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This package includes the function Apply
as its only
function. It extends the apply
function to applications in
which a function needs to be applied simultaneously over multiple input
arrays. Although this can be done manually with for loops and calls to
the base apply
function, it can often be a challenging task
which can easily result in error-prone or memory-inefficient code.
A very simple example follows showing the kind of situation where
Apply
can be useful: imagine you have two arrays, each
containing five 2x2 matrices, and you want to perform the multiplication
of each of the five pairs of matrices. Next, one of the best ways to do
this with base R (plus some helper libraries):
library(plyr)
library(abind)
<- array(1:20, c(5, 2, 2))
A <- array(1:20, c(5, 2, 2))
B
<- aaply(X = abind(A, B, along = 4),
D MARGINS = 1,
FUN = function(x) x[,,1] %*% x[,,2])
Since the choosen use case is very simple, this solution is not excessively complex, but the complexity would increase as the function to apply required additional dimensions or inputs, and would be unapplicable if multiple outputs were to be returned. In addition, the function to apply (matrix multiplication) had to be redefined for this particular case (multiplication of the first matrix along the third dimension by the second along the third dimension).
Next, an example of how to reach the same results using
Apply
:
library(multiApply)
<- array(1:20, c(5, 2, 2))
A <- array(1:20, c(5, 2, 2))
B
<- Apply(data = list(A, B),
D target_dims = c(2, 3),
fun = "%*%")$output1
This solution takes half the time to complete (as measured with
microbenchmark
with inputs of different sizes), and is
cleaner and extensible to functions receiving any number of inputs with
any number of dimensions, or returning any number of outputs. Although
the peak RAM usage (as measured with peakRAM
) of both
solutions in this example is about the same, it is challenging to avoid
memory duplications when using custom code in more complex applications,
and can usually require hours of dedication. Apply
scales
well to large inputs and has been designed to be fast and avoid memory
duplications.
Additionally, multi-code computation can be enabled via the
ncores
parameter, as shown next. Although in this
minimalist example using multi-core would make the execution slower, in
applications where the inputs are larger the wall-clock time is reduced
dramatically.
<- Apply(data = list(A, B),
D target_dims = c(2, 3),
fun = "%*%",
ncores = 4)$output1
In contrast to apply
and variants, this package suggests
the use of ‘target dimensions’ as opposite to the ‘margins’ for
specifying the dimensions relevant to the function to be applied.
Additionally, it supports functions returning multiple vector or arrays,
and can transparently uses multi-core.
In order to install and load the latest published version of the package on CRAN, you can run the following lines in your R session:
install.packages('multiApply')
library(multiApply)
This package consistis in a single function, Apply
,
which is used in a similar fashion as the base apply
. Full
documentation can be found in ?Apply
.
A simple example is provided next. In this example, we have two data arrays. The first, with information on the number of items sold in 5 different stores (located in different countries) during the past 1000 days, for 200 different items. The second, with information on the price point for each item in each store.
The example shows how to compute the total income for each of the stores, straightforwardly combining the input data arrays, by automatically applying repeatedly the ‘atomic’ function that performs only the essential calculations for a single case.
<- c(store = 5, item = 200, day = 1000)
dims <- array(rnorm(prod(dims)), dims)
sales_amount
<- c(store = 5, item = 200)
dims <- array(rnorm(prod(dims)), dims)
sales_price
<- function(x, y) {
income_function # Expected inputs:
# x: array with dimensions (item, day)
# y: price point vector with dimension (item)
sum(rowSums(x) * y)
}
<- Apply(data = list(sales_amount, sales_price),
income target_dims = list(c('item', 'day'), 'item'),
income_function)
dim(income$output1)
# store
# 5
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.