I have a grid with thousands of double precision reals.
It's iterating through, and I need it to stop when it's reached convergence to 3 decimal places.
The target is to have it run as fast as possible, but needs to give the same result every (to 3 dp) every time.
At the minute I'm doing something like this
REAL(KIND=DP) :: TOL = 0.001_DP
DO WHILE(.NOT. CONVERGED)
CONVERGED = .TRUE.
DO I = 1, NUM_POINTS
NEW POTENTIAL = !blah blah blah
IF (CONVERGED) THEN
IF (NEW_POTENTIAL < OLD_POTENTIAL - TOL .OR. NEW_POTENTIAL > OLD_POTENTIAL + TOL) THEN
CONVERGED = .FALSE.
END IF
END IF
OLD_POTENTIAL = NEW POTENTIAL
END DO
END DO
I'm thinking that many IF statements can't be too great for performance. I thought about checking for convergence at the end; finding the average value (summing the whole grid, divide by num_points), and checking if that has converged in the same way as above, but I'm not convinced this will always be accurate.
What is the best way of doing this?