How to make recursion faster in Matlab (Matlab seems to forget steps already done)?

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I have defined a recursive function successfully in Matlab.
function result = f(a,i,j)
subl = a(i:j);
n=length(subl);
first=subl(1);
last=subl(end);
if (i==j)
result = a(i);
else
result = max(first*(2*n-1)+f(a,i+1,j), last*(2*n-1)+f(a,i,j-1));
end
However, if I run the function for long enough array a. Say
a = [5 0 2 3 0 2 2 8 1 1 0 1 2 3 4 1 0 1 8 0 1 1 2 3 4]
The recursion gets really slow. This is because Matlab tends to calculate all the steps in the recursion again and again without remembering the between the steps. In Mathematica this can be easily changed by changing the recursive function a bit but I haven't found a way to do this in Matlab. Indeed, in Mathematica the same functions runs extremely fast.
Is there a way to do this easily?
  7 Comments
Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang on 10 Sep 2020
@Stephen Cobeldick, indeed, it can be improved.
>> tic;b=f1(a,1,20);toc
Elapsed time is 0.043371 seconds.
>> fh=@f1
fh =
function_handle with value:
@f1
>> memoizedFcn = memoize(fh)
memoizedFcn =
MemoizedFunction with properties:
Function: @f1
Enabled: 1
CacheSize: 10
>> tic;b=memoizedFcn(a,1,20);toc
Elapsed time is 0.053710 seconds.
>> tic;b=memoizedFcn(a,1,20);toc
Elapsed time is 0.001782 seconds.

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Answers (2)

Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang on 10 Sep 2020
Edited: Fangjun Jiang on 10 Sep 2020
The code can be simplified first.
I see the potential saving. f(a,1,20) depends on f(a,2,20) and f(a,1,19), which depends on f(a,3,20), f(a,2,19), f(a,2,19), f(a,1,18). Here, f(a,2,19) is probabaly calculated twice. Might be able to save it.
function result = f1(a,i,j)
n=j-i+1;
if (i==j)
result = a(i);
else
result = max(a(i)*(2*n-1)+f1(a,i+1,j), a(j)*(2*n-1)+f1(a,i,j-1));
end
>> a=ones(1,20);
>> tic;b=f(a,1,20);toc
Elapsed time is 0.310610 seconds.
>> tic;b=f1(a,1,20);toc
Elapsed time is 0.045661 seconds.
  2 Comments
Harto Saarinen
Harto Saarinen on 10 Sep 2020
Edited: Harto Saarinen on 10 Sep 2020
There are only N(N+1) needed calculations of the function f to calculate f(a,1,N) where N is the lenght of the vector a. And Matlab calculates everything again and again which makes the algorithm to run in 2^N steps!
Mathematica is more clever here for some reason.
Harto Saarinen
Harto Saarinen on 10 Sep 2020
If you continue your thought there you can see that Matlab calculates many of the function calls many times! Actually so many that it makes the recursion exponential even though it should not be.

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Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang on 10 Sep 2020
Edited: Fangjun Jiang on 10 Sep 2020
You might not need to use recursive function to get the solution. Instead, just calculate the result as a nxn matrix, but, it needs to be in a particular order.
For a=ones(1,20), i=1, j=20, Initially, R=nan(20)
first, calculate R(1,1),R(2,2), ..., R(20,20)
second, calculate R(1,2), R(2,3), R(3,4), ... R(19,20)
third, calculate R(1,3), R(2,4), R(3,5),...
function result = f2(a,i,j)
n=j-i+1;
result=nan(n);
for k=i:j
result(k,k)=a(k);
end
for increase=1:j-i
for k=i:j-increase
result(k,k+increase)=max(a(k)*(2*increase+1)+result(k+1,k+increase), a(k+increase)*(2*increase+1)+result(k,k+increase-1));
end
end
end
  2 Comments
Harto Saarinen
Harto Saarinen on 10 Sep 2020
Edited: Harto Saarinen on 10 Sep 2020
Yes this is something that I might have to do. It just suprises me that Matlab does not allow to compute the recursion fast enough but Mathematica is much more clever in this. Memoize does not seem to help too much.
But thank you for writing this up and for your time on the matter. The answer can be quite easily read from the upper right corner of the result now!
This is still a bit more unituitive for me. I can't so easily figure out which argument in the maximum we picked in each step now. In the recursion you can easily mark which part of the max(A,B) we took in each round so that we know at the end which side of the vector we 'consumed' at each step to achieve the maximum.
Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang on 10 Sep 2020
I think at issue is the fact that your recursive function called the function TWICE in one recursion. In next recursion, the function will be called 4 times and so on. I don't have knowledge why Mathematica is smarter about this. I am glad I understood the question and figured out ways to get a solution.

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