pyemma.coordinates.assign_to_centers¶
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pyemma.coordinates.
assign_to_centers
(data=None, centers=None, stride=1, return_dtrajs=True, metric='euclidean', n_jobs=None, chunksize=None, skip=0, **kwargs)¶ Assigns data to the nearest cluster centers
Creates a Voronoi partition with the given cluster centers. If given trajectories as data, this function will by default discretize the trajectories and return discrete trajectories of corresponding lengths. Otherwise, an assignment object will be returned that can be used to assign data later or can serve as a pipeline stage.
Parameters: - data (ndarray or list of arrays or reader created by source function) – data to be assigned
- centers (path to file or ndarray or a reader created by source function) – cluster centers to use in assignment of data
- stride (int, optional, default = 1) – assign only every n’th frame to the centers. Usually you want to assign all the data and only use a stride during calculation the centers.
- return_dtrajs (bool, optional, default = True) – If True, it will return the discretized trajectories obtained from assigning the coordinates in the data input. This will only have effect if data is given. When data is not given or return_dtrajs is False, the :class:’AssignCenters <_AssignCenters>’ object will be returned.
- metric (str) – metric to use during clustering (‘euclidean’, ‘minRMSD’)
- n_jobs (int or None, default None) – Number of threads to use during assignment of the data. If None, all available CPUs will be used.
- chunksize (int, default=None) – Number of data frames to process at once. Choose a higher value here, to optimize thread usage and gain processing speed. If None is passed, use the default value of the underlying reader/data source. Choose zero to disable chunking at all.
Returns: assignment – assigned data
Return type: list of integer arrays or an
AssignCenters
objectExamples
Load data to assign to clusters from ‘my_data.csv’ by using the cluster centers from file ‘my_centers.csv’
>>> import numpy as np
Generate some random data and choose 10 random centers:
>>> data = np.random.random((100, 3)) >>> cluster_centers = data[np.random.randint(0, 99, size=10)] >>> dtrajs = assign_to_centers(data, cluster_centers) >>> print(dtrajs) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS [array([...
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class
pyemma.coordinates.clustering.assign.
AssignCenters
(clustercenters, metric='euclidean', stride=1, n_jobs=None, skip=0)¶ Assigns given (pre-calculated) cluster centers. If you already have cluster centers from somewhere, you use this class to assign your data to it.
Parameters: - clustercenters (path to file (csv) or npyfile or ndarray) – cluster centers to use in assignment of data
- metric (str) – metric to use during clustering (‘euclidean’, ‘minRMSD’)
- stride (int) – stride
- n_jobs (int or None, default None) – Number of threads to use during assignment of the data. If None, all available CPUs will be used.
- skip (int, default=0) – skip the first initial n frames per trajectory.
Examples
Assuming you have stored your centers in a CSV file:
>>> from pyemma.coordinates.clustering import AssignCenters >>> from pyemma.coordinates import pipeline >>> reader = ... # doctest: +SKIP >>> assign = AssignCenters('my_centers.dat') # doctest: +SKIP >>> disc = pipeline(reader, cluster=assign) # doctest: +SKIP >>> disc.parametrize() # doctest: +SKIP
Methods
assign
([X, stride])Assigns the given trajectory or list of trajectories to cluster centers by using the discretization defined by this clustering method (usually a Voronoi tesselation). describe
()Get a descriptive string representation of this class. dimension
()output dimension of clustering algorithm (always 1). estimate
(X, **kwargs)Estimates the model given the data X fit
(X[, y])Estimates parameters - for compatibility with sklearn. fit_predict
(X[, y])Performs clustering on X and returns cluster labels. fit_transform
(X[, y])Fit to data, then transform it. get_model_params
([deep])Get parameters for this model. get_output
([dimensions, stride, skip, chunk])Maps all input data of this transformer and returns it as an array or list of arrays get_params
([deep])Get parameters for this estimator. iterator
([stride, lag, chunk, …])creates an iterator to stream over the (transformed) data. load
(file_name[, model_name])Loads a previously saved PyEMMA object from disk. n_chunks
(chunksize[, stride, skip])how many chunks an iterator of this sourcde will output, starting (eg. n_frames_total
([stride, skip])Returns total number of frames. number_of_trajectories
([stride])Returns the number of trajectories. output_type
()By default transformers return single precision floats. sample_indexes_by_cluster
(clusters, nsample)Samples trajectory/time indexes according to the given sequence of states. save
(file_name[, model_name, overwrite, …])saves the current state of this object to given file and name. save_dtrajs
([trajfiles, prefix, output_dir, …])saves calculated discrete trajectories. set_model_params
(clustercenters)set_params
(**params)Set the parameters of this estimator. trajectory_length
(itraj[, stride, skip])Returns the length of trajectory of the requested index. trajectory_lengths
([stride, skip])Returns the length of each trajectory. transform
(X)Maps the input data through the transformer to correspondingly shaped output data array/list. update_model_params
(**params)Update given model parameter if they are set to specific values write_to_csv
([filename, extension, …])write all data to csv with numpy.savetxt write_to_hdf5
(filename[, group, …])writes all data of this Iterable to a given HDF5 file. Attributes
chunksize
chunksize defines how much data is being processed at once. cluster_centers_
Array containing the coordinates of the calculated cluster centers. clustercenters
Array containing the coordinates of the calculated cluster centers. data_producer
The data producer for this data source object (can be another data source object). default_chunksize
How much data will be processed at once, in case no chunksize has been provided. dtrajs
Discrete trajectories (assigned data to cluster centers). filenames
list of file names the data is originally being read from. in_memory
are results stored in memory? index_clusters
Returns trajectory/time indexes for all the clusters is_random_accessible
Check if self._is_random_accessible is set to true and if all the random access strategies are implemented. is_reader
Property telling if this data source is a reader or not. logger
The logger for this class instance model
The model estimated by this Estimator n_jobs
Returns number of jobs/threads to use during assignment of data. name
The name of this instance ndim
ntraj
overwrite_dtrajs
Should existing dtraj files be overwritten. ra_itraj_cuboid
Implementation of random access with slicing that can be up to 3-dimensional, where the first dimension corresponds to the trajectory index, the second dimension corresponds to the frames and the third dimension corresponds to the dimensions of the frames. ra_itraj_jagged
Behaves like ra_itraj_cuboid just that the trajectories are not truncated and returned as a list. ra_itraj_linear
Implementation of random access that takes arguments as the default random access (i.e., up to three dimensions with trajs, frames and dims, respectively), but which considers the frame indexing to be contiguous. ra_linear
Implementation of random access that takes a (maximal) two-dimensional slice where the first component corresponds to the frames and the second component corresponds to the dimensions. -
assign
(X=None, stride=1)¶ Assigns the given trajectory or list of trajectories to cluster centers by using the discretization defined by this clustering method (usually a Voronoi tesselation).
You can assign multiple times with different strides. The last result of assign will be saved and is available as the attribute
dtrajs()
.Parameters: - X (ndarray(T, n) or list of ndarray(T_i, n), optional, default = None) – Optional input data to map, where T is the number of time steps and n is the number of dimensions. When a list is provided they can have differently many time steps, but the number of dimensions need to be consistent. When X is not provided, the result of assign is identical to get_output(), i.e. the data used for clustering will be assigned. If X is given, the stride argument is not accepted.
- stride (int, optional, default = 1) – If set to 1, all frames of the input data will be assigned. Note that this could cause this calculation to be very slow for large data sets. Since molecular dynamics data is usually correlated at short timescales, it is often sufficient to obtain the discretization at a longer stride. Note that the stride option used to conduct the clustering is independent of the assign stride. This argument is only accepted if X is not given.
Returns: Y – The discretized trajectory: int-array with the indexes of the assigned clusters, or list of such int-arrays. If called with a list of trajectories, Y will also be a corresponding list of discrete trajectories
Return type: ndarray(T, dtype=int) or list of ndarray(T_i, dtype=int)
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chunksize
¶ chunksize defines how much data is being processed at once.
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cluster_centers_
¶ Array containing the coordinates of the calculated cluster centers.
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clustercenters
¶ Array containing the coordinates of the calculated cluster centers.
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data_producer
¶ The data producer for this data source object (can be another data source object). :returns: :rtype: This data source’s data producer.
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default_chunksize
¶ How much data will be processed at once, in case no chunksize has been provided.
Notes
This variable respects your setting for maximum memory in pyemma.config.default_chunksize
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describe
()¶ Get a descriptive string representation of this class.
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dimension
()¶ output dimension of clustering algorithm (always 1).
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dtrajs
¶ Discrete trajectories (assigned data to cluster centers).
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estimate
(X, **kwargs)¶ Estimates the model given the data X
Parameters: - X (object) – A reference to the data from which the model will be estimated
- params (dict) – New estimation parameter values. The parameters must that have been announced in the __init__ method of this estimator. The present settings will overwrite the settings of parameters given in the __init__ method, i.e. the parameter values after this call will be those that have been used for this estimation. Use this option if only one or a few parameters change with respect to the __init__ settings for this run, and if you don’t need to remember the original settings of these changed parameters.
Returns: estimator – The estimated estimator with the model being available.
Return type: object
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filenames
¶ list of file names the data is originally being read from.
Returns: names – list of file names at the beginning of the input chain. Return type: list of str
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fit
(X, y=None)¶ Estimates parameters - for compatibility with sklearn.
Parameters: X (object) – A reference to the data from which the model will be estimated Returns: estimator – The estimator (self) with estimated model. Return type: object
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fit_predict
(X, y=None)¶ Performs clustering on X and returns cluster labels. :param X: Input data. :type X: ndarray, shape (n_samples, n_features)
Returns: y – cluster labels Return type: ndarray, shape (n_samples,)
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fit_transform
(X, y=None, **fit_params)¶ Fit to data, then transform it. Fits transformer to X and y with optional parameters fit_params and returns a transformed version of X. :param X: Training set. :type X: numpy array of shape [n_samples, n_features] :param y: Target values. :type y: numpy array of shape [n_samples]
Returns: X_new – Transformed array. Return type: numpy array of shape [n_samples, n_features_new]
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get_model_params
(deep=True)¶ Get parameters for this model.
Parameters: deep (boolean, optional) – If True, will return the parameters for this estimator and contained subobjects that are estimators. Returns: params – Parameter names mapped to their values. Return type: mapping of string to any
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get_output
(dimensions=slice(0, None, None), stride=1, skip=0, chunk=None)¶ Maps all input data of this transformer and returns it as an array or list of arrays
Parameters: - dimensions (list-like of indexes or slice, default=all) – indices of dimensions you like to keep.
- stride (int, default=1) – only take every n’th frame.
- skip (int, default=0) – initially skip n frames of each file.
- chunk (int, default=None) – How many frames to process at once. If not given obtain the chunk size from the source.
Returns: output – the mapped data, where T is the number of time steps of the input data, or if stride > 1, floor(T_in / stride). d is the output dimension of this transformer. If the input consists of a list of trajectories, Y will also be a corresponding list of trajectories
Return type: list of ndarray(T_i, d)
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get_params
(deep=True)¶ Get parameters for this estimator.
Parameters: deep (boolean, optional) – If True, will return the parameters for this estimator and contained subobjects that are estimators. Returns: params – Parameter names mapped to their values. Return type: mapping of string to any
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in_memory
¶ are results stored in memory?
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index_clusters
¶ Returns trajectory/time indexes for all the clusters
Returns: indexes – For each state, all trajectory and time indexes where this cluster occurs. Each matrix has a number of rows equal to the number of occurrences of the corresponding state, with rows consisting of a tuple (i, t), where i is the index of the trajectory and t is the time index within the trajectory. Return type: list of ndarray( (N_i, 2) )
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is_random_accessible
¶ Check if self._is_random_accessible is set to true and if all the random access strategies are implemented. :returns: bool :rtype: Returns True if random accessible via strategies and False otherwise.
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is_reader
¶ Property telling if this data source is a reader or not. :returns: bool :rtype: True if this data source is a reader and False otherwise
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iterator
(stride=1, lag=0, chunk=None, return_trajindex=True, cols=None, skip=0)¶ creates an iterator to stream over the (transformed) data.
If your data is too large to fit into memory and you want to incrementally compute some quantities on it, you can create an iterator on a reader or transformer (eg. TICA) to avoid memory overflows.
Parameters: - stride (int, default=1) – Take only every stride’th frame.
- lag (int, default=0) – how many frame to omit for each file.
- chunk (int, default=None) – How many frames to process at once. If not given obtain the chunk size from the source.
- return_trajindex (boolean, default=True) – a chunk of data if return_trajindex is False, otherwise a tuple of (trajindex, data).
- cols (array like, default=None) – return only the given columns.
- skip (int, default=0) – skip ‘n’ first frames of each trajectory.
Returns: iter – a implementation of a DataSourceIterator to stream over the data
Return type: instance of DataSourceIterator
Examples
>>> from pyemma.coordinates import source; import numpy as np >>> data = [np.arange(3), np.arange(4, 7)] >>> reader = source(data) >>> iterator = reader.iterator(chunk=1) >>> for array_index, chunk in iterator: ... print(array_index, chunk) 0 [[0]] 0 [[1]] 0 [[2]] 1 [[4]] 1 [[5]] 1 [[6]]
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classmethod
load
(file_name, model_name='default')¶ Loads a previously saved PyEMMA object from disk.
Parameters: - file_name (str or file like object (has to provide read method)) – The file like object tried to be read for a serialized object.
- model_name (str, default='default') – if multiple models are contained in the file, these can be accessed by
their name. Use
pyemma.list_models()
to get a representation of all stored models.
Returns: obj
Return type: the de-serialized object
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logger
¶ The logger for this class instance
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model
¶ The model estimated by this Estimator
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n_chunks
(chunksize, stride=1, skip=0)¶ how many chunks an iterator of this sourcde will output, starting (eg. after calling reset())
Parameters: - chunksize –
- stride –
- skip –
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n_frames_total
(stride=1, skip=0)¶ Returns total number of frames.
Parameters: - stride (int) – return value is the number of frames in trajectories when running through them with a step size of stride.
- skip (int, default=0) – skip the first initial n frames per trajectory.
Returns: n_frames_total – total number of frames.
Return type: int
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n_jobs
¶ Returns number of jobs/threads to use during assignment of data.
Returns: - If None it will return the setting of ‘PYEMMA_NJOBS’ or
- ’SLURM_CPUS_ON_NODE’ environment variable. If none of these environment variables exist,
- the number of processors /or cores is returned.
Notes
This setting will effectively be multiplied by the the number of threads used by NumPy for algorithms which use multiple processes. So take care if you choose this manually.
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name
¶ The name of this instance
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ndim
¶
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ntraj
¶
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number_of_trajectories
(stride=1)¶ Returns the number of trajectories.
Parameters: stride (None (default) or np.ndarray) – Returns: int Return type: number of trajectories
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output_type
()¶ By default transformers return single precision floats.
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overwrite_dtrajs
¶ Should existing dtraj files be overwritten. Set this property to True to overwrite.
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ra_itraj_cuboid
¶ Implementation of random access with slicing that can be up to 3-dimensional, where the first dimension corresponds to the trajectory index, the second dimension corresponds to the frames and the third dimension corresponds to the dimensions of the frames.
The with the frame slice selected frames will be loaded from each in the trajectory-slice selected trajectories and then sliced with the dimension slice. For example: The data consists out of three trajectories with length 10, 20, 10, respectively. The slice data[:, :15, :3] returns a 3D array of shape (3, 10, 3), where the first component corresponds to the three trajectories, the second component corresponds to 10 frames (note that the last 5 frames are being truncated as the other two trajectories only have 10 frames) and the third component corresponds to the selected first three dimensions.
Returns: Returns an object that allows access by slices in the described manner.
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ra_itraj_jagged
¶ Behaves like ra_itraj_cuboid just that the trajectories are not truncated and returned as a list.
Returns: Returns an object that allows access by slices in the described manner.
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ra_itraj_linear
¶ Implementation of random access that takes arguments as the default random access (i.e., up to three dimensions with trajs, frames and dims, respectively), but which considers the frame indexing to be contiguous. Therefore, it returns a simple 2D array.
Returns: A 2D array of the sliced data containing [frames, dims].
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ra_linear
¶ Implementation of random access that takes a (maximal) two-dimensional slice where the first component corresponds to the frames and the second component corresponds to the dimensions. Here it is assumed that the frame indexing is contiguous, i.e., the first frame of the second trajectory has the index of the last frame of the first trajectory plus one.
Returns: Returns an object that allows access by slices in the described manner.
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sample_indexes_by_cluster
(clusters, nsample, replace=True)¶ Samples trajectory/time indexes according to the given sequence of states.
Parameters: - clusters (iterable of integers) – It contains the cluster indexes to be sampled
- nsample (int) – Number of samples per cluster. If replace = False, the number of returned samples per cluster could be smaller if less than nsample indexes are available for a cluster.
- replace (boolean, optional) – Whether the sample is with or without replacement
Returns: indexes – List of the sampled indices by cluster. Each element is an index array with a number of rows equal to N=len(sequence), with rows consisting of a tuple (i, t), where i is the index of the trajectory and t is the time index within the trajectory.
Return type: list of ndarray( (N, 2) )
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save
(file_name, model_name='default', overwrite=False, save_streaming_chain=False)¶ saves the current state of this object to given file and name.
Parameters: - file_name (str) – path to desired output file
- model_name (str, default='default') – creates a group named ‘model_name’ in the given file, which will contain all of the data. If the name already exists, and overwrite is False (default) will raise a RuntimeError.
- overwrite (bool, default=False) – Should overwrite existing model names?
- save_streaming_chain (boolean, default=False) – if True, the data_producer(s) of this object will also be saved in the given file.
Examples
>>> import pyemma, numpy as np >>> from pyemma.util.contexts import named_temporary_file >>> m = pyemma.msm.MSM(P=np.array([[0.1, 0.9], [0.9, 0.1]]))
>>> with named_temporary_file() as file: # doctest: +SKIP ... m.save(file, 'simple') # doctest: +SKIP ... inst_restored = pyemma.load(file, 'simple') # doctest: +SKIP >>> np.testing.assert_equal(m.P, inst_restored.P) # doctest: +SKIP
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save_dtrajs
(trajfiles=None, prefix='', output_dir='.', output_format='ascii', extension='.dtraj')¶ saves calculated discrete trajectories. Filenames are taken from given reader. If data comes from memory dtrajs are written to a default filename.
Parameters: - trajfiles (list of str (optional)) – names of input trajectory files, will be used generate output files.
- prefix (str) – prepend prefix to filenames.
- output_dir (str) – save files to this directory.
- output_format (str) – if format is ‘ascii’ dtrajs will be written as csv files, otherwise they will be written as NumPy .npy files.
- extension (str) – file extension to append (eg. ‘.itraj’)
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set_model_params
(clustercenters)¶
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set_params
(**params)¶ Set the parameters of this estimator. The method works on simple estimators as well as on nested objects (such as pipelines). The former have parameters of the form
<component>__<parameter>
so that it’s possible to update each component of a nested object. :returns: :rtype: self
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trajectory_length
(itraj, stride=1, skip=0)¶ Returns the length of trajectory of the requested index.
Parameters: - itraj (int) – trajectory index
- stride (int) – return value is the number of frames in the trajectory when running through it with a step size of stride.
- skip (int or None) – skip n frames.
Returns: int
Return type: length of trajectory
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trajectory_lengths
(stride=1, skip=0)¶ Returns the length of each trajectory.
Parameters: - stride (int) – return value is the number of frames of the trajectories when running through them with a step size of stride.
- skip (int) – skip parameter
Returns: array(dtype=int)
Return type: containing length of each trajectory
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transform
(X)¶ Maps the input data through the transformer to correspondingly shaped output data array/list.
Parameters: X (ndarray(T, n) or list of ndarray(T_i, n)) – The input data, where T is the number of time steps and n is the number of dimensions. If a list is provided, the number of time steps is allowed to vary, but the number of dimensions are required to be to be consistent. Returns: Y – The mapped data, where T is the number of time steps of the input data and d is the output dimension of this transformer. If called with a list of trajectories, Y will also be a corresponding list of trajectories Return type: ndarray(T, d) or list of ndarray(T_i, d)
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update_model_params
(**params)¶ Update given model parameter if they are set to specific values
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write_to_csv
(filename=None, extension='.dat', overwrite=False, stride=1, chunksize=None, **kw)¶ write all data to csv with numpy.savetxt
Parameters: - filename (str, optional) –
filename string, which may contain placeholders {itraj} and {stride}:
- itraj will be replaced by trajetory index
- stride is stride argument of this method
If filename is not given, it is being tried to obtain the filenames from the data source of this iterator.
- extension (str, optional, default='.dat') – filename extension of created files
- overwrite (bool, optional, default=False) – shall existing files be overwritten? If a file exists, this method will raise.
- stride (int) – omit every n’th frame
- chunksize (int, default=None) – how many frames to process at once
- kw (dict, optional) – named arguments passed into numpy.savetxt (header, seperator etc.)
Example
Assume you want to save features calculated by some FeatureReader to ASCII:
>>> import numpy as np, pyemma >>> import os >>> from pyemma.util.files import TemporaryDirectory >>> from pyemma.util.contexts import settings >>> data = [np.random.random((10,3))] * 3 >>> reader = pyemma.coordinates.source(data) >>> filename = "distances_{itraj}.dat" >>> with TemporaryDirectory() as td, settings(show_progress_bars=False): ... out = os.path.join(td, filename) ... reader.write_to_csv(out, header='', delimiter=';') ... print(sorted(os.listdir(td))) ['distances_0.dat', 'distances_1.dat', 'distances_2.dat']
- filename (str, optional) –
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write_to_hdf5
(filename, group='/', data_set_prefix='', overwrite=False, stride=1, chunksize=None, h5_opt=None)¶ writes all data of this Iterable to a given HDF5 file. This is equivalent of writing the result of func:pyemma.coordinates.data._base.DataSource.get_output to a file.
Parameters: - filename (str) – file name of output HDF5 file
- group (str, default='/') – write all trajectories to this HDF5 group. The group name may not already exist in the file.
- data_set_prefix (str, default=None) – data set name prefix, will postfixed with the index of the trajectory.
- overwrite (bool, default=False) – if group and data sets already exist, shall we overwrite data?
- stride (int, default=1) – stride argument to iterator
- chunksize (int, default=None) – how many frames to process at once
- h5_opt (dict) – optional parameters for h5py.create_dataset
Notes
You can pass the following via h5_opt to enable compression/filters/shuffling etc:
- chunks
- (Tuple) Chunk shape, or True to enable auto-chunking.
- maxshape
- (Tuple) Make the dataset resizable up to this shape. Use None for axes you want to be unlimited.
- compression
- (String or int) Compression strategy. Legal values are ‘gzip’, ‘szip’, ‘lzf’. If an integer in range(10), this indicates gzip compression level. Otherwise, an integer indicates the number of a dynamically loaded compression filter.
- compression_opts
- Compression settings. This is an integer for gzip, 2-tuple for szip, etc. If specifying a dynamically loaded compression filter number, this must be a tuple of values.
- scaleoffset
- (Integer) Enable scale/offset filter for (usually) lossy compression of integer or floating-point data. For integer data, the value of scaleoffset is the number of bits to retain (pass 0 to let HDF5 determine the minimum number of bits necessary for lossless compression). For floating point data, scaleoffset is the number of digits after the decimal place to retain; stored values thus have absolute error less than 0.5*10**(-scaleoffset).
- shuffle
- (T/F) Enable shuffle filter. Only effective in combination with chunks.
- fletcher32
- (T/F) Enable fletcher32 error detection. Not permitted in conjunction with the scale/offset filter.
- fillvalue
- (Scalar) Use this value for uninitialized parts of the dataset.
- track_times
- (T/F) Enable dataset creation timestamps.