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Mastering TensorFlow 1.x

You're reading from   Mastering TensorFlow 1.x Advanced machine learning and deep learning concepts using TensorFlow 1.x and Keras

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788292061
Length 474 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. TensorFlow 101 2. High-Level Libraries for TensorFlow FREE CHAPTER 3. Keras 101 4. Classical Machine Learning with TensorFlow 5. Neural Networks and MLP with TensorFlow and Keras 6. RNN with TensorFlow and Keras 7. RNN for Time Series Data with TensorFlow and Keras 8. RNN for Text Data with TensorFlow and Keras 9. CNN with TensorFlow and Keras 10. Autoencoder with TensorFlow and Keras 11. TensorFlow Models in Production with TF Serving 12. Transfer Learning and Pre-Trained Models 13. Deep Reinforcement Learning 14. Generative Adversarial Networks 15. Distributed Models with TensorFlow Clusters 16. TensorFlow Models on Mobile and Embedded Platforms 17. TensorFlow and Keras in R 18. Debugging TensorFlow Models 19. Tensor Processing Units
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Fetching tensor values with tf.Session.run()

You can fetch the tensor values you want to print with tf.Session.run(). The values are returned as a NumPy array and can be printed or logged with Python statements. This is the simplest and easiest approach, with the biggest drawback being that the computation graph executes all the dependent paths, starting from the fetched tensor, and if those paths include the training operations, then it advances one step or one epoch.

Therefore, most of the time you would not call tf.Session.run() to fetch tensors in the middle of the graph, but you would execute the whole graph and fetch all the tensors, the ones you need to debug along with the ones you do not need to debug.

The function tf.Session.partial_run() is also available for situations where you may want to execute part of the graph, but it is a highly experimental API and not ready...
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