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numpy.matrix.ravel

matrix.ravel(order='C')[source]

Return a flattened matrix.

Refer to numpy.ravel for more documentation.

Parameters:

order : {‘C’, ‘F’, ‘A’, ‘K’}, optional

The elements of m are read using this index order. ‘C’ means to index the elements in C-like order, with the last axis index changing fastest, back to the first axis index changing slowest. ‘F’ means to index the elements in Fortran-like index order, with the first index changing fastest, and the last index changing slowest. Note that the ‘C’ and ‘F’ options take no account of the memory layout of the underlying array, and only refer to the order of axis indexing. ‘A’ means to read the elements in Fortran-like index order if m is Fortran contiguous in memory, C-like order otherwise. ‘K’ means to read the elements in the order they occur in memory, except for reversing the data when strides are negative. By default, ‘C’ index order is used.

Returns:

ret : matrix

Return the matrix flattened to shape (1, N) where N is the number of elements in the original matrix. A copy is made only if necessary.

See also

matrix.flatten
returns a similar output matrix but always a copy
matrix.flat
a flat iterator on the array.
numpy.ravel
related function which returns an ndarray