Too many ouput argument

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redroses
redroses on 3 Apr 2020
Commented: Stephen23 on 5 Apr 2020
Hi everyone, basically this is the coding that has been given to me.
%% setting up some variables
ws = round(620*100); % as ws is input in cycles, and better to have it in samples
[m,n] = size(@stateS3FastAnkleAngle);
state = [@stateS3FastAnkleAngle;NaN*ones(ws,n)]; % we extend the state space with NaN, so that we don't run into problems later
divergence = NaN*ones(m*n_neighbours,ws); % set up the output divergence matrix
but after I run the coding, it states that too many output argument. Can someone help me? I'm still newbie in Matlab and wanted to learn more.
  5 Comments
redroses
redroses on 3 Apr 2020
Hi Sir,
First of all this is the actual coding:
%% setting up some variables
ws = round(ws*fs);
[m,n] = size(state);
state = [state;NaN*ones(ws,n)];
for (state) variable, I want to call that function from another m.file. In the third row of my coding, I want to extend the state space with NaN.
Based on your statement above, that's mean I cannot use @ in the same array. am I right?
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 5 Apr 2020
This is very odd:
NaN*ones(ws,n)
Much better:
nan(ws,n)

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Accepted Answer

Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza on 3 Apr 2020
Yes, you cannot function handle @ in the same array as numbers. You need to call the function with an input value like this
ws = round(ws*fs);
[m,n] = size(stateS3FastAnkleAngle(input_value));
state = [stateS3FastAnkleAngle(input_value);NaN*ones(ws,n)];
here input_value is the input to function stateS3FastAnkleAngle.
  2 Comments
redroses
redroses on 5 Apr 2020
thanks so much! got it yeay
Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza on 5 Apr 2020
Glad to be of help.

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