numpy.
insert
Insert values along the given axis before the given indices.
Input array.
Object that defines the index or indices before which values is inserted.
New in version 1.8.0.
Support for multiple insertions when obj is a single scalar or a sequence with one element (similar to calling insert multiple times).
Values to insert into arr. If the type of values is different from that of arr, values is converted to the type of arr. values should be shaped so that arr[...,obj,...] = values is legal.
arr[...,obj,...] = values
Axis along which to insert values. If axis is None then arr is flattened first.
A copy of arr with values inserted. Note that insert does not occur in-place: a new array is returned. If axis is None, out is a flattened array.
See also
append
Append elements at the end of an array.
concatenate
Join a sequence of arrays along an existing axis.
delete
Delete elements from an array.
Notes
Note that for higher dimensional inserts obj=0 behaves very different from obj=[0] just like arr[:,0,:] = values is different from arr[:,[0],:] = values.
Examples
>>> a = np.array([[1, 1], [2, 2], [3, 3]]) >>> a array([[1, 1], [2, 2], [3, 3]]) >>> np.insert(a, 1, 5) array([1, 5, 1, ..., 2, 3, 3]) >>> np.insert(a, 1, 5, axis=1) array([[1, 5, 1], [2, 5, 2], [3, 5, 3]])
Difference between sequence and scalars:
>>> np.insert(a, [1], [[1],[2],[3]], axis=1) array([[1, 1, 1], [2, 2, 2], [3, 3, 3]]) >>> np.array_equal(np.insert(a, 1, [1, 2, 3], axis=1), ... np.insert(a, [1], [[1],[2],[3]], axis=1)) True
>>> b = a.flatten() >>> b array([1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3]) >>> np.insert(b, [2, 2], [5, 6]) array([1, 1, 5, ..., 2, 3, 3])
>>> np.insert(b, slice(2, 4), [5, 6]) array([1, 1, 5, ..., 2, 3, 3])
>>> np.insert(b, [2, 2], [7.13, False]) # type casting array([1, 1, 7, ..., 2, 3, 3])
>>> x = np.arange(8).reshape(2, 4) >>> idx = (1, 3) >>> np.insert(x, idx, 999, axis=1) array([[ 0, 999, 1, 2, 999, 3], [ 4, 999, 5, 6, 999, 7]])