Double vs Single Precision, Matlab in 2019
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Matlab defaults to double precision, but single precision is sufficient for many computational problems. In addition, single precision uses half the memory, and is generally twice as fast.
To convert from double to single precision is easy, in that all that is needed is to define the starting variables as single, and then all subsequent variables will default to the variable in each calculation with the lowest precision.
The best approach to define type single is:
X = zeros(10,10, 'single');
The construction: X = single(zeros(10,10)); is four times slower!!
Note that there is no difference between these two constructions for type double given that double precision is the default.
PROBLEMS
I ran into two problems that dimmed my enthusiasm for single precision.
1) Some Matlab functions will only work with double precision. The interpolation functions are the main examples that I have come across. (It would be great to have some documentation, either informal or formal, listing those Matlab functions that have type limitations. I have yet to find this information on the web.) To use the interpolation functions, you have to convert the input arguments to double, and then convert the output arguments back to single, which is cumbersome, and perhaps troublesome as well, as noted below.
2) A second problem is that the transition back and forth between single and double can cause errors in the limits for the interpolation. I ran across an error where the interpolation started to return nans after conversion to single precision. This problem would not have occured if the interpolation functions were able to work with single precision. That said, it might be possible to set the extrapolation option to "nearest" in order to navigate around the small round-off errors associated with the transition between single and double precision. Of course, this option could only be trusted when the algorithm was known to be fully functional.
For now, I have decided to stick with double precision.
I found very little discussion of this issue on the web. Surely there are others out there with experiences and recommendations about single precision.
Best,
Mark
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John D'Errico
2019년 2월 17일
편집: John D'Errico
2019년 2월 17일
This topic is worth discussing.
X = zeros(10,10, 'single');
The construction: X = single(zeros(10,10)); is four times slower!!
Of course it is! Why would you not expect that? The former just fills the assigned memory locations with the same zero element. The latter fills it with double precision zeros, then needs to move the entire array to a new location, converting each element to a single on the fly.
"In addition, single precision uses half the memory, and is generally twice as fast."
Had you stated that it is SOMETIMES twice as fast, you would be correct. Newer releases have improved in this respect, although users wth older releases may find that single is no faster than double computations.
The problem is that single precision can be dangerous. You may not always know when you are near the edge of a numerical cliff. Using doubles keeps you much farther away from that edge. Yes, good numerical analysis, good numerical methods is a good thing. But if you use singles just to save some CPU time and some memory, then you are forgetting a major thing - CPU time is cheap, as is memory. So if you are using singles just to be frugal, then you are making a mistake. Use single precision when you absolutely need to do so, and only when you have the numerical skills to know that you can safely afford the lower precision.
Effectively, if you use single precision for no valid reason than pure frugality, then you are pre-optimizing your code, often a bad thing.
"Matlab defaults to double precision, but single precision is sufficient for many..."
A better way to say that is:
Matlab defaults to double precision, but you can sometimes survive the use of single precision. As the precision gets smaller, the risks grow greater.
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Dan Bindman
2020년 9월 24일
편집: Dan Bindman
2020년 9월 24일
Thanks Mark, John, and Walter, this thread was very useful to me.
I am in a similar situation as Mark, I do custom iterative fitting on very large data sets that can push close to the max in memory (currently at 64GB) and the fact that "single" looks like it can double my speed and can half my memory requirements is absolutely huge! And for the type of things I am running, the risks John points out aren't really in play.
But now just seeing Mark's update, where he said going to "single" didn't make much of a difference. I am still going to try it though. Based on some preliminary experimentation, I am getting good speed improvements with "single", so maybe it depends on the types of computations being done, as has already been mentioned.
Steven Lord
2020년 9월 24일
If you're working with data that's pushing (or pushing past) the limits of the amount of memory you have on your machine, you may want to explore some of the tools for working with Big Data that are included in MATLAB. Depending on what functions and functionality you're using for your iterative fitting making your data tall might just plain work with no (or little) modification to your existing code.
추가 답변 (4개)
Krishna Bindumadhavan
2019년 9월 14일
Although this topic is about single precision, another floating point type with reduced precision that we are actively working on supporting with MATLAB is the half precision data type available with the fixed point designer toolbox:https://www.mathworks.com/help/fixedpoint/ref/half.html. With GPU Coder, you can deploy trained neural networks with half precision optimizations from 19a onwards.
Although half is usually not suitable for general purpose scientific computing, several applications like deep learning (training + inference) and image processing have proven benefits for using half precision to reduce memory bandwidth and computation time if the application can tolerate the reduced precision (as usually the case with deep learning).
On recent GPU's from NVIDIA like the Turing and Volta series, there is dedicated support for half precision in the hardware via tensor cores, which can accelerate computations like matrix multiply up to 8x.
This area is under active development and we expect to improve and expand support for half in various products in coming releases.
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Walter Roberson
2019년 2월 17일
>> x = linspace(single(0),single(pi),20);
>> y = single(rand(1,20));
>> z = interp1(x, y, linspace(single(0),single(1),20))
z =
1×20 single row vector
Columns 1 through 9
0.7323988 0.5099056 0.2874124 0.06491931 0.2007067 0.3955918 0.5904768 0.6504743 0.6571828
Columns 10 through 18
0.6638914 0.6852249 0.7173581 0.7494914 0.7815178 0.8134047 0.8452916 0.8761108 0.9043419
Columns 19 through 20
0.9325731 0.9475382
That looks like it supports single to me.
x— Sample points
vector
Data Types: single| double| duration| datetime
That looks like it supports single to me.
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