dpnp.copysign

dpnp.copysign(x1, x2, out=None, where=True, order='K', dtype=None, subok=True, **kwargs)

Composes a floating-point value with the magnitude of x1_i and the sign of x2_i for each element of input arrays x1 and x2.

For full documentation refer to numpy.copysign.

Parameters:
  • x1 ({dpnp.ndarray, usm_ndarray, scalar}) -- First input array, expected to have a real floating-point data type. Both inputs x1 and x2 can not be scalars at the same time.

  • x2 ({dpnp.ndarray, usm_ndarray, scalar}) -- Second input array, also expected to have a real floating-point data type. Both inputs x1 and x2 can not be scalars at the same time.

  • out ({None, dpnp.ndarray, usm_ndarray}, optional) -- Output array to populate. Array must have the correct shape and the expected data type. Default: None.

  • order ({"C", "F", "A", "K"}, optional) -- Memory layout of the newly output array, if parameter out is None. Default: "K".

Returns:

out -- An array containing the element-wise results. The data type of the returned array is determined by the Type Promotion Rules.

Return type:

dpnp.ndarray

Limitations

Parameters where and subok are supported with their default values. Keyword argument kwargs is currently unsupported. Otherwise NotImplementedError exception will be raised.

See also

dpnp.negative

Return the numerical negative of each element of x.

dpnp.positive

Return the numerical positive of each element of x.

Examples

>>> import dpnp as np
>>> np.copysign(np.array(1.3), np.array(-1))
array(-1.3)
>>> 1 / np.copysign(np.array(0), 1)
array(inf)
>>> 1 / np.copysign(np.array(0), -1)
array(-inf)
>>> x = np.array([-1, 0, 1])
>>> np.copysign(x, -1.1)
array([-1., -0., -1.])
>>> np.copysign(x, np.arange(3) - 1)
array([-1., 0., 1.])