From: Paul F. D. <pa...@pf...> - 2001-08-07 20:12:42
|
See fromstring() >>> import Numeric >>> x=Numeric.arange(10) >>> s=x.tostring() >>> y = Numeric.fromstring(s) >>> y array([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]) >>> -----Original Message----- From: num...@li... [mailto:num...@li...]On Behalf Of Hung Jung Lu Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2001 12:50 PM To: num...@li... Subject: [Numpy-discussion] fast constructor for arrays from byte data (unpickling?) Hi, Arrays have a method called tostring() which generates the binary data. Is there an inverse function to that? That is, generating an array from the binary data string? For large matrices, pickling/unpickling is a bit too much overhead (data stored as ASCII character strings instead of binary data strings.) I know, I am talking about a factor 4 here. But there is a big difference between 1 minute loading time and 4 minute loading time. I would imagine this is a very common problem/request for people working with large matrices. And I am sure hacking the C code to provide another fast constructor for arrays from binary strings won't be too hard. The questions is: has anyone already tried it? Is it already there? (For the kludge masters: one kludge is of course to store the binary data on disk, then use cStringIO to build the pickled file and then unpickle from the cStringIO. Speed is probably OK since the pickled file lives on RAM. But that's a kludge. :) ) regards, Hung Jung __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Make international calls for as low as $.04/minute with Yahoo! Messenger http://phonecard.yahoo.com/ _______________________________________________ Numpy-discussion mailing list Num...@li... http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/numpy-discussion |