@python_user I suppose I'm the lead developer. I brought vehicle routing experience with me when I joined the company and we're still expanding rapidly so every customer project was basically custom code in every case. I decided to try build some tooling, so I built the solver server and interface, and the engineers deploy parts of the stack on kubernetes. People on other projects that now use it will contribute code when they need new features or I build them in for them
I also had customer work for 4 customers myself, involving things like inventory management and forecasting, so I don't get as much time as I would like to work on tooling. I'm trying to reposition myself to get less of that and focus on beatroute and also a machine scheduling package (yet to be started)
Years I imagine :P We're growing 100% per year so we're all fully loaded. I think the Data Science team has doubled since I joined to something like 55 now and I've not even been here a year
I couldn't get tomorrow morning off as my boss is away so I'm not travelling to the 50th. I don't fancy a 7am drive back. I'm gonna head to the pub shortly. A remarkably productive morning, though; 5 issues/enhancements closed. I think I did a good
hey guys, would someone try and give me any ideas to optimize this cython function? I'm a little bit lost with the self. stuff (which are common python lists)
Indeed. And as it happens, I've been doing a lot of reading around cython recently while I plan out a package so I'm curious to see the result if you can link to a pic on imgur or something
There's a few things in that where I think it's calling into Python but I'll see whether I've guessed them right :P
Almost all of it is in Python, then :P Can you reduce the code down to a standalone example? You haven't typed y for a start. Once I have something to run self-contained, I'm in the mood to play around a bit on this as practice
I can see it's in a class, too, but I don't know what exactly those attributes are
Even if it's just a pure Python example. That'll be a good starting basis
this function is being used by a class method that's being invoked to create a NonLinear constraint function to be added to constraints list and then run differential_evolution (scipy).
all those self.Stuff are common python lists, and they contain some data I need in the computing
y is a subsection (not sure if this is the right word to describe it) of x, where x is [x] on diff evolution
It shouldn't be many more lines than you've written. I only need stand-in objects that represent what you're actually working with. But if it isn't going to be tonight then just ping me when it's done. I'm only going to play with this one function, not cythonize your entire code :P
@PedroSpinola Back from an SQL query. That would be (usually) a list of tuples. Unless you're using an ORM. But this is probably too much detail for an MCVE anyway. Just make the values up, but give them the correct type
Depends whether it's all supported by numba :) I must admit that my research is showing that the single decorator does an awful lot of fancy stuff, though
oh yeah, as long as the dtypes are figured out, almost everything should be a numba friendly. i will say though, there's a quite real possibility that iteration still falls short of vectorization if that's feasible. (i just dont have the mental capacity to figure out what the code is doing or what not. in my defense, it's the end of my weekend) :P
I tried jit, njit and jitclass for numba, but didn't seem to help. This is obviously my first time doing such things so I'm experimenting a lot still. I tried without list comprehensions, tried the non-logarithmic function, etc. I was probably using numpy wrong to be honest, but because it's never too many data inside each np.array, some people told me I shouldn't be using it.
I also tried PyPy.
I have an almost-working MCVE that will run only 1 time when in real code this would run thousand's of times... Also I'm not being able to get the solver to return a success
I tried to reduce it as much as I could, but it's still big @roganjosh
the eficN class method in this version is not cythonized
I only wanted to try cythonize one function. You could have stripped the entire context away and just given a representative input to that particular method and an expected output.
It shouldn't be many more lines than you've written. I only need stand-in objects that represent what you're actually working with. But if it isn't going to be tonight then just ping me when it's done. I'm only going to play with this one function, not cythonize your entire code :P
@roganjosh yeah, you sometimes have to replace things like arr.reshape with np.reshape or arr[:, None] with an explicit reshape, but it's normally very easy to numbify decent numerical code
@PedroSpinola small arrays are not necessarily a reason not to use numpy. Numpy still offers a lot of functions and methods, as well as powerful vectorisation capabilities. If you're not using any of that either then yes, you probably don't need numpy.
> IIRC we debated a similar issues when descriptors were added and decided that it's a perverse style that we just won't support. If you really have this you can add # type: ignore.
Context is instance.prop = obj where type(obj) and type(instance.prop) are different. Brilliant.
@AndrasDeak I see. I have ditched it only for now, but after I do some serious studying I'll try to use it again. It's hard for me because of all the math and matrixes I'm not very used to, and there's also a lot of funny stuff with data types :/
Maybe, but I need to get that vectorization completely right first, and it's hard I feel lost with current knowledge and practice (shouldn't have tried to do my first vectorization with such a complex formula, but that's what life threw at me)
yeah. matrices alone are scary tbh. but I'll overcome it eventually when I get enough time and patience to study it
I was just experimenting with optimizing what I got now so I learn some cool stuff before looking at vectorization again. Original test script was taking 1h40 min to run and now only 22 mins, so I'm quite happy already :)
@PedroSpinola What I'm trying to do is break the problem down. We were looking at a single function originally, right? I don't care how it fits into your problem as long as I know what general rules I have to abide by
This is more complex than I'd like, but it's the first example to hand. Here's an MCVE I passed to a colleague for them to play with. The data is nonsense but it is representative
That's only a subset of what we were trying to solve. I just wanted to give him something to break
But the point is, the data that feeds the query is entirely removed from the actual problem because I just made it up. He wasn't sure about the SQL so I just gave my colleague something representative. It doesn't matter how it fits into the actual program, it just illustrates one part in isolation
Much better, thanks. I just flipped the definitions to be before the function and had to deal with annoying line break issues that dpaste introduces. But I can run this now, thanks. It might be tomorrow before I can get back to you as it's getting a bit late now
@roganjosh to give your Cython a run for its money, here's a pythran version. It brings down the runtime from 17 μs to 1.2 μs for the small example, which is probably not representative of the large problem. cc @PedroSpinola
@Rahul2304 hello. Please don't ask for help here with fresh questions on the main site as per our rules. And two links to the same post would always be unnecessary.