arguments block seems wrong
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the arguments block can be used to validate input arguments. Great! Except that it doesn't seem to work as advertised.
According to the documentation (doc arguments) 
    "The value assigned to the argument in the function call must be compatible with the specified size, or MATLAB throws an error."
However, when calling this function 
function a=f(a)
    arguments
        a (1,3) double
    end
end
 with a scalar
>> f(1)
ans =
     1     1     1
The function expands the erroneous scalar argument to a 3-element vector instead of casting the error that was promised!
Why would this be? Am I reading it wrong?
Answers (1)
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 21 Aug 2020
        Documented. The size of the input must be "compatible" taking into account implicit expansion.
https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/matlab_prog/function-argument-validation-1.html#mw_48fe4f61-8ee4-424b-ae2b-c82b8d051910
5 Comments
  Bruno Luong
      
      
 on 22 Aug 2020
				Only scalar expansion is tolerated by ARGUMENTS, which exists in MATLAB well before R2016b
function a=f(a)
    arguments
        a (5,3) double
    end
end
I don't know what Walter meant by implicit expansion, but the singleton expansion is not tolerated.
>> f(rand(5,3))
ans =
    0.6229    0.9431    0.6980
    0.2473    0.5422    0.9468
    0.9195    0.5459    0.2302
    0.0582    0.1777    0.2003
    0.9456    0.8473    0.7904
>> f(rand(1))
ans =
    0.0317    0.0317    0.0317
    0.0317    0.0317    0.0317
    0.0317    0.0317    0.0317
    0.0317    0.0317    0.0317
    0.0317    0.0317    0.0317
>> f(rand(5,1))
Error using f
Invalid argument at position 1. Value must be a matrix of size 5-by-3.
>> f(rand(1,3))
Error using f
Invalid argument at position 1. Value must be a matrix of size 5-by-3.
>> 
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 22 Aug 2020
				Ah, this part seems to be the key:
MATLAB indexed assignment rules apply to size specifications. For example, a 1-by-1 value is compatible with the size specified as (5,3) because MATLAB applies scalar expansion. Also, MATLAB row-column conversion applies so that a size specified as (1,:) can accept a size of 1-by-n and n-by-1.
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