Quicker alternative to EVAL
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Hi,
I was wondering if anyone could suggest a quicker way of solving this problem.
I have a function that generates an 'n x n' cell array (A) where each cell contains a string. These strings are equations for calculating variables. For example, if n=3, A =
'theta(1).*theta(1)' 'theta(1).*theta(2)' 'theta(1).*theta(3)'
'theta(2).*theta(1)' 'theta(2).*theta(2)' 'theta(2).*theta(3)'
'theta(3).*theta(1)' 'theta(3).*theta(2)' 'theta(3).*theta(3)'
where theta is a predefined variable.
I have tried the 'eval' function in a loop for this and it works.
for i = 1:n
for j = 1:n
a(i,j)=eval(A{i,j});
end
end
However, this code is used in an optimization and I have found the optimizer is much quicker if I manually copy and paste each string and type within the .m file:
a11 = theta(1).*theta(1)
a12 = theta(1).*theta(2)
a13 = ...
The problem with this approach is that I would like to automate the code so that 'n' can be increased to any value so doing it manually would not be pratical for high values.
Is there a way to get matlab to write these strings into an m file once they've been generated? Sort of 'copying and pasting' but getting matlab to do the hard work! I've been looking but can't seem to find one.
Any feedback anyone could give would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Mike
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Jan
on 11 Apr 2012
Avoid the usage of eval when you need a fast program, and in all other cases also.
Instead of creating the strings 'theta(1).*theta(1)' it would be smarter to store the indices only:
A = {[1,1], [1,2], [1,3]; ...
[2,1], [2,2], [2,3]; ...
[3,1], [3,2], 3,3]};
for i = 1:n
for j = 1:n
index = A{i, j};
a(i,j) = theta(index(1)) * theta(index(2));
end
end
Using a numerical 3D array might be even faster.
Creating files dynamically has the big disadvantage, that reading and parsing the M-files is very time-consuming. Matlab is much more efficient, if you use static M-files and vary the parameters only.
1 Comment
Daniel Shub
on 11 Apr 2012
Even if theta is also changing, it you save all your possible variables in a structure, then you can extend Jan's solution to include more information while still avoiding eval.
More Answers (1)
Jacob Halbrooks
on 11 Apr 2012
I would suggest trying a few approaches and seeing which is fastest with TIC/TOC. For more advanced performance debugging, use MATLAB Profiler.
If you want to automate your copy and paste of the strings, use FPRINTF to generate your script, which you can then run:
fid = fopen('myscript.m','wt');
n = 3;
for i = 1:n
for j = 1:n
fprintf(fid,'A%u%u = %s;\n', i,j,A{i,j});
end
end
fclose(fid);
run myscript;
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