Provided by: libpdl-ccs-perl_1.23.20-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       PDL::CCS::MatrixOps - Low-level matrix operations for compressed storage sparse PDLs

SYNOPSIS

        use PDL;
        use PDL::CCS::MatrixOps;

        ##---------------------------------------------------------------------
        ## ... stuff happens

FUNCTIONS

   ccs_matmult2d_sdd
         Signature: (
           indx ixa(NdimsA,NnzA); nza(NnzA); missinga();
           b(O,M);
           zc(O);
           [o]c(O,N)
           )

       Two-dimensional matrix multiplication of a sparse index-encoded PDL $a() with a dense pdl
       $b(), with output to a dense pdl $c().

       The sparse input PDL $a() should be passed here with 0th dimension "M" and 1st dimension
       "N", just as for the built-in PDL::Primitive::matmult().

       "Missing" values in $a() are treated as $missinga(), which shouldn't be BAD or infinite,
       but otherwise ought to be handled correctly.  The input pdl $zc() is used to pass the
       cached contribution of a $missinga()-row ("M") to an output column ("O"), i.e.

        $zc = ((zeroes($M,1)+$missinga) x $b)->flat;

       $SIZE(Ndimsa) is assumed to be 2.

       ccs_matmult2d_sdd does not process bad values.  It will set the bad-value flag of all
       output ndarrays if the flag is set for any of the input ndarrays.

   ccs_matmult2d_zdd
         Signature: (
           indx ixa(Ndimsa,NnzA); nza(NnzA);
           b(O,M);
           [o]c(O,N)
           )

       Two-dimensional matrix multiplication of a sparse index-encoded PDL $a() with a dense pdl
       $b(), with output to a dense pdl $c().

       The sparse input PDL $a() should be passed here with 0th dimension "M" and 1st dimension
       "N", just as for the built-in PDL::Primitive::matmult().

       "Missing" values in $a() are treated as zero.  $SIZE(Ndimsa) is assumed to be 2.

       ccs_matmult2d_zdd does not process bad values.  It will set the bad-value flag of all
       output ndarrays if the flag is set for any of the input ndarrays.

   ccs_vnorm
         Signature: (
           indx acols(NnzA); avals(NnzA);
           float+ [o]vnorm(M);
           ; int sizeM=>M)

       Computes the Euclidean lengths of each column-vector $a(i,*) of a sparse index-encoded pdl
       $a() of logical dimensions (M,N), with output to a dense piddle $vnorm().  "Missing"
       values in $a() are treated as zero, and $acols() specifies the (unsorted) indices along
       the logical dimension M of the corresponding non-missing values in $avals().  This is
       basically the same thing as:

        $vnorm = ($a**2)->xchg(0,1)->sumover->sqrt;

       ... but should be must faster to compute for sparse index-encoded piddles.

       ccs_vnorm() always clears the bad-status flag on $vnorm().

   ccs_vcos_zdd
         Signature: (
           indx ixa(2,NnzA); nza(NnzA);
           b(N);
           float+ [o]vcos(M);
           float+ [t]anorm(M);
           int sizeM=>M;
         )

       Computes the vector cosine similarity of a dense row-vector $b(N) with respect to each
       column $a(i,*) of a sparse index-encoded PDL $a() of logical dimensions (M,N), with output
       to a dense piddle $vcos(M).  "Missing" values in $a() are treated as zero, and magnitudes
       for $a() are passed in the optional parameter $anorm(), which will be implicitly computed
       using ccs_vnorm if the $anorm() parameter is omitted or empty.  This is basically the same
       thing as:

        $anorm //= ($a**2)->xchg(0,1)->sumover->sqrt;
        $vcos    = ($a * $b->slice("*1,"))->xchg(0,1)->sumover / ($anorm * ($b**2)->sumover->sqrt);

       ... but should be must faster to compute.

       Output values in $vcos() are cosine similarities in the range [-1,1], except for zero-
       magnitude vectors which will result in NaN values in $vcos().  If you need non-negative
       distances, follow this up with a:

        $vcos->minus(1,$vcos,1)
        $vcos->inplace->setnantobad->inplace->setbadtoval(0); ##-- minimum distance for NaN values

       to get distances values in the range [0,2].  You can use PDL threading to batch-compute
       distances for multiple $b() vectors simultaneously:

         $bx   = random($N, $NB);                   ##-- get $NB random vectors of size $N
         $vcos = ccs_vcos_zdd($ixa,$nza, $bx, $M);  ##-- $vcos is now ($M,$NB)

       ccs_vcos_zdd() always clears the bad status flag on the output piddle $vcos.

   _ccs_vcos_zdd
         Signature: (
           indx ixa(Two,NnzA); nza(NnzA);
           b(N);
           float+ anorm(M);
           float+ [o]vcos(M);)

       Guts for ccs_vcos_zdd(), with slightly different calling conventions.

       Always clears the bad status flag on the output piddle $vcos.

   ccs_vcos_pzd
         Signature: (
           indx aptr(Nplus1); indx acols(NnzA); avals(NnzA);
           indx brows(NnzB);                     bvals(NnzB);
           anorm(M);
           float+ [o]vcos(M);)

       Computes the vector cosine similarity of a sparse index-encoded row-vector $b() of logical
       dimension (N) with respect to each column $a(i,*) a sparse Harwell-Boeing row-encoded PDL
       $a() of logical dimensions (M,N), with output to a dense piddle $vcos(M).  "Missing"
       values in $a() are treated as zero, and magnitudes for $a() are passed in the obligatory
       parameter $anorm().  Usually much faster than ccs_vcos_zdd() if a CRS pointer over logical
       dimension (N) is available for $a().

       ccs_vcos_pzd() always clears the bad status flag on the output piddle $vcos.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       Perl by Larry Wall.

       PDL by Karl Glazebrook, Tuomas J. Lukka, Christian Soeller, and others.

KNOWN BUGS

       We should really implement matrix multiplication in terms of inner product, and have a
       good sparse-matrix only implementation of the former.

AUTHOR

       Bryan Jurish <moocow@cpan.org>

   Copyright Policy
       All other parts Copyright (C) 2009-2022, Bryan Jurish. All rights reserved.

       This package is free software, and entirely without warranty.  You may redistribute it
       and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO

       perl(1), PDL(3perl)