Why would command syntax split string when using double quotes?

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disp 'str ing' % good
disp "str ing" % error, Too many input arguments
I am on R2020a. It seems that the latter is equivalent to
disp str ing
I thought, at least
disp "str ing"
should be interpreted as
disp('"str ing"')
why would matlab split the string into several parts?

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 28 Oct 2021
Not exactly. The latter is equivalent to disp('"str', 'ing"')
N 'str ing'
nargin = 1 varargin{1} = str ing
N "str ing"
nargin = 2 varargin{1} = "str varargin{2} = ing"
function N(varargin)
fprintf('nargin = %d\n', nargin);
celldisp(varargin)
end
why would matlab split the string into several parts?
Because that is what is documented:
With command syntax, MATLAB passes all inputs as character vectors (that is, as if they were enclosed in single quotation marks) and does not assign outputs to variables. To pass a data type other than a character vector, use the function syntax. To pass a value that contains a space, you have two options. One is to use function syntax. The other is to put single quotes around the value. Otherwise, MATLAB treats the space as splitting your value into multiple inputs.
In order for disp "str ing" to be treated as disp("str ing") then that would directly violate the rule that MATLAB passes all inputs as character vectors.
It does not explain why MATLAB does not convert the string into a character vector, as-if disp('str ing') had been called, but the documentation never implies anything like that would happen. Instead, the documentation talks only about single-quotes to include blanks, not about double-quotes.
It would not be unreasonable for MATLAB to be enhanced to handle double-quoted strings... but it is not a bug that it does not do so at the moment.
  2 Comments
Xingwang Yong
Xingwang Yong on 28 Oct 2021
Edited: Xingwang Yong on 28 Oct 2021
In function syntax, double quotes and single quotes make no difference, i.e. disp("str ing") == disp('str ing'). I thought they would be the same in command syntax, which is not the case though. Although documented, this is counterintuitive.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 28 Oct 2021
It is not correct that single quotes or double quotes make no difference. Consider
N('str ing')
numel = 7 #1: s #2: t #3: r #4: #5: i #6: n #7: g
N("str ing")
numel = 1 #1: str ing
function N(S)
NE = numel(S);
fprintf('numel = %d\n', NE);
for K = 1 : NE
fprintf('#%d: %s\n', K, S(K));
end
end
Character vectors with single quotes are not the same as string objects with double quotes

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