The best way in your particular case would just be to change your two criteria to one criterion:
dists[abs(dists - r - dr/2.) <= dr/2.]
It only creates one boolean array, and in my opinion is easier to read because it says, is dist
within a dr
or r
? (Though I'd redefine r
to be the center of your region of interest instead of the beginning, so r = r + dr/2.
) But that doesn't answer your question.
The answer to your question:
You don't actually need where
if you're just trying to filter out the elements of dists
that don't fit your criteria:
dists[(dists >= r) & (dists <= r+dr)]
Because the &
will give you an elementwise and
(the parentheses are necessary).
Or, if you do want to use where
for some reason, you can do:
dists[(np.where((dists >= r) & (dists <= r + dr)))]
Why:
The reason it doesn't work is because np.where
returns a list of indices, not a boolean array. You're trying to get and
between two lists of numbers, which of course doesn't have the True
/False
values that you expect. If a
and b
are both True
values, then a and b
returns b
. So saying something like [0,1,2] and [2,3,4]
will just give you [2,3,4]
. Here it is in action:
In [230]: dists = np.arange(0,10,.5)
In [231]: r = 5
In [232]: dr = 1
In [233]: np.where(dists >= r)
Out[233]: (array([10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19]),)
In [234]: np.where(dists <= r+dr)
Out[234]: (array([ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12]),)
In [235]: np.where(dists >= r) and np.where(dists <= r+dr)
Out[235]: (array([ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12]),)
What you were expecting to compare was simply the boolean array, for example
In [236]: dists >= r
Out[236]:
array([False, False, False, False, False, False, False, False, False,
False, True, True, True, True, True, True, True, True,
True, True], dtype=bool)
In [237]: dists <= r + dr
Out[237]:
array([ True, True, True, True, True, True, True, True, True,
True, True, True, True, False, False, False, False, False,
False, False], dtype=bool)
In [238]: (dists >= r) & (dists <= r + dr)
Out[238]:
array([False, False, False, False, False, False, False, False, False,
False, True, True, True, False, False, False, False, False,
False, False], dtype=bool)
Now you can call np.where
on the combined boolean array:
In [239]: np.where((dists >= r) & (dists <= r + dr))
Out[239]: (array([10, 11, 12]),)
In [240]: dists[np.where((dists >= r) & (dists <= r + dr))]
Out[240]: array([ 5. , 5.5, 6. ])
Or simply index the original array with the boolean array using fancy indexing
In [241]: dists[(dists >= r) & (dists <= r + dr)]
Out[241]: array([ 5. , 5.5, 6. ])