ak.argcombinations#
Defined in awkward.operations.ak_argcombinations on line 18.
- ak.argcombinations(array, n, *, replacement=False, axis=1, fields=None, parameters=None, with_name=None, highlevel=True, behavior=None, attrs=None)#
- Parameters:
array – Array-like data (anything
ak.to_layout
recognizes).n (int) – The number of items to choose from each list:
2
chooses unique pairs,3
chooses unique triples, etc.replacement (bool) – If True, combinations that include the same item more than once are allowed; otherwise each item in a combinations is strictly unique.
axis (int) – The dimension at which this operation is applied. The outermost dimension is
0
, followed by1
, etc., and negative values count backward from the innermost:-1
is the innermost dimension,-2
is the next level up, etc.fields (None or list of str) – If None, the pairs/triples/etc. are tuples with unnamed fields; otherwise, these
fields
name the fields. The number offields
must be equal ton
.parameters (None or dict) – Parameters for the new
ak.contents.RecordArray
node that is created by this operation.with_name (None or str) – Assigns a
"__record__"
name to the newak.contents.RecordArray
node that is created by this operation (overridingparameters
, if necessary).highlevel (bool) – If True, return an
ak.Array
; otherwise, return a low-levelak.contents.Content
subclass.behavior (None or dict) – Custom
ak.behavior
for the output array, if high-level.attrs (None or dict) – Custom attributes for the output array, if high-level.
Computes a Cartesian product (i.e. cross product) of array
with itself
that is restricted to combinations sampled without replacement,
like ak.combinations
, but returning integer indexes for
ak.Array.__getitem__
.
The motivation and uses of this function are similar to those of
ak.argcartesian
. See ak.combinations
and ak.argcartesian
for a more
complete description.