I apologize for the double post. John replied faster to my first post than
I could delete it.
Dominik
Am Mittwoch, 18. Dezember 2013 14:19:43 UTC+1 schrieb Dominik Holenstein:
>
> I am new to Julia programming and not an expert either.
>
> While working on a project which involves the translation of Matlab code
> to Julia I had the idea to write a
> feval(f, x1=NaN)
>
> function in Julia to evaluate a single expression or an array of two or
> more expressions by using just one function.
>
>
> This is the code of the feval(f, x1=NaN) function:
>
> function feval(f,x1 = NaN)
> if isnan(x1) == false
> global x = x1
> end
> if typeof(f) == Array{Expr,1}
> n = size(f,1)
> F = zeros(n,1)
> for i=1:n
> F[i] = eval(f[i])
> end
> elseif typeof(f) == Expr
> F = 0
> F = eval(f)
> else
> println("f is a ", typeof(f))
> error("f is nor an expression nor a single array of expressions.")
> end
> return F
> end
>
>
> You can use this function with a single expression or with an array of
> expressions (x = 3.5) :
>
> julia> f1 = :(3*x - 2*x + 5)
> :(+(-(*(3,x),*(2,x)),5))
>
> julia> f2 = :(4*x - 3*x/2)
> :(-(*(4,x),/(*(3,x),2)))
>
> julia> f = [f1;f2]
> 2-element Array{Expr,1}:
> :(+(-(*(3,x),*(2,x)),5))
> :(-(*(4,x),/(*(3,x),2)))
>
> julia> x = 3.5
> 3.5
>
>
> The results:
> julia> res_f1 = feval(f1)
> 8.5
>
> julia> res_f2 = feval(f2)
> 8.75
>
>
> julia> res_f = feval(f)
> 2x1 Array{Float64,2}:
> 8.5
> 8.75
>
>
> Further, you can deliver an optional input value for x with the function
> call:
>
> julia> res_f1 = feval(f1, 5.25)
> 10.25
>
>
> Note that this changes the global variable x:
> julia> x
> 5.25
>
>
>
> In general: Is this appraoch a good or bad idea? Or are there better
> options to consider (types, macros etc.)?
>
> Many thanks for your support.
>
> Regards,
> Dominik
>