Can one run a matlab script from the command line and pass arguments to it **without making it into a function**?

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I was to run a MATLAB script from the terminal and pass arguments to it. I know I can make it into a function to pass arguments to it but I don't want to make it into a function. Is there a different way? Like can one get the environment variables from the terminal or something as an alternative? As in:
SLURM_ARRAY_TASK_ID = int(os.environ['SLURM_ARRAY_TASK_ID'])
SLURM_JOBID = int(os.environ['SLURM_JOBID'])
as it would be done in python?
  2 Comments
Brando Miranda
Brando Miranda on 11 Dec 2017
follow up question:
https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/372388-why-doesn-t-getenv-work-on-mac-os-x
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 12 Dec 2017
Edited: Stephen23 on 12 Dec 2017
"...but I don't want to make it into a function."
Functions have many advantages over scripts (faster, encapsulated functionality, freedom from interference, clear workspace, debugging), which is why experienced MATLAB users write functions and not scripts. Why do you need to avoid writing better code? Why do you want to waste time avoiding doing the one thing that would actually solve your problem very neatly?

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Answers (2)

Greg
Greg on 11 Dec 2017
Edited: Greg on 11 Dec 2017
A script has access to its caller's workspace. You need not pass anything, they'll just be there.
This also means all variables and changes to variables you make inside the script happen in the calling workspace.

James Tursa
James Tursa on 11 Dec 2017
Edited: James Tursa on 11 Dec 2017
You could have your script use the getenv( ) function to retrieve all of those environment variables (as strings). Or have your script call another script as the first action, and that other script does all of the getenv( ) stuff (and perhaps also conversion of string to numeric as desired).
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