long time reader, first time writer.
I searched around on google and stack overflow, but wasn’t really able to find a general answer to this question.
I am getting an “unsupported operand type(s) for *: ‘numpy.ndarray’ and ‘numpy.float64′” error in python 2.7.3 using numpy 1.6.2.
The error comes from multiplying a numpy array and a numpy float, but it doesn’t happen every time.
For example:
x = np.tan(1) # numpy.float64
y = np.array([0,1,2,3]) # numpy.ndarray
np.multiply(x,y) # works no problem
Or
x = np.tan(np.abs(np.multiply(-31,41))) # numpy.float64
y = np.square(np.add(np.divide(np.zeros(100),42),(-27)**40)) # numpy.ndarray
np.multiply(x,y) # works no problem
Both work
Now for the problem children:
np.multiply(np.square(np.add(np.divide(np.zeros(100),42),-27)**40)),
np.tan(np.abs(np.multiply(-31,41))))
or, with x defined as above:
np.multiply(np.square(np.add(np.divide(np.zeros(100),42),(-27)**40)),x)
both produce the error: NotImplemented
I know the random functions and numbers seem odd, but conceptually this still should work, as it worked when both were set to variables individually.
Why does this happen? How can I fix it in a general sense?
Thanks so much!
Jason
I suspect that the problem here is that NumPy cannot store Python
longvalues in its arrays. As soon as you try to do this, it switches the data type of the array toobject. Arithmetic operations on the array then become trickier because NumPy can no longer do the arithmetic itself.Oddly enough, swapping the order of the arguments can sometimes work:
In this second case, the type of the result is a Python
float, not a NumPy array.The fix is to avoid creating
longvalues in NumPy arrays, and usefloats instead:If you do get an error like this is the future, the first thing to do is to check the
dtypeof the array being multiplied. Does it contain NumPy values or Python objects?