run function from command line

I want to start a matlab function from the unix command line. For now I use
matlab -nodisplay -r "functionname(argument1, argument2, argumentN);exit"
But for this the function I call needs to be in the folder where I am. Is there a way to call the function like
matlab -nodisplay -r "/path/to/functionname(argument1, argument2, argumentN);exit"
without manually adding it to the search path of matlab?

 Accepted Answer

Do you mean:
matlab -nodisplay -r "cd('/path/to'); functionname(argument1, argument2, argumentN);exit"

4 Comments

Thank you very much for helping. This easily solved my problem.
Does this change the directory that you are in permanantly or does it cd back after this command is called?
Jhe Mag
Jhe Mag on 16 Jan 2022
Edited: Jhe Mag on 16 Jan 2022
Thank you Mr. Jan. Seems like windows prompt is slightly the same with unix haha.
Someone might be needing this: For windows command prompt, I used the command : "C:\Program Files\Polyspace\R2021a\bin\matlab.exe" -nosplash -nodesktop -r "cd('D:\matlab_project\scripts\'), testFnc('blah'), exit"
with my testFnc.m
function sample = testFnc(stri)
sample = stri
disp(sample)
end
FWIW, this does seem to cd back to the original directory after MATLAB exits

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More Answers (1)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 12 Sep 2025
I'm not 100% sure this option was available in releases R2017a or R2017b, but I'm pretty sure it was. Use the -sd startup option to cause MATLAB to start in a certain directory.

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Asked:

on 27 Feb 2017

Edited:

on 12 Sep 2025

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