ak.covar#
Defined in awkward.operations.ak_covar on line 23.
- ak.covar(x, y, weight=None, axis=None, *, keepdims=False, mask_identity=False, highlevel=True, behavior=None, attrs=None)#
- Parameters:
x – One coordinate to use in the covariance calculation (anything
ak.to_layout
recognizes).y – The other coordinate to use in the covariance calculation (anything
ak.to_layout
recognizes).weight – Data that can be broadcasted to
x
andy
to give each point a weight. Weighting points equally is the same as no weights; weighting some points higher increases the significance of those points. Weights can be zero or negative.axis (None or int) – If None, combine all values from the array into a single scalar result; if an int, group by that axis:
0
is the outermost,1
is the first level of nested lists, etc., and negativeaxis
counts from the innermost:-1
is the innermost,-2
is the next level up, etc.keepdims (bool) – If False, this function decreases the number of dimensions by 1; if True, the output values are wrapped in a new length-1 dimension so that the result of this operation may be broadcasted with the original array.
mask_identity (bool) – If True, the application of this function on empty lists results in None (an option type); otherwise, the calculation is followed through with the reducers’ identities, usually resulting in floating-point
nan
.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 the covariance of x
and y
(many types supported, including
all Awkward Arrays and Records, must be broadcastable to each other).
The grouping is performed the same way as for reducers, though this
operation is not a reducer and has no identity.
This function has no NumPy equivalent.
Passing all arguments to the reducers, the covariance is calculated as
ak.sum((x - ak.mean(x))*(y - ak.mean(y))*weight) / ak.sum(weight)
See ak.sum
for a complete description of handling nested lists and
missing values (None) in reducers, and ak.mean
for an example with another
non-reducer.