Pagemtimes accuracy versus for loop

3 views (last 30 days)
Morten Nissov
Morten Nissov on 5 May 2021
Edited: Matt J on 5 May 2021
I was using pagemtimes for some calculations an I get results which are not quite what I expect, for example
N = 1e3;
a = randn(3, 3, N);
b = randn(2, 3);
c1 = zeros(2, 2, N);
for i=1:N
c1(:,:,i) = b * a(:,:,i) * b';
end
c2 = pagemtimes(pagemtimes(b, a), b');
c3 = pagemtimes(b, pagemtimes(a, b'));
isequal(c1,c2)
isequal(c1,c3)
returns a logical no for both isequal queries.
I assume this is due to numerical deviations? Or is there something non-equivalent between the different fomulations of the "c" matrix.

Answers (1)

Matt J
Matt J on 5 May 2021
Edited: Matt J on 5 May 2021
I assume this is due to numerical deviations?
Yes, there is no expectation that both approaches will produce the same floating point noise. Clearly the percent errors are very small, though:
N = 1e3;
a = randn(3, 3, N);
b = randn(2, 3);
c1 = zeros(2, 2, N);
for i=1:N
c1(:,:,i) = b * a(:,:,i) * b';
end
c2 = pagemtimes(pagemtimes(b, a), b');
c3 = pagemtimes(b, pagemtimes(a, b'));
%Percent errors
relError=@(a,b)norm(a(:)-b(:),inf)/norm(b(:),inf)*100;
relError(c1,c2)
ans = 2.1378e-14
relError(c1,c3)
ans = 2.1378e-14
  2 Comments
Morten Nissov
Morten Nissov on 5 May 2021
Okay sounds good, is there any metric for how small these deviations should be? Like for example differences in 1e-10 indicate different matrices but 1e-12 or less is likely numerical noise.
Matt J
Matt J on 5 May 2021
Edited: Matt J on 5 May 2021
If the difference were greater than, say,
1000*eps(class(c1))
ans = 2.2204e-13
I might start to wonder what was going on.

Sign in to comment.

Tags

Products


Release

R2020b

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!