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OffsetArrays provides Julia users with arrays that have arbitrary indices, similar to those found in some other programming languages like Fortran.
An OffsetArray
is a lightweight wrapper around an AbstractArray
that shifts its indices.
Generally, indexing into an OffsetArray
should be as performant as the parent array.
There are two ways to construct OffsetArray
s: by specifying the axes of the array, or
by specifying its origin.
The first way to construct an OffsetArray
by specifying its axes is:
OA = OffsetArray(A, axis1, axis2, ...)
where you want OA
to have axes (axis1, axis2, ...)
and be indexed by values that
fall within these axis ranges. Example:
julia> using OffsetArrays
julia> A = Float64.(reshape(1:15, 3, 5))
3×5 Matrix{Float64}:
1.0 4.0 7.0 10.0 13.0
2.0 5.0 8.0 11.0 14.0
3.0 6.0 9.0 12.0 15.0
julia> axes(A) # indices of a Matrix start from 1 along each axis
(Base.OneTo(3), Base.OneTo(5))
julia> OA = OffsetArray(A, -1:1, 0:4) # OA will have the axes (-1:1, 0:4)
3×5 OffsetArray(::Matrix{Float64}, -1:1, 0:4) with eltype Float64 with indices -1:1×0:4:
1.0 4.0 7.0 10.0 13.0
2.0 5.0 8.0 11.0 14.0
3.0 6.0 9.0 12.0 15.0
julia> OA[-1, 0]
1.0
julia> OA[1, 4]
15.0
The second way to construct an OffsetArray
is by specifying the origin, that is, the first index
along each axis. This is particularly useful if one wants, eg., arrays that are 0-indexed as opposed
to 1-indexed.
A convenient way to construct an OffsetArray
this way is by using OffsetArrays.Origin
:
julia> using OffsetArrays: Origin
julia> Origin(0)(A) # indices begin at 0 along all axes
3×5 OffsetArray(::Matrix{Float64}, 0:2, 0:4) with eltype Float64 with indices 0:2×0:4:
1.0 4.0 7.0 10.0 13.0
2.0 5.0 8.0 11.0 14.0
3.0 6.0 9.0 12.0 15.0
julia> Origin(2, 3)(A) # indices begin at 2 along the first axis and 3 along the second
3×5 OffsetArray(::Matrix{Float64}, 2:4, 3:7) with eltype Float64 with indices 2:4×3:7:
1.0 4.0 7.0 10.0 13.0
2.0 5.0 8.0 11.0 14.0
3.0 6.0 9.0 12.0 15.0
While the examples here refer to the common case where the parent arrays have indices starting at 1,
this is not necessary. An OffsetArray
may wrap any array that has integer indices, irrespective of
where the indices begin.
Certain libraries, such as LinearAlgebra
, require arrays to be indexed from 1. Passing an OffsetArray
with shifted indices would lead to an error here.
julia> A = Float64.(reshape(1:16, 4, 4));
julia> AO = Origin(0)(A);
julia> using LinearAlgebra
julia> Diagonal(AO)
ERROR: ArgumentError: offset arrays are not supported but got an array with index other than 1
The way to obtain a 1
-indexed array from an OffsetArray
is by using OffsetArrays.no_offset_view
.
An example of this is:
julia> OffsetArrays.no_offset_view(AO)
4×4 Matrix{Float64}:
1.0 5.0 9.0 13.0
2.0 6.0 10.0 14.0
3.0 7.0 11.0 15.0
4.0 8.0 12.0 16.0
This may now be passed to LinearAlgebra
:
julia> D = Diagonal(OffsetArrays.no_offset_view(AO))
4×4 Diagonal{Float64, Vector{Float64}}:
1.0 ⋅ ⋅ ⋅
⋅ 6.0 ⋅ ⋅
⋅ ⋅ 11.0 ⋅
⋅ ⋅ ⋅ 16.0
If we want to restore the original indices of AO
, we may wrap an OffsetArray
around the Diagonal
as:
julia> Origin(AO)(D)
4×4 OffsetArray(::Diagonal{Float64, Vector{Float64}}, 0:3, 0:3) with eltype Float64 with indices 0:3×0:3:
1.0 ⋅ ⋅ ⋅
⋅ 6.0 ⋅ ⋅
⋅ ⋅ 11.0 ⋅
⋅ ⋅ ⋅ 16.0
Here, Origin(AO)
is able to automatically infer and use the indices of AO
.
For some applications, OffsetArrays give users an easy-to-understand interface. However, handling the non-conventional axes of OffsetArrays requires extra care. Otherwise, the code might error, crash, or return incorrect results. You can read the Julialang documentation on offset for more information. Here we briefly summarize some of the best practices for users and package authors.
You don't need to support offset arrays for internal functions that only consume standard 1-based arrays -- it doesn't change or improve anything.
You don't need to support offset arrays for functions that have no well-defined behavior on custom
axes. For instance, many linear algebra functions such as matrix multiplication A * B
does not
have an agreed behavior for offset arrays. In this case, it is a better practice to let users do the
conversion.
The helper function Base.require_one_based_indexing
can be used to early check the axes and throw
a meaningful error. If your interface functions do not intend to support offset arrays, we recommend
you add this check before starting the real computation.
Many implementations assume the array axes start at 1 by writing loops such as for i in 1:length(x)
or for i in 1:size(x, 1)
. A better practice is to use for i in eachindex(x)
or for i in axes(x, 1)
-- axes
provides more information than size
with no performance overhead.
Also, if you know what indices type you want to use, LinearIndices
and
CartesianIndices
allow you to loop multidimensional arrays efficiently
without worrying about the axes.
For package authors that declare support for AbstractArray
, we recommend having a few test cases
against OffsetArray
to ensure the function works well for arrays with custom axes. This gives you
more confidence that users don't run into strange situations.
For package users that want to use offset arrays, many numerical correctness issues come from the
fact that @inbounds
is used inappropriately with the 1-based indexing assumption. Thus for debug
purposes, it is not a bad idea to start Julia with --check-bounds=yes
, which turns all @inbounds
into a no-op and uncover potential out-of-bound errors.