|  View source on GitHub | 
Wraps a python function and uses it as a TensorFlow op.
tf.numpy_function(
    func, inp, Tout, stateful=True, name=None
)
Given a python function func wrap this function as an operation in a
TensorFlow function. func must take numpy arrays as its arguments and
return numpy arrays as its outputs.
The following example creates a TensorFlow graph with np.sinh() as an
operation in the graph:
def my_numpy_func(x):# x will be a numpy array with the contents of the input to the# tf.functionreturn np.sinh(x)@tf.function(input_signature=[tf.TensorSpec(None, tf.float32)])def tf_function(input):y = tf.numpy_function(my_numpy_func, [input], tf.float32)return y * ytf_function(tf.constant(1.))<tf.Tensor: shape=(), dtype=float32, numpy=1.3810978>
Comparison to tf.py_function:
tf.py_function and tf.numpy_function are very similar, except that
tf.numpy_function takes numpy arrays, and not tf.Tensors. If you want the
function to contain tf.Tensors, and have any TensorFlow operations executed
in the function be differentiable, please use tf.py_function.
- Calling - tf.numpy_functionwill acquire the Python Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that allows only one thread to run at any point in time. This will preclude efficient parallelization and distribution of the execution of the program. Therefore, you are discouraged to use- tf.numpy_functionoutside of prototyping and experimentation.
- The body of the function (i.e. - func) will not be serialized in a- tf.SavedModel. Therefore, you should not use this function if you need to serialize your model and restore it in a different environment.
- The operation must run in the same address space as the Python program that calls - tf.numpy_function(). If you are using distributed TensorFlow, you must run a- tf.distribute.Serverin the same process as the program that calls- tf.numpy_functionyou must pin the created operation to a device in that server (e.g. using- with tf.device():).
- Currently - tf.numpy_functionis not compatible with XLA. Calling- tf.numpy_functioninside- tf.function(jit_comiple=True)will raise an error.
- Since the function takes numpy arrays, you cannot take gradients through a numpy_function. If you require something that is differentiable, please consider using tf.py_function. 
| Args | |
|---|---|
| func | A Python function, which accepts numpy.ndarrayobjects as arguments
and returns a list ofnumpy.ndarrayobjects (or a singlenumpy.ndarray). This function must accept as many arguments as there are
tensors ininp, and these argument types will match the correspondingtf.Tensorobjects ininp. The returnsnumpy.ndarrays must match the
number and types definedTout.
Important Note: Input and outputnumpy.ndarrays offuncare not
  guaranteed to be copies. In some cases their underlying memory will be
  shared with the corresponding TensorFlow tensors. In-place modification
  or storingfuncinput or return values in python datastructures
  without explicit (np.)copy can have non-deterministic consequences. | 
| inp | A list of tf.Tensorobjects. | 
| Tout | A list or tuple of tensorflow data types or a single tensorflow data
type if there is only one, indicating what funcreturns. | 
| stateful | (Boolean.) Setting this argument to False tells the runtime to
treat the function as stateless, which enables certain optimizations.
A function is stateless when given the same input it will return the
same output and have no side effects; its only purpose is to have a
return value.
The behavior for a stateful function with the statefulargument False
is undefined. In particular, caution should be taken when
mutating the input arguments as this is a stateful operation. | 
| name | (Optional) A name for the operation. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Single or list of tf.Tensorwhichfunccomputes. |