| Contents | Index |
q1 = copyobj(q)
[q1,q2,...] = copyobj(obja,objb,...)
q1 = copyobj(q) makes a copy of quantizer object q and returns it in q1.
[q1,q2,...] = copyobj(obja,objb,...)copies obja into q1, objb into q2, and so on.
Using copyobj to copy a quantizer object is not the same as using the command syntax q1 = q to copy a quantizer object. quantizer objects have memory (their read-only properties). When you use copyobj, the resulting copy is independent of the original item; it does not share the original object's memory, such as the values of the properties min, max, noverflows, or noperations. Using q1 = q creates a new object that is an alias for the original and shares the original object's memory, and thus its property values.
q = quantizer([8 7]); q1 = copyobj(q)

Learn how to apply early verification to your development process through these technical resources.
How much time do you spend on testing to ensure implementation meets system-level requirements?
| © 1984-2012- The MathWorks, Inc. - Site Help - Patents - Trademarks - Privacy Policy - Preventing Piracy - RSS |