Codegen and the "find" Function
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I'm writing a piece of Matlab code that will be used in a Simulink "Matlab Function" block, meaning that it will get run through the Matlab Coder.
When I use the "find" function, even when I know exactly the size that it's output is going to be, I can't store the answer in a fixed-size piece of memory because the Coder doesn't ever know what the output size is going to be.
Assume in the following code that we've already guaranteed that ind_vector is monotonically-increasing:
if query(i) < ind_vector(1)
locations(i) = 0;
else
location(i) = find(query(i)>=ind_vector,1,'last');
end
Because I've guaranteed that ind_vector is monotonically-increasing, I've checked for the condition that the query is lower than the whole vector (which is the only case that would make "find" return empty), and I've only asked find for a single output, I know that it will return a 1x1. The Coder does not know this, however, and considers the output a ?x1 and thus won't let me store it in a 1x1 slot.
Is there any way to prommise the Coder that this output is a specific size? I tried using assert, but it didn't work.
Thanks
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Accepted Answer
Mike Hosea
on 6 Sep 2012
Try
tmp = find(etc.);
location(i) = tmp(1);
However, FIND is pretty heavyweight for this. I prefer to write little helper functions to perform tasks like this because I can avoid creating a Boolean temporary array and because it avoids the variable sizing issue (since I can return 0 to mean "not found").
2 Comments
Mike Hosea
on 6 Sep 2012
Edited: Mike Hosea
on 6 Sep 2012
Yes. The speed situation is probably inverted in this case. The best practices when coding for MATLAB Coder are not the same as the best practices coding for MATLAB. Someday they may be the same, but not today. Another good example of this is related--logical indexing. Logical indexing works in MATLAB Coder, but it does not generate the kind of C code you would have written by hand to accomplish the same task. Rather it expresses in C the literal meaning of the statements in the MATLAB code. If the difference is big enough to warrant it in a bottleneck section of code, you can choose a different method for MATLAB versus MATLAB Coder based on isempty(coder.target).
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