numpy.ma.masked_values
-
numpy.ma.masked_values(x, value, rtol=1e-05, atol=1e-08, copy=True, shrink=True)
[source] -
Mask using floating point equality.
Return a MaskedArray, masked where the data in array
x
are approximately equal tovalue
, determined usingisclose
. The default tolerances formasked_values
are the same as those forisclose
.For integer types, exact equality is used, in the same way as
masked_equal
.The fill_value is set to
value
and the mask is set tonomask
if possible.- Parameters
-
-
xarray_like
-
Array to mask.
-
valuefloat
-
Masking value.
-
rtol, atolfloat, optional
-
Tolerance parameters passed on to
isclose
-
copybool, optional
-
Whether to return a copy of
x
. -
shrinkbool, optional
-
Whether to collapse a mask full of False to
nomask
.
-
- Returns
-
-
resultMaskedArray
-
The result of masking
x
where approximately equal tovalue
.
-
See also
-
masked_where
-
Mask where a condition is met.
-
masked_equal
-
Mask where equal to a given value (integers).
Examples
>>> import numpy.ma as ma >>> x = np.array([1, 1.1, 2, 1.1, 3]) >>> ma.masked_values(x, 1.1) masked_array(data=[1.0, --, 2.0, --, 3.0], mask=[False, True, False, True, False], fill_value=1.1)
Note that
mask
is set tonomask
if possible.>>> ma.masked_values(x, 1.5) masked_array(data=[1. , 1.1, 2. , 1.1, 3. ], mask=False, fill_value=1.5)
For integers, the fill value will be different in general to the result of
masked_equal
.>>> x = np.arange(5) >>> x array([0, 1, 2, 3, 4]) >>> ma.masked_values(x, 2) masked_array(data=[0, 1, --, 3, 4], mask=[False, False, True, False, False], fill_value=2) >>> ma.masked_equal(x, 2) masked_array(data=[0, 1, --, 3, 4], mask=[False, False, True, False, False], fill_value=2)
© 2005–2020 NumPy Developers
Licensed under the 3-clause BSD License.
https://numpy.org/doc/1.19/reference/generated/numpy.ma.masked_values.html