I am confused with the use of plural or singular with the word "performance".
My context is the following: I am running multiple experiments in order to evaluate the performance(s?) of an algorithm.
I want to say that using method A is not relevant to evaluate the algorithms in term of performance(s?).
In my native language (French), that would be plural, but I think the logic is different in English. Is it uncountable? Is it always the case?
In the sentences above, should I write performance or performances?
(Please pardon my French as I haven't used it regularly for years.)
Do you mean "to evaluate each instance of the algorithm in each instance", or "evaluate the general performance of the algorithm"? I think in the first case, it can be plural, but in the second it must be singular.
– jimsug Apr 23 '14 at 13:38