def put(a, ind, v, mode='raise'):
"""
Replaces specified elements of an array with given values.
The indexing works on the flattened target array. `put` is roughly
equivalent to:
::
a.flat[ind] = v
Parameters
----------
a : ndarray
Target array.
ind : array_like
Target indices, interpreted as integers.
v : array_like
Values to place in `a` at target indices. If `v` is shorter than
`ind` it will be repeated as necessary.
mode : {'raise', 'wrap', 'clip'}, optional
Specifies how out-of-bounds indices will behave.
* 'raise' -- raise an error (default)
* 'wrap' -- wrap around
* 'clip' -- clip to the range
'clip' mode means that all indices that are too large are replaced
by the index that addresses the last element along that axis. Note
that this disables indexing with negative numbers.
See Also
--------
putmask, place
Examples
--------
>>> a = np.arange(5)
>>> np.put(a, [0, 2], [-44, -55])
>>> a
array([-44, 1, -55, 3, 4])
>>> a = np.arange(5)
>>> np.put(a, 22, -5, mode='clip')
>>> a
array([ 0, 1, 2, 3, -5])
"""
try:
put = a.put
except AttributeError:
raise TypeError("argument 1 must be numpy.ndarray, "
"not {name}".format(name=type(a).__name__))
return put(ind, v, mode)
评论列表
文章目录