# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import datetime
from collections import abc
from typing import MutableSequence
import numpy as np
import uuid
from ..base import Property
from .array import StateVector, CovarianceMatrix
from .base import Type
from .particle import Particles
from .numeric import Probability
[docs]class State(Type):
"""State type.
Most simple state type, which only has time and a state vector."""
timestamp: datetime.datetime = Property(
default=None, doc="Timestamp of the state. Default None.")
state_vector: StateVector = Property(doc='State vector.')
def __init__(self, state_vector, *args, **kwargs):
# Don't cast away subtype of state_vector if not necessary
if state_vector is not None \
and not isinstance(state_vector, StateVector):
state_vector = StateVector(state_vector)
super().__init__(state_vector, *args, **kwargs)
@property
def ndim(self):
"""The number of dimensions represented by the state."""
return self.state_vector.shape[0]
[docs]class StateMutableSequence(Type, abc.MutableSequence):
"""A mutable sequence for :class:`~.State` instances
This sequence acts like a regular list object for States, as well as
proxying state attributes to the last state in the sequence. This sequence
can also be indexed/sliced by :class:`datetime.datetime` instances.
Example
-------
>>> t0 = datetime.datetime(2018, 1, 1, 14, 00)
>>> t1 = t0 + datetime.timedelta(minutes=1)
>>> state0 = State([[0]], t0)
>>> sequence = StateMutableSequence([state0])
>>> print(sequence.state_vector, sequence.timestamp)
[[0]] 2018-01-01 14:00:00
>>> sequence.append(State([[1]], t1))
>>> for state in sequence[t1:]:
... print(state.state_vector, state.timestamp)
[[1]] 2018-01-01 14:01:00
"""
states: MutableSequence[State] = Property(
default=None,
doc="The initial list of states. Default `None` which initialises with empty list.")
def __init__(self, states=None, *args, **kwargs):
if states is None:
states = []
elif not isinstance(states, abc.Sequence):
# Ensure states is a list
states = [states]
super().__init__(states, *args, **kwargs)
def __len__(self):
return self.states.__len__()
def __setitem__(self, index, value):
return self.states.__setitem__(index, value)
def __delitem__(self, index):
return self.states.__delitem__(index)
def __getitem__(self, index):
if isinstance(index, slice) and (
isinstance(index.start, datetime.datetime)
or isinstance(index.stop, datetime.datetime)):
items = []
for state in self.states:
try:
if index.start and state.timestamp < index.start:
continue
if index.stop and state.timestamp >= index.stop:
continue
except TypeError as exc:
raise TypeError(
'both indices must be `datetime.datetime` objects for'
'time slice') from exc
items.append(state)
return StateMutableSequence(items[::index.step])
elif isinstance(index, datetime.datetime):
for state in reversed(self.states):
if state.timestamp == index:
return state
else:
raise IndexError('timestamp not found in states')
elif isinstance(index, slice):
return StateMutableSequence(self.states.__getitem__(index))
else:
return self.states.__getitem__(index)
def __getattribute__(self, name):
# This method is called if we try to access an attribute of self. First we try to get the
# attribute directly, but if that fails, we want to try getting the same attribute from
# self.state instead. If that, in turn, fails we want to return the error message that
# would have originally been raised, rather than an error message that the State has no
# such attribute.
#
# An alternative mechanism using __getattr__ seems simpler (as it skips the first few lines
# of code, but __getattr__ has no mechanism to capture the originally raised error.
try:
# This tries first to get the attribute from self.
return Type.__getattribute__(self, name)
except AttributeError as original_error:
if name.startswith("_"):
# Don't proxy special/private attributes to `state`, just raise the original error
raise original_error
else:
# For non _ attributes, try to get the attribute from self.state instead of self.
try:
my_state = Type.__getattribute__(self, 'state')
return getattr(my_state, name)
except AttributeError:
# If we get the error about 'State' not having the attribute, then we want to
# raise the original error instead
raise original_error
[docs] def insert(self, index, value):
return self.states.insert(index, value)
@property
def state(self):
return self.states[-1]
[docs] def last_timestamp_generator(self):
"""Generator yielding the last state for each timestamp
This provides a method of iterating over a sequence of states,
such that when multiple states for the same timestamp exist,
only the last state is yielded. This is particularly useful in
cases where you may have multiple :class:`~.Update` states for
a single timestamp e.g. multi-sensor tracking example.
Yields
------
State
A state for each timestamp present in the sequence.
"""
state_iter = iter(self)
current_state = next(state_iter)
for next_state in state_iter:
if next_state.timestamp > current_state.timestamp:
yield current_state
current_state = next_state
yield current_state
[docs]class GaussianState(State):
"""Gaussian State type
This is a simple Gaussian state object, which, as the name suggests,
is described by a Gaussian state distribution.
"""
covar: CovarianceMatrix = Property(doc='Covariance matrix of state.')
def __init__(self, state_vector, covar, *args, **kwargs):
# Don't cast away subtype of covar if not necessary
if not isinstance(covar, CovarianceMatrix):
covar = CovarianceMatrix(covar)
super().__init__(state_vector, covar, *args, **kwargs)
if self.state_vector.shape[0] != self.covar.shape[0]:
raise ValueError(
"state vector and covariance should have same dimensions")
@property
def mean(self):
"""The state mean, equivalent to state vector"""
return self.state_vector
[docs]class SqrtGaussianState(State):
"""A Gaussian State type where the covariance matrix is stored in a form :math:`W` such that
:math:`P = WW^T`
For :math:`P` in general, :math:`W` is not unique and the user may choose the form to their
taste. No checks are undertaken to ensure that a sensible square root form has been chosen.
"""
sqrt_covar: CovarianceMatrix = Property(doc="A square root form of the Gaussian covariance "
"matrix.")
def __init__(self, state_vector, sqrt_covar, *args, **kwargs):
sqrt_covar = CovarianceMatrix(sqrt_covar)
super().__init__(state_vector, sqrt_covar, *args, **kwargs)
@property
def mean(self):
"""The state mean, equivalent to state vector"""
return self.state_vector
@property
def covar(self):
"""The full covariance matrix.
Returns
-------
: :class:`~.CovarianceMatrix`
The covariance matrix calculated via :math:`W W^T`, where :math:`W` is a
:class:`~.SqrtCovarianceMatrix`
"""
return self.sqrt_covar @ self.sqrt_covar.T
GaussianState.register(SqrtGaussianState) # noqa: E305
[docs]class WeightedGaussianState(GaussianState):
"""Weighted Gaussian State Type
Gaussian State object with an associated weight. Used as components
for a GaussianMixtureState.
"""
weight: Probability = Property(default=0, doc="Weight of the Gaussian State.")
@property
def gaussian_state(self):
"""The Gaussian state."""
return GaussianState(self.state_vector,
self.covar,
timestamp=self.timestamp)
[docs] @classmethod
def from_gaussian_state(cls, gaussian_state, *args, copy=True, **kwargs):
r"""
Returns a WeightedGaussianState instance based on the gaussian_state.
Parameters
----------
gaussian_state : :class:`~.GaussianState`
The guassian_state used to create the new WeightedGaussianState.
\*args : See main :class:`~.WeightedGaussianState`
args are passed to :class:`~.WeightedGaussianState` __init__()
copy : Boolean, optional
If True, the WeightedGaussianState is created with copies of the elements
of gaussian_state. The default is True.
\*\*kwargs : See main :class:`~.WeightedGaussianState`
kwargs are passed to :class:`~.WeightedGaussianState` __init__()
Returns
-------
:class:`~.WeightedGaussianState`
Instance of WeightedGaussianState.
"""
state_vector = gaussian_state.state_vector
covar = gaussian_state.covar
timestamp = gaussian_state.timestamp
if copy:
state_vector = state_vector.copy()
covar = covar.copy()
return cls(
state_vector=state_vector,
covar=covar,
timestamp=timestamp,
*args, **kwargs
)
[docs]class TaggedWeightedGaussianState(WeightedGaussianState):
"""Tagged Weighted Gaussian State Type
Gaussian State object with an associated weight and tag. Used as components
for a GaussianMixtureState.
"""
tag: str = Property(default=None, doc="Unique tag of the Gaussian State.")
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
if self.tag is None:
self.tag = str(uuid.uuid4())
[docs]class ParticleState(Type):
"""Particle State type
This is a particle state object which describes the state as a
distribution of particles"""
particles: Particles = Property(doc='All particles.')
fixed_covar: CovarianceMatrix = Property(default=None,
doc='Fixed covariance value. Default `None`, where'
'weighted sample covariance is then used.')
timestamp: datetime.datetime = Property(default=None,
doc="Timestamp of the state. Default None.")
def __init__(self, particles, *args, **kwargs):
if particles is not None and not isinstance(particles, Particles):
particles = Particles(particle_list=particles)
super().__init__(particles, *args, **kwargs)
@property
def ndim(self):
return self.particles.ndim
@property
def mean(self):
"""The state mean, equivalent to state vector"""
result = np.average(self.particles.state_vector,
axis=1,
weights=self.particles.weight)
# Convert type as may have type of weights
return result
@property
def state_vector(self):
"""The mean value of the particle states"""
return self.mean
@property
def covar(self):
if self.fixed_covar is not None:
return self.fixed_covar
cov = np.cov(self.particles.state_vector, ddof=0, aweights=np.array(self.particles.weight))
# Fix one dimensional covariances being returned with zero dimension
return cov
State.register(ParticleState) # noqa: E305