Help on function meshgrid in module numpy.lib.function_base:

Help on function meshgrid in module numpy.lib.function_base:

meshgrid(*xi, **kwargs)
Return coordinate matrices from coordinate vectors.

Make N-D coordinate arrays for vectorized evaluations of
N-D scalar/vector fields over N-D grids, given
one-dimensional coordinate arrays x1, x2,..., xn.

.. versionchanged:: 1.9
1-D and 0-D cases are allowed.

Parameters
----------
x1, x2,..., xn : array_like
1-D arrays representing the coordinates of a grid.
indexing : {'xy', 'ij'}, optional
Cartesian ('xy', default) or matrix ('ij') indexing of output.
See Notes for more details.

.. versionadded:: 1.7.0
sparse : bool, optional
If True a sparse grid is returned in order to conserve memory.
Default is False.

.. versionadded:: 1.7.0
copy : bool, optional
If False, a view into the original arrays are returned in order to
conserve memory. Default is True. Please note that
``sparse=False, copy=False`` will likely return non-contiguous
arrays. Furthermore, more than one element of a broadcast array
may refer to a single memory location. If you need to write to the
arrays, make copies first.

.. versionadded:: 1.7.0

Returns
-------
X1, X2,..., XN : ndarray
For vectors `x1`, `x2`,..., 'xn' with lengths ``Ni=len(xi)`` ,
return ``(N1, N2, N3,...Nn)`` shaped arrays if indexing='ij'
or ``(N2, N1, N3,...Nn)`` shaped arrays if indexing='xy'
with the elements of `xi` repeated to fill the matrix along
the first dimension for `x1`, the second for `x2` and so on.

Notes
-----
This function supports both indexing conventions through the indexing
keyword argument. Giving the string 'ij' returns a meshgrid with
matrix indexing, while 'xy' returns a meshgrid with Cartesian indexing.
In the 2-D case with inputs of length M and N, the outputs are of shape
(N, M) for 'xy' indexing and (M, N) for 'ij' indexing. In the 3-D case
with inputs of length M, N and P, outputs are of shape (N, M, P) for
'xy' indexing and (M, N, P) for 'ij' indexing. The difference is
illustrated by the following code snippet::

xv, yv = np.meshgrid(x, y, sparse=False, indexing='ij')
for i in range(nx):
for j in range(ny):
# treat xv[i,j], yv[i,j]

xv, yv = np.meshgrid(x, y, sparse=False, indexing='xy')
for i in range(nx):
for j in range(ny):
# treat xv[j,i], yv[j,i]

In the 1-D and 0-D case, the indexing and sparse keywords have no effect.

See Also
--------
index_tricks.mgrid : Construct a multi-dimensional "meshgrid"
using indexing notation.
index_tricks.ogrid : Construct an open multi-dimensional "meshgrid"
using indexing notation.

Examples
--------
>>> nx, ny = (3, 2)
>>> x = np.linspace(0, 1, nx)
>>> y = np.linspace(0, 1, ny)
>>> xv, yv = np.meshgrid(x, y)
>>> xv
array([[ 0. , 0.5, 1. ],
[ 0. , 0.5, 1. ]])
>>> yv
array([[ 0., 0., 0.],
[ 1., 1., 1.]])
>>> xv, yv = np.meshgrid(x, y, sparse=True) # make sparse output arrays
>>> xv
array([[ 0. , 0.5, 1. ]])
>>> yv
array([[ 0.],
[ 1.]])

`meshgrid` is very useful to evaluate functions on a grid.

>>> x = np.arange(-5, 5, 0.1)
>>> y = np.arange(-5, 5, 0.1)
>>> xx, yy = np.meshgrid(x, y, sparse=True)
>>> z = np.sin(xx**2 + yy**2) / (xx**2 + yy**2)
>>> h = plt.contourf(x,y,z)

原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/YingxuanZHANG/p/8808099.html