You rarely need loops for vector operations in numpy.
You can create an uninitialized array and assign to all entries at once:
>>> a = numpy.empty((3,3,))
>>> a[:] = numpy.nan
>>> a
array([[ NaN, NaN, NaN],
[ NaN, NaN, NaN],
[ NaN, NaN, NaN]])
I have timed the alternatives a[:] = numpy.nan
here and a.fill(numpy.nan)
as posted by Blaenk:
$ python -mtimeit "import numpy as np; a = np.empty((100,100));" "a.fill(np.nan)"
10000 loops, best of 3: 54.3 usec per loop
$ python -mtimeit "import numpy as np; a = np.empty((100,100));" "a[:] = np.nan"
10000 loops, best of 3: 88.8 usec per loop
The timings show a preference for ndarray.fill(..)
as the faster alternative. OTOH, I like numpy's convenience implementation where you can assign values to whole slices at the time, the code's intention is very clear.
Note that ndarray.fill
performs its operation in-place, so numpy.empty((3,3,)).fill(numpy.nan)
will instead return None
.
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