numpy.logspace() in Python
Last Updated :
05 Apr, 2022
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The numpy.logspace() function returns number spaces evenly w.r.t interval on a log scale.
Syntax :
numpy.logspace(start, stop, num = 50, endpoint = True, base = 10.0, dtype = None)
Parameters :
-> start : [float] start(base ** start) of interval range. -> stop : [float] end(base ** stop) of interval range -> endpoint : [boolean, optional]If True, stop is the last sample. By default, True -> num : [int, optional] No. of samples to generate -> base : [float, optional] Base of log scale. By default, equals 10.0 -> dtype : type of output array
Return :
-> ndarray
Code 1 : Explaining the use of logspace()
# Python Programming illustrating
# numpy.logspace method
import numpy as geek
# base = 11
print("B\n", geek.logspace(2.0, 3.0, num=5, base = 11))
# base = 10
print("B\n", geek.logspace(2.0, 3.0, num=5))
# base = 10, dtype = int
print("B\n", geek.logspace(2.0, 3.0, num=5, dtype = int))
Output :
B [ 121. 220.36039471 401.31159963 730.8527479 1331. ] B [ 100. 177.827941 316.22776602 562.34132519 1000. ] B [ 100 177 316 562 1000]
Code 2 : Graphical Representation of numpy.logspace() using matplotlib module - pylab
# Graphical Representation of numpy.logspace()
import numpy as geek
import pylab as p
# Start = 0
# End = 2
# Samples to generate = 10
x1 = geek.logspace(0, 1, 10)
y1 = geek.zeros(10)
# Start = 0.1
# End = 1.5
# Samples to generate = 12
x2 = geek.logspace(0.1, 1.5, 12)
y2 = geek.zeros(12)
p.plot(x1, y1+0.05, 'o')
p.xlim(-0.2, 18)
p.ylim(-0.5, 1)
p.plot(x2, y2, 'x')
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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