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torch.nn.functional.embedding

torch.nn.functional.embedding(input, weight, padding_idx=None, max_norm=None, norm_type=2.0, scale_grad_by_freq=False, sparse=False)[source]

A simple lookup table that looks up embeddings in a fixed dictionary and size.

This module is often used to retrieve word embeddings using indices. The input to the module is a list of indices, and the embedding matrix, and the output is the corresponding word embeddings.

See torch.nn.Embedding for more details.

Parameters:
  • input (LongTensor) – Tensor containing indices into the embedding matrix

  • weight (Tensor) – The embedding matrix with number of rows equal to the maximum possible index + 1, and number of columns equal to the embedding size

  • padding_idx (int, optional) – If specified, the entries at padding_idx do not contribute to the gradient; therefore, the embedding vector at padding_idx is not updated during training, i.e. it remains as a fixed “pad”.

  • max_norm (float, optional) – If given, each embedding vector with norm larger than max_norm is renormalized to have norm max_norm. Note: this will modify weight in-place.

  • norm_type (float, optional) – The p of the p-norm to compute for the max_norm option. Default 2.

  • scale_grad_by_freq (bool, optional) – If given, this will scale gradients by the inverse of frequency of the words in the mini-batch. Default False.

  • sparse (bool, optional) – If True, gradient w.r.t. weight will be a sparse tensor. See Notes under torch.nn.Embedding for more details regarding sparse gradients.

Return type:

Tensor

Shape:
  • Input: LongTensor of arbitrary shape containing the indices to extract

  • Weight: Embedding matrix of floating point type with shape (V, embedding_dim), where V = maximum index + 1 and embedding_dim = the embedding size

  • Output: (*, embedding_dim), where * is the input shape

Examples:

>>> # a batch of 2 samples of 4 indices each
>>> input = torch.tensor([[1, 2, 4, 5], [4, 3, 2, 9]])
>>> # an embedding matrix containing 10 tensors of size 3
>>> embedding_matrix = torch.rand(10, 3)
>>> F.embedding(input, embedding_matrix)
tensor([[[ 0.8490,  0.9625,  0.6753],
         [ 0.9666,  0.7761,  0.6108],
         [ 0.6246,  0.9751,  0.3618],
         [ 0.4161,  0.2419,  0.7383]],

        [[ 0.6246,  0.9751,  0.3618],
         [ 0.0237,  0.7794,  0.0528],
         [ 0.9666,  0.7761,  0.6108],
         [ 0.3385,  0.8612,  0.1867]]])

>>> # example with padding_idx
>>> weights = torch.rand(10, 3)
>>> weights[0, :].zero_()
>>> embedding_matrix = weights
>>> input = torch.tensor([[0, 2, 0, 5]])
>>> F.embedding(input, embedding_matrix, padding_idx=0)
tensor([[[ 0.0000,  0.0000,  0.0000],
         [ 0.5609,  0.5384,  0.8720],
         [ 0.0000,  0.0000,  0.0000],
         [ 0.6262,  0.2438,  0.7471]]])

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