Create a Simple Class MATLAB文档
https://blog.youkuaiyun.com/beechina/article/details/50933860
Design Class
The basic purpose of a class is to define an object that encapsulates data and the operations performed on that data. For example, BasicClass
defines a property and two methods that operate on the data in that property:
-
Value
— Property that contains the data stored in an object of the class -
roundOff
— Method that rounds the value of the property to two decimal places -
multiplyBy
— Method that multiplies the value of the property by the specified number
Here is the definition of BasicClass
:
classdef BasicClass
properties
Value
end
methods
function r = roundOff(obj)
r = round([obj.Value],2);
end
function r = multiplyBy(obj,n)
r = [obj.Value] * n;
end
end
end
For a summary of class syntax, see classdef
.
To use the class:
-
Save the class definition in a
.m
file with the same name as the class. -
Create an object of the class.
-
Access the properties to assign data.
-
Call methods to perform operation on the data.
Create Object
Create an object of the class using the class name:
a = BasicClass
a =
BasicClass with properties:
Value: []
Initially, the property value is empty.
Access Properties
Assign a value to the Value
property using the object variable and a dot before the property name:
a.Value = pi/3;
To access a property value, use dot notation without the assignment:
a.Value
ans =
1.0472
For information on class properties, see Properties.
Call Methods
Call the roundOff
method on object a
:
roundOff(a)
ans =
1.0500
Pass the object as the first argument to a method that takes multiple arguments:
multiplyBy(a,3)
ans =
3.1416
You can also call a method using dot notation:
a.multiplyBy(3)
It is not necessary to pass the object explicitly as an argument when using dot notation. The notation uses the object to the left of the method name.
For information on class methods, see Methods and Functions
Add Constructor
Classes can define a special method to create objects, called a constructor. Constructor methods enable you to pass arguments to the constructor, and to validate and assign property values. Here is a constructor for the BasicClass
class:
methods
function obj = BasicClass(val)
if nargin > 0
if isnumeric(val)
obj.Value = val;
else
error('Value must be numeric')
end
end
end
end
By adding this constructor to the class definition, you can create an object in one step:
a = BasicClass(pi/3)
a =
BasicClass with properties:
Value: 1.0472
This constructor also performs type checking on the input argument. For example:
a = BasicClass('A character array')
Error using BasicClass (line 11)
Value must be numeric
For information on constructors, see Class Constructor Methods
Vectorize Methods
MATLAB® enables you to vectorize operations. For example, you can add a number to a vector:
[1 2 3] + 2
ans =
3 4 5
MATLAB adds the number 2
to each of the elements in the array [1 2 3]
. To vectorize the arithmetic operator methods, enclose the obj.Value
property reference in brackets, where obj
is an object array.
[obj.Value] + 2
This syntax enables the method to work with arrays of object. For example, given objects a1
, a2
, and a3
:
[a1.Value,a2.Value,a3.Value] + 2
By using vector notation, a
can be an array:
a(1) = BasicClass(2.7984);
a(2) = BasicClass(sin(pi/3));
a(3) = BasicClass(7);
roundOff(a)
ans =
2.8000 0.8700 7.0000
Overload Functions
Classes can implement existing functionality, such as addition, by defining a method with the same name as the existing MATLAB function. For example, suppose that you want to add two BasicClass
objects. It makes sense to add the values of the ObjectValue
properties of each object.
Here is an overload of the MATLAB plus
function. It defines addition for this class as adding the property values:
method
function r = plus(o1,o2)
r = [o1.Value] + [o2.Value];
end
end
By implementing a method called plus
, you can use the “+
” operator with objects of BasicClass
.
a = BasicClass(pi/3);
b = BasicClass(pi/4);
a + b
ans =
1.8326
Related Information
For information on overloading functions, see Overload Functions in Class Definitions.
For information on overloading operators, see Operator Overloading.
BasicClass
Code Listing
Here is the BasicClass
definition after adding the features discussed in this topic:
classdef BasicClass
properties
Value
end
methods
function obj = BasicClass(val)
if nargin == 1
if isnumeric(val)
obj.Value = val;
else
error('Value must be numeric')
end
end
end
function r = roundOff(obj)
r = round([obj.Value],2);
end
function r = multiplyBy(obj,n)
r = [obj.Value] * n;
end
function r = plus(o1,o2)
r = o1.Value + o2.Value;
end
end
end