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Commands are a special class of functions that only accept string input arguments. A command can be called as an ordinary function, but it can also be called without the parentheses. For example,
my_command hello world
is equivalent to
my_command ("hello", "world")
The general form of a command call is
cmdname arg1 arg2 …
which translates directly to
cmdname ("arg1", "arg2", …)
Any regular function can be used as a command if it accepts string input arguments. For example:
toupper lower_case_arg ⇒ ans = LOWER_CASE_ARG
One difficulty of commands occurs when one of the string input arguments is stored in a variable. Because Octave can’t tell the difference between a variable name and an ordinary string, it is not possible to pass a variable as input to a command. In such a situation a command must be called as a function. For example:
strvar = "hello world"; toupper strvar ⇒ ans = STRVAR toupper (strvar) ⇒ ans = HELLO WORLD