mtlb_min
Matlab min emulation function
Description
Matlab and Scilab min behave differently in some particular cases:
- With complex values: Matlab min can be used with complex values
but not Scilab function.
- When called with one input: Matlab min threats values along the
first non-singleton dimension but Scilab threats all input values.
- When called with two inputs: if one is an empty matrix, Scilab
returns an error message but Matlab returns [].
- When called with three inputs: if dim parameter is greater than
number of dimensions of first input, Scilab returns an error message
and Matlab returns the first input.
The function [r[,k]] = mtlb_min(A[,B[,dim]]) is used by mfile2sci
to replace [r[,k]] = min(A[,B[,dim]]) when it was not possible to
know what were the inputs while porting Matlab code to Scilab. This
function will determine the correct semantic at run time. If you want
to have a more efficient code it is possible to replace mtlb_min
calls:
- When called with one input, if A is a vector or a scalar [r[,k]]
= mtlb_min(A) may be replaced by min(A)
- When called with one input, if A is a matrix [r[,k]] =
mtlb_min(A) may be replaced by min(A,”r”)
- When called with two inputs, if A and B are real matrices and
not empty matrices [r[,k]] = mtlb_min(A,B) may be replaced by
min(A,B)
- When called with three inputs, if dim is lesser than the number of
dimensions of A [r[,k]] = mtlb_min(A,[],dim) may be replaced by
min(A,dim)
Caution: mtlb_min has not to be used for hand coded functions.