Matlab Function block code
7 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Hi, I am new to Matlab. I have a merge block that outputs either a 1 or 0. What I want to do is; If the input to the function block is 0, i want the output to be 0 and not be able to change back to 1. if the input is 1 i want the output to be a 1 but be able to change to a 0. is it possible to implement this? thank you in advance!
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Honglei Chen
on 24 May 2017
I think you can use persistent variable to set a flag in the function block. If the input is ever 0, then you just ignore the future input. Something like this
function y = fcn(u)
persistent flag
if isempty(flag)
flag = true;
end
if flag
y = u;
if u == 0
flag = false;
end
else
y = 0;
end
end
HTH
4 Comments
Honglei Chen
on 24 May 2017
Edited: Honglei Chen
on 24 May 2017
You can try to use a switch block at the input, as shown here
so that one of the input is to your real input and the other one to a constant 1. For the condition, you can use a clock
and compare its output with the 0.5 threshold.
HTH
Walter Roberson
on 24 May 2017
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 24 May 2017
function y = fcn(u, t)
persistent lastval
if isempty(lasval); lastval = cast(1, class(u)); end
if t <= 0.5
y = u;
else
y = cast(u & lastval, class(u));
lastval = y;
end
More Answers (1)
Les Beckham
on 25 May 2017
Note that you can also do this with simple Simulink blocks (and no Matlab function block). If you don't have to protect against the input being zero during the first 0.5 seconds, it only takes two blocks. With the protection, it takes five. Here is an example. Be sure that you set the initial condition on the Memory block. You probably also want to make sure the decimation on the Clock block is set to 1.

<<

>>
6 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 5 Jun 2017
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 5 Jun 2017
I think you are right that
y = cast(u & lastval, class(u));
could be abbreviated as
y = u & lastval;
unless somehow the block was being called multiple times with different signal types (or unless somehow the signal type of the input can change during execution -- just because I can't think of a way that could happen doesn't mean it isn't possible.)
But mostly I think I put in the explicit typecast to be sure that code generation would know for sure what the output type would be, instead of code generation having to deduce that it is holding the correct type because of a persistent variable assigned to in the past.
Les Beckham
on 5 Jun 2017
I agree completely that this is good 'defensive programming' practice.
I do like to encourage the use of built-in Simulink blocks where possible as I've found them more efficient and portable (across versions, etc.).
Of course, the original question was about a Matlab function block implementation. I just wanted to show that there was an alternative.
See Also
Categories
Find more on General Applications in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!