tf.cumsum(x, axis=0, exclusive=False, reverse=False, name=None)See the guide: Math > Scan
Compute the cumulative sum of the tensor x along axis.
By default, this op performs an inclusive cumsum, which means that the first element of the input is identical to the first element of the output:
tf.cumsum([a, b, c]) ==> [a, a + b, a + b + c]
By setting the exclusive kwarg to True, an exclusive cumsum is performed instead:
tf.cumsum([a, b, c], exclusive=True) ==> [0, a, a + b]
By setting the reverse kwarg to True, the cumsum is performed in the opposite direction:
tf.cumsum([a, b, c], reverse=True) ==> [a + b + c, b + c, c]
This is more efficient than using separate tf.reverse ops.
The reverse and exclusive kwargs can also be combined:
tf.cumsum([a, b, c], exclusive=True, reverse=True) ==> [b + c, c, 0]
x: A Tensor. Must be one of the following types: float32, float64, int64, int32, uint8, uint16, int16, int8, complex64, complex128, qint8, quint8, qint32, half. axis: A Tensor of type int32 (default: 0). reverse: A bool (default: False). name: A name for the operation (optional).A Tensor. Has the same type as x.
Defined in tensorflow/python/ops/math_ops.py.
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0.
Code samples licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.
https://www.tensorflow.org/api_docs/python/tf/cumsum