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Re: 答复: Adjoint Greeks

Posted by Peter Caspers-4 on Jan 05, 2015; 8:16pm
URL: http://quantlib.414.s1.nabble.com/Adjoint-Greeks-tp16147p16152.html

Hi Cheng,
yes, exactly, Sebastian applied AD to vega computation in the Hull
White Model if I remember correctly.
It would be great, if you would join in.
Peter

On 5 January 2015 at 02:47, cheng li <[hidden email]> wrote:

> Hi Peter,
>
> I have recently read the presentation writtern by Sebastian on qlws13. Are
> your idea similar with his? Roughly both are template based? I am always
> very interested in AD method but never know how to start from scratch...
>
> I'd like to follow your branch and try to follow the algorithms. Once I got
> that basis, I am very glad to help you to continue the development~
>
> Regards,
> Cheng
>
> -----邮件原件-----
> 发件人: Peter Caspers [mailto:[hidden email]]
> 发送时间: 2015年1月5日 4:55
> 收件人: QuantLib Mailing Lists
> 主题: [Quantlib-dev] Adjoint Greeks
>
> Hello all,
>
> happy new year.
>
> I revisited Ferdinando's comments on adjoint greeks during our December
> workshop and started to play around with that idea.
>
> The approach I am trying to follow is to adapt the ql library code so that
> automatic differentiation _tools_ can be used with it in a transparent way.
> This is opposed to writing special adjoint engines by _hand_ like e.g.
> advocated in Capriotti, Giles, Algorithmic
> Differentiation: Adjoint Greeks Made Easy. The relatively small and
> homogeneous code basis of ql seems to allow for this kind of more
> fundamental approach.
>
> I wrote a bit about my first steps in my blog
>
> http://quantlib.wordpress.com/
>
> and forked a new branch from Luigi's current master on github
>
> https://github.com/pcaspers/quantlib/tree/adjoint
>
> where I started to template'ize the library in order to allow for AD tools
> to hook in. There are already first working examples (see the
> blog) and I am starting to feel confident that the approach might work as a
> whole, might be doable in a reasonable amount of time and is worthwhile
> following.
>
> About the feasibility: The library seems to consist of roughly 376k lines of
> code currently (all hpp and cpp files under ql / ). From that we can
> subtract "data" files
>
> 78862 ./math/randomnumbers/sobolrsg.cpp
> 21376 ./math/randomnumbers/primitivepolynomials.cpp
> 14495 ./math/randomnumbers/latticerules.cpp
> 10115 ./experimental/volatility/noarbsabrabsprobs.cpp
>
> which leaves us with 251k lines. It seems that I have already reviewed and
> adapted around 14k lines, which is 5% and which took me approximately 60
> hours. This gives an estimation of 130 person days still left to do. For the
> whole (!) library where already parts will make much sense and give
> interesting applications. E.g. excluding experimental classes (90k) and the
> market model (25k) reduces the estimate already to 65 person days to go.
>
> I would be interested in your opinions on that, in particular regarding the
> design choices to make (better now than later :-) ).
>
> I'd also be grateful for people supporting the development by forking the
> adjoint branch and sending pull requests with adapted code pieces.
> My personal next steps would be
> - rate deltas for Legs / Swap instruments
> - rate vegas for vanilla interest rate options
> - Hull White model
>
> What do you think ?
>
> Thank you
> Peter
>
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dive into the World of Parallel Programming! The Go Parallel Website,
sponsored by Intel and developed in partnership with Slashdot Media, is your
hub for all things parallel software development, from weekly thought
leadership blogs to news, videos, case studies, tutorials and more. Take a
look and join the conversation now. http://goparallel.sourceforge.net
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