Book Image

SciPy Recipes

By : V Kishore Ayyadevara, Ruben Oliva Ramos
Book Image

SciPy Recipes

By: V Kishore Ayyadevara, Ruben Oliva Ramos

Overview of this book

With the SciPy Stack, you get the power to effectively process, manipulate, and visualize your data using the popular Python language. Utilizing SciPy correctly can sometimes be a very tricky proposition. This book provides the right techniques so you can use SciPy to perform different data science tasks with ease. This book includes hands-on recipes for using the different components of the SciPy Stack such as NumPy, SciPy, matplotlib, and pandas, among others. You will use these libraries to solve real-world problems in linear algebra, numerical analysis, data visualization, and much more. The recipes included in the book will ensure you get a practical understanding not only of how a particular feature in SciPy Stack works, but also of its application to real-world problems. The independent nature of the recipes also ensure that you can pick up any one and learn about a particular feature of SciPy without reading through the other recipes, thus making the book a very handy and useful guide.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Operations on arrays

NumPy defines a rich set of operations and functions for the ndarray type. NumPy defines the notion of a universal function, abbreviated as ufunc, which is a function object that can be applied to arbitrary arrays. Universal functions are objects of ufunc type, and NumPy provides a vast collection of built-in ufunc functions, covering all computations needed in scientific and data applications.

A ufunc is specialized towards the element by element application of a function. That is, if x is an array object, and f is a ufunc, the f(x) expression will apply the function f to every element of array x, and return a new object with the resulting values.

A ufunc follows a strict functional protocol; applying the f function to x will never change the elements of the x arrays themselves, but return a new array with the values of f applied to each element of x. User...