On Sat, Jul 20, 2013 at 7:44 AM, josef.p...@gmail.com wrote:
related: is there any advantage to np.add.reduce?
I find it more difficult to read than sum() and still see it used sometimes.
I think ``np.add.reduce`` just falls out of the ufunc
implementation--there's no per ufunc choice to
On Fri, 19 Jul 2013, Warren Weckesser wrote:
Well, this is embarrassing: https://github.com/numpy/numpy/pull/3539
Thanks for benchmarks! I'm now an even bigger fan. :)
Great to see that those came of help! I thought to provide a detailed
details (benchmarking all recent commits) to provide
On Mon, Jul 22, 2013 at 10:55 AM, Yaroslav Halchenko
li...@onerussian.comwrote:
At some point I hope to tune up the report with an option of viewing the
plot using e.g. nvd3 JS so it could be easier to pin point/analyze
interactively.
shameless plug... the soon-to-be-finalized matplotlib-1.3
On Thu, Jul 18, 2013 at 3:18 PM, Stéfan van der Walt ste...@sun.ac.za wrote:
On Sat, Jul 13, 2013 at 7:46 PM, Nathaniel Smith n...@pobox.com wrote:
Why not just write
def H(a):
return a.conj().T
It's hard to convince students that this is the Best Way of doing
things in NumPy. Why,
What if .H is not an attribute, but a method? Is this enough of a warning about
copying?
Eugene
-Original Message-
From: numpy-discussion-boun...@scipy.org
[mailto:numpy-discussion-boun...@scipy.org] On Behalf Of Nathaniel Smith
Sent: Monday, July 22, 2013 3:11 PM
To: Discussion of
On the other hand, the most salient quality an unavoidable copy is that it is
unavoidable. For people for whom using Hermitian conjugates is common, it's not
like they won't do it just because they can't avoid a copy that can't be
avoided. Given that if a problem dictates a Hermitian conjugate
On 7/22/2013 3:10 PM, Nathaniel Smith wrote:
Having .T but not .H is an example of this split.
Hate to do this but ...
Readability counts.
Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules.
Although practicality beats purity.
How much is the split a rule or just a convention, and