codistributed.sprand
Create codistributed sparse array of uniformly distributed pseudo-random values
Syntax
CS = codistributed.sprand(m,n,density)
CS = sprand(n,codist)
Description
CS = codistributed.sprand(m,n,density)
creates an m
-by-n
sparse codistributed array with approximately density*m*n
uniformly distributed nonzero double entries.
Optional arguments to codistributed.sprand
must be specified after the required arguments, and in the following order:
codist
— A codistributor object specifying the distribution scheme of the resulting array. If omitted, the array is distributed using the default distribution scheme. For information on constructing codistributor objects, see the reference pages forcodistributor1d
andcodistributor2dbc
.'noCommunication'
— Specifies that no interworker communication is to be performed when constructing the array, skipping some error checking steps.
CS = sprand(n,codist)
is the same as CS = codistributed.sprand(n, codist)
. You can also use the optional arguments with this syntax. To use the default distribution scheme, specify a codistributor constructor without arguments. For example:
spmd CS = codistributed.sprand(8,8,0.2,codistributor1d()); end
Examples
With four workers,
spmd(4) CS = codistributed.sprand(1000,1000,0.001); end
creates a 1000-by-1000 sparse codistributed double array CS
with approximately 1000 nonzeros. CS
is distributed by its second dimension (columns), and each worker contains a 1000-by-250 local piece of CS
.
spmd(4) codist = codistributor1d(2,1:spmdSize); CS = sprand(10,10,0.1,codist); end
creates a 10-by-10 codistributed double array CS
with approximately 10 nonzeros. CS
is distributed by its columns, and each worker contains a 10-by-spmdIndex
local piece of CS
.
Tips
When you use sprand
on the workers in the parallel pool, or in an independent or communicating job, each worker sets its random generator seed to a value that depends only on the spmdIndex
or task ID. Therefore, the array on each worker is unique for that job. However, if you repeat the job, you get the same random data.
Version History
Introduced in R2009b