|  View source on GitHub | 
scan on the list of tensors unpacked from elems on dimension 0.
tf.compat.v1.scan(
    fn, elems, initializer=None, parallel_iterations=10, back_prop=True,
    swap_memory=False, infer_shape=True, reverse=False, name=None
)
See also tf.map_fn.
The simplest version of scan repeatedly applies the callable fn to a
sequence of elements from first to last. The elements are made of the tensors
unpacked from elems on dimension 0. The callable fn takes two tensors as
arguments. The first argument is the accumulated value computed from the
preceding invocation of fn, and the second is the value at the current
position of elems. If initializer is None, elems must contain at least
one element, and its first element is used as the initializer.
Suppose that elems is unpacked into values, a list of tensors. The shape
of the result tensor is [len(values)] + fn(initializer, values[0]).shape.
If reverse=True, it's fn(initializer, values[-1]).shape.
This method also allows multi-arity elems and accumulator.  If elems
is a (possibly nested) list or tuple of tensors, then each of these tensors
must have a matching first (unpack) dimension.  The second argument of
fn must match the structure of elems.
If no initializer is provided, the output structure and dtypes of fn
are assumed to be the same as its input; and in this case, the first
argument of fn must match the structure of elems.
If an initializer is provided, then the output of fn must have the same
structure as initializer; and the first argument of fn must match
this structure.
For example, if elems is (t1, [t2, t3]) and initializer is
[i1, i2] then an appropriate signature for fn in python2 is:
fn = lambda (acc_p1, acc_p2), (t1, [t2, t3]): and fn must return a list,
[acc_n1, acc_n2].  An alternative correct signature for fn, and the
 one that works in python3, is:
fn = lambda a, t:, where a and t correspond to the input tuples.
| Args | |
|---|---|
| fn | The callable to be performed.  It accepts two arguments.  The first will
have the same structure as initializerif one is provided, otherwise it
will have the same structure aselems.  The second will have the same
(possibly nested) structure aselems.  Its output must have the same
structure asinitializerif one is provided, otherwise it must have the
same structure aselems. | 
| elems | A tensor or (possibly nested) sequence of tensors, each of which will
be unpacked along their first dimension.  The nested sequence of the
resulting slices will be the first argument to fn. | 
| initializer | (optional) A tensor or (possibly nested) sequence of tensors,
initial value for the accumulator, and the expected output type of fn. | 
| parallel_iterations | (optional) The number of iterations allowed to run in parallel. | 
| back_prop | (optional) True enables support for back propagation. | 
| swap_memory | (optional) True enables GPU-CPU memory swapping. | 
| infer_shape | (optional) False disables tests for consistent output shapes. | 
| reverse | (optional) True scans the tensor last to first (instead of first to last). | 
| name | (optional) Name prefix for the returned tensors. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| A tensor or (possibly nested) sequence of tensors.  Each tensor packs the
results of applying fnto tensors unpacked fromelemsalong the first
dimension, and the previous accumulator value(s), from first to last (or
last to first, ifreverse=True). | 
| Raises | |
|---|---|
| TypeError | if fnis not callable or the structure of the output offnandinitializerdo not match. | 
| ValueError | if the lengths of the output of fnandinitializerdo not match. | 
Examples:
elems = np.array([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6])
sum = scan(lambda a, x: a + x, elems)
# sum == [1, 3, 6, 10, 15, 21]
sum = scan(lambda a, x: a + x, elems, reverse=True)
# sum == [21, 20, 18, 15, 11, 6]
elems = np.array([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6])
initializer = np.array(0)
sum_one = scan(
    lambda a, x: x[0] - x[1] + a, (elems + 1, elems), initializer)
# sum_one == [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
elems = np.array([1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0])
initializer = (np.array(0), np.array(1))
fibonaccis = scan(lambda a, _: (a[1], a[0] + a[1]), elems, initializer)
# fibonaccis == ([1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8], [1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13])