MATLAB Function Reference | ![]() ![]() |
Syntax
out = timerfind out = timerfind('P1', V1, 'P2', V2,...) out = timerfind(S) out = timerfind(obj, 'P1', V1, 'P2', V2,...)
Description
out = timerfind
returns an array, out
, of all the timer objects that exist in memory.
out = timerfind('P1', V1, 'P2', V2,...)
returns an array, out
, of timer objects whose property values match those passed as param-value pairs, P1
, V1
, P2
, V2
. Param-value pairs may be specified as a cell array.
out = timerfind(S)
returns an array, out
, of timer objects whose property values match those defined in the structure, S
. The field names of S
are timer object property names and the field values are the corresponding property values.
out = timerfind(obj, 'P1', V1, 'P2', V2,...)
restricts the search for matching parameter/value pairs to the timer objects listed in obj
. obj
can be an array of timer objects.
Note
Param-value string pairs, structures, and param-value cell array pairs may be used in the same call to timerfind .
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Note that, for most properties, timerfind
performs case-sensitive searches of property values. For example, if the value of an object's Name property is 'MyObject'
, timerfind
will not find a match if you specify 'myobject'
. Use the get
function to determine the exact format of a property value. However, properties which have an enumerated list of possible values, are not case-sensitive. For example, timerfind
will find an object with an ExecutionMode
property value of 'singleShot'
or 'singleshot'
.
Example
This example uses timerfind
to find timer objects with the specified property values.
t1 = timer('Tag', 'broadcastProgress', 'Period', 5); t2 = timer('Tag', 'displayProgress'); out1 = timerfind('Tag', 'displayProgress') out2 = timerfind({'Period', 'Tag'}, {5, 'broadcastProgress'})
See Also
![]() | timer | title | ![]() |