Reputation: 723
I'm trying to create a function that will calculate the lattice distance (number of horizontal and vertical steps) between elements in a multi-dimensional numpy array. For this I need to retrieve the actual numbers from the indexes of each element as I iterate through the array. I want to store those values as numbers that I can run through a distance formula.
For the example array A
A=np.array([[1,2,3],[4,5,6],[7,8,9]])
I'd like to create a loop that iterates through each element and for the first element 1 it would retrieve a=0, b=0 since 1 is at A[0,0], then a=0, b=1 for element 2 as it is located at A[0,1], and so on...
My envisioned output is two numbers (corresponding to the two index values for that element) for each element in the array. So in the example above, it would be the two values that I am assigning to be a and b. I only will need to retrieve these two numbers within the loop (rather than save separately as another data object).
Any thoughts on how to do this would be greatly appreciated!
Upvotes: 14
Views: 14395
Reputation: 688
Another possible solution:
import numpy as np
A = np.array([[1,2,3],[4,5,6],[7,8,9]])
for _, val in np.ndenumerate(A):
ind = np.argwhere(A == val)
print(val, ind)
In this case you will obtain the array of indexes if value appears in array not once.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 18816
As I've become more familiar with the numpy and pandas ecosystem, it's become clearer to me that iteration is usually outright wrong due to how slow it is in comparison, and writing to use a vectorized operation is best whenever possible. Though the style is not as obvious/Pythonic at first, I've (anecdotally) gained ridiculous speedups with vectorized operations; more than 1000x in a case of swapping out a form like some row iteration .apply(lambda)
@MSeifert's answer much better provides this and will be significantly more performant on a dataset of any real size
More general Answer by @cs95 covering and comparing alternatives to iteration in Pandas
You can iterate through the values in your array with numpy.ndenumerate
to get the indices of the values in your array.
Using the documentation above:
A = np.array([[1,2,3],[4,5,6],[7,8,9]])
for index, values in np.ndenumerate(A):
print(index, values) # operate here
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 152725
You can do it using np.ndenumerate
but generally you don't need to iterate over an array.
You can simply create a meshgrid (or open grid) to get all indices at once and you can then process them (vectorized) much faster.
For example
>>> x, y = np.mgrid[slice(A.shape[0]), slice(A.shape[1])]
>>> x
array([[0, 0, 0],
[1, 1, 1],
[2, 2, 2]])
>>> y
array([[0, 1, 2],
[0, 1, 2],
[0, 1, 2]])
and these can be processed like any other array. So if your function that needs the indices can be vectorized you shouldn't do the manual loop!
For example to calculate the lattice distance for each point to a point say (2, 3)
:
>>> abs(x - 2) + abs(y - 3)
array([[5, 4, 3],
[4, 3, 2],
[3, 2, 1]])
For distances an ogrid
would be faster. Just replace np.mgrid
with np.ogrid
:
>>> x, y = np.ogrid[slice(A.shape[0]), slice(A.shape[1])]
>>> np.hypot(x - 2, y - 3) # cartesian distance this time! :-)
array([[ 3.60555128, 2.82842712, 2.23606798],
[ 3.16227766, 2.23606798, 1.41421356],
[ 3. , 2. , 1. ]])
Upvotes: 7