Thanks for adding this so quick Thomas! Just pulled down the new version and it looks good. The specialisation for gsll-marrays looks like it should be quite easy, I might even tackle it myself if Liam has no objections..
One thing that would also be useful to me in my current work is to compare matrices for some degree of approximate equality - eg if Y is the pseudoinverse of the matrix X, then the properties XYX = X and YXY = Y should hold, but there is likely to be some numerical aberrations. I thought about a function for numerical-approximately-equal, with a tolerance parameter, but now I think probably the best way to handle this is to pass in a custom :test function. Would you agree?
Malcolm
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 5:02 AM, Thomas M. Hermann tmh.public@gmail.com wrote:
The NUMERICAL-EQUAL function has been implemented as a generic function in LISP-UNIT. It is specialized for the system classes NUMBER, LIST, VECTOR and ARRAY. It has been lightly tested. The documentation has not been updated. Please note that when you specialize it for your data type, a congruent argument list is (RESULT1 RESULT2 &KEY TEST). This will be clear when the documentation is updated.
Also note that the versions specialized for the CL system classes are for RESULT1 and RESULT2 of the same class, so, for example
(NUMERICAL-EQUAL LIST ARRAY) ; Not defined => an error
will throw an error. I'll get around to defining the mixed class versions later. Sooner if there is a real need for them.
Please feel free to email me bugs and further suggestions.
Cheers,
Tom
Liam Healy wrote:
I haven't defined such a predicate, but I think it's a good idea. As you have seen, in order to do tests on marrays, I turn all the marrays into CL arrays and do the comparisons on the result. I don't know if it's the best possible way to do it, but it works. You get an error from assert-numerical-equal because it uses #'numerical-equal as a test, and that does not handle marrays. Your suggestion spurred me to take a look at the lisp-unit source; what I'm thinking about is changing #'numerical-equal to a generic function with some methods pre-defined for CL classes; this would permit applications like GSLL to add methods for their own objects.
I've cc'ed Tom Hermann on this email; he is behind the modified version of lisp-unit more so than I am. Tom: what do you think of this idea?
Liam
On Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 11:05 AM, Malcolm Reynolds malcolm.reynolds@gmail.com wrote:
On a related point, I'm writing some unit tests using your modified version of lisp-unit (the one from repo.or.cz) and I haven't as yet been able to figure out a good way to compare two matrices for equality. In the automatically generated tests in the GSLL code it appears you do (cl-array ...) to convert the matrices back to native form. Is this the best way possible, or is there some numerical equality predicate in the gsll library that I've missed? It would seem to be ideal to be able to define a test by (assert-numerical-equal <marray 1> <marray 2>) but I get an error message when I try this...
Malcolm
On Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 2:24 PM, Malcolm Reynolds malcolm.reynolds@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Liam, thanks for your response.
Glad to hear that marrays are recommended, and especially that they are implemented well on SBCL as that is what I'm using.
As for the million element square matrices then yes, clearly on reflection that won't work. Some of the matrices I'm using will be sparse, but some will not be sparse at all - without wanting to get bogged down in details, I'm going to need to represent the Graph Laplacian, which is a matrix that is equal to the degree matrix minus the adjacency matrix (and so in a fairly sparse graph this matrix is sparse) but I will also need the graph Kernel, which is the pseudoinverse of the Laplacian. This will not be sparse at all, so clearly a direct representation of it isn't possible. I know of someone in my university's department who has a fast method for this kind of situation which means that calculating the full kernel matrix is unnecessary, so I guess I can look into that if and when I find that performance is a limiting factor.
Anyway thanks again for your response, and for your hard work on GSLL. I'm pretty new to lisp and I'm continuously impressed by the quality of the libraries!
Malcolm
On Sat, Apr 11, 2009 at 3:46 PM, Liam Healy lhealy@common-lisp.net wrote:
Yes, it is definitely my recommendation to use marrays everywhere. I am starting to get in the habit of doing so myself. One of my ideas is to extend CL array operations to marrays so that you need not convert back and forth. It is also my intent that other math software libraries would also use marrays (or an extension of them), so that they become a standard way to interchange data between libraries.
There is more overhead for marrays than plain arrays, but on SBCL where the native arrays are used in GSL directly, there is very little, and there is no copying. I recommend that you build it with marray and then see if you have performance problems. However, if you are talking matrices of 1000000x1000000, I think you will have problems in any representation on almost any kind of hardware. For single floats, one such matrix is 4TB. In that case, I recommend you rethink the problem structure. If these are sparse matrices, you should use a sparse matrix representation. GSL doesn't have such a representation, but others have been interested in having it so it might be worth posting something to the GSL mailing list -- perhaps someone has written a GSL-compatible sparse array representation.
Liam
On Sat, Apr 11, 2009 at 8:12 AM, Malcolm Reynolds malcolm.reynolds@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all, hope this is the right place for this kind of request.
I'm writing a program which will be doing Machine Learning over graph data structures. In it I'm going to be needing to represent a bunch of matrices, some sparse, some definitely not sparse, and do fairly basic operations on these matrices (add/ subtract/multiply, pseudoinverse, probably some others). I've started a basic prototype using the standard CL arrays but I always knew I would need GSLL to calculate a pseudo inverse.
My question is, would it be a reasonably sensible decision to just use marrays for the whole program rather than worrying about converting to/ from CL-type arrays all the time? Are there any places where CL-arrays beat marrays either in terms of memory usage, access speed, or anything else? I might be needing to scale this system up be dealing with N*N square matrices where N is on the order of hundreds of thousands or even millions, if that makes any difference to the recommendation.
Thanks in advance for any help!
Malcolm Reynolds
-- === Thomas M. Hermann ===