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Swift Matrix and Machine Learning Library

Note: tensorflow/swift and apple/swift-numerics/issues/6 have or will have more complete support for NumPy-like ndarrays and autodiff. Fast AI has a good overview: https://www.fast.ai/2019/01/10/swift-numerics/

An alternate and much mature library is https://github.com/AlexanderTar/LASwift

Apple's Swift is a high level language that's asking for some numerical library to perform computation fast or at the very least easily. This is a bare-bones wrapper for that library.

A way to have iOS run high-level code similar to Python or Matlab is something I've been waiting for, and am incredibly excited to see the results. This will make porting complex signal processing algorithms to C much easier. Porting from Python/MATLAB to C was (and is) a pain in the butt, and this library aims to make the conversion between a Python/Matlab algorithm and a mobile app simple.

In most cases, this library calls Accelerate or OpenCV. If you want to speed up some function or add add another feature in those libraries, feel free to file an issue or submit a pull request (preferred!).

Currently, this library gives you

When I was crafting this library, I primarily followed the footsteps and example set by NumPy. For the more complex mathematical functions (e.g., SVD) I tested it against NumPy. Matlab, at least for the SVD, returns slightly different output.

Additionally, I followed NumPy's syntax whenever possible. For example, NumPy and Matlab differ in their initializer called ones by ones((M,N)) and ones(M, N) respectively. If in doubt or getting weird compiler bugs, look at NumPy for Matlab users or the section on possible swix bugs that may pop up during the Install or other Bugs you may find.

Documentation

Details on how to install can be found in Install. The swix documentation includes details on each individual function and possible bugs.

Third Party Frameworks/Libraries

To be integrated

Uses

FAQ

Why does this library exist?

Not only should you be able to do simple math in arrays like in Surge, Swift makes it possible to call high level mathematical functions just like in Python/Matlab.

How does this library compare to Python/Matlab?

Complete speed results can be found in Speed