dpnp.asin

dpnp.asin(x, out=None, where=True, order='K', dtype=None, subok=True, **kwargs)

Computes inverse sine for each element x_i for input array x.

The inverse of dpnp.sin, so that if y = sin(x) then x = arcsin(y). Note that dpnp.asin is an alias of dpnp.arcsin.

For full documentation refer to numpy.arcsin.

Parameters:
  • x ({dpnp.ndarray, usm_ndarray}) -- Input array, expected to have numeric data type.

  • 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 inverse sine, in radians and in the closed interval [-pi/2, pi/2]. 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.sin

Trigonometric sine, element-wise.

dpnp.cos

Trigonometric cosine, element-wise.

dpnp.arccos

Trigonometric inverse cosine, element-wise.

dpnp.tan

Trigonometric tangent, element-wise.

dpnp.arctan

Trigonometric inverse tangent, element-wise.

dpnp.arctan2

Element-wise arc tangent of x1/x2 choosing the quadrant correctly.

dpnp.arcsinh

Hyperbolic inverse sine, element-wise.

Notes

dpnp.arcsin is a multivalued function: for each x there are infinitely many numbers z such that sin(z) = x. The convention is to return the angle z whose real part lies in [-pi/2, pi/2].

For real-valued input data types, dpnp.arcsin always returns real output. For each value that cannot be expressed as a real number or infinity, it yields nan.

For complex-valued input, dpnp.arcsin is a complex analytic function that has, by convention, the branch cuts [-inf, -1] and [1, inf] and is continuous from above on the former and from below on the latter.

The inverse sine is also known as \(asin\) or \(sin^{-1}\).

Examples

>>> import dpnp as np
>>> x = np.array([0, 1, -1])
>>> np.arcsin(x)
array([0.0, 1.5707963267948966, -1.5707963267948966])