savgol_coeffs#
- scipy.signal.savgol_coeffs(window_length, polyorder, deriv=0, delta=1.0, pos=None, use='conv')[source]#
- Compute the coefficients for a 1-D Savitzky-Golay FIR filter. - Parameters:
- window_lengthint
- The length of the filter window (i.e., the number of coefficients). 
- polyorderint
- The order of the polynomial used to fit the samples. polyorder must be less than window_length. 
- derivint, optional
- The order of the derivative to compute. This must be a nonnegative integer. The default is 0, which means to filter the data without differentiating. 
- deltafloat, optional
- The spacing of the samples to which the filter will be applied. This is only used if deriv > 0. 
- posint or None, optional
- If pos is not None, it specifies evaluation position within the window. The default is the middle of the window. 
- usestr, optional
- Either ‘conv’ or ‘dot’. This argument chooses the order of the coefficients. The default is ‘conv’, which means that the coefficients are ordered to be used in a convolution. With use=’dot’, the order is reversed, so the filter is applied by dotting the coefficients with the data set. 
 
- Returns:
- coeffs1-D ndarray
- The filter coefficients. 
 
 - See also - Notes - Added in version 0.14.0. - References - A. Savitzky, M. J. E. Golay, Smoothing and Differentiation of Data by Simplified Least Squares Procedures. Analytical Chemistry, 1964, 36 (8), pp 1627-1639. Jianwen Luo, Kui Ying, and Jing Bai. 2005. Savitzky-Golay smoothing and differentiation filter for even number data. Signal Process. 85, 7 (July 2005), 1429-1434. - Examples - >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy.signal import savgol_coeffs >>> savgol_coeffs(5, 2) array([-0.08571429, 0.34285714, 0.48571429, 0.34285714, -0.08571429]) >>> savgol_coeffs(5, 2, deriv=1) array([ 2.00000000e-01, 1.00000000e-01, 2.07548111e-16, -1.00000000e-01, -2.00000000e-01]) - Note that use=’dot’ simply reverses the coefficients. - >>> savgol_coeffs(5, 2, pos=3) array([ 0.25714286, 0.37142857, 0.34285714, 0.17142857, -0.14285714]) >>> savgol_coeffs(5, 2, pos=3, use='dot') array([-0.14285714, 0.17142857, 0.34285714, 0.37142857, 0.25714286]) >>> savgol_coeffs(4, 2, pos=3, deriv=1, use='dot') array([0.45, -0.85, -0.65, 1.05]) - x contains data from the parabola x = t**2, sampled at t = -1, 0, 1, 2, 3. c holds the coefficients that will compute the derivative at the last position. When dotted with x the result should be 6. - >>> x = np.array([1, 0, 1, 4, 9]) >>> c = savgol_coeffs(5, 2, pos=4, deriv=1, use='dot') >>> c.dot(x) 6.0