Is there a way to suppress command outputs to command window?

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Hello guys, I know I can use ; in the end of the commands to prevent them from echoing to the command windows. But now, my situation is that I have a very long code, dispersed in so many m files.
Several command in them, on purpose, for sake of reporting the status, (and useful for debugging( do not have semicolons. Now I am running the code in a loop, and I think having all these outputs slows the process.
How can I suppress all command outputs, without manually going through the long code and putting a semicolon on each line?
Bonus question: There are some disp functions as well that report to the command line. can I also suppress them?
Thanks

Answers (4)

Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski on 16 May 2014
evalc('yourmainfile');
  4 Comments
Sven
Sven on 8 Oct 2015
Thanks a lot! Worked for me for suppressing command line outputs of a model dependency function:
evalc('[files, ~, ~, ~] = dependencies.fileDependencyAnalysis(ModelName, ''manifestfile'')');

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Jos (10584)
Jos (10584) on 16 May 2014
Edited: Jos (10584) on 16 May 2014
You can create a function in the current directory or top directory of the path called disp.m and put the following single line of code in there:
function thisdoesnothing (varargin)
If you need to use DISP again, just change the name of the m-file to something else (e.g. thisdoesnothing.m)
  1 Comment
Ehsan na
Ehsan na on 16 May 2014
Thanks a very good solution to suppress the DISP function outputs!
Is it possible that instead of overloading disp function by creating another m-file named disp.m, I create a function named disp inside my main file (main_prog.m), but it gets a GLOBAL scope so that it also will be accessible from subcode_1.m in the run time? (subcode_1.m is called from within the main_prog.m in the run time)

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Azzi Abdelmalek
Azzi Abdelmalek on 16 May 2014
fid1 = fopen('your_file.m');
fid2=fopen('new_file.m','w')
res={};
while ~feof(fid)
line1 =[fgetl(fid) ';'];
res{end+1,1}=line1
fprintf(fid2,'%s \r\n',line1)
end
fclose(fid1);
fclose(fid2);
  3 Comments
Azzi Abdelmalek
Azzi Abdelmalek on 16 May 2014
I didn't change your file, just created another one, you can choose to run the first or second one

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Henric Rydén
Henric Rydén on 16 May 2014
echo off

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