Module of functions that are like ufuncs in acting on arrays and optionally storing results in an output array.
Function | fix |
Round to nearest integer towards zero. |
Function | isneginf |
Test element-wise for negative infinity, return result as bool array. |
Function | isposinf |
Test element-wise for positive infinity, return result as bool array. |
Function | _deprecate |
Allow the out argument to be passed as the name y (deprecated) |
Function | _dispatcher |
Undocumented |
Function | _fix |
Use the appropriate decorator, depending upon if dispatching is being used. |
Function | _fix |
Allow the out argument to be passed as the name y (deprecated) |
@_fix_and_maybe_deprecate_out_named_y
def fix(x, out=None): (source) ¶
Round to nearest integer towards zero.
Round an array of floats element-wise to nearest integer towards zero. The rounded values are returned as floats.
Examples
>>> np.fix(3.14) 3.0 >>> np.fix(3) 3.0 >>> np.fix([2.1, 2.9, -2.1, -2.9]) array([ 2., 2., -2., -2.])
Parameters | |
x:array_like | An array of floats to be rounded |
out:ndarray , optional | A location into which the result is stored. If provided, it must have a shape that the input broadcasts to. If not provided or None, a freshly-allocated array is returned. |
Returns | |
ndarray of floats | out - A float array with the same dimensions as the input. If second argument is not supplied then a float array is returned with the rounded values. If a second argument is supplied the result is stored there.
The return value |
@_fix_and_maybe_deprecate_out_named_y
def isneginf(x, out=None): (source) ¶
Test element-wise for negative infinity, return result as bool array.
Notes
NumPy uses the IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point for Arithmetic (IEEE 754).
Errors result if the second argument is also supplied when x is a scalar input, if first and second arguments have different shapes, or if the first argument has complex values.
Examples
>>> np.isneginf(np.NINF) True >>> np.isneginf(np.inf) False >>> np.isneginf(np.PINF) False >>> np.isneginf([-np.inf, 0., np.inf]) array([ True, False, False])
>>> x = np.array([-np.inf, 0., np.inf]) >>> y = np.array([2, 2, 2]) >>> np.isneginf(x, y) array([1, 0, 0]) >>> y array([1, 0, 0])
Parameters | |
x:array_like | The input array. |
out:array_like , optional | A location into which the result is stored. If provided, it must have a shape that the input broadcasts to. If not provided or None, a freshly-allocated boolean array is returned. |
Returns | |
ndarray | out - A boolean array with the same dimensions as the input. If second argument is not supplied then a numpy boolean array is returned with values True where the corresponding element of the input is negative infinity and values False where the element of the input is not negative infinity. If a second argument is supplied the result is stored there. If the
type of that array is a numeric type the result is represented as
zeros and ones, if the type is boolean then as False and True. The
return value |
@_fix_and_maybe_deprecate_out_named_y
def isposinf(x, out=None): (source) ¶
Test element-wise for positive infinity, return result as bool array.
Notes
NumPy uses the IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point for Arithmetic (IEEE 754).
Errors result if the second argument is also supplied when x is a scalar input, if first and second arguments have different shapes, or if the first argument has complex values
Examples
>>> np.isposinf(np.PINF) True >>> np.isposinf(np.inf) True >>> np.isposinf(np.NINF) False >>> np.isposinf([-np.inf, 0., np.inf]) array([False, False, True])
>>> x = np.array([-np.inf, 0., np.inf]) >>> y = np.array([2, 2, 2]) >>> np.isposinf(x, y) array([0, 0, 1]) >>> y array([0, 0, 1])
Parameters | |
x:array_like | The input array. |
out:array_like , optional | A location into which the result is stored. If provided, it must have a shape that the input broadcasts to. If not provided or None, a freshly-allocated boolean array is returned. |
Returns | |
ndarray | out - A boolean array with the same dimensions as the input. If second argument is not supplied then a boolean array is returned with values True where the corresponding element of the input is positive infinity and values False where the element of the input is not positive infinity. If a second argument is supplied the result is stored there. If the
type of that array is a numeric type the result is represented as zeros
and ones, if the type is boolean then as False and True.
The return value |
Allow the out argument to be passed as the name y
(deprecated)
In future, this decorator should be removed.