Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How to implement "where" (numpy.where(...) )?

I'm a functional programming newbie. I'd like to know how to implement numpy.where() in python, scala or haskell. A good explanation would be helpful to me.

like image 505
pt2121 Avatar asked Jun 29 '26 03:06

pt2121


1 Answers

In Haskell, doing it for n-dimensional lists, as the NumPy equivalent supports, requires a fairly advanced typeclass construction, but the 1-dimensional case is easy:

select :: [Bool] -> [a] -> [a] -> [a]
select [] [] [] = []
select (True:bs) (x:xs) (_:ys) = x : select bs xs ys
select (False:bs) (_:xs) (y:ys) = y : select bs xs ys

This is just a simple recursive procedure, examining each element of each list in turn, and producing the empty list when every list reaches its end. (Note that these are lists, not arrays.)

Here's a simpler but less obvious implementation for 1-dimensional lists, translating the definition in the NumPy documentation (credit to joaquin for pointing it out):

select :: [Bool] -> [a] -> [a] -> [a]
select bs xs ys = zipWith3 select' bs xs ys
  where select' True x _ = x
        select' False _ y = y

To achieve the two-argument case (returning all indices where the condition is True; credit to Rex Kerr for pointing this case out), a list comprehension can be used:

trueIndices :: [Bool] -> [Int]
trueIndices bs = [i | (i,True) <- zip [0..] bs]

It could also be written with the existing select, although there's not much point:

trueIndices :: [Bool] -> [Int]
trueIndices bs = catMaybes $ select bs (map Just [0..]) (repeat Nothing)

And here's the three-argument version for n-dimensional lists:

{-# LANGUAGE MultiParamTypeClasses, FlexibleInstances #-}

class Select bs as where
  select :: bs -> as -> as -> as

instance Select Bool a where
  select True x _ = x
  select False _ y = y

instance (Select bs as) => Select [bs] [as] where
  select = zipWith3 select

Here's an example:

GHCi> select [[True, False], [False, True]] [[0,1],[2,3]] [[4,5],[6,7]]
[[0,5],[6,3]]

You would probably want to use a proper n-dimensional array type instead in practice, though. If you just want to use select on an n-dimensional list for one specific n, luqui's advice (from the comments of this answer) is preferable:

In practice, instead of the typeclass hack, I would use (zipWith3.zipWith3.zipWith3) select' bs xs ys (for the three dimensional case).

(adding more compositions of zipWith3 as n increases.)

like image 122
ehird Avatar answered Jul 01 '26 16:07

ehird



Donate For Us

If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!