pycall 0.1.0.alpha.20170711 → 1.0.0
Sign up to get free protection for your applications and to get access to all the features.
- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/.gitignore +3 -0
- data/.travis.yml +13 -1
- data/CHANGES.md +35 -0
- data/Gemfile +0 -5
- data/README.md +41 -49
- data/Rakefile +22 -1
- data/appveyor.yml +9 -26
- data/examples/classifier_comparison.rb +52 -52
- data/examples/hist.rb +11 -11
- data/examples/notebooks/classifier_comparison.ipynb +51 -66
- data/examples/notebooks/forest_importances.ipynb +26 -49
- data/examples/notebooks/iruby_integration.ipynb +15 -36
- data/examples/notebooks/lorenz_attractor.ipynb +16 -47
- data/examples/notebooks/polar_axes.ipynb +29 -64
- data/examples/notebooks/sum_benchmarking.ipynb +109 -103
- data/examples/notebooks/xkcd_style.ipynb +12 -12
- data/examples/plot_forest_importances_faces.rb +8 -8
- data/examples/sum_benchmarking.rb +15 -19
- data/ext/pycall/extconf.rb +3 -0
- data/ext/pycall/gc.c +74 -0
- data/ext/pycall/libpython.c +217 -0
- data/ext/pycall/pycall.c +2184 -0
- data/ext/pycall/pycall_internal.h +700 -0
- data/ext/pycall/range.c +69 -0
- data/ext/pycall/ruby_wrapper.c +432 -0
- data/lib/pycall.rb +91 -19
- data/lib/pycall/dict.rb +28 -82
- data/lib/pycall/error.rb +10 -0
- data/lib/pycall/import.rb +45 -40
- data/lib/pycall/init.rb +44 -20
- data/lib/pycall/libpython.rb +6 -380
- data/lib/pycall/libpython/finder.rb +170 -0
- data/lib/pycall/list.rb +21 -51
- data/lib/pycall/pretty_print.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/pycall/pyerror.rb +14 -20
- data/lib/pycall/pyobject_wrapper.rb +157 -158
- data/lib/pycall/python/PyCall/__init__.py +1 -0
- data/lib/pycall/python/PyCall/six.py +23 -0
- data/lib/pycall/pytypeobject_wrapper.rb +79 -0
- data/lib/pycall/slice.rb +3 -22
- data/lib/pycall/tuple.rb +1 -7
- data/lib/pycall/version.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/pycall/wrapper_object_cache.rb +61 -0
- data/pycall.gemspec +4 -2
- data/tasks/pycall.rake +7 -0
- metadata +65 -27
- data/lib/pycall/eval.rb +0 -57
- data/lib/pycall/exception.rb +0 -13
- data/lib/pycall/pyobject.rb +0 -58
- data/lib/pycall/ruby_wrapper.rb +0 -137
- data/lib/pycall/type_object.rb +0 -11
- data/lib/pycall/types.rb +0 -19
- data/lib/pycall/utils.rb +0 -106
checksums.yaml
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
1
|
---
|
2
2
|
SHA1:
|
3
|
-
metadata.gz:
|
4
|
-
data.tar.gz:
|
3
|
+
metadata.gz: 3989138be85724905ddd029fb3f74a7168070c02
|
4
|
+
data.tar.gz: 8ab3173bf2d1c2f92deec6b98241cc28d9768a03
|
5
5
|
SHA512:
|
6
|
-
metadata.gz:
|
7
|
-
data.tar.gz:
|
6
|
+
metadata.gz: 574f866b421b1010e907ff83ca9ce45725cd642af94004a1ab979a2b24f1605dfdeaa29c6090a159a6ac713d97cb9be4f20dc343e8edc21156e143b3845e8b95
|
7
|
+
data.tar.gz: fb03c20e8e60bc674c484f871848106ffe2ab5722ac1ba2331ea6f77075743320eef7d0bc9d320744486b1698a00a9c801182b4442d0e2f85905822d5f83818f
|
data/.gitignore
CHANGED
data/.travis.yml
CHANGED
@@ -9,9 +9,12 @@ rvm:
|
|
9
9
|
- 2.1.10
|
10
10
|
|
11
11
|
env:
|
12
|
+
global:
|
13
|
+
- PYCALL_DEBUG_FIND_LIBPYTHON=1
|
14
|
+
matrix:
|
12
15
|
- PYTHON=python
|
13
16
|
- PYTHON=python3 LIBPYTHON=wrong_value
|
14
|
-
- LIBPYTHON=/
|
17
|
+
- LIBPYTHON=/opt/python/3.5.3/lib/libpython3.5m.so
|
15
18
|
|
16
19
|
addons:
|
17
20
|
apt:
|
@@ -19,11 +22,20 @@ addons:
|
|
19
22
|
- python3
|
20
23
|
- python3-dev
|
21
24
|
- python3-all
|
25
|
+
- python3-all-dev
|
22
26
|
|
23
27
|
before_install:
|
24
28
|
- gem update --system
|
25
29
|
- gem update bundler
|
26
30
|
|
27
31
|
before_script:
|
32
|
+
- bundle exec rake clobber compile
|
28
33
|
- echo === python investigator.py ===
|
29
34
|
- python lib/pycall/python/investigator.py
|
35
|
+
- python3 lib/pycall/python/investigator.py
|
36
|
+
- pip install numpy
|
37
|
+
- pip3 install numpy
|
38
|
+
|
39
|
+
matrix:
|
40
|
+
allow_failures:
|
41
|
+
- env: PYTHON=python # Ignore failed on python 2.7
|
data/CHANGES.md
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
|
|
1
|
+
# The change history of PyCall
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
## 1.0.0
|
4
|
+
|
5
|
+
* `#[]` and `#[]=` accept a `Range` and an `Enumerable`, which is genated by
|
6
|
+
`Range#step`, as a slice.
|
7
|
+
|
8
|
+
* Rewrite almost all fundamental parts of PyCall as C extension.
|
9
|
+
|
10
|
+
* PyCall now calls `Py_DecRef` in the finalizer of `PyCall::PyPtr`.
|
11
|
+
|
12
|
+
* Change the system of object mapping between Python and Ruby, drastically.
|
13
|
+
Now PyCall does not have `PyObject` class for wrapper objects.
|
14
|
+
Instead, PyCall generally makes `Object` instances and extends them by
|
15
|
+
`PyObjectWrapper` module.
|
16
|
+
But for Python module objects, PyCall makes anonymous `Module` instances
|
17
|
+
that are extended by `PyObjectWrapper` module.
|
18
|
+
Moreover for Python type objects, PyCall makes `Class` instances and extends
|
19
|
+
them by `PyTypeObjectWrapper` module.
|
20
|
+
|
21
|
+
* Change `PyCall.eval` to be a wrapper of `__builtins__.eval` in Python.
|
22
|
+
This means that `filename:` and `input_type:` parameters are dropped.
|
23
|
+
Instead, two new parameters `globals:` and `locals:` are introduced.
|
24
|
+
`globals:` is used for specifying a dictionary that is the global
|
25
|
+
namespace referred by the evaluated expression.
|
26
|
+
`locals:` is used for specifying a mapping object that is the local
|
27
|
+
namespace referred by the evaluated expression.
|
28
|
+
|
29
|
+
* Add `PyCall.exec` for the replacement of the former `PyCall.eval`
|
30
|
+
with `input_type: :file`.
|
31
|
+
It has `globals:` and `locals:` parameters for the same meaning as
|
32
|
+
the new `PyCall.eval` described above.
|
33
|
+
|
34
|
+
* Drop `PyCall.wrap_ruby_callable` and `PyCall.wrap_ruby_object` always
|
35
|
+
craetes a callable Python object taht has an ID of the given Ruby object.
|
data/Gemfile
CHANGED
data/README.md
CHANGED
@@ -3,7 +3,10 @@
|
|
3
3
|
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/mrkn/pycall.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/mrkn/pycall)
|
4
4
|
[![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/071is0f4iu0vy8lp/branch/master?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/mrkn/pycall/branch/master)
|
5
5
|
|
6
|
-
This library provides the features to directly call and partially interoperate
|
6
|
+
This library provides the features to directly call and partially interoperate
|
7
|
+
with Python from the Ruby language. You can import arbitrary Python modules
|
8
|
+
into Ruby modules, call Python functions with automatic type conversion from
|
9
|
+
Ruby to Python.
|
7
10
|
|
8
11
|
## Installation
|
9
12
|
|
@@ -23,77 +26,66 @@ Or install it yourself as:
|
|
23
26
|
|
24
27
|
## Usage
|
25
28
|
|
26
|
-
Here is a simple example to call Python's `math.sin` function and compare it to
|
29
|
+
Here is a simple example to call Python's `math.sin` function and compare it to
|
30
|
+
the `Math.sin` in Ruby:
|
27
31
|
|
28
32
|
require 'pycall/import'
|
29
33
|
include PyCall::Import
|
30
34
|
pyimport :math
|
31
|
-
math.sin
|
32
|
-
# ^ This period is necessary
|
35
|
+
math.sin(math.pi / 4) - Math.sin(Math::PI / 4) # => 0.0
|
33
36
|
|
34
|
-
Type conversions from Ruby to Python are automatically performed for numeric,
|
37
|
+
Type conversions from Ruby to Python are automatically performed for numeric,
|
38
|
+
boolean, string, arrays, and hashes.
|
35
39
|
|
36
|
-
|
40
|
+
## PyCall object system
|
37
41
|
|
38
|
-
|
42
|
+
PyCall wraps pointers of Python objects in `PyCall::PyPtr` objects.
|
43
|
+
`PyCall::PyPtr` class has two subclasses, `PyCall::PyTypePtr` and
|
44
|
+
`PyCall::PyRubyPtr`. `PyCall::PyTypePtr` is specialized for type (and classobj
|
45
|
+
in 2.7) objects, and `PyCall::PyRubyPtr` is for the objects that wraps pointers
|
46
|
+
of Ruby objects.
|
39
47
|
|
40
|
-
|
48
|
+
These `PyCall::PyPtr` objects are used mainly in PyCall infrastructure.
|
49
|
+
Instead, we usually treats the instances of `Object`, `Class`, `Module`, or
|
50
|
+
other classes that are extended by `PyCall::PyObjectWrapper` module.
|
41
51
|
|
42
|
-
|
43
|
-
|
44
|
-
|
45
|
-
|
46
|
-
|
47
|
-
|
48
|
-
```ruby
|
49
|
-
require 'pycall'
|
50
|
-
|
51
|
-
class Ndarray
|
52
|
-
import PyCall::PyObjectWrapper
|
53
|
-
wrap_class PyCall.import_module('numpy').ndarray
|
54
|
-
end
|
55
|
-
```
|
56
|
-
|
57
|
-
Defineing incarnation classes using `wrap_class` registeres automatic type conversion, so it changes the class of wrapper object. For example:
|
58
|
-
|
59
|
-
require 'pycall/import'
|
60
|
-
include PyCall::Import
|
61
|
-
pyimport :numpy, as: :np
|
62
|
-
x1 = np.array(PyCall.tuple(10))
|
63
|
-
x1.class # => PyCall::PyObject
|
64
|
-
|
65
|
-
class Ndarray
|
66
|
-
import PyCall::PyObjectWrapper
|
67
|
-
wrap_class PyCall.import_module('numpy').ndarray
|
68
|
-
# NOTE: From here, numpy.ndarray objects are converted to Ndarray objects
|
69
|
-
end
|
70
|
-
|
71
|
-
x2 = np.array(PyCall.tuple(10))
|
72
|
-
x2.class # => Ndarray
|
73
|
-
|
74
|
-
|
75
|
-
**NOTE: I will write an efficient wrapper for numpy by RubyKaigi 2017.**
|
52
|
+
`PyCall::PyObjectWrapper` is a mix-in module for objects that wraps Python
|
53
|
+
objects. A wrapper object should have `PyCall::PyPtr` object in its instance
|
54
|
+
variable `@__pyptr__`. `PyCall::PyObjectWrapper` assumes the existance of
|
55
|
+
`@__pyptr__`, and provides general translation mechanisms between Ruby object
|
56
|
+
system and Python object system. For example, `PyCall::PyObjectWrapper`
|
57
|
+
translates Ruby's coerce system into Python's swapped operation protocol.
|
76
58
|
|
77
59
|
### Specifying the Python version
|
78
60
|
|
79
|
-
If you want to use a specific version of Python instead of the default,
|
61
|
+
If you want to use a specific version of Python instead of the default,
|
62
|
+
you can change the Python version by setting the `PYTHON` environment variable
|
63
|
+
to the path of the `python` executable.
|
80
64
|
|
81
65
|
## Development
|
82
66
|
|
83
|
-
After checking out the repo, run `bin/setup` to install dependencies.
|
67
|
+
After checking out the repo, run `bin/setup` to install dependencies.
|
68
|
+
Then, run `rake spec` to run the tests. You can also run `bin/console`
|
69
|
+
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
|
84
70
|
|
85
|
-
To install this gem onto your local machine, run `bundle exec rake install`.
|
71
|
+
To install this gem onto your local machine, run `bundle exec rake install`.
|
72
|
+
To release a new version, update the version number in `version.rb`,
|
73
|
+
and then run `bundle exec rake release`, which will create a git tag for the
|
74
|
+
version, push git commits and tags, and push the `.gem` file to
|
75
|
+
[rubygems.org](https://rubygems.org).
|
86
76
|
|
87
77
|
## Contributing
|
88
78
|
|
89
|
-
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at
|
79
|
+
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at
|
80
|
+
https://github.com/mrkn/pycall.
|
90
81
|
|
91
82
|
|
92
83
|
## Acknowledgement
|
93
84
|
|
94
|
-
[PyCall.jl](https://github.com/JuliaPy/PyCall.jl) is referred too many times
|
85
|
+
[PyCall.jl](https://github.com/JuliaPy/PyCall.jl) is referred too many times
|
86
|
+
to implement this library.
|
95
87
|
|
96
88
|
## License
|
97
89
|
|
98
|
-
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the
|
99
|
-
|
90
|
+
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the
|
91
|
+
[MIT License](http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT).
|
data/Rakefile
CHANGED
@@ -1,8 +1,29 @@
|
|
1
|
-
require "bundler
|
1
|
+
require "bundler"
|
2
|
+
Bundler::GemHelper.install_tasks
|
3
|
+
|
4
|
+
require "rake"
|
5
|
+
require "rake/extensiontask"
|
2
6
|
require "rspec/core/rake_task"
|
3
7
|
|
4
8
|
Dir[File.expand_path('../tasks/**/*.rake', __FILE__)].each {|f| load f }
|
5
9
|
|
10
|
+
gem_spec = eval(File.read('pycall.gemspec'))
|
11
|
+
Rake::ExtensionTask.new('pycall', gem_spec) do |ext|
|
12
|
+
ext.lib_dir = File.join(*['lib', ENV['FAT_DIR']].compact)
|
13
|
+
ext.cross_compile = true
|
14
|
+
ext.cross_platform = %w[x86-mingw32 x64-mingw32]
|
15
|
+
ext.cross_compiling do |s|
|
16
|
+
s.files.concat %w[lib/2.2/pycall.so lib/2.3/pycall.so lib/2.4/pycall.so]
|
17
|
+
end
|
18
|
+
end
|
19
|
+
|
20
|
+
desc "Compile binaries for mingw platform using rake-compiler-dock"
|
21
|
+
task 'build:mingw' do
|
22
|
+
require 'rake_compiler_dock'
|
23
|
+
RakeCompilerDock.sh "bundle && rake cross native gem RUBY_CC_VERSION=2.1.6:2.2.2:2.3.0:2.4.0"
|
24
|
+
end
|
25
|
+
|
6
26
|
RSpec::Core::RakeTask.new(:spec)
|
7
27
|
|
8
28
|
task :default => :spec
|
29
|
+
task spec: :compile
|
data/appveyor.yml
CHANGED
@@ -6,10 +6,6 @@ environment:
|
|
6
6
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python27"
|
7
7
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python27\\python.exe"
|
8
8
|
|
9
|
-
- ruby_version: "21"
|
10
|
-
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python33"
|
11
|
-
PYTHON: "C:\\Python33\\python.exe"
|
12
|
-
|
13
9
|
- ruby_version: "21"
|
14
10
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python34"
|
15
11
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python34\\python.exe"
|
@@ -27,10 +23,6 @@ environment:
|
|
27
23
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python27-x64"
|
28
24
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python27-x64\\python.exe"
|
29
25
|
|
30
|
-
- ruby_version: "21-x64"
|
31
|
-
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python33-x64"
|
32
|
-
PYTHON: "C:\\Python33-x64\\python.exe"
|
33
|
-
|
34
26
|
- ruby_version: "21-x64"
|
35
27
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python34-x64"
|
36
28
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python34-x64\\python.exe"
|
@@ -48,10 +40,6 @@ environment:
|
|
48
40
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python27"
|
49
41
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python27\\python.exe"
|
50
42
|
|
51
|
-
- ruby_version: "22"
|
52
|
-
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python33"
|
53
|
-
PYTHON: "C:\\Python33\\python.exe"
|
54
|
-
|
55
43
|
- ruby_version: "22"
|
56
44
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python34"
|
57
45
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python34\\python.exe"
|
@@ -69,10 +57,6 @@ environment:
|
|
69
57
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python27-x64"
|
70
58
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python27-x64\\python.exe"
|
71
59
|
|
72
|
-
- ruby_version: "22-x64"
|
73
|
-
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python33-x64"
|
74
|
-
PYTHON: "C:\\Python33-x64\\python.exe"
|
75
|
-
|
76
60
|
- ruby_version: "22-x64"
|
77
61
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python34-x64"
|
78
62
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python34-x64\\python.exe"
|
@@ -90,10 +74,6 @@ environment:
|
|
90
74
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python27"
|
91
75
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python27\\python.exe"
|
92
76
|
|
93
|
-
- ruby_version: "23"
|
94
|
-
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python33"
|
95
|
-
PYTHON: "C:\\Python33\\python.exe"
|
96
|
-
|
97
77
|
- ruby_version: "23"
|
98
78
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python34"
|
99
79
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python34\\python.exe"
|
@@ -111,10 +91,6 @@ environment:
|
|
111
91
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python27-x64"
|
112
92
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python27-x64\\python.exe"
|
113
93
|
|
114
|
-
- ruby_version: "23-x64"
|
115
|
-
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python33-x64"
|
116
|
-
PYTHON: "C:\\Python33-x64\\python.exe"
|
117
|
-
|
118
94
|
- ruby_version: "23-x64"
|
119
95
|
PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python34-x64"
|
120
96
|
PYTHON: "C:\\Python34-x64\\python.exe"
|
@@ -144,12 +120,19 @@ build: off
|
|
144
120
|
install:
|
145
121
|
- "SET PATH=%PYTHONDIR%;%PYTHONDIR%\\Scripts;%PATH%"
|
146
122
|
- "SET PATH=C:\\Ruby%ruby_version%\\bin;%PATH%"
|
147
|
-
- bundle install
|
123
|
+
- "bundle install"
|
124
|
+
- "pip install numpy"
|
148
125
|
|
149
126
|
before_test:
|
127
|
+
- "bundle exec rake -rdevkit clobber compile"
|
150
128
|
- ECHO "=== python investigator.py ==="
|
151
129
|
- "python lib\\pycall\\python\\investigator.py"
|
152
130
|
|
153
131
|
test_script:
|
154
|
-
- "SET
|
132
|
+
- "SET PYCALL_DEBUG_FIND_LIBPYTHON=1"
|
155
133
|
- rake
|
134
|
+
|
135
|
+
matrix:
|
136
|
+
allow_failures:
|
137
|
+
- PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python27"
|
138
|
+
- PYTHONDIR: "C:\\Python27-x64"
|
@@ -34,18 +34,18 @@ names = [
|
|
34
34
|
]
|
35
35
|
|
36
36
|
classifiers = [
|
37
|
-
KNeighborsClassifier.(3),
|
38
|
-
SVC.(kernel: 'linear', C: 0.025),
|
39
|
-
SVC.(gamma: 2, C: 1),
|
40
|
-
DecisionTreeClassifier.(max_depth: 5),
|
41
|
-
RandomForestClassifier.(max_depth: 5, n_estimators: 10, max_features: 1),
|
42
|
-
AdaBoostClassifier.(),
|
43
|
-
GaussianNB.(),
|
44
|
-
LinearDiscriminantAnalysis.(),
|
45
|
-
QuadraticDiscriminantAnalysis.()
|
37
|
+
KNeighborsClassifier.new(3),
|
38
|
+
SVC.new(kernel: 'linear', C: 0.025),
|
39
|
+
SVC.new(gamma: 2, C: 1),
|
40
|
+
DecisionTreeClassifier.new(max_depth: 5),
|
41
|
+
RandomForestClassifier.new(max_depth: 5, n_estimators: 10, max_features: 1),
|
42
|
+
AdaBoostClassifier.new(),
|
43
|
+
GaussianNB.new(),
|
44
|
+
LinearDiscriminantAnalysis.new(),
|
45
|
+
QuadraticDiscriminantAnalysis.new()
|
46
46
|
]
|
47
47
|
|
48
|
-
x, y = make_classification
|
48
|
+
x, y = *make_classification(
|
49
49
|
n_features: 2,
|
50
50
|
n_redundant: 0,
|
51
51
|
n_informative: 2,
|
@@ -53,83 +53,83 @@ x, y = make_classification.(
|
|
53
53
|
n_clusters_per_class: 1
|
54
54
|
)
|
55
55
|
|
56
|
-
np.random.seed
|
57
|
-
x += 2 * np.random.random_sample
|
58
|
-
linearly_separable = PyCall.tuple(x, y)
|
56
|
+
np.random.seed(42)
|
57
|
+
x += 2 * np.random.random_sample(x.shape)
|
58
|
+
linearly_separable = PyCall.tuple([x, y]) # FIXME: allow PyCall.tuple(x, y)
|
59
59
|
|
60
60
|
datasets = [
|
61
|
-
make_moons
|
62
|
-
make_circles
|
61
|
+
make_moons(noise: 0.3, random_state: 0),
|
62
|
+
make_circles(noise: 0.2, factor: 0.5, random_state: 1),
|
63
63
|
linearly_separable
|
64
64
|
]
|
65
65
|
|
66
|
-
fig = plt.figure
|
66
|
+
fig = plt.figure(figsize: [27, 9])
|
67
67
|
i = 1
|
68
|
-
all =
|
68
|
+
all = 0..-1
|
69
69
|
datasets.each do |ds|
|
70
|
-
x, y = ds
|
71
|
-
x = StandardScaler.
|
72
|
-
x_train, x_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split
|
70
|
+
x, y = *ds
|
71
|
+
x = StandardScaler.new.fit_transform(x)
|
72
|
+
x_train, x_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(x, y, test_size: 0.4)
|
73
73
|
|
74
|
-
x_min, x_max = np.min
|
75
|
-
y_min, y_max = np.min
|
74
|
+
x_min, x_max = np.min(x[all, 0]) - 0.5, np.max(x[all, 0]) + 0.5
|
75
|
+
y_min, y_max = np.min(x[all, 1]) - 0.5, np.max(x[all, 1]) + 0.5
|
76
76
|
|
77
|
-
xx, yy = np.meshgrid
|
78
|
-
np.linspace
|
79
|
-
np.linspace
|
77
|
+
xx, yy = np.meshgrid(
|
78
|
+
np.linspace(x_min, x_max, ((x_max - x_min)/h).round),
|
79
|
+
np.linspace(y_min, y_max, ((y_max - y_min)/h).round),
|
80
80
|
)
|
81
|
-
mesh_points = np.dstack
|
81
|
+
mesh_points = np.dstack(PyCall.tuple([xx.ravel(), yy.ravel()]))[0, all, all]
|
82
82
|
|
83
83
|
# just plot the dataset first
|
84
|
-
cm = plt.cm.RdBu
|
85
|
-
cm_bright = mplc.ListedColormap.(["#FF0000", "#0000FF"])
|
86
|
-
ax = plt.subplot
|
84
|
+
cm = plt.cm.__dict__[:RdBu]
|
85
|
+
cm_bright = mplc.ListedColormap.new(["#FF0000", "#0000FF"])
|
86
|
+
ax = plt.subplot(datasets.length, classifiers.length + 1, i)
|
87
87
|
# plot the training points
|
88
|
-
ax.scatter
|
88
|
+
ax.scatter(x_train[all, 0], x_train[all, 1], c: y_train, cmap: cm_bright)
|
89
89
|
# and testing points
|
90
|
-
ax.scatter
|
90
|
+
ax.scatter(x_test[all, 0], x_test[all, 1], c: y_test, cmap: cm_bright, alpha: 0.6)
|
91
91
|
|
92
|
-
ax.set_xlim
|
93
|
-
ax.set_ylim
|
94
|
-
ax.set_xticks
|
95
|
-
ax.set_yticks
|
92
|
+
ax.set_xlim(np.min(xx), np.max(xx))
|
93
|
+
ax.set_ylim(np.min(yy), np.max(yy))
|
94
|
+
ax.set_xticks(PyCall.tuple())
|
95
|
+
ax.set_yticks(PyCall.tuple())
|
96
96
|
i += 1
|
97
97
|
|
98
98
|
# iterate over classifiers
|
99
99
|
names.zip(classifiers).each do |name, clf|
|
100
|
-
ax = plt.subplot
|
101
|
-
clf.fit
|
102
|
-
scor = clf.score
|
100
|
+
ax = plt.subplot(datasets.length, classifiers.length + 1, i)
|
101
|
+
clf.fit(x_train, y_train)
|
102
|
+
scor = clf.score(x_test, y_test)
|
103
103
|
|
104
104
|
# Plot the decision boundary. For that, we will assign a color to each
|
105
105
|
# point in the mesh [x_min, x_max]x[y_min, y_max]
|
106
106
|
begin
|
107
107
|
# not implemented for some
|
108
|
-
z = clf.decision_function
|
108
|
+
z = clf.decision_function(mesh_points)
|
109
109
|
rescue
|
110
|
-
z = clf.predict_proba
|
110
|
+
z = clf.predict_proba(mesh_points)[all, 1]
|
111
111
|
end
|
112
112
|
|
113
113
|
# Put the result into a color plot
|
114
|
-
z = z.reshape
|
115
|
-
ax.contourf
|
114
|
+
z = z.reshape(xx.shape)
|
115
|
+
ax.contourf(xx, yy, z, cmap: cm, alpha: 0.8)
|
116
116
|
|
117
117
|
# Plot also the training points
|
118
|
-
ax.scatter
|
118
|
+
ax.scatter(x_train[all, 0], x_train[all, 1], c: y_train, cmap: cm_bright)
|
119
119
|
# and testing points
|
120
|
-
ax.scatter
|
120
|
+
ax.scatter(x_test[all, 0], x_test[all, 1], c: y_test, cmap: cm_bright, alpha: 0.6)
|
121
121
|
|
122
|
-
ax.set_xlim
|
123
|
-
ax.set_ylim
|
124
|
-
ax.set_xticks
|
125
|
-
ax.set_yticks
|
126
|
-
ax.set_title
|
122
|
+
ax.set_xlim(np.min(xx), np.max(xx))
|
123
|
+
ax.set_ylim(np.min(yy), np.max(yy))
|
124
|
+
ax.set_xticks(PyCall.tuple())
|
125
|
+
ax.set_yticks(PyCall.tuple())
|
126
|
+
ax.set_title(name)
|
127
127
|
|
128
|
-
ax.text
|
128
|
+
ax.text(np.max(xx) - 0.3, np.min(yy) + 0.3, "%.2f" % scor, size: 15, horizontalalignment: 'right')
|
129
129
|
|
130
130
|
i += 1
|
131
131
|
end
|
132
132
|
end
|
133
133
|
|
134
|
-
fig.subplots_adjust
|
135
|
-
plt.show
|
134
|
+
fig.subplots_adjust(left: 0.02, right: 0.98)
|
135
|
+
plt.show()
|