numpy.choose — NumPy v1.18 Manual (original) (raw)
numpy.
choose
(a, choices, out=None, mode='raise')[source]¶
Construct an array from an index array and a set of arrays to choose from.
First of all, if confused or uncertain, definitely look at the Examples - in its full generality, this function is less simple than it might seem from the following code description (below ndi =numpy.lib.index_tricks
):
np.choose(a,c) == np.array([c[a[I]][I] for I in ndi.ndindex(a.shape)])
.
But this omits some subtleties. Here is a fully general summary:
Given an “index” array (a) of integers and a sequence of n arrays (choices), a and each choice array are first broadcast, as necessary, to arrays of a common shape; calling these Ba and Bchoices[i], i = 0,…,n-1 we have that, necessarily, Ba.shape == Bchoices[i].shape
for each i. Then, a new array with shape Ba.shape
is created as follows:
- if
mode=raise
(the default), then, first of all, each element of_a_ (and thus Ba) must be in the range [0, n-1]; now, suppose that_i_ (in that range) is the value at the (j0, j1, …, jm) position in Ba - then the value at the same position in the new array is the value in Bchoices[i] at that same position; - if
mode=wrap
, values in a (and thus Ba) may be any (signed) integer; modular arithmetic is used to map integers outside the range_[0, n-1]_ back into that range; and then the new array is constructed as above; - if
mode=clip
, values in a (and thus Ba) may be any (signed) integer; negative integers are mapped to 0; values greater than _n-1_are mapped to n-1; and then the new array is constructed as above.
Parameters
aint array
This array must contain integers in [0, n-1], where n is the number of choices, unless mode=wrap
or mode=clip
, in which cases any integers are permissible.
choicessequence of arrays
Choice arrays. a and all of the choices must be broadcastable to the same shape. If choices is itself an array (not recommended), then its outermost dimension (i.e., the one corresponding tochoices.shape[0]
) is taken as defining the “sequence”.
outarray, optional
If provided, the result will be inserted into this array. It should be of the appropriate shape and dtype. Note that out is always buffered if mode=’raise’; use other modes for better performance.
mode{‘raise’ (default), ‘wrap’, ‘clip’}, optional
Specifies how indices outside [0, n-1] will be treated:
- ‘raise’ : an exception is raised
- ‘wrap’ : value becomes value mod n
- ‘clip’ : values < 0 are mapped to 0, values > n-1 are mapped to n-1
Returns
merged_arrayarray
The merged result.
Raises
ValueError: shape mismatch
If a and each choice array are not all broadcastable to the same shape.
Notes
To reduce the chance of misinterpretation, even though the following “abuse” is nominally supported, choices should neither be, nor be thought of as, a single array, i.e., the outermost sequence-like container should be either a list or a tuple.
Examples
choices = [[0, 1, 2, 3], [10, 11, 12, 13], ... [20, 21, 22, 23], [30, 31, 32, 33]] np.choose([2, 3, 1, 0], choices ... # the first element of the result will be the first element of the ... # third (2+1) "array" in choices, namely, 20; the second element ... # will be the second element of the fourth (3+1) choice array, i.e., ... # 31, etc. ... ) array([20, 31, 12, 3]) np.choose([2, 4, 1, 0], choices, mode='clip') # 4 goes to 3 (4-1) array([20, 31, 12, 3])
because there are 4 choice arrays
np.choose([2, 4, 1, 0], choices, mode='wrap') # 4 goes to (4 mod 4) array([20, 1, 12, 3])
i.e., 0
A couple examples illustrating how choose broadcasts:
a = [[1, 0, 1], [0, 1, 0], [1, 0, 1]] choices = [-10, 10] np.choose(a, choices) array([[ 10, -10, 10], [-10, 10, -10], [ 10, -10, 10]])
With thanks to Anne Archibald
a = np.array([0, 1]).reshape((2,1,1)) c1 = np.array([1, 2, 3]).reshape((1,3,1)) c2 = np.array([-1, -2, -3, -4, -5]).reshape((1,1,5)) np.choose(a, (c1, c2)) # result is 2x3x5, res[0,:,:]=c1, res[1,:,:]=c2 array([[[ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1], [ 2, 2, 2, 2, 2], [ 3, 3, 3, 3, 3]], [[-1, -2, -3, -4, -5], [-1, -2, -3, -4, -5], [-1, -2, -3, -4, -5]]])