How do I make a desktop launcher for MATLAB in Linux?

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I don’t want to have to open a terminal window every time I want to launch MATLAB on Linux. I tried to make a Gnome launcher, but it does not seem to work. The command I gave was:
/usr/local/bin/matlab &
I see the process running, but now windows appear. What am I doing wrong?
  5 Comments
Calin Bira
Calin Bira on 2 Mar 2022
try to run as such: /usr/local/bin/matlab -desktop

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Accepted Answer

John
John on 11 Jan 2011
To have MATLAB open up from a launcher, you need to add the –desktop flag to the command field. For example:
/usr/local/matlab/bin/matlab desktop
If that does not work, try changing the launcher type from "Application" to "Application in terminal". If there is a MATLAB startup error, it won’t be displayed unless MATLAB is started with terminal.
  10 Comments
Dhananjay Rana
Dhananjay Rana on 25 Mar 2024 at 20:18
thanks a ton! it really helped me a lot!

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More Answers (15)

KimHan
KimHan on 21 Nov 2016
Edited: KimHan on 21 Nov 2016
In your terminal, type sudo apt-get install matlab-support, press enter, and follow the instructions. It works for Ubuntu 16.0 LTE
  33 Comments
Tiago
Tiago on 30 Oct 2023
It works in Ubuntu 22.04 with Matlab R2023b too.
Zhu
Zhu on 18 Dec 2023
Works well on Ubuntu 20.04 with Matlba R2023b.
But how do yall configure the Gcc in the instructions?

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Tucker McClure
Tucker McClure on 26 Sep 2017
I seemed to have to do the least to get this to work, so I thought I'd share. I'm on Ubuntu 16.04 and installed with the defaults. I created ~/.local/share/applications/matlab_r2015a.desktop with the following contents:
[Desktop Entry]
Version=1.0
Type=Application
Name=MATLAB R2015a
Icon=matlab
Path=/home/tucker/dev
Exec=/usr/local/MATLAB/R2015a/bin/glnxa64/MATLAB -desktop -prefersoftwareopengl
Terminal=false
I then made it executable:
chmod +x matlab_r2015a.desktop
I then navigated to ~/.local/share/applications/ with the file browser (you may need to click View > Show Hidden Files to see .local) and dragged the matlab_r2015a.desktop file to the launcher bar. It showed up, I clicked on it, and it opened MATLAB.
  7 Comments
Cesar Julian Cerpa Diaz
Cesar Julian Cerpa Diaz on 8 Sep 2020
i used this way to fix my icon desktop on manajaro and that's it. thanks
Isidro Losada López
Isidro Losada López on 11 Nov 2020
In my case, I had problems with the graphics at some point. I found a solution somewhere (I really don't remember where, sorry) that not only solved my problem, but my graphics improved consederably. You just have to change a line in the matlab.desktop file:
Exec=env MESA_LOADER_DRIVER_OVERRIDE=i965 /usr/local/bin/matlab -desktop -prefersoftwareopengl
It worked for me in Ubuntu 18.04 LTS and now in Ubuntu 20.04 LTS!

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Trevor Moon
Trevor Moon on 8 Sep 2021
1. Create a linux .desktop file
touch ~/.local/share/applications/matlab.desktop
2. Add/copy relevant details for app launcher
[Desktop Entry]
Version=1.0
Type=Application
Terminal=false
Exec=/path/to/matlab -desktop
Name=MATLAB RXXXXx
Icon=/path/to/icon
Comment=MATLAB
where /path/to/matlab is recommended to use usr/local/MATLAB/RXXXXx/bin/glnxa64/MATLAB and /path/to/icon is usr/local/MATLAB/RXXXXx/bin/glnxa64/cef_resources/matlab_icon.png
3. Make the file executable
chmod +x ~/.local/share/applications/matlab.desktop
4. Test the application launcher from the menu
From here, I had issues with the icons/descriptions to show. To fix this, I did
5. Move matlab.desktop to the shared applications folder
sudo mv ~/.local/share/applications/matlab.desktop /usr/share/applications
sudo is required since the root folder is protected
  1 Comment
Arslan Yahya
Arslan Yahya on 24 Sep 2022
You can skip step 5., if you remember the '/' in the start of "/usr/local/MATLAB/RXXXXx/bin/glnxa64/cef_resources/matlab_icon.png"

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Eric
Eric on 25 Jun 2015
If you're using Ubuntu, see this page: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MATLAB

Julian Zimmer
Julian Zimmer on 4 Nov 2016
Edited: Julian Zimmer on 4 Nov 2016
The following trick worked for me:
Suppose <install>/MATLAB is the folder where you installed MATLAB and you are using zsh as your preferred shell:
1. download the MATLAB logo from Wikipedia and save it as <install>/MATLAB/logo.png
2. go to ~/bin and create the following shell script and call it matlab:
#!/usr/bin/zsh
<install>/MATLAB/bin/matlab -desktop &
3. make matlab shell script executable
chmod +x matlab
4. in /usr/local/applications, create matlab.desktop (you have to be root). If there are other people using the same system use the personal applications folder of your respective distribution
#!/usr/bin/zsh
[Desktop Entry]
Name=MATLAB
Exec= /home/<yourUsername>/bin/matlab
Icon=<install>/MATLAB/logo.png
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Categories=Development;Math;Science;Education;
This will add MATLAB to your Menu and Application Starter.
5. Copy the file matlab.desktop file to your Desktop folder
  1 Comment
Steve Grobler
Steve Grobler on 11 Feb 2017
a rather complicated solution to do something so simple!! Its no wonder Linux is not catching on :(

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Taran Sachdeva
Taran Sachdeva on 16 Mar 2017
The problem is actually with creating an icon in Ubuntu itself more than anything else. Solution from Julian is very close to the working icon solution however, the number of steps for the icon can be further reduced to only two steps (at least in Ubuntu 16.04.2).
1. Install gksudo: The reason you want to install this is because you will be turning off the terminal when you create the icon. This is a small graphical interface with a forced sudo backend (more on that later)
sudo apt-get install gksudo
2. create icon: open terminal and enter the following command
sudo gedit ~/.local/share/applications/matlab.desktop
a blank text editor will open up. In that editor paste the following set and save
[Desktop Entry]
Name=MATLAB
Type=Application
Exec=gksudo -S "<matlab location>/matlab -desktop"
Terminal=false
Icon=<icon location>
Comment=MATLAB
Categories=Development;IDE;
if you search for "MATLAB" now you will see an icon that can be dragged and dropped to the launcher (Ubuntu's equivilant for windows taskbar) or desktop.
the "<matlab location>" is a placeholder for where your matlab installation is stored. By default, it should be store in the /usr/local/MATLAB/.....
the "<icon location>" is a placeholder for where the matlab icon should be stored. It can be a .png,.ico or .xmp .
Comments on what is going on in the background:
1. The gksudo is running the sudo as its backend (https://linux.die.net/man/1/gksudo), if your linux box has a password, it will ask you for it when you click the icon you have created using the above instruction. Since we turned the terminal off (line 5) there will be no way for you to enter this password and matlab will keep crashing. gksudo provides a GUI interface that will allow the user to input his/her password.
2. matlab -desktop, forces matlab to run in desktop mode with the full matlab shell
  2 Comments
gorilla3
gorilla3 on 20 Nov 2017
hi,
what is the file that we need to open in "usr/local/MATLAB/..." there are many files there and I don't know which to select
Mohsen Malayjerdi
Mohsen Malayjerdi on 16 Nov 2019
Hi, you need to address like this:
usr/local/MATLAB/R2019b/bin/matlab
but you should consider your version. The run file is on the bin folder

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Thaddeus Song En Low
Thaddeus Song En Low on 6 Dec 2017
A little bit late to the train, but an alternative that one can use, not only for matlab but for other scripts also, for those in Ubuntu.
1) Install "alacarte"
sudo apt-get install alacarte
2) Run alacarte and select "new item". Provide the command (ie. the matlab script) and name. You can also provide a logo by clicking on an image file. If you don't have a logo, just download one off the web.
You can now launch matlab without a terminal.
  3 Comments
gorilla3
gorilla3 on 17 Dec 2017
I managed to install it and it does launch but it crashes immediately.

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Rachel Allcock
Rachel Allcock on 28 Jun 2019
Edited: Rachel Allcock on 28 Jun 2019
Fairly straightforward using Xubuntu 18.04 (XFCE) using the menu edit function with the command path:
/usr/local/MATLAB/R2019a/bin/matlab
but the key is to check the "Run in Terminal" box otherwise it won't start. You'll see the Terminal run in the background but it launches the full desktop.

Zoltán Gál
Zoltán Gál on 19 Sep 2023
Update for 2023:
Matlab R2023b Linux installer still does not create a shortcut which is annoying. However, when making one manually, Mint 21 Cinnamon offers a MatLab icon among the default icons. So it took literally 20 seconds to solve this minor annoyance in life. Also, the Mint icon is stylized and I think it fits better than the default, so it's a win for me.

Martin
Martin on 22 Nov 2012
I am trying to do the same, basically going in to the terminal each time is very inconvenient. Is there a way I can make a button to click rather than terminal?

Mark
Mark on 13 Apr 2018
For Fedora, I made some packages packages:
https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/hmaarrfk/useful_launchers/
You may also want to edit the file `/usr/local/MATLAB/R20XXX/resources/MATLAB/en/branding.xml`, the keys with IDE_TITLE so that it matches up with the icon correctly. I mostly didn't want to create many different packages everytime matlab changes their Title.
Result:

kinblu
kinblu on 22 Jun 2018
Edited: kinblu on 22 Jun 2018
After launching it from the terminal, I clicked on its icon in the Launcher and then selected "Add to Dash". Voila! (on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS)

Qianqian Fang
Qianqian Fang on 17 Jan 2019
The launcher approach does not work properly after I upgraded Ubuntu from 14.04 to 16.04. Basically, all envrionment variables defined in my ~/.bashrc are not inheriented in the MATLAB environment, making it impossible to link to libraries in the non-standard locations, such as libcudart etc.
This did work well in Ubuntu 14.04. Is this a known problem?
thanks

Thomas Friedrich
Thomas Friedrich on 12 Aug 2020
For those struggeling with the environment variables / library location setup: The solution I am using now, is to use a bash script instead of the classical launcher. In this bash script the environment variables can be set prior to actually running matlab. For CUDA-10.0 the following would work:
#!/bin/bash
export CUDA_PATH=/usr/local/cuda-10.0
export CUDA_HOME=$CUDA_PATH
export CUDA_BIN_PATH=$CUDA_PATH/bin
export CUDA_LIB_PATH=$CUDA_PATH/lib64
# set PATH so it includes users private bin directories
PATH=$HOME/bin:$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH
PATH=/usr/bin:$PATH
PATH=$MATLAB_DIR:$PATH
PATH=$MATLAB_BIN:$PATH
PATH=$CUDA_BIN_PATH:$PATH
export PATH
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$CUDA_LIB_PATH:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
/usr/local/MATLAB/R2019b/bin/glnxa64/MATLAB -desktop
Saving that script as 'run19b' in some place the OS is looking for binaries, one can then create a launcher like that:
[Desktop Entry]
Type=Application
Name=MATLAB R2019b
Icon=/usr/local/MATLAB/R2019b/bin/glnxa64/cef_resources/matlab_icon.png
Path=/home/thomas
Exec=run19b
Terminal=false
Obviously this approach can be extended to whatever library one would want to add and I guess it'll work on most Linux distros. I tested it on Mint 19 (Ubuntu 18.04).

Hernan Mojica
Hernan Mojica on 7 Oct 2021
Edited: Hernan Mojica on 7 Oct 2021
Once time you have Matlab installed, for Ubuntu 21.04 follow nexts steps :
  • Open a comand terminal.
  • Create a desktop shorcout :
nano ~/Desktop/Matlab
  • Copy-paste bellow lines:
[Desktop Entry]
Version=1.0
Type=Application
Name=MATLAB
Exec=/usr/local/MATLAB/R2021b/bin/./matlab
Icon=/usr/local/MATLAB/R2021b/resources/coreui/matlab/splash.png
Terminal=false
  • Go to the path /Desktop in the terminal and copy-paste the following:
chmod +x Matlab
  5 Comments
VC
VC on 27 Oct 2022
[Desktop Entry]
Type=Application
Terminal=false
MimeType=text/x-matlab
Exec=/usr/local/MATLAB/R20xyz/bin/matlab -desktop
Name=MATLAB
Icon=matlab
Categories=Development;Math;Science
Comment=Scientific computing environment
StartupNotify=true
This works for me (Fedora 36). The one suggest by @Hernan Mojica leads to a crash post splash screen.

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