From 4a52a71956a8d46fcb7294ac71734504bb09bcc2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: S. Solomon Darnell Date: Fri, 28 Mar 2025 21:52:21 -0500 Subject: two version of R2R are here --- .../site-packages/numpy/core/arrayprint.py | 1725 ++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 1725 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .venv/lib/python3.12/site-packages/numpy/core/arrayprint.py (limited to '.venv/lib/python3.12/site-packages/numpy/core/arrayprint.py') diff --git a/.venv/lib/python3.12/site-packages/numpy/core/arrayprint.py b/.venv/lib/python3.12/site-packages/numpy/core/arrayprint.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000..62cd5270 --- /dev/null +++ b/.venv/lib/python3.12/site-packages/numpy/core/arrayprint.py @@ -0,0 +1,1725 @@ +"""Array printing function + +$Id: arrayprint.py,v 1.9 2005/09/13 13:58:44 teoliphant Exp $ + +""" +__all__ = ["array2string", "array_str", "array_repr", "set_string_function", + "set_printoptions", "get_printoptions", "printoptions", + "format_float_positional", "format_float_scientific"] +__docformat__ = 'restructuredtext' + +# +# Written by Konrad Hinsen +# last revision: 1996-3-13 +# modified by Jim Hugunin 1997-3-3 for repr's and str's (and other details) +# and by Perry Greenfield 2000-4-1 for numarray +# and by Travis Oliphant 2005-8-22 for numpy + + +# Note: Both scalartypes.c.src and arrayprint.py implement strs for numpy +# scalars but for different purposes. scalartypes.c.src has str/reprs for when +# the scalar is printed on its own, while arrayprint.py has strs for when +# scalars are printed inside an ndarray. Only the latter strs are currently +# user-customizable. + +import functools +import numbers +import sys +try: + from _thread import get_ident +except ImportError: + from _dummy_thread import get_ident + +import numpy as np +from . import numerictypes as _nt +from .umath import absolute, isinf, isfinite, isnat +from . import multiarray +from .multiarray import (array, dragon4_positional, dragon4_scientific, + datetime_as_string, datetime_data, ndarray, + set_legacy_print_mode) +from .fromnumeric import any +from .numeric import concatenate, asarray, errstate +from .numerictypes import (longlong, intc, int_, float_, complex_, bool_, + flexible) +from .overrides import array_function_dispatch, set_module +import operator +import warnings +import contextlib + +_format_options = { + 'edgeitems': 3, # repr N leading and trailing items of each dimension + 'threshold': 1000, # total items > triggers array summarization + 'floatmode': 'maxprec', + 'precision': 8, # precision of floating point representations + 'suppress': False, # suppress printing small floating values in exp format + 'linewidth': 75, + 'nanstr': 'nan', + 'infstr': 'inf', + 'sign': '-', + 'formatter': None, + # Internally stored as an int to simplify comparisons; converted from/to + # str/False on the way in/out. + 'legacy': sys.maxsize} + +def _make_options_dict(precision=None, threshold=None, edgeitems=None, + linewidth=None, suppress=None, nanstr=None, infstr=None, + sign=None, formatter=None, floatmode=None, legacy=None): + """ + Make a dictionary out of the non-None arguments, plus conversion of + *legacy* and sanity checks. + """ + + options = {k: v for k, v in locals().items() if v is not None} + + if suppress is not None: + options['suppress'] = bool(suppress) + + modes = ['fixed', 'unique', 'maxprec', 'maxprec_equal'] + if floatmode not in modes + [None]: + raise ValueError("floatmode option must be one of " + + ", ".join('"{}"'.format(m) for m in modes)) + + if sign not in [None, '-', '+', ' ']: + raise ValueError("sign option must be one of ' ', '+', or '-'") + + if legacy == False: + options['legacy'] = sys.maxsize + elif legacy == '1.13': + options['legacy'] = 113 + elif legacy == '1.21': + options['legacy'] = 121 + elif legacy is None: + pass # OK, do nothing. + else: + warnings.warn( + "legacy printing option can currently only be '1.13', '1.21', or " + "`False`", stacklevel=3) + + if threshold is not None: + # forbid the bad threshold arg suggested by stack overflow, gh-12351 + if not isinstance(threshold, numbers.Number): + raise TypeError("threshold must be numeric") + if np.isnan(threshold): + raise ValueError("threshold must be non-NAN, try " + "sys.maxsize for untruncated representation") + + if precision is not None: + # forbid the bad precision arg as suggested by issue #18254 + try: + options['precision'] = operator.index(precision) + except TypeError as e: + raise TypeError('precision must be an integer') from e + + return options + + +@set_module('numpy') +def set_printoptions(precision=None, threshold=None, edgeitems=None, + linewidth=None, suppress=None, nanstr=None, infstr=None, + formatter=None, sign=None, floatmode=None, *, legacy=None): + """ + Set printing options. + + These options determine the way floating point numbers, arrays and + other NumPy objects are displayed. + + Parameters + ---------- + precision : int or None, optional + Number of digits of precision for floating point output (default 8). + May be None if `floatmode` is not `fixed`, to print as many digits as + necessary to uniquely specify the value. + threshold : int, optional + Total number of array elements which trigger summarization + rather than full repr (default 1000). + To always use the full repr without summarization, pass `sys.maxsize`. + edgeitems : int, optional + Number of array items in summary at beginning and end of + each dimension (default 3). + linewidth : int, optional + The number of characters per line for the purpose of inserting + line breaks (default 75). + suppress : bool, optional + If True, always print floating point numbers using fixed point + notation, in which case numbers equal to zero in the current precision + will print as zero. If False, then scientific notation is used when + absolute value of the smallest number is < 1e-4 or the ratio of the + maximum absolute value to the minimum is > 1e3. The default is False. + nanstr : str, optional + String representation of floating point not-a-number (default nan). + infstr : str, optional + String representation of floating point infinity (default inf). + sign : string, either '-', '+', or ' ', optional + Controls printing of the sign of floating-point types. If '+', always + print the sign of positive values. If ' ', always prints a space + (whitespace character) in the sign position of positive values. If + '-', omit the sign character of positive values. (default '-') + formatter : dict of callables, optional + If not None, the keys should indicate the type(s) that the respective + formatting function applies to. Callables should return a string. + Types that are not specified (by their corresponding keys) are handled + by the default formatters. Individual types for which a formatter + can be set are: + + - 'bool' + - 'int' + - 'timedelta' : a `numpy.timedelta64` + - 'datetime' : a `numpy.datetime64` + - 'float' + - 'longfloat' : 128-bit floats + - 'complexfloat' + - 'longcomplexfloat' : composed of two 128-bit floats + - 'numpystr' : types `numpy.bytes_` and `numpy.str_` + - 'object' : `np.object_` arrays + + Other keys that can be used to set a group of types at once are: + + - 'all' : sets all types + - 'int_kind' : sets 'int' + - 'float_kind' : sets 'float' and 'longfloat' + - 'complex_kind' : sets 'complexfloat' and 'longcomplexfloat' + - 'str_kind' : sets 'numpystr' + floatmode : str, optional + Controls the interpretation of the `precision` option for + floating-point types. Can take the following values + (default maxprec_equal): + + * 'fixed': Always print exactly `precision` fractional digits, + even if this would print more or fewer digits than + necessary to specify the value uniquely. + * 'unique': Print the minimum number of fractional digits necessary + to represent each value uniquely. Different elements may + have a different number of digits. The value of the + `precision` option is ignored. + * 'maxprec': Print at most `precision` fractional digits, but if + an element can be uniquely represented with fewer digits + only print it with that many. + * 'maxprec_equal': Print at most `precision` fractional digits, + but if every element in the array can be uniquely + represented with an equal number of fewer digits, use that + many digits for all elements. + legacy : string or `False`, optional + If set to the string `'1.13'` enables 1.13 legacy printing mode. This + approximates numpy 1.13 print output by including a space in the sign + position of floats and different behavior for 0d arrays. This also + enables 1.21 legacy printing mode (described below). + + If set to the string `'1.21'` enables 1.21 legacy printing mode. This + approximates numpy 1.21 print output of complex structured dtypes + by not inserting spaces after commas that separate fields and after + colons. + + If set to `False`, disables legacy mode. + + Unrecognized strings will be ignored with a warning for forward + compatibility. + + .. versionadded:: 1.14.0 + .. versionchanged:: 1.22.0 + + See Also + -------- + get_printoptions, printoptions, set_string_function, array2string + + Notes + ----- + `formatter` is always reset with a call to `set_printoptions`. + + Use `printoptions` as a context manager to set the values temporarily. + + Examples + -------- + Floating point precision can be set: + + >>> np.set_printoptions(precision=4) + >>> np.array([1.123456789]) + [1.1235] + + Long arrays can be summarised: + + >>> np.set_printoptions(threshold=5) + >>> np.arange(10) + array([0, 1, 2, ..., 7, 8, 9]) + + Small results can be suppressed: + + >>> eps = np.finfo(float).eps + >>> x = np.arange(4.) + >>> x**2 - (x + eps)**2 + array([-4.9304e-32, -4.4409e-16, 0.0000e+00, 0.0000e+00]) + >>> np.set_printoptions(suppress=True) + >>> x**2 - (x + eps)**2 + array([-0., -0., 0., 0.]) + + A custom formatter can be used to display array elements as desired: + + >>> np.set_printoptions(formatter={'all':lambda x: 'int: '+str(-x)}) + >>> x = np.arange(3) + >>> x + array([int: 0, int: -1, int: -2]) + >>> np.set_printoptions() # formatter gets reset + >>> x + array([0, 1, 2]) + + To put back the default options, you can use: + + >>> np.set_printoptions(edgeitems=3, infstr='inf', + ... linewidth=75, nanstr='nan', precision=8, + ... suppress=False, threshold=1000, formatter=None) + + Also to temporarily override options, use `printoptions` as a context manager: + + >>> with np.printoptions(precision=2, suppress=True, threshold=5): + ... np.linspace(0, 10, 10) + array([ 0. , 1.11, 2.22, ..., 7.78, 8.89, 10. ]) + + """ + opt = _make_options_dict(precision, threshold, edgeitems, linewidth, + suppress, nanstr, infstr, sign, formatter, + floatmode, legacy) + # formatter is always reset + opt['formatter'] = formatter + _format_options.update(opt) + + # set the C variable for legacy mode + if _format_options['legacy'] == 113: + set_legacy_print_mode(113) + # reset the sign option in legacy mode to avoid confusion + _format_options['sign'] = '-' + elif _format_options['legacy'] == 121: + set_legacy_print_mode(121) + elif _format_options['legacy'] == sys.maxsize: + set_legacy_print_mode(0) + + +@set_module('numpy') +def get_printoptions(): + """ + Return the current print options. + + Returns + ------- + print_opts : dict + Dictionary of current print options with keys + + - precision : int + - threshold : int + - edgeitems : int + - linewidth : int + - suppress : bool + - nanstr : str + - infstr : str + - formatter : dict of callables + - sign : str + + For a full description of these options, see `set_printoptions`. + + See Also + -------- + set_printoptions, printoptions, set_string_function + + """ + opts = _format_options.copy() + opts['legacy'] = { + 113: '1.13', 121: '1.21', sys.maxsize: False, + }[opts['legacy']] + return opts + + +def _get_legacy_print_mode(): + """Return the legacy print mode as an int.""" + return _format_options['legacy'] + + +@set_module('numpy') +@contextlib.contextmanager +def printoptions(*args, **kwargs): + """Context manager for setting print options. + + Set print options for the scope of the `with` block, and restore the old + options at the end. See `set_printoptions` for the full description of + available options. + + Examples + -------- + + >>> from numpy.testing import assert_equal + >>> with np.printoptions(precision=2): + ... np.array([2.0]) / 3 + array([0.67]) + + The `as`-clause of the `with`-statement gives the current print options: + + >>> with np.printoptions(precision=2) as opts: + ... assert_equal(opts, np.get_printoptions()) + + See Also + -------- + set_printoptions, get_printoptions + + """ + opts = np.get_printoptions() + try: + np.set_printoptions(*args, **kwargs) + yield np.get_printoptions() + finally: + np.set_printoptions(**opts) + + +def _leading_trailing(a, edgeitems, index=()): + """ + Keep only the N-D corners (leading and trailing edges) of an array. + + Should be passed a base-class ndarray, since it makes no guarantees about + preserving subclasses. + """ + axis = len(index) + if axis == a.ndim: + return a[index] + + if a.shape[axis] > 2*edgeitems: + return concatenate(( + _leading_trailing(a, edgeitems, index + np.index_exp[ :edgeitems]), + _leading_trailing(a, edgeitems, index + np.index_exp[-edgeitems:]) + ), axis=axis) + else: + return _leading_trailing(a, edgeitems, index + np.index_exp[:]) + + +def _object_format(o): + """ Object arrays containing lists should be printed unambiguously """ + if type(o) is list: + fmt = 'list({!r})' + else: + fmt = '{!r}' + return fmt.format(o) + +def repr_format(x): + return repr(x) + +def str_format(x): + return str(x) + +def _get_formatdict(data, *, precision, floatmode, suppress, sign, legacy, + formatter, **kwargs): + # note: extra arguments in kwargs are ignored + + # wrapped in lambdas to avoid taking a code path with the wrong type of data + formatdict = { + 'bool': lambda: BoolFormat(data), + 'int': lambda: IntegerFormat(data), + 'float': lambda: FloatingFormat( + data, precision, floatmode, suppress, sign, legacy=legacy), + 'longfloat': lambda: FloatingFormat( + data, precision, floatmode, suppress, sign, legacy=legacy), + 'complexfloat': lambda: ComplexFloatingFormat( + data, precision, floatmode, suppress, sign, legacy=legacy), + 'longcomplexfloat': lambda: ComplexFloatingFormat( + data, precision, floatmode, suppress, sign, legacy=legacy), + 'datetime': lambda: DatetimeFormat(data, legacy=legacy), + 'timedelta': lambda: TimedeltaFormat(data), + 'object': lambda: _object_format, + 'void': lambda: str_format, + 'numpystr': lambda: repr_format} + + # we need to wrap values in `formatter` in a lambda, so that the interface + # is the same as the above values. + def indirect(x): + return lambda: x + + if formatter is not None: + fkeys = [k for k in formatter.keys() if formatter[k] is not None] + if 'all' in fkeys: + for key in formatdict.keys(): + formatdict[key] = indirect(formatter['all']) + if 'int_kind' in fkeys: + for key in ['int']: + formatdict[key] = indirect(formatter['int_kind']) + if 'float_kind' in fkeys: + for key in ['float', 'longfloat']: + formatdict[key] = indirect(formatter['float_kind']) + if 'complex_kind' in fkeys: + for key in ['complexfloat', 'longcomplexfloat']: + formatdict[key] = indirect(formatter['complex_kind']) + if 'str_kind' in fkeys: + formatdict['numpystr'] = indirect(formatter['str_kind']) + for key in formatdict.keys(): + if key in fkeys: + formatdict[key] = indirect(formatter[key]) + + return formatdict + +def _get_format_function(data, **options): + """ + find the right formatting function for the dtype_ + """ + dtype_ = data.dtype + dtypeobj = dtype_.type + formatdict = _get_formatdict(data, **options) + if dtypeobj is None: + return formatdict["numpystr"]() + elif issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.bool_): + return formatdict['bool']() + elif issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.integer): + if issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.timedelta64): + return formatdict['timedelta']() + else: + return formatdict['int']() + elif issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.floating): + if issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.longfloat): + return formatdict['longfloat']() + else: + return formatdict['float']() + elif issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.complexfloating): + if issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.clongfloat): + return formatdict['longcomplexfloat']() + else: + return formatdict['complexfloat']() + elif issubclass(dtypeobj, (_nt.str_, _nt.bytes_)): + return formatdict['numpystr']() + elif issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.datetime64): + return formatdict['datetime']() + elif issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.object_): + return formatdict['object']() + elif issubclass(dtypeobj, _nt.void): + if dtype_.names is not None: + return StructuredVoidFormat.from_data(data, **options) + else: + return formatdict['void']() + else: + return formatdict['numpystr']() + + +def _recursive_guard(fillvalue='...'): + """ + Like the python 3.2 reprlib.recursive_repr, but forwards *args and **kwargs + + Decorates a function such that if it calls itself with the same first + argument, it returns `fillvalue` instead of recursing. + + Largely copied from reprlib.recursive_repr + """ + + def decorating_function(f): + repr_running = set() + + @functools.wraps(f) + def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs): + key = id(self), get_ident() + if key in repr_running: + return fillvalue + repr_running.add(key) + try: + return f(self, *args, **kwargs) + finally: + repr_running.discard(key) + + return wrapper + + return decorating_function + + +# gracefully handle recursive calls, when object arrays contain themselves +@_recursive_guard() +def _array2string(a, options, separator=' ', prefix=""): + # The formatter __init__s in _get_format_function cannot deal with + # subclasses yet, and we also need to avoid recursion issues in + # _formatArray with subclasses which return 0d arrays in place of scalars + data = asarray(a) + if a.shape == (): + a = data + + if a.size > options['threshold']: + summary_insert = "..." + data = _leading_trailing(data, options['edgeitems']) + else: + summary_insert = "" + + # find the right formatting function for the array + format_function = _get_format_function(data, **options) + + # skip over "[" + next_line_prefix = " " + # skip over array( + next_line_prefix += " "*len(prefix) + + lst = _formatArray(a, format_function, options['linewidth'], + next_line_prefix, separator, options['edgeitems'], + summary_insert, options['legacy']) + return lst + + +def _array2string_dispatcher( + a, max_line_width=None, precision=None, + suppress_small=None, separator=None, prefix=None, + style=None, formatter=None, threshold=None, + edgeitems=None, sign=None, floatmode=None, suffix=None, + *, legacy=None): + return (a,) + + +@array_function_dispatch(_array2string_dispatcher, module='numpy') +def array2string(a, max_line_width=None, precision=None, + suppress_small=None, separator=' ', prefix="", + style=np._NoValue, formatter=None, threshold=None, + edgeitems=None, sign=None, floatmode=None, suffix="", + *, legacy=None): + """ + Return a string representation of an array. + + Parameters + ---------- + a : ndarray + Input array. + max_line_width : int, optional + Inserts newlines if text is longer than `max_line_width`. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['linewidth']``. + precision : int or None, optional + Floating point precision. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['precision']``. + suppress_small : bool, optional + Represent numbers "very close" to zero as zero; default is False. + Very close is defined by precision: if the precision is 8, e.g., + numbers smaller (in absolute value) than 5e-9 are represented as + zero. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['suppress']``. + separator : str, optional + Inserted between elements. + prefix : str, optional + suffix : str, optional + The length of the prefix and suffix strings are used to respectively + align and wrap the output. An array is typically printed as:: + + prefix + array2string(a) + suffix + + The output is left-padded by the length of the prefix string, and + wrapping is forced at the column ``max_line_width - len(suffix)``. + It should be noted that the content of prefix and suffix strings are + not included in the output. + style : _NoValue, optional + Has no effect, do not use. + + .. deprecated:: 1.14.0 + formatter : dict of callables, optional + If not None, the keys should indicate the type(s) that the respective + formatting function applies to. Callables should return a string. + Types that are not specified (by their corresponding keys) are handled + by the default formatters. Individual types for which a formatter + can be set are: + + - 'bool' + - 'int' + - 'timedelta' : a `numpy.timedelta64` + - 'datetime' : a `numpy.datetime64` + - 'float' + - 'longfloat' : 128-bit floats + - 'complexfloat' + - 'longcomplexfloat' : composed of two 128-bit floats + - 'void' : type `numpy.void` + - 'numpystr' : types `numpy.bytes_` and `numpy.str_` + + Other keys that can be used to set a group of types at once are: + + - 'all' : sets all types + - 'int_kind' : sets 'int' + - 'float_kind' : sets 'float' and 'longfloat' + - 'complex_kind' : sets 'complexfloat' and 'longcomplexfloat' + - 'str_kind' : sets 'numpystr' + threshold : int, optional + Total number of array elements which trigger summarization + rather than full repr. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['threshold']``. + edgeitems : int, optional + Number of array items in summary at beginning and end of + each dimension. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['edgeitems']``. + sign : string, either '-', '+', or ' ', optional + Controls printing of the sign of floating-point types. If '+', always + print the sign of positive values. If ' ', always prints a space + (whitespace character) in the sign position of positive values. If + '-', omit the sign character of positive values. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['sign']``. + floatmode : str, optional + Controls the interpretation of the `precision` option for + floating-point types. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['floatmode']``. + Can take the following values: + + - 'fixed': Always print exactly `precision` fractional digits, + even if this would print more or fewer digits than + necessary to specify the value uniquely. + - 'unique': Print the minimum number of fractional digits necessary + to represent each value uniquely. Different elements may + have a different number of digits. The value of the + `precision` option is ignored. + - 'maxprec': Print at most `precision` fractional digits, but if + an element can be uniquely represented with fewer digits + only print it with that many. + - 'maxprec_equal': Print at most `precision` fractional digits, + but if every element in the array can be uniquely + represented with an equal number of fewer digits, use that + many digits for all elements. + legacy : string or `False`, optional + If set to the string `'1.13'` enables 1.13 legacy printing mode. This + approximates numpy 1.13 print output by including a space in the sign + position of floats and different behavior for 0d arrays. If set to + `False`, disables legacy mode. Unrecognized strings will be ignored + with a warning for forward compatibility. + + .. versionadded:: 1.14.0 + + Returns + ------- + array_str : str + String representation of the array. + + Raises + ------ + TypeError + if a callable in `formatter` does not return a string. + + See Also + -------- + array_str, array_repr, set_printoptions, get_printoptions + + Notes + ----- + If a formatter is specified for a certain type, the `precision` keyword is + ignored for that type. + + This is a very flexible function; `array_repr` and `array_str` are using + `array2string` internally so keywords with the same name should work + identically in all three functions. + + Examples + -------- + >>> x = np.array([1e-16,1,2,3]) + >>> np.array2string(x, precision=2, separator=',', + ... suppress_small=True) + '[0.,1.,2.,3.]' + + >>> x = np.arange(3.) + >>> np.array2string(x, formatter={'float_kind':lambda x: "%.2f" % x}) + '[0.00 1.00 2.00]' + + >>> x = np.arange(3) + >>> np.array2string(x, formatter={'int':lambda x: hex(x)}) + '[0x0 0x1 0x2]' + + """ + + overrides = _make_options_dict(precision, threshold, edgeitems, + max_line_width, suppress_small, None, None, + sign, formatter, floatmode, legacy) + options = _format_options.copy() + options.update(overrides) + + if options['legacy'] <= 113: + if style is np._NoValue: + style = repr + + if a.shape == () and a.dtype.names is None: + return style(a.item()) + elif style is not np._NoValue: + # Deprecation 11-9-2017 v1.14 + warnings.warn("'style' argument is deprecated and no longer functional" + " except in 1.13 'legacy' mode", + DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) + + if options['legacy'] > 113: + options['linewidth'] -= len(suffix) + + # treat as a null array if any of shape elements == 0 + if a.size == 0: + return "[]" + + return _array2string(a, options, separator, prefix) + + +def _extendLine(s, line, word, line_width, next_line_prefix, legacy): + needs_wrap = len(line) + len(word) > line_width + if legacy > 113: + # don't wrap lines if it won't help + if len(line) <= len(next_line_prefix): + needs_wrap = False + + if needs_wrap: + s += line.rstrip() + "\n" + line = next_line_prefix + line += word + return s, line + + +def _extendLine_pretty(s, line, word, line_width, next_line_prefix, legacy): + """ + Extends line with nicely formatted (possibly multi-line) string ``word``. + """ + words = word.splitlines() + if len(words) == 1 or legacy <= 113: + return _extendLine(s, line, word, line_width, next_line_prefix, legacy) + + max_word_length = max(len(word) for word in words) + if (len(line) + max_word_length > line_width and + len(line) > len(next_line_prefix)): + s += line.rstrip() + '\n' + line = next_line_prefix + words[0] + indent = next_line_prefix + else: + indent = len(line)*' ' + line += words[0] + + for word in words[1::]: + s += line.rstrip() + '\n' + line = indent + word + + suffix_length = max_word_length - len(words[-1]) + line += suffix_length*' ' + + return s, line + +def _formatArray(a, format_function, line_width, next_line_prefix, + separator, edge_items, summary_insert, legacy): + """formatArray is designed for two modes of operation: + + 1. Full output + + 2. Summarized output + + """ + def recurser(index, hanging_indent, curr_width): + """ + By using this local function, we don't need to recurse with all the + arguments. Since this function is not created recursively, the cost is + not significant + """ + axis = len(index) + axes_left = a.ndim - axis + + if axes_left == 0: + return format_function(a[index]) + + # when recursing, add a space to align with the [ added, and reduce the + # length of the line by 1 + next_hanging_indent = hanging_indent + ' ' + if legacy <= 113: + next_width = curr_width + else: + next_width = curr_width - len(']') + + a_len = a.shape[axis] + show_summary = summary_insert and 2*edge_items < a_len + if show_summary: + leading_items = edge_items + trailing_items = edge_items + else: + leading_items = 0 + trailing_items = a_len + + # stringify the array with the hanging indent on the first line too + s = '' + + # last axis (rows) - wrap elements if they would not fit on one line + if axes_left == 1: + # the length up until the beginning of the separator / bracket + if legacy <= 113: + elem_width = curr_width - len(separator.rstrip()) + else: + elem_width = curr_width - max(len(separator.rstrip()), len(']')) + + line = hanging_indent + for i in range(leading_items): + word = recurser(index + (i,), next_hanging_indent, next_width) + s, line = _extendLine_pretty( + s, line, word, elem_width, hanging_indent, legacy) + line += separator + + if show_summary: + s, line = _extendLine( + s, line, summary_insert, elem_width, hanging_indent, legacy) + if legacy <= 113: + line += ", " + else: + line += separator + + for i in range(trailing_items, 1, -1): + word = recurser(index + (-i,), next_hanging_indent, next_width) + s, line = _extendLine_pretty( + s, line, word, elem_width, hanging_indent, legacy) + line += separator + + if legacy <= 113: + # width of the separator is not considered on 1.13 + elem_width = curr_width + word = recurser(index + (-1,), next_hanging_indent, next_width) + s, line = _extendLine_pretty( + s, line, word, elem_width, hanging_indent, legacy) + + s += line + + # other axes - insert newlines between rows + else: + s = '' + line_sep = separator.rstrip() + '\n'*(axes_left - 1) + + for i in range(leading_items): + nested = recurser(index + (i,), next_hanging_indent, next_width) + s += hanging_indent + nested + line_sep + + if show_summary: + if legacy <= 113: + # trailing space, fixed nbr of newlines, and fixed separator + s += hanging_indent + summary_insert + ", \n" + else: + s += hanging_indent + summary_insert + line_sep + + for i in range(trailing_items, 1, -1): + nested = recurser(index + (-i,), next_hanging_indent, + next_width) + s += hanging_indent + nested + line_sep + + nested = recurser(index + (-1,), next_hanging_indent, next_width) + s += hanging_indent + nested + + # remove the hanging indent, and wrap in [] + s = '[' + s[len(hanging_indent):] + ']' + return s + + try: + # invoke the recursive part with an initial index and prefix + return recurser(index=(), + hanging_indent=next_line_prefix, + curr_width=line_width) + finally: + # recursive closures have a cyclic reference to themselves, which + # requires gc to collect (gh-10620). To avoid this problem, for + # performance and PyPy friendliness, we break the cycle: + recurser = None + +def _none_or_positive_arg(x, name): + if x is None: + return -1 + if x < 0: + raise ValueError("{} must be >= 0".format(name)) + return x + +class FloatingFormat: + """ Formatter for subtypes of np.floating """ + def __init__(self, data, precision, floatmode, suppress_small, sign=False, + *, legacy=None): + # for backcompatibility, accept bools + if isinstance(sign, bool): + sign = '+' if sign else '-' + + self._legacy = legacy + if self._legacy <= 113: + # when not 0d, legacy does not support '-' + if data.shape != () and sign == '-': + sign = ' ' + + self.floatmode = floatmode + if floatmode == 'unique': + self.precision = None + else: + self.precision = precision + + self.precision = _none_or_positive_arg(self.precision, 'precision') + + self.suppress_small = suppress_small + self.sign = sign + self.exp_format = False + self.large_exponent = False + + self.fillFormat(data) + + def fillFormat(self, data): + # only the finite values are used to compute the number of digits + finite_vals = data[isfinite(data)] + + # choose exponential mode based on the non-zero finite values: + abs_non_zero = absolute(finite_vals[finite_vals != 0]) + if len(abs_non_zero) != 0: + max_val = np.max(abs_non_zero) + min_val = np.min(abs_non_zero) + with errstate(over='ignore'): # division can overflow + if max_val >= 1.e8 or (not self.suppress_small and + (min_val < 0.0001 or max_val/min_val > 1000.)): + self.exp_format = True + + # do a first pass of printing all the numbers, to determine sizes + if len(finite_vals) == 0: + self.pad_left = 0 + self.pad_right = 0 + self.trim = '.' + self.exp_size = -1 + self.unique = True + self.min_digits = None + elif self.exp_format: + trim, unique = '.', True + if self.floatmode == 'fixed' or self._legacy <= 113: + trim, unique = 'k', False + strs = (dragon4_scientific(x, precision=self.precision, + unique=unique, trim=trim, sign=self.sign == '+') + for x in finite_vals) + frac_strs, _, exp_strs = zip(*(s.partition('e') for s in strs)) + int_part, frac_part = zip(*(s.split('.') for s in frac_strs)) + self.exp_size = max(len(s) for s in exp_strs) - 1 + + self.trim = 'k' + self.precision = max(len(s) for s in frac_part) + self.min_digits = self.precision + self.unique = unique + + # for back-compat with np 1.13, use 2 spaces & sign and full prec + if self._legacy <= 113: + self.pad_left = 3 + else: + # this should be only 1 or 2. Can be calculated from sign. + self.pad_left = max(len(s) for s in int_part) + # pad_right is only needed for nan length calculation + self.pad_right = self.exp_size + 2 + self.precision + else: + trim, unique = '.', True + if self.floatmode == 'fixed': + trim, unique = 'k', False + strs = (dragon4_positional(x, precision=self.precision, + fractional=True, + unique=unique, trim=trim, + sign=self.sign == '+') + for x in finite_vals) + int_part, frac_part = zip(*(s.split('.') for s in strs)) + if self._legacy <= 113: + self.pad_left = 1 + max(len(s.lstrip('-+')) for s in int_part) + else: + self.pad_left = max(len(s) for s in int_part) + self.pad_right = max(len(s) for s in frac_part) + self.exp_size = -1 + self.unique = unique + + if self.floatmode in ['fixed', 'maxprec_equal']: + self.precision = self.min_digits = self.pad_right + self.trim = 'k' + else: + self.trim = '.' + self.min_digits = 0 + + if self._legacy > 113: + # account for sign = ' ' by adding one to pad_left + if self.sign == ' ' and not any(np.signbit(finite_vals)): + self.pad_left += 1 + + # if there are non-finite values, may need to increase pad_left + if data.size != finite_vals.size: + neginf = self.sign != '-' or any(data[isinf(data)] < 0) + nanlen = len(_format_options['nanstr']) + inflen = len(_format_options['infstr']) + neginf + offset = self.pad_right + 1 # +1 for decimal pt + self.pad_left = max(self.pad_left, nanlen - offset, inflen - offset) + + def __call__(self, x): + if not np.isfinite(x): + with errstate(invalid='ignore'): + if np.isnan(x): + sign = '+' if self.sign == '+' else '' + ret = sign + _format_options['nanstr'] + else: # isinf + sign = '-' if x < 0 else '+' if self.sign == '+' else '' + ret = sign + _format_options['infstr'] + return ' '*(self.pad_left + self.pad_right + 1 - len(ret)) + ret + + if self.exp_format: + return dragon4_scientific(x, + precision=self.precision, + min_digits=self.min_digits, + unique=self.unique, + trim=self.trim, + sign=self.sign == '+', + pad_left=self.pad_left, + exp_digits=self.exp_size) + else: + return dragon4_positional(x, + precision=self.precision, + min_digits=self.min_digits, + unique=self.unique, + fractional=True, + trim=self.trim, + sign=self.sign == '+', + pad_left=self.pad_left, + pad_right=self.pad_right) + + +@set_module('numpy') +def format_float_scientific(x, precision=None, unique=True, trim='k', + sign=False, pad_left=None, exp_digits=None, + min_digits=None): + """ + Format a floating-point scalar as a decimal string in scientific notation. + + Provides control over rounding, trimming and padding. Uses and assumes + IEEE unbiased rounding. Uses the "Dragon4" algorithm. + + Parameters + ---------- + x : python float or numpy floating scalar + Value to format. + precision : non-negative integer or None, optional + Maximum number of digits to print. May be None if `unique` is + `True`, but must be an integer if unique is `False`. + unique : boolean, optional + If `True`, use a digit-generation strategy which gives the shortest + representation which uniquely identifies the floating-point number from + other values of the same type, by judicious rounding. If `precision` + is given fewer digits than necessary can be printed. If `min_digits` + is given more can be printed, in which cases the last digit is rounded + with unbiased rounding. + If `False`, digits are generated as if printing an infinite-precision + value and stopping after `precision` digits, rounding the remaining + value with unbiased rounding + trim : one of 'k', '.', '0', '-', optional + Controls post-processing trimming of trailing digits, as follows: + + * 'k' : keep trailing zeros, keep decimal point (no trimming) + * '.' : trim all trailing zeros, leave decimal point + * '0' : trim all but the zero before the decimal point. Insert the + zero if it is missing. + * '-' : trim trailing zeros and any trailing decimal point + sign : boolean, optional + Whether to show the sign for positive values. + pad_left : non-negative integer, optional + Pad the left side of the string with whitespace until at least that + many characters are to the left of the decimal point. + exp_digits : non-negative integer, optional + Pad the exponent with zeros until it contains at least this many digits. + If omitted, the exponent will be at least 2 digits. + min_digits : non-negative integer or None, optional + Minimum number of digits to print. This only has an effect for + `unique=True`. In that case more digits than necessary to uniquely + identify the value may be printed and rounded unbiased. + + -- versionadded:: 1.21.0 + + Returns + ------- + rep : string + The string representation of the floating point value + + See Also + -------- + format_float_positional + + Examples + -------- + >>> np.format_float_scientific(np.float32(np.pi)) + '3.1415927e+00' + >>> s = np.float32(1.23e24) + >>> np.format_float_scientific(s, unique=False, precision=15) + '1.230000071797338e+24' + >>> np.format_float_scientific(s, exp_digits=4) + '1.23e+0024' + """ + precision = _none_or_positive_arg(precision, 'precision') + pad_left = _none_or_positive_arg(pad_left, 'pad_left') + exp_digits = _none_or_positive_arg(exp_digits, 'exp_digits') + min_digits = _none_or_positive_arg(min_digits, 'min_digits') + if min_digits > 0 and precision > 0 and min_digits > precision: + raise ValueError("min_digits must be less than or equal to precision") + return dragon4_scientific(x, precision=precision, unique=unique, + trim=trim, sign=sign, pad_left=pad_left, + exp_digits=exp_digits, min_digits=min_digits) + + +@set_module('numpy') +def format_float_positional(x, precision=None, unique=True, + fractional=True, trim='k', sign=False, + pad_left=None, pad_right=None, min_digits=None): + """ + Format a floating-point scalar as a decimal string in positional notation. + + Provides control over rounding, trimming and padding. Uses and assumes + IEEE unbiased rounding. Uses the "Dragon4" algorithm. + + Parameters + ---------- + x : python float or numpy floating scalar + Value to format. + precision : non-negative integer or None, optional + Maximum number of digits to print. May be None if `unique` is + `True`, but must be an integer if unique is `False`. + unique : boolean, optional + If `True`, use a digit-generation strategy which gives the shortest + representation which uniquely identifies the floating-point number from + other values of the same type, by judicious rounding. If `precision` + is given fewer digits than necessary can be printed, or if `min_digits` + is given more can be printed, in which cases the last digit is rounded + with unbiased rounding. + If `False`, digits are generated as if printing an infinite-precision + value and stopping after `precision` digits, rounding the remaining + value with unbiased rounding + fractional : boolean, optional + If `True`, the cutoffs of `precision` and `min_digits` refer to the + total number of digits after the decimal point, including leading + zeros. + If `False`, `precision` and `min_digits` refer to the total number of + significant digits, before or after the decimal point, ignoring leading + zeros. + trim : one of 'k', '.', '0', '-', optional + Controls post-processing trimming of trailing digits, as follows: + + * 'k' : keep trailing zeros, keep decimal point (no trimming) + * '.' : trim all trailing zeros, leave decimal point + * '0' : trim all but the zero before the decimal point. Insert the + zero if it is missing. + * '-' : trim trailing zeros and any trailing decimal point + sign : boolean, optional + Whether to show the sign for positive values. + pad_left : non-negative integer, optional + Pad the left side of the string with whitespace until at least that + many characters are to the left of the decimal point. + pad_right : non-negative integer, optional + Pad the right side of the string with whitespace until at least that + many characters are to the right of the decimal point. + min_digits : non-negative integer or None, optional + Minimum number of digits to print. Only has an effect if `unique=True` + in which case additional digits past those necessary to uniquely + identify the value may be printed, rounding the last additional digit. + + -- versionadded:: 1.21.0 + + Returns + ------- + rep : string + The string representation of the floating point value + + See Also + -------- + format_float_scientific + + Examples + -------- + >>> np.format_float_positional(np.float32(np.pi)) + '3.1415927' + >>> np.format_float_positional(np.float16(np.pi)) + '3.14' + >>> np.format_float_positional(np.float16(0.3)) + '0.3' + >>> np.format_float_positional(np.float16(0.3), unique=False, precision=10) + '0.3000488281' + """ + precision = _none_or_positive_arg(precision, 'precision') + pad_left = _none_or_positive_arg(pad_left, 'pad_left') + pad_right = _none_or_positive_arg(pad_right, 'pad_right') + min_digits = _none_or_positive_arg(min_digits, 'min_digits') + if not fractional and precision == 0: + raise ValueError("precision must be greater than 0 if " + "fractional=False") + if min_digits > 0 and precision > 0 and min_digits > precision: + raise ValueError("min_digits must be less than or equal to precision") + return dragon4_positional(x, precision=precision, unique=unique, + fractional=fractional, trim=trim, + sign=sign, pad_left=pad_left, + pad_right=pad_right, min_digits=min_digits) + + +class IntegerFormat: + def __init__(self, data): + if data.size > 0: + max_str_len = max(len(str(np.max(data))), + len(str(np.min(data)))) + else: + max_str_len = 0 + self.format = '%{}d'.format(max_str_len) + + def __call__(self, x): + return self.format % x + + +class BoolFormat: + def __init__(self, data, **kwargs): + # add an extra space so " True" and "False" have the same length and + # array elements align nicely when printed, except in 0d arrays + self.truestr = ' True' if data.shape != () else 'True' + + def __call__(self, x): + return self.truestr if x else "False" + + +class ComplexFloatingFormat: + """ Formatter for subtypes of np.complexfloating """ + def __init__(self, x, precision, floatmode, suppress_small, + sign=False, *, legacy=None): + # for backcompatibility, accept bools + if isinstance(sign, bool): + sign = '+' if sign else '-' + + floatmode_real = floatmode_imag = floatmode + if legacy <= 113: + floatmode_real = 'maxprec_equal' + floatmode_imag = 'maxprec' + + self.real_format = FloatingFormat( + x.real, precision, floatmode_real, suppress_small, + sign=sign, legacy=legacy + ) + self.imag_format = FloatingFormat( + x.imag, precision, floatmode_imag, suppress_small, + sign='+', legacy=legacy + ) + + def __call__(self, x): + r = self.real_format(x.real) + i = self.imag_format(x.imag) + + # add the 'j' before the terminal whitespace in i + sp = len(i.rstrip()) + i = i[:sp] + 'j' + i[sp:] + + return r + i + + +class _TimelikeFormat: + def __init__(self, data): + non_nat = data[~isnat(data)] + if len(non_nat) > 0: + # Max str length of non-NaT elements + max_str_len = max(len(self._format_non_nat(np.max(non_nat))), + len(self._format_non_nat(np.min(non_nat)))) + else: + max_str_len = 0 + if len(non_nat) < data.size: + # data contains a NaT + max_str_len = max(max_str_len, 5) + self._format = '%{}s'.format(max_str_len) + self._nat = "'NaT'".rjust(max_str_len) + + def _format_non_nat(self, x): + # override in subclass + raise NotImplementedError + + def __call__(self, x): + if isnat(x): + return self._nat + else: + return self._format % self._format_non_nat(x) + + +class DatetimeFormat(_TimelikeFormat): + def __init__(self, x, unit=None, timezone=None, casting='same_kind', + legacy=False): + # Get the unit from the dtype + if unit is None: + if x.dtype.kind == 'M': + unit = datetime_data(x.dtype)[0] + else: + unit = 's' + + if timezone is None: + timezone = 'naive' + self.timezone = timezone + self.unit = unit + self.casting = casting + self.legacy = legacy + + # must be called after the above are configured + super().__init__(x) + + def __call__(self, x): + if self.legacy <= 113: + return self._format_non_nat(x) + return super().__call__(x) + + def _format_non_nat(self, x): + return "'%s'" % datetime_as_string(x, + unit=self.unit, + timezone=self.timezone, + casting=self.casting) + + +class TimedeltaFormat(_TimelikeFormat): + def _format_non_nat(self, x): + return str(x.astype('i8')) + + +class SubArrayFormat: + def __init__(self, format_function, **options): + self.format_function = format_function + self.threshold = options['threshold'] + self.edge_items = options['edgeitems'] + + def __call__(self, a): + self.summary_insert = "..." if a.size > self.threshold else "" + return self.format_array(a) + + def format_array(self, a): + if np.ndim(a) == 0: + return self.format_function(a) + + if self.summary_insert and a.shape[0] > 2*self.edge_items: + formatted = ( + [self.format_array(a_) for a_ in a[:self.edge_items]] + + [self.summary_insert] + + [self.format_array(a_) for a_ in a[-self.edge_items:]] + ) + else: + formatted = [self.format_array(a_) for a_ in a] + + return "[" + ", ".join(formatted) + "]" + + +class StructuredVoidFormat: + """ + Formatter for structured np.void objects. + + This does not work on structured alias types like np.dtype(('i4', 'i2,i2')), + as alias scalars lose their field information, and the implementation + relies upon np.void.__getitem__. + """ + def __init__(self, format_functions): + self.format_functions = format_functions + + @classmethod + def from_data(cls, data, **options): + """ + This is a second way to initialize StructuredVoidFormat, using the raw data + as input. Added to avoid changing the signature of __init__. + """ + format_functions = [] + for field_name in data.dtype.names: + format_function = _get_format_function(data[field_name], **options) + if data.dtype[field_name].shape != (): + format_function = SubArrayFormat(format_function, **options) + format_functions.append(format_function) + return cls(format_functions) + + def __call__(self, x): + str_fields = [ + format_function(field) + for field, format_function in zip(x, self.format_functions) + ] + if len(str_fields) == 1: + return "({},)".format(str_fields[0]) + else: + return "({})".format(", ".join(str_fields)) + + +def _void_scalar_repr(x): + """ + Implements the repr for structured-void scalars. It is called from the + scalartypes.c.src code, and is placed here because it uses the elementwise + formatters defined above. + """ + return StructuredVoidFormat.from_data(array(x), **_format_options)(x) + + +_typelessdata = [int_, float_, complex_, bool_] + + +def dtype_is_implied(dtype): + """ + Determine if the given dtype is implied by the representation of its values. + + Parameters + ---------- + dtype : dtype + Data type + + Returns + ------- + implied : bool + True if the dtype is implied by the representation of its values. + + Examples + -------- + >>> np.core.arrayprint.dtype_is_implied(int) + True + >>> np.array([1, 2, 3], int) + array([1, 2, 3]) + >>> np.core.arrayprint.dtype_is_implied(np.int8) + False + >>> np.array([1, 2, 3], np.int8) + array([1, 2, 3], dtype=int8) + """ + dtype = np.dtype(dtype) + if _format_options['legacy'] <= 113 and dtype.type == bool_: + return False + + # not just void types can be structured, and names are not part of the repr + if dtype.names is not None: + return False + + # should care about endianness *unless size is 1* (e.g., int8, bool) + if not dtype.isnative: + return False + + return dtype.type in _typelessdata + + +def dtype_short_repr(dtype): + """ + Convert a dtype to a short form which evaluates to the same dtype. + + The intent is roughly that the following holds + + >>> from numpy import * + >>> dt = np.int64([1, 2]).dtype + >>> assert eval(dtype_short_repr(dt)) == dt + """ + if type(dtype).__repr__ != np.dtype.__repr__: + # TODO: Custom repr for user DTypes, logic should likely move. + return repr(dtype) + if dtype.names is not None: + # structured dtypes give a list or tuple repr + return str(dtype) + elif issubclass(dtype.type, flexible): + # handle these separately so they don't give garbage like str256 + return "'%s'" % str(dtype) + + typename = dtype.name + if not dtype.isnative: + # deal with cases like dtype(' 0 + + prefix = class_name + "(" + suffix = ")" if skipdtype else "," + + if (_format_options['legacy'] <= 113 and + arr.shape == () and not arr.dtype.names): + lst = repr(arr.item()) + elif arr.size > 0 or arr.shape == (0,): + lst = array2string(arr, max_line_width, precision, suppress_small, + ', ', prefix, suffix=suffix) + else: # show zero-length shape unless it is (0,) + lst = "[], shape=%s" % (repr(arr.shape),) + + arr_str = prefix + lst + suffix + + if skipdtype: + return arr_str + + dtype_str = "dtype={})".format(dtype_short_repr(arr.dtype)) + + # compute whether we should put dtype on a new line: Do so if adding the + # dtype would extend the last line past max_line_width. + # Note: This line gives the correct result even when rfind returns -1. + last_line_len = len(arr_str) - (arr_str.rfind('\n') + 1) + spacer = " " + if _format_options['legacy'] <= 113: + if issubclass(arr.dtype.type, flexible): + spacer = '\n' + ' '*len(class_name + "(") + elif last_line_len + len(dtype_str) + 1 > max_line_width: + spacer = '\n' + ' '*len(class_name + "(") + + return arr_str + spacer + dtype_str + + +def _array_repr_dispatcher( + arr, max_line_width=None, precision=None, suppress_small=None): + return (arr,) + + +@array_function_dispatch(_array_repr_dispatcher, module='numpy') +def array_repr(arr, max_line_width=None, precision=None, suppress_small=None): + """ + Return the string representation of an array. + + Parameters + ---------- + arr : ndarray + Input array. + max_line_width : int, optional + Inserts newlines if text is longer than `max_line_width`. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['linewidth']``. + precision : int, optional + Floating point precision. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['precision']``. + suppress_small : bool, optional + Represent numbers "very close" to zero as zero; default is False. + Very close is defined by precision: if the precision is 8, e.g., + numbers smaller (in absolute value) than 5e-9 are represented as + zero. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['suppress']``. + + Returns + ------- + string : str + The string representation of an array. + + See Also + -------- + array_str, array2string, set_printoptions + + Examples + -------- + >>> np.array_repr(np.array([1,2])) + 'array([1, 2])' + >>> np.array_repr(np.ma.array([0.])) + 'MaskedArray([0.])' + >>> np.array_repr(np.array([], np.int32)) + 'array([], dtype=int32)' + + >>> x = np.array([1e-6, 4e-7, 2, 3]) + >>> np.array_repr(x, precision=6, suppress_small=True) + 'array([0.000001, 0. , 2. , 3. ])' + + """ + return _array_repr_implementation( + arr, max_line_width, precision, suppress_small) + + +@_recursive_guard() +def _guarded_repr_or_str(v): + if isinstance(v, bytes): + return repr(v) + return str(v) + + +def _array_str_implementation( + a, max_line_width=None, precision=None, suppress_small=None, + array2string=array2string): + """Internal version of array_str() that allows overriding array2string.""" + if (_format_options['legacy'] <= 113 and + a.shape == () and not a.dtype.names): + return str(a.item()) + + # the str of 0d arrays is a special case: It should appear like a scalar, + # so floats are not truncated by `precision`, and strings are not wrapped + # in quotes. So we return the str of the scalar value. + if a.shape == (): + # obtain a scalar and call str on it, avoiding problems for subclasses + # for which indexing with () returns a 0d instead of a scalar by using + # ndarray's getindex. Also guard against recursive 0d object arrays. + return _guarded_repr_or_str(np.ndarray.__getitem__(a, ())) + + return array2string(a, max_line_width, precision, suppress_small, ' ', "") + + +def _array_str_dispatcher( + a, max_line_width=None, precision=None, suppress_small=None): + return (a,) + + +@array_function_dispatch(_array_str_dispatcher, module='numpy') +def array_str(a, max_line_width=None, precision=None, suppress_small=None): + """ + Return a string representation of the data in an array. + + The data in the array is returned as a single string. This function is + similar to `array_repr`, the difference being that `array_repr` also + returns information on the kind of array and its data type. + + Parameters + ---------- + a : ndarray + Input array. + max_line_width : int, optional + Inserts newlines if text is longer than `max_line_width`. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['linewidth']``. + precision : int, optional + Floating point precision. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['precision']``. + suppress_small : bool, optional + Represent numbers "very close" to zero as zero; default is False. + Very close is defined by precision: if the precision is 8, e.g., + numbers smaller (in absolute value) than 5e-9 are represented as + zero. + Defaults to ``numpy.get_printoptions()['suppress']``. + + See Also + -------- + array2string, array_repr, set_printoptions + + Examples + -------- + >>> np.array_str(np.arange(3)) + '[0 1 2]' + + """ + return _array_str_implementation( + a, max_line_width, precision, suppress_small) + + +# needed if __array_function__ is disabled +_array2string_impl = getattr(array2string, '__wrapped__', array2string) +_default_array_str = functools.partial(_array_str_implementation, + array2string=_array2string_impl) +_default_array_repr = functools.partial(_array_repr_implementation, + array2string=_array2string_impl) + + +def set_string_function(f, repr=True): + """ + Set a Python function to be used when pretty printing arrays. + + Parameters + ---------- + f : function or None + Function to be used to pretty print arrays. The function should expect + a single array argument and return a string of the representation of + the array. If None, the function is reset to the default NumPy function + to print arrays. + repr : bool, optional + If True (default), the function for pretty printing (``__repr__``) + is set, if False the function that returns the default string + representation (``__str__``) is set. + + See Also + -------- + set_printoptions, get_printoptions + + Examples + -------- + >>> def pprint(arr): + ... return 'HA! - What are you going to do now?' + ... + >>> np.set_string_function(pprint) + >>> a = np.arange(10) + >>> a + HA! - What are you going to do now? + >>> _ = a + >>> # [0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9] + + We can reset the function to the default: + + >>> np.set_string_function(None) + >>> a + array([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]) + + `repr` affects either pretty printing or normal string representation. + Note that ``__repr__`` is still affected by setting ``__str__`` + because the width of each array element in the returned string becomes + equal to the length of the result of ``__str__()``. + + >>> x = np.arange(4) + >>> np.set_string_function(lambda x:'random', repr=False) + >>> x.__str__() + 'random' + >>> x.__repr__() + 'array([0, 1, 2, 3])' + + """ + if f is None: + if repr: + return multiarray.set_string_function(_default_array_repr, 1) + else: + return multiarray.set_string_function(_default_array_str, 0) + else: + return multiarray.set_string_function(f, repr) -- cgit 1.4.1