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python - Fill 1D numpy array from arrays with indices

Background

I have one 1D NumPy array initialized with zeroes.

import numpy as np
section = np.zeros(1000)

Then I have a Pandas DataFrame where I have indices in two columns:

d= {'start': {0: 7200, 1: 7500, 2: 7560, 3: 8100, 4: 11400},
    'end': {0: 10800, 1: 8100, 2: 8100, 3: 8150, 4: 12000}}

df = pd.DataFrame(data=d, columns=['start', 'end'])

For each pair of indices, I want to set the value of the corresponding indices in the numpy array to True.

My current solution

I can do this by applying a function to the DataFrame:

def fill_array(row):
    section[row.start:row.end] = True

df.apply(fill_array, axis=1)

I want to vectorize this operation

This works as I expect, but for the fun of it, I would like to vectorize the operation. I'm not very proficient with this, and my searching online has not put me on the right track.

I would really appreciate any suggestions on how to make this into a vector operation, if at all possible.

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1 Answer

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The trick for the implementation to follow is that we would put 1s at every start points and -1s at every end points on a zeros initialized int array. The actual trick comes next, as we would cumulatively sum it, giving us non-zero numbers for the positions covered by the bin (start-stop pair) boundaries. So, the final step is to look for non-zeros for a final output as a boolean array. Thus, we would have two vectorized solutions, with their implementations shown below -

def filled_array(start, end, length):
    out = np.zeros((length), dtype=int)
    np.add.at(out,start,1)
    np.add.at(out,end,-1)
    return out.cumsum()>0

def filled_array_v2(start, end, length): #Using @Daniel's suggestion
    out =np.bincount(start, minlength=length) - np.bincount(end, minlength=length)
    return out.cumsum().astype(bool)

Sample run -

In [2]: start
Out[2]: array([ 4,  7,  5, 15])

In [3]: end
Out[3]: array([12, 12,  7, 17])

In [4]: out = filled_array(start, end, length=20)

In [7]: pd.DataFrame(out) # print as dataframe for easy verification
Out[7]: 
        0
0   False
1   False
2   False
3   False
4    True
5    True
6    True
7    True
8    True
9    True
10   True
11   True
12  False
13  False
14  False
15   True
16   True
17  False
18  False
19  False

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