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_torch_docs.py
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_torch_docs.py
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"""Adds docstrings to functions defined in the torch._C"""
import re
import torch._C
from torch._C import _add_docstr as add_docstr
def parse_kwargs(desc):
"""Maps a description of args to a dictionary of {argname: description}.
Input:
(' weight (Tensor): a weight tensor\n' +
' Some optional description')
Output: {
'weight': \
'weight (Tensor): a weight tensor\n Some optional description'
}
"""
# Split on exactly 4 spaces after a newline
regx = re.compile(r"\n\s{4}(?!\s)")
kwargs = [section.strip() for section in regx.split(desc)]
kwargs = [section for section in kwargs if len(section) > 0]
return {desc.split(" ")[0]: desc for desc in kwargs}
def merge_dicts(*dicts):
return {x: d[x] for d in dicts for x in d}
common_args = parse_kwargs(
"""
input (Tensor): the input tensor.
generator (:class:`torch.Generator`, optional): a pseudorandom number generator for sampling
out (Tensor, optional): the output tensor.
memory_format (:class:`torch.memory_format`, optional): the desired memory format of
returned tensor. Default: ``torch.preserve_format``.
"""
)
reduceops_common_args = merge_dicts(
common_args,
parse_kwargs(
"""
dtype (:class:`torch.dtype`, optional): the desired data type of returned tensor.
If specified, the input tensor is casted to :attr:`dtype` before the operation
is performed. This is useful for preventing data type overflows. Default: None.
keepdim (bool): whether the output tensor has :attr:`dim` retained or not.
"""
),
)
multi_dim_common = merge_dicts(
reduceops_common_args,
parse_kwargs(
"""
dim (int or tuple of ints): the dimension or dimensions to reduce.
"""
),
{
"keepdim_details": """
If :attr:`keepdim` is ``True``, the output tensor is of the same size
as :attr:`input` except in the dimension(s) :attr:`dim` where it is of size 1.
Otherwise, :attr:`dim` is squeezed (see :func:`torch.squeeze`), resulting in the
output tensor having 1 (or ``len(dim)``) fewer dimension(s).
"""
},
{
"opt_dim": """
dim (int or tuple of ints, optional): the dimension or dimensions to reduce.
If ``None``, all dimensions are reduced.
"""
},
)
single_dim_common = merge_dicts(
reduceops_common_args,
parse_kwargs(
"""
dim (int): the dimension to reduce.
"""
),
{
"keepdim_details": """If :attr:`keepdim` is ``True``, the output tensor is of the same size
as :attr:`input` except in the dimension :attr:`dim` where it is of size 1.
Otherwise, :attr:`dim` is squeezed (see :func:`torch.squeeze`), resulting in
the output tensor having 1 fewer dimension than :attr:`input`."""
},
)
factory_common_args = merge_dicts(
common_args,
parse_kwargs(
"""
dtype (:class:`torch.dtype`, optional): the desired data type of returned tensor.
Default: if ``None``, uses a global default (see :func:`torch.set_default_dtype`).
layout (:class:`torch.layout`, optional): the desired layout of returned Tensor.
Default: ``torch.strided``.
device (:class:`torch.device`, optional): the desired device of returned tensor.
Default: if ``None``, uses the current device for the default tensor type
(see :func:`torch.set_default_device`). :attr:`device` will be the CPU
for CPU tensor types and the current CUDA device for CUDA tensor types.
requires_grad (bool, optional): If autograd should record operations on the
returned tensor. Default: ``False``.
pin_memory (bool, optional): If set, returned tensor would be allocated in
the pinned memory. Works only for CPU tensors. Default: ``False``.
memory_format (:class:`torch.memory_format`, optional): the desired memory format of
returned Tensor. Default: ``torch.contiguous_format``.
check_invariants (bool, optional): If sparse tensor invariants are checked.
Default: as returned by :func:`torch.sparse.check_sparse_tensor_invariants.is_enabled`,
initially False.
"""
),
{
"sparse_factory_device_note": """\
.. note::
If the ``device`` argument is not specified the device of the given
:attr:`values` and indices tensor(s) must match. If, however, the
argument is specified the input Tensors will be converted to the
given device and in turn determine the device of the constructed
sparse tensor."""
},
)
factory_like_common_args = parse_kwargs(
"""
input (Tensor): the size of :attr:`input` will determine size of the output tensor.
layout (:class:`torch.layout`, optional): the desired layout of returned tensor.
Default: if ``None``, defaults to the layout of :attr:`input`.
dtype (:class:`torch.dtype`, optional): the desired data type of returned Tensor.
Default: if ``None``, defaults to the dtype of :attr:`input`.
device (:class:`torch.device`, optional): the desired device of returned tensor.
Default: if ``None``, defaults to the device of :attr:`input`.
requires_grad (bool, optional): If autograd should record operations on the
returned tensor. Default: ``False``.
pin_memory (bool, optional): If set, returned tensor would be allocated in
the pinned memory. Works only for CPU tensors. Default: ``False``.
memory_format (:class:`torch.memory_format`, optional): the desired memory format of
returned Tensor. Default: ``torch.preserve_format``.
"""
)
factory_data_common_args = parse_kwargs(
"""
data (array_like): Initial data for the tensor. Can be a list, tuple,
NumPy ``ndarray``, scalar, and other types.
dtype (:class:`torch.dtype`, optional): the desired data type of returned tensor.
Default: if ``None``, infers data type from :attr:`data`.
device (:class:`torch.device`, optional): the desired device of returned tensor.
Default: if ``None``, uses the current device for the default tensor type
(see :func:`torch.set_default_device`). :attr:`device` will be the CPU
for CPU tensor types and the current CUDA device for CUDA tensor types.
requires_grad (bool, optional): If autograd should record operations on the
returned tensor. Default: ``False``.
pin_memory (bool, optional): If set, returned tensor would be allocated in
the pinned memory. Works only for CPU tensors. Default: ``False``.
"""
)
tf32_notes = {
"tf32_note": """This operator supports :ref:`TensorFloat32<tf32_on_ampere>`."""
}
rocm_fp16_notes = {
"rocm_fp16_note": """On certain ROCm devices, when using float16 inputs this module will use \
:ref:`different precision<fp16_on_mi200>` for backward."""
}
reproducibility_notes = {
"forward_reproducibility_note": """This operation may behave nondeterministically when given tensors on \
a CUDA device. See :doc:`/notes/randomness` for more information.""",
"backward_reproducibility_note": """This operation may produce nondeterministic gradients when given tensors on \
a CUDA device. See :doc:`/notes/randomness` for more information.""",
"cudnn_reproducibility_note": """In some circumstances when given tensors on a CUDA device \
and using CuDNN, this operator may select a nondeterministic algorithm to increase performance. If this is \
undesirable, you can try to make the operation deterministic (potentially at \
a performance cost) by setting ``torch.backends.cudnn.deterministic = True``. \
See :doc:`/notes/randomness` for more information.""",
}
sparse_support_notes = {
"sparse_beta_warning": """
.. warning::
Sparse support is a beta feature and some layout(s)/dtype/device combinations may not be supported,
or may not have autograd support. If you notice missing functionality please
open a feature request.""",
}
add_docstr(
torch.abs,
r"""
abs(input, *, out=None) -> Tensor
Computes the absolute value of each element in :attr:`input`.
.. math::
\text{out}_{i} = |\text{input}_{i}|
"""
+ r"""
Args:
{input}
Keyword args:
{out}
Example::
>>> torch.abs(torch.tensor([-1, -2, 3]))
tensor([ 1, 2, 3])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.absolute,
r"""
absolute(input, *, out=None) -> Tensor
Alias for :func:`torch.abs`
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.acos,
r"""
acos(input, *, out=None) -> Tensor
Computes the inverse cosine of each element in :attr:`input`.
.. math::
\text{out}_{i} = \cos^{-1}(\text{input}_{i})
"""
+ r"""
Args:
{input}
Keyword args:
{out}
Example::
>>> a = torch.randn(4)
>>> a
tensor([ 0.3348, -0.5889, 0.2005, -0.1584])
>>> torch.acos(a)
tensor([ 1.2294, 2.2004, 1.3690, 1.7298])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.arccos,
r"""
arccos(input, *, out=None) -> Tensor
Alias for :func:`torch.acos`.
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.acosh,
r"""
acosh(input, *, out=None) -> Tensor
Returns a new tensor with the inverse hyperbolic cosine of the elements of :attr:`input`.
.. math::
\text{out}_{i} = \cosh^{-1}(\text{input}_{i})
Note:
The domain of the inverse hyperbolic cosine is `[1, inf)` and values outside this range
will be mapped to ``NaN``, except for `+ INF` for which the output is mapped to `+ INF`.
"""
+ r"""
Args:
{input}
Keyword arguments:
{out}
Example::
>>> a = torch.randn(4).uniform_(1, 2)
>>> a
tensor([ 1.3192, 1.9915, 1.9674, 1.7151 ])
>>> torch.acosh(a)
tensor([ 0.7791, 1.3120, 1.2979, 1.1341 ])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.arccosh,
r"""
arccosh(input, *, out=None) -> Tensor
Alias for :func:`torch.acosh`.
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.index_add,
r"""
index_add(input, dim, index, source, *, alpha=1, out=None) -> Tensor
See :meth:`~Tensor.index_add_` for function description.
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.index_copy,
r"""
index_copy(input, dim, index, source, *, out=None) -> Tensor
See :meth:`~Tensor.index_add_` for function description.
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.index_reduce,
r"""
index_reduce(input, dim, index, source, reduce, *, include_self=True, out=None) -> Tensor
See :meth:`~Tensor.index_reduce_` for function description.
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.add,
r"""
add(input, other, *, alpha=1, out=None) -> Tensor
Adds :attr:`other`, scaled by :attr:`alpha`, to :attr:`input`.
.. math::
\text{{out}}_i = \text{{input}}_i + \text{{alpha}} \times \text{{other}}_i
"""
+ r"""
Supports :ref:`broadcasting to a common shape <broadcasting-semantics>`,
:ref:`type promotion <type-promotion-doc>`, and integer, float, and complex inputs.
Args:
{input}
other (Tensor or Number): the tensor or number to add to :attr:`input`.
Keyword arguments:
alpha (Number): the multiplier for :attr:`other`.
{out}
Examples::
>>> a = torch.randn(4)
>>> a
tensor([ 0.0202, 1.0985, 1.3506, -0.6056])
>>> torch.add(a, 20)
tensor([ 20.0202, 21.0985, 21.3506, 19.3944])
>>> b = torch.randn(4)
>>> b
tensor([-0.9732, -0.3497, 0.6245, 0.4022])
>>> c = torch.randn(4, 1)
>>> c
tensor([[ 0.3743],
[-1.7724],
[-0.5811],
[-0.8017]])
>>> torch.add(b, c, alpha=10)
tensor([[ 2.7695, 3.3930, 4.3672, 4.1450],
[-18.6971, -18.0736, -17.0994, -17.3216],
[ -6.7845, -6.1610, -5.1868, -5.4090],
[ -8.9902, -8.3667, -7.3925, -7.6147]])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.addbmm,
r"""
addbmm(input, batch1, batch2, *, beta=1, alpha=1, out=None) -> Tensor
Performs a batch matrix-matrix product of matrices stored
in :attr:`batch1` and :attr:`batch2`,
with a reduced add step (all matrix multiplications get accumulated
along the first dimension).
:attr:`input` is added to the final result.
:attr:`batch1` and :attr:`batch2` must be 3-D tensors each containing the
same number of matrices.
If :attr:`batch1` is a :math:`(b \times n \times m)` tensor, :attr:`batch2` is a
:math:`(b \times m \times p)` tensor, :attr:`input` must be
:ref:`broadcastable <broadcasting-semantics>` with a :math:`(n \times p)` tensor
and :attr:`out` will be a :math:`(n \times p)` tensor.
.. math::
out = \beta\ \text{input} + \alpha\ (\sum_{i=0}^{b-1} \text{batch1}_i \mathbin{@} \text{batch2}_i)
If :attr:`beta` is 0, then :attr:`input` will be ignored, and `nan` and `inf` in
it will not be propagated.
"""
+ r"""
For inputs of type `FloatTensor` or `DoubleTensor`, arguments :attr:`beta` and :attr:`alpha`
must be real numbers, otherwise they should be integers.
{tf32_note}
{rocm_fp16_note}
Args:
batch1 (Tensor): the first batch of matrices to be multiplied
batch2 (Tensor): the second batch of matrices to be multiplied
Keyword args:
beta (Number, optional): multiplier for :attr:`input` (:math:`\beta`)
input (Tensor): matrix to be added
alpha (Number, optional): multiplier for `batch1 @ batch2` (:math:`\alpha`)
{out}
Example::
>>> M = torch.randn(3, 5)
>>> batch1 = torch.randn(10, 3, 4)
>>> batch2 = torch.randn(10, 4, 5)
>>> torch.addbmm(M, batch1, batch2)
tensor([[ 6.6311, 0.0503, 6.9768, -12.0362, -2.1653],
[ -4.8185, -1.4255, -6.6760, 8.9453, 2.5743],
[ -3.8202, 4.3691, 1.0943, -1.1109, 5.4730]])
""".format(
**common_args, **tf32_notes, **rocm_fp16_notes
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.addcdiv,
r"""
addcdiv(input, tensor1, tensor2, *, value=1, out=None) -> Tensor
Performs the element-wise division of :attr:`tensor1` by :attr:`tensor2`,
multiplies the result by the scalar :attr:`value` and adds it to :attr:`input`.
.. warning::
Integer division with addcdiv is no longer supported, and in a future
release addcdiv will perform a true division of tensor1 and tensor2.
The historic addcdiv behavior can be implemented as
(input + value * torch.trunc(tensor1 / tensor2)).to(input.dtype)
for integer inputs and as (input + value * tensor1 / tensor2) for float inputs.
The future addcdiv behavior is just the latter implementation:
(input + value * tensor1 / tensor2), for all dtypes.
.. math::
\text{out}_i = \text{input}_i + \text{value} \times \frac{\text{tensor1}_i}{\text{tensor2}_i}
"""
+ r"""
The shapes of :attr:`input`, :attr:`tensor1`, and :attr:`tensor2` must be
:ref:`broadcastable <broadcasting-semantics>`.
For inputs of type `FloatTensor` or `DoubleTensor`, :attr:`value` must be
a real number, otherwise an integer.
Args:
input (Tensor): the tensor to be added
tensor1 (Tensor): the numerator tensor
tensor2 (Tensor): the denominator tensor
Keyword args:
value (Number, optional): multiplier for :math:`\text{{tensor1}} / \text{{tensor2}}`
{out}
Example::
>>> t = torch.randn(1, 3)
>>> t1 = torch.randn(3, 1)
>>> t2 = torch.randn(1, 3)
>>> torch.addcdiv(t, t1, t2, value=0.1)
tensor([[-0.2312, -3.6496, 0.1312],
[-1.0428, 3.4292, -0.1030],
[-0.5369, -0.9829, 0.0430]])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.addcmul,
r"""
addcmul(input, tensor1, tensor2, *, value=1, out=None) -> Tensor
Performs the element-wise multiplication of :attr:`tensor1`
by :attr:`tensor2`, multiplies the result by the scalar :attr:`value`
and adds it to :attr:`input`.
.. math::
\text{out}_i = \text{input}_i + \text{value} \times \text{tensor1}_i \times \text{tensor2}_i
"""
+ r"""
The shapes of :attr:`tensor`, :attr:`tensor1`, and :attr:`tensor2` must be
:ref:`broadcastable <broadcasting-semantics>`.
For inputs of type `FloatTensor` or `DoubleTensor`, :attr:`value` must be
a real number, otherwise an integer.
Args:
input (Tensor): the tensor to be added
tensor1 (Tensor): the tensor to be multiplied
tensor2 (Tensor): the tensor to be multiplied
Keyword args:
value (Number, optional): multiplier for :math:`tensor1 .* tensor2`
{out}
Example::
>>> t = torch.randn(1, 3)
>>> t1 = torch.randn(3, 1)
>>> t2 = torch.randn(1, 3)
>>> torch.addcmul(t, t1, t2, value=0.1)
tensor([[-0.8635, -0.6391, 1.6174],
[-0.7617, -0.5879, 1.7388],
[-0.8353, -0.6249, 1.6511]])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.addmm,
r"""
addmm(input, mat1, mat2, *, beta=1, alpha=1, out=None) -> Tensor
Performs a matrix multiplication of the matrices :attr:`mat1` and :attr:`mat2`.
The matrix :attr:`input` is added to the final result.
If :attr:`mat1` is a :math:`(n \times m)` tensor, :attr:`mat2` is a
:math:`(m \times p)` tensor, then :attr:`input` must be
:ref:`broadcastable <broadcasting-semantics>` with a :math:`(n \times p)` tensor
and :attr:`out` will be a :math:`(n \times p)` tensor.
:attr:`alpha` and :attr:`beta` are scaling factors on matrix-vector product between
:attr:`mat1` and :attr:`mat2` and the added matrix :attr:`input` respectively.
.. math::
\text{out} = \beta\ \text{input} + \alpha\ (\text{mat1}_i \mathbin{@} \text{mat2}_i)
If :attr:`beta` is 0, then :attr:`input` will be ignored, and `nan` and `inf` in
it will not be propagated.
"""
+ r"""
For inputs of type `FloatTensor` or `DoubleTensor`, arguments :attr:`beta` and
:attr:`alpha` must be real numbers, otherwise they should be integers.
This operation has support for arguments with :ref:`sparse layouts<sparse-docs>`. If
:attr:`input` is sparse the result will have the same layout and if :attr:`out`
is provided it must have the same layout as :attr:`input`.
{sparse_beta_warning}
{tf32_note}
{rocm_fp16_note}
Args:
input (Tensor): matrix to be added
mat1 (Tensor): the first matrix to be matrix multiplied
mat2 (Tensor): the second matrix to be matrix multiplied
Keyword args:
beta (Number, optional): multiplier for :attr:`input` (:math:`\beta`)
alpha (Number, optional): multiplier for :math:`mat1 @ mat2` (:math:`\alpha`)
{out}
Example::
>>> M = torch.randn(2, 3)
>>> mat1 = torch.randn(2, 3)
>>> mat2 = torch.randn(3, 3)
>>> torch.addmm(M, mat1, mat2)
tensor([[-4.8716, 1.4671, -1.3746],
[ 0.7573, -3.9555, -2.8681]])
""".format(
**common_args, **tf32_notes, **rocm_fp16_notes, **sparse_support_notes
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.adjoint,
r"""
adjoint(Tensor) -> Tensor
Returns a view of the tensor conjugated and with the last two dimensions transposed.
``x.adjoint()`` is equivalent to ``x.transpose(-2, -1).conj()`` for complex tensors and
to ``x.transpose(-2, -1)`` for real tensors.
Example::
>>> x = torch.arange(4, dtype=torch.float)
>>> A = torch.complex(x, x).reshape(2, 2)
>>> A
tensor([[0.+0.j, 1.+1.j],
[2.+2.j, 3.+3.j]])
>>> A.adjoint()
tensor([[0.-0.j, 2.-2.j],
[1.-1.j, 3.-3.j]])
>>> (A.adjoint() == A.mH).all()
tensor(True)
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.sspaddmm,
r"""
sspaddmm(input, mat1, mat2, *, beta=1, alpha=1, out=None) -> Tensor
Matrix multiplies a sparse tensor :attr:`mat1` with a dense tensor
:attr:`mat2`, then adds the sparse tensor :attr:`input` to the result.
Note: This function is equivalent to :func:`torch.addmm`, except
:attr:`input` and :attr:`mat1` are sparse.
Args:
input (Tensor): a sparse matrix to be added
mat1 (Tensor): a sparse matrix to be matrix multiplied
mat2 (Tensor): a dense matrix to be matrix multiplied
Keyword args:
beta (Number, optional): multiplier for :attr:`mat` (:math:`\beta`)
alpha (Number, optional): multiplier for :math:`mat1 @ mat2` (:math:`\alpha`)
{out}
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.smm,
r"""
smm(input, mat) -> Tensor
Performs a matrix multiplication of the sparse matrix :attr:`input`
with the dense matrix :attr:`mat`.
Args:
input (Tensor): a sparse matrix to be matrix multiplied
mat (Tensor): a dense matrix to be matrix multiplied
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.addmv,
r"""
addmv(input, mat, vec, *, beta=1, alpha=1, out=None) -> Tensor
Performs a matrix-vector product of the matrix :attr:`mat` and
the vector :attr:`vec`.
The vector :attr:`input` is added to the final result.
If :attr:`mat` is a :math:`(n \times m)` tensor, :attr:`vec` is a 1-D tensor of
size `m`, then :attr:`input` must be
:ref:`broadcastable <broadcasting-semantics>` with a 1-D tensor of size `n` and
:attr:`out` will be 1-D tensor of size `n`.
:attr:`alpha` and :attr:`beta` are scaling factors on matrix-vector product between
:attr:`mat` and :attr:`vec` and the added tensor :attr:`input` respectively.
.. math::
\text{out} = \beta\ \text{input} + \alpha\ (\text{mat} \mathbin{@} \text{vec})
If :attr:`beta` is 0, then :attr:`input` will be ignored, and `nan` and `inf` in
it will not be propagated.
"""
+ r"""
For inputs of type `FloatTensor` or `DoubleTensor`, arguments :attr:`beta` and
:attr:`alpha` must be real numbers, otherwise they should be integers.
Args:
input (Tensor): vector to be added
mat (Tensor): matrix to be matrix multiplied
vec (Tensor): vector to be matrix multiplied
Keyword args:
beta (Number, optional): multiplier for :attr:`input` (:math:`\beta`)
alpha (Number, optional): multiplier for :math:`mat @ vec` (:math:`\alpha`)
{out}
Example::
>>> M = torch.randn(2)
>>> mat = torch.randn(2, 3)
>>> vec = torch.randn(3)
>>> torch.addmv(M, mat, vec)
tensor([-0.3768, -5.5565])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.addr,
r"""
addr(input, vec1, vec2, *, beta=1, alpha=1, out=None) -> Tensor
Performs the outer-product of vectors :attr:`vec1` and :attr:`vec2`
and adds it to the matrix :attr:`input`.
Optional values :attr:`beta` and :attr:`alpha` are scaling factors on the
outer product between :attr:`vec1` and :attr:`vec2` and the added matrix
:attr:`input` respectively.
.. math::
\text{out} = \beta\ \text{input} + \alpha\ (\text{vec1} \otimes \text{vec2})
If :attr:`beta` is 0, then :attr:`input` will be ignored, and `nan` and `inf` in
it will not be propagated.
"""
+ r"""
If :attr:`vec1` is a vector of size `n` and :attr:`vec2` is a vector
of size `m`, then :attr:`input` must be
:ref:`broadcastable <broadcasting-semantics>` with a matrix of size
:math:`(n \times m)` and :attr:`out` will be a matrix of size
:math:`(n \times m)`.
Args:
input (Tensor): matrix to be added
vec1 (Tensor): the first vector of the outer product
vec2 (Tensor): the second vector of the outer product
Keyword args:
beta (Number, optional): multiplier for :attr:`input` (:math:`\beta`)
alpha (Number, optional): multiplier for :math:`\text{{vec1}} \otimes \text{{vec2}}` (:math:`\alpha`)
{out}
Example::
>>> vec1 = torch.arange(1., 4.)
>>> vec2 = torch.arange(1., 3.)
>>> M = torch.zeros(3, 2)
>>> torch.addr(M, vec1, vec2)
tensor([[ 1., 2.],
[ 2., 4.],
[ 3., 6.]])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.allclose,
r"""
allclose(input, other, rtol=1e-05, atol=1e-08, equal_nan=False) -> bool
This function checks if :attr:`input` and :attr:`other` satisfy the condition:
.. math::
\lvert \text{input} - \text{other} \rvert \leq \texttt{atol} + \texttt{rtol} \times \lvert \text{other} \rvert
"""
+ r"""
elementwise, for all elements of :attr:`input` and :attr:`other`. The behaviour of this function is analogous to
`numpy.allclose <https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/generated/numpy.allclose.html>`_
Args:
input (Tensor): first tensor to compare
other (Tensor): second tensor to compare
atol (float, optional): absolute tolerance. Default: 1e-08
rtol (float, optional): relative tolerance. Default: 1e-05
equal_nan (bool, optional): if ``True``, then two ``NaN`` s will be considered equal. Default: ``False``
Example::
>>> torch.allclose(torch.tensor([10000., 1e-07]), torch.tensor([10000.1, 1e-08]))
False
>>> torch.allclose(torch.tensor([10000., 1e-08]), torch.tensor([10000.1, 1e-09]))
True
>>> torch.allclose(torch.tensor([1.0, float('nan')]), torch.tensor([1.0, float('nan')]))
False
>>> torch.allclose(torch.tensor([1.0, float('nan')]), torch.tensor([1.0, float('nan')]), equal_nan=True)
True
""",
)
add_docstr(
torch.all,
r"""
all(input) -> Tensor
Tests if all elements in :attr:`input` evaluate to `True`.
.. note:: This function matches the behaviour of NumPy in returning
output of dtype `bool` for all supported dtypes except `uint8`.
For `uint8` the dtype of output is `uint8` itself.
Example::
>>> a = torch.rand(1, 2).bool()
>>> a
tensor([[False, True]], dtype=torch.bool)
>>> torch.all(a)
tensor(False, dtype=torch.bool)
>>> a = torch.arange(0, 3)
>>> a
tensor([0, 1, 2])
>>> torch.all(a)
tensor(False)
.. function:: all(input, dim, keepdim=False, *, out=None) -> Tensor
:noindex:
For each row of :attr:`input` in the given dimension :attr:`dim`,
returns `True` if all elements in the row evaluate to `True` and `False` otherwise.
{keepdim_details}
Args:
{input}
{dim}
{keepdim}
Keyword args:
{out}
Example::
>>> a = torch.rand(4, 2).bool()
>>> a
tensor([[True, True],
[True, False],
[True, True],
[True, True]], dtype=torch.bool)
>>> torch.all(a, dim=1)
tensor([ True, False, True, True], dtype=torch.bool)
>>> torch.all(a, dim=0)
tensor([ True, False], dtype=torch.bool)
""".format(
**multi_dim_common
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.any,
r"""
any(input) -> Tensor
Tests if any element in :attr:`input` evaluates to `True`.
.. note:: This function matches the behaviour of NumPy in returning
output of dtype `bool` for all supported dtypes except `uint8`.
For `uint8` the dtype of output is `uint8` itself.
Example::
>>> a = torch.rand(1, 2).bool()
>>> a
tensor([[False, True]], dtype=torch.bool)
>>> torch.any(a)
tensor(True, dtype=torch.bool)
>>> a = torch.arange(0, 3)
>>> a
tensor([0, 1, 2])
>>> torch.any(a)
tensor(True)
.. function:: any(input, dim, keepdim=False, *, out=None) -> Tensor
:noindex:
For each row of :attr:`input` in the given dimension :attr:`dim`,
returns `True` if any element in the row evaluate to `True` and `False` otherwise.
{keepdim_details}
Args:
{input}
{dim}
{keepdim}
Keyword args:
{out}
Example::
>>> a = torch.randn(4, 2) < 0
>>> a
tensor([[ True, True],
[False, True],
[ True, True],
[False, False]])
>>> torch.any(a, 1)
tensor([ True, True, True, False])
>>> torch.any(a, 0)
tensor([True, True])
""".format(
**multi_dim_common
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.angle,
r"""
angle(input, *, out=None) -> Tensor
Computes the element-wise angle (in radians) of the given :attr:`input` tensor.
.. math::
\text{out}_{i} = angle(\text{input}_{i})
"""
+ r"""
Args:
{input}
Keyword args:
{out}
.. note:: Starting in PyTorch 1.8, angle returns pi for negative real numbers,
zero for non-negative real numbers, and propagates NaNs. Previously
the function would return zero for all real numbers and not propagate
floating-point NaNs.
Example::
>>> torch.angle(torch.tensor([-1 + 1j, -2 + 2j, 3 - 3j]))*180/3.14159
tensor([ 135., 135, -45])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.as_strided,
r"""
as_strided(input, size, stride, storage_offset=None) -> Tensor
Create a view of an existing `torch.Tensor` :attr:`input` with specified
:attr:`size`, :attr:`stride` and :attr:`storage_offset`.
.. warning::
Prefer using other view functions, like :meth:`torch.Tensor.expand`,
to setting a view's strides manually with `as_strided`, as this
function's behavior depends on the implementation of a tensor's storage.
The constructed view of the storage must only refer to elements within
the storage or a runtime error will be thrown, and if the view is
"overlapped" (with multiple indices referring to the same element in
memory) its behavior is undefined.
Args:
{input}
size (tuple or ints): the shape of the output tensor
stride (tuple or ints): the stride of the output tensor
storage_offset (int, optional): the offset in the underlying storage of the output tensor.
If ``None``, the storage_offset of the output tensor will match the input tensor.
Example::
>>> x = torch.randn(3, 3)
>>> x
tensor([[ 0.9039, 0.6291, 1.0795],
[ 0.1586, 2.1939, -0.4900],
[-0.1909, -0.7503, 1.9355]])
>>> t = torch.as_strided(x, (2, 2), (1, 2))
>>> t
tensor([[0.9039, 1.0795],
[0.6291, 0.1586]])
>>> t = torch.as_strided(x, (2, 2), (1, 2), 1)
tensor([[0.6291, 0.1586],
[1.0795, 2.1939]])
""".format(
**common_args
),
)
add_docstr(
torch.as_tensor,
r"""
as_tensor(data, dtype=None, device=None) -> Tensor
Converts :attr:`data` into a tensor, sharing data and preserving autograd
history if possible.
If :attr:`data` is already a tensor with the requested dtype and device
then :attr:`data` itself is returned, but if :attr:`data` is a
tensor with a different dtype or device then it's copied as if using
`data.to(dtype=dtype, device=device)`.
If :attr:`data` is a NumPy array (an ndarray) with the same dtype and device then a
tensor is constructed using :func:`torch.from_numpy`.
.. seealso::
:func:`torch.tensor` never shares its data and creates a new "leaf tensor" (see :doc:`/notes/autograd`).
Args:
{data}
{dtype}
device (:class:`torch.device`, optional): the device of the constructed tensor. If None and data is a tensor
then the device of data is used. If None and data is not a tensor then
the result tensor is constructed on the current device.