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02:20
I wonder if this is a troll?
-1
A: Performance Tradeoff - When is MATLAB better/slower than C/C++

yasirNothing can beat C, C++ and FORTRAN in terms of speed. You could understand this from the fact that all the parallelization schemes are designed for C, like CUDA C, Openmp, MPI. Besides this all the other highly compute extensive softwares like Gromacs, LAMMPS are built on C. Long story short, pr...

> Long story short, prefer Python, in terms of speed, C>Python>>MATLAB
Whatnow?
 
5 hours later…
06:58
@CrisLuengo Python is C, MATLAB is Java. Checkmate.
Question from 2013 so could be anything
Delvoted because it also doesn't answer the question
07:22
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні I'd be curious to hear if you find a solution to this!
Also, can you tell us a little bit where the problem came from?
 
1 hour later…
08:39
@flawr you probably didn't mean to ping me :P
d'oh
yes
@LuisMendo <- this is who I meant to ping: I'd be curious to hear if you find a solution to this!
09:10
@AnderBiguri So I tried to read a little bit but gave up soon, I just don't know enough to have an idea what they are talking about. But it sounds fancy
09:24
hello
 
1 hour later…
10:31
@flawr Sure! For now I'm thinking that having to compute C (linear system of size P-1) is maybe not that bad.
About the problem: you probably know about Gauss circle problem. I'm trying to tackle a generalized version where the center of the circle is arbitrary, so it can be optimized to cover the maximum or minimum number of points for a given radius, and the number of dimensions N can be more than 2 (so a ball instead of a circle).
This is also related to Steinhaus' circle theorem, which can be generalized to more than 2 dimensions.
I obtained an algorithm that computes the maximum and minimum number of points for a given radius, with N arbitrary, and where lattice points can be replaced by a vertices of sufficiently nice tesselation (not necesarily a lattice). It is based on solving equation systems corresponding to combinations of vertices, where the solution is the point I called C.
Combinations of vertices that don't fullfil the property Q can be discarded. But I have to compute C for that, I'm already done with that combination.
The complexity of the algorithm is polynomial in the radius, but exponential in dimension.
I thought the algorithm might be a novel (i.e. publishable) result, but then (as often happens) I found a 2006 paper where some of its ingredients were already published. We'll see
I didn't know Steinhaus, that is quite nice!
@LuisMendo You need to add some AI to make it re-publishable!
But it is an interesting problem when you consider an arbitrary center - I'm looking forward to reading your paper:)
10:52
@flawr :-D
The paper will take some time, but of course I'll point you to it when done
11:23
@flawr yeahhhhhhh same thing
I got someone else to read it and help me understand it actually
lucky thing tho that I work with the authors XD this is why I will be using it
@LuisMendo there is a fari amount of math journals that will accept retellings of a math story, as long as the retelling is novel enough
 
1 hour later…
12:35
This wouldn't be exactly retelling, it's just that some of the results I hoped would be new happen not to be
12:45
@LuisMendo Does it actually have any application in your field or is this a curiosit yof your inner mathematician?
hahaha
are any of those ever actually used?
python ⩼ MATLAB
python ⩻ MATLAB
who knows
I'm definitely going to use ⍨
I love it
14:23
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Damn! Air-tight logic!
the last one is a half-assed contour integral
I'm pretty sure the one prof with the illegible handwriting used the U+2118 once
It's definitely "cute" ⍨
sideways user experience made me lol
 
2 hours later…
16:09
@AnderBiguri I wanted to blow the dust of my screen but then I noticed the dust moves when I scroll
loool
did u listen to that album ander
no sorry! I was ready for it and tuns out i forgot to downlaod it from my flight
ohhhhh hahahah too bad too bad
will try again in my next trip, its when I enjoy most new music
16:11
makes sense!!
its a short album, only 25 minutes or so
perfect for my weekend trip to londonium
ouuuuuu this weekend? :D
was gonna say listen to this: youtube.com/watch?v=WACwXdj7OJ0 if you want a nice short sampler, but I can be patient
yeah, well, its 40 mins from here, so not a big deal XD
yaaa true, you at cambridge still?
yeah, just moved in last month, so not rushing to get kicked out yet
16:15
oo noice, right right
I'm thinking of doing a euro trip next year 👀
technically not the UK, but I guess they may let you in
LOL true
Not sure where I wanna go yet but I wanna try to visit some online peoples, not sure if anyone here would be down or not
Trying to get a list of countries down and then kinda go from there
i'll certainly will get a pint or two if we happen to coincide
okii shweet
16:34
@AnderBiguri only 2 km? Nice.
well, not walking 2km
in some sense, walking 2km from london you are, in fact, still inside london
 
3 hours later…
19:21
@flawr The latter :) Just for fun. But also with the hope to get it published somewhere
19:34
@LuisMendo Very nice:) I guess in academia just the numbers count, you could be publishing papers about greek mythology for all that matters, right?:P
 
3 hours later…
22:16
@flawr Well... they have to be at least a little related to my area :-) But mathy stuff always looks good

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