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author | Thomas White <taw@physics.org> | 2022-09-21 14:47:54 +0200 |
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committer | Thomas White <taw@physics.org> | 2022-09-21 14:47:54 +0200 |
commit | 862fa2485c77611532d21e18c92595b34f767ff7 (patch) | |
tree | dd97e359d0d8dfc570b169235d12b1d466768e42 | |
parent | ec502c382bab9be55ca467b9c521d7293b23ed59 (diff) |
speed.rst: Mention --asdf-fast
-rw-r--r-- | doc/articles/speed.rst | 13 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/doc/articles/speed.rst b/doc/articles/speed.rst index f4c4808d..b63e6164 100644 --- a/doc/articles/speed.rst +++ b/doc/articles/speed.rst @@ -85,10 +85,15 @@ results. Choose the fastest indexing algorithms ====================================== -Don't use PinkIndexer, unless you really need it (wide bandwidth or electron -diffraction data). PinkIndexer is a very general and accurate indexing -algorithm, but these advantages must be "paid for" in speed. Prefer DirAx, -TakeTwo, Mosflm and XGandalf. +In our tests, ``asdf`` gives the best compromise between speed and success +rate, so it's the best choice if you need fast processing. The ``indexamajig`` +option ``--asdf-fast`` makes it about three times faster with only a small +reduction in success rate. + +DirAx, TakeTwo, Mosflm and XGandalf are also good choices (roughly in that +order). Don't use PinkIndexer, unless you really need it (wide bandwidth or +electron diffraction data). PinkIndexer is a very general and accurate +indexing algorithm, but these advantages must be "paid for" in speed. Try less hard to index each frame |