TensorFlow 1 version
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    View source on GitHub
  
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Assert the condition x and y are close element-wise.
tf.debugging.assert_near(
    x, y, rtol=None, atol=None, message=None, summarize=None, name=None
)
This Op checks that x[i] - y[i] < atol + rtol * tf.abs(y[i]) holds for every
pair of (possibly broadcast) elements of x and y. If both x and y are
empty, this is trivially satisfied.
If any elements of x and y are not close, message, as well as the first
summarize entries of x and y are printed, and InvalidArgumentError
is raised.
The default atol and rtol is 10 * eps, where eps is the smallest
representable positive number such that 1 + eps != 1.  This is about
1.2e-6 in 32bit, 2.22e-15 in 64bit, and 0.00977 in 16bit.
See numpy.finfo.
Args | |
|---|---|
x
 | 
Float or complex Tensor.
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y
 | 
Float or complex Tensor, same dtype as and broadcastable to x.
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rtol
 | 
Tensor.  Same dtype as, and broadcastable to, x.
The relative tolerance.  Default is 10 * eps.
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atol
 | 
Tensor.  Same dtype as, and broadcastable to, x.
The absolute tolerance.  Default is 10 * eps.
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message
 | 
A string to prefix to the default message. | 
summarize
 | 
Print this many entries of each tensor. | 
name
 | 
A name for this operation (optional). Defaults to "assert_near". | 
Returns | |
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Op that raises InvalidArgumentError if x and y are not close enough.
This can be used with tf.control_dependencies inside of tf.functions
to block followup computation until the check has executed.
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Raises | |
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InvalidArgumentError
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if the check can be performed immediately and
x != y is False for any pair of elements in x and y. The check can
be performed immediately during eager execution or if x and y are
statically known.
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Eager Compatibility
returns None
Numpy Compatibility
Similar to numpy.testing.assert_allclose, except tolerance depends on data
type. This is due to the fact that TensorFlow is often used with 32bit,
64bit, and even 16bit data.
  TensorFlow 1 version
    View source on GitHub