tf.make_template(
name_,
func_,
create_scope_now_=False,
unique_name_=None,
custom_getter_=None,
**kwargs
)
Defined in tensorflow/python/ops/template.py
.
Given an arbitrary function, wrap it so that it does variable sharing.
This wraps func_
in a Template and partially evaluates it. Templates are
functions that create variables the first time they are called and reuse them
thereafter. In order for func_
to be compatible with a Template
it must
have the following properties:
- The function should create all trainable variables and any variables that
should be reused by calling
tf.get_variable
. If a trainable variable is created usingtf.Variable
, then a ValueError will be thrown. Variables that are intended to be locals can be created by specifyingtf.Variable(..., trainable=false)
. - The function may use variable scopes and other templates internally to
create and reuse variables, but it shouldn't use
tf.global_variables
to capture variables that are defined outside of the scope of the function. - Internal scopes and variable names should not depend on any arguments that
are not supplied to
make_template
. In general you will get a ValueError telling you that you are trying to reuse a variable that doesn't exist if you make a mistake.
In the following example, both z
and w
will be scaled by the same y
. It
is important to note that if we didn't assign scalar_name
and used a
different name for z and w that a ValueError
would be thrown because it
couldn't reuse the variable.
def my_op(x, scalar_name):
var1 = tf.get_variable(scalar_name,
shape=[],
initializer=tf.constant_initializer(1))
return x * var1
scale_by_y = tf.make_template('scale_by_y', my_op, scalar_name='y')
z = scale_by_y(input1)
w = scale_by_y(input2)
As a safe-guard, the returned function will raise a ValueError
after the
first call if trainable variables are created by calling tf.Variable
.
If all of these are true, then 2 properties are enforced by the template:
- Calling the same template multiple times will share all non-local variables.
- Two different templates are guaranteed to be unique, unless you reenter the same variable scope as the initial definition of a template and redefine it. An examples of this exception:
def my_op(x, scalar_name):
var1 = tf.get_variable(scalar_name,
shape=[],
initializer=tf.constant_initializer(1))
return x * var1
with tf.variable_scope('scope') as vs:
scale_by_y = tf.make_template('scale_by_y', my_op, scalar_name='y')
z = scale_by_y(input1)
w = scale_by_y(input2)
# Creates a template that reuses the variables above.
with tf.variable_scope(vs, reuse=True):
scale_by_y2 = tf.make_template('scale_by_y', my_op, scalar_name='y')
z2 = scale_by_y2(input1)
w2 = scale_by_y2(input2)
Depending on the value of create_scope_now_
, the full variable scope may be
captured either at the time of first call or at the time of construction. If
this option is set to True, then all Tensors created by repeated calls to the
template will have an extra trailing _N+1 to their name, as the first time the
scope is entered in the Template constructor no Tensors are created.
Args:
name_
: A name for the scope created by this template. If necessary, the name will be made unique by appending_N
to the name.func_
: The function to wrap.create_scope_now_
: Boolean controlling whether the scope should be created when the template is constructed or when the template is called. Default is False, meaning the scope is created when the template is called.unique_name_
: When used, it overrides name_ and is not made unique. If a template of the same scope/unique_name already exists and reuse is false, an error is raised. Defaults to None.custom_getter_
: Optional custom getter for variables used infunc_
. See thetf.get_variable
custom_getter
documentation for more information.**kwargs
: Keyword arguments to apply tofunc_
.
Returns:
A function to encapsulate a set of variables which should be created once
and reused. An enclosing scope will be created either when make_template
is called or when the result is called, depending on the value of
create_scope_now_
. Regardless of the value, the first time the template
is called it will enter the scope with no reuse, and call func_
to create
variables, which are guaranteed to be unique. All subsequent calls will
re-enter the scope and reuse those variables.
Raises:
ValueError
: ifname_
is None.