else
error('cellify currently does not support structs or objects');
end
end
To unpack the output into a 2-D cell array, the size of each output must be constant. Assuming M outputs:
N = numel(inp);
% M is known and constant
outp = cell(N,M);
for i=1:N
outp(i,:) = cellify( func( inp{i} ) ); % NB: parentheses instead of curlies on LHS
end
The output can then be addressed as outp{i,j}. An alternate approach allows the size of the output to vary:
N = numel(inp);
% M is not necessary here
outp = cell(N,1);
for i=1:N
outp{i} = cellify( func( inp{i} ) ); % NB: back to curlies on LHS
end
The output can then be addressed as outp{i}{j}, and the size of the output can vary.
A few things to keep in mind:
Matlab cells are basically inefficient pointers. The JIT compiler does not always optimize them as well as numeric arrays.
Splitting numeric arrays into cells can cost quite a bit of memory. Each split value is actually a numeric array, which has size and type information associated with it. In numeric array form, this occurs once for each array. When the array is split, this incurs once for each element.
varargout? - Amrox = 1:4,y = 6,myfunc = atan2, sozout(1,1:4)(four cells) is filled with the four values returned fromatan2. - Carl Witthoftuniquefor example, it returns up to 3 variables, and there is no way to programmatically know the number of outputs from the function (it is defined asfunction varargout = unique(varargin)). If you callnargout('unique')it says-1(minus to indicate varargout, so only one argument is reported) - Amrozout(not a cell inside a cell). I'm looking for DWIM behavior. The reasonzoutis a cell array is so that I can place each separate value into its own "location" regardless of the value's type (numeric, logical, character). - Carl Witthoft