@AndrasDeak You are right. It could return one or more outputs depending on some condition. Is that common in Python? (In Matlab, the typical use case is return only as many outputs as the function call expects, which can be known within the function with nargout)
@LuisMendo depends on the function. From a purity point of view it's better if it always returns the same number and type of objects. But it can still happen, normally with some input parameters that instruct it to do so.
Allowing a function to know how with many output arguments it has been called can hardly be considered "extrospection". inputname, on the other hand...
I consider inputname uglier than eval. I mean, evaluating a string as code is of course dangerous, but it may make sense sometimes, or at least it may seem to. But to know the caller's workspace variable name?? Why-T-H does a function need to know the name in the caller's workspace? That goes against the very essence of the function paradigm
@CrisLuengo Also, that can help save computations (for output variables that have not been requested)
I see your point, but I see it differently. When you call a function you should be able to know how many ouputs it's going to return. And the function should know how many outputs it has been requested. It's like implementing two different functions y = find(X) or [ii, jj] = find(x) with the same code. The code has to know what to do, depending on how it was called
I find it is very rare to have a function with a variable amount of things to be returned. I think the reason is that there is a great variety of containers wrap a "set" of returned values in a more meaningful way than it is in matlab.
@AndrasDeak I don't follow. Wasn't that my point since the beginning? :-) To have all that info in the first line that defines the function. Or do you mean that functions should not have variable input/output arity, i.e. should have a "fixed" signature?
@AndrasDeak “should” is a big word there. Just because most languages do overloading etc based only on input arguments doesn’t mean that is the only way to do it.
I happen to really like this aspect of MATLAB, and miss it in other languages. In other languages you need to pass an extra input argument to specify what outputs to produce, or have a different function name depending on the number of arguments. There’s a redundancy there, MATLAB’s solution is most elegant IMO.
a = foo(x);
[a,b] = foo(x,”two output args please”);
(Damn, the phone version of chat sucks balls, that was hard to post!)
Yeah, I do that when I'm really interested. But most of the time I'm too lazy. Sometimes I even justify my laziness thinking: "if the OP didn't bother, am I supposed to?"