"""Testing utilities.""" # Copyright (c) 2011, 2012 # Authors: Pietro Berkes, # Andreas Muller # Mathieu Blondel # Olivier Grisel # Arnaud Joly # Denis Engemann # Giorgio Patrini # Thierry Guillemot # License: BSD 3 clause import os import os.path as op import inspect import warnings import sys import functools import tempfile from subprocess import check_output, STDOUT, CalledProcessError from subprocess import TimeoutExpired import re import contextlib from collections.abc import Iterable from collections.abc import Sequence import scipy as sp from functools import wraps from inspect import signature import shutil import atexit import unittest from unittest import TestCase # WindowsError only exist on Windows try: WindowsError # type: ignore except NameError: WindowsError = None from numpy.testing import assert_allclose as np_assert_allclose from numpy.testing import assert_almost_equal from numpy.testing import assert_approx_equal from numpy.testing import assert_array_equal from numpy.testing import assert_array_almost_equal from numpy.testing import assert_array_less import numpy as np import joblib import sklearn from sklearn.utils import ( IS_PYPY, _IS_32BIT, _in_unstable_openblas_configuration, ) from sklearn.utils.multiclass import check_classification_targets from sklearn.utils.validation import ( check_array, check_is_fitted, check_X_y, ) from sklearn.utils.fixes import threadpool_info __all__ = [ "assert_raises", "assert_raises_regexp", "assert_array_equal", "assert_almost_equal", "assert_array_almost_equal", "assert_array_less", "assert_approx_equal", "assert_allclose", "assert_run_python_script", "SkipTest", ] _dummy = TestCase("__init__") assert_raises = _dummy.assertRaises SkipTest = unittest.case.SkipTest assert_dict_equal = _dummy.assertDictEqual assert_raises_regex = _dummy.assertRaisesRegex # assert_raises_regexp is deprecated in Python 3.4 in favor of # assert_raises_regex but lets keep the backward compat in scikit-learn with # the old name for now assert_raises_regexp = assert_raises_regex # To remove when we support numpy 1.7 def assert_no_warnings(func, *args, **kw): """ Parameters ---------- func *args **kw """ # very important to avoid uncontrolled state propagation with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as w: warnings.simplefilter("always") result = func(*args, **kw) if hasattr(np, "FutureWarning"): # Filter out numpy-specific warnings in numpy >= 1.9 w = [e for e in w if e.category is not np.VisibleDeprecationWarning] if len(w) > 0: raise AssertionError( "Got warnings when calling %s: [%s]" % (func.__name__, ", ".join(str(warning) for warning in w)) ) return result def ignore_warnings(obj=None, category=Warning): """Context manager and decorator to ignore warnings. Note: Using this (in both variants) will clear all warnings from all python modules loaded. In case you need to test cross-module-warning-logging, this is not your tool of choice. Parameters ---------- obj : callable, default=None callable where you want to ignore the warnings. category : warning class, default=Warning The category to filter. If Warning, all categories will be muted. Examples -------- >>> import warnings >>> from sklearn.utils._testing import ignore_warnings >>> with ignore_warnings(): ... warnings.warn('buhuhuhu') >>> def nasty_warn(): ... warnings.warn('buhuhuhu') ... print(42) >>> ignore_warnings(nasty_warn)() 42 """ if isinstance(obj, type) and issubclass(obj, Warning): # Avoid common pitfall of passing category as the first positional # argument which result in the test not being run warning_name = obj.__name__ raise ValueError( "'obj' should be a callable where you want to ignore warnings. " "You passed a warning class instead: 'obj={warning_name}'. " "If you want to pass a warning class to ignore_warnings, " "you should use 'category={warning_name}'".format(warning_name=warning_name) ) elif callable(obj): return _IgnoreWarnings(category=category)(obj) else: return _IgnoreWarnings(category=category) class _IgnoreWarnings: """Improved and simplified Python warnings context manager and decorator. This class allows the user to ignore the warnings raised by a function. Copied from Python 2.7.5 and modified as required. Parameters ---------- category : tuple of warning class, default=Warning The category to filter. By default, all the categories will be muted. """ def __init__(self, category): self._record = True self._module = sys.modules["warnings"] self._entered = False self.log = [] self.category = category def __call__(self, fn): """Decorator to catch and hide warnings without visual nesting.""" @wraps(fn) def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.simplefilter("ignore", self.category) return fn(*args, **kwargs) return wrapper def __repr__(self): args = [] if self._record: args.append("record=True") if self._module is not sys.modules["warnings"]: args.append("module=%r" % self._module) name = type(self).__name__ return "%s(%s)" % (name, ", ".join(args)) def __enter__(self): if self._entered: raise RuntimeError("Cannot enter %r twice" % self) self._entered = True self._filters = self._module.filters self._module.filters = self._filters[:] self._showwarning = self._module.showwarning warnings.simplefilter("ignore", self.category) def __exit__(self, *exc_info): if not self._entered: raise RuntimeError("Cannot exit %r without entering first" % self) self._module.filters = self._filters self._module.showwarning = self._showwarning self.log[:] = [] def assert_raise_message(exceptions, message, function, *args, **kwargs): """Helper function to test the message raised in an exception. Given an exception, a callable to raise the exception, and a message string, tests that the correct exception is raised and that the message is a substring of the error thrown. Used to test that the specific message thrown during an exception is correct. Parameters ---------- exceptions : exception or tuple of exception An Exception object. message : str The error message or a substring of the error message. function : callable Callable object to raise error. *args : the positional arguments to `function`. **kwargs : the keyword arguments to `function`. """ try: function(*args, **kwargs) except exceptions as e: error_message = str(e) if message not in error_message: raise AssertionError( "Error message does not include the expected" " string: %r. Observed error message: %r" % (message, error_message) ) else: # concatenate exception names if isinstance(exceptions, tuple): names = " or ".join(e.__name__ for e in exceptions) else: names = exceptions.__name__ raise AssertionError("%s not raised by %s" % (names, function.__name__)) def assert_allclose( actual, desired, rtol=None, atol=0.0, equal_nan=True, err_msg="", verbose=True ): """dtype-aware variant of numpy.testing.assert_allclose This variant introspects the least precise floating point dtype in the input argument and automatically sets the relative tolerance parameter to 1e-4 float32 and use 1e-7 otherwise (typically float64 in scikit-learn). `atol` is always left to 0. by default. It should be adjusted manually to an assertion-specific value in case there are null values expected in `desired`. The aggregate tolerance is `atol + rtol * abs(desired)`. Parameters ---------- actual : array_like Array obtained. desired : array_like Array desired. rtol : float, optional, default=None Relative tolerance. If None, it is set based on the provided arrays' dtypes. atol : float, optional, default=0. Absolute tolerance. equal_nan : bool, optional, default=True If True, NaNs will compare equal. err_msg : str, optional, default='' The error message to be printed in case of failure. verbose : bool, optional, default=True If True, the conflicting values are appended to the error message. Raises ------ AssertionError If actual and desired are not equal up to specified precision. See Also -------- numpy.testing.assert_allclose Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from sklearn.utils._testing import assert_allclose >>> x = [1e-5, 1e-3, 1e-1] >>> y = np.arccos(np.cos(x)) >>> assert_allclose(x, y, rtol=1e-5, atol=0) >>> a = np.full(shape=10, fill_value=1e-5, dtype=np.float32) >>> assert_allclose(a, 1e-5) """ dtypes = [] actual, desired = np.asanyarray(actual), np.asanyarray(desired) dtypes = [actual.dtype, desired.dtype] if rtol is None: rtols = [1e-4 if dtype == np.float32 else 1e-7 for dtype in dtypes] rtol = max(rtols) np_assert_allclose( actual, desired, rtol=rtol, atol=atol, equal_nan=equal_nan, err_msg=err_msg, verbose=verbose, ) def assert_allclose_dense_sparse(x, y, rtol=1e-07, atol=1e-9, err_msg=""): """Assert allclose for sparse and dense data. Both x and y need to be either sparse or dense, they can't be mixed. Parameters ---------- x : {array-like, sparse matrix} First array to compare. y : {array-like, sparse matrix} Second array to compare. rtol : float, default=1e-07 relative tolerance; see numpy.allclose. atol : float, default=1e-9 absolute tolerance; see numpy.allclose. Note that the default here is more tolerant than the default for numpy.testing.assert_allclose, where atol=0. err_msg : str, default='' Error message to raise. """ if sp.sparse.issparse(x) and sp.sparse.issparse(y): x = x.tocsr() y = y.tocsr() x.sum_duplicates() y.sum_duplicates() assert_array_equal(x.indices, y.indices, err_msg=err_msg) assert_array_equal(x.indptr, y.indptr, err_msg=err_msg) assert_allclose(x.data, y.data, rtol=rtol, atol=atol, err_msg=err_msg) elif not sp.sparse.issparse(x) and not sp.sparse.issparse(y): # both dense assert_allclose(x, y, rtol=rtol, atol=atol, err_msg=err_msg) else: raise ValueError( "Can only compare two sparse matrices, not a sparse matrix and an array." ) def set_random_state(estimator, random_state=0): """Set random state of an estimator if it has the `random_state` param. Parameters ---------- estimator : object The estimator. random_state : int, RandomState instance or None, default=0 Pseudo random number generator state. Pass an int for reproducible results across multiple function calls. See :term:`Glossary `. """ if "random_state" in estimator.get_params(): estimator.set_params(random_state=random_state) try: import pytest skip_if_32bit = pytest.mark.skipif(_IS_32BIT, reason="skipped on 32bit platforms") fails_if_pypy = pytest.mark.xfail(IS_PYPY, reason="not compatible with PyPy") fails_if_unstable_openblas = pytest.mark.xfail( _in_unstable_openblas_configuration(), reason="OpenBLAS is unstable for this configuration", ) skip_if_no_parallel = pytest.mark.skipif( not joblib.parallel.mp, reason="joblib is in serial mode" ) # Decorator for tests involving both BLAS calls and multiprocessing. # # Under POSIX (e.g. Linux or OSX), using multiprocessing in conjunction # with some implementation of BLAS (or other libraries that manage an # internal posix thread pool) can cause a crash or a freeze of the Python # process. # # In practice all known packaged distributions (from Linux distros or # Anaconda) of BLAS under Linux seems to be safe. So we this problem seems # to only impact OSX users. # # This wrapper makes it possible to skip tests that can possibly cause # this crash under OS X with. # # Under Python 3.4+ it is possible to use the `forkserver` start method # for multiprocessing to avoid this issue. However it can cause pickling # errors on interactively defined functions. It therefore not enabled by # default. if_safe_multiprocessing_with_blas = pytest.mark.skipif( sys.platform == "darwin", reason="Possible multi-process bug with some BLAS" ) except ImportError: pass def check_skip_network(): if int(os.environ.get("SKLEARN_SKIP_NETWORK_TESTS", 0)): raise SkipTest("Text tutorial requires large dataset download") def _delete_folder(folder_path, warn=False): """Utility function to cleanup a temporary folder if still existing. Copy from joblib.pool (for independence). """ try: if os.path.exists(folder_path): # This can fail under windows, # but will succeed when called by atexit shutil.rmtree(folder_path) except WindowsError: if warn: warnings.warn("Could not delete temporary folder %s" % folder_path) class TempMemmap: """ Parameters ---------- data mmap_mode : str, default='r' """ def __init__(self, data, mmap_mode="r"): self.mmap_mode = mmap_mode self.data = data def __enter__(self): data_read_only, self.temp_folder = create_memmap_backed_data( self.data, mmap_mode=self.mmap_mode, return_folder=True ) return data_read_only def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb): _delete_folder(self.temp_folder) def _create_memmap_backed_array(array, filename, mmap_mode): # https://numpy.org/doc/stable/reference/generated/numpy.memmap.html fp = np.memmap(filename, dtype=array.dtype, mode="w+", shape=array.shape) fp[:] = array[:] # write array to memmap array fp.flush() memmap_backed_array = np.memmap( filename, dtype=array.dtype, mode=mmap_mode, shape=array.shape ) return memmap_backed_array def _create_aligned_memmap_backed_arrays(data, mmap_mode, folder): if isinstance(data, np.ndarray): filename = op.join(folder, "data.dat") return _create_memmap_backed_array(data, filename, mmap_mode) if isinstance(data, Sequence) and all( isinstance(each, np.ndarray) for each in data ): return [ _create_memmap_backed_array( array, op.join(folder, f"data{index}.dat"), mmap_mode ) for index, array in enumerate(data) ] raise ValueError( "When creating aligned memmap-backed arrays, input must be a single array or a" " sequence of arrays" ) def create_memmap_backed_data(data, mmap_mode="r", return_folder=False, aligned=False): """ Parameters ---------- data mmap_mode : str, default='r' return_folder : bool, default=False aligned : bool, default=False If True, if input is a single numpy array and if the input array is aligned, the memory mapped array will also be aligned. This is a workaround for https://github.com/joblib/joblib/issues/563. """ temp_folder = tempfile.mkdtemp(prefix="sklearn_testing_") atexit.register(functools.partial(_delete_folder, temp_folder, warn=True)) # OpenBLAS is known to segfault with unaligned data on the Prescott # architecture so force aligned=True on Prescott. For more details, see: # https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/14886 has_prescott_openblas = any( True for info in threadpool_info() if info["internal_api"] == "openblas" # Prudently assume Prescott might be the architecture if it is unknown. and info.get("architecture", "prescott").lower() == "prescott" ) if has_prescott_openblas: aligned = True if aligned: memmap_backed_data = _create_aligned_memmap_backed_arrays( data, mmap_mode, temp_folder ) else: filename = op.join(temp_folder, "data.pkl") joblib.dump(data, filename) memmap_backed_data = joblib.load(filename, mmap_mode=mmap_mode) result = ( memmap_backed_data if not return_folder else (memmap_backed_data, temp_folder) ) return result # Utils to test docstrings def _get_args(function, varargs=False): """Helper to get function arguments.""" try: params = signature(function).parameters except ValueError: # Error on builtin C function return [] args = [ key for key, param in params.items() if param.kind not in (param.VAR_POSITIONAL, param.VAR_KEYWORD) ] if varargs: varargs = [ param.name for param in params.values() if param.kind == param.VAR_POSITIONAL ] if len(varargs) == 0: varargs = None return args, varargs else: return args def _get_func_name(func): """Get function full name. Parameters ---------- func : callable The function object. Returns ------- name : str The function name. """ parts = [] module = inspect.getmodule(func) if module: parts.append(module.__name__) qualname = func.__qualname__ if qualname != func.__name__: parts.append(qualname[: qualname.find(".")]) parts.append(func.__name__) return ".".join(parts) def check_docstring_parameters(func, doc=None, ignore=None): """Helper to check docstring. Parameters ---------- func : callable The function object to test. doc : str, default=None Docstring if it is passed manually to the test. ignore : list, default=None Parameters to ignore. Returns ------- incorrect : list A list of string describing the incorrect results. """ from numpydoc import docscrape incorrect = [] ignore = [] if ignore is None else ignore func_name = _get_func_name(func) if not func_name.startswith("sklearn.") or func_name.startswith( "sklearn.externals" ): return incorrect # Don't check docstring for property-functions if inspect.isdatadescriptor(func): return incorrect # Don't check docstring for setup / teardown pytest functions if func_name.split(".")[-1] in ("setup_module", "teardown_module"): return incorrect # Dont check estimator_checks module if func_name.split(".")[2] == "estimator_checks": return incorrect # Get the arguments from the function signature param_signature = list(filter(lambda x: x not in ignore, _get_args(func))) # drop self if len(param_signature) > 0 and param_signature[0] == "self": param_signature.remove("self") # Analyze function's docstring if doc is None: records = [] with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True): warnings.simplefilter("error", UserWarning) try: doc = docscrape.FunctionDoc(func) except UserWarning as exp: if "potentially wrong underline length" in str(exp): # Catch warning raised as of numpydoc 1.2 when # the underline length for a section of a docstring # is not consistent. message = str(exp).split("\n")[:3] incorrect += [f"In function: {func_name}"] + message return incorrect records.append(str(exp)) except Exception as exp: incorrect += [func_name + " parsing error: " + str(exp)] return incorrect if len(records): raise RuntimeError("Error for %s:\n%s" % (func_name, records[0])) param_docs = [] for name, type_definition, param_doc in doc["Parameters"]: # Type hints are empty only if parameter name ended with : if not type_definition.strip(): if ":" in name and name[: name.index(":")][-1:].strip(): incorrect += [ func_name + " There was no space between the param name and colon (%r)" % name ] elif name.rstrip().endswith(":"): incorrect += [ func_name + " Parameter %r has an empty type spec. Remove the colon" % (name.lstrip()) ] # Create a list of parameters to compare with the parameters gotten # from the func signature if "*" not in name: param_docs.append(name.split(":")[0].strip("` ")) # If one of the docstring's parameters had an error then return that # incorrect message if len(incorrect) > 0: return incorrect # Remove the parameters that should be ignored from list param_docs = list(filter(lambda x: x not in ignore, param_docs)) # The following is derived from pytest, Copyright (c) 2004-2017 Holger # Krekel and others, Licensed under MIT License. See # https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest message = [] for i in range(min(len(param_docs), len(param_signature))): if param_signature[i] != param_docs[i]: message += [ "There's a parameter name mismatch in function" " docstring w.r.t. function signature, at index %s" " diff: %r != %r" % (i, param_signature[i], param_docs[i]) ] break if len(param_signature) > len(param_docs): message += [ "Parameters in function docstring have less items w.r.t." " function signature, first missing item: %s" % param_signature[len(param_docs)] ] elif len(param_signature) < len(param_docs): message += [ "Parameters in function docstring have more items w.r.t." " function signature, first extra item: %s" % param_docs[len(param_signature)] ] # If there wasn't any difference in the parameters themselves between # docstring and signature including having the same length then return # empty list if len(message) == 0: return [] import difflib import pprint param_docs_formatted = pprint.pformat(param_docs).splitlines() param_signature_formatted = pprint.pformat(param_signature).splitlines() message += ["Full diff:"] message.extend( line.strip() for line in difflib.ndiff(param_signature_formatted, param_docs_formatted) ) incorrect.extend(message) # Prepend function name incorrect = ["In function: " + func_name] + incorrect return incorrect def assert_run_python_script(source_code, timeout=60): """Utility to check assertions in an independent Python subprocess. The script provided in the source code should return 0 and not print anything on stderr or stdout. This is a port from cloudpickle https://github.com/cloudpipe/cloudpickle Parameters ---------- source_code : str The Python source code to execute. timeout : int, default=60 Time in seconds before timeout. """ fd, source_file = tempfile.mkstemp(suffix="_src_test_sklearn.py") os.close(fd) try: with open(source_file, "wb") as f: f.write(source_code.encode("utf-8")) cmd = [sys.executable, source_file] cwd = op.normpath(op.join(op.dirname(sklearn.__file__), "..")) env = os.environ.copy() try: env["PYTHONPATH"] = os.pathsep.join([cwd, env["PYTHONPATH"]]) except KeyError: env["PYTHONPATH"] = cwd kwargs = {"cwd": cwd, "stderr": STDOUT, "env": env} # If coverage is running, pass the config file to the subprocess coverage_rc = os.environ.get("COVERAGE_PROCESS_START") if coverage_rc: kwargs["env"]["COVERAGE_PROCESS_START"] = coverage_rc kwargs["timeout"] = timeout try: try: out = check_output(cmd, **kwargs) except CalledProcessError as e: raise RuntimeError( "script errored with output:\n%s" % e.output.decode("utf-8") ) if out != b"": raise AssertionError(out.decode("utf-8")) except TimeoutExpired as e: raise RuntimeError( "script timeout, output so far:\n%s" % e.output.decode("utf-8") ) finally: os.unlink(source_file) def _convert_container(container, constructor_name, columns_name=None, dtype=None): """Convert a given container to a specific array-like with a dtype. Parameters ---------- container : array-like The container to convert. constructor_name : {"list", "tuple", "array", "sparse", "dataframe", \ "series", "index", "slice", "sparse_csr", "sparse_csc"} The type of the returned container. columns_name : index or array-like, default=None For pandas container supporting `columns_names`, it will affect specific names. dtype : dtype, default=None Force the dtype of the container. Does not apply to `"slice"` container. Returns ------- converted_container """ if constructor_name == "list": if dtype is None: return list(container) else: return np.asarray(container, dtype=dtype).tolist() elif constructor_name == "tuple": if dtype is None: return tuple(container) else: return tuple(np.asarray(container, dtype=dtype).tolist()) elif constructor_name == "array": return np.asarray(container, dtype=dtype) elif constructor_name == "sparse": return sp.sparse.csr_matrix(container, dtype=dtype) elif constructor_name == "dataframe": pd = pytest.importorskip("pandas") return pd.DataFrame(container, columns=columns_name, dtype=dtype) elif constructor_name == "series": pd = pytest.importorskip("pandas") return pd.Series(container, dtype=dtype) elif constructor_name == "index": pd = pytest.importorskip("pandas") return pd.Index(container, dtype=dtype) elif constructor_name == "slice": return slice(container[0], container[1]) elif constructor_name == "sparse_csr": return sp.sparse.csr_matrix(container, dtype=dtype) elif constructor_name == "sparse_csc": return sp.sparse.csc_matrix(container, dtype=dtype) def raises(expected_exc_type, match=None, may_pass=False, err_msg=None): """Context manager to ensure exceptions are raised within a code block. This is similar to and inspired from pytest.raises, but supports a few other cases. This is only intended to be used in estimator_checks.py where we don't want to use pytest. In the rest of the code base, just use pytest.raises instead. Parameters ---------- excepted_exc_type : Exception or list of Exception The exception that should be raised by the block. If a list, the block should raise one of the exceptions. match : str or list of str, default=None A regex that the exception message should match. If a list, one of the entries must match. If None, match isn't enforced. may_pass : bool, default=False If True, the block is allowed to not raise an exception. Useful in cases where some estimators may support a feature but others must fail with an appropriate error message. By default, the context manager will raise an exception if the block does not raise an exception. err_msg : str, default=None If the context manager fails (e.g. the block fails to raise the proper exception, or fails to match), then an AssertionError is raised with this message. By default, an AssertionError is raised with a default error message (depends on the kind of failure). Use this to indicate how users should fix their estimators to pass the checks. Attributes ---------- raised_and_matched : bool True if an exception was raised and a match was found, False otherwise. """ return _Raises(expected_exc_type, match, may_pass, err_msg) class _Raises(contextlib.AbstractContextManager): # see raises() for parameters def __init__(self, expected_exc_type, match, may_pass, err_msg): self.expected_exc_types = ( expected_exc_type if isinstance(expected_exc_type, Iterable) else [expected_exc_type] ) self.matches = [match] if isinstance(match, str) else match self.may_pass = may_pass self.err_msg = err_msg self.raised_and_matched = False def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, _): # see # https://docs.python.org/2.5/whatsnew/pep-343.html#SECTION000910000000000000000 if exc_type is None: # No exception was raised in the block if self.may_pass: return True # CM is happy else: err_msg = self.err_msg or f"Did not raise: {self.expected_exc_types}" raise AssertionError(err_msg) if not any( issubclass(exc_type, expected_type) for expected_type in self.expected_exc_types ): if self.err_msg is not None: raise AssertionError(self.err_msg) from exc_value else: return False # will re-raise the original exception if self.matches is not None: err_msg = self.err_msg or ( "The error message should contain one of the following " "patterns:\n{}\nGot {}".format("\n".join(self.matches), str(exc_value)) ) if not any(re.search(match, str(exc_value)) for match in self.matches): raise AssertionError(err_msg) from exc_value self.raised_and_matched = True return True class MinimalClassifier: """Minimal classifier implementation with inheriting from BaseEstimator. This estimator should be tested with: * `check_estimator` in `test_estimator_checks.py`; * within a `Pipeline` in `test_pipeline.py`; * within a `SearchCV` in `test_search.py`. """ _estimator_type = "classifier" def __init__(self, param=None): self.param = param def get_params(self, deep=True): return {"param": self.param} def set_params(self, **params): for key, value in params.items(): setattr(self, key, value) return self def fit(self, X, y): X, y = check_X_y(X, y) check_classification_targets(y) self.classes_, counts = np.unique(y, return_counts=True) self._most_frequent_class_idx = counts.argmax() return self def predict_proba(self, X): check_is_fitted(self) X = check_array(X) proba_shape = (X.shape[0], self.classes_.size) y_proba = np.zeros(shape=proba_shape, dtype=np.float64) y_proba[:, self._most_frequent_class_idx] = 1.0 return y_proba def predict(self, X): y_proba = self.predict_proba(X) y_pred = y_proba.argmax(axis=1) return self.classes_[y_pred] def score(self, X, y): from sklearn.metrics import accuracy_score return accuracy_score(y, self.predict(X)) class MinimalRegressor: """Minimal regressor implementation with inheriting from BaseEstimator. This estimator should be tested with: * `check_estimator` in `test_estimator_checks.py`; * within a `Pipeline` in `test_pipeline.py`; * within a `SearchCV` in `test_search.py`. """ _estimator_type = "regressor" def __init__(self, param=None): self.param = param def get_params(self, deep=True): return {"param": self.param} def set_params(self, **params): for key, value in params.items(): setattr(self, key, value) return self def fit(self, X, y): X, y = check_X_y(X, y) self.is_fitted_ = True self._mean = np.mean(y) return self def predict(self, X): check_is_fitted(self) X = check_array(X) return np.ones(shape=(X.shape[0],)) * self._mean def score(self, X, y): from sklearn.metrics import r2_score return r2_score(y, self.predict(X)) class MinimalTransformer: """Minimal transformer implementation with inheriting from BaseEstimator. This estimator should be tested with: * `check_estimator` in `test_estimator_checks.py`; * within a `Pipeline` in `test_pipeline.py`; * within a `SearchCV` in `test_search.py`. """ def __init__(self, param=None): self.param = param def get_params(self, deep=True): return {"param": self.param} def set_params(self, **params): for key, value in params.items(): setattr(self, key, value) return self def fit(self, X, y=None): check_array(X) self.is_fitted_ = True return self def transform(self, X, y=None): check_is_fitted(self) X = check_array(X) return X def fit_transform(self, X, y=None): return self.fit(X, y).transform(X, y)