Traktor/myenv/Lib/site-packages/sklearn/linear_model/_base.py

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"""
Generalized Linear Models.
"""
# Author: Alexandre Gramfort <alexandre.gramfort@inria.fr>
# Fabian Pedregosa <fabian.pedregosa@inria.fr>
# Olivier Grisel <olivier.grisel@ensta.org>
# Vincent Michel <vincent.michel@inria.fr>
# Peter Prettenhofer <peter.prettenhofer@gmail.com>
# Mathieu Blondel <mathieu@mblondel.org>
# Lars Buitinck
# Maryan Morel <maryan.morel@polytechnique.edu>
# Giorgio Patrini <giorgio.patrini@anu.edu.au>
# Maria Telenczuk <https://github.com/maikia>
# License: BSD 3 clause
import numbers
import warnings
from abc import ABCMeta, abstractmethod
from numbers import Integral
import numpy as np
import scipy.sparse as sp
from scipy import linalg, optimize, sparse
from scipy.sparse.linalg import lsqr
from scipy.special import expit
from ..base import (
BaseEstimator,
ClassifierMixin,
MultiOutputMixin,
RegressorMixin,
_fit_context,
)
from ..utils import check_array, check_random_state
from ..utils._array_api import (
_asarray_with_order,
_average,
get_namespace,
get_namespace_and_device,
indexing_dtype,
supported_float_dtypes,
)
from ..utils._seq_dataset import (
ArrayDataset32,
ArrayDataset64,
CSRDataset32,
CSRDataset64,
)
from ..utils.extmath import safe_sparse_dot
from ..utils.parallel import Parallel, delayed
from ..utils.sparsefuncs import mean_variance_axis
from ..utils.validation import _check_sample_weight, check_is_fitted
# TODO: bayesian_ridge_regression and bayesian_regression_ard
# should be squashed into its respective objects.
SPARSE_INTERCEPT_DECAY = 0.01
# For sparse data intercept updates are scaled by this decay factor to avoid
# intercept oscillation.
def make_dataset(X, y, sample_weight, random_state=None):
"""Create ``Dataset`` abstraction for sparse and dense inputs.
This also returns the ``intercept_decay`` which is different
for sparse datasets.
Parameters
----------
X : array-like, shape (n_samples, n_features)
Training data
y : array-like, shape (n_samples, )
Target values.
sample_weight : numpy array of shape (n_samples,)
The weight of each sample
random_state : int, RandomState instance or None (default)
Determines random number generation for dataset random sampling. It is not
used for dataset shuffling.
Pass an int for reproducible output across multiple function calls.
See :term:`Glossary <random_state>`.
Returns
-------
dataset
The ``Dataset`` abstraction
intercept_decay
The intercept decay
"""
rng = check_random_state(random_state)
# seed should never be 0 in SequentialDataset64
seed = rng.randint(1, np.iinfo(np.int32).max)
if X.dtype == np.float32:
CSRData = CSRDataset32
ArrayData = ArrayDataset32
else:
CSRData = CSRDataset64
ArrayData = ArrayDataset64
if sp.issparse(X):
dataset = CSRData(X.data, X.indptr, X.indices, y, sample_weight, seed=seed)
intercept_decay = SPARSE_INTERCEPT_DECAY
else:
X = np.ascontiguousarray(X)
dataset = ArrayData(X, y, sample_weight, seed=seed)
intercept_decay = 1.0
return dataset, intercept_decay
def _preprocess_data(
X,
y,
*,
fit_intercept,
copy=True,
copy_y=True,
sample_weight=None,
check_input=True,
):
"""Common data preprocessing for fitting linear models.
This helper is in charge of the following steps:
- Ensure that `sample_weight` is an array or `None`.
- If `check_input=True`, perform standard input validation of `X`, `y`.
- Perform copies if requested to avoid side-effects in case of inplace
modifications of the input.
Then, if `fit_intercept=True` this preprocessing centers both `X` and `y` as
follows:
- if `X` is dense, center the data and
store the mean vector in `X_offset`.
- if `X` is sparse, store the mean in `X_offset`
without centering `X`. The centering is expected to be handled by the
linear solver where appropriate.
- in either case, always center `y` and store the mean in `y_offset`.
- both `X_offset` and `y_offset` are always weighted by `sample_weight`
if not set to `None`.
If `fit_intercept=False`, no centering is performed and `X_offset`, `y_offset`
are set to zero.
Returns
-------
X_out : {ndarray, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples, n_features)
If copy=True a copy of the input X is triggered, otherwise operations are
inplace.
If input X is dense, then X_out is centered.
y_out : {ndarray, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples,) or (n_samples, n_targets)
Centered version of y. Possibly performed inplace on input y depending
on the copy_y parameter.
X_offset : ndarray of shape (n_features,)
The mean per column of input X.
y_offset : float or ndarray of shape (n_features,)
X_scale : ndarray of shape (n_features,)
Always an array of ones. TODO: refactor the code base to make it
possible to remove this unused variable.
"""
xp, _, device_ = get_namespace_and_device(X, y, sample_weight)
n_samples, n_features = X.shape
X_is_sparse = sp.issparse(X)
if isinstance(sample_weight, numbers.Number):
sample_weight = None
if sample_weight is not None:
sample_weight = xp.asarray(sample_weight)
if check_input:
X = check_array(
X, copy=copy, accept_sparse=["csr", "csc"], dtype=supported_float_dtypes(xp)
)
y = check_array(y, dtype=X.dtype, copy=copy_y, ensure_2d=False)
else:
y = xp.astype(y, X.dtype, copy=copy_y)
if copy:
if X_is_sparse:
X = X.copy()
else:
X = _asarray_with_order(X, order="K", copy=True, xp=xp)
dtype_ = X.dtype
if fit_intercept:
if X_is_sparse:
X_offset, X_var = mean_variance_axis(X, axis=0, weights=sample_weight)
else:
X_offset = _average(X, axis=0, weights=sample_weight, xp=xp)
X_offset = xp.astype(X_offset, X.dtype, copy=False)
X -= X_offset
y_offset = _average(y, axis=0, weights=sample_weight, xp=xp)
y -= y_offset
else:
X_offset = xp.zeros(n_features, dtype=X.dtype, device=device_)
if y.ndim == 1:
y_offset = xp.asarray(0.0, dtype=dtype_, device=device_)
else:
y_offset = xp.zeros(y.shape[1], dtype=dtype_, device=device_)
# XXX: X_scale is no longer needed. It is an historic artifact from the
# time where linear model exposed the normalize parameter.
X_scale = xp.ones(n_features, dtype=X.dtype, device=device_)
return X, y, X_offset, y_offset, X_scale
# TODO: _rescale_data should be factored into _preprocess_data.
# Currently, the fact that sag implements its own way to deal with
# sample_weight makes the refactoring tricky.
def _rescale_data(X, y, sample_weight, inplace=False):
"""Rescale data sample-wise by square root of sample_weight.
For many linear models, this enables easy support for sample_weight because
(y - X w)' S (y - X w)
with S = diag(sample_weight) becomes
||y_rescaled - X_rescaled w||_2^2
when setting
y_rescaled = sqrt(S) y
X_rescaled = sqrt(S) X
Returns
-------
X_rescaled : {array-like, sparse matrix}
y_rescaled : {array-like, sparse matrix}
"""
# Assume that _validate_data and _check_sample_weight have been called by
# the caller.
xp, _ = get_namespace(X, y, sample_weight)
n_samples = X.shape[0]
sample_weight_sqrt = xp.sqrt(sample_weight)
if sp.issparse(X) or sp.issparse(y):
sw_matrix = sparse.dia_matrix(
(sample_weight_sqrt, 0), shape=(n_samples, n_samples)
)
if sp.issparse(X):
X = safe_sparse_dot(sw_matrix, X)
else:
if inplace:
X *= sample_weight_sqrt[:, None]
else:
X = X * sample_weight_sqrt[:, None]
if sp.issparse(y):
y = safe_sparse_dot(sw_matrix, y)
else:
if inplace:
if y.ndim == 1:
y *= sample_weight_sqrt
else:
y *= sample_weight_sqrt[:, None]
else:
if y.ndim == 1:
y = y * sample_weight_sqrt
else:
y = y * sample_weight_sqrt[:, None]
return X, y, sample_weight_sqrt
class LinearModel(BaseEstimator, metaclass=ABCMeta):
"""Base class for Linear Models"""
@abstractmethod
def fit(self, X, y):
"""Fit model."""
def _decision_function(self, X):
check_is_fitted(self)
X = self._validate_data(X, accept_sparse=["csr", "csc", "coo"], reset=False)
coef_ = self.coef_
if coef_.ndim == 1:
return X @ coef_ + self.intercept_
else:
return X @ coef_.T + self.intercept_
def predict(self, X):
"""
Predict using the linear model.
Parameters
----------
X : array-like or sparse matrix, shape (n_samples, n_features)
Samples.
Returns
-------
C : array, shape (n_samples,)
Returns predicted values.
"""
return self._decision_function(X)
def _set_intercept(self, X_offset, y_offset, X_scale):
"""Set the intercept_"""
xp, _ = get_namespace(X_offset, y_offset, X_scale)
if self.fit_intercept:
# We always want coef_.dtype=X.dtype. For instance, X.dtype can differ from
# coef_.dtype if warm_start=True.
coef_ = xp.astype(self.coef_, X_scale.dtype, copy=False)
coef_ = self.coef_ = xp.divide(coef_, X_scale)
if coef_.ndim == 1:
intercept_ = y_offset - X_offset @ coef_
else:
intercept_ = y_offset - X_offset @ coef_.T
self.intercept_ = intercept_
else:
self.intercept_ = 0.0
def _more_tags(self):
return {"requires_y": True}
# XXX Should this derive from LinearModel? It should be a mixin, not an ABC.
# Maybe the n_features checking can be moved to LinearModel.
class LinearClassifierMixin(ClassifierMixin):
"""Mixin for linear classifiers.
Handles prediction for sparse and dense X.
"""
def decision_function(self, X):
"""
Predict confidence scores for samples.
The confidence score for a sample is proportional to the signed
distance of that sample to the hyperplane.
Parameters
----------
X : {array-like, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples, n_features)
The data matrix for which we want to get the confidence scores.
Returns
-------
scores : ndarray of shape (n_samples,) or (n_samples, n_classes)
Confidence scores per `(n_samples, n_classes)` combination. In the
binary case, confidence score for `self.classes_[1]` where >0 means
this class would be predicted.
"""
check_is_fitted(self)
xp, _ = get_namespace(X)
X = self._validate_data(X, accept_sparse="csr", reset=False)
scores = safe_sparse_dot(X, self.coef_.T, dense_output=True) + self.intercept_
return xp.reshape(scores, (-1,)) if scores.shape[1] == 1 else scores
def predict(self, X):
"""
Predict class labels for samples in X.
Parameters
----------
X : {array-like, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples, n_features)
The data matrix for which we want to get the predictions.
Returns
-------
y_pred : ndarray of shape (n_samples,)
Vector containing the class labels for each sample.
"""
xp, _ = get_namespace(X)
scores = self.decision_function(X)
if len(scores.shape) == 1:
indices = xp.astype(scores > 0, indexing_dtype(xp))
else:
indices = xp.argmax(scores, axis=1)
return xp.take(self.classes_, indices, axis=0)
def _predict_proba_lr(self, X):
"""Probability estimation for OvR logistic regression.
Positive class probabilities are computed as
1. / (1. + np.exp(-self.decision_function(X)));
multiclass is handled by normalizing that over all classes.
"""
prob = self.decision_function(X)
expit(prob, out=prob)
if prob.ndim == 1:
return np.vstack([1 - prob, prob]).T
else:
# OvR normalization, like LibLinear's predict_probability
prob /= prob.sum(axis=1).reshape((prob.shape[0], -1))
return prob
class SparseCoefMixin:
"""Mixin for converting coef_ to and from CSR format.
L1-regularizing estimators should inherit this.
"""
def densify(self):
"""
Convert coefficient matrix to dense array format.
Converts the ``coef_`` member (back) to a numpy.ndarray. This is the
default format of ``coef_`` and is required for fitting, so calling
this method is only required on models that have previously been
sparsified; otherwise, it is a no-op.
Returns
-------
self
Fitted estimator.
"""
msg = "Estimator, %(name)s, must be fitted before densifying."
check_is_fitted(self, msg=msg)
if sp.issparse(self.coef_):
self.coef_ = self.coef_.toarray()
return self
def sparsify(self):
"""
Convert coefficient matrix to sparse format.
Converts the ``coef_`` member to a scipy.sparse matrix, which for
L1-regularized models can be much more memory- and storage-efficient
than the usual numpy.ndarray representation.
The ``intercept_`` member is not converted.
Returns
-------
self
Fitted estimator.
Notes
-----
For non-sparse models, i.e. when there are not many zeros in ``coef_``,
this may actually *increase* memory usage, so use this method with
care. A rule of thumb is that the number of zero elements, which can
be computed with ``(coef_ == 0).sum()``, must be more than 50% for this
to provide significant benefits.
After calling this method, further fitting with the partial_fit
method (if any) will not work until you call densify.
"""
msg = "Estimator, %(name)s, must be fitted before sparsifying."
check_is_fitted(self, msg=msg)
self.coef_ = sp.csr_matrix(self.coef_)
return self
class LinearRegression(MultiOutputMixin, RegressorMixin, LinearModel):
"""
Ordinary least squares Linear Regression.
LinearRegression fits a linear model with coefficients w = (w1, ..., wp)
to minimize the residual sum of squares between the observed targets in
the dataset, and the targets predicted by the linear approximation.
Parameters
----------
fit_intercept : bool, default=True
Whether to calculate the intercept for this model. If set
to False, no intercept will be used in calculations
(i.e. data is expected to be centered).
copy_X : bool, default=True
If True, X will be copied; else, it may be overwritten.
n_jobs : int, default=None
The number of jobs to use for the computation. This will only provide
speedup in case of sufficiently large problems, that is if firstly
`n_targets > 1` and secondly `X` is sparse or if `positive` is set
to `True`. ``None`` means 1 unless in a
:obj:`joblib.parallel_backend` context. ``-1`` means using all
processors. See :term:`Glossary <n_jobs>` for more details.
positive : bool, default=False
When set to ``True``, forces the coefficients to be positive. This
option is only supported for dense arrays.
.. versionadded:: 0.24
Attributes
----------
coef_ : array of shape (n_features, ) or (n_targets, n_features)
Estimated coefficients for the linear regression problem.
If multiple targets are passed during the fit (y 2D), this
is a 2D array of shape (n_targets, n_features), while if only
one target is passed, this is a 1D array of length n_features.
rank_ : int
Rank of matrix `X`. Only available when `X` is dense.
singular_ : array of shape (min(X, y),)
Singular values of `X`. Only available when `X` is dense.
intercept_ : float or array of shape (n_targets,)
Independent term in the linear model. Set to 0.0 if
`fit_intercept = False`.
n_features_in_ : int
Number of features seen during :term:`fit`.
.. versionadded:: 0.24
feature_names_in_ : ndarray of shape (`n_features_in_`,)
Names of features seen during :term:`fit`. Defined only when `X`
has feature names that are all strings.
.. versionadded:: 1.0
See Also
--------
Ridge : Ridge regression addresses some of the
problems of Ordinary Least Squares by imposing a penalty on the
size of the coefficients with l2 regularization.
Lasso : The Lasso is a linear model that estimates
sparse coefficients with l1 regularization.
ElasticNet : Elastic-Net is a linear regression
model trained with both l1 and l2 -norm regularization of the
coefficients.
Notes
-----
From the implementation point of view, this is just plain Ordinary
Least Squares (scipy.linalg.lstsq) or Non Negative Least Squares
(scipy.optimize.nnls) wrapped as a predictor object.
Examples
--------
>>> import numpy as np
>>> from sklearn.linear_model import LinearRegression
>>> X = np.array([[1, 1], [1, 2], [2, 2], [2, 3]])
>>> # y = 1 * x_0 + 2 * x_1 + 3
>>> y = np.dot(X, np.array([1, 2])) + 3
>>> reg = LinearRegression().fit(X, y)
>>> reg.score(X, y)
1.0
>>> reg.coef_
array([1., 2.])
>>> reg.intercept_
3.0...
>>> reg.predict(np.array([[3, 5]]))
array([16.])
"""
_parameter_constraints: dict = {
"fit_intercept": ["boolean"],
"copy_X": ["boolean"],
"n_jobs": [None, Integral],
"positive": ["boolean"],
}
def __init__(
self,
*,
fit_intercept=True,
copy_X=True,
n_jobs=None,
positive=False,
):
self.fit_intercept = fit_intercept
self.copy_X = copy_X
self.n_jobs = n_jobs
self.positive = positive
@_fit_context(prefer_skip_nested_validation=True)
def fit(self, X, y, sample_weight=None):
"""
Fit linear model.
Parameters
----------
X : {array-like, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples, n_features)
Training data.
y : array-like of shape (n_samples,) or (n_samples, n_targets)
Target values. Will be cast to X's dtype if necessary.
sample_weight : array-like of shape (n_samples,), default=None
Individual weights for each sample.
.. versionadded:: 0.17
parameter *sample_weight* support to LinearRegression.
Returns
-------
self : object
Fitted Estimator.
"""
n_jobs_ = self.n_jobs
accept_sparse = False if self.positive else ["csr", "csc", "coo"]
X, y = self._validate_data(
X, y, accept_sparse=accept_sparse, y_numeric=True, multi_output=True
)
has_sw = sample_weight is not None
if has_sw:
sample_weight = _check_sample_weight(
sample_weight, X, dtype=X.dtype, only_non_negative=True
)
# Note that neither _rescale_data nor the rest of the fit method of
# LinearRegression can benefit from in-place operations when X is a
# sparse matrix. Therefore, let's not copy X when it is sparse.
copy_X_in_preprocess_data = self.copy_X and not sp.issparse(X)
X, y, X_offset, y_offset, X_scale = _preprocess_data(
X,
y,
fit_intercept=self.fit_intercept,
copy=copy_X_in_preprocess_data,
sample_weight=sample_weight,
)
if has_sw:
# Sample weight can be implemented via a simple rescaling. Note
# that we safely do inplace rescaling when _preprocess_data has
# already made a copy if requested.
X, y, sample_weight_sqrt = _rescale_data(
X, y, sample_weight, inplace=copy_X_in_preprocess_data
)
if self.positive:
if y.ndim < 2:
self.coef_ = optimize.nnls(X, y)[0]
else:
# scipy.optimize.nnls cannot handle y with shape (M, K)
outs = Parallel(n_jobs=n_jobs_)(
delayed(optimize.nnls)(X, y[:, j]) for j in range(y.shape[1])
)
self.coef_ = np.vstack([out[0] for out in outs])
elif sp.issparse(X):
X_offset_scale = X_offset / X_scale
if has_sw:
def matvec(b):
return X.dot(b) - sample_weight_sqrt * b.dot(X_offset_scale)
def rmatvec(b):
return X.T.dot(b) - X_offset_scale * b.dot(sample_weight_sqrt)
else:
def matvec(b):
return X.dot(b) - b.dot(X_offset_scale)
def rmatvec(b):
return X.T.dot(b) - X_offset_scale * b.sum()
X_centered = sparse.linalg.LinearOperator(
shape=X.shape, matvec=matvec, rmatvec=rmatvec
)
if y.ndim < 2:
self.coef_ = lsqr(X_centered, y)[0]
else:
# sparse_lstsq cannot handle y with shape (M, K)
outs = Parallel(n_jobs=n_jobs_)(
delayed(lsqr)(X_centered, y[:, j].ravel())
for j in range(y.shape[1])
)
self.coef_ = np.vstack([out[0] for out in outs])
else:
self.coef_, _, self.rank_, self.singular_ = linalg.lstsq(X, y)
self.coef_ = self.coef_.T
if y.ndim == 1:
self.coef_ = np.ravel(self.coef_)
self._set_intercept(X_offset, y_offset, X_scale)
return self
def _check_precomputed_gram_matrix(
X, precompute, X_offset, X_scale, rtol=None, atol=1e-5
):
"""Computes a single element of the gram matrix and compares it to
the corresponding element of the user supplied gram matrix.
If the values do not match a ValueError will be thrown.
Parameters
----------
X : ndarray of shape (n_samples, n_features)
Data array.
precompute : array-like of shape (n_features, n_features)
User-supplied gram matrix.
X_offset : ndarray of shape (n_features,)
Array of feature means used to center design matrix.
X_scale : ndarray of shape (n_features,)
Array of feature scale factors used to normalize design matrix.
rtol : float, default=None
Relative tolerance; see numpy.allclose
If None, it is set to 1e-4 for arrays of dtype numpy.float32 and 1e-7
otherwise.
atol : float, default=1e-5
absolute tolerance; see :func`numpy.allclose`. Note that the default
here is more tolerant than the default for
:func:`numpy.testing.assert_allclose`, where `atol=0`.
Raises
------
ValueError
Raised when the provided Gram matrix is not consistent.
"""
n_features = X.shape[1]
f1 = n_features // 2
f2 = min(f1 + 1, n_features - 1)
v1 = (X[:, f1] - X_offset[f1]) * X_scale[f1]
v2 = (X[:, f2] - X_offset[f2]) * X_scale[f2]
expected = np.dot(v1, v2)
actual = precompute[f1, f2]
dtypes = [precompute.dtype, expected.dtype]
if rtol is None:
rtols = [1e-4 if dtype == np.float32 else 1e-7 for dtype in dtypes]
rtol = max(rtols)
if not np.isclose(expected, actual, rtol=rtol, atol=atol):
raise ValueError(
"Gram matrix passed in via 'precompute' parameter "
"did not pass validation when a single element was "
"checked - please check that it was computed "
f"properly. For element ({f1},{f2}) we computed "
f"{expected} but the user-supplied value was "
f"{actual}."
)
def _pre_fit(
X,
y,
Xy,
precompute,
fit_intercept,
copy,
check_input=True,
sample_weight=None,
):
"""Function used at beginning of fit in linear models with L1 or L0 penalty.
This function applies _preprocess_data and additionally computes the gram matrix
`precompute` as needed as well as `Xy`.
"""
n_samples, n_features = X.shape
if sparse.issparse(X):
# copy is not needed here as X is not modified inplace when X is sparse
precompute = False
X, y, X_offset, y_offset, X_scale = _preprocess_data(
X,
y,
fit_intercept=fit_intercept,
copy=False,
check_input=check_input,
sample_weight=sample_weight,
)
else:
# copy was done in fit if necessary
X, y, X_offset, y_offset, X_scale = _preprocess_data(
X,
y,
fit_intercept=fit_intercept,
copy=copy,
check_input=check_input,
sample_weight=sample_weight,
)
# Rescale only in dense case. Sparse cd solver directly deals with
# sample_weight.
if sample_weight is not None:
# This triggers copies anyway.
X, y, _ = _rescale_data(X, y, sample_weight=sample_weight)
if hasattr(precompute, "__array__"):
if fit_intercept and not np.allclose(X_offset, np.zeros(n_features)):
warnings.warn(
(
"Gram matrix was provided but X was centered to fit "
"intercept: recomputing Gram matrix."
),
UserWarning,
)
# TODO: instead of warning and recomputing, we could just center
# the user provided Gram matrix a-posteriori (after making a copy
# when `copy=True`).
# recompute Gram
precompute = "auto"
Xy = None
elif check_input:
# If we're going to use the user's precomputed gram matrix, we
# do a quick check to make sure its not totally bogus.
_check_precomputed_gram_matrix(X, precompute, X_offset, X_scale)
# precompute if n_samples > n_features
if isinstance(precompute, str) and precompute == "auto":
precompute = n_samples > n_features
if precompute is True:
# make sure that the 'precompute' array is contiguous.
precompute = np.empty(shape=(n_features, n_features), dtype=X.dtype, order="C")
np.dot(X.T, X, out=precompute)
if not hasattr(precompute, "__array__"):
Xy = None # cannot use Xy if precompute is not Gram
if hasattr(precompute, "__array__") and Xy is None:
common_dtype = np.result_type(X.dtype, y.dtype)
if y.ndim == 1:
# Xy is 1d, make sure it is contiguous.
Xy = np.empty(shape=n_features, dtype=common_dtype, order="C")
np.dot(X.T, y, out=Xy)
else:
# Make sure that Xy is always F contiguous even if X or y are not
# contiguous: the goal is to make it fast to extract the data for a
# specific target.
n_targets = y.shape[1]
Xy = np.empty(shape=(n_features, n_targets), dtype=common_dtype, order="F")
np.dot(y.T, X, out=Xy.T)
return X, y, X_offset, y_offset, X_scale, precompute, Xy