Finding parfor baffling: Can anybody explain to me why this little bit of code works with for,but not with parfor?

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function B = partest
A = 1:4; B = zeros(1,4);
parfor j=1:2
B([j j+2]) = A([j+2 j]);
end
The two bits of the loop access different bits of B, so there should be some way of doing this. My actual application involves large cell arrays, for which something similar holds for the function within the loop.

Risposta accettata

Matt J
Matt J il 3 Set 2014
Modificato: Matt J il 3 Set 2014
A = reshape(1:4,2,2);
B = zeros(2);
parfor j=1:2
B(j,:) = A(j,end:-1:1);
end
  5 Commenti
John Billingham
John Billingham il 3 Set 2014
OK. Thanks. I'll have a look at that tomorrow and see what I can do. I expect I'll have more questions. Really struggling to get my head around this. Sorry.
John Billingham
John Billingham il 4 Set 2014
Having given this some thought, I realize that your answer is great, but that I'm asking the wrong question, so I'm going to ask the right question instead.

Accedi per commentare.

Più risposte (1)

José-Luis
José-Luis il 3 Set 2014
Modificato: José-Luis il 3 Set 2014
Looks like the interpreter is not smart enough to detect that there is no race condition in the case you present. You could go around that using two loops:
A = 1:4; B = zeros(1,4);
parfor j=1:2
B(j) = A(j+2);
end
parfor j=1:2
B(j+2) = A(j);
end
I assume the operations you actually perform are more complicated than that. Otherwise Matt J's solution is the way to go.

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