Expand the shape of an array.
Insert a new axis that will appear at the axis position in the expanded array shape.
Input array.
Position in the expanded axes where the new axis (or axes) is placed.
Deprecated since version 1.13.0: Passing an axis where axis > a.ndim will be treated as axis == a.ndim, and passing axis < -a.ndim - 1 will be treated as axis == 0. This behavior is deprecated.
View of a with the number of dimensions increased.
See also
squeezeThe inverse operation, removing singleton dimensions
reshapeInsert, remove, and combine dimensions, and resize existing ones
atleast_1d, atleast_2d, atleast_3d
>>> import numpy as np >>> x = np.array([1, 2]) >>> x.shape (2,)
The following is equivalent to x[np.newaxis, :] or x[np.newaxis]:
>>> y = np.expand_dims(x, axis=0) >>> y array([[1, 2]]) >>> y.shape (1, 2)
The following is equivalent to x[:, np.newaxis]:
>>> y = np.expand_dims(x, axis=1)
>>> y
array([[1],
[2]])
>>> y.shape
(2, 1)
axis may also be a tuple:
>>> y = np.expand_dims(x, axis=(0, 1)) >>> y array([[[1, 2]]])
>>> y = np.expand_dims(x, axis=(2, 0))
>>> y
array([[[1],
[2]]])
Note that some examples may use None instead of np.newaxis. These are the same objects:
>>> np.newaxis is None True
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https://numpy.org/doc/2.4/reference/generated/numpy.expand_dims.html