Is slicing one big matrix more efficient than storing smaller matrices in a struct?
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An example of the former would be:
% allcases =
%
% +---------+------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | Case ID | Data col 1 | Data col 2 | Data col 3 | ... | Data col 10 |
% +---------+------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | 1 | scalar | scalar | scalar | ... | scalar |
% +---------+------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | 1 | scalar | scalar | scalar | ... | scalar |
% +---------+------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | 1 | scalar | scalar | scalar | ... | scalar |
% +---------+------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... |
% +---------+------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | n | scalar | scalar | scalar | ... | scalar |
% +---------+------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
An example of the latter would be:
% allcases(case_id).matrix =
%
% +------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | Data col 1 | Data col 2 | Data col 3 | ... | Data col 10 |
% +------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | scalar | scalar | scalar | ... | scalar |
% +------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | scalar | scalar | scalar | ... | scalar |
% +------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | scalar | scalar | scalar | ... | scalar |
% +------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... |
% +------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
% | scalar | scalar | scalar | ... | scalar |
% +------------+------------+------------+-----+-------------+
Now, in a loop that goes through the cases, it needs to work with a (smaller) matrix that concerns that case only. Therefore, with the former approach we would slice the matrix (via logical or a find) while in the latter we would just call allcases(case_id).matrix.
Is there a recommended approach between these two, in terms of computational speed?
In my problem, I work with up to 100 cases, and up to 50,000 rows in the matrix containing data for each case.
3 Comments
Sindar
on 25 Oct 2020
If the data/case ID is constant, and depending on what you're doing with the data, it may be useful to use paged arrays, so
allcases(:,:,case_id)
returns the same matrix as your
allcases(case_id).matrix
For example, 2020b introduced pagewise matrix multiplication which is almost certainly faster than looping over the index subsets (or a structure array)
Accepted Answer
Matt J
on 6 Nov 2020
Edited: Matt J
on 6 Nov 2020
Therefore, with the former approach we would slice the matrix (via logical or a find) while in the latter we would just call allcases(case_id).matrix..
Either one can be more efficient, depending on the situation. Slicing the matrix requires a memory allocation operation. On the other hand, if you have a very large number of matrix IDs, I think you will find that the non-contiguous storage in RAM that you will have with a struct will start to outweigh what you save by avoiding matrix slicing.
Incidentally, you might also consider using a cell array,
allcases{case_id}=matrix
which also avoids matrix slicing, but which should give you slightly faster indexing than a struct.
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