Test whether all array elements along a given axis evaluate to True.
Input array or object that can be converted to an array.
Axis or axes along which a logical AND reduction is performed. The default (axis=None
) is to perform a logical AND over all the dimensions of the input array. axis may be negative, in which case it counts from the last to the first axis. If this is a tuple of ints, a reduction is performed on multiple axes, instead of a single axis or all the axes as before.
Alternate output array in which to place the result. It must have the same shape as the expected output and its type is preserved (e.g., if dtype(out)
is float, the result will consist of 0.0’s and 1.0’s). See Output type determination for more details.
If this is set to True, the axes which are reduced are left in the result as dimensions with size one. With this option, the result will broadcast correctly against the input array.
If the default value is passed, then keepdims will not be passed through to the all
method of sub-classes of ndarray
, however any non-default value will be. If the sub-class’ method does not implement keepdims any exceptions will be raised.
Elements to include in checking for all True values. See reduce
for details.
New in version 1.20.0.
A new boolean or array is returned unless out is specified, in which case a reference to out is returned.
See also
ndarray.all
equivalent method
any
Test whether any element along a given axis evaluates to True.
Notes
Not a Number (NaN), positive infinity and negative infinity evaluate to True because these are not equal to zero.
Changed in version 2.0: Before NumPy 2.0, all
did not return booleans for object dtype input arrays. This behavior is still available via np.logical_and.reduce
.
Examples
>>> import numpy as np >>> np.all([[True,False],[True,True]]) False
>>> np.all([[True,False],[True,True]], axis=0) array([ True, False])
>>> np.all([-1, 4, 5]) True
>>> np.all([1.0, np.nan]) True
>>> np.all([[True, True], [False, True]], where=[[True], [False]]) True
>>> o=np.array(False) >>> z=np.all([-1, 4, 5], out=o) >>> id(z), id(o), z (28293632, 28293632, array(True)) # may vary
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