An issue with the command 'isAlways'
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    Mohammad Shojaei Arani
 on 29 Dec 2022
  
    
    
    
    
    Commented: Mohammad Shojaei Arani
 on 30 Dec 2022
            Hello,
I have a simple question concerning the command 'isAlways' (appologies, if I am bothering you for a naive question). I do not know why I get an error message when I try to supress the warning message on undecided cases. For instance,
>> syms x real
>> tf = isAlways(x^2>=0,Unknown="false")
 tf = isAlways(x^2>=0,Unknown="false")
                             ↑
Error: Incorrect use of '=' operator. To assign a value to a variable, use '='. To compare values for equality, use '=='.
I also tried 'false' or '0' (instead of "false") and '==' (instead of '=') in an attempt to fix this which failed.
Thanks,
Babak
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Accepted Answer
  Steven Lord
    
      
 on 29 Dec 2022
        The name=value syntax was introduced in release R2021a. If you're using an earlier release you'll need to use the "name, value" syntax.
syms x real
tf = isAlways(x^2>=0,"Unknown","false")
4 Comments
  Stephen23
      
      
 on 30 Dec 2022
				
      Edited: Stephen23
      
      
 on 30 Dec 2022
  
			"To make my code workable for all matlab versions..."
Then you cannot use STRING() class either, it was introduced in R2016b:
"This fails because if your matlab version is 2021a or higher then the 'else' part finds an error, and vice versa."
Actually the syntax with two inputs (known as "name-value" in the MATLAB documentation) is also valid on alll new releases, so you can simply use "Unknown","false" with all MATLAB releases. Lets try it now with the release supported on this website:
matlabRelease.Release % as new as it gets right now
isAlways([true,false],"Unknown","false") % absolutely no problem
So, no error at all. Your IF .. ELSE .. END is superfluous.
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