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Shutdown is initiated with the exit
or quit
commands (they are
equivalent). Similar to startup, Octave has a shutdown process that can be
customized by user script files. During shutdown Octave will search for the
script file finish.m in the function load path. Commands to save all
workspace variables or cleanup temporary files may be placed there. Additional
functions to execute on shutdown may be registered with atexit
.
Quit the current Octave session.
The exit
function is an alias for quit
.
If the optional integer value status is supplied, pass that value to the operating system as Octave’s exit status. The default value is zero.
When exiting, Octave will attempt to run the m-file finish.m if it
exists. User commands to save the workspace or clean up temporary files
may be placed in that file. Alternatively, another m-file may be scheduled
to run using atexit
. If an error occurs while executing the
finish.m file, Octave does not exit and control is returned to
the command prompt.
If the optional argument "cancel"
is provided, Octave does not
exit and control is returned to the command prompt. This feature allows
the finish.m
file to cancel the quit process.
If the user preference to request confirmation before exiting, Octave will display a dialog and give the user an option to cancel the exit process.
If the optional argument "force"
is provided, no confirmation is
requested, and the execution of the finish.m file is skipped.
See also: atexit.
Register a function to be called when Octave exits.
For example,
function last_words () disp ("Bye bye"); endfunction atexit ("last_words");
will print the message "Bye bye"
when Octave exits.
The additional argument flag will register or unregister fcn
from the list of functions to be called when Octave exits. If flag is
true, the function is registered, and if flag is false, it is
unregistered. For example, after registering the function last_words
above,
atexit ("last_words", false);
will remove the function from the list and Octave will not call
last_words
when it exits.
Note that atexit
only removes the first occurrence of a function
from the list, so if a function was placed in the list multiple times with
atexit
, it must also be removed from the list multiple times.
See also: quit.
Next: Getting Help, Previous: Invoking Octave from the Command Line, Up: Getting Started [Contents][Index]