20

After peeking around the internet it looks like it is possible to interop between C# and Matlab. I am wondering if anyone has had success with it and what they did to do so. If possible somehow pulling it off without the use of COM. Thanks for your time.

Amro
  • 123,847
  • 25
  • 243
  • 454
smaclell
  • 4,568
  • 7
  • 41
  • 49

7 Answers7

20

Beginning with the R2009a release of MATLAB, .NET objects can be accessed from MATLAB:

http://www.mathworks.com/help/techdoc/matlab_external/brpb5k6.html

In older versions of MATLAB, it is possible to access .NET objects from MATLAB using CCW:

http://www.mathworks.com/support/solutions/data/1-5U8HND.html?solution=1-5U8HND

and the MATLAB engine from .NET:

http://www.mathworks.com/access/helpdesk/help/techdoc/index.html?/access/helpdesk/help/techdoc/matlab_external/f135590.html#f135616

You can also use the MATLAB Builder NE to wrap m-code into .NET assemblies.

http://www.mathworks.com/products/netbuilder/

Community
  • 1
  • 1
Todd
  • 2,321
  • 14
  • 11
  • Out of all the options, this is both the last thing I tried, and what I ended up doing. From the Mathworks perspective, it's the most supported and documented scenario. Keep in mind that 32-bit or 64-bit versions of Matlab can only host 32-bit or 64-bit in-process COM servers, respectively. – lightw8 Aug 24 '10 at 06:34
  • 3
    The first link is broken. – Drew Noakes Sep 19 '13 at 11:03
10

Yes, quite possible. Though I ended up using the C interface and calling into that using a mixed-mode DLL (and getting C# to call into that... but that was because I was also interfacing with some other C code). It's quite straightforward. On computers where you want to run your program, you'll need to install Matlab Runtime MCRInstaller.exe.

edit: removed broken link

Jesse Pepper
  • 3,225
  • 28
  • 48
3

Yes, I managed to do that and it was mostly painless.

You'd have to compile your MATLAB code for .NET (as explained in pervious answers), run MCR installer, reference MWArray.dll and the complied code dll in your .NET project and off you go.

The only annoyance was the casting (and sometimes multiple castings!) that the interface forces on you (using explicit in the cast operators)

Dani
  • 4,267
  • 4
  • 29
  • 37
1

There is a free and open source .NET wrapper for Matlab, and it is very simple: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/dotnet/matlabeng.aspx

I use this.

Jader Dias
  • 88,211
  • 155
  • 421
  • 625
0

If you're willing to spend money this may be what you need:

http://www.mathworks.com/products/netbuilder/

It can generate wrappers for Matlab code that allow it to be called from both .NET and COM.

Drew Noakes
  • 300,895
  • 165
  • 679
  • 742
Jared
  • 39,513
  • 29
  • 110
  • 145
0

In the R2009a pre-release you can call .net assemblies from MATLAB.

0

I'm not sure how much this applies to you but try looking into matlab executables or MEX Basically, it's really easy to write a program in C or FORTRAN, include a few libraries and functions, and then you can use you C or FORTRAN function in matlab

devin
  • 6,407
  • 14
  • 48
  • 53