dask.array.take

dask.array.take

dask.array.take(a, indices, axis=0)[source]

Take elements from an array along an axis.

This docstring was copied from numpy.take.

Some inconsistencies with the Dask version may exist.

When axis is not None, this function does the same thing as “fancy” indexing (indexing arrays using arrays); however, it can be easier to use if you need elements along a given axis. A call such as np.take(arr, indices, axis=3) is equivalent to arr[:,:,:,indices,...].

Explained without fancy indexing, this is equivalent to the following use of ndindex, which sets each of ii, jj, and kk to a tuple of indices:

Ni, Nk = a.shape[:axis], a.shape[axis+1:]
Nj = indices.shape
for ii in ndindex(Ni):
    for jj in ndindex(Nj):
        for kk in ndindex(Nk):
            out[ii + jj + kk] = a[ii + (indices[jj],) + kk]
Parameters
aarray_like (Ni…, M, Nk…)

The source array.

indicesarray_like (Nj…)

The indices of the values to extract.

New in version 1.8.0.

Also allow scalars for indices.

axisint, optional

The axis over which to select values. By default, the flattened input array is used.

outndarray, optional (Ni…, Nj…, Nk…)

If provided, the result will be placed in this array. It should be of the appropriate shape and dtype. Note that out is always buffered if mode=’raise’; use other modes for better performance.

mode{‘raise’, ‘wrap’, ‘clip’}, optional (Not supported in Dask)

Specifies how out-of-bounds indices will behave.

  • ‘raise’ – raise an error (default)

  • ‘wrap’ – wrap around

  • ‘clip’ – clip to the range

‘clip’ mode means that all indices that are too large are replaced by the index that addresses the last element along that axis. Note that this disables indexing with negative numbers.

Returns
outndarray (Ni…, Nj…, Nk…)

The returned array has the same type as a.

See also

compress

Take elements using a boolean mask

ndarray.take

equivalent method

take_along_axis

Take elements by matching the array and the index arrays

Notes

By eliminating the inner loop in the description above, and using s_ to build simple slice objects, take can be expressed in terms of applying fancy indexing to each 1-d slice:

Ni, Nk = a.shape[:axis], a.shape[axis+1:]
for ii in ndindex(Ni):
    for kk in ndindex(Nj):
        out[ii + s_[...,] + kk] = a[ii + s_[:,] + kk][indices]

For this reason, it is equivalent to (but faster than) the following use of apply_along_axis:

out = np.apply_along_axis(lambda a_1d: a_1d[indices], axis, a)

Examples

>>> import numpy as np  
>>> a = [4, 3, 5, 7, 6, 8]  
>>> indices = [0, 1, 4]  
>>> np.take(a, indices)  
array([4, 3, 6])

In this example if a is an ndarray, “fancy” indexing can be used.

>>> a = np.array(a)  
>>> a[indices]  
array([4, 3, 6])

If indices is not one dimensional, the output also has these dimensions.

>>> np.take(a, [[0, 1], [2, 3]])  
array([[4, 3],
       [5, 7]])