I am quite familiar with that :) and am about to email back to you guys as I'm about ready to release 'RcppDE' in a few or so -- so you you guys should get a first look because of the heritage and all.
As for PutRNGState() : if there is no call to RNGs, it's a (costly) null ops.
@JoshuaUlrich It 'lives' in Rcpp's R-Forge project just like RcppArmadillo, RcppExamples, a project of Romain's, a project of John Chamber illustrating ReferenceClasses etc -- and that makes sense as it was an Rcpp performance case study.
I have run gazillions runs of evaluate -- now as either an R or C++ function -- and never needed Get/PutRNGState() in evaluate. You need it in other places, but your 2.0.7 had that already.
@DirkEddelbuettel I guess I was wondering more if you were going to release to CRAN, but since I see that it's already on R-forge... I can connect the dots.
@DirkEddelbuettel So if your objective function needs the RNG, you need to call them there?
I will. It is a faster drop-in replacement, and now at steady state as I look at an OpenMP variant based on it (and with that I have a METRIC TON of troubles). So time is right to release the building block RcppDE.
Drop-in replacement and extension b/c of the compiled objective function -- a real good reason for Rcpp too. But I am otherwise (a little) faster as well.
@JoshuaUlrich Yes, if your objective function were to randomize you'd need to I suppose.
I use DEoptim in the LSPM package. The objective function in LSPM::optimalf can accept a drawdown constraint calculated by the LSPM::probDrawdown function, which uses random permutations of returns to calculate drawdown.
The first execution of optimalf with a drawdown constraint runs fine. If you try to run it again in the same session, no randomization occurs.
Can you abstract a smaller problem out of it -- where you call in loops, use the same functions for seeds, rng calls etc and see if you get consistent randomness across repeated calls there?
It sounds like you have a 'PutRNGState()' too many. You always reset back to a state you initially stored RNG state and push that back and back and back.
@JoshuaUlrich Pleasure. There is nothing like code talk over a virtual beer in front of a virtual fireplace. And now the not-so-virtual pinhead AO gets to write an exciting new blog post about how progress is being made. Hooray.
@JoshuaUlrich Sure. Seeds are a state. It advances them. You need to take care of this at the C++ level so that you get the same sequences you'd get at the R level. We test that rigorously in Rcpp unit tests.
@JoshuaUlrich What are nodes? Do you mean parallel work?
@JoshuaUlrich The general recommendation (cf snow and all the HPC stuff) is to use one of either the rlecuyer or rsprng packages to get suitable initial seeds on all nodes to minimise overlap which would bias.
Right now it's just the LSPM::probDrawdown function that uses snow to split the permutations evenly across all available nodes (e.g. 4mm permutations -> 2mm to each core on my dual-core CPU).
I wouldn't obsess over the RNG init. Snow does the right if you call its handler. That's all. Just don't call set.seed(N) on both nodes with the same N -- snow knows better.
Better even than some random N1 and N2. That is what RSPRNG and rlecuyer do.
Will release in a while once the good DEoptim folks get a look at it. Otherwise on R-Forge inside Rcpp and you have the URL for the current tarball if you so please.
Will write a vignette illustrating the 'porting C to C++/Rcpp case study' it is.
Nobody commenting on the continuing fireworks on the rcpp-devel list? ;-)
FWIW I think the record is clear. We can easily see the SVN logs for the existing Rcpp package. And I see no evidence of any work done by DS in the past two years. His RcppTemplate package doesn't even exist any more.
@Shane Feel to add that to the list, calmly and clearly. If you look in cxxpack/Archive/ on CRAN you see the old Rcpp and RcppTemplate release. Re-explain rotting to him is you feel like it.
I do of course understand that you may prefer not to get involved in this pissng match. Just saying -- the more the merrier.
We were coauthors on RQuantLib for quite some time. I repeatedly invited him to Rcpp when I put it on R-Forge (eight month before first new releases) etc pp
It was painful to work with him as he only ever sent tarballs. Diff and patch are not his friends.
But we did. Rcpp really was part of his key contribution to RQuantLib
@Shane throwing in my $0.02: I've not used it from Windows to Deb, but I use FreeNX from Ubuntu to Ubuntu remote. It was harder to set up than I anticipated, but I like it.
@Shane Not regularly any more as I have no real work on Windows -- it's all on the Linux servers. But I just walked a colleague through the KDE frontend krdc (which wraps vnc + rdp). There are a gazillion more. krdc is nice -- you can clip all windows borders to with the 1280x1024 dual screens at home I could (when I needed it) have one fully onto Windows and you would not see one pixel.
@JDLong I looked at FreeNX and OpenNX and ...NX at times in the past and the Linux server end never looked clear.
@Shane Sorry -- misread the quesion. I just so 'startxin.bat' or 'startxwin.sh' from Cygwin and do 'ssh -X a.real.computer' and it's all X11 after that. Cygwin finally got good enough for that a while back.
@JDLong Clear as in having sensible and comprehensible server setups. I have gotten used to some levels of quality in 15+ years with Debian and this didn't have it, sadly. I haven;'t looked since Google adopted parts of the NX stack. Did they do something for serving from Linux in a sane manner? We would have use for that at work (as would gazillion other enterprises....)
@DirkEddelbuettel it's really tough for me to contrast. I just ran across it a week or so ago (being rather new to Linux servers, etc.) I started fighting with it and eventually got it up and running thanks to much google foo and a bit of tenacity. For text editing I still prefer ssh -X and get a more native experience. But since I like some of the GUI tools for administration, etc. I often remote in via FreeNX.
@DirkEddelbuettel Thanks...that's basically what I do too, but I was wondering if there was more of a VNC kind of solution. It looks like it might be possible with RealVNC (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RealVNC). Might investigate a little further.
@JDLong Sure but I get graphics too with x11. Including from home thanks to VPN. Then its even Linux (home) to Linux (work) with no Windoze in between.
@Shane for local, I prefer VNC. Over internet I prefer NX because it seems to compress a little better. But I suspect if I spent time tweaking VNC the difference would be minimal. Main difference was with NX I could drag the corner of a window and resize the desktop. With VNC the desktop dimension is set and is harder to change dynamically.
@DirkEddelbuettel that's true. In my experience (and without knowing how to tweak things) I found remote access over internet using straight X11 to be sluggish because of the lack of compression
of course when I started experimenting with all this I had pretty crappy home DSL. I've since upgraded so I might think differently now.
x11 always compresses when you use ssh, by the way
but yes, NX is better than VNC which as a protocol and tool is too crude for words, but at least it'
s everywhere
Seriously: the sluggishness is the graph rendering on the windows desktop. Linux to Linux x11 is a breeze. Remember Sun's old slogan about the network being the computer. This is how it all started. X11 is a network protocol too.
@DirkEddelbuettel well your logic has prompted me to run experiments from home again. Is it possible to have an X window that shows the desktop environment (menus, taskbars, etc) the way one sees with VNC/NX?
DS is insane. Romain just calmy explained how nothing should depend on GNU make, in he storms saying what to with make. Does he have a reading comprehension problem?
@JoshuaUlrich Where those recent? OOP, HPC, ... haven't seen that at stats.se.com in a while. Or maybe I getting senile from all the DS beating I am getting.
An R question: Are any of you using lubridate? I've been meaning to look at it for a while, but haven't set aside the time. Really want to find something better than difftime.
I am currently consulting with the author of ProjectTemplate to see if this interpretation of the acts of Hadley aka the Chosen One are taken to be the new law.
@JoshuaUlrich he did... but with bit.ly it's harder to get a click through summary (I think). With your own domain you can look at the logs and see where the origination is
actually I've never tried to track that through bit.ly. If you have your own bit.ly account it may be one of the data points they give
@Shane I'm of mixed mind. I like the idea of acknowledging that there's a set of skills around working with and thinking about data. But I don't think "data science" really captures it right.
But I am glad that one profession is not grabbing the "data science" and saying it's a synonym for them. I watched the actuarial societies try to do that some.
My 2 cents: "Data science" is an emerging area. Universities are offering degrees in, say, data mining now. I agree with JD, tho: the label is very poor.
@Shane Bigest problem at the moment: Two reviewers said my interpretation of p-values was not mathematically precise (thinking of the semantics of hypothesis testing). So I have a round of editing there.
@JDLong Got ONE comment from Safari: Someone pointed out I used an adjective where an adverb was required. Thank you, thank you.
@JDLong They are working on a whole different way to put out "beta" copies of books. Will encourage more feedback/integration. They are always thinking.
@pteetor they are very innovative. I beat them up pretty bad over their iPad app mainly because it seemed out of character with the rest of their operation
@pteetor yeah I would expect some oddness in the forward cattle market.. shifting production numbers in response to input prices. glad I don't have to feed a few hundred head right now
oh 10,000 feeders like the midwest operations. I would not sleep at night.
@JDLong Honestly, I've been focusing on the fixed-income world more than ag. The bond people are sweating blood over QE ... and it throwing stuff out of whack.
I've been hacking away for a week, debugging the uebercool gWidgetsWWW with the very nice John Verzani. Now I hook an R script in, and it works for N=30 and dies for N-40. Arrrgggh.
@JDLong All works. John is a good guys.
But now when I tried to load the correlation calculator with a meaningful number assets, it goes belly up.