@CrisLuengo yes very dangerous:) I was thinking a little bit more about that too, cause sometimes it could be useful. You'd only need an object that pretends to be an array, but doesn't actually allocate the memory, but just saves the size, and then adapt the rest of the methdos to basically ignore the content of these arrays.
@CrisLuengo were you thinking about this for DIPLIB?
Yes, I agree there. Not sure I like overriding those functions, but it would certainly look nice. So ones(50,-5) creates a sink(50,5) object that then does its thing when concatenating.
Hummm... how to distinguish ones(50,-5) from ones(-50,5) then? This proposal needs a bit more thinking. But I like where it's going!
Also, overriding ones and zeros will make the SO answers way more confusing.
I was thinking the sink just deletes rows or columns depending on how it is concatenated: vertical concatenation removes rows, horizontal concatenation removes columns. Extends to arbitrary dimensions.
~I also just discovered that zeros(5,6,'sink') calls the sink constructor. So there's no need to override those functions!~
(can't cross out stuff?) I was wrong about that one, it doesn't call the sink constructor.
Yes, that was it. With the M-file in a directory on the path it works normally. There's something with a classdef in the current directory that does weird things.
Anyway, I gotta stop this. I might look more into it in the evening, when I'm not expected to be doing actual work. :)
@AndrasDeak actually yes! when concatenation you always have to define the axis of concatenation, and that would also be where you'd have the "negative" dimension
@CrisLuengo it's already evening here, you can stop working:P