The Python Oracle

How to add a new row to an empty numpy array

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Chapters
00:00 How To Add A New Row To An Empty Numpy Array
00:35 Answer 1 Score 32
00:51 Accepted Answer Score 341
01:44 Answer 3 Score 1
02:02 Answer 4 Score 48
02:10 Thank you

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Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2239...

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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

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Tags
#python #numpy #scipy

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 341


The way to "start" the array that you want is:

arr = np.empty((0,3), int)

Which is an empty array but it has the proper dimensionality.

>>> arr
array([], shape=(0, 3), dtype=int64)

Then be sure to append along axis 0:

arr = np.append(arr, np.array([[1,2,3]]), axis=0)
arr = np.append(arr, np.array([[4,5,6]]), axis=0)

But, @jonrsharpe is right. In fact, if you're going to be appending in a loop, it would be much faster to append to a list as in your first example, then convert to a numpy array at the end, since you're really not using numpy as intended during the loop:

In [210]: %%timeit
   .....: l = []
   .....: for i in xrange(1000):
   .....:     l.append([3*i+1,3*i+2,3*i+3])
   .....: l = np.asarray(l)
   .....: 
1000 loops, best of 3: 1.18 ms per loop

In [211]: %%timeit
   .....: a = np.empty((0,3), int)
   .....: for i in xrange(1000):
   .....:     a = np.append(a, 3*i+np.array([[1,2,3]]), 0)
   .....: 
100 loops, best of 3: 18.5 ms per loop

In [214]: np.allclose(a, l)
Out[214]: True

The numpythonic way to do it depends on your application, but it would be more like:

In [220]: timeit n = np.arange(1,3001).reshape(1000,3)
100000 loops, best of 3: 5.93 µs per loop

In [221]: np.allclose(a, n)
Out[221]: True



ANSWER 2

Score 48


Here is my solution:

arr = []
arr.append([1,2,3])
arr.append([4,5,6])
np_arr = np.array(arr)



ANSWER 3

Score 32


In this case you might want to use the functions np.hstack and np.vstack

arr = np.array([])
arr = np.hstack((arr, np.array([1,2,3])))
# arr is now [1,2,3]

arr = np.vstack((arr, np.array([4,5,6])))
# arr is now [[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]

You also can use the np.concatenate function.

Cheers




ANSWER 4

Score 1


using an custom dtype definition, what worked for me was:

import numpy

# define custom dtype
type1 = numpy.dtype([('freq', numpy.float64, 1), ('amplitude', numpy.float64, 1)])
# declare empty array, zero rows but one column
arr = numpy.empty([0,1],dtype=type1)
# store row data, maybe inside a loop
row = numpy.array([(0.0001, 0.002)], dtype=type1)
# append row to the main array
arr = numpy.row_stack((arr, row))
# print values stored in the row 0
print float(arr[0]['freq'])
print float(arr[0]['amplitude'])