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python - Cannot understand numpy argpartition output

I am trying to use arpgpartition from numpy, but it seems there is something going wrong and I cannot seem to figure it out. Here is what's happening:

These are first 5 elements of the sorted array norms

np.sort(norms)[:5]
array([ 53.64759445,  54.91434479,  60.11617279,  64.09630585,  64.75318909], dtype=float32)

But when I use indices_sorted = np.argpartition(norms, 5)[:5]

norms[indices_sorted]
array([ 60.11617279,  64.09630585,  53.64759445,  54.91434479,  64.75318909], dtype=float32)

When I think I should get the same result as the sorted array?

It works just fine when I use 3 as the parameter indices_sorted = np.argpartition(norms, 3)[:3]

norms[indices_sorted]
array([ 53.64759445,  54.91434479,  60.11617279], dtype=float32)

This isn't making much sense to me, hoping someone can offer some insight?

EDIT: Rephrasing this question as whether argpartition preserves order of the k partitioned elements makes more sense.

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We need to use list of indices that are to be kept in sorted order instead of feeding the kth param as a scalar. Thus, to maintain the sorted nature across the first 5 elements, instead of np.argpartition(a,5)[:5], simply do -

np.argpartition(a,range(5))[:5]

Here's a sample run to make things clear -

In [84]: a = np.random.rand(10)

In [85]: a
Out[85]: 
array([ 0.85017222,  0.19406266,  0.7879974 ,  0.40444978,  0.46057793,
        0.51428578,  0.03419694,  0.47708   ,  0.73924536,  0.14437159])

In [86]: a[np.argpartition(a,5)[:5]]
Out[86]: array([ 0.19406266,  0.14437159,  0.03419694,  0.40444978,  0.46057793])

In [87]: a[np.argpartition(a,range(5))[:5]]
Out[87]: array([ 0.03419694,  0.14437159,  0.19406266,  0.40444978,  0.46057793])

Please note that argpartition makes sense on performance aspect, if we are looking to get sorted indices for a small subset of elements, let's say k number of elems which is a small fraction of the total number of elems.

Let's use a bigger dataset and try to get sorted indices for all elems to make the above mentioned point clear -

In [51]: a = np.random.rand(10000)*100

In [52]: %timeit np.argpartition(a,range(a.size-1))[:5]
10 loops, best of 3: 105 ms per loop

In [53]: %timeit a.argsort()
1000 loops, best of 3: 893 μs per loop

Thus, to sort all elems, np.argpartition isn't the way to go.

Now, let's say I want to get sorted indices for only the first 5 elems with that big dataset and also keep the order for those -

In [68]: a = np.random.rand(10000)*100

In [69]: np.argpartition(a,range(5))[:5]
Out[69]: array([1647,  942, 2167, 1371, 2571])

In [70]: a.argsort()[:5]
Out[70]: array([1647,  942, 2167, 1371, 2571])

In [71]: %timeit np.argpartition(a,range(5))[:5]
10000 loops, best of 3: 112 μs per loop

In [72]: %timeit a.argsort()[:5]
1000 loops, best of 3: 888 μs per loop

Very useful here!


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