statsmodels.iolib.foreign.savetxt¶
- statsmodels.iolib.foreign.savetxt(fname, X, names=None, fmt='%.18e', delimiter=' ')[source]¶
Save an array to a text file.
This is just a copy of numpy.savetxt patched to support structured arrays or a header of names. Does not include py3 support now in savetxt.
- Parameters:
- fname
filename
orfile
handle
If the filename ends in
.gz
, the file is automatically saved in compressed gzip format. loadtxt understands gzipped files transparently.- Xarray_like
Data to be saved to a text file.
- names
list
,optional
If given names will be the column header in the text file.
- fmt
str
or sequenceof
strs
A single format (%10.5f), a sequence of formats, or a multi-format string, e.g. ‘Iteration %d – %10.5f’, in which case delimiter is ignored.
- delimiter
str
Character separating columns.
- fname
See also
save
Save an array to a binary file in NumPy
.npy
formatsavez
Save several arrays into a
.npz
compressed archive
Notes
Further explanation of the fmt parameter (
%[flag]width[.precision]specifier
):- flags:
-
: left justify+
: Forces to preceed result with + or -.0
: Left pad the number with zeros instead of space (see width).- width:
Minimum number of characters to be printed. The value is not truncated if it has more characters.
- precision:
For integer specifiers (eg.
d,i,o,x
), the minimum number of digits.For
e, E
andf
specifiers, the number of digits to print after the decimal point.For
g
andG
, the maximum number of significant digits.For
s
, the maximum number of characters.
- specifiers:
c
: characterd
ori
: signed decimal integere
orE
: scientific notation withe
orE
.f
: decimal floating pointg,G
: use the shorter ofe,E
orf
o
: signed octals
: str of charactersu
: unsigned decimal integerx,X
: unsigned hexadecimal integer
This explanation of
fmt
is not complete, for an exhaustive specification see [1].References
[1]Format Specification Mini-Language, Python Documentation.
Examples
>>> savetxt('test.out', x, delimiter=',') # x is an array >>> savetxt('test.out', (x,y,z)) # x,y,z equal sized 1D arrays >>> savetxt('test.out', x, fmt='%1.4e') # use exponential notation