Does Setting Variables as Integers for MATLAB Code Generation requires casting every time?
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Gabriel Roper
on 13 Mar 2021
Commented: Walter Roberson
on 14 Mar 2021
I have a MATLAB project (not Simulink) that I am generating C code for to run on a NVIDIA Jetson Nano. In it, I have a persistent variable that will only be a small integer, but MATLAB coder by default sets it to a double.
To work around this, I explicitly cast the variable to be a be a uint8 using the following snippet:
if isempty(example_var)
example_var=uint8(0);
end
When I then use the Check for Run-Time Issues step in the MATLAB Coder, it fails with the following error
This assignment writes a 'double' value into a 'uint8' type. Code generation does not support changing types through assignment. Check preceding assignments or input type specifications for type mismatches.
I scrolled down to the point where this error was reported, and found that the line in question in the following:
example_var = 0;
This is (obviously) a number that can be represented with a uint8, but MATLAB Coder seems to have decided to use it as a double. If I cast the variable again here, the error goes away. However, my project sets the variable multiple times, and there are many other variables that I would like to represent as an integer. Do I have to manually cast the variable every time that I set it, or is there a way for matlab to automatically convert the number to a uint8?
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Darshan Ramakant Bhat
on 14 Mar 2021
The default value of a number in MATLAB is 'double'. You can verify that with the below code :
>> a = 0
a =
0
>> class(a)
ans =
'double'
If you want to create values of other type you have to do like below explicitely :
>> b = uint8(0)
b =
uint8
0
5 Comments
Darshan Ramakant Bhat
on 14 Mar 2021
Casting explicitely to uint8() will aslo work. But like Walter suggested, indexing will keep the type
>> b = 3 % b will be of type double
>> b = uint8(3) % b will be of type uint8, old type is over-written
>> b(:) = 5 % b is still uint8, but the new value is uint8(5). Type is not lost
>> b(:) = 674 % Observe the output, it is saturated at uint8 max value of 255
>> b = uint16(4) % Now the type of b will be uint16
More Answers (1)
Walter Roberson
on 14 Mar 2021
b = uint8(0)
do_something(b)
b(:) = 1
b(:) = do_something_else(b)
3 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 14 Mar 2021
uint8(0) and other numeric type name conversions with a literal constant are handled at parse time -- for example uint64(20000000000000000001) is not computed as double precision first and then converted. Effectively they become like keywords.
type names with an expression that is not a literal constant are handled at run-time even if they could be handled at compile time. I think... it can be hard to tell.
So when assigning a constant that is not double precision, it is safest and potentially more efficient to put the type name with it instead of relying on indexing to do type conversion.
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