erfinv#
- ivy.erfinv(x, /, *, out=None)[source]#
Compute the inverse error function.
- Parameters:
- Returns:
ret – Values of the inverse error function.
Examples
>>> x = ivy.array([0, 0.5, -1.]) >>> ivy.erfinv(x) ivy.array([0.0000, 0.4769, -inf])
- Array.erfinv(self, /, *, out=None)[source]#
ivy.Array instance method variant of ivy.erfinv. This method simply wraps the function, and so the docstring for ivy.erfinv also applies to this method with minimal changes.
- Parameters:
self (
Array
) – Input array with real or complex valued argument.out (
Optional
[Array
], default:None
) – Alternate output array in which to place the result. The default is None.
- Return type:
Array
- Returns:
ret – Values of the inverse error function.
Examples
>>> x = ivy.array([0, -1., 10.]) >>> x.erfinv() ivy.array([1.00000000e+00, 1.84270084e+00, 2.80259693e-45])
- Container.erfinv(self, /, *, out=None)[source]#
ivy.Container instance method variant of ivy.erfinv. This method simply wraps the function, and so the docstring for ivy.erfinv also applies to this method with minimal changes.
- Parameters:
self (
Container
) – The container whose array contains real or complex valued argument.out (
Optional
[Container
], default:None
) – optional output container, for writing the result to.
- Return type:
Container
- Returns:
ret – container with values of the inverse error function.
Examples
With one
ivy.Container
input: >>> x = ivy.Container(a=ivy.array([1., 2., 3.]), b=ivy.array([-1., -2., -3.])) >>> x.erfinv() {a: ivy.array([1.57299206e-01, 4.67773480e-03, 2.20904985e-05]), b: ivy.array([1.84270084, 1.99532223, 1.99997795])
}