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NumPy Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   NumPy Beginner's Guide An action packed guide using real world examples of the easy to use, high performance, free open source NumPy mathematical library.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782166085
Length 310 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Ivan Idris Ivan Idris
Author Profile Icon Ivan Idris
Ivan Idris
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Numpy Beginner's Guide Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. NumPy Quick Start FREE CHAPTER 2. Beginning with NumPy Fundamentals 3. Get in Terms with Commonly Used Functions 4. Convenience Functions for Your Convenience 5. Working with Matrices and ufuncs 6. Move Further with NumPy Modules 7. Peeking into Special Routines 8. Assure Quality with Testing 9. Plotting with Matplotlib 10. When NumPy is Not Enough – SciPy and Beyond 11. Playing with Pygame Pop Quiz Answers Index

Time for action – creating a matrix from other matrices


We will create a matrix from two smaller matrices, as follows:

  1. First create a two-by-two identity matrix:

    A = np.eye(2)
    print "A", A

    The identity matrix looks like this:

    A [[ 1.  0.]
     [ 0.  1.]]
    

    Create another matrix like A and multiply by 2:

    B = 2 * A
    print "B", B

    The second matrix is as follows:

    B [[ 2.  0.]
     [ 0.  2.]]
    
  2. Create the compound matrix from a string. The string uses the same format as the mat function; only, you can use matrices instead of numbers.

    print "Compound matrix\n", np.bmat("A B; A B")

    The compound matrix is shown as follows:

    Compound matrix
    [[ 1.  0.  2.  0.]
     [ 0.  1.  0.  2.]
     [ 1.  0.  2.  0.]
     [ 0.  1.  0.  2.]]
    

What just happened?

We created a block matrix from two smaller matrices, with the bmat function. We gave the function a string containing the names of matrices instead of numbers (see bmatcreation.py):

import numpy as np

A = np.eye(2)
print "A", A
B = 2 * A
print "B", B
print "Compound matrix\n", np.bmat...
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