Filip Wasilewski wrote: > robert wrote: >> I have an integer array with values limited to range(a,b) like: >> >> ia=array([1,2,3,3,3,4,...2,0,1]) >> >> and want to speedly count the frequencies of the integers into get a density >> matrix. >> Is this possible without looping? > > See numpy.bincount (for integers >= 0) if you mean 'without writing > looping code in Python' or please specify your question. > >> Question 2: is it possible to compute a "moving maximum" without python >> looping >> >> ia=array([4,2,1,5,3,2,2,0,1,1]) >> -> mvmax(ia,3) -> >> [4,4,4,5,5,5,3,2,2,1]) > > I haven't seen a ready solution but this can be easily converted into > Pyrex/C looping.
I don't know a way to avoid looping entirely, but there are ways that you can loop over the width of the window (in this case 3) rather than over the entire array. Since the window width is generally small compared to the array, this will probably be fast enough. The tricky part is to get the value right at the edges, since what you do there depends on what boundary conditions you apply. The general idea is this: result = ia[n-1:] for i in range(n-1): numpy.maximum(result, ia[i:-n+i], result) This punts on dealing with the ends (and I haven't tested this version), but should give you the idea. -tim -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list