I do this on my simulations by using the checkpoint method. Run in batch mode and checkpoint every 10 steps and I typically get about 100 files each of which can be used as the start point for a GUI run so I can review whats happened and if there is anything of interest in a particular range. Stewart Aitken. On 5 June 2014 17:19, Sadat Chowdhury <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Hi, > > My simulations run in headless mode (or batch mode) by a class that > extends the sim.engine.SimState base class. The simulation involves running > an evolutionary system across several "generations". Typically, I can > evolve around 300/400 generations within 20-30 mins this way. > > The same simulation, if run using a 2D visualizer (sim.display.GUIState) > will take a much longer run-time. In fact, a single generation would take > at least 20 minutes (a "generation" is composed of several thousand > simulations of some scenario with some number of agents). So it's > practically impossible to visualize the entire experiment -- it would take > several days. Actually, neither do I want to. Rather, I would like to > visualize a particular simulation every 100 generations or so. > > One way of achieving this is to simply close the visualizer window (Java > applet window that shows the simulation) momentarily, and then the > simulation runs faster. However, it comes nowhere close to the speed of > running that same simulation completely headless. This makes sense, because > the "view" is still registered in the MVC plumbing and as the "model" is > changing, the "controller" is still making update calls to the "view" -- > regardless whether the "view" is active or not. If the window is closed, > there is no rendering, so it runs slightly faster. > > What I really want is a true detachment of the view from the > model/controller for a certain number of configurable steps. Is it > possible? I've been looking at the MASON source code, and it is fairly > involved, but I don't see an easy way to accomplish this. > > Maybe I am approaching this in the wrong way -- perhaps I should think of > alternatives such as serializing during key moments and then somehow > replaying them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks, > Sadat. > -- EMAIL DISCLAIMER http://www.york.ac.uk/docs/disclaimer/email.htm <http://www.york.ac.uk/docs/disclaimer/email.htm>