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Extracts a strided slice of a tensor (generalized Python array indexing).
tf.strided_slice(
input_,
begin,
end,
strides=None,
begin_mask=0,
end_mask=0,
ellipsis_mask=0,
new_axis_mask=0,
shrink_axis_mask=0,
var=None,
name=None
)
See also tf.slice.
Instead of calling this op directly most users will want to use the
NumPy-style slicing syntax (e.g. tensor[..., 3:4:-1, tf.newaxis, 3]), which
is supported via tf.Tensor.getitem and tf.Variable.getitem.
The interface of this op is a low-level encoding of the slicing syntax.
Roughly speaking, this op extracts a slice of size (end-begin)/stride
from the given input_ tensor. Starting at the location specified by begin
the slice continues by adding stride to the index until all dimensions are
not less than end.
Note that a stride can be negative, which causes a reverse slice.
Given a Python slice input[spec0, spec1, ..., specn],
this function will be called as follows.
begin, end, and strides will be vectors of length n.
n in general is not equal to the rank of the input_ tensor.
In each mask field (begin_mask, end_mask, ellipsis_mask,
new_axis_mask, shrink_axis_mask) the ith bit will correspond to
the ith spec.
If the ith bit of begin_mask is set, begin[i] is ignored and
the fullest possible range in that dimension is used instead.
end_mask works analogously, except with the end range.
foo[5:,:,:3] on a 7x8x9 tensor is equivalent to foo[5:7,0:8,0:3].
foo[::-1] reverses a tensor with shape 8.
If the ith bit of ellipsis_mask is set, as many unspecified dimensions
as needed will be inserted between other dimensions. Only one
non-zero bit is allowed in ellipsis_mask.
For example foo[3:5,...,4:5] on a shape 10x3x3x10 tensor is
equivalent to foo[3:5,:,:,4:5] and
foo[3:5,...] is equivalent to foo[3:5,:,:,:].
If the ith bit of new_axis_mask is set, then begin,
end, and stride are ignored and a new length 1 dimension is
added at this point in the output tensor.
For example,
foo[:4, tf.newaxis, :2] would produce a shape (4, 1, 2) tensor.
If the ith bit of shrink_axis_mask is set, it implies that the ith
specification shrinks the dimensionality by 1, taking on the value at index
begin[i]. end[i] and strides[i] are ignored in this case. For example in
Python one might do foo[:, 3, :] which would result in shrink_axis_mask
equal to 2.
t = tf.constant([[[1, 1, 1], [2, 2, 2]],
[[3, 3, 3], [4, 4, 4]],
[[5, 5, 5], [6, 6, 6]]])
tf.strided_slice(t, [1, 0, 0], [2, 1, 3], [1, 1, 1]) # [[[3, 3, 3]]]
tf.strided_slice(t, [1, 0, 0], [2, 2, 3], [1, 1, 1]) # [[[3, 3, 3],
# [4, 4, 4]]]
tf.strided_slice(t, [1, -1, 0], [2, -3, 3], [1, -1, 1]) # [[[4, 4, 4],
# [3, 3, 3]]]
Returns | |
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A Tensor the same type as input.
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