(octave.info)Structures with Mex-Files


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A.2.5 Structures with Mex-Files
-------------------------------

The basic function to create a structure in a mex-file is
‘mxCreateStructMatrix’ which creates a structure array with a two
dimensional matrix, or ‘mxCreateStructArray’.

     mxArray *mxCreateStructArray (int ndims, int *dims,
                                   int num_keys,
                                   const char **keys);
     mxArray *mxCreateStructMatrix (int rows, int cols,
                                    int num_keys,
                                    const char **keys);

   Accessing the fields of the structure can then be performed with
‘mxGetField’ and ‘mxSetField’ or alternatively with the
‘mxGetFieldByNumber’ and ‘mxSetFieldByNumber’ functions.

     mxArray *mxGetField (const mxArray *ptr, mwIndex index,
                          const char *key);
     mxArray *mxGetFieldByNumber (const mxArray *ptr,
                                  mwIndex index, int key_num);
     void mxSetField (mxArray *ptr, mwIndex index,
                      const char *key, mxArray *val);
     void mxSetFieldByNumber (mxArray *ptr, mwIndex index,
                              int key_num, mxArray *val);

   A difference between the oct-file interface to structures and the
mex-file version is that the functions to operate on structures in
mex-files directly include an ‘index’ over the elements of the arrays of
elements per ‘field’; Whereas, the oct-file structure includes a Cell
Array per field of the structure.

   An example that demonstrates the use of structures in a mex-file can
be found in the file ‘mystruct.c’ shown below.

     #include "mex.h"
     
     void
     mexFunction (int nlhs, mxArray *plhs[],
                  int nrhs, const mxArray *prhs[])
     {
       int i;
       mwIndex j;
       mxArray *v;
       const char *keys[] = { "this", "that" };
     
       if (nrhs != 1 || ! mxIsStruct (prhs[0]))
         mexErrMsgTxt ("ARG1 must be a struct");
     
       for (i = 0; i < mxGetNumberOfFields (prhs[0]); i++)
         for (j = 0; j < mxGetNumberOfElements (prhs[0]); j++)
           {
             mexPrintf ("field %s(%d) = ", mxGetFieldNameByNumber (prhs[0], i), j);
             v = mxGetFieldByNumber (prhs[0], j, i);
             mexCallMATLAB (0, NULL, 1, &v, "disp");
           }
     
       v = mxCreateStructMatrix (2, 2, 2, keys);
     
       mxSetFieldByNumber (v, 0, 0, mxCreateString ("this1"));
       mxSetFieldByNumber (v, 0, 1, mxCreateString ("that1"));
       mxSetFieldByNumber (v, 1, 0, mxCreateString ("this2"));
       mxSetFieldByNumber (v, 1, 1, mxCreateString ("that2"));
       mxSetFieldByNumber (v, 2, 0, mxCreateString ("this3"));
       mxSetFieldByNumber (v, 2, 1, mxCreateString ("that3"));
       mxSetFieldByNumber (v, 3, 0, mxCreateString ("this4"));
       mxSetFieldByNumber (v, 3, 1, mxCreateString ("that4"));
     
       if (nlhs)
         plhs[0] = v;
     }

   An example of the behavior of this function within Octave is then

     a(1).f1 = "f11"; a(1).f2 = "f12";
     a(2).f1 = "f21"; a(2).f2 = "f22";
     b = mystruct (a);
     ⇒  field f1(0) = f11
         field f1(1) = f21
         field f2(0) = f12
         field f2(1) = f22
     b
     ⇒ 2x2 struct array containing the fields:

          this
          that

     b(3)
     ⇒ scalar structure containing the fields:

          this = this3
          that = that3


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