numpy.
in1d
Test whether each element of a 1-D array is also present in a second array.
Returns a boolean array the same length as ar1 that is True where an element of ar1 is in ar2 and False otherwise.
We recommend using isin instead of in1d for new code.
isin
Input array.
The values against which to test each value of ar1.
If True, the input arrays are both assumed to be unique, which can speed up the calculation. Default is False.
If True, the values in the returned array are inverted (that is, False where an element of ar1 is in ar2 and True otherwise). Default is False. np.in1d(a, b, invert=True) is equivalent to (but is faster than) np.invert(in1d(a, b)).
np.in1d(a, b, invert=True)
np.invert(in1d(a, b))
New in version 1.8.0.
The values ar1[in1d] are in ar2.
See also
Version of this function that preserves the shape of ar1.
numpy.lib.arraysetops
Module with a number of other functions for performing set operations on arrays.
Notes
in1d can be considered as an element-wise function version of the python keyword in, for 1-D sequences. in1d(a, b) is roughly equivalent to np.array([item in b for item in a]). However, this idea fails if ar2 is a set, or similar (non-sequence) container: As ar2 is converted to an array, in those cases asarray(ar2) is an object array rather than the expected array of contained values.
in1d(a, b)
np.array([item in b for item in a])
ar2
asarray(ar2)
New in version 1.4.0.
Examples
>>> test = np.array([0, 1, 2, 5, 0]) >>> states = [0, 2] >>> mask = np.in1d(test, states) >>> mask array([ True, False, True, False, True]) >>> test[mask] array([0, 2, 0]) >>> mask = np.in1d(test, states, invert=True) >>> mask array([False, True, False, True, False]) >>> test[mask] array([1, 5])