I have a lower triangular array, like B:
B = np.array([[1,0,0,0],[.25,.75,0,0], [.1,.2,.7,0],[.2,.3,.4,.1]])
>>> B
array([[ 1. , 0. , 0. , 0. ],
[ 0.25, 0.75, 0. , 0. ],
[ 0.1 , 0.2 , 0.7 , 0. ],
[ 0.2 , 0.3 , 0.4 , 0.1 ]])
I want to flip it to look like:
array([[ 1. , 0. , 0. , 0. ],
[ 0.75, 0.25, 0. , 0. ],
[ 0.7 , 0.2 , 0.1 , 0. ],
[ 0.1 , 0.4 , 0.3 , 0.2 ]])
That is, I want to take all the positive values, and reverse within the positive values, leaving the trailing zeros in place. This is not what fliplr
does:
>>> np.fliplr(B)
array([[ 0. , 0. , 0. , 1. ],
[ 0. , 0. , 0.75, 0.25],
[ 0. , 0.7 , 0.2 , 0.1 ],
[ 0.1 , 0.4 , 0.3 , 0.2 ]])
Any tips? Also, the actual array I am working with would be something like B.shape = (200,20,4,4)
instead of (4,4)
. Each (4,4)
block looks like the above example (with different numbers across the 200, 20 different entries).