I'm trying to use uiopen in a Matlab script to build up a dataset. If the user clicks the cancel button though I can't figure out how to deal with that event. With uigetfile it seems like you can just check to see if the input is used, but I can't see a way to do that with uiopen.
Can you detect or use the cancel button when using uiopen, or should I rewrite my script for uigetfile? If it's the second... what is uiopen for? The documentation doesn't seem to deal with the cancel button at all from what I can see.
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Hey there great ppl out there!
I have a rather simple problem but no idea how to solve it. 2h Google search didn´t help.
I´m getting hands on Matlab´s App Designer.
To keep it simple: I have a button and a numerical field. Every time I click the button - a callback is called increasing the value of the numerical field by 1.
How can I implement a KeyPress event?!? I.e. When I press the '+' Key on my keyboard I would like to trigger the callback fuction of the button (or if not possible any other function).
I´m pretty sure the developers of App Designer must have thought about this - but I´m simply to untalented to find the right documentation. I think in GUIDE there´s something called 'keypressfcn' - so I basically need an equivalent for the App Designer.
Please help :)
Increasing the Number field by 1 when hitting the button or pressing the '+' key on my keyboard
A KeyPressFcn has been added as of Matlab R2019a. In appdesigner click the Callback button, select your figure, then choose the callback 'KeyPress'. I got it to work. More info here: https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/matlab.ui.figureappd-properties.html
I have a rather large Matlab program that is GUI based. I am looking into creating automated tests for it, as the current way of checking for bugs before a release is simply using all its functionality like a user would.
I would rather not use a GUI testing program that just records clicks and what not, so I was thinking of adding testing code that would call the button callbacks directly. The problem that I have run into with this is that we have a lot of warndlg and msgbox popups, and I would like my tester code to be able to see these.
Is there any way for Matlab code to tell if a function it called created a warndlg or msgbox? If so, is there any way to click 'ok' on these popups?
In a similar vein, is it possible to handle popups that block code execution (using uiwait or an inputdlg)?
If it matters I didn't use GUIDE, and all the GUI elements are created programmatically
Two ways. The first one is more elegant
Let the functions return an extra variable and return the status of the function. For example, 1: success, 2: success with warning, 3: error...
Create some global variables and make the function change them if a warndlg or msbgbox shows up. The main window would then check if the status of the global variable.
You can tell if a warning dialog was created by looking for it's tag using the findobj function. A warning dialog created using warndlg will have the tag "Msgbox_Warning Dialog". So code like this would tell you if the warning dialog exists:
set(0,'ShowHiddenHandles', 'on')
h = findobj('Tag', 'Msgbox_Warning Dialog');
warn_exists = ~isempty(h)
set(0,'ShowHiddenHandles', 'off')
to close the warning dialog, you can call delete, like this:
delete(h)
For the message box, I would store the handle when you create a message box, then look at the children to find the buttons, then look at their callbacks. You should be able to call the callbacks to simulate picking a button.
I am creating a MATLAB application in GUIDE and now I'm facing a problem. I need to call a function that takes a long time to execute and returns a value but while executing the function I want the GUI to wait for the returned value.
I tried with waitfor but this way I can still interact with the GUI and I can't take the returned value...
waitfor(function);
I can think of something that disables all the GUI then enables it back but I have both enabled and disabled objects...
Do you know any solution to this problem?
A simple solution is to create a modal dialog box with a message "Please wait..." just before executing your long-running function, and then to close the dialog box just after it completes. A modal dialog will be in front of the GUI, and will not allow interactions with the window behind.
It's possible for the user to click the "Close" button on the dialog, but you can override this by setting the "CloseRequestFcn" property of the dialog, so that the close button does nothing (unfortunately you can't easily hide the button).
I like the modal dialog proposed by Sam Roberts. There is no mystery and it is user friendly.
Another dirty and easy solution may be to hide the GUI completely, if it is okay:
set(hFig, 'Visible', 'off');
And set it to 'on' after done. It will be good practice to make sure to set it to 'on' in catch block, to avoid disappearing GUI due to error during execution.
As it is referenced in MATLAB documentation for edit box uicontrol or stated in this
post, when another component or menu bar or background GUI is clicked, the edit box callback gets executed. But in my attempts to use this functionality, I haven't been able so far to see the callback execution unless there is a change of edit box text or Enter key is pressed. What I'm trying to achieve is to execute edit box callback whenever there is focus loss from edit box even when nothing has been entered. Please enlighten me about what I'm missing here and how I can do this?
Thanks in advance.
The underlying Java object has a callback called FocusLostCallback that'll do what you want - execute when the object's focus is lost, even if you changed nothing.
You'll need findjobj from the MATLAB File Exchange. Then, get the Java handle and set the callback as usual (make sure the uicontrol is visible when you try to get the Java handle):
jh = findjobj(myEditBox); % myEditBox is a uicontrol handle
set(jh, 'FocusLostCallback', #myCallback);
A more complete list of the undocumented uicontrol callbacks can be found at Yair Altman's Undocumented MATLAB blog.
This method work perfectly with single-line textbox, but it has any effect with multi-line textbox (uicontrol, style edit, max = 2)
As I need to specify a local variable to a Subsystem, I created a mask. Doing that I lose the easy access to the subsystem. Right-click and navigating to "Look under mask" is supposed to be too complicated.
So I thought about a workaround and built the following:
The dialog callback code behind the "Get deeper!" checkbox is:
myParameter = %Parameter set by checking Get deeper!
path = gcb(gcs);
if strcmp(get_param(gcb,'myParameter'),'on')
open_system(path,'tab');
end
Everytime when I check the box, the subsystem gets opened and also by every double click on the subsystem, in case the box was checked before. Hence the code does what it should, but thats actualy not the common way how one would realize/visualize something like this.
What I want is a button "Look under mask" in my mask - so the subsystem just gets opened by clicking on that button. Basically the button should call the function: open_system(gcb(gcs),'tab'). Looks so easy, but Simulink doesn't offer me any option to implement this. Can anybody help?
The main issue whith the current solution is also that with every execution of the model all subsystems open up, where the box is checked. That's not the idea.
Matlab 2012b adds exactly what you want: masked blocks have a button on the botton left that is a shortcut to "Look under mask".
Unfortunately, I don't think it is possible to add a button in a mask.
You may want to change your function to automatically set the "Get deeper!" checkbox off after the user clicks on it. That would avoid the automatic opening of the subsystems when the model is loaded. You could do that adding set_param(path,'myParameter','off') just after the open_system(path,'tab');
Finally, as another workaround, you may want to set the OpenFcn callback to call open_system(gcb,'tab'). This will make the system work as if it isn't masked at all. You can put two open_system calls, one to look under mask and the other to open the mask dialog box, if you prefer.