speed, functions and overheads
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Dear all,
I have noticed using functions, nested functions and sub-functions considerably decrease the speed of execution. Is it possible to decrease the overhead incurred when calling a function?
Thanks, Patrick
2 Comments
Sean de Wolski
on 24 Jun 2013
What are you doing?
Have you used the profiler to identify bottlenecks in your code that are more than likely killing way more time than function overhead?
Accepted Answer
Jan
on 24 Jun 2013
Edited: Jan
on 25 Jun 2013
x = rand(1000, 1000);
tic;
for k = 1:1e3
m = mean(x);
end
toc;
tic;
for k = 1:1e3
m = sum(x, 1) / size(x, 1);
end
toc;
I assume, but cannot test currently, that there is a measurable difference in the timing due to the overhead for calling the M-function mean() (at least until 2009a it was an M-file).
Of course there is no magic flag to reduce the overhead, otherwise TMW would not have disabled this. So inlining the code is the only way to avoid the overhead. The resulting code is faster for the price of a reduced readability.
[EDITED] Summary of my comments:
- When you call functions, you cannot avoid the overhead.
- When you inline the code instead, the overhead vanishes, but other difficulties arise.
- Tertium non datur.
7 Comments
Jan
on 25 Jun 2013
Edited: Jan
on 25 Jun 2013
@Patrick: Let me repeat again, that the example is not "too simple" but chosen as simple as possible on purpose to demonstrate the drawbacks and benefits of inlining versus calling functions.
Of course I know, that calling mean() will not solve your problem. But you ask for avoiding the overhead of calling a function. And the answer is simply: See [EDITED].
TallBrian
on 15 Oct 2019
@Jan, this answer was from back in 2013, do you know is the answer still the same with the latest MATLAB?
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