I want to create an array with dtype=np.object
, where each element is an array with a numerical type, e.g int or float. For example:
>>> a = np.array([1,2,3])
>>> b = np.empty(3,dtype=np.object)
>>> b[0] = a
>>> b[1] = a
>>> b[2] = a
Creates what I want:
开发者_开发问答>>> print b.dtype
object
>>> print b.shape
(3,)
>>> print b[0].dtype
int64
but I am wondering whether there isn't a way to write lines 3 to 6 in one line (especially since I might want to concatenate 100 arrays). I tried
>>> b = np.array([a,a,a],dtype=np.object)
but this actually converts all the elements to np.object:
>>> print b.dtype
object
>>> print b.shape
(3,)
>>> print b[0].dtype
object
Does anyone have any ideas how to avoid this?
It's not exactly pretty, but...
import numpy as np
a = np.array([1,2,3])
b = np.array([None, a, a, a])[1:]
print b.dtype, b[0].dtype, b[1].dtype
# object int32 int32
a = np.array([1,2,3])
b = np.empty(3, dtype='O')
b[:] = [a] * 3
should suffice.
I can't find any elegant solution, but at least a more general solution to doing everything by hand is to declare a function of the form:
def object_array(*args):
array = np.empty(len(args), dtype=np.object)
for i in range(len(args)):
array[i] = args[i]
return array
I can then do:
a = np.array([1,2,3])
b = object_array(a,a,a)
I then get:
>>> a = np.array([1,2,3])
>>> b = object_array(a,a,a)
>>> print b.dtype
object
>>> print b.shape
(3,)
>>> print b[0].dtype
int64
I think anyarray is what you need here:
b = np.asanyarray([a,a,a])
>>> b[0].dtype
dtype('int32')
not sure what happened to the other 32bits of the ints though.
Not sure if it helps but if you add another array of a different shape, it converts back to the types you want:
import numpy as np
a = np.array([1,2,3])
b = np.array([1,2,3,4])
b = np.asarray([a,b,a], dtype=np.object)
print(b.dtype)
>>> object
print(b[0].dtype)
>>> int32
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