[Python-ideas] Fast sum() for non-numbers

Ethan Furman ethan at stoneleaf.us
Thu Jul 11 22:30:42 CEST 2013


On 07/11/2013 11:29 AM, Ron Adam wrote:
>>> On 07/11/2013 12:21 PM, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
>> On 11 July 2013 18:12, Ron Adam <ron3200 at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> I think this is what it should do.
>>>>>> I tried overiding lists __add__, but that didn't work as nice. It needs to
>>> have a starting list with all zeros in it. How does numpy get around that?
>>>> Like so:
>>>>>>> import numpy
>>>>> a = numpy.array([1, 2, 3])
>>>>> a
>> array([1, 2, 3])
>>>>> a + 0
>> array([1, 2, 3])
>>>>> a + 1
>> array([2, 3, 4])
>>>>>> Oscar
>> Right answer to the wrong question.
>> I was asking how numpy it gets around sum() needing a starting 'array' argument? Not how numpy arrays work with '+'.

Because the default start is 0, and when you add 0 to a numpy array you get back the same* numpy array.
*At least, a numpy array with all the same values.
--
~Ethan~


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