this is a bit specific to the way MATLAB paralelizes stuff, and I don't have that much experience on it, havent been following how it has evolved in detail
@Dev-iL as far as I know parfor, each has its own local workspace, and stuff is presumably broadcasted to all workers; i.e. if you define A before the loop, it gets broadcasted as a whole, unless you slice it before.
However, creating variables inside your parfor loop are not shared, but setting them global and have a high potential of breaking stuff, I encountered this last year when trying to optimise someone else's code; see this answer of mine
@AnderBiguri I'm an eccentric, according to the missus, but my last name is Visser which literally means fisherman. So shoes with fish on them are fitting for me I thought
@Dev-iL yes, but the core reason is the file identifier being shared among workers due to the explicit global call. My experience otherwise is that stuff that's created on a worker is not shared among other workers, unless explicitly stated
I used a write-to-file and load-from-disk to process a large data set back when I started here on SO; tmp=load('sprintf('file%d.m',ii)) is what loaded the actual variable and there was no problem with shared variables
I'm working on a complicated function that calls several subfunctions (within the same file). To pass data around, the setappdata/getappdata mechanism is used occasionally. Moreover, some subfunctions contain persistent variables (initialized once in order to save computations later).
I've been ...
However, it just gives 1 and 2 and leaves the third empty?
plotting semilogy(0:FinalIter,normR.','*-') doesn't work, since not all arrays have the same length, which would require me to use a loop. Not impossible, but why don't the ticks get set as I want them?
@AnderBiguri No, r_0 is always the same, i.e. the first residual set
then everything else is updated according to Somersalo's CGNE, and once that converges/maxes its iterations the IRLS sets a new z_old and a new Cp, which is the minimiser
and with a bit of bad luck you can also seee semiconvergence
semiconvergence, or i.e. the residual reducing does not mean the error is reduced, at some point the error will increase while the residual is being reduced
no, you want norm(data_back(:)-data_xt(:))/norm(data_xt(:))
and you can also see that per iteration
as a residual is a mathematical tool to see how much it fits your model, but the error is the real one
if your model is crap and you fit a bad model, the residual will nicely decrease anyway
not that this is a problem for you (likely), but its a nice plot to show
Sidenote, 3~5 iterations of CGLS like you are getting is the rigth amount for CGLS, 101 as you where getting was very weird, not it makes more sense. For a very ill-posed problem with size(x)~=10^8 I generally never iterate more than 8
@Adriaan It doesn't work because you're setting the tick labels, and not the viewport extents.. So the tick exists, but off screen (pan it and see; notice also how you're missing a tick label at 3). Set xlim.
AFAIK, xticks sets labels assuming that positions and labels match. If you want to set the text separately (i.e. show the value 1 where x is 0 etc.), you should set xticklabel.
enter image description hereI have some signals, I want to plot mean of signals with different line width because of different standard deviation of each point.
In other word, my mean matrix is (nx1) and my std matrix is also (nx1) and I want to plot mean matrix with different line width accordin...
I don't have much to add to my "official comment" (!) - but anyway, all global, persistent, appdata stuff is not shared between Parallel Computing Toolbox worker processes. (Usually people wish it was.) — Edric3 mins ago
Well technically no, global implies that it is the exact same object/handle/reference (i.e. pointer to the same shared memory address, if you will), but in case of the FID, they were likely created separately on each worker, and happen to contain the same data (i.e. deep copies, or different pointer, but same contents)
@AnderBiguri some solvers allow you to go outside of your domain if it helps you find a better solution overall.. Perhaps you can also increase the error momentarily if it helps you get out of a local minimum....
The 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics has just been announced, with half going to Arthur Ashkin for his work on optical tweezers and half going to Gérard Mourou and Donna Strickland for developing a technique called "Chirped Pulse Amplification". While normally the Wikipedia page is a reasonable place ...
Have you read the entire error? It gives more information than what you shared, relevant information. Also we can not help as we do not have access to your computer to read the code. You should always provide a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example — Ander Biguri17 mins ago
@AnderBiguri ^ You've been moderate this time :-)
@Adriaan Wikipedia could benefit from a little gamification
@AnderBiguri this sucks, if I make my preconditioner all ones, the algorithm ensures it's based on (pwiggle^2+snr^2)^a. This resembles taup(data)^2+snr^2)^a almost exactly, so, when I try to feed the algorithm the latter as initial preconditioner (as my theory says it should) my data goes POOF in a single iteration :s
My brain is weird, as is my code since it stems from there
I am concerned about how the code of conduct is being pointed out in practice. In its short time of existence (close to 2 months), I have seen multiple occurrences of comments claiming to report a violation of the code of conduct in response to downvotes, close votes, edits for clarity, and even ...
The filename in question is a MAT file that contains elements in the form of "a - bi" where 'i' signifies an imaginary number. The objective is to separate the real, a, and imaginary, b, parts of these elements and put them into two arrays. Afterwards, a text file with the same name as the MAT fi...
@CrisLuengo Not sure if there's a dupe target for that. There are a few for when you shadow a built-in with a variable, but shadowing with another function tends to give different sorts of error messages.
Since MATLAB R2018a, complex-valued matrices are stored internally as a single data block, with the real and imaginary component of each matrix element stored next to each other -- they call this "interleaved complex". (Previously such matrices had two data blocks, one for all real components, on...
@gnovice Yes, if you run the M-file code in the question to generate matrices A and B, and then do whos, you'll see they take up the same space. The C-MEX interface documentation also clearly describes how the data is stored.
@beaker I really feel that typecast should be able to cast complex to real. Maybe I'll submit a bug report... :)
@beaker typecast is an old function, and 8 months ago complex arrays were still stored in separate real and imaginary data blocks. So I'm not surprised that they didn't think of updating this function for the new possibilities. Also, MATLAB still doesn't have a separate type for "double complex". class still returns double for a complex array.
@CrisLuengo Can we trust whos and class to give us the right answers, or are they giving us the answers we expect, when in reality there are differences behind the scene?
But I imagine the array headers in MATLAB still have a separate "complex" flag, like they used to before.
What they call "class" hasn't changed with this internal change. You can't tell from within MATLAB that they changed how complex values are stored. So logically a complex array is still of class "double", because that is what it used to be before the change.
But the changes to the C MEX API are pretty broad, everything related to complex values has changed there. For example, the value of "element size" is now double what it used to be for complex arrays: mathworks.com/help/matlab/apiref/mxgetelementsize.html
@Cris is it legal to set prhs[0] to NULL? And if yes, does that help?
I imagine there should be a way to do this safely because this is similar to how "don't copy if necessary" functions could be implemented under the hood