Why do variables that are declared as globals get set to doubles?

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The variables that are declared as globals get set to doubles. This makes a consistent programming style difficult.
a.b = 3;
c(1) = a;
% Here c is a structure, however, if you do
global d
d(1) = a;
% You get an error stating ??? Conversion to double from struct is not possible.

Accepted Answer

MathWorks Support Team
MathWorks Support Team on 27 Jun 2009
The reason you get this error with global (or persistent) variables is that all global/persistent variables are implicitly initialized to []. Since the types need to match during subscripted assignment you get the error. In order to eliminate this error you can:
1. Avoid using the subscript (since the subscripted assignment preserves the original type)
2. Initialize d to be a struct. In this case you could use:
global d;
if isempty(d)
d = struct([]);
end
The basic idea behind suggestion 2 is that you need to create the variable to be a data type in the class of your choice. Then subscripted assignments into it will produce the results you'd like.

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