NAME
PDL::ApplyDim - shuffle before and after applying function
SYNOPSIS
use PDL;
use PDL::ApplyDim;
my $nd=sequence(3,3);
sub mult_columns($x, $dx, $m) { # multiply some columns of $x by $m
$x->slice("0:-1:$dx")*=$m;
}
say $nd->apply_to(\&mult_columns, 1, 2, 3); #multiply even rows of $nd by 3
say $nd->apply_not_to(\&mult_columns,0,2,3);# same
DESCRIPTION
Many operations in PDL act on the first dimension, so a very common idiom is
$pdl->mv($dim,0)->function($some, $extra, $args)->mv(0, $dim);
to move the dimension $dim
to the front, operate with the function and the move the dimension back to its original place. The idea is to hide the mv
operations and write this as
$pdl->apply_to(\&function, $dim, $some, $extra, $args);
or
apply_to($pdl, "function", $dim, $some, $extra, $args);
Similarly
$pdl->apply_not_to(\&function, $dim, $some, $extra, $args);
moves the dimension to the back.
Besides a number, $dim
may also be an array reference, such as as =[$d0, $d1...]
, to move the dimensions $d0, $d1...
to the front or to the back instead of just a single dimension.
METHODS
apply_to($code, $dim, @extra_args)
Applies $code
to an ndarray after moving dimension $dim
to the front, and then bringing the dimension back to its original position. Code can be a string naming a PDL function or a reference to a subroutine that acts on an ndarray. It may take extra arguments. If <$dim> is an array reference, moves several dimensions.
apply_not_to($code, $dim, @extra_args)
Applies <$code> to an ndarray after moving dimension $dim
to the end, and then bringing the dimension back to its original position. Code can be a string naming a PDL function or a reference to a subroutine that acts on an ndarray. It may take extra arguments. If <$dim> is an array reference, moves several dimensions.
AUTHOR
W. Luis Mochan <mochan@fis.unam.mx>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2025- W. Luis Mochan
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
# =head1 SEE ALSO