Reputation: 74930
Say I want to create an anonymous function from a m-file-function that returns two outputs. Is it possible to set up the anonymous function such that it only returns the second output from the m-file-function?
Example: ttest2
returns two outputs, t/f and a probability. If I want to use the t-test with cellfun
, I might only be interested in collecting the probabilities, i.e. I'd like to write something like this
probabilities = cellfun(@(u,v)ttest2(u,v)%take only second output%,cellArray1,cellArray2)
Upvotes: 16
Views: 5277
Reputation: 41
One way to do this is to define the function:
function varargout = getOutput(func,outputNo,varargin)
varargout = cell(max(outputNo),1);
[varargout{:}] = func(varargin{:});
varargout = varargout(outputNo);
end
and then getOutput(@ttest2,2,u,v)
gives only the p-value
.
To use it in a cellfun
you would need to run:
probabilities = cellfun(@(u,v)getOutput(@ttest2,2,u,v)...
This eliminates the need to write a wrapper every time, but then you have to make sure this function is always in the path.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 125854
There's no way I know of within the expression of the anonymous function to have it select which output to return from a function with multiple possible output arguments. However, you can return multiple outputs when you evaluate the anonymous function. Here's an example using the function MAX:
>> data = [1 3 2 5 4]; %# Sample data
>> fcn = @(x) max(x); %# An anonymous function with multiple possible outputs
>> [maxValue,maxIndex] = fcn(data) %# Get two outputs when evaluating fcn
maxValue =
5 %# The maximum value (output 1 from max)
maxIndex =
4 %# The index of the maximum value (output 2 from max)
Also, the best way to handle the specific example you give above is to actually just use the function handle @ttest2
as the input to CELLFUN, then get the multiple outputs from CELLFUN itself:
[junk,probabilities] = cellfun(@ttest2,cellArray1,cellArray2);
On newer versions of MATLAB, you can replace the variable junk
with ~
to ignore the first output argument.
Upvotes: 15