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GNU Octave Manual Version 3
by John W. Eaton, David Bateman, Søren Hauberg
Paperback (6"x9"), 568 pages
ISBN 095461206X
RRP £24.95 ($39.95)

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2.1.1 Command Line Options

Here is a complete list of all the command line options that Octave accepts.

--debug
-d
Enter parser debugging mode. Using this option will cause Octave's parser to print a lot of information about the commands it reads, and is probably only useful if you are actually trying to debug the parser.
--echo-commands
-x
Echo commands as they are executed.
--eval code
Evaluate code and exit when done unless --persist is also specified.
--exec-path path
Specify the path to search for programs to run. The value of path specified on the command line will override any value of OCTAVE_EXEC_PATH found in the environment, but not any commands in the system or user startup files that set the built-in variable EXEC_PATH.
--help
-h
-?
Print short help message and exit.
--image-path path
Specify the path to search for images. The value of path specified on the command line will set the value of IMAGE_PATH found in the environment.
--info-file filename
Specify the name of the info file to use. The value of filename specified on the command line will override any value of OCTAVE_INFO_FILE found in the environment, but not any commands in the system or user startup files that use the info_file function.
--info-program program
Specify the name of the info program to use. The value of program specified on the command line will override any value of OCTAVE_INFO_PROGRAM found in the environment, but not any commands in the system or user startup files that use the info_program function.
--interactive
-i
Force interactive behavior. This can be useful for running Octave via a remote shell command or inside an Emacs shell buffer. For another way to run Octave within Emacs, see appendix F Emacs Octave Support.
--no-history
-H
Disable command-line history.
--no-init-file
Don't read the ‘~/.octaverc’ or ‘.octaverc’ files.
--no-line-editing
Disable command-line editing.
--no-site-file
Don't read the site-wide ‘octaverc’ file.
--norc
-f
Don't read any of the system or user initialization files at startup. This is equivalent to using both of the options --no-init-file and --no-site-file.
--path path
-p path
Specify the path to search for function files. The value of path specified on the command line will override any value of OCTAVE_PATH found in the environment, but not any commands in the system or user startup files that set the internal load path through one of the path functions.
--persist
Go to interactive mode after --eval or reading from a file named on the command line.
--silent
--quiet
-q
Don't print the usual greeting and version message at startup.
--traditional
--braindead
For compatibility with Matlab, set initial values for user-preferences to the following values
PS1                     = ">> "
PS2                     = ""
beep_on_error           = true
crash_dumps_octave_core = false
default_save_options    = "-mat-binary"
fixed_point_format      = true
history_timestamp_format_string
                        = "%%-- %D %I:%M %p --%%"
page_screen_output      = false
print_empty_dimensions  = false
and disable the following warnings
Octave:fopen-file-in-path
Octave:function-name-clash
Octave:load-file-in-path
--verbose
-V
Turn on verbose output.
--version
-v
Print the program version number and exit.
file
Execute commands from file. Exit when done unless --persist is also specified.

Octave also includes several built-in variables that contain information about the command line, including the number of arguments and all of the options.

Built-in Function: argv ()
Return the command line arguments passed to Octave. For example, if you invoked Octave using the command

octave --no-line-editing --silent

argv would return a cell array of strings with the elements --no-line-editing and --silent.

If you write an executable Octave script, argv will return the list of arguments passed to the script. See section 2.6 Executable Octave Programs, for an example of how to create an executable Octave script.

Built-in Function: program_name ()
Return the last component of the value returned by program_invocation_name.

See also program_invocation_name

Built-in Function: program_invocation_name ()
Return the name that was typed at the shell prompt to run Octave.

If executing a script from the command line (e.g. octave foo.m) or using an executable Octave script, the program name is set to the name of the script. See section 2.6 Executable Octave Programs, for an example of how to create an executable Octave script.

See also program_name

Here is an example of using these functions to reproduce Octave's command line.

printf ("%s", program_name ());
arg_list = argv ();
for i = 1:nargin
  printf (" %s", arg_list{i});
endfor
printf ("\n");

See section 8.1 Index Expressions, for an explanation of how to properly index arrays of strings and substrings in Octave, and See section 11.1 Defining Functions, for information about the variable nargin.

ISBN 095461206XGNU Octave Manual Version 3See the print edition