numpy.ravel_multi_index#
- numpy.ravel_multi_index(multi_index, dims, mode='raise', order='C')#
- Converts a tuple of index arrays into an array of flat indices, applying boundary modes to the multi-index. - Parameters:
- multi_indextuple of array_like
- A tuple of integer arrays, one array for each dimension. 
- dimstuple of ints
- The shape of array into which the indices from - multi_indexapply.
- mode{‘raise’, ‘wrap’, ‘clip’}, optional
- Specifies how out-of-bounds indices are handled. Can specify either one mode or a tuple of modes, one mode per index. - ‘raise’ – raise an error (default) 
- ‘wrap’ – wrap around 
- ‘clip’ – clip to the range 
 - In ‘clip’ mode, a negative index which would normally wrap will clip to 0 instead. 
- order{‘C’, ‘F’}, optional
- Determines whether the multi-index should be viewed as indexing in row-major (C-style) or column-major (Fortran-style) order. 
 
- Returns:
- raveled_indicesndarray
- An array of indices into the flattened version of an array of dimensions - dims.
 
 - See also - Examples - >>> import numpy as np >>> arr = np.array([[3,6,6],[4,5,1]]) >>> np.ravel_multi_index(arr, (7,6)) array([22, 41, 37]) >>> np.ravel_multi_index(arr, (7,6), order='F') array([31, 41, 13]) >>> np.ravel_multi_index(arr, (4,6), mode='clip') array([22, 23, 19]) >>> np.ravel_multi_index(arr, (4,4), mode=('clip','wrap')) array([12, 13, 13]) - >>> np.ravel_multi_index((3,1,4,1), (6,7,8,9)) 1621