numpy.real_if_close
-
numpy.real_if_close(a, tol=100)[source] -
If input is complex with all imaginary parts close to zero, return real parts.
“Close to zero” is defined as
tol* (machine epsilon of the type fora).- Parameters
-
-
aarray_like -
Input array.
-
tolfloat -
Tolerance in machine epsilons for the complex part of the elements in the array.
-
- Returns
-
-
outndarray -
If
ais real, the type ofais used for the output. Ifahas complex elements, the returned type is float.
-
Notes
Machine epsilon varies from machine to machine and between data types but Python floats on most platforms have a machine epsilon equal to 2.2204460492503131e-16. You can use ‘np.finfo(float).eps’ to print out the machine epsilon for floats.
Examples
>>> np.finfo(float).eps 2.2204460492503131e-16 # may vary
>>> np.real_if_close([2.1 + 4e-14j, 5.2 + 3e-15j], tol=1000) array([2.1, 5.2]) >>> np.real_if_close([2.1 + 4e-13j, 5.2 + 3e-15j], tol=1000) array([2.1+4.e-13j, 5.2 + 3e-15j])
© 2005–2020 NumPy Developers
Licensed under the 3-clause BSD License.
https://numpy.org/doc/1.19/reference/generated/numpy.real_if_close.html