numpy.equal¶
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numpy.equal(x1, x2, /, out=None, *, where=True, casting='same_kind', order='K', dtype=None, subok=True[, signature, extobj]) = <ufunc 'equal'>¶
- Return (x1 == x2) element-wise. - Parameters: - x1, x2 : array_like - Input arrays of the same shape. - out : ndarray, None, or tuple of ndarray and None, optional - A location into which the result is stored. If provided, it must have a shape that the inputs broadcast to. If not provided or None, a freshly-allocated array is returned. A tuple (possible only as a keyword argument) must have length equal to the number of outputs. - where : array_like, optional - Values of True indicate to calculate the ufunc at that position, values of False indicate to leave the value in the output alone. - **kwargs - For other keyword-only arguments, see the ufunc docs. - Returns: - out : ndarray or bool - Output array of bools, or a single bool if x1 and x2 are scalars. - See also - Examples - >>> np.equal([0, 1, 3], np.arange(3)) array([ True, True, False], dtype=bool) - What is compared are values, not types. So an int (1) and an array of length one can evaluate as True: - >>> np.equal(1, np.ones(1)) array([ True], dtype=bool) 
