Source code for astropy.modeling.core

# Licensed under a 3-clause BSD style license - see LICENSE.rst

"""
This module defines base classes for all models.  The base class of all
models is `~astropy.modeling.Model`. `~astropy.modeling.FittableModel` is
the base class for all fittable models. Fittable models can be linear or
nonlinear in a regression analysis sense.

All models provide a `__call__` method which performs the transformation in
a purely mathematical way, i.e. the models are unitless.  Model instances can
represent either a single model, or a "model set" representing multiple copies
of the same type of model, but with potentially different values of the
parameters in each model making up the set.
"""


import abc
import copy
import copyreg
import inspect
import functools
import operator
import types
import warnings

from collections import defaultdict, OrderedDict
from contextlib import suppress
from inspect import signature
from itertools import chain, islice
from functools import partial

import numpy as np

from astropy.utils import indent, metadata
from astropy.table import Table
from astropy.units import Quantity, UnitsError, dimensionless_unscaled
from astropy.units.utils import quantity_asanyarray
from astropy.utils import (sharedmethod, find_current_module,
                     InheritDocstrings, OrderedDescriptorContainer,
                     check_broadcast, IncompatibleShapeError, isiterable)
from astropy.utils.codegen import make_function_with_signature
from astropy.utils.exceptions import AstropyDeprecationWarning
from .utils import (combine_labels, make_binary_operator_eval,
                    ExpressionTree, AliasDict, get_inputs_and_params,
                    _BoundingBox, _combine_equivalency_dict)
from astropy.nddata.utils import add_array, extract_array

from .parameters import Parameter, InputParameterError, param_repr_oneline


__all__ = ['Model', 'FittableModel', 'Fittable1DModel', 'Fittable2DModel',
           'custom_model', 'ModelDefinitionError']


[docs]class ModelDefinitionError(TypeError): """Used for incorrect models definitions"""
def _model_oper(oper, **kwargs): """ Returns a function that evaluates a given Python arithmetic operator between two models. The operator should be given as a string, like ``'+'`` or ``'**'``. Any additional keyword arguments passed in are passed to `_CompoundModelMeta._from_operator`. """ # Note: Originally this used functools.partial, but that won't work when # used in the class definition of _CompoundModelMeta since # _CompoundModelMeta has not been defined yet. # Perform an arithmetic operation on two models. return lambda left, right: _CompoundModelMeta._from_operator(oper, left, right, **kwargs) class _ModelMeta(OrderedDescriptorContainer, InheritDocstrings, abc.ABCMeta): """ Metaclass for Model. Currently just handles auto-generating the param_names list based on Parameter descriptors declared at the class-level of Model subclasses. """ _is_dynamic = False """ This flag signifies whether this class was created in the "normal" way, with a class statement in the body of a module, as opposed to a call to `type` or some other metaclass constructor, such that the resulting class does not belong to a specific module. This is important for pickling of dynamic classes. This flag is always forced to False for new classes, so code that creates dynamic classes should manually set it to True on those classes when creating them. """ # Default empty dict for _parameters_, which will be empty on model # classes that don't have any Parameters _parameters_ = OrderedDict() def __new__(mcls, name, bases, members): # See the docstring for _is_dynamic above if '_is_dynamic' not in members: members['_is_dynamic'] = mcls._is_dynamic return super().__new__(mcls, name, bases, members) def __init__(cls, name, bases, members): # Make sure OrderedDescriptorContainer gets to run before doing # anything else super().__init__(name, bases, members) if cls._parameters_: if hasattr(cls, '_param_names'): # Slight kludge to support compound models, where # cls.param_names is a property; could be improved with a # little refactoring but fine for now cls._param_names = tuple(cls._parameters_) else: cls.param_names = tuple(cls._parameters_) cls._create_inverse_property(members) cls._create_bounding_box_property(members) cls._handle_special_methods(members) def __repr__(cls): """ Custom repr for Model subclasses. """ return cls._format_cls_repr() def _repr_pretty_(cls, p, cycle): """ Repr for IPython's pretty printer. By default IPython "pretty prints" classes, so we need to implement this so that IPython displays the custom repr for Models. """ p.text(repr(cls)) def __reduce__(cls): if not cls._is_dynamic: # Just return a string specifying where the class can be imported # from return cls.__name__ else: members = dict(cls.__dict__) # Delete any ABC-related attributes--these will be restored when # the class is reconstructed: for key in list(members): if key.startswith('_abc_'): del members[key] # Delete custom __init__ and __call__ if they exist: for key in ('__init__', '__call__'): if key in members: del members[key] return (type(cls), (cls.__name__, cls.__bases__, members)) @property def name(cls): """ The name of this model class--equivalent to ``cls.__name__``. This attribute is provided for symmetry with the `Model.name` attribute of model instances. """ return cls.__name__ @property def n_inputs(cls): return len(cls.inputs) @property def n_outputs(cls): return len(cls.outputs) @property def _is_concrete(cls): """ A class-level property that determines whether the class is a concrete implementation of a Model--i.e. it is not some abstract base class or internal implementation detail (i.e. begins with '_'). """ return not (cls.__name__.startswith('_') or inspect.isabstract(cls)) def rename(cls, name): """ Creates a copy of this model class with a new name. The new class is technically a subclass of the original class, so that instance and type checks will still work. For example:: >>> from astropy.modeling.models import Rotation2D >>> SkyRotation = Rotation2D.rename('SkyRotation') >>> SkyRotation <class '__main__.SkyRotation'> Name: SkyRotation (Rotation2D) Inputs: ('x', 'y') Outputs: ('x', 'y') Fittable parameters: ('angle',) >>> issubclass(SkyRotation, Rotation2D) True >>> r = SkyRotation(90) >>> isinstance(r, Rotation2D) True """ mod = find_current_module(2) if mod: modname = mod.__name__ else: modname = '__main__' new_cls = type(name, (cls,), {}) new_cls.__module__ = modname if hasattr(cls, '__qualname__'): if new_cls.__module__ == '__main__': # __main__ is not added to a class's qualified name new_cls.__qualname__ = name else: new_cls.__qualname__ = '{0}.{1}'.format(modname, name) return new_cls def _create_inverse_property(cls, members): inverse = members.get('inverse') if inverse is None or cls.__bases__[0] is object: # The latter clause is the prevent the below code from running on # the Model base class, which implements the default getter and # setter for .inverse return if isinstance(inverse, property): # We allow the @property decorator to be omitted entirely from # the class definition, though its use should be encouraged for # clarity inverse = inverse.fget # Store the inverse getter internally, then delete the given .inverse # attribute so that cls.inverse resolves to Model.inverse instead cls._inverse = inverse del cls.inverse def _create_bounding_box_property(cls, members): """ Takes any bounding_box defined on a concrete Model subclass (either as a fixed tuple or a property or method) and wraps it in the generic getter/setter interface for the bounding_box attribute. """ # TODO: Much of this is verbatim from _create_inverse_property--I feel # like there could be a way to generify properties that work this way, # but for the time being that would probably only confuse things more. bounding_box = members.get('bounding_box') if bounding_box is None or cls.__bases__[0] is object: return if isinstance(bounding_box, property): bounding_box = bounding_box.fget if not callable(bounding_box): # See if it's a hard-coded bounding_box (as a sequence) and # normalize it try: bounding_box = _BoundingBox.validate(cls, bounding_box) except ValueError as exc: raise ModelDefinitionError(exc.args[0]) else: sig = signature(bounding_box) # May be a method that only takes 'self' as an argument (like a # property, but the @property decorator was forgotten) # TODO: Maybe warn in the above case? # # However, if the method takes additional arguments then this is a # parameterized bounding box and should be callable if len(sig.parameters) > 1: bounding_box = \ cls._create_bounding_box_subclass(bounding_box, sig) # See the Model.bounding_box getter definition for how this attribute # is used cls._bounding_box = bounding_box del cls.bounding_box def _create_bounding_box_subclass(cls, func, sig): """ For Models that take optional arguments for defining their bounding box, we create a subclass of _BoundingBox with a ``__call__`` method that supports those additional arguments. Takes the function's Signature as an argument since that is already computed in _create_bounding_box_property, so no need to duplicate that effort. """ # TODO: Might be convenient if calling the bounding box also # automatically sets the _user_bounding_box. So that # # >>> model.bounding_box(arg=1) # # in addition to returning the computed bbox, also sets it, so that # it's a shortcut for # # >>> model.bounding_box = model.bounding_box(arg=1) # # Not sure if that would be non-obvious / confusing though... def __call__(self, **kwargs): return func(self._model, **kwargs) kwargs = [] for idx, param in enumerate(sig.parameters.values()): if idx == 0: # Presumed to be a 'self' argument continue if param.default is param.empty: raise ModelDefinitionError( 'The bounding_box method for {0} is not correctly ' 'defined: If defined as a method all arguments to that ' 'method (besides self) must be keyword arguments with ' 'default values that can be used to compute a default ' 'bounding box.'.format(cls.name)) kwargs.append((param.name, param.default)) __call__ = make_function_with_signature(__call__, ('self',), kwargs) return type(str('_{0}BoundingBox'.format(cls.name)), (_BoundingBox,), {'__call__': __call__}) def _handle_special_methods(cls, members): # Handle init creation from inputs def update_wrapper(wrapper, cls): # Set up the new __call__'s metadata attributes as though it were # manually defined in the class definition # A bit like functools.update_wrapper but uses the class instead of # the wrapped function wrapper.__module__ = cls.__module__ wrapper.__doc__ = getattr(cls, wrapper.__name__).__doc__ if hasattr(cls, '__qualname__'): wrapper.__qualname__ = '{0}.{1}'.format( cls.__qualname__, wrapper.__name__) if ('__call__' not in members and 'inputs' in members and isinstance(members['inputs'], tuple)): # Don't create a custom __call__ for classes that already have one # explicitly defined (this includes the Model base class, and any # other classes that manually override __call__ def __call__(self, *inputs, **kwargs): """Evaluate this model on the supplied inputs.""" return super(cls, self).__call__(*inputs, **kwargs) # When called, models can take two optional keyword arguments: # # * model_set_axis, which indicates (for multi-dimensional input) # which axis is used to indicate different models # # * equivalencies, a dictionary of equivalencies to be applied to # the input values, where each key should correspond to one of # the inputs. # # The following code creates the __call__ function with these # two keyword arguments. inputs = members['inputs'] args = ('self',) + inputs new_call = make_function_with_signature( __call__, args, [('model_set_axis', None), ('with_bounding_box', False), ('fill_value', np.nan), ('equivalencies', None)]) # The following makes it look like __call__ was defined in the class update_wrapper(new_call, cls) cls.__call__ = new_call if ('__init__' not in members and not inspect.isabstract(cls) and cls._parameters_): # If *all* the parameters have default values we can make them # keyword arguments; otherwise they must all be positional arguments if all(p.default is not None for p in cls._parameters_.values()): args = ('self',) kwargs = [] for param_name in cls.param_names: default = cls._parameters_[param_name].default unit = cls._parameters_[param_name].unit # If the unit was specified in the parameter but the default # is not a Quantity, attach the unit to the default. if unit is not None: default = Quantity(default, unit, copy=False) kwargs.append((param_name, default)) else: args = ('self',) + cls.param_names kwargs = {} def __init__(self, *params, **kwargs): return super(cls, self).__init__(*params, **kwargs) new_init = make_function_with_signature( __init__, args, kwargs, varkwargs='kwargs') update_wrapper(new_init, cls) cls.__init__ = new_init # *** Arithmetic operators for creating compound models *** __add__ = _model_oper('+') __sub__ = _model_oper('-') __mul__ = _model_oper('*') __truediv__ = _model_oper('/') __pow__ = _model_oper('**') __or__ = _model_oper('|') __and__ = _model_oper('&') # *** Other utilities *** def _format_cls_repr(cls, keywords=[]): """ Internal implementation of ``__repr__``. This is separated out for ease of use by subclasses that wish to override the default ``__repr__`` while keeping the same basic formatting. """ # For the sake of familiarity start the output with the standard class # __repr__ parts = [super().__repr__()] if not cls._is_concrete: return parts[0] def format_inheritance(cls): bases = [] for base in cls.mro()[1:]: if not issubclass(base, Model): continue elif (inspect.isabstract(base) or base.__name__.startswith('_')): break bases.append(base.name) if bases: return '{0} ({1})'.format(cls.name, ' -> '.join(bases)) else: return cls.name try: default_keywords = [ ('Name', format_inheritance(cls)), ('Inputs', cls.inputs), ('Outputs', cls.outputs), ] if cls.param_names: default_keywords.append(('Fittable parameters', cls.param_names)) for keyword, value in default_keywords + keywords: if value is not None: parts.append('{0}: {1}'.format(keyword, value)) return '\n'.join(parts) except Exception: # If any of the above formatting fails fall back on the basic repr # (this is particularly useful in debugging) return parts[0]
[docs]class Model(metaclass=_ModelMeta): """ Base class for all models. This is an abstract class and should not be instantiated directly. This class sets the constraints and other properties for all individual parameters and performs parameter validation. The following initialization arguments apply to the majority of Model subclasses by default (exceptions include specialized utility models like `~astropy.modeling.mappings.Mapping`). Parametric models take all their parameters as arguments, followed by any of the following optional keyword arguments: Parameters ---------- name : str, optional A human-friendly name associated with this model instance (particularly useful for identifying the individual components of a compound model). meta : dict, optional An optional dict of user-defined metadata to attach to this model. How this is used and interpreted is up to the user or individual use case. n_models : int, optional If given an integer greater than 1, a *model set* is instantiated instead of a single model. This affects how the parameter arguments are interpreted. In this case each parameter must be given as a list or array--elements of this array are taken along the first axis (or ``model_set_axis`` if specified), such that the Nth element is the value of that parameter for the Nth model in the set. See the section on model sets in the documentation for more details. model_set_axis : int, optional This argument only applies when creating a model set (i.e. ``n_models > 1``). It changes how parameter values are interpreted. Normally the first axis of each input parameter array (properly the 0th axis) is taken as the axis corresponding to the model sets. However, any axis of an input array may be taken as this "model set axis". This accepts negative integers as well--for example use ``model_set_axis=-1`` if the last (most rapidly changing) axis should be associated with the model sets. Also, ``model_set_axis=False`` can be used to tell that a given input should be used to evaluate all the models in the model set. fixed : dict, optional Dictionary ``{parameter_name: bool}`` setting the fixed constraint for one or more parameters. `True` means the parameter is held fixed during fitting and is prevented from updates once an instance of the model has been created. Alternatively the `~astropy.modeling.Parameter.fixed` property of a parameter may be used to lock or unlock individual parameters. tied : dict, optional Dictionary ``{parameter_name: callable}`` of parameters which are linked to some other parameter. The dictionary values are callables providing the linking relationship. Alternatively the `~astropy.modeling.Parameter.tied` property of a parameter may be used to set the ``tied`` constraint on individual parameters. bounds : dict, optional A dictionary ``{parameter_name: value}`` of lower and upper bounds of parameters. Keys are parameter names. Values are a list or a tuple of length 2 giving the desired range for the parameter. Alternatively the `~astropy.modeling.Parameter.min` and `~astropy.modeling.Parameter.max` or ~astropy.modeling.Parameter.bounds` properties of a parameter may be used to set bounds on individual parameters. eqcons : list, optional List of functions of length n such that ``eqcons[j](x0, *args) == 0.0`` in a successfully optimized problem. ineqcons : list, optional List of functions of length n such that ``ieqcons[j](x0, *args) >= 0.0`` is a successfully optimized problem. Examples -------- >>> from astropy.modeling import models >>> def tie_center(model): ... mean = 50 * model.stddev ... return mean >>> tied_parameters = {'mean': tie_center} Specify that ``'mean'`` is a tied parameter in one of two ways: >>> g1 = models.Gaussian1D(amplitude=10, mean=5, stddev=.3, ... tied=tied_parameters) or >>> g1 = models.Gaussian1D(amplitude=10, mean=5, stddev=.3) >>> g1.mean.tied False >>> g1.mean.tied = tie_center >>> g1.mean.tied <function tie_center at 0x...> Fixed parameters: >>> g1 = models.Gaussian1D(amplitude=10, mean=5, stddev=.3, ... fixed={'stddev': True}) >>> g1.stddev.fixed True or >>> g1 = models.Gaussian1D(amplitude=10, mean=5, stddev=.3) >>> g1.stddev.fixed False >>> g1.stddev.fixed = True >>> g1.stddev.fixed True """ parameter_constraints = Parameter.constraints """ Primarily for informational purposes, these are the types of constraints that can be set on a model's parameters. """ model_constraints = ('eqcons', 'ineqcons') """ Primarily for informational purposes, these are the types of constraints that constrain model evaluation. """ param_names = () """ Names of the parameters that describe models of this type. The parameters in this tuple are in the same order they should be passed in when initializing a model of a specific type. Some types of models, such as polynomial models, have a different number of parameters depending on some other property of the model, such as the degree. When defining a custom model class the value of this attribute is automatically set by the `~astropy.modeling.Parameter` attributes defined in the class body. """ inputs = () """The name(s) of the input variable(s) on which a model is evaluated.""" outputs = () """The name(s) of the output(s) of the model.""" standard_broadcasting = True fittable = False linear = True _separable = None """ A boolean flag to indicate whether a model is separable.""" meta = metadata.MetaData() """A dict-like object to store optional information.""" # By default models either use their own inverse property or have no # inverse at all, but users may also assign a custom inverse to a model, # optionally; in that case it is of course up to the user to determine # whether their inverse is *actually* an inverse to the model they assign # it to. _inverse = None _user_inverse = None _bounding_box = None _user_bounding_box = None # Default n_models attribute, so that __len__ is still defined even when a # model hasn't completed initialization yet _n_models = 1 # New classes can set this as a boolean value. # It is converted to a dictionary mapping input name to a boolean value. _input_units_strict = False # Allow dimensionless input (and corresponding output). If this is True, # input values to evaluate will gain the units specified in input_units. If # this is a dictionary then it should map input name to a bool to allow # dimensionless numbers for that input. # Only has an effect if input_units is defined. _input_units_allow_dimensionless = False # Default equivalencies to apply to input values. If set, this should be a # dictionary where each key is a string that corresponds to one of the # model inputs. Only has an effect if input_units is defined. input_units_equivalencies = None def __init__(self, *args, meta=None, name=None, **kwargs): super().__init__() if meta is not None: self.meta = meta self._name = name self._initialize_constraints(kwargs) # Remaining keyword args are either parameter values or invalid # Parameter values must be passed in as keyword arguments in order to # distinguish them self._initialize_parameters(args, kwargs) self._initialize_unit_support() def _initialize_unit_support(self): """ Convert self._input_units_strict and self.input_units_allow_dimensionless to dictionaries mapping input name to a boolena value. """ if isinstance(self._input_units_strict, bool): self._input_units_strict = {key: self._input_units_strict for key in self.__class__.inputs} if isinstance(self._input_units_allow_dimensionless, bool): self._input_units_allow_dimensionless = {key: self._input_units_allow_dimensionless for key in self.__class__.inputs} @property def input_units_strict(self): """ Enforce strict units on inputs to evaluate. If this is set to True, input values to evaluate will be in the exact units specified by input_units. If the input quantities are convertible to input_units, they are converted. If this is a dictionary then it should map input name to a bool to set strict input units for that parameter. """ val = self._input_units_strict if isinstance(val, bool): return {key: val for key in self.__class__.inputs} else: return val @property def input_units_allow_dimensionless(self): """ Allow dimensionless input (and corresponding output). If this is True, input values to evaluate will gain the units specified in input_units. If this is a dictionary then it should map input name to a bool to allow dimensionless numbers for that input. Only has an effect if input_units is defined. """ val = self._input_units_allow_dimensionless if isinstance(val, bool): return {key: val for key in self.__class__.inputs} else: return val @property def uses_quantity(self): """ True if this model has been created with `~astropy.units.Quantity` objects or if there are no parameters. This can be used to determine if this model should be evaluated with `~astropy.units.Quantity` or regular floats. """ pisq = [isinstance(p, Quantity) for p in self._param_sets(units=True)] return (len(pisq) == 0) or any(pisq) def __repr__(self): return self._format_repr() def __str__(self): return self._format_str() def __len__(self): return self._n_models
[docs] def __call__(self, *inputs, **kwargs): """ Evaluate this model using the given input(s) and the parameter values that were specified when the model was instantiated. """ inputs, format_info = self.prepare_inputs(*inputs, **kwargs) parameters = self._param_sets(raw=True, units=True) with_bbox = kwargs.pop('with_bounding_box', False) fill_value = kwargs.pop('fill_value', np.nan) bbox = None if with_bbox: try: bbox = self.bounding_box except NotImplementedError: bbox = None if self.n_inputs > 1 and bbox is not None: # bounding_box is in python order - convert it to the order of the inputs bbox = bbox[::-1] if bbox is None: outputs = self.evaluate(*chain(inputs, parameters)) else: if self.n_inputs == 1: bbox = [bbox] # indices where input is outside the bbox # have a value of 1 in ``nan_ind`` nan_ind = np.zeros(inputs[0].shape, dtype=bool) for ind, inp in enumerate(inputs): # Pass an ``out`` array so that ``axis_ind`` is array for scalars as well. axis_ind = np.zeros(inp.shape, dtype=bool) axis_ind = np.logical_or(inp < bbox[ind][0], inp > bbox[ind][1], out=axis_ind) nan_ind[axis_ind] = 1 # get an array with indices of valid inputs valid_ind = np.logical_not(nan_ind).nonzero() # inputs holds only inputs within the bbox args = [] for input in inputs: if not input.shape: # shape is () if nan_ind: outputs = [fill_value for a in args] else: args.append(input) else: args.append(input[valid_ind]) valid_result = self.evaluate(*chain(args, parameters)) if self.n_outputs == 1: valid_result = [valid_result] # combine the valid results with the ``fill_value`` values # outside the bbox result = [np.zeros(inputs[0].shape) + fill_value for i in range(len(valid_result))] for ind, r in enumerate(valid_result): if not result[ind].shape: # shape is () result[ind] = r else: result[ind][valid_ind] = r # format output if self.n_outputs == 1: outputs = np.asarray(result[0]) else: outputs = [np.asarray(r) for r in result] else: outputs = self.evaluate(*chain(inputs, parameters)) if self.n_outputs == 1: outputs = (outputs,) outputs = self.prepare_outputs(format_info, *outputs, **kwargs) outputs = self._process_output_units(inputs, outputs) if self.n_outputs == 1: return outputs[0] else: return outputs
# *** Arithmetic operators for creating compound models *** __add__ = _model_oper('+') __sub__ = _model_oper('-') __mul__ = _model_oper('*') __truediv__ = _model_oper('/') __pow__ = _model_oper('**') __or__ = _model_oper('|') __and__ = _model_oper('&') # *** Properties *** @property def name(self): """User-provided name for this model instance.""" return self._name @name.setter def name(self, val): """Assign a (new) name to this model.""" self._name = val @property def n_inputs(self): """ The number of inputs to this model. Equivalent to ``len(model.inputs)``. """ return len(self.inputs) @property def n_outputs(self): """ The number of outputs from this model. Equivalent to ``len(model.outputs)``. """ return len(self.outputs) @property def model_set_axis(self): """ The index of the model set axis--that is the axis of a parameter array that pertains to which model a parameter value pertains to--as specified when the model was initialized. See the documentation on `Model Sets <http://docs.astropy.org/en/stable/modeling/models.html#model-sets>`_ for more details. """ return self._model_set_axis @property def param_sets(self): """ Return parameters as a pset. This is a list with one item per parameter set, which is an array of that parameter's values across all parameter sets, with the last axis associated with the parameter set. """ return self._param_sets() @property def parameters(self): """ A flattened array of all parameter values in all parameter sets. Fittable parameters maintain this list and fitters modify it. """ # Currently the sequence of a model's parameters must be contiguous # within the _parameters array (which may be a view of a larger array, # for example when taking a sub-expression of a compound model), so # the assumption here is reliable: if not self.param_names: # Trivial, but not unheard of return self._parameters start = self._param_metrics[self.param_names[0]]['slice'].start stop = self._param_metrics[self.param_names[-1]]['slice'].stop return self._parameters[start:stop] @parameters.setter def parameters(self, value): """ Assigning to this attribute updates the parameters array rather than replacing it. """ if not self.param_names: return start = self._param_metrics[self.param_names[0]]['slice'].start stop = self._param_metrics[self.param_names[-1]]['slice'].stop try: value = np.array(value).flatten() self._parameters[start:stop] = value except ValueError as e: raise InputParameterError( "Input parameter values not compatible with the model " "parameters array: {0}".format(e)) @property def fixed(self): """ A `dict` mapping parameter names to their fixed constraint. """ return self._constraints['fixed'] @property def tied(self): """ A `dict` mapping parameter names to their tied constraint. """ return self._constraints['tied'] @property def bounds(self): """ A `dict` mapping parameter names to their upper and lower bounds as ``(min, max)`` tuples or ``[min, max]`` lists. """ return self._constraints['bounds'] @property def eqcons(self): """List of parameter equality constraints.""" return self._constraints['eqcons'] @property def ineqcons(self): """List of parameter inequality constraints.""" return self._constraints['ineqcons'] @property def inverse(self): """ Returns a new `~astropy.modeling.Model` instance which performs the inverse transform, if an analytic inverse is defined for this model. Even on models that don't have an inverse defined, this property can be set with a manually-defined inverse, such a pre-computed or experimentally determined inverse (often given as a `~astropy.modeling.polynomial.PolynomialModel`, but not by requirement). A custom inverse can be deleted with ``del model.inverse``. In this case the model's inverse is reset to its default, if a default exists (otherwise the default is to raise `NotImplementedError`). Note to authors of `~astropy.modeling.Model` subclasses: To define an inverse for a model simply override this property to return the appropriate model representing the inverse. The machinery that will make the inverse manually-overridable is added automatically by the base class. """ if self._user_inverse is not None: return self._user_inverse elif self._inverse is not None: return self._inverse() raise NotImplementedError("An analytical inverse transform has not " "been implemented for this model.") @inverse.setter def inverse(self, value): if not isinstance(value, (Model, type(None))): raise ValueError( "The ``inverse`` attribute may be assigned a `Model` " "instance or `None` (where `None` explicitly forces the " "model to have no inverse.") self._user_inverse = value @inverse.deleter def inverse(self): """ Resets the model's inverse to its default (if one exists, otherwise the model will have no inverse). """ del self._user_inverse @property def has_user_inverse(self): """ A flag indicating whether or not a custom inverse model has been assigned to this model by a user, via assignment to ``model.inverse``. """ return self._user_inverse is not None @property def bounding_box(self): r""" A `tuple` of length `n_inputs` defining the bounding box limits, or `None` for no bounding box. The default limits are given by a ``bounding_box`` property or method defined in the class body of a specific model. If not defined then this property just raises `NotImplementedError` by default (but may be assigned a custom value by a user). ``bounding_box`` can be set manually to an array-like object of shape ``(model.n_inputs, 2)``. For further usage, see :ref:`bounding-boxes` The limits are ordered according to the `numpy` indexing convention, and are the reverse of the model input order, e.g. for inputs ``('x', 'y', 'z')``, ``bounding_box`` is defined: * for 1D: ``(x_low, x_high)`` * for 2D: ``((y_low, y_high), (x_low, x_high))`` * for 3D: ``((z_low, z_high), (y_low, y_high), (x_low, x_high))`` Examples -------- Setting the ``bounding_box`` limits for a 1D and 2D model: >>> from astropy.modeling.models import Gaussian1D, Gaussian2D >>> model_1d = Gaussian1D() >>> model_2d = Gaussian2D(x_stddev=1, y_stddev=1) >>> model_1d.bounding_box = (-5, 5) >>> model_2d.bounding_box = ((-6, 6), (-5, 5)) Setting the bounding_box limits for a user-defined 3D `custom_model`: >>> from astropy.modeling.models import custom_model >>> def const3d(x, y, z, amp=1): ... return amp ... >>> Const3D = custom_model(const3d) >>> model_3d = Const3D() >>> model_3d.bounding_box = ((-6, 6), (-5, 5), (-4, 4)) To reset ``bounding_box`` to its default limits just delete the user-defined value--this will reset it back to the default defined on the class: >>> del model_1d.bounding_box To disable the bounding box entirely (including the default), set ``bounding_box`` to `None`: >>> model_1d.bounding_box = None >>> model_1d.bounding_box # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> File "astropy\modeling\core.py", line 980, in bounding_box "No bounding box is defined for this model (note: the " NotImplementedError: No bounding box is defined for this model (note: the bounding box was explicitly disabled for this model; use `del model.bounding_box` to restore the default bounding box, if one is defined for this model). """ if self._user_bounding_box is not None: if self._user_bounding_box is NotImplemented: raise NotImplementedError( "No bounding box is defined for this model (note: the " "bounding box was explicitly disabled for this model; " "use `del model.bounding_box` to restore the default " "bounding box, if one is defined for this model).") return self._user_bounding_box elif self._bounding_box is None: raise NotImplementedError( "No bounding box is defined for this model.") elif isinstance(self._bounding_box, _BoundingBox): # This typically implies a hard-coded bounding box. This will # probably be rare, but it is an option return self._bounding_box elif isinstance(self._bounding_box, types.MethodType): return self._bounding_box() else: # The only other allowed possibility is that it's a _BoundingBox # subclass, so we call it with its default arguments and return an # instance of it (that can be called to recompute the bounding box # with any optional parameters) # (In other words, in this case self._bounding_box is a *class*) bounding_box = self._bounding_box((), _model=self)() return self._bounding_box(bounding_box, _model=self) @bounding_box.setter def bounding_box(self, bounding_box): """ Assigns the bounding box limits. """ if bounding_box is None: cls = None # We use this to explicitly set an unimplemented bounding box (as # opposed to no user bounding box defined) bounding_box = NotImplemented elif (isinstance(self._bounding_box, type) and issubclass(self._bounding_box, _BoundingBox)): cls = self._bounding_box else: cls = _BoundingBox if cls is not None: try: bounding_box = cls.validate(self, bounding_box) except ValueError as exc: raise ValueError(exc.args[0]) self._user_bounding_box = bounding_box @bounding_box.deleter def bounding_box(self): self._user_bounding_box = None @property def has_user_bounding_box(self): """ A flag indicating whether or not a custom bounding_box has been assigned to this model by a user, via assignment to ``model.bounding_box``. """ return self._user_bounding_box is not None @property def separable(self): """ A flag indicating whether a model is separable.""" if self._separable is not None: return self._separable else: raise NotImplementedError( 'The "separable" property is not defined for ' 'model {}'.format(self.__class__.__name__)) # *** Public methods ***
[docs] def without_units_for_data(self, **kwargs): """ Return an instance of the model for which the parameter values have been converted to the right units for the data, then the units have been stripped away. The input and output Quantity objects should be given as keyword arguments. Notes ----- This method is needed in order to be able to fit models with units in the parameters, since we need to temporarily strip away the units from the model during the fitting (which might be done by e.g. scipy functions). The units that the parameters should be converted to are not necessarily the units of the input data, but are derived from them. Model subclasses that want fitting to work in the presence of quantities need to define a _parameter_units_for_data_units method that takes the input and output units (as two dictionaries) and returns a dictionary giving the target units for each parameter. """ model = self.copy() inputs_unit = {inp: getattr(kwargs[inp], 'unit', dimensionless_unscaled) for inp in self.inputs if kwargs[inp] is not None} outputs_unit = {out: getattr(kwargs[out], 'unit', dimensionless_unscaled) for out in self.outputs if kwargs[out] is not None} parameter_units = self._parameter_units_for_data_units(inputs_unit, outputs_unit) for name, unit in parameter_units.items(): parameter = getattr(model, name) if parameter.unit is not None: parameter.value = parameter.quantity.to(unit).value parameter._set_unit(None, force=True) return model
[docs] def with_units_from_data(self, **kwargs): """ Return an instance of the model which has units for which the parameter values are compatible with the data units specified. The input and output Quantity objects should be given as keyword arguments. Notes ----- This method is needed in order to be able to fit models with units in the parameters, since we need to temporarily strip away the units from the model during the fitting (which might be done by e.g. scipy functions). The units that the parameters will gain are not necessarily the units of the input data, but are derived from them. Model subclasses that want fitting to work in the presence of quantities need to define a _parameter_units_for_data_units method that takes the input and output units (as two dictionaries) and returns a dictionary giving the target units for each parameter. """ model = self.copy() inputs_unit = {inp: getattr(kwargs[inp], 'unit', dimensionless_unscaled) for inp in self.inputs if kwargs[inp] is not None} outputs_unit = {out: getattr(kwargs[out], 'unit', dimensionless_unscaled) for out in self.outputs if kwargs[out] is not None} parameter_units = self._parameter_units_for_data_units(inputs_unit, outputs_unit) # We are adding units to parameters that already have a value, but we # don't want to convert the parameter, just add the unit directly, hence # the call to _set_unit. for name, unit in parameter_units.items(): parameter = getattr(model, name) parameter._set_unit(unit, force=True) return model
@property def _has_units(self): # Returns True if any of the parameters have units for param in self.param_names: if getattr(self, param).unit is not None: return True else: return False @property def _supports_unit_fitting(self): # If the model has a '_parameter_units_for_data_units' method, this # indicates that we have enough information to strip the units away # and add them back after fitting, when fitting quantities return hasattr(self, '_parameter_units_for_data_units')
[docs] @abc.abstractmethod def evaluate(self, *args, **kwargs): """Evaluate the model on some input variables."""
[docs] def sum_of_implicit_terms(self, *args, **kwargs): """ Evaluate the sum of any implicit model terms on some input variables. This includes any fixed terms used in evaluating a linear model that do not have corresponding parameters exposed to the user. The prototypical case is `astropy.modeling.functional_models.Shift`, which corresponds to a function y = a + bx, where b=1 is intrinsically fixed by the type of model, such that sum_of_implicit_terms(x) == x. This method is needed by linear fitters to correct the dependent variable for the implicit term(s) when solving for the remaining terms (ie. a = y - bx). """
[docs] def render(self, out=None, coords=None): """ Evaluate a model at fixed positions, respecting the ``bounding_box``. The key difference relative to evaluating the model directly is that this method is limited to a bounding box if the `Model.bounding_box` attribute is set. Parameters ---------- out : `numpy.ndarray`, optional An array that the evaluated model will be added to. If this is not given (or given as ``None``), a new array will be created. coords : array-like, optional An array to be used to translate from the model's input coordinates to the ``out`` array. It should have the property that ``self(coords)`` yields the same shape as ``out``. If ``out`` is not specified, ``coords`` will be used to determine the shape of the returned array. If this is not provided (or None), the model will be evaluated on a grid determined by `Model.bounding_box`. Returns ------- out : `numpy.ndarray` The model added to ``out`` if ``out`` is not ``None``, or else a new array from evaluating the model over ``coords``. If ``out`` and ``coords`` are both `None`, the returned array is limited to the `Model.bounding_box` limits. If `Model.bounding_box` is `None`, ``arr`` or ``coords`` must be passed. Raises ------ ValueError If ``coords`` are not given and the the `Model.bounding_box` of this model is not set. Examples -------- :ref:`bounding-boxes` """ try: bbox = self.bounding_box except NotImplementedError: bbox = None ndim = self.n_inputs if (coords is None) and (out is None) and (bbox is None): raise ValueError('If no bounding_box is set, ' 'coords or out must be input.') # for consistent indexing if ndim == 1: if coords is not None: coords = [coords] if bbox is not None: bbox = [bbox] if coords is not None: coords = np.asanyarray(coords, dtype=float) # Check dimensions match out and model assert len(coords) == ndim if out is not None: if coords[0].shape != out.shape: raise ValueError('inconsistent shape of the output.') else: out = np.zeros(coords[0].shape) if out is not None: out = np.asanyarray(out, dtype=float) if out.ndim != ndim: raise ValueError('the array and model must have the same ' 'number of dimensions.') if bbox is not None: # assures position is at center pixel, important when using add_array pd = np.array([(np.mean(bb), np.ceil((bb[1] - bb[0]) / 2)) for bb in bbox]).astype(int).T pos, delta = pd if coords is not None: sub_shape = tuple(delta * 2 + 1) sub_coords = np.array([extract_array(c, sub_shape, pos) for c in coords]) else: limits = [slice(p - d, p + d + 1, 1) for p, d in pd.T] sub_coords = np.mgrid[limits] sub_coords = sub_coords[::-1] if out is None: out = self(*sub_coords) else: try: out = add_array(out, self(*sub_coords), pos) except ValueError: raise ValueError( 'The `bounding_box` is larger than the input out in ' 'one or more dimensions. Set ' '`model.bounding_box = None`.') else: if coords is None: im_shape = out.shape limits = [slice(i) for i in im_shape] coords = np.mgrid[limits] coords = coords[::-1] out += self(*coords) return out
@property def input_units(self): """ This property is used to indicate what units or sets of units the evaluate method expects, and returns a dictionary mapping inputs to units (or `None` if any units are accepted). Model sub-classes can also use function annotations in evaluate to indicate valid input units, in which case this property should not be overridden since it will return the input units based on the annotations. """ if hasattr(self, '_input_units'): return self._input_units elif hasattr(self.evaluate, '__annotations__'): annotations = self.evaluate.__annotations__.copy() annotations.pop('return', None) if annotations: # If there are not annotations for all inputs this will error. return dict((name, annotations[name]) for name in self.inputs) else: # None means any unit is accepted return None @property def return_units(self): """ This property is used to indicate what units or sets of units the output of evaluate should be in, and returns a dictionary mapping outputs to units (or `None` if any units are accepted). Model sub-classes can also use function annotations in evaluate to indicate valid output units, in which case this property should not be overridden since it will return the return units based on the annotations. """ if hasattr(self, '_return_units'): return self._return_units elif hasattr(self.evaluate, '__annotations__'): return self.evaluate.__annotations__.get('return', None) else: # None means any unit is accepted return None
[docs] def prepare_inputs(self, *inputs, model_set_axis=None, equivalencies=None, **kwargs): """ This method is used in `~astropy.modeling.Model.__call__` to ensure that all the inputs to the model can be broadcast into compatible shapes (if one or both of them are input as arrays), particularly if there are more than one parameter sets. This also makes sure that (if applicable) the units of the input will be compatible with the evaluate method. """ # When we instantiate the model class, we make sure that __call__ can # take the following two keyword arguments: model_set_axis and # equivalencies. if model_set_axis is None: # By default the model_set_axis for the input is assumed to be the # same as that for the parameters the model was defined with # TODO: Ensure that negative model_set_axis arguments are respected model_set_axis = self.model_set_axis n_models = len(self) params = [getattr(self, name) for name in self.param_names] inputs = [np.asanyarray(_input, dtype=float) for _input in inputs] _validate_input_shapes(inputs, self.inputs, n_models, model_set_axis, self.standard_broadcasting) inputs = self._validate_input_units(inputs, equivalencies) # The input formatting required for single models versus a multiple # model set are different enough that they've been split into separate # subroutines if n_models == 1: return _prepare_inputs_single_model(self, params, inputs, **kwargs) else: return _prepare_inputs_model_set(self, params, inputs, n_models, model_set_axis, **kwargs)
def _validate_input_units(self, inputs, equivalencies=None): inputs = list(inputs) name = self.name or self.__class__.__name__ # Check that the units are correct, if applicable if self.input_units is not None: # We combine any instance-level input equivalencies with user # specified ones at call-time. input_units_equivalencies = _combine_equivalency_dict(self.inputs, equivalencies, self.input_units_equivalencies) # We now iterate over the different inputs and make sure that their # units are consistent with those specified in input_units. for i in range(len(inputs)): input_name = self.inputs[i] input_unit = self.input_units.get(input_name, None) if input_unit is None: continue if isinstance(inputs[i], Quantity): # We check for consistency of the units with input_units, # taking into account any equivalencies if inputs[i].unit.is_equivalent(input_unit, equivalencies=input_units_equivalencies[input_name]): # If equivalencies have been specified, we need to # convert the input to the input units - this is because # some equivalencies are non-linear, and we need to be # sure that we evaluate the model in its own frame # of reference. If input_units_strict is set, we also # need to convert to the input units. if len(input_units_equivalencies) > 0 or self.input_units_strict[input_name]: inputs[i] = inputs[i].to(input_unit, equivalencies=input_units_equivalencies[input_name]) else: # We consider the following two cases separately so as # to be able to raise more appropriate/nicer exceptions if input_unit is dimensionless_unscaled: raise UnitsError("{0}: Units of input '{1}', {2} ({3}), could not be " "converted to required dimensionless " "input".format(name, self.inputs[i], inputs[i].unit, inputs[i].unit.physical_type)) else: raise UnitsError("{0}: Units of input '{1}', {2} ({3}), could not be " "converted to required input units of " "{4} ({5})".format(name, self.inputs[i], inputs[i].unit, inputs[i].unit.physical_type, input_unit, input_unit.physical_type)) else: # If we allow dimensionless input, we add the units to the # input values without conversion, otherwise we raise an # exception. if (not self.input_units_allow_dimensionless[input_name] and input_unit is not dimensionless_unscaled and input_unit is not None): if np.any(inputs[i] != 0): raise UnitsError("{0}: Units of input '{1}', (dimensionless), could not be " "converted to required input units of " "{2} ({3})".format(name, self.inputs[i], input_unit, input_unit.physical_type)) return inputs def _process_output_units(self, inputs, outputs): inputs_are_quantity = any([isinstance(i, Quantity) for i in inputs]) if self.return_units and inputs_are_quantity: # We allow a non-iterable unit only if there is one output if self.n_outputs == 1 and not isiterable(self.return_units): return_units = {self.outputs[0]: self.return_units} else: return_units = self.return_units outputs = tuple([Quantity(out, return_units.get(out_name, None), subok=True) for out, out_name in zip(outputs, self.outputs)]) return outputs
[docs] def prepare_outputs(self, format_info, *outputs, **kwargs): model_set_axis = kwargs.get('model_set_axis', None) if len(self) == 1: return _prepare_outputs_single_model(self, outputs, format_info) else: return _prepare_outputs_model_set(self, outputs, format_info, model_set_axis)
[docs] def copy(self): """ Return a copy of this model. Uses a deep copy so that all model attributes, including parameter values, are copied as well. """ return copy.deepcopy(self)
[docs] def deepcopy(self): """ Return a deep copy of this model. """ return copy.deepcopy(self)
[docs] @sharedmethod def rename(self, name): """ Return a copy of this model with a new name. """ new_model = self.copy() new_model._name = name return new_model
[docs] @sharedmethod def n_submodels(self): """ Return the number of components in a single model, which is obviously 1. """ return 1
# *** Internal methods *** @sharedmethod def _from_existing(self, existing, param_names): """ Creates a new instance of ``cls`` that shares its underlying parameter values with an existing model instance given by ``existing``. This is used primarily by compound models to return a view of an individual component of a compound model. ``param_names`` should be the names of the parameters in the *existing* model to use as the parameters in this new model. Its length should equal the number of parameters this model takes, so that it can map parameters on the existing model to parameters on this model one-to-one. """ # Basically this is an alternative __init__ if isinstance(self, type): # self is a class, not an instance needs_initialization = True dummy_args = (0,) * len(param_names) self = self.__new__(self, *dummy_args) else: needs_initialization = False self = self.copy() aliases = dict(zip(self.param_names, param_names)) # This is basically an alternative _initialize_constraints constraints = {} for cons_type in self.parameter_constraints: orig = existing._constraints[cons_type] constraints[cons_type] = AliasDict(orig, aliases) self._constraints = constraints self._n_models = existing._n_models self._model_set_axis = existing._model_set_axis self._parameters = existing._parameters self._param_metrics = defaultdict(dict) for param_a, param_b in aliases.items(): # Take the param metrics info for the giving parameters in the # existing model, and hand them to the appropriate parameters in # the new model self._param_metrics[param_a] = existing._param_metrics[param_b] if needs_initialization: self.__init__(*dummy_args) return self def _initialize_constraints(self, kwargs): """ Pop parameter constraint values off the keyword arguments passed to `Model.__init__` and store them in private instance attributes. """ if hasattr(self, '_constraints'): # Skip constraint initialization if it has already been handled via # an alternate initialization return self._constraints = {} # Pop any constraints off the keyword arguments for constraint in self.parameter_constraints: values = kwargs.pop(constraint, {}) self._constraints[constraint] = values.copy() # Update with default parameter constraints for param_name in self.param_names: param = getattr(self, param_name) # Parameters don't have all constraint types value = getattr(param, constraint) if value is not None: self._constraints[constraint][param_name] = value for constraint in self.model_constraints: values = kwargs.pop(constraint, []) self._constraints[constraint] = values def _initialize_parameters(self, args, kwargs): """ Initialize the _parameters array that stores raw parameter values for all parameter sets for use with vectorized fitting algorithms; on FittableModels the _param_name attributes actually just reference slices of this array. """ if hasattr(self, '_parameters'): # Skip parameter initialization if it has already been handled via # an alternate initialization return n_models = kwargs.pop('n_models', None) if not (n_models is None or (isinstance(n_models, (int, np.integer)) and n_models >= 1)): raise ValueError( "n_models must be either None (in which case it is " "determined from the model_set_axis of the parameter initial " "values) or it must be a positive integer " "(got {0!r})".format(n_models)) model_set_axis = kwargs.pop('model_set_axis', None) if model_set_axis is None: if n_models is not None and n_models > 1: # Default to zero model_set_axis = 0 else: # Otherwise disable model_set_axis = False else: if not (model_set_axis is False or (isinstance(model_set_axis, int) and not isinstance(model_set_axis, bool))): raise ValueError( "model_set_axis must be either False or an integer " "specifying the parameter array axis to map to each " "model in a set of models (got {0!r}).".format( model_set_axis)) # Process positional arguments by matching them up with the # corresponding parameters in self.param_names--if any also appear as # keyword arguments this presents a conflict params = {} if len(args) > len(self.param_names): raise TypeError( "{0}.__init__() takes at most {1} positional arguments ({2} " "given)".format(self.__class__.__name__, len(self.param_names), len(args))) self._model_set_axis = model_set_axis self._param_metrics = defaultdict(dict) for idx, arg in enumerate(args): if arg is None: # A value of None implies using the default value, if exists continue # We use quantity_asanyarray here instead of np.asanyarray because # if any of the arguments are quantities, we need to return a # Quantity object not a plain Numpy array. params[self.param_names[idx]] = quantity_asanyarray(arg, dtype=float) # At this point the only remaining keyword arguments should be # parameter names; any others are in error. for param_name in self.param_names: if param_name in kwargs: if param_name in params: raise TypeError( "{0}.__init__() got multiple values for parameter " "{1!r}".format(self.__class__.__name__, param_name)) value = kwargs.pop(param_name) if value is None: continue # We use quantity_asanyarray here instead of np.asanyarray because # if any of the arguments are quantities, we need to return a # Quantity object not a plain Numpy array. params[param_name] = quantity_asanyarray(value, dtype=float) if kwargs: # If any keyword arguments were left over at this point they are # invalid--the base class should only be passed the parameter # values, constraints, and param_dim for kwarg in kwargs: # Just raise an error on the first unrecognized argument raise TypeError( '{0}.__init__() got an unrecognized parameter ' '{1!r}'.format(self.__class__.__name__, kwarg)) # Determine the number of model sets: If the model_set_axis is # None then there is just one parameter set; otherwise it is determined # by the size of that axis on the first parameter--if the other # parameters don't have the right number of axes or the sizes of their # model_set_axis don't match an error is raised if model_set_axis is not False and n_models != 1 and params: max_ndim = 0 if model_set_axis < 0: min_ndim = abs(model_set_axis) else: min_ndim = model_set_axis + 1 for name, value in params.items(): param_ndim = np.ndim(value) if param_ndim < min_ndim: raise InputParameterError( "All parameter values must be arrays of dimension " "at least {0} for model_set_axis={1} (the value " "given for {2!r} is only {3}-dimensional)".format( min_ndim, model_set_axis, name, param_ndim)) max_ndim = max(max_ndim, param_ndim) if n_models is None: # Use the dimensions of the first parameter to determine # the number of model sets n_models = value.shape[model_set_axis] elif value.shape[model_set_axis] != n_models: raise InputParameterError( "Inconsistent dimensions for parameter {0!r} for " "{1} model sets. The length of axis {2} must be the " "same for all input parameter values".format( name, n_models, model_set_axis)) self._check_param_broadcast(params, max_ndim) else: if n_models is None: n_models = 1 self._check_param_broadcast(params, None) self._n_models = n_models self._initialize_parameter_values(params) def _initialize_parameter_values(self, params): # self._param_metrics should have been initialized in # self._initialize_parameters param_metrics = self._param_metrics total_size = 0 for name in self.param_names: unit = None param_descr = getattr(self, name) if params.get(name) is None: default = param_descr.default if default is None: # No value was supplied for the parameter and the # parameter does not have a default, therefore the model # is underspecified raise TypeError( "{0}.__init__() requires a value for parameter " "{1!r}".format(self.__class__.__name__, name)) value = params[name] = default unit = param_descr.unit else: value = params[name] if isinstance(value, Quantity): unit = value.unit else: unit = None param_size = np.size(value) param_shape = np.shape(value) param_slice = slice(total_size, total_size + param_size) param_metrics[name]['slice'] = param_slice param_metrics[name]['shape'] = param_shape if unit is None and param_descr.unit is not None: raise InputParameterError( "{0}.__init__() requires a Quantity for parameter " "{1!r}".format(self.__class__.__name__, name)) param_metrics[name]['orig_unit'] = unit param_metrics[name]['raw_unit'] = None if param_descr._setter is not None: _val = param_descr._setter(value) if isinstance(_val, Quantity): param_metrics[name]['raw_unit'] = _val.unit else: param_metrics[name]['raw_unit'] = None total_size += param_size self._param_metrics = param_metrics self._parameters = np.empty(total_size, dtype=np.float64) # Now set the parameter values (this will also fill # self._parameters) # TODO: This is a bit ugly, but easier to deal with than how this was # done previously. There's still lots of opportunity for refactoring # though, in particular once we move the _get/set_model_value methods # out of Parameter and into Model (renaming them # _get/set_parameter_value) for name, value in params.items(): # value here may be a Quantity object. param_descr = getattr(self, name) unit = param_descr.unit value = np.array(value) orig_unit = param_metrics[name]['orig_unit'] if param_descr._setter is not None: if unit is not None: value = np.asarray(param_descr._setter(value * orig_unit).value) else: value = param_descr._setter(value) self._parameters[param_metrics[name]['slice']] = value.ravel() # Finally validate all the parameters; we do this last so that # validators that depend on one of the other parameters' values will # work for name in params: param_descr = getattr(self, name) param_descr.validator(param_descr.value) def _check_param_broadcast(self, params, max_ndim): """ This subroutine checks that all parameter arrays can be broadcast against each other, and determines the shapes parameters must have in order to broadcast correctly. If model_set_axis is None this merely checks that the parameters broadcast and returns an empty dict if so. This mode is only used for single model sets. """ all_shapes = [] param_names = [] model_set_axis = self._model_set_axis for name in self.param_names: # Previously this just used iteritems(params), but we loop over all # param_names instead just to ensure some determinism in the # ordering behavior if name not in params: continue value = params[name] param_names.append(name) # We've already checked that each parameter array is compatible in # the model_set_axis dimension, but now we need to check the # dimensions excluding that axis # Split the array dimensions into the axes before model_set_axis # and after model_set_axis param_shape = np.shape(value) param_ndim = len(param_shape) if max_ndim is not None and param_ndim < max_ndim: # All arrays have the same number of dimensions up to the # model_set_axis dimension, but after that they may have a # different number of trailing axes. The number of trailing # axes must be extended for mutual compatibility. For example # if max_ndim = 3 and model_set_axis = 0, an array with the # shape (2, 2) must be extended to (2, 1, 2). However, an # array with shape (2,) is extended to (2, 1). new_axes = (1,) * (max_ndim - param_ndim) if model_set_axis < 0: # Just need to prepend axes to make up the difference broadcast_shape = new_axes + param_shape else: broadcast_shape = (param_shape[:model_set_axis + 1] + new_axes + param_shape[model_set_axis + 1:]) self._param_metrics[name]['broadcast_shape'] = broadcast_shape all_shapes.append(broadcast_shape) else: all_shapes.append(param_shape) # Now check mutual broadcastability of all shapes try: check_broadcast(*all_shapes) except IncompatibleShapeError as exc: shape_a, shape_a_idx, shape_b, shape_b_idx = exc.args param_a = param_names[shape_a_idx] param_b = param_names[shape_b_idx] raise InputParameterError( "Parameter {0!r} of shape {1!r} cannot be broadcast with " "parameter {2!r} of shape {3!r}. All parameter arrays " "must have shapes that are mutually compatible according " "to the broadcasting rules.".format(param_a, shape_a, param_b, shape_b)) def _param_sets(self, raw=False, units=False): """ Implementation of the Model.param_sets property. This internal implementation has a ``raw`` argument which controls whether or not to return the raw parameter values (i.e. the values that are actually stored in the ._parameters array, as opposed to the values displayed to users. In most cases these are one in the same but there are currently a few exceptions. Note: This is notably an overcomplicated device and may be removed entirely in the near future. """ param_metrics = self._param_metrics values = [] shapes = [] for name in self.param_names: param = getattr(self, name) if raw: value = param._raw_value else: value = param.value broadcast_shape = param_metrics[name].get('broadcast_shape') if broadcast_shape is not None: value = value.reshape(broadcast_shape) shapes.append(np.shape(value)) if len(self) == 1: # Add a single param set axis to the parameter's value (thus # converting scalars to shape (1,) array values) for # consistency value = np.array([value]) if units: if raw and self._param_metrics[name]['raw_unit'] is not None: unit = self._param_metrics[name]['raw_unit'] else: unit = param.unit if unit is not None: value = Quantity(value, unit) values.append(value) if len(set(shapes)) != 1 or units: # If the parameters are not all the same shape, converting to an # array is going to produce an object array # However the way Numpy creates object arrays is tricky in that it # will recurse into array objects in the list and break them up # into separate objects. Doing things this way ensures a 1-D # object array the elements of which are the individual parameter # arrays. There's not much reason to do this over returning a list # except for consistency psets = np.empty(len(values), dtype=object) psets[:] = values return psets # TODO: Returning an array from this method may be entirely pointless # for internal use--perhaps only the external param_sets method should # return an array (and just for backwards compat--I would prefer to # maybe deprecate that method) return np.array(values) def _format_repr(self, args=[], kwargs={}, defaults={}): """ Internal implementation of ``__repr__``. This is separated out for ease of use by subclasses that wish to override the default ``__repr__`` while keeping the same basic formatting. """ # TODO: I think this could be reworked to preset model sets better parts = [repr(a) for a in args] parts.extend( "{0}={1}".format(name, param_repr_oneline(getattr(self, name))) for name in self.param_names) if self.name is not None: parts.append('name={0!r}'.format(self.name)) for kwarg, value in kwargs.items(): if kwarg in defaults and defaults[kwarg] != value: continue parts.append('{0}={1!r}'.format(kwarg, value)) if len(self) > 1: parts.append("n_models={0}".format(len(self))) return '<{0}({1})>'.format(self.__class__.__name__, ', '.join(parts)) def _format_str(self, keywords=[]): """ Internal implementation of ``__str__``. This is separated out for ease of use by subclasses that wish to override the default ``__str__`` while keeping the same basic formatting. """ default_keywords = [ ('Model', self.__class__.__name__), ('Name', self.name), ('Inputs', self.inputs), ('Outputs', self.outputs), ('Model set size', len(self)) ] parts = ['{0}: {1}'.format(keyword, value) for keyword, value in default_keywords + keywords if value is not None] parts.append('Parameters:') if len(self) == 1: columns = [[getattr(self, name).value] for name in self.param_names] else: columns = [getattr(self, name).value for name in self.param_names] if columns: param_table = Table(columns, names=self.param_names) # Set units on the columns for name in self.param_names: param_table[name].unit = getattr(self, name).unit parts.append(indent(str(param_table), width=4)) return '\n'.join(parts)
[docs]class FittableModel(Model): """ Base class for models that can be fitted using the built-in fitting algorithms. """ linear = False # derivative with respect to parameters fit_deriv = None """ Function (similar to the model's `~Model.evaluate`) to compute the derivatives of the model with respect to its parameters, for use by fitting algorithms. In other words, this computes the Jacobian matrix with respect to the model's parameters. """ # Flag that indicates if the model derivatives with respect to parameters # are given in columns or rows col_fit_deriv = True fittable = True
[docs]class Fittable1DModel(FittableModel): """ Base class for one-dimensional fittable models. This class provides an easier interface to defining new models. Examples can be found in `astropy.modeling.functional_models`. """ inputs = ('x',) outputs = ('y',) _separable = True
[docs]class Fittable2DModel(FittableModel): """ Base class for two-dimensional fittable models. This class provides an easier interface to defining new models. Examples can be found in `astropy.modeling.functional_models`. """ inputs = ('x', 'y') outputs = ('z',)
def _make_arithmetic_operator(oper): # We don't bother with tuple unpacking here for efficiency's sake, but for # documentation purposes: # # f_eval, f_n_inputs, f_n_outputs = f # # and similarly for g def op(f, g): return (make_binary_operator_eval(oper, f[0], g[0]), f[1], f[2]) return op def _composition_operator(f, g): # We don't bother with tuple unpacking here for efficiency's sake, but for # documentation purposes: # # f_eval, f_n_inputs, f_n_outputs = f # # and similarly for g return (lambda inputs, params: g[0](f[0](inputs, params), params), f[1], g[2]) def _join_operator(f, g): # We don't bother with tuple unpacking here for efficiency's sake, but for # documentation purposes: # # f_eval, f_n_inputs, f_n_outputs = f # # and similarly for g return (lambda inputs, params: (f[0](inputs[:f[1]], params) + g[0](inputs[f[1]:], params)), f[1] + g[1], f[2] + g[2]) # TODO: Support a couple unary operators--at least negation? BINARY_OPERATORS = { '+': _make_arithmetic_operator(operator.add), '-': _make_arithmetic_operator(operator.sub), '*': _make_arithmetic_operator(operator.mul), '/': _make_arithmetic_operator(operator.truediv), '**': _make_arithmetic_operator(operator.pow), '|': _composition_operator, '&': _join_operator } _ORDER_OF_OPERATORS = [('|',), ('&',), ('+', '-'), ('*', '/'), ('**',)] OPERATOR_PRECEDENCE = {} for idx, ops in enumerate(_ORDER_OF_OPERATORS): for op in ops: OPERATOR_PRECEDENCE[op] = idx del idx, op, ops class _CompoundModelMeta(_ModelMeta): _tree = None _submodels = None _submodel_names = None _nextid = 0 _param_names = None # _param_map is a mapping of the compound model's generated param names to # the parameters of submodels they are associated with. The values in this # mapping are (idx, name) tuples were idx is the index of the submodel this # parameter is associated with, and name is the same parameter's name on # the submodel # In principle this will allow compound models to give entirely new names # to parameters that don't have to be the same as their original names on # the submodels, but right now that isn't taken advantage of _param_map = None _slice_offset = 0 # When taking slices of a compound model, this keeps track of how offset # the first model in the slice is from the first model in the original # compound model it was taken from # This just inverts _param_map, swapping keys with values. This is also # useful to have. _param_map_inverse = None _fittable = None _evaluate = None def __getitem__(cls, index): index = cls._normalize_index(index) if isinstance(index, (int, np.integer)): return cls._get_submodels()[index] else: return cls._get_slice(index.start, index.stop) def __getattr__(cls, attr): # Make sure the _tree attribute is set; otherwise we are not looking up # an attribute on a concrete compound model class and should just raise # the AttributeError if cls._tree is not None and attr in cls.param_names: cls._init_param_descriptors() return getattr(cls, attr) raise AttributeError(attr) def __repr__(cls): if cls._tree is None: # This case is mostly for debugging purposes return cls._format_cls_repr() expression = cls._format_expression() components = cls._format_components() keywords = [ ('Expression', expression), ('Components', '\n' + indent(components)) ] return cls._format_cls_repr(keywords=keywords) def __dir__(cls): """ Returns a list of attributes defined on a compound model, including all of its parameters. """ basedir = super().__dir__() if cls._tree is not None: for name in cls.param_names: basedir.append(name) basedir.sort() return basedir def __reduce__(cls): rv = super().__reduce__() if isinstance(rv, tuple): # Delete _evaluate from the members dict with suppress(KeyError): del rv[1][2]['_evaluate'] return rv @property def submodel_names(cls): if cls._submodel_names is None: seen = {} names = [] for idx, submodel in enumerate(cls._get_submodels()): name = str(submodel.name) if name in seen: names.append('{0}_{1}'.format(name, idx)) if seen[name] >= 0: jdx = seen[name] names[jdx] = '{0}_{1}'.format(names[jdx], jdx) seen[name] = -1 else: names.append(name) seen[name] = idx cls._submodel_names = tuple(names) return cls._submodel_names @property def param_names(cls): if cls._param_names is None: cls._init_param_names() return cls._param_names @property def fittable(cls): if cls._fittable is None: cls._fittable = all(m.fittable for m in cls._get_submodels()) return cls._fittable # TODO: Maybe we could use make_function_with_signature for evaluate, but # it's probably not worth it (and I'm not sure what the limit is on number # of function arguments/local variables but we could break that limit for # complicated compound models... def evaluate(cls, *args): if cls._evaluate is None: func = cls._tree.evaluate(BINARY_OPERATORS, getter=cls._model_evaluate_getter)[0] cls._evaluate = func inputs = args[:cls.n_inputs] params = iter(args[cls.n_inputs:]) result = cls._evaluate(inputs, params) if cls.n_outputs == 1: return result[0] else: return result # TODO: This supports creating a new compound model from two existing # compound models (or normal models) and a single operator. However, it # ought also to be possible to create a new model from an *entire* # expression, represented as a sequence of operators and their operands (or # an exiting ExpressionTree) and build that into a compound model without # creating an intermediate _CompoundModel class for every single operator # in the expression. This will prove to be a useful optimization in many # cases @classmethod def _from_operator(mcls, operator, left, right, additional_members={}): """ Given a Python operator (represented by a string, such as ``'+'`` or ``'*'``, and two model classes or instances, return a new compound model that evaluates the given operator on the outputs of the left and right input models. If either of the input models are a model *class* (i.e. a subclass of `~astropy.modeling.Model`) then the returned model is a new subclass of `~astropy.modeling.Model` that may be instantiated with any parameter values. If both input models are *instances* of a model, a new class is still created, but this method returns an *instance* of that class, taking the parameter values from the parameters of the input model instances. If given, the ``additional_members`` `dict` may provide additional class members that should be added to the generated `~astropy.modeling.Model` subclass. Some members that are generated by this method should not be provided by ``additional_members``. These include ``_tree``, ``inputs``, ``outputs``, ``linear``, ``standard_broadcasting``, and ``__module__`. This is currently for internal use only. """ # Note, currently this only supports binary operators, but could be # easily extended to support unary operators (namely '-') if/when # needed children = [] for child in (left, right): if isinstance(child, (_CompoundModelMeta, _CompoundModel)): """ Although the original child models were copied we make another copy here to ensure that changes in this child compound model parameters will not propagate to the reuslt, that is cm1 = Gaussian1D(1, 5, .1) + Gaussian1D() cm2 = cm1 | Scale() cm1.amplitude_0 = 100 assert(cm2.amplitude_0 == 1) """ children.append(copy.deepcopy(child._tree)) elif isinstance(child, Model): children.append(ExpressionTree(child.copy(), inputs=child.inputs, outputs=child.outputs)) else: children.append(ExpressionTree(child, inputs=child.inputs, outputs=child.outputs)) inputs, outputs = mcls._check_inputs_and_outputs(operator, left, right) tree = ExpressionTree(operator, left=children[0], right=children[1], inputs=inputs, outputs=outputs) name = str('CompoundModel{0}'.format(_CompoundModelMeta._nextid)) _CompoundModelMeta._nextid += 1 mod = find_current_module(3) if mod: modname = mod.__name__ else: modname = '__main__' if operator in ('|', '+', '-'): linear = left.linear and right.linear else: # Which is not to say it is *definitely* not linear but it would be # trickier to determine linear = False standard_broadcasting = left.standard_broadcasting and right.standard_broadcasting # Note: If any other members are added here, make sure to mention them # in the docstring of this method. members = additional_members members.update({ '_tree': tree, '_is_dynamic': True, # See docs for _ModelMeta._is_dynamic 'inputs': inputs, 'outputs': outputs, 'linear': linear, 'standard_broadcasting': standard_broadcasting, '__module__': str(modname)}) new_cls = mcls(name, (_CompoundModel,), members) if isinstance(left, Model) and isinstance(right, Model): # Both models used in the operator were already instantiated models, # not model *classes*. As such it's not particularly useful to return # the class itself, but to instead produce a new instance: instance = new_cls() # Workaround for https://github.com/astropy/astropy/issues/3542 # TODO: Any effort to restructure the tree-like data structure for # compound models should try to obviate this workaround--if # intermediate compound models are stored in the tree as well then # we can immediately check for custom inverses on sub-models when # computing the inverse instance._user_inverse = mcls._make_user_inverse( operator, left, right) if left._n_models == right._n_models: instance._n_models = left._n_models else: raise ValueError('Model sets must have the same number of ' 'components.') return instance # Otherwise return the new uninstantiated class itself return new_cls @classmethod def _check_inputs_and_outputs(mcls, operator, left, right): # TODO: These aren't the full rules for handling inputs and outputs, but # this will handle most basic cases correctly if operator == '|': inputs = left.inputs outputs = right.outputs if left.n_outputs != right.n_inputs: raise ModelDefinitionError( "Unsupported operands for |: {0} (n_inputs={1}, " "n_outputs={2}) and {3} (n_inputs={4}, n_outputs={5}); " "n_outputs for the left-hand model must match n_inputs " "for the right-hand model.".format( left.name, left.n_inputs, left.n_outputs, right.name, right.n_inputs, right.n_outputs)) elif operator == '&': inputs = combine_labels(left.inputs, right.inputs) outputs = combine_labels(left.outputs, right.outputs) else: # Without loss of generality inputs = left.inputs outputs = left.outputs if (left.n_inputs != right.n_inputs or left.n_outputs != right.n_outputs): raise ModelDefinitionError( "Unsupported operands for {0}: {1} (n_inputs={2}, " "n_outputs={3}) and {4} (n_inputs={5}, n_outputs={6}); " "models must have the same n_inputs and the same " "n_outputs for this operator".format( operator, left.name, left.n_inputs, left.n_outputs, right.name, right.n_inputs, right.n_outputs)) return inputs, outputs @classmethod def _make_user_inverse(mcls, operator, left, right): """ Generates an inverse `Model` for this `_CompoundModel` when either model in the operation has a *custom inverse* that was manually assigned by the user. If either model has a custom inverse, and in particular if another `_CompoundModel` has a custom inverse, then none of that model's sub-models should be considered at all when computing the inverse. So in that case we just compute the inverse ahead of time and set it as the new compound model's custom inverse. Note, this use case only applies when combining model instances, since model classes don't currently have a notion of a "custom inverse" (though it could probably be supported by overriding the class's inverse property). TODO: Consider fixing things so the aforementioned class-based case works as well. However, for the present purposes this is good enough. """ if not (operator in ('&', '|') and (left._user_inverse or right._user_inverse)): # These are the only operators that support an inverse right now return None try: left_inv = left.inverse right_inv = right.inverse except NotImplementedError: # If either inverse is undefined then just return False; this # means the normal _CompoundModel.inverse routine will fail # naturally anyways, since it requires all sub-models to have # an inverse defined return None if operator == '&': return left_inv & right_inv else: return right_inv | left_inv # TODO: Perhaps, just perhaps, the post-order (or ???-order) ordering of # leaf nodes is something the ExpressionTree class itself could just know def _get_submodels(cls): # Would make this a lazyproperty but those don't currently work with # type objects if cls._submodels is not None: return cls._submodels submodels = [c.value for c in cls._tree.traverse_postorder() if c.isleaf] cls._submodels = submodels return submodels def _init_param_descriptors(cls): """ This routine sets up the names for all the parameters on a compound model, including figuring out unique names for those parameters and also mapping them back to their associated parameters of the underlying submodels. Setting this all up is costly, and only necessary for compound models that a user will directly interact with. For example when building an expression like:: >>> M = (Model1 + Model2) * Model3 # doctest: +SKIP the user will generally never interact directly with the temporary result of the subexpression ``(Model1 + Model2)``. So there's no need to setup all the parameters for that temporary throwaway. Only once the full expression is built and the user initializes or introspects ``M`` is it necessary to determine its full parameterization. """ # Accessing cls.param_names will implicitly call _init_param_names if # needed and thus also set up the _param_map; I'm not crazy about that # design but it stands for now for param_name in cls.param_names: submodel_idx, submodel_param = cls._param_map[param_name] submodel = cls[submodel_idx] orig_param = getattr(submodel, submodel_param, None) if isinstance(submodel, Model): # Take the parameter's default from the model's value for that # parameter default = orig_param.value else: default = orig_param.default # Copy constraints constraints = dict((key, getattr(orig_param, key)) for key in Model.parameter_constraints) # Note: Parameter.copy() returns a new unbound Parameter, never # a bound Parameter even if submodel is a Model instance (as # opposed to a Model subclass) new_param = orig_param.copy(name=param_name, default=default, unit=orig_param.unit, **constraints) setattr(cls, param_name, new_param) def _init_param_names(cls): """ This subroutine is solely for setting up the ``param_names`` attribute itself. See ``_init_param_descriptors`` for the full parameter setup. """ # Currently this skips over Model *instances* in the expression tree; # basically these are treated as constants and do not add # fittable/tunable parameters to the compound model. # TODO: I'm not 100% happy with this design, and maybe we need some # interface for distinguishing fittable/settable parameters with # *constant* parameters (which would be distinct from parameters with # fixed constraints since they're permanently locked in place). But I'm # not sure if this is really the best way to treat the issue. names = [] param_map = {} # Start counting the suffix indices to put on parameter names from the # slice_offset. Usually this will just be zero, but for compound # models that were sliced from another compound model this may be > 0 param_suffix = cls._slice_offset for idx, model in enumerate(cls._get_submodels()): if not model.param_names: # Skip models that don't have parameters in the numbering # TODO: Reevaluate this if it turns out to be confusing, though # parameter-less models are not very common in practice (there # are a few projections that don't take parameters) continue for param_name in model.param_names: # This is sort of heuristic, but we want to check that # model.param_name *actually* returns a Parameter descriptor, # and that the model isn't some inconsistent type that happens # to have a param_names attribute but does not actually # implement settable parameters. # In the future we can probably remove this check, but this is # here specifically to support the legacy compat # _CompositeModel which can be considered a pathological case # in the context of the new framework # if not isinstance(getattr(model, param_name, None), # Parameter): # break name = '{0}_{1}'.format(param_name, param_suffix + idx) names.append(name) param_map[name] = (idx, param_name) cls._param_names = tuple(names) cls._param_map = param_map cls._param_map_inverse = dict((v, k) for k, v in param_map.items()) def _format_expression(cls): # TODO: At some point might be useful to make a public version of this, # albeit with more formatting options return cls._tree.format_expression(OPERATOR_PRECEDENCE) def _format_components(cls): return '\n\n'.join('[{0}]: {1!r}'.format(idx, m) for idx, m in enumerate(cls._get_submodels())) def _normalize_index(cls, index): """ Converts an index given to __getitem__ to either an integer, or a slice with integer start and stop values. If the length of the slice is exactly 1 this converts the index to a simple integer lookup. Negative integers are converted to positive integers. """ def get_index_from_name(name): try: return cls.submodel_names.index(name) except ValueError: raise IndexError( 'Compound model {0} does not have a component named ' '{1}'.format(cls.name, name)) def check_for_negative_index(index): if index < 0: new_index = len(cls.submodel_names) + index if new_index < 0: # If still < 0 then this is an invalid index raise IndexError( "Model index {0} out of range.".format(index)) else: index = new_index return index if isinstance(index, str): return get_index_from_name(index) elif isinstance(index, slice): if index.step not in (1, None): # In principle it could be but I can scarcely imagine a case # where it would be useful. If someone can think of one then # we can enable it. raise ValueError( "Step not supported for compound model slicing.") start = index.start if index.start is not None else 0 stop = (index.stop if index.stop is not None else len(cls.submodel_names)) if isinstance(start, (int, np.integer)): start = check_for_negative_index(start) if isinstance(stop, (int, np.integer)): stop = check_for_negative_index(stop) if isinstance(start, str): start = get_index_from_name(start) if isinstance(stop, str): stop = get_index_from_name(stop) + 1 length = stop - start if length == 1: return start elif length <= 0: raise ValueError("Empty slice of a compound model.") return slice(start, stop) elif isinstance(index, (int, np.integer)): if index >= len(cls.submodel_names): raise IndexError( "Model index {0} out of range.".format(index)) return check_for_negative_index(index) raise TypeError( 'Submodels can be indexed either by their integer order or ' 'their name (got {0!r}).'.format(index)) def _get_slice(cls, start, stop): """ Return a new model build from a sub-expression of the expression represented by this model. Right now this is highly inefficient, as it creates a new temporary model for each operator that appears in the sub-expression. It would be better if this just built a new expression tree, and the new model instantiated directly from that tree. Once tree -> model instantiation is possible this should be fixed to use that instead. """ members = {'_slice_offset': cls._slice_offset + start} operators = dict((oper, _model_oper(oper, additional_members=members)) for oper in BINARY_OPERATORS) return cls._tree.evaluate(operators, start=start, stop=stop) @staticmethod def _model_evaluate_getter(idx, model): n_params = len(model.param_names) n_inputs = model.n_inputs n_outputs = model.n_outputs # If model is not an instance, we need to instantiate it to make sure # that we can call _validate_input_units (since e.g. input_units can # be an instance property). def evaluate_wrapper(model, inputs, param_values): inputs = model._validate_input_units(inputs) outputs = model.evaluate(*inputs, *param_values) if n_outputs == 1: outputs = (outputs,) return model._process_output_units(inputs, outputs) if isinstance(model, Model): def f(inputs, params): param_values = tuple(islice(params, n_params)) return evaluate_wrapper(model, inputs, param_values) else: # Where previously model was a class, now make an instance def f(inputs, params): param_values = tuple(islice(params, n_params)) m = model(*param_values) return evaluate_wrapper(m, inputs, param_values) return (f, n_inputs, n_outputs) class _CompoundModel(Model, metaclass=_CompoundModelMeta): fit_deriv = None col_fit_deriv = False _submodels = None def __str__(self): expression = self._format_expression() components = self._format_components() keywords = [ ('Expression', expression), ('Components', '\n' + indent(components)) ] return super()._format_str(keywords=keywords) def _generate_input_output_units_dict(self, mapping, attr): """ This method is used to transform dict or bool settings from submodels into a single dictionary for the composite model, taking into account renaming of input parameters. """ d = {} for inp, (model, orig_inp) in mapping.items(): mattr = getattr(model, attr) if isinstance(mattr, dict): if orig_inp in mattr: d[inp] = mattr[orig_inp] elif isinstance(mattr, bool): d[inp] = mattr if d: # Note that if d is empty, we just return None return d @property def _supports_unit_fitting(self): return False @property def input_units_allow_dimensionless(self): return self._generate_input_output_units_dict(self._tree.inputs_map, 'input_units_allow_dimensionless') @property def input_units_strict(self): return self._generate_input_output_units_dict(self._tree.inputs_map, 'input_units_strict') @property def input_units(self): return self._generate_input_output_units_dict(self._tree.inputs_map, 'input_units') @property def input_units_equivalencies(self): return self._generate_input_output_units_dict(self._tree.inputs_map, 'input_units_equivalencies') @property def return_units(self): return self._generate_input_output_units_dict(self._tree.outputs_map, 'return_units') def __getattr__(self, attr): # This __getattr__ is necessary, because _CompoundModelMeta creates # Parameter descriptors *lazily*--they do not exist in the class # __dict__ until one of them has been accessed. # However, this is at odds with how Python looks up descriptors (see # (https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#invoking-descriptors) # which is to look directly in the class __dict__ # This workaround allows descriptors to work correctly when they are # not initially found in the class __dict__ value = getattr(self.__class__, attr) if hasattr(value, '__get__'): # Object is a descriptor, so we should really return the result of # its __get__ value = value.__get__(self, self.__class__) return value def __getitem__(self, index): index = self.__class__._normalize_index(index) model = self.__class__[index] if isinstance(index, slice): param_names = model.param_names else: param_map = self.__class__._param_map_inverse param_names = tuple(param_map[index, name] for name in model.param_names) return model._from_existing(self, param_names) @property def submodel_names(self): return self.__class__.submodel_names @sharedmethod def n_submodels(self): return len(self.submodel_names) @property def param_names(self): return self.__class__.param_names @property def fittable(self): return self.__class__.fittable @sharedmethod def evaluate(self, *args): return self.__class__.evaluate(*args) # TODO: The way this works is highly inefficient--the inverse is created by # making a new model for each operator in the compound model, which could # potentially mean creating a large number of temporary throwaway model # classes. This can definitely be optimized in the future by implementing # a way to construct a single model class from an existing tree @property def inverse(self): def _not_implemented(oper): def _raise(x, y): raise NotImplementedError( "The inverse is not currently defined for compound " "models created using the {0} operator.".format(oper)) return _raise operators = dict((oper, _not_implemented(oper)) for oper in ('+', '-', '*', '/', '**')) operators['&'] = operator.and_ # Reverse the order of compositions operators['|'] = lambda x, y: operator.or_(y, x) def getter(idx, model): try: # By indexing on self[] this will return an instance of the # model, with all the appropriate parameters set, which is # currently required to return an inverse return self[idx].inverse except NotImplementedError: raise NotImplementedError( "All models in a composite model must have an inverse " "defined in order for the composite model to have an " "inverse. {0!r} does not have an inverse.".format(model)) return self._tree.evaluate(operators, getter=getter) @sharedmethod def _get_submodels(self): return self.__class__._get_submodels() def _parameter_units_for_data_units(self, input_units, output_units): units_for_data = {} for imodel, model in enumerate(self._submodels): units_for_data_sub = model._parameter_units_for_data_units(input_units, output_units) for param_sub in units_for_data_sub: param = self._param_map_inverse[(imodel, param_sub)] units_for_data[param] = units_for_data_sub[param_sub] return units_for_data def deepcopy(self): """ Return a deep copy of a compound model. """ new_model = self.copy() new_model._submodels = [model.deepcopy() for model in self._submodels] return new_model
[docs]def custom_model(*args, fit_deriv=None, **kwargs): """ Create a model from a user defined function. The inputs and parameters of the model will be inferred from the arguments of the function. This can be used either as a function or as a decorator. See below for examples of both usages. .. note:: All model parameters have to be defined as keyword arguments with default values in the model function. Use `None` as a default argument value if you do not want to have a default value for that parameter. Parameters ---------- func : function Function which defines the model. It should take N positional arguments where ``N`` is dimensions of the model (the number of independent variable in the model), and any number of keyword arguments (the parameters). It must return the value of the model (typically as an array, but can also be a scalar for scalar inputs). This corresponds to the `~astropy.modeling.Model.evaluate` method. fit_deriv : function, optional Function which defines the Jacobian derivative of the model. I.e., the derivative with respect to the *parameters* of the model. It should have the same argument signature as ``func``, but should return a sequence where each element of the sequence is the derivative with respect to the corresponding argument. This corresponds to the :meth:`~astropy.modeling.FittableModel.fit_deriv` method. Examples -------- Define a sinusoidal model function as a custom 1D model:: >>> from astropy.modeling.models import custom_model >>> import numpy as np >>> def sine_model(x, amplitude=1., frequency=1.): ... return amplitude * np.sin(2 * np.pi * frequency * x) >>> def sine_deriv(x, amplitude=1., frequency=1.): ... return 2 * np.pi * amplitude * np.cos(2 * np.pi * frequency * x) >>> SineModel = custom_model(sine_model, fit_deriv=sine_deriv) Create an instance of the custom model and evaluate it:: >>> model = SineModel() >>> model(0.25) 1.0 This model instance can now be used like a usual astropy model. The next example demonstrates a 2D Moffat function model, and also demonstrates the support for docstrings (this example could also include a derivative, but it has been omitted for simplicity):: >>> @custom_model ... def Moffat2D(x, y, amplitude=1.0, x_0=0.0, y_0=0.0, gamma=1.0, ... alpha=1.0): ... \"\"\"Two dimensional Moffat function.\"\"\" ... rr_gg = ((x - x_0) ** 2 + (y - y_0) ** 2) / gamma ** 2 ... return amplitude * (1 + rr_gg) ** (-alpha) ... >>> print(Moffat2D.__doc__) Two dimensional Moffat function. >>> model = Moffat2D() >>> model(1, 1) # doctest: +FLOAT_CMP 0.3333333333333333 """ if kwargs: warnings.warn( "Function received unexpected arguments ({}) these " "are ignored but will raise an Exception in the " "future.".format(list(kwargs)), AstropyDeprecationWarning) if len(args) == 1 and callable(args[0]): return _custom_model_wrapper(args[0], fit_deriv=fit_deriv) elif not args: return functools.partial(_custom_model_wrapper, fit_deriv=fit_deriv) else: raise TypeError( "{0} takes at most one positional argument (the callable/" "function to be turned into a model. When used as a decorator " "it should be passed keyword arguments only (if " "any).".format(__name__))
def _custom_model_wrapper(func, fit_deriv=None): """ Internal implementation `custom_model`. When `custom_model` is called as a function its arguments are passed to this function, and the result of this function is returned. When `custom_model` is used as a decorator a partial evaluation of this function is returned by `custom_model`. """ if not callable(func): raise ModelDefinitionError( "func is not callable; it must be a function or other callable " "object") if fit_deriv is not None and not callable(fit_deriv): raise ModelDefinitionError( "fit_deriv not callable; it must be a function or other " "callable object") model_name = func.__name__ inputs, params = get_inputs_and_params(func) if (fit_deriv is not None and len(fit_deriv.__defaults__) != len(params)): raise ModelDefinitionError("derivative function should accept " "same number of parameters as func.") # TODO: Maybe have a clever scheme for default output name? if inputs: output_names = (inputs[0].name,) else: output_names = ('x',) params = dict((param.name, Parameter(param.name, default=param.default)) for param in params) mod = find_current_module(2) if mod: modname = mod.__name__ else: modname = '__main__' members = { '__module__': str(modname), '__doc__': func.__doc__, 'inputs': tuple(x.name for x in inputs), 'outputs': output_names, 'evaluate': staticmethod(func), } if fit_deriv is not None: members['fit_deriv'] = staticmethod(fit_deriv) members.update(params) return type(model_name, (FittableModel,), members) def render_model(model, arr=None, coords=None): """ Evaluates a model on an input array. Evaluation is limited to a bounding box if the `Model.bounding_box` attribute is set. Parameters ---------- model : `Model` Model to be evaluated. arr : `numpy.ndarray`, optional Array on which the model is evaluated. coords : array-like, optional Coordinate arrays mapping to ``arr``, such that ``arr[coords] == arr``. Returns ------- array : `numpy.ndarray` The model evaluated on the input ``arr`` or a new array from ``coords``. If ``arr`` and ``coords`` are both `None`, the returned array is limited to the `Model.bounding_box` limits. If `Model.bounding_box` is `None`, ``arr`` or ``coords`` must be passed. Examples -------- :ref:`bounding-boxes` """ bbox = model.bounding_box if (coords is None) & (arr is None) & (bbox is None): raise ValueError('If no bounding_box is set, coords or arr must be input.') # for consistent indexing if model.n_inputs == 1: if coords is not None: coords = [coords] if bbox is not None: bbox = [bbox] if arr is not None: arr = arr.copy() # Check dimensions match model if arr.ndim != model.n_inputs: raise ValueError('number of array dimensions inconsistent with ' 'number of model inputs.') if coords is not None: # Check dimensions match arr and model coords = np.array(coords) if len(coords) != model.n_inputs: raise ValueError('coordinate length inconsistent with the number ' 'of model inputs.') if arr is not None: if coords[0].shape != arr.shape: raise ValueError('coordinate shape inconsistent with the ' 'array shape.') else: arr = np.zeros(coords[0].shape) if bbox is not None: # assures position is at center pixel, important when using add_array pd = pos, delta = np.array([(np.mean(bb), np.ceil((bb[1] - bb[0]) / 2)) for bb in bbox]).astype(int).T if coords is not None: sub_shape = tuple(delta * 2 + 1) sub_coords = np.array([extract_array(c, sub_shape, pos) for c in coords]) else: limits = [slice(p - d, p + d + 1, 1) for p, d in pd.T] sub_coords = np.mgrid[limits] sub_coords = sub_coords[::-1] if arr is None: arr = model(*sub_coords) else: try: arr = add_array(arr, model(*sub_coords), pos) except ValueError: raise ValueError('The `bounding_box` is larger than the input' ' arr in one or more dimensions. Set ' '`model.bounding_box = None`.') else: if coords is None: im_shape = arr.shape limits = [slice(i) for i in im_shape] coords = np.mgrid[limits] arr += model(*coords[::-1]) return arr def _prepare_inputs_single_model(model, params, inputs, **kwargs): broadcasts = [] for idx, _input in enumerate(inputs): input_shape = _input.shape # Ensure that array scalars are always upgrade to 1-D arrays for the # sake of consistency with how parameters work. They will be cast back # to scalars at the end if not input_shape: inputs[idx] = _input.reshape((1,)) if not params: max_broadcast = input_shape else: max_broadcast = () for param in params: try: if model.standard_broadcasting: broadcast = check_broadcast(input_shape, param.shape) else: broadcast = input_shape except IncompatibleShapeError: raise ValueError( "Model input argument {0!r} of shape {1!r} cannot be " "broadcast with parameter {2!r} of shape " "{3!r}.".format(model.inputs[idx], input_shape, param.name, param.shape)) if len(broadcast) > len(max_broadcast): max_broadcast = broadcast elif len(broadcast) == len(max_broadcast): max_broadcast = max(max_broadcast, broadcast) broadcasts.append(max_broadcast) if model.n_outputs > model.n_inputs: if len(set(broadcasts)) > 1: raise ValueError( "For models with n_outputs > n_inputs, the combination of " "all inputs and parameters must broadcast to the same shape, " "which will be used as the shape of all outputs. In this " "case some of the inputs had different shapes, so it is " "ambiguous how to format outputs for this model. Try using " "inputs that are all the same size and shape.") else: # Extend the broadcasts list to include shapes for all outputs extra_outputs = model.n_outputs - model.n_inputs if not broadcasts: # If there were no inputs then the broadcasts list is empty # just add a None since there is no broadcasting of outputs and # inputs necessary (see _prepare_outputs_single_model) broadcasts.append(None) broadcasts.extend([broadcasts[0]] * extra_outputs) return inputs, (broadcasts,) def _prepare_outputs_single_model(model, outputs, format_info): broadcasts = format_info[0] outputs = list(outputs) for idx, output in enumerate(outputs): broadcast_shape = broadcasts[idx] if broadcast_shape is not None: if not broadcast_shape: # Shape is (), i.e. a scalar should be returned outputs[idx] = output.item() else: outputs[idx] = output.reshape(broadcast_shape) return tuple(outputs) def _prepare_inputs_model_set(model, params, inputs, n_models, model_set_axis, **kwargs): reshaped = [] pivots = [] for idx, _input in enumerate(inputs): max_param_shape = () if n_models > 1 and model_set_axis is not False: # Use the shape of the input *excluding* the model axis input_shape = (_input.shape[:model_set_axis] + _input.shape[model_set_axis + 1:]) else: input_shape = _input.shape for param in params: try: check_broadcast(input_shape, param.shape) except IncompatibleShapeError: raise ValueError( "Model input argument {0!r} of shape {1!r} cannot be " "broadcast with parameter {2!r} of shape " "{3!r}.".format(model.inputs[idx], input_shape, param.name, param.shape)) if len(param.shape) > len(max_param_shape): max_param_shape = param.shape # We've now determined that, excluding the model_set_axis, the # input can broadcast with all the parameters input_ndim = len(input_shape) if model_set_axis is False: if len(max_param_shape) > input_ndim: # Just needs to prepend new axes to the input n_new_axes = 1 + len(max_param_shape) - input_ndim new_axes = (1,) * n_new_axes new_shape = new_axes + _input.shape pivot = model.model_set_axis else: pivot = input_ndim - len(max_param_shape) new_shape = (_input.shape[:pivot] + (1,) + _input.shape[pivot:]) new_input = _input.reshape(new_shape) else: if len(max_param_shape) >= input_ndim: n_new_axes = len(max_param_shape) - input_ndim pivot = model.model_set_axis new_axes = (1,) * n_new_axes new_shape = (_input.shape[:pivot + 1] + new_axes + _input.shape[pivot + 1:]) new_input = _input.reshape(new_shape) else: pivot = _input.ndim - len(max_param_shape) - 1 new_input = np.rollaxis(_input, model_set_axis, pivot + 1) pivots.append(pivot) reshaped.append(new_input) if model.n_inputs < model.n_outputs: pivots.extend([model_set_axis] * (model.n_outputs - model.n_inputs)) return reshaped, (pivots,) def _prepare_outputs_model_set(model, outputs, format_info, model_set_axis): pivots = format_info[0] # If model_set_axis = False was passed then use # model._model_set_axis to format the output. if model_set_axis is None or model_set_axis is False: model_set_axis = model.model_set_axis outputs = list(outputs) for idx, output in enumerate(outputs): pivot = pivots[idx] if pivot < output.ndim and pivot != model_set_axis: outputs[idx] = np.rollaxis(output, pivot, model_set_axis) return tuple(outputs) def _validate_input_shapes(inputs, argnames, n_models, model_set_axis, validate_broadcasting): """ Perform basic validation of model inputs--that they are mutually broadcastable and that they have the minimum dimensions for the given model_set_axis. If validation succeeds, returns the total shape that will result from broadcasting the input arrays with each other. """ check_model_set_axis = n_models > 1 and model_set_axis is not False if not (validate_broadcasting or check_model_set_axis): # Nothing else needed here return all_shapes = [] for idx, _input in enumerate(inputs): input_shape = np.shape(_input) # Ensure that the input's model_set_axis matches the model's # n_models if input_shape and check_model_set_axis: # Note: Scalar inputs *only* get a pass on this if len(input_shape) < model_set_axis + 1: raise ValueError( "For model_set_axis={0}, all inputs must be at " "least {1}-dimensional.".format( model_set_axis, model_set_axis + 1)) elif input_shape[model_set_axis] != n_models: try: argname = argnames[idx] except IndexError: # the case of model.inputs = () argname = str(idx) raise ValueError( "Input argument {0!r} does not have the correct " "dimensions in model_set_axis={1} for a model set with " "n_models={2}.".format(argname, model_set_axis, n_models)) all_shapes.append(input_shape) if not validate_broadcasting: return try: input_broadcast = check_broadcast(*all_shapes) except IncompatibleShapeError as exc: shape_a, shape_a_idx, shape_b, shape_b_idx = exc.args arg_a = argnames[shape_a_idx] arg_b = argnames[shape_b_idx] raise ValueError( "Model input argument {0!r} of shape {1!r} cannot " "be broadcast with input {2!r} of shape {3!r}".format( arg_a, shape_a, arg_b, shape_b)) return input_broadcast copyreg.pickle(_ModelMeta, _ModelMeta.__reduce__) copyreg.pickle(_CompoundModelMeta, _CompoundModelMeta.__reduce__)