Ehh these are sort of trivial things now but why not use a multidimensional array for the coords [n,2] and then use the numpy operators to find the difference? Just trying to reduce the things you do and offload more to the numpy fortran library. Uhm hmm you can use 4 cores then ~ just split it into 4 chunks to subtract? I find personally numpy does for loop operations tons faster ~ so a vectorized function rather than a for loop...
On 17 December 2012 08:38, Guillaume Gay <[email protected]>wrote: > Le 17/12/2012 13:14, Ronnie Ghose a écrit : > > also i assume you're using a numpy / C structure for all of this right? > Also depending on the number of cores you have you could try parallelizing > all of your loops with multiprocessing / if applicable ~ GPU processing > > Well I rely on the `propertymap.a` and `propertymap.fa` attributes, which > are subclasses of numpy ndarray. As for multiprocessing, of course, but I > only have 4 cores, so... As for GPU processing, I don't know whether there > is a simple way to do this in python. > I guess the real efficient way would be to dive into the underlying C++ > API, but I am not very C++ litterate and look for something simpler. > > But avoiding the inelegant loop over all edges is already interesting... > > Thanks for the suggestion anyway! > > Guillaume > > > > On 17 December 2012 05:59, Guillaume Gay <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Le 17/12/2012 11:29, Tiago de Paula Peixoto a écrit : >> >> On 12/17/2012 11:28 AM, Guillaume Gay wrote: >> >> Hi Tiago, >> >> Thanks for the blazing fast answer! >> >> It will sure do the job. I can't find it in the documentation though (it's >> accessible online via ipython autocompletion and magic '?', but doesn't >> appear on your web site). >> >> Oops... Indeed. I'll add it in the next release. >> >> Cheers, >> Tiago >> >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> graph-tool mailing >> [email protected]http://lists.skewed.de/mailman/listinfo/graph-tool >> >> Ok cool.. >> >> One more point: >> >> Is there a way to do the following differently: >> >> edge_x = g.new_edge_property() >> edge_x.a = np.array([x[e.source()] for e in g.edges()]) >> >> with x being a vector property map. >> I plain English, is there a (more efficient) way to copy the vertex >> property map of every edge source to an edge property map? >> >> >> Guillaume >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> graph-tool mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://lists.skewed.de/mailman/listinfo/graph-tool >> >> > > > _______________________________________________ > graph-tool mailing > [email protected]http://lists.skewed.de/mailman/listinfo/graph-tool > > > > _______________________________________________ > graph-tool mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.skewed.de/mailman/listinfo/graph-tool > >
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