Why does the Code Analyzer flag this as an error?

Why does the Code Analyzer flag this code as an error? It runs fine:
try
error("It's bad")
catch ME
warning('Error in code: %s', ME.message);
end
Warning: Error in code: It's bad

 Accepted Answer

Mathworks Support has classified it as a bug.

1 Comment

That's pretty-much what my conclusion was although I said mlint was too picky... :)

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More Answers (1)

dpb
dpb on 27 Feb 2025
Moved: dpb on 27 Feb 2025
Having warning() inside the catch clause is the problem -- the catch clause is executed only when an error condition exists and mixing that up with trying to issue a warning is sorta' like double jeopardy and mlint doesn't like it...
Just output any additional message with disp or fprintf, don't try to throw a warning there...
try
error("It's bad")
catch ME
fprintf('Error in code: \n%s\n',ME.message);
end
shows no error or warning.

2 Comments

Matt J
Matt J on 27 Feb 2025
Edited: Matt J on 27 Feb 2025
That does make a certain amount of sense, but the explanation given by the Code Analyzer doesn't resemble that:
dpb
dpb on 27 Feb 2025
Edited: dpb on 27 Feb 2025
Yeah, @Matt J, I thought about addressing that but decided to not touch it. :)
The suggested solution doesn't work(*) when the warning is inside the catch block, either...I believe the authors of mlint never thought of nor tested the case.
It's probably worth an enhancement/bug report...
(*) Actually, on further exploration using the other format string argument does convert the mlint error into a warning although it may take moving around in the file some first before the red line is replaced by the orange one. You then get a warning that the number of output items may not match the format specification. Either way, there isn't an actual syntax error in the warning statement per se, just a picky mlint false positive, I think.

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Release

R2024b

Asked:

on 26 Feb 2025

Commented:

dpb
on 6 Mar 2025

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