numpy.char.array¶
-
numpy.char.
array
(obj, itemsize=None, copy=True, unicode=None, order=None)¶ Create a
chararray
.Note
This class is provided for numarray backward-compatibility. New code (not concerned with numarray compatibility) should use arrays of type
string_
orunicode_
and use the free functions innumpy.char
for fast vectorized string operations instead.Versus a regular NumPy array of type str or unicode, this class adds the following functionality:
values automatically have whitespace removed from the end when indexed
comparison operators automatically remove whitespace from the end when comparing values
vectorized string operations are provided as methods (e.g. str.endswith) and infix operators (e.g.
+, *, %
)
- Parameters
- objarray of str or unicode-like
- itemsizeint, optional
itemsize is the number of characters per scalar in the resulting array. If itemsize is None, and obj is an object array or a Python list, the itemsize will be automatically determined. If itemsize is provided and obj is of type str or unicode, then the obj string will be chunked into itemsize pieces.
- copybool, optional
If true (default), then the object is copied. Otherwise, a copy will only be made if __array__ returns a copy, if obj is a nested sequence, or if a copy is needed to satisfy any of the other requirements (itemsize, unicode, order, etc.).
- unicodebool, optional
When true, the resulting
chararray
can contain Unicode characters, when false only 8-bit characters. If unicode is None and obj is one of the following:a
chararray
,an ndarray of type str or unicode
a Python str or unicode object,
then the unicode setting of the output array will be automatically determined.
- order{‘C’, ‘F’, ‘A’}, optional
Specify the order of the array. If order is ‘C’ (default), then the array will be in C-contiguous order (last-index varies the fastest). If order is ‘F’, then the returned array will be in Fortran-contiguous order (first-index varies the fastest). If order is ‘A’, then the returned array may be in any order (either C-, Fortran-contiguous, or even discontiguous).