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IPython Interactive Computing and Visualization Cookbook

You're reading from   IPython Interactive Computing and Visualization Cookbook Harness IPython for powerful scientific computing and Python data visualization with this collection of more than 100 practical data science recipes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783284818
Length 512 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Cyrille Rossant Cyrille Rossant
Author Profile Icon Cyrille Rossant
Cyrille Rossant
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Tour of Interactive Computing with IPython FREE CHAPTER 2. Best Practices in Interactive Computing 3. Mastering the Notebook 4. Profiling and Optimization 5. High-performance Computing 6. Advanced Visualization 7. Statistical Data Analysis 8. Machine Learning 9. Numerical Optimization 10. Signal Processing 11. Image and Audio Processing 12. Deterministic Dynamical Systems 13. Stochastic Dynamical Systems 14. Graphs, Geometry, and Geographic Information Systems 15. Symbolic and Numerical Mathematics Index

Using stride tricks with NumPy


In this recipe, we will dig deeper into the internals of NumPy arrays, by generalizing the notion of row-major and column-major orders to multidimensional arrays. The general notion is that of strides, which describe how the items of a multidimensional array are organized within a one-dimensional data buffer. Strides are mostly an implementation detail, but they can also be used in specific situations to optimize some algorithms.

Getting ready

We suppose that NumPy has been imported and that the id function has been defined (see the previous recipe, Understanding the internals of NumPy to avoid unnecessary array copying).

How to do it...

  1. Strides are integer numbers describing the byte step in the contiguous block of memory for each dimension.

    In [3]: x = np.zeros(10); x.strides
    Out[3]: (8,)

    This vector x contains double-precision floating point numbers (float64, 8 bytes); one needs to go 8 bytes forward to go from one item to the next.

  2. Now, let's look at the strides...

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