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# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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from typing import Union
import numpy as np
from ...typing import TileableType
from .. import asarray
[文档]def in1d(
ar1: Union[TileableType, np.ndarray],
ar2: Union[TileableType, np.ndarray, list],
assume_unique: bool = False,
invert: bool = False,
):
"""
Test whether each element of a 1-D tensor is also present in a second tensor.
Returns a boolean tensor the same length as `ar1` that is True
where an element of `ar1` is in `ar2` and False otherwise.
We recommend using :func:`isin` instead of `in1d` for new code.
Parameters
----------
ar1 : (M,) Tensor
Input tensor.
ar2 : array_like
The values against which to test each value of `ar1`.
assume_unique : bool, optional
If True, the input tensors are both assumed to be unique, which
can speed up the calculation. Default is False.
invert : bool, optional
If True, the values in the returned tensor are inverted (that is,
False where an element of `ar1` is in `ar2` and True otherwise).
Default is False. ``np.in1d(a, b, invert=True)`` is equivalent
to (but is faster than) ``np.invert(in1d(a, b))``.
Returns
-------
in1d : (M,) Tensor, bool
The values `ar1[in1d]` are in `ar2`.
See Also
--------
isin : Version of this function that preserves the
shape of ar1.
numpy.lib.arraysetops : Module with a number of other functions for
performing set operations on arrays.
Notes
-----
`in1d` can be considered as an element-wise function version of the
python keyword `in`, for 1-D sequences. ``in1d(a, b)`` is roughly
equivalent to ``mt.array([item in b for item in a])``.
However, this idea fails if `ar2` is a set, or similar (non-sequence)
container: As ``ar2`` is converted to a tensor, in those cases
``asarray(ar2)`` is an object tensor rather than the expected tensor of
contained values.
Examples
--------
>>> import mars.tensor as mt
>>> test = mt.array([0, 1, 2, 5, 0])
>>> states = [0, 2]
>>> mask = mt.in1d(test, states)
>>> mask.execute()
array([ True, False, True, False, True])
>>> test[mask].execute()
array([0, 2, 0])
>>> mask = mt.in1d(test, states, invert=True)
>>> mask.execute()
array([False, True, False, True, False])
>>> test[mask].execute()
array([1, 5])
"""
from .isin import isin
ar1 = asarray(ar1).ravel()
ar2 = asarray(ar2).ravel()
return isin(ar1, ar2, assume_unique=assume_unique, invert=invert)