numpy.interp¶
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numpy.interp(x, xp, fp, left=None, right=None, period=None)[source]¶
- One-dimensional linear interpolation. - Returns the one-dimensional piecewise linear interpolant to a function with given discrete data points (xp, fp), evaluated at x. - Parameters
- xarray_like
- The x-coordinates at which to evaluate the interpolated values. 
- xp1-D sequence of floats
- The x-coordinates of the data points, must be increasing if argument period is not specified. Otherwise, xp is internally sorted after normalizing the periodic boundaries with - xp = xp % period.
- fp1-D sequence of float or complex
- The y-coordinates of the data points, same length as xp. 
- leftoptional float or complex corresponding to fp
- Value to return for x < xp[0], default is fp[0]. 
- rightoptional float or complex corresponding to fp
- Value to return for x > xp[-1], default is fp[-1]. 
- periodNone or float, optional
- A period for the x-coordinates. This parameter allows the proper interpolation of angular x-coordinates. Parameters left and right are ignored if period is specified. - New in version 1.10.0. 
 
- Returns
- yfloat or complex (corresponding to fp) or ndarray
- The interpolated values, same shape as x. 
 
- Raises
- ValueError
- If xp and fp have different length If xp or fp are not 1-D sequences If period == 0 
 
 - Notes - The x-coordinate sequence is expected to be increasing, but this is not explicitly enforced. However, if the sequence xp is non-increasing, interpolation results are meaningless. - Note that, since NaN is unsortable, xp also cannot contain NaNs. - A simple check for xp being strictly increasing is: - np.all(np.diff(xp) > 0) - Examples - >>> xp = [1, 2, 3] >>> fp = [3, 2, 0] >>> np.interp(2.5, xp, fp) 1.0 >>> np.interp([0, 1, 1.5, 2.72, 3.14], xp, fp) array([3. , 3. , 2.5 , 0.56, 0. ]) >>> UNDEF = -99.0 >>> np.interp(3.14, xp, fp, right=UNDEF) -99.0 - Plot an interpolant to the sine function: - >>> x = np.linspace(0, 2*np.pi, 10) >>> y = np.sin(x) >>> xvals = np.linspace(0, 2*np.pi, 50) >>> yinterp = np.interp(xvals, x, y) >>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> plt.plot(x, y, 'o') [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x...>] >>> plt.plot(xvals, yinterp, '-x') [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x...>] >>> plt.show()   - Interpolation with periodic x-coordinates: - >>> x = [-180, -170, -185, 185, -10, -5, 0, 365] >>> xp = [190, -190, 350, -350] >>> fp = [5, 10, 3, 4] >>> np.interp(x, xp, fp, period=360) array([7.5 , 5. , 8.75, 6.25, 3. , 3.25, 3.5 , 3.75]) - Complex interpolation: - >>> x = [1.5, 4.0] >>> xp = [2,3,5] >>> fp = [1.0j, 0, 2+3j] >>> np.interp(x, xp, fp) array([0.+1.j , 1.+1.5j]) 
