zheminzhou / SPARSE

Strain Prediction and Analysis with Representative SEquence
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2017/11/07/215707.full.pdf
GNU General Public License v3.0
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Update scipy to 1.9.1 #454

Closed pyup-bot closed 2 years ago

pyup-bot commented 2 years ago

This PR updates scipy from 1.2.0 to 1.9.1.

Changelog ### 1.9.0 ``` many new features, numerous bug-fixes, improved test coverage and better documentation. There have been a number of deprecations and API changes in this release, which are documented below. All users are encouraged to upgrade to this release, as there are a large number of bug-fixes and optimizations. Before upgrading, we recommend that users check that their own code does not use deprecated SciPy functionality (to do so, run your code with ``python -Wd`` and check for ``DeprecationWarning`` s). Our development attention will now shift to bug-fix releases on the 1.9.x branch, and on adding new features on the main branch. This release requires Python `3.8+` and NumPy `1.18.5` or greater. For running on PyPy, PyPy3 `6.0+` is required. Highlights of this release =================== - We have modernized our build system to use ``meson``, substantially reducing our source build times - Added `scipy.optimize.milp`, new function for mixed-integer linear programming. - Added `scipy.stats.fit` for fitting discrete and continuous distributions to data. - Tensor-product spline interpolation modes were added to `scipy.interpolate.RegularGridInterpolator`. - A new global optimizer (DIviding RECTangles algorithm) `scipy.optimize.direct` New features =========== `scipy.interpolate` improvements ================================ - Speed up the ``RBFInterpolator`` evaluation with high dimensional interpolants. - Added new spline based interpolation methods for `scipy.interpolate.RegularGridInterpolator` and its tutorial. - `scipy.interpolate.RegularGridInterpolator` and `scipy.interpolate.interpn` now accept descending ordered points. - ``RegularGridInterpolator`` now handles length-1 grid axes. - The ``BivariateSpline`` subclasses have a new method ``partial_derivative`` which constructs a new spline object representing a derivative of an original spline. This mirrors the corresponding functionality for univariate splines, ``splder`` and ``BSpline.derivative``, and can substantially speed up repeated evaluation of derivatives. `scipy.linalg` improvements =========================== - `scipy.linalg.expm` now accepts nD arrays. Its speed is also improved. - Minimum required LAPACK version is bumped to ``3.7.1``. `scipy.fft` improvements ======================== - Added ``uarray`` multimethods for `scipy.fft.fht` and `scipy.fft.ifht` to allow provision of third party backend implementations such as those recently added to CuPy. `scipy.optimize` improvements ============================= - A new global optimizer, `scipy.optimize.direct` (DIviding RECTangles algorithm) was added. For problems with inexpensive function evaluations, like the ones in the SciPy benchmark suite, ``direct`` is competitive with the best other solvers in SciPy (``dual_annealing`` and ``differential_evolution``) in terms of execution time. See `gh-14300 <https://github.com/scipy/scipy/pull/14300>`__ for more details. - Add a ``full_output`` parameter to `scipy.optimize.curve_fit` to output additional solution information. - Add a ``integrality`` parameter to `scipy.optimize.differential_evolution`, enabling integer constraints on parameters. - Add a ``vectorized`` parameter to call a vectorized objective function only once per iteration. This can improve minimization speed by reducing interpreter overhead from the multiple objective function calls. - The default method of `scipy.optimize.linprog` is now ``'highs'``. - Added `scipy.optimize.milp`, new function for mixed-integer linear programming. - Added Newton-TFQMR method to ``newton_krylov``. - Added support for the ``Bounds`` class in ``shgo`` and ``dual_annealing`` for a more uniform API across `scipy.optimize`. - Added the ``vectorized`` keyword to ``differential_evolution``. - ``approx_fprime`` now works with vector-valued functions. `scipy.signal` improvements =========================== - The new window function `scipy.signal.windows.kaiser_bessel_derived` was added to compute the Kaiser-Bessel derived window. - Single-precision ``hilbert`` operations are now faster as a result of more consistent ``dtype`` handling. `scipy.sparse` improvements =========================== - Add a ``copy`` parameter to `scipy.sparce.csgraph.laplacian`. Using inplace computation with ``copy=False`` reduces the memory footprint. - Add a ``dtype`` parameter to `scipy.sparce.csgraph.laplacian` for type casting. - Add a ``symmetrized`` parameter to `scipy.sparce.csgraph.laplacian` to produce symmetric Laplacian for directed graphs. - Add a ``form`` parameter to `scipy.sparce.csgraph.laplacian` taking one of the three values: ``array``, or ``function``, or ``lo`` determining the format of the output Laplacian: * ``array`` is a numpy array (backward compatible default); * ``function`` is a pointer to a lambda-function evaluating the Laplacian-vector or Laplacian-matrix product; * ``lo`` results in the format of the ``LinearOperator``. `scipy.sparse.linalg` improvements ================================== - ``lobpcg`` performance improvements for small input cases. `scipy.spatial` improvements ============================ - Add an ``order`` parameter to `scipy.spatial.transform.Rotation.from_quat` and `scipy.spatial.transform.Rotation.as_quat` to specify quaternion format. `scipy.stats` improvements ========================== - `scipy.stats.monte_carlo_test` performs one-sample Monte Carlo hypothesis tests to assess whether a sample was drawn from a given distribution. Besides reproducing the results of hypothesis tests like `scipy.stats.ks_1samp`, `scipy.stats.normaltest`, and `scipy.stats.cramervonmises` without small sample size limitations, it makes it possible to perform similar tests using arbitrary statistics and distributions. - Several `scipy.stats` functions support new ``axis`` (integer or tuple of integers) and ``nan_policy`` ('raise', 'omit', or 'propagate'), and ``keepdims`` arguments. These functions also support masked arrays as inputs, even if they do not have a `scipy.stats.mstats` counterpart. Edge cases for multidimensional arrays, such as when axis-slices have no unmasked elements or entire inputs are of size zero, are handled consistently. - Add a ``weight`` parameter to `scipy.stats.hmean`. - Several improvements have been made to `scipy.stats.levy_stable`. Substantial improvement has been made for numerical evaluation of the pdf and cdf, resolving [12658](https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/12658) and [14944](https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/14994). The improvement is particularly dramatic for stability parameter ``alpha`` close to or equal to 1 and for ``alpha`` below but approaching its maximum value of 2. The alternative fast Fourier transform based method for pdf calculation has also been updated to use the approach of Wang and Zhang from their 2008 conference paper *Simpson’s rule based FFT method to compute densities of stable distribution*, making this method more competitive with the default method. In addition, users now have the option to change the parametrization of the Levy Stable distribution to Nolan's "S0" parametrization which is used internally by SciPy's pdf and cdf implementations. The "S0" parametrization is described in Nolan's paper [*Numerical calculation of stable densities and distribution functions*](https://doi.org/10.1080/15326349708807450) upon which SciPy's implementation is based. "S0" has the advantage that ``delta`` and ``gamma`` are proper location and scale parameters. With ``delta`` and ``gamma`` fixed, the location and scale of the resulting distribution remain unchanged as ``alpha`` and ``beta`` change. This is not the case for the default "S1" parametrization. Finally, more options have been exposed to allow users to trade off between runtime and accuracy for both the default and FFT methods of pdf and cdf calculation. More information can be found in the documentation here (to be linked). - Added `scipy.stats.fit` for fitting discrete and continuous distributions to data. - The methods ``"pearson"`` and ``"tippet"`` from `scipy.stats.combine_pvalues` have been fixed to return the correct p-values, resolving [15373](https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/15373). In addition, the documentation for `scipy.stats.combine_pvalues` has been expanded and improved. - Unlike other reduction functions, ``stats.mode`` didn't consume the axis being operated on and failed for negative axis inputs. Both the bugs have been fixed. Note that ``stats.mode`` will now consume the input axis and return an ndarray with the ``axis`` dimension removed. - Replaced implementation of `scipy.stats.ncf` with the implementation from Boost for improved reliability. - Add a `bits` parameter to `scipy.stats.qmc.Sobol`. It allows to use from 0 to 64 bits to compute the sequence. Default is ``None`` which corresponds to 30 for backward compatibility. Using a higher value allow to sample more points. Note: ``bits`` does not affect the output dtype. - Add a `integers` method to `scipy.stats.qmc.QMCEngine`. It allows sampling integers using any QMC sampler. - Improved the fit speed and accuracy of ``stats.pareto``. - Added ``qrvs`` method to ``NumericalInversePolynomial`` to match the situation for ``NumericalInverseHermite``. - Faster random variate generation for ``gennorm`` and ``nakagami``. - ``lloyd_centroidal_voronoi_tessellation`` has been added to allow improved sample distributions via iterative application of Voronoi diagrams and centering operations - Add `scipy.stats.qmc.PoissonDisk` to sample using the Poisson disk sampling method. It guarantees that samples are separated from each other by a given ``radius``. - Add `scipy.stats.pmean` to calculate the weighted power mean also called generalized mean. Deprecated features ================ - Due to collision with the shape parameter ``n`` of several distributions, use of the distribution ``moment`` method with keyword argument ``n`` is deprecated. Keyword ``n`` is replaced with keyword ``order``. - Similarly, use of the distribution ``interval`` method with keyword arguments ``alpha`` is deprecated. Keyword ``alpha`` is replaced with keyword ``confidence``. - The ``'simplex'``, ``'revised simplex'``, and ``'interior-point'`` methods of `scipy.optimize.linprog` are deprecated. Methods ``highs``, ``highs-ds``, or ``highs-ipm`` should be used in new code. - Support for non-numeric arrays has been deprecated from ``stats.mode``. ``pandas.DataFrame.mode`` can be used instead. - The function `spatial.distance.kulsinski` has been deprecated in favor of `spatial.distance.kulczynski1`. - The ``maxiter`` keyword of the truncated Newton (TNC) algorithm has been deprecated in favour of ``maxfun``. - The ``vertices`` keyword of ``Delauney.qhull`` now raises a DeprecationWarning, after having been deprecated in documentation only for a long time. - The ``extradoc`` keyword of ``rv_continuous``, ``rv_discrete`` and ``rv_sample`` now raises a DeprecationWarning, after having been deprecated in documentation only for a long time. Expired Deprecations ================= There is an ongoing effort to follow through on long-standing deprecations. The following previously deprecated features are affected: - Object arrays in sparse matrices now raise an error. - Inexact indices into sparse matrices now raise an error. - Passing ``radius=None`` to `scipy.spatial.SphericalVoronoi` now raises an error (not adding ``radius`` defaults to 1, as before). - Several BSpline methods now raise an error if inputs have ``ndim > 1``. - The ``_rvs`` method of statistical distributions now requires a ``size`` parameter. - Passing a ``fillvalue`` that cannot be cast to the output type in `scipy.signal.convolve2d` now raises an error. - `scipy.spatial.distance` now enforces that the input vectors are one-dimensional. - Removed ``stats.itemfreq``. - Removed ``stats.median_absolute_deviation``. - Removed ``n_jobs`` keyword argument and use of ``k=None`` from ``kdtree.query``. - Removed ``right`` keyword from ``interpolate.PPoly.extend``. - Removed ``debug`` keyword from ``scipy.linalg.solve_*``. - Removed class ``_ppform`` ``scipy.interpolate``. - Removed BSR methods ``matvec`` and ``matmat``. - Removed ``mlab`` truncation mode from ``cluster.dendrogram``. - Removed ``cluster.vq.py_vq2``. - Removed keyword arguments ``ftol`` and ``xtol`` from ``optimize.minimize(method='Nelder-Mead')``. - Removed ``signal.windows.hanning``. - Removed LAPACK ``gegv`` functions from ``linalg``; this raises the minimally required LAPACK version to 3.7.1. - Removed ``spatial.distance.matching``. - Removed the alias ``scipy.random`` for ``numpy.random``. - Removed docstring related functions from ``scipy.misc`` (``docformat``, ``inherit_docstring_from``, ``extend_notes_in_docstring``, ``replace_notes_in_docstring``, ``indentcount_lines``, ``filldoc``, ``unindent_dict``, ``unindent_string``). - Removed ``linalg.pinv2``. Backwards incompatible changes ========================== - Several `scipy.stats` functions now convert ``np.matrix`` to ``np.ndarray``s before the calculation is performed. In this case, the output will be a scalar or ``np.ndarray`` of appropriate shape rather than a 2D ``np.matrix``. Similarly, while masked elements of masked arrays are still ignored, the output will be a scalar or ``np.ndarray`` rather than a masked array with ``mask=False``. - The default method of `scipy.optimize.linprog` is now ``'highs'``, not ``'interior-point'`` (which is now deprecated), so callback functions and some options are no longer supported with the default method. - For `scipy.stats.combine_pvalues`, the sign of the test statistic returned for the method ``"pearson"`` has been flipped so that higher values of the statistic now correspond to lower p-values, making the statistic more consistent with those of the other methods and with the majority of the literature. - `scipy.linalg.expm` due to historical reasons was using the sparse implementation and thus was accepting sparse arrays. Now it only works with nDarrays. For sparse usage, `scipy.sparse.linalg.expm` needs to be used explicitly. - The definition of `scipy.stats.circvar` has reverted to the one that is standard in the literature; note that this is not the same as the square of `scipy.stats.circstd`. - Remove inheritance to `QMCEngine` in `MultinomialQMC` and `MultivariateNormalQMC`. It removes the methods `fast_forward` and `reset`. - Init of `MultinomialQMC` now require the number of trials with `n_trials`. Hence, `MultinomialQMC.random` output has now the correct shape ``(n, pvals)``. - Several function-specific warnings (``F_onewayConstantInputWarning``, ``F_onewayBadInputSizesWarning``, ``PearsonRConstantInputWarning``, ``PearsonRNearConstantInputWarning``, ``SpearmanRConstantInputWarning``, and ``BootstrapDegenerateDistributionWarning``) have been replaced with more general warnings. Other changes ============ - A draft developer CLI is available for SciPy, leveraging the ``doit``, ``click`` and ``rich-click`` tools. For more details, see [gh-15959](https://github.com/scipy/scipy/pull/15959). - The SciPy contributor guide has been reorganized and updated (see [15947](https://github.com/scipy/scipy/pull/15947) for details). - QUADPACK Fortran routines in `scipy.integrate`, which power `scipy.integrate.quad`, have been marked as `recursive`. This should fix rare issues in multivariate integration (`nquad` and friends) and obviate the need for compiler-specific compile flags (`/recursive` for ifort etc). Please file an issue if this change turns out problematic for you. This is also true for ``FITPACK`` routines in `scipy.interpolate`, which power ``splrep``, ``splev`` etc., and ``*UnivariateSpline`` and ``*BivariateSpline`` classes. - the ``USE_PROPACK`` environment variable has been renamed to ``SCIPY_USE_PROPACK``; setting to a non-zero value will enable the usage of the ``PROPACK`` library as before Lazy access to subpackages ====================== Before this release, all subpackages of SciPy (`cluster`, `fft`, `ndimage`, etc.) had to be explicitly imported. Now, these subpackages are lazily loaded as soon as they are accessed, so that the following is possible (if desired for interactive use, it's not actually recommended for code, see :ref:`scipy-api`): ``import scipy as sp; sp.fft.dct([1, 2, 3])``. Advantages include: making it easier to navigate SciPy in interactive terminals, reducing subpackage import conflicts (which before required ``import networkx.linalg as nla; import scipy.linalg as sla``), and avoiding repeatedly having to update imports during teaching & experimentation. Also see [the related community specification document](https://scientific-python.org/specs/spec-0001/). SciPy switched to Meson as its build system =========================================== This is the first release that ships with [Meson](https://mesonbuild.com) as the build system. When installing with ``pip`` or ``pypa/build``, Meson will be used (invoked via the ``meson-python`` build hook). This change brings significant benefits - most importantly much faster build times, but also better support for cross-compilation and cleaner build logs. *Note*: This release still ships with support for ``numpy.distutils``-based builds as well. Those can be invoked through the ``setup.py`` command-line interface (e.g., ``python setup.py install``). It is planned to remove ``numpy.distutils`` support before the 1.10.0 release. When building from source, a number of things have changed compared to building with ``numpy.distutils``: - New build dependencies: ``meson``, ``ninja``, and ``pkg-config``. ``setuptools`` and ``wheel`` are no longer needed. - BLAS and LAPACK libraries that are supported haven't changed, however the discovery mechanism has: that is now using ``pkg-config`` instead of hardcoded paths or a ``site.cfg`` file. - The build defaults to using OpenBLAS. See :ref:`blas-lapack-selection` for details. The two CLIs that can be used to build wheels are ``pip`` and ``build``. In addition, the SciPy repo contains a ``python dev.py`` CLI for any kind of development task (see its ``--help`` for details). For a comparison between old (``distutils``) and new (``meson``) build commands, see :ref:`meson-faq`. For more information on the introduction of Meson support in SciPy, see `gh-13615 <https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/13615>`__ and `this blog post <https://labs.quansight.org/blog/2021/07/moving-scipy-to-meson/>`__. Authors ======= * endolith (12) * Caio Agiani (2) + * Emmy Albert (1) + * Joseph Albert (1) * Tania Allard (3) * Carsten Allefeld (1) + * Kartik Anand (1) + * Virgile Andreani (2) + * Weh Andreas (1) + * Francesco Andreuzzi (5) + * Kian-Meng Ang (2) + * Gerrit Ansmann (1) * Ar-Kareem (1) + * Shehan Atukorala (1) + * avishai231 (1) + * Blair Azzopardi (1) * Sayantika Banik (2) + * Ross Barnowski (8) * Christoph Baumgarten (3) * Nickolai Belakovski (1) * Peter Bell (9) * Sebastian Berg (2) * Bharath (1) + * bobcatCA (2) + * boussoffara (2) + * Islem BOUZENIA (1) + * Jake Bowhay (41) + * Matthew Brett (11) * Dietrich Brunn (2) + * Michael Burkhart (2) + * Evgeni Burovski (96) * Matthias Bussonnier (20) * Dominic C (1) * Cameron (1) + * CJ Carey (3) * Thomas A Caswell (2) * Ali Cetin (2) + * Hood Chatham (5) + * Klesk Chonkin (1) * Craig Citro (1) + * Dan Cogswell (1) + * Luigi Cruz (1) + * Anirudh Dagar (5) * Brandon David (1) * deepakdinesh1123 (1) + * Denton DeLoss (1) + * derbuihan (2) + * Sameer Deshmukh (13) + * Niels Doucet (1) + * DWesl (8) * eytanadler (30) + * Thomas J. Fan (5) * Isuru Fernando (3) * Joseph Fox-Rabinovitz (1) * Ryan Gibson (4) + * Ralf Gommers (308) * Srinivas Gorur-Shandilya (1) + * Alex Griffing (2) * h-vetinari (3) * Matt Haberland (442) * Tristan Hearn (1) + * Jonathan Helgert (1) + * Samuel Hinton (1) + * Jake (1) + * Stewart Jamieson (1) + * Jan-Hendrik Müller (1) * Yikun Jiang (1) + * JuliaMelle01 (1) + * jyuv (12) + * Chris Keefe (1) + * Robert Kern (4) * Andrew Knyazev (11) * Matthias Koeppe (4) + * Sergey Koposov (1) * Volodymyr Kozachynskyi (1) + * Yotaro Kubo (2) + * Jacob Lapenna (1) + * Peter Mahler Larsen (8) * Eric Larson (4) * Laurynas Mikšys (1) + * Antony Lee (1) * Gregory R. Lee (2) * lerichi (1) + * Tim Leslie (2) * P. L. Lim (1) * Smit Lunagariya (43) * lutefiskhotdish (1) + * Cong Ma (12) * Syrtis Major (1) * Nicholas McKibben (17) * Melissa Weber Mendonça (10) * Mark Mikofski (1) * Jarrod Millman (13) * Harsh Mishra (6) * ML-Nielsen (3) + * Matthew Murray (1) + * Andrew Nelson (50) * Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos (1) + * Evgueni Ovtchinnikov (2) + * Sambit Panda (1) * Nick Papior (2) * Tirth Patel (43) * Petar Mlinarić (1) * petroselo (1) + * Ilhan Polat (64) * Anthony Polloreno (1) * Amit Portnoy (1) + * Quentin Barthélemy (9) * Patrick N. Raanes (1) + * Tyler Reddy (121) * Pamphile Roy (196) * Vivek Roy (2) + * Niyas Sait (2) + * Atsushi Sakai (25) * Mazen Sayed (1) + * Eduardo Schettino (5) + * Daniel Schmitz (6) + * Eli Schwartz (3) + * SELEE (2) + * Namami Shanker (4) * siddhantwahal (1) + * Gagandeep Singh (8) * Soph (1) + * Shivnaren Srinivasan (1) + * Scott Staniewicz (1) + * Leo C. Stein (4) * Albert Steppi (7) * Christopher Strickland (1) + * Kai Striega (4) * Søren Fuglede Jørgensen (1) * Aleksandr Tagilov (1) + * Masayuki Takagi (1) + * Sai Teja (1) + * Ewout ter Hoeven (2) + * Will Tirone (2) * Bas van Beek (7) * Dhruv Vats (1) * H. Vetinari (4) * Arthur Volant (1) * Samuel Wallan (5) * Stefan van der Walt (8) * Warren Weckesser (83) * Anreas Weh (1) * Nils Werner (1) * Aviv Yaish (1) + * Dowon Yi (1) * Rory Yorke (1) * Yosshi999 (1) + * yuanx749 (2) + * Gang Zhao (23) * ZhihuiChen0903 (1) * Pavel Zun (1) + * David Zwicker (1) + A total of 153 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.8.1 ``` compared to `1.8.0`. Notably, usage of Pythran has been restored for Windows builds/binaries. Authors ======= * Henry Schreiner * Maximilian Nöthe * Sebastian Berg (1) * Sameer Deshmukh (1) + * Niels Doucet (1) + * DWesl (4) * Isuru Fernando (1) * Ralf Gommers (4) * Matt Haberland (1) * Andrew Nelson (1) * Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos (1) + * Tirth Patel (3) * Tyler Reddy (46) * Pamphile Roy (7) * Niyas Sait (1) + * H. Vetinari (2) * Warren Weckesser (1) A total of 17 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.8.0 ``` many new features, numerous bug-fixes, improved test coverage and better documentation. There have been a number of deprecations and API changes in this release, which are documented below. All users are encouraged to upgrade to this release, as there are a large number of bug-fixes and optimizations. Before upgrading, we recommend that users check that their own code does not use deprecated SciPy functionality (to do so, run your code with ``python -Wd`` and check for ``DeprecationWarning`` s). Our development attention will now shift to bug-fix releases on the 1.8.x branch, and on adding new features on the master branch. This release requires Python `3.8`+ and NumPy `1.17.3` or greater. For running on PyPy, PyPy3 `6.0`+ is required. Highlights of this release ------------------------- - A sparse array API has been added for early testing and feedback; this work is ongoing, and users should expect minor API refinements over the next few releases. - The sparse SVD library PROPACK is now vendored with SciPy, and an interface is exposed via `scipy.sparse.svds` with ``solver='PROPACK'``. - A new `scipy.stats.sampling` submodule that leverages the ``UNU.RAN`` C library to sample from arbitrary univariate non-uniform continuous and discrete distributions - All namespaces that were private but happened to miss underscores in their names have been deprecated. New features ------------- `scipy.fft` improvements ======================== Added an ``orthogonalize=None`` parameter to the real transforms in `scipy.fft` which controls whether the modified definition of DCT/DST is used without changing the overall scaling. `scipy.fft` backend registration is now smoother, operating with a single registration call and no longer requiring a context manager. `scipy.integrate` improvements ============================== `scipy.integrate.quad_vec` introduces a new optional keyword-only argument, ``args``. ``args`` takes in a tuple of extra arguments if any (default is ``args=()``), which is then internally used to pass into the callable function (needing these extra arguments) which we wish to integrate. `scipy.interpolate` improvements ================================ `scipy.interpolate.BSpline` has a new method, ``design_matrix``, which constructs a design matrix of b-splines in the sparse CSR format. A new method ``from_cubic`` in ``BSpline`` class allows to convert a ``CubicSpline`` object to ``BSpline`` object. `scipy.linalg` improvements =========================== `scipy.linalg` gained three new public array structure investigation functions. `scipy.linalg.bandwidth` returns information about the bandedness of an array and can be used to test for triangular structure discovery, while `scipy.linalg.issymmetric` and `scipy.linalg.ishermitian` test the array for exact and approximate symmetric/Hermitian structure. `scipy.optimize` improvements ============================= `scipy.optimize.check_grad` introduces two new optional keyword only arguments, ``direction`` and ``seed``. ``direction`` can take values, ``'all'`` (default), in which case all the one hot direction vectors will be used for verifying the input analytical gradient function and ``'random'``, in which case a random direction vector will be used for the same purpose. ``seed`` (default is ``None``) can be used for reproducing the return value of ``check_grad`` function. It will be used only when ``direction='random'``. The `scipy.optimize.minimize` ``TNC`` method has been rewritten to use Cython bindings. This also fixes an issue with the callback altering the state of the optimization. Added optional parameters ``target_accept_rate`` and ``stepwise_factor`` for adapative step size adjustment in ``basinhopping``. The ``epsilon`` argument to ``approx_fprime`` is now optional so that it may have a default value consistent with most other functions in `scipy.optimize`. `scipy.signal` improvements =========================== Add ``analog`` argument, default ``False``, to ``zpk2sos``, and add new pairing option ``'minimal'`` to construct analog and minimal discrete SOS arrays. ``tf2sos`` uses zpk2sos; add ``analog`` argument here as well, and pass it on to ``zpk2sos``. ``savgol_coeffs`` and ``savgol_filter`` now work for even window lengths. Added the Chirp Z-transform and Zoom FFT available as `scipy.signal.CZT` and `scipy.signal.ZoomFFT`. `scipy.sparse` improvements =========================== An array API has been added for early testing and feedback; this work is ongoing, and users should expect minor API refinements over the next few releases. Please refer to the `scipy.sparse` docstring for more information. ``maximum_flow`` introduces optional keyword only argument, ``method`` which accepts either, ``'edmonds-karp'`` (Edmonds Karp algorithm) or ``'dinic'`` (Dinic's algorithm). Moreover, ``'dinic'`` is used as default value for ``method`` which means that Dinic's algorithm is used for computing maximum flow unless specified. See, the comparison between the supported algorithms in `this comment <https://github.com/scipy/scipy/pull/14358#issue-684212523>`_. Parameters ``atol``, ``btol`` now default to 1e-6 in `scipy.sparse.linalg.lsmr` to match with default values in `scipy.sparse.linalg.lsqr`. Add the Transpose-Free Quasi-Minimal Residual algorithm (TFQMR) for general nonsingular non-Hermitian linear systems in `scipy.sparse.linalg.tfqmr`. The sparse SVD library PROPACK is now vendored with SciPy, and an interface is exposed via `scipy.sparse.svds` with ``solver='PROPACK'``. For some problems, this may be faster and/or more accurate than the default, ARPACK. ``sparse.linalg`` iterative solvers now have a nonzero initial guess option, which may be specified as ``x0 = 'Mb'``. The ``trace`` method has been added for sparse matrices. `scipy.spatial` improvements ============================ `scipy.spatial.transform.Rotation` now supports item assignment and has a new ``concatenate`` method. Add `scipy.spatial.distance.kulczynski1` in favour of `scipy.spatial.distance.kulsinski` which will be deprecated in the next release. `scipy.spatial.distance.minkowski` now also supports ``0<p<1``. `scipy.special` improvements ============================ The new function `scipy.special.log_expit` computes the logarithm of the logistic sigmoid function. The function is formulated to provide accurate results for large positive and negative inputs, so it avoids the problems that would occur in the naive implementation ``log(expit(x))``. A suite of five new functions for elliptic integrals: ``scipy.special.ellipr{c,d,f,g,j}``. These are the `Carlson symmetric elliptic integrals <https://dlmf.nist.gov/19.16>`_, which have computational advantages over the classical Legendre integrals. Previous versions included some elliptic integrals from the Cephes library (``scipy.special.ellip{k,km1,kinc,e,einc}``) but was missing the integral of third kind (Legendre's Pi), which can be evaluated using the new Carlson functions. The new Carlson elliptic integral functions can be evaluated in the complex plane, whereas the Cephes library's functions are only defined for real inputs. Several defects in `scipy.special.hyp2f1` have been corrected. Approximately correct values are now returned for ``z`` near ``exp(+-i*pi/3)``, fixing `8054 <https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/8054>`_. Evaluation for such ``z`` is now calculated through a series derived by `López and Temme (2013) <https://arxiv.org/abs/1306.2046>`_ that converges in these regions. In addition, degenerate cases with one or more of ``a``, ``b``, and/or ``c`` a non-positive integer are now handled in a manner consistent with `mpmath's hyp2f1 implementation <https://mpmath.org/doc/current/functions/hypergeometric.html>`_, which fixes `7340 <https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/7340>`_. These fixes were made as part of an effort to rewrite the Fortran 77 implementation of hyp2f1 in Cython piece by piece. This rewriting is now roughly 50% complete. `scipy.stats` improvements ========================== `scipy.stats.qmc.LatinHypercube` introduces two new optional keyword-only arguments, ``optimization`` and ``strength``. ``optimization`` is either ``None`` or ``random-cd``. In the latter, random permutations are performed to improve the centered discrepancy. ``strength`` is either 1 or 2. 1 corresponds to the classical LHS while 2 has better sub-projection properties. This construction is referred to as an orthogonal array based LHS of strength 2. In both cases, the output is still a LHS. `scipy.stats.qmc.Halton` is faster as the underlying Van der Corput sequence was ported to Cython. The ``alternative`` parameter was added to the ``kendalltau`` and ``somersd`` functions to allow one-sided hypothesis testing. Similarly, the masked versions of ``skewtest``, ``kurtosistest``, ``ttest_1samp``, ``ttest_ind``, and ``ttest_rel`` now also have an ``alternative`` parameter. Add `scipy.stats.gzscore` to calculate the geometrical z score. Random variate generators to sample from arbitrary univariate non-uniform continuous and discrete distributions have been added to the new `scipy.stats.sampling` submodule. Implementations of a C library `UNU.RAN <http://statmath.wu.ac.at/software/unuran/>`_ are used for performance. The generators added are: - TransformedDensityRejection - DiscreteAliasUrn - NumericalInversePolynomial - DiscreteGuideTable - SimpleRatioUniforms The ``binned_statistic`` set of functions now have improved performance for the ``std``, ``min``, ``max``, and ``median`` statistic calculations. ``somersd`` and ``_tau_b`` now have faster Pythran-based implementations. Some general efficiency improvements to handling of ``nan`` values in several ``stats`` functions. Added the Tukey-Kramer test as `scipy.stats.tukey_hsd`. Improved performance of `scipy.stats.argus` ``rvs`` method. Added the parameter ``keepdims`` to `scipy.stats.variation` and prevent the undesirable return of a masked array from the function in some cases. ``permutation_test`` performs an exact or randomized permutation test of a given statistic on provided data. Deprecated features --------------------- Clear split between public and private API ========================================== SciPy has always documented what its public API consisted of in :ref:`its API reference docs <scipy-api>`, however there never was a clear split between public and private namespaces in the code base. In this release, all namespaces that were private but happened to miss underscores in their names have been deprecated. These include (as examples, there are many more): - ``scipy.signal.spline`` - ``scipy.ndimage.filters`` - ``scipy.ndimage.fourier`` - ``scipy.ndimage.measurements`` - ``scipy.ndimage.morphology`` - ``scipy.ndimage.interpolation`` - ``scipy.sparse.linalg.solve`` - ``scipy.sparse.linalg.eigen`` - ``scipy.sparse.linalg.isolve`` All functions and other objects in these namespaces that were meant to be public are accessible from their respective public namespace (e.g. `scipy.signal`). The design principle is that any public object must be accessible from a single namespace only; there are a few exceptions, mostly for historical reasons (e.g., ``stats`` and ``stats.distributions`` overlap). For other libraries aiming to provide a SciPy-compatible API, it is now unambiguous what namespace structure to follow. See `gh-14360 <https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/14360>`_ for more details. Other deprecations -------------------- ``NumericalInverseHermite`` has been deprecated from `scipy.stats` and moved to the `scipy.stats.sampling` submodule. It now uses the C implementation of the UNU.RAN library so the result of methods like ``ppf`` may vary slightly. Parameter ``tol`` has been deprecated and renamed to ``u_resolution``. The parameter ``max_intervals`` has also been deprecated and will be removed in a future release of SciPy. Backwards incompatible changes ---------------------------------- - SciPy has raised the minimum compiler versions to GCC 6.3 on linux and VS2019 on windows. In particular, this means that SciPy may now use C99 and C++14 features. For more details see `here <https://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/dev/toolchain.html>`_. - The result for empty bins for `scipy.stats.binned_statistic` with the builtin ``'std'`` metric is now ``nan``, for consistency with ``np.std``. - The function `scipy.spatial.distance.wminkowski` has been removed. To achieve the same results as before, please use the ``minkowski`` distance function with the (optional) ``w=`` keyword-argument for the given weight. Other changes --------------- Some Fortran 77 code was modernized to be compatible with NAG's nagfor Fortran compiler (see, e.g., `PR 13229 <https://github.com/scipy/scipy/pull/13229>`_). ``threadpoolctl`` may now be used by our test suite to substantially improve the efficiency of parallel test suite runs. Authors --------- * endolith * adamadanandy + * akeemlh + * Anton Akhmerov * Marvin Albert + * alegresor + * Andrew Annex + * Pantelis Antonoudiou + * Ross Barnowski + * Christoph Baumgarten * Stephen Becker + * Nickolai Belakovski * Peter Bell * berberto + * Georgii Bocharov + * Evgeni Burovski * Matthias Bussonnier * CJ Carey * Justin Charlong + * Dennis Collaris + * David Cottrell + * cruyffturn + * da-woods + * Anirudh Dagar * Tiger Du + * Thomas Duvernay * Dani El-Ayyass + * Castedo Ellerman + * Donnie Erb + * Andreas Esders-Kopecky + * Livio F + * Isuru Fernando * Evelyn Fitzgerald + * Sara Fridovich-Keil + * Mark E Fuller + * Ralf Gommers * Kevin Richard Green + * guiweber + * Nitish Gupta + * h-vetinari * Matt Haberland * J. Hariharan + * Charles Harris * Trever Hines * Ian Hunt-Isaak + * ich + * Itrimel + * Jan-Hendrik Müller + * Jebby993 + * Evan W Jones + * Nathaniel Jones + * Jeffrey Kelling + * Malik Idrees Hasan Khan + * Sergey B Kirpichev * Kadatatlu Kishore + * Andrew Knyazev * Ravin Kumar + * Peter Mahler Larsen * Eric Larson * Antony Lee * Gregory R. Lee * Tim Leslie * lezcano + * Xingyu Liu * Christian Lorentzen * Lorenzo + * Smit Lunagariya + * Lv101Magikarp + * Yair M + * Cong Ma * Lorenzo Maffioli + * majiang + * Brian McFee + * Nicholas McKibben * John Speed Meyers + * millivolt9 + * Jarrod Millman * Harsh Mishra + * Boaz Mohar + * naelsondouglas + * Andrew Nelson * Nico Schlömer * Thomas Nowotny + * nullptr + * Teddy Ort + * Nick Papior * ParticularMiner + * Dima Pasechnik * Tirth Patel * Matti Picus * Ilhan Polat * Adrian Price-Whelan + * Quentin Barthélemy + * Sundar R + * Judah Rand + * Tyler Reddy * Renal-Of-Loon + * Frederic Renner + * Pamphile Roy * Bharath Saiguhan + * Atsushi Sakai * Eric Schanet + * Sebastian Wallkötter * serge-sans-paille * Reshama Shaikh + * Namami Shanker * Walter Simson + * Gagandeep Singh + * Leo C. Stein + * Albert Steppi * Kai Striega * Diana Sukhoverkhova * Søren Fuglede Jørgensen * Mike Taves * Ben Thompson + * Bas van Beek * Jacob Vanderplas * Dhruv Vats + * H. Vetinari + * Thomas Viehmann + * Pauli Virtanen * Vlad + * Arthur Volant * Samuel Wallan * Stefan van der Walt * Warren Weckesser * Josh Wilson * Haoyin Xu + * Rory Yorke * Egor Zemlyanoy * Gang Zhao + * 赵丰 (Zhao Feng) + A total of 132 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.7.3 ``` for MacOS arm64 with Python `3.8`, `3.9`, and `3.10`. The MacOS arm64 wheels are only available for MacOS version `12.0` and greater, as explained in [Issue 14688](https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/14688). Authors ======= * Anirudh Dagar * Ralf Gommers * Tyler Reddy * Pamphile Roy * Olivier Grisel * Isuru Fernando A total of 6 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.7.2 ``` compared to `1.7.1`. Notably, the release includes wheels for Python `3.10`, and wheels are now built with a newer version of OpenBLAS, `0.3.17`. Python `3.10` wheels are provided for MacOS x86_64 (thin, not universal2 or arm64 at this time), and Windows/Linux 64-bit. Many wheels are now built with newer versions of manylinux, which may require newer versions of pip. Authors ======= * Peter Bell * da-woods + * Isuru Fernando * Ralf Gommers * Matt Haberland * Nicholas McKibben * Ilhan Polat * Judah Rand + * Tyler Reddy * Pamphile Roy * Charles Harris * Matti Picus * Hugo van Kemenade * Jacob Vanderplas A total of 14 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.7.1 ``` compared to `1.7.0`. Authors ======= * Peter Bell * Evgeni Burovski * Justin Charlong + * Ralf Gommers * Matti Picus * Tyler Reddy * Pamphile Roy * Sebastian Wallkötter * Arthur Volant A total of 9 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.7.0 ``` many new features, numerous bug-fixes, improved test coverage and better documentation. There have been a number of deprecations and API changes in this release, which are documented below. All users are encouraged to upgrade to this release, as there are a large number of bug-fixes and optimizations. Before upgrading, we recommend that users check that their own code does not use deprecated SciPy functionality (to do so, run your code with ``python -Wd`` and check for ``DeprecationWarning`` s). Our development attention will now shift to bug-fix releases on the 1.7.x branch, and on adding new features on the master branch. This release requires Python `3.7+` and NumPy `1.16.5` or greater. For running on PyPy, PyPy3 `6.0+` is required. Highlights of this release - A new submodule for quasi-Monte Carlo, `scipy.stats.qmc`, was added - The documentation design was updated to use the same PyData-Sphinx theme as other NumFOCUS packages like NumPy. - We now vendor and leverage the Boost C++ library to enable numerous improvements for long-standing weaknesses in `scipy.stats` - `scipy.stats` has six new distributions, eight new (or overhauled) hypothesis tests, a new function for bootstrapping, a class that enables fast random variate sampling and percentile point function evaluation, and many other enhancements. - ``cdist`` and ``pdist`` distance calculations are faster for several metrics, especially weighted cases, thanks to a rewrite to a new C++ backend framework - A new class for radial basis function interpolation, `RBFInterpolator`, was added to address issues with the `Rbf` class. *We gratefully acknowledge the Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative Essential Open Source Software for Science program for supporting many of the improvements to* `scipy.stats`. New features `scipy.cluster` improvements An optional argument, ``seed``, has been added to ``kmeans`` and ``kmeans2`` to set the random generator and random state. `scipy.interpolate` improvements Improved input validation and error messages for ``fitpack.bispev`` and ``fitpack.parder`` for scenarios that previously caused substantial confusion for users. The class `RBFInterpolator` was added to supersede the `Rbf` class. The new class has usage that more closely follows other interpolator classes, corrects sign errors that caused unexpected smoothing behavior, includes polynomial terms in the interpolant (which are necessary for some RBF choices), and supports interpolation using only the k-nearest neighbors for memory efficiency. `scipy.linalg` improvements An LAPACK wrapper was added for access to the ``tgexc`` subroutine. `scipy.ndimage` improvements `scipy.ndimage.affine_transform` is now able to infer the ``output_shape`` from the ``out`` array. `scipy.optimize` improvements The optional parameter ``bounds`` was added to ``_minimize_neldermead`` to support bounds constraints for the Nelder-Mead solver. ``trustregion`` methods ``trust-krylov``, ``dogleg`` and ``trust-ncg`` can now estimate ``hess`` by finite difference using one of ``["2-point", "3-point", "cs"]``. ``halton`` was added as a ``sampling_method`` in `scipy.optimize.shgo`. ``sobol`` was fixed and is now using `scipy.stats.qmc.Sobol`. ``halton`` and ``sobol`` were added as ``init`` methods in `scipy.optimize.differential_evolution.` ``differential_evolution`` now accepts an ``x0`` parameter to provide an initial guess for the minimization. ``least_squares`` has a modest performance improvement when SciPy is built with Pythran transpiler enabled. When ``linprog`` is used with ``method`` ``'highs'``, ``'highs-ipm'``, or ``'highs-ds'``, the result object now reports the marginals (AKA shadow prices, dual values) and residuals associated with each constraint. `scipy.signal` improvements ``get_window`` supports ``general_cosine`` and ``general_hamming`` window functions. `scipy.signal.medfilt2d` now releases the GIL where appropriate to enable performance gains via multithreaded calculations. `scipy.sparse` improvements Addition of ``dia_matrix`` sparse matrices is now faster. `scipy.spatial` improvements ``distance.cdist`` and ``distance.pdist`` performance has greatly improved for certain weighted metrics. Namely: ``minkowski``, ``euclidean``, ``chebyshev``, ``canberra``, and ``cityblock``. Modest performance improvements for many of the unweighted ``cdist`` and ``pdist`` metrics noted above. The parameter ``seed`` was added to `scipy.spatial.vq.kmeans` and `scipy.spatial.vq.kmeans2`. The parameters ``axis`` and ``keepdims`` where added to `scipy.spatial.distance.jensenshannon`. The ``rotation`` methods ``from_rotvec`` and ``as_rotvec`` now accept a ``degrees`` argument to specify usage of degrees instead of radians. `scipy.special` improvements Wright's generalized Bessel function for positive arguments was added as `scipy.special.wright_bessel.` An implementation of the inverse of the Log CDF of the Normal Distribution is now available via `scipy.special.ndtri_exp`. `scipy.stats` improvements Hypothesis Tests The Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon test, ``mannwhitneyu``, has been rewritten. It now supports n-dimensional input, an exact test method when there are no ties, and improved documentation. Please see "Other changes" for adjustments to default behavior. The new function `scipy.stats.binomtest` replaces `scipy.stats.binom_test`. The new function returns an object that calculates a confidence intervals of the proportion parameter. Also, performance was improved from O(n) to O(log(n)) by using binary search. The two-sample version of the Cramer-von Mises test is implemented in `scipy.stats.cramervonmises_2samp`. The Alexander-Govern test is implemented in the new function `scipy.stats.alexandergovern`. The new functions `scipy.stats.barnard_exact` and `scipy.stats. boschloo_exact` respectively perform Barnard's exact test and Boschloo's exact test for 2x2 contingency tables. The new function `scipy.stats.page_trend_test` performs Page's test for ordered alternatives. The new function `scipy.stats.somersd` performs Somers' D test for ordinal association between two variables. An option, ``permutations``, has been added in `scipy.stats.ttest_ind` to perform permutation t-tests. A ``trim`` option was also added to perform a trimmed (Yuen's) t-test. The ``alternative`` parameter was added to the ``skewtest``, ``kurtosistest``, ``ranksums``, ``mood``, ``ansari``, ``linregress``, and ``spearmanr`` functions to allow one-sided hypothesis testing. Sample statistics The new function `scipy.stats.differential_entropy` estimates the differential entropy of a continuous distribution from a sample. The ``boxcox`` and ``boxcox_normmax`` now allow the user to control the optimizer used to minimize the negative log-likelihood function. A new function `scipy.stats.contingency.relative_risk` calculates the relative risk, or risk ratio, of a 2x2 contingency table. The object returned has a method to compute the confidence interval of the relative risk. Performance improvements in the ``skew`` and ``kurtosis`` functions achieved by removal of repeated/redundant calculations. Substantial performance improvements in `scipy.stats.mstats.hdquantiles_sd`. The new function `scipy.stats.contingency.association` computes several measures of association for a contingency table: Pearsons contingency coefficient, Cramer's V, and Tschuprow's T. The parameter ``nan_policy`` was added to `scipy.stats.zmap` to provide options for handling the occurrence of ``nan`` in the input data. The parameter ``ddof`` was added to `scipy.stats.variation` and `scipy.stats.mstats.variation`. The parameter ``weights`` was added to `scipy.stats.gmean`. Statistical Distributions We now vendor and leverage the Boost C++ library to address a number of previously reported issues in ``stats``. Notably, ``beta``, ``binom``, ``nbinom`` now have Boost backends, and it is straightforward to leverage the backend for additional functions. The skew Cauchy probability distribution has been implemented as `scipy.stats.skewcauchy`. The Zipfian probability distribution has been implemented as `scipy.stats.zipfian`. The new distributions ``nchypergeom_fisher`` and ``nchypergeom_wallenius`` implement the Fisher and Wallenius versions of the noncentral hypergeometric distribution, respectively. The generalized hyperbolic distribution was added in `scipy.stats.genhyperbolic`. The studentized range distribution was added in `scipy.stats.studentized_range`. `scipy.stats.argus` now has improved handling for small parameter values. Better argument handling/preparation has resulted in performance improvements for many distributions. The ``cosine`` distribution has added ufuncs for ``ppf``, ``cdf``, ``sf``, and ``isf`` methods including numerical precision improvements at the edges of the support of the distribution. An option to fit the distribution to data by the method of moments has been added to the ``fit`` method of the univariate continuous distributions. Other `scipy.stats.bootstrap` has been added to allow estimation of the confidence interval and standard error of a statistic. The new function `scipy.stats.contingency.crosstab` computes a contingency table (i.e. a table of counts of unique entries) for the given data. `scipy.stats.NumericalInverseHermite` enables fast random variate sampling and percentile point function evaluation of an arbitrary univariate statistical distribution. New `scipy.stats.qmc` module This new module provides Quasi-Monte Carlo (QMC) generators and associated helper functions. It provides a generic class `scipy.stats.qmc.QMCEngine` which defines a QMC engine/sampler. An engine is state aware: it can be continued, advanced and reset. 3 base samplers are available: - `scipy.stats.qmc.Sobol` the well known Sobol low discrepancy sequence. Several warnings have been added to guide the user into properly using this sampler. The sequence is scrambled by default. - `scipy.stats.qmc.Halton`: Halton low discrepancy sequence. The sequence is scrambled by default. - `scipy.stats.qmc.LatinHypercube`: plain LHS design. And 2 special samplers are available: - `scipy.stats.qmc.MultinomialQMC`: sampling from a multinomial distribution using any of the base `scipy.stats.qmc.QMCEngine`. - `scipy.stats.qmc.MultivariateNormalQMC`: sampling from a multivariate Normal using any of the base `scipy.stats.qmc.QMCEngine`. The module also provide the following helpers: - `scipy.stats.qmc.discrepancy`: assess the quality of a set of points in terms of space coverage. - `scipy.stats.qmc.update_discrepancy`: can be used in an optimization loop to construct a good set of points. - `scipy.stats.qmc.scale`: easily scale a set of points from (to) the unit interval to (from) a given range. Deprecated features `scipy.linalg` deprecations - `scipy.linalg.pinv2` is deprecated and its functionality is completely subsumed into `scipy.linalg.pinv` - Both ``rcond``, ``cond`` keywords of `scipy.linalg.pinv` and `scipy.linalg.pinvh` were not working and now are deprecated. They are now replaced with functioning ``atol`` and ``rtol`` keywords with clear usage. `scipy.spatial` deprecations - `scipy.spatial.distance` metrics expect 1d input vectors but will call ``np.squeeze`` on their inputs to accept any extra length-1 dimensions. That behaviour is now deprecated. Backwards incompatible changes Other changes We now accept and leverage performance improvements from the ahead-of-time Python-to-C++ transpiler, Pythran, which can be optionally disabled (via ``export SCIPY_USE_PYTHRAN=0``) but is enabled by default at build time. There are two changes to the default behavior of `scipy.stats.mannwhitenyu`: - For years, use of the default ``alternative=None`` was deprecated; explicit ``alternative`` specification was required. Use of the new default value of ``alternative``, "two-sided", is now permitted. - Previously, all p-values were based on an asymptotic approximation. Now, for small samples without ties, the p-values returned are exact by default. Support has been added for PEP 621 (project metadata in ``pyproject.toml``) We now support a Gitpod environment to reduce the barrier to entry for SciPy development; for more details see `quickstart-gitpod`. Authors * endolith * Jelle Aalbers + * Adam + * Tania Allard + * Sven Baars + * Max Balandat + * baumgarc + * Christoph Baumgarten * Peter Bell * Lilian Besson * Robinson Besson + * Max Bolingbroke * Blair Bonnett + * Jordão Bragantini * Harm Buisman + * Evgeni Burovski * Matthias Bussonnier * Dominic C * CJ Carey * Ramón Casero + * Chachay + * charlotte12l + * Benjamin Curtice Corbett + * Falcon Dai + * Ian Dall + * Terry Davis * droussea2001 + * DWesl + * dwight200 + * Thomas J. Fan + * Joseph Fox-Rabinovitz * Max Frei + * Laura Gutierrez Funderburk + * gbonomib + * Matthias Geier + * Pradipta Ghosh + * Ralf Gommers * Evan H + * h-vetinari * Matt Haberland * Anselm Hahn + * Alex Henrie * Piet Hessenius + * Trever Hines + * Elisha Hollander + * Stephan Hoyer * Tom Hu + * Kei Ishikawa + * Julien Jerphanion * Robert Kern * Shashank KS + * Peter Mahler Larsen * Eric Larson * Cheng H. Lee + * Gregory R. Lee * Jean-Benoist Leger + * lgfunderburk + * liam-o-marsh + * Xingyu Liu + * Alex Loftus + * Christian Lorentzen + * Cong Ma * Marc + * MarkPundurs + * Markus Löning + * Liam Marsh + * Nicholas McKibben * melissawm + * Jamie Morton * Andrew Nelson * Nikola Forró * Tor Nordam + * Olivier Gauthé + * Rohit Pandey + * Avanindra Kumar Pandeya + * Tirth Patel * paugier + * Alex H. Wagner, PhD + * Jeff Plourde + * Ilhan Polat * pranavrajpal + * Vladyslav Rachek * Bharat Raghunathan * Recursing + * Tyler Reddy * Lucas Roberts * Gregor Robinson + * Pamphile Roy + * Atsushi Sakai * Benjamin Santos * Martin K. Scherer + * Thomas Schmelzer + * Daniel Scott + * Sebastian Wallkötter + * serge-sans-paille + * Namami Shanker + * Masashi Shibata + * Alexandre de Siqueira + * Albert Steppi + * Adam J. Stewart + * Kai Striega * Diana Sukhoverkhova * Søren Fuglede Jørgensen * Mike Taves * Dan Temkin + * Nicolas Tessore + * tsubota20 + * Robert Uhl * christos val + * Bas van Beek + * Ashutosh Varma + * Jose Vazquez + * Sebastiano Vigna * Aditya Vijaykumar * VNMabus * Arthur Volant + * Samuel Wallan * Stefan van der Walt * Warren Weckesser * Anreas Weh * Josh Wilson * Rory Yorke * Egor Zemlyanoy * Marc Zoeller + * zoj613 + * 秋纫 + A total of 126 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.6.3 ``` compared to `1.6.2`. Authors ====== * Peter Bell * Ralf Gommers * Matt Haberland * Peter Mahler Larsen * Tirth Patel * Tyler Reddy * Pamphile ROY + * Xingyu Liu + A total of 8 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.6.2 ``` compared to `1.6.1`. This is also the first SciPy release to place upper bounds on some dependencies to improve the long-term repeatability of source builds. Authors ======= * Pradipta Ghosh + * Tyler Reddy * Ralf Gommers * Martin K. Scherer + * Robert Uhl * Warren Weckesser A total of 6 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.6.1 ``` compared to `1.6.0`. Please note that for SciPy wheels to correctly install with pip on macOS 11, pip `>= 20.3.3` is needed. Authors ======= * Peter Bell * Evgeni Burovski * CJ Carey * Ralf Gommers * Peter Mahler Larsen * Cheng H. Lee + * Cong Ma * Nicholas McKibben * Nikola Forró * Tyler Reddy * Warren Weckesser A total of 11 people contributed to this release. People with a "+" by their names contributed a patch for the first time. This list of names is automatically generated, and may not be fully complete. ``` ### 1.6.0 ``` many new features, numerous bug-fixes, improved test coverage and better documentation. There have been a number of deprecations and API changes in this release, which are documented below. All users are encouraged to upgrade to this release, as there are a large number of bug-fixes and optimizations. Before upgrading, we recommend that users check that their own code does not use deprecated SciPy functionality (to do so, run your code with ``python -Wd`` and check for ``DeprecationWarning`` s). Our development attention will now shift to bug-fix releases on the 1.6.x branch, and on adding new features on the master branch. This release requires Python `3.7`+ and NumPy `1.16.5` or greater. For running on PyPy, PyPy3 `6.0`+ is required. Highlights of this release ---------------------------- - `scipy.ndimage` improvements: Fixes and ehancements to boundary extension modes for interpolation functions. Support for complex-valued inputs in many filtering and interpolation functions. New ``grid_mode`` option for `scipy.ndimage.zoom` to enable results consistent with scikit-image's ``rescale``. - `scipy.optimize.linprog` has fast, new methods for large, sparse problems from the ``HiGHS`` library. - `scipy.stats` improvements including new distributions, a new test, and enhancements to existing distributions and tests New features ============ `scipy.special` improvements ----------------------------- `scipy.special` now has improved support for 64-bit ``LAPACK`` backend `scipy.odr` improvements ------------------------- `scipy.odr` now has support for 64-bit integer ``BLAS`` `scipy.odr.ODR` has gained an optional ``overwrite`` argument so that existing files may be overwritten. `scipy.integrate` improvements ------------------------------- Some renames of functions with poor names were done, with the old names retained without being in the reference guide for backwards compatibility reasons: - ``integrate.simps`` was renamed to ``integrate.simpson`` - ``integrate.trapz`` was renamed to ``integrate.trapezoid`` - ``integrate.cumtrapz`` was renamed to ``integrate.cumulative_trapezoid`` `scipy.cluster` improvements ------------------------------- `scipy.cluster.hierarchy.DisjointSet` has been added for incremental connectivity queries. `scipy.cluster.hierarchy.dendrogram` return value now also includes leaf color information in `leaves_color_list`. `scipy.interpolate` improvements --------------------------------- `scipy.interpolate.interp1d` has a new method ``nearest-up``, similar to the existing method ``nearest`` but rounds half-integers up instead of down. `scipy.io` improvements ------------------------ Support has been added for reading arbitrary bit depth integer PCM WAV files from 1- to 32-bit, including the commonly-requested 24-bit depth. `scipy.linalg` improvements ---------------------------- The new function `scipy.linalg.matmul_toeplitz` uses the FFT to compute the product of a Toeplitz matrix with another matrix. `scipy.linalg.sqrtm` and `scipy.linalg.logm` have performance improvements thanks to additional Cython code. Python ``LAPACK`` wrappers have been added for ``pptrf``, ``pptrs``, ``ppsv``, ``pptri``, and ``ppcon``. `scipy.linalg.norm` and the ``svd`` family of functions will now use 64-bit integer backends when available. `scipy.ndimage` improvements ----------------------------- `scipy.ndimage.convolve`, `scipy.ndimage.correlate` and their 1d counterparts now accept both complex-valued images and/or complex-valued filter kernels. All convolution-based filters also now accept complex-valued inputs (e.g. ``gaussian_filter``, ``uniform_filter``, etc.). Multiple fixes and enhancements to boundary handling were introduced to `scipy.ndimage` interpolation functions (i.e. ``affine_transform``, ``geometric_transform``, ``map_coordinates``, ``rotate``, ``shift``, ``zoom``). A new boundary mode, ``grid-wrap`` was added which wraps images periodically, using a period equal to the shape of the input image grid. This is in contrast to the existing ``wrap`` mode which uses a period that is one sample smaller than the original signal extent along each dimension. A long-standing bug in the ``reflect`` boundary condition has been fixed and the mode ``grid-mirror`` was introduced as a synonym for ``reflect``. A new boundary mode, ``grid-constant`` is now available. This is similar to the existing ndimage ``constant`` mode, but interpolation will still performed at coordinate values outside of the original image extent. This ``grid-constant`` mode is consistent with OpenCV's ``BORDER_CONSTANT`` mode and scikit-image's ``constant`` mode. Spline pre-filtering (used internally by ``ndimage`` interpolation functions when ``order >= 2``), now supports all boundary modes rather than always defaulting to mirror boundary conditions. The standalone functions ``spline_filter`` and ``spline_filter1d`` have analytical boundary conditions that match modes ``mirror``, ``grid-wrap`` and ``reflect``. `scipy.ndimage` interpolation functions now accept complex-valued inputs. In this case, the interpolation is applied independently to the real and imaginary components. The ``ndimage`` tutorials (https://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/tutorial/ndimage.html) have been updated with new figures to better clarify the exact behavior of all of the interpolation boundary modes. `scipy.ndimage.zoom` now has a ``grid_mode`` option that changes the coordinate of the center of the first pixel along an axis from 0 to 0.5. This allows resizing in a manner that is consistent with the behavior of scikit-image's ``resize`` and ``rescale`` functions (and OpenCV's ``cv2.resize``). `scipy.optimize` improvements ------------------------------ `scipy.optimize.linprog` has fast, new methods for large, sparse problems from the ``HiGHS`` C++ library. ``method='highs-ds'`` uses a high performance dual revised simplex implementation (HSOL), ``method='highs-ipm'`` uses an interior-point method with crossover, and ``method='highs'`` chooses between the two automatically. These methods are typically much faster and often exceed the accuracy of other ``linprog`` methods, so we recommend explicitly specifying one of these three method values when using ``linprog``. `scipy.optimize.quadratic_assignment` has been added for approximate solution of the quadratic assignment problem. `scipy.optimize.linear_sum_assignment` now has a substantially reduced overhead for small cost matrix sizes `scipy.optimize.least_squares` has improved performance when the user provides the jacobian as a sparse jacobian already in ``csr_matrix`` format `scipy.optimize.linprog` now has an ``rr_method`` argument for specification of the method used for redundancy handling, and a new method for this purpose is available based on the interpolative decomposition approach. `scipy.signal` improvements ---------------------------- `scipy.signal.gammatone` has been added to design FIR or IIR filters that model the human auditory system. `scipy.signal.iircomb` has been added to design IIR peaking/notching comb filters that can boost/attenuate a frequency from a signal. `scipy.signal.sosfilt` performance has been improved to avoid some previously- observed slowdowns `scipy.signal.windows.taylor` has been added--the Taylor window function is commonly used in radar digital signal processing `scipy.signal.gauss_spline` now supports ``list`` type input for consistency with other related SciPy functions `scipy.signal.correlation_lags` has been added to allow calculation of the lag/ displacement indices array for 1D cross-correlation. `scipy.sparse` improvements ---------------------------- A solver for the minimum weight full matching problem for bipartite graphs, also known as the linear assignment problem, has been added in `scipy.sparse.csgraph.min_weight_full_bipartite_matching`. In particular, this provides func
pyup-bot commented 2 years ago

Closing this in favor of #470