@Divakar that's more or less out of my league :(. Most I can answer are things like "You forgot the add the loop index to your storage variable you scrub", or printing strings in a format.
Is there any explanation for following contradictory results in MATLAB?
>> Inf*0
ans =
NaN
>> Inf*(0+1i)
ans =
0 + Infi
Second result seems to contradict any sensible standard/library I know.
Is it a bug or is there any explanation for this?
I'm using MATLAB to profile a simple fminunc code and I found that the profiler displays different algorithms when I profile the code once again.
Why is it?
The code is as below.
clear;
clc;
alpha = 2;
beta = 2;
nobs = 100;
start = [1;1;1];
options = optimoptions('fminunc','GradObj','off','Algor...
It just looks... weird.... to see it like MATLAB... means that you're SHOUTING at someone... telling them about the goodness and well being that MATLAB brings to you.
yeah MATLAB is like I am the president and I am talking, so you all chaps listen carefully. matlab is like I am a question on SO, please answer me, if you have time.
Try to write some code in your language and make it not satisfying our criteria of being a programming language any more.
A language satisfies our criteria (simplified version for this challenge) of being a programming language if:
It can read user input representing tuples of positive integer...
basically, the premise is that you write a piece of code in your language... then after this code executes, the programming language can no longer function.
We all know the matlab colon operator to create a linear sequence, i.e.
1:5 = [1 2 3 4 5]
Now I found that the arguments of the colon operator can also be applied to vectors or matrices. However I do not understand the definition behind.
Examples
[1 2 3 4]:5 == [1 2 3 4 5]
[1 2; 3 4]:3 == ...
MATLAB
The following piece of code makes the environment completely unusable:
builtin = @(varargin)false; clear = @(varargin)false;
This overrides the builtin function and the clear function with new anonymous function handles. The builtin function ensures that if there are any custom functi...
@AbhishekBhatia based on the documentation I'd say yes, although it'd be very slow.
What I think it does, is that it creates a space on your hard drive which MATLAB can access as an array. So basically you can create an array as large as your hard disk allows, provided your file system is 64bits, otherwise it's max 2GB or 4GB, not sure.
accessing the hard drive however, takes as much time as a three month holiday compared to grabbing a coffee at the office
I have used memmaps before python, I understand their use clearly through matlab docs. For ex: how to create a simple random array of size (1000,1000,1000)
it seems I need to create it in matlab first then write it to a file and read using memmap!
then you probably need a server park instead of a homegrown desktop :D
noting your comment about first creating it in MATLAB: I have played with it cache (I think it is called) when I needed some 40GB of space to read in an array and extract 1.5GB of it, but I had the same problem: first it goes into RAM, then to disk. i.e. it blows on your RAM before it can write to disk.
Upon rereading the docs I think memmap is mainly used to provide a quick way of swapping files between separate MATLAB scripts/functions, without having to write them completely to disk using the default file I/O
So to get back to your original question: I'm not sure memmap will. Based on what you are describing I think not. Personal experience also shows MATLAB wants everything in RAM before it starts doing things.
For these kind of problems (my datasets are exceeding 250GB by now), most people use C++ in my field
memmap acts like a middle road between RAM on one hand and writing to disk on the other. Say you have 2GB of RAM and create a 1.5GB array in some function. You do a couple of operations, then want to create another 1.5GB array, do operations and then get back to the first array.
Well bummer, 1.5+1.5=3GB, that's too bad. So you write the array to disk using fwrite or something. Well, go grab coffee and do your workout, because that'll take a while. memmap actually does the same as filewriting, but faster and only for immediate use in MATLAB.
I want to create memmap in matlab.
In python I could do this by:
ut = np.memmap('my_array.mmap', dtype=np.float64, mode='w+', shape=(140000,3504))
Then I use it as a normal array, the OS ensured my memory never overflowed. How to do this in matlab.
From the docs it seems it wants to me : cre...
> Memory-mapping is a mechanism that maps a portion of a file, or an entire file, on disk to a range of memory addresses within the MATLAB® address space. Then, MATLAB can access files on disk in the same way it accesses dynamic memory, accelerating file reading and writing. Memory-mapping allows you to work with data in a file as if it were a MATLAB array.
memmap is not for treating memory like files: it's for treating files like memory.
@Divakar Wait until you see MATL taking off... It may make you want to! :-) I hope to send you guys an unfinished draft soon. I've been working on that, and I'd like to yave your opinions
I have some binary files (obtained from a camera), in which frames are stored in some sequential order.
The usual algorithm to working with such files would be something along the lines of: open file -> advance to first frame -> read frame -> advance a few bits until the next frame -> read next...
@AbhishekBhatia The bits with fwrite just set the scene
the actual example comes in each second block
Such as
m = memmapfile('mybinary.bin',...
'Format',{'uint16',[50 1],'pressure';...
'uint16',[50,1],'temperature';...
'double',[5,10],'volume'},'Repeat',2)
m =
Filename: 'd:\matlab\mybinary.bin'
Writable: false
Offset: 0
Format: {'uint16' [50 1] 'pressure'
'uint16' [50 1] 'temperature'
'double' [5 10] 'volume'}
Repeat: 2
Data: 2x1 struct array with fields:
pressure
temperature
volume
The Data property of the memory map, m, is a 2-by-1 structure array because the Format is applied twice.
Copy the Data property to a variable, A. Then, view the last block of double data, which you can access using the field name, volume.
If you can't make use of this then I'm afraid that I will have to continue not being able to help you.
(But the others are generally more patient than me, so that might not be a huge loss for you;)
Using
m = memmapfile('mybinary.bin',...
'Format',{'uint16',[50 1],'pressure';...
'uint16',[50,1],'temperature';...
'double',[5,10],'volume'},'Repeat',2)
Should there be a file by mybinary.bin already there?