strange behavior with fopen

I have a variable which is a string. When I call fopen with it, it returns -1. When I make the exact same call with fopen by evaluating the string variable, it opens correctly. THis is on a Linux system. Here is a sample of what I'm talking about using the command line:
K>> ischar(testdata.fullfn)
ans = 1
K>> testdata.fullfn
ans = '/home/data/blah.txt'
K>> fid = fopen(testdata.fullfn, 'r')
ans = -1 (open fails)
K>> fid = fopen ('/home/data/blah.txt', 'r')
ans = 3 (open succeeds)
Thus, the file is not open in some other app, the specified path and file exist, I have permission to read it ... but for some reason, fopen does not like the variable! Any ideas? Thanks in advance!

2 comentarios

Steven Lord
Steven Lord el 13 de En. de 2017
Call fopen with two output arguments and show us what the contents of the second output are when fopen returns -1.
Guillaume
Guillaume el 13 de En. de 2017
and what does
strcmp(testdata.fullfn, '/home/data/blah.txt')
return?

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Respuestas (1)

dpb
dpb el 14 de En. de 2017

0 votos

There's an inconsistency here...
K>> testdata.fullfn
ans = '/home/data/blah.txt'
shows the single quotes around the content which indicates that the variable is a cell string but ischar then should've returned false instead.
To prove conjecture, try
fid = fopen(char(testdata.fullfn), 'r')
I'm guessing there's a context issue between the two cases above where there are different variables extant of the same name but in different scopes.
ADDENDUM
Or, possibly the variable is a character string but has the single quotes embedded in it if was constructed incorrectly...
>> test = '''/home/data/blah.txt''';
>> test
test =
'/home/data/blah.txt'
>> ischar(test)
ans =
1
>>
Produces all the symptoms consistently in that is character string, output "looks like" a cell string but fopen will fail because the filename won't match with the added quotes.

1 comentario

Stephen23
Stephen23 el 14 de En. de 2017
Editada: Stephen23 el 14 de En. de 2017
The last explanation matches the description perfectly:
>> str = '''blah.m'''
str = 'blah.m'
>> [fid,msg] = fopen(str,'rt')
fid =
-1
msg =
No such file or directory
>> new = eval(str);
>> [fid,msg] = fopen(new,'rt')
fid =
3
msg =
''

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el 13 de En. de 2017

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el 14 de En. de 2017

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