SciPy

numpy.ma.inner

numpy.ma.inner(a, b)[source]

Inner product of two arrays.

Ordinary inner product of vectors for 1-D arrays (without complex conjugation), in higher dimensions a sum product over the last axes.

Parameters:
a, b : array_like

If a and b are nonscalar, their last dimensions must match.

Returns:
out : ndarray

out.shape = a.shape[:-1] + b.shape[:-1]

Raises:
ValueError

If the last dimension of a and b has different size.

See also

tensordot
Sum products over arbitrary axes.
dot
Generalised matrix product, using second last dimension of b.
einsum
Einstein summation convention.

Notes

Masked values are replaced by 0.

For vectors (1-D arrays) it computes the ordinary inner-product:

np.inner(a, b) = sum(a[:]*b[:])

More generally, if ndim(a) = r > 0 and ndim(b) = s > 0:

np.inner(a, b) = np.tensordot(a, b, axes=(-1,-1))

or explicitly:

np.inner(a, b)[i0,...,ir-1,j0,...,js-1]
     = sum(a[i0,...,ir-1,:]*b[j0,...,js-1,:])

In addition a or b may be scalars, in which case:

np.inner(a,b) = a*b

Examples

Ordinary inner product for vectors:

>>> a = np.array([1,2,3])
>>> b = np.array([0,1,0])
>>> np.inner(a, b)
2

A multidimensional example:

>>> a = np.arange(24).reshape((2,3,4))
>>> b = np.arange(4)
>>> np.inner(a, b)
array([[ 14,  38,  62],
       [ 86, 110, 134]])

An example where b is a scalar:

>>> np.inner(np.eye(2), 7)
array([[ 7.,  0.],
       [ 0.,  7.]])

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