matrixmultiply VS Programming-Language-Benchmark

Compare matrixmultiply vs Programming-Language-Benchmark and see what are their differences.

matrixmultiply

General matrix multiplication of f32 and f64 matrices in Rust. Supports matrices with general strides. (by bluss)
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matrixmultiply Programming-Language-Benchmark
4 5
202 -
- -
6.0 -
about 2 months ago -
Rust
Apache License 2.0 -
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.

matrixmultiply

Posts with mentions or reviews of matrixmultiply. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-07-09.
  • Help understanding the state of ndarrays and linalg in Rust.
    2 projects | /r/rust | 9 Jul 2023
    The matrixmultiply crate from the ndarray author (https://github.com/bluss/matrixmultiply) is one such implementation. It uses the same algorithm as the BLIS project (https://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/flame/pubs/TOMS-BLIS-Analytical.pdf) to partition the problem and exploit the cache hierarchy. It isn't as well tuned as eg. Intel MKL or BLIS, but the results are very respectable.
  • faer 0.8.0 release
    6 projects | /r/rust | 21 Apr 2023
    Do you plan to support integers as native types? I know there is an issue for the crate matrixmultiply for that, it seems it can be problematic because of overflow.
  • Faster `matrixmultiply` ?
    3 projects | /r/rust | 27 Aug 2022
    There's a famous crate [matrixmultiply](https://github.com/bluss/matrixmultiply) for matrix-matrix multiplication in Rust. But it's a bit slow for me.
  • Nim vs Rust Benchmarks
    10 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 7 Feb 2022
    In my benchmarks, Nim is faster than Rust:

    - multithreading runtime (i.e Rayon vs Weave https://github.com/mratsim/weave)

    - Cryptography: https://hackmd.io/@gnark/eccbench#Pairing

    - Scientific computing / matrix multiplication: https://github.com/bluss/matrixmultiply/issues/34#issuecomme...

    There is no inherent reason why a Nim program would be slower than Rust.

Programming-Language-Benchmark

Posts with mentions or reviews of Programming-Language-Benchmark. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-06-17.
  • Rust vs Zig Benchmarks
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 17 Jun 2023
  • Ask HN: What are some of the most elegant codebases in your favorite language?
    37 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 17 Jun 2023
    I found Zig implementation of json parsing is interesting. The code is free from hidden control flow !.

    https://github.com/hanabi1224/Programming-Language-Benchmark...

  • Nim vs Rust Benchmarks
    10 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 7 Feb 2022
    It appears helloworld is the only test with any repeats, and it only has 5 repeats. https://github.com/hanabi1224/Programming-Language-Benchmark...

    Here's the measurement code, it appears to be significantly more complicated than a simple fork/exec/wait loop but that could just be all the C# getting in the way: https://github.com/hanabi1224/Programming-Language-Benchmark... Nevertheless you are probably right that the bulk of this 1.8ms is in the executable under test, and it truly is just bloat. Running `hyperfine ./empty-main-function` from rustc on my Mac gives 0.8ms.

  • Which programming language or compiler is faster
    7 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 18 Dec 2021
    Is faster... on code that has been optimized to hell and back 5 times over and no longer resembles anything like normal code written in the language.

    Seriously, this is the code for the top program. I'm reasonably sure 99% of C++ programmers could not decipher it without spending significant amounts of time on google: https://github.com/hanabi1224/Programming-Language-Benchmark...

    I appreciate that fair benchmarks across languages are a hard problem, but this is not a good solution to it. Any reference to this data as a comparison between "programming languages and compilers" needs to come with a giant disclaimer that it's comparing them at something you almost certainly don't use them for, and is very far from their main use case.

    I also appreciate that this is a repetitive comment the likes of which always come up when this benchmark is mentioned... but I really don't see another way to avoid people misinterpreting it. Very few people are going to spontaneously click through to the code.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing matrixmultiply and Programming-Language-Benchmark you can also consider the following projects:

weave - A state-of-the-art multithreading runtime: message-passing based, fast, scalable, ultra-low overhead

Programming-Language-Benchmarks - Yet another implementation of computer language benchmarks game

rust-ndarray - ndarray: an N-dimensional array with array views, multidimensional slicing, and efficient operations

rosettaboy - A gameboy emulator in several different languages

awesome-python-typing - Collection of awesome Python types, stubs, plugins, and tools to work with them.

Graal - GraalVM compiles Java applications into native executables that start instantly, scale fast, and use fewer compute resources 🚀

cosmopolitan - build-once run-anywhere c library

faer-rs - Linear algebra foundation for the Rust programming language

matrixmultiply_mt - A Multithreaded, processor specialized, fork of the matrixmultiply crate

desktop - Focus on what matters instead of fighting with Git.