maxframe.tensor.arcsinh#
- maxframe.tensor.arcsinh(x, out=None, where=None, **kwargs)[source]#
Inverse hyperbolic sine element-wise.
- Parameters:
x (array_like) – Input tensor.
out (Tensor, None, or tuple of Tensor and None, optional) – A location into which the result is stored. If provided, it must have a shape that the inputs broadcast to. If not provided or None, a freshly-allocated tensor is returned. A tuple (possible only as a keyword argument) must have length equal to the number of outputs.
where (array_like, optional) – Values of True indicate to calculate the ufunc at that position, values of False indicate to leave the value in the output alone.
**kwargs
- Returns:
out – Tensor of of the same shape as x.
- Return type:
Tensor
Notes
arcsinh is a multivalued function: for each x there are infinitely many numbers z such that sinh(z) = x. The convention is to return the z whose imaginary part lies in [-pi/2, pi/2].
For real-valued input data types, arcsinh always returns real output. For each value that cannot be expressed as a real number or infinity, it returns
nan
and sets the invalid floating point error flag.For complex-valued input, arccos is a complex analytical function that has branch cuts [1j, infj] and [-1j, -infj] and is continuous from the right on the former and from the left on the latter.
The inverse hyperbolic sine is also known as asinh or
sinh^-1
.References
Examples
>>> import maxframe.tensor as mt
>>> mt.arcsinh(mt.array([mt.e, 10.0])).execute() array([ 1.72538256, 2.99822295])