Issue
I am trying to do the following but with numpy arrays:
x = [(0.1, 1.), (0.1, 2.), (0.1, 3.), (0.1, 4.), (0.1, 5.)]
normal_result = zip(*x)
This should give a result of:
normal_result = [(0.1, 0.1, 0.1, 0.1, 0.1), (1., 2., 3., 4., 5.)]
But if the input vector is a numpy array:
y = np.array(x)
numpy_result = zip(*y)
print type(numpy_result)
It (expectedly) returns a:
<type 'list'>
The issue is that I will need to transform the result back into a numpy array after this.
What I would like to know is what is if there is an efficient numpy function that will avoid these back-and-forth transformations?
Solution
You can just transpose it...
>>> a = np.array([(0.1, 1.), (0.1, 2.), (0.1, 3.), (0.1, 4.), (0.1, 5.)])
>>> a
array([[ 0.1, 1. ],
[ 0.1, 2. ],
[ 0.1, 3. ],
[ 0.1, 4. ],
[ 0.1, 5. ]])
>>> a.T
array([[ 0.1, 0.1, 0.1, 0.1, 0.1],
[ 1. , 2. , 3. , 4. , 5. ]])
Answered By - Jon Clements
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