Syntax in Python (.T)
Solution 1:
The .T
accesses the attribute T
of the object, which happens to be a NumPy array. The T
attribute is the transpose of the array, see the documentation.
Apparently you are creating random coordinates in the plane. The output of multivariate_normal()
might look like this:
>>> np.random.multivariate_normal([0, 0], [[1, 0], [0, 1]], 5)
array([[ 0.59589335, 0.97741328],
[-0.58597307, 0.56733234],
[-0.69164572, 0.17840394],
[-0.24992978, -2.57494471],
[ 0.38896689, 0.82221377]])
The transpose of this matrix is:
array([[ 0.59589335, -0.58597307, -0.69164572, -0.24992978, 0.38896689],
[ 0.97741328, 0.56733234, 0.17840394, -2.57494471, 0.82221377]])
which can be conveniently separated in x
and y
parts by sequence unpacking.
Solution 2:
.T is just np.transpose(). Best of luck
Solution 3:
Example
import numpy as np
a = [[1, 2, 3]]
b = np.array(a).T # ndarray.T The transposed array. [[1,2,3]] -> [[1][2][3]]
print("a=", a, "\nb=", b)
for i in range(3):
print(" a=", a[0][i]) # prints 1 2 3
for i in range(3):
print(" b=", b[i][0]) # prints 1 2 3