nlcpy.arange
- nlcpy.arange(start, stop=None, step=1, dtype=None)[source]
Returns evenly spaced values within a given interval.
Values are generated within the half-open interval
[start, stop)
(in other words, the interval including start but excluding stop). If stop is None, values are ganerated within[0, start)
. For integer arguments the function is equivalent to the Python built-in range function, but returns an ndarray rather than a list. When using a non-integer step, such as 0.1, the results will often not be consistent. It is better to uselinspace()
for these cases.- Parameters
- startnumber
Start of interval. The interval includes this value.
- stopnumber, optional
End of interval. The interval does not include this value, except in some cases where step is not an integer and floating point round-off affects the length of out.
- stepnumber, optional
Spacing between values. For any output out, this is the distance between two adjacent values,
out[i+1] - out[i]
. The default step size is 1. If step is specified as a position argument, start must also be given.- dtypedtype, optional
The type of the output array. If dtype is not given, infer the data type from the other input arguments.
- Returns
- arangendarray
Array of evenly spaced values. For floating point arguments, the length of the result is
ceil((stop - start)/step)
. Because of floating point overflow, this rule may result in the last element of out being greater than stop.
See also
linspace
Returns evenly spaced numbers over a specified interval.
Examples
>>> import nlcpy as vp >>> vp.arange(3) array([0, 1, 2]) >>> vp.arange(3.0) array([0., 1., 2.]) >>> vp.arange(3,7) array([3, 4, 5, 6]) >>> vp.arange(3,7,2) array([3, 5])