- If you click in the figure window, but not on the button, waitforbuttonpress will return, but nothing will have been assigned to answer . In this case, answer will be empty and you will see the error.
- I think it is possible that waitforbuttonpress can return before the callback function has run. The following code will then get an empty value for answer and you will see the error. The next time through, answer will have received a value.
How can I read global variables?
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Dear everyone, I used for the first time a global variable. This is my script:
emotion = ('aa_ANGER.png');
global answer; % define global variable
% Create push button with different emotions
hButton1 = uicontrol('Units','normalized','Position', UL,'Style','pushbutton','String','HAPPINESS','FontSize',16,'callback', @fCallback_F);
w = waitforbuttonpress;
if w == 0
RT = toc(tOn);
res = emotion(4:6);
nPt = emotion(1:2);
a = answer(1:3);
if strcmp(a,res)
response = 1;
else
response = 0;
end
close all
end
but in the first loop an error occurred: Index exceeds matrix dimensions Referring to a = answer(1:3); If I run the script again (without clear anything) it works. I don't know WHY!!! It something about the global variable definition but I don't know what Do i have to do.
Any help will be appreciated!
Thank you
------------------------------------------------------------ where fCallback_f is define as function elsewhere in this way:
function fCallback_F(src,evt)
global answer
answer = get(src,'String');
end
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
David Young
on 5 Mar 2015
Edited: David Young
on 5 Mar 2015
The problem is not connected with your use of a global variable. I think there are two possibilities:
Your description and my tests indicate that it's the second of these; more time with the documentation might support the hypothesis.
Either way the solution is this. Replace the call to waitforbuttonpress with
uiwait;
Remove if w == 0 and the corresponding end .
Insert into the callback function as the final statement before end
uiresume;
Then the progress of the main script is tied in properly with the execution of the callback function.
4 Comments
mat
on 4 Feb 2016
Thanks! This solved my problem too! But what if I want to use a button (stopbutton for example) in a continuous loop where uiwait is no option?
David Young
on 4 Feb 2016
Then you'd need to use the button to set a variable and test its value each time round the loop. The variable could be global, but as Adam says in his answer, that's usually a bad solution, and it would be better to share it with the callback function by using nested functions.
More Answers (2)
Adam
on 5 Mar 2015
To use a global variable in a function you have to call
global answer;
within that function if the global variable was created in some other function. That will create the variable within the scope of the current function allowing you to use it there.
Using global variables is almost always a bad idea and I can think of no circumstance in which it should ever be considered a good solution, but that is your decision. The above should allow you to use your global variable in any scope if you always add that line in a function in which you wish to use it.
8 Comments
Raja Awais Liaqait
on 7 Oct 2019
Dear All,
I want help in the following code.
global min_realvar ;
global max_realvar ;
Firstly, I want to get the value of these variables and secondly i want to write them in such away that I can give the values of these variables as an input.
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