Generate view of MATLAB file in specified format
publish( generates a view of
the specified MATLAB® code file and output in an HTML format that can be used for
sharing. file)publish saves the HTML file and a file for each
graphic that the code creates in a subfolder named html. The
location of the html subfolder is relative to the location of
file.
For example, publish('C:\myMATLABfiles\myfile.m') runs the
code in myfile.m using the base workspace, and then saves the
formatted code and results in
C:\myMATLABfiles\html\myfile.html.
publish(
generates a view of the specified MATLAB file with options specified by one or more
file,Name,Value)name,value pair arguments.
publish(
uses the file,options)options structure to generate the view of the
specified MATLAB file. Using a structure to specify options is useful when you want
to preconfigure and save your options for repeated use. The fields and values of
the options structure correspond to names and values of
name-value pair arguments.
Generate an HTML view of a MATLAB script including the code, results, and comments.
Copy the example file fourier_demo2.m to your current
folder.
filename = fullfile(matlabroot,'help','techdoc','matlab_env','examples','fourier_demo2.m'); copyfile(filename,'.','f')
Use the publish function to run the example and
generate an HTML view of the example. Then, use the web
function to view the resulting file.
publish('fourier_demo2.m'); web('html/fourier_demo2.html')
Generate a Microsoft® Word view of a MATLAB script including the code, results, and comments.
Copy the example file fourier_demo2.m to your current
folder.
filename = fullfile(matlabroot,'help','techdoc','matlab_env','examples','fourier_demo2.m'); copyfile(filename,'.','f')
Use the publish function to generate a Microsoft Word view of the example. Then, use the
winopen function to view the resulting file.
publish('fourier_demo2.m','doc'); winopen('html/fourier_demo2.doc')
Use name-value pair arguments to change the appearance of published figure windows in the HTML view of a MATLAB script.
Copy the example file fourier_demo2.m to your current
folder.
filename = fullfile(matlabroot,'help','techdoc','matlab_env','examples','fourier_demo2.m'); copyfile(filename,'.','f')
Use the publish function to generate an HTML view of
the example. Use the 'figureSnapMethod' name-value pair
argument with the value 'entireFigureWindow' to include
window decorations and to match the figure background color to the screen
color for figures. Then, use the web function to view
the resulting file.
publish('fourier_demo2.m','figureSnapMethod','entireFigureWindow') web('html/fourier_demo2.html')
Use a structure to create a Microsoft Word view of a MATLAB script that does not show the code from the script. Specifying options as a structure is useful when you want to preconfigure and save your options for repeated use.
Copy the example file fourier_demo2.m to your current
folder.
filename = fullfile(matlabroot,'help','techdoc','matlab_env','examples','fourier_demo2.m'); copyfile(filename,'.','f')
Create a structure options that specifies the
format and showcode
options.
options.format = 'doc';
options.showCode = false;
Use the publish function to generate a Microsoft Word view of the example using the options specified in
options. Then, use the winopen
function to view the resulting file.
publish('fourier_demo2.m',options); winopen('html/fourier_demo2.doc')
Generate an HTML view of a MATLAB function that requires input arguments.
Create and save the function fact.m.
%% FACT compute the factorial of a number % FACT(N) computes the factorial of the number N and returns the results function f = fact(n) f = prod(1:n); end
Use the publish function to generate an HTML view of
the function. Set the value of the input argument n by
using the 'codeToEvaluate' name-value pair argument.
Then, use the web function to view the resulting
file.
publish('fact.m','codeToEvaluate','fact(5);') web('html/fact.html')
Generate an HTML view of a MATLAB script, and save the path of the published HTML file to a variable.
Copy the example file fourier_demo2.m to your current
folder.
filename = fullfile(matlabroot,'help','techdoc','matlab_env','examples','fourier_demo2.m'); copyfile(filename,'.','f')
Use the publish function to generate an HTML view of
the example, and save the path of the published HTML file to the variable
mydoc.
mydoc = publish('fourier_demo2.m')
mydoc = C:\myMATLABfiles\html\fourier_demo2.html
file — MATLAB file nameMATLAB file name, specified as a character vector or string.
file can include a full or partial path.
Note
When MATLAB publishes a file, it can overwrite existing files from the
output folder that start with the same name as
file.
Example: publish('myfile.m')
Example: publish('C:\myMATLABfiles\myfile.m')
format — Output format'html' (default) | 'doc' | 'latex' | 'ppt' | 'xml' | 'pdf'Output format of published file, specified as one of the values listed in the table.
| Value | Output Format |
|---|---|
'html' (default) | Hypertext Markup Language |
'doc' | Microsoft Word |
'latex' | LaTeX |
'ppt' | Microsoft PowerPoint® |
'xml' | Extensible Markup Language |
'pdf' | Portable Document Format (PDF) |
The Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint formats are only available on Windows® platforms.
MATLAB does not preserve syntax highlighting when you specify the output format as Microsoft PowerPoint or LaTeX.
Example: publish('myfile.m','ppt');
options — Options for published outputOptions for published output, specified as a structure. Use the
options structure instead of name-value pair
arguments when you want to reuse the same configuration for publishing
multiple MATLAB files.
The fields and values of the options structure
correspond to names and values of the name-value pair arguments.
For example, this command creates the structure
options, and specifies the PDF output format and the
output folder
C:\myPublishedOutput.
options = struct('format','pdf','outputDir','C:\myPublishedOutput')
Specify optional
comma-separated pairs of Name,Value arguments. Name is
the argument name and Value is the corresponding value.
Name must appear inside quotes. You can specify several name and value
pair arguments in any order as
Name1,Value1,...,NameN,ValueN.
'format','pdf','showCode',false specifies the PDF
output file format and excludes the code from the output.'format' — Output format'html' (default) | 'doc' | 'latex' | 'ppt' | 'xml' | 'pdf'Output format of published file, specified as one of the values listed in the table.
| Value | Output Format |
|---|---|
'html' (default) | Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) |
'doc' | Microsoft Word |
'latex' | LaTeX |
'ppt' | Microsoft PowerPoint |
'xml' | Extensible Markup Language |
'pdf' | Portable Document Format (PDF) |
The Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint formats are only available on Windows platforms.
MATLAB does not preserve syntax highlighting when you specify the output format as Microsoft PowerPoint or LaTeX.
Example: publish('myfile.m','format','pdf')
'outputDir' — Output folderOutput folder to which the published document is saved, specified as a character vector. Specify the full path of the folder.
Example: publish('myfile.m','outputDir','C:\myPublishedOutput')
'stylesheet' — Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL) fileExtensible Stylesheet Language (XSL) file to use when publishing a MATLAB file to HTML, XML, or LaTeX format, specified as a character vector. Specify the full path of the XSL file.
Example: publish('myfile.m','stylesheet','C:\myStylesheet\stylesheet.xsl')
'createThumbnail' — Whether to create thumbnail imagetrue (default) | falseWhether to create a thumbnail image for the published document,
specified as true or false. You
can use the generated thumbnail to display a small representation of
your file on HTML pages.
'figureSnapMethod' — Figure window appearance'entireGUIWindow' (default) | 'print' | 'getframe' | 'entireFigureWindow'Figure window appearance for the published document, specified as one of the values listed in the table. Figure window appearance includes the background color of the plot and whether it includes window decorations (title bar, toolbar, menu bar, and window border).
This option is not available in MATLAB Online™.
| Value | Window Decorations | Background Color | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GUIs | Figures | GUIs | Figures | |
| Included | Excluded | Matches screen | White |
| Excluded | Excluded | White | White |
| Excluded | Excluded | Matches screen | Matches screen |
| Included | Included | Matches screen | Matches screen |
'imageFormat' — Image file format'png' | 'epsc2' | 'jpg' | ...Image file format for the images in the published document, specified as one of the values listed in the table. The list of valid image formats depends on the specified output format.
| Output Format | Valid Image Formats | Default Image Format |
|---|---|---|
| Microsoft Word | Any image format that your
installed version of Microsoft Office can import, including
| 'png' |
| Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) | All image formats. Ensure that the tools you use to view and process the output files can display the output format you specify. | 'png' |
| LaTeX | All image formats. Ensure that the tools you use to view and process the output files can display the output format you specify. |
The
default changes to
|
| Portable Document Format (PDF) |
| 'bmp' |
| Microsoft PowerPoint | Any format that your installed
version of Microsoft Office can import, including
| 'png' |
| Extensible Markup Language (XML) | All image formats. Ensure that the tools you use to view and process the output files can display the image format you specify. | 'png' |
'maxHeight' — Maximum image height[] (default) | positive integerMaximum image height of the published images, specified as one of these values:
[] (default) — Unrestricted
height. This value is always used when the output format is
PDF.
Positive integer — Height in pixels.
'maxWidth' — Maximum image width[] (default) | positive integerMaximum image width of the published images, specified as one of these values:
[] (default) — Unrestricted width.
This value is always used when the output format is PDF.
Positive integer — Width in pixels.
'useNewFigure' — Whether to create new figuretrue (default) | falseWhether to create new figure, specified as true or
false. If true and the code
generates a figure, then MATLAB creates a new figure window in the default size with a
white background before publishing. If false,
MATLAB does not create a figure window.
Specifying a value of false is useful if you want
to use a figure with different properties for publishing. For example,
you can open a figure window, change the size and background color, and
then publish your code. Figures in your published document use the
characteristics of the figure you opened before publishing.
'evalCode' — Whether to run codetrue (default) | falseWhether to run the code and include the MATLAB output in the published view, specified as
true or false.
'catchError' — Whether to catch errorstrue (default) | falseWhether to catch errors during publishing, specified as
true or false. If
true and an error occurs, MATLAB continues publishing and includes the error in the
published file. If false and an error occurs,
MATLAB displays the error at the command line and does not
produce a published file.
'codeToEvaluate' — Additional code to runAdditional code to run during publishing, specified as a character vector. Use this option to run code that is not included in the MATLAB file. For example, when publishing a function, you can set the value of input arguments.
If this option is unspecified, MATLAB only runs the code in the MATLAB file you are publishing.
Example: publish('myfunction.m','codeToEvaluate','myfunction(1,10)')
'maxOutputLines' — Maximum number of lines Inf (default) | nonnegative integer valueMaximum number of lines of output to be included in the published document, specified as one of these values:
Inf (default) — MATLAB includes all output in the published
document.
Nonnegative integer — MATLAB only includes the specified number of lines in the published document. Setting this option is useful if a smaller, representative sample of the output suffices.
'showCode' — Whether to include codetrue (default) | falseWhether to include code in published file, specified as
true or false.
If the output format is HTML, MATLAB includes the code at the end of the published HTML file as
comments, even when you set the 'showCode' option to
false. Including the code as comments enables the
grabcode function to extract the MATLAB code from an HTML file, even when the file does not
display the code. The code does not display in a Web browser because
MATLAB includes the code as comments.
To enhance the readability of the published document and include additional image snapshots, external file content, and external images, see Publishing Markup.
The publish function does not include formatted text when
generating a view of a live script or a live function (.mlx).
To generate a view of the entire live script or live function, export the file
instead. On the Live Editor tab, in the
File section, click Export
and select from the available export options.
For more information, see Share Live Scripts and Functions.