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06:33
stackoverflow.com/q/73631005/5211833 what's the canonical for "don't press Run on your function?" again?
I can't find @AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні's GitHub with the dupe links anymore
 
1 hour later…
07:54
Is it just me or is this guy asking loads of "why doesn't this behave how I expect" questions recently without actually taking the time to understand how stuff like `hold` works? Seems like they've come from Python and want line-for-line translations maybe

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/73629004/matlab-figure-behavior-at-command-execution
My suggestion their previous question was an XY problem was dutifully ignored, along with Cris's comments about their syntax being odd stackoverflow.com/questions/73601410/…
@Wolfie I remember that chap from a while (several years IIRC) ago, with similar behaviour.
At some point just ignore them beyond the down and close vote where applicable.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I like the [edit] shorthand which makes a link to edit the current question, found that suggesting people [edit] their question reduces the likelihood of people then posting code in a comment
@LuisMendo The only way I could think of would be to use the '-v4' version, but you'd lose a lot of other features
@Adriaan Ah fair play, maybe not worth the time then
Does using `who` to get the var names and specifying them in the `save` suit as a workaround? Would omit figures unless you had variable handles to them and save everything else I think

w = who; save( 'temp.mat', w{:} );
@Wolfie Their style irks as well; starting every question title with the tag and tagging only MATLAB, naught else
I might even mod flag about that, given the large amount of posts with bad style habit.
08:18
@Wolfie I think the figures are not saved with the standard version if there are no handles to them already
@BillBokeey Ah you're right, my testing was too hasty. In that case you'd have to pair my who suggestion with an ishghandle check, but that might require eval and I don't want to get kicked out of the chat for suggesting such a thing ;)
08:34
OK this is pretty ugly, but you could do

w = whos(); w = setdiff({w(~contains({w(:).class},'Figure')).name},'w');
save( 'temp.mat', w{:} );
@Adriaan you can star it on github and look there next time gist.github.com/adeak/c723e0137e8d05456ad8
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні eskerrikasko
09:11
stackoverflow.com/q/73629715/5211833 can I get a second opinion here? The OP's original post was definitely a dupe. However, the new post is a lot more difficult. Should I reopen?
In any case, even though the question in itself is clear, this is still a classical "I want all solutions"-problem, where they don't seem to realise that permutations grow in exponential or even factorial order, thus making small problems trivial, but slightly larger problems already impossibly hard.
09:51
I think the question body contradicts the title, so currently unclear
10:01
The entire bit about recursiveness doesn't seem very relevant either. It's just that they attempted that and didn't succeed. They don't necessarily want a recursive solution.
I feel like it has been an awful lot of time since the last interesting MATLAB question
In the sense of one that was fun to answer
 
4 hours later…
14:20
@Wolfie That is probably a typo.
@Adriaan The solution is easier to conceive recursively. The trivial non-recursive answer needs N nested loops, if there are N sets to combine.
@CrisLuengo right, that makes sense
Still, I'd like an update from the OP's side on the why of this post. You cannot do this for more than a couple of cells, as I mentioned in the comment
@Wolfie He is dead-set to write MATLAB code using Python-like syntax. He's already written a list and a dict class in MATLAB. Those questions last week were interesting. Now he's doing weird things with graphics and I've tuned him out.
He'll start custom reindex to start at 0 soon
In last week's questions, where he didn't understand some MATLAB behavior, he had good MREs and everything, they were good questions.
But his motivation is beyond me. :)
@BillBokeey I've done that! :)
I bet you did haha
In what context?
14:25
I wrote an image class where indexing is horizontal first, starting at 0.
Makes sense
I always have to double check everything when using images
It does! Indexing I(y,x) is just stupid!
Feels so weird
Yes
Like the first time you try to use meshgrid
indeed. that one is meshed up.
2
Every MATLAB user at some point
14:27
LOL
I really think they should have made imshow transpose the matrix first.
Would have solved a lot of issues.
Because Python now does the same thing, because they copied MATLAB behavior.
Do they have a good explanation of why it works like that?
It's just matrix indexing, which makes sense as (row, col), and then showing the matrix as an image.
Well, to be fair, MATrix LABoratory is designed to work with matrices and keeping syntax consistent across all toolboxes does seem to make sense
But it's just the displaying of a matrix as an image that needs to be fixed. Then everything would work as expected for everyone.
The first matrix index, "row", should be shown horizontally when displaying as an image.
@BillBokeey Yeah I think this answer with completely unnecessary detail was my latest "interesting" one and that was back in July stackoverflow.com/questions/73067493/…
@CrisLuengo The motivation is to re-write Python inside of MATLAB to avoid having to learn MATLAB ;)
14:41
@Wolfie Well, he's learning a lot of MATLAB in the process! :D
 
1 hour later…
15:49
@BillBokeey Yes, that's too restricting
@Wolfie Good idea!
I just wonder who thought it would be a good idea to include figures in save:-/
 
3 hours later…
18:51
@CrisLuengo that's funny because someone recently told me that containers.Map has shit performance. Incoming "why is my MATLAB dict so slow" question.
19:20
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Compared to a struct it certainly is slow. I still don't understand what it adds over a struct.
19:34
Compared to a python dict
Probably not O(1) lookup from what I've heard.
19:53
containers.Map probably doesn't do O(1) lookup.
ooh, that might have changed. In R2022a containers.Map is built-in. I remember it when it was a classdef object.
Back in its classdef days it was really slow!
N = 100000;
dictA = containers.Map;
dictB = struct;
names = cell(N,1);
for ii = 1:N
    names{ii} = char(randi(24, 1, 10) + 'a');
    value = randn(1);
    dictA(names{ii}) = value;
    dictB.(names{ii}) = value;
end

tic
for ii = 1:N
    v = dictA(names{ii});
end
toc

tic
for ii = 1:N
    v = dictB.(names{ii});
end
toc
Elapsed time is 0.724120 seconds.
Elapsed time is 0.118274 seconds.
So it's not as slow any more as I remember. But it's still slower than a plain struct. Maybe it takes up less memory? Since all values have the same type?
whos says that the filled containers.Map has 8 bytes. I think it's a bit off. :)
20:32
@CrisLuengo probably similar to sys.getsizeof in python
In any case a colleague told me that they realized that the bottleneck in one of their numerical codes was containers.Map, and they ended up rewriting it with a java map
20:50
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I believe that. containers.Map was 100x slower than struct last time I timed it.

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