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[project @ 2007-07-18 17:03:10 by jwe]
author | jwe |
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date | Wed, 18 Jul 2007 17:03:11 +0000 |
parents | a36e4bb26943 |
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@c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2007 John W. Eaton @c This is part of the Octave manual. @c For copying conditions, see the file gpl.texi. @node Variables @chapter Variables @cindex variables, user-defined @cindex user-defined variables Variables let you give names to values and refer to them later. You have already seen variables in many of the examples. The name of a variable must be a sequence of letters, digits and underscores, but it may not begin with a digit. Octave does not enforce a limit on the length of variable names, but it is seldom useful to have variables with names longer than about 30 characters. The following are all valid variable names @cindex job hunting @cindex getting a good job @cindex flying high and fast @example @group x x15 __foo_bar_baz__ fucnrdthsucngtagdjb @end group @end example @noindent However, names like @code{__foo_bar_baz__} that begin and end with two underscores are understood to be reserved for internal use by Octave. You should not use them in code you write, except to access Octave's documented internal variables and built-in symbolic constants. Case is significant in variable names. The symbols @code{a} and @code{A} are distinct variables. A variable name is a valid expression by itself. It represents the variable's current value. Variables are given new values with @dfn{assignment operators} and @dfn{increment operators}. @xref{Assignment Ops, ,Assignment Expressions}. A number of variables have special built-in meanings. For example, @code{ans} holds the current working directory, and @code{pi} names the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. @xref{Summary of Built-in Variables}, for a list of all the predefined variables. Some of these built-in symbols are constants and may not be changed. Others can be used and assigned just like all other variables, but their values are also used or changed automatically by Octave. Variables in Octave do not have fixed types, so it is possible to first store a numeric value in a variable and then to later use the same name to hold a string value in the same program. Variables may not be used before they have been given a value. Doing so results in an error. @DOCSTRING(isvarname) @menu * Global Variables:: * Persistent Variables:: * Status of Variables:: * Summary of Built-in Variables:: * Defaults from the Environment:: @end menu @node Global Variables @section Global Variables @cindex global variables @cindex @code{global} statement @cindex variables, global A variable that has been declared @dfn{global} may be accessed from within a function body without having to pass it as a formal parameter. A variable may be declared global using a @code{global} declaration statement. The following statements are all global declarations. @example @group global a global a b global c = 2 global d = 3 e f = 5 @end group @end example A global variable may only be initialized once in a @code{global} statement. For example, after executing the following code @example @group global gvar = 1 global gvar = 2 @end group @end example @noindent the value of the global variable @code{gvar} is 1, not 2. Issuing a @samp{clear gvar} command does not change the above behavior, but @samp{clear all} does. It is necessary declare a variable as global within a function body in order to access it. For example, @example @group global x function f () x = 1; endfunction f () @end group @end example @noindent does @emph{not} set the value of the global variable @code{x} to 1. In order to change the value of the global variable @code{x}, you must also declare it to be global within the function body, like this @example @group function f () global x; x = 1; endfunction @end group @end example Passing a global variable in a function parameter list will make a local copy and not modify the global value. For example, given the function @example @group function f (x) x = 0 endfunction @end group @end example @noindent and the definition of @code{x} as a global variable at the top level, @example global x = 13 @end example @noindent the expression @example f (x) @end example @noindent will display the value of @code{x} from inside the function as 0, but the value of @code{x} at the top level remains unchanged, because the function works with a @emph{copy} of its argument. @DOCSTRING(isglobal) @node Persistent Variables @section Persistent Variables @cindex persistent variables @cindex @code{persistent} statement @cindex variables, persistent A variable that has been declared @dfn{persistent} within a function will retain its contents in memory between subsequent calls to the same function. The difference between persistent variables and global variables is that persistent variables are local in scope to a particular function and are not visible elsewhere. A variable may be declared persistent using a @code{persistent} declaration statement. The following statements are all persistent declarations. @example @group persistent a persistent a b persistent c = 2 persistent d = 3 e f = 5 @end group @end example The behavior of persistent variables is equivalent to the behavior of static variables in C. The command @code{static} in octave is also recognized and is equivalent to @code{persistent}. Unlike global variables, every initialization statement will re-initialize the variable. For example, after executing the following code @example @group persistent pvar = 1 persistent pvar = 2 @end group @end example @noindent the value of the persistent variable @code{pvar} is 2. @node Status of Variables @section Status of Variables When creating simple one-shot programs it can be very convenient to see which variables are available at the prompt. The function @code{who} and its siblings @code{whos} and @code{whos_line_format} will show different information about what is in memory, as the following shows. @example str = "A random string"; who -variables @print{} *** local user variables: @print{} @print{} __nargin__ str @end example @DOCSTRING(who) @DOCSTRING(whos) @DOCSTRING(whos_line_format) Instead of displaying which variables are in memory, it is possible to determine if a given variable is available. That way it is possible to alter the behaviour of a program depending on the existence of a variable. The following example illustrates this. @example if (! exist ("meaning", "var")) disp ("The program has no 'meaning'"); endif @end example @DOCSTRING(exist) Usually Octave will manage the memory, but sometimes it can be practical to remove variables from memory manually. This is usually needed when working with large variables that fill a substantial part of the memory. On a computer that uses the IEEE floating point format, the following program allocates a matrix that requires around 128 MB memory. @example large_matrix = zeros (4000, 4000); @end example @noindent Since having this variable in memory might slow down other computations, it can be necessary to remove it manually from memory. The @code{clear} function allows this. @DOCSTRING(clear) Information about a function or variable such as it's location in the file system can also be acquired from within Octave. This is usually only useful during development of programs, and not within a program. @DOCSTRING(document) @DOCSTRING(type) @DOCSTRING(which) @node Summary of Built-in Variables @section Summary of Built-in Variables Here is a summary of all of Octave's built-in variables along with cross references to additional information and their default values. In the following table @var{octave-home} stands for the root directory where all of Octave is installed (the default is @file{@value{OCTAVEHOME}}, @var{version} stands for the Octave version number (for example, @value{VERSION}) and @var{arch} stands for the type of system for which Octave was compiled (for example, @code{x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu}). @vtable @code @item EDITOR @xref{Commands For History}. Default value: @code{"emacs"}. @item EXEC_PATH @xref{Controlling Subprocesses}. Default value: @code{":$PATH"}. @item OCTAVE_HOME Default value: @code{"@value{OCTAVEHOME}"}. @item PAGER @xref{Input and Output}. Default value: @code{"less", or "more"}. @item PS1 @xref{Customizing the Prompt}. Default value: @code{"\s:\#> "}. @item PS2 @xref{Customizing the Prompt}. Default value: @code{"> "}. @item PS4 @xref{Customizing the Prompt}. Default value: @code{"+ "}. @item beep_on_error @xref{Errors and Warnings}. Default value: 0. @item completion_append_char @xref{Commands For Completion}. Default value: @code{" "}. @item default_save_options @xref{Simple File I/O}. Default value: @code{"ascii"}. @item crash_dumps_octave_core @xref{Simple File I/O}. Default value: 1. @item fixed_point_format @xref{Matrices}. Default value: 0. @item gnuplot_binary @xref{Three-Dimensional Plotting}. Default value: @code{"gnuplot"}. @item history_file @xref{Commands For History}. Default value: @code{"~/.octave_hist"}. @item history_size @xref{Commands For History}. Default value: 1024. @item ignore_function_time_stamp @xref{Function Files}. Default value: @code{"system"}. @item max_recursion_depth @xref{Recursion}. Default value: 256. @item output_max_field_width @xref{Matrices}. Default value: 10. @item output_precision @xref{Matrices}. Default value: 5. @item page_screen_output @xref{Input and Output}. Default value: 1. @item print_answer_id_name @xref{Terminal Output}. Default value: 1. @item print_empty_dimensions @xref{Empty Matrices}. Default value: 1. @item return_last_computed_value @xref{Returning From a Function}. Default value: 0. @item save_precision @xref{Simple File I/O}. Default value: 17. @item saving_history @xref{Commands For History}. Default value: 1. @item sighup_dumps_octave_core @xref{Simple File I/O}. Default value: 1. @item sigterm_dumps_octave_core @xref{Simple File I/O}. Default value: 1. @item silent_functions @xref{Defining Functions}. Default value: 0. @item split_long_rows @xref{Matrices}. Default value: 1. @item struct_levels_to_print @xref{Data Structures}. Default value: 2. @item suppress_verbose_help_message @xref{Getting Help}. Default value: 1. @end vtable @node Defaults from the Environment @section Defaults from the Environment Octave uses the values of the following environment variables to set the default values for the corresponding built-in or internal variables. In addition, the values from the environment may be overridden by command-line arguments. @xref{Command Line Options}. @vtable @code @item EDITOR @xref{Commands For History}. Built-in variable: @code{EDITOR}. @item OCTAVE_EXEC_PATH @xref{Controlling Subprocesses}. Built-in variable: @code{EXEC_PATH}. Command-line argument: @code{--exec-path}. @item OCTAVE_PATH @xref{Function Files}. Internal variable changed by function @code{path}. Command-line argument: @code{--path}. @item OCTAVE_INFO_FILE @xref{Getting Help}. Internal variable changed by function @code{info_file}. Command-line argument: @code{--info-file}. @item OCTAVE_INFO_PROGRAM @xref{Getting Help}. Internal variable changed by function @code{info_program}. Command-line argument: @code{--info-program}. @item OCTAVE_HISTSIZE @xref{Commands For History}. Built-in variable: @code{history_size}. @item OCTAVE_HISTFILE @xref{Commands For History}. Built-in variable: @code{history_file}. @end vtable