%% Process named arguments to a function % % This allows you to pass in arguments using name, value pairs % eg func(x, y, 'u', 0, 'v', 1) % Or you can pass in a struct with named fields % eg S.u = 0; S.v = 1; func(x, y, S) % % Usage: [var1, var2, ..., varn[, unused]] = ... % process_options(args, ... % str1, def1, str2, def2, ..., strn, defn) % % % Arguments: % args - a cell array of input arguments, such % as that provided by VARARGIN. Its contents % should alternate between strings and % values. % str1, ..., strn - Strings that are associated with a % particular variable % def1, ..., defn - Default values returned if no option % is supplied % % Returns: % var1, ..., varn - values to be assigned to variables % unused - an optional cell array of those % string-value pairs that were unused; % if this is not supplied, then a % warning will be issued for each % option in args that lacked a match. % % Examples: % % Suppose we wish to define a Matlab function 'func' that has % required parameters x and y, and optional arguments 'u' and 'v'. % With the definition % % function y = func(x, y, varargin) % % [u, v] = process_options(varargin, 'u', 0, 'v', 1); % % calling func(0, 1, 'v', 2) will assign 0 to x, 1 to y, 0 to u, and 2 % to v. The parameter names are insensitive to case; calling % func(0, 1, 'V', 2) has the same effect. The function call % % func(0, 1, 'u', 5, 'z', 2); % % will result in u having the value 5 and v having value 1, but % will issue a warning that the 'z' option has not been used. On % the other hand, if func is defined as % % function y = func(x, y, varargin) % % [u, v, unused_args] = process_options(varargin, 'u', 0, 'v', 1); % % then the call func(0, 1, 'u', 5, 'z', 2) will yield no warning, % and unused_args will have the value {'z', 2}. This behaviour is % useful for functions with options that invoke other functions % with options; all options can be passed to the outer function and % its unprocessed arguments can be passed to the inner function. % % This file is from matlabtools.googlecode.com %PMTKauthor Mark Paskin %PMTKurl http://ai.stanford.edu/~paskin/software.html %PMTKmodified Matt Dunham % Copyright (C) 2002 Mark A. Paskin function [varargout] = process_options(args, varargin) args = prepareArgs(args); % added to support structured arguments % Check the number of input arguments n = length(varargin); if (mod(n, 2)) error('Each option must be a string/value pair.'); end % Check the number of supplied output arguments if (nargout < (n / 2)) error('Insufficient number of output arguments given'); elseif (nargout == (n / 2)) warn = 1; nout = n / 2; else warn = 0; nout = n / 2 + 1; end % Set outputs to be defaults varargout = cell(1, nout); for i=2:2:n varargout{i/2} = varargin{i}; end % Now process all arguments nunused = 0; for i=1:2:length(args) found = 0; for j=1:2:n if strcmpi(args{i}, varargin{j}) || strcmpi(args{i}(2:end),varargin{j}) varargout{(j + 1)/2} = args{i + 1}; found = 1; break; end end if (~found) if (warn) warning(sprintf('Option ''%s'' not used.', args{i})); args{i} else nunused = nunused + 1; unused{2 * nunused - 1} = args{i}; unused{2 * nunused} = args{i + 1}; end end end % Assign the unused arguments if (~warn) if (nunused) varargout{nout} = unused; else varargout{nout} = cell(0); end end end