Performance/Floating point
Haskell Performance Resource
Constructs: Techniques: |
Don't use Float
Float
Float
s (probably 32-bits) are almost always a bad idea, unless you Really Know What You Are Doing. Use Double
s. There's rarely a speed disadvantage—modern machines will use the same floating-point unit for both. With Double
s, you are much less likely to hang yourself with numerical errors.
One time when Float
might be a good idea is if you have a lot of them, say a giant array of Float
s. An unboxed array of Float
(see Performance/Arrays) takes up half the space in the heap compared to an unboxed array of Double
. However, boxed Float
s will only take up less space than boxed Double
s if you are on a 32-bit machine (on a 64-bit machine, a Float
still takes up 64 bits).
The speed claims may not be true due to Doubles not necessarily being aligned as the machine wishes. We could do with some benchmarking on various platforms to see what's what.
GHC-specific advice
On x86 (and other platforms with GHC prior to version 6.4.2), use the -fexcess-precision flag to improve performance of floating-point intensive code (up to 2x speedups have been seen). This will keep more intermediates in registers instead of memory, at the expense of occasional differences in results due to unpredictable rounding. See the GHC documentation for more details. Switching on GCCs -ffast-math and -O3 can also help (use -optc-ffast-math and -optc-O3).
Where available, the -optc-march=pentium4 -optc-mfpmath=sse flags may also help.
Note that the -fexcess-precision flag may make programs behave oddly,
e.g. after falling an if x < 0
branch you may find that x
is now not less than zero, as it has been written out to memory and thus some precision lost in the mean time.