is there a way to make it to where if a checkbox is checked then that corresponding word will show up in the text area?
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Joseph Catanese
on 15 Jun 2021
Commented: Walter Roberson
on 18 Jun 2021
i am using app designer and i am trying to get it to where if a check box is checked then it will display the name in the text area. this below is what in have for when a button is pushed fpmc fpcoy and fprg are set as words in the properties. and i want it to show up if the box for those is checked shown in the picture
and i want it to display like this
Flatpack mc
Flatpack Coy
Flatpack Rg
not Flatpack mc Flatpack Coy Flatpack Rg
i can get it to work but only for the Rg one
thank you
function DoneButton_4Pushed(app, event)
po=num2cell(app.PoEditField.Value);
fp1=app.FlatpackMcCheckBox.Value;
fp2=app.FlatpackCoyCheckBox.Value;
fp3=app.FlatpackRGCheckBox.Value;
if fp1==1
fpp=[app.fpmc];
else
fpp=0; % want to leave it blank;
end
if fp2==1
fpp=[app.fpcoy];
else
fpp=0;
end
if fp3==1
fpp=[app.fprg];
else
fpp=0;
end
app.PoTextArea.Value=[string(po)];
app.ProductTextArea.Value=[string(fpp)];
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Aghamarsh Varanasi
on 18 Jun 2021
Edited: Aghamarsh Varanasi
on 18 Jun 2021
Hi,
You can use string array to achieve this functionality. For reference, you can use the following code snippet
function DoneButton_4Pushed(app, event)
fpp = strings(1,3);
c = 0;
% if the 'app.FlatpackMcCheckBox.Value' is false, fpp(1) is left empty
if app.FlatpackMcCheckBox.Value
fpp(c+1) = app.fpmc;
c = c + 1;
end
if app.FlatpackCoyCheckBox.Value
fpp(c+1) = app.fpcoy;
c = c + 1;
end
if app.FlatpackRGCheckBox.Value
fpp(c+1) = app.fprg;
c = c + 1;
end
app.ProductTextArea.Value= fpp ;
end
Hope this helps
9 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 18 Jun 2021
t=0;
That creates t as a scalar numeric value
t(t+1)=string(mat2str(fpcoyt/60,2));
t has scalar numeric value 0, so t(t+1) is t(1) and identifies a scalar numeric output location.
The right hand side, on the other hand, is a string object or string array. mat2str() returns a character vector n matter what the shape of the input is, so string() of that would be a string scalar. Then because the result is being assigned into a numeric scalar, the string() class will attempt to convert the string scalar to numeric.
Now, if you use mat2str() with a scalar numeric value, then the result will be the scalar numeric value as a character vector, without any "decoration". For example, mat2str(5) is going to give you '5', not '[5]' . And it so happens that if you assign a string scalar has has the form of a scalar number, in a context that needs a double, then the string() class will do the equivalent of str2double() [except faster!!] . The numeric value that would end in in t(1) would, in that case, be the same scalar numeric value as was input, except possibly rounded.
If you use mat2str() with something that is not a scalar numeric value, then the result will have decorations, such as mat2str(4:5) giving the result '[4 5]' . And when the string() class tries to convert that to double to store into t(1) then the result you would get in t(1) would be NaN.
Meanwhile, you created the variable time as a 1 x 6 string array, each empty strings, and that string array is what you assign to the Value, even though you did not store anything into it. But you ignore the numeric value that you stored into t(1) after you put it there.
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