Statistical#

ivy.cumprod(x, /, *, axis=0, exclusive=False, reverse=False, dtype=None, out=None)[source]#

Return the cumulative product of the elements along a given axis.

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – Input array.

  • axis (int, default: 0) – int , axis along which the cumulative product is computed. By default 0.

  • exclusive (bool, default: False) – optional bool, Whether to perform the cumprod exclusively. Defaults is False.

  • reverse (bool, default: False) – Whether to perform the cumprod from last to first element in the selected axis. Default is False (from first to last element)

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to. It must have a shape that the inputs broadcast to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – Input array with cumulatively multiplied elements along axis.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([2, 3, 4])
>>> y = ivy.cumprod(x)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([2, 6, 24])
>>> x = ivy.array([2, 3, 4])
>>> y = ivy.cumprod(x, exclusive=True)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([1, 2, 6])
>>> x = ivy.array([[2, 3],[5, 7],[11, 13]])
>>> y = ivy.zeros((3, 2))
>>> ivy.cumprod(x, axis=1, exclusive=True, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([[ 1.,  2.],
           [ 1.,  5.],
           [ 1., 11.]])
>>> x = ivy.array([[2, 3],[5, 7],[11, 13]])
>>> ivy.cumprod(x, axis=0, exclusive=True, out=x)
>>> print(x)
ivy.array([[1,  1],
           [2,  3],
           [10, 21]])
>>> x = ivy.array([[2, 3],[5, 7],[11, 13]])
>>> y = ivy.zeros((3, 2))
>>> x.cumprod(axis=0, exclusive=True, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([[1.,  1.],
            [2.,  3.],
            [10., 21.]])

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([2, 3, 4]), b=ivy.array([3, 4, 5]))
>>> y = ivy.cumprod(x)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array([2, 6, 24]),
    b: ivy.array([3, 12, 60])
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([2, 3, 4]), b=ivy.array([3, 4, 5]))
>>> y = ivy.cumprod(x, exclusive=True)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array([1, 2, 6]),
    b: ivy.array([1, 3, 12])
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[2, 3],[5, 7],[11, 13]]), b=ivy.array([[3, 4],[4, 5],[5, 6]]))
>>> y = ivy.Container(a = ivy.zeros((3, 2)), b = ivy.zeros((3, 2)))
>>> ivy.cumprod(x, axis=1, exclusive=True, out=y)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array([[1, 2],
                  [1, 5],
                  [1, 11]]),
    b: ivy.array([[1, 3],
                  [1, 4],
                  [1, 5]])
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[2, 3],[5, 7],[11, 13]]), b=ivy.array([[3, 4],[4, 5],[5, 6]]))
>>> x.cumprod(axis=0, exclusive=True, out=x)
>>> print(x)
{
    a: ivy.array([[1, 1],
                  [2, 3],
                  [10, 21]]),
    b: ivy.array([[1, 1],
                  [3, 4],
                  [12, 20]])
}
ivy.cumsum(x, axis=0, exclusive=False, reverse=False, *, dtype=None, out=None)[source]#

Return the cumulative sum of the elements along a given axis.

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – Input array.

  • axis (int, default: 0) – Axis along which the cumulative sum is computed. Default is 0.

  • exclusive (bool, default: False) – Whether to perform cumsum exclusively. Default is False.

  • reverse (bool, default: False) – Whether to perform the cumsum from last to first element in the selected axis. Default is False (from first to last element)

  • dtype (Optional[Union[Dtype, NativeDtype]], default: None) – Data type of the returned array. Default is None. If None, if the default data type corresponding to the data type “kind” (integer or floating-point) of x has a smaller range of values than the data type of x (e.g., x has data type int64 and the default data type is int32, or x has data type uint64 and the default data type is int64), the returned array must have the same data type as x. If x has a floating-point data type, the returned array must have the default floating-point data type. If x has a signed integer data type (e.g., int16), the returned array must have the default integer data type. If x has an unsigned integer data type (e.g., uint16), the returned array must have an unsigned integer data type having the same number of bits as the default integer data type (e.g., if the default integer data type is int32, the returned array must have a uint32 data type). If the data type (either specified or resolved) differs from the data type of x, the input array should be cast to the specified data type before computing the product.

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – Optional output array, for writing the result to. It must have a shape that the inputs broadcast to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – Array which holds the result of applying cumsum at each original array elements along the specified axis.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([1, 5, 2, 0])
>>> y = ivy.cumsum(x, exclusive= True, reverse=False)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([0, 1, 6, 8])
>>> x = ivy.array([[6, 4, 2],
...                [1, 3, 0]])
>>> y = ivy.zeros((2,3))
>>> ivy.cumsum(x, axis=0, exclusive=False, reverse=True, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([[7, 7, 2],
           [1, 3, 0]])
>>> x = ivy.array([[1, 5, 2],
...                [4, 3, 0]])
>>> y = ivy.cumsum(x, axis=0, exclusive=True, reverse=True)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([[4, 3, 0],
           [0, 0, 0]])
>>> x = ivy.array([[2, 4, 5],
...                [3, 6, 5],
...                [1, 3, 10]])
>>> ivy.cumsum(x,axis=1,reverse=True, dtype='int64', out=x)
>>> print(x)
ivy.array([[11,  9,  5],
           [14, 11,  5],
           [14, 13, 10]])

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[1, 3, 5]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[3, 5, 7]]))
>>> y = ivy.cumsum(x, axis= 0)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array([[1, 3, 5]]),
    b: ivy.array([[3, 5, 7]])
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[1, 3, 4]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[3, 5, 8],
...                                [5, 6, 5]]),
...                   c=ivy.array([[2, 4, 1],
...                                [3, 6, 9],
...                                [0, 2, 3]]))
>>> y = ivy.Container(a = ivy.zeros((1, 3)),
...                   b = ivy.zeros((2, 3)),
...                   c = ivy.zeros((3,3)))
>>> ivy.cumsum(x,axis=1,reverse=True, out=y)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array([[8, 7, 4]]),
    b: ivy.array([[16, 13, 8],
                  [16, 11, 5]]),
    c: ivy.array([[7, 5, 1],
                  [18, 15, 9],
                  [5, 5, 3]])
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[0],
...                                [5]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[6, 8, 7],
...                                [4, 2, 3]]),
...                   c=ivy.array([[1, 2],
...                                [3, 4],
...                                [6, 4]]))
>>> ivy.cumsum(x,axis=0,out=x)
>>> print(x)
{
    a: ivy.array([[0],
                  [5]]),
    b: ivy.array([[6, 8, 7],
                  [10, 10, 10]]),
    c: ivy.array([[1, 2],
                  [4, 6],
                  [10, 10]])
}
ivy.einsum(equation, *operands, out=None)[source]#

Sum the product of the elements of the input operands along dimensions specified using a notation based on the Einstein summation convention.

Parameters:
  • equation (str) – A str describing the contraction, in the same format as numpy.einsum.

  • operands (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – seq of arrays, the inputs to contract (each one an ivy.Array), whose shapes should be consistent with equation.

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – The array with sums computed.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([[0, 1, 2], [3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8]])
>>> y = ivy.einsum('ii', x)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(12)
>>> x = ivy.array([[0, 1, 2], [3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8]])
>>> z = ivy.einsum('ij -> j', x)
>>> print(z)
ivy.array([ 9, 12, 15])
>>> A = ivy.array([0, 1, 2])
>>> B = ivy.array([[ 0,  1,  2,  3],
...                [ 4,  5,  6,  7],
...                [ 8,  9, 10, 11]])
>>> C = ivy.einsum('i,ij->i', A, B)
>>> print(C)
ivy.array([ 0, 22, 76])
>>> A = ivy.array([[1, 1, 1],
...                [2, 2, 2],
...                [5, 5, 5]])
>>> B = ivy.array([[0, 1, 0],
...                [1, 1, 0],
...                [1, 1, 1]])
>>> C = ivy.einsum('ij,jk->ik', A, B)
>>> print(C)
ivy.array([[ 2,  3,  1],
       [ 4,  6,  2],
       [10, 15,  5]])
>>> A = ivy.arange(10)
>>> B = ivy.arange(5, 15)
>>> C = ivy.einsum('i->', A)
>>> print(C)
ivy.array(45)
>>> A = ivy.arange(10)
>>> B = ivy.arange(5, 15)
>>> C = ivy.einsum('i,i->i', A, B)
>>> print(C)
ivy.array([  0,   6,  14,  24,  36,  50,  66,  84, 104, 126])
>>> A = ivy.arange(10)
>>> B = ivy.arange(5, 15)
>>> C = ivy.einsum('i,i->', A, B) # or just use 'i,i'
>>> print(C)
ivy.array(510)
>>> A = ivy.arange(10)
>>> B = ivy.arange(5, 15)
>>> C = ivy.einsum('i,j->ij', A, B)
>>> print(C)
ivy.array([[  0,   0,   0,   0,   0,   0,   0,   0,   0,   0],
       [  5,   6,   7,   8,   9,  10,  11,  12,  13,  14],
       [ 10,  12,  14,  16,  18,  20,  22,  24,  26,  28],
       [ 15,  18,  21,  24,  27,  30,  33,  36,  39,  42],
       [ 20,  24,  28,  32,  36,  40,  44,  48,  52,  56],
       [ 25,  30,  35,  40,  45,  50,  55,  60,  65,  70],
       [ 30,  36,  42,  48,  54,  60,  66,  72,  78,  84],
       [ 35,  42,  49,  56,  63,  70,  77,  84,  91,  98],
       [ 40,  48,  56,  64,  72,  80,  88,  96, 104, 112],
       [ 45,  54,  63,  72,  81,  90,  99, 108, 117, 126]])

With a mix of ivy.Array and ivy.Container inputs:

>>> x = ivy.array([0, 1, 2])
>>> y = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[ 0,  1,  2,  3],
...                                [ 4,  5,  6,  7],
...                                [ 8,  9, 10, 11]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[ 0,  1,  2],
...                                [ 4,  5,  6],
...                                [ 8,  9, 10]]))
>>> z = ivy.einsum('i,ij->i', x, y)
>>> print(z)
{
    a: ivy.array([0, 22, 76]),
    b: ivy.array([0, 15, 54])
}

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[0, 1, 0],[1, 1, 0],[1, 1, 1]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[0, 1, 2],[4, 5, 6],[8, 9, 10]]))
>>> y = ivy.einsum('ii', x)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array(2),
    b: ivy.array(15)
}
ivy.max(x, /, *, axis=None, keepdims=False, out=None)[source]#

Calculate the maximum value of the input array x.

Note

When the number of elements over which to compute the maximum value is zero, the maximum value is implementation-defined. Specification-compliant libraries may choose to raise an error, return a sentinel value (e.g., if x is a floating-point input array, return NaN), or return the minimum possible value for the input array x data type (e.g., if x is a floating-point array, return -infinity).

Special Cases

For floating-point operands,

  • If x_i is NaN, the maximum value is NaN (i.e., NaN values propagate).

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – input array. Should have a numeric data type.

  • axis (Optional[Union[int, Sequence[int]]], default: None) – axis or axes along which maximum values must be computed. By default, the maximum value must be computed over the entire array. If a tuple of integers, maximum values must be computed over multiple axes. Default: None.

  • keepdims (bool, default: False) – if True, the reduced axes (dimensions) must be included in the result as singleton dimensions, and, accordingly, the result must be compatible with the input array (see broadcasting). Otherwise, if False, the reduced axes (dimensions) must not be included in the result. Default: False.

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – if the maximum value was computed over the entire array, a zero-dimensional array containing the maximum value; otherwise, a non-zero-dimensional array containing the maximum values. The returned array must have the same data type as x.

This method conforms to the Array API Standard. This docstring is an extension of the docstring in the standard.

Both the description and the type hints above assumes an array input for simplicity, but this function is nestable, and therefore also accepts ivy.Container instances in place of any of the arguments.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([1, 2, 3])
>>> z = ivy.max(x)
>>> print(z)
ivy.array(3)
>>> x = ivy.array([0, 1, 2])
>>> z = ivy.array(0)
>>> y = ivy.max(x, out=z)
>>> print(z)
ivy.array(2)
>>> x = ivy.array([[0, 1, 2], [4, 6, 10]])
>>> y = ivy.max(x, axis=0, keepdims=True)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([[4, 6, 10]])

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([0., 1., 2.]), b=ivy.array([3., 4., 5.]))
>>> y = ivy.max(x)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array(2.),
    b: ivy.array(5.)
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[1, 2, 3],[-1,0,2]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[2, 3, 4], [0, 1, 2]]))
>>> z = ivy.max(x, axis=1)
>>> print(z)
{
    a: ivy.array([3, 2]),
    b: ivy.array([4, 2])
}
ivy.mean(x, /, axis=None, keepdims=False, *, dtype=None, out=None)[source]#

Calculate the arithmetic mean of the input array x.

Special Cases

Let N equal the number of elements over which to compute the arithmetic mean. - If N is 0, the arithmetic mean is NaN. - If x_i is NaN, the arithmetic mean is NaN (i.e., NaN values

propagate).

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – input array. Should have a floating-point data type.

  • axis (Optional[Union[int, Sequence[int]]], default: None) – axis or axes along which arithmetic means must be computed. By default, the mean must be computed over the entire array. If a Sequence of integers, arithmetic means must be computed over multiple axes. Default: None.

  • keepdims (bool, default: False) – bool, if True, the reduced axes (dimensions) must be included in the result as singleton dimensions, and, accordingly, the result must be compatible with the input array (see broadcasting). Otherwise, if False, the reduced axes (dimensions) must not be included in the result. Default: False.

  • dtype (Optional[Union[Dtype, NativeDtype]], default: None) – the desired data type of returned tensor. If specified, the input tensor is casted to dtype before the operation is performed. This is useful for preventing data type overflows. Default: None.

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – array, if the arithmetic mean was computed over the entire array, a zero-dimensional array containing the arithmetic mean; otherwise, a non-zero-dimensional array containing the arithmetic means. The returned array must have the same data type as x. .. note:

While this specification recommends that this function only accept input
arrays having a floating-point data type, specification-compliant array
libraries may choose to accept input arrays having an integer data type.
While mixed data type promotion is implementation-defined, if the input
array ``x`` has an integer data type, the returned array must have the
default floating-point data type.

This function conforms to the Array API Standard. This docstring is an extension of the docstring in the standard.

Both the description and the type hints above assumes an array input for simplicity, but this function is nestable, and therefore also accepts ivy.Container instances in place of any of the arguments.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([3., 4., 5.])
>>> y = ivy.mean(x)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(4.)
>>> x = ivy.array([0., 1., 2.])
>>> y = ivy.array(0.)
>>> ivy.mean(x, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(1.)
>>> x = ivy.array([[-1., -2., -3., 0., -1.], [1., 2., 3., 0., 1.]])
>>> y = ivy.array([0., 0.])
>>> ivy.mean(x, axis=1, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([-1.4,  1.4])

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([-1., 0., 1.]), b=ivy.array([1.1, 0.2, 1.4]))
>>> y = ivy.mean(x)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array(0.),
    b: ivy.array(0.90000004)
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[0., 1., 2.], [3., 4., 5.]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[3., 4., 5.], [6., 7., 8.]]))
>>> y = ivy.Container(a = ivy.zeros(3), b = ivy.zeros(3))
>>> ivy.mean(x, axis=0, out=y)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array([1.5, 2.5, 3.5]),
    b: ivy.array([4.5, 5.5, 6.5])
}
ivy.min(x, /, *, axis=None, keepdims=False, initial=None, where=None, out=None)[source]#

Calculate the minimum value of the input array x.

Note

When the number of elements over which to compute the minimum value is zero, the minimum value is implementation-defined. Specification-compliant libraries may choose to raise an error, return a sentinel value (e.g., if x is a floating-point input array, return NaN), or return the maximum possible value for the input array x data type (e.g., if x is a floating-point array, return +infinity).

Special Cases

For floating-point operands,

  • If x_i is NaN, the minimum value is NaN (i.e., NaN values propagate).

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – Input array. Should have a real-valued data type.

  • axis (Optional[Union[int, Sequence[int]]], default: None) – axis or axes along which minimum values must be computed. By default, the minimum value must be computed over the entire array. If a tuple of integers, minimum values must be computed over multiple axes. Default: None.

  • keepdims (bool, default: False) – optional boolean, if True, the reduced axes (dimensions) must be included in the result as singleton dimensions, and, accordingly, the result must be compatible with the input array (see broadcasting). Otherwise, if False, the reduced axes (dimensions) must not be included in the result. Default: False.

  • initial (Optional[Union[int, float, complex]], default: None) – The maximum value of an output element. Must be present to allow computation on empty slice.

  • where (Optional[Array], default: None) – Elements to compare for minimum

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – if the minimum value was computed over the entire array, a zero-dimensional array containing the minimum value; otherwise, a non-zero-dimensional array containing the minimum values. The returned array must have the same data type as x.

This function conforms to the Array API Standard. This docstring is an extension of the docstring in the standard.

Both the description and the type hints above assumes an array input for simplicity, but this function is nestable, and therefore also accepts ivy.Container instances in place of any of the arguments.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([1, 2, 3])
>>> z = ivy.min(x)
>>> print(z)
ivy.array(1)
>>> x = ivy.array([0, 1, 2])
>>> z = ivy.array([0, 0, 0])
>>> y = ivy.min(x, out=z)
>>> print(z)
ivy.array(0)
>>> x = ivy.array([[0, 1, 2], [4, 6, 10]])
>>> y = ivy.min(x, axis=0, keepdims=True)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([[0, 1, 2]])
>>> x = ivy.native_array([[0, 1, 2], [4, 6, 10]])
>>> y = ivy.min(x)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(0)

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([1, 2, 3]), b=ivy.array([2, 3, 4]))
>>> z = ivy.min(x)
>>> print(z)
{
    a: ivy.array(1),
    b: ivy.array(2)
}
ivy.prod(x, /, *, axis=None, dtype=None, keepdims=False, out=None)[source]#

Calculate the product of input array x elements.

Special Cases

Let N equal the number of elements over which to compute the product.

  • If N is 0, the product is 1 (i.e., the empty product).

For both both real-valued and complex floating-point operands, special cases must be handled as the operation is implemented by successive application of ivy.multiply():

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – input array. Should have a numeric data type.

  • axis (Optional[Union[int, Sequence[int]]], default: None) – axis or axes along which products must be computed. By default, the product must be computed over the entire array. If a tuple of integers, products must be computed over multiple axes. Default: None.

  • keepdims (bool, default: False) – bool, if True, the reduced axes (dimensions) must be included in the result as singleton dimensions, and, accordingly, the result must be compatible with the input array (see Broadcasting). Otherwise, if False, the reduced axes (dimensions) must not be included in the result. Default: False.

  • dtype (Optional[Union[Dtype, NativeDtype]], default: None) – data type of the returned array. If None, if the default data type corresponding to the data type “kind” (integer or floating-point) of x has a smaller range of values than the data type of x (e.g., x has data type int64 and the default data type is int32, or x has data type uint64 and the default data type is int64), the returned array must have the same data type as x. if x has a floating-point data type, the returned array must have the default floating-point data type. if x has a signed integer data type (e.g., int16), the returned array must have the default integer data type. if x has an unsigned integer data type (e.g., uint16), the returned array must have an unsigned integer data type having the same number of bits as the default integer data type (e.g., if the default integer data type is int32, the returned array must have a uint32 data type). If the data type (either specified or resolved) differs from the data type of x, the input array should be cast to the specified data type before computing the product. Default: None.

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – array, if the product was computed over the entire array, a zero-dimensional array containing the product; otherwise, a non-zero-dimensional array containing the products. The returned array must have a data type as described by the dtype parameter above.

This method conforms to the Array API Standard. This docstring is an extension of the docstring in the standard.

Both the description and the type hints above assumes an array input for simplicity, but this function is nestable, and therefore also accepts ivy.Container instances in place of any of the arguments.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([1, 2, 3])
>>> z = ivy.prod(x)
>>> print(z)
ivy.array(6)
>>> x = ivy.array([1, 0, 3])
>>> z = ivy.prod(x)
>>> print(z)
ivy.array(0)
>>> x = ivy.array([[3., 4., 5.]])
>>> y = ivy.prod(x, keepdims=True)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([60.])
>>> x = ivy.array([2., 1.])
>>> y = ivy.array(0.)
>>> ivy.prod(x, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(2.)
>>> x = ivy.array([[-1., -2.], [3., 3.]])
>>> y = ivy.prod(x, axis=1)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([2., 9.])

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([-1., 0., 1.]), b=ivy.array([1.1, 0.2, 1.4]))
>>> y = ivy.prod(x)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array(-0.),
    b: ivy.array(0.30800003)
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[1., 2.], [3., 4.]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[ 4., 5.], [5., 6.]]))
>>> y = ivy.prod(x, axis=1, keepdims=True)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array([[2.],
                  [12.]]),
    b: ivy.array([[20.],
                  [30.]])
}
ivy.std(x, /, *, axis=None, correction=0.0, keepdims=False, out=None)[source]#

Calculate the standard deviation of the input array x.

Special Cases

Let N equal the number of elements over which to compute the standard deviation.

  • If N - correction is less than or equal to 0, the standard deviation is NaN.

  • If x_i is NaN, the standard deviation is NaN (i.e., NaN values propagate).

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – input array.

  • axis (Optional[Union[int, Sequence[int]]], default: None) – axis or axes along which standard deviations must be computed. By default, the standard deviation must be computed over the entire array. If a tuple of integers, standard deviations must be computed over multiple axes. Default: None.

  • correction (Union[int, float], default: 0.0) – degrees of freedom adjustment. Setting this parameter to a value other than 0 has the effect of adjusting the divisor during the calculation of the standard deviation according to N-c where N corresponds to the total number of elements over which the standard deviation is computed and c corresponds to the provided degrees of freedom adjustment. When computing the standard deviation of a population, setting this parameter to 0 is the standard choice (i.e., the provided array contains data constituting an entire population). When computing the corrected sample standard deviation, setting this parameter to 1 is the standard choice (i.e., the provided array contains data sampled from a larger population; this is commonly referred to as Bessel’s correction). Default: 0.

  • keepdims (bool, default: False) – if True, the reduced axes (dimensions) must be included in the result as singleton dimensions, and, accordingly, the result must be compatible with the input array (see broadcasting). Otherwise, if False, the reduced axes (dimensions) must not be included in the result. Default: False.

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

  • ret – if the standard deviation was computed over the entire array, a zero-dimensional array containing the standard deviation; otherwise, a non-zero-dimensional array containing the standard deviations. The returned array must have the same data type as x.

    Note

    While this specification recommends that this function only accept input arrays having a real-valued floating-point data type, specification-compliant array libraries may choose to accept input arrays having an integer data type. While mixed data type promotion is implementation-defined, if the input array x has an integer data type, the returned array must have the default real-valued floating-point data type.

  • This function conforms to the `Array API Standard

  • <https (//data-apis.org/array-api/latest/>`_. This docstring is an extension of the)

  • `docstring <https (//data-apis.org/array-api/latest/)

  • API_specification/generated/array_api.std.html>`_

  • in the standard.

  • Both the description and the type hints above assumes an array input for simplicity,

  • but this function is nestable, and therefore also accepts ivy.Container

  • instances in place of any of the arguments.

Examples

>>> x = ivy.array([-1., 0., 1.])
>>> y = ivy.std(x)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(0.81649661)
>>> x = ivy.array([-1., 0., 1.])
>>> z = ivy.std(x, correction=1)
>>> print(z)
ivy.array(1.)
>>> x = ivy.array([[0., 4.]])
>>> y = ivy.std(x, keepdims=True)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([[2.]])
>>> x = ivy.array([2., 1.])
>>> y = ivy.array(0.)
>>> ivy.std(x, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(0.5)
>>> x = ivy.array([[-1., -2.], [3., 3.]])
>>> y = ivy.std(x, axis=1)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([0.5, 0. ])

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([-1., 0., 1.]), b=ivy.array([1.1, 0.2, 1.4]))
>>> y = x.std()
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array(0.81649661),
    b: ivy.array(0.509902)
}
>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([[1., 3.], [3., 6.]]),
...                   b=ivy.array([[ 4., 2.], [2., 1.]]))
>>> y = x.std(axis=1, keepdims=True)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array([[1.],
                  [1.5]]),
    b: ivy.array([[1.],
                  [0.5]])
}
ivy.sum(x, /, *, axis=None, dtype=None, keepdims=False, out=None)[source]#

Calculate the sum of the input array x.

Special Cases

Let N equal the number of elements over which to compute the sum. - If N is 0, the sum is 0 (i.e., the empty sum).

For floating-point operands, - If x_i is NaN, the sum is NaN (i.e., NaN values propagate).

For both real-valued and complex floating-point operands, special cases must be handled as if the operation is implemented by successive application of ivy.add():

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – Input array. Should have a numeric data type.

  • axis (Optional[Union[int, Sequence[int]]], default: None) – Axis or axes along which sums must be computed. By default, the sum must be computed over the entire array. If a tuple of integers, sums must be computed over multiple axes. Default: None.

  • dtype (Optional[Union[Dtype, NativeDtype]], default: None) –

    Data type of the returned array. If None,

    If the default data type corresponding to the data type “kind” (integer or floating-point) of x has a smaller range of values than the data type of x (e.g., x has data type int64 and the default data type is int32, or x has data type uint64 and the default data type is int64), the returned array must have the same data type as x. If x has a floating-point data type, the returned array must have the default floating-point data type. If x has a signed integer data type (e.g., int16), the returned array must have the default integer data type. If x has an unsigned integer data type (e.g., uint16), the returned array must have an unsigned integer data type having the same number of bits as the default integer data type (e.g., if the default integer data type is int32, the returned array must have a uint32 data type).

    If the data type (either specified or resolved) differs from the data type of x, the input array should be cast to the specified data type before computing the sum. Default: None.

    Note

    keyword argument is intended to help prevent data type overflows.

  • keepdims (Optional[bool], default: False) – If True, the reduced axes (dimensions) must be included in the result as singleton dimensions, and, accordingly, the result must be compatible with the input array (see broadcasting). Otherwise, if False, the reduced axes (dimensions) must not be included in the result. Default: False.

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – If the sum was computed over the entire array, a zero-dimensional array containing the sum; otherwise, an array containing the sums. The returned array must have a data type as described by the dtype parameter above.

This function conforms to the Array API Standard. This docstring is an extension of the docstring in the standard.

Both the description and the type hints above assumes an array input for simplicity, but this function is nestable, and therefore also accepts ivy.Container instances in place of any of the arguments.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([0.41, 0.89])
>>> y = ivy.sum(x)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(1.3)
>>> x = ivy.array([0.5, 0.7, 2.4])
>>> y = ivy.array(0.0)
>>> ivy.sum(x, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(3.6)
>>> x = ivy.array([[0, 1, 2], [4, 6, 10]])
>>> y = ivy.sum(x, axis = 1, keepdims = False)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([3, 20])
>>> x = ivy.array([[0, 1, 2], [4, 6, 10]])
>>> y = ivy.array([0,0,0])
>>> ivy.sum(x, axis = 0, keepdims = False, out = y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array([4, 7, 12])

With ivy.NativeArray input:

>>> x = ivy.native_array([0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.3, 0.9, 0.10])
>>> y = ivy.sum(x)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(1.9)
>>> x = ivy.native_array([1.0, 2.0, 2.0, 3.0])
>>> y = ivy.array(0.0)
>>> ivy.sum(x, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(8.)

With ivy.Container input:

>>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([0., 1., 2.]), b=ivy.array([3., 4., 5.]))
>>> y = ivy.sum(x)
>>> print(y)
{
    a: ivy.array(3.),
    b: ivy.array(12.)
}
ivy.var(x, /, *, axis=None, correction=0.0, keepdims=False, out=None)[source]#

Calculate the variance of the input array x.

Special Cases

Let N equal the number of elements over which to compute the variance.

If N - correction is less than or equal to 0, the variance is NaN.

If x_i is NaN, the variance is NaN (i.e., NaN values propagate).

Parameters:
  • x (Union[Array, NativeArray]) – input array. Should have a floating-point data type.

  • axis (Optional[Union[int, Sequence[int]]], default: None) – axis or axes along which variances must be computed. By default, the variance must be computed over the entire array. If a tuple of integers, variances must be computed over multiple axes. Default: None.

  • correction (Union[int, float], default: 0.0) – degrees of freedom adjustment. Setting this parameter to a value other than 0 has the effect of adjusting the divisor during the calculation of the variance according to N-c where N corresponds to the total number of elements over which the variance is computed and c corresponds to the provided degrees of freedom adjustment. When computing the variance of a population, setting this parameter to 0 is the standard choice (i.e., the provided array contains data constituting an entire population). When computing the unbiased sample variance, setting this parameter to 1 is the standard choice (i.e., the provided array contains data sampled from a larger population; this is commonly referred to as Bessel’s correction). Default: 0.

  • keepdims (bool, default: False) – if True, the reduced axes (dimensions) must be included in the result as singleton dimensions, and, accordingly, the result must be compatible with the input array (see Broadcasting). Otherwise, if False, the reduced axes (dimensions) must not be included in the result. Default: False.

  • out (Optional[Array], default: None) – optional output array, for writing the result to.

Return type:

Array

Returns:

ret – if the variance was computed over the entire array, a zero-dimensional array containing the variance; otherwise, a non-zero-dimensional array containing the variances. The returned array must have the same data type as x.

This method conforms to the Array API Standard. This docstring is an extension of the docstring in the standard.

Both the description and the type hints above assumes an array input for simplicity, but this function is nestable, and therefore also accepts ivy.Container instances in place of any of the arguments.

Examples

With ivy.Array input:

>>> x = ivy.array([0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.3, 0.9, 0.10])
>>> y = ivy.var(x)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(0.07472222)
>>> x = ivy.array([0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.3, 0.9, 0.10])
>>> y = ivy.array(0.0)
>>> ivy.var(x, out=y)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(0.07472222)
>>> x = ivy.array([[0.1, 0.2, 0.3], [0.3, 0.9, 0.10]])
>>> print(ivy.var(x, axis=1, keepdims=True))
ivy.array([[0.00666667],
   [0.11555555]])
>>> x = ivy.array([[0.1, 0.2, 0.3], [0.3, 0.9, 0.10]])
>>> y = ivy.var(x, correction=1)
>>> print(y)
ivy.array(0.08966666)

With ivy.Container input: >>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([0.1, 0.2, 0.9]), … b=ivy.array([0.7, 0.1, 0.9])) >>> y = ivy.var(x) >>> print(y) {

a: ivy.array(0.12666667), b: ivy.array(0.11555555)

}

This should have hopefully given you an overview of the statistical submodule, if you have any questions, please feel free to reach out on our discord!