11.11.1 Function Handles
A function handle is a pointer to another function and is defined with the syntax
@function-name
For example,
f = @sin;
creates a function handle called f
that refers to the function sin
.
Function handles are used to call other functions indirectly, or to pass a function as an argument to another function like quad
or fsolve
. For example:
f = @sin; quad (f, 0, pi) ⇒ 2
You may use feval
to call a function using function handle, or simply write the name of the function handle followed by an argument list. If there are no arguments, you must use an empty argument list ‘()’. For example:
f = @sin; feval (f, pi/4) ⇒ 0.70711 f (pi/4) ⇒ 0.70711
- is_function_handle (x)
-
Return true if x is a function handle.
- s = functions (fcn_handle)
-
Return a structure containing information about the function handle fcn_handle.
The structure s always contains these three fields:
- function
-
The function name. For an anonymous function (no name) this will be the actual function definition.
- type
-
Type of the function.
- anonymous
-
The function is anonymous.
- private
-
The function is private.
- overloaded
-
The function overloads an existing function.
- simple
-
The function is a built-in or m-file function.
- subfunction
The function is a subfunction within an m-file.
- file
The m-file that will be called to perform the function. This field is empty for anonymous and built-in functions.
In addition, some function types may return more information in additional fields.
Warning:
functions
is provided for debugging purposes only. Its behavior may change in the future and programs should not depend on any particular output format.
- func2str (fcn_handle)
-
Return a string containing the name of the function referenced by the function handle fcn_handle.
- str2func (fcn_name)
-
Return a function handle constructed from the string fcn_name.
Previous versions of Octave accepted an optional second argument,
"global"
, that caused str2func to ignore locally visible functions. This option is no longer supported.
© 1996–2020 John W. Eaton
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https://octave.org/doc/v5.2.0/Function-Handles.html