mindspore.ops.Div

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class mindspore.ops.Div[source]

Computes the quotient of dividing the first input tensor by the second input tensor element-wise.

Refer to mindspore.ops.div() for more details.

Note

  • One of the two inputs must be a Tensor, when the two inputs have different shapes, they must be able to broadcast to a common shape.

  • The two inputs can not be bool type at the same time, [True, Tensor(True, bool_), Tensor(np.array([True]), bool_)] are all considered bool type.

  • The two inputs comply with the implicit type conversion rules to make the data types consistent.

Inputs:
  • x (Union[Tensor, number.Number, bool]) - The first input is a number.Number or a bool or a tensor whose data type is number or bool_.

  • y (Union[Tensor, number.Number, bool]) - The second input, when the first input is a Tensor, the second input should be a number.Number or bool value, or a Tensor whose data type is number or bool. When the first input is Scalar, the second input must be a Tensor whose data type is number or bool.

Outputs:

Tensor, the shape is the same as the one of the input x , y after broadcasting, and the data type is the one with higher precision or higher digits among the two inputs.

Supported Platforms:

Ascend GPU CPU

Examples

>>> import mindspore
>>> import numpy as np
>>> from mindspore import Tensor, ops
>>> # case 1 :has same data type and shape of the two inputs
>>> x = Tensor(np.array([-4.0, 5.0, 6.0]), mindspore.float32)
>>> y = Tensor(np.array([3.0, 2.0, 3.0]), mindspore.float32)
>>> div = ops.Div()
>>> output = div(x, y)
>>> print(output)
[-1.3333334  2.5        2.        ]
>>> # case 2 : different data type and shape of the two inputs
>>> x = Tensor(np.array([-4.0, 5.0, 6.0]), mindspore.float32)
>>> y = Tensor(2, mindspore.int32)
>>> output = div(x, y)
>>> print(output)
[-2.  2.5  3.]
>>> print(output.dtype)
Float32