If you want a set of the elements, here is another, probably faster way:
y = set(x.flatten())
PS: after performing comparisons between x.flat
, x.flatten()
, and x.ravel()
on a 10x100 array, I found out that they all perform at about the same speed. For a 3x3 array, the fastest version is the iterator version:
y = set(x.flat)
which I would recommend because it is the less memory expensive version (it scales up well with the size of the array).
PPS: There is also a NumPy function that does something similar:
y = numpy.unique(x)
This does produce a NumPy array with the same element as set(x.flat)
, but as a NumPy array. This is very fast (almost 10 times faster), but if you need a set
, then doing set(numpy.unique(x))
is a bit slower than the other procedures (building a set comes with a large overhead).
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