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Rust numeric library with high performance and friendly syntax

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Peroxide

On crates.io On docs.rs DOI github

maintenance

Rust numeric library contains linear algebra, numerical analysis, statistics and machine learning tools with R, MATLAB, Python like macros.

Table of Contents

Why Peroxide?

1. Customize features

Peroxide provides various features.

  • default - Pure Rust (No dependencies of architecture - Perfect cross compilation)
  • O3 - BLAS & LAPACK (Perfect performance but little bit hard to set-up - Strongly recommend to look Peroxide with BLAS)
  • plot - With matplotlib of python, we can draw any plots.
  • complex - With complex numbers (vector, matrix and integral)
  • parallel - With some parallel functions
  • nc - To handle netcdf file format with DataFrame
  • csv - To handle csv file format with Matrix or DataFrame
  • parquet - To handle parquet file format with DataFrame
  • serde - serialization with Serde.

If you want to do high performance computation and more linear algebra, then choose O3 feature. If you don't want to depend C/C++ or Fortran libraries, then choose default feature. If you want to draw plot with some great templates, then choose plot feature.

You can choose any features simultaneously.

2. Easy to optimize

Peroxide uses a 1D data structure to represent matrices, making it straightforward to integrate with BLAS (Basic Linear Algebra Subprograms). This means that Peroxide can guarantee excellent performance for linear algebraic computations by leveraging the optimized routines provided by BLAS.

3. Friendly syntax

For users familiar with numerical computing libraries like NumPy, MATLAB, or R, Rust's syntax might seem unfamiliar at first. This can make it more challenging to learn and use Rust libraries that heavily rely on Rust's unique features and syntax.

However, Peroxide aims to bridge this gap by providing a syntax that resembles the style of popular numerical computing environments. With Peroxide, you can perform complex computations using a syntax similar to that of R, NumPy, or MATLAB, making it easier for users from these backgrounds to adapt to Rust and take advantage of its performance benefits.

For example,

#[macro_use]
extern crate peroxide;
use peroxide::prelude::*;

fn main() {
    // MATLAB like matrix constructor
    let a = ml_matrix("1 2;3 4");

    // R like matrix constructor (default)
    let b = matrix(c!(1,2,3,4), 2, 2, Row);

    // Or use zeros
    let mut z = zeros(2, 2);
    z[(0,0)] = 1.0;
    z[(0,1)] = 2.0;
    z[(1,0)] = 3.0;
    z[(1,1)] = 4.0;

    // Simple but effective operations
    let c = a * b; // Matrix multiplication (BLAS integrated)

    // Easy to pretty print
    c.print();
    //       c[0] c[1]
    // r[0]     1    3
    // r[1]     2    4

    // Easy to do linear algebra
    c.det().print();
    c.inv().print();

    // and etc.
}

4. Can choose two different coding styles.

In peroxide, there are two different options.

  • prelude: To simple use.
  • fuga: To choose numerical algorithms explicitly.

For examples, let's see norm.

In prelude, use norm is simple: a.norm(). But it only uses L2 norm for Vec<f64>. (For Matrix, Frobenius norm.)

#[macro_use]
extern crate peroxide;
use peroxide::prelude::*;

fn main() {
    let a = c!(1, 2, 3);
    let l2 = a.norm();      // L2 is default vector norm

    assert_eq!(l2, 14f64.sqrt());
}

In fuga, use various norms. But you should write a little bit longer than prelude.

#[macro_use]
extern crate peroxide;
use peroxide::fuga::*;

fn main() {
    let a = c!(1, 2, 3);
    let l1 = a.norm(Norm::L1);
    let l2 = a.norm(Norm::L2);
    let l_inf = a.norm(Norm::LInf);
    assert_eq!(l1, 6f64);
    assert_eq!(l2, 14f64.sqrt());
    assert_eq!(l_inf, 3f64);
}

5. Batteries included

Peroxide can do many things.

  • Linear Algebra
    • Effective Matrix structure
    • Transpose, Determinant, Diagonal
    • LU Decomposition, Inverse matrix, Block partitioning
    • QR Decomposition (O3 feature)
    • Singular Value Decomposition (SVD) (O3 feature)
    • Cholesky Decomposition (O3 feature)
    • Reduced Row Echelon form
    • Column, Row operations
    • Eigenvalue, Eigenvector
  • Functional Programming
    • Easier functional programming with Vec<f64>
    • For matrix, there are three maps
      • fmap : map for all elements
      • col_map : map for column vectors
      • row_map : map for row vectors
  • Automatic Differentiation
    • Taylor mode Forward AD - for nth order AD
    • Exact jacobian
    • Real trait to constrain for f64 and AD (for ODE)
  • Numerical Analysis
    • Lagrange interpolation
    • Splines
      • Cubic Spline
      • Cubic Hermite Spline
        • Estimate slope via Akima
        • Estimate slope via Quadratic interpolation
      • B-Spline
    • Non-linear regression
      • Gradient Descent
      • Levenberg Marquardt
    • Ordinary Differential Equation
      • Trait based ODE solver (after v0.36.0)
      • Explicit integrator
        • Ralston's 3rd order
        • Runge-Kutta 4th order
        • Ralston's 4th order
        • Runge-Kutta 5th order
      • Embedded integrator
        • Bogacki-Shampine 3(2)
        • Runge-Kutta-Fehlberg 4(5)
        • Dormand-Prince 5(4)
        • Tsitouras 5(4)
      • Implicit integrator
        • Gauss-Legendre 4th order
    • Numerical Integration
      • Newton-Cotes Quadrature
      • Gauss-Legendre Quadrature (up to 30 order)
      • Gauss-Kronrod Quadrature (Adaptive)
        • G7K15, G10K21, G15K31, G20K41, G25K51, G30K61
      • Gauss-Kronrod Quadrature (Relative tolerance)
        • G7K15R, G10K21R, G15K31R, G20K41R, G25K51R, G30K61R
    • Root Finding
      • Trait based root finding (after v0.37.0)
      • Bisection
      • False Position
      • Secant
      • Newton
      • Broyden
  • Statistics
    • More easy random with rand crate
    • Ordered Statistics
      • Median
      • Quantile (Matched with R quantile)
    • Probability Distributions
      • Bernoulli
      • Uniform
      • Binomial
      • Normal
      • Gamma
      • Beta
      • Student's-t
      • Weighted Uniform
    • RNG algorithms
      • Acceptance Rejection
      • Marsaglia Polar
      • Ziggurat
      • Wrapper for rand-dist crate
      • Piecewise Rejection Sampling
    • Confusion Matrix & Metrics
  • Special functions
    • Wrapper for puruspe crate (pure rust)
  • Utils
    • R-like macro & functions
    • Matlab-like macro & functions
    • Numpy-like macro & functions
    • Julia-like macro & functions
  • Plotting
    • With pyo3 & matplotlib
  • DataFrame
    • Support various types simultaneously
    • Read & Write csv files (csv feature)
    • Read & Write netcdf files (nc feature)
    • Read & Write parquet files (parquet feature)

6. Compatible with Mathematics

After 0.23.0, peroxide is compatible with mathematical structures. Matrix, Vec<f64>, f64 are considered as inner product vector spaces. And Matrix, Vec<f64> are linear operators - Vec<f64> to Vec<f64> and Vec<f64> to f64. For future, peroxide will include more & more mathematical concepts. (But still practical.)

7. Written in Rust

Rust provides a strong type system, ownership concepts, borrowing rules, and other features that enable developers to write safe and efficient code. It also offers modern programming techniques like trait-based abstraction and convenient error handling. Peroxide is developed to take full advantage of these strengths of Rust.

The example code demonstrates how Peroxide can be used to simulate the Lorenz attractor and visualize the results. It showcases some of the powerful features provided by Rust, such as the ? operator for streamlined error handling and the ODEProblem trait for abstracting ODE problems.

use peroxide::fuga::*;

fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn Error>> {
    let initial_conditions = vec![10f64, 1f64, 1f64];
    let rkf45 = RKF45::new(1e-4, 0.9, 1e-6, 1e-2, 100);
    let basic_ode_solver = BasicODESolver::new(rkf45);
    let (_, y_vec) = basic_ode_solver.solve(
        &Lorenz,
        (0f64, 100f64),
        1e-2,
        &initial_conditions,
    )?; // Error handling with `?` - can check constraint violation and etc.
    let y_mat = py_matrix(y_vec);
    let y0 = y_mat.col(0);
    let y2 = y_mat.col(2);

    // Simple but effective plotting
    let mut plt = Plot2D::new();
    plt
        .set_domain(y0)
        .insert_image(y2)
        .set_xlabel(r"$y_0$")
        .set_ylabel(r"$y_2$")
        .set_style(PlotStyle::Nature)
        .tight_layout()
        .set_dpi(600)
        .set_path("example_data/lorenz_rkf45.png")
        .savefig()?;

    Ok(())
}

struct Lorenz;

impl ODEProblem for Lorenz {
    fn rhs(&self, t: f64, y: &[f64], dy: &mut [f64]) -> anyhow::Result<()> {
        dy[0] = 10f64 * (y[1] - y[0]);
        dy[1] = 28f64 * y[0] - y[1] - y[0] * y[2];
        dy[2] = -8f64 / 3f64 * y[2] + y[0] * y[1];
        Ok(())
    }
}

Running the code produces the following visualization of the Lorenz attractor:

lorenz_rkf45.png

Peroxide strives to leverage the benefits of the Rust language while providing a user-friendly interface for numerical computing and scientific simulations.

How's that? Let me know if there's anything else you'd like me to improve!

Latest README version

Corresponding to 0.38.0

Pre-requisite

  • For O3 feature - Need OpenBLAS
  • For plot feature - Need matplotlib and optional scienceplots (for publication quality)
  • For nc feature - Need netcdf

Install

Basic Installation

cargo add peroxide

Featured Installation

cargo add peroxide --features "<FEATURES>"

Available Features

  • O3: Adds OpenBLAS support
  • plot: Enables plotting functionality
  • complex: Supports complex number operations
  • parallel: Enables parallel processing capabilities
  • nc: Adds NetCDF support for DataFrame
  • csv: Adds CSV support for DataFrame
  • parquet: Adds Parquet support for DataFrame
  • serde: Enables serialization/deserialization for Matrix and polynomial

Install Examples

Single feature installation:

cargo add peroxide --features "plot"

Multiple features installation:

cargo add peroxide --features "O3 plot nc csv parquet serde"

Useful tips for features

  • If you want to use QR, SVD, or Cholesky Decomposition, you should use the O3 feature. These decompositions are not implemented in the default feature.

  • If you want to save your numerical results, consider using the parquet or nc features, which correspond to the parquet and netcdf file formats, respectively. These formats are much more efficient than csv and json.

  • For plotting, it is recommended to use the plot feature. However, if you require more customization, you can use the parquet or nc feature to export your data in the parquet or netcdf format and then use Python to create the plots.

    • To read parquet files in Python, you can use the pandas and pyarrow libraries.

    • A template for Python code that works with netcdf files can be found in the Socialst repository.

Module Structure

Documentation

  • On docs.rs

Examples

Release Info

To see RELEASES.md

Contributes Guide

See CONTRIBUTES.md

LICENSE

Peroxide is licensed under dual licenses - Apache License 2.0 and MIT License.

TODO

To see TODO.md

Cite Peroxide

Hey there! If you're using Peroxide in your research or project, you're not required to cite us. But if you do, we'd be really grateful! 😊

To make citing Peroxide easy, we've created a DOI through Zenodo. Just click on this badge:

DOI

This will take you to the Zenodo page for Peroxide. At the bottom, you'll find the citation information in various formats like BibTeX, RIS, and APA.

So, if you want to acknowledge the work we've put into Peroxide, citing us would be a great way to do it! Thanks for considering it, we appreciate your support! πŸ‘