Should I use object oriented programming in MATLAB?

28 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
BJ
BJ le 4 Mai 2011
I am designing a large Hybrid Electric Vehicle model and simulation in MATLAB (multi-order dynamic models of 10+ vehicle components, etc). The intention is to run Monte Carlo simulations with the simulation using the Parallel Computing Toolbox in MATLAB on a 200 node cluster. The simulation was originally implemented in Simulink, but needed to be rewritten in MATLAB M-code for cost/availability/performance/distributed computing reasons.
I have done a large portion of the design and implementation with MATLAB's object oriented programming constructs (and it is an extremely beautiful and elegant solution, if I may say so myself). However, I am concerned that there may be a performance hit for doing it this way, and would like to know what others think about this decision that have done similar things using MATLAB's OO constructs. I would like to hear what others think before I start the next phase of implementing such a system on the cluster (in the case that there is an overwhelming consensus to serialize the code for this application).
Thanks!

Réponse acceptée

Adrien Leygue
Adrien Leygue le 4 Mai 2011
I have recently had to rewrite 90% of our research code (model reduction) which had become too messy and too intricate to support further algorithmic developments and I naturally tried to switch to OO. For this application, performances were really critical.
I have quickly moved away from OO in Matlab and gone back to a more traditional style as the code became horribly slow (even after careful profiling and optimization), apparently due to some overhead in accessing object's methods and properties.
As Matlab has become more efficient in memory management (e.g. function arguments are not duplicated if they are not modified in the function), I prefer to use some structures to organize the data. These structures are passed as arguments to the several functions.
The only one place where I had to use OO was to benefit from the handle class for some data structure which was sometimes modified by some functions and was too big to even consider duplicating it.
In a nutshell: If Matlab had better OO performances, I'd recommend switching to OO, even for critical parts (where speed is critical) of the code. Since this is not the case I prefer to stick to structures sometime with function handle to mimic object methods. The only thing missing is the handle class inheritance.
NB: I do not claim to be an expert in Matlab OO programming, so if some OO guru has hints on how tweak things to speed up OO in order to make it as fast as traditional structures (in terms of accessing, and modifying the object properties + calling methods), I'll take all advices.
Hope this helps.
A.

Plus de réponses (1)

Jan
Jan le 4 Mai 2011
Program time = programming time + debug time + run time
Your goal is to get the results as fast as possible considering your limited budget. While it is very easy to spend 400 hours for programming, it will be hard to gain 400 hours less runtime.
There are a lot of opinions about the efficiency of OO programming. But for a reliable decision the above formula is more scientific.
Another formula:
Program cost = programming time * HWP +
debug time * HWFP +
run tim * HMC
with:
HWP = Hourly wages for a programmer
HWFP = Hourly wages for a frustrated programmer
HMC = Hourly maintenance costs for the computers
  4 commentaires
BJ
BJ le 4 Mai 2011
I completely agree with you, Simon, but my question seeks a more quantitative answer (if one exists) relating to the performance of serialized vs OO MATLAB code. For the sake of argument, let's assume that financing/writing/debugging serialized and OO software design is the same, and the only concern is runtime performance.
Does anyone have an idea/analysis of OO vs serialized M-code?
Mohamed Habib
Mohamed Habib le 8 Sep 2015
Modifié(e) : Mohamed Habib le 8 Sep 2015
I found these stackoverflow benchmark results very insightful.

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