Issue
Im running several machine learning algorithms with sklearn in a for loop and want to see how long each of them takes. The problem is I also need to return a value and DONT want to have to run it more than once because each algorithm takes so long. Is there a way to capture the return value 'clf' using python's timeit module or a similar one with a function like this...
def RandomForest(train_input, train_output):
clf = ensemble.RandomForestClassifier(n_estimators=10)
clf.fit(train_input, train_output)
return clf
when I call the function like this
t = Timer(lambda : RandomForest(trainX,trainy))
print t.timeit(number=1)
P.S. I also dont want to set a global 'clf' because I might want to do multithreading or multiprocessing later.
Solution
The problem boils down to timeit._template_func not returning the function's return value:
def _template_func(setup, func):
"""Create a timer function. Used if the "statement" is a callable."""
def inner(_it, _timer, _func=func):
setup()
_t0 = _timer()
for _i in _it:
_func()
_t1 = _timer()
return _t1 - _t0
return inner
We can bend timeit
to our will with a bit of monkey-patching:
import timeit
import time
def _template_func(setup, func):
"""Create a timer function. Used if the "statement" is a callable."""
def inner(_it, _timer, _func=func):
setup()
_t0 = _timer()
for _i in _it:
retval = _func()
_t1 = _timer()
return _t1 - _t0, retval
return inner
timeit._template_func = _template_func
def foo():
time.sleep(1)
return 42
t = timeit.Timer(foo)
print(t.timeit(number=1))
returns
(1.0010340213775635, 42)
The first value is the timeit result (in seconds), the second value is the function's return value.
Note that the monkey-patch above only affects the behavior of timeit
when a callable is passed timeit.Timer
. If you pass a string statement, then you'd have to (similarly) monkey-patch the timeit.template
string.
Answered By - unutbu
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