Best practice to pass large number of parameters to many functions?

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This a programming style question. I have to solve a model for given parameters. The parameters are fixed in the beginning and they do not change during execution. These parameters need to be available to all the functions and subfunctions of the code. So far I used global variables. This is not very elegant, but it worked. But when I tried to speed up my code with using "parfor" instead of "for", then I learned that globals and parfor don't play well together.
So now I am planning to pass all the parameters to all functions as input arguments. Obviously, I don't want to write out each of them and create functions with 20-30 inputs. What is the best practice to do this? Should I use a structure?
Thanks, Andras
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Hari Haran
Hari Haran on 4 Oct 2018
Edited: Hari Haran on 4 Oct 2018
Hi,I am new to matlab .When I tried to execute the program(I have attached 2 files),the output shows an error saying too many input arguements.Can anyone tell me what's the problem?
Adam
Adam on 5 Oct 2018
You would be better off opening a new thread to ask a question. I assume you are just pressing Run on your program though, in which case obviously it will not have any input arguments, which it appears to expect so you will get that error as soon as it reaches a line where one of those input arguments will be used.

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Accepted Answer

John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 1 Aug 2014
Edited: John D'Errico on 1 Aug 2014
Yes. Simplest and fastest would be to use a struct as a container. That way you pass around only one argument to each function where any parameter is needed. This is not costly in terms of space or time, since MATLAB does not copy the struct into each workspace unless it is modified there.
Another option which will surely be slower but does not need you to pass in anything, is to use a function. Have the parameters defined in there as persistent variables, which you could easily set up so they are passed in initially.
Then when you want to know the value of a given parameter, query the value using the name of that parameter. Let the function do the work here. It would be slower, but requires no passed arguments at all.
You could even set up a list of prefs with setpref, which you could then query the values using getpref. Of course, this would be even slower, since I think prefs are stored on disk.

More Answers (2)

Kelly Kearney
Kelly Kearney on 1 Aug 2014
I use structures for this sort of thing. I also usually set up functions so that they can handle input as either structure or parameter/value pairs. When appropriate, the functions will also be coded to fall back on specific default values, so I don't always have to provide all the parameters.
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Adam
Adam on 1 Aug 2014
Nowadays I generally use classes with a regular setup of a class (or many collaborating, but one front end at least) to run the actual algorithm(s) or solve the model or whatever it is and an arguments/parameters class that I pass in.
The parameters class is always very simple, effectively just a struct, but with the added bonus that I use validateattributes in the set functions of all the parameters to ensure they are in the correct format before they get anywhere near the algorithm.
Using classes with parallel programming does require a bit of care though as I have made many mistakes with it!!

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