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Numpy arrays with labeled axes, similar to xarray but with support for uncertainties

Project description

named-arrays

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named-arrays is an implementation of a named tensor, which assigns names to each axis of an n-dimensional array such as a numpy array.

When using a Numpy n-dimensional array, the programmer must manually keep track of the physical meaning of each axis in the array. Furthermore, it is often necessary to insert singleton dimensions at the end of the array to allow it to broadcastable against other arrays. Named tensors solve this problem by giving each axis a name, which allows for automatic axis alignment without the need for inserting extra dimensions. named-arrays provides a very unapologetic implementation of a named tensor, since axes can only be accessed using their names, unlike xarray which allows for both name and index.

Features

Installation

named-arrays is available on PyPi and can be installed using pip

pip install named-arrays

Examples

ScalarArray

The fundamental type of named-arrays is the ScalarArray, which is a composition of a numpy ndarray-like object and a tuple of axis names which must have the same length as the number of dimensions in the array.

import numpy as np
import named_arrays as na

a = na.ScalarArray(np.array([1, 2, 3]), axes=('x',))

If we create another array with a different axis name, it will be broadcasted automatically against the first array if we add them together

b = na.ScalarArray(np.array([4, 5]), axes=('y',))
c = a + b
c
ScalarArray(
    ndarray=[[5, 6],
             [6, 7],
             [7, 8]],
    axes=('x', 'y'),
)

All the usual numpy reduction operations use the axis name instead of the axis index

c.mean('x')
ScalarArray(
    ndarray=[6., 7.],
    axes=('y',),
)

To index the array we can use a dictionary with the axis names as the keys

c[dict(x=0)]
ScalarArray(
    ndarray=[5, 6],
    axes=('y',),
)

ScalarLinearSpace

We recommend that you rarely directly create instances of ScalarArray directly. Instead, you can use the implicit array classes: ScalarLinearSpace, ScalarLogarithmicSpace, and ScalarGeometricSpace to create arrays in a similar fashion to numpy.linspace(), numpy.logspace(), and numpy.geomspace() with the advantage of being able to access the inputs to these functions at a later point.

d = na.ScalarLinearSpace(0, 1, axis='z', num=4)
d
ScalarLinearSpace(start=0, stop=1, axis='z', num=4, endpoint=True)

Thses implicit array classes work just like ScalarArray and can be used with any of the usual array operations.

a + d
ScalarArray(
    ndarray=[[1.        , 1.33333333, 1.66666667, 2.        ],
             [2.        , 2.33333333, 2.66666667, 3.        ],
             [3.        , 3.33333333, 3.66666667, 4.        ]],
    axes=('x', 'z'),
)


          

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