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Computes the max of elements across dimensions of a SparseTensor. (deprecated arguments) (deprecated arguments)
tf.compat.v1.sparse_reduce_max(
    sp_input, axis=None, keepdims=None, reduction_axes=None, keep_dims=None
)
This Op takes a SparseTensor and is the sparse counterpart to
tf.reduce_max().  In particular, this Op also returns a dense Tensor
instead of a sparse one.
Reduces sp_input along the dimensions given in reduction_axes.  Unless
keepdims is true, the rank of the tensor is reduced by 1 for each entry in
reduction_axes. If keepdims is true, the reduced dimensions are retained
with length 1.
If reduction_axes has no entries, all dimensions are reduced, and a tensor
with a single element is returned.  Additionally, the axes can be negative,
similar to the indexing rules in Python.
The values not defined in sp_input don't participate in the reduce max,
as opposed to be implicitly assumed 0 -- hence it can return negative values
for sparse reduction_axes. But, in case there are no values in
reduction_axes, it will reduce to 0. See second example below.
For example:
# 'x' represents [[1, ?, 2]
#                 [?, 3, ?]]
# where ? is implicitly-zero.
tf.sparse.reduce_max(x) ==> 3
tf.sparse.reduce_max(x, 0) ==> [1, 3, 2]
tf.sparse.reduce_max(x, 1) ==> [2, 3]  # Can also use -1 as the axis.
tf.sparse.reduce_max(x, 1, keepdims=True) ==> [[2], [3]]
tf.sparse.reduce_max(x, [0, 1]) ==> 3
# 'y' represents [[-7, ?]
#                 [ 4, 3]
#                 [ ?, ?]
tf.sparse.reduce_max(x, 1) ==> [-7, 4, 0]
| Args | |
|---|---|
| sp_input | The SparseTensor to reduce. Should have numeric type. | 
| axis | The dimensions to reduce; list or scalar. If None(the
default), reduces all dimensions. | 
| keepdims | If true, retain reduced dimensions with length 1. | 
| reduction_axes | Deprecated name of axis. | 
| keep_dims | Deprecated alias for keepdims. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| The reduced Tensor. |