The array-operations library is now maintained by @Symbolics as part
of the Lisp-Stat project. The new
repository is
https://github.com/Lisp-Stat/array-operations.
git clone https://github.com/Lisp-Stat/array-operations.git
This library is a collection of functions and macros for manipulating Common Lisp arrays and performing numerical calculations with them.
For example, arrays can be created:
;; uniform and normal random numbers
(rand '(2 2)) ; => #2A((0.62944734 0.2709539) (0.81158376 0.6700171))
;; linear ranges
(linspace 1 10 7) ; => #(1 5/2 4 11/2 7 17/2 10)
;; Using a function, optionally given index position
(generate #'identity '(2 3) :position) ; => #2A((0 1 2) (3 4 5))Arrays can be manipulated:
(defparameter A #2A((1 2) (3 4)))
(defparameter B #2A((2 3) (4 5)))
;; split along any dimension
(split A 1) ; => #(#(1 2) #(3 4))
;; stack along any dimension
(stack 1 A B) ; => #2A((1 2 2 3) (3 4 4 5))
;; element-wise function map
(each #'+ #(0 1 2) #(2 3 5)) ; => #(2 4 7)
;; element-wise expressions
(vectorize (A B) (* A (sqrt B))) ; => #2A((1.4142135 3.4641016) (6.0 8.944272))
;; index operations e.g. matrix-matrix multiply:
(each-index (i j)
(sum-index k
(* (aref A i k) (aref B k j)))) ; => #2A((10 13) (22 29))This library is on QuickLisp:
(ql:quickload :array-operations)To get the latest version, clone into your Quicklisp local project directory:
$ git clone https://github.com/bendudson/array-operations.git ~/quicklisp/local-projects/
Then load as above with (ql:quickload :array-operations).
To run the test suite (using clunit):
(ql:quickload :array-operations-tests)
(array-operations-tests:run)Notes:
- Requires ASDF version 3.1.6 (2015-10-18) or later, as it uses the
package-inferred-systemextension. A symptom of an older version of ASDF is an error when loadingarray-operations:System "array-operations/all" not found
The library defines the following short function names that are synomyms for Common Lisp operations:
| array-operations | Common Lisp |
|---|---|
| size | array-total-size |
| rank | array-rank |
| dim | array-dimension |
| dims | array-dimensions |
| nrow | number of rows in matrix |
| ncol | number of columns in matrix |
The array-operations package has the nickname aops, so you can use,
for example, (aops:size my-array) without use'ing the package.
displaced array n. an array which has no storage of its own, but which is instead indirected to the storage of another array, called its target, at a specified offset, in such a way that any attempt to access the displaced array implicitly references the target array. (CLHS Glossary)
Displaced arrays are one of the niftiest features of Common Lisp. When an array is displaced to another array, it shares structure with (part of) that array. The two arrays do not need to have the same dimensions, in fact, the dimensions do not be related at all as long as the displaced array fits inside the original one. The row-major index of the former in the latter is called the offset of the displacement.
Displaced arrays are usually constructed using make-array, but this
library also provides displace for that purpose:
(defparameter *a* #2A((1 2 3) (4 5 6)))
(aops:displace *a* 2 1) ; => #(2 3)flatten displaces to a row-major array:
(aops:flatten *a*) ; => #(1 2 3 4 5 6)The real fun starts with split, which splits off subarrays nested
within a given axis:
(aops:split *a* 1) ; => #(#(1 2 3) #(4 5 6))
(defparameter *b* #3A(((0 1) (2 3))
((4 5) (6 7))))
(aops:split *b* 0) ; => #3A(((0 1) (2 3)) ((4 5) (6 7)))
(aops:split *b* 1) ; => #(#2A((0 1) (2 3)) #2A((4 5) (6 7)))
(aops:split *b* 2) ; => #2A((#(0 1) #(2 3)) (#(4 5) #(6 7)))
(aops:split *b* 3) ; => #3A(((0 1) (2 3)) ((4 5) (6 7)))Note how splitting at 0 and the rank of the array returns the array
itself.
Now consider sub, which returns a specific array, composed of the
elements that would start with given subscripts:
(aops:sub *b* 0) ; => #2A((0 1) (2 3))
(aops:sub *b* 0 1) ; => #(2 3)
(aops:sub *b* 0 1 0) ; => 2There is also a (setf sub) function.
partition returns a consecutive chunk of an array separated along its
first subscript:
(aops:partition #2A((0 1)
(2 3)
(4 5)
(6 7)
(8 9))
1 3) ; => #2A((2 3) (4 5))and also has a (setf partition) pair.
combine is the opposite of split:
(aops:combine #(#(0 1) #(2 3))) ; => #2A((0 1) (2 3))subvec returns a displaced subvector:
(aops:subvec #(0 1 2 3 4) 2 4) ; => #(2 3)There is also a (setf subvec) function, which is like (setf subseq)
except for demanding matching lengths.
Finally, reshape can be used to displace arrays into a different
shape:
(aops:reshape *a* '(3 2)) ; => #2A((1 2) (3 4) (5 6))You can use t for one of the dimensions, to be filled in
automatically:
(aops:reshape *b* '(1 t)) ; => #2A((0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7))reshape-col and reshape-row reshape your array into a column or row
matrix, respectively.
Functions in the library accept the following in place of dimensions:
- a list of dimensions (as for
make-array), - a positive integer, which is used as a single-element list,
- another array, the dimensions of which are used.
The last one allows you to specify dimensions with other arrays. For
example, to reshape an array a1 to look like a2, you can use
(aops:reshape a1 a2)instead of the longer form
(aops:reshape a1 (aops:dims a2))When the resulting element type cannot be inferred, functions that
create and transform arrays are provided in pairs: one of these will
allow you to specify the array-element-type of the result, while the
other assumes it is t. The former ends with a *, and the
element-type is always its first argument. I give examples for the
versions without *, use the other when you are optimizing your code
and you are sure you can constrain to a given element-type.
Element traversal order of these functions is unspecified. The reason for this is that the library may use parallel code in the future, so it is unsafe to rely on a particular element traversal order.
The following functions all make a new array, taking the dimensions as
input. The version ending in * also takes the array type as first
argument. There are also versions ending in ! which do not make a
new array, but take an array as first argument, which is modified and returned.
| Function | Description |
|---|---|
| zeros | Filled with zeros |
| ones | Filled with ones |
| rand | Filled with uniformly distrubuted random numbers between 0 and 1 |
| randn | Normally distributed with mean 0 and standard deviation 1 |
| linspace | Evenly spaced numbers in given range |
For example:
(aops:rand '(2 2)) ; => #2A((0.6686077 0.59425664) (0.7987722 0.6930506))
(aops:rand* 'single-float '(2 2)) ; => #2A((0.39332366 0.5557821) (0.48831415 0.10924244))
(let ((a (make-array '(2 2) :element-type 'double-float)))
;; Modify array A, filling with random numbers
(aops:rand! a)) ; => #2A((0.6324615478515625d0 0.4636608362197876d0)
(0.4145939350128174d0 0.5124958753585815d0))
generate (and generate*) allow you to generate arrays using
functions.
(aops:generate (lambda () (random 10)) 3) ; => #(6 9 5)
(aops:generate #'identity '(2 3) :position) ; => #2A((0 1 2) (3 4 5))
(aops:generate #'identity '(2 2) :subscripts)
;; => #2A(((0 0) (0 1)) ((1 0) (1 1)))
(aops:generate #'cons '(2 2) :position-and-subscripts)
;; => #2A(((0 0 0) (1 0 1)) ((2 1 0) (3 1 1)))Depending on the last argument, the function will be called with the (row-major) position, the subscripts, both, or no argument.
permute can permutate subscripts (you can also invert, complement, and
complete permutations, look at the docstring and the unit tests).
Transposing is a special case of permute:
(defparameter *a* #2A((1 2 3) (4 5 6)))
(aops:permute '(0 1) *a*) ; => #2A((1 2 3) (4 5 6))
(aops:permute '(1 0) *a*) ; => #2A((1 4) (2 5) (3 6))each applies a function to its (array) arguments elementwise:
(aops:each #'+ #(0 1 2) #(2 3 5)) ; => #(2 4 7)vectorize is a macro which performs elementwise operations
(defparameter a #(1 2 3 4))
(aops:vectorize (a) (* 2 a)) ; => #(2 4 6 8)
(defparameter b #(2 3 4 5))
(aops:vectorize (a b) (* a (sin b))) ; => #(0.9092974 0.28224 -2.2704074 -3.8356972)There is also a version vectorize* which takes a type argument for the
resulting array, and a version vectorize! which sets elements in a
given array.
The semantics of margin are more difficult to explain, so perhaps an
example will be more useful. Suppose that you want to calculate column
sums in a matrix. You could permute (transpose) the matrix, split
its subarrays at rank one (so you get a vector for each row), and apply
the function that calculates the sum. margin automates that for you:
(aops:margin (lambda (column)
(reduce #'+ column))
#2A((0 1)
(2 3)
(5 7)) 0) ; => #(7 11)But the function is much more general than this: the arguments inner
and outer allow arbitrary permutations before splitting.
Finally, recycle allows you to recycle arrays along inner and outer
dimensions:
(aops:recycle #(2 3) :inner 2 :outer 4)
; => #3A(((2 2) (3 3)) ((2 2) (3 3)) ((2 2) (3 3)) ((2 2) (3 3)))nested-loop is a simple macro which iterates over a set of indices
with a given range
(defparameter A #2A((1 2) (3 4)))
(aops:nested-loop (i j) (array-dimensions A)
(setf (aref A i j) (* 2 (aref A i j))))
A ; => #2A((2 4) (6 8))
(aops:nested-loop (i j) '(2 3)
(format t "(~a ~a) " i j)) ; => (0 0) (0 1) (0 2) (1 0) (1 1) (1 2) sum-index is a macro which uses a code walker to determine the
dimension sizes, summing over the given index or indices
(defparameter A #2A((1 2) (3 4)))
;; Trace
(aops:sum-index i (aref A i i)) ; => 5
;; Sum array
(aops:sum-index (i j) (aref A i j)) ; => 10
;; Sum array
(aops:sum-index i (row-major-aref A i)) ; => 10The main use for sum-index is in combination with each-index.
each-index is a macro which creates an array and iterates over the
elements. Like sum-index it is given one or more index symbols, and
uses a code walker to find array dimensions.
(defparameter A #2A((1 2) (3 4)))
(defparameter B #2A((5 6) (7 8)))
;; Transpose
(aops:each-index (i j) (aref A j i)) ; => #2A((1 3) (2 4))
;; Sum columns
(aops:each-index i
(aops:sum-index j
(aref A j i))) ; => #(4 6)
;; Matrix-matrix multiply
(aops:each-index (i j)
(aops:sum-index k
(* (aref A i k) (aref B k j)))) ; => #2A((19 22) (43 50))reduce-index is a more general version of sum-index, which
applies a reduction operation over one or more indices.
(defparameter A #2A((1 2) (3 4)))
;; Sum all values in an array
(aops:reduce-index #'+ i (row-major-aref A i)) ; => 10
;; Maximum value in each row
(aops:each-index i
(aops:reduce-index #'max j
(aref A i j))) ; => #(2 4)Some reductions over array elements can be done using the CL reduce
function, together with aops:flatten, which returns a displaced
vector:
(defparameter a #2A((1 2) (3 4)))
(reduce #'max (aops:flatten a)) ; => 4argmax and argmin find the row-major-aref index where an array is
maximum or minimum. They both return two values: the first value is the
index; the second is the array value at that index.
(defparameter a #(1 2 5 4 2))
(aops:argmax a) ; => 2 5
(aops:argmin a) ; => 0 1More complicated reductions can be done with vectorize-reduce,
for example the maximum absolute difference between arrays:
(defparameter a #2A((1 2) (3 4)))
(defparameter b #2A((2 2) (1 3)))
(aops:vectorize-reduce #'max (a b) (abs (- a b))) ; => 2See also reduce-index above.
Library functions treat non-array objects as if they were equivalent to
0-dimensional arrays: for example, (aops:split array (rank array))
returns an array that effectively equivalent (eq) to array. Another
example is recycle:
(aops:recycle 4 :inner '(2 2)) ; => #2A((4 4) (4 4))You can also stack compatible arrays along any axis:
(defparameter *a1* #(0 1 2))
(defparameter *a2* #(3 5 7))
(aops:stack 0 *a1* *a2*) ; => #(0 1 2 3 5 7)
(aops:stack 1
(aops:reshape-col *a1*)
(aops:reshape-col *a2*)) ; => #2A((0 3) (1 5) (2 7))