Are they numbered like that? If so you can index into the first array by the second one. x[y[:,0], 1] if you can't get them into an indexable format, I think it's going to be slow no matter how you do it.
On Wed, Aug 4, 2010 at 4:59 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: > Hey folks, > > I've one array, x, that you could define as follows: > [[1, 2.25], > [2, 2.50], > [3, 2.25], > [4, 0.00], > [8, 0.00], > [9, 2.75]] > > Then my second array, y, is: > [[1, 0.00], > [2, 0.00], > [3, 0.00], > [4, 0.00], > [5, 0.00], > [6, 0.00], > [7, 0.00], > [8, 0.00], > [9, 0.00], > [10,0.00]] > > Is there a concise, Numpythonic way to copy the values of x[:,1] over to > y[:,1] where x[:,0] = y[:,0]? Resulting in, z: > [[1, 2.25], > [2, 2.50], > [3, 2.25], > [4, 0.00], > [5, 0.00], > [6, 0.00], > [7, 0.00], > [8, 0.00], > [9, 2.75], > [10,0.00]] > > My current task has len(x) = 25000 and len(y) = 350000 and looping through > is quite slow unfortunately. > > Many thanks, > -paul > > > _______________________________________________ > NumPy-Discussion mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion >
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