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import re
from contextlib import contextmanager
import functools
import operator
import warnings
import numbers
from collections import namedtuple
import inspect
import math
from typing import TypeAlias, TypeVar
import numpy as np
from scipy._lib._array_api import array_namespace, is_numpy, xp_size
from scipy._lib._docscrape import FunctionDoc, Parameter
AxisError: type[Exception]
ComplexWarning: type[Warning]
VisibleDeprecationWarning: type[Warning]
if np.lib.NumpyVersion(np.__version__) >= '1.25.0':
from numpy.exceptions import (
AxisError, ComplexWarning, VisibleDeprecationWarning,
DTypePromotionError
)
else:
from numpy import ( # type: ignore[attr-defined, no-redef]
AxisError, ComplexWarning, VisibleDeprecationWarning # noqa: F401
)
DTypePromotionError = TypeError # type: ignore
np_long: type
np_ulong: type
if np.lib.NumpyVersion(np.__version__) >= "2.0.0.dev0":
try:
with warnings.catch_warnings():
warnings.filterwarnings(
"ignore",
r".*In the future `np\.long` will be defined as.*",
FutureWarning,
)
np_long = np.long # type: ignore[attr-defined]
np_ulong = np.ulong # type: ignore[attr-defined]
except AttributeError:
np_long = np.int_
np_ulong = np.uint
else:
np_long = np.int_
np_ulong = np.uint
IntNumber = int | np.integer
DecimalNumber = float | np.floating | np.integer
copy_if_needed: bool | None
if np.lib.NumpyVersion(np.__version__) >= "2.0.0":
copy_if_needed = None
elif np.lib.NumpyVersion(np.__version__) < "1.28.0":
copy_if_needed = False
else:
# 2.0.0 dev versions, handle cases where copy may or may not exist
try:
np.array([1]).__array__(copy=None) # type: ignore[call-overload]
copy_if_needed = None
except TypeError:
copy_if_needed = False
_RNG: TypeAlias = np.random.Generator | np.random.RandomState
SeedType: TypeAlias = IntNumber | _RNG | None
GeneratorType = TypeVar("GeneratorType", bound=_RNG)
# Since Generator was introduced in numpy 1.17, the following condition is needed for
# backward compatibility
try:
from numpy.random import Generator as Generator
except ImportError:
class Generator: # type: ignore[no-redef]
pass
def _lazywhere(cond, arrays, f, fillvalue=None, f2=None):
"""Return elements chosen from two possibilities depending on a condition
Equivalent to ``f(*arrays) if cond else fillvalue`` performed elementwise.
Parameters
----------
cond : array
The condition (expressed as a boolean array).
arrays : tuple of array
Arguments to `f` (and `f2`). Must be broadcastable with `cond`.
f : callable
Where `cond` is True, output will be ``f(arr1[cond], arr2[cond], ...)``
fillvalue : object
If provided, value with which to fill output array where `cond` is
not True.
f2 : callable
If provided, output will be ``f2(arr1[cond], arr2[cond], ...)`` where
`cond` is not True.
Returns
-------
out : array
An array with elements from the output of `f` where `cond` is True
and `fillvalue` (or elements from the output of `f2`) elsewhere. The
returned array has data type determined by Type Promotion Rules
with the output of `f` and `fillvalue` (or the output of `f2`).
Notes
-----
``xp.where(cond, x, fillvalue)`` requires explicitly forming `x` even where
`cond` is False. This function evaluates ``f(arr1[cond], arr2[cond], ...)``
onle where `cond` ``is True.
Examples
--------
>>> import numpy as np
>>> a, b = np.array([1, 2, 3, 4]), np.array([5, 6, 7, 8])
>>> def f(a, b):
... return a*b
>>> _lazywhere(a > 2, (a, b), f, np.nan)
array([ nan, nan, 21., 32.])
"""
xp = array_namespace(cond, *arrays)
if (f2 is fillvalue is None) or (f2 is not None and fillvalue is not None):
raise ValueError("Exactly one of `fillvalue` or `f2` must be given.")
args = xp.broadcast_arrays(cond, *arrays)
bool_dtype = xp.asarray([True]).dtype # numpy 1.xx doesn't have `bool`
cond, arrays = xp.astype(args[0], bool_dtype, copy=False), args[1:]
temp1 = xp.asarray(f(*(arr[cond] for arr in arrays)))
if f2 is None:
# If `fillvalue` is a Python scalar and we convert to `xp.asarray`, it gets the
# default `int` or `float` type of `xp`, so `result_type` could be wrong.
# `result_type` should/will handle mixed array/Python scalars;
# remove this special logic when it does.
if type(fillvalue) in {bool, int, float, complex}:
with np.errstate(invalid='ignore'):
dtype = (temp1 * fillvalue).dtype
else:
dtype = xp.result_type(temp1.dtype, fillvalue)
out = xp.full(cond.shape, dtype=dtype,
fill_value=xp.asarray(fillvalue, dtype=dtype))
else:
ncond = ~cond
temp2 = xp.asarray(f2(*(arr[ncond] for arr in arrays)))
dtype = xp.result_type(temp1, temp2)
out = xp.empty(cond.shape, dtype=dtype)
out[ncond] = temp2
out[cond] = temp1
return out
def _lazyselect(condlist, choicelist, arrays, default=0):
"""
Mimic `np.select(condlist, choicelist)`.
Notice, it assumes that all `arrays` are of the same shape or can be
broadcasted together.
All functions in `choicelist` must accept array arguments in the order
given in `arrays` and must return an array of the same shape as broadcasted
`arrays`.
Examples
--------
>>> import numpy as np
>>> x = np.arange(6)
>>> np.select([x <3, x > 3], [x**2, x**3], default=0)
array([ 0, 1, 4, 0, 64, 125])
>>> _lazyselect([x < 3, x > 3], [lambda x: x**2, lambda x: x**3], (x,))
array([ 0., 1., 4., 0., 64., 125.])
>>> a = -np.ones_like(x)
>>> _lazyselect([x < 3, x > 3],
... [lambda x, a: x**2, lambda x, a: a * x**3],
... (x, a), default=np.nan)
array([ 0., 1., 4., nan, -64., -125.])
"""
arrays = np.broadcast_arrays(*arrays)
tcode = np.mintypecode([a.dtype.char for a in arrays])
out = np.full(np.shape(arrays[0]), fill_value=default, dtype=tcode)
for func, cond in zip(choicelist, condlist):
if np.all(cond is False):
continue
cond, _ = np.broadcast_arrays(cond, arrays[0])
temp = tuple(np.extract(cond, arr) for arr in arrays)
np.place(out, cond, func(*temp))
return out
def _aligned_zeros(shape, dtype=float, order="C", align=None):
"""Allocate a new ndarray with aligned memory.
Primary use case for this currently is working around a f2py issue
in NumPy 1.9.1, where dtype.alignment is such that np.zeros() does
not necessarily create arrays aligned up to it.
"""
dtype = np.dtype(dtype)
if align is None:
align = dtype.alignment
if not hasattr(shape, '__len__'):
shape = (shape,)
size = functools.reduce(operator.mul, shape) * dtype.itemsize
buf = np.empty(size + align + 1, np.uint8)
offset = buf.__array_interface__['data'][0] % align
if offset != 0:
offset = align - offset
# Note: slices producing 0-size arrays do not necessarily change
# data pointer --- so we use and allocate size+1
buf = buf[offset:offset+size+1][:-1]
data = np.ndarray(shape, dtype, buf, order=order)
data.fill(0)
return data
def _prune_array(array):
"""Return an array equivalent to the input array. If the input
array is a view of a much larger array, copy its contents to a
newly allocated array. Otherwise, return the input unchanged.
"""
if array.base is not None and array.size < array.base.size // 2:
return array.copy()
return array
def float_factorial(n: int) -> float:
"""Compute the factorial and return as a float
Returns infinity when result is too large for a double
"""
return float(math.factorial(n)) if n < 171 else np.inf
_rng_desc = (
r"""If `rng` is passed by keyword, types other than `numpy.random.Generator` are
passed to `numpy.random.default_rng` to instantiate a ``Generator``.
If `rng` is already a ``Generator`` instance, then the provided instance is
used. Specify `rng` for repeatable function behavior.
If this argument is passed by position or `{old_name}` is passed by keyword,
legacy behavior for the argument `{old_name}` applies:
- If `{old_name}` is None (or `numpy.random`), the `numpy.random.RandomState`
singleton is used.
- If `{old_name}` is an int, a new ``RandomState`` instance is used,
seeded with `{old_name}`.
- If `{old_name}` is already a ``Generator`` or ``RandomState`` instance then
that instance is used.
.. versionchanged:: 1.15.0
As part of the `SPEC-007 <https://scientific-python.org/specs/spec-0007/>`_
transition from use of `numpy.random.RandomState` to
`numpy.random.Generator`, this keyword was changed from `{old_name}` to `rng`.
For an interim period, both keywords will continue to work, although only one
may be specified at a time. After the interim period, function calls using the
`{old_name}` keyword will emit warnings. The behavior of both `{old_name}` and
`rng` are outlined above, but only the `rng` keyword should be used in new code.
"""
)
# SPEC 7
def _transition_to_rng(old_name, *, position_num=None, end_version=None,
replace_doc=True):
"""Example decorator to transition from old PRNG usage to new `rng` behavior
Suppose the decorator is applied to a function that used to accept parameter
`old_name='random_state'` either by keyword or as a positional argument at
`position_num=1`. At the time of application, the name of the argument in the
function signature is manually changed to the new name, `rng`. If positional
use was allowed before, this is not changed.*
- If the function is called with both `random_state` and `rng`, the decorator
raises an error.
- If `random_state` is provided as a keyword argument, the decorator passes
`random_state` to the function's `rng` argument as a keyword. If `end_version`
is specified, the decorator will emit a `DeprecationWarning` about the
deprecation of keyword `random_state`.
- If `random_state` is provided as a positional argument, the decorator passes
`random_state` to the function's `rng` argument by position. If `end_version`
is specified, the decorator will emit a `FutureWarning` about the changing
interpretation of the argument.
- If `rng` is provided as a keyword argument, the decorator validates `rng` using
`numpy.random.default_rng` before passing it to the function.
- If `end_version` is specified and neither `random_state` nor `rng` is provided
by the user, the decorator checks whether `np.random.seed` has been used to set
the global seed. If so, it emits a `FutureWarning`, noting that usage of
`numpy.random.seed` will eventually have no effect. Either way, the decorator
calls the function without explicitly passing the `rng` argument.
If `end_version` is specified, a user must pass `rng` as a keyword to avoid
warnings.
After the deprecation period, the decorator can be removed, and the function
can simply validate the `rng` argument by calling `np.random.default_rng(rng)`.
* A `FutureWarning` is emitted when the PRNG argument is used by
position. It indicates that the "Hinsen principle" (same
code yielding different results in two versions of the software)
will be violated, unless positional use is deprecated. Specifically:
- If `None` is passed by position and `np.random.seed` has been used,
the function will change from being seeded to being unseeded.
- If an integer is passed by position, the random stream will change.
- If `np.random` or an instance of `RandomState` is passed by position,
an error will be raised.
We suggest that projects consider deprecating positional use of
`random_state`/`rng` (i.e., change their function signatures to
``def my_func(..., *, rng=None)``); that might not make sense
for all projects, so this SPEC does not make that
recommendation, neither does this decorator enforce it.
Parameters
----------
old_name : str
The old name of the PRNG argument (e.g. `seed` or `random_state`).
position_num : int, optional
The (0-indexed) position of the old PRNG argument (if accepted by position).
Maintainers are welcome to eliminate this argument and use, for example,
`inspect`, if preferred.
end_version : str, optional
The full version number of the library when the behavior described in
`DeprecationWarning`s and `FutureWarning`s will take effect. If left
unspecified, no warnings will be emitted by the decorator.
replace_doc : bool, default: True
Whether the decorator should replace the documentation for parameter `rng` with
`_rng_desc` (defined above), which documents both new `rng` keyword behavior
and typical legacy `random_state`/`seed` behavior. If True, manually replace
the first paragraph of the function's old `random_state`/`seed` documentation
with the desired *final* `rng` documentation; this way, no changes to
documentation are needed when the decorator is removed. Documentation of `rng`
after the first blank line is preserved. Use False if the function's old
`random_state`/`seed` behavior does not match that described by `_rng_desc`.
"""
NEW_NAME = "rng"
cmn_msg = (
"To silence this warning and ensure consistent behavior in SciPy "
f"{end_version}, control the RNG using argument `{NEW_NAME}`. Arguments passed "
f"to keyword `{NEW_NAME}` will be validated by `np.random.default_rng`, so the "
"behavior corresponding with a given value may change compared to use of "
f"`{old_name}`. For example, "
"1) `None` will result in unpredictable random numbers, "
"2) an integer will result in a different stream of random numbers, (with the "
"same distribution), and "
"3) `np.random` or `RandomState` instances will result in an error. "
"See the documentation of `default_rng` for more information."
)
def decorator(fun):
@functools.wraps(fun)
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
# Determine how PRNG was passed
as_old_kwarg = old_name in kwargs
as_new_kwarg = NEW_NAME in kwargs
as_pos_arg = position_num is not None and len(args) >= position_num + 1
emit_warning = end_version is not None
# Can only specify PRNG one of the three ways
if int(as_old_kwarg) + int(as_new_kwarg) + int(as_pos_arg) > 1:
message = (
f"{fun.__name__}() got multiple values for "
f"argument now known as `{NEW_NAME}`. Specify one of "
f"`{NEW_NAME}` or `{old_name}`."
)
raise TypeError(message)
# Check whether global random state has been set
global_seed_set = np.random.mtrand._rand._bit_generator._seed_seq is None
if as_old_kwarg: # warn about deprecated use of old kwarg
kwargs[NEW_NAME] = kwargs.pop(old_name)
if emit_warning:
message = (
f"Use of keyword argument `{old_name}` is "
f"deprecated and replaced by `{NEW_NAME}`. "
f"Support for `{old_name}` will be removed "
f"in SciPy {end_version}. "
) + cmn_msg
warnings.warn(message, DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
elif as_pos_arg:
# Warn about changing meaning of positional arg
# Note that this decorator does not deprecate positional use of the
# argument; it only warns that the behavior will change in the future.
# Simultaneously transitioning to keyword-only use is another option.
arg = args[position_num]
# If the argument is None and the global seed wasn't set, or if the
# argument is one of a few new classes, the user will not notice change
# in behavior.
ok_classes = (
np.random.Generator,
np.random.SeedSequence,
np.random.BitGenerator,
)
if (arg is None and not global_seed_set) or isinstance(arg, ok_classes):
pass
elif emit_warning:
message = (
f"Positional use of `{NEW_NAME}` (formerly known as "
f"`{old_name}`) is still allowed, but the behavior is "
"changing: the argument will be normalized using "
f"`np.random.default_rng` beginning in SciPy {end_version}, "
"and the resulting `Generator` will be used to generate "
"random numbers."
) + cmn_msg
warnings.warn(message, FutureWarning, stacklevel=2)
elif as_new_kwarg: # no warnings; this is the preferred use
# After the removal of the decorator, normalization with
# np.random.default_rng will be done inside the decorated function
kwargs[NEW_NAME] = np.random.default_rng(kwargs[NEW_NAME])
elif global_seed_set and emit_warning:
# Emit FutureWarning if `np.random.seed` was used and no PRNG was passed
message = (
"The NumPy global RNG was seeded by calling "
f"`np.random.seed`. Beginning in {end_version}, this "
"function will no longer use the global RNG."
) + cmn_msg
warnings.warn(message, FutureWarning, stacklevel=2)
return fun(*args, **kwargs)
if replace_doc:
doc = FunctionDoc(wrapper)
parameter_names = [param.name for param in doc['Parameters']]
if 'rng' in parameter_names:
_type = "{None, int, `numpy.random.Generator`}, optional"
_desc = _rng_desc.replace("{old_name}", old_name)
old_doc = doc['Parameters'][parameter_names.index('rng')].desc
old_doc_keep = old_doc[old_doc.index("") + 1:] if "" in old_doc else []
new_doc = [_desc] + old_doc_keep
_rng_parameter_doc = Parameter('rng', _type, new_doc)
doc['Parameters'][parameter_names.index('rng')] = _rng_parameter_doc
doc = str(doc).split("\n", 1)[1] # remove signature
wrapper.__doc__ = str(doc)
return wrapper
return decorator
# copy-pasted from scikit-learn utils/validation.py
def check_random_state(seed):
"""Turn `seed` into a `np.random.RandomState` instance.
Parameters
----------
seed : {None, int, `numpy.random.Generator`, `numpy.random.RandomState`}, optional
If `seed` is None (or `np.random`), the `numpy.random.RandomState`
singleton is used.
If `seed` is an int, a new ``RandomState`` instance is used,
seeded with `seed`.
If `seed` is already a ``Generator`` or ``RandomState`` instance then
that instance is used.
Returns
-------
seed : {`numpy.random.Generator`, `numpy.random.RandomState`}
Random number generator.
"""
if seed is None or seed is np.random:
return np.random.mtrand._rand
if isinstance(seed, numbers.Integral | np.integer):
return np.random.RandomState(seed)
if isinstance(seed, np.random.RandomState | np.random.Generator):
return seed
raise ValueError(f"'{seed}' cannot be used to seed a numpy.random.RandomState"
" instance")
def _asarray_validated(a, check_finite=True,
sparse_ok=False, objects_ok=False, mask_ok=False,
as_inexact=False):
"""
Helper function for SciPy argument validation.
Many SciPy linear algebra functions do support arbitrary array-like
input arguments. Examples of commonly unsupported inputs include
matrices containing inf/nan, sparse matrix representations, and
matrices with complicated elements.
Parameters
----------
a : array_like
The array-like input.
check_finite : bool, optional
Whether to check that the input matrices contain only finite numbers.
Disabling may give a performance gain, but may result in problems
(crashes, non-termination) if the inputs do contain infinities or NaNs.
Default: True
sparse_ok : bool, optional
True if scipy sparse matrices are allowed.
objects_ok : bool, optional
True if arrays with dype('O') are allowed.
mask_ok : bool, optional
True if masked arrays are allowed.
as_inexact : bool, optional
True to convert the input array to a np.inexact dtype.
Returns
-------
ret : ndarray
The converted validated array.
"""
if not sparse_ok:
import scipy.sparse
if scipy.sparse.issparse(a):
msg = ('Sparse arrays/matrices are not supported by this function. '
'Perhaps one of the `scipy.sparse.linalg` functions '
'would work instead.')
raise ValueError(msg)
if not mask_ok:
if np.ma.isMaskedArray(a):
raise ValueError('masked arrays are not supported')
toarray = np.asarray_chkfinite if check_finite else np.asarray
a = toarray(a)
if not objects_ok:
if a.dtype is np.dtype('O'):
raise ValueError('object arrays are not supported')
if as_inexact:
if not np.issubdtype(a.dtype, np.inexact):
a = toarray(a, dtype=np.float64)
return a
def _validate_int(k, name, minimum=None):
"""
Validate a scalar integer.
This function can be used to validate an argument to a function
that expects the value to be an integer. It uses `operator.index`
to validate the value (so, for example, k=2.0 results in a
TypeError).
Parameters
----------
k : int
The value to be validated.
name : str
The name of the parameter.
minimum : int, optional
An optional lower bound.
"""
try:
k = operator.index(k)
except TypeError:
raise TypeError(f'{name} must be an integer.') from None
if minimum is not None and k < minimum:
raise ValueError(f'{name} must be an integer not less '
f'than {minimum}') from None
return k
# Add a replacement for inspect.getfullargspec()/
# The version below is borrowed from Django,
# https://github.com/django/django/pull/4846.
# Note an inconsistency between inspect.getfullargspec(func) and
# inspect.signature(func). If `func` is a bound method, the latter does *not*
# list `self` as a first argument, while the former *does*.
# Hence, cook up a common ground replacement: `getfullargspec_no_self` which
# mimics `inspect.getfullargspec` but does not list `self`.
#
# This way, the caller code does not need to know whether it uses a legacy
# .getfullargspec or a bright and shiny .signature.
FullArgSpec = namedtuple('FullArgSpec',
['args', 'varargs', 'varkw', 'defaults',
'kwonlyargs', 'kwonlydefaults', 'annotations'])
def getfullargspec_no_self(func):
"""inspect.getfullargspec replacement using inspect.signature.
If func is a bound method, do not list the 'self' parameter.
Parameters
----------
func : callable
A callable to inspect
Returns
-------
fullargspec : FullArgSpec(args, varargs, varkw, defaults, kwonlyargs,
kwonlydefaults, annotations)
NOTE: if the first argument of `func` is self, it is *not*, I repeat
*not*, included in fullargspec.args.
This is done for consistency between inspect.getargspec() under
Python 2.x, and inspect.signature() under Python 3.x.
"""
sig = inspect.signature(func)
args = [
p.name for p in sig.parameters.values()
if p.kind in [inspect.Parameter.POSITIONAL_OR_KEYWORD,
inspect.Parameter.POSITIONAL_ONLY]
]
varargs = [
p.name for p in sig.parameters.values()
if p.kind == inspect.Parameter.VAR_POSITIONAL
]
varargs = varargs[0] if varargs else None
varkw = [
p.name for p in sig.parameters.values()
if p.kind == inspect.Parameter.VAR_KEYWORD
]
varkw = varkw[0] if varkw else None
defaults = tuple(
p.default for p in sig.parameters.values()
if (p.kind == inspect.Parameter.POSITIONAL_OR_KEYWORD and
p.default is not p.empty)
) or None
kwonlyargs = [
p.name for p in sig.parameters.values()
if p.kind == inspect.Parameter.KEYWORD_ONLY
]
kwdefaults = {p.name: p.default for p in sig.parameters.values()
if p.kind == inspect.Parameter.KEYWORD_ONLY and
p.default is not p.empty}
annotations = {p.name: p.annotation for p in sig.parameters.values()
if p.annotation is not p.empty}
return FullArgSpec(args, varargs, varkw, defaults, kwonlyargs,
kwdefaults or None, annotations)
class _FunctionWrapper:
"""
Object to wrap user's function, allowing picklability
"""
def __init__(self, f, args):
self.f = f
self.args = [] if args is None else args
def __call__(self, x):
return self.f(x, *self.args)
class MapWrapper:
"""
Parallelisation wrapper for working with map-like callables, such as
`multiprocessing.Pool.map`.
Parameters
----------
pool : int or map-like callable
If `pool` is an integer, then it specifies the number of threads to
use for parallelization. If ``int(pool) == 1``, then no parallel
processing is used and the map builtin is used.
If ``pool == -1``, then the pool will utilize all available CPUs.
If `pool` is a map-like callable that follows the same
calling sequence as the built-in map function, then this callable is
used for parallelization.
"""
def __init__(self, pool=1):
self.pool = None
self._mapfunc = map
self._own_pool = False
if callable(pool):
self.pool = pool
self._mapfunc = self.pool
else:
from multiprocessing import Pool
# user supplies a number
if int(pool) == -1:
# use as many processors as possible
self.pool = Pool()
self._mapfunc = self.pool.map
self._own_pool = True
elif int(pool) == 1:
pass
elif int(pool) > 1:
# use the number of processors requested
self.pool = Pool(processes=int(pool))
self._mapfunc = self.pool.map
self._own_pool = True
else:
raise RuntimeError("Number of workers specified must be -1,"
" an int >= 1, or an object with a 'map' "
"method")
def __enter__(self):
return self
def terminate(self):
if self._own_pool:
self.pool.terminate()
def join(self):
if self._own_pool:
self.pool.join()
def close(self):
if self._own_pool:
self.pool.close()
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
if self._own_pool:
self.pool.close()
self.pool.terminate()
def __call__(self, func, iterable):
# only accept one iterable because that's all Pool.map accepts
try:
return self._mapfunc(func, iterable)
except TypeError as e:
# wrong number of arguments
raise TypeError("The map-like callable must be of the"
" form f(func, iterable)") from e
def rng_integers(gen, low, high=None, size=None, dtype='int64',
endpoint=False):
"""
Return random integers from low (inclusive) to high (exclusive), or if
endpoint=True, low (inclusive) to high (inclusive). Replaces
`RandomState.randint` (with endpoint=False) and
`RandomState.random_integers` (with endpoint=True).
Return random integers from the "discrete uniform" distribution of the
specified dtype. If high is None (the default), then results are from
0 to low.
Parameters
----------
gen : {None, np.random.RandomState, np.random.Generator}
Random number generator. If None, then the np.random.RandomState
singleton is used.
low : int or array-like of ints
Lowest (signed) integers to be drawn from the distribution (unless
high=None, in which case this parameter is 0 and this value is used
for high).
high : int or array-like of ints
If provided, one above the largest (signed) integer to be drawn from
the distribution (see above for behavior if high=None). If array-like,
must contain integer values.
size : array-like of ints, optional
Output shape. If the given shape is, e.g., (m, n, k), then m * n * k
samples are drawn. Default is None, in which case a single value is
returned.
dtype : {str, dtype}, optional
Desired dtype of the result. All dtypes are determined by their name,
i.e., 'int64', 'int', etc, so byteorder is not available and a specific
precision may have different C types depending on the platform.
The default value is 'int64'.
endpoint : bool, optional
If True, sample from the interval [low, high] instead of the default
[low, high) Defaults to False.
Returns
-------
out: int or ndarray of ints
size-shaped array of random integers from the appropriate distribution,
or a single such random int if size not provided.
"""
if isinstance(gen, Generator):
return gen.integers(low, high=high, size=size, dtype=dtype,
endpoint=endpoint)
else:
if gen is None:
# default is RandomState singleton used by np.random.
gen = np.random.mtrand._rand
if endpoint:
# inclusive of endpoint
# remember that low and high can be arrays, so don't modify in
# place
if high is None:
return gen.randint(low + 1, size=size, dtype=dtype)
if high is not None:
return gen.randint(low, high=high + 1, size=size, dtype=dtype)
# exclusive
return gen.randint(low, high=high, size=size, dtype=dtype)
@contextmanager
def _fixed_default_rng(seed=1638083107694713882823079058616272161):
"""Context with a fixed np.random.default_rng seed."""
orig_fun = np.random.default_rng
np.random.default_rng = lambda seed=seed: orig_fun(seed)
try:
yield
finally:
np.random.default_rng = orig_fun
def _rng_html_rewrite(func):
"""Rewrite the HTML rendering of ``np.random.default_rng``.
This is intended to decorate
``numpydoc.docscrape_sphinx.SphinxDocString._str_examples``.
Examples are only run by Sphinx when there are plot involved. Even so,
it does not change the result values getting printed.
"""
# hexadecimal or number seed, case-insensitive
pattern = re.compile(r'np.random.default_rng\((0x[0-9A-F]+|\d+)\)', re.I)
def _wrapped(*args, **kwargs):
res = func(*args, **kwargs)
lines = [
re.sub(pattern, 'np.random.default_rng()', line)
for line in res
]
return lines
return _wrapped
def _argmin(a, keepdims=False, axis=None):
"""
argmin with a `keepdims` parameter.
See https://github.com/numpy/numpy/issues/8710
If axis is not None, a.shape[axis] must be greater than 0.
"""
res = np.argmin(a, axis=axis)
if keepdims and axis is not None:
res = np.expand_dims(res, axis=axis)
return res
def _first_nonnan(a, axis):
"""
Return the first non-nan value along the given axis.
If a slice is all nan, nan is returned for that slice.
The shape of the return value corresponds to ``keepdims=True``.
Examples
--------
>>> import numpy as np
>>> nan = np.nan
>>> a = np.array([[ 3., 3., nan, 3.],
[ 1., nan, 2., 4.],
[nan, nan, 9., -1.],
[nan, 5., 4., 3.],
[ 2., 2., 2., 2.],
[nan, nan, nan, nan]])
>>> _first_nonnan(a, axis=0)
array([[3., 3., 2., 3.]])
>>> _first_nonnan(a, axis=1)
array([[ 3.],
[ 1.],
[ 9.],
[ 5.],
[ 2.],
[nan]])
"""
k = _argmin(np.isnan(a), axis=axis, keepdims=True)
return np.take_along_axis(a, k, axis=axis)
def _nan_allsame(a, axis, keepdims=False):
"""
Determine if the values along an axis are all the same.
nan values are ignored.
`a` must be a numpy array.
`axis` is assumed to be normalized; that is, 0 <= axis < a.ndim.
For an axis of length 0, the result is True. That is, we adopt the
convention that ``allsame([])`` is True. (There are no values in the
input that are different.)
`True` is returned for slices that are all nan--not because all the
values are the same, but because this is equivalent to ``allsame([])``.
Examples
--------
>>> from numpy import nan, array
>>> a = array([[ 3., 3., nan, 3.],
... [ 1., nan, 2., 4.],
... [nan, nan, 9., -1.],
... [nan, 5., 4., 3.],
... [ 2., 2., 2., 2.],
... [nan, nan, nan, nan]])
>>> _nan_allsame(a, axis=1, keepdims=True)
array([[ True],
[False],
[False],
[False],
[ True],
[ True]])
"""
if axis is None:
if a.size == 0:
return True
a = a.ravel()
axis = 0
else:
shp = a.shape
if shp[axis] == 0:
shp = shp[:axis] + (1,)*keepdims + shp[axis + 1:]
return np.full(shp, fill_value=True, dtype=bool)
a0 = _first_nonnan(a, axis=axis)
return ((a0 == a) | np.isnan(a)).all(axis=axis, keepdims=keepdims)
def _contains_nan(a, nan_policy='propagate', policies=None, *,
xp_omit_okay=False, xp=None):
# Regarding `xp_omit_okay`: Temporarily, while `_axis_nan_policy` does not
# handle non-NumPy arrays, most functions that call `_contains_nan` want
# it to raise an error if `nan_policy='omit'` and `xp` is not `np`.
# Some functions support `nan_policy='omit'` natively, so setting this to
# `True` prevents the error from being raised.
if xp is None:
xp = array_namespace(a)
not_numpy = not is_numpy(xp)
if policies is None:
policies = {'propagate', 'raise', 'omit'}
if nan_policy not in policies:
raise ValueError(f"nan_policy must be one of {set(policies)}.")
if xp_size(a) == 0:
contains_nan = False
elif xp.isdtype(a.dtype, "real floating"):
# Faster and less memory-intensive than xp.any(xp.isnan(a)), and unlike other
# reductions, `max`/`min` won't return NaN unless there is a NaN in the data.
contains_nan = xp.isnan(xp.max(a))
elif xp.isdtype(a.dtype, "complex floating"):
# Typically `real` and `imag` produce views; otherwise, `xp.any(xp.isnan(a))`
# would be more efficient.
contains_nan = xp.isnan(xp.max(xp.real(a))) | xp.isnan(xp.max(xp.imag(a)))
elif is_numpy(xp) and np.issubdtype(a.dtype, object):
contains_nan = False
for el in a.ravel():
# isnan doesn't work on non-numeric elements
if np.issubdtype(type(el), np.number) and np.isnan(el):
contains_nan = True
break
else:
# Only `object` and `inexact` arrays can have NaNs
contains_nan = False
if contains_nan and nan_policy == 'raise':
raise ValueError("The input contains nan values")
if not xp_omit_okay and not_numpy and contains_nan and nan_policy=='omit':
message = "`nan_policy='omit' is incompatible with non-NumPy arrays."
raise ValueError(message)
return contains_nan, nan_policy
def _rename_parameter(old_name, new_name, dep_version=None):
"""
Generate decorator for backward-compatible keyword renaming.
Apply the decorator generated by `_rename_parameter` to functions with a
recently renamed parameter to maintain backward-compatibility.
After decoration, the function behaves as follows:
If only the new parameter is passed into the function, behave as usual.
If only the old parameter is passed into the function (as a keyword), raise
a DeprecationWarning if `dep_version` is provided, and behave as usual
otherwise.
If both old and new parameters are passed into the function, raise a
DeprecationWarning if `dep_version` is provided, and raise the appropriate
TypeError (function got multiple values for argument).
Parameters
----------
old_name : str
Old name of parameter
new_name : str
New name of parameter
dep_version : str, optional
Version of SciPy in which old parameter was deprecated in the format
'X.Y.Z'. If supplied, the deprecation message will indicate that
support for the old parameter will be removed in version 'X.Y+2.Z'
Notes
-----
Untested with functions that accept *args. Probably won't work as written.
"""
def decorator(fun):
@functools.wraps(fun)
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
if old_name in kwargs:
if dep_version:
end_version = dep_version.split('.')
end_version[1] = str(int(end_version[1]) + 2)
end_version = '.'.join(end_version)
message = (f"Use of keyword argument `{old_name}` is "
f"deprecated and replaced by `{new_name}`. "
f"Support for `{old_name}` will be removed "
f"in SciPy {end_version}.")
warnings.warn(message, DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
if new_name in kwargs:
message = (f"{fun.__name__}() got multiple values for "
f"argument now known as `{new_name}`")
raise TypeError(message)
kwargs[new_name] = kwargs.pop(old_name)
return fun(*args, **kwargs)
return wrapper
return decorator
def _rng_spawn(rng, n_children):
# spawns independent RNGs from a parent RNG
bg = rng._bit_generator
ss = bg._seed_seq
child_rngs = [np.random.Generator(type(bg)(child_ss))
for child_ss in ss.spawn(n_children)]
return child_rngs
def _get_nan(*data, xp=None):
xp = array_namespace(*data) if xp is None else xp
# Get NaN of appropriate dtype for data
data = [xp.asarray(item) for item in data]
try:
min_float = getattr(xp, 'float16', xp.float32)
dtype = xp.result_type(*data, min_float) # must be at least a float
except DTypePromotionError:
# fallback to float64
dtype = xp.float64
return xp.asarray(xp.nan, dtype=dtype)[()]
def normalize_axis_index(axis, ndim):
# Check if `axis` is in the correct range and normalize it
if axis < -ndim or axis >= ndim:
msg = f"axis {axis} is out of bounds for array of dimension {ndim}"
raise AxisError(msg)
if axis < 0:
axis = axis + ndim
return axis
def _call_callback_maybe_halt(callback, res):
"""Call wrapped callback; return True if algorithm should stop.
Parameters
----------
callback : callable or None
A user-provided callback wrapped with `_wrap_callback`
res : OptimizeResult
Information about the current iterate
Returns
-------
halt : bool
True if minimization should stop
"""
if callback is None:
return False
try:
callback(res)
return False
except StopIteration:
callback.stop_iteration = True
return True
class _RichResult(dict):
""" Container for multiple outputs with pretty-printing """
def __getattr__(self, name):
try:
return self[name]
except KeyError as e:
raise AttributeError(name) from e
__setattr__ = dict.__setitem__ # type: ignore[assignment]
__delattr__ = dict.__delitem__ # type: ignore[assignment]
def __repr__(self):
order_keys = ['message', 'success', 'status', 'fun', 'funl', 'x', 'xl',
'col_ind', 'nit', 'lower', 'upper', 'eqlin', 'ineqlin',
'converged', 'flag', 'function_calls', 'iterations',
'root']
order_keys = getattr(self, '_order_keys', order_keys)
# 'slack', 'con' are redundant with residuals
# 'crossover_nit' is probably not interesting to most users
omit_keys = {'slack', 'con', 'crossover_nit', '_order_keys'}
def key(item):
try:
return order_keys.index(item[0].lower())
except ValueError: # item not in list
return np.inf
def omit_redundant(items):
for item in items:
if item[0] in omit_keys:
continue
yield item
def item_sorter(d):
return sorted(omit_redundant(d.items()), key=key)
if self.keys():
return _dict_formatter(self, sorter=item_sorter)
else:
return self.__class__.__name__ + "()"
def __dir__(self):
return list(self.keys())
def _indenter(s, n=0):
"""
Ensures that lines after the first are indented by the specified amount
"""
split = s.split("\n")
indent = " "*n
return ("\n" + indent).join(split)
def _float_formatter_10(x):
"""
Returns a string representation of a float with exactly ten characters
"""
if np.isposinf(x):
return " inf"
elif np.isneginf(x):
return " -inf"
elif np.isnan(x):
return " nan"
return np.format_float_scientific(x, precision=3, pad_left=2, unique=False)
def _dict_formatter(d, n=0, mplus=1, sorter=None):
"""
Pretty printer for dictionaries
`n` keeps track of the starting indentation;
lines are indented by this much after a line break.
`mplus` is additional left padding applied to keys
"""
if isinstance(d, dict):
m = max(map(len, list(d.keys()))) + mplus # width to print keys
s = '\n'.join([k.rjust(m) + ': ' + # right justified, width m
_indenter(_dict_formatter(v, m+n+2, 0, sorter), m+2)
for k, v in sorter(d)]) # +2 for ': '
else:
# By default, NumPy arrays print with linewidth=76. `n` is
# the indent at which a line begins printing, so it is subtracted
# from the default to avoid exceeding 76 characters total.
# `edgeitems` is the number of elements to include before and after
# ellipses when arrays are not shown in full.
# `threshold` is the maximum number of elements for which an
# array is shown in full.
# These values tend to work well for use with OptimizeResult.
with np.printoptions(linewidth=76-n, edgeitems=2, threshold=12,
formatter={'float_kind': _float_formatter_10}):
s = str(d)
return s
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