numpy.dot¶
- numpy.dot(a, b, out=None)¶
- Dot product of two arrays. - For 2-D arrays it is equivalent to matrix multiplication, and for 1-D arrays to inner product of vectors (without complex conjugation). For N dimensions it is a sum product over the last axis of a and the second-to-last of b: - dot(a, b)[i,j,k,m] = sum(a[i,j,:] * b[k,:,m]) - Parameters: - a : array_like - First argument. - b : array_like - Second argument. - out : ndarray, optional - Output argument. This must have the exact kind that would be returned if it was not used. In particular, it must have the right type, must be C-contiguous, and its dtype must be the dtype that would be returned for dot(a,b). This is a performance feature. Therefore, if these conditions are not met, an exception is raised, instead of attempting to be flexible. - Returns: - output : ndarray - Returns the dot product of a and b. If a and b are both scalars or both 1-D arrays then a scalar is returned; otherwise an array is returned. If out is given, then it is returned. - Raises: - ValueError - If the last dimension of a is not the same size as the second-to-last dimension of b. - See also - Examples - >>> np.dot(3, 4) 12 - Neither argument is complex-conjugated: - >>> np.dot([2j, 3j], [2j, 3j]) (-13+0j) - For 2-D arrays it is the matrix product: - >>> a = [[1, 0], [0, 1]] >>> b = [[4, 1], [2, 2]] >>> np.dot(a, b) array([[4, 1], [2, 2]]) - >>> a = np.arange(3*4*5*6).reshape((3,4,5,6)) >>> b = np.arange(3*4*5*6)[::-1].reshape((5,4,6,3)) >>> np.dot(a, b)[2,3,2,1,2,2] 499128 >>> sum(a[2,3,2,:] * b[1,2,:,2]) 499128