On Mon, 16 May 2005 12:03:24 -0600, Steven Bethard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Can you give an example of what you really want to do? Probably there >are numarray functions that you can use. In general, you'll do better >applying a sequence of numarray functions than operating element-wise on >an array and converting it from a list back to an array... Well, for example, suppose I want to modify the elements of the matrix in some fashion. However, I'm not entirely sure how I want to do it. As a strawman, I generate a function with a Boolean test in it that multiplies by one factor if the matrix element is in an interval and by a different factor if it is outside the interval def genfunc(xmin, xmax, f_in, f_out): def booltest(x): in_interval = x > xmin and x < xmax if in_interval: return x*f_in else: return x*f_out return booltest Generating the function in this way gives me great flexibility in deciding exactly what function I apply to the matrix. It's why I want to use Python for this analysis. The part of the function I vary and play around with is localized in one place in the 'genfunc' function-- I can change that and everything else stays the same. However, I realize that the gain in flexibility means a loss in efficiency. I'm limited to not-so-efficient ways of. For this work, it's OK-- I just want to know the best not-so-efficient way of doing the calculation. Matt Feinstein -- There is no virtue in believing something that can be proved to be true. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list