The numpy.linspace() function returns number spaces evenly w.r.t interval. Similar to numpy.arange() function but instead of step it uses sample number.
Syntax :
numpy.linspace(start, stop, num = 50, endpoint = True, retstep = False, dtype = None)
Parameters :
-> start : [optional] start of interval range. By default start = 0 -> stop : end of interval range -> restep : If True, return (samples, step). By default restep = False -> num : [int, optional] No. of samples to generate -> dtype : type of output array
Return :
-> ndarray -> step : [float, optional], if restep = True
Code 1 : Explaining linspace function
Python
# Python Programming illustrating # numpy.linspace method import numpy as geek # restep set to True print ( "B\n" , geek.linspace( 2.0 , 3.0 , num = 5 , retstep = True ), "\n" ) # To evaluate sin() in long range x = geek.linspace( 0 , 2 , 10 ) print ( "A\n" , geek.sin(x)) |
Output :
B (array([ 2. , 2.25, 2.5 , 2.75, 3. ]), 0.25) A [ 0. 0.22039774 0.42995636 0.6183698 0.77637192 0.8961922 0.9719379 0.99988386 0.9786557 0.90929743]
Code 2 : Graphical Representation of numpy.linspace() using matplotlib module – pylab
Python
# Graphical Representation of numpy.linspace() import numpy as geek import pylab as p # Start = 0 # End = 2 # Samples to generate = 10 x1 = geek.linspace( 0 , 2 , 10 , endpoint = False ) y1 = geek.ones( 10 ) p.plot(x1, y1, '*' ) p.xlim( - 0.2 , 1.8 ) |
Output :
Code 3 : Graphical Representation of numpy.linspace() using pylab
Python
# Graphical Representation of numpy.linspace() import numpy as geek import pylab as p # Start = 0 # End = 2 # Samples to generate = 15 x1 = geek.linspace( 0 , 2 , 15 , endpoint = True ) y1 = geek.zeros( 15 ) p.plot(x1, y1, 'o' ) p.xlim( - 0.2 , 2.1 ) |
Output :
Note :
These NumPy-Python programs won’t run on online IDE’s, so run them on your systems to explore them
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