Returns the data type with the smallest size and smallest scalar kind to which both type1
and type2
may be safely cast. The returned data type is always considered “canonical”, this mainly means that the promoted dtype will always be in native byte order.
This function is symmetric, but rarely associative.
First data type.
Second data type.
The promoted data type.
Notes
Please see numpy.result_type
for additional information about promotion.
Starting in NumPy 1.9, promote_types function now returns a valid string length when given an integer or float dtype as one argument and a string dtype as another argument. Previously it always returned the input string dtype, even if it wasn’t long enough to store the max integer/float value converted to a string.
Changed in version 1.23.0.
NumPy now supports promotion for more structured dtypes. It will now remove unnecessary padding from a structure dtype and promote included fields individually.
Examples
>>> import numpy as np >>> np.promote_types('f4', 'f8') dtype('float64')
>>> np.promote_types('i8', 'f4') dtype('float64')
>>> np.promote_types('>i8', '<c8') dtype('complex128')
>>> np.promote_types('i4', 'S8') dtype('S11')
An example of a non-associative case:
>>> p = np.promote_types >>> p('S', p('i1', 'u1')) dtype('S6') >>> p(p('S', 'i1'), 'u1') dtype('S4')
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