cholesky
function
keras.ops.cholesky(x)
Computes the Cholesky decomposition of a positive semi-definite matrix.
Arguments
- x: Input tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
.
Returns
A tensor of shape (..., M, M)
representing the lower triangular Cholesky factor of x
.
det
function
keras.ops.det(x)
Computes the determinant of a square tensor.
Arguments
- x: Input tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
.
Returns
A tensor of shape (...,)
represeting the determinant of x
.
eig
function
keras.ops.eig(x)
Computes the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a square matrix.
Arguments
- x: Input tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
.
Returns
- A tuple of two tensors: a tensor of shape
(..., M)
containing eigenvalues and a tensor of shape(..., M, M)
containing eigenvectors.
inv
function
keras.ops.inv(x)
Computes the inverse of a square tensor.
Arguments
- x: Input tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
.
Returns
A tensor of shape (..., M, M)
representing the inverse of x
.
lu_factor
function
keras.ops.lu_factor(x)
Computes the lower-upper decomposition of a square matrix.
Arguments
- x: A tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
.
Returns
- A tuple of two tensors: a tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
containing the lower and upper triangular matrices and a tensor of shape(..., M)
containing the pivots.
norm
function
keras.ops.norm(x, ord=None, axis=None, keepdims=False)
Matrix or vector norm.
This function is able to return one of eight different matrix norms, or one of an infinite number of vector norms (described below), depending on the value of the ord
parameter.
Arguments
- x: Input tensor.
- ord: Order of the norm (see table under Notes). The default is
None
. - axis: If
axis
is an integer, it specifies the axis ofx
along which to compute the vector norms. Ifaxis
is a 2-tuple, it specifies the axes that hold 2-D matrices, and the matrix norms of these matrices are computed. - keepdims: If this is set to
True
, the axes which are reduced are left in the result as dimensions with size one.
Note: For values of ord < 1
, the result is, strictly speaking, not a mathematical ‘norm’, but it may still be useful for various numerical purposes. The following norms can be calculated: – For matrices: – ord=None
: Frobenius norm – ord="fro"
: Frobenius norm – ord="nuc"
: nuclear norm – ord=np.inf
: max(sum(abs(x), axis=1))
– ord=-np.inf
: min(sum(abs(x), axis=1))
– ord=0
: not supported – ord=1
: max(sum(abs(x), axis=0))
– ord=-1
: min(sum(abs(x), axis=0))
– ord=2
: 2-norm (largest sing. value) – ord=-2
: smallest singular value – other: not supported – For vectors: – ord=None
: 2-norm – ord="fro"
: not supported – ord="nuc"
: not supported – ord=np.inf
: max(abs(x))
– ord=-np.inf
: min(abs(x))
– ord=0
: sum(x != 0)
– ord=1
: as below – ord=-1
: as below – ord=2
: as below – ord=-2
: as below – other: sum(abs(x)**ord)**(1./ord)
Returns
Norm of the matrix or vector(s).
Example
>>> x = keras.ops.reshape(keras.ops.arange(9, dtype="float32") - 4, (3, 3))
>>> keras.ops.linalg.norm(x)
7.7459664
qr
function
keras.ops.qr(x, mode="reduced")
Computes the QR decomposition of a tensor.
Arguments
- x: Input tensor of shape
(..., M, N)
. - mode: A string specifying the mode of the QR decomposition.
- ‘reduced’: Returns the reduced QR decomposition. (default)
- ‘complete’: Returns the complete QR decomposition.
Returns
A tuple containing two tensors. The first tensor of shape (..., M, K)
is the orthogonal matrix q
and the second tensor of shape (..., K, N)
is the upper triangular matrix r
, where K = min(M, N)
.
Example
>>> x = keras.ops.convert_to_tensor([[1., 2.], [3., 4.], [5., 6.]])
>>> q, r = qr(x)
>>> print(q)
array([[-0.16903079 0.897085]
[-0.5070925 0.2760267 ]
[-0.8451542 -0.34503305]], shape=(3, 2), dtype=float32)
solve
function
keras.ops.solve(a, b)
Solves a linear system of equations given by a x = b
.
Arguments
- a: A tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
representing the coefficients matrix. - b: A tensor of shape
(..., M)
or(..., M, N)
represeting the right-hand side or “dependent variable” matrix.
Returns
A tensor of shape (..., M)
or (..., M, N)
representing the solution of the linear system. Returned shape is identical to b
.
solve_triangular
function
keras.ops.solve_triangular(a, b, lower=False)
Solves a linear system of equations given by a x = b
.
Arguments
- a: A tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
representing the coefficients matrix. - b: A tensor of shape
(..., M)
or(..., M, N)
represeting the right-hand side or “dependent variable” matrix.
Returns
A tensor of shape (..., M)
or (..., M, N)
representing the solution of the linear system. Returned shape is identical to b
.
svd
function
keras.ops.svd(x, full_matrices=True, compute_uv=True)
Computes the singular value decomposition of a matrix.
Arguments
- x: Input tensor of shape
(..., M, N)
.
Returns
- A tuple of three tensors: a tensor of shape
(..., M, M)
containing the left singular vectors, a tensor of shape(..., M, N)
containing the singular values and a tensor of shape(..., N, N)
containing the right singular vectors.
Leave a Reply