5

I was trying out the 2d example given in the scipy.interpolation.griddata help file. It works for interpolation with 'nearest'. But it gives a matrix filled with nan while using any other interpolation like 'linear' or 'cubic'. If I give the argument fill_value=5 , it gives the matrix filled with 5.

Is this due to some installation problem?

I was trying the exact same thing they have given in the help document. But somehow it is giving the result as if the points i asked to interpolating is lying outside the input points. (which is not!! I followed the example)

I shall post the example to reproduce the error (taken form doc)

def func(x, y):
    return x*(1-x)*np.cos(4*np.pi*x) * np.sin(4*np.pi*y**2)**2

grid_x, grid_y = np.mgrid[0:1:10j, 0:1:10j]
points = np.random.rand(100, 2)
values = func(points[:,0], points[:,1])

from scipy.interpolate import griddata

grid_z0 = griddata(points, values, (grid_x, grid_y), method='nearest')
grid_z1 = griddata(points, values, (grid_x, grid_y), method='linear')
grid_z2 = griddata(points, values, (grid_x, grid_y), method='cubic')

I am getting grid_z1 and grid_z2 to be a matrix filled with nan.

UPDATE : I installed all the packages in another Ubuntu 11.10 machine. And the same script gave perfectly correct answer. Previously I was trying on Porteus distro (live slackware family). Hence I think i can safely conclude that this was some problem in my installation. Anybody have any idea what could have gone wrong? Does any library conflict result in this kind of behavior? Since my main machine is Portues, i have no other option than to repair the scipy in it.

2
  • Can you provide the link to the help document you are referring to?
    – Hooked
    Mar 11, 2012 at 19:45
  • @Hooked I was referring to the help document we get when we type griddata? in IPython. (The doc string inside the code itself)
    – indiajoe
    Mar 11, 2012 at 21:43

3 Answers 3

7

You say "filled with nan", but it's not really filled. Using your code but adding

np.random.seed(7)

at the start so that we're working with the same dataset, I find

>>> np.isnan(grid_z1).sum()
744
>>> np.isnan(grid_z2).sum()
744

And these NaNs occur all on a band on the outside:

>>> np.isnan(grid_z1[5:-5,5:-5]).sum()
0

which makes it likely what the problem is. The points which are giving NaN are outside the specified points, so it doesn't know what to do with them. For the special case of "nearest" interpolation, you can still find something that's near, so you don't get any NaNs out.

So when you say the points to be interpolated at aren't lying outside the input points, I beg to differ:

# brute force, because I'm too lazy
from collections import Counter
d = Counter()
for x, y, val in zip(grid_x.flat, grid_y.flat, grid_z1.flat):
    pg = (points >= [x, y])
    boxed = len(set(tuple(p) for p in pg)) == 4
    d[np.isnan(val), boxed] += 1

produces

>>> d
Counter({(False, True): 19189, (True, False): 744, (False, False): 67})

And there are no (True, True) cases. IOW, every NaN lacks a bounding box in the points. There are some (False, False) cases, where the value doesn't have a bounding box but doesn't wind up a NaN, which is mildly surprising, but if they've assumed that everything is contained it would probably depend upon boring implementation details what happens if they're not. Short version: I think everything here is probably working correctly, in the sense of as expected.

4
  • Thanks for the help. But the matrix I am getting is completely filled with nan. When I try np.isnan(grid_z1).sum() I am getting 20000 . And the size of grid_z1 is also 20000 . I even tried viewing it using the matplotlib.pyplot.imshow .It is completely empty with nan.
    – indiajoe
    Mar 11, 2012 at 21:45
  • That's very strange. Could you edit your post to include the smallest case (i.e. lower 100, 200, and 2000) which is completely NaN?
    – DSM
    Mar 11, 2012 at 21:49
  • I have changed to smaller matrices of 10x10. It is still giving me 10x10 matrix filled with nan.
    – indiajoe
    Mar 11, 2012 at 22:02
  • I tried the same script in another machine. And it worked perfectly, giving correct answer. I would like to repair the scipy on my machine. As it is not giving any error, i have no clue where to start. What do you think might be creating this problem?
    – indiajoe
    Mar 12, 2012 at 11:07
1

It's not clear how you installed scipy (or which version you're using - try $ python -c "import scipy; print scipy.__version__" to find out), but since griddata relies on compiled code, it's possible that what you're seeing is as a result of a build problem or (less likely) a griddata bug specific to your platform.

I suggest reporting this on the scipy-user mailing list http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/scipy-user, which is more suited to resolving build and install issues than Stack Overflow.

Before posting to the mailing list, it will be worth installing the nose testing framework http://packages.python.org/nose, so that you can run

$ python -c "import scipy; scipy.test()"

and report details of any test failures at the same time.

1
  • 0.10.0b2 is my scipy version. Right now I am running the scipy.test() . It is giving lots of Deprecation, User and Runtime Warnings and NaNs!!
    – indiajoe
    Mar 12, 2012 at 16:14
0

I have the same problem, but I think it has been fixed in scipy 0.11rc2 (not that I have been able to install that over the top of my Enthought Python Distribution to find out..)?

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