ra-ra is a C++23 header-only library for handling multidimensional dense arrays. These are objects that can be indexed in 0 or more dimensions; the number of dimensions is known as ‘rank’. For example, vectors are arrays of rank 1 and matrices are arrays of rank 2.
ra-ra implements expression templates. This is a C++ technique (pioneered by Blitz++) to delay the execution of expressions involving array operands, and in this way avoid the unnecessary creation of large temporary array objects.
ra-ra is compact (<5k loc), easy to extend, and generic. There are no arbitrary type restrictions or limits on rank or argument count.
In this example (examples/read-me.cc), we create some arrays, do operations on them, and print the result.
#include "ra/ra.hh"
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
// run time rank
ra::Big<float> A = {{1, 2, 3, 4}, {5, 6, 7, 8}};
// static rank, run time dimensions
ra::Big<float, 2> B = {{1, 2, 3, 4}, {5, 6, 7, 8}};
// static dimensions
ra::Small<float, 2, 4> C = {{1, 2, 3, 4}, {5, 6, 7, 8}};
// rank-extending op with STL object
B += A + C + std::vector {100., 200.};
// negate right half
B(ra::all, ra::iota(ra::len/2, ra::len/2)) *= -1;
// shape is dynamic, so will be printed
std::cout << "B: " << B << std::endl;
}
⇒
B: 2 4
103 106 -109 -112
215 218 -221 -224
Please check the manual online at lloda.github.io/ra-ra, or have a look at the examples/ folder.
ra-ra offers:
- Array types with arbitrary compile time or runtime rank and shape.
- Memory owning types as well as views over any piece of memory.
- Compatibility with builtin arrays and with the standard library, including ranges.
- Interoperability with other libraries and languages through transparent memory layout.
- Slicing with indices of arbitrary rank, axis skipping and insertion (e.g. for broadcasting), and contextual
len
. - Rank extension by prefix matching, as in APL/J, for functions of any number of arguments.
- Iterators over subarrays (cells) of any rank.
- Rank conjunction as in J (compile time rank only), outer product operation.
- Short-circuiting logical operators.
- Argument list selection operators (
where
with bool selector,pick
with integer selector). - Reshape, transpose, reverse, collapse/explode, stencils.
- Arbitrary types as array elements, or as scalar operands.
- Many predefined array operations. Adding yours is trivial.
- Configurable error checking.
- As much
constexpr
as possible.
Performance is competitive with hand written scalar (element by element) loops, but probably not with cache-tuned code such as your platform BLAS, or with code using SIMD. Please have a look at the benchmarks in bench/.
ra-ra is header-only and has no dependencies other than a C++23 compiler and the standard library. At the moment I test with gcc 14.1. If you can test with Clang, please let me know.
The test suite in test/ runs under either SCons (CXXFLAGS=-O3 scons
) or CMake (CXXFLAGS=-O3 cmake . && make && make test
). Running the test suite will also build and run the examples and the benchmarks. Please check the manual for options.
- Both index and size types are signed. Index base is 0.
- The default array order is C or row-major (last dimension changes fastest). You can make array views with other orders, but newly created arrays use C order.
- The subscripting operator is
()
or[]
, indistinctly. - Indices are checked by default. This can be disabled with a compilation flag.
- ra-ra doesn't use exceptions, but it provides a hook so you can throw your own exceptions on ra-ra errors. See ‘Error handling’ in the manual.
- ra-ra uses zero size arrays and VLAs internally.
- Operations that require allocation, such as concatenation or search, are mostly absent.
- No good abstraction for reductions. You can write reductions abusing rank extension, but it's awkward.
- Traversal of arrays is basic, just unrolling of inner dimensions.
- Handling of nested / ragged arrays is inconsistent.
- No support for parallel operations or GPU.
- No SIMD to speak of.
Please see the TODO file for a concrete list of known issues.
I do numerical work in C++, and I need support for array operations. The built-in array types that C++ inherits from C are very insufficient, so at the time of C++11 when I started writing ra-ra, a number of libraries where already available. However, most of these libraries seemed to support only vectors and matrices, or small objects for vector algebra.
Blitz++ was a major inspiration as an early generic library. But it was a heroic feat to write such a library in C++ in the late 90s. Variadic templates, lambdas, perfect forwarding, etc. make things much easier, for the library writer as well as for the user.
From APL and J I've taken the rank extension mechanism, and perhaps an inclination for carrying each feature to its logical end.
ra-ra wants to remain simple. I try not to second-guess the compiler and I don't stress performance as much as Blitz++ did. However, I'm wary of adding features that could become an obstacle if I ever tried to make things fast(er). I believe that implementating new traversal methods, or perhaps optimizing specific expression patterns, should be possible without having to turn the library inside out.
- Towards a standard for a C++ multi-dimensional array library for scientific applications Reviews C++ array libraries, including ra-ra (2020-08)
- libsimdpp C++ SIMD library
- J for C programmers Array programming concepts
- GNU APL
- Fortran wiki
- Numpy
- Octave