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�
�9Zc@`s�ddlmZmZmZddlZddlmZmZm	Z	ddl
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d6Zdefd��YZdS(i(tdivisiontabsolute_importtprint_functionNi(tuint8tndarraytdtype(tlongt
basestringtmemmaptrtcsr+sw+treadonlytcopyonwritet	readwritetwritecB`s>eZdZdZeddddd�Zd�Zd�ZRS(	s�Create a memory-map to an array stored in a *binary* file on disk.

    Memory-mapped files are used for accessing small segments of large files
    on disk, without reading the entire file into memory.  Numpy's
    memmap's are array-like objects.  This differs from Python's ``mmap``
    module, which uses file-like objects.

    This subclass of ndarray has some unpleasant interactions with
    some operations, because it doesn't quite fit properly as a subclass.
    An alternative to using this subclass is to create the ``mmap``
    object yourself, then create an ndarray with ndarray.__new__ directly,
    passing the object created in its 'buffer=' parameter.

    This class may at some point be turned into a factory function
    which returns a view into an mmap buffer.

    Delete the memmap instance to close.


    Parameters
    ----------
    filename : str or file-like object
        The file name or file object to be used as the array data buffer.
    dtype : data-type, optional
        The data-type used to interpret the file contents.
        Default is `uint8`.
    mode : {'r+', 'r', 'w+', 'c'}, optional
        The file is opened in this mode:

        +------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
        | 'r'  | Open existing file for reading only.                        |
        +------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
        | 'r+' | Open existing file for reading and writing.                 |
        +------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
        | 'w+' | Create or overwrite existing file for reading and writing.  |
        +------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
        | 'c'  | Copy-on-write: assignments affect data in memory, but       |
        |      | changes are not saved to disk.  The file on disk is         |
        |      | read-only.                                                  |
        +------+-------------------------------------------------------------+

        Default is 'r+'.
    offset : int, optional
        In the file, array data starts at this offset. Since `offset` is
        measured in bytes, it should normally be a multiple of the byte-size
        of `dtype`. When ``mode != 'r'``, even positive offsets beyond end of
        file are valid; The file will be extended to accommodate the
        additional data. By default, ``memmap`` will start at the beginning of
        the file, even if ``filename`` is a file pointer ``fp`` and
        ``fp.tell() != 0``.
    shape : tuple, optional
        The desired shape of the array. If ``mode == 'r'`` and the number
        of remaining bytes after `offset` is not a multiple of the byte-size
        of `dtype`, you must specify `shape`. By default, the returned array
        will be 1-D with the number of elements determined by file size
        and data-type.
    order : {'C', 'F'}, optional
        Specify the order of the ndarray memory layout:
        :term:`row-major`, C-style or :term:`column-major`,
        Fortran-style.  This only has an effect if the shape is
        greater than 1-D.  The default order is 'C'.

    Attributes
    ----------
    filename : str
        Path to the mapped file.
    offset : int
        Offset position in the file.
    mode : str
        File mode.

    Methods
    -------
    flush
        Flush any changes in memory to file on disk.
        When you delete a memmap object, flush is called first to write
        changes to disk before removing the object.


    Notes
    -----
    The memmap object can be used anywhere an ndarray is accepted.
    Given a memmap ``fp``, ``isinstance(fp, numpy.ndarray)`` returns
    ``True``.

    Memory-mapped arrays use the Python memory-map object which
    (prior to Python 2.5) does not allow files to be larger than a
    certain size depending on the platform. This size is always < 2GB
    even on 64-bit systems.

    When a memmap causes a file to be created or extended beyond its
    current size in the filesystem, the contents of the new part are
    unspecified. On systems with POSIX filesystem semantics, the extended
    part will be filled with zero bytes.

    Examples
    --------
    >>> data = np.arange(12, dtype='float32')
    >>> data.resize((3,4))

    This example uses a temporary file so that doctest doesn't write
    files to your directory. You would use a 'normal' filename.

    >>> from tempfile import mkdtemp
    >>> import os.path as path
    >>> filename = path.join(mkdtemp(), 'newfile.dat')

    Create a memmap with dtype and shape that matches our data:

    >>> fp = np.memmap(filename, dtype='float32', mode='w+', shape=(3,4))
    >>> fp
    memmap([[ 0.,  0.,  0.,  0.],
            [ 0.,  0.,  0.,  0.],
            [ 0.,  0.,  0.,  0.]], dtype=float32)

    Write data to memmap array:

    >>> fp[:] = data[:]
    >>> fp
    memmap([[  0.,   1.,   2.,   3.],
            [  4.,   5.,   6.,   7.],
            [  8.,   9.,  10.,  11.]], dtype=float32)

    >>> fp.filename == path.abspath(filename)
    True

    Deletion flushes memory changes to disk before removing the object:

    >>> del fp

    Load the memmap and verify data was stored:

    >>> newfp = np.memmap(filename, dtype='float32', mode='r', shape=(3,4))
    >>> newfp
    memmap([[  0.,   1.,   2.,   3.],
            [  4.,   5.,   6.,   7.],
            [  8.,   9.,  10.,  11.]], dtype=float32)

    Read-only memmap:

    >>> fpr = np.memmap(filename, dtype='float32', mode='r', shape=(3,4))
    >>> fpr.flags.writeable
    False

    Copy-on-write memmap:

    >>> fpc = np.memmap(filename, dtype='float32', mode='c', shape=(3,4))
    >>> fpc.flags.writeable
    True

    It's possible to assign to copy-on-write array, but values are only
    written into the memory copy of the array, and not written to disk:

    >>> fpc
    memmap([[  0.,   1.,   2.,   3.],
            [  4.,   5.,   6.,   7.],
            [  8.,   9.,  10.,  11.]], dtype=float32)
    >>> fpc[0,:] = 0
    >>> fpc
    memmap([[  0.,   0.,   0.,   0.],
            [  4.,   5.,   6.,   7.],
            [  8.,   9.,  10.,  11.]], dtype=float32)

    File on disk is unchanged:

    >>> fpr
    memmap([[  0.,   1.,   2.,   3.],
            [  4.,   5.,   6.,   7.],
            [  8.,   9.,  10.,  11.]], dtype=float32)

    Offset into a memmap:

    >>> fpo = np.memmap(filename, dtype='float32', mode='r', offset=16)
    >>> fpo
    memmap([  4.,   5.,   6.,   7.,   8.,   9.,  10.,  11.], dtype=float32)

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isinstancettupleRRtnptcompattasbytestflushtACCESS_COPYtACCESS_READtACCESS_WRITEtALLOCATIONGRANULARITYtfilenoRt__new__t_mmapRtmodeRtpathtabspathtfilenameR(tsubtypeR9RR6RtshapeRRtostfidtown_filetflentdescrt_dbytestbytestsizetktacctstarttmmtself((sD/opt/alt/python27/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/numpy/core/memmap.pyR4�sv
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        Write any changes in the array to the file on disk.

        For further information, see `memmap`.

        Parameters
        ----------
        None

        See Also
        --------
        memmap

        R.N(tbaseR#RR.(RH((sD/opt/alt/python27/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/numpy/core/memmap.pyR.'s!N(	t__name__t
__module__t__doc__t__array_priority__RR#R4RKR.(((sD/opt/alt/python27/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/numpy/core/memmap.pyRs�	Q	(t
__future__RRRtnumpyR+tnumericRRRtnumpy.compatRRt__all__R&Rtwriteable_filemodesRR(((sD/opt/alt/python27/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/numpy/core/memmap.pyt<module>s	


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