mean_variance_axis (original) (raw)
sklearn.utils.sparsefuncs.mean_variance_axis(X, axis, weights=None, return_sum_weights=False)[source]#
Compute mean and variance along an axis on a CSR or CSC matrix.
Parameters:
Xsparse matrix of shape (n_samples, n_features)
Input data. It can be of CSR or CSC format.
axis{0, 1}
Axis along which the axis should be computed.
weightsndarray of shape (n_samples,) or (n_features,), default=None
If axis is set to 0 shape is (n_samples,) or if axis is set to 1 shape is (n_features,). If it is set to None, then samples are equally weighted.
Added in version 0.24.
return_sum_weightsbool, default=False
If True, returns the sum of weights seen for each feature if axis=0
or each sample if axis=1
.
Added in version 0.24.
Returns:
meansndarray of shape (n_features,), dtype=floating
Feature-wise means.
variancesndarray of shape (n_features,), dtype=floating
Feature-wise variances.
sum_weightsndarray of shape (n_features,), dtype=floating
Returned if return_sum_weights
is True
.
Examples
from sklearn.utils import sparsefuncs from scipy import sparse import numpy as np indptr = np.array([0, 3, 4, 4, 4]) indices = np.array([0, 1, 2, 2]) data = np.array([8, 1, 2, 5]) scale = np.array([2, 3, 2]) csr = sparse.csr_matrix((data, indices, indptr)) csr.todense() matrix([[8, 1, 2], [0, 0, 5], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0]]) sparsefuncs.mean_variance_axis(csr, axis=0) (array([2. , 0.25, 1.75]), array([12. , 0.1875, 4.1875]))