On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 4:00 PM, Robert Kern <robert.k...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 20:30, <josef.p...@gmail.com> wrote: >> just a basic question (since I haven't looked at this in some time) >> >> I'm creating a structured array in a function. However, I want to >> return the array with just a simple dtype >> >> uni = uni.view(dt).reshape(-1, ncols) >> return uni >> >> the returned uni has owndata=False. Who owns the data, since the >> underlying, original array went out of scope? > > Every time you make a view through .view(), slicing, .T, certain > restricted .reshape() calls , etc. a reference to the original object > is stored on the view. Consequently, the original object does not get > garbage collected until all of the views go away too. Making view of a > view just adds another link in the chain. In your example, the > original object that was assigned to `uni` before that last assignment > statement was executed maintains ownership of the memory. The new > ndarray object that gets assigned to `uni` for the return statement > refers to the temporary ndarray returned by .view() which in turn > refers to the original `uni` array which owns the actual memory.
Thanks for the explanation. There where cases on the mailing list where views created problem, so I just thought of trying to own the data, but I don't think it's really relevant. > >> 2) >> uni.dtype = dt >> uni.reshape(-1, ncols) >> return uni >> >> this works and uni owns the data. > > uni.reshape() doesn't reshape `uni` inplace, though. It is possible > that your `uni` array wasn't contiguous to begin with. In all of the > cases that your first example would have owndata=False, this one > should too. this bug happened to me a few times now. I found it but only checked the flags before fixing it. Since reshape again creates a view, the next step is to assign to shape uni.shape = (uni.size//ncols, ncols) but that starts to look like too much inplace modifications just to avoid a view Thanks, Josef > >> I'm only worried whether assigning >> to dtype directly is not a dangerous thing to do. > > It's no worse than .view(dt). The same kind of checking goes on in both > places. > > -- > Robert Kern > > "I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless > enigma that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as > though it had an underlying truth." > -- Umberto Eco > _______________________________________________ > NumPy-Discussion mailing list > NumPy-Discussion@scipy.org > http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion _______________________________________________ NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@scipy.org http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion