I truly don't think I'm this stupid, but I can't even understand the fourth paragraph of the numpy documentation. https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/user/quickstart.html says:
In the example pictured below, the array has 2 axes. The first axis has a length of 2, the second axis has a length of 3. [[ 1., 0., 0.], [ 0., 1., 2.]] (I think) I understand the 2 axes. [1,0,0] (I'm lazy and don't want to type the periods) is one axis and [0,1,2] is the second axis. But then things get goofy. The first axis has a length of 2. Is that because [1,0,0] and [0,1,2] are counted as one axis? (I think) I understand the second axis has a length of 3 because there are 3 elements within the [0,1,2] axis. Is that correct? But why does the first axis have a length of 2? Because the second zero doesn't count? Did they change the example and forgot to change the text? Thank you for your help as always. -- Roger Lea Scherer 623.255.7719 *Strengths:* Input, Strategic, Responsibility, Learner, Ideation _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor