3D matrix multiplication

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Kamuran
Kamuran on 24 Jun 2011
Commented: James Tursa on 17 Sep 2020
Hi,
I have two 3D matrices that I need to multiply in a specific way. I need to do for k=1:Z M(:,:,k)=A(:,:,k)*B(:,:,k) end
but I do not want to use for loop because it makes my code run slower and I need to this multiplication for a unsteady flow profile calculation (close to million time steps). Is there a more efficient way to do it?
  4 Comments
Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 17 Sep 2020
We don't do implicit slice expansion, but as of release R2020b we provide the pagemtimes function for this purpose.
James Tursa
James Tursa on 17 Sep 2020
Finally! Guess I can now stop worrying about updating MTIMESX.

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Accepted Answer

James Tursa
James Tursa on 24 Jun 2011
  1 Comment
James Tursa
James Tursa on 24 Jun 2011
P.S. If your 2D slices are small (4x4 or less), be sure to use 'SPEED' or 'SPEEDOMP' mode. This will cause inline code to be used that will run faster than the default BLAS library routine calls.

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More Answers (4)

Daniel Frisch
Daniel Frisch on 3 Feb 2020
Matrix multiplication can also be expressed using native Matlab code (times and sum):
% A : (a x c x Z)
% B : (c x b x Z)
Ap = permute(A,[2,1,4,3]); % (c x a x 1 x Z)
Bp = permute(B,[1,4,2,3]); % (c x 1 x b x Z)
M = Ap .* Bp; % (c x a x b x Z)
M = sum(M,1); % (1 x a x b x Z)
M = permute(M,[2,3,4,1]); % (a x b x Z)
  1 Comment
James Tursa
James Tursa on 10 Feb 2020
Note that the permute( ) operations will involve a deep data copy, so this method will run slower than the mex routines.

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Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 24 Jun 2011
There is no built-in MATLAB support for 3D multiplications. The program James refers to is probably a good choice.
By the way, especially in the releases of the last few years, "for" loops are sometimes faster than vectorization, especially for large matricies.

Kamuran
Kamuran on 24 Jun 2011
to use this file I need to install a C compiler ? If so can you suggest me one, Because I never used C :) .
Thank you
  3 Comments
James Tursa
James Tursa on 24 Jun 2011
Type the following at the MATLAB prompt:
mex -setup
Then press Enter and see what shows up. If you have a 32-bit system then hopefully a compiler will already be there. If you have a 64-bit system then you will have to install one yourself unfortunately.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 24 Jun 2011
I checked back... we do not have any information about the OS or MATLAB version the poster is using.

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Mr M.
Mr M. on 6 Apr 2018
I got the following error message:
Error using mtimesx_build (line 120) Unable to compile mtimesx.c
Error in mtimesx (line 271) mtimesx_build;
  2 Comments
Mr M.
Mr M. on 6 Apr 2018
However XCode is installed and licence is accepted (mex -setup)
James Tursa
James Tursa on 6 Apr 2018
MTIMESX is way overdue for an update (TMW changed mex procedures some time ago). In the meantime, try this or some variation of this modified for your system:
lib_blas = fullfile(matlabroot,'extern','lib',computer('arch'),'microsoft','libmwblas.lib');
mex('mtimesx.c',lib_blas,'-largeArrayDims')

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