numpy.
nan_to_num
Replace NaN with zero and infinity with large finite numbers (default behaviour) or with the numbers defined by the user using the nan, posinf and/or neginf keywords.
nan
If x is inexact, NaN is replaced by zero or by the user defined value in nan keyword, infinity is replaced by the largest finite floating point values representable by x.dtype or by the user defined value in posinf keyword and -infinity is replaced by the most negative finite floating point values representable by x.dtype or by the user defined value in neginf keyword.
x.dtype
For complex dtypes, the above is applied to each of the real and imaginary components of x separately.
If x is not inexact, then no replacements are made.
Input data.
Whether to create a copy of x (True) or to replace values in-place (False). The in-place operation only occurs if casting to an array does not require a copy. Default is True.
New in version 1.13.
Value to be used to fill NaN values. If no value is passed then NaN values will be replaced with 0.0.
New in version 1.17.
Value to be used to fill positive infinity values. If no value is passed then positive infinity values will be replaced with a very large number.
Value to be used to fill negative infinity values. If no value is passed then negative infinity values will be replaced with a very small (or negative) number.
x, with the non-finite values replaced. If copy is False, this may be x itself.
copy
See also
isinf
Shows which elements are positive or negative infinity.
isneginf
Shows which elements are negative infinity.
isposinf
Shows which elements are positive infinity.
isnan
Shows which elements are Not a Number (NaN).
isfinite
Shows which elements are finite (not NaN, not infinity)
Notes
NumPy uses the IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point for Arithmetic (IEEE 754). This means that Not a Number is not equivalent to infinity.
Examples
>>> np.nan_to_num(np.inf) 1.7976931348623157e+308 >>> np.nan_to_num(-np.inf) -1.7976931348623157e+308 >>> np.nan_to_num(np.nan) 0.0 >>> x = np.array([np.inf, -np.inf, np.nan, -128, 128]) >>> np.nan_to_num(x) array([ 1.79769313e+308, -1.79769313e+308, 0.00000000e+000, # may vary -1.28000000e+002, 1.28000000e+002]) >>> np.nan_to_num(x, nan=-9999, posinf=33333333, neginf=33333333) array([ 3.3333333e+07, 3.3333333e+07, -9.9990000e+03, -1.2800000e+02, 1.2800000e+02]) >>> y = np.array([complex(np.inf, np.nan), np.nan, complex(np.nan, np.inf)]) array([ 1.79769313e+308, -1.79769313e+308, 0.00000000e+000, # may vary -1.28000000e+002, 1.28000000e+002]) >>> np.nan_to_num(y) array([ 1.79769313e+308 +0.00000000e+000j, # may vary 0.00000000e+000 +0.00000000e+000j, 0.00000000e+000 +1.79769313e+308j]) >>> np.nan_to_num(y, nan=111111, posinf=222222) array([222222.+111111.j, 111111. +0.j, 111111.+222222.j])