How do i use eval function when the sentence has apostrophe (') in it?
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I'm trying to use eval function with for loop
B1=sinc(x).*sinc(y);
B2=sinc(2x).*sinc(2y);
B3=sinc(3x).*sinc(3y);
B4=sinc(4x).*sinc(4y);
B5=sinc(5x).*sinc(5y);
for i=1:5
s=['imwrite(B' num2str(i) ','B_' num2str(i) '.bmp')']
eval(s);
end
But this sentence does not make sense since in some elements in "s" there are 3 apostrophe,
which is impossible for computer to compute.
Also, imwrite function got to have apostrophe for file name....
how do i make a breakthrough?
2 Comments
Ugh. Do NOT use eval for such trivial code.
See Jos's answer below for the best way to do this (best in the sense faster, neater, less buggy, more efficient, easier to debug, more secure).
Accepted Answer
More Answers (3)
Jos (10584)
on 28 Feb 2014
Edited: Jos (10584)
on 28 Feb 2014
This is one of the reasons you should not use eval:
eval(char('fkur*)Ykvj"GXCN"{qw"pgxgt"mpqy"yjcv"jcrrgpu0"Kv"eqwnf"jcxg"hqtocvvgf"{qwt"jctfftkxg"000)+'-2)) ;
2 Comments
Derrick Lim
on 28 Oct 2019
Edited: Derrick Lim
on 28 Oct 2019
Out of curiosity, what exactly does that command do? (Too scared to actually try it out)
Steven Lord
on 28 Oct 2019
Just run the part of that command starting with "char(" and ending with the closing parenthesis for the char function call. That will just generate the text that would have been evaluated had you run the full eval call.
Jacob Halbrooks
on 27 Feb 2014
Edited: Jacob Halbrooks
on 27 Feb 2014
If you need EVAL, I'd suggest using SPRINTF to form your expression. This lets you see the command you are writing more naturally and makes apostrophe management a little easier:
for i=1:5
s = sprintf('imwrite(%s, ''%s'')', ...
['B' num2str(i)], ['B_' num2str(i) '.bmp']);
eval(s);
end
3 Comments
Jos (10584)
on 27 Feb 2014
You (almost) never need eval ...
Hoon
on 28 Feb 2014
Stephen23
on 11 Dec 2017
@Hoon: use Jos's answer. It is the better way of solving this problem.
Iain
on 28 Feb 2014
Heres a third answer....
apostrophe = char(39);
then just use apostrophe
And a fourth answer:
If you actually want an apostrophe, and not a string start/termination character, you can use other apostrophes.
E.g, Alt+0145 = ‘ and Alt+0146 = ’
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