External Interfaces/API Reference | ![]() ![]() |
C Syntax
#include "engine.h" Engine *engOpen(const char *startcmd);
Arguments
startcmd
String to start MATLAB process. On Windows, the startcmd
string must be NULL
.
Returns
A pointer to an engine handle.
Description
This routine allows you to start a MATLAB process for the purpose of using MATLAB as a computational engine.
engOpen(startcmd)
starts a MATLAB process using the command specified in the string startcmd
, establishes a connection, and returns a unique engine identifier, or NULL
if the open fails.
On UNIX systems, if startcmd
is NULL
or the empty string, engOpen
starts MATLAB on the current host using the command matlab
. If startcmd
is a hostname, engOpen
starts MATLAB on the designated host by embedding the specified hostname string into the larger string:
"rsh hostname \"/bin/csh -c 'setenv DISPLAY\ hostname:0; matlab'\""
If startcmd
is any other string (has white space in it, or nonalphanumeric characters), the string is executed literally to start MATLAB.
On UNIX systems, engOpen
performs the following steps:
rsh
for remote execution).
Under Windows on a PC, engOpen
opens an ActiveX channel to MATLAB. This starts the MATLAB that was registered during installation. If you did not register during installation, on the command line you can enter the command:
matlab /regserver
See Introducing MATLAB ActiveX Integration for additional details.
Examples
See engdemo.c
in the eng_mat
subdirectory of the examples
directory for a sample program that illustrates how to call the MATLAB engine functions from a C program.
See engwindemo.c
in the eng_mat
subdirectory of the examples
directory for a sample program that illustrates how to call the MATLAB engine functions from a C program for Windows.
![]() | engGetMatrix (Obsolete) | engOpenSingleUse | ![]() |