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How can i process text in numpy arrays elegantly?

I can always iterate over the array, but is there some magic oneliner also possible? I am just learning python and want to do it in a way that looks good also.

example of what i want:

for y in data['filename']:
first = 12
last  = y[1][12:].find('.')
y= y[1][first+1:last+12]
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  • 2
    NumPy isn't for string processing. In fact, it's very inefficient at storing variable-length strings. You might want to do this in pure Python instead.
    – Fred Foo
    Jul 26, 2012 at 11:51
  • actually, is it even possible to store variable-length strings ?
    – François
    Jul 26, 2012 at 17:04
  • @François - As an object array, yes. (Though, at that point, you're better off with a list.) May 12, 2013 at 17:03
  • @tarrasch - Have a look at os.path.splitext if you're trying to strip the extension off of filenames. (Similarly, have a look at all of os.path if you're dealing with filenames/paths.) As larsmans suggested, for dealing with strings in numpy arrays, just treat them like they were lists and iterate through. numpy deliberately doesn't provide vectorized string operations. May 12, 2013 at 17:11
  • @tarrasch did you check the answers below? May 24, 2014 at 6:18

1 Answer 1

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You can use a numpy.char.array(), for example:

from string import find

import numpy as np

a = np.char.array(['cmd.py', 'matrix.txt', 'print.txt', 'test.txt', 'testpickle.test', 'Thumbs.db', 'tmp.py', 'tmp.txt', 'tmp2.py'])
find(a, '.py')
#array([ 3, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1,  3, -1,  4])


np.char.array(a.split('.'))[:,0]
#chararray(['cmd', 'matrix', 'print', 'test', 'testpickle', 'Thumbs', 'tmp', 'tmp', 'tmp2'], dtype='|S10')

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