Script vs Function with no input/output

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Sometimes I have to write a function ad-hoc for a script purpose. Usually I was simply creating a new .m file containing the function.
In order to increase the robustness of my code and avoid a crowd of small .m files roaming around i'm starting considering to exploit the ability of function files to include sub-functions directly in their inside. To exploit this ability however I have to declare the whole script as a function with no input and no output.
Therefore, instead of having:
  • Script.m
a=1;
b=2;
c=fun(a,b);
  • fun.m
function c=fun(a,b)
c=a+b;
I create a single file
  • Script.m
function script()
a=1;
b=2;
c=fun(a,b);
function c=fun(a,b)
c=a+b;
Of course in this case it seems useless. But sometimes this allows to have only one file instead of 5, 10 or maybe even more that can be shared more easily and are more "compact". (Indeed this kind of behavior can be done natively in other languages such as Python)
Now my question is: except for the "usual" care that have to be put in place when debugging a function and not a script due to the different workspace the variable resides into; is there any drawback you can spot?
Thank you for your opinion. Regards, Luca

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 2 Nov 2015
functions are usually better than scripts.
Depending on the exact MATLAB release and the complexity of the code and what the code does, there have been some cases where a script could be marginally faster than a function. Single-command scripts can potentially be faster than functions due to function-call overhead. For anything longer, functions are almost always faster.
There have also been some cases, historically, where there have been subtle errors in code interpretation due to the Just In Time optimizer being applied to functions but not to scripts. It happens. It is not at all common.
You do have to watch out for calls such as ode45 where Way Back (like MATLAB 5 and earlier) the way to pass the names of routines to call was as strings, whereas everything newer using function handles is preferred. If you do have something coded using a string as a routine name, and you move the function that is designated to become a function in the same file, then the routine that is doing the calling will not be able to find the function. When functions to call are named by strings, then the function has to have its own .m function file (because the expression that is executed to find the function from the string is executed in the base workspace). The real fix is to convert the call to @ syntax, as that syntax is fine with looking in the same file.
  5 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 6 Nov 2015
The better approach is to never "poof" variables into existence. Use the function form of load()
function script()
fd = load('file.mat');
alpha = fd.beta;
Also note that if you use the newer style of function in which you have an "end" matching the "function" line, then attempting to poof variables into existence will create an error about attempting to add variables to a static workspace. MATLAB can optimize notably better when it knows that variables cannot suddenly appear or suddenly be changed by functions.
GuillaumeT
GuillaumeT on 9 Mar 2018
Another (simpler I think) fix is to specify the name of the variable to be loaded in the load call, then the JIT knows it will exist.
function script()
load file.mat beta
alpha=beta+2
This works without error.

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