http
公司主营业务:成都网站设计、
成都做网站、移动网站开发等业务。帮助企业客户真正实现互联网宣传,提高企业的竞争能力。
创新互联建站是一支青春激扬、勤奋敬业、活力青春激扬、勤奋敬业、活力澎湃、和谐高效的团队。公司秉承以“开放、自由、严谨、自律”为核心的企业文化,感谢他们对我们的高要求,感谢他们从不同领域给我们带来的挑战,让我们激情的团队有机会用头脑与智慧不断的给客户带来惊喜。
创新互联建站推出
定边免费做网站回馈大家。://www.mathworks.cn/cn/help/distcomp/advanced-topics.html
PARFOR loops work by dividing the iterations of the loop among many
workers. Things work best when the inputs to the loop and outputs from
the loop can also be divided in the same way. The simplest example might
be:
N = 10;
in1 = rand(1, N);
in2 = rand(1, N);
out2 = 0;
parfor ii = 1:N
out1(ii) = in1(ii) * 2 + max(in2);
out2 = out2 + in1(ii);
end
In this case, both 'in1' and 'out1' are SLICED because PARFOR can see
how to divide them up - not all of 'in1' or 'out1' are required to
perform an iteration of the loop. 'in2' is *not* sliced, because the
whole value is needed for each loop iteration. 'out2' is not sliced
either, but PARFOR can still compute the value because it understands
that it is a REDUCTION variable. More info:
PARFOR warns you if you have a variable inside a PARFOR loop that you're
indexing, but that isn't sliced. This warning appears because you might
have intended the variable to be sliced, but PARFOR couldn't slice it.
PARFOR can slice multi-dimensional arrays providing that the indexing
expression matches various conditions layed out in the page referred to
above. For example:
in3 = rand(N);
parfor ii=1:N
out3(:,ii) = 1 - in3(:,ii);
end
both 'in3' and 'out3' can be sliced.
Cheers,
Edric.
当前文章:parforslice-创新互联
转载注明:http://njwzjz.com/article/diejei.html