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2c6e98a57d8baf31ad9cb0262e91a76a13ae1bf01b98afe8853ba6bbe7bacfc0
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"""
SymPy is a Python library for symbolic mathematics. It aims to become a
full-featured computer algebra system (CAS) while keeping the code as simple
as possible in order to be comprehensible and easily extensible. SymPy is
written entirely in Python. It depends on mpmath, and other external libraries
may be optionally for things like plotting support.
See the webpage for more information and documentation:
https://sympy.org
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
del absolute_import, print_function
try:
import mpmath
except ImportError:
raise ImportError("SymPy now depends on mpmath as an external library. "
"See https://docs.sympy.org/latest/install.html#mpmath for more information.")
del mpmath
from sympy.release import __version__
if 'dev' in __version__:
def enable_warnings():
import warnings
warnings.filterwarnings('default', '.*', DeprecationWarning, module='sympy.*')
del warnings
enable_warnings()
del enable_warnings
import sys
if ((sys.version_info[0] == 2 and sys.version_info[1] < 7) or
(sys.version_info[0] == 3 and sys.version_info[1] < 4)):
raise ImportError("Python version 2.7 or 3.4 or above "
"is required for SymPy.")
del sys
def __sympy_debug():
# helper function so we don't import os globally
import os
debug_str = os.getenv('SYMPY_DEBUG', 'False')
if debug_str in ('True', 'False'):
return eval(debug_str)
else:
raise RuntimeError("unrecognized value for SYMPY_DEBUG: %s" %
debug_str)
SYMPY_DEBUG = __sympy_debug()
from .core import *
from .logic import *
from .assumptions import *
from .polys import *
from .series import *
from .functions import *
from .ntheory import *
from .concrete import *
from .discrete import *
from .simplify import *
from .sets import *
from .solvers import *
from .matrices import *
from .geometry import *
from .utilities import *
from .integrals import *
from .tensor import *
from .parsing import *
from .calculus import *
from .algebras import *
# Adds about .04-.05 seconds of import time
# from combinatorics import *
# This module is slow to import:
#from physics import units
from .plotting import plot, textplot, plot_backends, plot_implicit
from .printing import *
from .interactive import init_session, init_printing
evalf._create_evalf_table()
# This is slow to import:
#import abc
from .deprecated import *
|
20f64a3d4b530e4908b80e1c37318a2d18ede1d002d7a770421f7a2deb39a88d
|
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""Quantum field theory example
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_field_theory
This particular example is a work in progress. Currently it calculates the
scattering amplitude of the process:
electron + positron -> photon -> electron + positron
in QED (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_electrodynamics). The aim
is to be able to do any kind of calculations in QED or standard model in
SymPy, but that's a long journey.
"""
from sympy import Basic, exp, Symbol, sin, Rational, I, Mul, Matrix, \
ones, sqrt, pprint, simplify, Eq, sympify
from sympy.physics import msigma, mgamma
# gamma^mu
gamma0 = mgamma(0)
gamma1 = mgamma(1)
gamma2 = mgamma(2)
gamma3 = mgamma(3)
gamma5 = mgamma(5)
# sigma_i
sigma1 = msigma(1)
sigma2 = msigma(2)
sigma3 = msigma(3)
E = Symbol("E", real=True)
m = Symbol("m", real=True)
def u(p, r):
""" p = (p1, p2, p3); r = 0,1 """
if r not in [1, 2]:
raise ValueError("Value of r should lie between 1 and 2")
p1, p2, p3 = p
if r == 1:
ksi = Matrix([[1], [0]])
else:
ksi = Matrix([[0], [1]])
a = (sigma1*p1 + sigma2*p2 + sigma3*p3) / (E + m)*ksi
if a == 0:
a = zeros(2, 1)
return sqrt(E + m) *\
Matrix([[ksi[0, 0]], [ksi[1, 0]], [a[0, 0]], [a[1, 0]]])
def v(p, r):
""" p = (p1, p2, p3); r = 0,1 """
if r not in [1, 2]:
raise ValueError("Value of r should lie between 1 and 2")
p1, p2, p3 = p
if r == 1:
ksi = Matrix([[1], [0]])
else:
ksi = -Matrix([[0], [1]])
a = (sigma1*p1 + sigma2*p2 + sigma3*p3) / (E + m)*ksi
if a == 0:
a = zeros(2, 1)
return sqrt(E + m) *\
Matrix([[a[0, 0]], [a[1, 0]], [ksi[0, 0]], [ksi[1, 0]]])
def pslash(p):
p1, p2, p3 = p
p0 = sqrt(m**2 + p1**2 + p2**2 + p3**2)
return gamma0*p0 - gamma1*p1 - gamma2*p2 - gamma3*p3
def Tr(M):
return M.trace()
def xprint(lhs, rhs):
pprint(Eq(sympify(lhs), rhs))
def main():
a = Symbol("a", real=True)
b = Symbol("b", real=True)
c = Symbol("c", real=True)
p = (a, b, c)
assert u(p, 1).D*u(p, 2) == Matrix(1, 1, [0])
assert u(p, 2).D*u(p, 1) == Matrix(1, 1, [0])
p1, p2, p3 = [Symbol(x, real=True) for x in ["p1", "p2", "p3"]]
pp1, pp2, pp3 = [Symbol(x, real=True) for x in ["pp1", "pp2", "pp3"]]
k1, k2, k3 = [Symbol(x, real=True) for x in ["k1", "k2", "k3"]]
kp1, kp2, kp3 = [Symbol(x, real=True) for x in ["kp1", "kp2", "kp3"]]
p = (p1, p2, p3)
pp = (pp1, pp2, pp3)
k = (k1, k2, k3)
kp = (kp1, kp2, kp3)
mu = Symbol("mu")
e = (pslash(p) + m*ones(4))*(pslash(k) - m*ones(4))
f = pslash(p) + m*ones(4)
g = pslash(p) - m*ones(4)
xprint('Tr(f*g)', Tr(f*g))
M0 = [(v(pp, 1).D*mgamma(mu)*u(p, 1))*(u(k, 1).D*mgamma(mu, True) *
v(kp, 1)) for mu in range(4)]
M = M0[0] + M0[1] + M0[2] + M0[3]
M = M[0]
if not isinstance(M, Basic):
raise TypeError("Invalid type of variable")
d = Symbol("d", real=True) # d=E+m
xprint('M', M)
print("-"*40)
M = ((M.subs(E, d - m)).expand()*d**2).expand()
xprint('M2', 1 / (E + m)**2*M)
print("-"*40)
x, y = M.as_real_imag()
xprint('Re(M)', x)
xprint('Im(M)', y)
e = x**2 + y**2
xprint('abs(M)**2', e)
print("-"*40)
xprint('Expand(abs(M)**2)', e.expand())
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
|
4f108481d41a1067664c96ec14bf05b577c4386077e2ac0ad2f59e8c2467ba04
|
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""
This example illustrates the Gibbs phenomenon.
It also calculates the Wilbraham-Gibbs constant by two approaches:
1) calculating the fourier series of the step function and determining the
first maximum.
2) evaluating the integral for si(pi).
See:
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibbs_phenomena
"""
from sympy import var, sqrt, integrate, conjugate, seterr, Abs, pprint, I, pi,\
sin, cos, sign, lambdify, Integral, S
x = var("x", real=True)
def l2_norm(f, lim):
"""
Calculates L2 norm of the function "f", over the domain lim=(x, a, b).
x ...... the independent variable in f over which to integrate
a, b ... the limits of the interval
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> from gibbs_phenomenon import l2_norm
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True)
>>> l2_norm(1, (x, -1, 1))
sqrt(2)
>>> l2_norm(x, (x, -1, 1))
sqrt(6)/3
"""
return sqrt(integrate(Abs(f)**2, lim))
def l2_inner_product(a, b, lim):
"""
Calculates the L2 inner product (a, b) over the domain lim.
"""
return integrate(conjugate(a)*b, lim)
def l2_projection(f, basis, lim):
"""
L2 projects the function f on the basis over the domain lim.
"""
r = 0
for b in basis:
r += l2_inner_product(f, b, lim) * b
return r
def l2_gram_schmidt(list, lim):
"""
Orthonormalizes the "list" of functions using the Gram-Schmidt process.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> from gibbs_phenomenon import l2_gram_schmidt
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True) # perform computations over reals to save time
>>> l2_gram_schmidt([1, x, x**2], (x, -1, 1))
[sqrt(2)/2, sqrt(6)*x/2, 3*sqrt(10)*(x**2 - 1/3)/4]
"""
r = []
for a in list:
if r == []:
v = a
else:
v = a - l2_projection(a, r, lim)
v_norm = l2_norm(v, lim)
if v_norm == 0:
raise ValueError("The sequence is not linearly independent.")
r.append(v/v_norm)
return r
def integ(f):
return integrate(f, (x, -pi, 0)) + integrate(-f, (x, 0, pi))
def series(L):
"""
Normalizes the series.
"""
r = 0
for b in L:
r += integ(b)*b
return r
def msolve(f, x):
"""
Finds the first root of f(x) to the left of 0.
The x0 and dx below are tailored to get the correct result for our
particular function --- the general solver often overshoots the first
solution.
"""
f = lambdify(x, f)
x0 = -0.001
dx = 0.001
while f(x0 - dx) * f(x0) > 0:
x0 = x0 - dx
x_max = x0 - dx
x_min = x0
assert f(x_max) > 0
assert f(x_min) < 0
for n in range(100):
x0 = (x_max + x_min)/2
if f(x0) > 0:
x_max = x0
else:
x_min = x0
return x0
def main():
L = [1]
for i in range(1, 100):
L.append(cos(i*x))
L.append(sin(i*x))
# next 2 lines equivalent to L = l2_gram_schmidt(L, (x, -pi, pi)), but faster:
L[0] /= sqrt(2)
L = [f/sqrt(pi) for f in L]
f = series(L)
print("Fourier series of the step function")
pprint(f)
x0 = msolve(f.diff(x), x)
print("x-value of the maximum:", x0)
max = f.subs(x, x0).evalf()
print("y-value of the maximum:", max)
g = max*pi/2
print("Wilbraham-Gibbs constant :", g.evalf())
print("Wilbraham-Gibbs constant (exact):", \
Integral(sin(x)/x, (x, 0, pi)).evalf())
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
|
acdcfa081afb37797458ae80e61fc6c7ad8d7459d54fb078e3224197cd9bf3eb
|
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""
This example calculates the Ricci tensor from the metric and does this
on the example of Schwarzschild solution.
If you want to derive this by hand, follow the wiki page here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deriving_the_Schwarzschild_solution
Also read the above wiki and follow the references from there if
something is not clear, like what the Ricci tensor is, etc.
"""
from sympy import (exp, Symbol, sin, Rational, Derivative, dsolve, Function,
Matrix, Eq, pprint, Pow, classify_ode, solve)
def grad(f, X):
a = []
for x in X:
a.append(f.diff(x))
return a
def d(m, x):
return grad(m[0, 0], x)
class MT(object):
def __init__(self, m):
self.gdd = m
self.guu = m.inv()
def __str__(self):
return "g_dd =\n" + str(self.gdd)
def dd(self, i, j):
return self.gdd[i, j]
def uu(self, i, j):
return self.guu[i, j]
class G(object):
def __init__(self, g, x):
self.g = g
self.x = x
def udd(self, i, k, l):
g = self.g
x = self.x
r = 0
for m in [0, 1, 2, 3]:
r += g.uu(i, m)/2 * (g.dd(m, k).diff(x[l]) + g.dd(m, l).diff(x[k])
- g.dd(k, l).diff(x[m]))
return r
class Riemann(object):
def __init__(self, G, x):
self.G = G
self.x = x
def uddd(self, rho, sigma, mu, nu):
G = self.G
x = self.x
r = G.udd(rho, nu, sigma).diff(x[mu]) - G.udd(rho, mu, sigma).diff(x[nu])
for lam in [0, 1, 2, 3]:
r += G.udd(rho, mu, lam)*G.udd(lam, nu, sigma) \
- G.udd(rho, nu, lam)*G.udd(lam, mu, sigma)
return r
class Ricci(object):
def __init__(self, R, x):
self.R = R
self.x = x
self.g = R.G.g
def dd(self, mu, nu):
R = self.R
x = self.x
r = 0
for lam in [0, 1, 2, 3]:
r += R.uddd(lam, mu, lam, nu)
return r
def ud(self, mu, nu):
r = 0
for lam in [0, 1, 2, 3]:
r += self.g.uu(mu, lam)*self.dd(lam, nu)
return r.expand()
def curvature(Rmn):
return Rmn.ud(0, 0) + Rmn.ud(1, 1) + Rmn.ud(2, 2) + Rmn.ud(3, 3)
nu = Function("nu")
lam = Function("lambda")
t = Symbol("t")
r = Symbol("r")
theta = Symbol(r"theta")
phi = Symbol(r"phi")
# general, spherically symmetric metric
gdd = Matrix((
(-exp(nu(r)), 0, 0, 0),
(0, exp(lam(r)), 0, 0),
(0, 0, r**2, 0),
(0, 0, 0, r**2*sin(theta)**2)
))
g = MT(gdd)
X = (t, r, theta, phi)
Gamma = G(g, X)
Rmn = Ricci(Riemann(Gamma, X), X)
def pprint_Gamma_udd(i, k, l):
pprint(Eq(Symbol('Gamma^%i_%i%i' % (i, k, l)), Gamma.udd(i, k, l)))
def pprint_Rmn_dd(i, j):
pprint(Eq(Symbol('R_%i%i' % (i, j)), Rmn.dd(i, j)))
# from Differential Equations example
def eq1():
r = Symbol("r")
e = Rmn.dd(0, 0)
e = e.subs(nu(r), -lam(r))
pprint(dsolve(e, lam(r)))
def eq2():
r = Symbol("r")
e = Rmn.dd(1, 1)
C = Symbol("CC")
e = e.subs(nu(r), -lam(r))
pprint(dsolve(e, lam(r)))
def eq3():
r = Symbol("r")
e = Rmn.dd(2, 2)
e = e.subs(nu(r), -lam(r))
pprint(dsolve(e, lam(r)))
def eq4():
r = Symbol("r")
e = Rmn.dd(3, 3)
e = e.subs(nu(r), -lam(r))
pprint(dsolve(e, lam(r)))
pprint(dsolve(e, lam(r), 'best'))
def main():
print("Initial metric:")
pprint(gdd)
print("-"*40)
print("Christoffel symbols:")
pprint_Gamma_udd(0, 1, 0)
pprint_Gamma_udd(0, 0, 1)
print()
pprint_Gamma_udd(1, 0, 0)
pprint_Gamma_udd(1, 1, 1)
pprint_Gamma_udd(1, 2, 2)
pprint_Gamma_udd(1, 3, 3)
print()
pprint_Gamma_udd(2, 2, 1)
pprint_Gamma_udd(2, 1, 2)
pprint_Gamma_udd(2, 3, 3)
print()
pprint_Gamma_udd(3, 2, 3)
pprint_Gamma_udd(3, 3, 2)
pprint_Gamma_udd(3, 1, 3)
pprint_Gamma_udd(3, 3, 1)
print("-"*40)
print("Ricci tensor:")
pprint_Rmn_dd(0, 0)
e = Rmn.dd(1, 1)
pprint_Rmn_dd(1, 1)
pprint_Rmn_dd(2, 2)
pprint_Rmn_dd(3, 3)
print("-"*40)
print("Solve Einstein's equations:")
e = e.subs(nu(r), -lam(r)).doit()
l = dsolve(e, lam(r))
pprint(l)
lamsol = solve(l, lam(r))[0]
metric = gdd.subs(lam(r), lamsol).subs(nu(r), -lamsol) # .combine()
print("metric:")
pprint(metric)
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
|
e0b223780e5cc0e5e8a3d34a183fa4437bb75348f36397dcf6374e2e0aa0c407
|
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""Pretty print example
Demonstrates pretty printing.
"""
from sympy import Symbol, pprint, sin, cos, exp, sqrt, MatrixSymbol, KroneckerProduct
def main():
x = Symbol("x")
y = Symbol("y")
a = MatrixSymbol("a", 1, 1)
b = MatrixSymbol("b", 1, 1)
c = MatrixSymbol("c", 1, 1)
pprint( x**x )
print('\n') # separate with two blank likes
pprint(x**2 + y + x)
print('\n')
pprint(sin(x)**x)
print('\n')
pprint( sin(x)**cos(x) )
print('\n')
pprint( sin(x)/(cos(x)**2 * x**x + (2*y)) )
print('\n')
pprint( sin(x**2 + exp(x)) )
print('\n')
pprint( sqrt(exp(x)) )
print('\n')
pprint( sqrt(sqrt(exp(x))) )
print('\n')
pprint( (1/cos(x)).series(x, 0, 10) )
print('\n')
pprint(a*(KroneckerProduct(b, c)))
print('\n')
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
|
03dc439ecc3cfd0964aac366b4aec04f57c69944e3787a0f2ae0fce11e79bc30
|
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""Vandermonde matrix example
Demonstrates matrix computations using the Vandermonde matrix.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vandermonde_matrix
"""
from sympy import Matrix, pprint, Rational, sqrt, symbols, Symbol, zeros
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
def symbol_gen(sym_str):
"""Symbol generator
Generates sym_str_n where n is the number of times the generator
has been called.
"""
n = 0
while True:
yield Symbol("%s_%d" % (sym_str, n))
n += 1
def comb_w_rep(n, k):
"""Combinations with repetition
Returns the list of k combinations with repetition from n objects.
"""
if k == 0:
return [[]]
combs = [[i] for i in range(n)]
for i in range(k - 1):
curr = []
for p in combs:
for m in range(p[-1], n):
curr.append(p + [m])
combs = curr
return combs
def vandermonde(order, dim=1, syms='a b c d'):
"""Computes a Vandermonde matrix of given order and dimension.
Define syms to give beginning strings for temporary variables.
Returns the Matrix, the temporary variables, and the terms for the
polynomials.
"""
syms = syms.split()
n = len(syms)
if n < dim:
new_syms = []
for i in range(dim - n):
j, rem = divmod(i, n)
new_syms.append(syms[rem] + str(j))
syms.extend(new_syms)
terms = []
for i in range(order + 1):
terms.extend(comb_w_rep(dim, i))
rank = len(terms)
V = zeros(rank)
generators = [symbol_gen(syms[i]) for i in range(dim)]
all_syms = []
for i in range(rank):
row_syms = [next(g) for g in generators]
all_syms.append(row_syms)
for j, term in enumerate(terms):
v_entry = 1
for k in term:
v_entry *= row_syms[k]
V[i*rank + j] = v_entry
return V, all_syms, terms
def gen_poly(points, order, syms):
"""Generates a polynomial using a Vandermonde system"""
num_pts = len(points)
if num_pts == 0:
raise ValueError("Must provide points")
dim = len(points[0]) - 1
if dim > len(syms):
raise ValueError("Must provide at least %d symbols for the polynomial" % dim)
V, tmp_syms, terms = vandermonde(order, dim)
if num_pts < V.shape[0]:
raise ValueError(
"Must provide %d points for order %d, dimension "
"%d polynomial, given %d points" %
(V.shape[0], order, dim, num_pts))
elif num_pts > V.shape[0]:
print("gen_poly given %d points but only requires %d, "\
"continuing using the first %d points" % \
(num_pts, V.shape[0], V.shape[0]))
num_pts = V.shape[0]
subs_dict = {}
for j in range(dim):
for i in range(num_pts):
subs_dict[tmp_syms[i][j]] = points[i][j]
V_pts = V.subs(subs_dict)
V_inv = V_pts.inv()
coeffs = V_inv.multiply(Matrix([points[i][-1] for i in range(num_pts)]))
f = 0
for j, term in enumerate(terms):
t = 1
for k in term:
t *= syms[k]
f += coeffs[j]*t
return f
def main():
order = 2
V, tmp_syms, _ = vandermonde(order)
print("Vandermonde matrix of order 2 in 1 dimension")
pprint(V)
print('-'*79)
print("Computing the determinant and comparing to \sum_{0<i<j<=3}(a_j - a_i)")
det_sum = 1
for j in range(order + 1):
for i in range(j):
det_sum *= (tmp_syms[j][0] - tmp_syms[i][0])
print("""
det(V) = %(det)s
\sum = %(sum)s
= %(sum_expand)s
""" % {"det": V.det(),
"sum": det_sum,
"sum_expand": det_sum.expand(),
})
print('-'*79)
print("Polynomial fitting with a Vandermonde Matrix:")
x, y, z = symbols('x,y,z')
points = [(0, 3), (1, 2), (2, 3)]
print("""
Quadratic function, represented by 3 points:
points = %(pts)s
f = %(f)s
""" % {"pts": points,
"f": gen_poly(points, 2, [x]),
})
points = [(0, 1, 1), (1, 0, 0), (1, 1, 0), (Rational(1, 2), 0, 0),
(0, Rational(1, 2), 0), (Rational(1, 2), Rational(1, 2), 0)]
print("""
2D Quadratic function, represented by 6 points:
points = %(pts)s
f = %(f)s
""" % {"pts": points,
"f": gen_poly(points, 2, [x, y]),
})
points = [(0, 1, 1, 1), (1, 1, 0, 0), (1, 0, 1, 0), (1, 1, 1, 1)]
print("""
3D linear function, represented by 4 points:
points = %(pts)s
f = %(f)s
""" % {"pts": points,
"f": gen_poly(points, 1, [x, y, z]),
})
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
|
d107d33825006c729f90c01348606890a1b2fc16bc3853457a5b264e2584ce53
|
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
#
# SymPy documentation build configuration file, created by
# sphinx-quickstart.py on Sat Mar 22 19:34:32 2008.
#
# This file is execfile()d with the current directory set to its containing dir.
#
# The contents of this file are pickled, so don't put values in the namespace
# that aren't pickleable (module imports are okay, they're removed automatically).
#
# All configuration values have a default value; values that are commented out
# serve to show the default value.
import sys
import sympy
# If your extensions are in another directory, add it here.
sys.path = ['ext'] + sys.path
# General configuration
# ---------------------
# Add any Sphinx extension module names here, as strings. They can be extensions
# coming with Sphinx (named 'sphinx.addons.*') or your custom ones.
extensions = ['sphinx.ext.autodoc', 'sphinx.ext.viewcode',
'sphinx.ext.mathjax', 'numpydoc', 'sympylive',
'sphinx.ext.graphviz', 'matplotlib.sphinxext.plot_directive']
# Use this to use pngmath instead
#extensions = ['sphinx.ext.autodoc', 'sphinx.ext.viewcode', 'sphinx.ext.pngmath', ]
# To stop docstrings inheritance.
autodoc_inherit_docstrings = False
# MathJax file, which is free to use. See https://www.mathjax.org/docs/2.0/start.html
mathjax_path = 'https://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS_HTML-full'
# Add any paths that contain templates here, relative to this directory.
templates_path = ['_templates']
# The suffix of source filenames.
source_suffix = '.rst'
# The master toctree document.
master_doc = 'index'
suppress_warnings = ['ref.citation', 'ref.footnote']
# General substitutions.
project = 'SymPy'
copyright = '2018 SymPy Development Team'
# The default replacements for |version| and |release|, also used in various
# other places throughout the built documents.
#
# The short X.Y version.
version = sympy.__version__
# The full version, including alpha/beta/rc tags.
release = version
# There are two options for replacing |today|: either, you set today to some
# non-false value, then it is used:
#today = ''
# Else, today_fmt is used as the format for a strftime call.
today_fmt = '%B %d, %Y'
# List of documents that shouldn't be included in the build.
#unused_docs = []
# If true, '()' will be appended to :func: etc. cross-reference text.
#add_function_parentheses = True
# If true, the current module name will be prepended to all description
# unit titles (such as .. function::).
#add_module_names = True
# If true, sectionauthor and moduleauthor directives will be shown in the
# output. They are ignored by default.
#show_authors = False
# The name of the Pygments (syntax highlighting) style to use.
pygments_style = 'sphinx'
# Don't show the source code hyperlinks when using matplotlib plot directive.
plot_html_show_source_link = False
# Options for HTML output
# -----------------------
# The style sheet to use for HTML and HTML Help pages. A file of that name
# must exist either in Sphinx' static/ path, or in one of the custom paths
# given in html_static_path.
html_style = 'default.css'
# Add any paths that contain custom static files (such as style sheets) here,
# relative to this directory. They are copied after the builtin static files,
# so a file named "default.css" will overwrite the builtin "default.css".
html_static_path = ['_static']
# If not '', a 'Last updated on:' timestamp is inserted at every page bottom,
# using the given strftime format.
html_last_updated_fmt = '%b %d, %Y'
html_theme = 'classic'
html_logo = '_static/sympylogo.png'
html_favicon = '../_build/logo/sympy-notailtext-favicon.ico'
# See http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/theming.html#builtin-themes
# If true, SmartyPants will be used to convert quotes and dashes to
# typographically correct entities.
#html_use_smartypants = True
# Content template for the index page.
#html_index = ''
# Custom sidebar templates, maps document names to template names.
#html_sidebars = {}
# Additional templates that should be rendered to pages, maps page names to
# template names.
#html_additional_pages = {}
# If false, no module index is generated.
#html_use_modindex = True
html_domain_indices = ['py-modindex']
# If true, the reST sources are included in the HTML build as _sources/<name>.
#html_copy_source = True
# Output file base name for HTML help builder.
htmlhelp_basename = 'SymPydoc'
# Options for LaTeX output
# ------------------------
# The paper size ('letter' or 'a4').
#latex_paper_size = 'letter'
# The font size ('10pt', '11pt' or '12pt').
#latex_font_size = '10pt'
# Grouping the document tree into LaTeX files. List of tuples
# (source start file, target name, title, author, document class [howto/manual], toctree_only).
# toctree_only is set to True so that the start file document itself is not included in the
# output, only the documents referenced by it via TOC trees. The extra stuff in the master
# document is intended to show up in the HTML, but doesn't really belong in the LaTeX output.
latex_documents = [('index', 'sympy-%s.tex' % release, 'SymPy Documentation',
'SymPy Development Team', 'manual', True)]
# Additional stuff for the LaTeX preamble.
# Tweaked to work with XeTeX.
latex_elements = {
'babel': '',
'fontenc': r'''
\usepackage{bm}
\usepackage{amssymb}
\usepackage{fontspec}
\usepackage[english]{babel}
\defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex-text}
\setmainfont{DejaVu Serif}
\setsansfont{DejaVu Sans}
\setmonofont{DejaVu Sans Mono}
''',
'fontpkg': '',
'inputenc': '',
'utf8extra': '',
'preamble': r'''
% redefine \LaTeX to be usable in math mode
\expandafter\def\expandafter\LaTeX\expandafter{\expandafter\text\expandafter{\LaTeX}}
'''
}
# SymPy logo on title page
html_logo = '_static/sympylogo.png'
latex_logo = '_static/sympylogo_big.png'
# Documents to append as an appendix to all manuals.
#latex_appendices = []
# Show page numbers next to internal references
latex_show_pagerefs = True
# We use False otherwise the module index gets generated twice.
latex_use_modindex = False
default_role = 'math'
pngmath_divpng_args = ['-gamma 1.5', '-D 110']
# Note, this is ignored by the mathjax extension
# Any \newcommand should be defined in the file
pngmath_latex_preamble = '\\usepackage{amsmath}\n' \
'\\usepackage{bm}\n' \
'\\usepackage{amsfonts}\n' \
'\\usepackage{amssymb}\n' \
'\\setlength{\\parindent}{0pt}\n'
texinfo_documents = [
(master_doc, 'sympy', 'SymPy Documentation', 'SymPy Development Team',
'SymPy', 'Computer algebra system (CAS) in Python', 'Programming', 1),
]
# Use svg for graphviz
graphviz_output_format = 'svg'
|
745d9888e75028bb6bd4d73e49787e8921c662e89e1614f8966ca97322199516
|
"""
Continuous Random Variables - Prebuilt variables
Contains
========
Arcsin
Benini
Beta
BetaPrime
Cauchy
Chi
ChiNoncentral
ChiSquared
Dagum
Erlang
Exponential
FDistribution
FisherZ
Frechet
Gamma
GammaInverse
Gumbel
Gompertz
Kumaraswamy
Laplace
Logistic
LogNormal
Maxwell
Nakagami
Normal
Pareto
QuadraticU
RaisedCosine
Rayleigh
ShiftedGompertz
StudentT
Trapezoidal
Triangular
Uniform
UniformSum
VonMises
Weibull
WignerSemicircle
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy import (log, sqrt, pi, S, Dummy, Interval, sympify, gamma,
Piecewise, And, Eq, binomial, factorial, Sum, floor, Abs,
Lambda, Basic, lowergamma, erf, erfi, I, hyper, uppergamma,
sinh, Ne, expint)
from sympy import beta as beta_fn
from sympy import cos, sin, exp, besseli, besselj, besselk
from sympy.stats.crv import (SingleContinuousPSpace, SingleContinuousDistribution,
ContinuousDistributionHandmade)
from sympy.stats.rv import _value_check, RandomSymbol
from sympy.matrices import MatrixBase
from sympy.stats.joint_rv_types import multivariate_rv
from sympy.stats.joint_rv import MarginalDistribution, JointPSpace, CompoundDistribution
from sympy.external import import_module
import random
oo = S.Infinity
__all__ = ['ContinuousRV',
'Arcsin',
'Benini',
'Beta',
'BetaPrime',
'Cauchy',
'Chi',
'ChiNoncentral',
'ChiSquared',
'Dagum',
'Erlang',
'Exponential',
'FDistribution',
'FisherZ',
'Frechet',
'Gamma',
'GammaInverse',
'Gompertz',
'Gumbel',
'Kumaraswamy',
'Laplace',
'Logistic',
'LogNormal',
'Maxwell',
'Nakagami',
'Normal',
'Pareto',
'QuadraticU',
'RaisedCosine',
'Rayleigh',
'StudentT',
'ShiftedGompertz',
'Trapezoidal',
'Triangular',
'Uniform',
'UniformSum',
'VonMises',
'Weibull',
'WignerSemicircle'
]
def ContinuousRV(symbol, density, set=Interval(-oo, oo)):
"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable given the following:
-- a symbol
-- a probability density function
-- set on which the pdf is valid (defaults to entire real line)
Returns a RandomSymbol.
Many common continuous random variable types are already implemented.
This function should be necessary only very rarely.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, sqrt, exp, pi
>>> from sympy.stats import ContinuousRV, P, E
>>> x = Symbol("x")
>>> pdf = sqrt(2)*exp(-x**2/2)/(2*sqrt(pi)) # Normal distribution
>>> X = ContinuousRV(x, pdf)
>>> E(X)
0
>>> P(X>0)
1/2
"""
pdf = Piecewise((density, set.as_relational(symbol)), (0, True))
pdf = Lambda(symbol, pdf)
dist = ContinuousDistributionHandmade(pdf, set)
return SingleContinuousPSpace(symbol, dist).value
def rv(symbol, cls, args):
args = list(map(sympify, args))
dist = cls(*args)
dist.check(*args)
pspace = SingleContinuousPSpace(symbol, dist)
if any(isinstance(arg, RandomSymbol) for arg in args):
pspace = JointPSpace(symbol, CompoundDistribution(dist))
return pspace.value
########################################
# Continuous Probability Distributions #
########################################
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Arcsin distribution ----------------------------------------------------------
class ArcsinDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('a', 'b')
def pdf(self, x):
return 1/(pi*sqrt((x - self.a)*(self.b - x)))
def _cdf(self, x):
from sympy import asin
a, b = self.a, self.b
return Piecewise(
(S.Zero, x < a),
(2*asin(sqrt((x - a)/(b - a)))/pi, x <= b),
(S.One, True))
def Arcsin(name, a=0, b=1):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with an arcsin distribution.
The density of the arcsin distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{1}{\pi\sqrt{(x-a)(b-x)}}
with :math:`x \in [a,b]`. It must hold that :math:`-\infty < a < b < \infty`.
Parameters
==========
a : Real number, the left interval boundary
b : Real number, the right interval boundary
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Arcsin, density, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> a = Symbol("a", real=True)
>>> b = Symbol("b", real=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Arcsin("x", a, b)
>>> density(X)(z)
1/(pi*sqrt((-a + z)*(b - z)))
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise((0, a > z),
(2*asin(sqrt((-a + z)/(-a + b)))/pi, b >= z),
(1, True))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arcsine_distribution
"""
return rv(name, ArcsinDistribution, (a, b))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Benini distribution ----------------------------------------------------------
class BeniniDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('alpha', 'beta', 'sigma')
@property
def set(self):
return Interval(self.sigma, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
alpha, beta, sigma = self.alpha, self.beta, self.sigma
return (exp(-alpha*log(x/sigma) - beta*log(x/sigma)**2)
*(alpha/x + 2*beta*log(x/sigma)/x))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
raise NotImplementedError('The moment generating function of the '
'Benini distribution does not exist.')
def Benini(name, alpha, beta, sigma):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with a Benini distribution.
The density of the Benini distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := e^{-\alpha\log{\frac{x}{\sigma}}
-\beta\log^2\left[{\frac{x}{\sigma}}\right]}
\left(\frac{\alpha}{x}+\frac{2\beta\log{\frac{x}{\sigma}}}{x}\right)
This is a heavy-tailed distrubtion and is also known as the log-Rayleigh
distribution.
Parameters
==========
alpha : Real number, `\alpha > 0`, a shape
beta : Real number, `\beta > 0`, a shape
sigma : Real number, `\sigma > 0`, a scale
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Benini, density
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> alpha = Symbol("alpha", positive=True)
>>> beta = Symbol("beta", positive=True)
>>> sigma = Symbol("sigma", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Benini("x", alpha, beta, sigma)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
/ / z \\ / z \ 2/ z \
| 2*beta*log|-----|| - alpha*log|-----| - beta*log |-----|
|alpha \sigma/| \sigma/ \sigma/
|----- + -----------------|*e
\ z z /
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benini_distribution
.. [2] http://reference.wolfram.com/legacy/v8/ref/BeniniDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, BeniniDistribution, (alpha, beta, sigma))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Beta distribution ------------------------------------------------------------
class BetaDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('alpha', 'beta')
set = Interval(0, 1)
@staticmethod
def check(alpha, beta):
_value_check(alpha > 0, "Alpha must be positive")
_value_check(beta > 0, "Beta must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
alpha, beta = self.alpha, self.beta
return x**(alpha - 1) * (1 - x)**(beta - 1) / beta_fn(alpha, beta)
def sample(self):
return random.betavariate(self.alpha, self.beta)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return hyper((self.alpha,), (self.alpha + self.beta,), I*t)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return hyper((self.alpha,), (self.alpha + self.beta,), t)
def Beta(name, alpha, beta):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with a Beta distribution.
The density of the Beta distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{x^{\alpha-1}(1-x)^{\beta-1}} {\mathrm{B}(\alpha,\beta)}
with :math:`x \in [0,1]`.
Parameters
==========
alpha : Real number, `\alpha > 0`, a shape
beta : Real number, `\beta > 0`, a shape
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Beta, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint, expand_func
>>> alpha = Symbol("alpha", positive=True)
>>> beta = Symbol("beta", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Beta("x", alpha, beta)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
alpha - 1 beta - 1
z *(-z + 1)
---------------------------
B(alpha, beta)
>>> expand_func(simplify(E(X, meijerg=True)))
alpha/(alpha + beta)
>>> simplify(variance(X, meijerg=True)) #doctest: +SKIP
alpha*beta/((alpha + beta)**2*(alpha + beta + 1))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/BetaDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, BetaDistribution, (alpha, beta))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Beta prime distribution ------------------------------------------------------
class BetaPrimeDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('alpha', 'beta')
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
alpha, beta = self.alpha, self.beta
return x**(alpha - 1)*(1 + x)**(-alpha - beta)/beta_fn(alpha, beta)
def BetaPrime(name, alpha, beta):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Beta prime distribution.
The density of the Beta prime distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{x^{\alpha-1} (1+x)^{-\alpha -\beta}}{B(\alpha,\beta)}
with :math:`x > 0`.
Parameters
==========
alpha : Real number, `\alpha > 0`, a shape
beta : Real number, `\beta > 0`, a shape
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import BetaPrime, density
>>> from sympy import Symbol, pprint
>>> alpha = Symbol("alpha", positive=True)
>>> beta = Symbol("beta", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = BetaPrime("x", alpha, beta)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
alpha - 1 -alpha - beta
z *(z + 1)
-------------------------------
B(alpha, beta)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_prime_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/BetaPrimeDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, BetaPrimeDistribution, (alpha, beta))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Cauchy distribution ----------------------------------------------------------
class CauchyDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('x0', 'gamma')
def pdf(self, x):
return 1/(pi*self.gamma*(1 + ((x - self.x0)/self.gamma)**2))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return exp(self.x0 * I * t - self.gamma * Abs(t))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
raise NotImplementedError("The moment generating function for the "
"Cauchy distribution does not exist.")
def Cauchy(name, x0, gamma):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Cauchy distribution.
The density of the Cauchy distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{1}{\pi} \arctan\left(\frac{x-x_0}{\gamma}\right)
+\frac{1}{2}
Parameters
==========
x0 : Real number, the location
gamma : Real number, `\gamma > 0`, the scale
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Cauchy, density
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> x0 = Symbol("x0")
>>> gamma = Symbol("gamma", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Cauchy("x", x0, gamma)
>>> density(X)(z)
1/(pi*gamma*(1 + (-x0 + z)**2/gamma**2))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cauchy_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CauchyDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, CauchyDistribution, (x0, gamma))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Chi distribution -------------------------------------------------------------
class ChiDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('k',)
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
return 2**(1 - self.k/2)*x**(self.k - 1)*exp(-x**2/2)/gamma(self.k/2)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
k = self.k
part_1 = hyper((k/2,), (S(1)/2,), -t**2/2)
part_2 = I*t*sqrt(2)*gamma((k+1)/2)/gamma(k/2)
part_3 = hyper(((k+1)/2,), (S(3)/2,), -t**2/2)
return part_1 + part_2*part_3
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
k = self.k
part_1 = hyper((k / 2,), (S(1) / 2,), t ** 2 / 2)
part_2 = t * sqrt(2) * gamma((k + 1) / 2) / gamma(k / 2)
part_3 = hyper(((k + 1) / 2,), (S(3) / 2,), t ** 2 / 2)
return part_1 + part_2 * part_3
def Chi(name, k):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Chi distribution.
The density of the Chi distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{2^{1-k/2}x^{k-1}e^{-x^2/2}}{\Gamma(k/2)}
with :math:`x \geq 0`.
Parameters
==========
k : A positive Integer, `k > 0`, the number of degrees of freedom
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Chi, density, E, std
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> k = Symbol("k", integer=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Chi("x", k)
>>> density(X)(z)
2**(-k/2 + 1)*z**(k - 1)*exp(-z**2/2)/gamma(k/2)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chi_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ChiDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, ChiDistribution, (k,))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Non-central Chi distribution -------------------------------------------------
class ChiNoncentralDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('k', 'l')
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
k, l = self.k, self.l
return exp(-(x**2+l**2)/2)*x**k*l / (l*x)**(k/2) * besseli(k/2-1, l*x)
def ChiNoncentral(name, k, l):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a non-central Chi distribution.
The density of the non-central Chi distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{e^{-(x^2+\lambda^2)/2} x^k\lambda}
{(\lambda x)^{k/2}} I_{k/2-1}(\lambda x)
with `x \geq 0`. Here, `I_\nu (x)` is the
:ref:`modified Bessel function of the first kind <besseli>`.
Parameters
==========
k : A positive Integer, `k > 0`, the number of degrees of freedom
l : Shift parameter
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import ChiNoncentral, density, E, std
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> k = Symbol("k", integer=True)
>>> l = Symbol("l")
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = ChiNoncentral("x", k, l)
>>> density(X)(z)
l*z**k*(l*z)**(-k/2)*exp(-l**2/2 - z**2/2)*besseli(k/2 - 1, l*z)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noncentral_chi_distribution
"""
return rv(name, ChiNoncentralDistribution, (k, l))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Chi squared distribution -----------------------------------------------------
class ChiSquaredDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('k',)
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
k = self.k
return 1/(2**(k/2)*gamma(k/2))*x**(k/2 - 1)*exp(-x/2)
def _cdf(self, x):
k = self.k
return Piecewise(
(S.One/gamma(k/2)*lowergamma(k/2, x/2), x >= 0),
(0, True)
)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return (1 - 2*I*t)**(-self.k/2)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return (1 - 2*t)**(-self.k/2)
def ChiSquared(name, k):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Chi-squared distribution.
The density of the Chi-squared distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{1}{2^{\frac{k}{2}}\Gamma\left(\frac{k}{2}\right)}
x^{\frac{k}{2}-1} e^{-\frac{x}{2}}
with :math:`x \geq 0`.
Parameters
==========
k : A positive Integer, `k > 0`, the number of degrees of freedom
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import ChiSquared, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, gammasimp, expand_func
>>> k = Symbol("k", integer=True, positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = ChiSquared("x", k)
>>> density(X)(z)
2**(-k/2)*z**(k/2 - 1)*exp(-z/2)/gamma(k/2)
>>> gammasimp(E(X))
k
>>> simplify(expand_func(variance(X)))
2*k
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chi_squared_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Chi-SquaredDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, ChiSquaredDistribution, (k, ))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Dagum distribution -----------------------------------------------------------
class DagumDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('p', 'a', 'b')
def pdf(self, x):
p, a, b = self.p, self.a, self.b
return a*p/x*((x/b)**(a*p)/(((x/b)**a + 1)**(p + 1)))
def _cdf(self, x):
p, a, b = self.p, self.a, self.b
return Piecewise(((S.One + (S(x)/b)**-a)**-p, x>=0),
(S.Zero, True))
def Dagum(name, p, a, b):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Dagum distribution.
The density of the Dagum distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{a p}{x} \left( \frac{\left(\tfrac{x}{b}\right)^{a p}}
{\left(\left(\tfrac{x}{b}\right)^a + 1 \right)^{p+1}} \right)
with :math:`x > 0`.
Parameters
==========
p : Real number, `p > 0`, a shape
a : Real number, `a > 0`, a shape
b : Real number, `b > 0`, a scale
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Dagum, density, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> p = Symbol("p", positive=True)
>>> b = Symbol("b", positive=True)
>>> a = Symbol("a", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Dagum("x", p, a, b)
>>> density(X)(z)
a*p*(z/b)**(a*p)*((z/b)**a + 1)**(-p - 1)/z
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise(((1 + (z/b)**(-a))**(-p), z >= 0), (0, True))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dagum_distribution
"""
return rv(name, DagumDistribution, (p, a, b))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Erlang distribution ----------------------------------------------------------
def Erlang(name, k, l):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with an Erlang distribution.
The density of the Erlang distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{\lambda^k x^{k-1} e^{-\lambda x}}{(k-1)!}
with :math:`x \in [0,\infty]`.
Parameters
==========
k : Integer
l : Real number, `\lambda > 0`, the rate
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Erlang, density, cdf, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> k = Symbol("k", integer=True, positive=True)
>>> l = Symbol("l", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Erlang("x", k, l)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
k k - 1 -l*z
l *z *e
---------------
Gamma(k)
>>> C = cdf(X, meijerg=True)(z)
>>> pprint(C, use_unicode=False)
/ -2*I*pi*k
|k*e *lowergamma(k, l*z)
|------------------------------- for z >= 0
< Gamma(k + 1)
|
| 0 otherwise
\
>>> simplify(E(X))
k/l
>>> simplify(variance(X))
k/l**2
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erlang_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ErlangDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, GammaDistribution, (k, S.One/l))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Exponential distribution -----------------------------------------------------
class ExponentialDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('rate',)
set = Interval(0, oo)
@staticmethod
def check(rate):
_value_check(rate > 0, "Rate must be positive.")
def pdf(self, x):
return self.rate * exp(-self.rate*x)
def sample(self):
return random.expovariate(self.rate)
def _cdf(self, x):
return Piecewise(
(S.One - exp(-self.rate*x), x >= 0),
(0, True),
)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
rate = self.rate
return rate / (rate - I*t)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
rate = self.rate
return rate / (rate - t)
def Exponential(name, rate):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with an Exponential distribution.
The density of the exponential distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \lambda \exp(-\lambda x)
with `x > 0`. Note that the expected value is `1/\lambda`.
Parameters
==========
rate : A positive Real number, `\lambda > 0`, the rate (or inverse scale/inverse mean)
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Exponential, density, cdf, E
>>> from sympy.stats import variance, std, skewness
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> l = Symbol("lambda", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Exponential("x", l)
>>> density(X)(z)
lambda*exp(-lambda*z)
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise((1 - exp(-lambda*z), z >= 0), (0, True))
>>> E(X)
1/lambda
>>> variance(X)
lambda**(-2)
>>> skewness(X)
2
>>> X = Exponential('x', 10)
>>> density(X)(z)
10*exp(-10*z)
>>> E(X)
1/10
>>> std(X)
1/10
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponential_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ExponentialDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, ExponentialDistribution, (rate, ))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# F distribution ---------------------------------------------------------------
class FDistributionDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('d1', 'd2')
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
d1, d2 = self.d1, self.d2
return (sqrt((d1*x)**d1*d2**d2 / (d1*x+d2)**(d1+d2))
/ (x * beta_fn(d1/2, d2/2)))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
raise NotImplementedError('The moment generating function for the '
'F-distribution does not exist.')
def FDistribution(name, d1, d2):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a F distribution.
The density of the F distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{\sqrt{\frac{(d_1 x)^{d_1} d_2^{d_2}}
{(d_1 x + d_2)^{d_1 + d_2}}}}
{x \mathrm{B} \left(\frac{d_1}{2}, \frac{d_2}{2}\right)}
with :math:`x > 0`.
Parameters
==========
d1 : `d_1 > 0`, where d_1 is the degrees of freedom (n_1 - 1)
d2 : `d_2 > 0`, where d_2 is the degrees of freedom (n_2 - 1)
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import FDistribution, density
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> d1 = Symbol("d1", positive=True)
>>> d2 = Symbol("d2", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = FDistribution("x", d1, d2)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
d2
-- ______________________________
2 / d1 -d1 - d2
d2 *\/ (d1*z) *(d1*z + d2)
--------------------------------------
/d1 d2\
z*B|--, --|
\2 2 /
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/F-Distribution.html
"""
return rv(name, FDistributionDistribution, (d1, d2))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Fisher Z distribution --------------------------------------------------------
class FisherZDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('d1', 'd2')
def pdf(self, x):
d1, d2 = self.d1, self.d2
return (2*d1**(d1/2)*d2**(d2/2) / beta_fn(d1/2, d2/2) *
exp(d1*x) / (d1*exp(2*x)+d2)**((d1+d2)/2))
def FisherZ(name, d1, d2):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with an Fisher's Z distribution.
The density of the Fisher's Z distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{2d_1^{d_1/2} d_2^{d_2/2}} {\mathrm{B}(d_1/2, d_2/2)}
\frac{e^{d_1z}}{\left(d_1e^{2z}+d_2\right)^{\left(d_1+d_2\right)/2}}
.. TODO - What is the difference between these degrees of freedom?
Parameters
==========
d1 : `d_1 > 0`, degree of freedom
d2 : `d_2 > 0`, degree of freedom
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import FisherZ, density
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> d1 = Symbol("d1", positive=True)
>>> d2 = Symbol("d2", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = FisherZ("x", d1, d2)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
d1 d2
d1 d2 - -- - --
-- -- 2 2
2 2 / 2*z \ d1*z
2*d1 *d2 *\d1*e + d2/ *e
-----------------------------------------
/d1 d2\
B|--, --|
\2 2 /
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisher%27s_z-distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Fishersz-Distribution.html
"""
return rv(name, FisherZDistribution, (d1, d2))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Frechet distribution ---------------------------------------------------------
class FrechetDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('a', 's', 'm')
set = Interval(0, oo)
def __new__(cls, a, s=1, m=0):
a, s, m = list(map(sympify, (a, s, m)))
return Basic.__new__(cls, a, s, m)
def pdf(self, x):
a, s, m = self.a, self.s, self.m
return a/s * ((x-m)/s)**(-1-a) * exp(-((x-m)/s)**(-a))
def _cdf(self, x):
a, s, m = self.a, self.s, self.m
return Piecewise((exp(-((x-m)/s)**(-a)), x >= m),
(S.Zero, True))
def Frechet(name, a, s=1, m=0):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Frechet distribution.
The density of the Frechet distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{\alpha}{s} \left(\frac{x-m}{s}\right)^{-1-\alpha}
e^{-(\frac{x-m}{s})^{-\alpha}}
with :math:`x \geq m`.
Parameters
==========
a : Real number, :math:`a \in \left(0, \infty\right)` the shape
s : Real number, :math:`s \in \left(0, \infty\right)` the scale
m : Real number, :math:`m \in \left(-\infty, \infty\right)` the minimum
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Frechet, density, E, std, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> a = Symbol("a", positive=True)
>>> s = Symbol("s", positive=True)
>>> m = Symbol("m", real=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Frechet("x", a, s, m)
>>> density(X)(z)
a*((-m + z)/s)**(-a - 1)*exp(-((-m + z)/s)**(-a))/s
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise((exp(-((-m + z)/s)**(-a)), m <= z), (0, True))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fr%C3%A9chet_distribution
"""
return rv(name, FrechetDistribution, (a, s, m))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Gamma distribution -----------------------------------------------------------
class GammaDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('k', 'theta')
set = Interval(0, oo)
@staticmethod
def check(k, theta):
_value_check(k > 0, "k must be positive")
_value_check(theta > 0, "Theta must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
k, theta = self.k, self.theta
return x**(k - 1) * exp(-x/theta) / (gamma(k)*theta**k)
def sample(self):
return random.gammavariate(self.k, self.theta)
def _cdf(self, x):
k, theta = self.k, self.theta
return Piecewise(
(lowergamma(k, S(x)/theta)/gamma(k), x > 0),
(S.Zero, True))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return (1 - self.theta*I*t)**(-self.k)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return (1- self.theta*t)**(-self.k)
def Gamma(name, k, theta):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Gamma distribution.
The density of the Gamma distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{1}{\Gamma(k) \theta^k} x^{k - 1} e^{-\frac{x}{\theta}}
with :math:`x \in [0,1]`.
Parameters
==========
k : Real number, `k > 0`, a shape
theta : Real number, `\theta > 0`, a scale
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Gamma, density, cdf, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, pprint, simplify
>>> k = Symbol("k", positive=True)
>>> theta = Symbol("theta", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Gamma("x", k, theta)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
-z
-----
-k k - 1 theta
theta *z *e
---------------------
Gamma(k)
>>> C = cdf(X, meijerg=True)(z)
>>> pprint(C, use_unicode=False)
/ / z \
|k*lowergamma|k, -----|
| \ theta/
<---------------------- for z >= 0
| Gamma(k + 1)
|
\ 0 otherwise
>>> E(X)
k*theta
>>> V = simplify(variance(X))
>>> pprint(V, use_unicode=False)
2
k*theta
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GammaDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, GammaDistribution, (k, theta))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Inverse Gamma distribution ---------------------------------------------------
class GammaInverseDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('a', 'b')
set = Interval(0, oo)
@staticmethod
def check(a, b):
_value_check(a > 0, "alpha must be positive")
_value_check(b > 0, "beta must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
a, b = self.a, self.b
return b**a/gamma(a) * x**(-a-1) * exp(-b/x)
def _cdf(self, x):
a, b = self.a, self.b
return Piecewise((uppergamma(a,b/x)/gamma(a), x > 0),
(S.Zero, True))
def sample(self):
scipy = import_module('scipy')
if scipy:
from scipy.stats import invgamma
return invgamma.rvs(float(self.a), 0, float(self.b))
else:
raise NotImplementedError('Sampling the inverse Gamma Distribution requires Scipy.')
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
a, b = self.a, self.b
return 2 * (-I*b*t)**(a/2) * besselk(sqrt(-4*I*b*t)) / gamma(a)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
raise NotImplementedError('The moment generating function for the '
'gamma inverse distribution does not exist.')
def GammaInverse(name, a, b):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with an inverse Gamma distribution.
The density of the inverse Gamma distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{\beta^\alpha}{\Gamma(\alpha)} x^{-\alpha - 1}
\exp\left(\frac{-\beta}{x}\right)
with :math:`x > 0`.
Parameters
==========
a : Real number, `a > 0` a shape
b : Real number, `b > 0` a scale
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import GammaInverse, density, cdf, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, pprint
>>> a = Symbol("a", positive=True)
>>> b = Symbol("b", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = GammaInverse("x", a, b)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
-b
---
a -a - 1 z
b *z *e
---------------
Gamma(a)
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise((uppergamma(a, b/z)/gamma(a), z > 0), (0, True))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse-gamma_distribution
"""
return rv(name, GammaInverseDistribution, (a, b))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Gumbel distribution --------------------------------------------------------
class GumbelDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('beta', 'mu')
set = Interval(-oo, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
beta, mu = self.beta, self.mu
return (1/beta)*exp(-((x-mu)/beta)+exp(-((x-mu)/beta)))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return gamma(1 - I*self.beta*t) * exp(I*self.mu*t)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return gamma(1 - self.beta*t) * exp(I*self.mu*t)
def Gumbel(name, beta, mu):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with Gumbel distribution.
The density of the Gumbel distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \exp \left( -exp \left( x + \exp \left( -x \right) \right) \right)
with ::math 'x \in [ - \inf, \inf ]'.
Parameters
==========
mu: Real number, 'mu' is a location
beta: Real number, 'beta > 0' is a scale
Returns
==========
A RandomSymbol
Examples
==========
>>> from sympy.stats import Gumbel, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> x = Symbol("x")
>>> mu = Symbol("mu")
>>> beta = Symbol("beta", positive=True)
>>> X = Gumbel("x", beta, mu)
>>> density(X)(x)
exp(exp(-(-mu + x)/beta) - (-mu + x)/beta)/beta
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GumbelDistribution.html
.. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gumbel_distribution
"""
return rv(name, GumbelDistribution, (beta, mu))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Gompertz distribution --------------------------------------------------------
class GompertzDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('b', 'eta')
set = Interval(0, oo)
@staticmethod
def check(b, eta):
_value_check(b > 0, "b must be positive")
_value_check(eta > 0, "eta must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
eta, b = self.eta, self.b
return b*eta*exp(b*x)*exp(eta)*exp(-eta*exp(b*x))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
eta, b = self.eta, self.b
return eta * exp(eta) * expint(t/b, eta)
def Gompertz(name, b, eta):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with Gompertz distribution.
The density of the Gompertz distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := b \eta e^{b x} e^{\eta} \exp \left(-\eta e^{bx} \right)
with :math: 'x \in [0, \inf)'.
Parameters
==========
b: Real number, 'b > 0' a scale
eta: Real number, 'eta > 0' a shape
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Gompertz, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> b = Symbol("b", positive=True)
>>> eta = Symbol("eta", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Gompertz("x", b, eta)
>>> density(X)(z)
b*eta*exp(eta)*exp(b*z)*exp(-eta*exp(b*z))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gompertz_distribution
"""
return rv(name, GompertzDistribution, (b, eta))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Kumaraswamy distribution -----------------------------------------------------
class KumaraswamyDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('a', 'b')
set = Interval(0, oo)
@staticmethod
def check(a, b):
_value_check(a > 0, "a must be positive")
_value_check(b > 0, "b must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
a, b = self.a, self.b
return a * b * x**(a-1) * (1-x**a)**(b-1)
def _cdf(self, x):
a, b = self.a, self.b
return Piecewise(
(S.Zero, x < S.Zero),
(1 - (1 - x**a)**b, x <= S.One),
(S.One, True))
def Kumaraswamy(name, a, b):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with a Kumaraswamy distribution.
The density of the Kumaraswamy distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := a b x^{a-1} (1-x^a)^{b-1}
with :math:`x \in [0,1]`.
Parameters
==========
a : Real number, `a > 0` a shape
b : Real number, `b > 0` a shape
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Kumaraswamy, density, E, variance, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> a = Symbol("a", positive=True)
>>> b = Symbol("b", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Kumaraswamy("x", a, b)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
b - 1
a - 1 / a \
a*b*z *\- z + 1/
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise((0, z < 0),
(-(-z**a + 1)**b + 1, z <= 1),
(1, True))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumaraswamy_distribution
"""
return rv(name, KumaraswamyDistribution, (a, b))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Laplace distribution ---------------------------------------------------------
class LaplaceDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('mu', 'b')
def pdf(self, x):
mu, b = self.mu, self.b
return 1/(2*b)*exp(-Abs(x - mu)/b)
def _cdf(self, x):
mu, b = self.mu, self.b
return Piecewise(
(S.Half*exp((x - mu)/b), x < mu),
(S.One - S.Half*exp(-(x - mu)/b), x >= mu)
)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return exp(self.mu*I*t) / (1 + self.b**2*t**2)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return exp(self.mu*t) / (1 - self.b**2*t**2)
def Laplace(name, mu, b):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Laplace distribution.
The density of the Laplace distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{1}{2 b} \exp \left(-\frac{|x-\mu|}b \right)
Parameters
==========
mu : Real number or a list/matrix, the location (mean) or the
location vector
b : Real number or a positive definite matrix, representing a scale
or the covariance matrix.
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Laplace, density, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol, pprint
>>> mu = Symbol("mu")
>>> b = Symbol("b", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Laplace("x", mu, b)
>>> density(X)(z)
exp(-Abs(mu - z)/b)/(2*b)
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise((exp((-mu + z)/b)/2, mu > z),
(-exp((mu - z)/b)/2 + 1, True))
>>> L = Laplace('L', [1, 2], [[1, 0], [0, 1]])
>>> pprint(density(L)(1, 2), use_unicode=False)
5 / ____\
e *besselk\0, \/ 35 /
---------------------
pi
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laplace_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/LaplaceDistribution.html
"""
if isinstance(mu, (list, MatrixBase)) and\
isinstance(b, (list, MatrixBase)):
from sympy.stats.joint_rv_types import MultivariateLaplaceDistribution
return multivariate_rv(
MultivariateLaplaceDistribution, name, mu, b)
return rv(name, LaplaceDistribution, (mu, b))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Logistic distribution --------------------------------------------------------
class LogisticDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('mu', 's')
def pdf(self, x):
mu, s = self.mu, self.s
return exp(-(x - mu)/s)/(s*(1 + exp(-(x - mu)/s))**2)
def _cdf(self, x):
mu, s = self.mu, self.s
return S.One/(1 + exp(-(x - mu)/s))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return Piecewise((exp(I*t*self.mu) * pi*self.s*t / sinh(pi*self.s*t), Ne(t, 0)), (S.One, True))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return exp(self.mu*t) * Beta(1 - self.s*t, 1 + self.s*t)
def Logistic(name, mu, s):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a logistic distribution.
The density of the logistic distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{e^{-(x-\mu)/s}} {s\left(1+e^{-(x-\mu)/s}\right)^2}
Parameters
==========
mu : Real number, the location (mean)
s : Real number, `s > 0` a scale
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Logistic, density, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> mu = Symbol("mu", real=True)
>>> s = Symbol("s", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Logistic("x", mu, s)
>>> density(X)(z)
exp((mu - z)/s)/(s*(exp((mu - z)/s) + 1)**2)
>>> cdf(X)(z)
1/(exp((mu - z)/s) + 1)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logistic_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/LogisticDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, LogisticDistribution, (mu, s))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Log Normal distribution ------------------------------------------------------
class LogNormalDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('mean', 'std')
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
mean, std = self.mean, self.std
return exp(-(log(x) - mean)**2 / (2*std**2)) / (x*sqrt(2*pi)*std)
def sample(self):
return random.lognormvariate(self.mean, self.std)
def _cdf(self, x):
mean, std = self.mean, self.std
return Piecewise(
(S.Half + S.Half*erf((log(x) - mean)/sqrt(2)/std), x > 0),
(S.Zero, True)
)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
raise NotImplementedError('Moment generating function of the log-normal distribution is not defined.')
def LogNormal(name, mean, std):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a log-normal distribution.
The density of the log-normal distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{1}{x\sqrt{2\pi\sigma^2}}
e^{-\frac{\left(\ln x-\mu\right)^2}{2\sigma^2}}
with :math:`x \geq 0`.
Parameters
==========
mu : Real number, the log-scale
sigma : Real number, :math:`\sigma^2 > 0` a shape
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import LogNormal, density
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> mu = Symbol("mu", real=True)
>>> sigma = Symbol("sigma", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = LogNormal("x", mu, sigma)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
2
-(-mu + log(z))
-----------------
2
___ 2*sigma
\/ 2 *e
------------------------
____
2*\/ pi *sigma*z
>>> X = LogNormal('x', 0, 1) # Mean 0, standard deviation 1
>>> density(X)(z)
sqrt(2)*exp(-log(z)**2/2)/(2*sqrt(pi)*z)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lognormal
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/LogNormalDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, LogNormalDistribution, (mean, std))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Maxwell distribution ---------------------------------------------------------
class MaxwellDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('a',)
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
a = self.a
return sqrt(2/pi)*x**2*exp(-x**2/(2*a**2))/a**3
def Maxwell(name, a):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Maxwell distribution.
The density of the Maxwell distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi}} \frac{x^2 e^{-x^2/(2a^2)}}{a^3}
with :math:`x \geq 0`.
.. TODO - what does the parameter mean?
Parameters
==========
a : Real number, `a > 0`
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Maxwell, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> a = Symbol("a", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Maxwell("x", a)
>>> density(X)(z)
sqrt(2)*z**2*exp(-z**2/(2*a**2))/(sqrt(pi)*a**3)
>>> E(X)
2*sqrt(2)*a/sqrt(pi)
>>> simplify(variance(X))
a**2*(-8 + 3*pi)/pi
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxwell_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/MaxwellDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, MaxwellDistribution, (a, ))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Nakagami distribution --------------------------------------------------------
class NakagamiDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('mu', 'omega')
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
mu, omega = self.mu, self.omega
return 2*mu**mu/(gamma(mu)*omega**mu)*x**(2*mu - 1)*exp(-mu/omega*x**2)
def _cdf(self, x):
mu, omega = self.mu, self.omega
return Piecewise(
(lowergamma(mu, (mu/omega)*x**2)/gamma(mu), x > 0),
(S.Zero, True))
def Nakagami(name, mu, omega):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Nakagami distribution.
The density of the Nakagami distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{2\mu^\mu}{\Gamma(\mu)\omega^\mu} x^{2\mu-1}
\exp\left(-\frac{\mu}{\omega}x^2 \right)
with :math:`x > 0`.
Parameters
==========
mu : Real number, `\mu \geq \frac{1}{2}` a shape
omega : Real number, `\omega > 0`, the spread
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Nakagami, density, E, variance, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> mu = Symbol("mu", positive=True)
>>> omega = Symbol("omega", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Nakagami("x", mu, omega)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
2
-mu*z
-------
mu -mu 2*mu - 1 omega
2*mu *omega *z *e
----------------------------------
Gamma(mu)
>>> simplify(E(X))
sqrt(mu)*sqrt(omega)*gamma(mu + 1/2)/gamma(mu + 1)
>>> V = simplify(variance(X))
>>> pprint(V, use_unicode=False)
2
omega*Gamma (mu + 1/2)
omega - -----------------------
Gamma(mu)*Gamma(mu + 1)
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise((lowergamma(mu, mu*z**2/omega)/gamma(mu), z > 0),
(0, True))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakagami_distribution
"""
return rv(name, NakagamiDistribution, (mu, omega))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Normal distribution ----------------------------------------------------------
class NormalDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('mean', 'std')
@staticmethod
def check(mean, std):
_value_check(std > 0, "Standard deviation must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
return exp(-(x - self.mean)**2 / (2*self.std**2)) / (sqrt(2*pi)*self.std)
def sample(self):
return random.normalvariate(self.mean, self.std)
def _cdf(self, x):
mean, std = self.mean, self.std
return erf(sqrt(2)*(-mean + x)/(2*std))/2 + S.Half
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
mean, std = self.mean, self.std
return exp(I*mean*t - std**2*t**2/2)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
mean, std = self.mean, self.std
return exp(mean*t + std**2*t**2/2)
def Normal(name, mean, std):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Normal distribution.
The density of the Normal distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{1}{\sigma\sqrt{2\pi}} e^{ -\frac{(x-\mu)^2}{2\sigma^2} }
Parameters
==========
mu : Real number or a list representing the mean or the mean vector
sigma : Real number or a positive definite sqaure matrix,
:math:`\sigma^2 > 0` the variance
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Normal, density, E, std, cdf, skewness
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint, factor, together, factor_terms
>>> mu = Symbol("mu")
>>> sigma = Symbol("sigma", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> y = Symbol("y")
>>> X = Normal("x", mu, sigma)
>>> density(X)(z)
sqrt(2)*exp(-(-mu + z)**2/(2*sigma**2))/(2*sqrt(pi)*sigma)
>>> C = simplify(cdf(X))(z) # it needs a little more help...
>>> pprint(C, use_unicode=False)
/ ___ \
|\/ 2 *(-mu + z)|
erf|---------------|
\ 2*sigma / 1
-------------------- + -
2 2
>>> simplify(skewness(X))
0
>>> X = Normal("x", 0, 1) # Mean 0, standard deviation 1
>>> density(X)(z)
sqrt(2)*exp(-z**2/2)/(2*sqrt(pi))
>>> E(2*X + 1)
1
>>> simplify(std(2*X + 1))
2
>>> m = Normal('X', [1, 2], [[2, 1], [1, 2]])
>>> from sympy.stats.joint_rv import marginal_distribution
>>> pprint(density(m)(y, z))
/ y 1\ /2*y z\ / z \ / y 2*z \
|- - + -|*|--- - -| + |- - + 1|*|- - + --- - 1|
___ \ 2 2/ \ 3 3/ \ 2 / \ 3 3 /
\/ 3 *e
------------------------------------------------------
6*pi
>>> marginal_distribution(m, m[0])(1)
1/(2*sqrt(pi))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/NormalDistributionFunction.html
"""
if isinstance(mean, (list, MatrixBase)) and\
isinstance(std, (list, MatrixBase)):
from sympy.stats.joint_rv_types import MultivariateNormalDistribution
return multivariate_rv(
MultivariateNormalDistribution, name, mean, std)
return rv(name, NormalDistribution, (mean, std))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Pareto distribution ----------------------------------------------------------
class ParetoDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('xm', 'alpha')
@property
def set(self):
return Interval(self.xm, oo)
@staticmethod
def check(xm, alpha):
_value_check(xm > 0, "Xm must be positive")
_value_check(alpha > 0, "Alpha must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
xm, alpha = self.xm, self.alpha
return alpha * xm**alpha / x**(alpha + 1)
def sample(self):
return random.paretovariate(self.alpha)
def _cdf(self, x):
xm, alpha = self.xm, self.alpha
return Piecewise(
(S.One - xm**alpha/x**alpha, x>=xm),
(0, True),
)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
xm, alpha = self.xm, self.alpha
return alpha * (-xm*t)**alpha * uppergamma(-alpha, -xm*t)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
xm, alpha = self.xm, self.alpha
return alpha * (-I * xm * t) ** alpha * uppergamma(-alpha, -I * xm * t)
def Pareto(name, xm, alpha):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with the Pareto distribution.
The density of the Pareto distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{\alpha\,x_m^\alpha}{x^{\alpha+1}}
with :math:`x \in [x_m,\infty]`.
Parameters
==========
xm : Real number, `x_m > 0`, a scale
alpha : Real number, `\alpha > 0`, a shape
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Pareto, density
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> xm = Symbol("xm", positive=True)
>>> beta = Symbol("beta", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Pareto("x", xm, beta)
>>> density(X)(z)
beta*xm**beta*z**(-beta - 1)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareto_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ParetoDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, ParetoDistribution, (xm, alpha))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# QuadraticU distribution ------------------------------------------------------
class QuadraticUDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('a', 'b')
@property
def set(self):
return Interval(self.a, self.b)
def pdf(self, x):
a, b = self.a, self.b
alpha = 12 / (b-a)**3
beta = (a+b) / 2
return Piecewise(
(alpha * (x-beta)**2, And(a<=x, x<=b)),
(S.Zero, True))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
a, b = self.a, self.b
return -3 * (exp(a*t) * (4 + (a**2 + 2*a*(-2 + b) + b**2) * t) - exp(b*t) * (4 + (-4*b + (a + b)**2) * t)) / ((a-b)**3 * t**2)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
a, b = self.a, self.b
return -3*I*(exp(I*a*t*exp(I*b*t)) * (4*I - (-4*b + (a+b)**2)*t)) / ((a-b)**3 * t**2)
def QuadraticU(name, a, b):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with a U-quadratic distribution.
The density of the U-quadratic distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \alpha (x-\beta)^2
with :math:`x \in [a,b]`.
Parameters
==========
a : Real number
b : Real number, :math:`a < b`
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import QuadraticU, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, factor, pprint
>>> a = Symbol("a", real=True)
>>> b = Symbol("b", real=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = QuadraticU("x", a, b)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
/ 2
| / a b \
|12*|- - - - + z|
| \ 2 2 /
<----------------- for And(b >= z, a <= z)
| 3
| (-a + b)
|
\ 0 otherwise
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U-quadratic_distribution
"""
return rv(name, QuadraticUDistribution, (a, b))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# RaisedCosine distribution ----------------------------------------------------
class RaisedCosineDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('mu', 's')
@property
def set(self):
return Interval(self.mu - self.s, self.mu + self.s)
@staticmethod
def check(mu, s):
_value_check(s > 0, "s must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
mu, s = self.mu, self.s
return Piecewise(
((1+cos(pi*(x-mu)/s)) / (2*s), And(mu-s<=x, x<=mu+s)),
(S.Zero, True))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
mu, s = self.mu, self.s
return Piecewise((exp(-I*pi*mu/s)/2, Eq(t, -pi/s)),
(exp(I*pi*mu/s)/2, Eq(t, pi/s)),
(pi**2*sin(s*t)*exp(I*mu*t) / (s*t*(pi**2 - s**2*t**2)), True))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
mu, s = self.mu, self.s
return pi**2 * sinh(s*t) * exp(mu*t) / (s*t*(pi**2 + s**2*t**2))
def RaisedCosine(name, mu, s):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with a raised cosine distribution.
The density of the raised cosine distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{1}{2s}\left(1+\cos\left(\frac{x-\mu}{s}\pi\right)\right)
with :math:`x \in [\mu-s,\mu+s]`.
Parameters
==========
mu : Real number
s : Real number, `s > 0`
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import RaisedCosine, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> mu = Symbol("mu", real=True)
>>> s = Symbol("s", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = RaisedCosine("x", mu, s)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
/ /pi*(-mu + z)\
|cos|------------| + 1
| \ s /
<--------------------- for And(z >= mu - s, z <= mu + s)
| 2*s
|
\ 0 otherwise
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raised_cosine_distribution
"""
return rv(name, RaisedCosineDistribution, (mu, s))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Rayleigh distribution --------------------------------------------------------
class RayleighDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('sigma',)
set = Interval(0, oo)
def pdf(self, x):
sigma = self.sigma
return x/sigma**2*exp(-x**2/(2*sigma**2))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
sigma = self.sigma
return 1 - sigma*t*exp(-sigma**2*t**2/2) * sqrt(pi/2) * (erfi(sigma*t/sqrt(2)) - I)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
sigma = self.sigma
return 1 + sigma*t*exp(sigma**2*t**2/2) * sqrt(pi/2) * (erf(sigma*t/sqrt(2)) + 1)
def Rayleigh(name, sigma):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Rayleigh distribution.
The density of the Rayleigh distribution is given by
.. math ::
f(x) := \frac{x}{\sigma^2} e^{-x^2/2\sigma^2}
with :math:`x > 0`.
Parameters
==========
sigma : Real number, `\sigma > 0`
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Rayleigh, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> sigma = Symbol("sigma", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Rayleigh("x", sigma)
>>> density(X)(z)
z*exp(-z**2/(2*sigma**2))/sigma**2
>>> E(X)
sqrt(2)*sqrt(pi)*sigma/2
>>> variance(X)
-pi*sigma**2/2 + 2*sigma**2
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rayleigh_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/RayleighDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, RayleighDistribution, (sigma, ))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Shifted Gompertz distribution ------------------------------------------------
class ShiftedGompertzDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('b', 'eta')
set = Interval(0, oo)
@staticmethod
def check(b, eta):
_value_check(b > 0, "b must be positive")
_value_check(eta > 0, "eta must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
b, eta = self.b, self.eta
return b*exp(-b*x)*exp(-eta*exp(-b*x))*(1+eta*(1-exp(-b*x)))
def ShiftedGompertz(name, b, eta):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Shifted Gompertz distribution.
The density of the Shifted Gompertz distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := b e^{-b x} e^{-\eta \exp(-b x)} \left[1 + \eta(1 - e^(-bx)) \right]
with :math: 'x \in [0, \inf)'.
Parameters
==========
b: Real number, 'b > 0' a scale
eta: Real number, 'eta > 0' a shape
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import ShiftedGompertz, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> b = Symbol("b", positive=True)
>>> eta = Symbol("eta", positive=True)
>>> x = Symbol("x")
>>> X = ShiftedGompertz("x", b, eta)
>>> density(X)(x)
b*(eta*(1 - exp(-b*x)) + 1)*exp(-b*x)*exp(-eta*exp(-b*x))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shifted_Gompertz_distribution
"""
return rv(name, ShiftedGompertzDistribution, (b, eta))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# StudentT distribution --------------------------------------------------------
class StudentTDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('nu',)
def pdf(self, x):
nu = self.nu
return 1/(sqrt(nu)*beta_fn(S(1)/2, nu/2))*(1 + x**2/nu)**(-(nu + 1)/2)
def _cdf(self, x):
nu = self.nu
return S.Half + x*gamma((nu+1)/2)*hyper((S.Half, (nu+1)/2),
(S(3)/2,), -x**2/nu)/(sqrt(pi*nu)*gamma(nu/2))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
raise NotImplementedError('The moment generating function for the Student-T distribution is undefined.')
def StudentT(name, nu):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a student's t distribution.
The density of the student's t distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{\Gamma \left(\frac{\nu+1}{2} \right)}
{\sqrt{\nu\pi}\Gamma \left(\frac{\nu}{2} \right)}
\left(1+\frac{x^2}{\nu} \right)^{-\frac{\nu+1}{2}}
Parameters
==========
nu : Real number, `\nu > 0`, the degrees of freedom
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import StudentT, density, E, variance, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> nu = Symbol("nu", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = StudentT("x", nu)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
nu 1
- -- - -
2 2
/ 2\
| z |
|1 + --|
\ nu/
-----------------
____ / nu\
\/ nu *B|1/2, --|
\ 2 /
>>> cdf(X)(z)
1/2 + z*gamma(nu/2 + 1/2)*hyper((1/2, nu/2 + 1/2), (3/2,),
-z**2/nu)/(sqrt(pi)*sqrt(nu)*gamma(nu/2))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student_t-distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Studentst-Distribution.html
"""
return rv(name, StudentTDistribution, (nu, ))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Trapezoidal distribution ------------------------------------------------------
class TrapezoidalDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('a', 'b', 'c', 'd')
def pdf(self, x):
a, b, c, d = self.a, self.b, self.c, self.d
return Piecewise(
(2*(x-a) / ((b-a)*(d+c-a-b)), And(a <= x, x < b)),
(2 / (d+c-a-b), And(b <= x, x < c)),
(2*(d-x) / ((d-c)*(d+c-a-b)), And(c <= x, x <= d)),
(S.Zero, True))
def Trapezoidal(name, a, b, c, d):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a trapezoidal distribution.
The density of the trapezoidal distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \begin{cases}
0 & \mathrm{for\ } x < a, \\
\frac{2(x-a)}{(b-a)(d+c-a-b)} & \mathrm{for\ } a \le x < b, \\
\frac{2}{d+c-a-b} & \mathrm{for\ } b \le x < c, \\
\frac{2(d-x)}{(d-c)(d+c-a-b)} & \mathrm{for\ } c \le x < d, \\
0 & \mathrm{for\ } d < x.
\end{cases}
Parameters
==========
a : Real number, :math:`a < d`
b : Real number, :math:`a <= b < c`
c : Real number, :math:`b < c <= d`
d : Real number
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Trapezoidal, density, E
>>> from sympy import Symbol, pprint
>>> a = Symbol("a")
>>> b = Symbol("b")
>>> c = Symbol("c")
>>> d = Symbol("d")
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Trapezoidal("x", a,b,c,d)
>>> pprint(density(X)(z), use_unicode=False)
/ -2*a + 2*z
|------------------------- for And(a <= z, b > z)
|(-a + b)*(-a - b + c + d)
|
| 2
| -------------- for And(b <= z, c > z)
< -a - b + c + d
|
| 2*d - 2*z
|------------------------- for And(d >= z, c <= z)
|(-c + d)*(-a - b + c + d)
|
\ 0 otherwise
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trapezoidal_distribution
"""
return rv(name, TrapezoidalDistribution, (a, b, c, d))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Triangular distribution ------------------------------------------------------
class TriangularDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('a', 'b', 'c')
def pdf(self, x):
a, b, c = self.a, self.b, self.c
return Piecewise(
(2*(x - a)/((b - a)*(c - a)), And(a <= x, x < c)),
(2/(b - a), Eq(x, c)),
(2*(b - x)/((b - a)*(b - c)), And(c < x, x <= b)),
(S.Zero, True))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
a, b, c = self.a, self.b, self.c
return -2 *((b-c) * exp(I*a*t) - (b-a) * exp(I*c*t) + (c-a) * exp(I*b*t)) / ((b-a)*(c-a)*(b-c)*t**2)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
a, b, c = self.a, self.b, self.c
return 2 * ((b - c) * exp(a * t) - (b - a) * exp(c * t) + (c + a) * exp(b * t)) / (
(b - a) * (c - a) * (b - c) * t ** 2)
def Triangular(name, a, b, c):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a triangular distribution.
The density of the triangular distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \begin{cases}
0 & \mathrm{for\ } x < a, \\
\frac{2(x-a)}{(b-a)(c-a)} & \mathrm{for\ } a \le x < c, \\
\frac{2}{b-a} & \mathrm{for\ } x = c, \\
\frac{2(b-x)}{(b-a)(b-c)} & \mathrm{for\ } c < x \le b, \\
0 & \mathrm{for\ } b < x.
\end{cases}
Parameters
==========
a : Real number, :math:`a \in \left(-\infty, \infty\right)`
b : Real number, :math:`a < b`
c : Real number, :math:`a \leq c \leq b`
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Triangular, density, E
>>> from sympy import Symbol, pprint
>>> a = Symbol("a")
>>> b = Symbol("b")
>>> c = Symbol("c")
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Triangular("x", a,b,c)
>>> pprint(density(X)(z), use_unicode=False)
/ -2*a + 2*z
|----------------- for And(a <= z, c > z)
|(-a + b)*(-a + c)
|
| 2
| ------ for c = z
< -a + b
|
| 2*b - 2*z
|---------------- for And(b >= z, c < z)
|(-a + b)*(b - c)
|
\ 0 otherwise
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangular_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/TriangularDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, TriangularDistribution, (a, b, c))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Uniform distribution ---------------------------------------------------------
class UniformDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('left', 'right')
def pdf(self, x):
left, right = self.left, self.right
return Piecewise(
(S.One/(right - left), And(left <= x, x <= right)),
(S.Zero, True)
)
def _cdf(self, x):
left, right = self.left, self.right
return Piecewise(
(S.Zero, x < left),
((x - left)/(right - left), x <= right),
(S.One, True)
)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
left, right = self.left, self.right
return Piecewise(((exp(I*t*right) - exp(I*t*left)) / (I*t*(right - left)), Ne(t, 0)),
(S.One, True))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
left, right = self.left, self.right
return Piecewise(((exp(t*right) - exp(t*left)) / (t * (right - left)), Ne(t, 0)),
(S.One, True))
def expectation(self, expr, var, **kwargs):
from sympy import Max, Min
kwargs['evaluate'] = True
result = SingleContinuousDistribution.expectation(self, expr, var, **kwargs)
result = result.subs({Max(self.left, self.right): self.right,
Min(self.left, self.right): self.left})
return result
def sample(self):
return random.uniform(self.left, self.right)
def Uniform(name, left, right):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a uniform distribution.
The density of the uniform distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \begin{cases}
\frac{1}{b - a} & \text{for } x \in [a,b] \\
0 & \text{otherwise}
\end{cases}
with :math:`x \in [a,b]`.
Parameters
==========
a : Real number, :math:`-\infty < a` the left boundary
b : Real number, :math:`a < b < \infty` the right boundary
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Uniform, density, cdf, E, variance, skewness
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> a = Symbol("a", negative=True)
>>> b = Symbol("b", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Uniform("x", a, b)
>>> density(X)(z)
Piecewise((1/(-a + b), (b >= z) & (a <= z)), (0, True))
>>> cdf(X)(z) # doctest: +SKIP
-a/(-a + b) + z/(-a + b)
>>> simplify(E(X))
a/2 + b/2
>>> simplify(variance(X))
a**2/12 - a*b/6 + b**2/12
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_distribution_%28continuous%29
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/UniformDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, UniformDistribution, (left, right))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# UniformSum distribution ------------------------------------------------------
class UniformSumDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('n',)
@property
def set(self):
return Interval(0, self.n)
def pdf(self, x):
n = self.n
k = Dummy("k")
return 1/factorial(
n - 1)*Sum((-1)**k*binomial(n, k)*(x - k)**(n - 1), (k, 0, floor(x)))
def _cdf(self, x):
n = self.n
k = Dummy("k")
return Piecewise((S.Zero, x < 0),
(1/factorial(n)*Sum((-1)**k*binomial(n, k)*(x - k)**(n),
(k, 0, floor(x))), x <= n),
(S.One, True))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return ((exp(I*t) - 1) / (I*t))**self.n
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return ((exp(t) - 1) / t)**self.n
def UniformSum(name, n):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with an Irwin-Hall distribution.
The probability distribution function depends on a single parameter
`n` which is an integer.
The density of the Irwin-Hall distribution is given by
.. math ::
f(x) := \frac{1}{(n-1)!}\sum_{k=0}^{\lfloor x\rfloor}(-1)^k
\binom{n}{k}(x-k)^{n-1}
Parameters
==========
n : A positive Integer, `n > 0`
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import UniformSum, density, cdf
>>> from sympy import Symbol, pprint
>>> n = Symbol("n", integer=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = UniformSum("x", n)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
floor(z)
___
\ `
\ k n - 1 /n\
) (-1) *(-k + z) *| |
/ \k/
/__,
k = 0
--------------------------------
(n - 1)!
>>> cdf(X)(z)
Piecewise((0, z < 0), (Sum((-1)**_k*(-_k + z)**n*binomial(n, _k),
(_k, 0, floor(z)))/factorial(n), n >= z), (1, True))
Compute cdf with specific 'x' and 'n' values as follows :
>>> cdf(UniformSum("x", 5), evaluate=False)(2).doit()
9/40
The argument evaluate=False prevents an attempt at evaluation
of the sum for general n, before the argument 2 is passed.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_sum_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/UniformSumDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, UniformSumDistribution, (n, ))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# VonMises distribution --------------------------------------------------------
class VonMisesDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('mu', 'k')
set = Interval(0, 2*pi)
@staticmethod
def check(mu, k):
_value_check(k > 0, "k must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
mu, k = self.mu, self.k
return exp(k*cos(x-mu)) / (2*pi*besseli(0, k))
def VonMises(name, mu, k):
r"""
Create a Continuous Random Variable with a von Mises distribution.
The density of the von Mises distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac{e^{\kappa\cos(x-\mu)}}{2\pi I_0(\kappa)}
with :math:`x \in [0,2\pi]`.
Parameters
==========
mu : Real number, measure of location
k : Real number, measure of concentration
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import VonMises, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify, pprint
>>> mu = Symbol("mu")
>>> k = Symbol("k", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = VonMises("x", mu, k)
>>> D = density(X)(z)
>>> pprint(D, use_unicode=False)
k*cos(mu - z)
e
------------------
2*pi*besseli(0, k)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Von_Mises_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/vonMisesDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, VonMisesDistribution, (mu, k))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Weibull distribution ---------------------------------------------------------
class WeibullDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('alpha', 'beta')
set = Interval(0, oo)
@staticmethod
def check(alpha, beta):
_value_check(alpha > 0, "Alpha must be positive")
_value_check(beta > 0, "Beta must be positive")
def pdf(self, x):
alpha, beta = self.alpha, self.beta
return beta * (x/alpha)**(beta - 1) * exp(-(x/alpha)**beta) / alpha
def sample(self):
return random.weibullvariate(self.alpha, self.beta)
def Weibull(name, alpha, beta):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Weibull distribution.
The density of the Weibull distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \begin{cases}
\frac{k}{\lambda}\left(\frac{x}{\lambda}\right)^{k-1}
e^{-(x/\lambda)^{k}} & x\geq0\\
0 & x<0
\end{cases}
Parameters
==========
lambda : Real number, :math:`\lambda > 0` a scale
k : Real number, `k > 0` a shape
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Weibull, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> l = Symbol("lambda", positive=True)
>>> k = Symbol("k", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Weibull("x", l, k)
>>> density(X)(z)
k*(z/lambda)**(k - 1)*exp(-(z/lambda)**k)/lambda
>>> simplify(E(X))
lambda*gamma(1 + 1/k)
>>> simplify(variance(X))
lambda**2*(-gamma(1 + 1/k)**2 + gamma(1 + 2/k))
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weibull_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/WeibullDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, WeibullDistribution, (alpha, beta))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Wigner semicircle distribution -----------------------------------------------
class WignerSemicircleDistribution(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('R',)
@property
def set(self):
return Interval(-self.R, self.R)
def pdf(self, x):
R = self.R
return 2/(pi*R**2)*sqrt(R**2 - x**2)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return Piecewise((2 * besselj(1, self.R*t) / (self.R*t), Ne(t, 0)),
(S.One, True))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return Piecewise((2 * besseli(1, self.R*t) / (self.R*t), Ne(t, 0)),
(S.One, True))
def WignerSemicircle(name, R):
r"""
Create a continuous random variable with a Wigner semicircle distribution.
The density of the Wigner semicircle distribution is given by
.. math::
f(x) := \frac2{\pi R^2}\,\sqrt{R^2-x^2}
with :math:`x \in [-R,R]`.
Parameters
==========
R : Real number, `R > 0`, the radius
Returns
=======
A `RandomSymbol`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import WignerSemicircle, density, E
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> R = Symbol("R", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = WignerSemicircle("x", R)
>>> density(X)(z)
2*sqrt(R**2 - z**2)/(pi*R**2)
>>> E(X)
0
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wigner_semicircle_distribution
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/WignersSemicircleLaw.html
"""
return rv(name, WignerSemicircleDistribution, (R,))
|
f9d08148c654f0db26d1ad438700adb191cece36ab865f1d46fbaea1a820572e
|
"""
Finite Discrete Random Variables - Prebuilt variable types
Contains
========
FiniteRV
DiscreteUniform
Die
Bernoulli
Coin
Binomial
Hypergeometric
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int, range
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_not, fuzzy_and
from sympy.stats.frv import (SingleFinitePSpace, SingleFiniteDistribution)
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
from sympy import (S, sympify, Rational, binomial, cacheit, Integer,
Dict, Basic, KroneckerDelta, Dummy)
__all__ = ['FiniteRV', 'DiscreteUniform', 'Die', 'Bernoulli', 'Coin',
'Binomial', 'Hypergeometric']
def rv(name, cls, *args):
density = cls(*args)
return SingleFinitePSpace(name, density).value
class FiniteDistributionHandmade(SingleFiniteDistribution):
@property
def dict(self):
return self.args[0]
def __new__(cls, density):
density = Dict(density)
return Basic.__new__(cls, density)
def FiniteRV(name, density):
"""
Create a Finite Random Variable given a dict representing the density.
Returns a RandomSymbol.
>>> from sympy.stats import FiniteRV, P, E
>>> density = {0: .1, 1: .2, 2: .3, 3: .4}
>>> X = FiniteRV('X', density)
>>> E(X)
2.00000000000000
>>> P(X >= 2)
0.700000000000000
"""
return rv(name, FiniteDistributionHandmade, density)
class DiscreteUniformDistribution(SingleFiniteDistribution):
@property
def p(self):
return Rational(1, len(self.args))
@property
@cacheit
def dict(self):
return dict((k, self.p) for k in self.set)
@property
def set(self):
return self.args
def pdf(self, x):
if x in self.args:
return self.p
else:
return S.Zero
def DiscreteUniform(name, items):
"""
Create a Finite Random Variable representing a uniform distribution over
the input set.
Returns a RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import DiscreteUniform, density
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> X = DiscreteUniform('X', symbols('a b c')) # equally likely over a, b, c
>>> density(X).dict
{a: 1/3, b: 1/3, c: 1/3}
>>> Y = DiscreteUniform('Y', list(range(5))) # distribution over a range
>>> density(Y).dict
{0: 1/5, 1: 1/5, 2: 1/5, 3: 1/5, 4: 1/5}
"""
return rv(name, DiscreteUniformDistribution, *items)
class DieDistribution(SingleFiniteDistribution):
_argnames = ('sides',)
def __new__(cls, sides):
sides_sym = sympify(sides)
if fuzzy_not(fuzzy_and((sides_sym.is_integer, sides_sym.is_positive))):
raise ValueError("'sides' must be a positive integer.")
else:
return super(DieDistribution, cls).__new__(cls, sides)
@property
@cacheit
def dict(self):
sides = as_int(self.sides)
return super(DieDistribution, self).dict
@property
def set(self):
return list(map(Integer, list(range(1, self.sides + 1))))
def pdf(self, x):
x = sympify(x)
if x.is_number:
if x.is_Integer and x >= 1 and x <= self.sides:
return Rational(1, self.sides)
return S.Zero
if x.is_Symbol:
i = Dummy('i', integer=True, positive=True)
return Sum(KroneckerDelta(x, i)/self.sides, (i, 1, self.sides))
raise ValueError("'x' expected as an argument of type 'number' or 'symbol', "
"not %s" % (type(x)))
def Die(name, sides=6):
"""
Create a Finite Random Variable representing a fair die.
Returns a RandomSymbol.
>>> from sympy.stats import Die, density
>>> D6 = Die('D6', 6) # Six sided Die
>>> density(D6).dict
{1: 1/6, 2: 1/6, 3: 1/6, 4: 1/6, 5: 1/6, 6: 1/6}
>>> D4 = Die('D4', 4) # Four sided Die
>>> density(D4).dict
{1: 1/4, 2: 1/4, 3: 1/4, 4: 1/4}
"""
return rv(name, DieDistribution, sides)
class BernoulliDistribution(SingleFiniteDistribution):
_argnames = ('p', 'succ', 'fail')
@property
@cacheit
def dict(self):
return {self.succ: self.p, self.fail: 1 - self.p}
def Bernoulli(name, p, succ=1, fail=0):
"""
Create a Finite Random Variable representing a Bernoulli process.
Returns a RandomSymbol
>>> from sympy.stats import Bernoulli, density
>>> from sympy import S
>>> X = Bernoulli('X', S(3)/4) # 1-0 Bernoulli variable, probability = 3/4
>>> density(X).dict
{0: 1/4, 1: 3/4}
>>> X = Bernoulli('X', S.Half, 'Heads', 'Tails') # A fair coin toss
>>> density(X).dict
{Heads: 1/2, Tails: 1/2}
"""
return rv(name, BernoulliDistribution, p, succ, fail)
def Coin(name, p=S.Half):
"""
Create a Finite Random Variable representing a Coin toss.
Probability p is the chance of gettings "Heads." Half by default
Returns a RandomSymbol.
>>> from sympy.stats import Coin, density
>>> from sympy import Rational
>>> C = Coin('C') # A fair coin toss
>>> density(C).dict
{H: 1/2, T: 1/2}
>>> C2 = Coin('C2', Rational(3, 5)) # An unfair coin
>>> density(C2).dict
{H: 3/5, T: 2/5}
"""
return rv(name, BernoulliDistribution, p, 'H', 'T')
class BinomialDistribution(SingleFiniteDistribution):
_argnames = ('n', 'p', 'succ', 'fail')
def __new__(cls, *args):
n = args[BinomialDistribution._argnames.index('n')]
p = args[BinomialDistribution._argnames.index('p')]
n_sym = sympify(n)
p_sym = sympify(p)
if fuzzy_not(fuzzy_and((n_sym.is_integer, n_sym.is_nonnegative))):
raise ValueError("'n' must be positive integer. n = %s." % str(n))
elif fuzzy_not(fuzzy_and((p_sym.is_nonnegative, (p_sym - 1).is_nonpositive))):
raise ValueError("'p' must be: 0 <= p <= 1 . p = %s" % str(p))
else:
return super(BinomialDistribution, cls).__new__(cls, *args)
@property
@cacheit
def dict(self):
n, p, succ, fail = self.n, self.p, self.succ, self.fail
n = as_int(n)
return dict((k*succ + (n - k)*fail,
binomial(n, k) * p**k * (1 - p)**(n - k)) for k in range(0, n + 1))
def Binomial(name, n, p, succ=1, fail=0):
"""
Create a Finite Random Variable representing a binomial distribution.
Returns a RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Binomial, density
>>> from sympy import S
>>> X = Binomial('X', 4, S.Half) # Four "coin flips"
>>> density(X).dict
{0: 1/16, 1: 1/4, 2: 3/8, 3: 1/4, 4: 1/16}
"""
return rv(name, BinomialDistribution, n, p, succ, fail)
class HypergeometricDistribution(SingleFiniteDistribution):
_argnames = ('N', 'm', 'n')
@property
@cacheit
def dict(self):
N, m, n = self.N, self.m, self.n
N, m, n = list(map(sympify, (N, m, n)))
density = dict((sympify(k),
Rational(binomial(m, k) * binomial(N - m, n - k),
binomial(N, n)))
for k in range(max(0, n + m - N), min(m, n) + 1))
return density
def Hypergeometric(name, N, m, n):
"""
Create a Finite Random Variable representing a hypergeometric distribution.
Returns a RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Hypergeometric, density
>>> from sympy import S
>>> X = Hypergeometric('X', 10, 5, 3) # 10 marbles, 5 white (success), 3 draws
>>> density(X).dict
{0: 1/12, 1: 5/12, 2: 5/12, 3: 1/12}
"""
return rv(name, HypergeometricDistribution, N, m, n)
class RademacherDistribution(SingleFiniteDistribution):
@property
@cacheit
def dict(self):
return {-1: S.Half, 1: S.Half}
def Rademacher(name):
"""
Create a Finite Random Variable representing a Rademacher distribution.
Return a RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Rademacher, density
>>> X = Rademacher('X')
>>> density(X).dict
{-1: 1/2, 1: 1/2}
See Also
========
sympy.stats.Bernoulli
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rademacher_distribution
"""
return rv(name, RademacherDistribution)
|
1fab8d31005460d44d920e8af58bc2307fb11f1b0731214dfb311b3bb6333012
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.stats.drv import SingleDiscreteDistribution, SingleDiscretePSpace
from sympy import (factorial, exp, S, sympify, And, I, zeta, polylog, log, beta, hyper, binomial,
Piecewise, floor)
from sympy.stats.rv import _value_check, RandomSymbol
from sympy.stats.joint_rv_types import JointRV
from sympy.stats.joint_rv import MarginalDistribution, JointPSpace, CompoundDistribution
from sympy.stats import density
import random
__all__ = ['Geometric', 'Logarithmic', 'NegativeBinomial', 'Poisson', 'YuleSimon', 'Zeta']
def rv(symbol, cls, *args):
args = list(map(sympify, args))
dist = cls(*args)
dist.check(*args)
pspace = SingleDiscretePSpace(symbol, dist)
if any(isinstance(arg, RandomSymbol) for arg in args):
pspace = JointPSpace(symbol, CompoundDistribution(dist))
return pspace.value
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Geometric distribution ------------------------------------------------------------
class GeometricDistribution(SingleDiscreteDistribution):
_argnames = ('p',)
set = S.Naturals
@staticmethod
def check(p):
_value_check(And(0 < p, p <= 1), "p must be between 0 and 1")
def pdf(self, k):
return (1 - self.p)**(k - 1) * self.p
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
p = self.p
return p * exp(I*t) / (1 - (1 - p)*exp(I*t))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
p = self.p
return p * exp(t) / (1 - (1 - p) * exp(t))
def Geometric(name, p):
r"""
Create a discrete random variable with a Geometric distribution.
The density of the Geometric distribution is given by
.. math::
f(k) := p (1 - p)^{k - 1}
Parameters
==========
p: A probability between 0 and 1
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Geometric, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, S
>>> p = S.One / 5
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Geometric("x", p)
>>> density(X)(z)
(4/5)**(z - 1)/5
>>> E(X)
5
>>> variance(X)
20
References
==========
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_distribution
[2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GeometricDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, GeometricDistribution, p)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Logarithmic distribution ------------------------------------------------------------
class LogarithmicDistribution(SingleDiscreteDistribution):
_argnames = ('p',)
set = S.Naturals
@staticmethod
def check(p):
_value_check(And(p > 0, p < 1), "p should be between 0 and 1")
def pdf(self, k):
p = self.p
return (-1) * p**k / (k * log(1 - p))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
p = self.p
return log(1 - p * exp(I*t)) / log(1 - p)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
p = self.p
return log(1 - p * exp(t)) / log(1 - p)
def sample(self):
### TODO
raise NotImplementedError("Sampling of %s is not implemented" % density(self))
def Logarithmic(name, p):
r"""
Create a discrete random variable with a Logarithmic distribution.
The density of the Logarithmic distribution is given by
.. math::
f(k) := \frac{-p^k}{k \ln{(1 - p)}}
Parameters
==========
p: A value between 0 and 1
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Logarithmic, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, S
>>> p = S.One / 5
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Logarithmic("x", p)
>>> density(X)(z)
-5**(-z)/(z*log(4/5))
>>> E(X)
-1/(-4*log(5) + 8*log(2))
>>> variance(X)
-1/((-4*log(5) + 8*log(2))*(-2*log(5) + 4*log(2))) + 1/(-64*log(2)*log(5) + 64*log(2)**2 + 16*log(5)**2) - 10/(-32*log(5) + 64*log(2))
"""
return rv(name, LogarithmicDistribution, p)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Negative binomial distribution ------------------------------------------------------------
class NegativeBinomialDistribution(SingleDiscreteDistribution):
_argnames = ('r', 'p')
set = S.Naturals0
@staticmethod
def check(r, p):
_value_check(r > 0, 'r should be positive')
_value_check(And(p > 0, p < 1), 'p should be between 0 and 1')
def pdf(self, k):
r = self.r
p = self.p
return binomial(k + r - 1, k) * (1 - p)**r * p**k
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
r = self.r
p = self.p
return ((1 - p) / (1 - p * exp(I*t)))**r
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
r = self.r
p = self.p
return ((1 - p) / (1 - p * exp(t)))**r
def sample(self):
### TODO
raise NotImplementedError("Sampling of %s is not implemented" % density(self))
def NegativeBinomial(name, r, p):
r"""
Create a discrete random variable with a Negative Binomial distribution.
The density of the Negative Binomial distribution is given by
.. math::
f(k) := \binom{k + r - 1}{k} (1 - p)^r p^k
Parameters
==========
r: A positive value
p: A value between 0 and 1
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import NegativeBinomial, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, S
>>> r = 5
>>> p = S.One / 5
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = NegativeBinomial("x", r, p)
>>> density(X)(z)
1024*5**(-z)*binomial(z + 4, z)/3125
>>> E(X)
5/4
>>> variance(X)
25/16
"""
return rv(name, NegativeBinomialDistribution, r, p)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Poisson distribution ------------------------------------------------------------
class PoissonDistribution(SingleDiscreteDistribution):
_argnames = ('lamda',)
set = S.Naturals0
@staticmethod
def check(lamda):
_value_check(lamda > 0, "Lambda must be positive")
def pdf(self, k):
return self.lamda**k / factorial(k) * exp(-self.lamda)
def sample(self):
def search(x, y, u):
while x < y:
mid = (x + y)//2
if u <= self.cdf(mid):
y = mid
else:
x = mid + 1
return x
u = random.uniform(0, 1)
if u <= self.cdf(S.Zero):
return S.Zero
n = S.One
while True:
if u > self.cdf(2*n):
n *= 2
else:
return search(n, 2*n, u)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return exp(self.lamda * (exp(I*t) - 1))
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return exp(self.lamda * (exp(t) - 1))
def Poisson(name, lamda):
r"""
Create a discrete random variable with a Poisson distribution.
The density of the Poisson distribution is given by
.. math::
f(k) := \frac{\lambda^{k} e^{- \lambda}}{k!}
Parameters
==========
lamda: Positive number, a rate
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Poisson, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> rate = Symbol("lambda", positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Poisson("x", rate)
>>> density(X)(z)
lambda**z*exp(-lambda)/factorial(z)
>>> E(X)
lambda
>>> simplify(variance(X))
lambda
References
==========
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisson_distribution
[2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PoissonDistribution.html
"""
return rv(name, PoissonDistribution, lamda)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Yule-Simon distribution ------------------------------------------------------------
class YuleSimonDistribution(SingleDiscreteDistribution):
_argnames = ('rho',)
set = S.Naturals
@staticmethod
def check(rho):
_value_check(rho > 0, 'rho should be positive')
def pdf(self, k):
rho = self.rho
return rho * beta(k, rho + 1)
def _cdf(self, x):
return Piecewise((1 - floor(x) * beta(floor(x), self.rho + 1), x >= 1), (0, True))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
rho = self.rho
return rho * hyper((1, 1), (rho + 2,), exp(I*t)) * exp(I*t) / (rho + 1)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
rho = self.rho
return rho * hyper((1, 1), (rho + 2,), exp(t)) * exp(t) / (rho + 1)
def sample(self):
### TODO
raise NotImplementedError("Sampling of %s is not implemented" % density(self))
def YuleSimon(name, rho):
r"""
Create a discrete random variable with a Yule-Simon distribution.
The density of the Yule-Simon distribution is given by
.. math::
f(k) := \rho B(k, \rho + 1)
Parameters
==========
rho: A positive value
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import YuleSimon, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol, simplify
>>> p = 5
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = YuleSimon("x", p)
>>> density(X)(z)
5*beta(z, 6)
>>> simplify(E(X))
5/4
>>> simplify(variance(X))
25/48
"""
return rv(name, YuleSimonDistribution, rho)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Zeta distribution ------------------------------------------------------------
class ZetaDistribution(SingleDiscreteDistribution):
_argnames = ('s',)
set = S.Naturals
@staticmethod
def check(s):
_value_check(s > 1, 's should be greater than 1')
def pdf(self, k):
s = self.s
return 1 / (k**s * zeta(s))
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return polylog(self.s, exp(I*t)) / zeta(self.s)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return polylog(self.s, exp(t)) / zeta(self.s)
def sample(self):
### TODO
raise NotImplementedError("Sampling of %s is not implemented" % density(self))
def Zeta(name, s):
r"""
Create a discrete random variable with a Zeta distribution.
The density of the Zeta distribution is given by
.. math::
f(k) := \frac{1}{k^s \zeta{(s)}}
Parameters
==========
s: A value greater than 1
Returns
=======
A RandomSymbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.stats import Zeta, density, E, variance
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> s = 5
>>> z = Symbol("z")
>>> X = Zeta("x", s)
>>> density(X)(z)
1/(z**5*zeta(5))
>>> E(X)
pi**4/(90*zeta(5))
>>> variance(X)
-pi**8/(8100*zeta(5)**2) + zeta(3)/zeta(5)
"""
return rv(name, ZetaDistribution, s)
|
82ff6eb35ce4e7489d60cae5ada62c09daca4cd1c28f5b1f27490a3c6da533d7
|
"""
Continuous Random Variables Module
See Also
========
sympy.stats.crv_types
sympy.stats.rv
sympy.stats.frv
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.stats.rv import (RandomDomain, SingleDomain, ConditionalDomain,
ProductDomain, PSpace, SinglePSpace, random_symbols, NamedArgsMixin)
from sympy.functions.special.delta_functions import DiracDelta
from sympy import (Interval, Intersection, symbols, sympify, Dummy,
Integral, And, Or, Piecewise, cacheit, integrate, oo, Lambda,
Basic, S, exp, I, FiniteSet, Ne, Eq, Union, poly, series, factorial)
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset
from sympy.solvers.inequalities import reduce_rational_inequalities
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import PolynomialError
import random
class ContinuousDomain(RandomDomain):
"""
A domain with continuous support
Represented using symbols and Intervals.
"""
is_Continuous = True
def as_boolean(self):
raise NotImplementedError("Not Implemented for generic Domains")
class SingleContinuousDomain(ContinuousDomain, SingleDomain):
"""
A univariate domain with continuous support
Represented using a single symbol and interval.
"""
def compute_expectation(self, expr, variables=None, **kwargs):
if variables is None:
variables = self.symbols
if not variables:
return expr
if frozenset(variables) != frozenset(self.symbols):
raise ValueError("Values should be equal")
# assumes only intervals
return Integral(expr, (self.symbol, self.set), **kwargs)
def as_boolean(self):
return self.set.as_relational(self.symbol)
class ProductContinuousDomain(ProductDomain, ContinuousDomain):
"""
A collection of independent domains with continuous support
"""
def compute_expectation(self, expr, variables=None, **kwargs):
if variables is None:
variables = self.symbols
for domain in self.domains:
domain_vars = frozenset(variables) & frozenset(domain.symbols)
if domain_vars:
expr = domain.compute_expectation(expr, domain_vars, **kwargs)
return expr
def as_boolean(self):
return And(*[domain.as_boolean() for domain in self.domains])
class ConditionalContinuousDomain(ContinuousDomain, ConditionalDomain):
"""
A domain with continuous support that has been further restricted by a
condition such as x > 3
"""
def compute_expectation(self, expr, variables=None, **kwargs):
if variables is None:
variables = self.symbols
if not variables:
return expr
# Extract the full integral
fullintgrl = self.fulldomain.compute_expectation(expr, variables)
# separate into integrand and limits
integrand, limits = fullintgrl.function, list(fullintgrl.limits)
conditions = [self.condition]
while conditions:
cond = conditions.pop()
if cond.is_Boolean:
if isinstance(cond, And):
conditions.extend(cond.args)
elif isinstance(cond, Or):
raise NotImplementedError("Or not implemented here")
elif cond.is_Relational:
if cond.is_Equality:
# Add the appropriate Delta to the integrand
integrand *= DiracDelta(cond.lhs - cond.rhs)
else:
symbols = cond.free_symbols & set(self.symbols)
if len(symbols) != 1: # Can't handle x > y
raise NotImplementedError(
"Multivariate Inequalities not yet implemented")
# Can handle x > 0
symbol = symbols.pop()
# Find the limit with x, such as (x, -oo, oo)
for i, limit in enumerate(limits):
if limit[0] == symbol:
# Make condition into an Interval like [0, oo]
cintvl = reduce_rational_inequalities_wrap(
cond, symbol)
# Make limit into an Interval like [-oo, oo]
lintvl = Interval(limit[1], limit[2])
# Intersect them to get [0, oo]
intvl = cintvl.intersect(lintvl)
# Put back into limits list
limits[i] = (symbol, intvl.left, intvl.right)
else:
raise TypeError(
"Condition %s is not a relational or Boolean" % cond)
return Integral(integrand, *limits, **kwargs)
def as_boolean(self):
return And(self.fulldomain.as_boolean(), self.condition)
@property
def set(self):
if len(self.symbols) == 1:
return (self.fulldomain.set & reduce_rational_inequalities_wrap(
self.condition, tuple(self.symbols)[0]))
else:
raise NotImplementedError(
"Set of Conditional Domain not Implemented")
class ContinuousDistribution(Basic):
def __call__(self, *args):
return self.pdf(*args)
class SingleContinuousDistribution(ContinuousDistribution, NamedArgsMixin):
""" Continuous distribution of a single variable
Serves as superclass for Normal/Exponential/UniformDistribution etc....
Represented by parameters for each of the specific classes. E.g
NormalDistribution is represented by a mean and standard deviation.
Provides methods for pdf, cdf, and sampling
See Also:
sympy.stats.crv_types.*
"""
set = Interval(-oo, oo)
def __new__(cls, *args):
args = list(map(sympify, args))
return Basic.__new__(cls, *args)
@staticmethod
def check(*args):
pass
def sample(self):
""" A random realization from the distribution """
icdf = self._inverse_cdf_expression()
return icdf(random.uniform(0, 1))
@cacheit
def _inverse_cdf_expression(self):
""" Inverse of the CDF
Used by sample
"""
x, z = symbols('x, z', real=True, positive=True, cls=Dummy)
# Invert CDF
try:
inverse_cdf = solveset(self.cdf(x) - z, x, S.Reals)
if isinstance(inverse_cdf, Intersection) and S.Reals in inverse_cdf.args:
inverse_cdf = list(inverse_cdf.args[1])
except NotImplementedError:
inverse_cdf = None
if not inverse_cdf or len(inverse_cdf) != 1:
raise NotImplementedError("Could not invert CDF")
return Lambda(z, inverse_cdf[0])
@cacheit
def compute_cdf(self, **kwargs):
""" Compute the CDF from the PDF
Returns a Lambda
"""
x, z = symbols('x, z', real=True, finite=True, cls=Dummy)
left_bound = self.set.start
# CDF is integral of PDF from left bound to z
pdf = self.pdf(x)
cdf = integrate(pdf, (x, left_bound, z), **kwargs)
# CDF Ensure that CDF left of left_bound is zero
cdf = Piecewise((cdf, z >= left_bound), (0, True))
return Lambda(z, cdf)
def _cdf(self, x):
return None
def cdf(self, x, **kwargs):
""" Cumulative density function """
if len(kwargs) == 0:
cdf = self._cdf(x)
if cdf is not None:
return cdf
return self.compute_cdf(**kwargs)(x)
@cacheit
def compute_characteristic_function(self, **kwargs):
""" Compute the characteristic function from the PDF
Returns a Lambda
"""
x, t = symbols('x, t', real=True, finite=True, cls=Dummy)
pdf = self.pdf(x)
cf = integrate(exp(I*t*x)*pdf, (x, -oo, oo))
return Lambda(t, cf)
def _characteristic_function(self, t):
return None
def characteristic_function(self, t, **kwargs):
""" Characteristic function """
if len(kwargs) == 0:
cf = self._characteristic_function(t)
if cf is not None:
return cf
return self.compute_characteristic_function(**kwargs)(t)
@cacheit
def compute_moment_generating_function(self, **kwargs):
""" Compute the moment generating function from the PDF
Returns a Lambda
"""
x, t = symbols('x, t', real=True, cls=Dummy)
pdf = self.pdf(x)
mgf = integrate(exp(t * x) * pdf, (x, -oo, oo))
return Lambda(t, mgf)
def _moment_generating_function(self, t):
return None
def moment_generating_function(self, t, **kwargs):
""" Moment generating function """
if len(kwargs) == 0:
try:
mgf = self._moment_generating_function(t)
if mgf is not None:
return mgf
except NotImplementedError:
return None
return self.compute_moment_generating_function(**kwargs)(t)
def expectation(self, expr, var, evaluate=True, **kwargs):
""" Expectation of expression over distribution """
if evaluate:
try:
p = poly(expr, var)
t = Dummy('t', real=True)
mgf = self._moment_generating_function(t)
if mgf is None:
return integrate(expr * self.pdf(var), (var, self.set), **kwargs)
deg = p.degree()
taylor = poly(series(mgf, t, 0, deg + 1).removeO(), t)
result = 0
for k in range(deg+1):
result += p.coeff_monomial(var ** k) * taylor.coeff_monomial(t ** k) * factorial(k)
return result
except PolynomialError:
return integrate(expr * self.pdf(var), (var, self.set), **kwargs)
else:
return Integral(expr * self.pdf(var), (var, self.set), **kwargs)
class ContinuousDistributionHandmade(SingleContinuousDistribution):
_argnames = ('pdf',)
@property
def set(self):
return self.args[1]
def __new__(cls, pdf, set=Interval(-oo, oo)):
return Basic.__new__(cls, pdf, set)
class ContinuousPSpace(PSpace):
""" Continuous Probability Space
Represents the likelihood of an event space defined over a continuum.
Represented with a ContinuousDomain and a PDF (Lambda-Like)
"""
is_Continuous = True
is_real = True
@property
def pdf(self):
return self.density(*self.domain.symbols)
def compute_expectation(self, expr, rvs=None, evaluate=False, **kwargs):
if rvs is None:
rvs = self.values
else:
rvs = frozenset(rvs)
expr = expr.xreplace(dict((rv, rv.symbol) for rv in rvs))
domain_symbols = frozenset(rv.symbol for rv in rvs)
return self.domain.compute_expectation(self.pdf * expr,
domain_symbols, **kwargs)
def compute_density(self, expr, **kwargs):
# Common case Density(X) where X in self.values
if expr in self.values:
# Marginalize all other random symbols out of the density
randomsymbols = tuple(set(self.values) - frozenset([expr]))
symbols = tuple(rs.symbol for rs in randomsymbols)
pdf = self.domain.compute_expectation(self.pdf, symbols, **kwargs)
return Lambda(expr.symbol, pdf)
z = Dummy('z', real=True, finite=True)
return Lambda(z, self.compute_expectation(DiracDelta(expr - z), **kwargs))
@cacheit
def compute_cdf(self, expr, **kwargs):
if not self.domain.set.is_Interval:
raise ValueError(
"CDF not well defined on multivariate expressions")
d = self.compute_density(expr, **kwargs)
x, z = symbols('x, z', real=True, finite=True, cls=Dummy)
left_bound = self.domain.set.start
# CDF is integral of PDF from left bound to z
cdf = integrate(d(x), (x, left_bound, z), **kwargs)
# CDF Ensure that CDF left of left_bound is zero
cdf = Piecewise((cdf, z >= left_bound), (0, True))
return Lambda(z, cdf)
@cacheit
def compute_characteristic_function(self, expr, **kwargs):
if not self.domain.set.is_Interval:
raise NotImplementedError("Characteristic function of multivariate expressions not implemented")
d = self.compute_density(expr, **kwargs)
x, t = symbols('x, t', real=True, cls=Dummy)
cf = integrate(exp(I*t*x)*d(x), (x, -oo, oo), **kwargs)
return Lambda(t, cf)
@cacheit
def compute_moment_generating_function(self, expr, **kwargs):
if not self.domain.set.is_Interval:
raise NotImplementedError("Moment generating function of multivariate expressions not implemented")
d = self.compute_density(expr, **kwargs)
x, t = symbols('x, t', real=True, cls=Dummy)
mgf = integrate(exp(t * x) * d(x), (x, -oo, oo), **kwargs)
return Lambda(t, mgf)
def probability(self, condition, **kwargs):
z = Dummy('z', real=True, finite=True)
cond_inv = False
if isinstance(condition, Ne):
condition = Eq(condition.args[0], condition.args[1])
cond_inv = True
# Univariate case can be handled by where
try:
domain = self.where(condition)
rv = [rv for rv in self.values if rv.symbol == domain.symbol][0]
# Integrate out all other random variables
pdf = self.compute_density(rv, **kwargs)
# return S.Zero if `domain` is empty set
if domain.set is S.EmptySet or isinstance(domain.set, FiniteSet):
return S.Zero if not cond_inv else S.One
if isinstance(domain.set, Union):
return sum(
Integral(pdf(z), (z, subset), **kwargs) for subset in
domain.set.args if isinstance(subset, Interval))
# Integrate out the last variable over the special domain
return Integral(pdf(z), (z, domain.set), **kwargs)
# Other cases can be turned into univariate case
# by computing a density handled by density computation
except NotImplementedError:
from sympy.stats.rv import density
expr = condition.lhs - condition.rhs
dens = density(expr, **kwargs)
if not isinstance(dens, ContinuousDistribution):
dens = ContinuousDistributionHandmade(dens)
# Turn problem into univariate case
space = SingleContinuousPSpace(z, dens)
result = space.probability(condition.__class__(space.value, 0))
return result if not cond_inv else S.One - result
def where(self, condition):
rvs = frozenset(random_symbols(condition))
if not (len(rvs) == 1 and rvs.issubset(self.values)):
raise NotImplementedError(
"Multiple continuous random variables not supported")
rv = tuple(rvs)[0]
interval = reduce_rational_inequalities_wrap(condition, rv)
interval = interval.intersect(self.domain.set)
return SingleContinuousDomain(rv.symbol, interval)
def conditional_space(self, condition, normalize=True, **kwargs):
condition = condition.xreplace(dict((rv, rv.symbol) for rv in self.values))
domain = ConditionalContinuousDomain(self.domain, condition)
if normalize:
# create a clone of the variable to
# make sure that variables in nested integrals are different
# from the variables outside the integral
# this makes sure that they are evaluated separately
# and in the correct order
replacement = {rv: Dummy(str(rv)) for rv in self.symbols}
norm = domain.compute_expectation(self.pdf, **kwargs)
pdf = self.pdf / norm.xreplace(replacement)
density = Lambda(domain.symbols, pdf)
return ContinuousPSpace(domain, density)
class SingleContinuousPSpace(ContinuousPSpace, SinglePSpace):
"""
A continuous probability space over a single univariate variable
These consist of a Symbol and a SingleContinuousDistribution
This class is normally accessed through the various random variable
functions, Normal, Exponential, Uniform, etc....
"""
@property
def set(self):
return self.distribution.set
@property
def domain(self):
return SingleContinuousDomain(sympify(self.symbol), self.set)
def sample(self):
"""
Internal sample method
Returns dictionary mapping RandomSymbol to realization value.
"""
return {self.value: self.distribution.sample()}
def compute_expectation(self, expr, rvs=None, evaluate=False, **kwargs):
rvs = rvs or (self.value,)
if self.value not in rvs:
return expr
expr = expr.xreplace(dict((rv, rv.symbol) for rv in rvs))
x = self.value.symbol
try:
return self.distribution.expectation(expr, x, evaluate=evaluate, **kwargs)
except Exception:
return Integral(expr * self.pdf, (x, self.set), **kwargs)
def compute_cdf(self, expr, **kwargs):
if expr == self.value:
z = symbols("z", real=True, finite=True, cls=Dummy)
return Lambda(z, self.distribution.cdf(z, **kwargs))
else:
return ContinuousPSpace.compute_cdf(self, expr, **kwargs)
def compute_characteristic_function(self, expr, **kwargs):
if expr == self.value:
t = symbols("t", real=True, cls=Dummy)
return Lambda(t, self.distribution.characteristic_function(t, **kwargs))
else:
return ContinuousPSpace.compute_characteristic_function(self, expr, **kwargs)
def compute_moment_generating_function(self, expr, **kwargs):
if expr == self.value:
t = symbols("t", real=True, cls=Dummy)
return Lambda(t, self.distribution.moment_generating_function(t, **kwargs))
else:
return ContinuousPSpace.compute_moment_generating_function(self, expr, **kwargs)
def compute_density(self, expr, **kwargs):
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_variable#Functions_of_random_variables
if expr == self.value:
return self.density
y = Dummy('y')
gs = solveset(expr - y, self.value, S.Reals)
if isinstance(gs, Intersection) and S.Reals in gs.args:
gs = list(gs.args[1])
if not gs:
raise ValueError("Can not solve %s for %s"%(expr, self.value))
fx = self.compute_density(self.value)
fy = sum(fx(g) * abs(g.diff(y)) for g in gs)
return Lambda(y, fy)
def _reduce_inequalities(conditions, var, **kwargs):
try:
return reduce_rational_inequalities(conditions, var, **kwargs)
except PolynomialError:
raise ValueError("Reduction of condition failed %s\n" % conditions[0])
def reduce_rational_inequalities_wrap(condition, var):
if condition.is_Relational:
return _reduce_inequalities([[condition]], var, relational=False)
if isinstance(condition, Or):
return Union(*[_reduce_inequalities([[arg]], var, relational=False)
for arg in condition.args])
if isinstance(condition, And):
intervals = [_reduce_inequalities([[arg]], var, relational=False)
for arg in condition.args]
I = intervals[0]
for i in intervals:
I = I.intersect(i)
return I
|
17f6ae4d5e6617034a88e8ff905b27b6a4c9f8663eb078ed25eac175d50c2b04
|
# conceal the implicit import from the code quality tester
from __future__ import print_function, division
exec("from sympy import *")
LT = laplace_transform
FT = fourier_transform
MT = mellin_transform
IFT = inverse_fourier_transform
ILT = inverse_laplace_transform
IMT = inverse_mellin_transform
from sympy.abc import a, b, s, t, x, y, z
nu, beta, rho = symbols('nu beta rho')
apos, bpos, cpos, dpos, posk, p = symbols('a b c d k p', positive=True)
k = Symbol('k', real=True)
negk = Symbol('k', negative=True)
mu1, mu2 = symbols('mu1 mu2', real=True, nonzero=True, finite=True)
sigma1, sigma2 = symbols('sigma1 sigma2', real=True, nonzero=True,
finite=True, positive=True)
rate = Symbol('lambda', real=True, positive=True, finite=True)
def normal(x, mu, sigma):
return 1/sqrt(2*pi*sigma**2)*exp(-(x - mu)**2/2/sigma**2)
def exponential(x, rate):
return rate*exp(-rate*x)
alpha, beta = symbols('alpha beta', positive=True)
betadist = x**(alpha - 1)*(1 + x)**(-alpha - beta)*gamma(alpha + beta) \
/gamma(alpha)/gamma(beta)
kint = Symbol('k', integer=True, positive=True)
chi = 2**(1 - kint/2)*x**(kint - 1)*exp(-x**2/2)/gamma(kint/2)
chisquared = 2**(-k/2)/gamma(k/2)*x**(k/2 - 1)*exp(-x/2)
dagum = apos*p/x*(x/bpos)**(apos*p)/(1 + x**apos/bpos**apos)**(p + 1)
d1, d2 = symbols('d1 d2', positive=True)
f = sqrt(((d1*x)**d1 * d2**d2)/(d1*x + d2)**(d1 + d2))/x \
/gamma(d1/2)/gamma(d2/2)*gamma((d1 + d2)/2)
nupos, sigmapos = symbols('nu sigma', positive=True)
rice = x/sigmapos**2*exp(-(x**2 + nupos**2)/2/sigmapos**2)*besseli(0, x*
nupos/sigmapos**2)
mu = Symbol('mu', real=True)
laplace = exp(-abs(x - mu)/bpos)/2/bpos
u = Symbol('u', polar=True)
tpos = Symbol('t', positive=True)
def E(expr):
res1 = integrate(expr*exponential(x, rate)*normal(y, mu1, sigma1),
(x, 0, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)
res2 = integrate(expr*exponential(x, rate)*normal(y, mu1, sigma1),
(y, -oo, oo), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)
bench = [
'MT(x**nu*Heaviside(x - 1), x, s)',
'MT(x**nu*Heaviside(1 - x), x, s)',
'MT((1-x)**(beta - 1)*Heaviside(1-x), x, s)',
'MT((x-1)**(beta - 1)*Heaviside(x-1), x, s)',
'MT((1+x)**(-rho), x, s)',
'MT(abs(1-x)**(-rho), x, s)',
'MT((1-x)**(beta-1)*Heaviside(1-x) + a*(x-1)**(beta-1)*Heaviside(x-1), x, s)',
'MT((x**a-b**a)/(x-b), x, s)',
'MT((x**a-bpos**a)/(x-bpos), x, s)',
'MT(exp(-x), x, s)',
'MT(exp(-1/x), x, s)',
'MT(log(x)**4*Heaviside(1-x), x, s)',
'MT(log(x)**3*Heaviside(x-1), x, s)',
'MT(log(x + 1), x, s)',
'MT(log(1/x + 1), x, s)',
'MT(log(abs(1 - x)), x, s)',
'MT(log(abs(1 - 1/x)), x, s)',
'MT(log(x)/(x+1), x, s)',
'MT(log(x)**2/(x+1), x, s)',
'MT(log(x)/(x+1)**2, x, s)',
'MT(erf(sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a, 2*sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(sin(sqrt(x))*besselj(a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(cos(sqrt(x))*besselj(a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a, sqrt(x))**2, x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a, sqrt(x))*besselj(-a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a - 1, sqrt(x))*besselj(a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a, sqrt(x))*besselj(b, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a, sqrt(x))**2 + besselj(-a, sqrt(x))**2, x, s)',
'MT(bessely(a, 2*sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(sin(sqrt(x))*bessely(a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(cos(sqrt(x))*bessely(a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a, sqrt(x))*bessely(a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a, sqrt(x))*bessely(b, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(bessely(a, sqrt(x))**2, x, s)',
'MT(besselk(a, 2*sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besselj(a, 2*sqrt(2*sqrt(x)))*besselk(a, 2*sqrt(2*sqrt(x))), x, s)',
'MT(besseli(a, sqrt(x))*besselk(a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(besseli(b, sqrt(x))*besselk(a, sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'MT(exp(-x/2)*besselk(a, x/2), x, s)',
# later: ILT, IMT
'LT((t-apos)**bpos*exp(-cpos*(t-apos))*Heaviside(t-apos), t, s)',
'LT(t**apos, t, s)',
'LT(Heaviside(t), t, s)',
'LT(Heaviside(t - apos), t, s)',
'LT(1 - exp(-apos*t), t, s)',
'LT((exp(2*t)-1)*exp(-bpos - t)*Heaviside(t)/2, t, s, noconds=True)',
'LT(exp(t), t, s)',
'LT(exp(2*t), t, s)',
'LT(exp(apos*t), t, s)',
'LT(log(t/apos), t, s)',
'LT(erf(t), t, s)',
'LT(sin(apos*t), t, s)',
'LT(cos(apos*t), t, s)',
'LT(exp(-apos*t)*sin(bpos*t), t, s)',
'LT(exp(-apos*t)*cos(bpos*t), t, s)',
'LT(besselj(0, t), t, s, noconds=True)',
'LT(besselj(1, t), t, s, noconds=True)',
'FT(Heaviside(1 - abs(2*apos*x)), x, k)',
'FT(Heaviside(1-abs(apos*x))*(1-abs(apos*x)), x, k)',
'FT(exp(-apos*x)*Heaviside(x), x, k)',
'IFT(1/(apos + 2*pi*I*x), x, posk, noconds=False)',
'IFT(1/(apos + 2*pi*I*x), x, -posk, noconds=False)',
'IFT(1/(apos + 2*pi*I*x), x, negk)',
'FT(x*exp(-apos*x)*Heaviside(x), x, k)',
'FT(exp(-apos*x)*sin(bpos*x)*Heaviside(x), x, k)',
'FT(exp(-apos*x**2), x, k)',
'IFT(sqrt(pi/apos)*exp(-(pi*k)**2/apos), k, x)',
'FT(exp(-apos*abs(x)), x, k)',
'integrate(normal(x, mu1, sigma1), (x, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*normal(x, mu1, sigma1), (x, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*normal(x, mu1, sigma1), (x, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**3*normal(x, mu1, sigma1), (x, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(normal(x, mu1, sigma1)*normal(y, mu2, sigma2),'
' (x, -oo, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*normal(x, mu1, sigma1)*normal(y, mu2, sigma2),'
' (x, -oo, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(y*normal(x, mu1, sigma1)*normal(y, mu2, sigma2),'
' (x, -oo, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*y*normal(x, mu1, sigma1)*normal(y, mu2, sigma2),'
' (x, -oo, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate((x+y+1)*normal(x, mu1, sigma1)*normal(y, mu2, sigma2),'
' (x, -oo, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate((x+y-1)*normal(x, mu1, sigma1)*normal(y, mu2, sigma2),'
' (x, -oo, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*normal(x, mu1, sigma1)*normal(y, mu2, sigma2),'
' (x, -oo, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(y**2*normal(x, mu1, sigma1)*normal(y, mu2, sigma2),'
' (x, -oo, oo), (y, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(exponential(x, rate), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*exponential(x, rate), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*exponential(x, rate), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'E(1)',
'E(x*y)',
'E(x*y**2)',
'E((x+y+1)**2)',
'E(x+y+1)',
'E((x+y-1)**2)',
'integrate(betadist, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*betadist, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*betadist, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(chi, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*chi, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*chi, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(chisquared, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*chisquared, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*chisquared, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(((x-k)/sqrt(2*k))**3*chisquared, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(dagum, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*dagum, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*dagum, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(f, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*f, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*f, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(rice, (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(laplace, (x, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x*laplace, (x, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(x**2*laplace, (x, -oo, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(log(x) * x**(k-1) * exp(-x) / gamma(k), (x, 0, oo))',
'integrate(sin(z*x)*(x**2-1)**(-(y+S(1)/2)), (x, 1, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(besselj(0,x)*besselj(1,x)*exp(-x**2), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(besselj(0,x)*besselj(1,x)*besselk(0,x), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(besselj(0,x)*besselj(1,x)*exp(-x**2), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(besselj(a,x)*besselj(b,x)/x, (x,0,oo), meijerg=True)',
'hyperexpand(meijerg((-s - a/2 + 1, -s + a/2 + 1), (-a/2 - S(1)/2, -s + a/2 + S(3)/2), (a/2, -a/2), (-a/2 - S(1)/2, -s + a/2 + S(3)/2), 1))',
"gammasimp(S('2**(2*s)*(-pi*gamma(-a + 1)*gamma(a + 1)*gamma(-a - s + 1)*gamma(-a + s - 1/2)*gamma(a - s + 3/2)*gamma(a + s + 1)/(a*(a + s)) - gamma(-a - 1/2)*gamma(-a + 1)*gamma(a + 1)*gamma(a + 3/2)*gamma(-s + 3/2)*gamma(s - 1/2)*gamma(-a + s + 1)*gamma(a - s + 1)/(a*(-a + s)))*gamma(-2*s + 1)*gamma(s + 1)/(pi*s*gamma(-a - 1/2)*gamma(a + 3/2)*gamma(-s + 1)*gamma(-s + 3/2)*gamma(s - 1/2)*gamma(-a - s + 1)*gamma(-a + s - 1/2)*gamma(a - s + 1)*gamma(a - s + 3/2))'))",
'mellin_transform(E1(x), x, s)',
'inverse_mellin_transform(gamma(s)/s, s, x, (0, oo))',
'mellin_transform(expint(a, x), x, s)',
'mellin_transform(Si(x), x, s)',
'inverse_mellin_transform(-2**s*sqrt(pi)*gamma((s + 1)/2)/(2*s*gamma(-s/2 + 1)), s, x, (-1, 0))',
'mellin_transform(Ci(sqrt(x)), x, s)',
'inverse_mellin_transform(-4**s*sqrt(pi)*gamma(s)/(2*s*gamma(-s + S(1)/2)),s, u, (0, 1))',
'laplace_transform(Ci(x), x, s)',
'laplace_transform(expint(a, x), x, s)',
'laplace_transform(expint(1, x), x, s)',
'laplace_transform(expint(2, x), x, s)',
'inverse_laplace_transform(-log(1 + s**2)/2/s, s, u)',
'inverse_laplace_transform(log(s + 1)/s, s, x)',
'inverse_laplace_transform((s - log(s + 1))/s**2, s, x)',
'laplace_transform(Chi(x), x, s)',
'laplace_transform(Shi(x), x, s)',
'integrate(exp(-z*x)/x, (x, 1, oo), meijerg=True, conds="none")',
'integrate(exp(-z*x)/x**2, (x, 1, oo), meijerg=True, conds="none")',
'integrate(exp(-z*x)/x**3, (x, 1, oo), meijerg=True,conds="none")',
'integrate(-cos(x)/x, (x, tpos, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(-sin(x)/x, (x, tpos, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(sin(x)/x, (x, 0, z), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(sinh(x)/x, (x, 0, z), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(exp(-x)/x, x, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(exp(-x)/x**2, x, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(cos(u)/u, u, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(cosh(u)/u, u, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(expint(1, x), x, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(expint(2, x), x, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(Si(x), x, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(Ci(u), u, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(Shi(x), x, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(Chi(u), u, meijerg=True)',
'integrate(Si(x)*exp(-x), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)',
'integrate(expint(1, x)*sin(x), (x, 0, oo), meijerg=True)'
]
from time import time
from sympy.core.cache import clear_cache
import sys
timings = []
if __name__ == '__main__':
for n, string in enumerate(bench):
clear_cache()
_t = time()
exec(string)
_t = time() - _t
timings += [(_t, string)]
sys.stdout.write('.')
sys.stdout.flush()
if n % (len(bench) // 10) == 0:
sys.stdout.write('%s' % (10*n // len(bench)))
print()
timings.sort(key=lambda x: -x[0])
for t, string in timings:
print('%.2fs %s' % (t, string))
|
4815e76ca67d655877a6c35280bafd3dd64fd5de9f15d3068d1b25a171bd25b7
|
"""
Generating and counting primes.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import random
from bisect import bisect
# Using arrays for sieving instead of lists greatly reduces
# memory consumption
from array import array as _array
from .primetest import isprime
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int, range
from sympy import Function, S
def _azeros(n):
return _array('l', [0]*n)
def _aset(*v):
return _array('l', v)
def _arange(a, b):
return _array('l', range(a, b))
class Sieve:
"""An infinite list of prime numbers, implemented as a dynamically
growing sieve of Eratosthenes. When a lookup is requested involving
an odd number that has not been sieved, the sieve is automatically
extended up to that number.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sieve
>>> sieve._reset() # this line for doctest only
>>> 25 in sieve
False
>>> sieve._list
array('l', [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23])
"""
# data shared (and updated) by all Sieve instances
def __init__(self):
self._n = 6
self._list = _aset(2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13) # primes
self._tlist = _aset(0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 4) # totient
self._mlist = _aset(0, 1, -1, -1, 0, -1) # mobius
assert all(len(i) == self._n for i in (self._list, self._tlist, self._mlist))
def __repr__(self):
return ("<%s sieve (%i): %i, %i, %i, ... %i, %i\n"
"%s sieve (%i): %i, %i, %i, ... %i, %i\n"
"%s sieve (%i): %i, %i, %i, ... %i, %i>") % (
'prime', len(self._list),
self._list[0], self._list[1], self._list[2],
self._list[-2], self._list[-1],
'totient', len(self._tlist),
self._tlist[0], self._tlist[1],
self._tlist[2], self._tlist[-2], self._tlist[-1],
'mobius', len(self._mlist),
self._mlist[0], self._mlist[1],
self._mlist[2], self._mlist[-2], self._mlist[-1])
def _reset(self, prime=None, totient=None, mobius=None):
"""Reset all caches (default). To reset one or more set the
desired keyword to True."""
if all(i is None for i in (prime, totient, mobius)):
prime = totient = mobius = True
if prime:
self._list = self._list[:self._n]
if totient:
self._tlist = self._tlist[:self._n]
if mobius:
self._mlist = self._mlist[:self._n]
def extend(self, n):
"""Grow the sieve to cover all primes <= n (a real number).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sieve
>>> sieve._reset() # this line for doctest only
>>> sieve.extend(30)
>>> sieve[10] == 29
True
"""
n = int(n)
if n <= self._list[-1]:
return
# We need to sieve against all bases up to sqrt(n).
# This is a recursive call that will do nothing if there are enough
# known bases already.
maxbase = int(n**0.5) + 1
self.extend(maxbase)
# Create a new sieve starting from sqrt(n)
begin = self._list[-1] + 1
newsieve = _arange(begin, n + 1)
# Now eliminate all multiples of primes in [2, sqrt(n)]
for p in self.primerange(2, maxbase):
# Start counting at a multiple of p, offsetting
# the index to account for the new sieve's base index
startindex = (-begin) % p
for i in range(startindex, len(newsieve), p):
newsieve[i] = 0
# Merge the sieves
self._list += _array('l', [x for x in newsieve if x])
def extend_to_no(self, i):
"""Extend to include the ith prime number.
i must be an integer.
The list is extended by 50% if it is too short, so it is
likely that it will be longer than requested.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sieve
>>> sieve._reset() # this line for doctest only
>>> sieve.extend_to_no(9)
>>> sieve._list
array('l', [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23])
"""
i = as_int(i)
while len(self._list) < i:
self.extend(int(self._list[-1] * 1.5))
def primerange(self, a, b):
"""Generate all prime numbers in the range [a, b).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sieve
>>> print([i for i in sieve.primerange(7, 18)])
[7, 11, 13, 17]
"""
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import ceiling
# wrapping ceiling in as_int will raise an error if there was a problem
# determining whether the expression was exactly an integer or not
a = max(2, as_int(ceiling(a)))
b = as_int(ceiling(b))
if a >= b:
return
self.extend(b)
i = self.search(a)[1]
maxi = len(self._list) + 1
while i < maxi:
p = self._list[i - 1]
if p < b:
yield p
i += 1
else:
return
def totientrange(self, a, b):
"""Generate all totient numbers for the range [a, b).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sieve
>>> print([i for i in sieve.totientrange(7, 18)])
[6, 4, 6, 4, 10, 4, 12, 6, 8, 8, 16]
"""
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import ceiling
# wrapping ceiling in as_int will raise an error if there was a problem
# determining whether the expression was exactly an integer or not
a = max(1, as_int(ceiling(a)))
b = as_int(ceiling(b))
n = len(self._tlist)
if a >= b:
return
elif b <= n:
for i in range(a, b):
yield self._tlist[i]
else:
self._tlist += _arange(n, b)
for i in range(1, n):
ti = self._tlist[i]
startindex = (n + i - 1) // i * i
for j in range(startindex, b, i):
self._tlist[j] -= ti
if i >= a:
yield ti
for i in range(n, b):
ti = self._tlist[i]
for j in range(2 * i, b, i):
self._tlist[j] -= ti
if i >= a:
yield ti
def mobiusrange(self, a, b):
"""Generate all mobius numbers for the range [a, b).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sieve
>>> print([i for i in sieve.mobiusrange(7, 18)])
[-1, 0, 0, 1, -1, 0, -1, 1, 1, 0, -1]
"""
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import ceiling
# wrapping ceiling in as_int will raise an error if there was a problem
# determining whether the expression was exactly an integer or not
a = max(1, as_int(ceiling(a)))
b = as_int(ceiling(b))
n = len(self._mlist)
if a >= b:
return
elif b <= n:
for i in range(a, b):
yield self._mlist[i]
else:
self._mlist += _azeros(b - n)
for i in range(1, n):
mi = self._mlist[i]
startindex = (n + i - 1) // i * i
for j in range(startindex, b, i):
self._mlist[j] -= mi
if i >= a:
yield mi
for i in range(n, b):
mi = self._mlist[i]
for j in range(2 * i, b, i):
self._mlist[j] -= mi
if i >= a:
yield mi
def search(self, n):
"""Return the indices i, j of the primes that bound n.
If n is prime then i == j.
Although n can be an expression, if ceiling cannot convert
it to an integer then an n error will be raised.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sieve
>>> sieve.search(25)
(9, 10)
>>> sieve.search(23)
(9, 9)
"""
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import ceiling
# wrapping ceiling in as_int will raise an error if there was a problem
# determining whether the expression was exactly an integer or not
test = as_int(ceiling(n))
n = as_int(n)
if n < 2:
raise ValueError("n should be >= 2 but got: %s" % n)
if n > self._list[-1]:
self.extend(n)
b = bisect(self._list, n)
if self._list[b - 1] == test:
return b, b
else:
return b, b + 1
def __contains__(self, n):
try:
n = as_int(n)
assert n >= 2
except (ValueError, AssertionError):
return False
if n % 2 == 0:
return n == 2
a, b = self.search(n)
return a == b
def __getitem__(self, n):
"""Return the nth prime number"""
if isinstance(n, slice):
self.extend_to_no(n.stop)
return self._list[n.start - 1:n.stop - 1:n.step]
else:
n = as_int(n)
self.extend_to_no(n)
return self._list[n - 1]
# Generate a global object for repeated use in trial division etc
sieve = Sieve()
def prime(nth):
""" Return the nth prime, with the primes indexed as prime(1) = 2,
prime(2) = 3, etc.... The nth prime is approximately n*log(n).
Logarithmic integral of x is a pretty nice approximation for number of
primes <= x, i.e.
li(x) ~ pi(x)
In fact, for the numbers we are concerned about( x<1e11 ),
li(x) - pi(x) < 50000
Also,
li(x) > pi(x) can be safely assumed for the numbers which
can be evaluated by this function.
Here, we find the least integer m such that li(m) > n using binary search.
Now pi(m-1) < li(m-1) <= n,
We find pi(m - 1) using primepi function.
Starting from m, we have to find n - pi(m-1) more primes.
For the inputs this implementation can handle, we will have to test
primality for at max about 10**5 numbers, to get our answer.
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime_number_theorem#Table_of_.CF.80.28x.29.2C_x_.2F_log_x.2C_and_li.28x.29
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime_number_theorem#Approximations_for_the_nth_prime_number
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skewes%27_number
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import prime
>>> prime(10)
29
>>> prime(1)
2
>>> prime(100000)
1299709
See Also
========
sympy.ntheory.primetest.isprime : Test if n is prime
primerange : Generate all primes in a given range
primepi : Return the number of primes less than or equal to n
"""
n = as_int(nth)
if n < 1:
raise ValueError("nth must be a positive integer; prime(1) == 2")
if n <= len(sieve._list):
return sieve[n]
from sympy.functions.special.error_functions import li
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import log
a = 2 # Lower bound for binary search
b = int(n*(log(n) + log(log(n)))) # Upper bound for the search.
while a < b:
mid = (a + b) >> 1
if li(mid) > n:
b = mid
else:
a = mid + 1
n_primes = primepi(a - 1)
while n_primes < n:
if isprime(a):
n_primes += 1
a += 1
return a - 1
class primepi(Function):
""" Represents the prime counting function pi(n) = the number
of prime numbers less than or equal to n.
Algorithm Description:
In sieve method, we remove all multiples of prime p
except p itself.
Let phi(i,j) be the number of integers 2 <= k <= i
which remain after sieving from primes less than
or equal to j.
Clearly, pi(n) = phi(n, sqrt(n))
If j is not a prime,
phi(i,j) = phi(i, j - 1)
if j is a prime,
We remove all numbers(except j) whose
smallest prime factor is j.
Let x= j*a be such a number, where 2 <= a<= i / j
Now, after sieving from primes <= j - 1,
a must remain
(because x, and hence a has no prime factor <= j - 1)
Clearly, there are phi(i / j, j - 1) such a
which remain on sieving from primes <= j - 1
Now, if a is a prime less than equal to j - 1,
x= j*a has smallest prime factor = a, and
has already been removed(by sieving from a).
So, we don't need to remove it again.
(Note: there will be pi(j - 1) such x)
Thus, number of x, that will be removed are:
phi(i / j, j - 1) - phi(j - 1, j - 1)
(Note that pi(j - 1) = phi(j - 1, j - 1))
=> phi(i,j) = phi(i, j - 1) - phi(i / j, j - 1) + phi(j - 1, j - 1)
So,following recursion is used and implemented as dp:
phi(a, b) = phi(a, b - 1), if b is not a prime
phi(a, b) = phi(a, b-1)-phi(a / b, b-1) + phi(b-1, b-1), if b is prime
Clearly a is always of the form floor(n / k),
which can take at most 2*sqrt(n) values.
Two arrays arr1,arr2 are maintained
arr1[i] = phi(i, j),
arr2[i] = phi(n // i, j)
Finally the answer is arr2[1]
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import primepi
>>> primepi(25)
9
See Also
========
sympy.ntheory.primetest.isprime : Test if n is prime
primerange : Generate all primes in a given range
prime : Return the nth prime
"""
@classmethod
def eval(cls, n):
if n is S.Infinity:
return S.Infinity
if n is S.NegativeInfinity:
return S.Zero
try:
n = int(n)
except TypeError:
if n.is_real == False or n is S.NaN:
raise ValueError("n must be real")
return
if n < 2:
return S.Zero
if n <= sieve._list[-1]:
return S(sieve.search(n)[0])
lim = int(n ** 0.5)
lim -= 1
lim = max(lim, 0)
while lim * lim <= n:
lim += 1
lim -= 1
arr1 = [0] * (lim + 1)
arr2 = [0] * (lim + 1)
for i in range(1, lim + 1):
arr1[i] = i - 1
arr2[i] = n // i - 1
for i in range(2, lim + 1):
# Presently, arr1[k]=phi(k,i - 1),
# arr2[k] = phi(n // k,i - 1)
if arr1[i] == arr1[i - 1]:
continue
p = arr1[i - 1]
for j in range(1, min(n // (i * i), lim) + 1):
st = i * j
if st <= lim:
arr2[j] -= arr2[st] - p
else:
arr2[j] -= arr1[n // st] - p
lim2 = min(lim, i * i - 1)
for j in range(lim, lim2, -1):
arr1[j] -= arr1[j // i] - p
return S(arr2[1])
def nextprime(n, ith=1):
""" Return the ith prime greater than n.
i must be an integer.
Notes
=====
Potential primes are located at 6*j +/- 1. This
property is used during searching.
>>> from sympy import nextprime
>>> [(i, nextprime(i)) for i in range(10, 15)]
[(10, 11), (11, 13), (12, 13), (13, 17), (14, 17)]
>>> nextprime(2, ith=2) # the 2nd prime after 2
5
See Also
========
prevprime : Return the largest prime smaller than n
primerange : Generate all primes in a given range
"""
n = int(n)
i = as_int(ith)
if i > 1:
pr = n
j = 1
while 1:
pr = nextprime(pr)
j += 1
if j > i:
break
return pr
if n < 2:
return 2
if n < 7:
return {2: 3, 3: 5, 4: 5, 5: 7, 6: 7}[n]
if n <= sieve._list[-2]:
l, u = sieve.search(n)
if l == u:
return sieve[u + 1]
else:
return sieve[u]
nn = 6*(n//6)
if nn == n:
n += 1
if isprime(n):
return n
n += 4
elif n - nn == 5:
n += 2
if isprime(n):
return n
n += 4
else:
n = nn + 5
while 1:
if isprime(n):
return n
n += 2
if isprime(n):
return n
n += 4
def prevprime(n):
""" Return the largest prime smaller than n.
Notes
=====
Potential primes are located at 6*j +/- 1. This
property is used during searching.
>>> from sympy import prevprime
>>> [(i, prevprime(i)) for i in range(10, 15)]
[(10, 7), (11, 7), (12, 11), (13, 11), (14, 13)]
See Also
========
nextprime : Return the ith prime greater than n
primerange : Generates all primes in a given range
"""
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import ceiling
# wrapping ceiling in as_int will raise an error if there was a problem
# determining whether the expression was exactly an integer or not
n = as_int(ceiling(n))
if n < 3:
raise ValueError("no preceding primes")
if n < 8:
return {3: 2, 4: 3, 5: 3, 6: 5, 7: 5}[n]
if n <= sieve._list[-1]:
l, u = sieve.search(n)
if l == u:
return sieve[l-1]
else:
return sieve[l]
nn = 6*(n//6)
if n - nn <= 1:
n = nn - 1
if isprime(n):
return n
n -= 4
else:
n = nn + 1
while 1:
if isprime(n):
return n
n -= 2
if isprime(n):
return n
n -= 4
def primerange(a, b):
""" Generate a list of all prime numbers in the range [a, b).
If the range exists in the default sieve, the values will
be returned from there; otherwise values will be returned
but will not modify the sieve.
Notes
=====
Some famous conjectures about the occurrence of primes in a given
range are [1]:
- Twin primes: though often not, the following will give 2 primes
an infinite number of times:
primerange(6*n - 1, 6*n + 2)
- Legendre's: the following always yields at least one prime
primerange(n**2, (n+1)**2+1)
- Bertrand's (proven): there is always a prime in the range
primerange(n, 2*n)
- Brocard's: there are at least four primes in the range
primerange(prime(n)**2, prime(n+1)**2)
The average gap between primes is log(n) [2]; the gap between
primes can be arbitrarily large since sequences of composite
numbers are arbitrarily large, e.g. the numbers in the sequence
n! + 2, n! + 3 ... n! + n are all composite.
References
==========
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime_number
2. http://primes.utm.edu/notes/gaps.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import primerange, sieve
>>> print([i for i in primerange(1, 30)])
[2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29]
The Sieve method, primerange, is generally faster but it will
occupy more memory as the sieve stores values. The default
instance of Sieve, named sieve, can be used:
>>> list(sieve.primerange(1, 30))
[2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29]
See Also
========
nextprime : Return the ith prime greater than n
prevprime : Return the largest prime smaller than n
randprime : Returns a random prime in a given range
primorial : Returns the product of primes based on condition
Sieve.primerange : return range from already computed primes
or extend the sieve to contain the requested
range.
"""
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import ceiling
if a >= b:
return
# if we already have the range, return it
if b <= sieve._list[-1]:
for i in sieve.primerange(a, b):
yield i
return
# otherwise compute, without storing, the desired range.
# wrapping ceiling in as_int will raise an error if there was a problem
# determining whether the expression was exactly an integer or not
a = as_int(ceiling(a)) - 1
b = as_int(ceiling(b))
while 1:
a = nextprime(a)
if a < b:
yield a
else:
return
def randprime(a, b):
""" Return a random prime number in the range [a, b).
Bertrand's postulate assures that
randprime(a, 2*a) will always succeed for a > 1.
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertrand's_postulate
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import randprime, isprime
>>> randprime(1, 30) #doctest: +SKIP
13
>>> isprime(randprime(1, 30))
True
See Also
========
primerange : Generate all primes in a given range
"""
if a >= b:
return
a, b = map(int, (a, b))
n = random.randint(a - 1, b)
p = nextprime(n)
if p >= b:
p = prevprime(b)
if p < a:
raise ValueError("no primes exist in the specified range")
return p
def primorial(n, nth=True):
"""
Returns the product of the first n primes (default) or
the primes less than or equal to n (when ``nth=False``).
>>> from sympy.ntheory.generate import primorial, randprime, primerange
>>> from sympy import factorint, Mul, primefactors, sqrt
>>> primorial(4) # the first 4 primes are 2, 3, 5, 7
210
>>> primorial(4, nth=False) # primes <= 4 are 2 and 3
6
>>> primorial(1)
2
>>> primorial(1, nth=False)
1
>>> primorial(sqrt(101), nth=False)
210
One can argue that the primes are infinite since if you take
a set of primes and multiply them together (e.g. the primorial) and
then add or subtract 1, the result cannot be divided by any of the
original factors, hence either 1 or more new primes must divide this
product of primes.
In this case, the number itself is a new prime:
>>> factorint(primorial(4) + 1)
{211: 1}
In this case two new primes are the factors:
>>> factorint(primorial(4) - 1)
{11: 1, 19: 1}
Here, some primes smaller and larger than the primes multiplied together
are obtained:
>>> p = list(primerange(10, 20))
>>> sorted(set(primefactors(Mul(*p) + 1)).difference(set(p)))
[2, 5, 31, 149]
See Also
========
primerange : Generate all primes in a given range
"""
if nth:
n = as_int(n)
else:
n = int(n)
if n < 1:
raise ValueError("primorial argument must be >= 1")
p = 1
if nth:
for i in range(1, n + 1):
p *= prime(i)
else:
for i in primerange(2, n + 1):
p *= i
return p
def cycle_length(f, x0, nmax=None, values=False):
"""For a given iterated sequence, return a generator that gives
the length of the iterated cycle (lambda) and the length of terms
before the cycle begins (mu); if ``values`` is True then the
terms of the sequence will be returned instead. The sequence is
started with value ``x0``.
Note: more than the first lambda + mu terms may be returned and this
is the cost of cycle detection with Brent's method; there are, however,
generally less terms calculated than would have been calculated if the
proper ending point were determined, e.g. by using Floyd's method.
>>> from sympy.ntheory.generate import cycle_length
This will yield successive values of i <-- func(i):
>>> def iter(func, i):
... while 1:
... ii = func(i)
... yield ii
... i = ii
...
A function is defined:
>>> func = lambda i: (i**2 + 1) % 51
and given a seed of 4 and the mu and lambda terms calculated:
>>> next(cycle_length(func, 4))
(6, 2)
We can see what is meant by looking at the output:
>>> n = cycle_length(func, 4, values=True)
>>> list(ni for ni in n)
[17, 35, 2, 5, 26, 14, 44, 50, 2, 5, 26, 14]
There are 6 repeating values after the first 2.
If a sequence is suspected of being longer than you might wish, ``nmax``
can be used to exit early (and mu will be returned as None):
>>> next(cycle_length(func, 4, nmax = 4))
(4, None)
>>> [ni for ni in cycle_length(func, 4, nmax = 4, values=True)]
[17, 35, 2, 5]
Code modified from:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycle_detection.
"""
nmax = int(nmax or 0)
# main phase: search successive powers of two
power = lam = 1
tortoise, hare = x0, f(x0) # f(x0) is the element/node next to x0.
i = 0
while tortoise != hare and (not nmax or i < nmax):
i += 1
if power == lam: # time to start a new power of two?
tortoise = hare
power *= 2
lam = 0
if values:
yield hare
hare = f(hare)
lam += 1
if nmax and i == nmax:
if values:
return
else:
yield nmax, None
return
if not values:
# Find the position of the first repetition of length lambda
mu = 0
tortoise = hare = x0
for i in range(lam):
hare = f(hare)
while tortoise != hare:
tortoise = f(tortoise)
hare = f(hare)
mu += 1
if mu:
mu -= 1
yield lam, mu
def composite(nth):
""" Return the nth composite number, with the composite numbers indexed as
composite(1) = 4, composite(2) = 6, etc....
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import composite
>>> composite(36)
52
>>> composite(1)
4
>>> composite(17737)
20000
See Also
========
sympy.ntheory.primetest.isprime : Test if n is prime
primerange : Generate all primes in a given range
primepi : Return the number of primes less than or equal to n
prime : Return the nth prime
compositepi : Return the number of positive composite numbers less than or equal to n
"""
n = as_int(nth)
if n < 1:
raise ValueError("nth must be a positive integer; composite(1) == 4")
composite_arr = [4, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18]
if n <= 10:
return composite_arr[n - 1]
a, b = 4, sieve._list[-1]
if n <= b - primepi(b) - 1:
while a < b - 1:
mid = (a + b) >> 1
if mid - primepi(mid) - 1 > n:
b = mid
else:
a = mid
if isprime(a):
a -= 1
return a
from sympy.functions.special.error_functions import li
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import log
a = 4 # Lower bound for binary search
b = int(n*(log(n) + log(log(n)))) # Upper bound for the search.
while a < b:
mid = (a + b) >> 1
if mid - li(mid) - 1 > n:
b = mid
else:
a = mid + 1
n_composites = a - primepi(a) - 1
while n_composites > n:
if not isprime(a):
n_composites -= 1
a -= 1
if isprime(a):
a -= 1
return a
def compositepi(n):
""" Return the number of positive composite numbers less than or equal to n.
The first positive composite is 4, i.e. compositepi(4) = 1.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import compositepi
>>> compositepi(25)
15
>>> compositepi(1000)
831
See Also
========
sympy.ntheory.primetest.isprime : Test if n is prime
primerange : Generate all primes in a given range
prime : Return the nth prime
primepi : Return the number of primes less than or equal to n
composite : Return the nth composite number
"""
n = int(n)
if n < 4:
return 0
return n - primepi(n) - 1
|
179a60b05604c322905619db075b8d6eb1ea05c21105371ab5b71507caaae4f9
|
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.numbers import igcd, igcdex, mod_inverse
from sympy.core.power import isqrt
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int, range
from sympy.core.function import Function
from .primetest import isprime
from .factor_ import factorint, trailing, totient, multiplicity
from random import randint, Random
def n_order(a, n):
"""Returns the order of ``a`` modulo ``n``.
The order of ``a`` modulo ``n`` is the smallest integer
``k`` such that ``a**k`` leaves a remainder of 1 with ``n``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import n_order
>>> n_order(3, 7)
6
>>> n_order(4, 7)
3
"""
from collections import defaultdict
a, n = as_int(a), as_int(n)
if igcd(a, n) != 1:
raise ValueError("The two numbers should be relatively prime")
factors = defaultdict(int)
f = factorint(n)
for px, kx in f.items():
if kx > 1:
factors[px] += kx - 1
fpx = factorint(px - 1)
for py, ky in fpx.items():
factors[py] += ky
group_order = 1
for px, kx in factors.items():
group_order *= px**kx
order = 1
if a > n:
a = a % n
for p, e in factors.items():
exponent = group_order
for f in range(e + 1):
if pow(a, exponent, n) != 1:
order *= p ** (e - f + 1)
break
exponent = exponent // p
return order
def _primitive_root_prime_iter(p):
"""
Generates the primitive roots for a prime ``p``
References
==========
.. [1] W. Stein "Elementary Number Theory" (2011), page 44
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import _primitive_root_prime_iter
>>> list(_primitive_root_prime_iter(19))
[2, 3, 10, 13, 14, 15]
"""
# it is assumed that p is an int
v = [(p - 1) // i for i in factorint(p - 1).keys()]
a = 2
while a < p:
for pw in v:
# a TypeError below may indicate that p was not an int
if pow(a, pw, p) == 1:
break
else:
yield a
a += 1
def primitive_root(p):
"""
Returns the smallest primitive root or None
References
==========
.. [1] W. Stein "Elementary Number Theory" (2011), page 44
.. [2] P. Hackman "Elementary Number Theory" (2009), Chapter C
Parameters
==========
p : positive integer
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import primitive_root
>>> primitive_root(19)
2
"""
p = as_int(p)
if p < 1:
raise ValueError('p is required to be positive')
if p <= 2:
return 1
f = factorint(p)
if len(f) > 2:
return None
if len(f) == 2:
if 2 not in f or f[2] > 1:
return None
# case p = 2*p1**k, p1 prime
for p1, e1 in f.items():
if p1 != 2:
break
i = 1
while i < p:
i += 2
if i % p1 == 0:
continue
if is_primitive_root(i, p):
return i
else:
if 2 in f:
if p == 4:
return 3
return None
p1, n = list(f.items())[0]
if n > 1:
# see Ref [2], page 81
g = primitive_root(p1)
if is_primitive_root(g, p1**2):
return g
else:
for i in range(2, g + p1 + 1):
if igcd(i, p) == 1 and is_primitive_root(i, p):
return i
return next(_primitive_root_prime_iter(p))
def is_primitive_root(a, p):
"""
Returns True if ``a`` is a primitive root of ``p``
``a`` is said to be the primitive root of ``p`` if gcd(a, p) == 1 and
totient(p) is the smallest positive number s.t.
a**totient(p) cong 1 mod(p)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import is_primitive_root, n_order, totient
>>> is_primitive_root(3, 10)
True
>>> is_primitive_root(9, 10)
False
>>> n_order(3, 10) == totient(10)
True
>>> n_order(9, 10) == totient(10)
False
"""
a, p = as_int(a), as_int(p)
if igcd(a, p) != 1:
raise ValueError("The two numbers should be relatively prime")
if a > p:
a = a % p
return n_order(a, p) == totient(p)
def _sqrt_mod_tonelli_shanks(a, p):
"""
Returns the square root in the case of ``p`` prime with ``p == 1 (mod 8)``
References
==========
.. [1] R. Crandall and C. Pomerance "Prime Numbers", 2nt Ed., page 101
"""
s = trailing(p - 1)
t = p >> s
# find a non-quadratic residue
while 1:
d = randint(2, p - 1)
r = legendre_symbol(d, p)
if r == -1:
break
#assert legendre_symbol(d, p) == -1
A = pow(a, t, p)
D = pow(d, t, p)
m = 0
for i in range(s):
adm = A*pow(D, m, p) % p
adm = pow(adm, 2**(s - 1 - i), p)
if adm % p == p - 1:
m += 2**i
#assert A*pow(D, m, p) % p == 1
x = pow(a, (t + 1)//2, p)*pow(D, m//2, p) % p
return x
def sqrt_mod(a, p, all_roots=False):
"""
Find a root of ``x**2 = a mod p``
Parameters
==========
a : integer
p : positive integer
all_roots : if True the list of roots is returned or None
Notes
=====
If there is no root it is returned None; else the returned root
is less or equal to ``p // 2``; in general is not the smallest one.
It is returned ``p // 2`` only if it is the only root.
Use ``all_roots`` only when it is expected that all the roots fit
in memory; otherwise use ``sqrt_mod_iter``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import sqrt_mod
>>> sqrt_mod(11, 43)
21
>>> sqrt_mod(17, 32, True)
[7, 9, 23, 25]
"""
if all_roots:
return sorted(list(sqrt_mod_iter(a, p)))
try:
p = abs(as_int(p))
it = sqrt_mod_iter(a, p)
r = next(it)
if r > p // 2:
return p - r
elif r < p // 2:
return r
else:
try:
r = next(it)
if r > p // 2:
return p - r
except StopIteration:
pass
return r
except StopIteration:
return None
def _product(*iters):
"""
Cartesian product generator
Notes
=====
Unlike itertools.product, it works also with iterables which do not fit
in memory. See http://bugs.python.org/issue10109
Author: Fernando Sumudu
with small changes
"""
import itertools
inf_iters = tuple(itertools.cycle(enumerate(it)) for it in iters)
num_iters = len(inf_iters)
cur_val = [None]*num_iters
first_v = True
while True:
i, p = 0, num_iters
while p and not i:
p -= 1
i, cur_val[p] = next(inf_iters[p])
if not p and not i:
if first_v:
first_v = False
else:
break
yield cur_val
def sqrt_mod_iter(a, p, domain=int):
"""
Iterate over solutions to ``x**2 = a mod p``
Parameters
==========
a : integer
p : positive integer
domain : integer domain, ``int``, ``ZZ`` or ``Integer``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import sqrt_mod_iter
>>> list(sqrt_mod_iter(11, 43))
[21, 22]
"""
from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_crt1, gf_crt2
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
a, p = as_int(a), abs(as_int(p))
if isprime(p):
a = a % p
if a == 0:
res = _sqrt_mod1(a, p, 1)
else:
res = _sqrt_mod_prime_power(a, p, 1)
if res:
if domain is ZZ:
for x in res:
yield x
else:
for x in res:
yield domain(x)
else:
f = factorint(p)
v = []
pv = []
for px, ex in f.items():
if a % px == 0:
rx = _sqrt_mod1(a, px, ex)
if not rx:
return
else:
rx = _sqrt_mod_prime_power(a, px, ex)
if not rx:
return
v.append(rx)
pv.append(px**ex)
mm, e, s = gf_crt1(pv, ZZ)
if domain is ZZ:
for vx in _product(*v):
r = gf_crt2(vx, pv, mm, e, s, ZZ)
yield r
else:
for vx in _product(*v):
r = gf_crt2(vx, pv, mm, e, s, ZZ)
yield domain(r)
def _sqrt_mod_prime_power(a, p, k):
"""
Find the solutions to ``x**2 = a mod p**k`` when ``a % p != 0``
Parameters
==========
a : integer
p : prime number
k : positive integer
References
==========
.. [1] P. Hackman "Elementary Number Theory" (2009), page 160
.. [2] http://www.numbertheory.org/php/squareroot.html
.. [3] [Gathen99]_
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import _sqrt_mod_prime_power
>>> _sqrt_mod_prime_power(11, 43, 1)
[21, 22]
"""
from sympy.core.numbers import igcdex
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
pk = p**k
a = a % pk
if k == 1:
if p == 2:
return [ZZ(a)]
if not is_quad_residue(a, p):
return None
if p % 4 == 3:
res = pow(a, (p + 1) // 4, p)
elif p % 8 == 5:
sign = pow(a, (p - 1) // 4, p)
if sign == 1:
res = pow(a, (p + 3) // 8, p)
else:
b = pow(4*a, (p - 5) // 8, p)
x = (2*a*b) % p
if pow(x, 2, p) == a:
res = x
else:
res = _sqrt_mod_tonelli_shanks(a, p)
# ``_sqrt_mod_tonelli_shanks(a, p)`` is not deterministic;
# sort to get always the same result
return sorted([ZZ(res), ZZ(p - res)])
if k > 1:
# see Ref.[2]
if p == 2:
if a % 8 != 1:
return None
if k <= 3:
s = set()
for i in range(0, pk, 4):
s.add(1 + i)
s.add(-1 + i)
return list(s)
# according to Ref.[2] for k > 2 there are two solutions
# (mod 2**k-1), that is four solutions (mod 2**k), which can be
# obtained from the roots of x**2 = 0 (mod 8)
rv = [ZZ(1), ZZ(3), ZZ(5), ZZ(7)]
# hensel lift them to solutions of x**2 = 0 (mod 2**k)
# if r**2 - a = 0 mod 2**nx but not mod 2**(nx+1)
# then r + 2**(nx - 1) is a root mod 2**(nx+1)
n = 3
res = []
for r in rv:
nx = n
while nx < k:
r1 = (r**2 - a) >> nx
if r1 % 2:
r = r + (1 << (nx - 1))
#assert (r**2 - a)% (1 << (nx + 1)) == 0
nx += 1
if r not in res:
res.append(r)
x = r + (1 << (k - 1))
#assert (x**2 - a) % pk == 0
if x < (1 << nx) and x not in res:
if (x**2 - a) % pk == 0:
res.append(x)
return res
rv = _sqrt_mod_prime_power(a, p, 1)
if not rv:
return None
r = rv[0]
fr = r**2 - a
# hensel lifting with Newton iteration, see Ref.[3] chapter 9
# with f(x) = x**2 - a; one has f'(a) != 0 (mod p) for p != 2
n = 1
px = p
while 1:
n1 = n
n1 *= 2
if n1 > k:
break
n = n1
px = px**2
frinv = igcdex(2*r, px)[0]
r = (r - fr*frinv) % px
fr = r**2 - a
if n < k:
px = p**k
frinv = igcdex(2*r, px)[0]
r = (r - fr*frinv) % px
return [r, px - r]
def _sqrt_mod1(a, p, n):
"""
Find solution to ``x**2 == a mod p**n`` when ``a % p == 0``
see http://www.numbertheory.org/php/squareroot.html
"""
pn = p**n
a = a % pn
if a == 0:
# case gcd(a, p**k) = p**n
m = n // 2
if n % 2 == 1:
pm1 = p**(m + 1)
def _iter0a():
i = 0
while i < pn:
yield i
i += pm1
return _iter0a()
else:
pm = p**m
def _iter0b():
i = 0
while i < pn:
yield i
i += pm
return _iter0b()
# case gcd(a, p**k) = p**r, r < n
f = factorint(a)
r = f[p]
if r % 2 == 1:
return None
m = r // 2
a1 = a >> r
if p == 2:
if n - r == 1:
pnm1 = 1 << (n - m + 1)
pm1 = 1 << (m + 1)
def _iter1():
k = 1 << (m + 2)
i = 1 << m
while i < pnm1:
j = i
while j < pn:
yield j
j += k
i += pm1
return _iter1()
if n - r == 2:
res = _sqrt_mod_prime_power(a1, p, n - r)
if res is None:
return None
pnm = 1 << (n - m)
def _iter2():
s = set()
for r in res:
i = 0
while i < pn:
x = (r << m) + i
if x not in s:
s.add(x)
yield x
i += pnm
return _iter2()
if n - r > 2:
res = _sqrt_mod_prime_power(a1, p, n - r)
if res is None:
return None
pnm1 = 1 << (n - m - 1)
def _iter3():
s = set()
for r in res:
i = 0
while i < pn:
x = ((r << m) + i) % pn
if x not in s:
s.add(x)
yield x
i += pnm1
return _iter3()
else:
m = r // 2
a1 = a // p**r
res1 = _sqrt_mod_prime_power(a1, p, n - r)
if res1 is None:
return None
pm = p**m
pnr = p**(n-r)
pnm = p**(n-m)
def _iter4():
s = set()
pm = p**m
for rx in res1:
i = 0
while i < pnm:
x = ((rx + i) % pn)
if x not in s:
s.add(x)
yield x*pm
i += pnr
return _iter4()
def is_quad_residue(a, p):
"""
Returns True if ``a`` (mod ``p``) is in the set of squares mod ``p``,
i.e a % p in set([i**2 % p for i in range(p)]). If ``p`` is an odd
prime, an iterative method is used to make the determination:
>>> from sympy.ntheory import is_quad_residue
>>> sorted(set([i**2 % 7 for i in range(7)]))
[0, 1, 2, 4]
>>> [j for j in range(7) if is_quad_residue(j, 7)]
[0, 1, 2, 4]
See Also
========
legendre_symbol, jacobi_symbol
"""
a, p = as_int(a), as_int(p)
if p < 1:
raise ValueError('p must be > 0')
if a >= p or a < 0:
a = a % p
if a < 2 or p < 3:
return True
if not isprime(p):
if p % 2 and jacobi_symbol(a, p) == -1:
return False
r = sqrt_mod(a, p)
if r is None:
return False
else:
return True
return pow(a, (p - 1) // 2, p) == 1
def is_nthpow_residue(a, n, m):
"""
Returns True if ``x**n == a (mod m)`` has solutions.
References
==========
.. [1] P. Hackman "Elementary Number Theory" (2009), page 76
"""
a, n, m = as_int(a), as_int(n), as_int(m)
if m <= 0:
raise ValueError('m must be > 0')
if n < 0:
raise ValueError('n must be >= 0')
if a < 0:
raise ValueError('a must be >= 0')
if n == 0:
if m == 1:
return False
return a == 1
if n == 1:
return True
if n == 2:
return is_quad_residue(a, m)
return _is_nthpow_residue_bign(a, n, m)
def _is_nthpow_residue_bign(a, n, m):
"""Returns True if ``x**n == a (mod m)`` has solutions for n > 2."""
# assert n > 2
# assert a > 0 and m > 0
if primitive_root(m) is None:
# assert m >= 8
for prime, power in factorint(m).items():
if not _is_nthpow_residue_bign_prime_power(a, n, prime, power):
return False
return True
f = totient(m)
k = f // igcd(f, n)
return pow(a, k, m) == 1
def _is_nthpow_residue_bign_prime_power(a, n, p, k):
"""Returns True/False if a solution for ``x**n == a (mod(p**k))``
does/doesn't exist."""
# assert a > 0
# assert n > 2
# assert p is prime
# assert k > 0
if a % p:
if p != 2:
return _is_nthpow_residue_bign(a, n, pow(p, k))
if n & 1:
return True
c = trailing(n)
return a % pow(2, min(c + 2, k)) == 1
else:
a %= pow(p, k)
if not a:
return True
mu = multiplicity(p, a)
if mu % n:
return False
pm = pow(p, mu)
return _is_nthpow_residue_bign_prime_power(a//pm, n, p, k - mu)
def _nthroot_mod2(s, q, p):
f = factorint(q)
v = []
for b, e in f.items():
v.extend([b]*e)
for qx in v:
s = _nthroot_mod1(s, qx, p, False)
return s
def _nthroot_mod1(s, q, p, all_roots):
"""
Root of ``x**q = s mod p``, ``p`` prime and ``q`` divides ``p - 1``
References
==========
.. [1] A. M. Johnston "A Generalized qth Root Algorithm"
"""
g = primitive_root(p)
if not isprime(q):
r = _nthroot_mod2(s, q, p)
else:
f = p - 1
assert (p - 1) % q == 0
# determine k
k = 0
while f % q == 0:
k += 1
f = f // q
# find z, x, r1
f1 = igcdex(-f, q)[0] % q
z = f*f1
x = (1 + z) // q
w = pow(g, z, p)
r1 = pow(s, x, p)
s1 = pow(s, f, p)
y = pow(g, f, p)
h = pow(g, f*q, p)
t = discrete_log(p, s1, h)
g2 = pow(g, z*t, p)
g3 = igcdex(g2, p)[0]
r = r1*g3 % p
#assert pow(r, q, p) == s
res = [r]
h = pow(g, (p - 1) // q, p)
#assert pow(h, q, p) == 1
hx = r
for i in range(q - 1):
hx = (hx*h) % p
res.append(hx)
if all_roots:
res.sort()
return res
return min(res)
def nthroot_mod(a, n, p, all_roots=False):
"""
Find the solutions to ``x**n = a mod p``
Parameters
==========
a : integer
n : positive integer
p : positive integer
all_roots : if False returns the smallest root, else the list of roots
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import nthroot_mod
>>> nthroot_mod(11, 4, 19)
8
>>> nthroot_mod(11, 4, 19, True)
[8, 11]
>>> nthroot_mod(68, 3, 109)
23
"""
from sympy.core.numbers import igcdex
a, n, p = as_int(a), as_int(n), as_int(p)
if n == 2:
return sqrt_mod(a, p, all_roots)
f = totient(p)
# see Hackman "Elementary Number Theory" (2009), page 76
if not is_nthpow_residue(a, n, p):
return None
if primitive_root(p) == None:
raise NotImplementedError("Not Implemented for m without primitive root")
if (p - 1) % n == 0:
return _nthroot_mod1(a, n, p, all_roots)
# The roots of ``x**n - a = 0 (mod p)`` are roots of
# ``gcd(x**n - a, x**(p - 1) - 1) = 0 (mod p)``
pa = n
pb = p - 1
b = 1
if pa < pb:
a, pa, b, pb = b, pb, a, pa
while pb:
# x**pa - a = 0; x**pb - b = 0
# x**pa - a = x**(q*pb + r) - a = (x**pb)**q * x**r - a =
# b**q * x**r - a; x**r - c = 0; c = b**-q * a mod p
q, r = divmod(pa, pb)
c = pow(b, q, p)
c = igcdex(c, p)[0]
c = (c * a) % p
pa, pb = pb, r
a, b = b, c
if pa == 1:
if all_roots:
res = [a]
else:
res = a
elif pa == 2:
return sqrt_mod(a, p , all_roots)
else:
res = _nthroot_mod1(a, pa, p, all_roots)
return res
def quadratic_residues(p):
"""
Returns the list of quadratic residues.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import quadratic_residues
>>> quadratic_residues(7)
[0, 1, 2, 4]
"""
p = as_int(p)
r = set()
for i in range(p // 2 + 1):
r.add(pow(i, 2, p))
return sorted(list(r))
def legendre_symbol(a, p):
r"""
Returns the Legendre symbol `(a / p)`.
For an integer ``a`` and an odd prime ``p``, the Legendre symbol is
defined as
.. math ::
\genfrac(){}{}{a}{p} = \begin{cases}
0 & \text{if } p \text{ divides } a\\
1 & \text{if } a \text{ is a quadratic residue modulo } p\\
-1 & \text{if } a \text{ is a quadratic nonresidue modulo } p
\end{cases}
Parameters
==========
a : integer
p : odd prime
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import legendre_symbol
>>> [legendre_symbol(i, 7) for i in range(7)]
[0, 1, 1, -1, 1, -1, -1]
>>> sorted(set([i**2 % 7 for i in range(7)]))
[0, 1, 2, 4]
See Also
========
is_quad_residue, jacobi_symbol
"""
a, p = as_int(a), as_int(p)
if not isprime(p) or p == 2:
raise ValueError("p should be an odd prime")
a = a % p
if not a:
return 0
if is_quad_residue(a, p):
return 1
return -1
def jacobi_symbol(m, n):
r"""
Returns the Jacobi symbol `(m / n)`.
For any integer ``m`` and any positive odd integer ``n`` the Jacobi symbol
is defined as the product of the Legendre symbols corresponding to the
prime factors of ``n``:
.. math ::
\genfrac(){}{}{m}{n} =
\genfrac(){}{}{m}{p^{1}}^{\alpha_1}
\genfrac(){}{}{m}{p^{2}}^{\alpha_2}
...
\genfrac(){}{}{m}{p^{k}}^{\alpha_k}
\text{ where } n =
p_1^{\alpha_1}
p_2^{\alpha_2}
...
p_k^{\alpha_k}
Like the Legendre symbol, if the Jacobi symbol `\genfrac(){}{}{m}{n} = -1`
then ``m`` is a quadratic nonresidue modulo ``n``.
But, unlike the Legendre symbol, if the Jacobi symbol
`\genfrac(){}{}{m}{n} = 1` then ``m`` may or may not be a quadratic residue
modulo ``n``.
Parameters
==========
m : integer
n : odd positive integer
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import jacobi_symbol, legendre_symbol
>>> from sympy import Mul, S
>>> jacobi_symbol(45, 77)
-1
>>> jacobi_symbol(60, 121)
1
The relationship between the ``jacobi_symbol`` and ``legendre_symbol`` can
be demonstrated as follows:
>>> L = legendre_symbol
>>> S(45).factors()
{3: 2, 5: 1}
>>> jacobi_symbol(7, 45) == L(7, 3)**2 * L(7, 5)**1
True
See Also
========
is_quad_residue, legendre_symbol
"""
m, n = as_int(m), as_int(n)
if n < 0 or not n % 2:
raise ValueError("n should be an odd positive integer")
if m < 0 or m > n:
m = m % n
if not m:
return int(n == 1)
if n == 1 or m == 1:
return 1
if igcd(m, n) != 1:
return 0
j = 1
if m < 0:
m = -m
if n % 4 == 3:
j = -j
while m != 0:
while m % 2 == 0 and m > 0:
m >>= 1
if n % 8 in [3, 5]:
j = -j
m, n = n, m
if m % 4 == 3 and n % 4 == 3:
j = -j
m %= n
if n != 1:
j = 0
return j
class mobius(Function):
"""
Möbius function maps natural number to {-1, 0, 1}
It is defined as follows:
1) `1` if `n = 1`.
2) `0` if `n` has a squared prime factor.
3) `(-1)^k` if `n` is a square-free positive integer with `k`
number of prime factors.
It is an important multiplicative function in number theory
and combinatorics. It has applications in mathematical series,
algebraic number theory and also physics (Fermion operator has very
concrete realization with Möbius Function model).
Parameters
==========
n : positive integer
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import mobius
>>> mobius(13*7)
1
>>> mobius(1)
1
>>> mobius(13*7*5)
-1
>>> mobius(13**2)
0
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%B6bius_function
.. [2] Thomas Koshy "Elementary Number Theory with Applications"
"""
@classmethod
def eval(cls, n):
if n.is_integer:
if n.is_positive is not True:
raise ValueError("n should be a positive integer")
else:
raise TypeError("n should be an integer")
if n.is_prime:
return S.NegativeOne
elif n is S.One:
return S.One
elif n.is_Integer:
a = factorint(n)
if any(i > 1 for i in a.values()):
return S.Zero
return S.NegativeOne**len(a)
def _discrete_log_trial_mul(n, a, b, order=None):
"""
Trial multiplication algorithm for computing the discrete logarithm of
``a`` to the base ``b`` modulo ``n``.
The algorithm finds the discrete logarithm using exhaustive search. This
naive method is used as fallback algorithm of ``discrete_log`` when the
group order is very small.
References
==========
.. [1] "Handbook of applied cryptography", Menezes, A. J., Van, O. P. C., &
Vanstone, S. A. (1997).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import _discrete_log_trial_mul
>>> _discrete_log_trial_mul(41, 15, 7)
3
See also
========
discrete_log
"""
a %= n
b %= n
if order is None:
order = n
x = 1
k = 1
for i in range(order):
if x == a:
return i
x = x * b % n
raise ValueError("Log does not exist")
def _discrete_log_shanks_steps(n, a, b, order=None):
"""
Baby-step giant-step algorithm for computing the discrete logarithm of
``a`` to the base ``b`` modulo ``n``.
The algorithm is a time-memory trade-off of the method of exhaustive
search. It uses `O(sqrt(m))` memory, where `m` is the group order.
References
==========
.. [1] "Handbook of applied cryptography", Menezes, A. J., Van, O. P. C., &
Vanstone, S. A. (1997).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import _discrete_log_shanks_steps
>>> _discrete_log_shanks_steps(41, 15, 7)
3
See also
========
discrete_log
"""
a %= n
b %= n
if order is None:
order = n_order(b, n)
m = isqrt(order) + 1
T = dict()
x = 1
for i in range(m):
T[x] = i
x = x * b % n
z = mod_inverse(b, n)
z = pow(z, m, n)
x = a
for i in range(m):
if x in T:
return i * m + T[x]
x = x * z % n
raise ValueError("Log does not exist")
def _discrete_log_pollard_rho(n, a, b, order=None, retries=10, rseed=None):
"""
Pollard's Rho algorithm for computing the discrete logarithm of ``a`` to
the base ``b`` modulo ``n``.
It is a randomized algorithm with the same expected running time as
``_discrete_log_shanks_steps``, but requires a negligible amount of memory.
References
==========
.. [1] "Handbook of applied cryptography", Menezes, A. J., Van, O. P. C., &
Vanstone, S. A. (1997).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import _discrete_log_pollard_rho
>>> _discrete_log_pollard_rho(227, 3**7, 3)
7
See also
========
discrete_log
"""
a %= n
b %= n
if order is None:
order = n_order(b, n)
prng = Random()
if rseed is not None:
prng.seed(rseed)
for i in range(retries):
aa = prng.randint(1, order - 1)
ba = prng.randint(1, order - 1)
xa = pow(b, aa, n) * pow(a, ba, n) % n
c = xa % 3
if c == 0:
xb = a * xa % n
ab = aa
bb = (ba + 1) % order
elif c == 1:
xb = xa * xa % n
ab = (aa + aa) % order
bb = (ba + ba) % order
else:
xb = b * xa % n
ab = (aa + 1) % order
bb = ba
for j in range(order):
c = xa % 3
if c == 0:
xa = a * xa % n
ba = (ba + 1) % order
elif c == 1:
xa = xa * xa % n
aa = (aa + aa) % order
ba = (ba + ba) % order
else:
xa = b * xa % n
aa = (aa + 1) % order
c = xb % 3
if c == 0:
xb = a * xb % n
bb = (bb + 1) % order
elif c == 1:
xb = xb * xb % n
ab = (ab + ab) % order
bb = (bb + bb) % order
else:
xb = b * xb % n
ab = (ab + 1) % order
c = xb % 3
if c == 0:
xb = a * xb % n
bb = (bb + 1) % order
elif c == 1:
xb = xb * xb % n
ab = (ab + ab) % order
bb = (bb + bb) % order
else:
xb = b * xb % n
ab = (ab + 1) % order
if xa == xb:
r = (ba - bb) % order
if r != 0:
return mod_inverse(r, order) * (ab - aa) % order
break
raise ValueError("Pollard's Rho failed to find logarithm")
def _discrete_log_pohlig_hellman(n, a, b, order=None):
"""
Pohlig-Hellman algorithm for computing the discrete logarithm of ``a`` to
the base ``b`` modulo ``n``.
In order to compute the discrete logarithm, the algorithm takes advantage
of the factorization of the group order. It is more efficient when the
group order factors into many small primes.
References
==========
.. [1] "Handbook of applied cryptography", Menezes, A. J., Van, O. P. C., &
Vanstone, S. A. (1997).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import _discrete_log_pohlig_hellman
>>> _discrete_log_pohlig_hellman(251, 210, 71)
197
See also
========
discrete_log
"""
from .modular import crt
a %= n
b %= n
if order is None:
order = n_order(b, n)
f = factorint(order)
l = [0] * len(f)
for i, (pi, ri) in enumerate(f.items()):
for j in range(ri):
gj = pow(b, l[i], n)
aj = pow(a * mod_inverse(gj, n), order // pi**(j + 1), n)
bj = pow(b, order // pi, n)
cj = discrete_log(n, aj, bj, pi, True)
l[i] += cj * pi**j
d, _ = crt([pi**ri for pi, ri in f.items()], l)
return d
def discrete_log(n, a, b, order=None, prime_order=None):
"""
Compute the discrete logarithm of ``a`` to the base ``b`` modulo ``n``.
This is a recursive function to reduce the discrete logarithm problem in
cyclic groups of composite order to the problem in cyclic groups of prime
order.
It employs different algorithms depending on the problem (subgroup order
size, prime order or not):
* Trial multiplication
* Baby-step giant-step
* Pollard's Rho
* Pohlig-Hellman
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/DiscreteLogarithm.html
.. [2] "Handbook of applied cryptography", Menezes, A. J., Van, O. P. C., &
Vanstone, S. A. (1997).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import discrete_log
>>> discrete_log(41, 15, 7)
3
"""
n, a, b = as_int(n), as_int(a), as_int(b)
if order is None:
order = n_order(b, n)
if prime_order is None:
prime_order = isprime(order)
if order < 1000:
return _discrete_log_trial_mul(n, a, b, order)
elif prime_order:
if order < 1000000000000:
return _discrete_log_shanks_steps(n, a, b, order)
return _discrete_log_pollard_rho(n, a, b, order)
return _discrete_log_pohlig_hellman(n, a, b, order)
|
8be7e8b5b13aaaf808aeb9843c427f00231f1ff46ea6064822b8bb0703c56eb4
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.numbers import igcdex, igcd
from sympy.core.mul import prod
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int, reduce
from sympy.ntheory.primetest import isprime
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_crt, gf_crt1, gf_crt2
def symmetric_residue(a, m):
"""Return the residual mod m such that it is within half of the modulus.
>>> from sympy.ntheory.modular import symmetric_residue
>>> symmetric_residue(1, 6)
1
>>> symmetric_residue(4, 6)
-2
"""
if a <= m // 2:
return a
return a - m
def crt(m, v, symmetric=False, check=True):
r"""Chinese Remainder Theorem.
The moduli in m are assumed to be pairwise coprime. The output
is then an integer f, such that f = v_i mod m_i for each pair out
of v and m. If ``symmetric`` is False a positive integer will be
returned, else \|f\| will be less than or equal to the LCM of the
moduli, and thus f may be negative.
If the moduli are not co-prime the correct result will be returned
if/when the test of the result is found to be incorrect. This result
will be None if there is no solution.
The keyword ``check`` can be set to False if it is known that the moduli
are coprime.
As an example consider a set of residues ``U = [49, 76, 65]``
and a set of moduli ``M = [99, 97, 95]``. Then we have::
>>> from sympy.ntheory.modular import crt, solve_congruence
>>> crt([99, 97, 95], [49, 76, 65])
(639985, 912285)
This is the correct result because::
>>> [639985 % m for m in [99, 97, 95]]
[49, 76, 65]
If the moduli are not co-prime, you may receive an incorrect result
if you use ``check=False``:
>>> crt([12, 6, 17], [3, 4, 2], check=False)
(954, 1224)
>>> [954 % m for m in [12, 6, 17]]
[6, 0, 2]
>>> crt([12, 6, 17], [3, 4, 2]) is None
True
>>> crt([3, 6], [2, 5])
(5, 6)
Note: the order of gf_crt's arguments is reversed relative to crt,
and that solve_congruence takes residue, modulus pairs.
Programmer's note: rather than checking that all pairs of moduli share
no GCD (an O(n**2) test) and rather than factoring all moduli and seeing
that there is no factor in common, a check that the result gives the
indicated residuals is performed -- an O(n) operation.
See Also
========
solve_congruence
sympy.polys.galoistools.gf_crt : low level crt routine used by this routine
"""
if check:
m = list(map(as_int, m))
v = list(map(as_int, v))
result = gf_crt(v, m, ZZ)
mm = prod(m)
if check:
if not all(v % m == result % m for v, m in zip(v, m)):
result = solve_congruence(*list(zip(v, m)),
check=False, symmetric=symmetric)
if result is None:
return result
result, mm = result
if symmetric:
return symmetric_residue(result, mm), mm
return result, mm
def crt1(m):
"""First part of Chinese Remainder Theorem, for multiple application.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.modular import crt1
>>> crt1([18, 42, 6])
(4536, [252, 108, 756], [0, 2, 0])
"""
return gf_crt1(m, ZZ)
def crt2(m, v, mm, e, s, symmetric=False):
"""Second part of Chinese Remainder Theorem, for multiple application.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.modular import crt1, crt2
>>> mm, e, s = crt1([18, 42, 6])
>>> crt2([18, 42, 6], [0, 0, 0], mm, e, s)
(0, 4536)
"""
result = gf_crt2(v, m, mm, e, s, ZZ)
if symmetric:
return symmetric_residue(result, mm), mm
return result, mm
def solve_congruence(*remainder_modulus_pairs, **hint):
"""Compute the integer ``n`` that has the residual ``ai`` when it is
divided by ``mi`` where the ``ai`` and ``mi`` are given as pairs to
this function: ((a1, m1), (a2, m2), ...). If there is no solution,
return None. Otherwise return ``n`` and its modulus.
The ``mi`` values need not be co-prime. If it is known that the moduli are
not co-prime then the hint ``check`` can be set to False (default=True) and
the check for a quicker solution via crt() (valid when the moduli are
co-prime) will be skipped.
If the hint ``symmetric`` is True (default is False), the value of ``n``
will be within 1/2 of the modulus, possibly negative.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.modular import solve_congruence
What number is 2 mod 3, 3 mod 5 and 2 mod 7?
>>> solve_congruence((2, 3), (3, 5), (2, 7))
(23, 105)
>>> [23 % m for m in [3, 5, 7]]
[2, 3, 2]
If you prefer to work with all remainder in one list and
all moduli in another, send the arguments like this:
>>> solve_congruence(*zip((2, 3, 2), (3, 5, 7)))
(23, 105)
The moduli need not be co-prime; in this case there may or
may not be a solution:
>>> solve_congruence((2, 3), (4, 6)) is None
True
>>> solve_congruence((2, 3), (5, 6))
(5, 6)
The symmetric flag will make the result be within 1/2 of the modulus:
>>> solve_congruence((2, 3), (5, 6), symmetric=True)
(-1, 6)
See Also
========
crt : high level routine implementing the Chinese Remainder Theorem
"""
def combine(c1, c2):
"""Return the tuple (a, m) which satisfies the requirement
that n = a + i*m satisfy n = a1 + j*m1 and n = a2 = k*m2.
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_of_successive_substitution
"""
a1, m1 = c1
a2, m2 = c2
a, b, c = m1, a2 - a1, m2
g = reduce(igcd, [a, b, c])
a, b, c = [i//g for i in [a, b, c]]
if a != 1:
inv_a, _, g = igcdex(a, c)
if g != 1:
return None
b *= inv_a
a, m = a1 + m1*b, m1*c
return a, m
rm = remainder_modulus_pairs
symmetric = hint.get('symmetric', False)
if hint.get('check', True):
rm = [(as_int(r), as_int(m)) for r, m in rm]
# ignore redundant pairs but raise an error otherwise; also
# make sure that a unique set of bases is sent to gf_crt if
# they are all prime.
#
# The routine will work out less-trivial violations and
# return None, e.g. for the pairs (1,3) and (14,42) there
# is no answer because 14 mod 42 (having a gcd of 14) implies
# (14/2) mod (42/2), (14/7) mod (42/7) and (14/14) mod (42/14)
# which, being 0 mod 3, is inconsistent with 1 mod 3. But to
# preprocess the input beyond checking of another pair with 42
# or 3 as the modulus (for this example) is not necessary.
uniq = {}
for r, m in rm:
r %= m
if m in uniq:
if r != uniq[m]:
return None
continue
uniq[m] = r
rm = [(r, m) for m, r in uniq.items()]
del uniq
# if the moduli are co-prime, the crt will be significantly faster;
# checking all pairs for being co-prime gets to be slow but a prime
# test is a good trade-off
if all(isprime(m) for r, m in rm):
r, m = list(zip(*rm))
return crt(m, r, symmetric=symmetric, check=False)
rv = (0, 1)
for rmi in rm:
rv = combine(rv, rmi)
if rv is None:
break
n, m = rv
n = n % m
else:
if symmetric:
return symmetric_residue(n, m), m
return n, m
|
55f717cca4a54aea19fe8dfb5b823d6e800fd03c1d91a93922625bc5d729f6c5
|
"""
Primality testing
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.compatibility import range, as_int
from sympy.core.numbers import Float
from mpmath.libmp import bitcount as _bitlength
def _int_tuple(*i):
return tuple(int(_) for _ in i)
def is_euler_pseudoprime(n, b):
"""Returns True if n is prime or an Euler pseudoprime to base b, else False.
Euler Pseudoprime : In arithmetic, an odd composite integer n is called an
euler pseudoprime to base a, if a and n are coprime and satisfy the modular
arithmetic congruence relation :
a ^ (n-1)/2 = + 1(mod n) or
a ^ (n-1)/2 = - 1(mod n)
(where mod refers to the modulo operation).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.primetest import is_euler_pseudoprime
>>> is_euler_pseudoprime(2, 5)
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler_pseudoprime
"""
from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import trailing
if not mr(n, [b]):
return False
n = as_int(n)
r = n - 1
c = pow(b, r >> trailing(r), n)
if c == 1:
return True
while True:
if c == n - 1:
return True
c = pow(c, 2, n)
if c == 1:
return False
def is_square(n, prep=True):
"""Return True if n == a * a for some integer a, else False.
If n is suspected of *not* being a square then this is a
quick method of confirming that it is not.
References
==========
[1] http://mersenneforum.org/showpost.php?p=110896
See Also
========
sympy.core.power.integer_nthroot
"""
if prep:
n = as_int(n)
if n < 0:
return False
if n in [0, 1]:
return True
m = n & 127
if not ((m*0x8bc40d7d) & (m*0xa1e2f5d1) & 0x14020a):
m = n % 63
if not ((m*0x3d491df7) & (m*0xc824a9f9) & 0x10f14008):
from sympy.ntheory import perfect_power
if perfect_power(n, [2]):
return True
return False
def _test(n, base, s, t):
"""Miller-Rabin strong pseudoprime test for one base.
Return False if n is definitely composite, True if n is
probably prime, with a probability greater than 3/4.
"""
# do the Fermat test
b = pow(base, t, n)
if b == 1 or b == n - 1:
return True
else:
for j in range(1, s):
b = pow(b, 2, n)
if b == n - 1:
return True
# see I. Niven et al. "An Introduction to Theory of Numbers", page 78
if b == 1:
return False
return False
def mr(n, bases):
"""Perform a Miller-Rabin strong pseudoprime test on n using a
given list of bases/witnesses.
References
==========
- Richard Crandall & Carl Pomerance (2005), "Prime Numbers:
A Computational Perspective", Springer, 2nd edition, 135-138
A list of thresholds and the bases they require are here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miller%E2%80%93Rabin_primality_test#Deterministic_variants_of_the_test
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.primetest import mr
>>> mr(1373651, [2, 3])
False
>>> mr(479001599, [31, 73])
True
"""
from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import trailing
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
n = as_int(n)
if n < 2:
return False
# remove powers of 2 from n-1 (= t * 2**s)
s = trailing(n - 1)
t = n >> s
for base in bases:
# Bases >= n are wrapped, bases < 2 are invalid
if base >= n:
base %= n
if base >= 2:
base = ZZ(base)
if not _test(n, base, s, t):
return False
return True
def _lucas_sequence(n, P, Q, k):
"""Return the modular Lucas sequence (U_k, V_k, Q_k).
Given a Lucas sequence defined by P, Q, returns the kth values for
U and V, along with Q^k, all modulo n. This is intended for use with
possibly very large values of n and k, where the combinatorial functions
would be completely unusable.
The modular Lucas sequences are used in numerous places in number theory,
especially in the Lucas compositeness tests and the various n + 1 proofs.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.primetest import _lucas_sequence
>>> N = 10**2000 + 4561
>>> sol = U, V, Qk = _lucas_sequence(N, 3, 1, N//2); sol
(0, 2, 1)
"""
D = P*P - 4*Q
if n < 2:
raise ValueError("n must be >= 2")
if k < 0:
raise ValueError("k must be >= 0")
if D == 0:
raise ValueError("D must not be zero")
if k == 0:
return _int_tuple(0, 2, Q)
U = 1
V = P
Qk = Q
b = _bitlength(k)
if Q == 1:
# Optimization for extra strong tests.
while b > 1:
U = (U*V) % n
V = (V*V - 2) % n
b -= 1
if (k >> (b - 1)) & 1:
U, V = U*P + V, V*P + U*D
if U & 1:
U += n
if V & 1:
V += n
U, V = U >> 1, V >> 1
elif P == 1 and Q == -1:
# Small optimization for 50% of Selfridge parameters.
while b > 1:
U = (U*V) % n
if Qk == 1:
V = (V*V - 2) % n
else:
V = (V*V + 2) % n
Qk = 1
b -= 1
if (k >> (b-1)) & 1:
U, V = U + V, V + U*D
if U & 1:
U += n
if V & 1:
V += n
U, V = U >> 1, V >> 1
Qk = -1
else:
# The general case with any P and Q.
while b > 1:
U = (U*V) % n
V = (V*V - 2*Qk) % n
Qk *= Qk
b -= 1
if (k >> (b - 1)) & 1:
U, V = U*P + V, V*P + U*D
if U & 1:
U += n
if V & 1:
V += n
U, V = U >> 1, V >> 1
Qk *= Q
Qk %= n
return _int_tuple(U % n, V % n, Qk)
def _lucas_selfridge_params(n):
"""Calculates the Selfridge parameters (D, P, Q) for n. This is
method A from page 1401 of Baillie and Wagstaff.
References
==========
- "Lucas Pseudoprimes", Baillie and Wagstaff, 1980.
http://mpqs.free.fr/LucasPseudoprimes.pdf
"""
from sympy.core import igcd
from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import jacobi_symbol
D = 5
while True:
g = igcd(abs(D), n)
if g > 1 and g != n:
return (0, 0, 0)
if jacobi_symbol(D, n) == -1:
break
if D > 0:
D = -D - 2
else:
D = -D + 2
return _int_tuple(D, 1, (1 - D)/4)
def _lucas_extrastrong_params(n):
"""Calculates the "extra strong" parameters (D, P, Q) for n.
References
==========
- OEIS A217719: Extra Strong Lucas Pseudoprimes
https://oeis.org/A217719
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucas_pseudoprime
"""
from sympy.core import igcd
from sympy.ntheory.residue_ntheory import jacobi_symbol
P, Q, D = 3, 1, 5
while True:
g = igcd(D, n)
if g > 1 and g != n:
return (0, 0, 0)
if jacobi_symbol(D, n) == -1:
break
P += 1
D = P*P - 4
return _int_tuple(D, P, Q)
def is_lucas_prp(n):
"""Standard Lucas compositeness test with Selfridge parameters. Returns
False if n is definitely composite, and True if n is a Lucas probable
prime.
This is typically used in combination with the Miller-Rabin test.
References
==========
- "Lucas Pseudoprimes", Baillie and Wagstaff, 1980.
http://mpqs.free.fr/LucasPseudoprimes.pdf
- OEIS A217120: Lucas Pseudoprimes
https://oeis.org/A217120
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucas_pseudoprime
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.primetest import isprime, is_lucas_prp
>>> for i in range(10000):
... if is_lucas_prp(i) and not isprime(i):
... print(i)
323
377
1159
1829
3827
5459
5777
9071
9179
"""
n = as_int(n)
if n == 2:
return True
if n < 2 or (n % 2) == 0:
return False
if is_square(n, False):
return False
D, P, Q = _lucas_selfridge_params(n)
if D == 0:
return False
U, V, Qk = _lucas_sequence(n, P, Q, n+1)
return U == 0
def is_strong_lucas_prp(n):
"""Strong Lucas compositeness test with Selfridge parameters. Returns
False if n is definitely composite, and True if n is a strong Lucas
probable prime.
This is often used in combination with the Miller-Rabin test, and
in particular, when combined with M-R base 2 creates the strong BPSW test.
References
==========
- "Lucas Pseudoprimes", Baillie and Wagstaff, 1980.
http://mpqs.free.fr/LucasPseudoprimes.pdf
- OEIS A217255: Strong Lucas Pseudoprimes
https://oeis.org/A217255
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucas_pseudoprime
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baillie-PSW_primality_test
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.primetest import isprime, is_strong_lucas_prp
>>> for i in range(20000):
... if is_strong_lucas_prp(i) and not isprime(i):
... print(i)
5459
5777
10877
16109
18971
"""
from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import trailing
n = as_int(n)
if n == 2:
return True
if n < 2 or (n % 2) == 0:
return False
if is_square(n, False):
return False
D, P, Q = _lucas_selfridge_params(n)
if D == 0:
return False
# remove powers of 2 from n+1 (= k * 2**s)
s = trailing(n + 1)
k = (n+1) >> s
U, V, Qk = _lucas_sequence(n, P, Q, k)
if U == 0 or V == 0:
return True
for r in range(1, s):
V = (V*V - 2*Qk) % n
if V == 0:
return True
Qk = pow(Qk, 2, n)
return False
def is_extra_strong_lucas_prp(n):
"""Extra Strong Lucas compositeness test. Returns False if n is
definitely composite, and True if n is a "extra strong" Lucas probable
prime.
The parameters are selected using P = 3, Q = 1, then incrementing P until
(D|n) == -1. The test itself is as defined in Grantham 2000, from the
Mo and Jones preprint. The parameter selection and test are the same as
used in OEIS A217719, Perl's Math::Prime::Util, and the Lucas pseudoprime
page on Wikipedia.
With these parameters, there are no counterexamples below 2^64 nor any
known above that range. It is 20-50% faster than the strong test.
Because of the different parameters selected, there is no relationship
between the strong Lucas pseudoprimes and extra strong Lucas pseudoprimes.
In particular, one is not a subset of the other.
References
==========
- "Frobenius Pseudoprimes", Jon Grantham, 2000.
http://www.ams.org/journals/mcom/2001-70-234/S0025-5718-00-01197-2/
- OEIS A217719: Extra Strong Lucas Pseudoprimes
https://oeis.org/A217719
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucas_pseudoprime
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.primetest import isprime, is_extra_strong_lucas_prp
>>> for i in range(20000):
... if is_extra_strong_lucas_prp(i) and not isprime(i):
... print(i)
989
3239
5777
10877
"""
# Implementation notes:
# 1) the parameters differ from Thomas R. Nicely's. His parameter
# selection leads to pseudoprimes that overlap M-R tests, and
# contradict Baillie and Wagstaff's suggestion of (D|n) = -1.
# 2) The MathWorld page as of June 2013 specifies Q=-1. The Lucas
# sequence must have Q=1. See Grantham theorem 2.3, any of the
# references on the MathWorld page, or run it and see Q=-1 is wrong.
from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import trailing
n = as_int(n)
if n == 2:
return True
if n < 2 or (n % 2) == 0:
return False
if is_square(n, False):
return False
D, P, Q = _lucas_extrastrong_params(n)
if D == 0:
return False
# remove powers of 2 from n+1 (= k * 2**s)
s = trailing(n + 1)
k = (n+1) >> s
U, V, Qk = _lucas_sequence(n, P, Q, k)
if U == 0 and (V == 2 or V == n - 2):
return True
if V == 0:
return True
for r in range(1, s):
V = (V*V - 2) % n
if V == 0:
return True
return False
def isprime(n):
"""
Test if n is a prime number (True) or not (False). For n < 2^64 the
answer is definitive; larger n values have a small probability of actually
being pseudoprimes.
Negative numbers (e.g. -2) are not considered prime.
The first step is looking for trivial factors, which if found enables
a quick return. Next, if the sieve is large enough, use bisection search
on the sieve. For small numbers, a set of deterministic Miller-Rabin
tests are performed with bases that are known to have no counterexamples
in their range. Finally if the number is larger than 2^64, a strong
BPSW test is performed. While this is a probable prime test and we
believe counterexamples exist, there are no known counterexamples.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import isprime
>>> isprime(13)
True
>>> isprime(15)
False
See Also
========
sympy.ntheory.generate.primerange : Generates all primes in a given range
sympy.ntheory.generate.primepi : Return the number of primes less than or equal to n
sympy.ntheory.generate.prime : Return the nth prime
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strong_pseudoprime
- "Lucas Pseudoprimes", Baillie and Wagstaff, 1980.
http://mpqs.free.fr/LucasPseudoprimes.pdf
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baillie-PSW_primality_test
"""
if isinstance(n, (Float, float)):
return False
n = int(n)
# Step 1, do quick composite testing via trial division. The individual
# modulo tests benchmark faster than one or two primorial igcds for me.
# The point here is just to speedily handle small numbers and many
# composites. Step 2 only requires that n <= 2 get handled here.
if n in [2, 3, 5]:
return True
if n < 2 or (n % 2) == 0 or (n % 3) == 0 or (n % 5) == 0:
return False
if n < 49:
return True
if (n % 7) == 0 or (n % 11) == 0 or (n % 13) == 0 or (n % 17) == 0 or \
(n % 19) == 0 or (n % 23) == 0 or (n % 29) == 0 or (n % 31) == 0 or \
(n % 37) == 0 or (n % 41) == 0 or (n % 43) == 0 or (n % 47) == 0:
return False
if n < 2809:
return True
if n <= 23001:
return pow(2, n, n) == 2 and n not in [7957, 8321, 13747, 18721, 19951]
# bisection search on the sieve if the sieve is large enough
from sympy.ntheory.generate import sieve as s
if n <= s._list[-1]:
l, u = s.search(n)
return l == u
# If we have GMPY2, skip straight to step 3 and do a strong BPSW test.
# This should be a bit faster than our step 2, and for large values will
# be a lot faster than our step 3 (C+GMP vs. Python).
from sympy.core.compatibility import HAS_GMPY
if HAS_GMPY == 2:
from gmpy2 import is_strong_prp, is_strong_selfridge_prp
return is_strong_prp(n, 2) and is_strong_selfridge_prp(n)
# Step 2: deterministic Miller-Rabin testing for numbers < 2^64. See:
# https://miller-rabin.appspot.com/
# for lists. We have made sure the M-R routine will successfully handle
# bases larger than n, so we can use the minimal set.
if n < 341531:
return mr(n, [9345883071009581737])
if n < 885594169:
return mr(n, [725270293939359937, 3569819667048198375])
if n < 350269456337:
return mr(n, [4230279247111683200, 14694767155120705706, 16641139526367750375])
if n < 55245642489451:
return mr(n, [2, 141889084524735, 1199124725622454117, 11096072698276303650])
if n < 7999252175582851:
return mr(n, [2, 4130806001517, 149795463772692060, 186635894390467037, 3967304179347715805])
if n < 585226005592931977:
return mr(n, [2, 123635709730000, 9233062284813009, 43835965440333360, 761179012939631437, 1263739024124850375])
if n < 18446744073709551616:
return mr(n, [2, 325, 9375, 28178, 450775, 9780504, 1795265022])
# We could do this instead at any point:
#if n < 18446744073709551616:
# return mr(n, [2]) and is_extra_strong_lucas_prp(n)
# Here are tests that are safe for MR routines that don't understand
# large bases.
#if n < 9080191:
# return mr(n, [31, 73])
#if n < 19471033:
# return mr(n, [2, 299417])
#if n < 38010307:
# return mr(n, [2, 9332593])
#if n < 316349281:
# return mr(n, [11000544, 31481107])
#if n < 4759123141:
# return mr(n, [2, 7, 61])
#if n < 105936894253:
# return mr(n, [2, 1005905886, 1340600841])
#if n < 31858317218647:
# return mr(n, [2, 642735, 553174392, 3046413974])
#if n < 3071837692357849:
# return mr(n, [2, 75088, 642735, 203659041, 3613982119])
#if n < 18446744073709551616:
# return mr(n, [2, 325, 9375, 28178, 450775, 9780504, 1795265022])
# Step 3: BPSW.
#
# Time for isprime(10**2000 + 4561), no gmpy or gmpy2 installed
# 44.0s old isprime using 46 bases
# 5.3s strong BPSW + one random base
# 4.3s extra strong BPSW + one random base
# 4.1s strong BPSW
# 3.2s extra strong BPSW
# Classic BPSW from page 1401 of the paper. See alternate ideas below.
return mr(n, [2]) and is_strong_lucas_prp(n)
# Using extra strong test, which is somewhat faster
#return mr(n, [2]) and is_extra_strong_lucas_prp(n)
# Add a random M-R base
#import random
#return mr(n, [2, random.randint(3, n-1)]) and is_strong_lucas_prp(n)
|
c9e21d4dd1570fb96c30dca3138e4e95a8f0eebdef5baeb8e0b1e87c391580fb
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
import sympy.polys
from sympy import Integer
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
import sys
if sys.version_info < (3,5):
from fractions import gcd
else:
from math import gcd
def egyptian_fraction(r, algorithm="Greedy"):
"""
Return the list of denominators of an Egyptian fraction
expansion [1]_ of the said rational `r`.
Parameters
==========
r : Rational
a positive rational number.
algorithm : { "Greedy", "Graham Jewett", "Takenouchi", "Golomb" }, optional
Denotes the algorithm to be used (the default is "Greedy").
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Rational
>>> from sympy.ntheory.egyptian_fraction import egyptian_fraction
>>> egyptian_fraction(Rational(3, 7))
[3, 11, 231]
>>> egyptian_fraction(Rational(3, 7), "Graham Jewett")
[7, 8, 9, 56, 57, 72, 3192]
>>> egyptian_fraction(Rational(3, 7), "Takenouchi")
[4, 7, 28]
>>> egyptian_fraction(Rational(3, 7), "Golomb")
[3, 15, 35]
>>> egyptian_fraction(Rational(11, 5), "Golomb")
[1, 2, 3, 4, 9, 234, 1118, 2580]
See Also
========
sympy.core.numbers.Rational
Notes
=====
Currently the following algorithms are supported:
1) Greedy Algorithm
Also called the Fibonacci-Sylvester algorithm [2]_.
At each step, extract the largest unit fraction less
than the target and replace the target with the remainder.
It has some distinct properties:
a) Given `p/q` in lowest terms, generates an expansion of maximum
length `p`. Even as the numerators get large, the number of
terms is seldom more than a handful.
b) Uses minimal memory.
c) The terms can blow up (standard examples of this are 5/121 and
31/311). The denominator is at most squared at each step
(doubly-exponential growth) and typically exhibits
singly-exponential growth.
2) Graham Jewett Algorithm
The algorithm suggested by the result of Graham and Jewett.
Note that this has a tendency to blow up: the length of the
resulting expansion is always ``2**(x/gcd(x, y)) - 1``. See [3]_.
3) Takenouchi Algorithm
The algorithm suggested by Takenouchi (1921).
Differs from the Graham-Jewett algorithm only in the handling
of duplicates. See [3]_.
4) Golomb's Algorithm
A method given by Golumb (1962), using modular arithmetic and
inverses. It yields the same results as a method using continued
fractions proposed by Bleicher (1972). See [4]_.
If the given rational is greater than or equal to 1, a greedy algorithm
of summing the harmonic sequence 1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + ... is used, taking
all the unit fractions of this sequence until adding one more would be
greater than the given number. This list of denominators is prefixed
to the result from the requested algorithm used on the remainder. For
example, if r is 8/3, using the Greedy algorithm, we get [1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, 14, 420], where the beginning of the sequence, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7] is part of the harmonic sequence summing to 363/140, leaving a
remainder of 31/420, which yields [14, 420] by the Greedy algorithm.
The result of egyptian_fraction(Rational(8, 3), "Golomb") is [1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6, 7, 14, 574, 2788, 6460, 11590, 33062, 113820], and so on.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_fraction
.. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greedy_algorithm_for_Egyptian_fractions
.. [3] https://www.ics.uci.edu/~eppstein/numth/egypt/conflict.html
.. [4] http://ami.ektf.hu/uploads/papers/finalpdf/AMI_42_from129to134.pdf
"""
if r <= 0:
raise ValueError("Value must be positive")
prefix, rem = egypt_harmonic(r)
if rem == 0:
return prefix
x, y = rem.as_numer_denom()
if algorithm == "Greedy":
return prefix + egypt_greedy(x, y)
elif algorithm == "Graham Jewett":
return prefix + egypt_graham_jewett(x, y)
elif algorithm == "Takenouchi":
return prefix + egypt_takenouchi(x, y)
elif algorithm == "Golomb":
return prefix + egypt_golomb(x, y)
else:
raise ValueError("Entered invalid algorithm")
def egypt_greedy(x, y):
if x == 1:
return [y]
else:
a = (-y) % (x)
b = y*(y//x + 1)
c = gcd(a, b)
if c > 1:
num, denom = a//c, b//c
else:
num, denom = a, b
return [y//x + 1] + egypt_greedy(num, denom)
def egypt_graham_jewett(x, y):
l = [y] * x
# l is now a list of integers whose reciprocals sum to x/y.
# we shall now proceed to manipulate the elements of l without
# changing the reciprocated sum until all elements are unique.
while len(l) != len(set(l)):
l.sort() # so the list has duplicates. find a smallest pair
for i in range(len(l) - 1):
if l[i] == l[i + 1]:
break
# we have now identified a pair of identical
# elements: l[i] and l[i + 1].
# now comes the application of the result of graham and jewett:
l[i + 1] = l[i] + 1
# and we just iterate that until the list has no duplicates.
l.append(l[i]*(l[i] + 1))
return sorted(l)
def egypt_takenouchi(x, y):
l = [y] * x
while len(l) != len(set(l)):
l.sort()
for i in range(len(l) - 1):
if l[i] == l[i + 1]:
break
k = l[i]
if k % 2 == 0:
l[i] = l[i] // 2
del l[i + 1]
else:
l[i], l[i + 1] = (k + 1)//2, k*(k + 1)//2
return sorted(l)
def egypt_golomb(x, y):
if x == 1:
return [y]
xp = sympy.polys.ZZ.invert(int(x), int(y))
rv = [Integer(xp*y)]
rv.extend(egypt_golomb((x*xp - 1)//y, xp))
return sorted(rv)
def egypt_harmonic(r):
rv = []
d = Integer(1)
acc = Integer(0)
while acc + 1/d <= r:
acc += 1/d
rv.append(d)
d += 1
return (rv, r - acc)
|
4ed28b7cc820c0c5504165cd32c353123db59324475a3b2420227e8cc53edb28
|
from sympy.core.numbers import Integer, Rational
def continued_fraction_periodic(p, q, d=0):
r"""
Find the periodic continued fraction expansion of a quadratic irrational.
Compute the continued fraction expansion of a rational or a
quadratic irrational number, i.e. `\frac{p + \sqrt{d}}{q}`, where
`p`, `q` and `d \ge 0` are integers.
Returns the continued fraction representation (canonical form) as
a list of integers, optionally ending (for quadratic irrationals)
with repeating block as the last term of this list.
Parameters
==========
p : int
the rational part of the number's numerator
q : int
the denominator of the number
d : int, optional
the irrational part (discriminator) of the number's numerator
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.continued_fraction import continued_fraction_periodic
>>> continued_fraction_periodic(3, 2, 7)
[2, [1, 4, 1, 1]]
Golden ratio has the simplest continued fraction expansion:
>>> continued_fraction_periodic(1, 2, 5)
[[1]]
If the discriminator is zero or a perfect square then the number will be a
rational number:
>>> continued_fraction_periodic(4, 3, 0)
[1, 3]
>>> continued_fraction_periodic(4, 3, 49)
[3, 1, 2]
See Also
========
continued_fraction_iterator, continued_fraction_reduce
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periodic_continued_fraction
.. [2] K. Rosen. Elementary Number theory and its applications.
Addison-Wesley, 3 Sub edition, pages 379-381, January 1992.
"""
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int
from sympy.functions import sqrt
p, q, d = list(map(as_int, [p, q, d]))
sd = sqrt(d)
if q == 0:
raise ValueError("The denominator is zero.")
if d < 0:
raise ValueError("Delta supposed to be a non-negative "
"integer, got %d" % d)
elif d == 0 or sd.is_integer:
# the number is a rational number
return list(continued_fraction_iterator(Rational(p + sd, q)))
if (d - p**2)%q:
d *= q**2
sd *= q
p *= abs(q)
q *= abs(q)
terms = []
pq = {}
while (p, q) not in pq:
pq[(p, q)] = len(terms)
terms.append(int((p + sd)/q))
p = terms[-1]*q - p
q = (d - p**2)/q
i = pq[(p, q)]
return terms[:i] + [terms[i:]]
def continued_fraction_reduce(cf):
"""
Reduce a continued fraction to a rational or quadratic irrational.
Compute the rational or quadratic irrational number from its
terminating or periodic continued fraction expansion. The
continued fraction expansion (cf) should be supplied as a
terminating iterator supplying the terms of the expansion. For
terminating continued fractions, this is equivalent to
``list(continued_fraction_convergents(cf))[-1]``, only a little more
efficient. If the expansion has a repeating part, a list of the
repeating terms should be returned as the last element from the
iterator. This is the format returned by
continued_fraction_periodic.
For quadratic irrationals, returns the largest solution found,
which is generally the one sought, if the fraction is in canonical
form (all terms positive except possibly the first).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.continued_fraction import continued_fraction_reduce
>>> continued_fraction_reduce([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
225/157
>>> continued_fraction_reduce([-2, 1, 9, 7, 1, 2])
-256/233
>>> continued_fraction_reduce([2, 1, 2, 1, 1, 4, 1, 1, 6, 1, 1, 8]).n(10)
2.718281835
>>> continued_fraction_reduce([1, 4, 2, [3, 1]])
(sqrt(21) + 287)/238
>>> continued_fraction_reduce([[1]])
1/2 + sqrt(5)/2
>>> from sympy.ntheory.continued_fraction import continued_fraction_periodic
>>> continued_fraction_reduce(continued_fraction_periodic(8, 5, 13))
(sqrt(13) + 8)/5
See Also
========
continued_fraction_periodic
"""
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy
from sympy.solvers import solve
period = []
x = Dummy('x')
def untillist(cf):
for nxt in cf:
if isinstance(nxt, list):
period.extend(nxt)
yield x
break
yield nxt
a = Integer(0)
for a in continued_fraction_convergents(untillist(cf)):
pass
if period:
y = Dummy('y')
solns = solve(continued_fraction_reduce(period + [y]) - y, y)
solns.sort()
pure = solns[-1]
return a.subs(x, pure).radsimp()
else:
return a
def continued_fraction_iterator(x):
"""
Return continued fraction expansion of x as iterator.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core import Rational, pi
>>> from sympy.ntheory.continued_fraction import continued_fraction_iterator
>>> list(continued_fraction_iterator(Rational(3, 8)))
[0, 2, 1, 2]
>>> list(continued_fraction_iterator(Rational(-3, 8)))
[-1, 1, 1, 1, 2]
>>> for i, v in enumerate(continued_fraction_iterator(pi)):
... if i > 7:
... break
... print(v)
3
7
15
1
292
1
1
1
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continued_fraction
"""
from sympy.functions import floor
while True:
i = floor(x)
yield i
x -= i
if not x:
break
x = 1/x
def continued_fraction_convergents(cf):
"""
Return an iterator over the convergents of a continued fraction (cf).
The parameter should be an iterable returning successive
partial quotients of the continued fraction, such as might be
returned by continued_fraction_iterator. In computing the
convergents, the continued fraction need not be strictly in
canonical form (all integers, all but the first positive).
Rational and negative elements may be present in the expansion.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core import Rational, pi
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.ntheory.continued_fraction import \
continued_fraction_convergents, continued_fraction_iterator
>>> list(continued_fraction_convergents([0, 2, 1, 2]))
[0, 1/2, 1/3, 3/8]
>>> list(continued_fraction_convergents([1, S('1/2'), -7, S('1/4')]))
[1, 3, 19/5, 7]
>>> it = continued_fraction_convergents(continued_fraction_iterator(pi))
>>> for n in range(7):
... print(next(it))
3
22/7
333/106
355/113
103993/33102
104348/33215
208341/66317
See Also
========
continued_fraction_iterator
"""
p_2, q_2 = Integer(0), Integer(1)
p_1, q_1 = Integer(1), Integer(0)
for a in cf:
p, q = a*p_1 + p_2, a*q_1 + q_2
p_2, q_2 = p_1, q_1
p_1, q_1 = p, q
yield p/q
|
67156fc4c76c5ee22ce39daca2449a36905e0e8724fccf7e56b00d7106dd849d
|
"""
Integer factorization
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import random
import math
from .primetest import isprime
from .generate import sieve, primerange, nextprime
from sympy.core import sympify
from sympy.core.evalf import bitcount
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_and
from sympy.core.numbers import igcd, ilcm, Rational
from sympy.core.power import integer_nthroot, Pow
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int, SYMPY_INTS, range
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.function import Function
from sympy.core.expr import Expr
small_trailing = [i and max(int(not i % 2**j) and j for j in range(1, 8))
for i in range(256)]
def smoothness(n):
"""
Return the B-smooth and B-power smooth values of n.
The smoothness of n is the largest prime factor of n; the power-
smoothness is the largest divisor raised to its multiplicity.
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import smoothness
>>> smoothness(2**7*3**2)
(3, 128)
>>> smoothness(2**4*13)
(13, 16)
>>> smoothness(2)
(2, 2)
See Also
========
factorint, smoothness_p
"""
if n == 1:
return (1, 1) # not prime, but otherwise this causes headaches
facs = factorint(n)
return max(facs), max(m**facs[m] for m in facs)
def smoothness_p(n, m=-1, power=0, visual=None):
"""
Return a list of [m, (p, (M, sm(p + m), psm(p + m)))...]
where:
1. p**M is the base-p divisor of n
2. sm(p + m) is the smoothness of p + m (m = -1 by default)
3. psm(p + m) is the power smoothness of p + m
The list is sorted according to smoothness (default) or by power smoothness
if power=1.
The smoothness of the numbers to the left (m = -1) or right (m = 1) of a
factor govern the results that are obtained from the p +/- 1 type factoring
methods.
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import smoothness_p, factorint
>>> smoothness_p(10431, m=1)
(1, [(3, (2, 2, 4)), (19, (1, 5, 5)), (61, (1, 31, 31))])
>>> smoothness_p(10431)
(-1, [(3, (2, 2, 2)), (19, (1, 3, 9)), (61, (1, 5, 5))])
>>> smoothness_p(10431, power=1)
(-1, [(3, (2, 2, 2)), (61, (1, 5, 5)), (19, (1, 3, 9))])
If visual=True then an annotated string will be returned:
>>> print(smoothness_p(21477639576571, visual=1))
p**i=4410317**1 has p-1 B=1787, B-pow=1787
p**i=4869863**1 has p-1 B=2434931, B-pow=2434931
This string can also be generated directly from a factorization dictionary
and vice versa:
>>> factorint(17*9)
{3: 2, 17: 1}
>>> smoothness_p(_)
'p**i=3**2 has p-1 B=2, B-pow=2\\np**i=17**1 has p-1 B=2, B-pow=16'
>>> smoothness_p(_)
{3: 2, 17: 1}
The table of the output logic is:
====== ====== ======= =======
| Visual
------ ----------------------
Input True False other
====== ====== ======= =======
dict str tuple str
str str tuple dict
tuple str tuple str
n str tuple tuple
mul str tuple tuple
====== ====== ======= =======
See Also
========
factorint, smoothness
"""
from sympy.utilities import flatten
# visual must be True, False or other (stored as None)
if visual in (1, 0):
visual = bool(visual)
elif visual not in (True, False):
visual = None
if type(n) is str:
if visual:
return n
d = {}
for li in n.splitlines():
k, v = [int(i) for i in
li.split('has')[0].split('=')[1].split('**')]
d[k] = v
if visual is not True and visual is not False:
return d
return smoothness_p(d, visual=False)
elif type(n) is not tuple:
facs = factorint(n, visual=False)
if power:
k = -1
else:
k = 1
if type(n) is not tuple:
rv = (m, sorted([(f,
tuple([M] + list(smoothness(f + m))))
for f, M in [i for i in facs.items()]],
key=lambda x: (x[1][k], x[0])))
else:
rv = n
if visual is False or (visual is not True) and (type(n) in [int, Mul]):
return rv
lines = []
for dat in rv[1]:
dat = flatten(dat)
dat.insert(2, m)
lines.append('p**i=%i**%i has p%+i B=%i, B-pow=%i' % tuple(dat))
return '\n'.join(lines)
def trailing(n):
"""Count the number of trailing zero digits in the binary
representation of n, i.e. determine the largest power of 2
that divides n.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import trailing
>>> trailing(128)
7
>>> trailing(63)
0
"""
n = abs(int(n))
if not n:
return 0
low_byte = n & 0xff
if low_byte:
return small_trailing[low_byte]
# 2**m is quick for z up through 2**30
z = bitcount(n) - 1
if isinstance(z, SYMPY_INTS):
if n == 1 << z:
return z
t = 0
p = 8
while not n & 1:
while not n & ((1 << p) - 1):
n >>= p
t += p
p *= 2
p //= 2
return t
def multiplicity(p, n):
"""
Find the greatest integer m such that p**m divides n.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import multiplicity
>>> from sympy.core.numbers import Rational as R
>>> [multiplicity(5, n) for n in [8, 5, 25, 125, 250]]
[0, 1, 2, 3, 3]
>>> multiplicity(3, R(1, 9))
-2
"""
try:
p, n = as_int(p), as_int(n)
except ValueError:
if all(isinstance(i, (SYMPY_INTS, Rational)) for i in (p, n)):
try:
p = Rational(p)
n = Rational(n)
if p.q == 1:
if n.p == 1:
return -multiplicity(p.p, n.q)
return S.Zero
elif p.p == 1:
return multiplicity(p.q, n.q)
else:
like = min(
multiplicity(p.p, n.p),
multiplicity(p.q, n.q))
cross = min(
multiplicity(p.q, n.p),
multiplicity(p.p, n.q))
return like - cross
except AttributeError:
pass
raise ValueError('expecting ints or fractions, got %s and %s' % (p, n))
if n == 0:
raise ValueError('no such integer exists: multiplicity of %s is not-defined' %(n))
if p == 2:
return trailing(n)
if p < 2:
raise ValueError('p must be an integer, 2 or larger, but got %s' % p)
if p == n:
return 1
m = 0
n, rem = divmod(n, p)
while not rem:
m += 1
if m > 5:
# The multiplicity could be very large. Better
# to increment in powers of two
e = 2
while 1:
ppow = p**e
if ppow < n:
nnew, rem = divmod(n, ppow)
if not rem:
m += e
e *= 2
n = nnew
continue
return m + multiplicity(p, n)
n, rem = divmod(n, p)
return m
def perfect_power(n, candidates=None, big=True, factor=True):
"""
Return ``(b, e)`` such that ``n`` == ``b**e`` if ``n`` is a
perfect power; otherwise return ``False``.
By default, the base is recursively decomposed and the exponents
collected so the largest possible ``e`` is sought. If ``big=False``
then the smallest possible ``e`` (thus prime) will be chosen.
If ``candidates`` for exponents are given, they are assumed to be sorted
and the first one that is larger than the computed maximum will signal
failure for the routine.
If ``factor=True`` then simultaneous factorization of n is attempted
since finding a factor indicates the only possible root for n. This
is True by default since only a few small factors will be tested in
the course of searching for the perfect power.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import perfect_power
>>> perfect_power(16)
(2, 4)
>>> perfect_power(16, big = False)
(4, 2)
"""
n = int(n)
if n < 3:
return False
logn = math.log(n, 2)
max_possible = int(logn) + 2 # only check values less than this
not_square = n % 10 in [2, 3, 7, 8] # squares cannot end in 2, 3, 7, 8
if not candidates:
candidates = primerange(2 + not_square, max_possible)
afactor = 2 + n % 2
for e in candidates:
if e < 3:
if e == 1 or e == 2 and not_square:
continue
if e > max_possible:
return False
# see if there is a factor present
if factor:
if n % afactor == 0:
# find what the potential power is
if afactor == 2:
e = trailing(n)
else:
e = multiplicity(afactor, n)
# if it's a trivial power we are done
if e == 1:
return False
# maybe the bth root of n is exact
r, exact = integer_nthroot(n, e)
if not exact:
# then remove this factor and check to see if
# any of e's factors are a common exponent; if
# not then it's not a perfect power
n //= afactor**e
m = perfect_power(n, candidates=primefactors(e), big=big)
if m is False:
return False
else:
r, m = m
# adjust the two exponents so the bases can
# be combined
g = igcd(m, e)
if g == 1:
return False
m //= g
e //= g
r, e = r**m*afactor**e, g
if not big:
e0 = primefactors(e)
if len(e0) > 1 or e0[0] != e:
e0 = e0[0]
r, e = r**(e//e0), e0
return r, e
else:
# get the next factor ready for the next pass through the loop
afactor = nextprime(afactor)
# Weed out downright impossible candidates
if logn/e < 40:
b = 2.0**(logn/e)
if abs(int(b + 0.5) - b) > 0.01:
continue
# now see if the plausible e makes a perfect power
r, exact = integer_nthroot(n, e)
if exact:
if big:
m = perfect_power(r, big=big, factor=factor)
if m is not False:
r, e = m[0], e*m[1]
return int(r), e
else:
return False
def pollard_rho(n, s=2, a=1, retries=5, seed=1234, max_steps=None, F=None):
r"""
Use Pollard's rho method to try to extract a nontrivial factor
of ``n``. The returned factor may be a composite number. If no
factor is found, ``None`` is returned.
The algorithm generates pseudo-random values of x with a generator
function, replacing x with F(x). If F is not supplied then the
function x**2 + ``a`` is used. The first value supplied to F(x) is ``s``.
Upon failure (if ``retries`` is > 0) a new ``a`` and ``s`` will be
supplied; the ``a`` will be ignored if F was supplied.
The sequence of numbers generated by such functions generally have a
a lead-up to some number and then loop around back to that number and
begin to repeat the sequence, e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 3, 4, 5 -- this leader
and loop look a bit like the Greek letter rho, and thus the name, 'rho'.
For a given function, very different leader-loop values can be obtained
so it is a good idea to allow for retries:
>>> from sympy.ntheory.generate import cycle_length
>>> n = 16843009
>>> F = lambda x:(2048*pow(x, 2, n) + 32767) % n
>>> for s in range(5):
... print('loop length = %4i; leader length = %3i' % next(cycle_length(F, s)))
...
loop length = 2489; leader length = 42
loop length = 78; leader length = 120
loop length = 1482; leader length = 99
loop length = 1482; leader length = 285
loop length = 1482; leader length = 100
Here is an explicit example where there is a two element leadup to
a sequence of 3 numbers (11, 14, 4) that then repeat:
>>> x=2
>>> for i in range(9):
... x=(x**2+12)%17
... print(x)
...
16
13
11
14
4
11
14
4
11
>>> next(cycle_length(lambda x: (x**2+12)%17, 2))
(3, 2)
>>> list(cycle_length(lambda x: (x**2+12)%17, 2, values=True))
[16, 13, 11, 14, 4]
Instead of checking the differences of all generated values for a gcd
with n, only the kth and 2*kth numbers are checked, e.g. 1st and 2nd,
2nd and 4th, 3rd and 6th until it has been detected that the loop has been
traversed. Loops may be many thousands of steps long before rho finds a
factor or reports failure. If ``max_steps`` is specified, the iteration
is cancelled with a failure after the specified number of steps.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import pollard_rho
>>> n=16843009
>>> F=lambda x:(2048*pow(x,2,n) + 32767) % n
>>> pollard_rho(n, F=F)
257
Use the default setting with a bad value of ``a`` and no retries:
>>> pollard_rho(n, a=n-2, retries=0)
If retries is > 0 then perhaps the problem will correct itself when
new values are generated for a:
>>> pollard_rho(n, a=n-2, retries=1)
257
References
==========
- Richard Crandall & Carl Pomerance (2005), "Prime Numbers:
A Computational Perspective", Springer, 2nd edition, 229-231
"""
n = int(n)
if n < 5:
raise ValueError('pollard_rho should receive n > 4')
prng = random.Random(seed + retries)
V = s
for i in range(retries + 1):
U = V
if not F:
F = lambda x: (pow(x, 2, n) + a) % n
j = 0
while 1:
if max_steps and (j > max_steps):
break
j += 1
U = F(U)
V = F(F(V)) # V is 2x further along than U
g = igcd(U - V, n)
if g == 1:
continue
if g == n:
break
return int(g)
V = prng.randint(0, n - 1)
a = prng.randint(1, n - 3) # for x**2 + a, a%n should not be 0 or -2
F = None
return None
def pollard_pm1(n, B=10, a=2, retries=0, seed=1234):
"""
Use Pollard's p-1 method to try to extract a nontrivial factor
of ``n``. Either a divisor (perhaps composite) or ``None`` is returned.
The value of ``a`` is the base that is used in the test gcd(a**M - 1, n).
The default is 2. If ``retries`` > 0 then if no factor is found after the
first attempt, a new ``a`` will be generated randomly (using the ``seed``)
and the process repeated.
Note: the value of M is lcm(1..B) = reduce(ilcm, range(2, B + 1)).
A search is made for factors next to even numbers having a power smoothness
less than ``B``. Choosing a larger B increases the likelihood of finding a
larger factor but takes longer. Whether a factor of n is found or not
depends on ``a`` and the power smoothness of the even number just less than
the factor p (hence the name p - 1).
Although some discussion of what constitutes a good ``a`` some
descriptions are hard to interpret. At the modular.math site referenced
below it is stated that if gcd(a**M - 1, n) = N then a**M % q**r is 1
for every prime power divisor of N. But consider the following:
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import smoothness_p, pollard_pm1
>>> n=257*1009
>>> smoothness_p(n)
(-1, [(257, (1, 2, 256)), (1009, (1, 7, 16))])
So we should (and can) find a root with B=16:
>>> pollard_pm1(n, B=16, a=3)
1009
If we attempt to increase B to 256 we find that it doesn't work:
>>> pollard_pm1(n, B=256)
>>>
But if the value of ``a`` is changed we find that only multiples of
257 work, e.g.:
>>> pollard_pm1(n, B=256, a=257)
1009
Checking different ``a`` values shows that all the ones that didn't
work had a gcd value not equal to ``n`` but equal to one of the
factors:
>>> from sympy.core.numbers import ilcm, igcd
>>> from sympy import factorint, Pow
>>> M = 1
>>> for i in range(2, 256):
... M = ilcm(M, i)
...
>>> set([igcd(pow(a, M, n) - 1, n) for a in range(2, 256) if
... igcd(pow(a, M, n) - 1, n) != n])
{1009}
But does aM % d for every divisor of n give 1?
>>> aM = pow(255, M, n)
>>> [(d, aM%Pow(*d.args)) for d in factorint(n, visual=True).args]
[(257**1, 1), (1009**1, 1)]
No, only one of them. So perhaps the principle is that a root will
be found for a given value of B provided that:
1) the power smoothness of the p - 1 value next to the root
does not exceed B
2) a**M % p != 1 for any of the divisors of n.
By trying more than one ``a`` it is possible that one of them
will yield a factor.
Examples
========
With the default smoothness bound, this number can't be cracked:
>>> from sympy.ntheory import pollard_pm1, primefactors
>>> pollard_pm1(21477639576571)
Increasing the smoothness bound helps:
>>> pollard_pm1(21477639576571, B=2000)
4410317
Looking at the smoothness of the factors of this number we find:
>>> from sympy.utilities import flatten
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import smoothness_p, factorint
>>> print(smoothness_p(21477639576571, visual=1))
p**i=4410317**1 has p-1 B=1787, B-pow=1787
p**i=4869863**1 has p-1 B=2434931, B-pow=2434931
The B and B-pow are the same for the p - 1 factorizations of the divisors
because those factorizations had a very large prime factor:
>>> factorint(4410317 - 1)
{2: 2, 617: 1, 1787: 1}
>>> factorint(4869863-1)
{2: 1, 2434931: 1}
Note that until B reaches the B-pow value of 1787, the number is not cracked;
>>> pollard_pm1(21477639576571, B=1786)
>>> pollard_pm1(21477639576571, B=1787)
4410317
The B value has to do with the factors of the number next to the divisor,
not the divisors themselves. A worst case scenario is that the number next
to the factor p has a large prime divisisor or is a perfect power. If these
conditions apply then the power-smoothness will be about p/2 or p. The more
realistic is that there will be a large prime factor next to p requiring
a B value on the order of p/2. Although primes may have been searched for
up to this level, the p/2 is a factor of p - 1, something that we don't
know. The modular.math reference below states that 15% of numbers in the
range of 10**15 to 15**15 + 10**4 are 10**6 power smooth so a B of 10**6
will fail 85% of the time in that range. From 10**8 to 10**8 + 10**3 the
percentages are nearly reversed...but in that range the simple trial
division is quite fast.
References
==========
- Richard Crandall & Carl Pomerance (2005), "Prime Numbers:
A Computational Perspective", Springer, 2nd edition, 236-238
- http://modular.math.washington.edu/edu/2007/spring/ent/ent-html/node81.html
- https://www.cs.toronto.edu/~yuvalf/Factorization.pdf
"""
n = int(n)
if n < 4 or B < 3:
raise ValueError('pollard_pm1 should receive n > 3 and B > 2')
prng = random.Random(seed + B)
# computing a**lcm(1,2,3,..B) % n for B > 2
# it looks weird, but it's right: primes run [2, B]
# and the answer's not right until the loop is done.
for i in range(retries + 1):
aM = a
for p in sieve.primerange(2, B + 1):
e = int(math.log(B, p))
aM = pow(aM, pow(p, e), n)
g = igcd(aM - 1, n)
if 1 < g < n:
return int(g)
# get a new a:
# since the exponent, lcm(1..B), is even, if we allow 'a' to be 'n-1'
# then (n - 1)**even % n will be 1 which will give a g of 0 and 1 will
# give a zero, too, so we set the range as [2, n-2]. Some references
# say 'a' should be coprime to n, but either will detect factors.
a = prng.randint(2, n - 2)
def _trial(factors, n, candidates, verbose=False):
"""
Helper function for integer factorization. Trial factors ``n`
against all integers given in the sequence ``candidates``
and updates the dict ``factors`` in-place. Returns the reduced
value of ``n`` and a flag indicating whether any factors were found.
"""
if verbose:
factors0 = list(factors.keys())
nfactors = len(factors)
for d in candidates:
if n % d == 0:
m = multiplicity(d, n)
n //= d**m
factors[d] = m
if verbose:
for k in sorted(set(factors).difference(set(factors0))):
print(factor_msg % (k, factors[k]))
return int(n), len(factors) != nfactors
def _check_termination(factors, n, limitp1, use_trial, use_rho, use_pm1,
verbose):
"""
Helper function for integer factorization. Checks if ``n``
is a prime or a perfect power, and in those cases updates
the factorization and raises ``StopIteration``.
"""
if verbose:
print('Check for termination')
# since we've already been factoring there is no need to do
# simultaneous factoring with the power check
p = perfect_power(n, factor=False)
if p is not False:
base, exp = p
if limitp1:
limit = limitp1 - 1
else:
limit = limitp1
facs = factorint(base, limit, use_trial, use_rho, use_pm1,
verbose=False)
for b, e in facs.items():
if verbose:
print(factor_msg % (b, e))
factors[b] = exp*e
raise StopIteration
if isprime(n):
factors[int(n)] = 1
raise StopIteration
if n == 1:
raise StopIteration
trial_int_msg = "Trial division with ints [%i ... %i] and fail_max=%i"
trial_msg = "Trial division with primes [%i ... %i]"
rho_msg = "Pollard's rho with retries %i, max_steps %i and seed %i"
pm1_msg = "Pollard's p-1 with smoothness bound %i and seed %i"
factor_msg = '\t%i ** %i'
fermat_msg = 'Close factors satisying Fermat condition found.'
complete_msg = 'Factorization is complete.'
def _factorint_small(factors, n, limit, fail_max):
"""
Return the value of n and either a 0 (indicating that factorization up
to the limit was complete) or else the next near-prime that would have
been tested.
Factoring stops if there are fail_max unsuccessful tests in a row.
If factors of n were found they will be in the factors dictionary as
{factor: multiplicity} and the returned value of n will have had those
factors removed. The factors dictionary is modified in-place.
"""
def done(n, d):
"""return n, d if the sqrt(n) wasn't reached yet, else
n, 0 indicating that factoring is done.
"""
if d*d <= n:
return n, d
return n, 0
d = 2
m = trailing(n)
if m:
factors[d] = m
n >>= m
d = 3
if limit < d:
if n > 1:
factors[n] = 1
return done(n, d)
# reduce
m = 0
while n % d == 0:
n //= d
m += 1
if m == 20:
mm = multiplicity(d, n)
m += mm
n //= d**mm
break
if m:
factors[d] = m
# when d*d exceeds maxx or n we are done; if limit**2 is greater
# than n then maxx is set to zero so the value of n will flag the finish
if limit*limit > n:
maxx = 0
else:
maxx = limit*limit
dd = maxx or n
d = 5
fails = 0
while fails < fail_max:
if d*d > dd:
break
# d = 6*i - 1
# reduce
m = 0
while n % d == 0:
n //= d
m += 1
if m == 20:
mm = multiplicity(d, n)
m += mm
n //= d**mm
break
if m:
factors[d] = m
dd = maxx or n
fails = 0
else:
fails += 1
d += 2
if d*d > dd:
break
# d = 6*i - 1
# reduce
m = 0
while n % d == 0:
n //= d
m += 1
if m == 20:
mm = multiplicity(d, n)
m += mm
n //= d**mm
break
if m:
factors[d] = m
dd = maxx or n
fails = 0
else:
fails += 1
# d = 6*(i + 1) - 1
d += 4
return done(n, d)
def factorint(n, limit=None, use_trial=True, use_rho=True, use_pm1=True,
verbose=False, visual=None, multiple=False):
r"""
Given a positive integer ``n``, ``factorint(n)`` returns a dict containing
the prime factors of ``n`` as keys and their respective multiplicities
as values. For example:
>>> from sympy.ntheory import factorint
>>> factorint(2000) # 2000 = (2**4) * (5**3)
{2: 4, 5: 3}
>>> factorint(65537) # This number is prime
{65537: 1}
For input less than 2, factorint behaves as follows:
- ``factorint(1)`` returns the empty factorization, ``{}``
- ``factorint(0)`` returns ``{0:1}``
- ``factorint(-n)`` adds ``-1:1`` to the factors and then factors ``n``
Partial Factorization:
If ``limit`` (> 3) is specified, the search is stopped after performing
trial division up to (and including) the limit (or taking a
corresponding number of rho/p-1 steps). This is useful if one has
a large number and only is interested in finding small factors (if
any). Note that setting a limit does not prevent larger factors
from being found early; it simply means that the largest factor may
be composite. Since checking for perfect power is relatively cheap, it is
done regardless of the limit setting.
This number, for example, has two small factors and a huge
semi-prime factor that cannot be reduced easily:
>>> from sympy.ntheory import isprime
>>> from sympy.core.compatibility import long
>>> a = 1407633717262338957430697921446883
>>> f = factorint(a, limit=10000)
>>> f == {991: 1, long(202916782076162456022877024859): 1, 7: 1}
True
>>> isprime(max(f))
False
This number has a small factor and a residual perfect power whose
base is greater than the limit:
>>> factorint(3*101**7, limit=5)
{3: 1, 101: 7}
List of Factors:
If ``multiple`` is set to ``True`` then a list containing the
prime factors including multiplicities is returned.
>>> factorint(24, multiple=True)
[2, 2, 2, 3]
Visual Factorization:
If ``visual`` is set to ``True``, then it will return a visual
factorization of the integer. For example:
>>> from sympy import pprint
>>> pprint(factorint(4200, visual=True))
3 1 2 1
2 *3 *5 *7
Note that this is achieved by using the evaluate=False flag in Mul
and Pow. If you do other manipulations with an expression where
evaluate=False, it may evaluate. Therefore, you should use the
visual option only for visualization, and use the normal dictionary
returned by visual=False if you want to perform operations on the
factors.
You can easily switch between the two forms by sending them back to
factorint:
>>> from sympy import Mul, Pow
>>> regular = factorint(1764); regular
{2: 2, 3: 2, 7: 2}
>>> pprint(factorint(regular))
2 2 2
2 *3 *7
>>> visual = factorint(1764, visual=True); pprint(visual)
2 2 2
2 *3 *7
>>> print(factorint(visual))
{2: 2, 3: 2, 7: 2}
If you want to send a number to be factored in a partially factored form
you can do so with a dictionary or unevaluated expression:
>>> factorint(factorint({4: 2, 12: 3})) # twice to toggle to dict form
{2: 10, 3: 3}
>>> factorint(Mul(4, 12, evaluate=False))
{2: 4, 3: 1}
The table of the output logic is:
====== ====== ======= =======
Visual
------ ----------------------
Input True False other
====== ====== ======= =======
dict mul dict mul
n mul dict dict
mul mul dict dict
====== ====== ======= =======
Notes
=====
Algorithm:
The function switches between multiple algorithms. Trial division
quickly finds small factors (of the order 1-5 digits), and finds
all large factors if given enough time. The Pollard rho and p-1
algorithms are used to find large factors ahead of time; they
will often find factors of the order of 10 digits within a few
seconds:
>>> factors = factorint(12345678910111213141516)
>>> for base, exp in sorted(factors.items()):
... print('%s %s' % (base, exp))
...
2 2
2507191691 1
1231026625769 1
Any of these methods can optionally be disabled with the following
boolean parameters:
- ``use_trial``: Toggle use of trial division
- ``use_rho``: Toggle use of Pollard's rho method
- ``use_pm1``: Toggle use of Pollard's p-1 method
``factorint`` also periodically checks if the remaining part is
a prime number or a perfect power, and in those cases stops.
For unevaluated factorial, it uses Legendre's formula(theorem).
If ``verbose`` is set to ``True``, detailed progress is printed.
See Also
========
smoothness, smoothness_p, divisors
"""
if multiple:
fac = factorint(n, limit=limit, use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho, use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose, visual=False, multiple=False)
factorlist = sum(([p] * fac[p] if fac[p] > 0 else [S(1)/p]*(-fac[p])
for p in sorted(fac)), [])
return factorlist
factordict = {}
if visual and not isinstance(n, Mul) and not isinstance(n, dict):
factordict = factorint(n, limit=limit, use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho, use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose, visual=False)
elif isinstance(n, Mul):
factordict = dict([(int(k), int(v)) for k, v in
list(n.as_powers_dict().items())])
elif isinstance(n, dict):
factordict = n
if factordict and (isinstance(n, Mul) or isinstance(n, dict)):
# check it
for k in list(factordict.keys()):
if isprime(k):
continue
e = factordict.pop(k)
d = factorint(k, limit=limit, use_trial=use_trial, use_rho=use_rho,
use_pm1=use_pm1, verbose=verbose, visual=False)
for k, v in d.items():
if k in factordict:
factordict[k] += v*e
else:
factordict[k] = v*e
if visual or (type(n) is dict and
visual is not True and
visual is not False):
if factordict == {}:
return S.One
if -1 in factordict:
factordict.pop(-1)
args = [S.NegativeOne]
else:
args = []
args.extend([Pow(*i, evaluate=False)
for i in sorted(factordict.items())])
return Mul(*args, evaluate=False)
elif isinstance(n, dict) or isinstance(n, Mul):
return factordict
assert use_trial or use_rho or use_pm1
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import factorial
if isinstance(n, factorial):
x = as_int(n.args[0])
if x >= 20:
factors = {}
m = 2 # to initialize the if condition below
for p in sieve.primerange(2, x + 1):
if m > 1:
m, q = 0, x // p
while q != 0:
m += q
q //= p
factors[p] = m
if factors and verbose:
for k in sorted(factors):
print(factor_msg % (k, factors[k]))
if verbose:
print(complete_msg)
return factors
else:
# if n < 20!, direct computation is faster
# since it uses a lookup table
n = n.func(x)
n = as_int(n)
if limit:
limit = int(limit)
# special cases
if n < 0:
factors = factorint(
-n, limit=limit, use_trial=use_trial, use_rho=use_rho,
use_pm1=use_pm1, verbose=verbose, visual=False)
factors[-1] = 1
return factors
if limit and limit < 2:
if n == 1:
return {}
return {n: 1}
elif n < 10:
# doing this we are assured of getting a limit > 2
# when we have to compute it later
return [{0: 1}, {}, {2: 1}, {3: 1}, {2: 2}, {5: 1},
{2: 1, 3: 1}, {7: 1}, {2: 3}, {3: 2}][n]
factors = {}
# do simplistic factorization
if verbose:
sn = str(n)
if len(sn) > 50:
print('Factoring %s' % sn[:5] + \
'..(%i other digits)..' % (len(sn) - 10) + sn[-5:])
else:
print('Factoring', n)
if use_trial:
# this is the preliminary factorization for small factors
small = 2**15
fail_max = 600
small = min(small, limit or small)
if verbose:
print(trial_int_msg % (2, small, fail_max))
n, next_p = _factorint_small(factors, n, small, fail_max)
else:
next_p = 2
if factors and verbose:
for k in sorted(factors):
print(factor_msg % (k, factors[k]))
if next_p == 0:
if n > 1:
factors[int(n)] = 1
if verbose:
print(complete_msg)
return factors
# continue with more advanced factorization methods
# first check if the simplistic run didn't finish
# because of the limit and check for a perfect
# power before exiting
try:
if limit and next_p > limit:
if verbose:
print('Exceeded limit:', limit)
_check_termination(factors, n, limit, use_trial, use_rho, use_pm1,
verbose)
if n > 1:
factors[int(n)] = 1
return factors
else:
# Before quitting (or continuing on)...
# ...do a Fermat test since it's so easy and we need the
# square root anyway. Finding 2 factors is easy if they are
# "close enough." This is the big root equivalent of dividing by
# 2, 3, 5.
sqrt_n = integer_nthroot(n, 2)[0]
a = sqrt_n + 1
a2 = a**2
b2 = a2 - n
for i in range(3):
b, fermat = integer_nthroot(b2, 2)
if fermat:
break
b2 += 2*a + 1 # equiv to (a + 1)**2 - n
a += 1
if fermat:
if verbose:
print(fermat_msg)
if limit:
limit -= 1
for r in [a - b, a + b]:
facs = factorint(r, limit=limit, use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho, use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose)
factors.update(facs)
raise StopIteration
# ...see if factorization can be terminated
_check_termination(factors, n, limit, use_trial, use_rho, use_pm1,
verbose)
except StopIteration:
if verbose:
print(complete_msg)
return factors
# these are the limits for trial division which will
# be attempted in parallel with pollard methods
low, high = next_p, 2*next_p
limit = limit or sqrt_n
# add 1 to make sure limit is reached in primerange calls
limit += 1
while 1:
try:
high_ = high
if limit < high_:
high_ = limit
# Trial division
if use_trial:
if verbose:
print(trial_msg % (low, high_))
ps = sieve.primerange(low, high_)
n, found_trial = _trial(factors, n, ps, verbose)
if found_trial:
_check_termination(factors, n, limit, use_trial, use_rho,
use_pm1, verbose)
else:
found_trial = False
if high > limit:
if verbose:
print('Exceeded limit:', limit)
if n > 1:
factors[int(n)] = 1
raise StopIteration
# Only used advanced methods when no small factors were found
if not found_trial:
if (use_pm1 or use_rho):
high_root = max(int(math.log(high_**0.7)), low, 3)
# Pollard p-1
if use_pm1:
if verbose:
print(pm1_msg % (high_root, high_))
c = pollard_pm1(n, B=high_root, seed=high_)
if c:
# factor it and let _trial do the update
ps = factorint(c, limit=limit - 1,
use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho,
use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose)
n, _ = _trial(factors, n, ps, verbose=False)
_check_termination(factors, n, limit, use_trial,
use_rho, use_pm1, verbose)
# Pollard rho
if use_rho:
max_steps = high_root
if verbose:
print(rho_msg % (1, max_steps, high_))
c = pollard_rho(n, retries=1, max_steps=max_steps,
seed=high_)
if c:
# factor it and let _trial do the update
ps = factorint(c, limit=limit - 1,
use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho,
use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose)
n, _ = _trial(factors, n, ps, verbose=False)
_check_termination(factors, n, limit, use_trial,
use_rho, use_pm1, verbose)
except StopIteration:
if verbose:
print(complete_msg)
return factors
low, high = high, high*2
def factorrat(rat, limit=None, use_trial=True, use_rho=True, use_pm1=True,
verbose=False, visual=None, multiple=False):
r"""
Given a Rational ``r``, ``factorrat(r)`` returns a dict containing
the prime factors of ``r`` as keys and their respective multiplicities
as values. For example:
>>> from sympy.ntheory import factorrat
>>> from sympy.core.symbol import S
>>> factorrat(S(8)/9) # 8/9 = (2**3) * (3**-2)
{2: 3, 3: -2}
>>> factorrat(S(-1)/987) # -1/789 = -1 * (3**-1) * (7**-1) * (47**-1)
{-1: 1, 3: -1, 7: -1, 47: -1}
Please see the docstring for ``factorint`` for detailed explanations
and examples of the following keywords:
- ``limit``: Integer limit up to which trial division is done
- ``use_trial``: Toggle use of trial division
- ``use_rho``: Toggle use of Pollard's rho method
- ``use_pm1``: Toggle use of Pollard's p-1 method
- ``verbose``: Toggle detailed printing of progress
- ``multiple``: Toggle returning a list of factors or dict
- ``visual``: Toggle product form of output
"""
from collections import defaultdict
if multiple:
fac = factorrat(rat, limit=limit, use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho, use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose, visual=False, multiple=False)
factorlist = sum(([p] * fac[p] if fac[p] > 0 else [S(1)/p]*(-fac[p])
for p, _ in sorted(fac.items(),
key=lambda elem: elem[0]
if elem[1] > 0
else 1/elem[0])), [])
return factorlist
f = factorint(rat.p, limit=limit, use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho, use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose).copy()
f = defaultdict(int, f)
for p, e in factorint(rat.q, limit=limit,
use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho,
use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose).items():
f[p] += -e
if len(f) > 1 and 1 in f:
del f[1]
if not visual:
return dict(f)
else:
if -1 in f:
f.pop(-1)
args = [S.NegativeOne]
else:
args = []
args.extend([Pow(*i, evaluate=False)
for i in sorted(f.items())])
return Mul(*args, evaluate=False)
def primefactors(n, limit=None, verbose=False):
"""Return a sorted list of n's prime factors, ignoring multiplicity
and any composite factor that remains if the limit was set too low
for complete factorization. Unlike factorint(), primefactors() does
not return -1 or 0.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import primefactors, factorint, isprime
>>> primefactors(6)
[2, 3]
>>> primefactors(-5)
[5]
>>> sorted(factorint(123456).items())
[(2, 6), (3, 1), (643, 1)]
>>> primefactors(123456)
[2, 3, 643]
>>> sorted(factorint(10000000001, limit=200).items())
[(101, 1), (99009901, 1)]
>>> isprime(99009901)
False
>>> primefactors(10000000001, limit=300)
[101]
See Also
========
divisors
"""
n = int(n)
factors = sorted(factorint(n, limit=limit, verbose=verbose).keys())
s = [f for f in factors[:-1:] if f not in [-1, 0, 1]]
if factors and isprime(factors[-1]):
s += [factors[-1]]
return s
def _divisors(n):
"""Helper function for divisors which generates the divisors."""
factordict = factorint(n)
ps = sorted(factordict.keys())
def rec_gen(n=0):
if n == len(ps):
yield 1
else:
pows = [1]
for j in range(factordict[ps[n]]):
pows.append(pows[-1] * ps[n])
for q in rec_gen(n + 1):
for p in pows:
yield p * q
for p in rec_gen():
yield p
def divisors(n, generator=False):
r"""
Return all divisors of n sorted from 1..n by default.
If generator is ``True`` an unordered generator is returned.
The number of divisors of n can be quite large if there are many
prime factors (counting repeated factors). If only the number of
factors is desired use divisor_count(n).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import divisors, divisor_count
>>> divisors(24)
[1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24]
>>> divisor_count(24)
8
>>> list(divisors(120, generator=True))
[1, 2, 4, 8, 3, 6, 12, 24, 5, 10, 20, 40, 15, 30, 60, 120]
This is a slightly modified version of Tim Peters referenced at:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1010381/python-factorization
See Also
========
primefactors, factorint, divisor_count
"""
n = as_int(abs(n))
if isprime(n):
return [1, n]
if n == 1:
return [1]
if n == 0:
return []
rv = _divisors(n)
if not generator:
return sorted(rv)
return rv
def divisor_count(n, modulus=1):
"""
Return the number of divisors of ``n``. If ``modulus`` is not 1 then only
those that are divisible by ``modulus`` are counted.
References
==========
- http://www.mayer.dial.pipex.com/maths/formulae.htm
>>> from sympy import divisor_count
>>> divisor_count(6)
4
See Also
========
factorint, divisors, totient
"""
if not modulus:
return 0
elif modulus != 1:
n, r = divmod(n, modulus)
if r:
return 0
if n == 0:
return 0
return Mul(*[v + 1 for k, v in factorint(n).items() if k > 1])
def _udivisors(n):
"""Helper function for udivisors which generates the unitary divisors."""
factorpows = [p**e for p, e in factorint(n).items()]
for i in range(2**len(factorpows)):
d, j, k = 1, i, 0
while j:
if (j & 1):
d *= factorpows[k]
j >>= 1
k += 1
yield d
def udivisors(n, generator=False):
r"""
Return all unitary divisors of n sorted from 1..n by default.
If generator is ``True`` an unordered generator is returned.
The number of unitary divisors of n can be quite large if there are many
prime factors. If only the number of unitary divisors is desired use
udivisor_count(n).
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unitary_divisor
- http://mathworld.wolfram.com/UnitaryDivisor.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import udivisors, udivisor_count
>>> udivisors(15)
[1, 3, 5, 15]
>>> udivisor_count(15)
4
>>> sorted(udivisors(120, generator=True))
[1, 3, 5, 8, 15, 24, 40, 120]
See Also
========
primefactors, factorint, divisors, divisor_count, udivisor_count
"""
n = as_int(abs(n))
if isprime(n):
return [1, n]
if n == 1:
return [1]
if n == 0:
return []
rv = _udivisors(n)
if not generator:
return sorted(rv)
return rv
def udivisor_count(n):
"""
Return the number of unitary divisors of ``n``.
References
==========
- http://mathworld.wolfram.com/UnitaryDivisorFunction.html
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import udivisor_count
>>> udivisor_count(120)
8
See Also
========
factorint, divisors, udivisors, divisor_count, totient
"""
if n == 0:
return 0
return 2**len([p for p in factorint(n) if p > 1])
def _antidivisors(n):
"""Helper function for antidivisors which generates the antidivisors."""
for d in _divisors(n):
y = 2*d
if n > y and n % y:
yield y
for d in _divisors(2*n-1):
if n > d >= 2 and n % d:
yield d
for d in _divisors(2*n+1):
if n > d >= 2 and n % d:
yield d
def antidivisors(n, generator=False):
r"""
Return all antidivisors of n sorted from 1..n by default.
Antidivisors [1]_ of n are numbers that do not divide n by the largest
possible margin. If generator is True an unordered generator is returned.
References
==========
.. [1] definition is described in https://oeis.org/A066272/a066272a.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import antidivisors
>>> antidivisors(24)
[7, 16]
>>> sorted(antidivisors(128, generator=True))
[3, 5, 15, 17, 51, 85]
See Also
========
primefactors, factorint, divisors, divisor_count, antidivisor_count
"""
n = as_int(abs(n))
if n <= 2:
return []
rv = _antidivisors(n)
if not generator:
return sorted(rv)
return rv
def antidivisor_count(n):
"""
Return the number of antidivisors [1]_ of ``n``.
References
==========
.. [1] formula from https://oeis.org/A066272
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import antidivisor_count
>>> antidivisor_count(13)
4
>>> antidivisor_count(27)
5
See Also
========
factorint, divisors, antidivisors, divisor_count, totient
"""
n = as_int(abs(n))
if n <= 2:
return 0
return divisor_count(2*n - 1) + divisor_count(2*n + 1) + \
divisor_count(n) - divisor_count(n, 2) - 5
class totient(Function):
r"""
Calculate the Euler totient function phi(n)
``totient(n)`` or `\phi(n)` is the number of positive integers `\leq` n
that are relatively prime to n.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%27s_totient_function
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/TotientFunction.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import totient
>>> totient(1)
1
>>> totient(25)
20
See Also
========
divisor_count
"""
@classmethod
def eval(cls, n):
n = sympify(n)
if n.is_Integer:
if n < 1:
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer")
factors = factorint(n)
t = 1
for p, k in factors.items():
t *= (p - 1) * p**(k - 1)
return t
elif not isinstance(n, Expr) or (n.is_integer is False) or (n.is_positive is False):
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer")
def _eval_is_integer(self):
return fuzzy_and([self.args[0].is_integer, self.args[0].is_positive])
class reduced_totient(Function):
r"""
Calculate the Carmichael reduced totient function lambda(n)
``reduced_totient(n)`` or `\lambda(n)` is the smallest m > 0 such that
`k^m \equiv 1 \mod n` for all k relatively prime to n.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmichael_function
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CarmichaelFunction.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import reduced_totient
>>> reduced_totient(1)
1
>>> reduced_totient(8)
2
>>> reduced_totient(30)
4
See Also
========
totient
"""
@classmethod
def eval(cls, n):
n = sympify(n)
if n.is_Integer:
if n < 1:
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer")
factors = factorint(n)
t = 1
for p, k in factors.items():
if p == 2 and k > 2:
t = ilcm(t, 2**(k - 2))
else:
t = ilcm(t, (p - 1) * p**(k - 1))
return t
def _eval_is_integer(self):
return fuzzy_and([self.args[0].is_integer, self.args[0].is_positive])
class divisor_sigma(Function):
r"""
Calculate the divisor function `\sigma_k(n)` for positive integer n
``divisor_sigma(n, k)`` is equal to ``sum([x**k for x in divisors(n)])``
If n's prime factorization is:
.. math ::
n = \prod_{i=1}^\omega p_i^{m_i},
then
.. math ::
\sigma_k(n) = \prod_{i=1}^\omega (1+p_i^k+p_i^{2k}+\cdots
+ p_i^{m_ik}).
Parameters
==========
k : power of divisors in the sum
for k = 0, 1:
``divisor_sigma(n, 0)`` is equal to ``divisor_count(n)``
``divisor_sigma(n, 1)`` is equal to ``sum(divisors(n))``
Default for k is 1.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divisor_function
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory import divisor_sigma
>>> divisor_sigma(18, 0)
6
>>> divisor_sigma(39, 1)
56
>>> divisor_sigma(12, 2)
210
>>> divisor_sigma(37)
38
See Also
========
divisor_count, totient, divisors, factorint
"""
@classmethod
def eval(cls, n, k=1):
n = sympify(n)
k = sympify(k)
if n.is_prime:
return 1 + n**k
if n.is_Integer:
if n <= 0:
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer")
else:
return Mul(*[(p**(k*(e + 1)) - 1)/(p**k - 1) if k != 0
else e + 1 for p, e in factorint(n).items()])
def core(n, t=2):
r"""
Calculate core(n, t) = `core_t(n)` of a positive integer n
``core_2(n)`` is equal to the squarefree part of n
If n's prime factorization is:
.. math ::
n = \prod_{i=1}^\omega p_i^{m_i},
then
.. math ::
core_t(n) = \prod_{i=1}^\omega p_i^{m_i \mod t}.
Parameters
==========
t : core(n, t) calculates the t-th power free part of n
``core(n, 2)`` is the squarefree part of ``n``
``core(n, 3)`` is the cubefree part of ``n``
Default for t is 2.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square-free_integer#Squarefree_core
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import core
>>> core(24, 2)
6
>>> core(9424, 3)
1178
>>> core(379238)
379238
>>> core(15**11, 10)
15
See Also
========
factorint, sympy.solvers.diophantine.square_factor
"""
n = as_int(n)
t = as_int(t)
if n <= 0:
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer")
elif t <= 1:
raise ValueError("t must be >= 2")
else:
y = 1
for p, e in factorint(n).items():
y *= p**(e % t)
return y
def digits(n, b=10):
"""
Return a list of the digits of n in base b. The first element in the list
is b (or -b if n is negative).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import digits
>>> digits(35)
[10, 3, 5]
>>> digits(27, 2)
[2, 1, 1, 0, 1, 1]
>>> digits(65536, 256)
[256, 1, 0, 0]
>>> digits(-3958, 27)
[-27, 5, 11, 16]
"""
b = as_int(b)
n = as_int(n)
if b <= 1:
raise ValueError("b must be >= 2")
else:
x, y = abs(n), []
while x >= b:
x, r = divmod(x, b)
y.append(r)
y.append(x)
y.append(-b if n < 0 else b)
y.reverse()
return y
class udivisor_sigma(Function):
r"""
Calculate the unitary divisor function `\sigma_k^*(n)` for positive integer n
``udivisor_sigma(n, k)`` is equal to ``sum([x**k for x in udivisors(n)])``
If n's prime factorization is:
.. math ::
n = \prod_{i=1}^\omega p_i^{m_i},
then
.. math ::
\sigma_k^*(n) = \prod_{i=1}^\omega (1+ p_i^{m_ik}).
Parameters
==========
k : power of divisors in the sum
for k = 0, 1:
``udivisor_sigma(n, 0)`` is equal to ``udivisor_count(n)``
``udivisor_sigma(n, 1)`` is equal to ``sum(udivisors(n))``
Default for k is 1.
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/UnitaryDivisorFunction.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import udivisor_sigma
>>> udivisor_sigma(18, 0)
4
>>> udivisor_sigma(74, 1)
114
>>> udivisor_sigma(36, 3)
47450
>>> udivisor_sigma(111)
152
See Also
========
divisor_count, totient, divisors, udivisors, udivisor_count, divisor_sigma,
factorint
"""
@classmethod
def eval(cls, n, k=1):
n = sympify(n)
k = sympify(k)
if n.is_prime:
return 1 + n**k
if n.is_Integer:
if n <= 0:
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer")
else:
return Mul(*[1+p**(k*e) for p, e in factorint(n).items()])
class primenu(Function):
r"""
Calculate the number of distinct prime factors for a positive integer n.
If n's prime factorization is:
.. math ::
n = \prod_{i=1}^k p_i^{m_i},
then ``primenu(n)`` or `\nu(n)` is:
.. math ::
\nu(n) = k.
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PrimeFactor.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import primenu
>>> primenu(1)
0
>>> primenu(30)
3
See Also
========
factorint
"""
@classmethod
def eval(cls, n):
n = sympify(n)
if n.is_Integer:
if n <= 0:
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer")
else:
return len(factorint(n).keys())
class primeomega(Function):
r"""
Calculate the number of prime factors counting multiplicities for a
positive integer n.
If n's prime factorization is:
.. math ::
n = \prod_{i=1}^k p_i^{m_i},
then ``primeomega(n)`` or `\Omega(n)` is:
.. math ::
\Omega(n) = \sum_{i=1}^k m_i.
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PrimeFactor.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import primeomega
>>> primeomega(1)
0
>>> primeomega(20)
3
See Also
========
factorint
"""
@classmethod
def eval(cls, n):
n = sympify(n)
if n.is_Integer:
if n <= 0:
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer")
else:
return sum(factorint(n).values())
|
4fe143453ae2bbe0a77796f60775572a98bf5bb23b45702e9b2c0d787c799bb9
|
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
from sympy.combinatorics.util import _distribute_gens_by_base
from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
rmul = Permutation.rmul
def _cmp_perm_lists(first, second):
"""
Compare two lists of permutations as sets.
This is used for testing purposes. Since the array form of a
permutation is currently a list, Permutation is not hashable
and cannot be put into a set.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _cmp_perm_lists
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 3, 4, 1])
>>> b = Permutation([1, 2, 0, 4, 3])
>>> c = Permutation([3, 4, 0, 1, 2])
>>> ls1 = [a, b, c]
>>> ls2 = [b, c, a]
>>> _cmp_perm_lists(ls1, ls2)
True
"""
return {tuple(a) for a in first} == \
{tuple(a) for a in second}
def _naive_list_centralizer(self, other, af=False):
from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
"""
Return a list of elements for the centralizer of a subgroup/set/element.
This is a brute force implementation that goes over all elements of the
group and checks for membership in the centralizer. It is used to
test ``.centralizer()`` from ``sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _naive_list_centralizer
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> D = DihedralGroup(4)
>>> _naive_list_centralizer(D, D)
[Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3]), Permutation([2, 3, 0, 1])]
See Also
========
sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups.centralizer
"""
from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_commutes_with
if hasattr(other, 'generators'):
elements = list(self.generate_dimino(af=True))
gens = [x._array_form for x in other.generators]
commutes_with_gens = lambda x: all(_af_commutes_with(x, gen) for gen in gens)
centralizer_list = []
if not af:
for element in elements:
if commutes_with_gens(element):
centralizer_list.append(Permutation._af_new(element))
else:
for element in elements:
if commutes_with_gens(element):
centralizer_list.append(element)
return centralizer_list
elif hasattr(other, 'getitem'):
return _naive_list_centralizer(self, PermutationGroup(other), af)
elif hasattr(other, 'array_form'):
return _naive_list_centralizer(self, PermutationGroup([other]), af)
def _verify_bsgs(group, base, gens):
"""
Verify the correctness of a base and strong generating set.
This is a naive implementation using the definition of a base and a strong
generating set relative to it. There are other procedures for
verifying a base and strong generating set, but this one will
serve for more robust testing.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import AlternatingGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _verify_bsgs
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(4)
>>> A.schreier_sims()
>>> _verify_bsgs(A, A.base, A.strong_gens)
True
See Also
========
sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups.PermutationGroup.schreier_sims
"""
from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(base, gens)
current_stabilizer = group
for i in range(len(base)):
candidate = PermutationGroup(strong_gens_distr[i])
if current_stabilizer.order() != candidate.order():
return False
current_stabilizer = current_stabilizer.stabilizer(base[i])
if current_stabilizer.order() != 1:
return False
return True
def _verify_centralizer(group, arg, centr=None):
"""
Verify the centralizer of a group/set/element inside another group.
This is used for testing ``.centralizer()`` from
``sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... AlternatingGroup)
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _verify_centralizer
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(5)
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(5)
>>> centr = PermutationGroup([Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3, 4])])
>>> _verify_centralizer(S, A, centr)
True
See Also
========
_naive_list_centralizer,
sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups.PermutationGroup.centralizer,
_cmp_perm_lists
"""
if centr is None:
centr = group.centralizer(arg)
centr_list = list(centr.generate_dimino(af=True))
centr_list_naive = _naive_list_centralizer(group, arg, af=True)
return _cmp_perm_lists(centr_list, centr_list_naive)
def _verify_normal_closure(group, arg, closure=None):
from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
"""
Verify the normal closure of a subgroup/subset/element in a group.
This is used to test
sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups.PermutationGroup.normal_closure
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... AlternatingGroup)
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _verify_normal_closure
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(3)
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(3)
>>> _verify_normal_closure(S, A, closure=A)
True
See Also
========
sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups.PermutationGroup.normal_closure
"""
if closure is None:
closure = group.normal_closure(arg)
conjugates = set()
if hasattr(arg, 'generators'):
subgr_gens = arg.generators
elif hasattr(arg, '__getitem__'):
subgr_gens = arg
elif hasattr(arg, 'array_form'):
subgr_gens = [arg]
for el in group.generate_dimino():
for gen in subgr_gens:
conjugates.add(gen ^ el)
naive_closure = PermutationGroup(list(conjugates))
return closure.is_subgroup(naive_closure)
def canonicalize_naive(g, dummies, sym, *v):
"""
Canonicalize tensor formed by tensors of the different types
g permutation representing the tensor
dummies list of dummy indices
msym symmetry of the metric
v is a list of (base_i, gens_i, n_i, sym_i) for tensors of type `i`
base_i, gens_i BSGS for tensors of this type
n_i number ot tensors of type `i`
sym_i symmetry under exchange of two component tensors of type `i`
None no symmetry
0 commuting
1 anticommuting
Return 0 if the tensor is zero, else return the array form of
the permutation representing the canonical form of the tensor.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import canonicalize_naive
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.tensor_can import get_symmetric_group_sgs
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation, PermutationGroup
>>> g = Permutation([1, 3, 2, 0, 4, 5])
>>> base2, gens2 = get_symmetric_group_sgs(2)
>>> canonicalize_naive(g, [2, 3], 0, (base2, gens2, 2, 0))
[0, 2, 1, 3, 4, 5]
"""
from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
from sympy.combinatorics.tensor_can import gens_products, dummy_sgs
from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation, _af_rmul
v1 = []
for i in range(len(v)):
base_i, gens_i, n_i, sym_i = v[i]
v1.append((base_i, gens_i, [[]]*n_i, sym_i))
size, sbase, sgens = gens_products(*v1)
dgens = dummy_sgs(dummies, sym, size-2)
if isinstance(sym, int):
num_types = 1
dummies = [dummies]
sym = [sym]
else:
num_types = len(sym)
dgens = []
for i in range(num_types):
dgens.extend(dummy_sgs(dummies[i], sym[i], size - 2))
S = PermutationGroup(sgens)
D = PermutationGroup([Permutation(x) for x in dgens])
dlist = list(D.generate(af=True))
g = g.array_form
st = set()
for s in S.generate(af=True):
h = _af_rmul(g, s)
for d in dlist:
q = tuple(_af_rmul(d, h))
st.add(q)
a = list(st)
a.sort()
prev = (0,)*size
for h in a:
if h[:-2] == prev[:-2]:
if h[-1] != prev[-1]:
return 0
prev = h
return list(a[0])
def graph_certificate(gr):
"""
Return a certificate for the graph
gr adjacency list
The graph is assumed to be unoriented and without
external lines.
Associate to each vertex of the graph a symmetric tensor with
number of indices equal to the degree of the vertex; indices
are contracted when they correspond to the same line of the graph.
The canonical form of the tensor gives a certificate for the graph.
This is not an efficient algorithm to get the certificate of a graph.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import graph_certificate
>>> gr1 = {0:[1, 2, 3, 5], 1:[0, 2, 4], 2:[0, 1, 3, 4], 3:[0, 2, 4], 4:[1, 2, 3, 5], 5:[0, 4]}
>>> gr2 = {0:[1, 5], 1:[0, 2, 3, 4], 2:[1, 3, 5], 3:[1, 2, 4, 5], 4:[1, 3, 5], 5:[0, 2, 3, 4]}
>>> c1 = graph_certificate(gr1)
>>> c2 = graph_certificate(gr2)
>>> c1
[0, 2, 4, 6, 1, 8, 10, 12, 3, 14, 16, 18, 5, 9, 15, 7, 11, 17, 13, 19, 20, 21]
>>> c1 == c2
True
"""
from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_invert
from sympy.combinatorics.tensor_can import get_symmetric_group_sgs, canonicalize
items = list(gr.items())
items.sort(key=lambda x: len(x[1]), reverse=True)
pvert = [x[0] for x in items]
pvert = _af_invert(pvert)
# the indices of the tensor are twice the number of lines of the graph
num_indices = 0
for v, neigh in items:
num_indices += len(neigh)
# associate to each vertex its indices; for each line
# between two vertices assign the
# even index to the vertex which comes first in items,
# the odd index to the other vertex
vertices = [[] for i in items]
i = 0
for v, neigh in items:
for v2 in neigh:
if pvert[v] < pvert[v2]:
vertices[pvert[v]].append(i)
vertices[pvert[v2]].append(i+1)
i += 2
g = []
for v in vertices:
g.extend(v)
assert len(g) == num_indices
g += [num_indices, num_indices + 1]
size = num_indices + 2
assert sorted(g) == list(range(size))
g = Permutation(g)
vlen = [0]*(len(vertices[0])+1)
for neigh in vertices:
vlen[len(neigh)] += 1
v = []
for i in range(len(vlen)):
n = vlen[i]
if n:
base, gens = get_symmetric_group_sgs(i)
v.append((base, gens, n, 0))
v.reverse()
dummies = list(range(num_indices))
can = canonicalize(g, dummies, 0, *v)
return can
|
7e85d2840ee76c1e5efaf1889b454ffa53305d30a5fd927bf8e20a195803798c
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from random import randrange, choice
from math import log
from sympy.core import Basic
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import (_af_commutes_with, _af_invert,
_af_rmul, _af_rmuln, _af_pow, Cycle)
from sympy.combinatorics.util import (_check_cycles_alt_sym,
_distribute_gens_by_base, _orbits_transversals_from_bsgs,
_handle_precomputed_bsgs, _base_ordering, _strong_gens_from_distr,
_strip, _strip_af)
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import factorial
from sympy.ntheory import sieve
from sympy.utilities.iterables import has_variety, is_sequence, uniq
from sympy.utilities.randtest import _randrange
from itertools import islice
rmul = Permutation.rmul_with_af
_af_new = Permutation._af_new
class PermutationGroup(Basic):
"""The class defining a Permutation group.
PermutationGroup([p1, p2, ..., pn]) returns the permutation group
generated by the list of permutations. This group can be supplied
to Polyhedron if one desires to decorate the elements to which the
indices of the permutation refer.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Cycle
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.polyhedron import Polyhedron
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
The permutations corresponding to motion of the front, right and
bottom face of a 2x2 Rubik's cube are defined:
>>> F = Permutation(2, 19, 21, 8)(3, 17, 20, 10)(4, 6, 7, 5)
>>> R = Permutation(1, 5, 21, 14)(3, 7, 23, 12)(8, 10, 11, 9)
>>> D = Permutation(6, 18, 14, 10)(7, 19, 15, 11)(20, 22, 23, 21)
These are passed as permutations to PermutationGroup:
>>> G = PermutationGroup(F, R, D)
>>> G.order()
3674160
The group can be supplied to a Polyhedron in order to track the
objects being moved. An example involving the 2x2 Rubik's cube is
given there, but here is a simple demonstration:
>>> a = Permutation(2, 1)
>>> b = Permutation(1, 0)
>>> G = PermutationGroup(a, b)
>>> P = Polyhedron(list('ABC'), pgroup=G)
>>> P.corners
(A, B, C)
>>> P.rotate(0) # apply permutation 0
>>> P.corners
(A, C, B)
>>> P.reset()
>>> P.corners
(A, B, C)
Or one can make a permutation as a product of selected permutations
and apply them to an iterable directly:
>>> P10 = G.make_perm([0, 1])
>>> P10('ABC')
['C', 'A', 'B']
See Also
========
sympy.combinatorics.polyhedron.Polyhedron,
sympy.combinatorics.permutations.Permutation
References
==========
[1] Holt, D., Eick, B., O'Brien, E.
"Handbook of Computational Group Theory"
[2] Seress, A.
"Permutation Group Algorithms"
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schreier_vector
[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nielsen_transformation
#Product_replacement_algorithm
[5] Frank Celler, Charles R.Leedham-Green, Scott H.Murray,
Alice C.Niemeyer, and E.A.O'Brien. "Generating Random
Elements of a Finite Group"
[6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_%28permutation_group_theory%29
[7] http://www.algorithmist.com/index.php/Union_Find
[8] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiply_transitive_group#Multiply_transitive_groups
[9] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_%28group_theory%29
[10] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centralizer_and_normalizer
[11] http://groupprops.subwiki.org/wiki/Derived_subgroup
[12] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nilpotent_group
[13] http://www.math.colostate.edu/~hulpke/CGT/cgtnotes.pdf
"""
is_group = True
def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
"""The default constructor. Accepts Cycle and Permutation forms.
Removes duplicates unless ``dups`` keyword is ``False``.
"""
if not args:
args = [Permutation()]
else:
args = list(args[0] if is_sequence(args[0]) else args)
if not args:
args = [Permutation()]
if any(isinstance(a, Cycle) for a in args):
args = [Permutation(a) for a in args]
if has_variety(a.size for a in args):
degree = kwargs.pop('degree', None)
if degree is None:
degree = max(a.size for a in args)
for i in range(len(args)):
if args[i].size != degree:
args[i] = Permutation(args[i], size=degree)
if kwargs.pop('dups', True):
args = list(uniq([_af_new(list(a)) for a in args]))
if len(args) > 1:
args = [g for g in args if not g.is_identity]
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, *args, **kwargs)
obj._generators = args
obj._order = None
obj._center = []
obj._is_abelian = None
obj._is_transitive = None
obj._is_sym = None
obj._is_alt = None
obj._is_primitive = None
obj._is_nilpotent = None
obj._is_solvable = None
obj._is_trivial = None
obj._transitivity_degree = None
obj._max_div = None
obj._r = len(obj._generators)
obj._degree = obj._generators[0].size
# these attributes are assigned after running schreier_sims
obj._base = []
obj._strong_gens = []
obj._strong_gens_slp = []
obj._basic_orbits = []
obj._transversals = []
obj._transversal_slp = []
# these attributes are assigned after running _random_pr_init
obj._random_gens = []
# finite presentation of the group as an instance of `FpGroup`
obj._fp_presentation = None
return obj
def __getitem__(self, i):
return self._generators[i]
def __contains__(self, i):
"""Return ``True`` if `i` is contained in PermutationGroup.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation, PermutationGroup
>>> p = Permutation(1, 2, 3)
>>> Permutation(3) in PermutationGroup(p)
True
"""
if not isinstance(i, Permutation):
raise TypeError("A PermutationGroup contains only Permutations as "
"elements, not elements of type %s" % type(i))
return self.contains(i)
def __len__(self):
return len(self._generators)
def __eq__(self, other):
"""Return ``True`` if PermutationGroup generated by elements in the
group are same i.e they represent the same PermutationGroup.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> p = Permutation(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
>>> G = PermutationGroup([p, p**2])
>>> H = PermutationGroup([p**2, p])
>>> G.generators == H.generators
False
>>> G == H
True
"""
if not isinstance(other, PermutationGroup):
return False
set_self_gens = set(self.generators)
set_other_gens = set(other.generators)
# before reaching the general case there are also certain
# optimisation and obvious cases requiring less or no actual
# computation.
if set_self_gens == set_other_gens:
return True
# in the most general case it will check that each generator of
# one group belongs to the other PermutationGroup and vice-versa
for gen1 in set_self_gens:
if not other.contains(gen1):
return False
for gen2 in set_other_gens:
if not self.contains(gen2):
return False
return True
def __hash__(self):
return super(PermutationGroup, self).__hash__()
def __mul__(self, other):
"""Return the direct product of two permutation groups as a permutation
group.
This implementation realizes the direct product by shifting the index
set for the generators of the second group: so if we have `G` acting
on `n1` points and `H` acting on `n2` points, `G*H` acts on `n1 + n2`
points.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import CyclicGroup
>>> G = CyclicGroup(5)
>>> H = G*G
>>> H
PermutationGroup([
(9)(0 1 2 3 4),
(5 6 7 8 9)])
>>> H.order()
25
"""
gens1 = [perm._array_form for perm in self.generators]
gens2 = [perm._array_form for perm in other.generators]
n1 = self._degree
n2 = other._degree
start = list(range(n1))
end = list(range(n1, n1 + n2))
for i in range(len(gens2)):
gens2[i] = [x + n1 for x in gens2[i]]
gens2 = [start + gen for gen in gens2]
gens1 = [gen + end for gen in gens1]
together = gens1 + gens2
gens = [_af_new(x) for x in together]
return PermutationGroup(gens)
def _random_pr_init(self, r, n, _random_prec_n=None):
r"""Initialize random generators for the product replacement algorithm.
The implementation uses a modification of the original product
replacement algorithm due to Leedham-Green, as described in [1],
pp. 69-71; also, see [2], pp. 27-29 for a detailed theoretical
analysis of the original product replacement algorithm, and [4].
The product replacement algorithm is used for producing random,
uniformly distributed elements of a group `G` with a set of generators
`S`. For the initialization ``_random_pr_init``, a list ``R`` of
`\max\{r, |S|\}` group generators is created as the attribute
``G._random_gens``, repeating elements of `S` if necessary, and the
identity element of `G` is appended to ``R`` - we shall refer to this
last element as the accumulator. Then the function ``random_pr()``
is called ``n`` times, randomizing the list ``R`` while preserving
the generation of `G` by ``R``. The function ``random_pr()`` itself
takes two random elements ``g, h`` among all elements of ``R`` but
the accumulator and replaces ``g`` with a randomly chosen element
from `\{gh, g(~h), hg, (~h)g\}`. Then the accumulator is multiplied
by whatever ``g`` was replaced by. The new value of the accumulator is
then returned by ``random_pr()``.
The elements returned will eventually (for ``n`` large enough) become
uniformly distributed across `G` ([5]). For practical purposes however,
the values ``n = 50, r = 11`` are suggested in [1].
Notes
=====
THIS FUNCTION HAS SIDE EFFECTS: it changes the attribute
self._random_gens
See Also
========
random_pr
"""
deg = self.degree
random_gens = [x._array_form for x in self.generators]
k = len(random_gens)
if k < r:
for i in range(k, r):
random_gens.append(random_gens[i - k])
acc = list(range(deg))
random_gens.append(acc)
self._random_gens = random_gens
# handle randomized input for testing purposes
if _random_prec_n is None:
for i in range(n):
self.random_pr()
else:
for i in range(n):
self.random_pr(_random_prec=_random_prec_n[i])
def _union_find_merge(self, first, second, ranks, parents, not_rep):
"""Merges two classes in a union-find data structure.
Used in the implementation of Atkinson's algorithm as suggested in [1],
pp. 83-87. The class merging process uses union by rank as an
optimization. ([7])
Notes
=====
THIS FUNCTION HAS SIDE EFFECTS: the list of class representatives,
``parents``, the list of class sizes, ``ranks``, and the list of
elements that are not representatives, ``not_rep``, are changed due to
class merging.
See Also
========
minimal_block, _union_find_rep
References
==========
[1] Holt, D., Eick, B., O'Brien, E.
"Handbook of computational group theory"
[7] http://www.algorithmist.com/index.php/Union_Find
"""
rep_first = self._union_find_rep(first, parents)
rep_second = self._union_find_rep(second, parents)
if rep_first != rep_second:
# union by rank
if ranks[rep_first] >= ranks[rep_second]:
new_1, new_2 = rep_first, rep_second
else:
new_1, new_2 = rep_second, rep_first
total_rank = ranks[new_1] + ranks[new_2]
if total_rank > self.max_div:
return -1
parents[new_2] = new_1
ranks[new_1] = total_rank
not_rep.append(new_2)
return 1
return 0
def _union_find_rep(self, num, parents):
"""Find representative of a class in a union-find data structure.
Used in the implementation of Atkinson's algorithm as suggested in [1],
pp. 83-87. After the representative of the class to which ``num``
belongs is found, path compression is performed as an optimization
([7]).
Notes
=====
THIS FUNCTION HAS SIDE EFFECTS: the list of class representatives,
``parents``, is altered due to path compression.
See Also
========
minimal_block, _union_find_merge
References
==========
[1] Holt, D., Eick, B., O'Brien, E.
"Handbook of computational group theory"
[7] http://www.algorithmist.com/index.php/Union_Find
"""
rep, parent = num, parents[num]
while parent != rep:
rep = parent
parent = parents[rep]
# path compression
temp, parent = num, parents[num]
while parent != rep:
parents[temp] = rep
temp = parent
parent = parents[temp]
return rep
@property
def base(self):
"""Return a base from the Schreier-Sims algorithm.
For a permutation group `G`, a base is a sequence of points
`B = (b_1, b_2, ..., b_k)` such that no element of `G` apart
from the identity fixes all the points in `B`. The concepts of
a base and strong generating set and their applications are
discussed in depth in [1], pp. 87-89 and [2], pp. 55-57.
An alternative way to think of `B` is that it gives the
indices of the stabilizer cosets that contain more than the
identity permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation, PermutationGroup
>>> G = PermutationGroup([Permutation(0, 1, 3)(2, 4)])
>>> G.base
[0, 2]
See Also
========
strong_gens, basic_transversals, basic_orbits, basic_stabilizers
"""
if self._base == []:
self.schreier_sims()
return self._base
def baseswap(self, base, strong_gens, pos, randomized=False,
transversals=None, basic_orbits=None, strong_gens_distr=None):
r"""Swap two consecutive base points in base and strong generating set.
If a base for a group `G` is given by `(b_1, b_2, ..., b_k)`, this
function returns a base `(b_1, b_2, ..., b_{i+1}, b_i, ..., b_k)`,
where `i` is given by ``pos``, and a strong generating set relative
to that base. The original base and strong generating set are not
modified.
The randomized version (default) is of Las Vegas type.
Parameters
==========
base, strong_gens
The base and strong generating set.
pos
The position at which swapping is performed.
randomized
A switch between randomized and deterministic version.
transversals
The transversals for the basic orbits, if known.
basic_orbits
The basic orbits, if known.
strong_gens_distr
The strong generators distributed by basic stabilizers, if known.
Returns
=======
(base, strong_gens)
``base`` is the new base, and ``strong_gens`` is a generating set
relative to it.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import SymmetricGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _verify_bsgs
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(4)
>>> S.schreier_sims()
>>> S.base
[0, 1, 2]
>>> base, gens = S.baseswap(S.base, S.strong_gens, 1, randomized=False)
>>> base, gens
([0, 2, 1],
[(0 1 2 3), (3)(0 1), (1 3 2),
(2 3), (1 3)])
check that base, gens is a BSGS
>>> S1 = PermutationGroup(gens)
>>> _verify_bsgs(S1, base, gens)
True
See Also
========
schreier_sims
Notes
=====
The deterministic version of the algorithm is discussed in
[1], pp. 102-103; the randomized version is discussed in [1], p.103, and
[2], p.98. It is of Las Vegas type.
Notice that [1] contains a mistake in the pseudocode and
discussion of BASESWAP: on line 3 of the pseudocode,
`|\beta_{i+1}^{\left\langle T\right\rangle}|` should be replaced by
`|\beta_{i}^{\left\langle T\right\rangle}|`, and the same for the
discussion of the algorithm.
"""
# construct the basic orbits, generators for the stabilizer chain
# and transversal elements from whatever was provided
transversals, basic_orbits, strong_gens_distr = \
_handle_precomputed_bsgs(base, strong_gens, transversals,
basic_orbits, strong_gens_distr)
base_len = len(base)
degree = self.degree
# size of orbit of base[pos] under the stabilizer we seek to insert
# in the stabilizer chain at position pos + 1
size = len(basic_orbits[pos])*len(basic_orbits[pos + 1]) \
//len(_orbit(degree, strong_gens_distr[pos], base[pos + 1]))
# initialize the wanted stabilizer by a subgroup
if pos + 2 > base_len - 1:
T = []
else:
T = strong_gens_distr[pos + 2][:]
# randomized version
if randomized is True:
stab_pos = PermutationGroup(strong_gens_distr[pos])
schreier_vector = stab_pos.schreier_vector(base[pos + 1])
# add random elements of the stabilizer until they generate it
while len(_orbit(degree, T, base[pos])) != size:
new = stab_pos.random_stab(base[pos + 1],
schreier_vector=schreier_vector)
T.append(new)
# deterministic version
else:
Gamma = set(basic_orbits[pos])
Gamma.remove(base[pos])
if base[pos + 1] in Gamma:
Gamma.remove(base[pos + 1])
# add elements of the stabilizer until they generate it by
# ruling out member of the basic orbit of base[pos] along the way
while len(_orbit(degree, T, base[pos])) != size:
gamma = next(iter(Gamma))
x = transversals[pos][gamma]
temp = x._array_form.index(base[pos + 1]) # (~x)(base[pos + 1])
if temp not in basic_orbits[pos + 1]:
Gamma = Gamma - _orbit(degree, T, gamma)
else:
y = transversals[pos + 1][temp]
el = rmul(x, y)
if el(base[pos]) not in _orbit(degree, T, base[pos]):
T.append(el)
Gamma = Gamma - _orbit(degree, T, base[pos])
# build the new base and strong generating set
strong_gens_new_distr = strong_gens_distr[:]
strong_gens_new_distr[pos + 1] = T
base_new = base[:]
base_new[pos], base_new[pos + 1] = base_new[pos + 1], base_new[pos]
strong_gens_new = _strong_gens_from_distr(strong_gens_new_distr)
for gen in T:
if gen not in strong_gens_new:
strong_gens_new.append(gen)
return base_new, strong_gens_new
@property
def basic_orbits(self):
"""
Return the basic orbits relative to a base and strong generating set.
If `(b_1, b_2, ..., b_k)` is a base for a group `G`, and
`G^{(i)} = G_{b_1, b_2, ..., b_{i-1}}` is the ``i``-th basic stabilizer
(so that `G^{(1)} = G`), the ``i``-th basic orbit relative to this base
is the orbit of `b_i` under `G^{(i)}`. See [1], pp. 87-89 for more
information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import SymmetricGroup
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(4)
>>> S.basic_orbits
[[0, 1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 3], [2, 3]]
See Also
========
base, strong_gens, basic_transversals, basic_stabilizers
"""
if self._basic_orbits == []:
self.schreier_sims()
return self._basic_orbits
@property
def basic_stabilizers(self):
"""
Return a chain of stabilizers relative to a base and strong generating
set.
The ``i``-th basic stabilizer `G^{(i)}` relative to a base
`(b_1, b_2, ..., b_k)` is `G_{b_1, b_2, ..., b_{i-1}}`. For more
information, see [1], pp. 87-89.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import AlternatingGroup
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(4)
>>> A.schreier_sims()
>>> A.base
[0, 1]
>>> for g in A.basic_stabilizers:
... print(g)
...
PermutationGroup([
(3)(0 1 2),
(1 2 3)])
PermutationGroup([
(1 2 3)])
See Also
========
base, strong_gens, basic_orbits, basic_transversals
"""
if self._transversals == []:
self.schreier_sims()
strong_gens = self._strong_gens
base = self._base
if not base: # e.g. if self is trivial
return []
strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(base, strong_gens)
basic_stabilizers = []
for gens in strong_gens_distr:
basic_stabilizers.append(PermutationGroup(gens))
return basic_stabilizers
@property
def basic_transversals(self):
"""
Return basic transversals relative to a base and strong generating set.
The basic transversals are transversals of the basic orbits. They
are provided as a list of dictionaries, each dictionary having
keys - the elements of one of the basic orbits, and values - the
corresponding transversal elements. See [1], pp. 87-89 for more
information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import AlternatingGroup
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(4)
>>> A.basic_transversals
[{0: (3), 1: (3)(0 1 2), 2: (3)(0 2 1), 3: (0 3 1)}, {1: (3), 2: (1 2 3), 3: (1 3 2)}]
See Also
========
strong_gens, base, basic_orbits, basic_stabilizers
"""
if self._transversals == []:
self.schreier_sims()
return self._transversals
def coset_transversal(self, H):
"""Return a transversal of the right cosets of self by its subgroup H
using the second method described in [1], Subsection 4.6.7
"""
if not H.is_subgroup(self):
raise ValueError("The argument must be a subgroup")
if H.order() == 1:
return self._elements
self._schreier_sims(base=H.base) # make G.base an extension of H.base
base = self.base
base_ordering = _base_ordering(base, self.degree)
identity = Permutation(self.degree - 1)
transversals = self.basic_transversals[:]
# transversals is a list of dictionaries. Get rid of the keys
# so that it is a list of lists and sort each list in
# the increasing order of base[l]^x
for l, t in enumerate(transversals):
transversals[l] = sorted(t.values(),
key = lambda x: base_ordering[base[l]^x])
orbits = H.basic_orbits
h_stabs = H.basic_stabilizers
g_stabs = self.basic_stabilizers
indices = [x.order()//y.order() for x, y in zip(g_stabs, h_stabs)]
# T^(l) should be a right transversal of H^(l) in G^(l) for
# 1<=l<=len(base). While H^(l) is the trivial group, T^(l)
# contains all the elements of G^(l) so we might just as well
# start with l = len(h_stabs)-1
if len(g_stabs) > len(h_stabs):
T = g_stabs[len(h_stabs)]._elements
else:
T = [identity]
l = len(h_stabs)-1
t_len = len(T)
while l > -1:
T_next = []
for u in transversals[l]:
if u == identity:
continue
b = base_ordering[base[l]^u]
for t in T:
p = t*u
if all([base_ordering[h^p] >= b for h in orbits[l]]):
T_next.append(p)
if t_len + len(T_next) == indices[l]:
break
if t_len + len(T_next) == indices[l]:
break
T += T_next
t_len += len(T_next)
l -= 1
T.remove(identity)
T = [identity] + T
return T
def _coset_representative(self, g, H):
"""Return the representative of Hg from the transversal that
would be computed by `self.coset_transversal(H)`.
"""
if H.order() == 1:
return g
# The base of self must be an extension of H.base.
if not(self.base[:len(H.base)] == H.base):
self._schreier_sims(base=H.base)
orbits = H.basic_orbits[:]
h_transversals = [list(_.values()) for _ in H.basic_transversals]
transversals = [list(_.values()) for _ in self.basic_transversals]
base = self.base
base_ordering = _base_ordering(base, self.degree)
def step(l, x):
gamma = sorted(orbits[l], key = lambda y: base_ordering[y^x])[0]
i = [base[l]^h for h in h_transversals[l]].index(gamma)
x = h_transversals[l][i]*x
if l < len(orbits)-1:
for u in transversals[l]:
if base[l]^u == base[l]^x:
break
x = step(l+1, x*u**-1)*u
return x
return step(0, g)
def coset_table(self, H):
"""Return the standardised (right) coset table of self in H as
a list of lists.
"""
# Maybe this should be made to return an instance of CosetTable
# from fp_groups.py but the class would need to be changed first
# to be compatible with PermutationGroups
from itertools import chain, product
if not H.is_subgroup(self):
raise ValueError("The argument must be a subgroup")
T = self.coset_transversal(H)
n = len(T)
A = list(chain.from_iterable((gen, gen**-1)
for gen in self.generators))
table = []
for i in range(n):
row = [self._coset_representative(T[i]*x, H) for x in A]
row = [T.index(r) for r in row]
table.append(row)
# standardize (this is the same as the algorithm used in coset_table)
# If CosetTable is made compatible with PermutationGroups, this
# should be replaced by table.standardize()
A = range(len(A))
gamma = 1
for alpha, a in product(range(n), A):
beta = table[alpha][a]
if beta >= gamma:
if beta > gamma:
for x in A:
z = table[gamma][x]
table[gamma][x] = table[beta][x]
table[beta][x] = z
for i in range(n):
if table[i][x] == beta:
table[i][x] = gamma
elif table[i][x] == gamma:
table[i][x] = beta
gamma += 1
if gamma >= n-1:
return table
def center(self):
r"""
Return the center of a permutation group.
The center for a group `G` is defined as
`Z(G) = \{z\in G | \forall g\in G, zg = gz \}`,
the set of elements of `G` that commute with all elements of `G`.
It is equal to the centralizer of `G` inside `G`, and is naturally a
subgroup of `G` ([9]).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> D = DihedralGroup(4)
>>> G = D.center()
>>> G.order()
2
See Also
========
centralizer
Notes
=====
This is a naive implementation that is a straightforward application
of ``.centralizer()``
"""
return self.centralizer(self)
def centralizer(self, other):
r"""
Return the centralizer of a group/set/element.
The centralizer of a set of permutations ``S`` inside
a group ``G`` is the set of elements of ``G`` that commute with all
elements of ``S``::
`C_G(S) = \{ g \in G | gs = sg \forall s \in S\}` ([10])
Usually, ``S`` is a subset of ``G``, but if ``G`` is a proper subgroup of
the full symmetric group, we allow for ``S`` to have elements outside
``G``.
It is naturally a subgroup of ``G``; the centralizer of a permutation
group is equal to the centralizer of any set of generators for that
group, since any element commuting with the generators commutes with
any product of the generators.
Parameters
==========
other
a permutation group/list of permutations/single permutation
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... CyclicGroup)
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(6)
>>> C = CyclicGroup(6)
>>> H = S.centralizer(C)
>>> H.is_subgroup(C)
True
See Also
========
subgroup_search
Notes
=====
The implementation is an application of ``.subgroup_search()`` with
tests using a specific base for the group ``G``.
"""
if hasattr(other, 'generators'):
if other.is_trivial or self.is_trivial:
return self
degree = self.degree
identity = _af_new(list(range(degree)))
orbits = other.orbits()
num_orbits = len(orbits)
orbits.sort(key=lambda x: -len(x))
long_base = []
orbit_reps = [None]*num_orbits
orbit_reps_indices = [None]*num_orbits
orbit_descr = [None]*degree
for i in range(num_orbits):
orbit = list(orbits[i])
orbit_reps[i] = orbit[0]
orbit_reps_indices[i] = len(long_base)
for point in orbit:
orbit_descr[point] = i
long_base = long_base + orbit
base, strong_gens = self.schreier_sims_incremental(base=long_base)
strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(base, strong_gens)
i = 0
for i in range(len(base)):
if strong_gens_distr[i] == [identity]:
break
base = base[:i]
base_len = i
for j in range(num_orbits):
if base[base_len - 1] in orbits[j]:
break
rel_orbits = orbits[: j + 1]
num_rel_orbits = len(rel_orbits)
transversals = [None]*num_rel_orbits
for j in range(num_rel_orbits):
rep = orbit_reps[j]
transversals[j] = dict(
other.orbit_transversal(rep, pairs=True))
trivial_test = lambda x: True
tests = [None]*base_len
for l in range(base_len):
if base[l] in orbit_reps:
tests[l] = trivial_test
else:
def test(computed_words, l=l):
g = computed_words[l]
rep_orb_index = orbit_descr[base[l]]
rep = orbit_reps[rep_orb_index]
im = g._array_form[base[l]]
im_rep = g._array_form[rep]
tr_el = transversals[rep_orb_index][base[l]]
# using the definition of transversal,
# base[l]^g = rep^(tr_el*g);
# if g belongs to the centralizer, then
# base[l]^g = (rep^g)^tr_el
return im == tr_el._array_form[im_rep]
tests[l] = test
def prop(g):
return [rmul(g, gen) for gen in other.generators] == \
[rmul(gen, g) for gen in other.generators]
return self.subgroup_search(prop, base=base,
strong_gens=strong_gens, tests=tests)
elif hasattr(other, '__getitem__'):
gens = list(other)
return self.centralizer(PermutationGroup(gens))
elif hasattr(other, 'array_form'):
return self.centralizer(PermutationGroup([other]))
def commutator(self, G, H):
"""
Return the commutator of two subgroups.
For a permutation group ``K`` and subgroups ``G``, ``H``, the
commutator of ``G`` and ``H`` is defined as the group generated
by all the commutators `[g, h] = hgh^{-1}g^{-1}` for ``g`` in ``G`` and
``h`` in ``H``. It is naturally a subgroup of ``K`` ([1], p.27).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... AlternatingGroup)
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(5)
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(5)
>>> G = S.commutator(S, A)
>>> G.is_subgroup(A)
True
See Also
========
derived_subgroup
Notes
=====
The commutator of two subgroups `H, G` is equal to the normal closure
of the commutators of all the generators, i.e. `hgh^{-1}g^{-1}` for `h`
a generator of `H` and `g` a generator of `G` ([1], p.28)
"""
ggens = G.generators
hgens = H.generators
commutators = []
for ggen in ggens:
for hgen in hgens:
commutator = rmul(hgen, ggen, ~hgen, ~ggen)
if commutator not in commutators:
commutators.append(commutator)
res = self.normal_closure(commutators)
return res
def coset_factor(self, g, factor_index=False):
"""Return ``G``'s (self's) coset factorization of ``g``
If ``g`` is an element of ``G`` then it can be written as the product
of permutations drawn from the Schreier-Sims coset decomposition,
The permutations returned in ``f`` are those for which
the product gives ``g``: ``g = f[n]*...f[1]*f[0]`` where ``n = len(B)``
and ``B = G.base``. f[i] is one of the permutations in
``self._basic_orbits[i]``.
If factor_index==True,
returns a tuple ``[b[0],..,b[n]]``, where ``b[i]``
belongs to ``self._basic_orbits[i]``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation, PermutationGroup
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> a = Permutation(0, 1, 3, 7, 6, 4)(2, 5)
>>> b = Permutation(0, 1, 3, 2)(4, 5, 7, 6)
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
Define g:
>>> g = Permutation(7)(1, 2, 4)(3, 6, 5)
Confirm that it is an element of G:
>>> G.contains(g)
True
Thus, it can be written as a product of factors (up to
3) drawn from u. See below that a factor from u1 and u2
and the Identity permutation have been used:
>>> f = G.coset_factor(g)
>>> f[2]*f[1]*f[0] == g
True
>>> f1 = G.coset_factor(g, True); f1
[0, 4, 4]
>>> tr = G.basic_transversals
>>> f[0] == tr[0][f1[0]]
True
If g is not an element of G then [] is returned:
>>> c = Permutation(5, 6, 7)
>>> G.coset_factor(c)
[]
see util._strip
"""
if isinstance(g, (Cycle, Permutation)):
g = g.list()
if len(g) != self._degree:
# this could either adjust the size or return [] immediately
# but we don't choose between the two and just signal a possible
# error
raise ValueError('g should be the same size as permutations of G')
I = list(range(self._degree))
basic_orbits = self.basic_orbits
transversals = self._transversals
factors = []
base = self.base
h = g
for i in range(len(base)):
beta = h[base[i]]
if beta == base[i]:
factors.append(beta)
continue
if beta not in basic_orbits[i]:
return []
u = transversals[i][beta]._array_form
h = _af_rmul(_af_invert(u), h)
factors.append(beta)
if h != I:
return []
if factor_index:
return factors
tr = self.basic_transversals
factors = [tr[i][factors[i]] for i in range(len(base))]
return factors
def generator_product(self, g, original=False):
'''
Return a list of strong generators `[s1, ..., sn]`
s.t `g = sn*...*s1`. If `original=True`, make the list
contain only the original group generators
'''
product = []
if g.is_identity:
return []
if g in self.strong_gens:
if not original or g in self.generators:
return [g]
else:
slp = self._strong_gens_slp[g]
for s in slp:
product.extend(self.generator_product(s, original=True))
return product
elif g**-1 in self.strong_gens:
g = g**-1
if not original or g in self.generators:
return [g**-1]
else:
slp = self._strong_gens_slp[g]
for s in slp:
product.extend(self.generator_product(s, original=True))
l = len(product)
product = [product[l-i-1]**-1 for i in range(l)]
return product
f = self.coset_factor(g, True)
for i, j in enumerate(f):
slp = self._transversal_slp[i][j]
for s in slp:
if not original:
product.append(self.strong_gens[s])
else:
s = self.strong_gens[s]
product.extend(self.generator_product(s, original=True))
return product
def coset_rank(self, g):
"""rank using Schreier-Sims representation
The coset rank of ``g`` is the ordering number in which
it appears in the lexicographic listing according to the
coset decomposition
The ordering is the same as in G.generate(method='coset').
If ``g`` does not belong to the group it returns None.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation(0, 1, 3, 7, 6, 4)(2, 5)
>>> b = Permutation(0, 1, 3, 2)(4, 5, 7, 6)
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> c = Permutation(7)(2, 4)(3, 5)
>>> G.coset_rank(c)
16
>>> G.coset_unrank(16)
(7)(2 4)(3 5)
See Also
========
coset_factor
"""
factors = self.coset_factor(g, True)
if not factors:
return None
rank = 0
b = 1
transversals = self._transversals
base = self._base
basic_orbits = self._basic_orbits
for i in range(len(base)):
k = factors[i]
j = basic_orbits[i].index(k)
rank += b*j
b = b*len(transversals[i])
return rank
def coset_unrank(self, rank, af=False):
"""unrank using Schreier-Sims representation
coset_unrank is the inverse operation of coset_rank
if 0 <= rank < order; otherwise it returns None.
"""
if rank < 0 or rank >= self.order():
return None
base = self.base
transversals = self.basic_transversals
basic_orbits = self.basic_orbits
m = len(base)
v = [0]*m
for i in range(m):
rank, c = divmod(rank, len(transversals[i]))
v[i] = basic_orbits[i][c]
a = [transversals[i][v[i]]._array_form for i in range(m)]
h = _af_rmuln(*a)
if af:
return h
else:
return _af_new(h)
@property
def degree(self):
"""Returns the size of the permutations in the group.
The number of permutations comprising the group is given by
``len(group)``; the number of permutations that can be generated
by the group is given by ``group.order()``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a])
>>> G.degree
3
>>> len(G)
1
>>> G.order()
2
>>> list(G.generate())
[(2), (2)(0 1)]
See Also
========
order
"""
return self._degree
@property
def identity(self):
'''
Return the identity element of the permutation group.
'''
return _af_new(list(range(self.degree)))
@property
def elements(self):
"""Returns all the elements of the permutation group as a set
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation, PermutationGroup
>>> p = PermutationGroup(Permutation(1, 3), Permutation(1, 2))
>>> p.elements
{(3), (2 3), (3)(1 2), (1 2 3), (1 3 2), (1 3)}
"""
return set(self._elements)
@property
def _elements(self):
"""Returns all the elements of the permutation group as a list
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation, PermutationGroup
>>> p = PermutationGroup(Permutation(1, 3), Permutation(1, 2))
>>> p._elements
[(3), (3)(1 2), (1 3), (2 3), (1 2 3), (1 3 2)]
"""
return list(islice(self.generate(), None))
def derived_series(self):
r"""Return the derived series for the group.
The derived series for a group `G` is defined as
`G = G_0 > G_1 > G_2 > \ldots` where `G_i = [G_{i-1}, G_{i-1}]`,
i.e. `G_i` is the derived subgroup of `G_{i-1}`, for
`i\in\mathbb{N}`. When we have `G_k = G_{k-1}` for some
`k\in\mathbb{N}`, the series terminates.
Returns
=======
A list of permutation groups containing the members of the derived
series in the order `G = G_0, G_1, G_2, \ldots`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... AlternatingGroup, DihedralGroup)
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(5)
>>> len(A.derived_series())
1
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(4)
>>> len(S.derived_series())
4
>>> S.derived_series()[1].is_subgroup(AlternatingGroup(4))
True
>>> S.derived_series()[2].is_subgroup(DihedralGroup(2))
True
See Also
========
derived_subgroup
"""
res = [self]
current = self
next = self.derived_subgroup()
while not current.is_subgroup(next):
res.append(next)
current = next
next = next.derived_subgroup()
return res
def derived_subgroup(self):
r"""Compute the derived subgroup.
The derived subgroup, or commutator subgroup is the subgroup generated
by all commutators `[g, h] = hgh^{-1}g^{-1}` for `g, h\in G` ; it is
equal to the normal closure of the set of commutators of the generators
([1], p.28, [11]).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([1, 0, 2, 4, 3])
>>> b = Permutation([0, 1, 3, 2, 4])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> C = G.derived_subgroup()
>>> list(C.generate(af=True))
[[0, 1, 2, 3, 4], [0, 1, 3, 4, 2], [0, 1, 4, 2, 3]]
See Also
========
derived_series
"""
r = self._r
gens = [p._array_form for p in self.generators]
gens_inv = [_af_invert(p) for p in gens]
set_commutators = set()
degree = self._degree
rng = list(range(degree))
for i in range(r):
for j in range(r):
p1 = gens[i]
p2 = gens[j]
c = list(range(degree))
for k in rng:
c[p2[p1[k]]] = p1[p2[k]]
ct = tuple(c)
if not ct in set_commutators:
set_commutators.add(ct)
cms = [_af_new(p) for p in set_commutators]
G2 = self.normal_closure(cms)
return G2
def generate(self, method="coset", af=False):
"""Return iterator to generate the elements of the group
Iteration is done with one of these methods::
method='coset' using the Schreier-Sims coset representation
method='dimino' using the Dimino method
If af = True it yields the array form of the permutations
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.polyhedron import tetrahedron
The permutation group given in the tetrahedron object is also
true groups:
>>> G = tetrahedron.pgroup
>>> G.is_group
True
Also the group generated by the permutations in the tetrahedron
pgroup -- even the first two -- is a proper group:
>>> H = PermutationGroup(G[0], G[1])
>>> J = PermutationGroup(list(H.generate())); J
PermutationGroup([
(0 1)(2 3),
(1 2 3),
(1 3 2),
(0 3 1),
(0 2 3),
(0 3)(1 2),
(0 1 3),
(3)(0 2 1),
(0 3 2),
(3)(0 1 2),
(0 2)(1 3)])
>>> _.is_group
True
"""
if method == "coset":
return self.generate_schreier_sims(af)
elif method == "dimino":
return self.generate_dimino(af)
else:
raise NotImplementedError('No generation defined for %s' % method)
def generate_dimino(self, af=False):
"""Yield group elements using Dimino's algorithm
If af == True it yields the array form of the permutations
References
==========
[1] The Implementation of Various Algorithms for Permutation Groups in
the Computer Algebra System: AXIOM, N.J. Doye, M.Sc. Thesis
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1, 3])
>>> b = Permutation([0, 2, 3, 1])
>>> g = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> list(g.generate_dimino(af=True))
[[0, 1, 2, 3], [0, 2, 1, 3], [0, 2, 3, 1],
[0, 1, 3, 2], [0, 3, 2, 1], [0, 3, 1, 2]]
"""
idn = list(range(self.degree))
order = 0
element_list = [idn]
set_element_list = {tuple(idn)}
if af:
yield idn
else:
yield _af_new(idn)
gens = [p._array_form for p in self.generators]
for i in range(len(gens)):
# D elements of the subgroup G_i generated by gens[:i]
D = element_list[:]
N = [idn]
while N:
A = N
N = []
for a in A:
for g in gens[:i + 1]:
ag = _af_rmul(a, g)
if tuple(ag) not in set_element_list:
# produce G_i*g
for d in D:
order += 1
ap = _af_rmul(d, ag)
if af:
yield ap
else:
p = _af_new(ap)
yield p
element_list.append(ap)
set_element_list.add(tuple(ap))
N.append(ap)
self._order = len(element_list)
def generate_schreier_sims(self, af=False):
"""Yield group elements using the Schreier-Sims representation
in coset_rank order
If ``af = True`` it yields the array form of the permutations
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1, 3])
>>> b = Permutation([0, 2, 3, 1])
>>> g = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> list(g.generate_schreier_sims(af=True))
[[0, 1, 2, 3], [0, 2, 1, 3], [0, 3, 2, 1],
[0, 1, 3, 2], [0, 2, 3, 1], [0, 3, 1, 2]]
"""
n = self._degree
u = self.basic_transversals
basic_orbits = self._basic_orbits
if len(u) == 0:
for x in self.generators:
if af:
yield x._array_form
else:
yield x
return
if len(u) == 1:
for i in basic_orbits[0]:
if af:
yield u[0][i]._array_form
else:
yield u[0][i]
return
u = list(reversed(u))
basic_orbits = basic_orbits[::-1]
# stg stack of group elements
stg = [list(range(n))]
posmax = [len(x) for x in u]
n1 = len(posmax) - 1
pos = [0]*n1
h = 0
while 1:
# backtrack when finished iterating over coset
if pos[h] >= posmax[h]:
if h == 0:
return
pos[h] = 0
h -= 1
stg.pop()
continue
p = _af_rmul(u[h][basic_orbits[h][pos[h]]]._array_form, stg[-1])
pos[h] += 1
stg.append(p)
h += 1
if h == n1:
if af:
for i in basic_orbits[-1]:
p = _af_rmul(u[-1][i]._array_form, stg[-1])
yield p
else:
for i in basic_orbits[-1]:
p = _af_rmul(u[-1][i]._array_form, stg[-1])
p1 = _af_new(p)
yield p1
stg.pop()
h -= 1
@property
def generators(self):
"""Returns the generators of the group.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1])
>>> b = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G.generators
[(1 2), (2)(0 1)]
"""
return self._generators
def contains(self, g, strict=True):
"""Test if permutation ``g`` belong to self, ``G``.
If ``g`` is an element of ``G`` it can be written as a product
of factors drawn from the cosets of ``G``'s stabilizers. To see
if ``g`` is one of the actual generators defining the group use
``G.has(g)``.
If ``strict`` is not ``True``, ``g`` will be resized, if necessary,
to match the size of permutations in ``self``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation(1, 2)
>>> b = Permutation(2, 3, 1)
>>> G = PermutationGroup(a, b, degree=5)
>>> G.contains(G[0]) # trivial check
True
>>> elem = Permutation([[2, 3]], size=5)
>>> G.contains(elem)
True
>>> G.contains(Permutation(4)(0, 1, 2, 3))
False
If strict is False, a permutation will be resized, if
necessary:
>>> H = PermutationGroup(Permutation(5))
>>> H.contains(Permutation(3))
False
>>> H.contains(Permutation(3), strict=False)
True
To test if a given permutation is present in the group:
>>> elem in G.generators
False
>>> G.has(elem)
False
See Also
========
coset_factor, has, in
"""
if not isinstance(g, Permutation):
return False
if g.size != self.degree:
if strict:
return False
g = Permutation(g, size=self.degree)
if g in self.generators:
return True
return bool(self.coset_factor(g.array_form, True))
@property
def is_abelian(self):
"""Test if the group is Abelian.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1])
>>> b = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G.is_abelian
False
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a])
>>> G.is_abelian
True
"""
if self._is_abelian is not None:
return self._is_abelian
self._is_abelian = True
gens = [p._array_form for p in self.generators]
for x in gens:
for y in gens:
if y <= x:
continue
if not _af_commutes_with(x, y):
self._is_abelian = False
return False
return True
def is_alt_sym(self, eps=0.05, _random_prec=None):
r"""Monte Carlo test for the symmetric/alternating group for degrees
>= 8.
More specifically, it is one-sided Monte Carlo with the
answer True (i.e., G is symmetric/alternating) guaranteed to be
correct, and the answer False being incorrect with probability eps.
For degree < 8, the order of the group is checked so the test
is deterministic.
Notes
=====
The algorithm itself uses some nontrivial results from group theory and
number theory:
1) If a transitive group ``G`` of degree ``n`` contains an element
with a cycle of length ``n/2 < p < n-2`` for ``p`` a prime, ``G`` is the
symmetric or alternating group ([1], pp. 81-82)
2) The proportion of elements in the symmetric/alternating group having
the property described in 1) is approximately `\log(2)/\log(n)`
([1], p.82; [2], pp. 226-227).
The helper function ``_check_cycles_alt_sym`` is used to
go over the cycles in a permutation and look for ones satisfying 1).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> D = DihedralGroup(10)
>>> D.is_alt_sym()
False
See Also
========
_check_cycles_alt_sym
"""
if _random_prec is None:
if self._is_sym or self._is_alt:
return True
n = self.degree
if n < 8:
sym_order = 1
for i in range(2, n+1):
sym_order *= i
order = self.order()
if order == sym_order:
self._is_sym = True
return True
elif 2*order == sym_order:
self._is_alt = True
return True
return False
if not self.is_transitive():
return False
if n < 17:
c_n = 0.34
else:
c_n = 0.57
d_n = (c_n*log(2))/log(n)
N_eps = int(-log(eps)/d_n)
for i in range(N_eps):
perm = self.random_pr()
if _check_cycles_alt_sym(perm):
return True
return False
else:
for i in range(_random_prec['N_eps']):
perm = _random_prec[i]
if _check_cycles_alt_sym(perm):
return True
return False
@property
def is_nilpotent(self):
"""Test if the group is nilpotent.
A group `G` is nilpotent if it has a central series of finite length.
Alternatively, `G` is nilpotent if its lower central series terminates
with the trivial group. Every nilpotent group is also solvable
([1], p.29, [12]).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... CyclicGroup)
>>> C = CyclicGroup(6)
>>> C.is_nilpotent
True
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(5)
>>> S.is_nilpotent
False
See Also
========
lower_central_series, is_solvable
"""
if self._is_nilpotent is None:
lcs = self.lower_central_series()
terminator = lcs[len(lcs) - 1]
gens = terminator.generators
degree = self.degree
identity = _af_new(list(range(degree)))
if all(g == identity for g in gens):
self._is_solvable = True
self._is_nilpotent = True
return True
else:
self._is_nilpotent = False
return False
else:
return self._is_nilpotent
def is_normal(self, gr, strict=True):
"""Test if ``G=self`` is a normal subgroup of ``gr``.
G is normal in gr if
for each g2 in G, g1 in gr, ``g = g1*g2*g1**-1`` belongs to G
It is sufficient to check this for each g1 in gr.generators and
g2 in G.generators.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([1, 2, 0])
>>> b = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G1 = PermutationGroup([a, Permutation([2, 0, 1])])
>>> G1.is_normal(G)
True
"""
d_self = self.degree
d_gr = gr.degree
new_self = self.copy()
if not strict and d_self != d_gr:
if d_self < d_gr:
new_self = PermGroup(new_self.generators + [Permutation(d_gr - 1)])
else:
gr = PermGroup(gr.generators + [Permutation(d_self - 1)])
gens2 = [p._array_form for p in new_self.generators]
gens1 = [p._array_form for p in gr.generators]
for g1 in gens1:
for g2 in gens2:
p = _af_rmuln(g1, g2, _af_invert(g1))
if not new_self.coset_factor(p, True):
return False
return True
def is_primitive(self, randomized=True):
r"""Test if a group is primitive.
A permutation group ``G`` acting on a set ``S`` is called primitive if
``S`` contains no nontrivial block under the action of ``G``
(a block is nontrivial if its cardinality is more than ``1``).
Notes
=====
The algorithm is described in [1], p.83, and uses the function
minimal_block to search for blocks of the form `\{0, k\}` for ``k``
ranging over representatives for the orbits of `G_0`, the stabilizer of
``0``. This algorithm has complexity `O(n^2)` where ``n`` is the degree
of the group, and will perform badly if `G_0` is small.
There are two implementations offered: one finds `G_0`
deterministically using the function ``stabilizer``, and the other
(default) produces random elements of `G_0` using ``random_stab``,
hoping that they generate a subgroup of `G_0` with not too many more
orbits than `G_0` (this is suggested in [1], p.83). Behavior is changed
by the ``randomized`` flag.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> D = DihedralGroup(10)
>>> D.is_primitive()
False
See Also
========
minimal_block, random_stab
"""
if self._is_primitive is not None:
return self._is_primitive
n = self.degree
if randomized:
random_stab_gens = []
v = self.schreier_vector(0)
for i in range(len(self)):
random_stab_gens.append(self.random_stab(0, v))
stab = PermutationGroup(random_stab_gens)
else:
stab = self.stabilizer(0)
orbits = stab.orbits()
for orb in orbits:
x = orb.pop()
if x != 0 and any(e != 0 for e in self.minimal_block([0, x])):
self._is_primitive = False
return False
self._is_primitive = True
return True
def minimal_blocks(self, randomized=True):
'''
For a transitive group, return the list of all minimal
block systems. If a group is intransitive, return `False`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> DihedralGroup(6).minimal_blocks()
[[0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1], [0, 1, 2, 0, 1, 2]]
>>> G = PermutationGroup(Permutation(1,2,5))
>>> G.minimal_blocks()
False
See Also
========
minimal_block, is_transitive, is_primitive
'''
def _number_blocks(blocks):
# number the blocks of a block system
# in order and return the number of
# blocks and the tuple with the
# reordering
n = len(blocks)
appeared = {}
m = 0
b = [None]*n
for i in range(n):
if blocks[i] not in appeared:
appeared[blocks[i]] = m
b[i] = m
m += 1
else:
b[i] = appeared[blocks[i]]
return tuple(b), m
if not self.is_transitive():
return False
blocks = []
num_blocks = []
rep_blocks = []
if randomized:
random_stab_gens = []
v = self.schreier_vector(0)
for i in range(len(self)):
random_stab_gens.append(self.random_stab(0, v))
stab = PermutationGroup(random_stab_gens)
else:
stab = self.stabilizer(0)
orbits = stab.orbits()
for orb in orbits:
x = orb.pop()
if x != 0:
block = self.minimal_block([0, x])
num_block, m = _number_blocks(block)
# a representative block (containing 0)
rep = set(j for j in range(self.degree) if num_block[j] == 0)
# check if the system is minimal with
# respect to the already discovere ones
minimal = True
to_remove = []
for i, r in enumerate(rep_blocks):
if len(r) > len(rep) and rep.issubset(r):
# i-th block system is not minimal
del num_blocks[i], blocks[i]
to_remove.append(rep_blocks[i])
elif len(r) < len(rep) and r.issubset(rep):
# the system being checked is not minimal
minimal = False
break
# remove non-minimal representative blocks
rep_blocks = [r for r in rep_blocks if r not in to_remove]
if minimal and num_block not in num_blocks:
blocks.append(block)
num_blocks.append(num_block)
rep_blocks.append(rep)
return blocks
@property
def is_solvable(self):
"""Test if the group is solvable.
``G`` is solvable if its derived series terminates with the trivial
group ([1], p.29).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import SymmetricGroup
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(3)
>>> S.is_solvable
True
See Also
========
is_nilpotent, derived_series
"""
if self._is_solvable is None:
ds = self.derived_series()
terminator = ds[len(ds) - 1]
gens = terminator.generators
degree = self.degree
identity = _af_new(list(range(degree)))
if all(g == identity for g in gens):
self._is_solvable = True
return True
else:
self._is_solvable = False
return False
else:
return self._is_solvable
def is_subgroup(self, G, strict=True):
"""Return ``True`` if all elements of ``self`` belong to ``G``.
If ``strict`` is ``False`` then if ``self``'s degree is smaller
than ``G``'s, the elements will be resized to have the same degree.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation, PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... CyclicGroup)
Testing is strict by default: the degree of each group must be the
same:
>>> p = Permutation(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
>>> G1 = PermutationGroup([Permutation(0, 1, 2), Permutation(0, 1)])
>>> G2 = PermutationGroup([Permutation(0, 2), Permutation(0, 1, 2)])
>>> G3 = PermutationGroup([p, p**2])
>>> assert G1.order() == G2.order() == G3.order() == 6
>>> G1.is_subgroup(G2)
True
>>> G1.is_subgroup(G3)
False
>>> G3.is_subgroup(PermutationGroup(G3[1]))
False
>>> G3.is_subgroup(PermutationGroup(G3[0]))
True
To ignore the size, set ``strict`` to ``False``:
>>> S3 = SymmetricGroup(3)
>>> S5 = SymmetricGroup(5)
>>> S3.is_subgroup(S5, strict=False)
True
>>> C7 = CyclicGroup(7)
>>> G = S5*C7
>>> S5.is_subgroup(G, False)
True
>>> C7.is_subgroup(G, 0)
False
"""
if not isinstance(G, PermutationGroup):
return False
if self == G or self.generators[0]==Permutation():
return True
if G.order() % self.order() != 0:
return False
if self.degree == G.degree or \
(self.degree < G.degree and not strict):
gens = self.generators
else:
return False
return all(G.contains(g, strict=strict) for g in gens)
def is_transitive(self, strict=True):
"""Test if the group is transitive.
A group is transitive if it has a single orbit.
If ``strict`` is ``False`` the group is transitive if it has
a single orbit of length different from 1.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1, 3])
>>> b = Permutation([2, 0, 1, 3])
>>> G1 = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G1.is_transitive()
False
>>> G1.is_transitive(strict=False)
True
>>> c = Permutation([2, 3, 0, 1])
>>> G2 = PermutationGroup([a, c])
>>> G2.is_transitive()
True
>>> d = Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3])
>>> e = Permutation([0, 1, 3, 2])
>>> G3 = PermutationGroup([d, e])
>>> G3.is_transitive() or G3.is_transitive(strict=False)
False
"""
if self._is_transitive: # strict or not, if True then True
return self._is_transitive
if strict:
if self._is_transitive is not None: # we only store strict=True
return self._is_transitive
ans = len(self.orbit(0)) == self.degree
self._is_transitive = ans
return ans
got_orb = False
for x in self.orbits():
if len(x) > 1:
if got_orb:
return False
got_orb = True
return got_orb
@property
def is_trivial(self):
"""Test if the group is the trivial group.
This is true if the group contains only the identity permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> G = PermutationGroup([Permutation([0, 1, 2])])
>>> G.is_trivial
True
"""
if self._is_trivial is None:
self._is_trivial = len(self) == 1 and self[0].is_Identity
return self._is_trivial
def lower_central_series(self):
r"""Return the lower central series for the group.
The lower central series for a group `G` is the series
`G = G_0 > G_1 > G_2 > \ldots` where
`G_k = [G, G_{k-1}]`, i.e. every term after the first is equal to the
commutator of `G` and the previous term in `G1` ([1], p.29).
Returns
=======
A list of permutation groups in the order `G = G_0, G_1, G_2, \ldots`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (AlternatingGroup,
... DihedralGroup)
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(4)
>>> len(A.lower_central_series())
2
>>> A.lower_central_series()[1].is_subgroup(DihedralGroup(2))
True
See Also
========
commutator, derived_series
"""
res = [self]
current = self
next = self.commutator(self, current)
while not current.is_subgroup(next):
res.append(next)
current = next
next = self.commutator(self, current)
return res
@property
def max_div(self):
"""Maximum proper divisor of the degree of a permutation group.
Notes
=====
Obviously, this is the degree divided by its minimal proper divisor
(larger than ``1``, if one exists). As it is guaranteed to be prime,
the ``sieve`` from ``sympy.ntheory`` is used.
This function is also used as an optimization tool for the functions
``minimal_block`` and ``_union_find_merge``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> G = PermutationGroup([Permutation([0, 2, 1, 3])])
>>> G.max_div
2
See Also
========
minimal_block, _union_find_merge
"""
if self._max_div is not None:
return self._max_div
n = self.degree
if n == 1:
return 1
for x in sieve:
if n % x == 0:
d = n//x
self._max_div = d
return d
def minimal_block(self, points):
r"""For a transitive group, finds the block system generated by
``points``.
If a group ``G`` acts on a set ``S``, a nonempty subset ``B`` of ``S``
is called a block under the action of ``G`` if for all ``g`` in ``G``
we have ``gB = B`` (``g`` fixes ``B``) or ``gB`` and ``B`` have no
common points (``g`` moves ``B`` entirely). ([1], p.23; [6]).
The distinct translates ``gB`` of a block ``B`` for ``g`` in ``G``
partition the set ``S`` and this set of translates is known as a block
system. Moreover, we obviously have that all blocks in the partition
have the same size, hence the block size divides ``|S|`` ([1], p.23).
A ``G``-congruence is an equivalence relation ``~`` on the set ``S``
such that ``a ~ b`` implies ``g(a) ~ g(b)`` for all ``g`` in ``G``.
For a transitive group, the equivalence classes of a ``G``-congruence
and the blocks of a block system are the same thing ([1], p.23).
The algorithm below checks the group for transitivity, and then finds
the ``G``-congruence generated by the pairs ``(p_0, p_1), (p_0, p_2),
..., (p_0,p_{k-1})`` which is the same as finding the maximal block
system (i.e., the one with minimum block size) such that
``p_0, ..., p_{k-1}`` are in the same block ([1], p.83).
It is an implementation of Atkinson's algorithm, as suggested in [1],
and manipulates an equivalence relation on the set ``S`` using a
union-find data structure. The running time is just above
`O(|points||S|)`. ([1], pp. 83-87; [7]).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> D = DihedralGroup(10)
>>> D.minimal_block([0, 5])
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
>>> D.minimal_block([0, 1])
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]
See Also
========
_union_find_rep, _union_find_merge, is_transitive, is_primitive
"""
if not self.is_transitive():
return False
n = self.degree
gens = self.generators
# initialize the list of equivalence class representatives
parents = list(range(n))
ranks = [1]*n
not_rep = []
k = len(points)
# the block size must divide the degree of the group
if k > self.max_div:
return [0]*n
for i in range(k - 1):
parents[points[i + 1]] = points[0]
not_rep.append(points[i + 1])
ranks[points[0]] = k
i = 0
len_not_rep = k - 1
while i < len_not_rep:
gamma = not_rep[i]
i += 1
for gen in gens:
# find has side effects: performs path compression on the list
# of representatives
delta = self._union_find_rep(gamma, parents)
# union has side effects: performs union by rank on the list
# of representatives
temp = self._union_find_merge(gen(gamma), gen(delta), ranks,
parents, not_rep)
if temp == -1:
return [0]*n
len_not_rep += temp
for i in range(n):
# force path compression to get the final state of the equivalence
# relation
self._union_find_rep(i, parents)
# rewrite result so that block representatives are minimal
new_reps = {}
return [new_reps.setdefault(r, i) for i, r in enumerate(parents)]
def normal_closure(self, other, k=10):
r"""Return the normal closure of a subgroup/set of permutations.
If ``S`` is a subset of a group ``G``, the normal closure of ``A`` in ``G``
is defined as the intersection of all normal subgroups of ``G`` that
contain ``A`` ([1], p.14). Alternatively, it is the group generated by
the conjugates ``x^{-1}yx`` for ``x`` a generator of ``G`` and ``y`` a
generator of the subgroup ``\left\langle S\right\rangle`` generated by
``S`` (for some chosen generating set for ``\left\langle S\right\rangle``)
([1], p.73).
Parameters
==========
other
a subgroup/list of permutations/single permutation
k
an implementation-specific parameter that determines the number
of conjugates that are adjoined to ``other`` at once
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... CyclicGroup, AlternatingGroup)
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(5)
>>> C = CyclicGroup(5)
>>> G = S.normal_closure(C)
>>> G.order()
60
>>> G.is_subgroup(AlternatingGroup(5))
True
See Also
========
commutator, derived_subgroup, random_pr
Notes
=====
The algorithm is described in [1], pp. 73-74; it makes use of the
generation of random elements for permutation groups by the product
replacement algorithm.
"""
if hasattr(other, 'generators'):
degree = self.degree
identity = _af_new(list(range(degree)))
if all(g == identity for g in other.generators):
return other
Z = PermutationGroup(other.generators[:])
base, strong_gens = Z.schreier_sims_incremental()
strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(base, strong_gens)
basic_orbits, basic_transversals = \
_orbits_transversals_from_bsgs(base, strong_gens_distr)
self._random_pr_init(r=10, n=20)
_loop = True
while _loop:
Z._random_pr_init(r=10, n=10)
for i in range(k):
g = self.random_pr()
h = Z.random_pr()
conj = h^g
res = _strip(conj, base, basic_orbits, basic_transversals)
if res[0] != identity or res[1] != len(base) + 1:
gens = Z.generators
gens.append(conj)
Z = PermutationGroup(gens)
strong_gens.append(conj)
temp_base, temp_strong_gens = \
Z.schreier_sims_incremental(base, strong_gens)
base, strong_gens = temp_base, temp_strong_gens
strong_gens_distr = \
_distribute_gens_by_base(base, strong_gens)
basic_orbits, basic_transversals = \
_orbits_transversals_from_bsgs(base,
strong_gens_distr)
_loop = False
for g in self.generators:
for h in Z.generators:
conj = h^g
res = _strip(conj, base, basic_orbits,
basic_transversals)
if res[0] != identity or res[1] != len(base) + 1:
_loop = True
break
if _loop:
break
return Z
elif hasattr(other, '__getitem__'):
return self.normal_closure(PermutationGroup(other))
elif hasattr(other, 'array_form'):
return self.normal_closure(PermutationGroup([other]))
def orbit(self, alpha, action='tuples'):
r"""Compute the orbit of alpha `\{g(\alpha) | g \in G\}` as a set.
The time complexity of the algorithm used here is `O(|Orb|*r)` where
`|Orb|` is the size of the orbit and ``r`` is the number of generators of
the group. For a more detailed analysis, see [1], p.78, [2], pp. 19-21.
Here alpha can be a single point, or a list of points.
If alpha is a single point, the ordinary orbit is computed.
if alpha is a list of points, there are three available options:
'union' - computes the union of the orbits of the points in the list
'tuples' - computes the orbit of the list interpreted as an ordered
tuple under the group action ( i.e., g((1,2,3)) = (g(1), g(2), g(3)) )
'sets' - computes the orbit of the list interpreted as a sets
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([1, 2, 0, 4, 5, 6, 3])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a])
>>> G.orbit(0)
{0, 1, 2}
>>> G.orbit([0, 4], 'union')
{0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}
See Also
========
orbit_transversal
"""
return _orbit(self.degree, self.generators, alpha, action)
def orbit_rep(self, alpha, beta, schreier_vector=None):
"""Return a group element which sends ``alpha`` to ``beta``.
If ``beta`` is not in the orbit of ``alpha``, the function returns
``False``. This implementation makes use of the schreier vector.
For a proof of correctness, see [1], p.80
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import AlternatingGroup
>>> G = AlternatingGroup(5)
>>> G.orbit_rep(0, 4)
(0 4 1 2 3)
See Also
========
schreier_vector
"""
if schreier_vector is None:
schreier_vector = self.schreier_vector(alpha)
if schreier_vector[beta] is None:
return False
k = schreier_vector[beta]
gens = [x._array_form for x in self.generators]
a = []
while k != -1:
a.append(gens[k])
beta = gens[k].index(beta) # beta = (~gens[k])(beta)
k = schreier_vector[beta]
if a:
return _af_new(_af_rmuln(*a))
else:
return _af_new(list(range(self._degree)))
def orbit_transversal(self, alpha, pairs=False):
r"""Computes a transversal for the orbit of ``alpha`` as a set.
For a permutation group `G`, a transversal for the orbit
`Orb = \{g(\alpha) | g \in G\}` is a set
`\{g_\beta | g_\beta(\alpha) = \beta\}` for `\beta \in Orb`.
Note that there may be more than one possible transversal.
If ``pairs`` is set to ``True``, it returns the list of pairs
`(\beta, g_\beta)`. For a proof of correctness, see [1], p.79
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> G = DihedralGroup(6)
>>> G.orbit_transversal(0)
[(5), (0 1 2 3 4 5), (0 5)(1 4)(2 3), (0 2 4)(1 3 5), (5)(0 4)(1 3), (0 3)(1 4)(2 5)]
See Also
========
orbit
"""
return _orbit_transversal(self._degree, self.generators, alpha, pairs)
def orbits(self, rep=False):
"""Return the orbits of ``self``, ordered according to lowest element
in each orbit.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation(1, 5)(2, 3)(4, 0, 6)
>>> b = Permutation(1, 5)(3, 4)(2, 6, 0)
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G.orbits()
[{0, 2, 3, 4, 6}, {1, 5}]
"""
return _orbits(self._degree, self._generators)
def order(self):
"""Return the order of the group: the number of permutations that
can be generated from elements of the group.
The number of permutations comprising the group is given by
``len(group)``; the length of each permutation in the group is
given by ``group.size``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a])
>>> G.degree
3
>>> len(G)
1
>>> G.order()
2
>>> list(G.generate())
[(2), (2)(0 1)]
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1])
>>> b = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G.order()
6
See Also
========
degree
"""
if self._order != None:
return self._order
if self._is_sym:
n = self._degree
self._order = factorial(n)
return self._order
if self._is_alt:
n = self._degree
self._order = factorial(n)/2
return self._order
basic_transversals = self.basic_transversals
m = 1
for x in basic_transversals:
m *= len(x)
self._order = m
return m
def pointwise_stabilizer(self, points, incremental=True):
r"""Return the pointwise stabilizer for a set of points.
For a permutation group `G` and a set of points
`\{p_1, p_2,\ldots, p_k\}`, the pointwise stabilizer of
`p_1, p_2, \ldots, p_k` is defined as
`G_{p_1,\ldots, p_k} =
\{g\in G | g(p_i) = p_i \forall i\in\{1, 2,\ldots,k\}\}` ([1],p20).
It is a subgroup of `G`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import SymmetricGroup
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(7)
>>> Stab = S.pointwise_stabilizer([2, 3, 5])
>>> Stab.is_subgroup(S.stabilizer(2).stabilizer(3).stabilizer(5))
True
See Also
========
stabilizer, schreier_sims_incremental
Notes
=====
When incremental == True,
rather than the obvious implementation using successive calls to
``.stabilizer()``, this uses the incremental Schreier-Sims algorithm
to obtain a base with starting segment - the given points.
"""
if incremental:
base, strong_gens = self.schreier_sims_incremental(base=points)
stab_gens = []
degree = self.degree
for gen in strong_gens:
if [gen(point) for point in points] == points:
stab_gens.append(gen)
if not stab_gens:
stab_gens = _af_new(list(range(degree)))
return PermutationGroup(stab_gens)
else:
gens = self._generators
degree = self.degree
for x in points:
gens = _stabilizer(degree, gens, x)
return PermutationGroup(gens)
def make_perm(self, n, seed=None):
"""
Multiply ``n`` randomly selected permutations from
pgroup together, starting with the identity
permutation. If ``n`` is a list of integers, those
integers will be used to select the permutations and they
will be applied in L to R order: make_perm((A, B, C)) will
give CBA(I) where I is the identity permutation.
``seed`` is used to set the seed for the random selection
of permutations from pgroup. If this is a list of integers,
the corresponding permutations from pgroup will be selected
in the order give. This is mainly used for testing purposes.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a, b = [Permutation([1, 0, 3, 2]), Permutation([1, 3, 0, 2])]
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G.make_perm(1, [0])
(0 1)(2 3)
>>> G.make_perm(3, [0, 1, 0])
(0 2 3 1)
>>> G.make_perm([0, 1, 0])
(0 2 3 1)
See Also
========
random
"""
if is_sequence(n):
if seed is not None:
raise ValueError('If n is a sequence, seed should be None')
n, seed = len(n), n
else:
try:
n = int(n)
except TypeError:
raise ValueError('n must be an integer or a sequence.')
randrange = _randrange(seed)
# start with the identity permutation
result = Permutation(list(range(self.degree)))
m = len(self)
for i in range(n):
p = self[randrange(m)]
result = rmul(result, p)
return result
def random(self, af=False):
"""Return a random group element
"""
rank = randrange(self.order())
return self.coset_unrank(rank, af)
def random_pr(self, gen_count=11, iterations=50, _random_prec=None):
"""Return a random group element using product replacement.
For the details of the product replacement algorithm, see
``_random_pr_init`` In ``random_pr`` the actual 'product replacement'
is performed. Notice that if the attribute ``_random_gens``
is empty, it needs to be initialized by ``_random_pr_init``.
See Also
========
_random_pr_init
"""
if self._random_gens == []:
self._random_pr_init(gen_count, iterations)
random_gens = self._random_gens
r = len(random_gens) - 1
# handle randomized input for testing purposes
if _random_prec is None:
s = randrange(r)
t = randrange(r - 1)
if t == s:
t = r - 1
x = choice([1, 2])
e = choice([-1, 1])
else:
s = _random_prec['s']
t = _random_prec['t']
if t == s:
t = r - 1
x = _random_prec['x']
e = _random_prec['e']
if x == 1:
random_gens[s] = _af_rmul(random_gens[s], _af_pow(random_gens[t], e))
random_gens[r] = _af_rmul(random_gens[r], random_gens[s])
else:
random_gens[s] = _af_rmul(_af_pow(random_gens[t], e), random_gens[s])
random_gens[r] = _af_rmul(random_gens[s], random_gens[r])
return _af_new(random_gens[r])
def random_stab(self, alpha, schreier_vector=None, _random_prec=None):
"""Random element from the stabilizer of ``alpha``.
The schreier vector for ``alpha`` is an optional argument used
for speeding up repeated calls. The algorithm is described in [1], p.81
See Also
========
random_pr, orbit_rep
"""
if schreier_vector is None:
schreier_vector = self.schreier_vector(alpha)
if _random_prec is None:
rand = self.random_pr()
else:
rand = _random_prec['rand']
beta = rand(alpha)
h = self.orbit_rep(alpha, beta, schreier_vector)
return rmul(~h, rand)
def schreier_sims(self):
"""Schreier-Sims algorithm.
It computes the generators of the chain of stabilizers
`G > G_{b_1} > .. > G_{b1,..,b_r} > 1`
in which `G_{b_1,..,b_i}` stabilizes `b_1,..,b_i`,
and the corresponding ``s`` cosets.
An element of the group can be written as the product
`h_1*..*h_s`.
We use the incremental Schreier-Sims algorithm.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1])
>>> b = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G.schreier_sims()
>>> G.basic_transversals
[{0: (2)(0 1), 1: (2), 2: (1 2)},
{0: (2), 2: (0 2)}]
"""
if self._transversals:
return
self._schreier_sims()
return
def _schreier_sims(self, base=None):
schreier = self.schreier_sims_incremental(base=base, slp_dict=True)
base, strong_gens = schreier[:2]
self._base = base
self._strong_gens = strong_gens
self._strong_gens_slp = schreier[2]
if not base:
self._transversals = []
self._basic_orbits = []
return
strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(base, strong_gens)
basic_orbits, transversals, slps = _orbits_transversals_from_bsgs(base,\
strong_gens_distr, slp=True)
# rewrite the indices stored in slps in terms of strong_gens
for i, slp in enumerate(slps):
gens = strong_gens_distr[i]
for k in slp:
slp[k] = [strong_gens.index(gens[s]) for s in slp[k]]
self._transversals = transversals
self._basic_orbits = [sorted(x) for x in basic_orbits]
self._transversal_slp = slps
def schreier_sims_incremental(self, base=None, gens=None, slp_dict=False):
"""Extend a sequence of points and generating set to a base and strong
generating set.
Parameters
==========
base
The sequence of points to be extended to a base. Optional
parameter with default value ``[]``.
gens
The generating set to be extended to a strong generating set
relative to the base obtained. Optional parameter with default
value ``self.generators``.
slp_dict
If `True`, return a dictionary `{g: gens}` for each strong
generator `g` where `gens` is a list of strong generators
coming before `g` in `strong_gens`, such that the product
of the elements of `gens` is equal to `g`.
Returns
=======
(base, strong_gens)
``base`` is the base obtained, and ``strong_gens`` is the strong
generating set relative to it. The original parameters ``base``,
``gens`` remain unchanged.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import AlternatingGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _verify_bsgs
>>> A = AlternatingGroup(7)
>>> base = [2, 3]
>>> seq = [2, 3]
>>> base, strong_gens = A.schreier_sims_incremental(base=seq)
>>> _verify_bsgs(A, base, strong_gens)
True
>>> base[:2]
[2, 3]
Notes
=====
This version of the Schreier-Sims algorithm runs in polynomial time.
There are certain assumptions in the implementation - if the trivial
group is provided, ``base`` and ``gens`` are returned immediately,
as any sequence of points is a base for the trivial group. If the
identity is present in the generators ``gens``, it is removed as
it is a redundant generator.
The implementation is described in [1], pp. 90-93.
See Also
========
schreier_sims, schreier_sims_random
"""
if base is None:
base = []
if gens is None:
gens = self.generators[:]
degree = self.degree
id_af = list(range(degree))
# handle the trivial group
if len(gens) == 1 and gens[0].is_Identity:
if slp_dict:
return base, gens, {gens[0]: [gens[0]]}
return base, gens
# prevent side effects
_base, _gens = base[:], gens[:]
# remove the identity as a generator
_gens = [x for x in _gens if not x.is_Identity]
# make sure no generator fixes all base points
for gen in _gens:
if all(x == gen._array_form[x] for x in _base):
for new in id_af:
if gen._array_form[new] != new:
break
else:
assert None # can this ever happen?
_base.append(new)
# distribute generators according to basic stabilizers
strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(_base, _gens)
strong_gens_slp = []
# initialize the basic stabilizers, basic orbits and basic transversals
orbs = {}
transversals = {}
slps = {}
base_len = len(_base)
for i in range(base_len):
transversals[i], slps[i] = _orbit_transversal(degree, strong_gens_distr[i],
_base[i], pairs=True, af=True, slp=True)
transversals[i] = dict(transversals[i])
orbs[i] = list(transversals[i].keys())
# main loop: amend the stabilizer chain until we have generators
# for all stabilizers
i = base_len - 1
while i >= 0:
# this flag is used to continue with the main loop from inside
# a nested loop
continue_i = False
# test the generators for being a strong generating set
db = {}
for beta, u_beta in list(transversals[i].items()):
for j, gen in enumerate(strong_gens_distr[i]):
gb = gen._array_form[beta]
u1 = transversals[i][gb]
g1 = _af_rmul(gen._array_form, u_beta)
slp = [(i, g) for g in slps[i][beta]]
slp = [(i, j)] + slp
if g1 != u1:
# test if the schreier generator is in the i+1-th
# would-be basic stabilizer
y = True
try:
u1_inv = db[gb]
except KeyError:
u1_inv = db[gb] = _af_invert(u1)
schreier_gen = _af_rmul(u1_inv, g1)
u1_inv_slp = slps[i][gb][:]
u1_inv_slp.reverse()
u1_inv_slp = [(i, (g,)) for g in u1_inv_slp]
slp = u1_inv_slp + slp
h, j, slp = _strip_af(schreier_gen, _base, orbs, transversals, i, slp=slp, slps=slps)
if j <= base_len:
# new strong generator h at level j
y = False
elif h:
# h fixes all base points
y = False
moved = 0
while h[moved] == moved:
moved += 1
_base.append(moved)
base_len += 1
strong_gens_distr.append([])
if y is False:
# if a new strong generator is found, update the
# data structures and start over
h = _af_new(h)
strong_gens_slp.append((h, slp))
for l in range(i + 1, j):
strong_gens_distr[l].append(h)
transversals[l], slps[l] =\
_orbit_transversal(degree, strong_gens_distr[l],
_base[l], pairs=True, af=True, slp=True)
transversals[l] = dict(transversals[l])
orbs[l] = list(transversals[l].keys())
i = j - 1
# continue main loop using the flag
continue_i = True
if continue_i is True:
break
if continue_i is True:
break
if continue_i is True:
continue
i -= 1
strong_gens = _gens[:]
if slp_dict:
# create the list of the strong generators strong_gens and
# rewrite the indices of strong_gens_slp in terms of the
# elements of strong_gens
for k, slp in strong_gens_slp:
strong_gens.append(k)
for i in range(len(slp)):
s = slp[i]
if isinstance(s[1], tuple):
slp[i] = strong_gens_distr[s[0]][s[1][0]]**-1
else:
slp[i] = strong_gens_distr[s[0]][s[1]]
strong_gens_slp = dict(strong_gens_slp)
# add the original generators
for g in _gens:
strong_gens_slp[g] = [g]
return (_base, strong_gens, strong_gens_slp)
strong_gens.extend([k for k, _ in strong_gens_slp])
return _base, strong_gens
def schreier_sims_random(self, base=None, gens=None, consec_succ=10,
_random_prec=None):
r"""Randomized Schreier-Sims algorithm.
The randomized Schreier-Sims algorithm takes the sequence ``base``
and the generating set ``gens``, and extends ``base`` to a base, and
``gens`` to a strong generating set relative to that base with
probability of a wrong answer at most `2^{-consec\_succ}`,
provided the random generators are sufficiently random.
Parameters
==========
base
The sequence to be extended to a base.
gens
The generating set to be extended to a strong generating set.
consec_succ
The parameter defining the probability of a wrong answer.
_random_prec
An internal parameter used for testing purposes.
Returns
=======
(base, strong_gens)
``base`` is the base and ``strong_gens`` is the strong generating
set relative to it.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _verify_bsgs
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import SymmetricGroup
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(5)
>>> base, strong_gens = S.schreier_sims_random(consec_succ=5)
>>> _verify_bsgs(S, base, strong_gens) #doctest: +SKIP
True
Notes
=====
The algorithm is described in detail in [1], pp. 97-98. It extends
the orbits ``orbs`` and the permutation groups ``stabs`` to
basic orbits and basic stabilizers for the base and strong generating
set produced in the end.
The idea of the extension process
is to "sift" random group elements through the stabilizer chain
and amend the stabilizers/orbits along the way when a sift
is not successful.
The helper function ``_strip`` is used to attempt
to decompose a random group element according to the current
state of the stabilizer chain and report whether the element was
fully decomposed (successful sift) or not (unsuccessful sift). In
the latter case, the level at which the sift failed is reported and
used to amend ``stabs``, ``base``, ``gens`` and ``orbs`` accordingly.
The halting condition is for ``consec_succ`` consecutive successful
sifts to pass. This makes sure that the current ``base`` and ``gens``
form a BSGS with probability at least `1 - 1/\text{consec\_succ}`.
See Also
========
schreier_sims
"""
if base is None:
base = []
if gens is None:
gens = self.generators
base_len = len(base)
n = self.degree
# make sure no generator fixes all base points
for gen in gens:
if all(gen(x) == x for x in base):
new = 0
while gen._array_form[new] == new:
new += 1
base.append(new)
base_len += 1
# distribute generators according to basic stabilizers
strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(base, gens)
# initialize the basic stabilizers, basic transversals and basic orbits
transversals = {}
orbs = {}
for i in range(base_len):
transversals[i] = dict(_orbit_transversal(n, strong_gens_distr[i],
base[i], pairs=True))
orbs[i] = list(transversals[i].keys())
# initialize the number of consecutive elements sifted
c = 0
# start sifting random elements while the number of consecutive sifts
# is less than consec_succ
while c < consec_succ:
if _random_prec is None:
g = self.random_pr()
else:
g = _random_prec['g'].pop()
h, j = _strip(g, base, orbs, transversals)
y = True
# determine whether a new base point is needed
if j <= base_len:
y = False
elif not h.is_Identity:
y = False
moved = 0
while h(moved) == moved:
moved += 1
base.append(moved)
base_len += 1
strong_gens_distr.append([])
# if the element doesn't sift, amend the strong generators and
# associated stabilizers and orbits
if y is False:
for l in range(1, j):
strong_gens_distr[l].append(h)
transversals[l] = dict(_orbit_transversal(n,
strong_gens_distr[l], base[l], pairs=True))
orbs[l] = list(transversals[l].keys())
c = 0
else:
c += 1
# build the strong generating set
strong_gens = strong_gens_distr[0][:]
for gen in strong_gens_distr[1]:
if gen not in strong_gens:
strong_gens.append(gen)
return base, strong_gens
def schreier_vector(self, alpha):
"""Computes the schreier vector for ``alpha``.
The Schreier vector efficiently stores information
about the orbit of ``alpha``. It can later be used to quickly obtain
elements of the group that send ``alpha`` to a particular element
in the orbit. Notice that the Schreier vector depends on the order
in which the group generators are listed. For a definition, see [3].
Since list indices start from zero, we adopt the convention to use
"None" instead of 0 to signify that an element doesn't belong
to the orbit.
For the algorithm and its correctness, see [2], pp.78-80.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> a = Permutation([2, 4, 6, 3, 1, 5, 0])
>>> b = Permutation([0, 1, 3, 5, 4, 6, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G.schreier_vector(0)
[-1, None, 0, 1, None, 1, 0]
See Also
========
orbit
"""
n = self.degree
v = [None]*n
v[alpha] = -1
orb = [alpha]
used = [False]*n
used[alpha] = True
gens = self.generators
r = len(gens)
for b in orb:
for i in range(r):
temp = gens[i]._array_form[b]
if used[temp] is False:
orb.append(temp)
used[temp] = True
v[temp] = i
return v
def stabilizer(self, alpha):
r"""Return the stabilizer subgroup of ``alpha``.
The stabilizer of `\alpha` is the group `G_\alpha =
\{g \in G | g(\alpha) = \alpha\}`.
For a proof of correctness, see [1], p.79.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> G = DihedralGroup(6)
>>> G.stabilizer(5)
PermutationGroup([
(5)(0 4)(1 3)])
See Also
========
orbit
"""
return PermGroup(_stabilizer(self._degree, self._generators, alpha))
@property
def strong_gens(self):
r"""Return a strong generating set from the Schreier-Sims algorithm.
A generating set `S = \{g_1, g_2, ..., g_t\}` for a permutation group
`G` is a strong generating set relative to the sequence of points
(referred to as a "base") `(b_1, b_2, ..., b_k)` if, for
`1 \leq i \leq k` we have that the intersection of the pointwise
stabilizer `G^{(i+1)} := G_{b_1, b_2, ..., b_i}` with `S` generates
the pointwise stabilizer `G^{(i+1)}`. The concepts of a base and
strong generating set and their applications are discussed in depth
in [1], pp. 87-89 and [2], pp. 55-57.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> D = DihedralGroup(4)
>>> D.strong_gens
[(0 1 2 3), (0 3)(1 2), (1 3)]
>>> D.base
[0, 1]
See Also
========
base, basic_transversals, basic_orbits, basic_stabilizers
"""
if self._strong_gens == []:
self.schreier_sims()
return self._strong_gens
def subgroup(self, gens):
"""
Return the subgroup generated by `gens` which is a list of
elements of the group
"""
if not all([g in self for g in gens]):
raise ValueError("The group doesn't contain the supplied generators")
G = PermutationGroup(gens)
return G
def subgroup_search(self, prop, base=None, strong_gens=None, tests=None,
init_subgroup=None):
"""Find the subgroup of all elements satisfying the property ``prop``.
This is done by a depth-first search with respect to base images that
uses several tests to prune the search tree.
Parameters
==========
prop
The property to be used. Has to be callable on group elements
and always return ``True`` or ``False``. It is assumed that
all group elements satisfying ``prop`` indeed form a subgroup.
base
A base for the supergroup.
strong_gens
A strong generating set for the supergroup.
tests
A list of callables of length equal to the length of ``base``.
These are used to rule out group elements by partial base images,
so that ``tests[l](g)`` returns False if the element ``g`` is known
not to satisfy prop base on where g sends the first ``l + 1`` base
points.
init_subgroup
if a subgroup of the sought group is
known in advance, it can be passed to the function as this
parameter.
Returns
=======
res
The subgroup of all elements satisfying ``prop``. The generating
set for this group is guaranteed to be a strong generating set
relative to the base ``base``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import (SymmetricGroup,
... AlternatingGroup)
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.testutil import _verify_bsgs
>>> S = SymmetricGroup(7)
>>> prop_even = lambda x: x.is_even
>>> base, strong_gens = S.schreier_sims_incremental()
>>> G = S.subgroup_search(prop_even, base=base, strong_gens=strong_gens)
>>> G.is_subgroup(AlternatingGroup(7))
True
>>> _verify_bsgs(G, base, G.generators)
True
Notes
=====
This function is extremely lengthy and complicated and will require
some careful attention. The implementation is described in
[1], pp. 114-117, and the comments for the code here follow the lines
of the pseudocode in the book for clarity.
The complexity is exponential in general, since the search process by
itself visits all members of the supergroup. However, there are a lot
of tests which are used to prune the search tree, and users can define
their own tests via the ``tests`` parameter, so in practice, and for
some computations, it's not terrible.
A crucial part in the procedure is the frequent base change performed
(this is line 11 in the pseudocode) in order to obtain a new basic
stabilizer. The book mentiones that this can be done by using
``.baseswap(...)``, however the current implementation uses a more
straightforward way to find the next basic stabilizer - calling the
function ``.stabilizer(...)`` on the previous basic stabilizer.
"""
# initialize BSGS and basic group properties
def get_reps(orbits):
# get the minimal element in the base ordering
return [min(orbit, key = lambda x: base_ordering[x]) \
for orbit in orbits]
def update_nu(l):
temp_index = len(basic_orbits[l]) + 1 -\
len(res_basic_orbits_init_base[l])
# this corresponds to the element larger than all points
if temp_index >= len(sorted_orbits[l]):
nu[l] = base_ordering[degree]
else:
nu[l] = sorted_orbits[l][temp_index]
if base is None:
base, strong_gens = self.schreier_sims_incremental()
base_len = len(base)
degree = self.degree
identity = _af_new(list(range(degree)))
base_ordering = _base_ordering(base, degree)
# add an element larger than all points
base_ordering.append(degree)
# add an element smaller than all points
base_ordering.append(-1)
# compute BSGS-related structures
strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(base, strong_gens)
basic_orbits, transversals = _orbits_transversals_from_bsgs(base,
strong_gens_distr)
# handle subgroup initialization and tests
if init_subgroup is None:
init_subgroup = PermutationGroup([identity])
if tests is None:
trivial_test = lambda x: True
tests = []
for i in range(base_len):
tests.append(trivial_test)
# line 1: more initializations.
res = init_subgroup
f = base_len - 1
l = base_len - 1
# line 2: set the base for K to the base for G
res_base = base[:]
# line 3: compute BSGS and related structures for K
res_base, res_strong_gens = res.schreier_sims_incremental(
base=res_base)
res_strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(res_base,
res_strong_gens)
res_generators = res.generators
res_basic_orbits_init_base = \
[_orbit(degree, res_strong_gens_distr[i], res_base[i])\
for i in range(base_len)]
# initialize orbit representatives
orbit_reps = [None]*base_len
# line 4: orbit representatives for f-th basic stabilizer of K
orbits = _orbits(degree, res_strong_gens_distr[f])
orbit_reps[f] = get_reps(orbits)
# line 5: remove the base point from the representatives to avoid
# getting the identity element as a generator for K
orbit_reps[f].remove(base[f])
# line 6: more initializations
c = [0]*base_len
u = [identity]*base_len
sorted_orbits = [None]*base_len
for i in range(base_len):
sorted_orbits[i] = basic_orbits[i][:]
sorted_orbits[i].sort(key=lambda point: base_ordering[point])
# line 7: initializations
mu = [None]*base_len
nu = [None]*base_len
# this corresponds to the element smaller than all points
mu[l] = degree + 1
update_nu(l)
# initialize computed words
computed_words = [identity]*base_len
# line 8: main loop
while True:
# apply all the tests
while l < base_len - 1 and \
computed_words[l](base[l]) in orbit_reps[l] and \
base_ordering[mu[l]] < \
base_ordering[computed_words[l](base[l])] < \
base_ordering[nu[l]] and \
tests[l](computed_words):
# line 11: change the (partial) base of K
new_point = computed_words[l](base[l])
res_base[l] = new_point
new_stab_gens = _stabilizer(degree, res_strong_gens_distr[l],
new_point)
res_strong_gens_distr[l + 1] = new_stab_gens
# line 12: calculate minimal orbit representatives for the
# l+1-th basic stabilizer
orbits = _orbits(degree, new_stab_gens)
orbit_reps[l + 1] = get_reps(orbits)
# line 13: amend sorted orbits
l += 1
temp_orbit = [computed_words[l - 1](point) for point
in basic_orbits[l]]
temp_orbit.sort(key=lambda point: base_ordering[point])
sorted_orbits[l] = temp_orbit
# lines 14 and 15: update variables used minimality tests
new_mu = degree + 1
for i in range(l):
if base[l] in res_basic_orbits_init_base[i]:
candidate = computed_words[i](base[i])
if base_ordering[candidate] > base_ordering[new_mu]:
new_mu = candidate
mu[l] = new_mu
update_nu(l)
# line 16: determine the new transversal element
c[l] = 0
temp_point = sorted_orbits[l][c[l]]
gamma = computed_words[l - 1]._array_form.index(temp_point)
u[l] = transversals[l][gamma]
# update computed words
computed_words[l] = rmul(computed_words[l - 1], u[l])
# lines 17 & 18: apply the tests to the group element found
g = computed_words[l]
temp_point = g(base[l])
if l == base_len - 1 and \
base_ordering[mu[l]] < \
base_ordering[temp_point] < base_ordering[nu[l]] and \
temp_point in orbit_reps[l] and \
tests[l](computed_words) and \
prop(g):
# line 19: reset the base of K
res_generators.append(g)
res_base = base[:]
# line 20: recalculate basic orbits (and transversals)
res_strong_gens.append(g)
res_strong_gens_distr = _distribute_gens_by_base(res_base,
res_strong_gens)
res_basic_orbits_init_base = \
[_orbit(degree, res_strong_gens_distr[i], res_base[i]) \
for i in range(base_len)]
# line 21: recalculate orbit representatives
# line 22: reset the search depth
orbit_reps[f] = get_reps(orbits)
l = f
# line 23: go up the tree until in the first branch not fully
# searched
while l >= 0 and c[l] == len(basic_orbits[l]) - 1:
l = l - 1
# line 24: if the entire tree is traversed, return K
if l == -1:
return PermutationGroup(res_generators)
# lines 25-27: update orbit representatives
if l < f:
# line 26
f = l
c[l] = 0
# line 27
temp_orbits = _orbits(degree, res_strong_gens_distr[f])
orbit_reps[f] = get_reps(temp_orbits)
# line 28: update variables used for minimality testing
mu[l] = degree + 1
temp_index = len(basic_orbits[l]) + 1 - \
len(res_basic_orbits_init_base[l])
if temp_index >= len(sorted_orbits[l]):
nu[l] = base_ordering[degree]
else:
nu[l] = sorted_orbits[l][temp_index]
# line 29: set the next element from the current branch and update
# accordingly
c[l] += 1
if l == 0:
gamma = sorted_orbits[l][c[l]]
else:
gamma = computed_words[l - 1]._array_form.index(sorted_orbits[l][c[l]])
u[l] = transversals[l][gamma]
if l == 0:
computed_words[l] = u[l]
else:
computed_words[l] = rmul(computed_words[l - 1], u[l])
@property
def transitivity_degree(self):
r"""Compute the degree of transitivity of the group.
A permutation group `G` acting on `\Omega = \{0, 1, ..., n-1\}` is
``k``-fold transitive, if, for any k points
`(a_1, a_2, ..., a_k)\in\Omega` and any k points
`(b_1, b_2, ..., b_k)\in\Omega` there exists `g\in G` such that
`g(a_1)=b_1, g(a_2)=b_2, ..., g(a_k)=b_k`
The degree of transitivity of `G` is the maximum ``k`` such that
`G` is ``k``-fold transitive. ([8])
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> a = Permutation([1, 2, 0])
>>> b = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a, b])
>>> G.transitivity_degree
3
See Also
========
is_transitive, orbit
"""
if self._transitivity_degree is None:
n = self.degree
G = self
# if G is k-transitive, a tuple (a_0,..,a_k)
# can be brought to (b_0,...,b_(k-1), b_k)
# where b_0,...,b_(k-1) are fixed points;
# consider the group G_k which stabilizes b_0,...,b_(k-1)
# if G_k is transitive on the subset excluding b_0,...,b_(k-1)
# then G is (k+1)-transitive
for i in range(n):
orb = G.orbit((i))
if len(orb) != n - i:
self._transitivity_degree = i
return i
G = G.stabilizer(i)
self._transitivity_degree = n
return n
else:
return self._transitivity_degree
def _p_elements_group(G, p):
'''
For an abelian p-group G return the subgroup consisting of
all elements of order p (and the identity)
'''
gens = G.generators[:]
gens = sorted(gens, key=lambda x: x.order(), reverse=True)
gens_p = [g**(g.order()/p) for g in gens]
gens_r = []
for i in range(len(gens)):
x = gens[i]
x_order = x.order()
# x_p has order p
x_p = x**(x_order/p)
if i > 0:
P = PermutationGroup(gens_p[:i])
else:
P = PermutationGroup(G.identity)
if x**(x_order/p) not in P:
gens_r.append(x**(x_order/p))
else:
# replace x by an element of order (x.order()/p)
# so that gens still generates G
g = P.generator_product(x_p, original=True)
for s in g:
x = x*s**-1
x_order = x_order/p
# insert x to gens so that the sorting is preserved
del gens[i]
del gens_p[i]
j = i - 1
while j < len(gens) and gens[j].order() >= x_order:
j += 1
gens = gens[:j] + [x] + gens[j:]
gens_p = gens_p[:j] + [x] + gens_p[j:]
return PermutationGroup(gens_r)
def _sylow_alt_sym(self, p):
'''
Return a p-Sylow subgroup of a symmetric or an
alternating group.
The algorithm for this is hinted at in [1], Chapter 4,
Exercise 4.
For Sym(n) with n = p^i, the idea is as follows. Partition
the interval [0..n-1] into p equal parts, each of length p^(i-1):
[0..p^(i-1)-1], [p^(i-1)..2*p^(i-1)-1]...[(p-1)*p^(i-1)..p^i-1].
Find a p-Sylow subgroup of Sym(p^(i-1)) (treated as a subgroup
of `self`) acting on each of the parts. Call the subgroups
P_1, P_2...P_p. The generators for the subgroups P_2...P_p
can be obtained from those of P_1 by applying a "shifting"
permutation to them, that is, a permutation mapping [0..p^(i-1)-1]
to the second part (the other parts are obtained by using the shift
multiple times). The union of this permutation and the generators
of P_1 is a p-Sylow subgroup of `self`.
For n not equal to a power of p, partition
[0..n-1] in accordance with how n would be written in base p.
E.g. for p=2 and n=11, 11 = 2^3 + 2^2 + 1 so the partition
is [[0..7], [8..9], {10}]. To generate a p-Sylow subgroup,
take the union of the generators for each of the parts.
For the above example, {(0 1), (0 2)(1 3), (0 4), (1 5)(2 7)}
from the first part, {(8 9)} from the second part and
nothing from the third. This gives 4 generators in total, and
the subgroup they generate is p-Sylow.
Alternating groups are treated the same except when p=2. In this
case, (0 1)(s s+1) should be added for an appropriate s (the start
of a part) for each part in the partitions.
See Also
========
sylow_subgroup, is_alt_sym
'''
n = self.degree
gens = []
identity = Permutation(n-1)
# the case of 2-sylow subgroups of alternating groups
# needs special treatment
alt = p == 2 and all(g.is_even for g in self.generators)
# find the presentation of n in base p
coeffs = []
m = n
while m > 0:
coeffs.append(m % p)
m = m // p
power = len(coeffs)-1
# for a symmetric group, gens[:i] is the generating
# set for a p-Sylow subgroup on [0..p**(i-1)-1]. For
# alternating groups, the same is given by gens[:2*(i-1)]
for i in range(1, power+1):
if i == 1 and alt:
# (0 1) shouldn't be added for alternating groups
continue
gen = Permutation([(j + p**(i-1)) % p**i for j in range(p**i)])
gens.append(identity*gen)
if alt:
gen = Permutation(0, 1)*gen*Permutation(0, 1)*gen
gens.append(gen)
# the first point in the current part (see the algorithm
# description in the docstring)
start = 0
while power > 0:
a = coeffs[power]
# make the permutation shifting the start of the first
# part ([0..p^i-1] for some i) to the current one
for s in range(a):
shift = Permutation()
if start > 0:
for i in range(p**power):
shift = shift(i, start + i)
if alt:
gen = Permutation(0, 1)*shift*Permutation(0, 1)*shift
gens.append(gen)
j = 2*(power - 1)
else:
j = power
for i, gen in enumerate(gens[:j]):
if alt and i % 2 == 1:
continue
# shift the generator to the start of the
# partition part
gen = shift*gen*shift
gens.append(gen)
start += p**power
power = power-1
return gens
def sylow_subgroup(self, p):
'''
Return a p-Sylow subgroup of the group.
The algorithm is described in [1], Chapter 4, Section 7
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import SymmetricGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import AlternatingGroup
>>> D = DihedralGroup(6)
>>> S = D.sylow_subgroup(2)
>>> S.order()
4
>>> G = SymmetricGroup(6)
>>> S = G.sylow_subgroup(5)
>>> S.order()
5
>>> G1 = AlternatingGroup(3)
>>> G2 = AlternatingGroup(5)
>>> G3 = AlternatingGroup(9)
>>> S1 = G1.sylow_subgroup(3)
>>> S2 = G2.sylow_subgroup(3)
>>> S3 = G3.sylow_subgroup(3)
>>> len1 = len(S1.lower_central_series())
>>> len2 = len(S2.lower_central_series())
>>> len3 = len(S3.lower_central_series())
>>> len1 == len2
True
>>> len1 < len3
True
'''
from sympy.combinatorics.homomorphisms import (homomorphism,
orbit_homomorphism, block_homomorphism)
from sympy.ntheory.primetest import isprime
if not isprime(p):
raise ValueError("p must be a prime")
def is_p_group(G):
# check if the order of G is a power of p
# and return the power
m = G.order()
n = 0
while m % p == 0:
m = m/p
n += 1
if m == 1:
return True, n
return False, n
def _sylow_reduce(mu, nu):
# reduction based on two homomorphisms
# mu and nu with trivially intersecting
# kernels
Q = mu.image().sylow_subgroup(p)
Q = mu.invert_subgroup(Q)
nu = nu.restrict_to(Q)
R = nu.image().sylow_subgroup(p)
return nu.invert_subgroup(R)
order = self.order()
if order % p != 0:
return PermutationGroup([self.identity])
p_group, n = is_p_group(self)
if p_group:
return self
if self.is_alt_sym():
return PermutationGroup(self._sylow_alt_sym(p))
# if there is a non-trivial orbit with size not divisible
# by p, the sylow subgroup is contained in its stabilizer
# (by orbit-stabilizer theorem)
orbits = self.orbits()
non_p_orbits = [o for o in orbits if len(o) % p != 0 and len(o) != 1]
if non_p_orbits:
G = self.stabilizer(list(non_p_orbits[0]).pop())
return G.sylow_subgroup(p)
if not self.is_transitive():
# apply _sylow_reduce to orbit actions
orbits = sorted(orbits, key = lambda x: len(x))
omega1 = orbits.pop()
omega2 = orbits[0].union(*orbits)
mu = orbit_homomorphism(self, omega1)
nu = orbit_homomorphism(self, omega2)
return _sylow_reduce(mu, nu)
blocks = self.minimal_blocks()
if len(blocks) > 1:
# apply _sylow_reduce to block system actions
mu = block_homomorphism(self, blocks[0])
nu = block_homomorphism(self, blocks[1])
return _sylow_reduce(mu, nu)
elif len(blocks) == 1:
block = list(blocks)[0]
if any(e != 0 for e in block):
# self is imprimitive
mu = block_homomorphism(self, block)
if not is_p_group(mu.image())[0]:
S = mu.image().sylow_subgroup(p)
return mu.invert_subgroup(S).sylow_subgroup(p)
# find an element of order p
g = self.random()
g_order = g.order()
while g_order % p != 0 or g_order == 0:
g = self.random()
g_order = g.order()
g = g**(g_order // p)
if order % p**2 != 0:
return PermutationGroup(g)
C = self.centralizer(g)
while C.order() % p**n != 0:
S = C.sylow_subgroup(p)
s_order = S.order()
Z = S.center()
P = Z._p_elements_group(p)
h = P.random()
C_h = self.centralizer(h)
while C_h.order() % p*s_order != 0:
h = P.random()
C_h = self.centralizer(h)
C = C_h
return C.sylow_subgroup(p)
def _block_verify(H, L, alpha):
delta = sorted(list(H.orbit(alpha)))
H_gens = H.generators
L_gens = L.generators
# p[i] will be the number of the block
# delta[i] belongs to
p = [-1]*len(delta)
blocks = [-1]*len(delta)
B = [[]] # future list of blocks
u = [0]*len(delta) # u[i] in L s.t. alpha^u[i] = B[0][i]
t = L.orbit_transversal(alpha, pairs=True)
for a, beta in t:
B[0].append(a)
i_a = delta.index(a)
p[i_a] = 0
blocks[i_a] = alpha
u[i_a] = beta
rho = 0
m = 0 # number of blocks - 1
while rho <= m:
beta = B[rho][0]
for g in H_gens:
d = beta^g
i_d = delta.index(d)
sigma = p[i_d]
if sigma < 0:
# define a new block
m += 1
sigma = m
u[i_d] = u[delta.index(beta)]*g
p[i_d] = sigma
rep = d
blocks[i_d] = rep
newb = [rep]
for gamma in B[rho][1:]:
i_gamma = delta.index(gamma)
d = gamma^g
i_d = delta.index(d)
if p[i_d] < 0:
u[i_d] = u[i_gamma]*g
p[i_d] = sigma
blocks[i_d] = rep
newb.append(d)
else:
# B[rho] is not a block
s = u[i_gamma]*g*u[i_d]**(-1)
return False, s
B.append(newb)
else:
for h in B[rho][1:]:
if not h^g in B[sigma]:
# B[rho] is not a block
s = u[delta.index(beta)]*g*u[i_d]**(-1)
return False, s
rho += 1
return True, blocks
def _verify(H, K, phi, z, alpha):
'''
Return a list of relators `rels` in generators `gens_h` that
are mapped to `H.generators` by `phi` so that given a finite
presentation <gens_k | rels_k> of `K` on a subset of `gens_h`
<gens_h | rels_k + rels> is a finite presentation of `H`.
`H` should be generated by the union of `K.generators` and `z`
(a single generator), and `H.stabilizer(alpha) == K`; `phi` is a
canonical injection from a free group into a permutation group
containing `H`.
The algorithm is described in [1], Chapter 6.
Example
=======
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.homomorphisms import homomorphism
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.free_groups import free_group
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.fp_groups import FpGroup
>>> H = PermutationGroup(Permutation(0, 2), Permutation (1, 5))
>>> K = PermutationGroup(Permutation(5)(0, 2))
>>> F = free_group("x_0 x_1")[0]
>>> gens = F.generators
>>> phi = homomorphism(F, H, F.generators, H.generators)
>>> rels_k = [gens[0]**2] # relators for presentation of K
>>> z= Permutation(1, 5)
>>> check, rels_h = H._verify(K, phi, z, 1)
>>> check
True
>>> rels = rels_k + rels_h
>>> G = FpGroup(F, rels) # presentation of H
>>> G.order() == H.order()
True
See also
========
strong_presentation, presentation, stabilizer
'''
orbit = H.orbit(alpha)
beta = alpha^(z**-1)
K_beta = K.stabilizer(beta)
# orbit representatives of K_beta
gammas = [alpha, beta]
orbits = list(set(tuple(K_beta.orbit(o)) for o in orbit))
orbit_reps = [orb[0] for orb in orbits]
for rep in orbit_reps:
if rep not in gammas:
gammas.append(rep)
# orbit transversal of K
betas = [alpha, beta]
transversal = {alpha: phi.invert(H.identity), beta: phi.invert(z**-1)}
for s, g in K.orbit_transversal(beta, pairs=True):
if not s in transversal:
transversal[s] = transversal[beta]*phi.invert(g)
union = K.orbit(alpha).union(K.orbit(beta))
while (len(union) < len(orbit)):
for gamma in gammas:
if gamma in union:
r = gamma^z
if r not in union:
betas.append(r)
transversal[r] = transversal[gamma]*phi.invert(z)
for s, g in K.orbit_transversal(r, pairs=True):
if not s in transversal:
transversal[s] = transversal[r]*phi.invert(g)
union = union.union(K.orbit(r))
break
# compute relators
rels = []
for b in betas:
k_gens = K.stabilizer(b).generators
for y in k_gens:
new_rel = transversal[b]
gens = K.generator_product(y, original=True)
for g in gens[::-1]:
new_rel = new_rel*phi.invert(g)
new_rel = new_rel*transversal[b]**-1
perm = phi(new_rel)
try:
gens = K.generator_product(perm, original=True)
except ValueError:
return False, perm
for g in gens:
new_rel = new_rel*phi.invert(g)**-1
if new_rel not in rels:
rels.append(new_rel)
for gamma in gammas:
new_rel = transversal[gamma]*phi.invert(z)*transversal[gamma^z]**-1
perm = phi(new_rel)
try:
gens = K.generator_product(perm, original=True)
except ValueError:
return False, perm
for g in gens:
new_rel = new_rel*phi.invert(g)**-1
if new_rel not in rels:
rels.append(new_rel)
return True, rels
def strong_presentation(G):
'''
Return a strong finite presentation of `G`. The generators
of the returned group are in the same order as the strong
generators of `G`.
The algorithm is based on Sims' Verify algorithm described
in [1], Chapter 6.
Example
=======
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> P = DihedralGroup(4)
>>> G = P.strong_presentation()
>>> P.order() == G.order()
True
See Also
========
presentation, _verify
'''
from sympy.combinatorics.fp_groups import (FpGroup,
simplify_presentation)
from sympy.combinatorics.free_groups import free_group
from sympy.combinatorics.homomorphisms import (block_homomorphism,
homomorphism, GroupHomomorphism)
from itertools import product
strong_gens = G.strong_gens[:]
stabs = G.basic_stabilizers[:]
base = G.base[:]
# injection from a free group on len(strong_gens)
# generators into G
gen_syms = [('x_%d'%i) for i in range(len(strong_gens))]
F = free_group(', '.join(gen_syms))[0]
phi = homomorphism(F, G, F.generators, strong_gens)
H = PermutationGroup(G.identity)
while stabs:
alpha = base.pop()
K = H
H = stabs.pop()
new_gens = [g for g in H.generators if g not in K]
if K.order() == 1:
z = new_gens.pop()
rels = [F.generators[-1]**z.order()]
intermediate_gens = [z]
K = PermutationGroup(intermediate_gens)
# add generators one at a time building up from K to H
while new_gens:
z = new_gens.pop()
intermediate_gens = [z] + intermediate_gens
K_s = PermutationGroup(intermediate_gens)
orbit = K_s.orbit(alpha)
orbit_k = K.orbit(alpha)
# split into cases based on the orbit of K_s
if orbit_k == orbit:
if z in K:
rel = phi.invert(z)
perm = z
else:
t = K.orbit_rep(alpha, alpha^z)
rel = phi.invert(z)*phi.invert(t)**-1
perm = z*t**-1
for g in K.generator_product(perm, original=True):
rel = rel*phi.invert(g)**-1
new_rels = [rel]
elif len(orbit_k) == 1:
# `success` is always true because `strong_gens`
# and `base` are already a verified BSGS. Later
# this could be changed to start with a randomly
# generated (potential) BSGS, and then new elements
# would have to be appended to it when `success`
# is false.
success, new_rels = K_s._verify(K, phi, z, alpha)
else:
# K.orbit(alpha) should be a block
# under the action of K_s on K_s.orbit(alpha)
check, block = K_s._block_verify(K, alpha)
if check:
# apply _verify to the action of K_s
# on the block system; for convenience,
# add the blocks as additional points
# that K_s should act on
t = block_homomorphism(K_s, block)
m = t.codomain.degree # number of blocks
d = K_s.degree
# conjugating with p will shift
# permutations in t.image() to
# higher numbers, e.g.
# p*(0 1)*p = (m m+1)
p = Permutation()
for i in range(m):
p *= Permutation(i, i+d)
t_img = t.images
# combine generators of K_s with their
# action on the block system
images = {g: g*p*t_img[g]*p for g in t_img}
for g in G.strong_gens[:-len(K_s.generators)]:
images[g] = g
K_s_act = PermutationGroup(list(images.values()))
f = GroupHomomorphism(G, K_s_act, images)
K_act = PermutationGroup([f(g) for g in K.generators])
success, new_rels = K_s_act._verify(K_act, f.compose(phi), f(z), d)
for n in new_rels:
if not n in rels:
rels.append(n)
K = K_s
group = FpGroup(F, rels)
return simplify_presentation(group)
def presentation(G, eliminate_gens=True):
'''
Return an `FpGroup` presentation of the group.
The algorithm is described in [1], Chapter 6.1.
'''
from sympy.combinatorics.fp_groups import (FpGroup,
simplify_presentation)
from sympy.combinatorics.coset_table import CosetTable
from sympy.combinatorics.free_groups import free_group
from sympy.combinatorics.homomorphisms import homomorphism
from itertools import product
if G._fp_presentation:
return G._fp_presentation
if G._fp_presentation:
return G._fp_presentation
def _factor_group_by_rels(G, rels):
if isinstance(G, FpGroup):
rels.extend(G.relators)
return FpGroup(G.free_group, list(set(rels)))
return FpGroup(G, rels)
gens = G.generators
len_g = len(gens)
if len_g == 1:
order = gens[0].order()
# handle the trivial group
if order == 1:
return free_group([])[0]
F, x = free_group('x')
return FpGroup(F, [x**order])
if G.order() > 20:
half_gens = G.generators[0:(len_g+1)//2]
else:
half_gens = []
H = PermutationGroup(half_gens)
H_p = H.presentation()
len_h = len(H_p.generators)
C = G.coset_table(H)
n = len(C) # subgroup index
gen_syms = [('x_%d'%i) for i in range(len(gens))]
F = free_group(', '.join(gen_syms))[0]
# mapping generators of H_p to those of F
images = [F.generators[i] for i in range(len_h)]
R = homomorphism(H_p, F, H_p.generators, images, check=False)
# rewrite relators
rels = R(H_p.relators)
G_p = FpGroup(F, rels)
# injective homomorphism from G_p into G
T = homomorphism(G_p, G, G_p.generators, gens)
C_p = CosetTable(G_p, [])
C_p.table = [[None]*(2*len_g) for i in range(n)]
# initiate the coset transversal
transversal = [None]*n
transversal[0] = G_p.identity
# fill in the coset table as much as possible
for i in range(2*len_h):
C_p.table[0][i] = 0
gamma = 1
for alpha, x in product(range(0, n), range(2*len_g)):
beta = C[alpha][x]
if beta == gamma:
gen = G_p.generators[x//2]**((-1)**(x % 2))
transversal[beta] = transversal[alpha]*gen
C_p.table[alpha][x] = beta
C_p.table[beta][x + (-1)**(x % 2)] = alpha
gamma += 1
if gamma == n:
break
C_p.p = list(range(n))
beta = x = 0
while not C_p.is_complete():
# find the first undefined entry
while C_p.table[beta][x] == C[beta][x]:
x = (x + 1) % (2*len_g)
if x == 0:
beta = (beta + 1) % n
# define a new relator
gen = G_p.generators[x//2]**((-1)**(x % 2))
new_rel = transversal[beta]*gen*transversal[C[beta][x]]**-1
perm = T(new_rel)
next = G_p.identity
for s in H.generator_product(perm, original=True):
next = next*T.invert(s)**-1
new_rel = new_rel*next
# continue coset enumeration
G_p = _factor_group_by_rels(G_p, [new_rel])
C_p.scan_and_fill(0, new_rel)
C_p = G_p.coset_enumeration([], strategy="coset_table",
draft=C_p, max_cosets=n, incomplete=True)
G._fp_presentation = simplify_presentation(G_p)
return G._fp_presentation
def _orbit(degree, generators, alpha, action='tuples'):
r"""Compute the orbit of alpha `\{g(\alpha) | g \in G\}` as a set.
The time complexity of the algorithm used here is `O(|Orb|*r)` where
`|Orb|` is the size of the orbit and ``r`` is the number of generators of
the group. For a more detailed analysis, see [1], p.78, [2], pp. 19-21.
Here alpha can be a single point, or a list of points.
If alpha is a single point, the ordinary orbit is computed.
if alpha is a list of points, there are three available options:
'union' - computes the union of the orbits of the points in the list
'tuples' - computes the orbit of the list interpreted as an ordered
tuple under the group action ( i.e., g((1, 2, 3)) = (g(1), g(2), g(3)) )
'sets' - computes the orbit of the list interpreted as a sets
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup, _orbit
>>> a = Permutation([1, 2, 0, 4, 5, 6, 3])
>>> G = PermutationGroup([a])
>>> _orbit(G.degree, G.generators, 0)
{0, 1, 2}
>>> _orbit(G.degree, G.generators, [0, 4], 'union')
{0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}
See Also
========
orbit, orbit_transversal
"""
if not hasattr(alpha, '__getitem__'):
alpha = [alpha]
gens = [x._array_form for x in generators]
if len(alpha) == 1 or action == 'union':
orb = alpha
used = [False]*degree
for el in alpha:
used[el] = True
for b in orb:
for gen in gens:
temp = gen[b]
if used[temp] == False:
orb.append(temp)
used[temp] = True
return set(orb)
elif action == 'tuples':
alpha = tuple(alpha)
orb = [alpha]
used = {alpha}
for b in orb:
for gen in gens:
temp = tuple([gen[x] for x in b])
if temp not in used:
orb.append(temp)
used.add(temp)
return set(orb)
elif action == 'sets':
alpha = frozenset(alpha)
orb = [alpha]
used = {alpha}
for b in orb:
for gen in gens:
temp = frozenset([gen[x] for x in b])
if temp not in used:
orb.append(temp)
used.add(temp)
return {tuple(x) for x in orb}
def _orbits(degree, generators):
"""Compute the orbits of G.
If ``rep=False`` it returns a list of sets else it returns a list of
representatives of the orbits
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup, _orbits
>>> a = Permutation([0, 2, 1])
>>> b = Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> _orbits(a.size, [a, b])
[{0, 1, 2}]
"""
seen = set() # elements that have already appeared in orbits
orbs = []
sorted_I = list(range(degree))
I = set(sorted_I)
while I:
i = sorted_I[0]
orb = _orbit(degree, generators, i)
orbs.append(orb)
# remove all indices that are in this orbit
I -= orb
sorted_I = [i for i in sorted_I if i not in orb]
return orbs
def _orbit_transversal(degree, generators, alpha, pairs, af=False, slp=False):
r"""Computes a transversal for the orbit of ``alpha`` as a set.
generators generators of the group ``G``
For a permutation group ``G``, a transversal for the orbit
`Orb = \{g(\alpha) | g \in G\}` is a set
`\{g_\beta | g_\beta(\alpha) = \beta\}` for `\beta \in Orb`.
Note that there may be more than one possible transversal.
If ``pairs`` is set to ``True``, it returns the list of pairs
`(\beta, g_\beta)`. For a proof of correctness, see [1], p.79
if ``af`` is ``True``, the transversal elements are given in
array form.
If `slp` is `True`, a dictionary `{beta: slp_beta}` is returned
for `\beta \in Orb` where `slp_beta` is a list of indices of the
generators in `generators` s.t. if `slp_beta = [i_1 ... i_n]`
`g_\beta = generators[i_n]*...*generators[i_1]`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import _orbit_transversal
>>> G = DihedralGroup(6)
>>> _orbit_transversal(G.degree, G.generators, 0, False)
[(5), (0 1 2 3 4 5), (0 5)(1 4)(2 3), (0 2 4)(1 3 5), (5)(0 4)(1 3), (0 3)(1 4)(2 5)]
"""
tr = [(alpha, list(range(degree)))]
slp_dict = {alpha: []}
used = [False]*degree
used[alpha] = True
gens = [x._array_form for x in generators]
for x, px in tr:
px_slp = slp_dict[x]
for gen in gens:
temp = gen[x]
if used[temp] == False:
slp_dict[temp] = [gens.index(gen)] + px_slp
tr.append((temp, _af_rmul(gen, px)))
used[temp] = True
if pairs:
if not af:
tr = [(x, _af_new(y)) for x, y in tr]
if not slp:
return tr
return tr, slp_dict
if af:
tr = [y for _, y in tr]
if not slp:
return tr
return tr, slp_dict
tr = [_af_new(y) for _, y in tr]
if not slp:
return tr
return tr, slp_dict
def _stabilizer(degree, generators, alpha):
r"""Return the stabilizer subgroup of ``alpha``.
The stabilizer of `\alpha` is the group `G_\alpha =
\{g \in G | g(\alpha) = \alpha\}`.
For a proof of correctness, see [1], p.79.
degree : degree of G
generators : generators of G
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import _stabilizer
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> G = DihedralGroup(6)
>>> _stabilizer(G.degree, G.generators, 5)
[(5)(0 4)(1 3), (5)]
See Also
========
orbit
"""
orb = [alpha]
table = {alpha: list(range(degree))}
table_inv = {alpha: list(range(degree))}
used = [False]*degree
used[alpha] = True
gens = [x._array_form for x in generators]
stab_gens = []
for b in orb:
for gen in gens:
temp = gen[b]
if used[temp] is False:
gen_temp = _af_rmul(gen, table[b])
orb.append(temp)
table[temp] = gen_temp
table_inv[temp] = _af_invert(gen_temp)
used[temp] = True
else:
schreier_gen = _af_rmuln(table_inv[temp], gen, table[b])
if schreier_gen not in stab_gens:
stab_gens.append(schreier_gen)
return [_af_new(x) for x in stab_gens]
PermGroup = PermutationGroup
|
64c51dd40f5bb42d11e7e13ba53053927209c84422b8a308c8020f654acf4004
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
import random
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy.core import Basic
from sympy.core.compatibility import is_sequence, reduce, range, as_int
from sympy.utilities.iterables import (flatten, has_variety, minlex,
has_dups, runs)
from sympy.polys.polytools import lcm
from sympy.matrices import zeros
from mpmath.libmp.libintmath import ifac
def _af_rmul(a, b):
"""
Return the product b*a; input and output are array forms. The ith value
is a[b[i]].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_rmul, Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> a, b = [1, 0, 2], [0, 2, 1]
>>> _af_rmul(a, b)
[1, 2, 0]
>>> [a[b[i]] for i in range(3)]
[1, 2, 0]
This handles the operands in reverse order compared to the ``*`` operator:
>>> a = Permutation(a)
>>> b = Permutation(b)
>>> list(a*b)
[2, 0, 1]
>>> [b(a(i)) for i in range(3)]
[2, 0, 1]
See Also
========
rmul, _af_rmuln
"""
return [a[i] for i in b]
def _af_rmuln(*abc):
"""
Given [a, b, c, ...] return the product of ...*c*b*a using array forms.
The ith value is a[b[c[i]]].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_rmul, Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> a, b = [1, 0, 2], [0, 2, 1]
>>> _af_rmul(a, b)
[1, 2, 0]
>>> [a[b[i]] for i in range(3)]
[1, 2, 0]
This handles the operands in reverse order compared to the ``*`` operator:
>>> a = Permutation(a); b = Permutation(b)
>>> list(a*b)
[2, 0, 1]
>>> [b(a(i)) for i in range(3)]
[2, 0, 1]
See Also
========
rmul, _af_rmul
"""
a = abc
m = len(a)
if m == 3:
p0, p1, p2 = a
return [p0[p1[i]] for i in p2]
if m == 4:
p0, p1, p2, p3 = a
return [p0[p1[p2[i]]] for i in p3]
if m == 5:
p0, p1, p2, p3, p4 = a
return [p0[p1[p2[p3[i]]]] for i in p4]
if m == 6:
p0, p1, p2, p3, p4, p5 = a
return [p0[p1[p2[p3[p4[i]]]]] for i in p5]
if m == 7:
p0, p1, p2, p3, p4, p5, p6 = a
return [p0[p1[p2[p3[p4[p5[i]]]]]] for i in p6]
if m == 8:
p0, p1, p2, p3, p4, p5, p6, p7 = a
return [p0[p1[p2[p3[p4[p5[p6[i]]]]]]] for i in p7]
if m == 1:
return a[0][:]
if m == 2:
a, b = a
return [a[i] for i in b]
if m == 0:
raise ValueError("String must not be empty")
p0 = _af_rmuln(*a[:m//2])
p1 = _af_rmuln(*a[m//2:])
return [p0[i] for i in p1]
def _af_parity(pi):
"""
Computes the parity of a permutation in array form.
The parity of a permutation reflects the parity of the
number of inversions in the permutation, i.e., the
number of pairs of x and y such that x > y but p[x] < p[y].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_parity
>>> _af_parity([0, 1, 2, 3])
0
>>> _af_parity([3, 2, 0, 1])
1
See Also
========
Permutation
"""
n = len(pi)
a = [0] * n
c = 0
for j in range(n):
if a[j] == 0:
c += 1
a[j] = 1
i = j
while pi[i] != j:
i = pi[i]
a[i] = 1
return (n - c) % 2
def _af_invert(a):
"""
Finds the inverse, ~A, of a permutation, A, given in array form.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_invert, _af_rmul
>>> A = [1, 2, 0, 3]
>>> _af_invert(A)
[2, 0, 1, 3]
>>> _af_rmul(_, A)
[0, 1, 2, 3]
See Also
========
Permutation, __invert__
"""
inv_form = [0] * len(a)
for i, ai in enumerate(a):
inv_form[ai] = i
return inv_form
def _af_pow(a, n):
"""
Routine for finding powers of a permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation, _af_pow
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation([2, 0, 3, 1])
>>> p.order()
4
>>> _af_pow(p._array_form, 4)
[0, 1, 2, 3]
"""
if n == 0:
return list(range(len(a)))
if n < 0:
return _af_pow(_af_invert(a), -n)
if n == 1:
return a[:]
elif n == 2:
b = [a[i] for i in a]
elif n == 3:
b = [a[a[i]] for i in a]
elif n == 4:
b = [a[a[a[i]]] for i in a]
else:
# use binary multiplication
b = list(range(len(a)))
while 1:
if n & 1:
b = [b[i] for i in a]
n -= 1
if not n:
break
if n % 4 == 0:
a = [a[a[a[i]]] for i in a]
n = n // 4
elif n % 2 == 0:
a = [a[i] for i in a]
n = n // 2
return b
def _af_commutes_with(a, b):
"""
Checks if the two permutations with array forms
given by ``a`` and ``b`` commute.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_commutes_with
>>> _af_commutes_with([1, 2, 0], [0, 2, 1])
False
See Also
========
Permutation, commutes_with
"""
return not any(a[b[i]] != b[a[i]] for i in range(len(a) - 1))
class Cycle(dict):
"""
Wrapper around dict which provides the functionality of a disjoint cycle.
A cycle shows the rule to use to move subsets of elements to obtain
a permutation. The Cycle class is more flexible than Permutation in
that 1) all elements need not be present in order to investigate how
multiple cycles act in sequence and 2) it can contain singletons:
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Perm, Cycle
A Cycle will automatically parse a cycle given as a tuple on the rhs:
>>> Cycle(1, 2)(2, 3)
(1 3 2)
The identity cycle, Cycle(), can be used to start a product:
>>> Cycle()(1, 2)(2, 3)
(1 3 2)
The array form of a Cycle can be obtained by calling the list
method (or passing it to the list function) and all elements from
0 will be shown:
>>> a = Cycle(1, 2)
>>> a.list()
[0, 2, 1]
>>> list(a)
[0, 2, 1]
If a larger (or smaller) range is desired use the list method and
provide the desired size -- but the Cycle cannot be truncated to
a size smaller than the largest element that is out of place:
>>> b = Cycle(2, 4)(1, 2)(3, 1, 4)(1, 3)
>>> b.list()
[0, 2, 1, 3, 4]
>>> b.list(b.size + 1)
[0, 2, 1, 3, 4, 5]
>>> b.list(-1)
[0, 2, 1]
Singletons are not shown when printing with one exception: the largest
element is always shown -- as a singleton if necessary:
>>> Cycle(1, 4, 10)(4, 5)
(1 5 4 10)
>>> Cycle(1, 2)(4)(5)(10)
(1 2)(10)
The array form can be used to instantiate a Permutation so other
properties of the permutation can be investigated:
>>> Perm(Cycle(1, 2)(3, 4).list()).transpositions()
[(1, 2), (3, 4)]
Notes
=====
The underlying structure of the Cycle is a dictionary and although
the __iter__ method has been redefined to give the array form of the
cycle, the underlying dictionary items are still available with the
such methods as items():
>>> list(Cycle(1, 2).items())
[(1, 2), (2, 1)]
See Also
========
Permutation
"""
def __missing__(self, arg):
"""Enter arg into dictionary and return arg."""
arg = as_int(arg)
self[arg] = arg
return arg
def __iter__(self):
for i in self.list():
yield i
def __call__(self, *other):
"""Return product of cycles processed from R to L.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Cycle as C
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation as Perm
>>> C(1, 2)(2, 3)
(1 3 2)
An instance of a Cycle will automatically parse list-like
objects and Permutations that are on the right. It is more
flexible than the Permutation in that all elements need not
be present:
>>> a = C(1, 2)
>>> a(2, 3)
(1 3 2)
>>> a(2, 3)(4, 5)
(1 3 2)(4 5)
"""
rv = Cycle(*other)
for k, v in zip(list(self.keys()), [rv[self[k]] for k in self.keys()]):
rv[k] = v
return rv
def list(self, size=None):
"""Return the cycles as an explicit list starting from 0 up
to the greater of the largest value in the cycles and size.
Truncation of trailing unmoved items will occur when size
is less than the maximum element in the cycle; if this is
desired, setting ``size=-1`` will guarantee such trimming.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Cycle
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Cycle(2, 3)(4, 5)
>>> p.list()
[0, 1, 3, 2, 5, 4]
>>> p.list(10)
[0, 1, 3, 2, 5, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Passing a length too small will trim trailing, unchanged elements
in the permutation:
>>> Cycle(2, 4)(1, 2, 4).list(-1)
[0, 2, 1]
"""
if not self and size is None:
raise ValueError('must give size for empty Cycle')
if size is not None:
big = max([i for i in self.keys() if self[i] != i] + [0])
size = max(size, big + 1)
else:
size = self.size
return [self[i] for i in range(size)]
def __repr__(self):
"""We want it to print as a Cycle, not as a dict.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Cycle
>>> Cycle(1, 2)
(1 2)
>>> print(_)
(1 2)
>>> list(Cycle(1, 2).items())
[(1, 2), (2, 1)]
"""
if not self:
return 'Cycle()'
cycles = Permutation(self).cyclic_form
s = ''.join(str(tuple(c)) for c in cycles)
big = self.size - 1
if not any(i == big for c in cycles for i in c):
s += '(%s)' % big
return 'Cycle%s' % s
def __str__(self):
"""We want it to be printed in a Cycle notation with no
comma in-between.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Cycle
>>> Cycle(1, 2)
(1 2)
>>> Cycle(1, 2, 4)(5, 6)
(1 2 4)(5 6)
"""
if not self:
return '()'
cycles = Permutation(self).cyclic_form
s = ''.join(str(tuple(c)) for c in cycles)
big = self.size - 1
if not any(i == big for c in cycles for i in c):
s += '(%s)' % big
s = s.replace(',', '')
return s
def __init__(self, *args):
"""Load up a Cycle instance with the values for the cycle.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Cycle
>>> Cycle(1, 2, 6)
(1 2 6)
"""
if not args:
return
if len(args) == 1:
if isinstance(args[0], Permutation):
for c in args[0].cyclic_form:
self.update(self(*c))
return
elif isinstance(args[0], Cycle):
for k, v in args[0].items():
self[k] = v
return
args = [as_int(a) for a in args]
if any(i < 0 for i in args):
raise ValueError('negative integers are not allowed in a cycle.')
if has_dups(args):
raise ValueError('All elements must be unique in a cycle.')
for i in range(-len(args), 0):
self[args[i]] = args[i + 1]
@property
def size(self):
if not self:
return 0
return max(self.keys()) + 1
def copy(self):
return Cycle(self)
class Permutation(Basic):
"""
A permutation, alternatively known as an 'arrangement number' or 'ordering'
is an arrangement of the elements of an ordered list into a one-to-one
mapping with itself. The permutation of a given arrangement is given by
indicating the positions of the elements after re-arrangement [2]_. For
example, if one started with elements [x, y, a, b] (in that order) and
they were reordered as [x, y, b, a] then the permutation would be
[0, 1, 3, 2]. Notice that (in SymPy) the first element is always referred
to as 0 and the permutation uses the indices of the elements in the
original ordering, not the elements (a, b, etc...) themselves.
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
Permutations Notation
=====================
Permutations are commonly represented in disjoint cycle or array forms.
Array Notation and 2-line Form
------------------------------------
In the 2-line form, the elements and their final positions are shown
as a matrix with 2 rows:
[0 1 2 ... n-1]
[p(0) p(1) p(2) ... p(n-1)]
Since the first line is always range(n), where n is the size of p,
it is sufficient to represent the permutation by the second line,
referred to as the "array form" of the permutation. This is entered
in brackets as the argument to the Permutation class:
>>> p = Permutation([0, 2, 1]); p
Permutation([0, 2, 1])
Given i in range(p.size), the permutation maps i to i^p
>>> [i^p for i in range(p.size)]
[0, 2, 1]
The composite of two permutations p*q means first apply p, then q, so
i^(p*q) = (i^p)^q which is i^p^q according to Python precedence rules:
>>> q = Permutation([2, 1, 0])
>>> [i^p^q for i in range(3)]
[2, 0, 1]
>>> [i^(p*q) for i in range(3)]
[2, 0, 1]
One can use also the notation p(i) = i^p, but then the composition
rule is (p*q)(i) = q(p(i)), not p(q(i)):
>>> [(p*q)(i) for i in range(p.size)]
[2, 0, 1]
>>> [q(p(i)) for i in range(p.size)]
[2, 0, 1]
>>> [p(q(i)) for i in range(p.size)]
[1, 2, 0]
Disjoint Cycle Notation
-----------------------
In disjoint cycle notation, only the elements that have shifted are
indicated. In the above case, the 2 and 1 switched places. This can
be entered in two ways:
>>> Permutation(1, 2) == Permutation([[1, 2]]) == p
True
Only the relative ordering of elements in a cycle matter:
>>> Permutation(1,2,3) == Permutation(2,3,1) == Permutation(3,1,2)
True
The disjoint cycle notation is convenient when representing
permutations that have several cycles in them:
>>> Permutation(1, 2)(3, 5) == Permutation([[1, 2], [3, 5]])
True
It also provides some economy in entry when computing products of
permutations that are written in disjoint cycle notation:
>>> Permutation(1, 2)(1, 3)(2, 3)
Permutation([0, 3, 2, 1])
>>> _ == Permutation([[1, 2]])*Permutation([[1, 3]])*Permutation([[2, 3]])
True
Caution: when the cycles have common elements
between them then the order in which the
permutations are applied matters. The
convention is that the permutations are
applied from *right to left*. In the following, the
transposition of elements 2 and 3 is followed
by the transposition of elements 1 and 2:
>>> Permutation(1, 2)(2, 3) == Permutation([(1, 2), (2, 3)])
True
>>> Permutation(1, 2)(2, 3).list()
[0, 3, 1, 2]
If the first and second elements had been
swapped first, followed by the swapping of the second
and third, the result would have been [0, 2, 3, 1].
If, for some reason, you want to apply the cycles
in the order they are entered, you can simply reverse
the order of cycles:
>>> Permutation([(1, 2), (2, 3)][::-1]).list()
[0, 2, 3, 1]
Entering a singleton in a permutation is a way to indicate the size of the
permutation. The ``size`` keyword can also be used.
Array-form entry:
>>> Permutation([[1, 2], [9]])
Permutation([0, 2, 1], size=10)
>>> Permutation([[1, 2]], size=10)
Permutation([0, 2, 1], size=10)
Cyclic-form entry:
>>> Permutation(1, 2, size=10)
Permutation([0, 2, 1], size=10)
>>> Permutation(9)(1, 2)
Permutation([0, 2, 1], size=10)
Caution: no singleton containing an element larger than the largest
in any previous cycle can be entered. This is an important difference
in how Permutation and Cycle handle the __call__ syntax. A singleton
argument at the start of a Permutation performs instantiation of the
Permutation and is permitted:
>>> Permutation(5)
Permutation([], size=6)
A singleton entered after instantiation is a call to the permutation
-- a function call -- and if the argument is out of range it will
trigger an error. For this reason, it is better to start the cycle
with the singleton:
The following fails because there is is no element 3:
>>> Permutation(1, 2)(3)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
IndexError: list index out of range
This is ok: only the call to an out of range singleton is prohibited;
otherwise the permutation autosizes:
>>> Permutation(3)(1, 2)
Permutation([0, 2, 1, 3])
>>> Permutation(1, 2)(3, 4) == Permutation(3, 4)(1, 2)
True
Equality testing
----------------
The array forms must be the same in order for permutations to be equal:
>>> Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3]) == Permutation([1, 0])
False
Identity Permutation
--------------------
The identity permutation is a permutation in which no element is out of
place. It can be entered in a variety of ways. All the following create
an identity permutation of size 4:
>>> I = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> all(p == I for p in [
... Permutation(3),
... Permutation(range(4)),
... Permutation([], size=4),
... Permutation(size=4)])
True
Watch out for entering the range *inside* a set of brackets (which is
cycle notation):
>>> I == Permutation([range(4)])
False
Permutation Printing
====================
There are a few things to note about how Permutations are printed.
1) If you prefer one form (array or cycle) over another, you can set that
with the print_cyclic flag.
>>> Permutation(1, 2)(4, 5)(3, 4)
Permutation([0, 2, 1, 4, 5, 3])
>>> p = _
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> p
(1 2)(3 4 5)
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
2) Regardless of the setting, a list of elements in the array for cyclic
form can be obtained and either of those can be copied and supplied as
the argument to Permutation:
>>> p.array_form
[0, 2, 1, 4, 5, 3]
>>> p.cyclic_form
[[1, 2], [3, 4, 5]]
>>> Permutation(_) == p
True
3) Printing is economical in that as little as possible is printed while
retaining all information about the size of the permutation:
>>> Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3])
Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3])
>>> Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3], size=20)
Permutation([1, 0], size=20)
>>> Permutation([1, 0, 2, 4, 3, 5, 6], size=20)
Permutation([1, 0, 2, 4, 3], size=20)
>>> p = Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3])
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> p
(3)(0 1)
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
The 2 was not printed but it is still there as can be seen with the
array_form and size methods:
>>> p.array_form
[1, 0, 2, 3]
>>> p.size
4
Short introduction to other methods
===================================
The permutation can act as a bijective function, telling what element is
located at a given position
>>> q = Permutation([5, 2, 3, 4, 1, 0])
>>> q.array_form[1] # the hard way
2
>>> q(1) # the easy way
2
>>> {i: q(i) for i in range(q.size)} # showing the bijection
{0: 5, 1: 2, 2: 3, 3: 4, 4: 1, 5: 0}
The full cyclic form (including singletons) can be obtained:
>>> p.full_cyclic_form
[[0, 1], [2], [3]]
Any permutation can be factored into transpositions of pairs of elements:
>>> Permutation([[1, 2], [3, 4, 5]]).transpositions()
[(1, 2), (3, 5), (3, 4)]
>>> Permutation.rmul(*[Permutation([ti], size=6) for ti in _]).cyclic_form
[[1, 2], [3, 4, 5]]
The number of permutations on a set of n elements is given by n! and is
called the cardinality.
>>> p.size
4
>>> p.cardinality
24
A given permutation has a rank among all the possible permutations of the
same elements, but what that rank is depends on how the permutations are
enumerated. (There are a number of different methods of doing so.) The
lexicographic rank is given by the rank method and this rank is used to
increment a permutation with addition/subtraction:
>>> p.rank()
6
>>> p + 1
Permutation([1, 0, 3, 2])
>>> p.next_lex()
Permutation([1, 0, 3, 2])
>>> _.rank()
7
>>> p.unrank_lex(p.size, rank=7)
Permutation([1, 0, 3, 2])
The product of two permutations p and q is defined as their composition as
functions, (p*q)(i) = q(p(i)) [6]_.
>>> p = Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3])
>>> q = Permutation([2, 3, 1, 0])
>>> list(q*p)
[2, 3, 0, 1]
>>> list(p*q)
[3, 2, 1, 0]
>>> [q(p(i)) for i in range(p.size)]
[3, 2, 1, 0]
The permutation can be 'applied' to any list-like object, not only
Permutations:
>>> p(['zero', 'one', 'four', 'two'])
['one', 'zero', 'four', 'two']
>>> p('zo42')
['o', 'z', '4', '2']
If you have a list of arbitrary elements, the corresponding permutation
can be found with the from_sequence method:
>>> Permutation.from_sequence('SymPy')
Permutation([1, 3, 2, 0, 4])
See Also
========
Cycle
References
==========
.. [1] Skiena, S. 'Permutations.' 1.1 in Implementing Discrete Mathematics
Combinatorics and Graph Theory with Mathematica. Reading, MA:
Addison-Wesley, pp. 3-16, 1990.
.. [2] Knuth, D. E. The Art of Computer Programming, Vol. 4: Combinatorial
Algorithms, 1st ed. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 2011.
.. [3] Wendy Myrvold and Frank Ruskey. 2001. Ranking and unranking
permutations in linear time. Inf. Process. Lett. 79, 6 (September 2001),
281-284. DOI=10.1016/S0020-0190(01)00141-7
.. [4] D. L. Kreher, D. R. Stinson 'Combinatorial Algorithms'
CRC Press, 1999
.. [5] Graham, R. L.; Knuth, D. E.; and Patashnik, O.
Concrete Mathematics: A Foundation for Computer Science, 2nd ed.
Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1994.
.. [6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permutation#Product_and_inverse
.. [7] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehmer_code
"""
is_Permutation = True
_array_form = None
_cyclic_form = None
_cycle_structure = None
_size = None
_rank = None
def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Constructor for the Permutation object from a list or a
list of lists in which all elements of the permutation may
appear only once.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
Permutations entered in array-form are left unaltered:
>>> Permutation([0, 2, 1])
Permutation([0, 2, 1])
Permutations entered in cyclic form are converted to array form;
singletons need not be entered, but can be entered to indicate the
largest element:
>>> Permutation([[4, 5, 6], [0, 1]])
Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3, 5, 6, 4])
>>> Permutation([[4, 5, 6], [0, 1], [19]])
Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3, 5, 6, 4], size=20)
All manipulation of permutations assumes that the smallest element
is 0 (in keeping with 0-based indexing in Python) so if the 0 is
missing when entering a permutation in array form, an error will be
raised:
>>> Permutation([2, 1])
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: Integers 0 through 2 must be present.
If a permutation is entered in cyclic form, it can be entered without
singletons and the ``size`` specified so those values can be filled
in, otherwise the array form will only extend to the maximum value
in the cycles:
>>> Permutation([[1, 4], [3, 5, 2]], size=10)
Permutation([0, 4, 3, 5, 1, 2], size=10)
>>> _.array_form
[0, 4, 3, 5, 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 9]
"""
size = kwargs.pop('size', None)
if size is not None:
size = int(size)
#a) ()
#b) (1) = identity
#c) (1, 2) = cycle
#d) ([1, 2, 3]) = array form
#e) ([[1, 2]]) = cyclic form
#f) (Cycle) = conversion to permutation
#g) (Permutation) = adjust size or return copy
ok = True
if not args: # a
return cls._af_new(list(range(size or 0)))
elif len(args) > 1: # c
return cls._af_new(Cycle(*args).list(size))
if len(args) == 1:
a = args[0]
if isinstance(a, cls): # g
if size is None or size == a.size:
return a
return cls(a.array_form, size=size)
if isinstance(a, Cycle): # f
return cls._af_new(a.list(size))
if not is_sequence(a): # b
return cls._af_new(list(range(a + 1)))
if has_variety(is_sequence(ai) for ai in a):
ok = False
else:
ok = False
if not ok:
raise ValueError("Permutation argument must be a list of ints, "
"a list of lists, Permutation or Cycle.")
# safe to assume args are valid; this also makes a copy
# of the args
args = list(args[0])
is_cycle = args and is_sequence(args[0])
if is_cycle: # e
args = [[int(i) for i in c] for c in args]
else: # d
args = [int(i) for i in args]
# if there are n elements present, 0, 1, ..., n-1 should be present
# unless a cycle notation has been provided. A 0 will be added
# for convenience in case one wants to enter permutations where
# counting starts from 1.
temp = flatten(args)
if has_dups(temp) and not is_cycle:
raise ValueError('there were repeated elements.')
temp = set(temp)
if not is_cycle and \
any(i not in temp for i in range(len(temp))):
raise ValueError("Integers 0 through %s must be present." %
max(temp))
if is_cycle:
# it's not necessarily canonical so we won't store
# it -- use the array form instead
c = Cycle()
for ci in args:
c = c(*ci)
aform = c.list()
else:
aform = list(args)
if size and size > len(aform):
# don't allow for truncation of permutation which
# might split a cycle and lead to an invalid aform
# but do allow the permutation size to be increased
aform.extend(list(range(len(aform), size)))
return cls._af_new(aform)
@classmethod
def _af_new(cls, perm):
"""A method to produce a Permutation object from a list;
the list is bound to the _array_form attribute, so it must
not be modified; this method is meant for internal use only;
the list ``a`` is supposed to be generated as a temporary value
in a method, so p = Perm._af_new(a) is the only object
to hold a reference to ``a``::
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Perm
>>> Perm.print_cyclic = False
>>> a = [2,1,3,0]
>>> p = Perm._af_new(a)
>>> p
Permutation([2, 1, 3, 0])
"""
p = Basic.__new__(cls, perm)
p._array_form = perm
p._size = len(perm)
return p
def _hashable_content(self):
# the array_form (a list) is the Permutation arg, so we need to
# return a tuple, instead
return tuple(self.array_form)
@property
def array_form(self):
"""
Return a copy of the attribute _array_form
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation([[2, 0], [3, 1]])
>>> p.array_form
[2, 3, 0, 1]
>>> Permutation([[2, 0, 3, 1]]).array_form
[3, 2, 0, 1]
>>> Permutation([2, 0, 3, 1]).array_form
[2, 0, 3, 1]
>>> Permutation([[1, 2], [4, 5]]).array_form
[0, 2, 1, 3, 5, 4]
"""
return self._array_form[:]
def __repr__(self):
from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation, Cycle
if Permutation.print_cyclic:
if not self.size:
return 'Permutation()'
# before taking Cycle notation, see if the last element is
# a singleton and move it to the head of the string
s = Cycle(self)(self.size - 1).__repr__()[len('Cycle'):]
last = s.rfind('(')
if not last == 0 and ',' not in s[last:]:
s = s[last:] + s[:last]
return 'Permutation%s' %s
else:
s = self.support()
if not s:
if self.size < 5:
return 'Permutation(%s)' % str(self.array_form)
return 'Permutation([], size=%s)' % self.size
trim = str(self.array_form[:s[-1] + 1]) + ', size=%s' % self.size
use = full = str(self.array_form)
if len(trim) < len(full):
use = trim
return 'Permutation(%s)' % use
def list(self, size=None):
"""Return the permutation as an explicit list, possibly
trimming unmoved elements if size is less than the maximum
element in the permutation; if this is desired, setting
``size=-1`` will guarantee such trimming.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation(2, 3)(4, 5)
>>> p.list()
[0, 1, 3, 2, 5, 4]
>>> p.list(10)
[0, 1, 3, 2, 5, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Passing a length too small will trim trailing, unchanged elements
in the permutation:
>>> Permutation(2, 4)(1, 2, 4).list(-1)
[0, 2, 1]
>>> Permutation(3).list(-1)
[]
"""
if not self and size is None:
raise ValueError('must give size for empty Cycle')
rv = self.array_form
if size is not None:
if size > self.size:
rv.extend(list(range(self.size, size)))
else:
# find first value from rhs where rv[i] != i
i = self.size - 1
while rv:
if rv[-1] != i:
break
rv.pop()
i -= 1
return rv
@property
def cyclic_form(self):
"""
This is used to convert to the cyclic notation
from the canonical notation. Singletons are omitted.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation([0, 3, 1, 2])
>>> p.cyclic_form
[[1, 3, 2]]
>>> Permutation([1, 0, 2, 4, 3, 5]).cyclic_form
[[0, 1], [3, 4]]
See Also
========
array_form, full_cyclic_form
"""
if self._cyclic_form is not None:
return list(self._cyclic_form)
array_form = self.array_form
unchecked = [True] * len(array_form)
cyclic_form = []
for i in range(len(array_form)):
if unchecked[i]:
cycle = []
cycle.append(i)
unchecked[i] = False
j = i
while unchecked[array_form[j]]:
j = array_form[j]
cycle.append(j)
unchecked[j] = False
if len(cycle) > 1:
cyclic_form.append(cycle)
assert cycle == list(minlex(cycle, is_set=True))
cyclic_form.sort()
self._cyclic_form = cyclic_form[:]
return cyclic_form
@property
def full_cyclic_form(self):
"""Return permutation in cyclic form including singletons.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation([0, 2, 1]).full_cyclic_form
[[0], [1, 2]]
"""
need = set(range(self.size)) - set(flatten(self.cyclic_form))
rv = self.cyclic_form
rv.extend([[i] for i in need])
rv.sort()
return rv
@property
def size(self):
"""
Returns the number of elements in the permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation([[3, 2], [0, 1]]).size
4
See Also
========
cardinality, length, order, rank
"""
return self._size
def support(self):
"""Return the elements in permutation, P, for which P[i] != i.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([[3, 2], [0, 1], [4]])
>>> p.array_form
[1, 0, 3, 2, 4]
>>> p.support()
[0, 1, 2, 3]
"""
a = self.array_form
return [i for i, e in enumerate(a) if a[i] != i]
def __add__(self, other):
"""Return permutation that is other higher in rank than self.
The rank is the lexicographical rank, with the identity permutation
having rank of 0.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> I = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> a = Permutation([2, 1, 3, 0])
>>> I + a.rank() == a
True
See Also
========
__sub__, inversion_vector
"""
rank = (self.rank() + other) % self.cardinality
rv = self.unrank_lex(self.size, rank)
rv._rank = rank
return rv
def __sub__(self, other):
"""Return the permutation that is other lower in rank than self.
See Also
========
__add__
"""
return self.__add__(-other)
@staticmethod
def rmul(*args):
"""
Return product of Permutations [a, b, c, ...] as the Permutation whose
ith value is a(b(c(i))).
a, b, c, ... can be Permutation objects or tuples.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_rmul, Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> a, b = [1, 0, 2], [0, 2, 1]
>>> a = Permutation(a); b = Permutation(b)
>>> list(Permutation.rmul(a, b))
[1, 2, 0]
>>> [a(b(i)) for i in range(3)]
[1, 2, 0]
This handles the operands in reverse order compared to the ``*`` operator:
>>> a = Permutation(a); b = Permutation(b)
>>> list(a*b)
[2, 0, 1]
>>> [b(a(i)) for i in range(3)]
[2, 0, 1]
Notes
=====
All items in the sequence will be parsed by Permutation as
necessary as long as the first item is a Permutation:
>>> Permutation.rmul(a, [0, 2, 1]) == Permutation.rmul(a, b)
True
The reverse order of arguments will raise a TypeError.
"""
rv = args[0]
for i in range(1, len(args)):
rv = args[i]*rv
return rv
@classmethod
def rmul_with_af(cls, *args):
"""
same as rmul, but the elements of args are Permutation objects
which have _array_form
"""
a = [x._array_form for x in args]
rv = cls._af_new(_af_rmuln(*a))
return rv
def mul_inv(self, other):
"""
other*~self, self and other have _array_form
"""
a = _af_invert(self._array_form)
b = other._array_form
return self._af_new(_af_rmul(a, b))
def __rmul__(self, other):
"""This is needed to coerce other to Permutation in rmul."""
cls = type(self)
return cls(other)*self
def __mul__(self, other):
"""
Return the product a*b as a Permutation; the ith value is b(a(i)).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import _af_rmul, Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> a, b = [1, 0, 2], [0, 2, 1]
>>> a = Permutation(a); b = Permutation(b)
>>> list(a*b)
[2, 0, 1]
>>> [b(a(i)) for i in range(3)]
[2, 0, 1]
This handles operands in reverse order compared to _af_rmul and rmul:
>>> al = list(a); bl = list(b)
>>> _af_rmul(al, bl)
[1, 2, 0]
>>> [al[bl[i]] for i in range(3)]
[1, 2, 0]
It is acceptable for the arrays to have different lengths; the shorter
one will be padded to match the longer one:
>>> b*Permutation([1, 0])
Permutation([1, 2, 0])
>>> Permutation([1, 0])*b
Permutation([2, 0, 1])
It is also acceptable to allow coercion to handle conversion of a
single list to the left of a Permutation:
>>> [0, 1]*a # no change: 2-element identity
Permutation([1, 0, 2])
>>> [[0, 1]]*a # exchange first two elements
Permutation([0, 1, 2])
You cannot use more than 1 cycle notation in a product of cycles
since coercion can only handle one argument to the left. To handle
multiple cycles it is convenient to use Cycle instead of Permutation:
>>> [[1, 2]]*[[2, 3]]*Permutation([]) # doctest: +SKIP
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Cycle
>>> Cycle(1, 2)(2, 3)
(1 3 2)
"""
a = self.array_form
# __rmul__ makes sure the other is a Permutation
b = other.array_form
if not b:
perm = a
else:
b.extend(list(range(len(b), len(a))))
perm = [b[i] for i in a] + b[len(a):]
return self._af_new(perm)
def commutes_with(self, other):
"""
Checks if the elements are commuting.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> a = Permutation([1, 4, 3, 0, 2, 5])
>>> b = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
>>> a.commutes_with(b)
True
>>> b = Permutation([2, 3, 5, 4, 1, 0])
>>> a.commutes_with(b)
False
"""
a = self.array_form
b = other.array_form
return _af_commutes_with(a, b)
def __pow__(self, n):
"""
Routine for finding powers of a permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation([2,0,3,1])
>>> p.order()
4
>>> p**4
Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
"""
if isinstance(n, Permutation):
raise NotImplementedError(
'p**p is not defined; do you mean p^p (conjugate)?')
n = int(n)
return self._af_new(_af_pow(self.array_form, n))
def __rxor__(self, i):
"""Return self(i) when ``i`` is an int.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation(1, 2, 9)
>>> 2^p == p(2) == 9
True
"""
if int(i) == i:
return self(i)
else:
raise NotImplementedError(
"i^p = p(i) when i is an integer, not %s." % i)
def __xor__(self, h):
"""Return the conjugate permutation ``~h*self*h` `.
If ``a`` and ``b`` are conjugates, ``a = h*b*~h`` and
``b = ~h*a*h`` and both have the same cycle structure.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> p = Permutation(1, 2, 9)
>>> q = Permutation(6, 9, 8)
>>> p*q != q*p
True
Calculate and check properties of the conjugate:
>>> c = p^q
>>> c == ~q*p*q and p == q*c*~q
True
The expression q^p^r is equivalent to q^(p*r):
>>> r = Permutation(9)(4, 6, 8)
>>> q^p^r == q^(p*r)
True
If the term to the left of the conjugate operator, i, is an integer
then this is interpreted as selecting the ith element from the
permutation to the right:
>>> all(i^p == p(i) for i in range(p.size))
True
Note that the * operator as higher precedence than the ^ operator:
>>> q^r*p^r == q^(r*p)^r == Permutation(9)(1, 6, 4)
True
Notes
=====
In Python the precedence rule is p^q^r = (p^q)^r which differs
in general from p^(q^r)
>>> q^p^r
(9)(1 4 8)
>>> q^(p^r)
(9)(1 8 6)
For a given r and p, both of the following are conjugates of p:
~r*p*r and r*p*~r. But these are not necessarily the same:
>>> ~r*p*r == r*p*~r
True
>>> p = Permutation(1, 2, 9)(5, 6)
>>> ~r*p*r == r*p*~r
False
The conjugate ~r*p*r was chosen so that ``p^q^r`` would be equivalent
to ``p^(q*r)`` rather than ``p^(r*q)``. To obtain r*p*~r, pass ~r to
this method:
>>> p^~r == r*p*~r
True
"""
if self.size != h.size:
raise ValueError("The permutations must be of equal size.")
a = [None]*self.size
h = h._array_form
p = self._array_form
for i in range(self.size):
a[h[i]] = h[p[i]]
return self._af_new(a)
def transpositions(self):
"""
Return the permutation decomposed into a list of transpositions.
It is always possible to express a permutation as the product of
transpositions, see [1]
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([[1, 2, 3], [0, 4, 5, 6, 7]])
>>> t = p.transpositions()
>>> t
[(0, 7), (0, 6), (0, 5), (0, 4), (1, 3), (1, 2)]
>>> print(''.join(str(c) for c in t))
(0, 7)(0, 6)(0, 5)(0, 4)(1, 3)(1, 2)
>>> Permutation.rmul(*[Permutation([ti], size=p.size) for ti in t]) == p
True
References
==========
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transposition_%28mathematics%29#Properties
"""
a = self.cyclic_form
res = []
for x in a:
nx = len(x)
if nx == 2:
res.append(tuple(x))
elif nx > 2:
first = x[0]
for y in x[nx - 1:0:-1]:
res.append((first, y))
return res
@classmethod
def from_sequence(self, i, key=None):
"""Return the permutation needed to obtain ``i`` from the sorted
elements of ``i``. If custom sorting is desired, a key can be given.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> Permutation.from_sequence('SymPy')
(4)(0 1 3)
>>> _(sorted("SymPy"))
['S', 'y', 'm', 'P', 'y']
>>> Permutation.from_sequence('SymPy', key=lambda x: x.lower())
(4)(0 2)(1 3)
"""
ic = list(zip(i, list(range(len(i)))))
if key:
ic.sort(key=lambda x: key(x[0]))
else:
ic.sort()
return ~Permutation([i[1] for i in ic])
def __invert__(self):
"""
Return the inverse of the permutation.
A permutation multiplied by its inverse is the identity permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([[2,0], [3,1]])
>>> ~p
Permutation([2, 3, 0, 1])
>>> _ == p**-1
True
>>> p*~p == ~p*p == Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
True
"""
return self._af_new(_af_invert(self._array_form))
def __iter__(self):
"""Yield elements from array form.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> list(Permutation(range(3)))
[0, 1, 2]
"""
for i in self.array_form:
yield i
def __call__(self, *i):
"""
Allows applying a permutation instance as a bijective function.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([[2, 0], [3, 1]])
>>> p.array_form
[2, 3, 0, 1]
>>> [p(i) for i in range(4)]
[2, 3, 0, 1]
If an array is given then the permutation selects the items
from the array (i.e. the permutation is applied to the array):
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> p([x, 1, 0, x**2])
[0, x**2, x, 1]
"""
# list indices can be Integer or int; leave this
# as it is (don't test or convert it) because this
# gets called a lot and should be fast
if len(i) == 1:
i = i[0]
try:
# P(1)
return self._array_form[i]
except TypeError:
try:
# P([a, b, c])
return [i[j] for j in self._array_form]
except Exception:
raise TypeError('unrecognized argument')
else:
# P(1, 2, 3)
return self*Permutation(Cycle(*i), size=self.size)
def atoms(self):
"""
Returns all the elements of a permutation
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).atoms()
{0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
>>> Permutation([[0, 1], [2, 3], [4, 5]]).atoms()
{0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
"""
return set(self.array_form)
def next_lex(self):
"""
Returns the next permutation in lexicographical order.
If self is the last permutation in lexicographical order
it returns None.
See [4] section 2.4.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([2, 3, 1, 0])
>>> p = Permutation([2, 3, 1, 0]); p.rank()
17
>>> p = p.next_lex(); p.rank()
18
See Also
========
rank, unrank_lex
"""
perm = self.array_form[:]
n = len(perm)
i = n - 2
while perm[i + 1] < perm[i]:
i -= 1
if i == -1:
return None
else:
j = n - 1
while perm[j] < perm[i]:
j -= 1
perm[j], perm[i] = perm[i], perm[j]
i += 1
j = n - 1
while i < j:
perm[j], perm[i] = perm[i], perm[j]
i += 1
j -= 1
return self._af_new(perm)
@classmethod
def unrank_nonlex(self, n, r):
"""
This is a linear time unranking algorithm that does not
respect lexicographic order [3].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> Permutation.unrank_nonlex(4, 5)
Permutation([2, 0, 3, 1])
>>> Permutation.unrank_nonlex(4, -1)
Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
See Also
========
next_nonlex, rank_nonlex
"""
def _unrank1(n, r, a):
if n > 0:
a[n - 1], a[r % n] = a[r % n], a[n - 1]
_unrank1(n - 1, r//n, a)
id_perm = list(range(n))
n = int(n)
r = r % ifac(n)
_unrank1(n, r, id_perm)
return self._af_new(id_perm)
def rank_nonlex(self, inv_perm=None):
"""
This is a linear time ranking algorithm that does not
enforce lexicographic order [3].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> p.rank_nonlex()
23
See Also
========
next_nonlex, unrank_nonlex
"""
def _rank1(n, perm, inv_perm):
if n == 1:
return 0
s = perm[n - 1]
t = inv_perm[n - 1]
perm[n - 1], perm[t] = perm[t], s
inv_perm[n - 1], inv_perm[s] = inv_perm[s], t
return s + n*_rank1(n - 1, perm, inv_perm)
if inv_perm is None:
inv_perm = (~self).array_form
if not inv_perm:
return 0
perm = self.array_form[:]
r = _rank1(len(perm), perm, inv_perm)
return r
def next_nonlex(self):
"""
Returns the next permutation in nonlex order [3].
If self is the last permutation in this order it returns None.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation([2, 0, 3, 1]); p.rank_nonlex()
5
>>> p = p.next_nonlex(); p
Permutation([3, 0, 1, 2])
>>> p.rank_nonlex()
6
See Also
========
rank_nonlex, unrank_nonlex
"""
r = self.rank_nonlex()
if r == ifac(self.size) - 1:
return None
return self.unrank_nonlex(self.size, r + 1)
def rank(self):
"""
Returns the lexicographic rank of the permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> p.rank()
0
>>> p = Permutation([3, 2, 1, 0])
>>> p.rank()
23
See Also
========
next_lex, unrank_lex, cardinality, length, order, size
"""
if not self._rank is None:
return self._rank
rank = 0
rho = self.array_form[:]
n = self.size - 1
size = n + 1
psize = int(ifac(n))
for j in range(size - 1):
rank += rho[j]*psize
for i in range(j + 1, size):
if rho[i] > rho[j]:
rho[i] -= 1
psize //= n
n -= 1
self._rank = rank
return rank
@property
def cardinality(self):
"""
Returns the number of all possible permutations.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> p.cardinality
24
See Also
========
length, order, rank, size
"""
return int(ifac(self.size))
def parity(self):
"""
Computes the parity of a permutation.
The parity of a permutation reflects the parity of the
number of inversions in the permutation, i.e., the
number of pairs of x and y such that ``x > y`` but ``p[x] < p[y]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> p.parity()
0
>>> p = Permutation([3, 2, 0, 1])
>>> p.parity()
1
See Also
========
_af_parity
"""
if self._cyclic_form is not None:
return (self.size - self.cycles) % 2
return _af_parity(self.array_form)
@property
def is_even(self):
"""
Checks if a permutation is even.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> p.is_even
True
>>> p = Permutation([3, 2, 1, 0])
>>> p.is_even
True
See Also
========
is_odd
"""
return not self.is_odd
@property
def is_odd(self):
"""
Checks if a permutation is odd.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> p.is_odd
False
>>> p = Permutation([3, 2, 0, 1])
>>> p.is_odd
True
See Also
========
is_even
"""
return bool(self.parity() % 2)
@property
def is_Singleton(self):
"""
Checks to see if the permutation contains only one number and is
thus the only possible permutation of this set of numbers
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation([0]).is_Singleton
True
>>> Permutation([0, 1]).is_Singleton
False
See Also
========
is_Empty
"""
return self.size == 1
@property
def is_Empty(self):
"""
Checks to see if the permutation is a set with zero elements
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation([]).is_Empty
True
>>> Permutation([0]).is_Empty
False
See Also
========
is_Singleton
"""
return self.size == 0
@property
def is_identity(self):
return self.is_Identity
@property
def is_Identity(self):
"""
Returns True if the Permutation is an identity permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([])
>>> p.is_Identity
True
>>> p = Permutation([[0], [1], [2]])
>>> p.is_Identity
True
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2])
>>> p.is_Identity
True
>>> p = Permutation([0, 2, 1])
>>> p.is_Identity
False
See Also
========
order
"""
af = self.array_form
return not af or all(i == af[i] for i in range(self.size))
def ascents(self):
"""
Returns the positions of ascents in a permutation, ie, the location
where p[i] < p[i+1]
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([4, 0, 1, 3, 2])
>>> p.ascents()
[1, 2]
See Also
========
descents, inversions, min, max
"""
a = self.array_form
pos = [i for i in range(len(a) - 1) if a[i] < a[i + 1]]
return pos
def descents(self):
"""
Returns the positions of descents in a permutation, ie, the location
where p[i] > p[i+1]
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([4, 0, 1, 3, 2])
>>> p.descents()
[0, 3]
See Also
========
ascents, inversions, min, max
"""
a = self.array_form
pos = [i for i in range(len(a) - 1) if a[i] > a[i + 1]]
return pos
def max(self):
"""
The maximum element moved by the permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([1, 0, 2, 3, 4])
>>> p.max()
1
See Also
========
min, descents, ascents, inversions
"""
max = 0
a = self.array_form
for i in range(len(a)):
if a[i] != i and a[i] > max:
max = a[i]
return max
def min(self):
"""
The minimum element moved by the permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 4, 3, 2])
>>> p.min()
2
See Also
========
max, descents, ascents, inversions
"""
a = self.array_form
min = len(a)
for i in range(len(a)):
if a[i] != i and a[i] < min:
min = a[i]
return min
def inversions(self):
"""
Computes the number of inversions of a permutation.
An inversion is where i > j but p[i] < p[j].
For small length of p, it iterates over all i and j
values and calculates the number of inversions.
For large length of p, it uses a variation of merge
sort to calculate the number of inversions.
References
==========
[1] http://www.cp.eng.chula.ac.th/~piak/teaching/algo/algo2008/count-inv.htm
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
>>> p.inversions()
0
>>> Permutation([3, 2, 1, 0]).inversions()
6
See Also
========
descents, ascents, min, max
"""
inversions = 0
a = self.array_form
n = len(a)
if n < 130:
for i in range(n - 1):
b = a[i]
for c in a[i + 1:]:
if b > c:
inversions += 1
else:
k = 1
right = 0
arr = a[:]
temp = a[:]
while k < n:
i = 0
while i + k < n:
right = i + k * 2 - 1
if right >= n:
right = n - 1
inversions += _merge(arr, temp, i, i + k, right)
i = i + k * 2
k = k * 2
return inversions
def commutator(self, x):
"""Return the commutator of self and x: ``~x*~self*x*self``
If f and g are part of a group, G, then the commutator of f and g
is the group identity iff f and g commute, i.e. fg == gf.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation([0, 2, 3, 1])
>>> x = Permutation([2, 0, 3, 1])
>>> c = p.commutator(x); c
Permutation([2, 1, 3, 0])
>>> c == ~x*~p*x*p
True
>>> I = Permutation(3)
>>> p = [I + i for i in range(6)]
>>> for i in range(len(p)):
... for j in range(len(p)):
... c = p[i].commutator(p[j])
... if p[i]*p[j] == p[j]*p[i]:
... assert c == I
... else:
... assert c != I
...
References
==========
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commutator
"""
a = self.array_form
b = x.array_form
n = len(a)
if len(b) != n:
raise ValueError("The permutations must be of equal size.")
inva = [None]*n
for i in range(n):
inva[a[i]] = i
invb = [None]*n
for i in range(n):
invb[b[i]] = i
return self._af_new([a[b[inva[i]]] for i in invb])
def signature(self):
"""
Gives the signature of the permutation needed to place the
elements of the permutation in canonical order.
The signature is calculated as (-1)^<number of inversions>
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2])
>>> p.inversions()
0
>>> p.signature()
1
>>> q = Permutation([0,2,1])
>>> q.inversions()
1
>>> q.signature()
-1
See Also
========
inversions
"""
if self.is_even:
return 1
return -1
def order(self):
"""
Computes the order of a permutation.
When the permutation is raised to the power of its
order it equals the identity permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation([3, 1, 5, 2, 4, 0])
>>> p.order()
4
>>> (p**(p.order()))
Permutation([], size=6)
See Also
========
identity, cardinality, length, rank, size
"""
return reduce(lcm, [len(cycle) for cycle in self.cyclic_form], 1)
def length(self):
"""
Returns the number of integers moved by a permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation([0, 3, 2, 1]).length()
2
>>> Permutation([[0, 1], [2, 3]]).length()
4
See Also
========
min, max, support, cardinality, order, rank, size
"""
return len(self.support())
@property
def cycle_structure(self):
"""Return the cycle structure of the permutation as a dictionary
indicating the multiplicity of each cycle length.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> Permutation(3).cycle_structure
{1: 4}
>>> Permutation(0, 4, 3)(1, 2)(5, 6).cycle_structure
{2: 2, 3: 1}
"""
if self._cycle_structure:
rv = self._cycle_structure
else:
rv = defaultdict(int)
singletons = self.size
for c in self.cyclic_form:
rv[len(c)] += 1
singletons -= len(c)
if singletons:
rv[1] = singletons
self._cycle_structure = rv
return dict(rv) # make a copy
@property
def cycles(self):
"""
Returns the number of cycles contained in the permutation
(including singletons).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation([0, 1, 2]).cycles
3
>>> Permutation([0, 1, 2]).full_cyclic_form
[[0], [1], [2]]
>>> Permutation(0, 1)(2, 3).cycles
2
See Also
========
sympy.functions.combinatorial.numbers.stirling
"""
return len(self.full_cyclic_form)
def index(self):
"""
Returns the index of a permutation.
The index of a permutation is the sum of all subscripts j such
that p[j] is greater than p[j+1].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([3, 0, 2, 1, 4])
>>> p.index()
2
"""
a = self.array_form
return sum([j for j in range(len(a) - 1) if a[j] > a[j + 1]])
def runs(self):
"""
Returns the runs of a permutation.
An ascending sequence in a permutation is called a run [5].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([2, 5, 7, 3, 6, 0, 1, 4, 8])
>>> p.runs()
[[2, 5, 7], [3, 6], [0, 1, 4, 8]]
>>> q = Permutation([1,3,2,0])
>>> q.runs()
[[1, 3], [2], [0]]
"""
return runs(self.array_form)
def inversion_vector(self):
"""Return the inversion vector of the permutation.
The inversion vector consists of elements whose value
indicates the number of elements in the permutation
that are lesser than it and lie on its right hand side.
The inversion vector is the same as the Lehmer encoding of a
permutation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([4, 8, 0, 7, 1, 5, 3, 6, 2])
>>> p.inversion_vector()
[4, 7, 0, 5, 0, 2, 1, 1]
>>> p = Permutation([3, 2, 1, 0])
>>> p.inversion_vector()
[3, 2, 1]
The inversion vector increases lexicographically with the rank
of the permutation, the -ith element cycling through 0..i.
>>> p = Permutation(2)
>>> while p:
... print('%s %s %s' % (p, p.inversion_vector(), p.rank()))
... p = p.next_lex()
...
Permutation([0, 1, 2]) [0, 0] 0
Permutation([0, 2, 1]) [0, 1] 1
Permutation([1, 0, 2]) [1, 0] 2
Permutation([1, 2, 0]) [1, 1] 3
Permutation([2, 0, 1]) [2, 0] 4
Permutation([2, 1, 0]) [2, 1] 5
See Also
========
from_inversion_vector
"""
self_array_form = self.array_form
n = len(self_array_form)
inversion_vector = [0] * (n - 1)
for i in range(n - 1):
val = 0
for j in range(i + 1, n):
if self_array_form[j] < self_array_form[i]:
val += 1
inversion_vector[i] = val
return inversion_vector
def rank_trotterjohnson(self):
"""
Returns the Trotter Johnson rank, which we get from the minimal
change algorithm. See [4] section 2.4.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> p.rank_trotterjohnson()
0
>>> p = Permutation([0, 2, 1, 3])
>>> p.rank_trotterjohnson()
7
See Also
========
unrank_trotterjohnson, next_trotterjohnson
"""
if self.array_form == [] or self.is_Identity:
return 0
if self.array_form == [1, 0]:
return 1
perm = self.array_form
n = self.size
rank = 0
for j in range(1, n):
k = 1
i = 0
while perm[i] != j:
if perm[i] < j:
k += 1
i += 1
j1 = j + 1
if rank % 2 == 0:
rank = j1*rank + j1 - k
else:
rank = j1*rank + k - 1
return rank
@classmethod
def unrank_trotterjohnson(cls, size, rank):
"""
Trotter Johnson permutation unranking. See [4] section 2.4.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.unrank_trotterjohnson(5, 10)
Permutation([0, 3, 1, 2, 4])
See Also
========
rank_trotterjohnson, next_trotterjohnson
"""
perm = [0]*size
r2 = 0
n = ifac(size)
pj = 1
for j in range(2, size + 1):
pj *= j
r1 = (rank * pj) // n
k = r1 - j*r2
if r2 % 2 == 0:
for i in range(j - 1, j - k - 1, -1):
perm[i] = perm[i - 1]
perm[j - k - 1] = j - 1
else:
for i in range(j - 1, k, -1):
perm[i] = perm[i - 1]
perm[k] = j - 1
r2 = r1
return cls._af_new(perm)
def next_trotterjohnson(self):
"""
Returns the next permutation in Trotter-Johnson order.
If self is the last permutation it returns None.
See [4] section 2.4. If it is desired to generate all such
permutations, they can be generated in order more quickly
with the ``generate_bell`` function.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> p = Permutation([3, 0, 2, 1])
>>> p.rank_trotterjohnson()
4
>>> p = p.next_trotterjohnson(); p
Permutation([0, 3, 2, 1])
>>> p.rank_trotterjohnson()
5
See Also
========
rank_trotterjohnson, unrank_trotterjohnson, sympy.utilities.iterables.generate_bell
"""
pi = self.array_form[:]
n = len(pi)
st = 0
rho = pi[:]
done = False
m = n-1
while m > 0 and not done:
d = rho.index(m)
for i in range(d, m):
rho[i] = rho[i + 1]
par = _af_parity(rho[:m])
if par == 1:
if d == m:
m -= 1
else:
pi[st + d], pi[st + d + 1] = pi[st + d + 1], pi[st + d]
done = True
else:
if d == 0:
m -= 1
st += 1
else:
pi[st + d], pi[st + d - 1] = pi[st + d - 1], pi[st + d]
done = True
if m == 0:
return None
return self._af_new(pi)
def get_precedence_matrix(self):
"""
Gets the precedence matrix. This is used for computing the
distance between two permutations.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation.josephus(3, 6, 1)
>>> p
Permutation([2, 5, 3, 1, 4, 0])
>>> p.get_precedence_matrix()
Matrix([
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0],
[1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1],
[1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0],
[1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0]])
See Also
========
get_precedence_distance, get_adjacency_matrix, get_adjacency_distance
"""
m = zeros(self.size)
perm = self.array_form
for i in range(m.rows):
for j in range(i + 1, m.cols):
m[perm[i], perm[j]] = 1
return m
def get_precedence_distance(self, other):
"""
Computes the precedence distance between two permutations.
Suppose p and p' represent n jobs. The precedence metric
counts the number of times a job j is preceded by job i
in both p and p'. This metric is commutative.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([2, 0, 4, 3, 1])
>>> q = Permutation([3, 1, 2, 4, 0])
>>> p.get_precedence_distance(q)
7
>>> q.get_precedence_distance(p)
7
See Also
========
get_precedence_matrix, get_adjacency_matrix, get_adjacency_distance
"""
if self.size != other.size:
raise ValueError("The permutations must be of equal size.")
self_prec_mat = self.get_precedence_matrix()
other_prec_mat = other.get_precedence_matrix()
n_prec = 0
for i in range(self.size):
for j in range(self.size):
if i == j:
continue
if self_prec_mat[i, j] * other_prec_mat[i, j] == 1:
n_prec += 1
d = self.size * (self.size - 1)//2 - n_prec
return d
def get_adjacency_matrix(self):
"""
Computes the adjacency matrix of a permutation.
If job i is adjacent to job j in a permutation p
then we set m[i, j] = 1 where m is the adjacency
matrix of p.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation.josephus(3, 6, 1)
>>> p.get_adjacency_matrix()
Matrix([
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1],
[0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0]])
>>> q = Permutation([0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> q.get_adjacency_matrix()
Matrix([
[0, 1, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 1, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 1],
[0, 0, 0, 0]])
See Also
========
get_precedence_matrix, get_precedence_distance, get_adjacency_distance
"""
m = zeros(self.size)
perm = self.array_form
for i in range(self.size - 1):
m[perm[i], perm[i + 1]] = 1
return m
def get_adjacency_distance(self, other):
"""
Computes the adjacency distance between two permutations.
This metric counts the number of times a pair i,j of jobs is
adjacent in both p and p'. If n_adj is this quantity then
the adjacency distance is n - n_adj - 1 [1]
[1] Reeves, Colin R. Landscapes, Operators and Heuristic search, Annals
of Operational Research, 86, pp 473-490. (1999)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 3, 1, 2, 4])
>>> q = Permutation.josephus(4, 5, 2)
>>> p.get_adjacency_distance(q)
3
>>> r = Permutation([0, 2, 1, 4, 3])
>>> p.get_adjacency_distance(r)
4
See Also
========
get_precedence_matrix, get_precedence_distance, get_adjacency_matrix
"""
if self.size != other.size:
raise ValueError("The permutations must be of the same size.")
self_adj_mat = self.get_adjacency_matrix()
other_adj_mat = other.get_adjacency_matrix()
n_adj = 0
for i in range(self.size):
for j in range(self.size):
if i == j:
continue
if self_adj_mat[i, j] * other_adj_mat[i, j] == 1:
n_adj += 1
d = self.size - n_adj - 1
return d
def get_positional_distance(self, other):
"""
Computes the positional distance between two permutations.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> p = Permutation([0, 3, 1, 2, 4])
>>> q = Permutation.josephus(4, 5, 2)
>>> r = Permutation([3, 1, 4, 0, 2])
>>> p.get_positional_distance(q)
12
>>> p.get_positional_distance(r)
12
See Also
========
get_precedence_distance, get_adjacency_distance
"""
a = self.array_form
b = other.array_form
if len(a) != len(b):
raise ValueError("The permutations must be of the same size.")
return sum([abs(a[i] - b[i]) for i in range(len(a))])
@classmethod
def josephus(cls, m, n, s=1):
"""Return as a permutation the shuffling of range(n) using the Josephus
scheme in which every m-th item is selected until all have been chosen.
The returned permutation has elements listed by the order in which they
were selected.
The parameter ``s`` stops the selection process when there are ``s``
items remaining and these are selected by continuing the selection,
counting by 1 rather than by ``m``.
Consider selecting every 3rd item from 6 until only 2 remain::
choices chosen
======== ======
012345
01 345 2
01 34 25
01 4 253
0 4 2531
0 25314
253140
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.josephus(3, 6, 2).array_form
[2, 5, 3, 1, 4, 0]
References
==========
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavius_Josephus
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josephus_problem
3. http://www.wou.edu/~burtonl/josephus.html
"""
from collections import deque
m -= 1
Q = deque(list(range(n)))
perm = []
while len(Q) > max(s, 1):
for dp in range(m):
Q.append(Q.popleft())
perm.append(Q.popleft())
perm.extend(list(Q))
return cls(perm)
@classmethod
def from_inversion_vector(cls, inversion):
"""
Calculates the permutation from the inversion vector.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> Permutation.from_inversion_vector([3, 2, 1, 0, 0])
Permutation([3, 2, 1, 0, 4, 5])
"""
size = len(inversion)
N = list(range(size + 1))
perm = []
try:
for k in range(size):
val = N[inversion[k]]
perm.append(val)
N.remove(val)
except IndexError:
raise ValueError("The inversion vector is not valid.")
perm.extend(N)
return cls._af_new(perm)
@classmethod
def random(cls, n):
"""
Generates a random permutation of length ``n``.
Uses the underlying Python pseudo-random number generator.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.random(2) in (Permutation([1, 0]), Permutation([0, 1]))
True
"""
perm_array = list(range(n))
random.shuffle(perm_array)
return cls._af_new(perm_array)
@classmethod
def unrank_lex(cls, size, rank):
"""
Lexicographic permutation unranking.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = False
>>> a = Permutation.unrank_lex(5, 10)
>>> a.rank()
10
>>> a
Permutation([0, 2, 4, 1, 3])
See Also
========
rank, next_lex
"""
perm_array = [0] * size
psize = 1
for i in range(size):
new_psize = psize*(i + 1)
d = (rank % new_psize) // psize
rank -= d*psize
perm_array[size - i - 1] = d
for j in range(size - i, size):
if perm_array[j] > d - 1:
perm_array[j] += 1
psize = new_psize
return cls._af_new(perm_array)
# global flag to control how permutations are printed
# when True, Permutation([0, 2, 1, 3]) -> Cycle(1, 2)
# when False, Permutation([0, 2, 1, 3]) -> Permutation([0, 2, 1])
print_cyclic = True
def _merge(arr, temp, left, mid, right):
"""
Merges two sorted arrays and calculates the inversion count.
Helper function for calculating inversions. This method is
for internal use only.
"""
i = k = left
j = mid
inv_count = 0
while i < mid and j <= right:
if arr[i] < arr[j]:
temp[k] = arr[i]
k += 1
i += 1
else:
temp[k] = arr[j]
k += 1
j += 1
inv_count += (mid -i)
while i < mid:
temp[k] = arr[i]
k += 1
i += 1
if j <= right:
k += right - j + 1
j += right - j + 1
arr[left:k + 1] = temp[left:k + 1]
else:
arr[left:right + 1] = temp[left:right + 1]
return inv_count
Perm = Permutation
_af_new = Perm._af_new
|
13598cc2a251a71b416775d4a9d937d7b2c68377b925c9697e2f8d9e471363b6
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import Basic, Dict, sympify
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int, default_sort_key, range
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.numbers import bell
from sympy.matrices import zeros
from sympy.sets.sets import FiniteSet
from sympy.utilities.iterables import has_dups, flatten, group
from collections import defaultdict
class Partition(FiniteSet):
"""
This class represents an abstract partition.
A partition is a set of disjoint sets whose union equals a given set.
See Also
========
sympy.utilities.iterables.partitions,
sympy.utilities.iterables.multiset_partitions
"""
_rank = None
_partition = None
def __new__(cls, *partition):
"""
Generates a new partition object.
This method also verifies if the arguments passed are
valid and raises a ValueError if they are not.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> a = Partition([1, 2], [3])
>>> a
{{3}, {1, 2}}
>>> a.partition
[[1, 2], [3]]
>>> len(a)
2
>>> a.members
(1, 2, 3)
"""
args = partition
if not all(isinstance(part, (list, FiniteSet)) for part in args):
raise ValueError(
"Each argument to Partition should be a list or a FiniteSet")
# sort so we have a canonical reference for RGS
partition = sorted(sum(partition, []), key=default_sort_key)
if has_dups(partition):
raise ValueError("Partition contained duplicated elements.")
obj = FiniteSet.__new__(cls, *[FiniteSet(*x) for x in args])
obj.members = tuple(partition)
obj.size = len(partition)
return obj
def sort_key(self, order=None):
"""Return a canonical key that can be used for sorting.
Ordering is based on the size and sorted elements of the partition
and ties are broken with the rank.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import default_sort_key
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> a = Partition([1, 2])
>>> b = Partition([3, 4])
>>> c = Partition([1, x])
>>> d = Partition(list(range(4)))
>>> l = [d, b, a + 1, a, c]
>>> l.sort(key=default_sort_key); l
[{{1, 2}}, {{1}, {2}}, {{1, x}}, {{3, 4}}, {{0, 1, 2, 3}}]
"""
if order is None:
members = self.members
else:
members = tuple(sorted(self.members,
key=lambda w: default_sort_key(w, order)))
return list(map(default_sort_key, (self.size, members, self.rank)))
@property
def partition(self):
"""Return partition as a sorted list of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> Partition([1], [2, 3]).partition
[[1], [2, 3]]
"""
if self._partition is None:
self._partition = sorted([sorted(p, key=default_sort_key)
for p in self.args])
return self._partition
def __add__(self, other):
"""
Return permutation whose rank is ``other`` greater than current rank,
(mod the maximum rank for the set).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> a = Partition([1, 2], [3])
>>> a.rank
1
>>> (a + 1).rank
2
>>> (a + 100).rank
1
"""
other = as_int(other)
offset = self.rank + other
result = RGS_unrank((offset) %
RGS_enum(self.size),
self.size)
return Partition.from_rgs(result, self.members)
def __sub__(self, other):
"""
Return permutation whose rank is ``other`` less than current rank,
(mod the maximum rank for the set).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> a = Partition([1, 2], [3])
>>> a.rank
1
>>> (a - 1).rank
0
>>> (a - 100).rank
1
"""
return self.__add__(-other)
def __le__(self, other):
"""
Checks if a partition is less than or equal to
the other based on rank.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> a = Partition([1, 2], [3, 4, 5])
>>> b = Partition([1], [2, 3], [4], [5])
>>> a.rank, b.rank
(9, 34)
>>> a <= a
True
>>> a <= b
True
"""
return self.sort_key() <= sympify(other).sort_key()
def __lt__(self, other):
"""
Checks if a partition is less than the other.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> a = Partition([1, 2], [3, 4, 5])
>>> b = Partition([1], [2, 3], [4], [5])
>>> a.rank, b.rank
(9, 34)
>>> a < b
True
"""
return self.sort_key() < sympify(other).sort_key()
@property
def rank(self):
"""
Gets the rank of a partition.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> a = Partition([1, 2], [3], [4, 5])
>>> a.rank
13
"""
if self._rank is not None:
return self._rank
self._rank = RGS_rank(self.RGS)
return self._rank
@property
def RGS(self):
"""
Returns the "restricted growth string" of the partition.
The RGS is returned as a list of indices, L, where L[i] indicates
the block in which element i appears. For example, in a partition
of 3 elements (a, b, c) into 2 blocks ([c], [a, b]) the RGS is
[1, 1, 0]: "a" is in block 1, "b" is in block 1 and "c" is in block 0.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> a = Partition([1, 2], [3], [4, 5])
>>> a.members
(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
>>> a.RGS
(0, 0, 1, 2, 2)
>>> a + 1
{{3}, {4}, {5}, {1, 2}}
>>> _.RGS
(0, 0, 1, 2, 3)
"""
rgs = {}
partition = self.partition
for i, part in enumerate(partition):
for j in part:
rgs[j] = i
return tuple([rgs[i] for i in sorted(
[i for p in partition for i in p], key=default_sort_key)])
@classmethod
def from_rgs(self, rgs, elements):
"""
Creates a set partition from a restricted growth string.
The indices given in rgs are assumed to be the index
of the element as given in elements *as provided* (the
elements are not sorted by this routine). Block numbering
starts from 0. If any block was not referenced in ``rgs``
an error will be raised.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> Partition.from_rgs([0, 1, 2, 0, 1], list('abcde'))
{{c}, {a, d}, {b, e}}
>>> Partition.from_rgs([0, 1, 2, 0, 1], list('cbead'))
{{e}, {a, c}, {b, d}}
>>> a = Partition([1, 4], [2], [3, 5])
>>> Partition.from_rgs(a.RGS, a.members)
{{2}, {1, 4}, {3, 5}}
"""
if len(rgs) != len(elements):
raise ValueError('mismatch in rgs and element lengths')
max_elem = max(rgs) + 1
partition = [[] for i in range(max_elem)]
j = 0
for i in rgs:
partition[i].append(elements[j])
j += 1
if not all(p for p in partition):
raise ValueError('some blocks of the partition were empty.')
return Partition(*partition)
class IntegerPartition(Basic):
"""
This class represents an integer partition.
In number theory and combinatorics, a partition of a positive integer,
``n``, also called an integer partition, is a way of writing ``n`` as a
list of positive integers that sum to n. Two partitions that differ only
in the order of summands are considered to be the same partition; if order
matters then the partitions are referred to as compositions. For example,
4 has five partitions: [4], [3, 1], [2, 2], [2, 1, 1], and [1, 1, 1, 1];
the compositions [1, 2, 1] and [1, 1, 2] are the same as partition
[2, 1, 1].
See Also
========
sympy.utilities.iterables.partitions,
sympy.utilities.iterables.multiset_partitions
Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partition_%28number_theory%29
"""
_dict = None
_keys = None
def __new__(cls, partition, integer=None):
"""
Generates a new IntegerPartition object from a list or dictionary.
The partition can be given as a list of positive integers or a
dictionary of (integer, multiplicity) items. If the partition is
preceded by an integer an error will be raised if the partition
does not sum to that given integer.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import IntegerPartition
>>> a = IntegerPartition([5, 4, 3, 1, 1])
>>> a
IntegerPartition(14, (5, 4, 3, 1, 1))
>>> print(a)
[5, 4, 3, 1, 1]
>>> IntegerPartition({1:3, 2:1})
IntegerPartition(5, (2, 1, 1, 1))
If the value that the partition should sum to is given first, a check
will be made to see n error will be raised if there is a discrepancy:
>>> IntegerPartition(10, [5, 4, 3, 1])
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: The partition is not valid
"""
if integer is not None:
integer, partition = partition, integer
if isinstance(partition, (dict, Dict)):
_ = []
for k, v in sorted(list(partition.items()), reverse=True):
if not v:
continue
k, v = as_int(k), as_int(v)
_.extend([k]*v)
partition = tuple(_)
else:
partition = tuple(sorted(map(as_int, partition), reverse=True))
sum_ok = False
if integer is None:
integer = sum(partition)
sum_ok = True
else:
integer = as_int(integer)
if not sum_ok and sum(partition) != integer:
raise ValueError("Partition did not add to %s" % integer)
if any(i < 1 for i in partition):
raise ValueError("The summands must all be positive.")
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, integer, partition)
obj.partition = list(partition)
obj.integer = integer
return obj
def prev_lex(self):
"""Return the previous partition of the integer, n, in lexical order,
wrapping around to [1, ..., 1] if the partition is [n].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import IntegerPartition
>>> p = IntegerPartition([4])
>>> print(p.prev_lex())
[3, 1]
>>> p.partition > p.prev_lex().partition
True
"""
d = defaultdict(int)
d.update(self.as_dict())
keys = self._keys
if keys == [1]:
return IntegerPartition({self.integer: 1})
if keys[-1] != 1:
d[keys[-1]] -= 1
if keys[-1] == 2:
d[1] = 2
else:
d[keys[-1] - 1] = d[1] = 1
else:
d[keys[-2]] -= 1
left = d[1] + keys[-2]
new = keys[-2]
d[1] = 0
while left:
new -= 1
if left - new >= 0:
d[new] += left//new
left -= d[new]*new
return IntegerPartition(self.integer, d)
def next_lex(self):
"""Return the next partition of the integer, n, in lexical order,
wrapping around to [n] if the partition is [1, ..., 1].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import IntegerPartition
>>> p = IntegerPartition([3, 1])
>>> print(p.next_lex())
[4]
>>> p.partition < p.next_lex().partition
True
"""
d = defaultdict(int)
d.update(self.as_dict())
key = self._keys
a = key[-1]
if a == self.integer:
d.clear()
d[1] = self.integer
elif a == 1:
if d[a] > 1:
d[a + 1] += 1
d[a] -= 2
else:
b = key[-2]
d[b + 1] += 1
d[1] = (d[b] - 1)*b
d[b] = 0
else:
if d[a] > 1:
if len(key) == 1:
d.clear()
d[a + 1] = 1
d[1] = self.integer - a - 1
else:
a1 = a + 1
d[a1] += 1
d[1] = d[a]*a - a1
d[a] = 0
else:
b = key[-2]
b1 = b + 1
d[b1] += 1
need = d[b]*b + d[a]*a - b1
d[a] = d[b] = 0
d[1] = need
return IntegerPartition(self.integer, d)
def as_dict(self):
"""Return the partition as a dictionary whose keys are the
partition integers and the values are the multiplicity of that
integer.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import IntegerPartition
>>> IntegerPartition([1]*3 + [2] + [3]*4).as_dict()
{1: 3, 2: 1, 3: 4}
"""
if self._dict is None:
groups = group(self.partition, multiple=False)
self._keys = [g[0] for g in groups]
self._dict = dict(groups)
return self._dict
@property
def conjugate(self):
"""
Computes the conjugate partition of itself.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import IntegerPartition
>>> a = IntegerPartition([6, 3, 3, 2, 1])
>>> a.conjugate
[5, 4, 3, 1, 1, 1]
"""
j = 1
temp_arr = list(self.partition) + [0]
k = temp_arr[0]
b = [0]*k
while k > 0:
while k > temp_arr[j]:
b[k - 1] = j
k -= 1
j += 1
return b
def __lt__(self, other):
"""Return True if self is less than other when the partition
is listed from smallest to biggest.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import IntegerPartition
>>> a = IntegerPartition([3, 1])
>>> a < a
False
>>> b = a.next_lex()
>>> a < b
True
>>> a == b
False
"""
return list(reversed(self.partition)) < list(reversed(other.partition))
def __le__(self, other):
"""Return True if self is less than other when the partition
is listed from smallest to biggest.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import IntegerPartition
>>> a = IntegerPartition([4])
>>> a <= a
True
"""
return list(reversed(self.partition)) <= list(reversed(other.partition))
def as_ferrers(self, char='#'):
"""
Prints the ferrer diagram of a partition.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import IntegerPartition
>>> print(IntegerPartition([1, 1, 5]).as_ferrers())
#####
#
#
"""
return "\n".join([char*i for i in self.partition])
def __str__(self):
return str(list(self.partition))
def random_integer_partition(n, seed=None):
"""
Generates a random integer partition summing to ``n`` as a list
of reverse-sorted integers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import random_integer_partition
For the following, a seed is given so a known value can be shown; in
practice, the seed would not be given.
>>> random_integer_partition(100, seed=[1, 1, 12, 1, 2, 1, 85, 1])
[85, 12, 2, 1]
>>> random_integer_partition(10, seed=[1, 2, 3, 1, 5, 1])
[5, 3, 1, 1]
>>> random_integer_partition(1)
[1]
"""
from sympy.utilities.randtest import _randint
n = as_int(n)
if n < 1:
raise ValueError('n must be a positive integer')
randint = _randint(seed)
partition = []
while (n > 0):
k = randint(1, n)
mult = randint(1, n//k)
partition.append((k, mult))
n -= k*mult
partition.sort(reverse=True)
partition = flatten([[k]*m for k, m in partition])
return partition
def RGS_generalized(m):
"""
Computes the m + 1 generalized unrestricted growth strings
and returns them as rows in matrix.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import RGS_generalized
>>> RGS_generalized(6)
Matrix([
[ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1],
[ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 0],
[ 2, 5, 10, 17, 26, 0, 0],
[ 5, 15, 37, 77, 0, 0, 0],
[ 15, 52, 151, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[ 52, 203, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[203, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]])
"""
d = zeros(m + 1)
for i in range(0, m + 1):
d[0, i] = 1
for i in range(1, m + 1):
for j in range(m):
if j <= m - i:
d[i, j] = j * d[i - 1, j] + d[i - 1, j + 1]
else:
d[i, j] = 0
return d
def RGS_enum(m):
"""
RGS_enum computes the total number of restricted growth strings
possible for a superset of size m.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import RGS_enum
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import Partition
>>> RGS_enum(4)
15
>>> RGS_enum(5)
52
>>> RGS_enum(6)
203
We can check that the enumeration is correct by actually generating
the partitions. Here, the 15 partitions of 4 items are generated:
>>> a = Partition(list(range(4)))
>>> s = set()
>>> for i in range(20):
... s.add(a)
... a += 1
...
>>> assert len(s) == 15
"""
if (m < 1):
return 0
elif (m == 1):
return 1
else:
return bell(m)
def RGS_unrank(rank, m):
"""
Gives the unranked restricted growth string for a given
superset size.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import RGS_unrank
>>> RGS_unrank(14, 4)
[0, 1, 2, 3]
>>> RGS_unrank(0, 4)
[0, 0, 0, 0]
"""
if m < 1:
raise ValueError("The superset size must be >= 1")
if rank < 0 or RGS_enum(m) <= rank:
raise ValueError("Invalid arguments")
L = [1] * (m + 1)
j = 1
D = RGS_generalized(m)
for i in range(2, m + 1):
v = D[m - i, j]
cr = j*v
if cr <= rank:
L[i] = j + 1
rank -= cr
j += 1
else:
L[i] = int(rank / v + 1)
rank %= v
return [x - 1 for x in L[1:]]
def RGS_rank(rgs):
"""
Computes the rank of a restricted growth string.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.partitions import RGS_rank, RGS_unrank
>>> RGS_rank([0, 1, 2, 1, 3])
42
>>> RGS_rank(RGS_unrank(4, 7))
4
"""
rgs_size = len(rgs)
rank = 0
D = RGS_generalized(rgs_size)
for i in range(1, rgs_size):
n = len(rgs[(i + 1):])
m = max(rgs[0:i])
rank += D[n, m + 1] * rgs[i]
return rank
|
af59834b0ef9f5899176b3cb46f886519816b5bdf473a62b420e10f5d558c1b7
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
from sympy.combinatorics.group_constructs import DirectProduct
from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
_af_new = Permutation._af_new
def AbelianGroup(*cyclic_orders):
"""
Returns the direct product of cyclic groups with the given orders.
According to the structure theorem for finite abelian groups ([1]),
every finite abelian group can be written as the direct product of
finitely many cyclic groups.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import AbelianGroup
>>> AbelianGroup(3, 4)
PermutationGroup([
(6)(0 1 2),
(3 4 5 6)])
>>> _.is_group
True
See Also
========
DirectProduct
References
==========
[1] http://groupprops.subwiki.org/wiki/Structure_theorem_for_finitely_generated_abelian_groups
"""
groups = []
degree = 0
order = 1
for size in cyclic_orders:
degree += size
order *= size
groups.append(CyclicGroup(size))
G = DirectProduct(*groups)
G._is_abelian = True
G._degree = degree
G._order = order
return G
def AlternatingGroup(n):
"""
Generates the alternating group on ``n`` elements as a permutation group.
For ``n > 2``, the generators taken are ``(0 1 2), (0 1 2 ... n-1)`` for
``n`` odd
and ``(0 1 2), (1 2 ... n-1)`` for ``n`` even (See [1], p.31, ex.6.9.).
After the group is generated, some of its basic properties are set.
The cases ``n = 1, 2`` are handled separately.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import AlternatingGroup
>>> G = AlternatingGroup(4)
>>> G.is_group
True
>>> a = list(G.generate_dimino())
>>> len(a)
12
>>> all(perm.is_even for perm in a)
True
See Also
========
SymmetricGroup, CyclicGroup, DihedralGroup
References
==========
[1] Armstrong, M. "Groups and Symmetry"
"""
# small cases are special
if n in (1, 2):
return PermutationGroup([Permutation([0])])
a = list(range(n))
a[0], a[1], a[2] = a[1], a[2], a[0]
gen1 = a
if n % 2:
a = list(range(1, n))
a.append(0)
gen2 = a
else:
a = list(range(2, n))
a.append(1)
a.insert(0, 0)
gen2 = a
gens = [gen1, gen2]
if gen1 == gen2:
gens = gens[:1]
G = PermutationGroup([_af_new(a) for a in gens], dups=False)
if n < 4:
G._is_abelian = True
G._is_nilpotent = True
else:
G._is_abelian = False
G._is_nilpotent = False
if n < 5:
G._is_solvable = True
else:
G._is_solvable = False
G._degree = n
G._is_transitive = True
G._is_alt = True
return G
def CyclicGroup(n):
"""
Generates the cyclic group of order ``n`` as a permutation group.
The generator taken is the ``n``-cycle ``(0 1 2 ... n-1)``
(in cycle notation). After the group is generated, some of its basic
properties are set.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import CyclicGroup
>>> G = CyclicGroup(6)
>>> G.is_group
True
>>> G.order()
6
>>> list(G.generate_schreier_sims(af=True))
[[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5], [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 0], [2, 3, 4, 5, 0, 1],
[3, 4, 5, 0, 1, 2], [4, 5, 0, 1, 2, 3], [5, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4]]
See Also
========
SymmetricGroup, DihedralGroup, AlternatingGroup
"""
a = list(range(1, n))
a.append(0)
gen = _af_new(a)
G = PermutationGroup([gen])
G._is_abelian = True
G._is_nilpotent = True
G._is_solvable = True
G._degree = n
G._is_transitive = True
G._order = n
return G
def DihedralGroup(n):
r"""
Generates the dihedral group `D_n` as a permutation group.
The dihedral group `D_n` is the group of symmetries of the regular
``n``-gon. The generators taken are the ``n``-cycle ``a = (0 1 2 ... n-1)``
(a rotation of the ``n``-gon) and ``b = (0 n-1)(1 n-2)...``
(a reflection of the ``n``-gon) in cycle rotation. It is easy to see that
these satisfy ``a**n = b**2 = 1`` and ``bab = ~a`` so they indeed generate
`D_n` (See [1]). After the group is generated, some of its basic properties
are set.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import DihedralGroup
>>> G = DihedralGroup(5)
>>> G.is_group
True
>>> a = list(G.generate_dimino())
>>> [perm.cyclic_form for perm in a]
[[], [[0, 1, 2, 3, 4]], [[0, 2, 4, 1, 3]],
[[0, 3, 1, 4, 2]], [[0, 4, 3, 2, 1]], [[0, 4], [1, 3]],
[[1, 4], [2, 3]], [[0, 1], [2, 4]], [[0, 2], [3, 4]],
[[0, 3], [1, 2]]]
See Also
========
SymmetricGroup, CyclicGroup, AlternatingGroup
References
==========
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dihedral_group
"""
# small cases are special
if n == 1:
return PermutationGroup([Permutation([1, 0])])
if n == 2:
return PermutationGroup([Permutation([1, 0, 3, 2]),
Permutation([2, 3, 0, 1]), Permutation([3, 2, 1, 0])])
a = list(range(1, n))
a.append(0)
gen1 = _af_new(a)
a = list(range(n))
a.reverse()
gen2 = _af_new(a)
G = PermutationGroup([gen1, gen2])
# if n is a power of 2, group is nilpotent
if n & (n-1) == 0:
G._is_nilpotent = True
else:
G._is_nilpotent = False
G._is_abelian = False
G._is_solvable = True
G._degree = n
G._is_transitive = True
G._order = 2*n
return G
def SymmetricGroup(n):
"""
Generates the symmetric group on ``n`` elements as a permutation group.
The generators taken are the ``n``-cycle
``(0 1 2 ... n-1)`` and the transposition ``(0 1)`` (in cycle notation).
(See [1]). After the group is generated, some of its basic properties
are set.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import SymmetricGroup
>>> G = SymmetricGroup(4)
>>> G.is_group
True
>>> G.order()
24
>>> list(G.generate_schreier_sims(af=True))
[[0, 1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 3, 0], [2, 3, 0, 1], [3, 1, 2, 0], [0, 2, 3, 1],
[1, 3, 0, 2], [2, 0, 1, 3], [3, 2, 0, 1], [0, 3, 1, 2], [1, 0, 2, 3],
[2, 1, 3, 0], [3, 0, 1, 2], [0, 1, 3, 2], [1, 2, 0, 3], [2, 3, 1, 0],
[3, 1, 0, 2], [0, 2, 1, 3], [1, 3, 2, 0], [2, 0, 3, 1], [3, 2, 1, 0],
[0, 3, 2, 1], [1, 0, 3, 2], [2, 1, 0, 3], [3, 0, 2, 1]]
See Also
========
CyclicGroup, DihedralGroup, AlternatingGroup
References
==========
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetric_group#Generators_and_relations
"""
if n == 1:
G = PermutationGroup([Permutation([0])])
elif n == 2:
G = PermutationGroup([Permutation([1, 0])])
else:
a = list(range(1, n))
a.append(0)
gen1 = _af_new(a)
a = list(range(n))
a[0], a[1] = a[1], a[0]
gen2 = _af_new(a)
G = PermutationGroup([gen1, gen2])
if n < 3:
G._is_abelian = True
G._is_nilpotent = True
else:
G._is_abelian = False
G._is_nilpotent = False
if n < 5:
G._is_solvable = True
else:
G._is_solvable = False
G._degree = n
G._is_transitive = True
G._is_sym = True
return G
def RubikGroup(n):
"""Return a group of Rubik's cube generators
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.named_groups import RubikGroup
>>> RubikGroup(2).is_group
True
"""
from sympy.combinatorics.generators import rubik
if n <= 1:
raise ValueError("Invalid cube . n has to be greater than 1")
return PermutationGroup(rubik(n))
|
0d9e8254b6b8e66c16dc060093c9f3692cd8499ce625d26aceaaaf13ca1909a5
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.tensor.indexed import Idx
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.symbol import symbols
from sympy.concrete.expr_with_intlimits import ExprWithIntLimits
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import exp, log
from sympy.polys import quo, roots
from sympy.simplify import powsimp
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
class Product(ExprWithIntLimits):
r"""Represents unevaluated products.
``Product`` represents a finite or infinite product, with the first
argument being the general form of terms in the series, and the second
argument being ``(dummy_variable, start, end)``, with ``dummy_variable``
taking all integer values from ``start`` through ``end``. In accordance
with long-standing mathematical convention, the end term is included in
the product.
Finite products
===============
For finite products (and products with symbolic limits assumed to be finite)
we follow the analogue of the summation convention described by Karr [1],
especially definition 3 of section 1.4. The product:
.. math::
\prod_{m \leq i < n} f(i)
has *the obvious meaning* for `m < n`, namely:
.. math::
\prod_{m \leq i < n} f(i) = f(m) f(m+1) \cdot \ldots \cdot f(n-2) f(n-1)
with the upper limit value `f(n)` excluded. The product over an empty set is
one if and only if `m = n`:
.. math::
\prod_{m \leq i < n} f(i) = 1 \quad \mathrm{for} \quad m = n
Finally, for all other products over empty sets we assume the following
definition:
.. math::
\prod_{m \leq i < n} f(i) = \frac{1}{\prod_{n \leq i < m} f(i)} \quad \mathrm{for} \quad m > n
It is important to note that above we define all products with the upper
limit being exclusive. This is in contrast to the usual mathematical notation,
but does not affect the product convention. Indeed we have:
.. math::
\prod_{m \leq i < n} f(i) = \prod_{i = m}^{n - 1} f(i)
where the difference in notation is intentional to emphasize the meaning,
with limits typeset on the top being inclusive.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, i, k, m, n, x
>>> from sympy import Product, factorial, oo
>>> Product(k, (k, 1, m))
Product(k, (k, 1, m))
>>> Product(k, (k, 1, m)).doit()
factorial(m)
>>> Product(k**2,(k, 1, m))
Product(k**2, (k, 1, m))
>>> Product(k**2,(k, 1, m)).doit()
factorial(m)**2
Wallis' product for pi:
>>> W = Product(2*i/(2*i-1) * 2*i/(2*i+1), (i, 1, oo))
>>> W
Product(4*i**2/((2*i - 1)*(2*i + 1)), (i, 1, oo))
Direct computation currently fails:
>>> W.doit()
Product(4*i**2/((2*i - 1)*(2*i + 1)), (i, 1, oo))
But we can approach the infinite product by a limit of finite products:
>>> from sympy import limit
>>> W2 = Product(2*i/(2*i-1)*2*i/(2*i+1), (i, 1, n))
>>> W2
Product(4*i**2/((2*i - 1)*(2*i + 1)), (i, 1, n))
>>> W2e = W2.doit()
>>> W2e
2**(-2*n)*4**n*factorial(n)**2/(RisingFactorial(1/2, n)*RisingFactorial(3/2, n))
>>> limit(W2e, n, oo)
pi/2
By the same formula we can compute sin(pi/2):
>>> from sympy import pi, gamma, simplify
>>> P = pi * x * Product(1 - x**2/k**2, (k, 1, n))
>>> P = P.subs(x, pi/2)
>>> P
pi**2*Product(1 - pi**2/(4*k**2), (k, 1, n))/2
>>> Pe = P.doit()
>>> Pe
pi**2*RisingFactorial(1 + pi/2, n)*RisingFactorial(-pi/2 + 1, n)/(2*factorial(n)**2)
>>> Pe = Pe.rewrite(gamma)
>>> Pe
pi**2*gamma(n + 1 + pi/2)*gamma(n - pi/2 + 1)/(2*gamma(1 + pi/2)*gamma(-pi/2 + 1)*gamma(n + 1)**2)
>>> Pe = simplify(Pe)
>>> Pe
sin(pi**2/2)*gamma(n + 1 + pi/2)*gamma(n - pi/2 + 1)/gamma(n + 1)**2
>>> limit(Pe, n, oo)
sin(pi**2/2)
Products with the lower limit being larger than the upper one:
>>> Product(1/i, (i, 6, 1)).doit()
120
>>> Product(i, (i, 2, 5)).doit()
120
The empty product:
>>> Product(i, (i, n, n-1)).doit()
1
An example showing that the symbolic result of a product is still
valid for seemingly nonsensical values of the limits. Then the Karr
convention allows us to give a perfectly valid interpretation to
those products by interchanging the limits according to the above rules:
>>> P = Product(2, (i, 10, n)).doit()
>>> P
2**(n - 9)
>>> P.subs(n, 5)
1/16
>>> Product(2, (i, 10, 5)).doit()
1/16
>>> 1/Product(2, (i, 6, 9)).doit()
1/16
An explicit example of the Karr summation convention applied to products:
>>> P1 = Product(x, (i, a, b)).doit()
>>> P1
x**(-a + b + 1)
>>> P2 = Product(x, (i, b+1, a-1)).doit()
>>> P2
x**(a - b - 1)
>>> simplify(P1 * P2)
1
And another one:
>>> P1 = Product(i, (i, b, a)).doit()
>>> P1
RisingFactorial(b, a - b + 1)
>>> P2 = Product(i, (i, a+1, b-1)).doit()
>>> P2
RisingFactorial(a + 1, -a + b - 1)
>>> P1 * P2
RisingFactorial(b, a - b + 1)*RisingFactorial(a + 1, -a + b - 1)
>>> simplify(P1 * P2)
1
See Also
========
Sum, summation
product
References
==========
.. [1] Michael Karr, "Summation in Finite Terms", Journal of the ACM,
Volume 28 Issue 2, April 1981, Pages 305-350
http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=322248.322255
.. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiplication#Capital_Pi_notation
.. [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empty_product
"""
__slots__ = ['is_commutative']
def __new__(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions):
obj = ExprWithIntLimits.__new__(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions)
return obj
def _eval_rewrite_as_Sum(self, *args, **kwargs):
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
return exp(Sum(log(self.function), *self.limits))
@property
def term(self):
return self._args[0]
function = term
def _eval_is_zero(self):
# a Product is zero only if its term is zero.
return self.term.is_zero
def doit(self, **hints):
f = self.function
for index, limit in enumerate(self.limits):
i, a, b = limit
dif = b - a
if dif.is_Integer and dif < 0:
a, b = b + 1, a - 1
f = 1 / f
g = self._eval_product(f, (i, a, b))
if g in (None, S.NaN):
return self.func(powsimp(f), *self.limits[index:])
else:
f = g
if hints.get('deep', True):
return f.doit(**hints)
else:
return powsimp(f)
def _eval_adjoint(self):
if self.is_commutative:
return self.func(self.function.adjoint(), *self.limits)
return None
def _eval_conjugate(self):
return self.func(self.function.conjugate(), *self.limits)
def _eval_product(self, term, limits):
from sympy.concrete.delta import deltaproduct, _has_simple_delta
from sympy.concrete.summations import summation
from sympy.functions import KroneckerDelta, RisingFactorial
(k, a, n) = limits
if k not in term.free_symbols:
if (term - 1).is_zero:
return S.One
return term**(n - a + 1)
if a == n:
return term.subs(k, a)
if term.has(KroneckerDelta) and _has_simple_delta(term, limits[0]):
return deltaproduct(term, limits)
dif = n - a
if dif.is_Integer:
return Mul(*[term.subs(k, a + i) for i in range(dif + 1)])
elif term.is_polynomial(k):
poly = term.as_poly(k)
A = B = Q = S.One
all_roots = roots(poly)
M = 0
for r, m in all_roots.items():
M += m
A *= RisingFactorial(a - r, n - a + 1)**m
Q *= (n - r)**m
if M < poly.degree():
arg = quo(poly, Q.as_poly(k))
B = self.func(arg, (k, a, n)).doit()
return poly.LC()**(n - a + 1) * A * B
elif term.is_Add:
factored = factor_terms(term, fraction=True)
if factored.is_Mul:
return self._eval_product(factored, (k, a, n))
elif term.is_Mul:
exclude, include = [], []
for t in term.args:
p = self._eval_product(t, (k, a, n))
if p is not None:
exclude.append(p)
else:
include.append(t)
if not exclude:
return None
else:
arg = term._new_rawargs(*include)
A = Mul(*exclude)
B = self.func(arg, (k, a, n)).doit()
return A * B
elif term.is_Pow:
if not term.base.has(k):
s = summation(term.exp, (k, a, n))
return term.base**s
elif not term.exp.has(k):
p = self._eval_product(term.base, (k, a, n))
if p is not None:
return p**term.exp
elif isinstance(term, Product):
evaluated = term.doit()
f = self._eval_product(evaluated, limits)
if f is None:
return self.func(evaluated, limits)
else:
return f
def _eval_simplify(self, ratio, measure, rational, inverse):
from sympy.simplify.simplify import product_simplify
return product_simplify(self)
def _eval_transpose(self):
if self.is_commutative:
return self.func(self.function.transpose(), *self.limits)
return None
def is_convergent(self):
r"""
See docs of Sum.is_convergent() for explanation of convergence
in SymPy.
The infinite product:
.. math::
\prod_{1 \leq i < \infty} f(i)
is defined by the sequence of partial products:
.. math::
\prod_{i=1}^{n} f(i) = f(1) f(2) \cdots f(n)
as n increases without bound. The product converges to a non-zero
value if and only if the sum:
.. math::
\sum_{1 \leq i < \infty} \log{f(n)}
converges.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinite_product
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Interval, S, Product, Symbol, cos, pi, exp, oo
>>> n = Symbol('n', integer=True)
>>> Product(n/(n + 1), (n, 1, oo)).is_convergent()
False
>>> Product(1/n**2, (n, 1, oo)).is_convergent()
False
>>> Product(cos(pi/n), (n, 1, oo)).is_convergent()
True
>>> Product(exp(-n**2), (n, 1, oo)).is_convergent()
False
"""
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
sequence_term = self.function
log_sum = log(sequence_term)
lim = self.limits
try:
is_conv = Sum(log_sum, *lim).is_convergent()
except NotImplementedError:
if Sum(sequence_term - 1, *lim).is_absolutely_convergent() is S.true:
return S.true
raise NotImplementedError("The algorithm to find the product convergence of %s "
"is not yet implemented" % (sequence_term))
return is_conv
def reverse_order(expr, *indices):
"""
Reverse the order of a limit in a Product.
Usage
=====
``reverse_order(expr, *indices)`` reverses some limits in the expression
``expr`` which can be either a ``Sum`` or a ``Product``. The selectors in
the argument ``indices`` specify some indices whose limits get reversed.
These selectors are either variable names or numerical indices counted
starting from the inner-most limit tuple.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Product, simplify, RisingFactorial, gamma, Sum
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, a, b, c, d
>>> P = Product(x, (x, a, b))
>>> Pr = P.reverse_order(x)
>>> Pr
Product(1/x, (x, b + 1, a - 1))
>>> Pr = Pr.doit()
>>> Pr
1/RisingFactorial(b + 1, a - b - 1)
>>> simplify(Pr)
gamma(b + 1)/gamma(a)
>>> P = P.doit()
>>> P
RisingFactorial(a, -a + b + 1)
>>> simplify(P)
gamma(b + 1)/gamma(a)
While one should prefer variable names when specifying which limits
to reverse, the index counting notation comes in handy in case there
are several symbols with the same name.
>>> S = Sum(x*y, (x, a, b), (y, c, d))
>>> S
Sum(x*y, (x, a, b), (y, c, d))
>>> S0 = S.reverse_order(0)
>>> S0
Sum(-x*y, (x, b + 1, a - 1), (y, c, d))
>>> S1 = S0.reverse_order(1)
>>> S1
Sum(x*y, (x, b + 1, a - 1), (y, d + 1, c - 1))
Of course we can mix both notations:
>>> Sum(x*y, (x, a, b), (y, 2, 5)).reverse_order(x, 1)
Sum(x*y, (x, b + 1, a - 1), (y, 6, 1))
>>> Sum(x*y, (x, a, b), (y, 2, 5)).reverse_order(y, x)
Sum(x*y, (x, b + 1, a - 1), (y, 6, 1))
See Also
========
index, reorder_limit, reorder
References
==========
.. [1] Michael Karr, "Summation in Finite Terms", Journal of the ACM,
Volume 28 Issue 2, April 1981, Pages 305-350
http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=322248.322255
"""
l_indices = list(indices)
for i, indx in enumerate(l_indices):
if not isinstance(indx, int):
l_indices[i] = expr.index(indx)
e = 1
limits = []
for i, limit in enumerate(expr.limits):
l = limit
if i in l_indices:
e = -e
l = (limit[0], limit[2] + 1, limit[1] - 1)
limits.append(l)
return Product(expr.function ** e, *limits)
def product(*args, **kwargs):
r"""
Compute the product.
The notation for symbols is similar to the notation used in Sum or
Integral. product(f, (i, a, b)) computes the product of f with
respect to i from a to b, i.e.,
::
b
_____
product(f(n), (i, a, b)) = | | f(n)
| |
i = a
If it cannot compute the product, it returns an unevaluated Product object.
Repeated products can be computed by introducing additional symbols tuples::
>>> from sympy import product, symbols
>>> i, n, m, k = symbols('i n m k', integer=True)
>>> product(i, (i, 1, k))
factorial(k)
>>> product(m, (i, 1, k))
m**k
>>> product(i, (i, 1, k), (k, 1, n))
Product(factorial(k), (k, 1, n))
"""
prod = Product(*args, **kwargs)
if isinstance(prod, Product):
return prod.doit(deep=False)
else:
return prod
|
73751bb116b316c8cc32dbadef5829c74dfb0e4eb7dc1336a933e127f48bfc48
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.expr import Expr
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.relational import Equality
from sympy.sets.sets import Interval
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol, Dummy
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.core.compatibility import is_sequence, range
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
from sympy.core.relational import Relational
from sympy.logic.boolalg import BooleanFunction
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import (piecewise_fold,
Piecewise)
from sympy.utilities import flatten
from sympy.utilities.iterables import sift
from sympy.matrices import Matrix
from sympy.tensor.indexed import Idx
def _common_new(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions):
"""Return either a special return value or the tuple,
(function, limits, orientation). This code is common to
both ExprWithLimits and AddWithLimits."""
function = sympify(function)
if hasattr(function, 'func') and isinstance(function, Equality):
lhs = function.lhs
rhs = function.rhs
return Equality(cls(lhs, *symbols, **assumptions), \
cls(rhs, *symbols, **assumptions))
if function is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
if symbols:
limits, orientation = _process_limits(*symbols)
else:
# symbol not provided -- we can still try to compute a general form
free = function.free_symbols
if len(free) != 1:
raise ValueError(
"specify dummy variables for %s" % function)
limits, orientation = [Tuple(s) for s in free], 1
# denest any nested calls
while cls == type(function):
limits = list(function.limits) + limits
function = function.function
# Any embedded piecewise functions need to be brought out to the
# top level. We only fold Piecewise that contain the integration
# variable.
reps = {}
symbols_of_integration = set([i[0] for i in limits])
for p in function.atoms(Piecewise):
if not p.has(*symbols_of_integration):
reps[p] = Dummy()
# mask off those that don't
function = function.xreplace(reps)
# do the fold
function = piecewise_fold(function)
# remove the masking
function = function.xreplace({v: k for k, v in reps.items()})
return function, limits, orientation
def _process_limits(*symbols):
"""Process the list of symbols and convert them to canonical limits,
storing them as Tuple(symbol, lower, upper). The orientation of
the function is also returned when the upper limit is missing
so (x, 1, None) becomes (x, None, 1) and the orientation is changed.
"""
limits = []
orientation = 1
for V in symbols:
if isinstance(V, (Relational, BooleanFunction)):
variable = V.atoms(Symbol).pop()
V = (variable, V.as_set())
if isinstance(V, Symbol) or getattr(V, '_diff_wrt', False):
if isinstance(V, Idx):
if V.lower is None or V.upper is None:
limits.append(Tuple(V))
else:
limits.append(Tuple(V, V.lower, V.upper))
else:
limits.append(Tuple(V))
continue
elif is_sequence(V, Tuple):
V = sympify(flatten(V))
if isinstance(V[0], (Symbol, Idx)) or getattr(V[0], '_diff_wrt', False):
newsymbol = V[0]
if len(V) == 2 and isinstance(V[1], Interval):
V[1:] = [V[1].start, V[1].end]
if len(V) == 3:
if V[1] is None and V[2] is not None:
nlim = [V[2]]
elif V[1] is not None and V[2] is None:
orientation *= -1
nlim = [V[1]]
elif V[1] is None and V[2] is None:
nlim = []
else:
nlim = V[1:]
limits.append(Tuple(newsymbol, *nlim))
if isinstance(V[0], Idx):
if V[0].lower is not None and not bool(nlim[0] >= V[0].lower):
raise ValueError("Summation exceeds Idx lower range.")
if V[0].upper is not None and not bool(nlim[1] <= V[0].upper):
raise ValueError("Summation exceeds Idx upper range.")
continue
elif len(V) == 1 or (len(V) == 2 and V[1] is None):
limits.append(Tuple(newsymbol))
continue
elif len(V) == 2:
limits.append(Tuple(newsymbol, V[1]))
continue
raise ValueError('Invalid limits given: %s' % str(symbols))
return limits, orientation
class ExprWithLimits(Expr):
__slots__ = ['is_commutative']
def __new__(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions):
pre = _common_new(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions)
if type(pre) is tuple:
function, limits, _ = pre
else:
return pre
# limits must have upper and lower bounds; the indefinite form
# is not supported. This restriction does not apply to AddWithLimits
if any(len(l) != 3 or None in l for l in limits):
raise ValueError('ExprWithLimits requires values for lower and upper bounds.')
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, **assumptions)
arglist = [function]
arglist.extend(limits)
obj._args = tuple(arglist)
obj.is_commutative = function.is_commutative # limits already checked
return obj
@property
def function(self):
"""Return the function applied across limits.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Integral(x**2, (x,)).function
x**2
See Also
========
limits, variables, free_symbols
"""
return self._args[0]
@property
def limits(self):
"""Return the limits of expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x, i
>>> Integral(x**i, (i, 1, 3)).limits
((i, 1, 3),)
See Also
========
function, variables, free_symbols
"""
return self._args[1:]
@property
def variables(self):
"""Return a list of the limit variables.
>>> from sympy import Sum
>>> from sympy.abc import x, i
>>> Sum(x**i, (i, 1, 3)).variables
[i]
See Also
========
function, limits, free_symbols
as_dummy : Rename dummy variables
transform : Perform mapping on the dummy variable
"""
return [l[0] for l in self.limits]
@property
def bound_symbols(self):
"""Return only variables that are dummy variables.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x, i, j, k
>>> Integral(x**i, (i, 1, 3), (j, 2), k).bound_symbols
[i, j]
See Also
========
function, limits, free_symbols
as_dummy : Rename dummy variables
transform : Perform mapping on the dummy variable
"""
return [l[0] for l in self.limits if len(l) != 1]
@property
def free_symbols(self):
"""
This method returns the symbols in the object, excluding those
that take on a specific value (i.e. the dummy symbols).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Sum
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Sum(x, (x, y, 1)).free_symbols
{y}
"""
# don't test for any special values -- nominal free symbols
# should be returned, e.g. don't return set() if the
# function is zero -- treat it like an unevaluated expression.
function, limits = self.function, self.limits
isyms = function.free_symbols
for xab in limits:
if len(xab) == 1:
isyms.add(xab[0])
continue
# take out the target symbol
if xab[0] in isyms:
isyms.remove(xab[0])
# add in the new symbols
for i in xab[1:]:
isyms.update(i.free_symbols)
return isyms
@property
def is_number(self):
"""Return True if the Sum has no free symbols, else False."""
return not self.free_symbols
def _eval_interval(self, x, a, b):
limits = [(i if i[0] != x else (x, a, b)) for i in self.limits]
integrand = self.function
return self.func(integrand, *limits)
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
"""
Perform substitutions over non-dummy variables
of an expression with limits. Also, can be used
to specify point-evaluation of an abstract antiderivative.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Sum, oo
>>> from sympy.abc import s, n
>>> Sum(1/n**s, (n, 1, oo)).subs(s, 2)
Sum(n**(-2), (n, 1, oo))
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x, a
>>> Integral(a*x**2, x).subs(x, 4)
Integral(a*x**2, (x, 4))
See Also
========
variables : Lists the integration variables
transform : Perform mapping on the dummy variable for integrals
change_index : Perform mapping on the sum and product dummy variables
"""
from sympy.core.function import AppliedUndef, UndefinedFunction
func, limits = self.function, list(self.limits)
# If one of the expressions we are replacing is used as a func index
# one of two things happens.
# - the old variable first appears as a free variable
# so we perform all free substitutions before it becomes
# a func index.
# - the old variable first appears as a func index, in
# which case we ignore. See change_index.
# Reorder limits to match standard mathematical practice for scoping
limits.reverse()
if not isinstance(old, Symbol) or \
old.free_symbols.intersection(self.free_symbols):
sub_into_func = True
for i, xab in enumerate(limits):
if 1 == len(xab) and old == xab[0]:
if new._diff_wrt:
xab = (new,)
else:
xab = (old, old)
limits[i] = Tuple(xab[0], *[l._subs(old, new) for l in xab[1:]])
if len(xab[0].free_symbols.intersection(old.free_symbols)) != 0:
sub_into_func = False
break
if isinstance(old, AppliedUndef) or isinstance(old, UndefinedFunction):
sy2 = set(self.variables).intersection(set(new.atoms(Symbol)))
sy1 = set(self.variables).intersection(set(old.args))
if not sy2.issubset(sy1):
raise ValueError(
"substitution can not create dummy dependencies")
sub_into_func = True
if sub_into_func:
func = func.subs(old, new)
else:
# old is a Symbol and a dummy variable of some limit
for i, xab in enumerate(limits):
if len(xab) == 3:
limits[i] = Tuple(xab[0], *[l._subs(old, new) for l in xab[1:]])
if old == xab[0]:
break
# simplify redundant limits (x, x) to (x, )
for i, xab in enumerate(limits):
if len(xab) == 2 and (xab[0] - xab[1]).is_zero:
limits[i] = Tuple(xab[0], )
# Reorder limits back to representation-form
limits.reverse()
return self.func(func, *limits)
class AddWithLimits(ExprWithLimits):
r"""Represents unevaluated oriented additions.
Parent class for Integral and Sum.
"""
def __new__(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions):
pre = _common_new(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions)
if type(pre) is tuple:
function, limits, orientation = pre
else:
return pre
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, **assumptions)
arglist = [orientation*function] # orientation not used in ExprWithLimits
arglist.extend(limits)
obj._args = tuple(arglist)
obj.is_commutative = function.is_commutative # limits already checked
return obj
def _eval_adjoint(self):
if all([x.is_real for x in flatten(self.limits)]):
return self.func(self.function.adjoint(), *self.limits)
return None
def _eval_conjugate(self):
if all([x.is_real for x in flatten(self.limits)]):
return self.func(self.function.conjugate(), *self.limits)
return None
def _eval_transpose(self):
if all([x.is_real for x in flatten(self.limits)]):
return self.func(self.function.transpose(), *self.limits)
return None
def _eval_factor(self, **hints):
if 1 == len(self.limits):
summand = self.function.factor(**hints)
if summand.is_Mul:
out = sift(summand.args, lambda w: w.is_commutative \
and not set(self.variables) & w.free_symbols)
return Mul(*out[True])*self.func(Mul(*out[False]), \
*self.limits)
else:
summand = self.func(self.function, *self.limits[0:-1]).factor()
if not summand.has(self.variables[-1]):
return self.func(1, [self.limits[-1]]).doit()*summand
elif isinstance(summand, Mul):
return self.func(summand, self.limits[-1]).factor()
return self
def _eval_expand_basic(self, **hints):
summand = self.function.expand(**hints)
if summand.is_Add and summand.is_commutative:
return Add(*[self.func(i, *self.limits) for i in summand.args])
elif summand.is_Matrix:
return Matrix._new(summand.rows, summand.cols,
[self.func(i, *self.limits) for i in summand._mat])
elif summand != self.function:
return self.func(summand, *self.limits)
return self
|
6ea6ed8abe2ecdf0f8a4a3fc3d21619e09f972be46f0151b085a7ef611dcb246
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.concrete.expr_with_limits import AddWithLimits
from sympy.concrete.expr_with_intlimits import ExprWithIntLimits
from sympy.core.function import Derivative, Function
from sympy.core.relational import Eq
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy, Wild, Symbol
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.calculus.singularities import is_decreasing
from sympy.concrete.gosper import gosper_sum
from sympy.functions.special.zeta_functions import zeta
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise
from sympy.logic.boolalg import And
from sympy.polys import apart, PolynomialError, together
from sympy.series.limitseq import limit_seq
from sympy.series.order import O
from sympy.sets.sets import FiniteSet
from sympy.simplify.combsimp import combsimp
from sympy.simplify.powsimp import powsimp
from sympy.solvers import solve
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
from sympy.simplify import denom
from sympy.calculus.util import AccumulationBounds
import itertools
class Sum(AddWithLimits, ExprWithIntLimits):
r"""Represents unevaluated summation.
``Sum`` represents a finite or infinite series, with the first argument
being the general form of terms in the series, and the second argument
being ``(dummy_variable, start, end)``, with ``dummy_variable`` taking
all integer values from ``start`` through ``end``. In accordance with
long-standing mathematical convention, the end term is included in the
summation.
Finite sums
===========
For finite sums (and sums with symbolic limits assumed to be finite) we
follow the summation convention described by Karr [1], especially
definition 3 of section 1.4. The sum:
.. math::
\sum_{m \leq i < n} f(i)
has *the obvious meaning* for `m < n`, namely:
.. math::
\sum_{m \leq i < n} f(i) = f(m) + f(m+1) + \ldots + f(n-2) + f(n-1)
with the upper limit value `f(n)` excluded. The sum over an empty set is
zero if and only if `m = n`:
.. math::
\sum_{m \leq i < n} f(i) = 0 \quad \mathrm{for} \quad m = n
Finally, for all other sums over empty sets we assume the following
definition:
.. math::
\sum_{m \leq i < n} f(i) = - \sum_{n \leq i < m} f(i) \quad \mathrm{for} \quad m > n
It is important to note that Karr defines all sums with the upper
limit being exclusive. This is in contrast to the usual mathematical notation,
but does not affect the summation convention. Indeed we have:
.. math::
\sum_{m \leq i < n} f(i) = \sum_{i = m}^{n - 1} f(i)
where the difference in notation is intentional to emphasize the meaning,
with limits typeset on the top being inclusive.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import i, k, m, n, x
>>> from sympy import Sum, factorial, oo, IndexedBase, Function
>>> Sum(k, (k, 1, m))
Sum(k, (k, 1, m))
>>> Sum(k, (k, 1, m)).doit()
m**2/2 + m/2
>>> Sum(k**2, (k, 1, m))
Sum(k**2, (k, 1, m))
>>> Sum(k**2, (k, 1, m)).doit()
m**3/3 + m**2/2 + m/6
>>> Sum(x**k, (k, 0, oo))
Sum(x**k, (k, 0, oo))
>>> Sum(x**k, (k, 0, oo)).doit()
Piecewise((1/(-x + 1), Abs(x) < 1), (Sum(x**k, (k, 0, oo)), True))
>>> Sum(x**k/factorial(k), (k, 0, oo)).doit()
exp(x)
Here are examples to do summation with symbolic indices. You
can use either Function of IndexedBase classes:
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> Sum(f(n), (n, 0, 3)).doit()
f(0) + f(1) + f(2) + f(3)
>>> Sum(f(n), (n, 0, oo)).doit()
Sum(f(n), (n, 0, oo))
>>> f = IndexedBase('f')
>>> Sum(f[n]**2, (n, 0, 3)).doit()
f[0]**2 + f[1]**2 + f[2]**2 + f[3]**2
An example showing that the symbolic result of a summation is still
valid for seemingly nonsensical values of the limits. Then the Karr
convention allows us to give a perfectly valid interpretation to
those sums by interchanging the limits according to the above rules:
>>> S = Sum(i, (i, 1, n)).doit()
>>> S
n**2/2 + n/2
>>> S.subs(n, -4)
6
>>> Sum(i, (i, 1, -4)).doit()
6
>>> Sum(-i, (i, -3, 0)).doit()
6
An explicit example of the Karr summation convention:
>>> S1 = Sum(i**2, (i, m, m+n-1)).doit()
>>> S1
m**2*n + m*n**2 - m*n + n**3/3 - n**2/2 + n/6
>>> S2 = Sum(i**2, (i, m+n, m-1)).doit()
>>> S2
-m**2*n - m*n**2 + m*n - n**3/3 + n**2/2 - n/6
>>> S1 + S2
0
>>> S3 = Sum(i, (i, m, m-1)).doit()
>>> S3
0
See Also
========
summation
Product, product
References
==========
.. [1] Michael Karr, "Summation in Finite Terms", Journal of the ACM,
Volume 28 Issue 2, April 1981, Pages 305-350
http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=322248.322255
.. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summation#Capital-sigma_notation
.. [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empty_sum
"""
__slots__ = ['is_commutative']
def __new__(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions):
obj = AddWithLimits.__new__(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions)
if not hasattr(obj, 'limits'):
return obj
if any(len(l) != 3 or None in l for l in obj.limits):
raise ValueError('Sum requires values for lower and upper bounds.')
return obj
def _eval_is_zero(self):
# a Sum is only zero if its function is zero or if all terms
# cancel out. This only answers whether the summand is zero; if
# not then None is returned since we don't analyze whether all
# terms cancel out.
if self.function.is_zero:
return True
def doit(self, **hints):
if hints.get('deep', True):
f = self.function.doit(**hints)
else:
f = self.function
if self.function.is_Matrix:
return self.expand().doit()
for n, limit in enumerate(self.limits):
i, a, b = limit
dif = b - a
if dif.is_integer and (dif < 0) == True:
a, b = b + 1, a - 1
f = -f
newf = eval_sum(f, (i, a, b))
if newf is None:
if f == self.function:
zeta_function = self.eval_zeta_function(f, (i, a, b))
if zeta_function is not None:
return zeta_function
return self
else:
return self.func(f, *self.limits[n:])
f = newf
if hints.get('deep', True):
# eval_sum could return partially unevaluated
# result with Piecewise. In this case we won't
# doit() recursively.
if not isinstance(f, Piecewise):
return f.doit(**hints)
return f
def eval_zeta_function(self, f, limits):
"""
Check whether the function matches with the zeta function.
If it matches, then return a `Piecewise` expression because
zeta function does not converge unless `s > 1` and `q > 0`
"""
i, a, b = limits
w, y, z = Wild('w', exclude=[i]), Wild('y', exclude=[i]), Wild('z', exclude=[i])
result = f.match((w * i + y) ** (-z))
if result is not None and b == S.Infinity:
coeff = 1 / result[w] ** result[z]
s = result[z]
q = result[y] / result[w] + a
return Piecewise((coeff * zeta(s, q), And(q > 0, s > 1)), (self, True))
def _eval_derivative(self, x):
"""
Differentiate wrt x as long as x is not in the free symbols of any of
the upper or lower limits.
Sum(a*b*x, (x, 1, a)) can be differentiated wrt x or b but not `a`
since the value of the sum is discontinuous in `a`. In a case
involving a limit variable, the unevaluated derivative is returned.
"""
# diff already confirmed that x is in the free symbols of self, but we
# don't want to differentiate wrt any free symbol in the upper or lower
# limits
# XXX remove this test for free_symbols when the default _eval_derivative is in
if isinstance(x, Symbol) and x not in self.free_symbols:
return S.Zero
# get limits and the function
f, limits = self.function, list(self.limits)
limit = limits.pop(-1)
if limits: # f is the argument to a Sum
f = self.func(f, *limits)
if len(limit) == 3:
_, a, b = limit
if x in a.free_symbols or x in b.free_symbols:
return None
df = Derivative(f, x, evaluate=True)
rv = self.func(df, limit)
return rv
else:
return NotImplementedError('Lower and upper bound expected.')
def _eval_difference_delta(self, n, step):
k, _, upper = self.args[-1]
new_upper = upper.subs(n, n + step)
if len(self.args) == 2:
f = self.args[0]
else:
f = self.func(*self.args[:-1])
return Sum(f, (k, upper + 1, new_upper)).doit()
def _eval_simplify(self, ratio=1.7, measure=None, rational=False, inverse=False):
from sympy.simplify.simplify import factor_sum, sum_combine
from sympy.core.function import expand
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
# split the function into adds
terms = Add.make_args(expand(self.function))
s_t = [] # Sum Terms
o_t = [] # Other Terms
for term in terms:
if term.has(Sum):
# if there is an embedded sum here
# it is of the form x * (Sum(whatever))
# hence we make a Mul out of it, and simplify all interior sum terms
subterms = Mul.make_args(expand(term))
out_terms = []
for subterm in subterms:
# go through each term
if isinstance(subterm, Sum):
# if it's a sum, simplify it
out_terms.append(subterm._eval_simplify())
else:
# otherwise, add it as is
out_terms.append(subterm)
# turn it back into a Mul
s_t.append(Mul(*out_terms))
else:
o_t.append(term)
# next try to combine any interior sums for further simplification
result = Add(sum_combine(s_t), *o_t)
return factor_sum(result, limits=self.limits)
def _eval_summation(self, f, x):
return None
def is_convergent(self):
r"""Checks for the convergence of a Sum.
We divide the study of convergence of infinite sums and products in
two parts.
First Part:
One part is the question whether all the terms are well defined, i.e.,
they are finite in a sum and also non-zero in a product. Zero
is the analogy of (minus) infinity in products as
:math:`e^{-\infty} = 0`.
Second Part:
The second part is the question of convergence after infinities,
and zeros in products, have been omitted assuming that their number
is finite. This means that we only consider the tail of the sum or
product, starting from some point after which all terms are well
defined.
For example, in a sum of the form:
.. math::
\sum_{1 \leq i < \infty} \frac{1}{n^2 + an + b}
where a and b are numbers. The routine will return true, even if there
are infinities in the term sequence (at most two). An analogous
product would be:
.. math::
\prod_{1 \leq i < \infty} e^{\frac{1}{n^2 + an + b}}
This is how convergence is interpreted. It is concerned with what
happens at the limit. Finding the bad terms is another independent
matter.
Note: It is responsibility of user to see that the sum or product
is well defined.
There are various tests employed to check the convergence like
divergence test, root test, integral test, alternating series test,
comparison tests, Dirichlet tests. It returns true if Sum is convergent
and false if divergent and NotImplementedError if it can not be checked.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convergence_tests
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import factorial, S, Sum, Symbol, oo
>>> n = Symbol('n', integer=True)
>>> Sum(n/(n - 1), (n, 4, 7)).is_convergent()
True
>>> Sum(n/(2*n + 1), (n, 1, oo)).is_convergent()
False
>>> Sum(factorial(n)/5**n, (n, 1, oo)).is_convergent()
False
>>> Sum(1/n**(S(6)/5), (n, 1, oo)).is_convergent()
True
See Also
========
Sum.is_absolutely_convergent()
Product.is_convergent()
"""
from sympy import Interval, Integral, Limit, log, symbols, Ge, Gt, simplify
p, q, r = symbols('p q r', cls=Wild)
sym = self.limits[0][0]
lower_limit = self.limits[0][1]
upper_limit = self.limits[0][2]
sequence_term = self.function
if len(sequence_term.free_symbols) > 1:
raise NotImplementedError("convergence checking for more than one symbol "
"containing series is not handled")
if lower_limit.is_finite and upper_limit.is_finite:
return S.true
# transform sym -> -sym and swap the upper_limit = S.Infinity
# and lower_limit = - upper_limit
if lower_limit is S.NegativeInfinity:
if upper_limit is S.Infinity:
return Sum(sequence_term, (sym, 0, S.Infinity)).is_convergent() and \
Sum(sequence_term, (sym, S.NegativeInfinity, 0)).is_convergent()
sequence_term = simplify(sequence_term.xreplace({sym: -sym}))
lower_limit = -upper_limit
upper_limit = S.Infinity
sym_ = Dummy(sym.name, integer=True, positive=True)
sequence_term = sequence_term.xreplace({sym: sym_})
sym = sym_
interval = Interval(lower_limit, upper_limit)
# Piecewise function handle
if sequence_term.is_Piecewise:
for func, cond in sequence_term.args:
# see if it represents something going to oo
if cond == True or cond.as_set().sup is S.Infinity:
s = Sum(func, (sym, lower_limit, upper_limit))
return s.is_convergent()
return S.true
### -------- Divergence test ----------- ###
try:
lim_val = limit_seq(sequence_term, sym)
if lim_val is not None and lim_val.is_zero is False:
return S.false
except NotImplementedError:
pass
try:
lim_val_abs = limit_seq(abs(sequence_term), sym)
if lim_val_abs is not None and lim_val_abs.is_zero is False:
return S.false
except NotImplementedError:
pass
order = O(sequence_term, (sym, S.Infinity))
### --------- p-series test (1/n**p) ---------- ###
p1_series_test = order.expr.match(sym**p)
if p1_series_test is not None:
if p1_series_test[p] < -1:
return S.true
if p1_series_test[p] >= -1:
return S.false
p2_series_test = order.expr.match((1/sym)**p)
if p2_series_test is not None:
if p2_series_test[p] > 1:
return S.true
if p2_series_test[p] <= 1:
return S.false
### ------------- comparison test ------------- ###
# 1/(n**p*log(n)**q*log(log(n))**r) comparison
n_log_test = order.expr.match(1/(sym**p*log(sym)**q*log(log(sym))**r))
if n_log_test is not None:
if (n_log_test[p] > 1 or
(n_log_test[p] == 1 and n_log_test[q] > 1) or
(n_log_test[p] == n_log_test[q] == 1 and n_log_test[r] > 1)):
return S.true
return S.false
### ------------- Limit comparison test -----------###
# (1/n) comparison
try:
lim_comp = limit_seq(sym*sequence_term, sym)
if lim_comp is not None and lim_comp.is_number and lim_comp > 0:
return S.false
except NotImplementedError:
pass
### ----------- ratio test ---------------- ###
next_sequence_term = sequence_term.xreplace({sym: sym + 1})
ratio = combsimp(powsimp(next_sequence_term/sequence_term))
try:
lim_ratio = limit_seq(ratio, sym)
if lim_ratio is not None and lim_ratio.is_number:
if abs(lim_ratio) > 1:
return S.false
if abs(lim_ratio) < 1:
return S.true
except NotImplementedError:
pass
### ----------- root test ---------------- ###
# lim = Limit(abs(sequence_term)**(1/sym), sym, S.Infinity)
try:
lim_evaluated = limit_seq(abs(sequence_term)**(1/sym), sym)
if lim_evaluated is not None and lim_evaluated.is_number:
if lim_evaluated < 1:
return S.true
if lim_evaluated > 1:
return S.false
except NotImplementedError:
pass
### ------------- alternating series test ----------- ###
dict_val = sequence_term.match((-1)**(sym + p)*q)
if not dict_val[p].has(sym) and is_decreasing(dict_val[q], interval):
return S.true
### ------------- integral test -------------- ###
check_interval = None
maxima = solveset(sequence_term.diff(sym), sym, interval)
if not maxima:
check_interval = interval
elif isinstance(maxima, FiniteSet) and maxima.sup.is_number:
check_interval = Interval(maxima.sup, interval.sup)
if (check_interval is not None and
(is_decreasing(sequence_term, check_interval) or
is_decreasing(-sequence_term, check_interval))):
integral_val = Integral(
sequence_term, (sym, lower_limit, upper_limit))
try:
integral_val_evaluated = integral_val.doit()
if integral_val_evaluated.is_number:
return S(integral_val_evaluated.is_finite)
except NotImplementedError:
pass
### ----- Dirichlet and bounded times convergent tests ----- ###
# TODO
#
# Dirichlet_test
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirichlet%27s_test
#
# Bounded times convergent test
# It is based on comparison theorems for series.
# In particular, if the general term of a series can
# be written as a product of two terms a_n and b_n
# and if a_n is bounded and if Sum(b_n) is absolutely
# convergent, then the original series Sum(a_n * b_n)
# is absolutely convergent and so convergent.
#
# The following code can grows like 2**n where n is the
# number of args in order.expr
# Possibly combined with the potentially slow checks
# inside the loop, could make this test extremely slow
# for larger summation expressions.
if order.expr.is_Mul:
args = order.expr.args
argset = set(args)
### -------------- Dirichlet tests -------------- ###
m = Dummy('m', integer=True)
def _dirichlet_test(g_n):
try:
ing_val = limit_seq(Sum(g_n, (sym, interval.inf, m)).doit(), m)
if ing_val is not None and ing_val.is_finite:
return S.true
except NotImplementedError:
pass
### -------- bounded times convergent test ---------###
def _bounded_convergent_test(g1_n, g2_n):
try:
lim_val = limit_seq(g1_n, sym)
if lim_val is not None and (lim_val.is_finite or (
isinstance(lim_val, AccumulationBounds)
and (lim_val.max - lim_val.min).is_finite)):
if Sum(g2_n, (sym, lower_limit, upper_limit)).is_absolutely_convergent():
return S.true
except NotImplementedError:
pass
for n in range(1, len(argset)):
for a_tuple in itertools.combinations(args, n):
b_set = argset - set(a_tuple)
a_n = Mul(*a_tuple)
b_n = Mul(*b_set)
if is_decreasing(a_n, interval):
dirich = _dirichlet_test(b_n)
if dirich is not None:
return dirich
bc_test = _bounded_convergent_test(a_n, b_n)
if bc_test is not None:
return bc_test
_sym = self.limits[0][0]
sequence_term = sequence_term.xreplace({sym: _sym})
raise NotImplementedError("The algorithm to find the Sum convergence of %s "
"is not yet implemented" % (sequence_term))
def is_absolutely_convergent(self):
"""
Checks for the absolute convergence of an infinite series.
Same as checking convergence of absolute value of sequence_term of
an infinite series.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_convergence
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Sum, Symbol, sin, oo
>>> n = Symbol('n', integer=True)
>>> Sum((-1)**n, (n, 1, oo)).is_absolutely_convergent()
False
>>> Sum((-1)**n/n**2, (n, 1, oo)).is_absolutely_convergent()
True
See Also
========
Sum.is_convergent()
"""
return Sum(abs(self.function), self.limits).is_convergent()
def euler_maclaurin(self, m=0, n=0, eps=0, eval_integral=True):
"""
Return an Euler-Maclaurin approximation of self, where m is the
number of leading terms to sum directly and n is the number of
terms in the tail.
With m = n = 0, this is simply the corresponding integral
plus a first-order endpoint correction.
Returns (s, e) where s is the Euler-Maclaurin approximation
and e is the estimated error (taken to be the magnitude of
the first omitted term in the tail):
>>> from sympy.abc import k, a, b
>>> from sympy import Sum
>>> Sum(1/k, (k, 2, 5)).doit().evalf()
1.28333333333333
>>> s, e = Sum(1/k, (k, 2, 5)).euler_maclaurin()
>>> s
-log(2) + 7/20 + log(5)
>>> from sympy import sstr
>>> print(sstr((s.evalf(), e.evalf()), full_prec=True))
(1.26629073187415, 0.0175000000000000)
The endpoints may be symbolic:
>>> s, e = Sum(1/k, (k, a, b)).euler_maclaurin()
>>> s
-log(a) + log(b) + 1/(2*b) + 1/(2*a)
>>> e
Abs(1/(12*b**2) - 1/(12*a**2))
If the function is a polynomial of degree at most 2n+1, the
Euler-Maclaurin formula becomes exact (and e = 0 is returned):
>>> Sum(k, (k, 2, b)).euler_maclaurin()
(b**2/2 + b/2 - 1, 0)
>>> Sum(k, (k, 2, b)).doit()
b**2/2 + b/2 - 1
With a nonzero eps specified, the summation is ended
as soon as the remainder term is less than the epsilon.
"""
from sympy.functions import bernoulli, factorial
from sympy.integrals import Integral
m = int(m)
n = int(n)
f = self.function
if len(self.limits) != 1:
raise ValueError("More than 1 limit")
i, a, b = self.limits[0]
if (a > b) == True:
if a - b == 1:
return S.Zero, S.Zero
a, b = b + 1, a - 1
f = -f
s = S.Zero
if m:
if b.is_Integer and a.is_Integer:
m = min(m, b - a + 1)
if not eps or f.is_polynomial(i):
for k in range(m):
s += f.subs(i, a + k)
else:
term = f.subs(i, a)
if term:
test = abs(term.evalf(3)) < eps
if test == True:
return s, abs(term)
elif not (test == False):
# a symbolic Relational class, can't go further
return term, S.Zero
s += term
for k in range(1, m):
term = f.subs(i, a + k)
if abs(term.evalf(3)) < eps and term != 0:
return s, abs(term)
s += term
if b - a + 1 == m:
return s, S.Zero
a += m
x = Dummy('x')
I = Integral(f.subs(i, x), (x, a, b))
if eval_integral:
I = I.doit()
s += I
def fpoint(expr):
if b is S.Infinity:
return expr.subs(i, a), 0
return expr.subs(i, a), expr.subs(i, b)
fa, fb = fpoint(f)
iterm = (fa + fb)/2
g = f.diff(i)
for k in range(1, n + 2):
ga, gb = fpoint(g)
term = bernoulli(2*k)/factorial(2*k)*(gb - ga)
if (eps and term and abs(term.evalf(3)) < eps) or (k > n):
break
s += term
g = g.diff(i, 2, simplify=False)
return s + iterm, abs(term)
def reverse_order(self, *indices):
"""
Reverse the order of a limit in a Sum.
Usage
=====
``reverse_order(self, *indices)`` reverses some limits in the expression
``self`` which can be either a ``Sum`` or a ``Product``. The selectors in
the argument ``indices`` specify some indices whose limits get reversed.
These selectors are either variable names or numerical indices counted
starting from the inner-most limit tuple.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Sum
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, a, b, c, d
>>> Sum(x, (x, 0, 3)).reverse_order(x)
Sum(-x, (x, 4, -1))
>>> Sum(x*y, (x, 1, 5), (y, 0, 6)).reverse_order(x, y)
Sum(x*y, (x, 6, 0), (y, 7, -1))
>>> Sum(x, (x, a, b)).reverse_order(x)
Sum(-x, (x, b + 1, a - 1))
>>> Sum(x, (x, a, b)).reverse_order(0)
Sum(-x, (x, b + 1, a - 1))
While one should prefer variable names when specifying which limits
to reverse, the index counting notation comes in handy in case there
are several symbols with the same name.
>>> S = Sum(x**2, (x, a, b), (x, c, d))
>>> S
Sum(x**2, (x, a, b), (x, c, d))
>>> S0 = S.reverse_order(0)
>>> S0
Sum(-x**2, (x, b + 1, a - 1), (x, c, d))
>>> S1 = S0.reverse_order(1)
>>> S1
Sum(x**2, (x, b + 1, a - 1), (x, d + 1, c - 1))
Of course we can mix both notations:
>>> Sum(x*y, (x, a, b), (y, 2, 5)).reverse_order(x, 1)
Sum(x*y, (x, b + 1, a - 1), (y, 6, 1))
>>> Sum(x*y, (x, a, b), (y, 2, 5)).reverse_order(y, x)
Sum(x*y, (x, b + 1, a - 1), (y, 6, 1))
See Also
========
index, reorder_limit, reorder
References
==========
.. [1] Michael Karr, "Summation in Finite Terms", Journal of the ACM,
Volume 28 Issue 2, April 1981, Pages 305-350
http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=322248.322255
"""
l_indices = list(indices)
for i, indx in enumerate(l_indices):
if not isinstance(indx, int):
l_indices[i] = self.index(indx)
e = 1
limits = []
for i, limit in enumerate(self.limits):
l = limit
if i in l_indices:
e = -e
l = (limit[0], limit[2] + 1, limit[1] - 1)
limits.append(l)
return Sum(e * self.function, *limits)
def summation(f, *symbols, **kwargs):
r"""
Compute the summation of f with respect to symbols.
The notation for symbols is similar to the notation used in Integral.
summation(f, (i, a, b)) computes the sum of f with respect to i from a to b,
i.e.,
::
b
____
\ `
summation(f, (i, a, b)) = ) f
/___,
i = a
If it cannot compute the sum, it returns an unevaluated Sum object.
Repeated sums can be computed by introducing additional symbols tuples::
>>> from sympy import summation, oo, symbols, log
>>> i, n, m = symbols('i n m', integer=True)
>>> summation(2*i - 1, (i, 1, n))
n**2
>>> summation(1/2**i, (i, 0, oo))
2
>>> summation(1/log(n)**n, (n, 2, oo))
Sum(log(n)**(-n), (n, 2, oo))
>>> summation(i, (i, 0, n), (n, 0, m))
m**3/6 + m**2/2 + m/3
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import factorial
>>> summation(x**n/factorial(n), (n, 0, oo))
exp(x)
See Also
========
Sum
Product, product
"""
return Sum(f, *symbols, **kwargs).doit(deep=False)
def telescopic_direct(L, R, n, limits):
"""Returns the direct summation of the terms of a telescopic sum
L is the term with lower index
R is the term with higher index
n difference between the indexes of L and R
For example:
>>> from sympy.concrete.summations import telescopic_direct
>>> from sympy.abc import k, a, b
>>> telescopic_direct(1/k, -1/(k+2), 2, (k, a, b))
-1/(b + 2) - 1/(b + 1) + 1/(a + 1) + 1/a
"""
(i, a, b) = limits
s = 0
for m in range(n):
s += L.subs(i, a + m) + R.subs(i, b - m)
return s
def telescopic(L, R, limits):
'''Tries to perform the summation using the telescopic property
return None if not possible
'''
(i, a, b) = limits
if L.is_Add or R.is_Add:
return None
# We want to solve(L.subs(i, i + m) + R, m)
# First we try a simple match since this does things that
# solve doesn't do, e.g. solve(f(k+m)-f(k), m) fails
k = Wild("k")
sol = (-R).match(L.subs(i, i + k))
s = None
if sol and k in sol:
s = sol[k]
if not (s.is_Integer and L.subs(i, i + s) == -R):
# sometimes match fail(f(x+2).match(-f(x+k))->{k: -2 - 2x}))
s = None
# But there are things that match doesn't do that solve
# can do, e.g. determine that 1/(x + m) = 1/(1 - x) when m = 1
if s is None:
m = Dummy('m')
try:
sol = solve(L.subs(i, i + m) + R, m) or []
except NotImplementedError:
return None
sol = [si for si in sol if si.is_Integer and
(L.subs(i, i + si) + R).expand().is_zero]
if len(sol) != 1:
return None
s = sol[0]
if s < 0:
return telescopic_direct(R, L, abs(s), (i, a, b))
elif s > 0:
return telescopic_direct(L, R, s, (i, a, b))
def eval_sum(f, limits):
from sympy.concrete.delta import deltasummation, _has_simple_delta
from sympy.functions import KroneckerDelta
(i, a, b) = limits
if f is S.Zero:
return S.Zero
if i not in f.free_symbols:
return f*(b - a + 1)
if a == b:
return f.subs(i, a)
if isinstance(f, Piecewise):
if not any(i in arg.args[1].free_symbols for arg in f.args):
# Piecewise conditions do not depend on the dummy summation variable,
# therefore we can fold: Sum(Piecewise((e, c), ...), limits)
# --> Piecewise((Sum(e, limits), c), ...)
newargs = []
for arg in f.args:
newexpr = eval_sum(arg.expr, limits)
if newexpr is None:
return None
newargs.append((newexpr, arg.cond))
return f.func(*newargs)
if f.has(KroneckerDelta) and _has_simple_delta(f, limits[0]):
return deltasummation(f, limits)
dif = b - a
definite = dif.is_Integer
# Doing it directly may be faster if there are very few terms.
if definite and (dif < 100):
return eval_sum_direct(f, (i, a, b))
if isinstance(f, Piecewise):
return None
# Try to do it symbolically. Even when the number of terms is known,
# this can save time when b-a is big.
# We should try to transform to partial fractions
value = eval_sum_symbolic(f.expand(), (i, a, b))
if value is not None:
return value
# Do it directly
if definite:
return eval_sum_direct(f, (i, a, b))
def eval_sum_direct(expr, limits):
from sympy.core import Add
(i, a, b) = limits
dif = b - a
return Add(*[expr.subs(i, a + j) for j in range(dif + 1)])
def eval_sum_symbolic(f, limits):
from sympy.functions import harmonic, bernoulli
f_orig = f
(i, a, b) = limits
if not f.has(i):
return f*(b - a + 1)
# Linearity
if f.is_Mul:
L, R = f.as_two_terms()
if not L.has(i):
sR = eval_sum_symbolic(R, (i, a, b))
if sR:
return L*sR
if not R.has(i):
sL = eval_sum_symbolic(L, (i, a, b))
if sL:
return R*sL
try:
f = apart(f, i) # see if it becomes an Add
except PolynomialError:
pass
if f.is_Add:
L, R = f.as_two_terms()
lrsum = telescopic(L, R, (i, a, b))
if lrsum:
return lrsum
lsum = eval_sum_symbolic(L, (i, a, b))
rsum = eval_sum_symbolic(R, (i, a, b))
if None not in (lsum, rsum):
r = lsum + rsum
if not r is S.NaN:
return r
# Polynomial terms with Faulhaber's formula
n = Wild('n')
result = f.match(i**n)
if result is not None:
n = result[n]
if n.is_Integer:
if n >= 0:
if (b is S.Infinity and not a is S.NegativeInfinity) or \
(a is S.NegativeInfinity and not b is S.Infinity):
return S.Infinity
return ((bernoulli(n + 1, b + 1) - bernoulli(n + 1, a))/(n + 1)).expand()
elif a.is_Integer and a >= 1:
if n == -1:
return harmonic(b) - harmonic(a - 1)
else:
return harmonic(b, abs(n)) - harmonic(a - 1, abs(n))
if not (a.has(S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity) or
b.has(S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity)):
# Geometric terms
c1 = Wild('c1', exclude=[i])
c2 = Wild('c2', exclude=[i])
c3 = Wild('c3', exclude=[i])
wexp = Wild('wexp')
# Here we first attempt powsimp on f for easier matching with the
# exponential pattern, and attempt expansion on the exponent for easier
# matching with the linear pattern.
e = f.powsimp().match(c1 ** wexp)
if e is not None:
e_exp = e.pop(wexp).expand().match(c2*i + c3)
if e_exp is not None:
e.update(e_exp)
if e is not None:
p = (c1**c3).subs(e)
q = (c1**c2).subs(e)
r = p*(q**a - q**(b + 1))/(1 - q)
l = p*(b - a + 1)
return Piecewise((l, Eq(q, S.One)), (r, True))
r = gosper_sum(f, (i, a, b))
if isinstance(r, (Mul,Add)):
from sympy import ordered, Tuple
non_limit = r.free_symbols - Tuple(*limits[1:]).free_symbols
den = denom(together(r))
den_sym = non_limit & den.free_symbols
args = []
for v in ordered(den_sym):
try:
s = solve(den, v)
m = Eq(v, s[0]) if s else S.false
if m != False:
args.append((Sum(f_orig.subs(*m.args), limits).doit(), m))
break
except NotImplementedError:
continue
args.append((r, True))
return Piecewise(*args)
if not r in (None, S.NaN):
return r
h = eval_sum_hyper(f_orig, (i, a, b))
if h is not None:
return h
factored = f_orig.factor()
if factored != f_orig:
return eval_sum_symbolic(factored, (i, a, b))
def _eval_sum_hyper(f, i, a):
""" Returns (res, cond). Sums from a to oo. """
from sympy.functions import hyper
from sympy.simplify import hyperexpand, hypersimp, fraction, simplify
from sympy.polys.polytools import Poly, factor
from sympy.core.numbers import Float
if a != 0:
return _eval_sum_hyper(f.subs(i, i + a), i, 0)
if f.subs(i, 0) == 0:
if simplify(f.subs(i, Dummy('i', integer=True, positive=True))) == 0:
return S(0), True
return _eval_sum_hyper(f.subs(i, i + 1), i, 0)
hs = hypersimp(f, i)
if hs is None:
return None
if isinstance(hs, Float):
from sympy.simplify.simplify import nsimplify
hs = nsimplify(hs)
numer, denom = fraction(factor(hs))
top, topl = numer.as_coeff_mul(i)
bot, botl = denom.as_coeff_mul(i)
ab = [top, bot]
factors = [topl, botl]
params = [[], []]
for k in range(2):
for fac in factors[k]:
mul = 1
if fac.is_Pow:
mul = fac.exp
fac = fac.base
if not mul.is_Integer:
return None
p = Poly(fac, i)
if p.degree() != 1:
return None
m, n = p.all_coeffs()
ab[k] *= m**mul
params[k] += [n/m]*mul
# Add "1" to numerator parameters, to account for implicit n! in
# hypergeometric series.
ap = params[0] + [1]
bq = params[1]
x = ab[0]/ab[1]
h = hyper(ap, bq, x)
return f.subs(i, 0)*hyperexpand(h), h.convergence_statement
def eval_sum_hyper(f, i_a_b):
from sympy.logic.boolalg import And
i, a, b = i_a_b
if (b - a).is_Integer:
# We are never going to do better than doing the sum in the obvious way
return None
old_sum = Sum(f, (i, a, b))
if b != S.Infinity:
if a == S.NegativeInfinity:
res = _eval_sum_hyper(f.subs(i, -i), i, -b)
if res is not None:
return Piecewise(res, (old_sum, True))
else:
res1 = _eval_sum_hyper(f, i, a)
res2 = _eval_sum_hyper(f, i, b + 1)
if res1 is None or res2 is None:
return None
(res1, cond1), (res2, cond2) = res1, res2
cond = And(cond1, cond2)
if cond == False:
return None
return Piecewise((res1 - res2, cond), (old_sum, True))
if a == S.NegativeInfinity:
res1 = _eval_sum_hyper(f.subs(i, -i), i, 1)
res2 = _eval_sum_hyper(f, i, 0)
if res1 is None or res2 is None:
return None
res1, cond1 = res1
res2, cond2 = res2
cond = And(cond1, cond2)
if cond == False:
return None
return Piecewise((res1 + res2, cond), (old_sum, True))
# Now b == oo, a != -oo
res = _eval_sum_hyper(f, i, a)
if res is not None:
r, c = res
if c == False:
if r.is_number:
f = f.subs(i, Dummy('i', integer=True, positive=True) + a)
if f.is_positive or f.is_zero:
return S.Infinity
elif f.is_negative:
return S.NegativeInfinity
return None
return Piecewise(res, (old_sum, True))
|
54d392bd67b947564d0c84f0ea67781577251e0885d9e529cc347a26974f5edb
|
"""Tools to assist importing optional external modules."""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import sys
from distutils.version import StrictVersion
# Override these in the module to change the default warning behavior.
# For example, you might set both to False before running the tests so that
# warnings are not printed to the console, or set both to True for debugging.
WARN_NOT_INSTALLED = None # Default is False
WARN_OLD_VERSION = None # Default is True
def __sympy_debug():
# helper function from sympy/__init__.py
# We don't just import SYMPY_DEBUG from that file because we don't want to
# import all of sympy just to use this module.
import os
debug_str = os.getenv('SYMPY_DEBUG', 'False')
if debug_str in ('True', 'False'):
return eval(debug_str)
else:
raise RuntimeError("unrecognized value for SYMPY_DEBUG: %s" %
debug_str)
if __sympy_debug():
WARN_OLD_VERSION = True
WARN_NOT_INSTALLED = True
def import_module(module, min_module_version=None, min_python_version=None,
warn_not_installed=None, warn_old_version=None,
module_version_attr='__version__', module_version_attr_call_args=None,
__import__kwargs={}, catch=()):
"""
Import and return a module if it is installed.
If the module is not installed, it returns None.
A minimum version for the module can be given as the keyword argument
min_module_version. This should be comparable against the module version.
By default, module.__version__ is used to get the module version. To
override this, set the module_version_attr keyword argument. If the
attribute of the module to get the version should be called (e.g.,
module.version()), then set module_version_attr_call_args to the args such
that module.module_version_attr(*module_version_attr_call_args) returns the
module's version.
If the module version is less than min_module_version using the Python <
comparison, None will be returned, even if the module is installed. You can
use this to keep from importing an incompatible older version of a module.
You can also specify a minimum Python version by using the
min_python_version keyword argument. This should be comparable against
sys.version_info.
If the keyword argument warn_not_installed is set to True, the function will
emit a UserWarning when the module is not installed.
If the keyword argument warn_old_version is set to True, the function will
emit a UserWarning when the library is installed, but cannot be imported
because of the min_module_version or min_python_version options.
Note that because of the way warnings are handled, a warning will be
emitted for each module only once. You can change the default warning
behavior by overriding the values of WARN_NOT_INSTALLED and WARN_OLD_VERSION
in sympy.external.importtools. By default, WARN_NOT_INSTALLED is False and
WARN_OLD_VERSION is True.
This function uses __import__() to import the module. To pass additional
options to __import__(), use the __import__kwargs keyword argument. For
example, to import a submodule A.B, you must pass a nonempty fromlist option
to __import__. See the docstring of __import__().
This catches ImportError to determine if the module is not installed. To
catch additional errors, pass them as a tuple to the catch keyword
argument.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.external import import_module
>>> numpy = import_module('numpy')
>>> numpy = import_module('numpy', min_python_version=(2, 7),
... warn_old_version=False)
>>> numpy = import_module('numpy', min_module_version='1.5',
... warn_old_version=False) # numpy.__version__ is a string
>>> # gmpy does not have __version__, but it does have gmpy.version()
>>> gmpy = import_module('gmpy', min_module_version='1.14',
... module_version_attr='version', module_version_attr_call_args=(),
... warn_old_version=False)
>>> # To import a submodule, you must pass a nonempty fromlist to
>>> # __import__(). The values do not matter.
>>> p3 = import_module('mpl_toolkits.mplot3d',
... __import__kwargs={'fromlist':['something']})
>>> # matplotlib.pyplot can raise RuntimeError when the display cannot be opened
>>> matplotlib = import_module('matplotlib',
... __import__kwargs={'fromlist':['pyplot']}, catch=(RuntimeError,))
"""
# keyword argument overrides default, and global variable overrides
# keyword argument.
warn_old_version = (WARN_OLD_VERSION if WARN_OLD_VERSION is not None
else warn_old_version or True)
warn_not_installed = (WARN_NOT_INSTALLED if WARN_NOT_INSTALLED is not None
else warn_not_installed or False)
import warnings
# Check Python first so we don't waste time importing a module we can't use
if min_python_version:
if sys.version_info < min_python_version:
if warn_old_version:
warnings.warn("Python version is too old to use %s "
"(%s or newer required)" % (
module, '.'.join(map(str, min_python_version))),
UserWarning, stacklevel=2)
return
# PyPy 1.6 has rudimentary NumPy support and importing it produces errors, so skip it
if module == 'numpy' and '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names:
return
try:
mod = __import__(module, **__import__kwargs)
## there's something funny about imports with matplotlib and py3k. doing
## from matplotlib import collections
## gives python's stdlib collections module. explicitly re-importing
## the module fixes this.
from_list = __import__kwargs.get('fromlist', tuple())
for submod in from_list:
if submod == 'collections' and mod.__name__ == 'matplotlib':
__import__(module + '.' + submod)
except ImportError:
if warn_not_installed:
warnings.warn("%s module is not installed" % module, UserWarning,
stacklevel=2)
return
except catch as e:
if warn_not_installed:
warnings.warn(
"%s module could not be used (%s)" % (module, repr(e)),
stacklevel=2)
return
if min_module_version:
modversion = getattr(mod, module_version_attr)
if module_version_attr_call_args is not None:
modversion = modversion(*module_version_attr_call_args)
# NOTE: StrictVersion() is use here to make sure a comparison like
# '1.11.2' < '1.6.1' doesn't fail. There is not a straight forward way
# to create a unit test for this.
if StrictVersion(modversion) < StrictVersion(min_module_version):
if warn_old_version:
# Attempt to create a pretty string version of the version
from ..core.compatibility import string_types
if isinstance(min_module_version, string_types):
verstr = min_module_version
elif isinstance(min_module_version, (tuple, list)):
verstr = '.'.join(map(str, min_module_version))
else:
# Either don't know what this is. Hopefully
# it's something that has a nice str version, like an int.
verstr = str(min_module_version)
warnings.warn("%s version is too old to use "
"(%s or newer required)" % (module, verstr),
UserWarning, stacklevel=2)
return
return mod
|
8d04241f9d27a747a7c677d85604520b2056b1cd74d92f6c564b90f18946bde1
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
def series(expr, x=None, x0=0, n=6, dir="+"):
"""Series expansion of expr around point `x = x0`.
See the docstring of Expr.series() for complete details of this wrapper.
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
return expr.series(x, x0, n, dir)
|
d3b53e4ab6a002ec7d4cffabd5b430c0ea343b5a036aedaf091907303c06516c
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import S, Symbol, Add, sympify, Expr, PoleError, Mul
from sympy.core.compatibility import string_types
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import factorial
from sympy.core.numbers import GoldenRatio
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.numbers import fibonacci
from sympy.functions.special.gamma_functions import gamma
from sympy.series.order import Order
from .gruntz import gruntz
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
from sympy.simplify.ratsimp import ratsimp
from sympy.polys import PolynomialError, factor
from sympy.simplify.simplify import together
def limit(e, z, z0, dir="+"):
"""Computes the limit of ``e(z)`` at the point ``z0``.
Parameters
==========
e : expression, the limit of which is to be taken
z : symbol representing the variable in the limit.
Other symbols are treated as constants. Multivariate limits
are not supported.
z0 : the value toward which ``z`` tends. Can be any expression,
including ``oo`` and ``-oo``.
dir : string, optional (default: "+")
The limit is bi-directional if ``dir="+-"``, from the right
(z->z0+) if ``dir="+"``, and from the left (z->z0-) if
``dir="-"``. For infinite ``z0`` (``oo`` or ``-oo``), the ``dir``
argument is determined from the direction of the infinity
(i.e., ``dir="-"`` for ``oo``).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import limit, sin, Symbol, oo
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> limit(sin(x)/x, x, 0)
1
>>> limit(1/x, x, 0) # default dir='+'
oo
>>> limit(1/x, x, 0, dir="-")
-oo
>>> limit(1/x, x, 0, dir='+-')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: The limit does not exist since left hand limit = -oo and right hand limit = oo
>>> limit(1/x, x, oo)
0
Notes
=====
First we try some heuristics for easy and frequent cases like "x", "1/x",
"x**2" and similar, so that it's fast. For all other cases, we use the
Gruntz algorithm (see the gruntz() function).
See Also
========
limit_seq : returns the limit of a sequence.
"""
if dir == "+-":
llim = Limit(e, z, z0, dir="-").doit(deep=False)
rlim = Limit(e, z, z0, dir="+").doit(deep=False)
if llim == rlim:
return rlim
else:
# TODO: choose a better error?
raise ValueError("The limit does not exist since "
"left hand limit = %s and right hand limit = %s"
% (llim, rlim))
else:
return Limit(e, z, z0, dir).doit(deep=False)
def heuristics(e, z, z0, dir):
"""Computes the limit of an expression term-wise.
Parameters are the same as for the ``limit`` function.
Works with the arguments of expression ``e`` one by one, computing
the limit of each and then combining the results. This approach
works only for simple limits, but it is fast.
"""
from sympy.calculus.util import AccumBounds
rv = None
if abs(z0) is S.Infinity:
rv = limit(e.subs(z, 1/z), z, S.Zero, "+" if z0 is S.Infinity else "-")
if isinstance(rv, Limit):
return
elif e.is_Mul or e.is_Add or e.is_Pow or e.is_Function:
r = []
for a in e.args:
l = limit(a, z, z0, dir)
if l.has(S.Infinity) and l.is_finite is None:
if isinstance(e, Add):
m = factor_terms(e)
if not isinstance(m, Mul): # try together
m = together(m)
if not isinstance(m, Mul): # try factor if the previous methods failed
m = factor(e)
if isinstance(m, Mul):
return heuristics(m, z, z0, dir)
return
return
elif isinstance(l, Limit):
return
elif l is S.NaN:
return
else:
r.append(l)
if r:
rv = e.func(*r)
if rv is S.NaN and e.is_Mul and any(isinstance(rr, AccumBounds) for rr in r):
r2 = []
e2 = []
for ii in range(len(r)):
if isinstance(r[ii], AccumBounds):
r2.append(r[ii])
else:
e2.append(e.args[ii])
if len(e2) > 0:
e3 = Mul(*e2).simplify()
l = limit(e3, z, z0, dir)
rv = l * Mul(*r2)
if rv is S.NaN:
try:
rat_e = ratsimp(e)
except PolynomialError:
return
if rat_e is S.NaN or rat_e == e:
return
return limit(rat_e, z, z0, dir)
return rv
class Limit(Expr):
"""Represents an unevaluated limit.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Limit, sin, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Limit(sin(x)/x, x, 0)
Limit(sin(x)/x, x, 0)
>>> Limit(1/x, x, 0, dir="-")
Limit(1/x, x, 0, dir='-')
"""
def __new__(cls, e, z, z0, dir="+"):
e = sympify(e)
z = sympify(z)
z0 = sympify(z0)
if z0 is S.Infinity:
dir = "-"
elif z0 is S.NegativeInfinity:
dir = "+"
if isinstance(dir, string_types):
dir = Symbol(dir)
elif not isinstance(dir, Symbol):
raise TypeError("direction must be of type basestring or "
"Symbol, not %s" % type(dir))
if str(dir) not in ('+', '-', '+-'):
raise ValueError("direction must be one of '+', '-' "
"or '+-', not %s" % dir)
obj = Expr.__new__(cls)
obj._args = (e, z, z0, dir)
return obj
@property
def free_symbols(self):
e = self.args[0]
isyms = e.free_symbols
isyms.difference_update(self.args[1].free_symbols)
isyms.update(self.args[2].free_symbols)
return isyms
def doit(self, **hints):
"""Evaluates the limit.
Parameters
==========
deep : bool, optional (default: True)
Invoke the ``doit`` method of the expressions involved before
taking the limit.
hints : optional keyword arguments
To be passed to ``doit`` methods; only used if deep is True.
"""
from sympy.series.limitseq import limit_seq
from sympy.functions import RisingFactorial
e, z, z0, dir = self.args
if z0 is S.ComplexInfinity:
raise NotImplementedError("Limits at complex "
"infinity are not implemented")
if hints.get('deep', True):
e = e.doit(**hints)
z = z.doit(**hints)
z0 = z0.doit(**hints)
if e == z:
return z0
if not e.has(z):
return e
# gruntz fails on factorials but works with the gamma function
# If no factorial term is present, e should remain unchanged.
# factorial is defined to be zero for negative inputs (which
# differs from gamma) so only rewrite for positive z0.
if z0.is_positive:
e = e.rewrite([factorial, RisingFactorial], gamma)
if e.is_Mul:
if abs(z0) is S.Infinity:
e = factor_terms(e)
e = e.rewrite(fibonacci, GoldenRatio)
ok = lambda w: (z in w.free_symbols and
any(a.is_polynomial(z) or
any(z in m.free_symbols and m.is_polynomial(z)
for m in Mul.make_args(a))
for a in Add.make_args(w)))
if all(ok(w) for w in e.as_numer_denom()):
u = Dummy(positive=True)
if z0 is S.NegativeInfinity:
inve = e.subs(z, -1/u)
else:
inve = e.subs(z, 1/u)
r = limit(inve.as_leading_term(u), u, S.Zero, "+")
if isinstance(r, Limit):
return self
else:
return r
if e.is_Order:
return Order(limit(e.expr, z, z0), *e.args[1:])
try:
r = gruntz(e, z, z0, dir)
if r is S.NaN:
raise PoleError()
except (PoleError, ValueError):
r = heuristics(e, z, z0, dir)
if r is None:
return self
return r
|
c433f91da406d3b8b5fe16ef929ff1cb0ec926f5dbaa51fbf82bdb88bd73e466
|
"""Limits of sequences"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.power import Pow
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy
from sympy.core.function import PoleError
from sympy.series.limits import Limit
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.numbers import fibonacci
def difference_delta(expr, n=None, step=1):
"""Difference Operator.
Discrete analog of differential operator. Given a sequence x[n],
returns the sequence x[n + step] - x[n].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import difference_delta as dd
>>> from sympy.abc import n
>>> dd(n*(n + 1), n)
2*n + 2
>>> dd(n*(n + 1), n, 2)
4*n + 6
References
==========
.. [1] https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/DifferenceDelta.html
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
if n is None:
f = expr.free_symbols
if len(f) == 1:
n = f.pop()
elif len(f) == 0:
return S.Zero
else:
raise ValueError("Since there is more than one variable in the"
" expression, a variable must be supplied to"
" take the difference of %s" % expr)
step = sympify(step)
if step.is_number is False or step.is_finite is False:
raise ValueError("Step should be a finite number.")
if hasattr(expr, '_eval_difference_delta'):
result = expr._eval_difference_delta(n, step)
if result:
return result
return expr.subs(n, n + step) - expr
def dominant(expr, n):
"""Finds the dominant term in a sum, that is a term that dominates
every other term.
If limit(a/b, n, oo) is oo then a dominates b.
If limit(a/b, n, oo) is 0 then b dominates a.
Otherwise, a and b are comparable.
If there is no unique dominant term, then returns ``None``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Sum
>>> from sympy.series.limitseq import dominant
>>> from sympy.abc import n, k
>>> dominant(5*n**3 + 4*n**2 + n + 1, n)
5*n**3
>>> dominant(2**n + Sum(k, (k, 0, n)), n)
2**n
See Also
========
sympy.series.limitseq.dominant
"""
terms = Add.make_args(expr.expand(func=True))
term0 = terms[-1]
comp = [term0] # comparable terms
for t in terms[:-1]:
e = (term0 / t).gammasimp()
l = limit_seq(e, n)
if l is S.Zero:
term0 = t
comp = [term0]
elif l is None:
return None
elif l not in [S.Infinity, -S.Infinity]:
comp.append(t)
if len(comp) > 1:
return None
return term0
def _limit_inf(expr, n):
try:
return Limit(expr, n, S.Infinity).doit(deep=False)
except (NotImplementedError, PoleError):
return None
def _limit_seq(expr, n, trials):
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
for i in range(trials):
if not expr.has(Sum):
result = _limit_inf(expr, n)
if result is not None:
return result
num, den = expr.as_numer_denom()
if not den.has(n) or not num.has(n):
result = _limit_inf(expr.doit(), n)
if result is not None:
return result
return None
num, den = (difference_delta(t.expand(), n) for t in [num, den])
expr = (num / den).gammasimp()
if not expr.has(Sum):
result = _limit_inf(expr, n)
if result is not None:
return result
num, den = expr.as_numer_denom()
num = dominant(num, n)
if num is None:
return None
den = dominant(den, n)
if den is None:
return None
expr = (num / den).gammasimp()
def limit_seq(expr, n=None, trials=5):
"""Finds the limit of a sequence as index n tends to infinity.
Parameters
==========
expr : Expr
SymPy expression for the n-th term of the sequence
n : Symbol, optional
The index of the sequence, an integer that tends to positive
infinity. If None, inferred from the expression unless it has
multiple symbols.
trials: int, optional
The algorithm is highly recursive. ``trials`` is a safeguard from
infinite recursion in case the limit is not easily computed by the
algorithm. Try increasing ``trials`` if the algorithm returns ``None``.
Admissible Terms
================
The algorithm is designed for sequences built from rational functions,
indefinite sums, and indefinite products over an indeterminate n. Terms of
alternating sign are also allowed, but more complex oscillatory behavior is
not supported.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import limit_seq, Sum, binomial
>>> from sympy.abc import n, k, m
>>> limit_seq((5*n**3 + 3*n**2 + 4) / (3*n**3 + 4*n - 5), n)
5/3
>>> limit_seq(binomial(2*n, n) / Sum(binomial(2*k, k), (k, 1, n)), n)
3/4
>>> limit_seq(Sum(k**2 * Sum(2**m/m, (m, 1, k)), (k, 1, n)) / (2**n*n), n)
4
See Also
========
sympy.series.limitseq.dominant
References
==========
.. [1] Computing Limits of Sequences - Manuel Kauers
"""
if n is None:
free = expr.free_symbols
if len(free) == 1:
n = free.pop()
elif not free:
return expr
else:
raise ValueError("expr %s has more than one variables. Please"
"specify a variable." % (expr))
elif n not in expr.free_symbols:
return expr
expr = expr.rewrite(fibonacci, S.GoldenRatio)
n_ = Dummy("n", integer=True, positive=True)
# If there is a negative term raised to a power involving n, consider
# even and odd n separately.
powers = (p.as_base_exp() for p in expr.atoms(Pow))
if any(b.is_negative and e.has(n) for b, e in powers):
L1 = _limit_seq(expr.xreplace({n: 2*n_}), n_, trials)
if L1 is not None:
L2 = _limit_seq(expr.xreplace({n: 2*n_ + 1}), n_, trials)
if L1 == L2:
return L1
else:
return _limit_seq(expr.xreplace({n: n_}), n_, trials)
|
26b32152d51713f31c56579a55521b785e0196800419cb2f208d88cc38debe7f
|
"""
This module implements the Residue function and related tools for working
with residues.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy import sympify
from sympy.utilities.timeutils import timethis
@timethis('residue')
def residue(expr, x, x0):
"""
Finds the residue of ``expr`` at the point x=x0.
The residue is defined as the coefficient of 1/(x-x0) in the power series
expansion about x=x0.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, residue, sin
>>> x = Symbol("x")
>>> residue(1/x, x, 0)
1
>>> residue(1/x**2, x, 0)
0
>>> residue(2/sin(x), x, 0)
2
This function is essential for the Residue Theorem [1].
References
==========
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residue_theorem
"""
# The current implementation uses series expansion to
# calculate it. A more general implementation is explained in
# the section 5.6 of the Bronstein's book {M. Bronstein:
# Symbolic Integration I, Springer Verlag (2005)}. For purely
# rational functions, the algorithm is much easier. See
# sections 2.4, 2.5, and 2.7 (this section actually gives an
# algorithm for computing any Laurent series coefficient for
# a rational function). The theory in section 2.4 will help to
# understand why the resultant works in the general algorithm.
# For the definition of a resultant, see section 1.4 (and any
# previous sections for more review).
from sympy import collect, Mul, Order, S
expr = sympify(expr)
if x0 != 0:
expr = expr.subs(x, x + x0)
for n in [0, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32]:
if n == 0:
s = expr.series(x, n=0)
else:
s = expr.nseries(x, n=n)
if not s.has(Order) or s.getn() >= 0:
break
s = collect(s.removeO(), x)
if s.is_Add:
args = s.args
else:
args = [s]
res = S(0)
for arg in args:
c, m = arg.as_coeff_mul(x)
m = Mul(*m)
if not (m == 1 or m == x or (m.is_Pow and m.exp.is_Integer)):
raise NotImplementedError('term of unexpected form: %s' % m)
if m == 1/x:
res += c
return res
|
09f79d2a6031681c9d92289daedd44ca3d00bf3a950393b0beced792da541086
|
"""Formal Power Series"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy import oo, zoo, nan
from sympy.core.expr import Expr
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.function import Derivative, Function
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.core.symbol import Wild, Dummy, symbols, Symbol
from sympy.core.relational import Eq
from sympy.core.numbers import Rational
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable
from sympy.sets.sets import Interval
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import binomial, factorial, rf
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import floor, frac, ceiling
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import Min, Max
from sympy.series.sequences import sequence
from sympy.series.series_class import SeriesBase
from sympy.series.order import Order
from sympy.series.limits import Limit
def rational_algorithm(f, x, k, order=4, full=False):
"""Rational algorithm for computing
formula of coefficients of Formal Power Series
of a function.
Applicable when f(x) or some derivative of f(x)
is a rational function in x.
:func:`rational_algorithm` uses :func:`apart` function for partial fraction
decomposition. :func:`apart` by default uses 'undetermined coefficients
method'. By setting ``full=True``, 'Bronstein's algorithm' can be used
instead.
Looks for derivative of a function up to 4'th order (by default).
This can be overridden using order option.
Returns
=======
formula : Expr
ind : Expr
Independent terms.
order : int
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import log, atan, I
>>> from sympy.series.formal import rational_algorithm as ra
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k
>>> ra(1 / (1 - x), x, k)
(1, 0, 0)
>>> ra(log(1 + x), x, k)
(-(-1)**(-k)/k, 0, 1)
>>> ra(atan(x), x, k, full=True)
((-I*(-I)**(-k)/2 + I*I**(-k)/2)/k, 0, 1)
Notes
=====
By setting ``full=True``, range of admissible functions to be solved using
``rational_algorithm`` can be increased. This option should be used
carefully as it can significantly slow down the computation as ``doit`` is
performed on the :class:`RootSum` object returned by the ``apart`` function.
Use ``full=False`` whenever possible.
See Also
========
sympy.polys.partfrac.apart
References
==========
.. [1] Formal Power Series - Dominik Gruntz, Wolfram Koepf
.. [2] Power Series in Computer Algebra - Wolfram Koepf
"""
from sympy.polys import RootSum, apart
from sympy.integrals import integrate
diff = f
ds = [] # list of diff
for i in range(order + 1):
if i:
diff = diff.diff(x)
if diff.is_rational_function(x):
coeff, sep = S.Zero, S.Zero
terms = apart(diff, x, full=full)
if terms.has(RootSum):
terms = terms.doit()
for t in Add.make_args(terms):
num, den = t.as_numer_denom()
if not den.has(x):
sep += t
else:
if isinstance(den, Mul):
# m*(n*x - a)**j -> (n*x - a)**j
ind = den.as_independent(x)
den = ind[1]
num /= ind[0]
# (n*x - a)**j -> (x - b)
den, j = den.as_base_exp()
a, xterm = den.as_coeff_add(x)
# term -> m/x**n
if not a:
sep += t
continue
xc = xterm[0].coeff(x)
a /= -xc
num /= xc**j
ak = ((-1)**j * num *
binomial(j + k - 1, k).rewrite(factorial) /
a**(j + k))
coeff += ak
# Hacky, better way?
if coeff is S.Zero:
return None
if (coeff.has(x) or coeff.has(zoo) or coeff.has(oo) or
coeff.has(nan)):
return None
for j in range(i):
coeff = (coeff / (k + j + 1))
sep = integrate(sep, x)
sep += (ds.pop() - sep).limit(x, 0) # constant of integration
return (coeff.subs(k, k - i), sep, i)
else:
ds.append(diff)
return None
def rational_independent(terms, x):
"""Returns a list of all the rationally independent terms.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, cos
>>> from sympy.series.formal import rational_independent
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> rational_independent([cos(x), sin(x)], x)
[cos(x), sin(x)]
>>> rational_independent([x**2, sin(x), x*sin(x), x**3], x)
[x**3 + x**2, x*sin(x) + sin(x)]
"""
if not terms:
return []
ind = terms[0:1]
for t in terms[1:]:
n = t.as_independent(x)[1]
for i, term in enumerate(ind):
d = term.as_independent(x)[1]
q = (n / d).cancel()
if q.is_rational_function(x):
ind[i] += t
break
else:
ind.append(t)
return ind
def simpleDE(f, x, g, order=4):
r"""Generates simple DE.
DE is of the form
.. math::
f^k(x) + \sum\limits_{j=0}^{k-1} A_j f^j(x) = 0
where :math:`A_j` should be rational function in x.
Generates DE's upto order 4 (default). DE's can also have free parameters.
By increasing order, higher order DE's can be found.
Yields a tuple of (DE, order).
"""
from sympy.solvers.solveset import linsolve
a = symbols('a:%d' % (order))
def _makeDE(k):
eq = f.diff(x, k) + Add(*[a[i]*f.diff(x, i) for i in range(0, k)])
DE = g(x).diff(x, k) + Add(*[a[i]*g(x).diff(x, i) for i in range(0, k)])
return eq, DE
eq, DE = _makeDE(order)
found = False
for k in range(1, order + 1):
eq, DE = _makeDE(k)
eq = eq.expand()
terms = eq.as_ordered_terms()
ind = rational_independent(terms, x)
if found or len(ind) == k:
sol = dict(zip(a, (i for s in linsolve(ind, a[:k]) for i in s)))
if sol:
found = True
DE = DE.subs(sol)
DE = DE.as_numer_denom()[0]
DE = DE.factor().as_coeff_mul(Derivative)[1][0]
yield DE.collect(Derivative(g(x))), k
def exp_re(DE, r, k):
"""Converts a DE with constant coefficients (explike) into a RE.
Performs the substitution:
.. math::
f^j(x) \\to r(k + j)
Normalises the terms so that lowest order of a term is always r(k).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Derivative
>>> from sympy.series.formal import exp_re
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k
>>> f, r = Function('f'), Function('r')
>>> exp_re(-f(x) + Derivative(f(x)), r, k)
-r(k) + r(k + 1)
>>> exp_re(Derivative(f(x), x) + Derivative(f(x), (x, 2)), r, k)
r(k) + r(k + 1)
See Also
========
sympy.series.formal.hyper_re
"""
RE = S.Zero
g = DE.atoms(Function).pop()
mini = None
for t in Add.make_args(DE):
coeff, d = t.as_independent(g)
if isinstance(d, Derivative):
j = d.derivative_count
else:
j = 0
if mini is None or j < mini:
mini = j
RE += coeff * r(k + j)
if mini:
RE = RE.subs(k, k - mini)
return RE
def hyper_re(DE, r, k):
"""Converts a DE into a RE.
Performs the substitution:
.. math::
x^l f^j(x) \\to (k + 1 - l)_j . a_{k + j - l}
Normalises the terms so that lowest order of a term is always r(k).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Derivative
>>> from sympy.series.formal import hyper_re
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k
>>> f, r = Function('f'), Function('r')
>>> hyper_re(-f(x) + Derivative(f(x)), r, k)
(k + 1)*r(k + 1) - r(k)
>>> hyper_re(-x*f(x) + Derivative(f(x), (x, 2)), r, k)
(k + 2)*(k + 3)*r(k + 3) - r(k)
See Also
========
sympy.series.formal.exp_re
"""
RE = S.Zero
g = DE.atoms(Function).pop()
x = g.atoms(Symbol).pop()
mini = None
for t in Add.make_args(DE.expand()):
coeff, d = t.as_independent(g)
c, v = coeff.as_independent(x)
l = v.as_coeff_exponent(x)[1]
if isinstance(d, Derivative):
j = d.derivative_count
else:
j = 0
RE += c * rf(k + 1 - l, j) * r(k + j - l)
if mini is None or j - l < mini:
mini = j - l
RE = RE.subs(k, k - mini)
m = Wild('m')
return RE.collect(r(k + m))
def _transformation_a(f, x, P, Q, k, m, shift):
f *= x**(-shift)
P = P.subs(k, k + shift)
Q = Q.subs(k, k + shift)
return f, P, Q, m
def _transformation_c(f, x, P, Q, k, m, scale):
f = f.subs(x, x**scale)
P = P.subs(k, k / scale)
Q = Q.subs(k, k / scale)
m *= scale
return f, P, Q, m
def _transformation_e(f, x, P, Q, k, m):
f = f.diff(x)
P = P.subs(k, k + 1) * (k + m + 1)
Q = Q.subs(k, k + 1) * (k + 1)
return f, P, Q, m
def _apply_shift(sol, shift):
return [(res, cond + shift) for res, cond in sol]
def _apply_scale(sol, scale):
return [(res, cond / scale) for res, cond in sol]
def _apply_integrate(sol, x, k):
return [(res / ((cond + 1)*(cond.as_coeff_Add()[1].coeff(k))), cond + 1)
for res, cond in sol]
def _compute_formula(f, x, P, Q, k, m, k_max):
"""Computes the formula for f."""
from sympy.polys import roots
sol = []
for i in range(k_max + 1, k_max + m + 1):
if (i < 0) == True:
continue
r = f.diff(x, i).limit(x, 0) / factorial(i)
if r is S.Zero:
continue
kterm = m*k + i
res = r
p = P.subs(k, kterm)
q = Q.subs(k, kterm)
c1 = p.subs(k, 1/k).leadterm(k)[0]
c2 = q.subs(k, 1/k).leadterm(k)[0]
res *= (-c1 / c2)**k
for r, mul in roots(p, k).items():
res *= rf(-r, k)**mul
for r, mul in roots(q, k).items():
res /= rf(-r, k)**mul
sol.append((res, kterm))
return sol
def _rsolve_hypergeometric(f, x, P, Q, k, m):
"""Recursive wrapper to rsolve_hypergeometric.
Returns a Tuple of (formula, series independent terms,
maximum power of x in independent terms) if successful
otherwise ``None``.
See :func:`rsolve_hypergeometric` for details.
"""
from sympy.polys import lcm, roots
from sympy.integrals import integrate
# transformation - c
proots, qroots = roots(P, k), roots(Q, k)
all_roots = dict(proots)
all_roots.update(qroots)
scale = lcm([r.as_numer_denom()[1] for r, t in all_roots.items()
if r.is_rational])
f, P, Q, m = _transformation_c(f, x, P, Q, k, m, scale)
# transformation - a
qroots = roots(Q, k)
if qroots:
k_min = Min(*qroots.keys())
else:
k_min = S.Zero
shift = k_min + m
f, P, Q, m = _transformation_a(f, x, P, Q, k, m, shift)
l = (x*f).limit(x, 0)
if not isinstance(l, Limit) and l != 0: # Ideally should only be l != 0
return None
qroots = roots(Q, k)
if qroots:
k_max = Max(*qroots.keys())
else:
k_max = S.Zero
ind, mp = S.Zero, -oo
for i in range(k_max + m + 1):
r = f.diff(x, i).limit(x, 0) / factorial(i)
if r.is_finite is False:
old_f = f
f, P, Q, m = _transformation_a(f, x, P, Q, k, m, i)
f, P, Q, m = _transformation_e(f, x, P, Q, k, m)
sol, ind, mp = _rsolve_hypergeometric(f, x, P, Q, k, m)
sol = _apply_integrate(sol, x, k)
sol = _apply_shift(sol, i)
ind = integrate(ind, x)
ind += (old_f - ind).limit(x, 0) # constant of integration
mp += 1
return sol, ind, mp
elif r:
ind += r*x**(i + shift)
pow_x = Rational((i + shift), scale)
if pow_x > mp:
mp = pow_x # maximum power of x
ind = ind.subs(x, x**(1/scale))
sol = _compute_formula(f, x, P, Q, k, m, k_max)
sol = _apply_shift(sol, shift)
sol = _apply_scale(sol, scale)
return sol, ind, mp
def rsolve_hypergeometric(f, x, P, Q, k, m):
"""Solves RE of hypergeometric type.
Attempts to solve RE of the form
Q(k)*a(k + m) - P(k)*a(k)
Transformations that preserve Hypergeometric type:
a. x**n*f(x): b(k + m) = R(k - n)*b(k)
b. f(A*x): b(k + m) = A**m*R(k)*b(k)
c. f(x**n): b(k + n*m) = R(k/n)*b(k)
d. f(x**(1/m)): b(k + 1) = R(k*m)*b(k)
e. f'(x): b(k + m) = ((k + m + 1)/(k + 1))*R(k + 1)*b(k)
Some of these transformations have been used to solve the RE.
Returns
=======
formula : Expr
ind : Expr
Independent terms.
order : int
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp, ln, S
>>> from sympy.series.formal import rsolve_hypergeometric as rh
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k
>>> rh(exp(x), x, -S.One, (k + 1), k, 1)
(Piecewise((1/factorial(k), Eq(Mod(k, 1), 0)), (0, True)), 1, 1)
>>> rh(ln(1 + x), x, k**2, k*(k + 1), k, 1)
(Piecewise(((-1)**(k - 1)*factorial(k - 1)/RisingFactorial(2, k - 1),
Eq(Mod(k, 1), 0)), (0, True)), x, 2)
References
==========
.. [1] Formal Power Series - Dominik Gruntz, Wolfram Koepf
.. [2] Power Series in Computer Algebra - Wolfram Koepf
"""
result = _rsolve_hypergeometric(f, x, P, Q, k, m)
if result is None:
return None
sol_list, ind, mp = result
sol_dict = defaultdict(lambda: S.Zero)
for res, cond in sol_list:
j, mk = cond.as_coeff_Add()
c = mk.coeff(k)
if j.is_integer is False:
res *= x**frac(j)
j = floor(j)
res = res.subs(k, (k - j) / c)
cond = Eq(k % c, j % c)
sol_dict[cond] += res # Group together formula for same conditions
sol = []
for cond, res in sol_dict.items():
sol.append((res, cond))
sol.append((S.Zero, True))
sol = Piecewise(*sol)
if mp is -oo:
s = S.Zero
elif mp.is_integer is False:
s = ceiling(mp)
else:
s = mp + 1
# save all the terms of
# form 1/x**k in ind
if s < 0:
ind += sum(sequence(sol * x**k, (k, s, -1)))
s = S.Zero
return (sol, ind, s)
def _solve_hyper_RE(f, x, RE, g, k):
"""See docstring of :func:`rsolve_hypergeometric` for details."""
terms = Add.make_args(RE)
if len(terms) == 2:
gs = list(RE.atoms(Function))
P, Q = map(RE.coeff, gs)
m = gs[1].args[0] - gs[0].args[0]
if m < 0:
P, Q = Q, P
m = abs(m)
return rsolve_hypergeometric(f, x, P, Q, k, m)
def _solve_explike_DE(f, x, DE, g, k):
"""Solves DE with constant coefficients."""
from sympy.solvers import rsolve
for t in Add.make_args(DE):
coeff, d = t.as_independent(g)
if coeff.free_symbols:
return
RE = exp_re(DE, g, k)
init = {}
for i in range(len(Add.make_args(RE))):
if i:
f = f.diff(x)
init[g(k).subs(k, i)] = f.limit(x, 0)
sol = rsolve(RE, g(k), init)
if sol:
return (sol / factorial(k), S.Zero, S.Zero)
def _solve_simple(f, x, DE, g, k):
"""Converts DE into RE and solves using :func:`rsolve`."""
from sympy.solvers import rsolve
RE = hyper_re(DE, g, k)
init = {}
for i in range(len(Add.make_args(RE))):
if i:
f = f.diff(x)
init[g(k).subs(k, i)] = f.limit(x, 0) / factorial(i)
sol = rsolve(RE, g(k), init)
if sol:
return (sol, S.Zero, S.Zero)
def _transform_explike_DE(DE, g, x, order, syms):
"""Converts DE with free parameters into DE with constant coefficients."""
from sympy.solvers.solveset import linsolve
eq = []
highest_coeff = DE.coeff(Derivative(g(x), x, order))
for i in range(order):
coeff = DE.coeff(Derivative(g(x), x, i))
coeff = (coeff / highest_coeff).expand().collect(x)
for t in Add.make_args(coeff):
eq.append(t)
temp = []
for e in eq:
if e.has(x):
break
elif e.has(Symbol):
temp.append(e)
else:
eq = temp
if eq:
sol = dict(zip(syms, (i for s in linsolve(eq, list(syms)) for i in s)))
if sol:
DE = DE.subs(sol)
DE = DE.factor().as_coeff_mul(Derivative)[1][0]
DE = DE.collect(Derivative(g(x)))
return DE
def _transform_DE_RE(DE, g, k, order, syms):
"""Converts DE with free parameters into RE of hypergeometric type."""
from sympy.solvers.solveset import linsolve
RE = hyper_re(DE, g, k)
eq = []
for i in range(1, order):
coeff = RE.coeff(g(k + i))
eq.append(coeff)
sol = dict(zip(syms, (i for s in linsolve(eq, list(syms)) for i in s)))
if sol:
m = Wild('m')
RE = RE.subs(sol)
RE = RE.factor().as_numer_denom()[0].collect(g(k + m))
RE = RE.as_coeff_mul(g)[1][0]
for i in range(order): # smallest order should be g(k)
if RE.coeff(g(k + i)) and i:
RE = RE.subs(k, k - i)
break
return RE
def solve_de(f, x, DE, order, g, k):
"""Solves the DE.
Tries to solve DE by either converting into a RE containing two terms or
converting into a DE having constant coefficients.
Returns
=======
formula : Expr
ind : Expr
Independent terms.
order : int
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Derivative as D, Function
>>> from sympy import exp, ln
>>> from sympy.series.formal import solve_de
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> solve_de(exp(x), x, D(f(x), x) - f(x), 1, f, k)
(Piecewise((1/factorial(k), Eq(Mod(k, 1), 0)), (0, True)), 1, 1)
>>> solve_de(ln(1 + x), x, (x + 1)*D(f(x), x, 2) + D(f(x)), 2, f, k)
(Piecewise(((-1)**(k - 1)*factorial(k - 1)/RisingFactorial(2, k - 1),
Eq(Mod(k, 1), 0)), (0, True)), x, 2)
"""
sol = None
syms = DE.free_symbols.difference({g, x})
if syms:
RE = _transform_DE_RE(DE, g, k, order, syms)
else:
RE = hyper_re(DE, g, k)
if not RE.free_symbols.difference({k}):
sol = _solve_hyper_RE(f, x, RE, g, k)
if sol:
return sol
if syms:
DE = _transform_explike_DE(DE, g, x, order, syms)
if not DE.free_symbols.difference({x}):
sol = _solve_explike_DE(f, x, DE, g, k)
if sol:
return sol
def hyper_algorithm(f, x, k, order=4):
"""Hypergeometric algorithm for computing Formal Power Series.
Steps:
* Generates DE
* Convert the DE into RE
* Solves the RE
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp, ln
>>> from sympy.series.formal import hyper_algorithm
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k
>>> hyper_algorithm(exp(x), x, k)
(Piecewise((1/factorial(k), Eq(Mod(k, 1), 0)), (0, True)), 1, 1)
>>> hyper_algorithm(ln(1 + x), x, k)
(Piecewise(((-1)**(k - 1)*factorial(k - 1)/RisingFactorial(2, k - 1),
Eq(Mod(k, 1), 0)), (0, True)), x, 2)
See Also
========
sympy.series.formal.simpleDE
sympy.series.formal.solve_de
"""
g = Function('g')
des = [] # list of DE's
sol = None
for DE, i in simpleDE(f, x, g, order):
if DE is not None:
sol = solve_de(f, x, DE, i, g, k)
if sol:
return sol
if not DE.free_symbols.difference({x}):
des.append(DE)
# If nothing works
# Try plain rsolve
for DE in des:
sol = _solve_simple(f, x, DE, g, k)
if sol:
return sol
def _compute_fps(f, x, x0, dir, hyper, order, rational, full):
"""Recursive wrapper to compute fps.
See :func:`compute_fps` for details.
"""
if x0 in [S.Infinity, -S.Infinity]:
dir = S.One if x0 is S.Infinity else -S.One
temp = f.subs(x, 1/x)
result = _compute_fps(temp, x, 0, dir, hyper, order, rational, full)
if result is None:
return None
return (result[0], result[1].subs(x, 1/x), result[2].subs(x, 1/x))
elif x0 or dir == -S.One:
if dir == -S.One:
rep = -x + x0
rep2 = -x
rep2b = x0
else:
rep = x + x0
rep2 = x
rep2b = -x0
temp = f.subs(x, rep)
result = _compute_fps(temp, x, 0, S.One, hyper, order, rational, full)
if result is None:
return None
return (result[0], result[1].subs(x, rep2 + rep2b),
result[2].subs(x, rep2 + rep2b))
if f.is_polynomial(x):
return None
# Break instances of Add
# this allows application of different
# algorithms on different terms increasing the
# range of admissible functions.
if isinstance(f, Add):
result = False
ak = sequence(S.Zero, (0, oo))
ind, xk = S.Zero, None
for t in Add.make_args(f):
res = _compute_fps(t, x, 0, S.One, hyper, order, rational, full)
if res:
if not result:
result = True
xk = res[1]
if res[0].start > ak.start:
seq = ak
s, f = ak.start, res[0].start
else:
seq = res[0]
s, f = res[0].start, ak.start
save = Add(*[z[0]*z[1] for z in zip(seq[0:(f - s)], xk[s:f])])
ak += res[0]
ind += res[2] + save
else:
ind += t
if result:
return ak, xk, ind
return None
result = None
# from here on it's x0=0 and dir=1 handling
k = Dummy('k')
if rational:
result = rational_algorithm(f, x, k, order, full)
if result is None and hyper:
result = hyper_algorithm(f, x, k, order)
if result is None:
return None
ak = sequence(result[0], (k, result[2], oo))
xk = sequence(x**k, (k, 0, oo))
ind = result[1]
return ak, xk, ind
def compute_fps(f, x, x0=0, dir=1, hyper=True, order=4, rational=True,
full=False):
"""Computes the formula for Formal Power Series of a function.
Tries to compute the formula by applying the following techniques
(in order):
* rational_algorithm
* Hypergeomitric algorithm
Parameters
==========
x : Symbol
x0 : number, optional
Point to perform series expansion about. Default is 0.
dir : {1, -1, '+', '-'}, optional
If dir is 1 or '+' the series is calculated from the right and
for -1 or '-' the series is calculated from the left. For smooth
functions this flag will not alter the results. Default is 1.
hyper : {True, False}, optional
Set hyper to False to skip the hypergeometric algorithm.
By default it is set to False.
order : int, optional
Order of the derivative of ``f``, Default is 4.
rational : {True, False}, optional
Set rational to False to skip rational algorithm. By default it is set
to True.
full : {True, False}, optional
Set full to True to increase the range of rational algorithm.
See :func:`rational_algorithm` for details. By default it is set to
False.
Returns
=======
ak : sequence
Sequence of coefficients.
xk : sequence
Sequence of powers of x.
ind : Expr
Independent terms.
mul : Pow
Common terms.
See Also
========
sympy.series.formal.rational_algorithm
sympy.series.formal.hyper_algorithm
"""
f = sympify(f)
x = sympify(x)
if not f.has(x):
return None
x0 = sympify(x0)
if dir == '+':
dir = S.One
elif dir == '-':
dir = -S.One
elif dir not in [S.One, -S.One]:
raise ValueError("Dir must be '+' or '-'")
else:
dir = sympify(dir)
return _compute_fps(f, x, x0, dir, hyper, order, rational, full)
class FormalPowerSeries(SeriesBase):
"""Represents Formal Power Series of a function.
No computation is performed. This class should only to be used to represent
a series. No checks are performed.
For computing a series use :func:`fps`.
See Also
========
sympy.series.formal.fps
"""
def __new__(cls, *args):
args = map(sympify, args)
return Expr.__new__(cls, *args)
@property
def function(self):
return self.args[0]
@property
def x(self):
return self.args[1]
@property
def x0(self):
return self.args[2]
@property
def dir(self):
return self.args[3]
@property
def ak(self):
return self.args[4][0]
@property
def xk(self):
return self.args[4][1]
@property
def ind(self):
return self.args[4][2]
@property
def interval(self):
return Interval(0, oo)
@property
def start(self):
return self.interval.inf
@property
def stop(self):
return self.interval.sup
@property
def length(self):
return oo
@property
def infinite(self):
"""Returns an infinite representation of the series"""
from sympy.concrete import Sum
ak, xk = self.ak, self.xk
k = ak.variables[0]
inf_sum = Sum(ak.formula * xk.formula, (k, ak.start, ak.stop))
return self.ind + inf_sum
def _get_pow_x(self, term):
"""Returns the power of x in a term."""
xterm, pow_x = term.as_independent(self.x)[1].as_base_exp()
if not xterm.has(self.x):
return S.Zero
return pow_x
def polynomial(self, n=6):
"""Truncated series as polynomial.
Returns series sexpansion of ``f`` upto order ``O(x**n)``
as a polynomial(without ``O`` term).
"""
terms = []
for i, t in enumerate(self):
xp = self._get_pow_x(t)
if xp >= n:
break
elif xp.is_integer is True and i == n + 1:
break
elif t is not S.Zero:
terms.append(t)
return Add(*terms)
def truncate(self, n=6):
"""Truncated series.
Returns truncated series expansion of f upto
order ``O(x**n)``.
If n is ``None``, returns an infinite iterator.
"""
if n is None:
return iter(self)
x, x0 = self.x, self.x0
pt_xk = self.xk.coeff(n)
if x0 is S.NegativeInfinity:
x0 = S.Infinity
return self.polynomial(n) + Order(pt_xk, (x, x0))
def _eval_term(self, pt):
try:
pt_xk = self.xk.coeff(pt)
pt_ak = self.ak.coeff(pt).simplify() # Simplify the coefficients
except IndexError:
term = S.Zero
else:
term = (pt_ak * pt_xk)
if self.ind:
ind = S.Zero
for t in Add.make_args(self.ind):
pow_x = self._get_pow_x(t)
if pt == 0 and pow_x < 1:
ind += t
elif pow_x >= pt and pow_x < pt + 1:
ind += t
term += ind
return term.collect(self.x)
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
x = self.x
if old.has(x):
return self
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
for t in self:
if t is not S.Zero:
return t
def _eval_derivative(self, x):
f = self.function.diff(x)
ind = self.ind.diff(x)
pow_xk = self._get_pow_x(self.xk.formula)
ak = self.ak
k = ak.variables[0]
if ak.formula.has(x):
form = []
for e, c in ak.formula.args:
temp = S.Zero
for t in Add.make_args(e):
pow_x = self._get_pow_x(t)
temp += t * (pow_xk + pow_x)
form.append((temp, c))
form = Piecewise(*form)
ak = sequence(form.subs(k, k + 1), (k, ak.start - 1, ak.stop))
else:
ak = sequence((ak.formula * pow_xk).subs(k, k + 1),
(k, ak.start - 1, ak.stop))
return self.func(f, self.x, self.x0, self.dir, (ak, self.xk, ind))
def integrate(self, x=None, **kwargs):
"""Integrate Formal Power Series.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import fps, sin, integrate
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = fps(sin(x))
>>> f.integrate(x).truncate()
-1 + x**2/2 - x**4/24 + O(x**6)
>>> integrate(f, (x, 0, 1))
-cos(1) + 1
"""
from sympy.integrals import integrate
if x is None:
x = self.x
elif iterable(x):
return integrate(self.function, x)
f = integrate(self.function, x)
ind = integrate(self.ind, x)
ind += (f - ind).limit(x, 0) # constant of integration
pow_xk = self._get_pow_x(self.xk.formula)
ak = self.ak
k = ak.variables[0]
if ak.formula.has(x):
form = []
for e, c in ak.formula.args:
temp = S.Zero
for t in Add.make_args(e):
pow_x = self._get_pow_x(t)
temp += t / (pow_xk + pow_x + 1)
form.append((temp, c))
form = Piecewise(*form)
ak = sequence(form.subs(k, k - 1), (k, ak.start + 1, ak.stop))
else:
ak = sequence((ak.formula / (pow_xk + 1)).subs(k, k - 1),
(k, ak.start + 1, ak.stop))
return self.func(f, self.x, self.x0, self.dir, (ak, self.xk, ind))
def __add__(self, other):
other = sympify(other)
if isinstance(other, FormalPowerSeries):
if self.dir != other.dir:
raise ValueError("Both series should be calculated from the"
" same direction.")
elif self.x0 != other.x0:
raise ValueError("Both series should be calculated about the"
" same point.")
x, y = self.x, other.x
f = self.function + other.function.subs(y, x)
if self.x not in f.free_symbols:
return f
ak = self.ak + other.ak
if self.ak.start > other.ak.start:
seq = other.ak
s, e = other.ak.start, self.ak.start
else:
seq = self.ak
s, e = self.ak.start, other.ak.start
save = Add(*[z[0]*z[1] for z in zip(seq[0:(e - s)], self.xk[s:e])])
ind = self.ind + other.ind + save
return self.func(f, x, self.x0, self.dir, (ak, self.xk, ind))
elif not other.has(self.x):
f = self.function + other
ind = self.ind + other
return self.func(f, self.x, self.x0, self.dir,
(self.ak, self.xk, ind))
return Add(self, other)
def __radd__(self, other):
return self.__add__(other)
def __neg__(self):
return self.func(-self.function, self.x, self.x0, self.dir,
(-self.ak, self.xk, -self.ind))
def __sub__(self, other):
return self.__add__(-other)
def __rsub__(self, other):
return (-self).__add__(other)
def __mul__(self, other):
other = sympify(other)
if other.has(self.x):
return Mul(self, other)
f = self.function * other
ak = self.ak.coeff_mul(other)
ind = self.ind * other
return self.func(f, self.x, self.x0, self.dir, (ak, self.xk, ind))
def __rmul__(self, other):
return self.__mul__(other)
def fps(f, x=None, x0=0, dir=1, hyper=True, order=4, rational=True, full=False):
"""Generates Formal Power Series of f.
Returns the formal series expansion of ``f`` around ``x = x0``
with respect to ``x`` in the form of a ``FormalPowerSeries`` object.
Formal Power Series is represented using an explicit formula
computed using different algorithms.
See :func:`compute_fps` for the more details regarding the computation
of formula.
Parameters
==========
x : Symbol, optional
If x is None and ``f`` is univariate, the univariate symbols will be
supplied, otherwise an error will be raised.
x0 : number, optional
Point to perform series expansion about. Default is 0.
dir : {1, -1, '+', '-'}, optional
If dir is 1 or '+' the series is calculated from the right and
for -1 or '-' the series is calculated from the left. For smooth
functions this flag will not alter the results. Default is 1.
hyper : {True, False}, optional
Set hyper to False to skip the hypergeometric algorithm.
By default it is set to False.
order : int, optional
Order of the derivative of ``f``, Default is 4.
rational : {True, False}, optional
Set rational to False to skip rational algorithm. By default it is set
to True.
full : {True, False}, optional
Set full to True to increase the range of rational algorithm.
See :func:`rational_algorithm` for details. By default it is set to
False.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import fps, O, ln, atan
>>> from sympy.abc import x
Rational Functions
>>> fps(ln(1 + x)).truncate()
x - x**2/2 + x**3/3 - x**4/4 + x**5/5 + O(x**6)
>>> fps(atan(x), full=True).truncate()
x - x**3/3 + x**5/5 + O(x**6)
See Also
========
sympy.series.formal.FormalPowerSeries
sympy.series.formal.compute_fps
"""
f = sympify(f)
if x is None:
free = f.free_symbols
if len(free) == 1:
x = free.pop()
elif not free:
return f
else:
raise NotImplementedError("multivariate formal power series")
result = compute_fps(f, x, x0, dir, hyper, order, rational, full)
if result is None:
return f
return FormalPowerSeries(f, x, x0, dir, result)
|
6aee661f79baf5a1b4dd35d0828fb458b8dfbbd6dd37f633caa12b760808ce75
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import S, sympify, Expr, Rational, Symbol, Dummy
from sympy.core import Add, Mul, expand_power_base, expand_log
from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
from sympy.core.compatibility import default_sort_key, is_sequence
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
from sympy.utilities.iterables import uniq
from sympy.sets.sets import Complement
class Order(Expr):
r""" Represents the limiting behavior of some function
The order of a function characterizes the function based on the limiting
behavior of the function as it goes to some limit. Only taking the limit
point to be a number is currently supported. This is expressed in
big O notation [1]_.
The formal definition for the order of a function `g(x)` about a point `a`
is such that `g(x) = O(f(x))` as `x \rightarrow a` if and only if for any
`\delta > 0` there exists a `M > 0` such that `|g(x)| \leq M|f(x)|` for
`|x-a| < \delta`. This is equivalent to `\lim_{x \rightarrow a}
\sup |g(x)/f(x)| < \infty`.
Let's illustrate it on the following example by taking the expansion of
`\sin(x)` about 0:
.. math ::
\sin(x) = x - x^3/3! + O(x^5)
where in this case `O(x^5) = x^5/5! - x^7/7! + \cdots`. By the definition
of `O`, for any `\delta > 0` there is an `M` such that:
.. math ::
|x^5/5! - x^7/7! + ....| <= M|x^5| \text{ for } |x| < \delta
or by the alternate definition:
.. math ::
\lim_{x \rightarrow 0} | (x^5/5! - x^7/7! + ....) / x^5| < \infty
which surely is true, because
.. math ::
\lim_{x \rightarrow 0} | (x^5/5! - x^7/7! + ....) / x^5| = 1/5!
As it is usually used, the order of a function can be intuitively thought
of representing all terms of powers greater than the one specified. For
example, `O(x^3)` corresponds to any terms proportional to `x^3,
x^4,\ldots` and any higher power. For a polynomial, this leaves terms
proportional to `x^2`, `x` and constants.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import O, oo, cos, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> O(x + x**2)
O(x)
>>> O(x + x**2, (x, 0))
O(x)
>>> O(x + x**2, (x, oo))
O(x**2, (x, oo))
>>> O(1 + x*y)
O(1, x, y)
>>> O(1 + x*y, (x, 0), (y, 0))
O(1, x, y)
>>> O(1 + x*y, (x, oo), (y, oo))
O(x*y, (x, oo), (y, oo))
>>> O(1) in O(1, x)
True
>>> O(1, x) in O(1)
False
>>> O(x) in O(1, x)
True
>>> O(x**2) in O(x)
True
>>> O(x)*x
O(x**2)
>>> O(x) - O(x)
O(x)
>>> O(cos(x))
O(1)
>>> O(cos(x), (x, pi/2))
O(x - pi/2, (x, pi/2))
References
==========
.. [1] `Big O notation <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_O_notation>`_
Notes
=====
In ``O(f(x), x)`` the expression ``f(x)`` is assumed to have a leading
term. ``O(f(x), x)`` is automatically transformed to
``O(f(x).as_leading_term(x),x)``.
``O(expr*f(x), x)`` is ``O(f(x), x)``
``O(expr, x)`` is ``O(1)``
``O(0, x)`` is 0.
Multivariate O is also supported:
``O(f(x, y), x, y)`` is transformed to
``O(f(x, y).as_leading_term(x,y).as_leading_term(y), x, y)``
In the multivariate case, it is assumed the limits w.r.t. the various
symbols commute.
If no symbols are passed then all symbols in the expression are used
and the limit point is assumed to be zero.
"""
is_Order = True
__slots__ = []
@cacheit
def __new__(cls, expr, *args, **kwargs):
expr = sympify(expr)
if not args:
if expr.is_Order:
variables = expr.variables
point = expr.point
else:
variables = list(expr.free_symbols)
point = [S.Zero]*len(variables)
else:
args = list(args if is_sequence(args) else [args])
variables, point = [], []
if is_sequence(args[0]):
for a in args:
v, p = list(map(sympify, a))
variables.append(v)
point.append(p)
else:
variables = list(map(sympify, args))
point = [S.Zero]*len(variables)
if not all(v.is_symbol for v in variables):
raise TypeError('Variables are not symbols, got %s' % variables)
if len(list(uniq(variables))) != len(variables):
raise ValueError('Variables are supposed to be unique symbols, got %s' % variables)
if expr.is_Order:
expr_vp = dict(expr.args[1:])
new_vp = dict(expr_vp)
vp = dict(zip(variables, point))
for v, p in vp.items():
if v in new_vp.keys():
if p != new_vp[v]:
raise NotImplementedError(
"Mixing Order at different points is not supported.")
else:
new_vp[v] = p
if set(expr_vp.keys()) == set(new_vp.keys()):
return expr
else:
variables = list(new_vp.keys())
point = [new_vp[v] for v in variables]
if expr is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
if any(x in p.free_symbols for x in variables for p in point):
raise ValueError('Got %s as a point.' % point)
if variables:
if any(p != point[0] for p in point):
raise NotImplementedError(
"Multivariable orders at different points are not supported.")
if point[0] is S.Infinity:
s = {k: 1/Dummy() for k in variables}
rs = {1/v: 1/k for k, v in s.items()}
elif point[0] is S.NegativeInfinity:
s = {k: -1/Dummy() for k in variables}
rs = {-1/v: -1/k for k, v in s.items()}
elif point[0] is not S.Zero:
s = dict((k, Dummy() + point[0]) for k in variables)
rs = dict((v - point[0], k - point[0]) for k, v in s.items())
else:
s = ()
rs = ()
expr = expr.subs(s)
if expr.is_Add:
from sympy import expand_multinomial
expr = expand_multinomial(expr)
if s:
args = tuple([r[0] for r in rs.items()])
else:
args = tuple(variables)
if len(variables) > 1:
# XXX: better way? We need this expand() to
# workaround e.g: expr = x*(x + y).
# (x*(x + y)).as_leading_term(x, y) currently returns
# x*y (wrong order term!). That's why we want to deal with
# expand()'ed expr (handled in "if expr.is_Add" branch below).
expr = expr.expand()
if expr.is_Add:
lst = expr.extract_leading_order(args)
expr = Add(*[f.expr for (e, f) in lst])
elif expr:
expr = expr.as_leading_term(*args)
expr = expr.as_independent(*args, as_Add=False)[1]
expr = expand_power_base(expr)
expr = expand_log(expr)
if len(args) == 1:
# The definition of O(f(x)) symbol explicitly stated that
# the argument of f(x) is irrelevant. That's why we can
# combine some power exponents (only "on top" of the
# expression tree for f(x)), e.g.:
# x**p * (-x)**q -> x**(p+q) for real p, q.
x = args[0]
margs = list(Mul.make_args(
expr.as_independent(x, as_Add=False)[1]))
for i, t in enumerate(margs):
if t.is_Pow:
b, q = t.args
if b in (x, -x) and q.is_real and not q.has(x):
margs[i] = x**q
elif b.is_Pow and not b.exp.has(x):
b, r = b.args
if b in (x, -x) and r.is_real:
margs[i] = x**(r*q)
elif b.is_Mul and b.args[0] is S.NegativeOne:
b = -b
if b.is_Pow and not b.exp.has(x):
b, r = b.args
if b in (x, -x) and r.is_real:
margs[i] = x**(r*q)
expr = Mul(*margs)
expr = expr.subs(rs)
if expr is S.Zero:
return expr
if expr.is_Order:
expr = expr.expr
if not expr.has(*variables):
expr = S.One
# create Order instance:
vp = dict(zip(variables, point))
variables.sort(key=default_sort_key)
point = [vp[v] for v in variables]
args = (expr,) + Tuple(*zip(variables, point))
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, *args)
return obj
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
return self
@property
def expr(self):
return self.args[0]
@property
def variables(self):
if self.args[1:]:
return tuple(x[0] for x in self.args[1:])
else:
return ()
@property
def point(self):
if self.args[1:]:
return tuple(x[1] for x in self.args[1:])
else:
return ()
@property
def free_symbols(self):
return self.expr.free_symbols | set(self.variables)
def _eval_power(b, e):
if e.is_Number and e.is_nonnegative:
return b.func(b.expr ** e, *b.args[1:])
if e == O(1):
return b
return
def as_expr_variables(self, order_symbols):
if order_symbols is None:
order_symbols = self.args[1:]
else:
if (not all(o[1] == order_symbols[0][1] for o in order_symbols) and
not all(p == self.point[0] for p in self.point)): # pragma: no cover
raise NotImplementedError('Order at points other than 0 '
'or oo not supported, got %s as a point.' % point)
if order_symbols and order_symbols[0][1] != self.point[0]:
raise NotImplementedError(
"Multiplying Order at different points is not supported.")
order_symbols = dict(order_symbols)
for s, p in dict(self.args[1:]).items():
if s not in order_symbols.keys():
order_symbols[s] = p
order_symbols = sorted(order_symbols.items(), key=lambda x: default_sort_key(x[0]))
return self.expr, tuple(order_symbols)
def removeO(self):
return S.Zero
def getO(self):
return self
@cacheit
def contains(self, expr):
r"""
Return True if expr belongs to Order(self.expr, \*self.variables).
Return False if self belongs to expr.
Return None if the inclusion relation cannot be determined
(e.g. when self and expr have different symbols).
"""
from sympy import powsimp
if expr is S.Zero:
return True
if expr is S.NaN:
return False
point = self.point[0] if self.point else S.Zero
if expr.is_Order:
if (any(p != point for p in expr.point) or
any(p != point for p in self.point)):
return None
if expr.expr == self.expr:
# O(1) + O(1), O(1) + O(1, x), etc.
return all([x in self.args[1:] for x in expr.args[1:]])
if expr.expr.is_Add:
return all([self.contains(x) for x in expr.expr.args])
if self.expr.is_Add and point == S.Zero:
return any([self.func(x, *self.args[1:]).contains(expr)
for x in self.expr.args])
if self.variables and expr.variables:
common_symbols = tuple(
[s for s in self.variables if s in expr.variables])
elif self.variables:
common_symbols = self.variables
else:
common_symbols = expr.variables
if not common_symbols:
return None
if (self.expr.is_Pow and len(self.variables) == 1
and self.variables == expr.variables):
symbol = self.variables[0]
other = expr.expr.as_independent(symbol, as_Add=False)[1]
if (other.is_Pow and other.base == symbol and
self.expr.base == symbol):
if point == S.Zero:
rv = (self.expr.exp - other.exp).is_nonpositive
if point.is_infinite:
rv = (self.expr.exp - other.exp).is_nonnegative
if rv is not None:
return rv
r = None
ratio = self.expr/expr.expr
ratio = powsimp(ratio, deep=True, combine='exp')
for s in common_symbols:
from sympy.series.limits import Limit
l = Limit(ratio, s, point).doit(heuristics=False)
if not isinstance(l, Limit):
l = l != 0
else:
l = None
if r is None:
r = l
else:
if r != l:
return
return r
if self.expr.is_Pow and len(self.variables) == 1:
symbol = self.variables[0]
other = expr.as_independent(symbol, as_Add=False)[1]
if (other.is_Pow and other.base == symbol and
self.expr.base == symbol):
if point == S.Zero:
rv = (self.expr.exp - other.exp).is_nonpositive
if point.is_infinite:
rv = (self.expr.exp - other.exp).is_nonnegative
if rv is not None:
return rv
obj = self.func(expr, *self.args[1:])
return self.contains(obj)
def __contains__(self, other):
result = self.contains(other)
if result is None:
raise TypeError('contains did not evaluate to a bool')
return result
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
if old in self.variables:
newexpr = self.expr.subs(old, new)
i = self.variables.index(old)
newvars = list(self.variables)
newpt = list(self.point)
if new.is_symbol:
newvars[i] = new
else:
syms = new.free_symbols
if len(syms) == 1 or old in syms:
if old in syms:
var = self.variables[i]
else:
var = syms.pop()
# First, try to substitute self.point in the "new"
# expr to see if this is a fixed point.
# E.g. O(y).subs(y, sin(x))
point = new.subs(var, self.point[i])
if point != self.point[i]:
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset
d = Dummy()
sol = solveset(old - new.subs(var, d), d)
if isinstance(sol, Complement):
e1 = sol.args[0]
e2 = sol.args[1]
sol = set(e1) - set(e2)
res = [dict(zip((d, ), sol))]
point = d.subs(res[0]).limit(old, self.point[i])
newvars[i] = var
newpt[i] = point
elif old not in syms:
del newvars[i], newpt[i]
if not syms and new == self.point[i]:
newvars.extend(syms)
newpt.extend([S.Zero]*len(syms))
else:
return
return Order(newexpr, *zip(newvars, newpt))
def _eval_conjugate(self):
expr = self.expr._eval_conjugate()
if expr is not None:
return self.func(expr, *self.args[1:])
def _eval_derivative(self, x):
return self.func(self.expr.diff(x), *self.args[1:]) or self
def _eval_transpose(self):
expr = self.expr._eval_transpose()
if expr is not None:
return self.func(expr, *self.args[1:])
def _sage_(self):
#XXX: SAGE doesn't have Order yet. Let's return 0 instead.
return Rational(0)._sage_()
O = Order
|
390186d285cd9cd01c6a44d4252161192459fa1840b1363a255a761ad5f6d976
|
"""
Expand Hypergeometric (and Meijer G) functions into named
special functions.
The algorithm for doing this uses a collection of lookup tables of
hypergeometric functions, and various of their properties, to expand
many hypergeometric functions in terms of special functions.
It is based on the following paper:
Kelly B. Roach. Meijer G Function Representations.
In: Proceedings of the 1997 International Symposium on Symbolic and
Algebraic Computation, pages 205-211, New York, 1997. ACM.
It is described in great(er) detail in the Sphinx documentation.
"""
# SUMMARY OF EXTENSIONS FOR MEIJER G FUNCTIONS
#
# o z**rho G(ap, bq; z) = G(ap + rho, bq + rho; z)
#
# o denote z*d/dz by D
#
# o It is helpful to keep in mind that ap and bq play essentially symmetric
# roles: G(1/z) has slightly altered parameters, with ap and bq interchanged.
#
# o There are four shift operators:
# A_J = b_J - D, J = 1, ..., n
# B_J = 1 - a_j + D, J = 1, ..., m
# C_J = -b_J + D, J = m+1, ..., q
# D_J = a_J - 1 - D, J = n+1, ..., p
#
# A_J, C_J increment b_J
# B_J, D_J decrement a_J
#
# o The corresponding four inverse-shift operators are defined if there
# is no cancellation. Thus e.g. an index a_J (upper or lower) can be
# incremented if a_J != b_i for i = 1, ..., q.
#
# o Order reduction: if b_j - a_i is a non-negative integer, where
# j <= m and i > n, the corresponding quotient of gamma functions reduces
# to a polynomial. Hence the G function can be expressed using a G-function
# of lower order.
# Similarly if j > m and i <= n.
#
# Secondly, there are paired index theorems [Adamchik, The evaluation of
# integrals of Bessel functions via G-function identities]. Suppose there
# are three parameters a, b, c, where a is an a_i, i <= n, b is a b_j,
# j <= m and c is a denominator parameter (i.e. a_i, i > n or b_j, j > m).
# Suppose further all three differ by integers.
# Then the order can be reduced.
# TODO work this out in detail.
#
# o An index quadruple is called suitable if its order cannot be reduced.
# If there exists a sequence of shift operators transforming one index
# quadruple into another, we say one is reachable from the other.
#
# o Deciding if one index quadruple is reachable from another is tricky. For
# this reason, we use hand-built routines to match and instantiate formulas.
#
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from itertools import product
from sympy import SYMPY_DEBUG
from sympy.core import (S, Dummy, symbols, sympify, Tuple, expand, I, pi, Mul,
EulerGamma, oo, zoo, expand_func, Add, nan, Expr)
from sympy.core.mod import Mod
from sympy.core.compatibility import default_sort_key, range
from sympy.utilities.iterables import sift
from sympy.functions import (exp, sqrt, root, log, lowergamma, cos,
besseli, gamma, uppergamma, expint, erf, sin, besselj, Ei, Ci, Si, Shi,
sinh, cosh, Chi, fresnels, fresnelc, polar_lift, exp_polar, floor, ceiling,
rf, factorial, lerchphi, Piecewise, re, elliptic_k, elliptic_e)
from sympy.functions.special.hyper import (hyper, HyperRep_atanh,
HyperRep_power1, HyperRep_power2, HyperRep_log1, HyperRep_asin1,
HyperRep_asin2, HyperRep_sqrts1, HyperRep_sqrts2, HyperRep_log2,
HyperRep_cosasin, HyperRep_sinasin, meijerg)
from sympy.simplify import simplify
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import polarify, unpolarify
from sympy.simplify.powsimp import powdenest
from sympy.polys import poly, Poly
from sympy.series import residue
# function to define "buckets"
def _mod1(x):
# TODO see if this can work as Mod(x, 1); this will require
# different handling of the "buckets" since these need to
# be sorted and that fails when there is a mixture of
# integers and expressions with parameters. With the current
# Mod behavior, Mod(k, 1) == Mod(1, 1) == 0 if k is an integer.
# Although the sorting can be done with Basic.compare, this may
# still require different handling of the sorted buckets.
if x.is_Number:
return Mod(x, 1)
c, x = x.as_coeff_Add()
return Mod(c, 1) + x
# leave add formulae at the top for easy reference
def add_formulae(formulae):
""" Create our knowledge base. """
from sympy.matrices import Matrix
a, b, c, z = symbols('a b c, z', cls=Dummy)
def add(ap, bq, res):
func = Hyper_Function(ap, bq)
formulae.append(Formula(func, z, res, (a, b, c)))
def addb(ap, bq, B, C, M):
func = Hyper_Function(ap, bq)
formulae.append(Formula(func, z, None, (a, b, c), B, C, M))
# Luke, Y. L. (1969), The Special Functions and Their Approximations,
# Volume 1, section 6.2
# 0F0
add((), (), exp(z))
# 1F0
add((a, ), (), HyperRep_power1(-a, z))
# 2F1
addb((a, a - S.Half), (2*a, ),
Matrix([HyperRep_power2(a, z),
HyperRep_power2(a + S(1)/2, z)/2]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[(a - S.Half)*z/(1 - z), (S.Half - a)*z/(1 - z)],
[a/(1 - z), a*(z - 2)/(1 - z)]]))
addb((1, 1), (2, ),
Matrix([HyperRep_log1(z), 1]), Matrix([[-1/z, 0]]),
Matrix([[0, z/(z - 1)], [0, 0]]))
addb((S.Half, 1), (S('3/2'), ),
Matrix([HyperRep_atanh(z), 1]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[-S(1)/2, 1/(1 - z)/2], [0, 0]]))
addb((S.Half, S.Half), (S('3/2'), ),
Matrix([HyperRep_asin1(z), HyperRep_power1(-S(1)/2, z)]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[-S(1)/2, S(1)/2], [0, z/(1 - z)/2]]))
addb((a, S.Half + a), (S.Half, ),
Matrix([HyperRep_sqrts1(-a, z), -HyperRep_sqrts2(-a - S(1)/2, z)]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[0, -a],
[z*(-2*a - 1)/2/(1 - z), S.Half - z*(-2*a - 1)/(1 - z)]]))
# A. P. Prudnikov, Yu. A. Brychkov and O. I. Marichev (1990).
# Integrals and Series: More Special Functions, Vol. 3,.
# Gordon and Breach Science Publisher
addb([a, -a], [S.Half],
Matrix([HyperRep_cosasin(a, z), HyperRep_sinasin(a, z)]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[0, -a], [a*z/(1 - z), 1/(1 - z)/2]]))
addb([1, 1], [3*S.Half],
Matrix([HyperRep_asin2(z), 1]), Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[(z - S.Half)/(1 - z), 1/(1 - z)/2], [0, 0]]))
# Complete elliptic integrals K(z) and E(z), both a 2F1 function
addb([S.Half, S.Half], [S.One],
Matrix([elliptic_k(z), elliptic_e(z)]),
Matrix([[2/pi, 0]]),
Matrix([[-S.Half, -1/(2*z-2)],
[-S.Half, S.Half]]))
addb([-S.Half, S.Half], [S.One],
Matrix([elliptic_k(z), elliptic_e(z)]),
Matrix([[0, 2/pi]]),
Matrix([[-S.Half, -1/(2*z-2)],
[-S.Half, S.Half]]))
# 3F2
addb([-S.Half, 1, 1], [S.Half, 2],
Matrix([z*HyperRep_atanh(z), HyperRep_log1(z), 1]),
Matrix([[-S(2)/3, -S(1)/(3*z), S(2)/3]]),
Matrix([[S(1)/2, 0, z/(1 - z)/2],
[0, 0, z/(z - 1)],
[0, 0, 0]]))
# actually the formula for 3/2 is much nicer ...
addb([-S.Half, 1, 1], [2, 2],
Matrix([HyperRep_power1(S(1)/2, z), HyperRep_log2(z), 1]),
Matrix([[S(4)/9 - 16/(9*z), 4/(3*z), 16/(9*z)]]),
Matrix([[z/2/(z - 1), 0, 0], [1/(2*(z - 1)), 0, S.Half], [0, 0, 0]]))
# 1F1
addb([1], [b], Matrix([z**(1 - b) * exp(z) * lowergamma(b - 1, z), 1]),
Matrix([[b - 1, 0]]), Matrix([[1 - b + z, 1], [0, 0]]))
addb([a], [2*a],
Matrix([z**(S.Half - a)*exp(z/2)*besseli(a - S.Half, z/2)
* gamma(a + S.Half)/4**(S.Half - a),
z**(S.Half - a)*exp(z/2)*besseli(a + S.Half, z/2)
* gamma(a + S.Half)/4**(S.Half - a)]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[z/2, z/2], [z/2, (z/2 - 2*a)]]))
mz = polar_lift(-1)*z
addb([a], [a + 1],
Matrix([mz**(-a)*a*lowergamma(a, mz), a*exp(z)]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[-a, 1], [0, z]]))
# This one is redundant.
add([-S.Half], [S.Half], exp(z) - sqrt(pi*z)*(-I)*erf(I*sqrt(z)))
# Added to get nice results for Laplace transform of Fresnel functions
# http://functions.wolfram.com/07.22.03.6437.01
# Basic rule
#add([1], [S(3)/4, S(5)/4],
# sqrt(pi) * (cos(2*sqrt(polar_lift(-1)*z))*fresnelc(2*root(polar_lift(-1)*z,4)/sqrt(pi)) +
# sin(2*sqrt(polar_lift(-1)*z))*fresnels(2*root(polar_lift(-1)*z,4)/sqrt(pi)))
# / (2*root(polar_lift(-1)*z,4)))
# Manually tuned rule
addb([1], [S(3)/4, S(5)/4],
Matrix([ sqrt(pi)*(I*sinh(2*sqrt(z))*fresnels(2*root(z, 4)*exp(I*pi/4)/sqrt(pi))
+ cosh(2*sqrt(z))*fresnelc(2*root(z, 4)*exp(I*pi/4)/sqrt(pi)))
* exp(-I*pi/4)/(2*root(z, 4)),
sqrt(pi)*root(z, 4)*(sinh(2*sqrt(z))*fresnelc(2*root(z, 4)*exp(I*pi/4)/sqrt(pi))
+ I*cosh(2*sqrt(z))*fresnels(2*root(z, 4)*exp(I*pi/4)/sqrt(pi)))
*exp(-I*pi/4)/2,
1 ]),
Matrix([[1, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[-S(1)/4, 1, S(1)/4],
[ z, S(1)/4, 0 ],
[ 0, 0, 0 ]]))
# 2F2
addb([S.Half, a], [S(3)/2, a + 1],
Matrix([a/(2*a - 1)*(-I)*sqrt(pi/z)*erf(I*sqrt(z)),
a/(2*a - 1)*(polar_lift(-1)*z)**(-a)*
lowergamma(a, polar_lift(-1)*z),
a/(2*a - 1)*exp(z)]),
Matrix([[1, -1, 0]]),
Matrix([[-S.Half, 0, 1], [0, -a, 1], [0, 0, z]]))
# We make a "basis" of four functions instead of three, and give EulerGamma
# an extra slot (it could just be a coefficient to 1). The advantage is
# that this way Polys will not see multivariate polynomials (it treats
# EulerGamma as an indeterminate), which is *way* faster.
addb([1, 1], [2, 2],
Matrix([Ei(z) - log(z), exp(z), 1, EulerGamma]),
Matrix([[1/z, 0, 0, -1/z]]),
Matrix([[0, 1, -1, 0], [0, z, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0, 0]]))
# 0F1
add((), (S.Half, ), cosh(2*sqrt(z)))
addb([], [b],
Matrix([gamma(b)*z**((1 - b)/2)*besseli(b - 1, 2*sqrt(z)),
gamma(b)*z**(1 - b/2)*besseli(b, 2*sqrt(z))]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]), Matrix([[0, 1], [z, (1 - b)]]))
# 0F3
x = 4*z**(S(1)/4)
def fp(a, z):
return besseli(a, x) + besselj(a, x)
def fm(a, z):
return besseli(a, x) - besselj(a, x)
# TODO branching
addb([], [S.Half, a, a + S.Half],
Matrix([fp(2*a - 1, z), fm(2*a, z)*z**(S(1)/4),
fm(2*a - 1, z)*sqrt(z), fp(2*a, z)*z**(S(3)/4)])
* 2**(-2*a)*gamma(2*a)*z**((1 - 2*a)/4),
Matrix([[1, 0, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[0, 1, 0, 0],
[0, S(1)/2 - a, 1, 0],
[0, 0, S(1)/2, 1],
[z, 0, 0, 1 - a]]))
x = 2*(4*z)**(S(1)/4)*exp_polar(I*pi/4)
addb([], [a, a + S.Half, 2*a],
(2*sqrt(polar_lift(-1)*z))**(1 - 2*a)*gamma(2*a)**2 *
Matrix([besselj(2*a - 1, x)*besseli(2*a - 1, x),
x*(besseli(2*a, x)*besselj(2*a - 1, x)
- besseli(2*a - 1, x)*besselj(2*a, x)),
x**2*besseli(2*a, x)*besselj(2*a, x),
x**3*(besseli(2*a, x)*besselj(2*a - 1, x)
+ besseli(2*a - 1, x)*besselj(2*a, x))]),
Matrix([[1, 0, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[0, S(1)/4, 0, 0],
[0, (1 - 2*a)/2, -S(1)/2, 0],
[0, 0, 1 - 2*a, S(1)/4],
[-32*z, 0, 0, 1 - a]]))
# 1F2
addb([a], [a - S.Half, 2*a],
Matrix([z**(S.Half - a)*besseli(a - S.Half, sqrt(z))**2,
z**(1 - a)*besseli(a - S.Half, sqrt(z))
*besseli(a - S(3)/2, sqrt(z)),
z**(S(3)/2 - a)*besseli(a - S(3)/2, sqrt(z))**2]),
Matrix([[-gamma(a + S.Half)**2/4**(S.Half - a),
2*gamma(a - S.Half)*gamma(a + S.Half)/4**(1 - a),
0]]),
Matrix([[1 - 2*a, 1, 0], [z/2, S.Half - a, S.Half], [0, z, 0]]))
addb([S.Half], [b, 2 - b],
pi*(1 - b)/sin(pi*b)*
Matrix([besseli(1 - b, sqrt(z))*besseli(b - 1, sqrt(z)),
sqrt(z)*(besseli(-b, sqrt(z))*besseli(b - 1, sqrt(z))
+ besseli(1 - b, sqrt(z))*besseli(b, sqrt(z))),
besseli(-b, sqrt(z))*besseli(b, sqrt(z))]),
Matrix([[1, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[b - 1, S(1)/2, 0],
[z, 0, z],
[0, S(1)/2, -b]]))
addb([S(1)/2], [S(3)/2, S(3)/2],
Matrix([Shi(2*sqrt(z))/2/sqrt(z), sinh(2*sqrt(z))/2/sqrt(z),
cosh(2*sqrt(z))]),
Matrix([[1, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[-S.Half, S.Half, 0], [0, -S.Half, S.Half], [0, 2*z, 0]]))
# FresnelS
# Basic rule
#add([S(3)/4], [S(3)/2,S(7)/4], 6*fresnels( exp(pi*I/4)*root(z,4)*2/sqrt(pi) ) / ( pi * (exp(pi*I/4)*root(z,4)*2/sqrt(pi))**3 ) )
# Manually tuned rule
addb([S(3)/4], [S(3)/2, S(7)/4],
Matrix(
[ fresnels(
exp(
pi*I/4)*root(
z, 4)*2/sqrt(
pi) ) / (
pi * (exp(pi*I/4)*root(z, 4)*2/sqrt(pi))**3 ),
sinh(2*sqrt(z))/sqrt(z),
cosh(2*sqrt(z)) ]),
Matrix([[6, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[-S(3)/4, S(1)/16, 0],
[ 0, -S(1)/2, 1],
[ 0, z, 0]]))
# FresnelC
# Basic rule
#add([S(1)/4], [S(1)/2,S(5)/4], fresnelc( exp(pi*I/4)*root(z,4)*2/sqrt(pi) ) / ( exp(pi*I/4)*root(z,4)*2/sqrt(pi) ) )
# Manually tuned rule
addb([S(1)/4], [S(1)/2, S(5)/4],
Matrix(
[ sqrt(
pi)*exp(
-I*pi/4)*fresnelc(
2*root(z, 4)*exp(I*pi/4)/sqrt(pi))/(2*root(z, 4)),
cosh(2*sqrt(z)),
sinh(2*sqrt(z))*sqrt(z) ]),
Matrix([[1, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[-S(1)/4, S(1)/4, 0 ],
[ 0, 0, 1 ],
[ 0, z, S(1)/2]]))
# 2F3
# XXX with this five-parameter formula is pretty slow with the current
# Formula.find_instantiations (creates 2!*3!*3**(2+3) ~ 3000
# instantiations ... But it's not too bad.
addb([a, a + S.Half], [2*a, b, 2*a - b + 1],
gamma(b)*gamma(2*a - b + 1) * (sqrt(z)/2)**(1 - 2*a) *
Matrix([besseli(b - 1, sqrt(z))*besseli(2*a - b, sqrt(z)),
sqrt(z)*besseli(b, sqrt(z))*besseli(2*a - b, sqrt(z)),
sqrt(z)*besseli(b - 1, sqrt(z))*besseli(2*a - b + 1, sqrt(z)),
besseli(b, sqrt(z))*besseli(2*a - b + 1, sqrt(z))]),
Matrix([[1, 0, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[0, S(1)/2, S(1)/2, 0],
[z/2, 1 - b, 0, z/2],
[z/2, 0, b - 2*a, z/2],
[0, S(1)/2, S(1)/2, -2*a]]))
# (C/f above comment about eulergamma in the basis).
addb([1, 1], [2, 2, S(3)/2],
Matrix([Chi(2*sqrt(z)) - log(2*sqrt(z)),
cosh(2*sqrt(z)), sqrt(z)*sinh(2*sqrt(z)), 1, EulerGamma]),
Matrix([[1/z, 0, 0, 0, -1/z]]),
Matrix([[0, S(1)/2, 0, -S(1)/2, 0],
[0, 0, 1, 0, 0],
[0, z, S(1)/2, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0]]))
# 3F3
# This is rule: http://functions.wolfram.com/07.31.03.0134.01
# Initial reason to add it was a nice solution for
# integrate(erf(a*z)/z**2, z) and same for erfc and erfi.
# Basic rule
# add([1, 1, a], [2, 2, a+1], (a/(z*(a-1)**2)) *
# (1 - (-z)**(1-a) * (gamma(a) - uppergamma(a,-z))
# - (a-1) * (EulerGamma + uppergamma(0,-z) + log(-z))
# - exp(z)))
# Manually tuned rule
addb([1, 1, a], [2, 2, a+1],
Matrix([a*(log(-z) + expint(1, -z) + EulerGamma)/(z*(a**2 - 2*a + 1)),
a*(-z)**(-a)*(gamma(a) - uppergamma(a, -z))/(a - 1)**2,
a*exp(z)/(a**2 - 2*a + 1),
a/(z*(a**2 - 2*a + 1))]),
Matrix([[1-a, 1, -1/z, 1]]),
Matrix([[-1,0,-1/z,1],
[0,-a,1,0],
[0,0,z,0],
[0,0,0,-1]]))
def add_meijerg_formulae(formulae):
from sympy.matrices import Matrix
a, b, c, z = list(map(Dummy, 'abcz'))
rho = Dummy('rho')
def add(an, ap, bm, bq, B, C, M, matcher):
formulae.append(MeijerFormula(an, ap, bm, bq, z, [a, b, c, rho],
B, C, M, matcher))
def detect_uppergamma(func):
x = func.an[0]
y, z = func.bm
swapped = False
if not _mod1((x - y).simplify()):
swapped = True
(y, z) = (z, y)
if _mod1((x - z).simplify()) or x - z > 0:
return None
l = [y, x]
if swapped:
l = [x, y]
return {rho: y, a: x - y}, G_Function([x], [], l, [])
add([a + rho], [], [rho, a + rho], [],
Matrix([gamma(1 - a)*z**rho*exp(z)*uppergamma(a, z),
gamma(1 - a)*z**(a + rho)]),
Matrix([[1, 0]]),
Matrix([[rho + z, -1], [0, a + rho]]),
detect_uppergamma)
def detect_3113(func):
"""http://functions.wolfram.com/07.34.03.0984.01"""
x = func.an[0]
u, v, w = func.bm
if _mod1((u - v).simplify()) == 0:
if _mod1((v - w).simplify()) == 0:
return
sig = (S(1)/2, S(1)/2, S(0))
x1, x2, y = u, v, w
else:
if _mod1((x - u).simplify()) == 0:
sig = (S(1)/2, S(0), S(1)/2)
x1, y, x2 = u, v, w
else:
sig = (S(0), S(1)/2, S(1)/2)
y, x1, x2 = u, v, w
if (_mod1((x - x1).simplify()) != 0 or
_mod1((x - x2).simplify()) != 0 or
_mod1((x - y).simplify()) != S(1)/2 or
x - x1 > 0 or x - x2 > 0):
return
return {a: x}, G_Function([x], [], [x - S(1)/2 + t for t in sig], [])
s = sin(2*sqrt(z))
c_ = cos(2*sqrt(z))
S_ = Si(2*sqrt(z)) - pi/2
C = Ci(2*sqrt(z))
add([a], [], [a, a, a - S(1)/2], [],
Matrix([sqrt(pi)*z**(a - S(1)/2)*(c_*S_ - s*C),
sqrt(pi)*z**a*(s*S_ + c_*C),
sqrt(pi)*z**a]),
Matrix([[-2, 0, 0]]),
Matrix([[a - S(1)/2, -1, 0], [z, a, S(1)/2], [0, 0, a]]),
detect_3113)
def make_simp(z):
""" Create a function that simplifies rational functions in ``z``. """
def simp(expr):
""" Efficiently simplify the rational function ``expr``. """
numer, denom = expr.as_numer_denom()
numer = numer.expand()
# denom = denom.expand() # is this needed?
c, numer, denom = poly(numer, z).cancel(poly(denom, z))
return c * numer.as_expr() / denom.as_expr()
return simp
def debug(*args):
if SYMPY_DEBUG:
for a in args:
print(a, end="")
print()
class Hyper_Function(Expr):
""" A generalized hypergeometric function. """
def __new__(cls, ap, bq):
obj = super(Hyper_Function, cls).__new__(cls)
obj.ap = Tuple(*list(map(expand, ap)))
obj.bq = Tuple(*list(map(expand, bq)))
return obj
@property
def args(self):
return (self.ap, self.bq)
@property
def sizes(self):
return (len(self.ap), len(self.bq))
@property
def gamma(self):
"""
Number of upper parameters that are negative integers
This is a transformation invariant.
"""
return sum(bool(x.is_integer and x.is_negative) for x in self.ap)
def _hashable_content(self):
return super(Hyper_Function, self)._hashable_content() + (self.ap,
self.bq)
def __call__(self, arg):
return hyper(self.ap, self.bq, arg)
def build_invariants(self):
"""
Compute the invariant vector.
The invariant vector is:
(gamma, ((s1, n1), ..., (sk, nk)), ((t1, m1), ..., (tr, mr)))
where gamma is the number of integer a < 0,
s1 < ... < sk
nl is the number of parameters a_i congruent to sl mod 1
t1 < ... < tr
ml is the number of parameters b_i congruent to tl mod 1
If the index pair contains parameters, then this is not truly an
invariant, since the parameters cannot be sorted uniquely mod1.
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import Hyper_Function
>>> from sympy import S
>>> ap = (S(1)/2, S(1)/3, S(-1)/2, -2)
>>> bq = (1, 2)
Here gamma = 1,
k = 3, s1 = 0, s2 = 1/3, s3 = 1/2
n1 = 1, n2 = 1, n2 = 2
r = 1, t1 = 0
m1 = 2:
>>> Hyper_Function(ap, bq).build_invariants()
(1, ((0, 1), (1/3, 1), (1/2, 2)), ((0, 2),))
"""
abuckets, bbuckets = sift(self.ap, _mod1), sift(self.bq, _mod1)
def tr(bucket):
bucket = list(bucket.items())
if not any(isinstance(x[0], Mod) for x in bucket):
bucket.sort(key=lambda x: default_sort_key(x[0]))
bucket = tuple([(mod, len(values)) for mod, values in bucket if
values])
return bucket
return (self.gamma, tr(abuckets), tr(bbuckets))
def difficulty(self, func):
""" Estimate how many steps it takes to reach ``func`` from self.
Return -1 if impossible. """
if self.gamma != func.gamma:
return -1
oabuckets, obbuckets, abuckets, bbuckets = [sift(params, _mod1) for
params in (self.ap, self.bq, func.ap, func.bq)]
diff = 0
for bucket, obucket in [(abuckets, oabuckets), (bbuckets, obbuckets)]:
for mod in set(list(bucket.keys()) + list(obucket.keys())):
if (not mod in bucket) or (not mod in obucket) \
or len(bucket[mod]) != len(obucket[mod]):
return -1
l1 = list(bucket[mod])
l2 = list(obucket[mod])
l1.sort()
l2.sort()
for i, j in zip(l1, l2):
diff += abs(i - j)
return diff
def _is_suitable_origin(self):
"""
Decide if ``self`` is a suitable origin.
A function is a suitable origin iff:
* none of the ai equals bj + n, with n a non-negative integer
* none of the ai is zero
* none of the bj is a non-positive integer
Note that this gives meaningful results only when none of the indices
are symbolic.
"""
for a in self.ap:
for b in self.bq:
if (a - b).is_integer and (a - b).is_negative is False:
return False
for a in self.ap:
if a == 0:
return False
for b in self.bq:
if b.is_integer and b.is_nonpositive:
return False
return True
class G_Function(Expr):
""" A Meijer G-function. """
def __new__(cls, an, ap, bm, bq):
obj = super(G_Function, cls).__new__(cls)
obj.an = Tuple(*list(map(expand, an)))
obj.ap = Tuple(*list(map(expand, ap)))
obj.bm = Tuple(*list(map(expand, bm)))
obj.bq = Tuple(*list(map(expand, bq)))
return obj
@property
def args(self):
return (self.an, self.ap, self.bm, self.bq)
def _hashable_content(self):
return super(G_Function, self)._hashable_content() + self.args
def __call__(self, z):
return meijerg(self.an, self.ap, self.bm, self.bq, z)
def compute_buckets(self):
"""
Compute buckets for the fours sets of parameters.
We guarantee that any two equal Mod objects returned are actually the
same, and that the buckets are sorted by real part (an and bq
descendending, bm and ap ascending).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import G_Function
>>> from sympy.abc import y
>>> from sympy import S, symbols
>>> a, b = [1, 3, 2, S(3)/2], [1 + y, y, 2, y + 3]
>>> G_Function(a, b, [2], [y]).compute_buckets()
({0: [3, 2, 1], 1/2: [3/2]},
{0: [2], y: [y, y + 1, y + 3]}, {0: [2]}, {y: [y]})
"""
dicts = pan, pap, pbm, pbq = [defaultdict(list) for i in range(4)]
for dic, lis in zip(dicts, (self.an, self.ap, self.bm, self.bq)):
for x in lis:
dic[_mod1(x)].append(x)
for dic, flip in zip(dicts, (True, False, False, True)):
for m, items in dic.items():
x0 = items[0]
items.sort(key=lambda x: x - x0, reverse=flip)
dic[m] = items
return tuple([dict(w) for w in dicts])
@property
def signature(self):
return (len(self.an), len(self.ap), len(self.bm), len(self.bq))
# Dummy variable.
_x = Dummy('x')
class Formula(object):
"""
This class represents hypergeometric formulae.
Its data members are:
- z, the argument
- closed_form, the closed form expression
- symbols, the free symbols (parameters) in the formula
- func, the function
- B, C, M (see _compute_basis)
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, z
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import Formula, Hyper_Function
>>> func = Hyper_Function((a/2, a/3 + b, (1+a)/2), (a, b, (a+b)/7))
>>> f = Formula(func, z, None, [a, b])
"""
def _compute_basis(self, closed_form):
"""
Compute a set of functions B=(f1, ..., fn), a nxn matrix M
and a 1xn matrix C such that:
closed_form = C B
z d/dz B = M B.
"""
from sympy.matrices import Matrix, eye, zeros
afactors = [_x + a for a in self.func.ap]
bfactors = [_x + b - 1 for b in self.func.bq]
expr = _x*Mul(*bfactors) - self.z*Mul(*afactors)
poly = Poly(expr, _x)
n = poly.degree() - 1
b = [closed_form]
for _ in range(n):
b.append(self.z*b[-1].diff(self.z))
self.B = Matrix(b)
self.C = Matrix([[1] + [0]*n])
m = eye(n)
m = m.col_insert(0, zeros(n, 1))
l = poly.all_coeffs()[1:]
l.reverse()
self.M = m.row_insert(n, -Matrix([l])/poly.all_coeffs()[0])
def __init__(self, func, z, res, symbols, B=None, C=None, M=None):
z = sympify(z)
res = sympify(res)
symbols = [x for x in sympify(symbols) if func.has(x)]
self.z = z
self.symbols = symbols
self.B = B
self.C = C
self.M = M
self.func = func
# TODO with symbolic parameters, it could be advantageous
# (for prettier answers) to compute a basis only *after*
# instantiation
if res is not None:
self._compute_basis(res)
@property
def closed_form(self):
return (self.C*self.B)[0]
def find_instantiations(self, func):
"""
Find substitutions of the free symbols that match ``func``.
Return the substitution dictionaries as a list. Note that the returned
instantiations need not actually match, or be valid!
"""
from sympy.solvers import solve
ap = func.ap
bq = func.bq
if len(ap) != len(self.func.ap) or len(bq) != len(self.func.bq):
raise TypeError('Cannot instantiate other number of parameters')
symbol_values = []
for a in self.symbols:
if a in self.func.ap.args:
symbol_values.append(ap)
elif a in self.func.bq.args:
symbol_values.append(bq)
else:
raise ValueError("At least one of the parameters of the "
"formula must be equal to %s" % (a,))
base_repl = [dict(list(zip(self.symbols, values)))
for values in product(*symbol_values)]
abuckets, bbuckets = [sift(params, _mod1) for params in [ap, bq]]
a_inv, b_inv = [dict((a, len(vals)) for a, vals in bucket.items())
for bucket in [abuckets, bbuckets]]
critical_values = [[0] for _ in self.symbols]
result = []
_n = Dummy()
for repl in base_repl:
symb_a, symb_b = [sift(params, lambda x: _mod1(x.xreplace(repl)))
for params in [self.func.ap, self.func.bq]]
for bucket, obucket in [(abuckets, symb_a), (bbuckets, symb_b)]:
for mod in set(list(bucket.keys()) + list(obucket.keys())):
if (not mod in bucket) or (not mod in obucket) \
or len(bucket[mod]) != len(obucket[mod]):
break
for a, vals in zip(self.symbols, critical_values):
if repl[a].free_symbols:
continue
exprs = [expr for expr in obucket[mod] if expr.has(a)]
repl0 = repl.copy()
repl0[a] += _n
for expr in exprs:
for target in bucket[mod]:
n0, = solve(expr.xreplace(repl0) - target, _n)
if n0.free_symbols:
raise ValueError("Value should not be true")
vals.append(n0)
else:
values = []
for a, vals in zip(self.symbols, critical_values):
a0 = repl[a]
min_ = floor(min(vals))
max_ = ceiling(max(vals))
values.append([a0 + n for n in range(min_, max_ + 1)])
result.extend(dict(list(zip(self.symbols, l))) for l in product(*values))
return result
class FormulaCollection(object):
""" A collection of formulae to use as origins. """
def __init__(self):
""" Doing this globally at module init time is a pain ... """
self.symbolic_formulae = {}
self.concrete_formulae = {}
self.formulae = []
add_formulae(self.formulae)
# Now process the formulae into a helpful form.
# These dicts are indexed by (p, q).
for f in self.formulae:
sizes = f.func.sizes
if len(f.symbols) > 0:
self.symbolic_formulae.setdefault(sizes, []).append(f)
else:
inv = f.func.build_invariants()
self.concrete_formulae.setdefault(sizes, {})[inv] = f
def lookup_origin(self, func):
"""
Given the suitable target ``func``, try to find an origin in our
knowledge base.
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import (FormulaCollection,
... Hyper_Function)
>>> f = FormulaCollection()
>>> f.lookup_origin(Hyper_Function((), ())).closed_form
exp(_z)
>>> f.lookup_origin(Hyper_Function([1], ())).closed_form
HyperRep_power1(-1, _z)
>>> from sympy import S
>>> i = Hyper_Function([S('1/4'), S('3/4 + 4')], [S.Half])
>>> f.lookup_origin(i).closed_form
HyperRep_sqrts1(-1/4, _z)
"""
inv = func.build_invariants()
sizes = func.sizes
if sizes in self.concrete_formulae and \
inv in self.concrete_formulae[sizes]:
return self.concrete_formulae[sizes][inv]
# We don't have a concrete formula. Try to instantiate.
if not sizes in self.symbolic_formulae:
return None # Too bad...
possible = []
for f in self.symbolic_formulae[sizes]:
repls = f.find_instantiations(func)
for repl in repls:
func2 = f.func.xreplace(repl)
if not func2._is_suitable_origin():
continue
diff = func2.difficulty(func)
if diff == -1:
continue
possible.append((diff, repl, f, func2))
# find the nearest origin
possible.sort(key=lambda x: x[0])
for _, repl, f, func2 in possible:
f2 = Formula(func2, f.z, None, [], f.B.subs(repl),
f.C.subs(repl), f.M.subs(repl))
if not any(e.has(S.NaN, oo, -oo, zoo) for e in [f2.B, f2.M, f2.C]):
return f2
else:
return None
class MeijerFormula(object):
"""
This class represents a Meijer G-function formula.
Its data members are:
- z, the argument
- symbols, the free symbols (parameters) in the formula
- func, the function
- B, C, M (c/f ordinary Formula)
"""
def __init__(self, an, ap, bm, bq, z, symbols, B, C, M, matcher):
an, ap, bm, bq = [Tuple(*list(map(expand, w))) for w in [an, ap, bm, bq]]
self.func = G_Function(an, ap, bm, bq)
self.z = z
self.symbols = symbols
self._matcher = matcher
self.B = B
self.C = C
self.M = M
@property
def closed_form(self):
return (self.C*self.B)[0]
def try_instantiate(self, func):
"""
Try to instantiate the current formula to (almost) match func.
This uses the _matcher passed on init.
"""
if func.signature != self.func.signature:
return None
res = self._matcher(func)
if res is not None:
subs, newfunc = res
return MeijerFormula(newfunc.an, newfunc.ap, newfunc.bm, newfunc.bq,
self.z, [],
self.B.subs(subs), self.C.subs(subs),
self.M.subs(subs), None)
class MeijerFormulaCollection(object):
"""
This class holds a collection of meijer g formulae.
"""
def __init__(self):
formulae = []
add_meijerg_formulae(formulae)
self.formulae = defaultdict(list)
for formula in formulae:
self.formulae[formula.func.signature].append(formula)
self.formulae = dict(self.formulae)
def lookup_origin(self, func):
""" Try to find a formula that matches func. """
if not func.signature in self.formulae:
return None
for formula in self.formulae[func.signature]:
res = formula.try_instantiate(func)
if res is not None:
return res
class Operator(object):
"""
Base class for operators to be applied to our functions.
These operators are differential operators. They are by convention
expressed in the variable D = z*d/dz (although this base class does
not actually care).
Note that when the operator is applied to an object, we typically do
*not* blindly differentiate but instead use a different representation
of the z*d/dz operator (see make_derivative_operator).
To subclass from this, define a __init__ method that initializes a
self._poly variable. This variable stores a polynomial. By convention
the generator is z*d/dz, and acts to the right of all coefficients.
Thus this poly
x**2 + 2*z*x + 1
represents the differential operator
(z*d/dz)**2 + 2*z**2*d/dz.
This class is used only in the implementation of the hypergeometric
function expansion algorithm.
"""
def apply(self, obj, op):
"""
Apply ``self`` to the object ``obj``, where the generator is ``op``.
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import Operator
>>> from sympy.polys.polytools import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> op = Operator()
>>> op._poly = Poly(x**2 + z*x + y, x)
>>> op.apply(z**7, lambda f: f.diff(z))
y*z**7 + 7*z**7 + 42*z**5
"""
coeffs = self._poly.all_coeffs()
coeffs.reverse()
diffs = [obj]
for c in coeffs[1:]:
diffs.append(op(diffs[-1]))
r = coeffs[0]*diffs[0]
for c, d in zip(coeffs[1:], diffs[1:]):
r += c*d
return r
class MultOperator(Operator):
""" Simply multiply by a "constant" """
def __init__(self, p):
self._poly = Poly(p, _x)
class ShiftA(Operator):
""" Increment an upper index. """
def __init__(self, ai):
ai = sympify(ai)
if ai == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot increment zero upper index.')
self._poly = Poly(_x/ai + 1, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Increment upper %s.>' % (1/self._poly.all_coeffs()[0])
class ShiftB(Operator):
""" Decrement a lower index. """
def __init__(self, bi):
bi = sympify(bi)
if bi == 1:
raise ValueError('Cannot decrement unit lower index.')
self._poly = Poly(_x/(bi - 1) + 1, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Decrement lower %s.>' % (1/self._poly.all_coeffs()[0] + 1)
class UnShiftA(Operator):
""" Decrement an upper index. """
def __init__(self, ap, bq, i, z):
""" Note: i counts from zero! """
ap, bq, i = list(map(sympify, [ap, bq, i]))
self._ap = ap
self._bq = bq
self._i = i
ap = list(ap)
bq = list(bq)
ai = ap.pop(i) - 1
if ai == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot decrement unit upper index.')
m = Poly(z*ai, _x)
for a in ap:
m *= Poly(_x + a, _x)
A = Dummy('A')
n = D = Poly(ai*A - ai, A)
for b in bq:
n *= (D + b - 1)
b0 = -n.nth(0)
if b0 == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot decrement upper index: '
'cancels with lower')
n = Poly(Poly(n.all_coeffs()[:-1], A).as_expr().subs(A, _x/ai + 1), _x)
self._poly = Poly((n - m)/b0, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Decrement upper index #%s of %s, %s.>' % (self._i,
self._ap, self._bq)
class UnShiftB(Operator):
""" Increment a lower index. """
def __init__(self, ap, bq, i, z):
""" Note: i counts from zero! """
ap, bq, i = list(map(sympify, [ap, bq, i]))
self._ap = ap
self._bq = bq
self._i = i
ap = list(ap)
bq = list(bq)
bi = bq.pop(i) + 1
if bi == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot increment -1 lower index.')
m = Poly(_x*(bi - 1), _x)
for b in bq:
m *= Poly(_x + b - 1, _x)
B = Dummy('B')
D = Poly((bi - 1)*B - bi + 1, B)
n = Poly(z, B)
for a in ap:
n *= (D + a)
b0 = n.nth(0)
if b0 == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot increment index: cancels with upper')
n = Poly(Poly(n.all_coeffs()[:-1], B).as_expr().subs(
B, _x/(bi - 1) + 1), _x)
self._poly = Poly((m - n)/b0, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Increment lower index #%s of %s, %s.>' % (self._i,
self._ap, self._bq)
class MeijerShiftA(Operator):
""" Increment an upper b index. """
def __init__(self, bi):
bi = sympify(bi)
self._poly = Poly(bi - _x, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Increment upper b=%s.>' % (self._poly.all_coeffs()[1])
class MeijerShiftB(Operator):
""" Decrement an upper a index. """
def __init__(self, bi):
bi = sympify(bi)
self._poly = Poly(1 - bi + _x, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Decrement upper a=%s.>' % (1 - self._poly.all_coeffs()[1])
class MeijerShiftC(Operator):
""" Increment a lower b index. """
def __init__(self, bi):
bi = sympify(bi)
self._poly = Poly(-bi + _x, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Increment lower b=%s.>' % (-self._poly.all_coeffs()[1])
class MeijerShiftD(Operator):
""" Decrement a lower a index. """
def __init__(self, bi):
bi = sympify(bi)
self._poly = Poly(bi - 1 - _x, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Decrement lower a=%s.>' % (self._poly.all_coeffs()[1] + 1)
class MeijerUnShiftA(Operator):
""" Decrement an upper b index. """
def __init__(self, an, ap, bm, bq, i, z):
""" Note: i counts from zero! """
an, ap, bm, bq, i = list(map(sympify, [an, ap, bm, bq, i]))
self._an = an
self._ap = ap
self._bm = bm
self._bq = bq
self._i = i
an = list(an)
ap = list(ap)
bm = list(bm)
bq = list(bq)
bi = bm.pop(i) - 1
m = Poly(1, _x)
for b in bm:
m *= Poly(b - _x, _x)
for b in bq:
m *= Poly(_x - b, _x)
A = Dummy('A')
D = Poly(bi - A, A)
n = Poly(z, A)
for a in an:
n *= (D + 1 - a)
for a in ap:
n *= (-D + a - 1)
b0 = n.nth(0)
if b0 == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot decrement upper b index (cancels)')
n = Poly(Poly(n.all_coeffs()[:-1], A).as_expr().subs(A, bi - _x), _x)
self._poly = Poly((m - n)/b0, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Decrement upper b index #%s of %s, %s, %s, %s.>' % (self._i,
self._an, self._ap, self._bm, self._bq)
class MeijerUnShiftB(Operator):
""" Increment an upper a index. """
def __init__(self, an, ap, bm, bq, i, z):
""" Note: i counts from zero! """
an, ap, bm, bq, i = list(map(sympify, [an, ap, bm, bq, i]))
self._an = an
self._ap = ap
self._bm = bm
self._bq = bq
self._i = i
an = list(an)
ap = list(ap)
bm = list(bm)
bq = list(bq)
ai = an.pop(i) + 1
m = Poly(z, _x)
for a in an:
m *= Poly(1 - a + _x, _x)
for a in ap:
m *= Poly(a - 1 - _x, _x)
B = Dummy('B')
D = Poly(B + ai - 1, B)
n = Poly(1, B)
for b in bm:
n *= (-D + b)
for b in bq:
n *= (D - b)
b0 = n.nth(0)
if b0 == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot increment upper a index (cancels)')
n = Poly(Poly(n.all_coeffs()[:-1], B).as_expr().subs(
B, 1 - ai + _x), _x)
self._poly = Poly((m - n)/b0, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Increment upper a index #%s of %s, %s, %s, %s.>' % (self._i,
self._an, self._ap, self._bm, self._bq)
class MeijerUnShiftC(Operator):
""" Decrement a lower b index. """
# XXX this is "essentially" the same as MeijerUnShiftA. This "essentially"
# can be made rigorous using the functional equation G(1/z) = G'(z),
# where G' denotes a G function of slightly altered parameters.
# However, sorting out the details seems harder than just coding it
# again.
def __init__(self, an, ap, bm, bq, i, z):
""" Note: i counts from zero! """
an, ap, bm, bq, i = list(map(sympify, [an, ap, bm, bq, i]))
self._an = an
self._ap = ap
self._bm = bm
self._bq = bq
self._i = i
an = list(an)
ap = list(ap)
bm = list(bm)
bq = list(bq)
bi = bq.pop(i) - 1
m = Poly(1, _x)
for b in bm:
m *= Poly(b - _x, _x)
for b in bq:
m *= Poly(_x - b, _x)
C = Dummy('C')
D = Poly(bi + C, C)
n = Poly(z, C)
for a in an:
n *= (D + 1 - a)
for a in ap:
n *= (-D + a - 1)
b0 = n.nth(0)
if b0 == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot decrement lower b index (cancels)')
n = Poly(Poly(n.all_coeffs()[:-1], C).as_expr().subs(C, _x - bi), _x)
self._poly = Poly((m - n)/b0, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Decrement lower b index #%s of %s, %s, %s, %s.>' % (self._i,
self._an, self._ap, self._bm, self._bq)
class MeijerUnShiftD(Operator):
""" Increment a lower a index. """
# XXX This is essentially the same as MeijerUnShiftA.
# See comment at MeijerUnShiftC.
def __init__(self, an, ap, bm, bq, i, z):
""" Note: i counts from zero! """
an, ap, bm, bq, i = list(map(sympify, [an, ap, bm, bq, i]))
self._an = an
self._ap = ap
self._bm = bm
self._bq = bq
self._i = i
an = list(an)
ap = list(ap)
bm = list(bm)
bq = list(bq)
ai = ap.pop(i) + 1
m = Poly(z, _x)
for a in an:
m *= Poly(1 - a + _x, _x)
for a in ap:
m *= Poly(a - 1 - _x, _x)
B = Dummy('B') # - this is the shift operator `D_I`
D = Poly(ai - 1 - B, B)
n = Poly(1, B)
for b in bm:
n *= (-D + b)
for b in bq:
n *= (D - b)
b0 = n.nth(0)
if b0 == 0:
raise ValueError('Cannot increment lower a index (cancels)')
n = Poly(Poly(n.all_coeffs()[:-1], B).as_expr().subs(
B, ai - 1 - _x), _x)
self._poly = Poly((m - n)/b0, _x)
def __str__(self):
return '<Increment lower a index #%s of %s, %s, %s, %s.>' % (self._i,
self._an, self._ap, self._bm, self._bq)
class ReduceOrder(Operator):
""" Reduce Order by cancelling an upper and a lower index. """
def __new__(cls, ai, bj):
""" For convenience if reduction is not possible, return None. """
ai = sympify(ai)
bj = sympify(bj)
n = ai - bj
if not n.is_Integer or n < 0:
return None
if bj.is_integer and bj.is_nonpositive:
return None
expr = Operator.__new__(cls)
p = S(1)
for k in range(n):
p *= (_x + bj + k)/(bj + k)
expr._poly = Poly(p, _x)
expr._a = ai
expr._b = bj
return expr
@classmethod
def _meijer(cls, b, a, sign):
""" Cancel b + sign*s and a + sign*s
This is for meijer G functions. """
b = sympify(b)
a = sympify(a)
n = b - a
if n.is_negative or not n.is_Integer:
return None
expr = Operator.__new__(cls)
p = S(1)
for k in range(n):
p *= (sign*_x + a + k)
expr._poly = Poly(p, _x)
if sign == -1:
expr._a = b
expr._b = a
else:
expr._b = Add(1, a - 1, evaluate=False)
expr._a = Add(1, b - 1, evaluate=False)
return expr
@classmethod
def meijer_minus(cls, b, a):
return cls._meijer(b, a, -1)
@classmethod
def meijer_plus(cls, a, b):
return cls._meijer(1 - a, 1 - b, 1)
def __str__(self):
return '<Reduce order by cancelling upper %s with lower %s.>' % \
(self._a, self._b)
def _reduce_order(ap, bq, gen, key):
""" Order reduction algorithm used in Hypergeometric and Meijer G """
ap = list(ap)
bq = list(bq)
ap.sort(key=key)
bq.sort(key=key)
nap = []
# we will edit bq in place
operators = []
for a in ap:
op = None
for i in range(len(bq)):
op = gen(a, bq[i])
if op is not None:
bq.pop(i)
break
if op is None:
nap.append(a)
else:
operators.append(op)
return nap, bq, operators
def reduce_order(func):
"""
Given the hypergeometric function ``func``, find a sequence of operators to
reduces order as much as possible.
Return (newfunc, [operators]), where applying the operators to the
hypergeometric function newfunc yields func.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import reduce_order, Hyper_Function
>>> reduce_order(Hyper_Function((1, 2), (3, 4)))
(Hyper_Function((1, 2), (3, 4)), [])
>>> reduce_order(Hyper_Function((1,), (1,)))
(Hyper_Function((), ()), [<Reduce order by cancelling upper 1 with lower 1.>])
>>> reduce_order(Hyper_Function((2, 4), (3, 3)))
(Hyper_Function((2,), (3,)), [<Reduce order by cancelling
upper 4 with lower 3.>])
"""
nap, nbq, operators = _reduce_order(func.ap, func.bq, ReduceOrder, default_sort_key)
return Hyper_Function(Tuple(*nap), Tuple(*nbq)), operators
def reduce_order_meijer(func):
"""
Given the Meijer G function parameters, ``func``, find a sequence of
operators that reduces order as much as possible.
Return newfunc, [operators].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import (reduce_order_meijer,
... G_Function)
>>> reduce_order_meijer(G_Function([3, 4], [5, 6], [3, 4], [1, 2]))[0]
G_Function((4, 3), (5, 6), (3, 4), (2, 1))
>>> reduce_order_meijer(G_Function([3, 4], [5, 6], [3, 4], [1, 8]))[0]
G_Function((3,), (5, 6), (3, 4), (1,))
>>> reduce_order_meijer(G_Function([3, 4], [5, 6], [7, 5], [1, 5]))[0]
G_Function((3,), (), (), (1,))
>>> reduce_order_meijer(G_Function([3, 4], [5, 6], [7, 5], [5, 3]))[0]
G_Function((), (), (), ())
"""
nan, nbq, ops1 = _reduce_order(func.an, func.bq, ReduceOrder.meijer_plus,
lambda x: default_sort_key(-x))
nbm, nap, ops2 = _reduce_order(func.bm, func.ap, ReduceOrder.meijer_minus,
default_sort_key)
return G_Function(nan, nap, nbm, nbq), ops1 + ops2
def make_derivative_operator(M, z):
""" Create a derivative operator, to be passed to Operator.apply. """
def doit(C):
r = z*C.diff(z) + C*M
r = r.applyfunc(make_simp(z))
return r
return doit
def apply_operators(obj, ops, op):
"""
Apply the list of operators ``ops`` to object ``obj``, substituting
``op`` for the generator.
"""
res = obj
for o in reversed(ops):
res = o.apply(res, op)
return res
def devise_plan(target, origin, z):
"""
Devise a plan (consisting of shift and un-shift operators) to be applied
to the hypergeometric function ``target`` to yield ``origin``.
Returns a list of operators.
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import devise_plan, Hyper_Function
>>> from sympy.abc import z
Nothing to do:
>>> devise_plan(Hyper_Function((1, 2), ()), Hyper_Function((1, 2), ()), z)
[]
>>> devise_plan(Hyper_Function((), (1, 2)), Hyper_Function((), (1, 2)), z)
[]
Very simple plans:
>>> devise_plan(Hyper_Function((2,), ()), Hyper_Function((1,), ()), z)
[<Increment upper 1.>]
>>> devise_plan(Hyper_Function((), (2,)), Hyper_Function((), (1,)), z)
[<Increment lower index #0 of [], [1].>]
Several buckets:
>>> from sympy import S
>>> devise_plan(Hyper_Function((1, S.Half), ()),
... Hyper_Function((2, S('3/2')), ()), z) #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[<Decrement upper index #0 of [3/2, 1], [].>,
<Decrement upper index #0 of [2, 3/2], [].>]
A slightly more complicated plan:
>>> devise_plan(Hyper_Function((1, 3), ()), Hyper_Function((2, 2), ()), z)
[<Increment upper 2.>, <Decrement upper index #0 of [2, 2], [].>]
Another more complicated plan: (note that the ap have to be shifted first!)
>>> devise_plan(Hyper_Function((1, -1), (2,)), Hyper_Function((3, -2), (4,)), z)
[<Decrement lower 3.>, <Decrement lower 4.>,
<Decrement upper index #1 of [-1, 2], [4].>,
<Decrement upper index #1 of [-1, 3], [4].>, <Increment upper -2.>]
"""
abuckets, bbuckets, nabuckets, nbbuckets = [sift(params, _mod1) for
params in (target.ap, target.bq, origin.ap, origin.bq)]
if len(list(abuckets.keys())) != len(list(nabuckets.keys())) or \
len(list(bbuckets.keys())) != len(list(nbbuckets.keys())):
raise ValueError('%s not reachable from %s' % (target, origin))
ops = []
def do_shifts(fro, to, inc, dec):
ops = []
for i in range(len(fro)):
if to[i] - fro[i] > 0:
sh = inc
ch = 1
else:
sh = dec
ch = -1
while to[i] != fro[i]:
ops += [sh(fro, i)]
fro[i] += ch
return ops
def do_shifts_a(nal, nbk, al, aother, bother):
""" Shift us from (nal, nbk) to (al, nbk). """
return do_shifts(nal, al, lambda p, i: ShiftA(p[i]),
lambda p, i: UnShiftA(p + aother, nbk + bother, i, z))
def do_shifts_b(nal, nbk, bk, aother, bother):
""" Shift us from (nal, nbk) to (nal, bk). """
return do_shifts(nbk, bk,
lambda p, i: UnShiftB(nal + aother, p + bother, i, z),
lambda p, i: ShiftB(p[i]))
for r in sorted(list(abuckets.keys()) + list(bbuckets.keys()), key=default_sort_key):
al = ()
nal = ()
bk = ()
nbk = ()
if r in abuckets:
al = abuckets[r]
nal = nabuckets[r]
if r in bbuckets:
bk = bbuckets[r]
nbk = nbbuckets[r]
if len(al) != len(nal) or len(bk) != len(nbk):
raise ValueError('%s not reachable from %s' % (target, origin))
al, nal, bk, nbk = [sorted(list(w), key=default_sort_key)
for w in [al, nal, bk, nbk]]
def others(dic, key):
l = []
for k, value in dic.items():
if k != key:
l += list(dic[k])
return l
aother = others(nabuckets, r)
bother = others(nbbuckets, r)
if len(al) == 0:
# there can be no complications, just shift the bs as we please
ops += do_shifts_b([], nbk, bk, aother, bother)
elif len(bk) == 0:
# there can be no complications, just shift the as as we please
ops += do_shifts_a(nal, [], al, aother, bother)
else:
namax = nal[-1]
amax = al[-1]
if nbk[0] - namax <= 0 or bk[0] - amax <= 0:
raise ValueError('Non-suitable parameters.')
if namax - amax > 0:
# we are going to shift down - first do the as, then the bs
ops += do_shifts_a(nal, nbk, al, aother, bother)
ops += do_shifts_b(al, nbk, bk, aother, bother)
else:
# we are going to shift up - first do the bs, then the as
ops += do_shifts_b(nal, nbk, bk, aother, bother)
ops += do_shifts_a(nal, bk, al, aother, bother)
nabuckets[r] = al
nbbuckets[r] = bk
ops.reverse()
return ops
def try_shifted_sum(func, z):
""" Try to recognise a hypergeometric sum that starts from k > 0. """
abuckets, bbuckets = sift(func.ap, _mod1), sift(func.bq, _mod1)
if len(abuckets[S(0)]) != 1:
return None
r = abuckets[S(0)][0]
if r <= 0:
return None
if not S(0) in bbuckets:
return None
l = list(bbuckets[S(0)])
l.sort()
k = l[0]
if k <= 0:
return None
nap = list(func.ap)
nap.remove(r)
nbq = list(func.bq)
nbq.remove(k)
k -= 1
nap = [x - k for x in nap]
nbq = [x - k for x in nbq]
ops = []
for n in range(r - 1):
ops.append(ShiftA(n + 1))
ops.reverse()
fac = factorial(k)/z**k
for a in nap:
fac /= rf(a, k)
for b in nbq:
fac *= rf(b, k)
ops += [MultOperator(fac)]
p = 0
for n in range(k):
m = z**n/factorial(n)
for a in nap:
m *= rf(a, n)
for b in nbq:
m /= rf(b, n)
p += m
return Hyper_Function(nap, nbq), ops, -p
def try_polynomial(func, z):
""" Recognise polynomial cases. Returns None if not such a case.
Requires order to be fully reduced. """
abuckets, bbuckets = sift(func.ap, _mod1), sift(func.bq, _mod1)
a0 = abuckets[S(0)]
b0 = bbuckets[S(0)]
a0.sort()
b0.sort()
al0 = [x for x in a0 if x <= 0]
bl0 = [x for x in b0 if x <= 0]
if bl0 and all(a < bl0[-1] for a in al0):
return oo
if not al0:
return None
a = al0[-1]
fac = 1
res = S(1)
for n in Tuple(*list(range(-a))):
fac *= z
fac /= n + 1
for a in func.ap:
fac *= a + n
for b in func.bq:
fac /= b + n
res += fac
return res
def try_lerchphi(func):
"""
Try to find an expression for Hyper_Function ``func`` in terms of Lerch
Transcendents.
Return None if no such expression can be found.
"""
# This is actually quite simple, and is described in Roach's paper,
# section 18.
# We don't need to implement the reduction to polylog here, this
# is handled by expand_func.
from sympy.matrices import Matrix, zeros
from sympy.polys import apart
# First we need to figure out if the summation coefficient is a rational
# function of the summation index, and construct that rational function.
abuckets, bbuckets = sift(func.ap, _mod1), sift(func.bq, _mod1)
paired = {}
for key, value in abuckets.items():
if key != 0 and not key in bbuckets:
return None
bvalue = bbuckets[key]
paired[key] = (list(value), list(bvalue))
bbuckets.pop(key, None)
if bbuckets != {}:
return None
if not S(0) in abuckets:
return None
aints, bints = paired[S(0)]
# Account for the additional n! in denominator
paired[S(0)] = (aints, bints + [1])
t = Dummy('t')
numer = S(1)
denom = S(1)
for key, (avalue, bvalue) in paired.items():
if len(avalue) != len(bvalue):
return None
# Note that since order has been reduced fully, all the b are
# bigger than all the a they differ from by an integer. In particular
# if there are any negative b left, this function is not well-defined.
for a, b in zip(avalue, bvalue):
if (a - b).is_positive:
k = a - b
numer *= rf(b + t, k)
denom *= rf(b, k)
else:
k = b - a
numer *= rf(a, k)
denom *= rf(a + t, k)
# Now do a partial fraction decomposition.
# We assemble two structures: a list monomials of pairs (a, b) representing
# a*t**b (b a non-negative integer), and a dict terms, where
# terms[a] = [(b, c)] means that there is a term b/(t-a)**c.
part = apart(numer/denom, t)
args = Add.make_args(part)
monomials = []
terms = {}
for arg in args:
numer, denom = arg.as_numer_denom()
if not denom.has(t):
p = Poly(numer, t)
if not p.is_monomial:
raise TypeError("p should be monomial")
((b, ), a) = p.LT()
monomials += [(a/denom, b)]
continue
if numer.has(t):
raise NotImplementedError('Need partial fraction decomposition'
' with linear denominators')
indep, [dep] = denom.as_coeff_mul(t)
n = 1
if dep.is_Pow:
n = dep.exp
dep = dep.base
if dep == t:
a == 0
elif dep.is_Add:
a, tmp = dep.as_independent(t)
b = 1
if tmp != t:
b, _ = tmp.as_independent(t)
if dep != b*t + a:
raise NotImplementedError('unrecognised form %s' % dep)
a /= b
indep *= b**n
else:
raise NotImplementedError('unrecognised form of partial fraction')
terms.setdefault(a, []).append((numer/indep, n))
# Now that we have this information, assemble our formula. All the
# monomials yield rational functions and go into one basis element.
# The terms[a] are related by differentiation. If the largest exponent is
# n, we need lerchphi(z, k, a) for k = 1, 2, ..., n.
# deriv maps a basis to its derivative, expressed as a C(z)-linear
# combination of other basis elements.
deriv = {}
coeffs = {}
z = Dummy('z')
monomials.sort(key=lambda x: x[1])
mon = {0: 1/(1 - z)}
if monomials:
for k in range(monomials[-1][1]):
mon[k + 1] = z*mon[k].diff(z)
for a, n in monomials:
coeffs.setdefault(S(1), []).append(a*mon[n])
for a, l in terms.items():
for c, k in l:
coeffs.setdefault(lerchphi(z, k, a), []).append(c)
l.sort(key=lambda x: x[1])
for k in range(2, l[-1][1] + 1):
deriv[lerchphi(z, k, a)] = [(-a, lerchphi(z, k, a)),
(1, lerchphi(z, k - 1, a))]
deriv[lerchphi(z, 1, a)] = [(-a, lerchphi(z, 1, a)),
(1/(1 - z), S(1))]
trans = {}
for n, b in enumerate([S(1)] + list(deriv.keys())):
trans[b] = n
basis = [expand_func(b) for (b, _) in sorted(list(trans.items()),
key=lambda x:x[1])]
B = Matrix(basis)
C = Matrix([[0]*len(B)])
for b, c in coeffs.items():
C[trans[b]] = Add(*c)
M = zeros(len(B))
for b, l in deriv.items():
for c, b2 in l:
M[trans[b], trans[b2]] = c
return Formula(func, z, None, [], B, C, M)
def build_hypergeometric_formula(func):
"""
Create a formula object representing the hypergeometric function ``func``.
"""
# We know that no `ap` are negative integers, otherwise "detect poly"
# would have kicked in. However, `ap` could be empty. In this case we can
# use a different basis.
# I'm not aware of a basis that works in all cases.
from sympy import zeros, Matrix, eye
z = Dummy('z')
if func.ap:
afactors = [_x + a for a in func.ap]
bfactors = [_x + b - 1 for b in func.bq]
expr = _x*Mul(*bfactors) - z*Mul(*afactors)
poly = Poly(expr, _x)
n = poly.degree()
basis = []
M = zeros(n)
for k in range(n):
a = func.ap[0] + k
basis += [hyper([a] + list(func.ap[1:]), func.bq, z)]
if k < n - 1:
M[k, k] = -a
M[k, k + 1] = a
B = Matrix(basis)
C = Matrix([[1] + [0]*(n - 1)])
derivs = [eye(n)]
for k in range(n):
derivs.append(M*derivs[k])
l = poly.all_coeffs()
l.reverse()
res = [0]*n
for k, c in enumerate(l):
for r, d in enumerate(C*derivs[k]):
res[r] += c*d
for k, c in enumerate(res):
M[n - 1, k] = -c/derivs[n - 1][0, n - 1]/poly.all_coeffs()[0]
return Formula(func, z, None, [], B, C, M)
else:
# Since there are no `ap`, none of the `bq` can be non-positive
# integers.
basis = []
bq = list(func.bq[:])
for i in range(len(bq)):
basis += [hyper([], bq, z)]
bq[i] += 1
basis += [hyper([], bq, z)]
B = Matrix(basis)
n = len(B)
C = Matrix([[1] + [0]*(n - 1)])
M = zeros(n)
M[0, n - 1] = z/Mul(*func.bq)
for k in range(1, n):
M[k, k - 1] = func.bq[k - 1]
M[k, k] = -func.bq[k - 1]
return Formula(func, z, None, [], B, C, M)
def hyperexpand_special(ap, bq, z):
"""
Try to find a closed-form expression for hyper(ap, bq, z), where ``z``
is supposed to be a "special" value, e.g. 1.
This function tries various of the classical summation formulae
(Gauss, Saalschuetz, etc).
"""
# This code is very ad-hoc. There are many clever algorithms
# (notably Zeilberger's) related to this problem.
# For now we just want a few simple cases to work.
p, q = len(ap), len(bq)
z_ = z
z = unpolarify(z)
if z == 0:
return S.One
if p == 2 and q == 1:
# 2F1
a, b, c = ap + bq
if z == 1:
# Gauss
return gamma(c - a - b)*gamma(c)/gamma(c - a)/gamma(c - b)
if z == -1 and simplify(b - a + c) == 1:
b, a = a, b
if z == -1 and simplify(a - b + c) == 1:
# Kummer
if b.is_integer and b.is_negative:
return 2*cos(pi*b/2)*gamma(-b)*gamma(b - a + 1) \
/gamma(-b/2)/gamma(b/2 - a + 1)
else:
return gamma(b/2 + 1)*gamma(b - a + 1) \
/gamma(b + 1)/gamma(b/2 - a + 1)
# TODO tons of more formulae
# investigate what algorithms exist
return hyper(ap, bq, z_)
_collection = None
def _hyperexpand(func, z, ops0=[], z0=Dummy('z0'), premult=1, prem=0,
rewrite='default'):
"""
Try to find an expression for the hypergeometric function ``func``.
The result is expressed in terms of a dummy variable z0. Then it
is multiplied by premult. Then ops0 is applied.
premult must be a*z**prem for some a independent of z.
"""
if z is S.Zero:
return S.One
z = polarify(z, subs=False)
if rewrite == 'default':
rewrite = 'nonrepsmall'
def carryout_plan(f, ops):
C = apply_operators(f.C.subs(f.z, z0), ops,
make_derivative_operator(f.M.subs(f.z, z0), z0))
from sympy import eye
C = apply_operators(C, ops0,
make_derivative_operator(f.M.subs(f.z, z0)
+ prem*eye(f.M.shape[0]), z0))
if premult == 1:
C = C.applyfunc(make_simp(z0))
r = C*f.B.subs(f.z, z0)*premult
res = r[0].subs(z0, z)
if rewrite:
res = res.rewrite(rewrite)
return res
# TODO
# The following would be possible:
# *) PFD Duplication (see Kelly Roach's paper)
# *) In a similar spirit, try_lerchphi() can be generalised considerably.
global _collection
if _collection is None:
_collection = FormulaCollection()
debug('Trying to expand hypergeometric function ', func)
# First reduce order as much as possible.
func, ops = reduce_order(func)
if ops:
debug(' Reduced order to ', func)
else:
debug(' Could not reduce order.')
# Now try polynomial cases
res = try_polynomial(func, z0)
if res is not None:
debug(' Recognised polynomial.')
p = apply_operators(res, ops, lambda f: z0*f.diff(z0))
p = apply_operators(p*premult, ops0, lambda f: z0*f.diff(z0))
return unpolarify(simplify(p).subs(z0, z))
# Try to recognise a shifted sum.
p = S(0)
res = try_shifted_sum(func, z0)
if res is not None:
func, nops, p = res
debug(' Recognised shifted sum, reduced order to ', func)
ops += nops
# apply the plan for poly
p = apply_operators(p, ops, lambda f: z0*f.diff(z0))
p = apply_operators(p*premult, ops0, lambda f: z0*f.diff(z0))
p = simplify(p).subs(z0, z)
# Try special expansions early.
if unpolarify(z) in [1, -1] and (len(func.ap), len(func.bq)) == (2, 1):
f = build_hypergeometric_formula(func)
r = carryout_plan(f, ops).replace(hyper, hyperexpand_special)
if not r.has(hyper):
return r + p
# Try to find a formula in our collection
formula = _collection.lookup_origin(func)
# Now try a lerch phi formula
if formula is None:
formula = try_lerchphi(func)
if formula is None:
debug(' Could not find an origin. ',
'Will return answer in terms of '
'simpler hypergeometric functions.')
formula = build_hypergeometric_formula(func)
debug(' Found an origin: ', formula.closed_form, ' ', formula.func)
# We need to find the operators that convert formula into func.
ops += devise_plan(func, formula.func, z0)
# Now carry out the plan.
r = carryout_plan(formula, ops) + p
return powdenest(r, polar=True).replace(hyper, hyperexpand_special)
def devise_plan_meijer(fro, to, z):
"""
Find operators to convert G-function ``fro`` into G-function ``to``.
It is assumed that fro and to have the same signatures, and that in fact
any corresponding pair of parameters differs by integers, and a direct path
is possible. I.e. if there are parameters a1 b1 c1 and a2 b2 c2 it is
assumed that a1 can be shifted to a2, etc. The only thing this routine
determines is the order of shifts to apply, nothing clever will be tried.
It is also assumed that fro is suitable.
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import (devise_plan_meijer,
... G_Function)
>>> from sympy.abc import z
Empty plan:
>>> devise_plan_meijer(G_Function([1], [2], [3], [4]),
... G_Function([1], [2], [3], [4]), z)
[]
Very simple plans:
>>> devise_plan_meijer(G_Function([0], [], [], []),
... G_Function([1], [], [], []), z)
[<Increment upper a index #0 of [0], [], [], [].>]
>>> devise_plan_meijer(G_Function([0], [], [], []),
... G_Function([-1], [], [], []), z)
[<Decrement upper a=0.>]
>>> devise_plan_meijer(G_Function([], [1], [], []),
... G_Function([], [2], [], []), z)
[<Increment lower a index #0 of [], [1], [], [].>]
Slightly more complicated plans:
>>> devise_plan_meijer(G_Function([0], [], [], []),
... G_Function([2], [], [], []), z)
[<Increment upper a index #0 of [1], [], [], [].>,
<Increment upper a index #0 of [0], [], [], [].>]
>>> devise_plan_meijer(G_Function([0], [], [0], []),
... G_Function([-1], [], [1], []), z)
[<Increment upper b=0.>, <Decrement upper a=0.>]
Order matters:
>>> devise_plan_meijer(G_Function([0], [], [0], []),
... G_Function([1], [], [1], []), z)
[<Increment upper a index #0 of [0], [], [1], [].>, <Increment upper b=0.>]
"""
# TODO for now, we use the following simple heuristic: inverse-shift
# when possible, shift otherwise. Give up if we cannot make progress.
def try_shift(f, t, shifter, diff, counter):
""" Try to apply ``shifter`` in order to bring some element in ``f``
nearer to its counterpart in ``to``. ``diff`` is +/- 1 and
determines the effect of ``shifter``. Counter is a list of elements
blocking the shift.
Return an operator if change was possible, else None.
"""
for idx, (a, b) in enumerate(zip(f, t)):
if (
(a - b).is_integer and (b - a)/diff > 0 and
all(a != x for x in counter)):
sh = shifter(idx)
f[idx] += diff
return sh
fan = list(fro.an)
fap = list(fro.ap)
fbm = list(fro.bm)
fbq = list(fro.bq)
ops = []
change = True
while change:
change = False
op = try_shift(fan, to.an,
lambda i: MeijerUnShiftB(fan, fap, fbm, fbq, i, z),
1, fbm + fbq)
if op is not None:
ops += [op]
change = True
continue
op = try_shift(fap, to.ap,
lambda i: MeijerUnShiftD(fan, fap, fbm, fbq, i, z),
1, fbm + fbq)
if op is not None:
ops += [op]
change = True
continue
op = try_shift(fbm, to.bm,
lambda i: MeijerUnShiftA(fan, fap, fbm, fbq, i, z),
-1, fan + fap)
if op is not None:
ops += [op]
change = True
continue
op = try_shift(fbq, to.bq,
lambda i: MeijerUnShiftC(fan, fap, fbm, fbq, i, z),
-1, fan + fap)
if op is not None:
ops += [op]
change = True
continue
op = try_shift(fan, to.an, lambda i: MeijerShiftB(fan[i]), -1, [])
if op is not None:
ops += [op]
change = True
continue
op = try_shift(fap, to.ap, lambda i: MeijerShiftD(fap[i]), -1, [])
if op is not None:
ops += [op]
change = True
continue
op = try_shift(fbm, to.bm, lambda i: MeijerShiftA(fbm[i]), 1, [])
if op is not None:
ops += [op]
change = True
continue
op = try_shift(fbq, to.bq, lambda i: MeijerShiftC(fbq[i]), 1, [])
if op is not None:
ops += [op]
change = True
continue
if fan != list(to.an) or fap != list(to.ap) or fbm != list(to.bm) or \
fbq != list(to.bq):
raise NotImplementedError('Could not devise plan.')
ops.reverse()
return ops
_meijercollection = None
def _meijergexpand(func, z0, allow_hyper=False, rewrite='default',
place=None):
"""
Try to find an expression for the Meijer G function specified
by the G_Function ``func``. If ``allow_hyper`` is True, then returning
an expression in terms of hypergeometric functions is allowed.
Currently this just does Slater's theorem.
If expansions exist both at zero and at infinity, ``place``
can be set to ``0`` or ``zoo`` for the preferred choice.
"""
global _meijercollection
if _meijercollection is None:
_meijercollection = MeijerFormulaCollection()
if rewrite == 'default':
rewrite = None
func0 = func
debug('Try to expand Meijer G function corresponding to ', func)
# We will play games with analytic continuation - rather use a fresh symbol
z = Dummy('z')
func, ops = reduce_order_meijer(func)
if ops:
debug(' Reduced order to ', func)
else:
debug(' Could not reduce order.')
# Try to find a direct formula
f = _meijercollection.lookup_origin(func)
if f is not None:
debug(' Found a Meijer G formula: ', f.func)
ops += devise_plan_meijer(f.func, func, z)
# Now carry out the plan.
C = apply_operators(f.C.subs(f.z, z), ops,
make_derivative_operator(f.M.subs(f.z, z), z))
C = C.applyfunc(make_simp(z))
r = C*f.B.subs(f.z, z)
r = r[0].subs(z, z0)
return powdenest(r, polar=True)
debug(" Could not find a direct formula. Trying Slater's theorem.")
# TODO the following would be possible:
# *) Paired Index Theorems
# *) PFD Duplication
# (See Kelly Roach's paper for details on either.)
#
# TODO Also, we tend to create combinations of gamma functions that can be
# simplified.
def can_do(pbm, pap):
""" Test if slater applies. """
for i in pbm:
if len(pbm[i]) > 1:
l = 0
if i in pap:
l = len(pap[i])
if l + 1 < len(pbm[i]):
return False
return True
def do_slater(an, bm, ap, bq, z, zfinal):
# zfinal is the value that will eventually be substituted for z.
# We pass it to _hyperexpand to improve performance.
func = G_Function(an, bm, ap, bq)
_, pbm, pap, _ = func.compute_buckets()
if not can_do(pbm, pap):
return S(0), False
cond = len(an) + len(ap) < len(bm) + len(bq)
if len(an) + len(ap) == len(bm) + len(bq):
cond = abs(z) < 1
if cond is False:
return S(0), False
res = S(0)
for m in pbm:
if len(pbm[m]) == 1:
bh = pbm[m][0]
fac = 1
bo = list(bm)
bo.remove(bh)
for bj in bo:
fac *= gamma(bj - bh)
for aj in an:
fac *= gamma(1 + bh - aj)
for bj in bq:
fac /= gamma(1 + bh - bj)
for aj in ap:
fac /= gamma(aj - bh)
nap = [1 + bh - a for a in list(an) + list(ap)]
nbq = [1 + bh - b for b in list(bo) + list(bq)]
k = polar_lift(S(-1)**(len(ap) - len(bm)))
harg = k*zfinal
# NOTE even though k "is" +-1, this has to be t/k instead of
# t*k ... we are using polar numbers for consistency!
premult = (t/k)**bh
hyp = _hyperexpand(Hyper_Function(nap, nbq), harg, ops,
t, premult, bh, rewrite=None)
res += fac * hyp
else:
b_ = pbm[m][0]
ki = [bi - b_ for bi in pbm[m][1:]]
u = len(ki)
li = [ai - b_ for ai in pap[m][:u + 1]]
bo = list(bm)
for b in pbm[m]:
bo.remove(b)
ao = list(ap)
for a in pap[m][:u]:
ao.remove(a)
lu = li[-1]
di = [l - k for (l, k) in zip(li, ki)]
# We first work out the integrand:
s = Dummy('s')
integrand = z**s
for b in bm:
if not Mod(b, 1) and b.is_Number:
b = int(round(b))
integrand *= gamma(b - s)
for a in an:
integrand *= gamma(1 - a + s)
for b in bq:
integrand /= gamma(1 - b + s)
for a in ap:
integrand /= gamma(a - s)
# Now sum the finitely many residues:
# XXX This speeds up some cases - is it a good idea?
integrand = expand_func(integrand)
for r in range(int(round(lu))):
resid = residue(integrand, s, b_ + r)
resid = apply_operators(resid, ops, lambda f: z*f.diff(z))
res -= resid
# Now the hypergeometric term.
au = b_ + lu
k = polar_lift(S(-1)**(len(ao) + len(bo) + 1))
harg = k*zfinal
premult = (t/k)**au
nap = [1 + au - a for a in list(an) + list(ap)] + [1]
nbq = [1 + au - b for b in list(bm) + list(bq)]
hyp = _hyperexpand(Hyper_Function(nap, nbq), harg, ops,
t, premult, au, rewrite=None)
C = S(-1)**(lu)/factorial(lu)
for i in range(u):
C *= S(-1)**di[i]/rf(lu - li[i] + 1, di[i])
for a in an:
C *= gamma(1 - a + au)
for b in bo:
C *= gamma(b - au)
for a in ao:
C /= gamma(a - au)
for b in bq:
C /= gamma(1 - b + au)
res += C*hyp
return res, cond
t = Dummy('t')
slater1, cond1 = do_slater(func.an, func.bm, func.ap, func.bq, z, z0)
def tr(l):
return [1 - x for x in l]
for op in ops:
op._poly = Poly(op._poly.subs({z: 1/t, _x: -_x}), _x)
slater2, cond2 = do_slater(tr(func.bm), tr(func.an), tr(func.bq), tr(func.ap),
t, 1/z0)
slater1 = powdenest(slater1.subs(z, z0), polar=True)
slater2 = powdenest(slater2.subs(t, 1/z0), polar=True)
if not isinstance(cond2, bool):
cond2 = cond2.subs(t, 1/z)
m = func(z)
if m.delta > 0 or \
(m.delta == 0 and len(m.ap) == len(m.bq) and
(re(m.nu) < -1) is not False and polar_lift(z0) == polar_lift(1)):
# The condition delta > 0 means that the convergence region is
# connected. Any expression we find can be continued analytically
# to the entire convergence region.
# The conditions delta==0, p==q, re(nu) < -1 imply that G is continuous
# on the positive reals, so the values at z=1 agree.
if cond1 is not False:
cond1 = True
if cond2 is not False:
cond2 = True
if cond1 is True:
slater1 = slater1.rewrite(rewrite or 'nonrep')
else:
slater1 = slater1.rewrite(rewrite or 'nonrepsmall')
if cond2 is True:
slater2 = slater2.rewrite(rewrite or 'nonrep')
else:
slater2 = slater2.rewrite(rewrite or 'nonrepsmall')
if cond1 is not False and cond2 is not False:
# If one condition is False, there is no choice.
if place == 0:
cond2 = False
if place == zoo:
cond1 = False
if not isinstance(cond1, bool):
cond1 = cond1.subs(z, z0)
if not isinstance(cond2, bool):
cond2 = cond2.subs(z, z0)
def weight(expr, cond):
if cond is True:
c0 = 0
elif cond is False:
c0 = 1
else:
c0 = 2
if expr.has(oo, zoo, -oo, nan):
# XXX this actually should not happen, but consider
# S('meijerg(((0, -1/2, 0, -1/2, 1/2), ()), ((0,),
# (-1/2, -1/2, -1/2, -1)), exp_polar(I*pi))/4')
c0 = 3
return (c0, expr.count(hyper), expr.count_ops())
w1 = weight(slater1, cond1)
w2 = weight(slater2, cond2)
if min(w1, w2) <= (0, 1, oo):
if w1 < w2:
return slater1
else:
return slater2
if max(w1[0], w2[0]) <= 1 and max(w1[1], w2[1]) <= 1:
return Piecewise((slater1, cond1), (slater2, cond2), (func0(z0), True))
# We couldn't find an expression without hypergeometric functions.
# TODO it would be helpful to give conditions under which the integral
# is known to diverge.
r = Piecewise((slater1, cond1), (slater2, cond2), (func0(z0), True))
if r.has(hyper) and not allow_hyper:
debug(' Could express using hypergeometric functions, '
'but not allowed.')
if not r.has(hyper) or allow_hyper:
return r
return func0(z0)
def hyperexpand(f, allow_hyper=False, rewrite='default', place=None):
"""
Expand hypergeometric functions. If allow_hyper is True, allow partial
simplification (that is a result different from input,
but still containing hypergeometric functions).
If a G-function has expansions both at zero and at infinity,
``place`` can be set to ``0`` or ``zoo`` to indicate the
preferred choice.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import hyperexpand
>>> from sympy.functions import hyper
>>> from sympy.abc import z
>>> hyperexpand(hyper([], [], z))
exp(z)
Non-hyperegeometric parts of the expression and hypergeometric expressions
that are not recognised are left unchanged:
>>> hyperexpand(1 + hyper([1, 1, 1], [], z))
hyper((1, 1, 1), (), z) + 1
"""
f = sympify(f)
def do_replace(ap, bq, z):
r = _hyperexpand(Hyper_Function(ap, bq), z, rewrite=rewrite)
if r is None:
return hyper(ap, bq, z)
else:
return r
def do_meijer(ap, bq, z):
r = _meijergexpand(G_Function(ap[0], ap[1], bq[0], bq[1]), z,
allow_hyper, rewrite=rewrite, place=place)
if not r.has(nan, zoo, oo, -oo):
return r
return f.replace(hyper, do_replace).replace(meijerg, do_meijer)
|
d6650161696ddf33b77d7ad2ebbcff2f61868db55fc3394c087ffafcf502e491
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy import SYMPY_DEBUG
from sympy.core.evaluate import global_evaluate
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable, ordered, default_sort_key
from sympy.core import expand_power_base, sympify, Add, S, Mul, Derivative, Pow, symbols, expand_mul
from sympy.core.numbers import Rational
from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors, gcd_terms
from sympy.core.mul import _keep_coeff, _unevaluated_Mul
from sympy.core.function import _mexpand
from sympy.core.add import _unevaluated_Add
from sympy.functions import exp, sqrt, log
from sympy.polys import gcd
from sympy.simplify.sqrtdenest import sqrtdenest
def collect(expr, syms, func=None, evaluate=None, exact=False, distribute_order_term=True):
"""
Collect additive terms of an expression.
This function collects additive terms of an expression with respect
to a list of expression up to powers with rational exponents. By the
term symbol here are meant arbitrary expressions, which can contain
powers, products, sums etc. In other words symbol is a pattern which
will be searched for in the expression's terms.
The input expression is not expanded by :func:`collect`, so user is
expected to provide an expression is an appropriate form. This makes
:func:`collect` more predictable as there is no magic happening behind the
scenes. However, it is important to note, that powers of products are
converted to products of powers using the :func:`expand_power_base`
function.
There are two possible types of output. First, if ``evaluate`` flag is
set, this function will return an expression with collected terms or
else it will return a dictionary with expressions up to rational powers
as keys and collected coefficients as values.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S, collect, expand, factor, Wild
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c, x, y, z
This function can collect symbolic coefficients in polynomials or
rational expressions. It will manage to find all integer or rational
powers of collection variable::
>>> collect(a*x**2 + b*x**2 + a*x - b*x + c, x)
c + x**2*(a + b) + x*(a - b)
The same result can be achieved in dictionary form::
>>> d = collect(a*x**2 + b*x**2 + a*x - b*x + c, x, evaluate=False)
>>> d[x**2]
a + b
>>> d[x]
a - b
>>> d[S.One]
c
You can also work with multivariate polynomials. However, remember that
this function is greedy so it will care only about a single symbol at time,
in specification order::
>>> collect(x**2 + y*x**2 + x*y + y + a*y, [x, y])
x**2*(y + 1) + x*y + y*(a + 1)
Also more complicated expressions can be used as patterns::
>>> from sympy import sin, log
>>> collect(a*sin(2*x) + b*sin(2*x), sin(2*x))
(a + b)*sin(2*x)
>>> collect(a*x*log(x) + b*(x*log(x)), x*log(x))
x*(a + b)*log(x)
You can use wildcards in the pattern::
>>> w = Wild('w1')
>>> collect(a*x**y - b*x**y, w**y)
x**y*(a - b)
It is also possible to work with symbolic powers, although it has more
complicated behavior, because in this case power's base and symbolic part
of the exponent are treated as a single symbol::
>>> collect(a*x**c + b*x**c, x)
a*x**c + b*x**c
>>> collect(a*x**c + b*x**c, x**c)
x**c*(a + b)
However if you incorporate rationals to the exponents, then you will get
well known behavior::
>>> collect(a*x**(2*c) + b*x**(2*c), x**c)
x**(2*c)*(a + b)
Note also that all previously stated facts about :func:`collect` function
apply to the exponential function, so you can get::
>>> from sympy import exp
>>> collect(a*exp(2*x) + b*exp(2*x), exp(x))
(a + b)*exp(2*x)
If you are interested only in collecting specific powers of some symbols
then set ``exact`` flag in arguments::
>>> collect(a*x**7 + b*x**7, x, exact=True)
a*x**7 + b*x**7
>>> collect(a*x**7 + b*x**7, x**7, exact=True)
x**7*(a + b)
You can also apply this function to differential equations, where
derivatives of arbitrary order can be collected. Note that if you
collect with respect to a function or a derivative of a function, all
derivatives of that function will also be collected. Use
``exact=True`` to prevent this from happening::
>>> from sympy import Derivative as D, collect, Function
>>> f = Function('f') (x)
>>> collect(a*D(f,x) + b*D(f,x), D(f,x))
(a + b)*Derivative(f(x), x)
>>> collect(a*D(D(f,x),x) + b*D(D(f,x),x), f)
(a + b)*Derivative(f(x), (x, 2))
>>> collect(a*D(D(f,x),x) + b*D(D(f,x),x), D(f,x), exact=True)
a*Derivative(f(x), (x, 2)) + b*Derivative(f(x), (x, 2))
>>> collect(a*D(f,x) + b*D(f,x) + a*f + b*f, f)
(a + b)*f(x) + (a + b)*Derivative(f(x), x)
Or you can even match both derivative order and exponent at the same time::
>>> collect(a*D(D(f,x),x)**2 + b*D(D(f,x),x)**2, D(f,x))
(a + b)*Derivative(f(x), (x, 2))**2
Finally, you can apply a function to each of the collected coefficients.
For example you can factorize symbolic coefficients of polynomial::
>>> f = expand((x + a + 1)**3)
>>> collect(f, x, factor)
x**3 + 3*x**2*(a + 1) + 3*x*(a + 1)**2 + (a + 1)**3
.. note:: Arguments are expected to be in expanded form, so you might have
to call :func:`expand` prior to calling this function.
See Also
========
collect_const, collect_sqrt, rcollect
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
syms = list(syms) if iterable(syms) else [syms]
if evaluate is None:
evaluate = global_evaluate[0]
def make_expression(terms):
product = []
for term, rat, sym, deriv in terms:
if deriv is not None:
var, order = deriv
while order > 0:
term, order = Derivative(term, var), order - 1
if sym is None:
if rat is S.One:
product.append(term)
else:
product.append(Pow(term, rat))
else:
product.append(Pow(term, rat*sym))
return Mul(*product)
def parse_derivative(deriv):
# scan derivatives tower in the input expression and return
# underlying function and maximal differentiation order
expr, sym, order = deriv.expr, deriv.variables[0], 1
for s in deriv.variables[1:]:
if s == sym:
order += 1
else:
raise NotImplementedError(
'Improve MV Derivative support in collect')
while isinstance(expr, Derivative):
s0 = expr.variables[0]
for s in expr.variables:
if s != s0:
raise NotImplementedError(
'Improve MV Derivative support in collect')
if s0 == sym:
expr, order = expr.expr, order + len(expr.variables)
else:
break
return expr, (sym, Rational(order))
def parse_term(expr):
"""Parses expression expr and outputs tuple (sexpr, rat_expo,
sym_expo, deriv)
where:
- sexpr is the base expression
- rat_expo is the rational exponent that sexpr is raised to
- sym_expo is the symbolic exponent that sexpr is raised to
- deriv contains the derivatives the the expression
for example, the output of x would be (x, 1, None, None)
the output of 2**x would be (2, 1, x, None)
"""
rat_expo, sym_expo = S.One, None
sexpr, deriv = expr, None
if expr.is_Pow:
if isinstance(expr.base, Derivative):
sexpr, deriv = parse_derivative(expr.base)
else:
sexpr = expr.base
if expr.exp.is_Number:
rat_expo = expr.exp
else:
coeff, tail = expr.exp.as_coeff_Mul()
if coeff.is_Number:
rat_expo, sym_expo = coeff, tail
else:
sym_expo = expr.exp
elif isinstance(expr, exp):
arg = expr.args[0]
if arg.is_Rational:
sexpr, rat_expo = S.Exp1, arg
elif arg.is_Mul:
coeff, tail = arg.as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
sexpr, rat_expo = exp(tail), coeff
elif isinstance(expr, Derivative):
sexpr, deriv = parse_derivative(expr)
return sexpr, rat_expo, sym_expo, deriv
def parse_expression(terms, pattern):
"""Parse terms searching for a pattern.
terms is a list of tuples as returned by parse_terms;
pattern is an expression treated as a product of factors
"""
pattern = Mul.make_args(pattern)
if len(terms) < len(pattern):
# pattern is longer than matched product
# so no chance for positive parsing result
return None
else:
pattern = [parse_term(elem) for elem in pattern]
terms = terms[:] # need a copy
elems, common_expo, has_deriv = [], None, False
for elem, e_rat, e_sym, e_ord in pattern:
if elem.is_Number and e_rat == 1 and e_sym is None:
# a constant is a match for everything
continue
for j in range(len(terms)):
if terms[j] is None:
continue
term, t_rat, t_sym, t_ord = terms[j]
# keeping track of whether one of the terms had
# a derivative or not as this will require rebuilding
# the expression later
if t_ord is not None:
has_deriv = True
if (term.match(elem) is not None and
(t_sym == e_sym or t_sym is not None and
e_sym is not None and
t_sym.match(e_sym) is not None)):
if exact is False:
# we don't have to be exact so find common exponent
# for both expression's term and pattern's element
expo = t_rat / e_rat
if common_expo is None:
# first time
common_expo = expo
else:
# common exponent was negotiated before so
# there is no chance for a pattern match unless
# common and current exponents are equal
if common_expo != expo:
common_expo = 1
else:
# we ought to be exact so all fields of
# interest must match in every details
if e_rat != t_rat or e_ord != t_ord:
continue
# found common term so remove it from the expression
# and try to match next element in the pattern
elems.append(terms[j])
terms[j] = None
break
else:
# pattern element not found
return None
return [_f for _f in terms if _f], elems, common_expo, has_deriv
if evaluate:
if expr.is_Add:
o = expr.getO() or 0
expr = expr.func(*[
collect(a, syms, func, True, exact, distribute_order_term)
for a in expr.args if a != o]) + o
elif expr.is_Mul:
return expr.func(*[
collect(term, syms, func, True, exact, distribute_order_term)
for term in expr.args])
elif expr.is_Pow:
b = collect(
expr.base, syms, func, True, exact, distribute_order_term)
return Pow(b, expr.exp)
syms = [expand_power_base(i, deep=False) for i in syms]
order_term = None
if distribute_order_term:
order_term = expr.getO()
if order_term is not None:
if order_term.has(*syms):
order_term = None
else:
expr = expr.removeO()
summa = [expand_power_base(i, deep=False) for i in Add.make_args(expr)]
collected, disliked = defaultdict(list), S.Zero
for product in summa:
c, nc = product.args_cnc(split_1=False)
args = list(ordered(c)) + nc
terms = [parse_term(i) for i in args]
small_first = True
for symbol in syms:
if SYMPY_DEBUG:
print("DEBUG: parsing of expression %s with symbol %s " % (
str(terms), str(symbol))
)
if isinstance(symbol, Derivative) and small_first:
terms = list(reversed(terms))
small_first = not small_first
result = parse_expression(terms, symbol)
if SYMPY_DEBUG:
print("DEBUG: returned %s" % str(result))
if result is not None:
if not symbol.is_commutative:
raise AttributeError("Can not collect noncommutative symbol")
terms, elems, common_expo, has_deriv = result
# when there was derivative in current pattern we
# will need to rebuild its expression from scratch
if not has_deriv:
margs = []
for elem in elems:
if elem[2] is None:
e = elem[1]
else:
e = elem[1]*elem[2]
margs.append(Pow(elem[0], e))
index = Mul(*margs)
else:
index = make_expression(elems)
terms = expand_power_base(make_expression(terms), deep=False)
index = expand_power_base(index, deep=False)
collected[index].append(terms)
break
else:
# none of the patterns matched
disliked += product
# add terms now for each key
collected = {k: Add(*v) for k, v in collected.items()}
if disliked is not S.Zero:
collected[S.One] = disliked
if order_term is not None:
for key, val in collected.items():
collected[key] = val + order_term
if func is not None:
collected = dict(
[(key, func(val)) for key, val in collected.items()])
if evaluate:
return Add(*[key*val for key, val in collected.items()])
else:
return collected
def rcollect(expr, *vars):
"""
Recursively collect sums in an expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify import rcollect
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> expr = (x**2*y + x*y + x + y)/(x + y)
>>> rcollect(expr, y)
(x + y*(x**2 + x + 1))/(x + y)
See Also
========
collect, collect_const, collect_sqrt
"""
if expr.is_Atom or not expr.has(*vars):
return expr
else:
expr = expr.__class__(*[rcollect(arg, *vars) for arg in expr.args])
if expr.is_Add:
return collect(expr, vars)
else:
return expr
def collect_sqrt(expr, evaluate=None):
"""Return expr with terms having common square roots collected together.
If ``evaluate`` is False a count indicating the number of sqrt-containing
terms will be returned and, if non-zero, the terms of the Add will be
returned, else the expression itself will be returned as a single term.
If ``evaluate`` is True, the expression with any collected terms will be
returned.
Note: since I = sqrt(-1), it is collected, too.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.simplify.radsimp import collect_sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b
>>> r2, r3, r5 = [sqrt(i) for i in [2, 3, 5]]
>>> collect_sqrt(a*r2 + b*r2)
sqrt(2)*(a + b)
>>> collect_sqrt(a*r2 + b*r2 + a*r3 + b*r3)
sqrt(2)*(a + b) + sqrt(3)*(a + b)
>>> collect_sqrt(a*r2 + b*r2 + a*r3 + b*r5)
sqrt(3)*a + sqrt(5)*b + sqrt(2)*(a + b)
If evaluate is False then the arguments will be sorted and
returned as a list and a count of the number of sqrt-containing
terms will be returned:
>>> collect_sqrt(a*r2 + b*r2 + a*r3 + b*r5, evaluate=False)
((sqrt(3)*a, sqrt(5)*b, sqrt(2)*(a + b)), 3)
>>> collect_sqrt(a*sqrt(2) + b, evaluate=False)
((b, sqrt(2)*a), 1)
>>> collect_sqrt(a + b, evaluate=False)
((a + b,), 0)
See Also
========
collect, collect_const, rcollect
"""
if evaluate is None:
evaluate = global_evaluate[0]
# this step will help to standardize any complex arguments
# of sqrts
coeff, expr = expr.as_content_primitive()
vars = set()
for a in Add.make_args(expr):
for m in a.args_cnc()[0]:
if m.is_number and (
m.is_Pow and m.exp.is_Rational and m.exp.q == 2 or
m is S.ImaginaryUnit):
vars.add(m)
# we only want radicals, so exclude Number handling; in this case
# d will be evaluated
d = collect_const(expr, *vars, Numbers=False)
hit = expr != d
if not evaluate:
nrad = 0
# make the evaluated args canonical
args = list(ordered(Add.make_args(d)))
for i, m in enumerate(args):
c, nc = m.args_cnc()
for ci in c:
# XXX should this be restricted to ci.is_number as above?
if ci.is_Pow and ci.exp.is_Rational and ci.exp.q == 2 or \
ci is S.ImaginaryUnit:
nrad += 1
break
args[i] *= coeff
if not (hit or nrad):
args = [Add(*args)]
return tuple(args), nrad
return coeff*d
def collect_const(expr, *vars, **kwargs):
"""A non-greedy collection of terms with similar number coefficients in
an Add expr. If ``vars`` is given then only those constants will be
targeted. Although any Number can also be targeted, if this is not
desired set ``Numbers=False`` and no Float or Rational will be collected.
Parameters
==========
expr : sympy expression
This parameter defines the expression the expression from which
terms with similar coefficients are to be collected. A non-Add
expression is returned as it is.
vars : variable length collection of Numbers, optional
Specifies the constants to target for collection. Can be multiple in
number.
kwargs : ``Numbers`` is the only possible argument to pass.
Numbers (default=True) specifies to target all instance of
:class:`sympy.core.numbers.Number` class. If ``Numbers=False``, then
no Float or Rational will be collected.
Returns
=======
expr : Expr
Returns an expression with similar coefficient terms collected.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import a, s, x, y, z
>>> from sympy.simplify.radsimp import collect_const
>>> collect_const(sqrt(3) + sqrt(3)*(1 + sqrt(2)))
sqrt(3)*(sqrt(2) + 2)
>>> collect_const(sqrt(3)*s + sqrt(7)*s + sqrt(3) + sqrt(7))
(sqrt(3) + sqrt(7))*(s + 1)
>>> s = sqrt(2) + 2
>>> collect_const(sqrt(3)*s + sqrt(3) + sqrt(7)*s + sqrt(7))
(sqrt(2) + 3)*(sqrt(3) + sqrt(7))
>>> collect_const(sqrt(3)*s + sqrt(3) + sqrt(7)*s + sqrt(7), sqrt(3))
sqrt(7) + sqrt(3)*(sqrt(2) + 3) + sqrt(7)*(sqrt(2) + 2)
The collection is sign-sensitive, giving higher precedence to the
unsigned values:
>>> collect_const(x - y - z)
x - (y + z)
>>> collect_const(-y - z)
-(y + z)
>>> collect_const(2*x - 2*y - 2*z, 2)
2*(x - y - z)
>>> collect_const(2*x - 2*y - 2*z, -2)
2*x - 2*(y + z)
See Also
========
collect, collect_sqrt, rcollect
"""
if not expr.is_Add:
return expr
recurse = False
Numbers = kwargs.get('Numbers', True)
if not vars:
recurse = True
vars = set()
for a in expr.args:
for m in Mul.make_args(a):
if m.is_number:
vars.add(m)
else:
vars = sympify(vars)
if not Numbers:
vars = [v for v in vars if not v.is_Number]
vars = list(ordered(vars))
for v in vars:
terms = defaultdict(list)
Fv = Factors(v)
for m in Add.make_args(expr):
f = Factors(m)
q, r = f.div(Fv)
if r.is_one:
# only accept this as a true factor if
# it didn't change an exponent from an Integer
# to a non-Integer, e.g. 2/sqrt(2) -> sqrt(2)
# -- we aren't looking for this sort of change
fwas = f.factors.copy()
fnow = q.factors
if not any(k in fwas and fwas[k].is_Integer and not
fnow[k].is_Integer for k in fnow):
terms[v].append(q.as_expr())
continue
terms[S.One].append(m)
args = []
hit = False
uneval = False
for k in ordered(terms):
v = terms[k]
if k is S.One:
args.extend(v)
continue
if len(v) > 1:
v = Add(*v)
hit = True
if recurse and v != expr:
vars.append(v)
else:
v = v[0]
# be careful not to let uneval become True unless
# it must be because it's going to be more expensive
# to rebuild the expression as an unevaluated one
if Numbers and k.is_Number and v.is_Add:
args.append(_keep_coeff(k, v, sign=True))
uneval = True
else:
args.append(k*v)
if hit:
if uneval:
expr = _unevaluated_Add(*args)
else:
expr = Add(*args)
if not expr.is_Add:
break
return expr
def radsimp(expr, symbolic=True, max_terms=4):
r"""
Rationalize the denominator by removing square roots.
Note: the expression returned from radsimp must be used with caution
since if the denominator contains symbols, it will be possible to make
substitutions that violate the assumptions of the simplification process:
that for a denominator matching a + b*sqrt(c), a != +/-b*sqrt(c). (If
there are no symbols, this assumptions is made valid by collecting terms
of sqrt(c) so the match variable ``a`` does not contain ``sqrt(c)``.) If
you do not want the simplification to occur for symbolic denominators, set
``symbolic`` to False.
If there are more than ``max_terms`` radical terms then the expression is
returned unchanged.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import radsimp, sqrt, Symbol, denom, pprint, I
>>> from sympy import factor_terms, fraction, signsimp
>>> from sympy.simplify.radsimp import collect_sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c
>>> radsimp(1/(2 + sqrt(2)))
(-sqrt(2) + 2)/2
>>> x,y = map(Symbol, 'xy')
>>> e = ((2 + 2*sqrt(2))*x + (2 + sqrt(8))*y)/(2 + sqrt(2))
>>> radsimp(e)
sqrt(2)*(x + y)
No simplification beyond removal of the gcd is done. One might
want to polish the result a little, however, by collecting
square root terms:
>>> r2 = sqrt(2)
>>> r5 = sqrt(5)
>>> ans = radsimp(1/(y*r2 + x*r2 + a*r5 + b*r5)); pprint(ans)
___ ___ ___ ___
\/ 5 *a + \/ 5 *b - \/ 2 *x - \/ 2 *y
------------------------------------------
2 2 2 2
5*a + 10*a*b + 5*b - 2*x - 4*x*y - 2*y
>>> n, d = fraction(ans)
>>> pprint(factor_terms(signsimp(collect_sqrt(n))/d, radical=True))
___ ___
\/ 5 *(a + b) - \/ 2 *(x + y)
------------------------------------------
2 2 2 2
5*a + 10*a*b + 5*b - 2*x - 4*x*y - 2*y
If radicals in the denominator cannot be removed or there is no denominator,
the original expression will be returned.
>>> radsimp(sqrt(2)*x + sqrt(2))
sqrt(2)*x + sqrt(2)
Results with symbols will not always be valid for all substitutions:
>>> eq = 1/(a + b*sqrt(c))
>>> eq.subs(a, b*sqrt(c))
1/(2*b*sqrt(c))
>>> radsimp(eq).subs(a, b*sqrt(c))
nan
If symbolic=False, symbolic denominators will not be transformed (but
numeric denominators will still be processed):
>>> radsimp(eq, symbolic=False)
1/(a + b*sqrt(c))
"""
from sympy.simplify.simplify import signsimp
syms = symbols("a:d A:D")
def _num(rterms):
# return the multiplier that will simplify the expression described
# by rterms [(sqrt arg, coeff), ... ]
a, b, c, d, A, B, C, D = syms
if len(rterms) == 2:
reps = dict(list(zip([A, a, B, b], [j for i in rterms for j in i])))
return (
sqrt(A)*a - sqrt(B)*b).xreplace(reps)
if len(rterms) == 3:
reps = dict(list(zip([A, a, B, b, C, c], [j for i in rterms for j in i])))
return (
(sqrt(A)*a + sqrt(B)*b - sqrt(C)*c)*(2*sqrt(A)*sqrt(B)*a*b - A*a**2 -
B*b**2 + C*c**2)).xreplace(reps)
elif len(rterms) == 4:
reps = dict(list(zip([A, a, B, b, C, c, D, d], [j for i in rterms for j in i])))
return ((sqrt(A)*a + sqrt(B)*b - sqrt(C)*c - sqrt(D)*d)*(2*sqrt(A)*sqrt(B)*a*b
- A*a**2 - B*b**2 - 2*sqrt(C)*sqrt(D)*c*d + C*c**2 +
D*d**2)*(-8*sqrt(A)*sqrt(B)*sqrt(C)*sqrt(D)*a*b*c*d + A**2*a**4 -
2*A*B*a**2*b**2 - 2*A*C*a**2*c**2 - 2*A*D*a**2*d**2 + B**2*b**4 -
2*B*C*b**2*c**2 - 2*B*D*b**2*d**2 + C**2*c**4 - 2*C*D*c**2*d**2 +
D**2*d**4)).xreplace(reps)
elif len(rterms) == 1:
return sqrt(rterms[0][0])
else:
raise NotImplementedError
def ispow2(d, log2=False):
if not d.is_Pow:
return False
e = d.exp
if e.is_Rational and e.q == 2 or symbolic and denom(e) == 2:
return True
if log2:
q = 1
if e.is_Rational:
q = e.q
elif symbolic:
d = denom(e)
if d.is_Integer:
q = d
if q != 1 and log(q, 2).is_Integer:
return True
return False
def handle(expr):
# Handle first reduces to the case
# expr = 1/d, where d is an add, or d is base**p/2.
# We do this by recursively calling handle on each piece.
from sympy.simplify.simplify import nsimplify
n, d = fraction(expr)
if expr.is_Atom or (d.is_Atom and n.is_Atom):
return expr
elif not n.is_Atom:
n = n.func(*[handle(a) for a in n.args])
return _unevaluated_Mul(n, handle(1/d))
elif n is not S.One:
return _unevaluated_Mul(n, handle(1/d))
elif d.is_Mul:
return _unevaluated_Mul(*[handle(1/d) for d in d.args])
# By this step, expr is 1/d, and d is not a mul.
if not symbolic and d.free_symbols:
return expr
if ispow2(d):
d2 = sqrtdenest(sqrt(d.base))**numer(d.exp)
if d2 != d:
return handle(1/d2)
elif d.is_Pow and (d.exp.is_integer or d.base.is_positive):
# (1/d**i) = (1/d)**i
return handle(1/d.base)**d.exp
if not (d.is_Add or ispow2(d)):
return 1/d.func(*[handle(a) for a in d.args])
# handle 1/d treating d as an Add (though it may not be)
keep = True # keep changes that are made
# flatten it and collect radicals after checking for special
# conditions
d = _mexpand(d)
# did it change?
if d.is_Atom:
return 1/d
# is it a number that might be handled easily?
if d.is_number:
_d = nsimplify(d)
if _d.is_Number and _d.equals(d):
return 1/_d
while True:
# collect similar terms
collected = defaultdict(list)
for m in Add.make_args(d): # d might have become non-Add
p2 = []
other = []
for i in Mul.make_args(m):
if ispow2(i, log2=True):
p2.append(i.base if i.exp is S.Half else i.base**(2*i.exp))
elif i is S.ImaginaryUnit:
p2.append(S.NegativeOne)
else:
other.append(i)
collected[tuple(ordered(p2))].append(Mul(*other))
rterms = list(ordered(list(collected.items())))
rterms = [(Mul(*i), Add(*j)) for i, j in rterms]
nrad = len(rterms) - (1 if rterms[0][0] is S.One else 0)
if nrad < 1:
break
elif nrad > max_terms:
# there may have been invalid operations leading to this point
# so don't keep changes, e.g. this expression is troublesome
# in collecting terms so as not to raise the issue of 2834:
# r = sqrt(sqrt(5) + 5)
# eq = 1/(sqrt(5)*r + 2*sqrt(5)*sqrt(-sqrt(5) + 5) + 5*r)
keep = False
break
if len(rterms) > 4:
# in general, only 4 terms can be removed with repeated squaring
# but other considerations can guide selection of radical terms
# so that radicals are removed
if all([x.is_Integer and (y**2).is_Rational for x, y in rterms]):
nd, d = rad_rationalize(S.One, Add._from_args(
[sqrt(x)*y for x, y in rterms]))
n *= nd
else:
# is there anything else that might be attempted?
keep = False
break
from sympy.simplify.powsimp import powsimp, powdenest
num = powsimp(_num(rterms))
n *= num
d *= num
d = powdenest(_mexpand(d), force=symbolic)
if d.is_Atom:
break
if not keep:
return expr
return _unevaluated_Mul(n, 1/d)
coeff, expr = expr.as_coeff_Add()
expr = expr.normal()
old = fraction(expr)
n, d = fraction(handle(expr))
if old != (n, d):
if not d.is_Atom:
was = (n, d)
n = signsimp(n, evaluate=False)
d = signsimp(d, evaluate=False)
u = Factors(_unevaluated_Mul(n, 1/d))
u = _unevaluated_Mul(*[k**v for k, v in u.factors.items()])
n, d = fraction(u)
if old == (n, d):
n, d = was
n = expand_mul(n)
if d.is_Number or d.is_Add:
n2, d2 = fraction(gcd_terms(_unevaluated_Mul(n, 1/d)))
if d2.is_Number or (d2.count_ops() <= d.count_ops()):
n, d = [signsimp(i) for i in (n2, d2)]
if n.is_Mul and n.args[0].is_Number:
n = n.func(*n.args)
return coeff + _unevaluated_Mul(n, 1/d)
def rad_rationalize(num, den):
"""
Rationalize num/den by removing square roots in the denominator;
num and den are sum of terms whose squares are rationals
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.simplify.radsimp import rad_rationalize
>>> rad_rationalize(sqrt(3), 1 + sqrt(2)/3)
(-sqrt(3) + sqrt(6)/3, -7/9)
"""
if not den.is_Add:
return num, den
g, a, b = split_surds(den)
a = a*sqrt(g)
num = _mexpand((a - b)*num)
den = _mexpand(a**2 - b**2)
return rad_rationalize(num, den)
def fraction(expr, exact=False):
"""Returns a pair with expression's numerator and denominator.
If the given expression is not a fraction then this function
will return the tuple (expr, 1).
This function will not make any attempt to simplify nested
fractions or to do any term rewriting at all.
If only one of the numerator/denominator pair is needed then
use numer(expr) or denom(expr) functions respectively.
>>> from sympy import fraction, Rational, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> fraction(x/y)
(x, y)
>>> fraction(x)
(x, 1)
>>> fraction(1/y**2)
(1, y**2)
>>> fraction(x*y/2)
(x*y, 2)
>>> fraction(Rational(1, 2))
(1, 2)
This function will also work fine with assumptions:
>>> k = Symbol('k', negative=True)
>>> fraction(x * y**k)
(x, y**(-k))
If we know nothing about sign of some exponent and 'exact'
flag is unset, then structure this exponent's structure will
be analyzed and pretty fraction will be returned:
>>> from sympy import exp, Mul
>>> fraction(2*x**(-y))
(2, x**y)
>>> fraction(exp(-x))
(1, exp(x))
>>> fraction(exp(-x), exact=True)
(exp(-x), 1)
The `exact` flag will also keep any unevaluated Muls from
being evaluated:
>>> u = Mul(2, x + 1, evaluate=False)
>>> fraction(u)
(2*x + 2, 1)
>>> fraction(u, exact=True)
(2*(x + 1), 1)
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
numer, denom = [], []
for term in Mul.make_args(expr):
if term.is_commutative and (term.is_Pow or isinstance(term, exp)):
b, ex = term.as_base_exp()
if ex.is_negative:
if ex is S.NegativeOne:
denom.append(b)
elif exact:
if ex.is_constant():
denom.append(Pow(b, -ex))
else:
numer.append(term)
else:
denom.append(Pow(b, -ex))
elif ex.is_positive:
numer.append(term)
elif not exact and ex.is_Mul:
n, d = term.as_numer_denom()
numer.append(n)
denom.append(d)
else:
numer.append(term)
elif term.is_Rational:
n, d = term.as_numer_denom()
numer.append(n)
denom.append(d)
else:
numer.append(term)
if exact:
return Mul(*numer, evaluate=False), Mul(*denom, evaluate=False)
else:
return Mul(*numer), Mul(*denom)
def numer(expr):
return fraction(expr)[0]
def denom(expr):
return fraction(expr)[1]
def fraction_expand(expr, **hints):
return expr.expand(frac=True, **hints)
def numer_expand(expr, **hints):
a, b = fraction(expr)
return a.expand(numer=True, **hints) / b
def denom_expand(expr, **hints):
a, b = fraction(expr)
return a / b.expand(denom=True, **hints)
expand_numer = numer_expand
expand_denom = denom_expand
expand_fraction = fraction_expand
def split_surds(expr):
"""
split an expression with terms whose squares are rationals
into a sum of terms whose surds squared have gcd equal to g
and a sum of terms with surds squared prime with g
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.simplify.radsimp import split_surds
>>> split_surds(3*sqrt(3) + sqrt(5)/7 + sqrt(6) + sqrt(10) + sqrt(15))
(3, sqrt(2) + sqrt(5) + 3, sqrt(5)/7 + sqrt(10))
"""
args = sorted(expr.args, key=default_sort_key)
coeff_muls = [x.as_coeff_Mul() for x in args]
surds = [x[1]**2 for x in coeff_muls if x[1].is_Pow]
surds.sort(key=default_sort_key)
g, b1, b2 = _split_gcd(*surds)
g2 = g
if not b2 and len(b1) >= 2:
b1n = [x/g for x in b1]
b1n = [x for x in b1n if x != 1]
# only a common factor has been factored; split again
g1, b1n, b2 = _split_gcd(*b1n)
g2 = g*g1
a1v, a2v = [], []
for c, s in coeff_muls:
if s.is_Pow and s.exp == S.Half:
s1 = s.base
if s1 in b1:
a1v.append(c*sqrt(s1/g2))
else:
a2v.append(c*s)
else:
a2v.append(c*s)
a = Add(*a1v)
b = Add(*a2v)
return g2, a, b
def _split_gcd(*a):
"""
split the list of integers ``a`` into a list of integers, ``a1`` having
``g = gcd(a1)``, and a list ``a2`` whose elements are not divisible by
``g``. Returns ``g, a1, a2``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.radsimp import _split_gcd
>>> _split_gcd(55, 35, 22, 14, 77, 10)
(5, [55, 35, 10], [22, 14, 77])
"""
g = a[0]
b1 = [g]
b2 = []
for x in a[1:]:
g1 = gcd(g, x)
if g1 == 1:
b2.append(x)
else:
g = g1
b1.append(x)
return g, b1, b2
|
2b38c6eb62d08e1e8a10a0e9324d6f29139251a9fd9288a563bf0cbb5fa137e3
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
from sympy.core import (sympify, Basic, S, Expr, expand_mul, factor_terms,
Mul, Dummy, igcd, FunctionClass, Add, symbols, Wild, expand)
from sympy.core.compatibility import reduce, iterable, SYMPY_INTS
from sympy.core.numbers import I, Integer
from sympy.core.function import count_ops, _mexpand
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import TrigonometricFunction
from sympy.functions.elementary.hyperbolic import HyperbolicFunction
from sympy.functions import sin, cos, exp, cosh, tanh, sinh, tan, cot, coth
from sympy.strategies.core import identity
from sympy.strategies.tree import greedy
from sympy.polys import Poly
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import PolificationFailed
from sympy.polys.polytools import groebner
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
from sympy.polys import factor, cancel, parallel_poly_from_expr
from sympy.utilities.misc import debug
def trigsimp_groebner(expr, hints=[], quick=False, order="grlex",
polynomial=False):
"""
Simplify trigonometric expressions using a groebner basis algorithm.
This routine takes a fraction involving trigonometric or hyperbolic
expressions, and tries to simplify it. The primary metric is the
total degree. Some attempts are made to choose the simplest possible
expression of the minimal degree, but this is non-rigorous, and also
very slow (see the ``quick=True`` option).
If ``polynomial`` is set to True, instead of simplifying numerator and
denominator together, this function just brings numerator and denominator
into a canonical form. This is much faster, but has potentially worse
results. However, if the input is a polynomial, then the result is
guaranteed to be an equivalent polynomial of minimal degree.
The most important option is hints. Its entries can be any of the
following:
- a natural number
- a function
- an iterable of the form (func, var1, var2, ...)
- anything else, interpreted as a generator
A number is used to indicate that the search space should be increased.
A function is used to indicate that said function is likely to occur in a
simplified expression.
An iterable is used indicate that func(var1 + var2 + ...) is likely to
occur in a simplified .
An additional generator also indicates that it is likely to occur.
(See examples below).
This routine carries out various computationally intensive algorithms.
The option ``quick=True`` can be used to suppress one particularly slow
step (at the expense of potentially more complicated results, but never at
the expense of increased total degree).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import sin, tan, cos, sinh, cosh, tanh
>>> from sympy.simplify.trigsimp import trigsimp_groebner
Suppose you want to simplify ``sin(x)*cos(x)``. Naively, nothing happens:
>>> ex = sin(x)*cos(x)
>>> trigsimp_groebner(ex)
sin(x)*cos(x)
This is because ``trigsimp_groebner`` only looks for a simplification
involving just ``sin(x)`` and ``cos(x)``. You can tell it to also try
``2*x`` by passing ``hints=[2]``:
>>> trigsimp_groebner(ex, hints=[2])
sin(2*x)/2
>>> trigsimp_groebner(sin(x)**2 - cos(x)**2, hints=[2])
-cos(2*x)
Increasing the search space this way can quickly become expensive. A much
faster way is to give a specific expression that is likely to occur:
>>> trigsimp_groebner(ex, hints=[sin(2*x)])
sin(2*x)/2
Hyperbolic expressions are similarly supported:
>>> trigsimp_groebner(sinh(2*x)/sinh(x))
2*cosh(x)
Note how no hints had to be passed, since the expression already involved
``2*x``.
The tangent function is also supported. You can either pass ``tan`` in the
hints, to indicate that than should be tried whenever cosine or sine are,
or you can pass a specific generator:
>>> trigsimp_groebner(sin(x)/cos(x), hints=[tan])
tan(x)
>>> trigsimp_groebner(sinh(x)/cosh(x), hints=[tanh(x)])
tanh(x)
Finally, you can use the iterable form to suggest that angle sum formulae
should be tried:
>>> ex = (tan(x) + tan(y))/(1 - tan(x)*tan(y))
>>> trigsimp_groebner(ex, hints=[(tan, x, y)])
tan(x + y)
"""
# TODO
# - preprocess by replacing everything by funcs we can handle
# - optionally use cot instead of tan
# - more intelligent hinting.
# For example, if the ideal is small, and we have sin(x), sin(y),
# add sin(x + y) automatically... ?
# - algebraic numbers ...
# - expressions of lowest degree are not distinguished properly
# e.g. 1 - sin(x)**2
# - we could try to order the generators intelligently, so as to influence
# which monomials appear in the quotient basis
# THEORY
# ------
# Ratsimpmodprime above can be used to "simplify" a rational function
# modulo a prime ideal. "Simplify" mainly means finding an equivalent
# expression of lower total degree.
#
# We intend to use this to simplify trigonometric functions. To do that,
# we need to decide (a) which ring to use, and (b) modulo which ideal to
# simplify. In practice, (a) means settling on a list of "generators"
# a, b, c, ..., such that the fraction we want to simplify is a rational
# function in a, b, c, ..., with coefficients in ZZ (integers).
# (2) means that we have to decide what relations to impose on the
# generators. There are two practical problems:
# (1) The ideal has to be *prime* (a technical term).
# (2) The relations have to be polynomials in the generators.
#
# We typically have two kinds of generators:
# - trigonometric expressions, like sin(x), cos(5*x), etc
# - "everything else", like gamma(x), pi, etc.
#
# Since this function is trigsimp, we will concentrate on what to do with
# trigonometric expressions. We can also simplify hyperbolic expressions,
# but the extensions should be clear.
#
# One crucial point is that all *other* generators really should behave
# like indeterminates. In particular if (say) "I" is one of them, then
# in fact I**2 + 1 = 0 and we may and will compute non-sensical
# expressions. However, we can work with a dummy and add the relation
# I**2 + 1 = 0 to our ideal, then substitute back in the end.
#
# Now regarding trigonometric generators. We split them into groups,
# according to the argument of the trigonometric functions. We want to
# organise this in such a way that most trigonometric identities apply in
# the same group. For example, given sin(x), cos(2*x) and cos(y), we would
# group as [sin(x), cos(2*x)] and [cos(y)].
#
# Our prime ideal will be built in three steps:
# (1) For each group, compute a "geometrically prime" ideal of relations.
# Geometrically prime means that it generates a prime ideal in
# CC[gens], not just ZZ[gens].
# (2) Take the union of all the generators of the ideals for all groups.
# By the geometric primality condition, this is still prime.
# (3) Add further inter-group relations which preserve primality.
#
# Step (1) works as follows. We will isolate common factors in the
# argument, so that all our generators are of the form sin(n*x), cos(n*x)
# or tan(n*x), with n an integer. Suppose first there are no tan terms.
# The ideal [sin(x)**2 + cos(x)**2 - 1] is geometrically prime, since
# X**2 + Y**2 - 1 is irreducible over CC.
# Now, if we have a generator sin(n*x), than we can, using trig identities,
# express sin(n*x) as a polynomial in sin(x) and cos(x). We can add this
# relation to the ideal, preserving geometric primality, since the quotient
# ring is unchanged.
# Thus we have treated all sin and cos terms.
# For tan(n*x), we add a relation tan(n*x)*cos(n*x) - sin(n*x) = 0.
# (This requires of course that we already have relations for cos(n*x) and
# sin(n*x).) It is not obvious, but it seems that this preserves geometric
# primality.
# XXX A real proof would be nice. HELP!
# Sketch that <S**2 + C**2 - 1, C*T - S> is a prime ideal of
# CC[S, C, T]:
# - it suffices to show that the projective closure in CP**3 is
# irreducible
# - using the half-angle substitutions, we can express sin(x), tan(x),
# cos(x) as rational functions in tan(x/2)
# - from this, we get a rational map from CP**1 to our curve
# - this is a morphism, hence the curve is prime
#
# Step (2) is trivial.
#
# Step (3) works by adding selected relations of the form
# sin(x + y) - sin(x)*cos(y) - sin(y)*cos(x), etc. Geometric primality is
# preserved by the same argument as before.
def parse_hints(hints):
"""Split hints into (n, funcs, iterables, gens)."""
n = 1
funcs, iterables, gens = [], [], []
for e in hints:
if isinstance(e, (SYMPY_INTS, Integer)):
n = e
elif isinstance(e, FunctionClass):
funcs.append(e)
elif iterable(e):
iterables.append((e[0], e[1:]))
# XXX sin(x+2y)?
# Note: we go through polys so e.g.
# sin(-x) -> -sin(x) -> sin(x)
gens.extend(parallel_poly_from_expr(
[e[0](x) for x in e[1:]] + [e[0](Add(*e[1:]))])[1].gens)
else:
gens.append(e)
return n, funcs, iterables, gens
def build_ideal(x, terms):
"""
Build generators for our ideal. Terms is an iterable with elements of
the form (fn, coeff), indicating that we have a generator fn(coeff*x).
If any of the terms is trigonometric, sin(x) and cos(x) are guaranteed
to appear in terms. Similarly for hyperbolic functions. For tan(n*x),
sin(n*x) and cos(n*x) are guaranteed.
"""
gens = []
I = []
y = Dummy('y')
for fn, coeff in terms:
for c, s, t, rel in (
[cos, sin, tan, cos(x)**2 + sin(x)**2 - 1],
[cosh, sinh, tanh, cosh(x)**2 - sinh(x)**2 - 1]):
if coeff == 1 and fn in [c, s]:
I.append(rel)
elif fn == t:
I.append(t(coeff*x)*c(coeff*x) - s(coeff*x))
elif fn in [c, s]:
cn = fn(coeff*y).expand(trig=True).subs(y, x)
I.append(fn(coeff*x) - cn)
return list(set(I))
def analyse_gens(gens, hints):
"""
Analyse the generators ``gens``, using the hints ``hints``.
The meaning of ``hints`` is described in the main docstring.
Return a new list of generators, and also the ideal we should
work with.
"""
# First parse the hints
n, funcs, iterables, extragens = parse_hints(hints)
debug('n=%s' % n, 'funcs:', funcs, 'iterables:',
iterables, 'extragens:', extragens)
# We just add the extragens to gens and analyse them as before
gens = list(gens)
gens.extend(extragens)
# remove duplicates
funcs = list(set(funcs))
iterables = list(set(iterables))
gens = list(set(gens))
# all the functions we can do anything with
allfuncs = {sin, cos, tan, sinh, cosh, tanh}
# sin(3*x) -> ((3, x), sin)
trigterms = [(g.args[0].as_coeff_mul(), g.func) for g in gens
if g.func in allfuncs]
# Our list of new generators - start with anything that we cannot
# work with (i.e. is not a trigonometric term)
freegens = [g for g in gens if g.func not in allfuncs]
newgens = []
trigdict = {}
for (coeff, var), fn in trigterms:
trigdict.setdefault(var, []).append((coeff, fn))
res = [] # the ideal
for key, val in trigdict.items():
# We have now assembeled a dictionary. Its keys are common
# arguments in trigonometric expressions, and values are lists of
# pairs (fn, coeff). x0, (fn, coeff) in trigdict means that we
# need to deal with fn(coeff*x0). We take the rational gcd of the
# coeffs, call it ``gcd``. We then use x = x0/gcd as "base symbol",
# all other arguments are integral multiples thereof.
# We will build an ideal which works with sin(x), cos(x).
# If hint tan is provided, also work with tan(x). Moreover, if
# n > 1, also work with sin(k*x) for k <= n, and similarly for cos
# (and tan if the hint is provided). Finally, any generators which
# the ideal does not work with but we need to accommodate (either
# because it was in expr or because it was provided as a hint)
# we also build into the ideal.
# This selection process is expressed in the list ``terms``.
# build_ideal then generates the actual relations in our ideal,
# from this list.
fns = [x[1] for x in val]
val = [x[0] for x in val]
gcd = reduce(igcd, val)
terms = [(fn, v/gcd) for (fn, v) in zip(fns, val)]
fs = set(funcs + fns)
for c, s, t in ([cos, sin, tan], [cosh, sinh, tanh]):
if any(x in fs for x in (c, s, t)):
fs.add(c)
fs.add(s)
for fn in fs:
for k in range(1, n + 1):
terms.append((fn, k))
extra = []
for fn, v in terms:
if fn == tan:
extra.append((sin, v))
extra.append((cos, v))
if fn in [sin, cos] and tan in fs:
extra.append((tan, v))
if fn == tanh:
extra.append((sinh, v))
extra.append((cosh, v))
if fn in [sinh, cosh] and tanh in fs:
extra.append((tanh, v))
terms.extend(extra)
x = gcd*Mul(*key)
r = build_ideal(x, terms)
res.extend(r)
newgens.extend(set(fn(v*x) for fn, v in terms))
# Add generators for compound expressions from iterables
for fn, args in iterables:
if fn == tan:
# Tan expressions are recovered from sin and cos.
iterables.extend([(sin, args), (cos, args)])
elif fn == tanh:
# Tanh expressions are recovered from sihn and cosh.
iterables.extend([(sinh, args), (cosh, args)])
else:
dummys = symbols('d:%i' % len(args), cls=Dummy)
expr = fn( Add(*dummys)).expand(trig=True).subs(list(zip(dummys, args)))
res.append(fn(Add(*args)) - expr)
if myI in gens:
res.append(myI**2 + 1)
freegens.remove(myI)
newgens.append(myI)
return res, freegens, newgens
myI = Dummy('I')
expr = expr.subs(S.ImaginaryUnit, myI)
subs = [(myI, S.ImaginaryUnit)]
num, denom = cancel(expr).as_numer_denom()
try:
(pnum, pdenom), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr([num, denom])
except PolificationFailed:
return expr
debug('initial gens:', opt.gens)
ideal, freegens, gens = analyse_gens(opt.gens, hints)
debug('ideal:', ideal)
debug('new gens:', gens, " -- len", len(gens))
debug('free gens:', freegens, " -- len", len(gens))
# NOTE we force the domain to be ZZ to stop polys from injecting generators
# (which is usually a sign of a bug in the way we build the ideal)
if not gens:
return expr
G = groebner(ideal, order=order, gens=gens, domain=ZZ)
debug('groebner basis:', list(G), " -- len", len(G))
# If our fraction is a polynomial in the free generators, simplify all
# coefficients separately:
from sympy.simplify.ratsimp import ratsimpmodprime
if freegens and pdenom.has_only_gens(*set(gens).intersection(pdenom.gens)):
num = Poly(num, gens=gens+freegens).eject(*gens)
res = []
for monom, coeff in num.terms():
ourgens = set(parallel_poly_from_expr([coeff, denom])[1].gens)
# We compute the transitive closure of all generators that can
# be reached from our generators through relations in the ideal.
changed = True
while changed:
changed = False
for p in ideal:
p = Poly(p)
if not ourgens.issuperset(p.gens) and \
not p.has_only_gens(*set(p.gens).difference(ourgens)):
changed = True
ourgens.update(p.exclude().gens)
# NOTE preserve order!
realgens = [x for x in gens if x in ourgens]
# The generators of the ideal have now been (implicitly) split
# into two groups: those involving ourgens and those that don't.
# Since we took the transitive closure above, these two groups
# live in subgrings generated by a *disjoint* set of variables.
# Any sensible groebner basis algorithm will preserve this disjoint
# structure (i.e. the elements of the groebner basis can be split
# similarly), and and the two subsets of the groebner basis then
# form groebner bases by themselves. (For the smaller generating
# sets, of course.)
ourG = [g.as_expr() for g in G.polys if
g.has_only_gens(*ourgens.intersection(g.gens))]
res.append(Mul(*[a**b for a, b in zip(freegens, monom)]) * \
ratsimpmodprime(coeff/denom, ourG, order=order,
gens=realgens, quick=quick, domain=ZZ,
polynomial=polynomial).subs(subs))
return Add(*res)
# NOTE The following is simpler and has less assumptions on the
# groebner basis algorithm. If the above turns out to be broken,
# use this.
return Add(*[Mul(*[a**b for a, b in zip(freegens, monom)]) * \
ratsimpmodprime(coeff/denom, list(G), order=order,
gens=gens, quick=quick, domain=ZZ)
for monom, coeff in num.terms()])
else:
return ratsimpmodprime(
expr, list(G), order=order, gens=freegens+gens,
quick=quick, domain=ZZ, polynomial=polynomial).subs(subs)
_trigs = (TrigonometricFunction, HyperbolicFunction)
def trigsimp(expr, **opts):
"""
reduces expression by using known trig identities
Notes
=====
method:
- Determine the method to use. Valid choices are 'matching' (default),
'groebner', 'combined', and 'fu'. If 'matching', simplify the
expression recursively by targeting common patterns. If 'groebner', apply
an experimental groebner basis algorithm. In this case further options
are forwarded to ``trigsimp_groebner``, please refer to its docstring.
If 'combined', first run the groebner basis algorithm with small
default parameters, then run the 'matching' algorithm. 'fu' runs the
collection of trigonometric transformations described by Fu, et al.
(see the `fu` docstring).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import trigsimp, sin, cos, log
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> e = 2*sin(x)**2 + 2*cos(x)**2
>>> trigsimp(e)
2
Simplification occurs wherever trigonometric functions are located.
>>> trigsimp(log(e))
log(2)
Using `method="groebner"` (or `"combined"`) might lead to greater
simplification.
The old trigsimp routine can be accessed as with method 'old'.
>>> from sympy import coth, tanh
>>> t = 3*tanh(x)**7 - 2/coth(x)**7
>>> trigsimp(t, method='old') == t
True
>>> trigsimp(t)
tanh(x)**7
"""
from sympy.simplify.fu import fu
expr = sympify(expr)
try:
return expr._eval_trigsimp(**opts)
except AttributeError:
pass
old = opts.pop('old', False)
if not old:
opts.pop('deep', None)
recursive = opts.pop('recursive', None)
method = opts.pop('method', 'matching')
else:
method = 'old'
def groebnersimp(ex, **opts):
def traverse(e):
if e.is_Atom:
return e
args = [traverse(x) for x in e.args]
if e.is_Function or e.is_Pow:
args = [trigsimp_groebner(x, **opts) for x in args]
return e.func(*args)
new = traverse(ex)
if not isinstance(new, Expr):
return new
return trigsimp_groebner(new, **opts)
trigsimpfunc = {
'fu': (lambda x: fu(x, **opts)),
'matching': (lambda x: futrig(x)),
'groebner': (lambda x: groebnersimp(x, **opts)),
'combined': (lambda x: futrig(groebnersimp(x,
polynomial=True, hints=[2, tan]))),
'old': lambda x: trigsimp_old(x, **opts),
}[method]
return trigsimpfunc(expr)
def exptrigsimp(expr):
"""
Simplifies exponential / trigonometric / hyperbolic functions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exptrigsimp, exp, cosh, sinh
>>> from sympy.abc import z
>>> exptrigsimp(exp(z) + exp(-z))
2*cosh(z)
>>> exptrigsimp(cosh(z) - sinh(z))
exp(-z)
"""
from sympy.simplify.fu import hyper_as_trig, TR2i
from sympy.simplify.simplify import bottom_up
def exp_trig(e):
# select the better of e, and e rewritten in terms of exp or trig
# functions
choices = [e]
if e.has(*_trigs):
choices.append(e.rewrite(exp))
choices.append(e.rewrite(cos))
return min(*choices, key=count_ops)
newexpr = bottom_up(expr, exp_trig)
def f(rv):
if not rv.is_Mul:
return rv
rvd = rv.as_powers_dict()
newd = rvd.copy()
def signlog(expr, sign=1):
if expr is S.Exp1:
return sign, 1
elif isinstance(expr, exp):
return sign, expr.args[0]
elif sign == 1:
return signlog(-expr, sign=-1)
else:
return None, None
ee = rvd[S.Exp1]
for k in rvd:
if k.is_Add and len(k.args) == 2:
# k == c*(1 + sign*E**x)
c = k.args[0]
sign, x = signlog(k.args[1]/c)
if not x:
continue
m = rvd[k]
newd[k] -= m
if ee == -x*m/2:
# sinh and cosh
newd[S.Exp1] -= ee
ee = 0
if sign == 1:
newd[2*c*cosh(x/2)] += m
else:
newd[-2*c*sinh(x/2)] += m
elif newd[1 - sign*S.Exp1**x] == -m:
# tanh
del newd[1 - sign*S.Exp1**x]
if sign == 1:
newd[-c/tanh(x/2)] += m
else:
newd[-c*tanh(x/2)] += m
else:
newd[1 + sign*S.Exp1**x] += m
newd[c] += m
return Mul(*[k**newd[k] for k in newd])
newexpr = bottom_up(newexpr, f)
# sin/cos and sinh/cosh ratios to tan and tanh, respectively
if newexpr.has(HyperbolicFunction):
e, f = hyper_as_trig(newexpr)
newexpr = f(TR2i(e))
if newexpr.has(TrigonometricFunction):
newexpr = TR2i(newexpr)
# can we ever generate an I where there was none previously?
if not (newexpr.has(I) and not expr.has(I)):
expr = newexpr
return expr
#-------------------- the old trigsimp routines ---------------------
def trigsimp_old(expr, **opts):
"""
reduces expression by using known trig identities
Notes
=====
deep:
- Apply trigsimp inside all objects with arguments
recursive:
- Use common subexpression elimination (cse()) and apply
trigsimp recursively (this is quite expensive if the
expression is large)
method:
- Determine the method to use. Valid choices are 'matching' (default),
'groebner', 'combined', 'fu' and 'futrig'. If 'matching', simplify the
expression recursively by pattern matching. If 'groebner', apply an
experimental groebner basis algorithm. In this case further options
are forwarded to ``trigsimp_groebner``, please refer to its docstring.
If 'combined', first run the groebner basis algorithm with small
default parameters, then run the 'matching' algorithm. 'fu' runs the
collection of trigonometric transformations described by Fu, et al.
(see the `fu` docstring) while `futrig` runs a subset of Fu-transforms
that mimic the behavior of `trigsimp`.
compare:
- show input and output from `trigsimp` and `futrig` when different,
but returns the `trigsimp` value.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import trigsimp, sin, cos, log, cosh, sinh, tan, cot
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> e = 2*sin(x)**2 + 2*cos(x)**2
>>> trigsimp(e, old=True)
2
>>> trigsimp(log(e), old=True)
log(2*sin(x)**2 + 2*cos(x)**2)
>>> trigsimp(log(e), deep=True, old=True)
log(2)
Using `method="groebner"` (or `"combined"`) can sometimes lead to a lot
more simplification:
>>> e = (-sin(x) + 1)/cos(x) + cos(x)/(-sin(x) + 1)
>>> trigsimp(e, old=True)
(-sin(x) + 1)/cos(x) + cos(x)/(-sin(x) + 1)
>>> trigsimp(e, method="groebner", old=True)
2/cos(x)
>>> trigsimp(1/cot(x)**2, compare=True, old=True)
futrig: tan(x)**2
cot(x)**(-2)
"""
old = expr
first = opts.pop('first', True)
if first:
if not expr.has(*_trigs):
return expr
trigsyms = set().union(*[t.free_symbols for t in expr.atoms(*_trigs)])
if len(trigsyms) > 1:
d = separatevars(expr)
if d.is_Mul:
d = separatevars(d, dict=True) or d
if isinstance(d, dict):
expr = 1
for k, v in d.items():
# remove hollow factoring
was = v
v = expand_mul(v)
opts['first'] = False
vnew = trigsimp(v, **opts)
if vnew == v:
vnew = was
expr *= vnew
old = expr
else:
if d.is_Add:
for s in trigsyms:
r, e = expr.as_independent(s)
if r:
opts['first'] = False
expr = r + trigsimp(e, **opts)
if not expr.is_Add:
break
old = expr
recursive = opts.pop('recursive', False)
deep = opts.pop('deep', False)
method = opts.pop('method', 'matching')
def groebnersimp(ex, deep, **opts):
def traverse(e):
if e.is_Atom:
return e
args = [traverse(x) for x in e.args]
if e.is_Function or e.is_Pow:
args = [trigsimp_groebner(x, **opts) for x in args]
return e.func(*args)
if deep:
ex = traverse(ex)
return trigsimp_groebner(ex, **opts)
trigsimpfunc = {
'matching': (lambda x, d: _trigsimp(x, d)),
'groebner': (lambda x, d: groebnersimp(x, d, **opts)),
'combined': (lambda x, d: _trigsimp(groebnersimp(x,
d, polynomial=True, hints=[2, tan]),
d))
}[method]
if recursive:
w, g = cse(expr)
g = trigsimpfunc(g[0], deep)
for sub in reversed(w):
g = g.subs(sub[0], sub[1])
g = trigsimpfunc(g, deep)
result = g
else:
result = trigsimpfunc(expr, deep)
if opts.get('compare', False):
f = futrig(old)
if f != result:
print('\tfutrig:', f)
return result
def _dotrig(a, b):
"""Helper to tell whether ``a`` and ``b`` have the same sorts
of symbols in them -- no need to test hyperbolic patterns against
expressions that have no hyperbolics in them."""
return a.func == b.func and (
a.has(TrigonometricFunction) and b.has(TrigonometricFunction) or
a.has(HyperbolicFunction) and b.has(HyperbolicFunction))
_trigpat = None
def _trigpats():
global _trigpat
a, b, c = symbols('a b c', cls=Wild)
d = Wild('d', commutative=False)
# for the simplifications like sinh/cosh -> tanh:
# DO NOT REORDER THE FIRST 14 since these are assumed to be in this
# order in _match_div_rewrite.
matchers_division = (
(a*sin(b)**c/cos(b)**c, a*tan(b)**c, sin(b), cos(b)),
(a*tan(b)**c*cos(b)**c, a*sin(b)**c, sin(b), cos(b)),
(a*cot(b)**c*sin(b)**c, a*cos(b)**c, sin(b), cos(b)),
(a*tan(b)**c/sin(b)**c, a/cos(b)**c, sin(b), cos(b)),
(a*cot(b)**c/cos(b)**c, a/sin(b)**c, sin(b), cos(b)),
(a*cot(b)**c*tan(b)**c, a, sin(b), cos(b)),
(a*(cos(b) + 1)**c*(cos(b) - 1)**c,
a*(-sin(b)**2)**c, cos(b) + 1, cos(b) - 1),
(a*(sin(b) + 1)**c*(sin(b) - 1)**c,
a*(-cos(b)**2)**c, sin(b) + 1, sin(b) - 1),
(a*sinh(b)**c/cosh(b)**c, a*tanh(b)**c, S.One, S.One),
(a*tanh(b)**c*cosh(b)**c, a*sinh(b)**c, S.One, S.One),
(a*coth(b)**c*sinh(b)**c, a*cosh(b)**c, S.One, S.One),
(a*tanh(b)**c/sinh(b)**c, a/cosh(b)**c, S.One, S.One),
(a*coth(b)**c/cosh(b)**c, a/sinh(b)**c, S.One, S.One),
(a*coth(b)**c*tanh(b)**c, a, S.One, S.One),
(c*(tanh(a) + tanh(b))/(1 + tanh(a)*tanh(b)),
tanh(a + b)*c, S.One, S.One),
)
matchers_add = (
(c*sin(a)*cos(b) + c*cos(a)*sin(b) + d, sin(a + b)*c + d),
(c*cos(a)*cos(b) - c*sin(a)*sin(b) + d, cos(a + b)*c + d),
(c*sin(a)*cos(b) - c*cos(a)*sin(b) + d, sin(a - b)*c + d),
(c*cos(a)*cos(b) + c*sin(a)*sin(b) + d, cos(a - b)*c + d),
(c*sinh(a)*cosh(b) + c*sinh(b)*cosh(a) + d, sinh(a + b)*c + d),
(c*cosh(a)*cosh(b) + c*sinh(a)*sinh(b) + d, cosh(a + b)*c + d),
)
# for cos(x)**2 + sin(x)**2 -> 1
matchers_identity = (
(a*sin(b)**2, a - a*cos(b)**2),
(a*tan(b)**2, a*(1/cos(b))**2 - a),
(a*cot(b)**2, a*(1/sin(b))**2 - a),
(a*sin(b + c), a*(sin(b)*cos(c) + sin(c)*cos(b))),
(a*cos(b + c), a*(cos(b)*cos(c) - sin(b)*sin(c))),
(a*tan(b + c), a*((tan(b) + tan(c))/(1 - tan(b)*tan(c)))),
(a*sinh(b)**2, a*cosh(b)**2 - a),
(a*tanh(b)**2, a - a*(1/cosh(b))**2),
(a*coth(b)**2, a + a*(1/sinh(b))**2),
(a*sinh(b + c), a*(sinh(b)*cosh(c) + sinh(c)*cosh(b))),
(a*cosh(b + c), a*(cosh(b)*cosh(c) + sinh(b)*sinh(c))),
(a*tanh(b + c), a*((tanh(b) + tanh(c))/(1 + tanh(b)*tanh(c)))),
)
# Reduce any lingering artifacts, such as sin(x)**2 changing
# to 1-cos(x)**2 when sin(x)**2 was "simpler"
artifacts = (
(a - a*cos(b)**2 + c, a*sin(b)**2 + c, cos),
(a - a*(1/cos(b))**2 + c, -a*tan(b)**2 + c, cos),
(a - a*(1/sin(b))**2 + c, -a*cot(b)**2 + c, sin),
(a - a*cosh(b)**2 + c, -a*sinh(b)**2 + c, cosh),
(a - a*(1/cosh(b))**2 + c, a*tanh(b)**2 + c, cosh),
(a + a*(1/sinh(b))**2 + c, a*coth(b)**2 + c, sinh),
# same as above but with noncommutative prefactor
(a*d - a*d*cos(b)**2 + c, a*d*sin(b)**2 + c, cos),
(a*d - a*d*(1/cos(b))**2 + c, -a*d*tan(b)**2 + c, cos),
(a*d - a*d*(1/sin(b))**2 + c, -a*d*cot(b)**2 + c, sin),
(a*d - a*d*cosh(b)**2 + c, -a*d*sinh(b)**2 + c, cosh),
(a*d - a*d*(1/cosh(b))**2 + c, a*d*tanh(b)**2 + c, cosh),
(a*d + a*d*(1/sinh(b))**2 + c, a*d*coth(b)**2 + c, sinh),
)
_trigpat = (a, b, c, d, matchers_division, matchers_add,
matchers_identity, artifacts)
return _trigpat
def _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, f, g, rexp, h, rexph):
"""Helper for _match_div_rewrite.
Replace f(b_)**c_*g(b_)**(rexp(c_)) with h(b)**rexph(c) if f(b_)
and g(b_) are both positive or if c_ is an integer.
"""
# assert expr.is_Mul and expr.is_commutative and f != g
fargs = defaultdict(int)
gargs = defaultdict(int)
args = []
for x in expr.args:
if x.is_Pow or x.func in (f, g):
b, e = x.as_base_exp()
if b.is_positive or e.is_integer:
if b.func == f:
fargs[b.args[0]] += e
continue
elif b.func == g:
gargs[b.args[0]] += e
continue
args.append(x)
common = set(fargs) & set(gargs)
hit = False
while common:
key = common.pop()
fe = fargs.pop(key)
ge = gargs.pop(key)
if fe == rexp(ge):
args.append(h(key)**rexph(fe))
hit = True
else:
fargs[key] = fe
gargs[key] = ge
if not hit:
return expr
while fargs:
key, e = fargs.popitem()
args.append(f(key)**e)
while gargs:
key, e = gargs.popitem()
args.append(g(key)**e)
return Mul(*args)
_idn = lambda x: x
_midn = lambda x: -x
_one = lambda x: S.One
def _match_div_rewrite(expr, i):
"""helper for __trigsimp"""
if i == 0:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, sin, cos,
_midn, tan, _idn)
elif i == 1:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, tan, cos,
_idn, sin, _idn)
elif i == 2:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, cot, sin,
_idn, cos, _idn)
elif i == 3:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, tan, sin,
_midn, cos, _midn)
elif i == 4:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, cot, cos,
_midn, sin, _midn)
elif i == 5:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, cot, tan,
_idn, _one, _idn)
# i in (6, 7) is skipped
elif i == 8:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, sinh, cosh,
_midn, tanh, _idn)
elif i == 9:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, tanh, cosh,
_idn, sinh, _idn)
elif i == 10:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, coth, sinh,
_idn, cosh, _idn)
elif i == 11:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, tanh, sinh,
_midn, cosh, _midn)
elif i == 12:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, coth, cosh,
_midn, sinh, _midn)
elif i == 13:
expr = _replace_mul_fpowxgpow(expr, coth, tanh,
_idn, _one, _idn)
else:
return None
return expr
def _trigsimp(expr, deep=False):
# protect the cache from non-trig patterns; we only allow
# trig patterns to enter the cache
if expr.has(*_trigs):
return __trigsimp(expr, deep)
return expr
@cacheit
def __trigsimp(expr, deep=False):
"""recursive helper for trigsimp"""
from sympy.simplify.fu import TR10i
if _trigpat is None:
_trigpats()
a, b, c, d, matchers_division, matchers_add, \
matchers_identity, artifacts = _trigpat
if expr.is_Mul:
# do some simplifications like sin/cos -> tan:
if not expr.is_commutative:
com, nc = expr.args_cnc()
expr = _trigsimp(Mul._from_args(com), deep)*Mul._from_args(nc)
else:
for i, (pattern, simp, ok1, ok2) in enumerate(matchers_division):
if not _dotrig(expr, pattern):
continue
newexpr = _match_div_rewrite(expr, i)
if newexpr is not None:
if newexpr != expr:
expr = newexpr
break
else:
continue
# use SymPy matching instead
res = expr.match(pattern)
if res and res.get(c, 0):
if not res[c].is_integer:
ok = ok1.subs(res)
if not ok.is_positive:
continue
ok = ok2.subs(res)
if not ok.is_positive:
continue
# if "a" contains any of trig or hyperbolic funcs with
# argument "b" then skip the simplification
if any(w.args[0] == res[b] for w in res[a].atoms(
TrigonometricFunction, HyperbolicFunction)):
continue
# simplify and finish:
expr = simp.subs(res)
break # process below
if expr.is_Add:
args = []
for term in expr.args:
if not term.is_commutative:
com, nc = term.args_cnc()
nc = Mul._from_args(nc)
term = Mul._from_args(com)
else:
nc = S.One
term = _trigsimp(term, deep)
for pattern, result in matchers_identity:
res = term.match(pattern)
if res is not None:
term = result.subs(res)
break
args.append(term*nc)
if args != expr.args:
expr = Add(*args)
expr = min(expr, expand(expr), key=count_ops)
if expr.is_Add:
for pattern, result in matchers_add:
if not _dotrig(expr, pattern):
continue
expr = TR10i(expr)
if expr.has(HyperbolicFunction):
res = expr.match(pattern)
# if "d" contains any trig or hyperbolic funcs with
# argument "a" or "b" then skip the simplification;
# this isn't perfect -- see tests
if res is None or not (a in res and b in res) or any(
w.args[0] in (res[a], res[b]) for w in res[d].atoms(
TrigonometricFunction, HyperbolicFunction)):
continue
expr = result.subs(res)
break
# Reduce any lingering artifacts, such as sin(x)**2 changing
# to 1 - cos(x)**2 when sin(x)**2 was "simpler"
for pattern, result, ex in artifacts:
if not _dotrig(expr, pattern):
continue
# Substitute a new wild that excludes some function(s)
# to help influence a better match. This is because
# sometimes, for example, 'a' would match sec(x)**2
a_t = Wild('a', exclude=[ex])
pattern = pattern.subs(a, a_t)
result = result.subs(a, a_t)
m = expr.match(pattern)
was = None
while m and was != expr:
was = expr
if m[a_t] == 0 or \
-m[a_t] in m[c].args or m[a_t] + m[c] == 0:
break
if d in m and m[a_t]*m[d] + m[c] == 0:
break
expr = result.subs(m)
m = expr.match(pattern)
m.setdefault(c, S.Zero)
elif expr.is_Mul or expr.is_Pow or deep and expr.args:
expr = expr.func(*[_trigsimp(a, deep) for a in expr.args])
try:
if not expr.has(*_trigs):
raise TypeError
e = expr.atoms(exp)
new = expr.rewrite(exp, deep=deep)
if new == e:
raise TypeError
fnew = factor(new)
if fnew != new:
new = sorted([new, factor(new)], key=count_ops)[0]
# if all exp that were introduced disappeared then accept it
if not (new.atoms(exp) - e):
expr = new
except TypeError:
pass
return expr
#------------------- end of old trigsimp routines --------------------
def futrig(e, **kwargs):
"""Return simplified ``e`` using Fu-like transformations.
This is not the "Fu" algorithm. This is called by default
from ``trigsimp``. By default, hyperbolics subexpressions
will be simplified, but this can be disabled by setting
``hyper=False``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import trigsimp, tan, sinh, tanh
>>> from sympy.simplify.trigsimp import futrig
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> trigsimp(1/tan(x)**2)
tan(x)**(-2)
>>> futrig(sinh(x)/tanh(x))
cosh(x)
"""
from sympy.simplify.fu import hyper_as_trig
from sympy.simplify.simplify import bottom_up
e = sympify(e)
if not isinstance(e, Basic):
return e
if not e.args:
return e
old = e
e = bottom_up(e, lambda x: _futrig(x, **kwargs))
if kwargs.pop('hyper', True) and e.has(HyperbolicFunction):
e, f = hyper_as_trig(e)
e = f(_futrig(e))
if e != old and e.is_Mul and e.args[0].is_Rational:
# redistribute leading coeff on 2-arg Add
e = Mul(*e.as_coeff_Mul())
return e
def _futrig(e, **kwargs):
"""Helper for futrig."""
from sympy.simplify.fu import (
TR1, TR2, TR3, TR2i, TR10, L, TR10i,
TR8, TR6, TR15, TR16, TR111, TR5, TRmorrie, TR11, TR14, TR22,
TR12)
from sympy.core.compatibility import _nodes
if not e.has(TrigonometricFunction):
return e
if e.is_Mul:
coeff, e = e.as_independent(TrigonometricFunction)
else:
coeff = S.One
Lops = lambda x: (L(x), x.count_ops(), _nodes(x), len(x.args), x.is_Add)
trigs = lambda x: x.has(TrigonometricFunction)
tree = [identity,
(
TR3, # canonical angles
TR1, # sec-csc -> cos-sin
TR12, # expand tan of sum
lambda x: _eapply(factor, x, trigs),
TR2, # tan-cot -> sin-cos
[identity, lambda x: _eapply(_mexpand, x, trigs)],
TR2i, # sin-cos ratio -> tan
lambda x: _eapply(lambda i: factor(i.normal()), x, trigs),
TR14, # factored identities
TR5, # sin-pow -> cos_pow
TR10, # sin-cos of sums -> sin-cos prod
TR11, TR6, # reduce double angles and rewrite cos pows
lambda x: _eapply(factor, x, trigs),
TR14, # factored powers of identities
[identity, lambda x: _eapply(_mexpand, x, trigs)],
TR10i, # sin-cos products > sin-cos of sums
TRmorrie,
[identity, TR8], # sin-cos products -> sin-cos of sums
[identity, lambda x: TR2i(TR2(x))], # tan -> sin-cos -> tan
[
lambda x: _eapply(expand_mul, TR5(x), trigs),
lambda x: _eapply(
expand_mul, TR15(x), trigs)], # pos/neg powers of sin
[
lambda x: _eapply(expand_mul, TR6(x), trigs),
lambda x: _eapply(
expand_mul, TR16(x), trigs)], # pos/neg powers of cos
TR111, # tan, sin, cos to neg power -> cot, csc, sec
[identity, TR2i], # sin-cos ratio to tan
[identity, lambda x: _eapply(
expand_mul, TR22(x), trigs)], # tan-cot to sec-csc
TR1, TR2, TR2i,
[identity, lambda x: _eapply(
factor_terms, TR12(x), trigs)], # expand tan of sum
)]
e = greedy(tree, objective=Lops)(e)
return coeff*e
def _is_Expr(e):
"""_eapply helper to tell whether ``e`` and all its args
are Exprs."""
from sympy import Derivative
if isinstance(e, Derivative):
return _is_Expr(e.expr)
if not isinstance(e, Expr):
return False
return all(_is_Expr(i) for i in e.args)
def _eapply(func, e, cond=None):
"""Apply ``func`` to ``e`` if all args are Exprs else only
apply it to those args that *are* Exprs."""
if not isinstance(e, Expr):
return e
if _is_Expr(e) or not e.args:
return func(e)
return e.func(*[
_eapply(func, ei) if (cond is None or cond(ei)) else ei
for ei in e.args])
|
d19cc1ac439635b5b4d1f71c59d137136f48516161a2bf6d6c2f9e5a40b8061b
|
"""
Implementation of the trigsimp algorithm by Fu et al.
The idea behind the ``fu`` algorithm is to use a sequence of rules, applied
in what is heuristically known to be a smart order, to select a simpler
expression that is equivalent to the input.
There are transform rules in which a single rule is applied to the
expression tree. The following are just mnemonic in nature; see the
docstrings for examples.
TR0 - simplify expression
TR1 - sec-csc to cos-sin
TR2 - tan-cot to sin-cos ratio
TR2i - sin-cos ratio to tan
TR3 - angle canonicalization
TR4 - functions at special angles
TR5 - powers of sin to powers of cos
TR6 - powers of cos to powers of sin
TR7 - reduce cos power (increase angle)
TR8 - expand products of sin-cos to sums
TR9 - contract sums of sin-cos to products
TR10 - separate sin-cos arguments
TR10i - collect sin-cos arguments
TR11 - reduce double angles
TR12 - separate tan arguments
TR12i - collect tan arguments
TR13 - expand product of tan-cot
TRmorrie - prod(cos(x*2**i), (i, 0, k - 1)) -> sin(2**k*x)/(2**k*sin(x))
TR14 - factored powers of sin or cos to cos or sin power
TR15 - negative powers of sin to cot power
TR16 - negative powers of cos to tan power
TR22 - tan-cot powers to negative powers of sec-csc functions
TR111 - negative sin-cos-tan powers to csc-sec-cot
There are 4 combination transforms (CTR1 - CTR4) in which a sequence of
transformations are applied and the simplest expression is selected from
a few options.
Finally, there are the 2 rule lists (RL1 and RL2), which apply a
sequence of transformations and combined transformations, and the ``fu``
algorithm itself, which applies rules and rule lists and selects the
best expressions. There is also a function ``L`` which counts the number
of trigonometric functions that appear in the expression.
Other than TR0, re-writing of expressions is not done by the transformations.
e.g. TR10i finds pairs of terms in a sum that are in the form like
``cos(x)*cos(y) + sin(x)*sin(y)``. Such expression are targeted in a bottom-up
traversal of the expression, but no manipulation to make them appear is
attempted. For example,
Set-up for examples below:
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import fu, L, TR9, TR10i, TR11
>>> from sympy import factor, sin, cos, powsimp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z, a
>>> from time import time
>>> eq = cos(x + y)/cos(x)
>>> TR10i(eq.expand(trig=True))
-sin(x)*sin(y)/cos(x) + cos(y)
If the expression is put in "normal" form (with a common denominator) then
the transformation is successful:
>>> TR10i(_.normal())
cos(x + y)/cos(x)
TR11's behavior is similar. It rewrites double angles as smaller angles but
doesn't do any simplification of the result.
>>> TR11(sin(2)**a*cos(1)**(-a), 1)
(2*sin(1)*cos(1))**a*cos(1)**(-a)
>>> powsimp(_)
(2*sin(1))**a
The temptation is to try make these TR rules "smarter" but that should really
be done at a higher level; the TR rules should try maintain the "do one thing
well" principle. There is one exception, however. In TR10i and TR9 terms are
recognized even when they are each multiplied by a common factor:
>>> fu(a*cos(x)*cos(y) + a*sin(x)*sin(y))
a*cos(x - y)
Factoring with ``factor_terms`` is used but it it "JIT"-like, being delayed
until it is deemed necessary. Furthermore, if the factoring does not
help with the simplification, it is not retained, so
``a*cos(x)*cos(y) + a*sin(x)*sin(z)`` does not become the factored
(but unsimplified in the trigonometric sense) expression:
>>> fu(a*cos(x)*cos(y) + a*sin(x)*sin(z))
a*sin(x)*sin(z) + a*cos(x)*cos(y)
In some cases factoring might be a good idea, but the user is left
to make that decision. For example:
>>> expr=((15*sin(2*x) + 19*sin(x + y) + 17*sin(x + z) + 19*cos(x - z) +
... 25)*(20*sin(2*x) + 15*sin(x + y) + sin(y + z) + 14*cos(x - z) +
... 14*cos(y - z))*(9*sin(2*y) + 12*sin(y + z) + 10*cos(x - y) + 2*cos(y -
... z) + 18)).expand(trig=True).expand()
In the expanded state, there are nearly 1000 trig functions:
>>> L(expr)
932
If the expression where factored first, this would take time but the
resulting expression would be transformed very quickly:
>>> def clock(f, n=2):
... t=time(); f(); return round(time()-t, n)
...
>>> clock(lambda: factor(expr)) # doctest: +SKIP
0.86
>>> clock(lambda: TR10i(expr), 3) # doctest: +SKIP
0.016
If the unexpanded expression is used, the transformation takes longer but
not as long as it took to factor it and then transform it:
>>> clock(lambda: TR10i(expr), 2) # doctest: +SKIP
0.28
So neither expansion nor factoring is used in ``TR10i``: if the
expression is already factored (or partially factored) then expansion
with ``trig=True`` would destroy what is already known and take
longer; if the expression is expanded, factoring may take longer than
simply applying the transformation itself.
Although the algorithms should be canonical, always giving the same
result, they may not yield the best result. This, in general, is
the nature of simplification where searching all possible transformation
paths is very expensive. Here is a simple example. There are 6 terms
in the following sum:
>>> expr = (sin(x)**2*cos(y)*cos(z) + sin(x)*sin(y)*cos(x)*cos(z) +
... sin(x)*sin(z)*cos(x)*cos(y) + sin(y)*sin(z)*cos(x)**2 + sin(y)*sin(z) +
... cos(y)*cos(z))
>>> args = expr.args
Serendipitously, fu gives the best result:
>>> fu(expr)
3*cos(y - z)/2 - cos(2*x + y + z)/2
But if different terms were combined, a less-optimal result might be
obtained, requiring some additional work to get better simplification,
but still less than optimal. The following shows an alternative form
of ``expr`` that resists optimal simplification once a given step
is taken since it leads to a dead end:
>>> TR9(-cos(x)**2*cos(y + z) + 3*cos(y - z)/2 +
... cos(y + z)/2 + cos(-2*x + y + z)/4 - cos(2*x + y + z)/4)
sin(2*x)*sin(y + z)/2 - cos(x)**2*cos(y + z) + 3*cos(y - z)/2 + cos(y + z)/2
Here is a smaller expression that exhibits the same behavior:
>>> a = sin(x)*sin(z)*cos(x)*cos(y) + sin(x)*sin(y)*cos(x)*cos(z)
>>> TR10i(a)
sin(x)*sin(y + z)*cos(x)
>>> newa = _
>>> TR10i(expr - a) # this combines two more of the remaining terms
sin(x)**2*cos(y)*cos(z) + sin(y)*sin(z)*cos(x)**2 + cos(y - z)
>>> TR10i(_ + newa) == _ + newa # but now there is no more simplification
True
Without getting lucky or trying all possible pairings of arguments, the
final result may be less than optimal and impossible to find without
better heuristics or brute force trial of all possibilities.
Notes
=====
This work was started by Dimitar Vlahovski at the Technological School
"Electronic systems" (30.11.2011).
References
==========
Fu, Hongguang, Xiuqin Zhong, and Zhenbing Zeng. "Automated and readable
simplification of trigonometric expressions." Mathematical and computer
modelling 44.11 (2006): 1169-1177.
http://rfdz.ph-noe.ac.at/fileadmin/Mathematik_Uploads/ACDCA/DESTIME2006/DES_contribs/Fu/simplification.pdf
http://www.sosmath.com/trig/Trig5/trig5/pdf/pdf.html gives a formula sheet.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy.simplify.simplify import bottom_up
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import (
cos, sin, tan, cot, sec, csc, sqrt, TrigonometricFunction)
from sympy.functions.elementary.hyperbolic import (
cosh, sinh, tanh, coth, sech, csch, HyperbolicFunction)
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import binomial
from sympy.core.compatibility import ordered, range
from sympy.core.expr import Expr
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.power import Pow
from sympy.core.function import expand_mul
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy
from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors, gcd_terms, factor_terms
from sympy.core.basic import S
from sympy.core.numbers import pi, I
from sympy.strategies.tree import greedy
from sympy.strategies.core import identity, debug
from sympy.polys.polytools import factor
from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import perfect_power
from sympy import SYMPY_DEBUG
# ================== Fu-like tools ===========================
def TR0(rv):
"""Simplification of rational polynomials, trying to simplify
the expression, e.g. combine things like 3*x + 2*x, etc....
"""
# although it would be nice to use cancel, it doesn't work
# with noncommutatives
return rv.normal().factor().expand()
def TR1(rv):
"""Replace sec, csc with 1/cos, 1/sin
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR1, sec, csc
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> TR1(2*csc(x) + sec(x))
1/cos(x) + 2/sin(x)
"""
def f(rv):
if isinstance(rv, sec):
a = rv.args[0]
return S.One/cos(a)
elif isinstance(rv, csc):
a = rv.args[0]
return S.One/sin(a)
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR2(rv):
"""Replace tan and cot with sin/cos and cos/sin
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR2
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import tan, cot, sin, cos
>>> TR2(tan(x))
sin(x)/cos(x)
>>> TR2(cot(x))
cos(x)/sin(x)
>>> TR2(tan(tan(x) - sin(x)/cos(x)))
0
"""
def f(rv):
if isinstance(rv, tan):
a = rv.args[0]
return sin(a)/cos(a)
elif isinstance(rv, cot):
a = rv.args[0]
return cos(a)/sin(a)
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR2i(rv, half=False):
"""Converts ratios involving sin and cos as follows::
sin(x)/cos(x) -> tan(x)
sin(x)/(cos(x) + 1) -> tan(x/2) if half=True
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR2i
>>> from sympy.abc import x, a
>>> from sympy import sin, cos
>>> TR2i(sin(x)/cos(x))
tan(x)
Powers of the numerator and denominator are also recognized
>>> TR2i(sin(x)**2/(cos(x) + 1)**2, half=True)
tan(x/2)**2
The transformation does not take place unless assumptions allow
(i.e. the base must be positive or the exponent must be an integer
for both numerator and denominator)
>>> TR2i(sin(x)**a/(cos(x) + 1)**a)
(cos(x) + 1)**(-a)*sin(x)**a
"""
def f(rv):
if not rv.is_Mul:
return rv
n, d = rv.as_numer_denom()
if n.is_Atom or d.is_Atom:
return rv
def ok(k, e):
# initial filtering of factors
return (
(e.is_integer or k.is_positive) and (
k.func in (sin, cos) or (half and
k.is_Add and
len(k.args) >= 2 and
any(any(isinstance(ai, cos) or ai.is_Pow and ai.base is cos
for ai in Mul.make_args(a)) for a in k.args))))
n = n.as_powers_dict()
ndone = [(k, n.pop(k)) for k in list(n.keys()) if not ok(k, n[k])]
if not n:
return rv
d = d.as_powers_dict()
ddone = [(k, d.pop(k)) for k in list(d.keys()) if not ok(k, d[k])]
if not d:
return rv
# factoring if necessary
def factorize(d, ddone):
newk = []
for k in d:
if k.is_Add and len(k.args) > 1:
knew = factor(k) if half else factor_terms(k)
if knew != k:
newk.append((k, knew))
if newk:
for i, (k, knew) in enumerate(newk):
del d[k]
newk[i] = knew
newk = Mul(*newk).as_powers_dict()
for k in newk:
v = d[k] + newk[k]
if ok(k, v):
d[k] = v
else:
ddone.append((k, v))
del newk
factorize(n, ndone)
factorize(d, ddone)
# joining
t = []
for k in n:
if isinstance(k, sin):
a = cos(k.args[0], evaluate=False)
if a in d and d[a] == n[k]:
t.append(tan(k.args[0])**n[k])
n[k] = d[a] = None
elif half:
a1 = 1 + a
if a1 in d and d[a1] == n[k]:
t.append((tan(k.args[0]/2))**n[k])
n[k] = d[a1] = None
elif isinstance(k, cos):
a = sin(k.args[0], evaluate=False)
if a in d and d[a] == n[k]:
t.append(tan(k.args[0])**-n[k])
n[k] = d[a] = None
elif half and k.is_Add and k.args[0] is S.One and \
isinstance(k.args[1], cos):
a = sin(k.args[1].args[0], evaluate=False)
if a in d and d[a] == n[k] and (d[a].is_integer or \
a.is_positive):
t.append(tan(a.args[0]/2)**-n[k])
n[k] = d[a] = None
if t:
rv = Mul(*(t + [b**e for b, e in n.items() if e]))/\
Mul(*[b**e for b, e in d.items() if e])
rv *= Mul(*[b**e for b, e in ndone])/Mul(*[b**e for b, e in ddone])
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR3(rv):
"""Induced formula: example sin(-a) = -sin(a)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR3
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import pi
>>> from sympy import cos
>>> TR3(cos(y - x*(y - x)))
cos(x*(x - y) + y)
>>> cos(pi/2 + x)
-sin(x)
>>> cos(30*pi/2 + x)
-cos(x)
"""
from sympy.simplify.simplify import signsimp
# Negative argument (already automatic for funcs like sin(-x) -> -sin(x)
# but more complicated expressions can use it, too). Also, trig angles
# between pi/4 and pi/2 are not reduced to an angle between 0 and pi/4.
# The following are automatically handled:
# Argument of type: pi/2 +/- angle
# Argument of type: pi +/- angle
# Argument of type : 2k*pi +/- angle
def f(rv):
if not isinstance(rv, TrigonometricFunction):
return rv
rv = rv.func(signsimp(rv.args[0]))
if not isinstance(rv, TrigonometricFunction):
return rv
if (rv.args[0] - S.Pi/4).is_positive is (S.Pi/2 - rv.args[0]).is_positive is True:
fmap = {cos: sin, sin: cos, tan: cot, cot: tan, sec: csc, csc: sec}
rv = fmap[rv.func](S.Pi/2 - rv.args[0])
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR4(rv):
"""Identify values of special angles.
a= 0 pi/6 pi/4 pi/3 pi/2
----------------------------------------------------
cos(a) 0 1/2 sqrt(2)/2 sqrt(3)/2 1
sin(a) 1 sqrt(3)/2 sqrt(2)/2 1/2 0
tan(a) 0 sqt(3)/3 1 sqrt(3) --
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR4
>>> from sympy import pi
>>> from sympy import cos, sin, tan, cot
>>> for s in (0, pi/6, pi/4, pi/3, pi/2):
... print('%s %s %s %s' % (cos(s), sin(s), tan(s), cot(s)))
...
1 0 0 zoo
sqrt(3)/2 1/2 sqrt(3)/3 sqrt(3)
sqrt(2)/2 sqrt(2)/2 1 1
1/2 sqrt(3)/2 sqrt(3) sqrt(3)/3
0 1 zoo 0
"""
# special values at 0, pi/6, pi/4, pi/3, pi/2 already handled
return rv
def _TR56(rv, f, g, h, max, pow):
"""Helper for TR5 and TR6 to replace f**2 with h(g**2)
Options
=======
max : controls size of exponent that can appear on f
e.g. if max=4 then f**4 will be changed to h(g**2)**2.
pow : controls whether the exponent must be a perfect power of 2
e.g. if pow=True (and max >= 6) then f**6 will not be changed
but f**8 will be changed to h(g**2)**4
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import _TR56 as T
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import sin, cos
>>> h = lambda x: 1 - x
>>> T(sin(x)**3, sin, cos, h, 4, False)
sin(x)**3
>>> T(sin(x)**6, sin, cos, h, 6, False)
(-cos(x)**2 + 1)**3
>>> T(sin(x)**6, sin, cos, h, 6, True)
sin(x)**6
>>> T(sin(x)**8, sin, cos, h, 10, True)
(-cos(x)**2 + 1)**4
"""
def _f(rv):
# I'm not sure if this transformation should target all even powers
# or only those expressible as powers of 2. Also, should it only
# make the changes in powers that appear in sums -- making an isolated
# change is not going to allow a simplification as far as I can tell.
if not (rv.is_Pow and rv.base.func == f):
return rv
if (rv.exp < 0) == True:
return rv
if (rv.exp > max) == True:
return rv
if rv.exp == 2:
return h(g(rv.base.args[0])**2)
else:
if rv.exp == 4:
e = 2
elif not pow:
if rv.exp % 2:
return rv
e = rv.exp//2
else:
p = perfect_power(rv.exp)
if not p:
return rv
e = rv.exp//2
return h(g(rv.base.args[0])**2)**e
return bottom_up(rv, _f)
def TR5(rv, max=4, pow=False):
"""Replacement of sin**2 with 1 - cos(x)**2.
See _TR56 docstring for advanced use of ``max`` and ``pow``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR5
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import sin
>>> TR5(sin(x)**2)
-cos(x)**2 + 1
>>> TR5(sin(x)**-2) # unchanged
sin(x)**(-2)
>>> TR5(sin(x)**4)
(-cos(x)**2 + 1)**2
"""
return _TR56(rv, sin, cos, lambda x: 1 - x, max=max, pow=pow)
def TR6(rv, max=4, pow=False):
"""Replacement of cos**2 with 1 - sin(x)**2.
See _TR56 docstring for advanced use of ``max`` and ``pow``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR6
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import cos
>>> TR6(cos(x)**2)
-sin(x)**2 + 1
>>> TR6(cos(x)**-2) #unchanged
cos(x)**(-2)
>>> TR6(cos(x)**4)
(-sin(x)**2 + 1)**2
"""
return _TR56(rv, cos, sin, lambda x: 1 - x, max=max, pow=pow)
def TR7(rv):
"""Lowering the degree of cos(x)**2
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR7
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import cos
>>> TR7(cos(x)**2)
cos(2*x)/2 + 1/2
>>> TR7(cos(x)**2 + 1)
cos(2*x)/2 + 3/2
"""
def f(rv):
if not (rv.is_Pow and rv.base.func == cos and rv.exp == 2):
return rv
return (1 + cos(2*rv.base.args[0]))/2
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR8(rv, first=True):
"""Converting products of ``cos`` and/or ``sin`` to a sum or
difference of ``cos`` and or ``sin`` terms.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR8, TR7
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> TR8(cos(2)*cos(3))
cos(5)/2 + cos(1)/2
>>> TR8(cos(2)*sin(3))
sin(5)/2 + sin(1)/2
>>> TR8(sin(2)*sin(3))
-cos(5)/2 + cos(1)/2
"""
def f(rv):
if not (
rv.is_Mul or
rv.is_Pow and
rv.base.func in (cos, sin) and
(rv.exp.is_integer or rv.base.is_positive)):
return rv
if first:
n, d = [expand_mul(i) for i in rv.as_numer_denom()]
newn = TR8(n, first=False)
newd = TR8(d, first=False)
if newn != n or newd != d:
rv = gcd_terms(newn/newd)
if rv.is_Mul and rv.args[0].is_Rational and \
len(rv.args) == 2 and rv.args[1].is_Add:
rv = Mul(*rv.as_coeff_Mul())
return rv
args = {cos: [], sin: [], None: []}
for a in ordered(Mul.make_args(rv)):
if a.func in (cos, sin):
args[a.func].append(a.args[0])
elif (a.is_Pow and a.exp.is_Integer and a.exp > 0 and \
a.base.func in (cos, sin)):
# XXX this is ok but pathological expression could be handled
# more efficiently as in TRmorrie
args[a.base.func].extend([a.base.args[0]]*a.exp)
else:
args[None].append(a)
c = args[cos]
s = args[sin]
if not (c and s or len(c) > 1 or len(s) > 1):
return rv
args = args[None]
n = min(len(c), len(s))
for i in range(n):
a1 = s.pop()
a2 = c.pop()
args.append((sin(a1 + a2) + sin(a1 - a2))/2)
while len(c) > 1:
a1 = c.pop()
a2 = c.pop()
args.append((cos(a1 + a2) + cos(a1 - a2))/2)
if c:
args.append(cos(c.pop()))
while len(s) > 1:
a1 = s.pop()
a2 = s.pop()
args.append((-cos(a1 + a2) + cos(a1 - a2))/2)
if s:
args.append(sin(s.pop()))
return TR8(expand_mul(Mul(*args)))
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR9(rv):
"""Sum of ``cos`` or ``sin`` terms as a product of ``cos`` or ``sin``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR9
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> TR9(cos(1) + cos(2))
2*cos(1/2)*cos(3/2)
>>> TR9(cos(1) + 2*sin(1) + 2*sin(2))
cos(1) + 4*sin(3/2)*cos(1/2)
If no change is made by TR9, no re-arrangement of the
expression will be made. For example, though factoring
of common term is attempted, if the factored expression
wasn't changed, the original expression will be returned:
>>> TR9(cos(3) + cos(3)*cos(2))
cos(3) + cos(2)*cos(3)
"""
def f(rv):
if not rv.is_Add:
return rv
def do(rv, first=True):
# cos(a)+/-cos(b) can be combined into a product of cosines and
# sin(a)+/-sin(b) can be combined into a product of cosine and
# sine.
#
# If there are more than two args, the pairs which "work" will
# have a gcd extractable and the remaining two terms will have
# the above structure -- all pairs must be checked to find the
# ones that work. args that don't have a common set of symbols
# are skipped since this doesn't lead to a simpler formula and
# also has the arbitrariness of combining, for example, the x
# and y term instead of the y and z term in something like
# cos(x) + cos(y) + cos(z).
if not rv.is_Add:
return rv
args = list(ordered(rv.args))
if len(args) != 2:
hit = False
for i in range(len(args)):
ai = args[i]
if ai is None:
continue
for j in range(i + 1, len(args)):
aj = args[j]
if aj is None:
continue
was = ai + aj
new = do(was)
if new != was:
args[i] = new # update in place
args[j] = None
hit = True
break # go to next i
if hit:
rv = Add(*[_f for _f in args if _f])
if rv.is_Add:
rv = do(rv)
return rv
# two-arg Add
split = trig_split(*args)
if not split:
return rv
gcd, n1, n2, a, b, iscos = split
# application of rule if possible
if iscos:
if n1 == n2:
return gcd*n1*2*cos((a + b)/2)*cos((a - b)/2)
if n1 < 0:
a, b = b, a
return -2*gcd*sin((a + b)/2)*sin((a - b)/2)
else:
if n1 == n2:
return gcd*n1*2*sin((a + b)/2)*cos((a - b)/2)
if n1 < 0:
a, b = b, a
return 2*gcd*cos((a + b)/2)*sin((a - b)/2)
return process_common_addends(rv, do) # DON'T sift by free symbols
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR10(rv, first=True):
"""Separate sums in ``cos`` and ``sin``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR10
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> TR10(cos(a + b))
-sin(a)*sin(b) + cos(a)*cos(b)
>>> TR10(sin(a + b))
sin(a)*cos(b) + sin(b)*cos(a)
>>> TR10(sin(a + b + c))
(-sin(a)*sin(b) + cos(a)*cos(b))*sin(c) + \
(sin(a)*cos(b) + sin(b)*cos(a))*cos(c)
"""
def f(rv):
if not rv.func in (cos, sin):
return rv
f = rv.func
arg = rv.args[0]
if arg.is_Add:
if first:
args = list(ordered(arg.args))
else:
args = list(arg.args)
a = args.pop()
b = Add._from_args(args)
if b.is_Add:
if f == sin:
return sin(a)*TR10(cos(b), first=False) + \
cos(a)*TR10(sin(b), first=False)
else:
return cos(a)*TR10(cos(b), first=False) - \
sin(a)*TR10(sin(b), first=False)
else:
if f == sin:
return sin(a)*cos(b) + cos(a)*sin(b)
else:
return cos(a)*cos(b) - sin(a)*sin(b)
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR10i(rv):
"""Sum of products to function of sum.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR10i
>>> from sympy import cos, sin, pi, Add, Mul, sqrt, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> TR10i(cos(1)*cos(3) + sin(1)*sin(3))
cos(2)
>>> TR10i(cos(1)*sin(3) + sin(1)*cos(3) + cos(3))
cos(3) + sin(4)
>>> TR10i(sqrt(2)*cos(x)*x + sqrt(6)*sin(x)*x)
2*sqrt(2)*x*sin(x + pi/6)
"""
global _ROOT2, _ROOT3, _invROOT3
if _ROOT2 is None:
_roots()
def f(rv):
if not rv.is_Add:
return rv
def do(rv, first=True):
# args which can be expressed as A*(cos(a)*cos(b)+/-sin(a)*sin(b))
# or B*(cos(a)*sin(b)+/-cos(b)*sin(a)) can be combined into
# A*f(a+/-b) where f is either sin or cos.
#
# If there are more than two args, the pairs which "work" will have
# a gcd extractable and the remaining two terms will have the above
# structure -- all pairs must be checked to find the ones that
# work.
if not rv.is_Add:
return rv
args = list(ordered(rv.args))
if len(args) != 2:
hit = False
for i in range(len(args)):
ai = args[i]
if ai is None:
continue
for j in range(i + 1, len(args)):
aj = args[j]
if aj is None:
continue
was = ai + aj
new = do(was)
if new != was:
args[i] = new # update in place
args[j] = None
hit = True
break # go to next i
if hit:
rv = Add(*[_f for _f in args if _f])
if rv.is_Add:
rv = do(rv)
return rv
# two-arg Add
split = trig_split(*args, two=True)
if not split:
return rv
gcd, n1, n2, a, b, same = split
# identify and get c1 to be cos then apply rule if possible
if same: # coscos, sinsin
gcd = n1*gcd
if n1 == n2:
return gcd*cos(a - b)
return gcd*cos(a + b)
else: #cossin, cossin
gcd = n1*gcd
if n1 == n2:
return gcd*sin(a + b)
return gcd*sin(b - a)
rv = process_common_addends(
rv, do, lambda x: tuple(ordered(x.free_symbols)))
# need to check for inducible pairs in ratio of sqrt(3):1 that
# appeared in different lists when sorting by coefficient
while rv.is_Add:
byrad = defaultdict(list)
for a in rv.args:
hit = 0
if a.is_Mul:
for ai in a.args:
if ai.is_Pow and ai.exp is S.Half and \
ai.base.is_Integer:
byrad[ai].append(a)
hit = 1
break
if not hit:
byrad[S.One].append(a)
# no need to check all pairs -- just check for the onees
# that have the right ratio
args = []
for a in byrad:
for b in [_ROOT3*a, _invROOT3]:
if b in byrad:
for i in range(len(byrad[a])):
if byrad[a][i] is None:
continue
for j in range(len(byrad[b])):
if byrad[b][j] is None:
continue
was = Add(byrad[a][i] + byrad[b][j])
new = do(was)
if new != was:
args.append(new)
byrad[a][i] = None
byrad[b][j] = None
break
if args:
rv = Add(*(args + [Add(*[_f for _f in v if _f])
for v in byrad.values()]))
else:
rv = do(rv) # final pass to resolve any new inducible pairs
break
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR11(rv, base=None):
"""Function of double angle to product. The ``base`` argument can be used
to indicate what is the un-doubled argument, e.g. if 3*pi/7 is the base
then cosine and sine functions with argument 6*pi/7 will be replaced.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR11
>>> from sympy import cos, sin, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> TR11(sin(2*x))
2*sin(x)*cos(x)
>>> TR11(cos(2*x))
-sin(x)**2 + cos(x)**2
>>> TR11(sin(4*x))
4*(-sin(x)**2 + cos(x)**2)*sin(x)*cos(x)
>>> TR11(sin(4*x/3))
4*(-sin(x/3)**2 + cos(x/3)**2)*sin(x/3)*cos(x/3)
If the arguments are simply integers, no change is made
unless a base is provided:
>>> TR11(cos(2))
cos(2)
>>> TR11(cos(4), 2)
-sin(2)**2 + cos(2)**2
There is a subtle issue here in that autosimplification will convert
some higher angles to lower angles
>>> cos(6*pi/7) + cos(3*pi/7)
-cos(pi/7) + cos(3*pi/7)
The 6*pi/7 angle is now pi/7 but can be targeted with TR11 by supplying
the 3*pi/7 base:
>>> TR11(_, 3*pi/7)
-sin(3*pi/7)**2 + cos(3*pi/7)**2 + cos(3*pi/7)
"""
def f(rv):
if not rv.func in (cos, sin):
return rv
if base:
f = rv.func
t = f(base*2)
co = S.One
if t.is_Mul:
co, t = t.as_coeff_Mul()
if not t.func in (cos, sin):
return rv
if rv.args[0] == t.args[0]:
c = cos(base)
s = sin(base)
if f is cos:
return (c**2 - s**2)/co
else:
return 2*c*s/co
return rv
elif not rv.args[0].is_Number:
# make a change if the leading coefficient's numerator is
# divisible by 2
c, m = rv.args[0].as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
if c.p % 2 == 0:
arg = c.p//2*m/c.q
c = TR11(cos(arg))
s = TR11(sin(arg))
if rv.func == sin:
rv = 2*s*c
else:
rv = c**2 - s**2
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR12(rv, first=True):
"""Separate sums in ``tan``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR12
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import tan
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR12
>>> TR12(tan(x + y))
(tan(x) + tan(y))/(-tan(x)*tan(y) + 1)
"""
def f(rv):
if not rv.func == tan:
return rv
arg = rv.args[0]
if arg.is_Add:
if first:
args = list(ordered(arg.args))
else:
args = list(arg.args)
a = args.pop()
b = Add._from_args(args)
if b.is_Add:
tb = TR12(tan(b), first=False)
else:
tb = tan(b)
return (tan(a) + tb)/(1 - tan(a)*tb)
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR12i(rv):
"""Combine tan arguments as
(tan(y) + tan(x))/(tan(x)*tan(y) - 1) -> -tan(x + y)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR12i
>>> from sympy import tan
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c
>>> ta, tb, tc = [tan(i) for i in (a, b, c)]
>>> TR12i((ta + tb)/(-ta*tb + 1))
tan(a + b)
>>> TR12i((ta + tb)/(ta*tb - 1))
-tan(a + b)
>>> TR12i((-ta - tb)/(ta*tb - 1))
tan(a + b)
>>> eq = (ta + tb)/(-ta*tb + 1)**2*(-3*ta - 3*tc)/(2*(ta*tc - 1))
>>> TR12i(eq.expand())
-3*tan(a + b)*tan(a + c)/(2*(tan(a) + tan(b) - 1))
"""
from sympy import factor
def f(rv):
if not (rv.is_Add or rv.is_Mul or rv.is_Pow):
return rv
n, d = rv.as_numer_denom()
if not d.args or not n.args:
return rv
dok = {}
def ok(di):
m = as_f_sign_1(di)
if m:
g, f, s = m
if s is S.NegativeOne and f.is_Mul and len(f.args) == 2 and \
all(isinstance(fi, tan) for fi in f.args):
return g, f
d_args = list(Mul.make_args(d))
for i, di in enumerate(d_args):
m = ok(di)
if m:
g, t = m
s = Add(*[_.args[0] for _ in t.args])
dok[s] = S.One
d_args[i] = g
continue
if di.is_Add:
di = factor(di)
if di.is_Mul:
d_args.extend(di.args)
d_args[i] = S.One
elif di.is_Pow and (di.exp.is_integer or di.base.is_positive):
m = ok(di.base)
if m:
g, t = m
s = Add(*[_.args[0] for _ in t.args])
dok[s] = di.exp
d_args[i] = g**di.exp
else:
di = factor(di)
if di.is_Mul:
d_args.extend(di.args)
d_args[i] = S.One
if not dok:
return rv
def ok(ni):
if ni.is_Add and len(ni.args) == 2:
a, b = ni.args
if isinstance(a, tan) and isinstance(b, tan):
return a, b
n_args = list(Mul.make_args(factor_terms(n)))
hit = False
for i, ni in enumerate(n_args):
m = ok(ni)
if not m:
m = ok(-ni)
if m:
n_args[i] = S.NegativeOne
else:
if ni.is_Add:
ni = factor(ni)
if ni.is_Mul:
n_args.extend(ni.args)
n_args[i] = S.One
continue
elif ni.is_Pow and (
ni.exp.is_integer or ni.base.is_positive):
m = ok(ni.base)
if m:
n_args[i] = S.One
else:
ni = factor(ni)
if ni.is_Mul:
n_args.extend(ni.args)
n_args[i] = S.One
continue
else:
continue
else:
n_args[i] = S.One
hit = True
s = Add(*[_.args[0] for _ in m])
ed = dok[s]
newed = ed.extract_additively(S.One)
if newed is not None:
if newed:
dok[s] = newed
else:
dok.pop(s)
n_args[i] *= -tan(s)
if hit:
rv = Mul(*n_args)/Mul(*d_args)/Mul(*[(Add(*[
tan(a) for a in i.args]) - 1)**e for i, e in dok.items()])
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR13(rv):
"""Change products of ``tan`` or ``cot``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR13
>>> from sympy import tan, cot, cos
>>> TR13(tan(3)*tan(2))
-tan(2)/tan(5) - tan(3)/tan(5) + 1
>>> TR13(cot(3)*cot(2))
cot(2)*cot(5) + 1 + cot(3)*cot(5)
"""
def f(rv):
if not rv.is_Mul:
return rv
# XXX handle products of powers? or let power-reducing handle it?
args = {tan: [], cot: [], None: []}
for a in ordered(Mul.make_args(rv)):
if a.func in (tan, cot):
args[a.func].append(a.args[0])
else:
args[None].append(a)
t = args[tan]
c = args[cot]
if len(t) < 2 and len(c) < 2:
return rv
args = args[None]
while len(t) > 1:
t1 = t.pop()
t2 = t.pop()
args.append(1 - (tan(t1)/tan(t1 + t2) + tan(t2)/tan(t1 + t2)))
if t:
args.append(tan(t.pop()))
while len(c) > 1:
t1 = c.pop()
t2 = c.pop()
args.append(1 + cot(t1)*cot(t1 + t2) + cot(t2)*cot(t1 + t2))
if c:
args.append(cot(c.pop()))
return Mul(*args)
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TRmorrie(rv):
"""Returns cos(x)*cos(2*x)*...*cos(2**(k-1)*x) -> sin(2**k*x)/(2**k*sin(x))
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TRmorrie, TR8, TR3
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import Mul, cos, pi
>>> TRmorrie(cos(x)*cos(2*x))
sin(4*x)/(4*sin(x))
>>> TRmorrie(7*Mul(*[cos(x) for x in range(10)]))
7*sin(12)*sin(16)*cos(5)*cos(7)*cos(9)/(64*sin(1)*sin(3))
Sometimes autosimplification will cause a power to be
not recognized. e.g. in the following, cos(4*pi/7) automatically
simplifies to -cos(3*pi/7) so only 2 of the 3 terms are
recognized:
>>> TRmorrie(cos(pi/7)*cos(2*pi/7)*cos(4*pi/7))
-sin(3*pi/7)*cos(3*pi/7)/(4*sin(pi/7))
A touch by TR8 resolves the expression to a Rational
>>> TR8(_)
-1/8
In this case, if eq is unsimplified, the answer is obtained
directly:
>>> eq = cos(pi/9)*cos(2*pi/9)*cos(3*pi/9)*cos(4*pi/9)
>>> TRmorrie(eq)
1/16
But if angles are made canonical with TR3 then the answer
is not simplified without further work:
>>> TR3(eq)
sin(pi/18)*cos(pi/9)*cos(2*pi/9)/2
>>> TRmorrie(_)
sin(pi/18)*sin(4*pi/9)/(8*sin(pi/9))
>>> TR8(_)
cos(7*pi/18)/(16*sin(pi/9))
>>> TR3(_)
1/16
The original expression would have resolve to 1/16 directly with TR8,
however:
>>> TR8(eq)
1/16
References
==========
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morrie%27s_law
"""
def f(rv):
if not rv.is_Mul:
return rv
args = defaultdict(list)
coss = {}
other = []
for c in rv.args:
b, e = c.as_base_exp()
if e.is_Integer and isinstance(b, cos):
co, a = b.args[0].as_coeff_Mul()
args[a].append(co)
coss[b] = e
else:
other.append(c)
new = []
for a in args:
c = args[a]
c.sort()
no = []
while c:
k = 0
cc = ci = c[0]
while cc in c:
k += 1
cc *= 2
if k > 1:
newarg = sin(2**k*ci*a)/2**k/sin(ci*a)
# see how many times this can be taken
take = None
ccs = []
for i in range(k):
cc /= 2
key = cos(a*cc, evaluate=False)
ccs.append(cc)
take = min(coss[key], take or coss[key])
# update exponent counts
for i in range(k):
cc = ccs.pop()
key = cos(a*cc, evaluate=False)
coss[key] -= take
if not coss[key]:
c.remove(cc)
new.append(newarg**take)
else:
no.append(c.pop(0))
c[:] = no
if new:
rv = Mul(*(new + other + [
cos(k*a, evaluate=False) for a in args for k in args[a]]))
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR14(rv, first=True):
"""Convert factored powers of sin and cos identities into simpler
expressions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR14
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> TR14((cos(x) - 1)*(cos(x) + 1))
-sin(x)**2
>>> TR14((sin(x) - 1)*(sin(x) + 1))
-cos(x)**2
>>> p1 = (cos(x) + 1)*(cos(x) - 1)
>>> p2 = (cos(y) - 1)*2*(cos(y) + 1)
>>> p3 = (3*(cos(y) - 1))*(3*(cos(y) + 1))
>>> TR14(p1*p2*p3*(x - 1))
-18*(x - 1)*sin(x)**2*sin(y)**4
"""
def f(rv):
if not rv.is_Mul:
return rv
if first:
# sort them by location in numerator and denominator
# so the code below can just deal with positive exponents
n, d = rv.as_numer_denom()
if d is not S.One:
newn = TR14(n, first=False)
newd = TR14(d, first=False)
if newn != n or newd != d:
rv = newn/newd
return rv
other = []
process = []
for a in rv.args:
if a.is_Pow:
b, e = a.as_base_exp()
if not (e.is_integer or b.is_positive):
other.append(a)
continue
a = b
else:
e = S.One
m = as_f_sign_1(a)
if not m or m[1].func not in (cos, sin):
if e is S.One:
other.append(a)
else:
other.append(a**e)
continue
g, f, si = m
process.append((g, e.is_Number, e, f, si, a))
# sort them to get like terms next to each other
process = list(ordered(process))
# keep track of whether there was any change
nother = len(other)
# access keys
keys = (g, t, e, f, si, a) = list(range(6))
while process:
A = process.pop(0)
if process:
B = process[0]
if A[e].is_Number and B[e].is_Number:
# both exponents are numbers
if A[f] == B[f]:
if A[si] != B[si]:
B = process.pop(0)
take = min(A[e], B[e])
# reinsert any remainder
# the B will likely sort after A so check it first
if B[e] != take:
rem = [B[i] for i in keys]
rem[e] -= take
process.insert(0, rem)
elif A[e] != take:
rem = [A[i] for i in keys]
rem[e] -= take
process.insert(0, rem)
if isinstance(A[f], cos):
t = sin
else:
t = cos
other.append((-A[g]*B[g]*t(A[f].args[0])**2)**take)
continue
elif A[e] == B[e]:
# both exponents are equal symbols
if A[f] == B[f]:
if A[si] != B[si]:
B = process.pop(0)
take = A[e]
if isinstance(A[f], cos):
t = sin
else:
t = cos
other.append((-A[g]*B[g]*t(A[f].args[0])**2)**take)
continue
# either we are done or neither condition above applied
other.append(A[a]**A[e])
if len(other) != nother:
rv = Mul(*other)
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR15(rv, max=4, pow=False):
"""Convert sin(x)*-2 to 1 + cot(x)**2.
See _TR56 docstring for advanced use of ``max`` and ``pow``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR15
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> TR15(1 - 1/sin(x)**2)
-cot(x)**2
"""
def f(rv):
if not (isinstance(rv, Pow) and isinstance(rv.base, sin)):
return rv
ia = 1/rv
a = _TR56(ia, sin, cot, lambda x: 1 + x, max=max, pow=pow)
if a != ia:
rv = a
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR16(rv, max=4, pow=False):
"""Convert cos(x)*-2 to 1 + tan(x)**2.
See _TR56 docstring for advanced use of ``max`` and ``pow``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR16
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> TR16(1 - 1/cos(x)**2)
-tan(x)**2
"""
def f(rv):
if not (isinstance(rv, Pow) and isinstance(rv.base, cos)):
return rv
ia = 1/rv
a = _TR56(ia, cos, tan, lambda x: 1 + x, max=max, pow=pow)
if a != ia:
rv = a
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR111(rv):
"""Convert f(x)**-i to g(x)**i where either ``i`` is an integer
or the base is positive and f, g are: tan, cot; sin, csc; or cos, sec.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR111
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import tan
>>> TR111(1 - 1/tan(x)**2)
-cot(x)**2 + 1
"""
def f(rv):
if not (
isinstance(rv, Pow) and
(rv.base.is_positive or rv.exp.is_integer and rv.exp.is_negative)):
return rv
if isinstance(rv.base, tan):
return cot(rv.base.args[0])**-rv.exp
elif isinstance(rv.base, sin):
return csc(rv.base.args[0])**-rv.exp
elif isinstance(rv.base, cos):
return sec(rv.base.args[0])**-rv.exp
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TR22(rv, max=4, pow=False):
"""Convert tan(x)**2 to sec(x)**2 - 1 and cot(x)**2 to csc(x)**2 - 1.
See _TR56 docstring for advanced use of ``max`` and ``pow``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TR22
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import tan, cot
>>> TR22(1 + tan(x)**2)
sec(x)**2
>>> TR22(1 + cot(x)**2)
csc(x)**2
"""
def f(rv):
if not (isinstance(rv, Pow) and rv.base.func in (cot, tan)):
return rv
rv = _TR56(rv, tan, sec, lambda x: x - 1, max=max, pow=pow)
rv = _TR56(rv, cot, csc, lambda x: x - 1, max=max, pow=pow)
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def TRpower(rv):
"""Convert sin(x)**n and cos(x)**n with positive n to sums.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import TRpower
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> TRpower(sin(x)**6)
-15*cos(2*x)/32 + 3*cos(4*x)/16 - cos(6*x)/32 + 5/16
>>> TRpower(sin(x)**3*cos(2*x)**4)
(3*sin(x)/4 - sin(3*x)/4)*(cos(4*x)/2 + cos(8*x)/8 + 3/8)
References
==========
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trigonometric_identities#Power-reduction_formulae
"""
def f(rv):
if not (isinstance(rv, Pow) and isinstance(rv.base, (sin, cos))):
return rv
b, n = rv.as_base_exp()
x = b.args[0]
if n.is_Integer and n.is_positive:
if n.is_odd and isinstance(b, cos):
rv = 2**(1-n)*Add(*[binomial(n, k)*cos((n - 2*k)*x)
for k in range((n + 1)/2)])
elif n.is_odd and isinstance(b, sin):
rv = 2**(1-n)*(-1)**((n-1)/2)*Add(*[binomial(n, k)*
(-1)**k*sin((n - 2*k)*x) for k in range((n + 1)/2)])
elif n.is_even and isinstance(b, cos):
rv = 2**(1-n)*Add(*[binomial(n, k)*cos((n - 2*k)*x)
for k in range(n/2)])
elif n.is_even and isinstance(b, sin):
rv = 2**(1-n)*(-1)**(n/2)*Add(*[binomial(n, k)*
(-1)**k*cos((n - 2*k)*x) for k in range(n/2)])
if n.is_even:
rv += 2**(-n)*binomial(n, n/2)
return rv
return bottom_up(rv, f)
def L(rv):
"""Return count of trigonometric functions in expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import L
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> L(cos(x)+sin(x))
2
"""
return S(rv.count(TrigonometricFunction))
# ============== end of basic Fu-like tools =====================
if SYMPY_DEBUG:
(TR0, TR1, TR2, TR3, TR4, TR5, TR6, TR7, TR8, TR9, TR10, TR11, TR12, TR13,
TR2i, TRmorrie, TR14, TR15, TR16, TR12i, TR111, TR22
)= list(map(debug,
(TR0, TR1, TR2, TR3, TR4, TR5, TR6, TR7, TR8, TR9, TR10, TR11, TR12, TR13,
TR2i, TRmorrie, TR14, TR15, TR16, TR12i, TR111, TR22)))
# tuples are chains -- (f, g) -> lambda x: g(f(x))
# lists are choices -- [f, g] -> lambda x: min(f(x), g(x), key=objective)
CTR1 = [(TR5, TR0), (TR6, TR0), identity]
CTR2 = (TR11, [(TR5, TR0), (TR6, TR0), TR0])
CTR3 = [(TRmorrie, TR8, TR0), (TRmorrie, TR8, TR10i, TR0), identity]
CTR4 = [(TR4, TR10i), identity]
RL1 = (TR4, TR3, TR4, TR12, TR4, TR13, TR4, TR0)
# XXX it's a little unclear how this one is to be implemented
# see Fu paper of reference, page 7. What is the Union symbol referring to?
# The diagram shows all these as one chain of transformations, but the
# text refers to them being applied independently. Also, a break
# if L starts to increase has not been implemented.
RL2 = [
(TR4, TR3, TR10, TR4, TR3, TR11),
(TR5, TR7, TR11, TR4),
(CTR3, CTR1, TR9, CTR2, TR4, TR9, TR9, CTR4),
identity,
]
def fu(rv, measure=lambda x: (L(x), x.count_ops())):
"""Attempt to simplify expression by using transformation rules given
in the algorithm by Fu et al.
:func:`fu` will try to minimize the objective function ``measure``.
By default this first minimizes the number of trig terms and then minimizes
the number of total operations.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import fu
>>> from sympy import cos, sin, tan, pi, S, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, a, b
>>> fu(sin(50)**2 + cos(50)**2 + sin(pi/6))
3/2
>>> fu(sqrt(6)*cos(x) + sqrt(2)*sin(x))
2*sqrt(2)*sin(x + pi/3)
CTR1 example
>>> eq = sin(x)**4 - cos(y)**2 + sin(y)**2 + 2*cos(x)**2
>>> fu(eq)
cos(x)**4 - 2*cos(y)**2 + 2
CTR2 example
>>> fu(S.Half - cos(2*x)/2)
sin(x)**2
CTR3 example
>>> fu(sin(a)*(cos(b) - sin(b)) + cos(a)*(sin(b) + cos(b)))
sqrt(2)*sin(a + b + pi/4)
CTR4 example
>>> fu(sqrt(3)*cos(x)/2 + sin(x)/2)
sin(x + pi/3)
Example 1
>>> fu(1-sin(2*x)**2/4-sin(y)**2-cos(x)**4)
-cos(x)**2 + cos(y)**2
Example 2
>>> fu(cos(4*pi/9))
sin(pi/18)
>>> fu(cos(pi/9)*cos(2*pi/9)*cos(3*pi/9)*cos(4*pi/9))
1/16
Example 3
>>> fu(tan(7*pi/18)+tan(5*pi/18)-sqrt(3)*tan(5*pi/18)*tan(7*pi/18))
-sqrt(3)
Objective function example
>>> fu(sin(x)/cos(x)) # default objective function
tan(x)
>>> fu(sin(x)/cos(x), measure=lambda x: -x.count_ops()) # maximize op count
sin(x)/cos(x)
References
==========
http://rfdz.ph-noe.ac.at/fileadmin/Mathematik_Uploads/ACDCA/
DESTIME2006/DES_contribs/Fu/simplification.pdf
"""
fRL1 = greedy(RL1, measure)
fRL2 = greedy(RL2, measure)
was = rv
rv = sympify(rv)
if not isinstance(rv, Expr):
return rv.func(*[fu(a, measure=measure) for a in rv.args])
rv = TR1(rv)
if rv.has(tan, cot):
rv1 = fRL1(rv)
if (measure(rv1) < measure(rv)):
rv = rv1
if rv.has(tan, cot):
rv = TR2(rv)
if rv.has(sin, cos):
rv1 = fRL2(rv)
rv2 = TR8(TRmorrie(rv1))
rv = min([was, rv, rv1, rv2], key=measure)
return min(TR2i(rv), rv, key=measure)
def process_common_addends(rv, do, key2=None, key1=True):
"""Apply ``do`` to addends of ``rv`` that (if key1=True) share at least
a common absolute value of their coefficient and the value of ``key2`` when
applied to the argument. If ``key1`` is False ``key2`` must be supplied and
will be the only key applied.
"""
# collect by absolute value of coefficient and key2
absc = defaultdict(list)
if key1:
for a in rv.args:
c, a = a.as_coeff_Mul()
if c < 0:
c = -c
a = -a # put the sign on `a`
absc[(c, key2(a) if key2 else 1)].append(a)
elif key2:
for a in rv.args:
absc[(S.One, key2(a))].append(a)
else:
raise ValueError('must have at least one key')
args = []
hit = False
for k in absc:
v = absc[k]
c, _ = k
if len(v) > 1:
e = Add(*v, evaluate=False)
new = do(e)
if new != e:
e = new
hit = True
args.append(c*e)
else:
args.append(c*v[0])
if hit:
rv = Add(*args)
return rv
fufuncs = '''
TR0 TR1 TR2 TR3 TR4 TR5 TR6 TR7 TR8 TR9 TR10 TR10i TR11
TR12 TR13 L TR2i TRmorrie TR12i
TR14 TR15 TR16 TR111 TR22'''.split()
FU = dict(list(zip(fufuncs, list(map(locals().get, fufuncs)))))
def _roots():
global _ROOT2, _ROOT3, _invROOT3
_ROOT2, _ROOT3 = sqrt(2), sqrt(3)
_invROOT3 = 1/_ROOT3
_ROOT2 = None
def trig_split(a, b, two=False):
"""Return the gcd, s1, s2, a1, a2, bool where
If two is False (default) then::
a + b = gcd*(s1*f(a1) + s2*f(a2)) where f = cos if bool else sin
else:
if bool, a + b was +/- cos(a1)*cos(a2) +/- sin(a1)*sin(a2) and equals
n1*gcd*cos(a - b) if n1 == n2 else
n1*gcd*cos(a + b)
else a + b was +/- cos(a1)*sin(a2) +/- sin(a1)*cos(a2) and equals
n1*gcd*sin(a + b) if n1 = n2 else
n1*gcd*sin(b - a)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import trig_split
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy import cos, sin, sqrt
>>> trig_split(cos(x), cos(y))
(1, 1, 1, x, y, True)
>>> trig_split(2*cos(x), -2*cos(y))
(2, 1, -1, x, y, True)
>>> trig_split(cos(x)*sin(y), cos(y)*sin(y))
(sin(y), 1, 1, x, y, True)
>>> trig_split(cos(x), -sqrt(3)*sin(x), two=True)
(2, 1, -1, x, pi/6, False)
>>> trig_split(cos(x), sin(x), two=True)
(sqrt(2), 1, 1, x, pi/4, False)
>>> trig_split(cos(x), -sin(x), two=True)
(sqrt(2), 1, -1, x, pi/4, False)
>>> trig_split(sqrt(2)*cos(x), -sqrt(6)*sin(x), two=True)
(2*sqrt(2), 1, -1, x, pi/6, False)
>>> trig_split(-sqrt(6)*cos(x), -sqrt(2)*sin(x), two=True)
(-2*sqrt(2), 1, 1, x, pi/3, False)
>>> trig_split(cos(x)/sqrt(6), sin(x)/sqrt(2), two=True)
(sqrt(6)/3, 1, 1, x, pi/6, False)
>>> trig_split(-sqrt(6)*cos(x)*sin(y), -sqrt(2)*sin(x)*sin(y), two=True)
(-2*sqrt(2)*sin(y), 1, 1, x, pi/3, False)
>>> trig_split(cos(x), sin(x))
>>> trig_split(cos(x), sin(z))
>>> trig_split(2*cos(x), -sin(x))
>>> trig_split(cos(x), -sqrt(3)*sin(x))
>>> trig_split(cos(x)*cos(y), sin(x)*sin(z))
>>> trig_split(cos(x)*cos(y), sin(x)*sin(y))
>>> trig_split(-sqrt(6)*cos(x), sqrt(2)*sin(x)*sin(y), two=True)
"""
global _ROOT2, _ROOT3, _invROOT3
if _ROOT2 is None:
_roots()
a, b = [Factors(i) for i in (a, b)]
ua, ub = a.normal(b)
gcd = a.gcd(b).as_expr()
n1 = n2 = 1
if S.NegativeOne in ua.factors:
ua = ua.quo(S.NegativeOne)
n1 = -n1
elif S.NegativeOne in ub.factors:
ub = ub.quo(S.NegativeOne)
n2 = -n2
a, b = [i.as_expr() for i in (ua, ub)]
def pow_cos_sin(a, two):
"""Return ``a`` as a tuple (r, c, s) such that
``a = (r or 1)*(c or 1)*(s or 1)``.
Three arguments are returned (radical, c-factor, s-factor) as
long as the conditions set by ``two`` are met; otherwise None is
returned. If ``two`` is True there will be one or two non-None
values in the tuple: c and s or c and r or s and r or s or c with c
being a cosine function (if possible) else a sine, and s being a sine
function (if possible) else oosine. If ``two`` is False then there
will only be a c or s term in the tuple.
``two`` also require that either two cos and/or sin be present (with
the condition that if the functions are the same the arguments are
different or vice versa) or that a single cosine or a single sine
be present with an optional radical.
If the above conditions dictated by ``two`` are not met then None
is returned.
"""
c = s = None
co = S.One
if a.is_Mul:
co, a = a.as_coeff_Mul()
if len(a.args) > 2 or not two:
return None
if a.is_Mul:
args = list(a.args)
else:
args = [a]
a = args.pop(0)
if isinstance(a, cos):
c = a
elif isinstance(a, sin):
s = a
elif a.is_Pow and a.exp is S.Half: # autoeval doesn't allow -1/2
co *= a
else:
return None
if args:
b = args[0]
if isinstance(b, cos):
if c:
s = b
else:
c = b
elif isinstance(b, sin):
if s:
c = b
else:
s = b
elif b.is_Pow and b.exp is S.Half:
co *= b
else:
return None
return co if co is not S.One else None, c, s
elif isinstance(a, cos):
c = a
elif isinstance(a, sin):
s = a
if c is None and s is None:
return
co = co if co is not S.One else None
return co, c, s
# get the parts
m = pow_cos_sin(a, two)
if m is None:
return
coa, ca, sa = m
m = pow_cos_sin(b, two)
if m is None:
return
cob, cb, sb = m
# check them
if (not ca) and cb or ca and isinstance(ca, sin):
coa, ca, sa, cob, cb, sb = cob, cb, sb, coa, ca, sa
n1, n2 = n2, n1
if not two: # need cos(x) and cos(y) or sin(x) and sin(y)
c = ca or sa
s = cb or sb
if not isinstance(c, s.func):
return None
return gcd, n1, n2, c.args[0], s.args[0], isinstance(c, cos)
else:
if not coa and not cob:
if (ca and cb and sa and sb):
if isinstance(ca, sa.func) is not isinstance(cb, sb.func):
return
args = {j.args for j in (ca, sa)}
if not all(i.args in args for i in (cb, sb)):
return
return gcd, n1, n2, ca.args[0], sa.args[0], isinstance(ca, sa.func)
if ca and sa or cb and sb or \
two and (ca is None and sa is None or cb is None and sb is None):
return
c = ca or sa
s = cb or sb
if c.args != s.args:
return
if not coa:
coa = S.One
if not cob:
cob = S.One
if coa is cob:
gcd *= _ROOT2
return gcd, n1, n2, c.args[0], pi/4, False
elif coa/cob == _ROOT3:
gcd *= 2*cob
return gcd, n1, n2, c.args[0], pi/3, False
elif coa/cob == _invROOT3:
gcd *= 2*coa
return gcd, n1, n2, c.args[0], pi/6, False
def as_f_sign_1(e):
"""If ``e`` is a sum that can be written as ``g*(a + s)`` where
``s`` is ``+/-1``, return ``g``, ``a``, and ``s`` where ``a`` does
not have a leading negative coefficient.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import as_f_sign_1
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> as_f_sign_1(x + 1)
(1, x, 1)
>>> as_f_sign_1(x - 1)
(1, x, -1)
>>> as_f_sign_1(-x + 1)
(-1, x, -1)
>>> as_f_sign_1(-x - 1)
(-1, x, 1)
>>> as_f_sign_1(2*x + 2)
(2, x, 1)
"""
if not e.is_Add or len(e.args) != 2:
return
# exact match
a, b = e.args
if a in (S.NegativeOne, S.One):
g = S.One
if b.is_Mul and b.args[0].is_Number and b.args[0] < 0:
a, b = -a, -b
g = -g
return g, b, a
# gcd match
a, b = [Factors(i) for i in e.args]
ua, ub = a.normal(b)
gcd = a.gcd(b).as_expr()
if S.NegativeOne in ua.factors:
ua = ua.quo(S.NegativeOne)
n1 = -1
n2 = 1
elif S.NegativeOne in ub.factors:
ub = ub.quo(S.NegativeOne)
n1 = 1
n2 = -1
else:
n1 = n2 = 1
a, b = [i.as_expr() for i in (ua, ub)]
if a is S.One:
a, b = b, a
n1, n2 = n2, n1
if n1 == -1:
gcd = -gcd
n2 = -n2
if b is S.One:
return gcd, a, n2
def _osborne(e, d):
"""Replace all hyperbolic functions with trig functions using
the Osborne rule.
Notes
=====
``d`` is a dummy variable to prevent automatic evaluation
of trigonometric/hyperbolic functions.
References
==========
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperbolic_function
"""
def f(rv):
if not isinstance(rv, HyperbolicFunction):
return rv
a = rv.args[0]
a = a*d if not a.is_Add else Add._from_args([i*d for i in a.args])
if isinstance(rv, sinh):
return I*sin(a)
elif isinstance(rv, cosh):
return cos(a)
elif isinstance(rv, tanh):
return I*tan(a)
elif isinstance(rv, coth):
return cot(a)/I
elif isinstance(rv, sech):
return sec(a)
elif isinstance(rv, csch):
return csc(a)/I
else:
raise NotImplementedError('unhandled %s' % rv.func)
return bottom_up(e, f)
def _osbornei(e, d):
"""Replace all trig functions with hyperbolic functions using
the Osborne rule.
Notes
=====
``d`` is a dummy variable to prevent automatic evaluation
of trigonometric/hyperbolic functions.
References
==========
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperbolic_function
"""
def f(rv):
if not isinstance(rv, TrigonometricFunction):
return rv
const, x = rv.args[0].as_independent(d, as_Add=True)
a = x.xreplace({d: S.One}) + const*I
if isinstance(rv, sin):
return sinh(a)/I
elif isinstance(rv, cos):
return cosh(a)
elif isinstance(rv, tan):
return tanh(a)/I
elif isinstance(rv, cot):
return coth(a)*I
elif isinstance(rv, sec):
return sech(a)
elif isinstance(rv, csc):
return csch(a)*I
else:
raise NotImplementedError('unhandled %s' % rv.func)
return bottom_up(e, f)
def hyper_as_trig(rv):
"""Return an expression containing hyperbolic functions in terms
of trigonometric functions. Any trigonometric functions initially
present are replaced with Dummy symbols and the function to undo
the masking and the conversion back to hyperbolics is also returned. It
should always be true that::
t, f = hyper_as_trig(expr)
expr == f(t)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import hyper_as_trig, fu
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import cosh, sinh
>>> eq = sinh(x)**2 + cosh(x)**2
>>> t, f = hyper_as_trig(eq)
>>> f(fu(t))
cosh(2*x)
References
==========
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperbolic_function
"""
from sympy.simplify.simplify import signsimp
from sympy.simplify.radsimp import collect
# mask off trig functions
trigs = rv.atoms(TrigonometricFunction)
reps = [(t, Dummy()) for t in trigs]
masked = rv.xreplace(dict(reps))
# get inversion substitutions in place
reps = [(v, k) for k, v in reps]
d = Dummy()
return _osborne(masked, d), lambda x: collect(signsimp(
_osbornei(x, d).xreplace(dict(reps))), S.ImaginaryUnit)
def sincos_to_sum(expr):
"""Convert products and powers of sin and cos to sums.
Applied power reduction TRpower first, then expands products, and
converts products to sums with TR8.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.fu import sincos_to_sum
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> sincos_to_sum(16*sin(x)**3*cos(2*x)**2)
7*sin(x) - 5*sin(3*x) + 3*sin(5*x) - sin(7*x)
"""
if not expr.has(cos, sin):
return expr
else:
return TR8(expand_mul(TRpower(expr)))
|
8dd9687703e118ec839aa71ddf217153c1168054559b58dabefa3e5784be5f6f
|
r"""
This module contains the functionality to arrange the nodes of a
diagram on an abstract grid, and then to produce a graphical
representation of the grid.
The currently supported back-ends are Xy-pic [Xypic].
Layout Algorithm
================
This section provides an overview of the algorithms implemented in
:class:`DiagramGrid` to lay out diagrams.
The first step of the algorithm is the removal composite and identity
morphisms which do not have properties in the supplied diagram. The
premises and conclusions of the diagram are then merged.
The generic layout algorithm begins with the construction of the
"skeleton" of the diagram. The skeleton is an undirected graph which
has the objects of the diagram as vertices and has an (undirected)
edge between each pair of objects between which there exist morphisms.
The direction of the morphisms does not matter at this stage. The
skeleton also includes an edge between each pair of vertices `A` and
`C` such that there exists an object `B` which is connected via
a morphism to `A`, and via a morphism to `C`.
The skeleton constructed in this way has the property that every
object is a vertex of a triangle formed by three edges of the
skeleton. This property lies at the base of the generic layout
algorithm.
After the skeleton has been constructed, the algorithm lists all
triangles which can be formed. Note that some triangles will not have
all edges corresponding to morphisms which will actually be drawn.
Triangles which have only one edge or less which will actually be
drawn are immediately discarded.
The list of triangles is sorted according to the number of edges which
correspond to morphisms, then the triangle with the least number of such
edges is selected. One of such edges is picked and the corresponding
objects are placed horizontally, on a grid. This edge is recorded to
be in the fringe. The algorithm then finds a "welding" of a triangle
to the fringe. A welding is an edge in the fringe where a triangle
could be attached. If the algorithm succeeds in finding such a
welding, it adds to the grid that vertex of the triangle which was not
yet included in any edge in the fringe and records the two new edges in
the fringe. This process continues iteratively until all objects of
the diagram has been placed or until no more weldings can be found.
An edge is only removed from the fringe when a welding to this edge
has been found, and there is no room around this edge to place
another vertex.
When no more weldings can be found, but there are still triangles
left, the algorithm searches for a possibility of attaching one of the
remaining triangles to the existing structure by a vertex. If such a
possibility is found, the corresponding edge of the found triangle is
placed in the found space and the iterative process of welding
triangles restarts.
When logical groups are supplied, each of these groups is laid out
independently. Then a diagram is constructed in which groups are
objects and any two logical groups between which there exist morphisms
are connected via a morphism. This diagram is laid out. Finally,
the grid which includes all objects of the initial diagram is
constructed by replacing the cells which contain logical groups with
the corresponding laid out grids, and by correspondingly expanding the
rows and columns.
The sequential layout algorithm begins by constructing the
underlying undirected graph defined by the morphisms obtained after
simplifying premises and conclusions and merging them (see above).
The vertex with the minimal degree is then picked up and depth-first
search is started from it. All objects which are located at distance
`n` from the root in the depth-first search tree, are positioned in
the `n`-th column of the resulting grid. The sequential layout will
therefore attempt to lay the objects out along a line.
References
==========
[Xypic] http://xy-pic.sourceforge.net/
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import Dict, Symbol
from sympy.sets import FiniteSet
from sympy.categories import (CompositeMorphism, IdentityMorphism,
NamedMorphism, Diagram)
from sympy.utilities import default_sort_key
from itertools import chain
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable, range
from sympy.printing import latex
from sympy.utilities.decorator import doctest_depends_on
class _GrowableGrid(object):
"""
Holds a growable grid of objects.
It is possible to append or prepend a row or a column to the grid
using the corresponding methods. Prepending rows or columns has
the effect of changing the coordinates of the already existing
elements.
This class currently represents a naive implementation of the
functionality with little attempt at optimisation.
"""
def __init__(self, width, height):
self._width = width
self._height = height
self._array = [[None for j in range(width)] for i in range(height)]
@property
def width(self):
return self._width
@property
def height(self):
return self._height
def __getitem__(self, i_j):
"""
Returns the element located at in the i-th line and j-th
column.
"""
i, j = i_j
return self._array[i][j]
def __setitem__(self, i_j, newvalue):
"""
Sets the element located at in the i-th line and j-th
column.
"""
i, j = i_j
self._array[i][j] = newvalue
def append_row(self):
"""
Appends an empty row to the grid.
"""
self._height += 1
self._array.append([None for j in range(self._width)])
def append_column(self):
"""
Appends an empty column to the grid.
"""
self._width += 1
for i in range(self._height):
self._array[i].append(None)
def prepend_row(self):
"""
Prepends the grid with an empty row.
"""
self._height += 1
self._array.insert(0, [None for j in range(self._width)])
def prepend_column(self):
"""
Prepends the grid with an empty column.
"""
self._width += 1
for i in range(self._height):
self._array[i].insert(0, None)
class DiagramGrid(object):
r"""
Constructs and holds the fitting of the diagram into a grid.
The mission of this class is to analyse the structure of the
supplied diagram and to place its objects on a grid such that,
when the objects and the morphisms are actually drawn, the diagram
would be "readable", in the sense that there will not be many
intersections of moprhisms. This class does not perform any
actual drawing. It does strive nevertheless to offer sufficient
metadata to draw a diagram.
Consider the following simple diagram.
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism
>>> from sympy.categories import Diagram, DiagramGrid
>>> from sympy import pprint
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g])
The simplest way to have a diagram laid out is the following:
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> (grid.width, grid.height)
(2, 2)
>>> pprint(grid)
A B
<BLANKLINE>
C
Sometimes one sees the diagram as consisting of logical groups.
One can advise ``DiagramGrid`` as to such groups by employing the
``groups`` keyword argument.
Consider the following diagram:
>>> D = Object("D")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> h = NamedMorphism(D, A, "h")
>>> k = NamedMorphism(D, B, "k")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g, h, k])
Lay it out with generic layout:
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> pprint(grid)
A B D
<BLANKLINE>
C
Now, we can group the objects `A` and `D` to have them near one
another:
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram, groups=[[A, D], B, C])
>>> pprint(grid)
B C
<BLANKLINE>
A D
Note how the positioning of the other objects changes.
Further indications can be supplied to the constructor of
:class:`DiagramGrid` using keyword arguments. The currently
supported hints are explained in the following paragraphs.
:class:`DiagramGrid` does not automatically guess which layout
would suit the supplied diagram better. Consider, for example,
the following linear diagram:
>>> E = Object("E")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> h = NamedMorphism(C, D, "h")
>>> i = NamedMorphism(D, E, "i")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g, h, i])
When laid out with the generic layout, it does not get to look
linear:
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> pprint(grid)
A B
<BLANKLINE>
C D
<BLANKLINE>
E
To get it laid out in a line, use ``layout="sequential"``:
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram, layout="sequential")
>>> pprint(grid)
A B C D E
One may sometimes need to transpose the resulting layout. While
this can always be done by hand, :class:`DiagramGrid` provides a
hint for that purpose:
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram, layout="sequential", transpose=True)
>>> pprint(grid)
A
<BLANKLINE>
B
<BLANKLINE>
C
<BLANKLINE>
D
<BLANKLINE>
E
Separate hints can also be provided for each group. For an
example, refer to ``tests/test_drawing.py``, and see the different
ways in which the five lemma [FiveLemma] can be laid out.
See Also
========
Diagram
References
==========
[FiveLemma] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_lemma
"""
@staticmethod
def _simplify_morphisms(morphisms):
"""
Given a dictionary mapping morphisms to their properties,
returns a new dictionary in which there are no morphisms which
do not have properties, and which are compositions of other
morphisms included in the dictionary. Identities are dropped
as well.
"""
newmorphisms = {}
for morphism, props in morphisms.items():
if isinstance(morphism, CompositeMorphism) and not props:
continue
elif isinstance(morphism, IdentityMorphism):
continue
else:
newmorphisms[morphism] = props
return newmorphisms
@staticmethod
def _merge_premises_conclusions(premises, conclusions):
"""
Given two dictionaries of morphisms and their properties,
produces a single dictionary which includes elements from both
dictionaries. If a morphism has some properties in premises
and also in conclusions, the properties in conclusions take
priority.
"""
return dict(chain(premises.items(), conclusions.items()))
@staticmethod
def _juxtapose_edges(edge1, edge2):
"""
If ``edge1`` and ``edge2`` have precisely one common endpoint,
returns an edge which would form a triangle with ``edge1`` and
``edge2``.
If ``edge1`` and ``edge2`` don't have a common endpoint,
returns ``None``.
If ``edge1`` and ``edge`` are the same edge, returns ``None``.
"""
intersection = edge1 & edge2
if len(intersection) != 1:
# The edges either have no common points or are equal.
return None
# The edges have a common endpoint. Extract the different
# endpoints and set up the new edge.
return (edge1 - intersection) | (edge2 - intersection)
@staticmethod
def _add_edge_append(dictionary, edge, elem):
"""
If ``edge`` is not in ``dictionary``, adds ``edge`` to the
dictionary and sets its value to ``[elem]``. Otherwise
appends ``elem`` to the value of existing entry.
Note that edges are undirected, thus `(A, B) = (B, A)`.
"""
if edge in dictionary:
dictionary[edge].append(elem)
else:
dictionary[edge] = [elem]
@staticmethod
def _build_skeleton(morphisms):
"""
Creates a dictionary which maps edges to corresponding
morphisms. Thus for a morphism `f:A\rightarrow B`, the edge
`(A, B)` will be associated with `f`. This function also adds
to the list those edges which are formed by juxtaposition of
two edges already in the list. These new edges are not
associated with any morphism and are only added to assure that
the diagram can be decomposed into triangles.
"""
edges = {}
# Create edges for morphisms.
for morphism in morphisms:
DiagramGrid._add_edge_append(
edges, frozenset([morphism.domain, morphism.codomain]), morphism)
# Create new edges by juxtaposing existing edges.
edges1 = dict(edges)
for w in edges1:
for v in edges1:
wv = DiagramGrid._juxtapose_edges(w, v)
if wv and wv not in edges:
edges[wv] = []
return edges
@staticmethod
def _list_triangles(edges):
"""
Builds the set of triangles formed by the supplied edges. The
triangles are arbitrary and need not be commutative. A
triangle is a set that contains all three of its sides.
"""
triangles = set()
for w in edges:
for v in edges:
wv = DiagramGrid._juxtapose_edges(w, v)
if wv and wv in edges:
triangles.add(frozenset([w, v, wv]))
return triangles
@staticmethod
def _drop_redundant_triangles(triangles, skeleton):
"""
Returns a list which contains only those triangles who have
morphisms associated with at least two edges.
"""
return [tri for tri in triangles
if len([e for e in tri if skeleton[e]]) >= 2]
@staticmethod
def _morphism_length(morphism):
"""
Returns the length of a morphism. The length of a morphism is
the number of components it consists of. A non-composite
morphism is of length 1.
"""
if isinstance(morphism, CompositeMorphism):
return len(morphism.components)
else:
return 1
@staticmethod
def _compute_triangle_min_sizes(triangles, edges):
r"""
Returns a dictionary mapping triangles to their minimal sizes.
The minimal size of a triangle is the sum of maximal lengths
of morphisms associated to the sides of the triangle. The
length of a morphism is the number of components it consists
of. A non-composite morphism is of length 1.
Sorting triangles by this metric attempts to address two
aspects of layout. For triangles with only simple morphisms
in the edge, this assures that triangles with all three edges
visible will get typeset after triangles with less visible
edges, which sometimes minimizes the necessity in diagonal
arrows. For triangles with composite morphisms in the edges,
this assures that objects connected with shorter morphisms
will be laid out first, resulting the visual proximity of
those objects which are connected by shorter morphisms.
"""
triangle_sizes = {}
for triangle in triangles:
size = 0
for e in triangle:
morphisms = edges[e]
if morphisms:
size += max(DiagramGrid._morphism_length(m)
for m in morphisms)
triangle_sizes[triangle] = size
return triangle_sizes
@staticmethod
def _triangle_objects(triangle):
"""
Given a triangle, returns the objects included in it.
"""
# A triangle is a frozenset of three two-element frozensets
# (the edges). This chains the three edges together and
# creates a frozenset from the iterator, thus producing a
# frozenset of objects of the triangle.
return frozenset(chain(*tuple(triangle)))
@staticmethod
def _other_vertex(triangle, edge):
"""
Given a triangle and an edge of it, returns the vertex which
opposes the edge.
"""
# This gets the set of objects of the triangle and then
# subtracts the set of objects employed in ``edge`` to get the
# vertex opposite to ``edge``.
return list(DiagramGrid._triangle_objects(triangle) - set(edge))[0]
@staticmethod
def _empty_point(pt, grid):
"""
Checks if the cell at coordinates ``pt`` is either empty or
out of the bounds of the grid.
"""
if (pt[0] < 0) or (pt[1] < 0) or \
(pt[0] >= grid.height) or (pt[1] >= grid.width):
return True
return grid[pt] is None
@staticmethod
def _put_object(coords, obj, grid, fringe):
"""
Places an object at the coordinate ``cords`` in ``grid``,
growing the grid and updating ``fringe``, if necessary.
Returns (0, 0) if no row or column has been prepended, (1, 0)
if a row was prepended, (0, 1) if a column was prepended and
(1, 1) if both a column and a row were prepended.
"""
(i, j) = coords
offset = (0, 0)
if i == -1:
grid.prepend_row()
i = 0
offset = (1, 0)
for k in range(len(fringe)):
((i1, j1), (i2, j2)) = fringe[k]
fringe[k] = ((i1 + 1, j1), (i2 + 1, j2))
elif i == grid.height:
grid.append_row()
if j == -1:
j = 0
offset = (offset[0], 1)
grid.prepend_column()
for k in range(len(fringe)):
((i1, j1), (i2, j2)) = fringe[k]
fringe[k] = ((i1, j1 + 1), (i2, j2 + 1))
elif j == grid.width:
grid.append_column()
grid[i, j] = obj
return offset
@staticmethod
def _choose_target_cell(pt1, pt2, edge, obj, skeleton, grid):
"""
Given two points, ``pt1`` and ``pt2``, and the welding edge
``edge``, chooses one of the two points to place the opposing
vertex ``obj`` of the triangle. If neither of this points
fits, returns ``None``.
"""
pt1_empty = DiagramGrid._empty_point(pt1, grid)
pt2_empty = DiagramGrid._empty_point(pt2, grid)
if pt1_empty and pt2_empty:
# Both cells are empty. Of these two, choose that cell
# which will assure that a visible edge of the triangle
# will be drawn perpendicularly to the current welding
# edge.
A = grid[edge[0]]
B = grid[edge[1]]
if skeleton.get(frozenset([A, obj])):
return pt1
else:
return pt2
if pt1_empty:
return pt1
elif pt2_empty:
return pt2
else:
return None
@staticmethod
def _find_triangle_to_weld(triangles, fringe, grid):
"""
Finds, if possible, a triangle and an edge in the fringe to
which the triangle could be attached. Returns the tuple
containing the triangle and the index of the corresponding
edge in the fringe.
This function relies on the fact that objects are unique in
the diagram.
"""
for triangle in triangles:
for (a, b) in fringe:
if frozenset([grid[a], grid[b]]) in triangle:
return (triangle, (a, b))
return None
@staticmethod
def _weld_triangle(tri, welding_edge, fringe, grid, skeleton):
"""
If possible, welds the triangle ``tri`` to ``fringe`` and
returns ``False``. If this method encounters a degenerate
situation in the fringe and corrects it such that a restart of
the search is required, it returns ``True`` (which means that
a restart in finding triangle weldings is required).
A degenerate situation is a situation when an edge listed in
the fringe does not belong to the visual boundary of the
diagram.
"""
a, b = welding_edge
target_cell = None
obj = DiagramGrid._other_vertex(tri, (grid[a], grid[b]))
# We now have a triangle and an edge where it can be welded to
# the fringe. Decide where to place the other vertex of the
# triangle and check for degenerate situations en route.
if (abs(a[0] - b[0]) == 1) and (abs(a[1] - b[1]) == 1):
# A diagonal edge.
target_cell = (a[0], b[1])
if grid[target_cell]:
# That cell is already occupied.
target_cell = (b[0], a[1])
if grid[target_cell]:
# Degenerate situation, this edge is not
# on the actual fringe. Correct the
# fringe and go on.
fringe.remove((a, b))
return True
elif a[0] == b[0]:
# A horizontal edge. We first attempt to build the
# triangle in the downward direction.
down_left = a[0] + 1, a[1]
down_right = a[0] + 1, b[1]
target_cell = DiagramGrid._choose_target_cell(
down_left, down_right, (a, b), obj, skeleton, grid)
if not target_cell:
# No room below this edge. Check above.
up_left = a[0] - 1, a[1]
up_right = a[0] - 1, b[1]
target_cell = DiagramGrid._choose_target_cell(
up_left, up_right, (a, b), obj, skeleton, grid)
if not target_cell:
# This edge is not in the fringe, remove it
# and restart.
fringe.remove((a, b))
return True
elif a[1] == b[1]:
# A vertical edge. We will attempt to place the other
# vertex of the triangle to the right of this edge.
right_up = a[0], a[1] + 1
right_down = b[0], a[1] + 1
target_cell = DiagramGrid._choose_target_cell(
right_up, right_down, (a, b), obj, skeleton, grid)
if not target_cell:
# No room to the left. See what's to the right.
left_up = a[0], a[1] - 1
left_down = b[0], a[1] - 1
target_cell = DiagramGrid._choose_target_cell(
left_up, left_down, (a, b), obj, skeleton, grid)
if not target_cell:
# This edge is not in the fringe, remove it
# and restart.
fringe.remove((a, b))
return True
# We now know where to place the other vertex of the
# triangle.
offset = DiagramGrid._put_object(target_cell, obj, grid, fringe)
# Take care of the displacement of coordinates if a row or
# a column was prepended.
target_cell = (target_cell[0] + offset[0],
target_cell[1] + offset[1])
a = (a[0] + offset[0], a[1] + offset[1])
b = (b[0] + offset[0], b[1] + offset[1])
fringe.extend([(a, target_cell), (b, target_cell)])
# No restart is required.
return False
@staticmethod
def _triangle_key(tri, triangle_sizes):
"""
Returns a key for the supplied triangle. It should be the
same independently of the hash randomisation.
"""
objects = sorted(
DiagramGrid._triangle_objects(tri), key=default_sort_key)
return (triangle_sizes[tri], default_sort_key(objects))
@staticmethod
def _pick_root_edge(tri, skeleton):
"""
For a given triangle always picks the same root edge. The
root edge is the edge that will be placed first on the grid.
"""
candidates = [sorted(e, key=default_sort_key)
for e in tri if skeleton[e]]
sorted_candidates = sorted(candidates, key=default_sort_key)
# Don't forget to assure the proper ordering of the vertices
# in this edge.
return tuple(sorted(sorted_candidates[0], key=default_sort_key))
@staticmethod
def _drop_irrelevant_triangles(triangles, placed_objects):
"""
Returns only those triangles whose set of objects is not
completely included in ``placed_objects``.
"""
return [tri for tri in triangles if not placed_objects.issuperset(
DiagramGrid._triangle_objects(tri))]
@staticmethod
def _grow_pseudopod(triangles, fringe, grid, skeleton, placed_objects):
"""
Starting from an object in the existing structure on the grid,
adds an edge to which a triangle from ``triangles`` could be
welded. If this method has found a way to do so, it returns
the object it has just added.
This method should be applied when ``_weld_triangle`` cannot
find weldings any more.
"""
for i in range(grid.height):
for j in range(grid.width):
obj = grid[i, j]
if not obj:
continue
# Here we need to choose a triangle which has only
# ``obj`` in common with the existing structure. The
# situations when this is not possible should be
# handled elsewhere.
def good_triangle(tri):
objs = DiagramGrid._triangle_objects(tri)
return obj in objs and \
placed_objects & (objs - {obj}) == set()
tris = [tri for tri in triangles if good_triangle(tri)]
if not tris:
# This object is not interesting.
continue
# Pick the "simplest" of the triangles which could be
# attached. Remember that the list of triangles is
# sorted according to their "simplicity" (see
# _compute_triangle_min_sizes for the metric).
#
# Note that ``tris`` are sequentially built from
# ``triangles``, so we don't have to worry about hash
# randomisation.
tri = tris[0]
# We have found a triangle which could be attached to
# the existing structure by a vertex.
candidates = sorted([e for e in tri if skeleton[e]],
key=lambda e: FiniteSet(*e).sort_key())
edges = [e for e in candidates if obj in e]
# Note that a meaningful edge (i.e., and edge that is
# associated with a morphism) containing ``obj``
# always exists. That's because all triangles are
# guaranteed to have at least two meaningful edges.
# See _drop_redundant_triangles.
# Get the object at the other end of the edge.
edge = edges[0]
other_obj = tuple(edge - frozenset([obj]))[0]
# Now check for free directions. When checking for
# free directions, prefer the horizontal and vertical
# directions.
neighbours = [(i - 1, j), (i, j + 1), (i + 1, j), (i, j - 1),
(i - 1, j - 1), (i - 1, j + 1), (i + 1, j - 1), (i + 1, j + 1)]
for pt in neighbours:
if DiagramGrid._empty_point(pt, grid):
# We have a found a place to grow the
# pseudopod into.
offset = DiagramGrid._put_object(
pt, other_obj, grid, fringe)
i += offset[0]
j += offset[1]
pt = (pt[0] + offset[0], pt[1] + offset[1])
fringe.append(((i, j), pt))
return other_obj
# This diagram is actually cooler that I can handle. Fail cowardly.
return None
@staticmethod
def _handle_groups(diagram, groups, merged_morphisms, hints):
"""
Given the slightly preprocessed morphisms of the diagram,
produces a grid laid out according to ``groups``.
If a group has hints, it is laid out with those hints only,
without any influence from ``hints``. Otherwise, it is laid
out with ``hints``.
"""
def lay_out_group(group, local_hints):
"""
If ``group`` is a set of objects, uses a ``DiagramGrid``
to lay it out and returns the grid. Otherwise returns the
object (i.e., ``group``). If ``local_hints`` is not
empty, it is supplied to ``DiagramGrid`` as the dictionary
of hints. Otherwise, the ``hints`` argument of
``_handle_groups`` is used.
"""
if isinstance(group, FiniteSet):
# Set up the corresponding object-to-group
# mappings.
for obj in group:
obj_groups[obj] = group
# Lay out the current group.
if local_hints:
groups_grids[group] = DiagramGrid(
diagram.subdiagram_from_objects(group), **local_hints)
else:
groups_grids[group] = DiagramGrid(
diagram.subdiagram_from_objects(group), **hints)
else:
obj_groups[group] = group
def group_to_finiteset(group):
"""
Converts ``group`` to a :class:``FiniteSet`` if it is an
iterable.
"""
if iterable(group):
return FiniteSet(*group)
else:
return group
obj_groups = {}
groups_grids = {}
# We would like to support various containers to represent
# groups. To achieve that, before laying each group out, it
# should be converted to a FiniteSet, because that is what the
# following code expects.
if isinstance(groups, dict) or isinstance(groups, Dict):
finiteset_groups = {}
for group, local_hints in groups.items():
finiteset_group = group_to_finiteset(group)
finiteset_groups[finiteset_group] = local_hints
lay_out_group(group, local_hints)
groups = finiteset_groups
else:
finiteset_groups = []
for group in groups:
finiteset_group = group_to_finiteset(group)
finiteset_groups.append(finiteset_group)
lay_out_group(finiteset_group, None)
groups = finiteset_groups
new_morphisms = []
for morphism in merged_morphisms:
dom = obj_groups[morphism.domain]
cod = obj_groups[morphism.codomain]
# Note that we are not really interested in morphisms
# which do not employ two different groups, because
# these do not influence the layout.
if dom != cod:
# These are essentially unnamed morphisms; they are
# not going to mess in the final layout. By giving
# them the same names, we avoid unnecessary
# duplicates.
new_morphisms.append(NamedMorphism(dom, cod, "dummy"))
# Lay out the new diagram. Since these are dummy morphisms,
# properties and conclusions are irrelevant.
top_grid = DiagramGrid(Diagram(new_morphisms))
# We now have to substitute the groups with the corresponding
# grids, laid out at the beginning of this function. Compute
# the size of each row and column in the grid, so that all
# nested grids fit.
def group_size(group):
"""
For the supplied group (or object, eventually), returns
the size of the cell that will hold this group (object).
"""
if group in groups_grids:
grid = groups_grids[group]
return (grid.height, grid.width)
else:
return (1, 1)
row_heights = [max(group_size(top_grid[i, j])[0]
for j in range(top_grid.width))
for i in range(top_grid.height)]
column_widths = [max(group_size(top_grid[i, j])[1]
for i in range(top_grid.height))
for j in range(top_grid.width)]
grid = _GrowableGrid(sum(column_widths), sum(row_heights))
real_row = 0
real_column = 0
for logical_row in range(top_grid.height):
for logical_column in range(top_grid.width):
obj = top_grid[logical_row, logical_column]
if obj in groups_grids:
# This is a group. Copy the corresponding grid in
# place.
local_grid = groups_grids[obj]
for i in range(local_grid.height):
for j in range(local_grid.width):
grid[real_row + i,
real_column + j] = local_grid[i, j]
else:
# This is an object. Just put it there.
grid[real_row, real_column] = obj
real_column += column_widths[logical_column]
real_column = 0
real_row += row_heights[logical_row]
return grid
@staticmethod
def _generic_layout(diagram, merged_morphisms):
"""
Produces the generic layout for the supplied diagram.
"""
all_objects = set(diagram.objects)
if len(all_objects) == 1:
# There only one object in the diagram, just put in on 1x1
# grid.
grid = _GrowableGrid(1, 1)
grid[0, 0] = tuple(all_objects)[0]
return grid
skeleton = DiagramGrid._build_skeleton(merged_morphisms)
grid = _GrowableGrid(2, 1)
if len(skeleton) == 1:
# This diagram contains only one morphism. Draw it
# horizontally.
objects = sorted(all_objects, key=default_sort_key)
grid[0, 0] = objects[0]
grid[0, 1] = objects[1]
return grid
triangles = DiagramGrid._list_triangles(skeleton)
triangles = DiagramGrid._drop_redundant_triangles(triangles, skeleton)
triangle_sizes = DiagramGrid._compute_triangle_min_sizes(
triangles, skeleton)
triangles = sorted(triangles, key=lambda tri:
DiagramGrid._triangle_key(tri, triangle_sizes))
# Place the first edge on the grid.
root_edge = DiagramGrid._pick_root_edge(triangles[0], skeleton)
grid[0, 0], grid[0, 1] = root_edge
fringe = [((0, 0), (0, 1))]
# Record which objects we now have on the grid.
placed_objects = set(root_edge)
while placed_objects != all_objects:
welding = DiagramGrid._find_triangle_to_weld(
triangles, fringe, grid)
if welding:
(triangle, welding_edge) = welding
restart_required = DiagramGrid._weld_triangle(
triangle, welding_edge, fringe, grid, skeleton)
if restart_required:
continue
placed_objects.update(
DiagramGrid._triangle_objects(triangle))
else:
# No more weldings found. Try to attach triangles by
# vertices.
new_obj = DiagramGrid._grow_pseudopod(
triangles, fringe, grid, skeleton, placed_objects)
if not new_obj:
# No more triangles can be attached, not even by
# the edge. We will set up a new diagram out of
# what has been left, laid it out independently,
# and then attach it to this one.
remaining_objects = all_objects - placed_objects
remaining_diagram = diagram.subdiagram_from_objects(
FiniteSet(*remaining_objects))
remaining_grid = DiagramGrid(remaining_diagram)
# Now, let's glue ``remaining_grid`` to ``grid``.
final_width = grid.width + remaining_grid.width
final_height = max(grid.height, remaining_grid.height)
final_grid = _GrowableGrid(final_width, final_height)
for i in range(grid.width):
for j in range(grid.height):
final_grid[i, j] = grid[i, j]
start_j = grid.width
for i in range(remaining_grid.height):
for j in range(remaining_grid.width):
final_grid[i, start_j + j] = remaining_grid[i, j]
return final_grid
placed_objects.add(new_obj)
triangles = DiagramGrid._drop_irrelevant_triangles(
triangles, placed_objects)
return grid
@staticmethod
def _get_undirected_graph(objects, merged_morphisms):
"""
Given the objects and the relevant morphisms of a diagram,
returns the adjacency lists of the underlying undirected
graph.
"""
adjlists = {}
for obj in objects:
adjlists[obj] = []
for morphism in merged_morphisms:
adjlists[morphism.domain].append(morphism.codomain)
adjlists[morphism.codomain].append(morphism.domain)
# Assure that the objects in the adjacency list are always in
# the same order.
for obj in adjlists.keys():
adjlists[obj].sort(key=default_sort_key)
return adjlists
@staticmethod
def _sequential_layout(diagram, merged_morphisms):
r"""
Lays out the diagram in "sequential" layout. This method
will attempt to produce a result as close to a line as
possible. For linear diagrams, the result will actually be a
line.
"""
objects = diagram.objects
sorted_objects = sorted(objects, key=default_sort_key)
# Set up the adjacency lists of the underlying undirected
# graph of ``merged_morphisms``.
adjlists = DiagramGrid._get_undirected_graph(objects, merged_morphisms)
# Find an object with the minimal degree. This is going to be
# the root.
root = sorted_objects[0]
mindegree = len(adjlists[root])
for obj in sorted_objects:
current_degree = len(adjlists[obj])
if current_degree < mindegree:
root = obj
mindegree = current_degree
grid = _GrowableGrid(1, 1)
grid[0, 0] = root
placed_objects = {root}
def place_objects(pt, placed_objects):
"""
Does depth-first search in the underlying graph of the
diagram and places the objects en route.
"""
# We will start placing new objects from here.
new_pt = (pt[0], pt[1] + 1)
for adjacent_obj in adjlists[grid[pt]]:
if adjacent_obj in placed_objects:
# This object has already been placed.
continue
DiagramGrid._put_object(new_pt, adjacent_obj, grid, [])
placed_objects.add(adjacent_obj)
placed_objects.update(place_objects(new_pt, placed_objects))
new_pt = (new_pt[0] + 1, new_pt[1])
return placed_objects
place_objects((0, 0), placed_objects)
return grid
@staticmethod
def _drop_inessential_morphisms(merged_morphisms):
r"""
Removes those morphisms which should appear in the diagram,
but which have no relevance to object layout.
Currently this removes "loop" morphisms: the non-identity
morphisms with the same domains and codomains.
"""
morphisms = [m for m in merged_morphisms if m.domain != m.codomain]
return morphisms
@staticmethod
def _get_connected_components(objects, merged_morphisms):
"""
Given a container of morphisms, returns a list of connected
components formed by these morphisms. A connected component
is represented by a diagram consisting of the corresponding
morphisms.
"""
component_index = {}
for o in objects:
component_index[o] = None
# Get the underlying undirected graph of the diagram.
adjlist = DiagramGrid._get_undirected_graph(objects, merged_morphisms)
def traverse_component(object, current_index):
"""
Does a depth-first search traversal of the component
containing ``object``.
"""
component_index[object] = current_index
for o in adjlist[object]:
if component_index[o] is None:
traverse_component(o, current_index)
# Traverse all components.
current_index = 0
for o in adjlist:
if component_index[o] is None:
traverse_component(o, current_index)
current_index += 1
# List the objects of the components.
component_objects = [[] for i in range(current_index)]
for o, idx in component_index.items():
component_objects[idx].append(o)
# Finally, list the morphisms belonging to each component.
#
# Note: If some objects are isolated, they will not get any
# morphisms at this stage, and since the layout algorithm
# relies, we are essentially going to lose this object.
# Therefore, check if there are isolated objects and, for each
# of them, provide the trivial identity morphism. It will get
# discarded later, but the object will be there.
component_morphisms = []
for component in component_objects:
current_morphisms = {}
for m in merged_morphisms:
if (m.domain in component) and (m.codomain in component):
current_morphisms[m] = merged_morphisms[m]
if len(component) == 1:
# Let's add an identity morphism, for the sake of
# surely having morphisms in this component.
current_morphisms[IdentityMorphism(component[0])] = FiniteSet()
component_morphisms.append(Diagram(current_morphisms))
return component_morphisms
def __init__(self, diagram, groups=None, **hints):
premises = DiagramGrid._simplify_morphisms(diagram.premises)
conclusions = DiagramGrid._simplify_morphisms(diagram.conclusions)
all_merged_morphisms = DiagramGrid._merge_premises_conclusions(
premises, conclusions)
merged_morphisms = DiagramGrid._drop_inessential_morphisms(
all_merged_morphisms)
# Store the merged morphisms for later use.
self._morphisms = all_merged_morphisms
components = DiagramGrid._get_connected_components(
diagram.objects, all_merged_morphisms)
if groups and (groups != diagram.objects):
# Lay out the diagram according to the groups.
self._grid = DiagramGrid._handle_groups(
diagram, groups, merged_morphisms, hints)
elif len(components) > 1:
# Note that we check for connectedness _before_ checking
# the layout hints because the layout strategies don't
# know how to deal with disconnected diagrams.
# The diagram is disconnected. Lay out the components
# independently.
grids = []
# Sort the components to eventually get the grids arranged
# in a fixed, hash-independent order.
components = sorted(components, key=default_sort_key)
for component in components:
grid = DiagramGrid(component, **hints)
grids.append(grid)
# Throw the grids together, in a line.
total_width = sum(g.width for g in grids)
total_height = max(g.height for g in grids)
grid = _GrowableGrid(total_width, total_height)
start_j = 0
for g in grids:
for i in range(g.height):
for j in range(g.width):
grid[i, start_j + j] = g[i, j]
start_j += g.width
self._grid = grid
elif "layout" in hints:
if hints["layout"] == "sequential":
self._grid = DiagramGrid._sequential_layout(
diagram, merged_morphisms)
else:
self._grid = DiagramGrid._generic_layout(diagram, merged_morphisms)
if hints.get("transpose"):
# Transpose the resulting grid.
grid = _GrowableGrid(self._grid.height, self._grid.width)
for i in range(self._grid.height):
for j in range(self._grid.width):
grid[j, i] = self._grid[i, j]
self._grid = grid
@property
def width(self):
"""
Returns the number of columns in this diagram layout.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism
>>> from sympy.categories import Diagram, DiagramGrid
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g])
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> grid.width
2
"""
return self._grid.width
@property
def height(self):
"""
Returns the number of rows in this diagram layout.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism
>>> from sympy.categories import Diagram, DiagramGrid
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g])
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> grid.height
2
"""
return self._grid.height
def __getitem__(self, i_j):
"""
Returns the object placed in the row ``i`` and column ``j``.
The indices are 0-based.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism
>>> from sympy.categories import Diagram, DiagramGrid
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g])
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> (grid[0, 0], grid[0, 1])
(Object("A"), Object("B"))
>>> (grid[1, 0], grid[1, 1])
(None, Object("C"))
"""
i, j = i_j
return self._grid[i, j]
@property
def morphisms(self):
"""
Returns those morphisms (and their properties) which are
sufficiently meaningful to be drawn.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism
>>> from sympy.categories import Diagram, DiagramGrid
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g])
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> grid.morphisms
{NamedMorphism(Object("A"), Object("B"), "f"): EmptySet(),
NamedMorphism(Object("B"), Object("C"), "g"): EmptySet()}
"""
return self._morphisms
def __str__(self):
"""
Produces a string representation of this class.
This method returns a string representation of the underlying
list of lists of objects.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism
>>> from sympy.categories import Diagram, DiagramGrid
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g])
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> print(grid)
[[Object("A"), Object("B")],
[None, Object("C")]]
"""
return repr(self._grid._array)
class ArrowStringDescription(object):
r"""
Stores the information necessary for producing an Xy-pic
description of an arrow.
The principal goal of this class is to abstract away the string
representation of an arrow and to also provide the functionality
to produce the actual Xy-pic string.
``unit`` sets the unit which will be used to specify the amount of
curving and other distances. ``horizontal_direction`` should be a
string of ``"r"`` or ``"l"`` specifying the horizontal offset of the
target cell of the arrow relatively to the current one.
``vertical_direction`` should specify the vertical offset using a
series of either ``"d"`` or ``"u"``. ``label_position`` should be
either ``"^"``, ``"_"``, or ``"|"`` to specify that the label should
be positioned above the arrow, below the arrow or just over the arrow,
in a break. Note that the notions "above" and "below" are relative
to arrow direction. ``label`` stores the morphism label.
This works as follows (disregard the yet unexplained arguments):
>>> from sympy.categories.diagram_drawing import ArrowStringDescription
>>> astr = ArrowStringDescription(
... unit="mm", curving=None, curving_amount=None,
... looping_start=None, looping_end=None, horizontal_direction="d",
... vertical_direction="r", label_position="_", label="f")
>>> print(str(astr))
\ar[dr]_{f}
``curving`` should be one of ``"^"``, ``"_"`` to specify in which
direction the arrow is going to curve. ``curving_amount`` is a number
describing how many ``unit``'s the morphism is going to curve:
>>> astr = ArrowStringDescription(
... unit="mm", curving="^", curving_amount=12,
... looping_start=None, looping_end=None, horizontal_direction="d",
... vertical_direction="r", label_position="_", label="f")
>>> print(str(astr))
\ar@/^12mm/[dr]_{f}
``looping_start`` and ``looping_end`` are currently only used for
loop morphisms, those which have the same domain and codomain.
These two attributes should store a valid Xy-pic direction and
specify, correspondingly, the direction the arrow gets out into
and the direction the arrow gets back from:
>>> astr = ArrowStringDescription(
... unit="mm", curving=None, curving_amount=None,
... looping_start="u", looping_end="l", horizontal_direction="",
... vertical_direction="", label_position="_", label="f")
>>> print(str(astr))
\ar@(u,l)[]_{f}
``label_displacement`` controls how far the arrow label is from
the ends of the arrow. For example, to position the arrow label
near the arrow head, use ">":
>>> astr = ArrowStringDescription(
... unit="mm", curving="^", curving_amount=12,
... looping_start=None, looping_end=None, horizontal_direction="d",
... vertical_direction="r", label_position="_", label="f")
>>> astr.label_displacement = ">"
>>> print(str(astr))
\ar@/^12mm/[dr]_>{f}
Finally, ``arrow_style`` is used to specify the arrow style. To
get a dashed arrow, for example, use "{-->}" as arrow style:
>>> astr = ArrowStringDescription(
... unit="mm", curving="^", curving_amount=12,
... looping_start=None, looping_end=None, horizontal_direction="d",
... vertical_direction="r", label_position="_", label="f")
>>> astr.arrow_style = "{-->}"
>>> print(str(astr))
\ar@/^12mm/@{-->}[dr]_{f}
Notes
=====
Instances of :class:`ArrowStringDescription` will be constructed
by :class:`XypicDiagramDrawer` and provided for further use in
formatters. The user is not expected to construct instances of
:class:`ArrowStringDescription` themselves.
To be able to properly utilise this class, the reader is encouraged
to checkout the Xy-pic user guide, available at [Xypic].
See Also
========
XypicDiagramDrawer
References
==========
[Xypic] http://xy-pic.sourceforge.net/
"""
def __init__(self, unit, curving, curving_amount, looping_start,
looping_end, horizontal_direction, vertical_direction,
label_position, label):
self.unit = unit
self.curving = curving
self.curving_amount = curving_amount
self.looping_start = looping_start
self.looping_end = looping_end
self.horizontal_direction = horizontal_direction
self.vertical_direction = vertical_direction
self.label_position = label_position
self.label = label
self.label_displacement = ""
self.arrow_style = ""
# This flag shows that the position of the label of this
# morphism was set while typesetting a curved morphism and
# should not be modified later.
self.forced_label_position = False
def __str__(self):
if self.curving:
curving_str = "@/%s%d%s/" % (self.curving, self.curving_amount,
self.unit)
else:
curving_str = ""
if self.looping_start and self.looping_end:
looping_str = "@(%s,%s)" % (self.looping_start, self.looping_end)
else:
looping_str = ""
if self.arrow_style:
style_str = "@" + self.arrow_style
else:
style_str = ""
return "\\ar%s%s%s[%s%s]%s%s{%s}" % \
(curving_str, looping_str, style_str, self.horizontal_direction,
self.vertical_direction, self.label_position,
self.label_displacement, self.label)
class XypicDiagramDrawer(object):
r"""
Given a :class:`Diagram` and the corresponding
:class:`DiagramGrid`, produces the Xy-pic representation of the
diagram.
The most important method in this class is ``draw``. Consider the
following triangle diagram:
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism, Diagram
>>> from sympy.categories import DiagramGrid, XypicDiagramDrawer
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g], {g * f: "unique"})
To draw this diagram, its objects need to be laid out with a
:class:`DiagramGrid`::
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
Finally, the drawing:
>>> drawer = XypicDiagramDrawer()
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid))
\xymatrix{
A \ar[d]_{g\circ f} \ar[r]^{f} & B \ar[ld]^{g} \\
C &
}
For further details see the docstring of this method.
To control the appearance of the arrows, formatters are used. The
dictionary ``arrow_formatters`` maps morphisms to formatter
functions. A formatter is accepts an
:class:`ArrowStringDescription` and is allowed to modify any of
the arrow properties exposed thereby. For example, to have all
morphisms with the property ``unique`` appear as dashed arrows,
and to have their names prepended with `\exists !`, the following
should be done:
>>> def formatter(astr):
... astr.label = "\exists !" + astr.label
... astr.arrow_style = "{-->}"
>>> drawer.arrow_formatters["unique"] = formatter
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid))
\xymatrix{
A \ar@{-->}[d]_{\exists !g\circ f} \ar[r]^{f} & B \ar[ld]^{g} \\
C &
}
To modify the appearance of all arrows in the diagram, set
``default_arrow_formatter``. For example, to place all morphism
labels a little bit farther from the arrow head so that they look
more centred, do as follows:
>>> def default_formatter(astr):
... astr.label_displacement = "(0.45)"
>>> drawer.default_arrow_formatter = default_formatter
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid))
\xymatrix{
A \ar@{-->}[d]_(0.45){\exists !g\circ f} \ar[r]^(0.45){f} & B \ar[ld]^(0.45){g} \\
C &
}
In some diagrams some morphisms are drawn as curved arrows.
Consider the following diagram:
>>> D = Object("D")
>>> E = Object("E")
>>> h = NamedMorphism(D, A, "h")
>>> k = NamedMorphism(D, B, "k")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g, h, k])
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> drawer = XypicDiagramDrawer()
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid))
\xymatrix{
A \ar[r]_{f} & B \ar[d]^{g} & D \ar[l]^{k} \ar@/_3mm/[ll]_{h} \\
& C &
}
To control how far the morphisms are curved by default, one can
use the ``unit`` and ``default_curving_amount`` attributes:
>>> drawer.unit = "cm"
>>> drawer.default_curving_amount = 1
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid))
\xymatrix{
A \ar[r]_{f} & B \ar[d]^{g} & D \ar[l]^{k} \ar@/_1cm/[ll]_{h} \\
& C &
}
In some diagrams, there are multiple curved morphisms between the
same two objects. To control by how much the curving changes
between two such successive morphisms, use
``default_curving_step``:
>>> drawer.default_curving_step = 1
>>> h1 = NamedMorphism(A, D, "h1")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g, h, k, h1])
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid))
\xymatrix{
A \ar[r]_{f} \ar@/^1cm/[rr]^{h_{1}} & B \ar[d]^{g} & D \ar[l]^{k} \ar@/_2cm/[ll]_{h} \\
& C &
}
The default value of ``default_curving_step`` is 4 units.
See Also
========
draw, ArrowStringDescription
"""
def __init__(self):
self.unit = "mm"
self.default_curving_amount = 3
self.default_curving_step = 4
# This dictionary maps properties to the corresponding arrow
# formatters.
self.arrow_formatters = {}
# This is the default arrow formatter which will be applied to
# each arrow independently of its properties.
self.default_arrow_formatter = None
@staticmethod
def _process_loop_morphism(i, j, grid, morphisms_str_info, object_coords):
"""
Produces the information required for constructing the string
representation of a loop morphism. This function is invoked
from ``_process_morphism``.
See Also
========
_process_morphism
"""
curving = ""
label_pos = "^"
looping_start = ""
looping_end = ""
# This is a loop morphism. Count how many morphisms stick
# in each of the four quadrants. Note that straight
# vertical and horizontal morphisms count in two quadrants
# at the same time (i.e., a morphism going up counts both
# in the first and the second quadrants).
# The usual numbering (counterclockwise) of quadrants
# applies.
quadrant = [0, 0, 0, 0]
obj = grid[i, j]
for m, m_str_info in morphisms_str_info.items():
if (m.domain == obj) and (m.codomain == obj):
# That's another loop morphism. Check how it
# loops and mark the corresponding quadrants as
# busy.
(l_s, l_e) = (m_str_info.looping_start, m_str_info.looping_end)
if (l_s, l_e) == ("r", "u"):
quadrant[0] += 1
elif (l_s, l_e) == ("u", "l"):
quadrant[1] += 1
elif (l_s, l_e) == ("l", "d"):
quadrant[2] += 1
elif (l_s, l_e) == ("d", "r"):
quadrant[3] += 1
continue
if m.domain == obj:
(end_i, end_j) = object_coords[m.codomain]
goes_out = True
elif m.codomain == obj:
(end_i, end_j) = object_coords[m.domain]
goes_out = False
else:
continue
d_i = end_i - i
d_j = end_j - j
m_curving = m_str_info.curving
if (d_i != 0) and (d_j != 0):
# This is really a diagonal morphism. Detect the
# quadrant.
if (d_i > 0) and (d_j > 0):
quadrant[0] += 1
elif (d_i > 0) and (d_j < 0):
quadrant[1] += 1
elif (d_i < 0) and (d_j < 0):
quadrant[2] += 1
elif (d_i < 0) and (d_j > 0):
quadrant[3] += 1
elif d_i == 0:
# Knowing where the other end of the morphism is
# and which way it goes, we now have to decide
# which quadrant is now the upper one and which is
# the lower one.
if d_j > 0:
if goes_out:
upper_quadrant = 0
lower_quadrant = 3
else:
upper_quadrant = 3
lower_quadrant = 0
else:
if goes_out:
upper_quadrant = 2
lower_quadrant = 1
else:
upper_quadrant = 1
lower_quadrant = 2
if m_curving:
if m_curving == "^":
quadrant[upper_quadrant] += 1
elif m_curving == "_":
quadrant[lower_quadrant] += 1
else:
# This morphism counts in both upper and lower
# quadrants.
quadrant[upper_quadrant] += 1
quadrant[lower_quadrant] += 1
elif d_j == 0:
# Knowing where the other end of the morphism is
# and which way it goes, we now have to decide
# which quadrant is now the left one and which is
# the right one.
if d_i < 0:
if goes_out:
left_quadrant = 1
right_quadrant = 0
else:
left_quadrant = 0
right_quadrant = 1
else:
if goes_out:
left_quadrant = 3
right_quadrant = 2
else:
left_quadrant = 2
right_quadrant = 3
if m_curving:
if m_curving == "^":
quadrant[left_quadrant] += 1
elif m_curving == "_":
quadrant[right_quadrant] += 1
else:
# This morphism counts in both upper and lower
# quadrants.
quadrant[left_quadrant] += 1
quadrant[right_quadrant] += 1
# Pick the freest quadrant to curve our morphism into.
freest_quadrant = 0
for i in range(4):
if quadrant[i] < quadrant[freest_quadrant]:
freest_quadrant = i
# Now set up proper looping.
(looping_start, looping_end) = [("r", "u"), ("u", "l"), ("l", "d"),
("d", "r")][freest_quadrant]
return (curving, label_pos, looping_start, looping_end)
@staticmethod
def _process_horizontal_morphism(i, j, target_j, grid, morphisms_str_info,
object_coords):
"""
Produces the information required for constructing the string
representation of a horizontal morphism. This function is
invoked from ``_process_morphism``.
See Also
========
_process_morphism
"""
# The arrow is horizontal. Check if it goes from left to
# right (``backwards == False``) or from right to left
# (``backwards == True``).
backwards = False
start = j
end = target_j
if end < start:
(start, end) = (end, start)
backwards = True
# Let's see which objects are there between ``start`` and
# ``end``, and then count how many morphisms stick out
# upwards, and how many stick out downwards.
#
# For example, consider the situation:
#
# B1 C1
# | |
# A--B--C--D
# |
# B2
#
# Between the objects `A` and `D` there are two objects:
# `B` and `C`. Further, there are two morphisms which
# stick out upward (the ones between `B1` and `B` and
# between `C` and `C1`) and one morphism which sticks out
# downward (the one between `B and `B2`).
#
# We need this information to decide how to curve the
# arrow between `A` and `D`. First of all, since there
# are two objects between `A` and `D``, we must curve the
# arrow. Then, we will have it curve downward, because
# there is more space (less morphisms stick out downward
# than upward).
up = []
down = []
straight_horizontal = []
for k in range(start + 1, end):
obj = grid[i, k]
if not obj:
continue
for m in morphisms_str_info:
if m.domain == obj:
(end_i, end_j) = object_coords[m.codomain]
elif m.codomain == obj:
(end_i, end_j) = object_coords[m.domain]
else:
continue
if end_i > i:
down.append(m)
elif end_i < i:
up.append(m)
elif not morphisms_str_info[m].curving:
# This is a straight horizontal morphism,
# because it has no curving.
straight_horizontal.append(m)
if len(up) < len(down):
# More morphisms stick out downward than upward, let's
# curve the morphism up.
if backwards:
curving = "_"
label_pos = "_"
else:
curving = "^"
label_pos = "^"
# Assure that the straight horizontal morphisms have
# their labels on the lower side of the arrow.
for m in straight_horizontal:
(i1, j1) = object_coords[m.domain]
(i2, j2) = object_coords[m.codomain]
m_str_info = morphisms_str_info[m]
if j1 < j2:
m_str_info.label_position = "_"
else:
m_str_info.label_position = "^"
# Don't allow any further modifications of the
# position of this label.
m_str_info.forced_label_position = True
else:
# More morphisms stick out downward than upward, let's
# curve the morphism up.
if backwards:
curving = "^"
label_pos = "^"
else:
curving = "_"
label_pos = "_"
# Assure that the straight horizontal morphisms have
# their labels on the upper side of the arrow.
for m in straight_horizontal:
(i1, j1) = object_coords[m.domain]
(i2, j2) = object_coords[m.codomain]
m_str_info = morphisms_str_info[m]
if j1 < j2:
m_str_info.label_position = "^"
else:
m_str_info.label_position = "_"
# Don't allow any further modifications of the
# position of this label.
m_str_info.forced_label_position = True
return (curving, label_pos)
@staticmethod
def _process_vertical_morphism(i, j, target_i, grid, morphisms_str_info,
object_coords):
"""
Produces the information required for constructing the string
representation of a vertical morphism. This function is
invoked from ``_process_morphism``.
See Also
========
_process_morphism
"""
# This arrow is vertical. Check if it goes from top to
# bottom (``backwards == False``) or from bottom to top
# (``backwards == True``).
backwards = False
start = i
end = target_i
if end < start:
(start, end) = (end, start)
backwards = True
# Let's see which objects are there between ``start`` and
# ``end``, and then count how many morphisms stick out to
# the left, and how many stick out to the right.
#
# See the corresponding comment in the previous branch of
# this if-statement for more details.
left = []
right = []
straight_vertical = []
for k in range(start + 1, end):
obj = grid[k, j]
if not obj:
continue
for m in morphisms_str_info:
if m.domain == obj:
(end_i, end_j) = object_coords[m.codomain]
elif m.codomain == obj:
(end_i, end_j) = object_coords[m.domain]
else:
continue
if end_j > j:
right.append(m)
elif end_j < j:
left.append(m)
elif not morphisms_str_info[m].curving:
# This is a straight vertical morphism,
# because it has no curving.
straight_vertical.append(m)
if len(left) < len(right):
# More morphisms stick out to the left than to the
# right, let's curve the morphism to the right.
if backwards:
curving = "^"
label_pos = "^"
else:
curving = "_"
label_pos = "_"
# Assure that the straight vertical morphisms have
# their labels on the left side of the arrow.
for m in straight_vertical:
(i1, j1) = object_coords[m.domain]
(i2, j2) = object_coords[m.codomain]
m_str_info = morphisms_str_info[m]
if i1 < i2:
m_str_info.label_position = "^"
else:
m_str_info.label_position = "_"
# Don't allow any further modifications of the
# position of this label.
m_str_info.forced_label_position = True
else:
# More morphisms stick out to the right than to the
# left, let's curve the morphism to the left.
if backwards:
curving = "_"
label_pos = "_"
else:
curving = "^"
label_pos = "^"
# Assure that the straight vertical morphisms have
# their labels on the right side of the arrow.
for m in straight_vertical:
(i1, j1) = object_coords[m.domain]
(i2, j2) = object_coords[m.codomain]
m_str_info = morphisms_str_info[m]
if i1 < i2:
m_str_info.label_position = "_"
else:
m_str_info.label_position = "^"
# Don't allow any further modifications of the
# position of this label.
m_str_info.forced_label_position = True
return (curving, label_pos)
def _process_morphism(self, diagram, grid, morphism, object_coords,
morphisms, morphisms_str_info):
"""
Given the required information, produces the string
representation of ``morphism``.
"""
def repeat_string_cond(times, str_gt, str_lt):
"""
If ``times > 0``, repeats ``str_gt`` ``times`` times.
Otherwise, repeats ``str_lt`` ``-times`` times.
"""
if times > 0:
return str_gt * times
else:
return str_lt * (-times)
def count_morphisms_undirected(A, B):
"""
Counts how many processed morphisms there are between the
two supplied objects.
"""
return len([m for m in morphisms_str_info
if set([m.domain, m.codomain]) == set([A, B])])
def count_morphisms_filtered(dom, cod, curving):
"""
Counts the processed morphisms which go out of ``dom``
into ``cod`` with curving ``curving``.
"""
return len([m for m, m_str_info in morphisms_str_info.items()
if (m.domain, m.codomain) == (dom, cod) and
(m_str_info.curving == curving)])
(i, j) = object_coords[morphism.domain]
(target_i, target_j) = object_coords[morphism.codomain]
# We now need to determine the direction of
# the arrow.
delta_i = target_i - i
delta_j = target_j - j
vertical_direction = repeat_string_cond(delta_i,
"d", "u")
horizontal_direction = repeat_string_cond(delta_j,
"r", "l")
curving = ""
label_pos = "^"
looping_start = ""
looping_end = ""
if (delta_i == 0) and (delta_j == 0):
# This is a loop morphism.
(curving, label_pos, looping_start,
looping_end) = XypicDiagramDrawer._process_loop_morphism(
i, j, grid, morphisms_str_info, object_coords)
elif (delta_i == 0) and (abs(j - target_j) > 1):
# This is a horizontal morphism.
(curving, label_pos) = XypicDiagramDrawer._process_horizontal_morphism(
i, j, target_j, grid, morphisms_str_info, object_coords)
elif (delta_j == 0) and (abs(i - target_i) > 1):
# This is a vertical morphism.
(curving, label_pos) = XypicDiagramDrawer._process_vertical_morphism(
i, j, target_i, grid, morphisms_str_info, object_coords)
count = count_morphisms_undirected(morphism.domain, morphism.codomain)
curving_amount = ""
if curving:
# This morphisms should be curved anyway.
curving_amount = self.default_curving_amount + count * \
self.default_curving_step
elif count:
# There are no objects between the domain and codomain of
# the current morphism, but this is not there already are
# some morphisms with the same domain and codomain, so we
# have to curve this one.
curving = "^"
filtered_morphisms = count_morphisms_filtered(
morphism.domain, morphism.codomain, curving)
curving_amount = self.default_curving_amount + \
filtered_morphisms * \
self.default_curving_step
# Let's now get the name of the morphism.
morphism_name = ""
if isinstance(morphism, IdentityMorphism):
morphism_name = "id_{%s}" + latex(obj)
elif isinstance(morphism, CompositeMorphism):
component_names = [latex(Symbol(component.name)) for
component in morphism.components]
component_names.reverse()
morphism_name = "\\circ ".join(component_names)
elif isinstance(morphism, NamedMorphism):
morphism_name = latex(Symbol(morphism.name))
return ArrowStringDescription(
self.unit, curving, curving_amount, looping_start,
looping_end, horizontal_direction, vertical_direction,
label_pos, morphism_name)
@staticmethod
def _check_free_space_horizontal(dom_i, dom_j, cod_j, grid):
"""
For a horizontal morphism, checks whether there is free space
(i.e., space not occupied by any objects) above the morphism
or below it.
"""
if dom_j < cod_j:
(start, end) = (dom_j, cod_j)
backwards = False
else:
(start, end) = (cod_j, dom_j)
backwards = True
# Check for free space above.
if dom_i == 0:
free_up = True
else:
free_up = all([grid[dom_i - 1, j] for j in
range(start, end + 1)])
# Check for free space below.
if dom_i == grid.height - 1:
free_down = True
else:
free_down = all([not grid[dom_i + 1, j] for j in
range(start, end + 1)])
return (free_up, free_down, backwards)
@staticmethod
def _check_free_space_vertical(dom_i, cod_i, dom_j, grid):
"""
For a vertical morphism, checks whether there is free space
(i.e., space not occupied by any objects) to the left of the
morphism or to the right of it.
"""
if dom_i < cod_i:
(start, end) = (dom_i, cod_i)
backwards = False
else:
(start, end) = (cod_i, dom_i)
backwards = True
# Check if there's space to the left.
if dom_j == 0:
free_left = True
else:
free_left = all([not grid[i, dom_j - 1] for i in
range(start, end + 1)])
if dom_j == grid.width - 1:
free_right = True
else:
free_right = all([not grid[i, dom_j + 1] for i in
range(start, end + 1)])
return (free_left, free_right, backwards)
@staticmethod
def _check_free_space_diagonal(dom_i, cod_i, dom_j, cod_j, grid):
"""
For a diagonal morphism, checks whether there is free space
(i.e., space not occupied by any objects) above the morphism
or below it.
"""
def abs_xrange(start, end):
if start < end:
return range(start, end + 1)
else:
return range(end, start + 1)
if dom_i < cod_i and dom_j < cod_j:
# This morphism goes from top-left to
# bottom-right.
(start_i, start_j) = (dom_i, dom_j)
(end_i, end_j) = (cod_i, cod_j)
backwards = False
elif dom_i > cod_i and dom_j > cod_j:
# This morphism goes from bottom-right to
# top-left.
(start_i, start_j) = (cod_i, cod_j)
(end_i, end_j) = (dom_i, dom_j)
backwards = True
if dom_i < cod_i and dom_j > cod_j:
# This morphism goes from top-right to
# bottom-left.
(start_i, start_j) = (dom_i, dom_j)
(end_i, end_j) = (cod_i, cod_j)
backwards = True
elif dom_i > cod_i and dom_j < cod_j:
# This morphism goes from bottom-left to
# top-right.
(start_i, start_j) = (cod_i, cod_j)
(end_i, end_j) = (dom_i, dom_j)
backwards = False
# This is an attempt at a fast and furious strategy to
# decide where there is free space on the two sides of
# a diagonal morphism. For a diagonal morphism
# starting at ``(start_i, start_j)`` and ending at
# ``(end_i, end_j)`` the rectangle defined by these
# two points is considered. The slope of the diagonal
# ``alpha`` is then computed. Then, for every cell
# ``(i, j)`` within the rectangle, the slope
# ``alpha1`` of the line through ``(start_i,
# start_j)`` and ``(i, j)`` is considered. If
# ``alpha1`` is between 0 and ``alpha``, the point
# ``(i, j)`` is above the diagonal, if ``alpha1`` is
# between ``alpha`` and infinity, the point is below
# the diagonal. Also note that, with some beforehand
# precautions, this trick works for both the main and
# the secondary diagonals of the rectangle.
# I have considered the possibility to only follow the
# shorter diagonals immediately above and below the
# main (or secondary) diagonal. This, however,
# wouldn't have resulted in much performance gain or
# better detection of outer edges, because of
# relatively small sizes of diagram grids, while the
# code would have become harder to understand.
alpha = float(end_i - start_i)/(end_j - start_j)
free_up = True
free_down = True
for i in abs_xrange(start_i, end_i):
if not free_up and not free_down:
break
for j in abs_xrange(start_j, end_j):
if not free_up and not free_down:
break
if (i, j) == (start_i, start_j):
continue
if j == start_j:
alpha1 = "inf"
else:
alpha1 = float(i - start_i)/(j - start_j)
if grid[i, j]:
if (alpha1 == "inf") or (abs(alpha1) > abs(alpha)):
free_down = False
elif abs(alpha1) < abs(alpha):
free_up = False
return (free_up, free_down, backwards)
def _push_labels_out(self, morphisms_str_info, grid, object_coords):
"""
For all straight morphisms which form the visual boundary of
the laid out diagram, puts their labels on their outer sides.
"""
def set_label_position(free1, free2, pos1, pos2, backwards, m_str_info):
"""
Given the information about room available to one side and
to the other side of a morphism (``free1`` and ``free2``),
sets the position of the morphism label in such a way that
it is on the freer side. This latter operations involves
choice between ``pos1`` and ``pos2``, taking ``backwards``
in consideration.
Thus this function will do nothing if either both ``free1
== True`` and ``free2 == True`` or both ``free1 == False``
and ``free2 == False``. In either case, choosing one side
over the other presents no advantage.
"""
if backwards:
(pos1, pos2) = (pos2, pos1)
if free1 and not free2:
m_str_info.label_position = pos1
elif free2 and not free1:
m_str_info.label_position = pos2
for m, m_str_info in morphisms_str_info.items():
if m_str_info.curving or m_str_info.forced_label_position:
# This is either a curved morphism, and curved
# morphisms have other magic, or the position of this
# label has already been fixed.
continue
if m.domain == m.codomain:
# This is a loop morphism, their labels, again have a
# different magic.
continue
(dom_i, dom_j) = object_coords[m.domain]
(cod_i, cod_j) = object_coords[m.codomain]
if dom_i == cod_i:
# Horizontal morphism.
(free_up, free_down,
backwards) = XypicDiagramDrawer._check_free_space_horizontal(
dom_i, dom_j, cod_j, grid)
set_label_position(free_up, free_down, "^", "_",
backwards, m_str_info)
elif dom_j == cod_j:
# Vertical morphism.
(free_left, free_right,
backwards) = XypicDiagramDrawer._check_free_space_vertical(
dom_i, cod_i, dom_j, grid)
set_label_position(free_left, free_right, "_", "^",
backwards, m_str_info)
else:
# A diagonal morphism.
(free_up, free_down,
backwards) = XypicDiagramDrawer._check_free_space_diagonal(
dom_i, cod_i, dom_j, cod_j, grid)
set_label_position(free_up, free_down, "^", "_",
backwards, m_str_info)
@staticmethod
def _morphism_sort_key(morphism, object_coords):
"""
Provides a morphism sorting key such that horizontal or
vertical morphisms between neighbouring objects come
first, then horizontal or vertical morphisms between more
far away objects, and finally, all other morphisms.
"""
(i, j) = object_coords[morphism.domain]
(target_i, target_j) = object_coords[morphism.codomain]
if morphism.domain == morphism.codomain:
# Loop morphisms should get after diagonal morphisms
# so that the proper direction in which to curve the
# loop can be determined.
return (3, 0, default_sort_key(morphism))
if target_i == i:
return (1, abs(target_j - j), default_sort_key(morphism))
if target_j == j:
return (1, abs(target_i - i), default_sort_key(morphism))
# Diagonal morphism.
return (2, 0, default_sort_key(morphism))
@staticmethod
def _build_xypic_string(diagram, grid, morphisms,
morphisms_str_info, diagram_format):
"""
Given a collection of :class:`ArrowStringDescription`
describing the morphisms of a diagram and the object layout
information of a diagram, produces the final Xy-pic picture.
"""
# Build the mapping between objects and morphisms which have
# them as domains.
object_morphisms = {}
for obj in diagram.objects:
object_morphisms[obj] = []
for morphism in morphisms:
object_morphisms[morphism.domain].append(morphism)
result = "\\xymatrix%s{\n" % diagram_format
for i in range(grid.height):
for j in range(grid.width):
obj = grid[i, j]
if obj:
result += latex(obj) + " "
morphisms_to_draw = object_morphisms[obj]
for morphism in morphisms_to_draw:
result += str(morphisms_str_info[morphism]) + " "
# Don't put the & after the last column.
if j < grid.width - 1:
result += "& "
# Don't put the line break after the last row.
if i < grid.height - 1:
result += "\\\\"
result += "\n"
result += "}\n"
return result
def draw(self, diagram, grid, masked=None, diagram_format=""):
r"""
Returns the Xy-pic representation of ``diagram`` laid out in
``grid``.
Consider the following simple triangle diagram.
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism, Diagram
>>> from sympy.categories import DiagramGrid, XypicDiagramDrawer
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g], {g * f: "unique"})
To draw this diagram, its objects need to be laid out with a
:class:`DiagramGrid`::
>>> grid = DiagramGrid(diagram)
Finally, the drawing:
>>> drawer = XypicDiagramDrawer()
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid))
\xymatrix{
A \ar[d]_{g\circ f} \ar[r]^{f} & B \ar[ld]^{g} \\
C &
}
The argument ``masked`` can be used to skip morphisms in the
presentation of the diagram:
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid, masked=[g * f]))
\xymatrix{
A \ar[r]^{f} & B \ar[ld]^{g} \\
C &
}
Finally, the ``diagram_format`` argument can be used to
specify the format string of the diagram. For example, to
increase the spacing by 1 cm, proceeding as follows:
>>> print(drawer.draw(diagram, grid, diagram_format="@+1cm"))
\xymatrix@+1cm{
A \ar[d]_{g\circ f} \ar[r]^{f} & B \ar[ld]^{g} \\
C &
}
"""
# This method works in several steps. It starts by removing
# the masked morphisms, if necessary, and then maps objects to
# their positions in the grid (coordinate tuples). Remember
# that objects are unique in ``Diagram`` and in the layout
# produced by ``DiagramGrid``, so every object is mapped to a
# single coordinate pair.
#
# The next step is the central step and is concerned with
# analysing the morphisms of the diagram and deciding how to
# draw them. For example, how to curve the arrows is decided
# at this step. The bulk of the analysis is implemented in
# ``_process_morphism``, to the result of which the
# appropriate formatters are applied.
#
# The result of the previous step is a list of
# ``ArrowStringDescription``. After the analysis and
# application of formatters, some extra logic tries to assure
# better positioning of morphism labels (for example, an
# attempt is made to avoid the situations when arrows cross
# labels). This functionality constitutes the next step and
# is implemented in ``_push_labels_out``. Note that label
# positions which have been set via a formatter are not
# affected in this step.
#
# Finally, at the closing step, the array of
# ``ArrowStringDescription`` and the layout information
# incorporated in ``DiagramGrid`` are combined to produce the
# resulting Xy-pic picture. This part of code lies in
# ``_build_xypic_string``.
if not masked:
morphisms_props = grid.morphisms
else:
morphisms_props = {}
for m, props in grid.morphisms.items():
if m in masked:
continue
morphisms_props[m] = props
# Build the mapping between objects and their position in the
# grid.
object_coords = {}
for i in range(grid.height):
for j in range(grid.width):
if grid[i, j]:
object_coords[grid[i, j]] = (i, j)
morphisms = sorted(morphisms_props,
key=lambda m: XypicDiagramDrawer._morphism_sort_key(
m, object_coords))
# Build the tuples defining the string representations of
# morphisms.
morphisms_str_info = {}
for morphism in morphisms:
string_description = self._process_morphism(
diagram, grid, morphism, object_coords, morphisms,
morphisms_str_info)
if self.default_arrow_formatter:
self.default_arrow_formatter(string_description)
for prop in morphisms_props[morphism]:
# prop is a Symbol. TODO: Find out why.
if prop.name in self.arrow_formatters:
formatter = self.arrow_formatters[prop.name]
formatter(string_description)
morphisms_str_info[morphism] = string_description
# Reposition the labels a bit.
self._push_labels_out(morphisms_str_info, grid, object_coords)
return XypicDiagramDrawer._build_xypic_string(
diagram, grid, morphisms, morphisms_str_info, diagram_format)
def xypic_draw_diagram(diagram, masked=None, diagram_format="",
groups=None, **hints):
r"""
Provides a shortcut combining :class:`DiagramGrid` and
:class:`XypicDiagramDrawer`. Returns an Xy-pic presentation of
``diagram``. The argument ``masked`` is a list of morphisms which
will be not be drawn. The argument ``diagram_format`` is the
format string inserted after "\xymatrix". ``groups`` should be a
set of logical groups. The ``hints`` will be passed directly to
the constructor of :class:`DiagramGrid`.
For more information about the arguments, see the docstrings of
:class:`DiagramGrid` and ``XypicDiagramDrawer.draw``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism, Diagram
>>> from sympy.categories import xypic_draw_diagram
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> diagram = Diagram([f, g], {g * f: "unique"})
>>> print(xypic_draw_diagram(diagram))
\xymatrix{
A \ar[d]_{g\circ f} \ar[r]^{f} & B \ar[ld]^{g} \\
C &
}
See Also
========
XypicDiagramDrawer, DiagramGrid
"""
grid = DiagramGrid(diagram, groups, **hints)
drawer = XypicDiagramDrawer()
return drawer.draw(diagram, grid, masked, diagram_format)
@doctest_depends_on(exe=('latex', 'dvipng'), modules=('pyglet',))
def preview_diagram(diagram, masked=None, diagram_format="", groups=None,
output='png', viewer=None, euler=True, **hints):
"""
Combines the functionality of ``xypic_draw_diagram`` and
``sympy.printing.preview``. The arguments ``masked``,
``diagram_format``, ``groups``, and ``hints`` are passed to
``xypic_draw_diagram``, while ``output``, ``viewer, and ``euler``
are passed to ``preview``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.categories import Object, NamedMorphism, Diagram
>>> from sympy.categories import preview_diagram
>>> A = Object("A")
>>> B = Object("B")
>>> C = Object("C")
>>> f = NamedMorphism(A, B, "f")
>>> g = NamedMorphism(B, C, "g")
>>> d = Diagram([f, g], {g * f: "unique"})
>>> preview_diagram(d)
See Also
========
xypic_diagram_drawer
"""
from sympy.printing import preview
latex_output = xypic_draw_diagram(diagram, masked, diagram_format,
groups, **hints)
preview(latex_output, output, viewer, euler, ("xypic",))
|
01033e595ace04c9fc07206f81bbc690b6eacd50afcecfb41feafef2753eabc2
|
# References :
# http://www.euclideanspace.com/maths/algebra/realNormedAlgebra/quaternions/
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quaternion
from __future__ import print_function
from sympy.core.expr import Expr
from sympy import Rational
from sympy import re, im, conjugate
from sympy import sqrt, sin, cos, acos, asin, exp, ln
from sympy import trigsimp
from sympy import diff, integrate
from sympy import Matrix, Add, Mul
from sympy import symbols, sympify
from sympy.printing.latex import latex
from sympy.printing import StrPrinter
from sympy.core.numbers import Integer
from sympy.core.compatibility import SYMPY_INTS
class Quaternion(Expr):
"""Provides basic quaternion operations.
Quaternion objects can be instantiated as Quaternion(a, b, c, d)
as in (a + b*i + c*j + d*k).
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> q = Quaternion(1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> q
1 + 2*i + 3*j + 4*k
Quaternions over complex fields can be defined as :
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import symbols, I
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> q1 = Quaternion(x, x**3, x, x**2, real_field = False)
>>> q2 = Quaternion(3 + 4*I, 2 + 5*I, 0, 7 + 8*I, real_field = False)
>>> q1
x + x**3*i + x*j + x**2*k
>>> q2
(3 + 4*I) + (2 + 5*I)*i + 0*j + (7 + 8*I)*k
"""
_op_priority = 11.0
is_commutative = False
def __new__(cls, a=0, b=0, c=0, d=0, real_field=True):
a = sympify(a)
b = sympify(b)
c = sympify(c)
d = sympify(d)
if any(i.is_commutative is False for i in [a, b, c, d]):
raise ValueError("arguments have to be commutative")
else:
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, a, b, c, d)
obj._a = a
obj._b = b
obj._c = c
obj._d = d
obj._real_field = real_field
return obj
@property
def a(self):
return self._a
@property
def b(self):
return self._b
@property
def c(self):
return self._c
@property
def d(self):
return self._d
@property
def real_field(self):
return self._real_field
@classmethod
def from_axis_angle(cls, vector, angle):
"""Returns a rotation quaternion given the axis and the angle of rotation.
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import pi, sqrt
>>> q = Quaternion.from_axis_angle((sqrt(3)/3, sqrt(3)/3, sqrt(3)/3), 2*pi/3)
>>> q
1/2 + 1/2*i + 1/2*j + 1/2*k
"""
(x, y, z) = vector
norm = sqrt(x**2 + y**2 + z**2)
(x, y, z) = (x / norm, y / norm, z / norm)
s = sin(angle * Rational(1, 2))
a = cos(angle * Rational(1, 2))
b = x * s
c = y * s
d = z * s
return cls(a, b, c, d).normalize()
@classmethod
def from_rotation_matrix(cls, M):
"""Returns the equivalent quaternion of a matrix. The quaternion will be normalized
only if the matrix is special orthogonal (orthogonal and det(M) = 1).
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import Matrix, symbols, cos, sin, trigsimp
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> M = Matrix([[cos(x), -sin(x), 0], [sin(x), cos(x), 0], [0, 0, 1]])
>>> q = trigsimp(Quaternion.from_rotation_matrix(M))
>>> q
sqrt(2)*sqrt(cos(x) + 1)/2 + 0*i + 0*j + sqrt(-2*cos(x) + 2)/2*k
"""
absQ = M.det()**Rational(1, 3)
a = sqrt(absQ + M[0, 0] + M[1, 1] + M[2, 2]) / 2
b = sqrt(absQ + M[0, 0] - M[1, 1] - M[2, 2]) / 2
c = sqrt(absQ - M[0, 0] + M[1, 1] - M[2, 2]) / 2
d = sqrt(absQ - M[0, 0] - M[1, 1] + M[2, 2]) / 2
try:
b = Quaternion.__copysign(b, M[2, 1] - M[1, 2])
c = Quaternion.__copysign(c, M[0, 2] - M[2, 0])
d = Quaternion.__copysign(d, M[1, 0] - M[0, 1])
except Exception:
pass
return Quaternion(a, b, c, d)
@staticmethod
def __copysign(x, y):
# Takes the sign from the second term and sets the sign of the first
# without altering the magnitude.
if y == 0:
return 0
return x if x*y > 0 else -x
def __add__(self, other):
return self.add(other)
def __radd__(self, other):
return self.add(other)
def __sub__(self, other):
return self.add(other*-1)
def __mul__(self, other):
return self._generic_mul(self, other)
def __rmul__(self, other):
return self._generic_mul(other, self)
def __pow__(self, p):
return self.pow(p)
def __neg__(self):
return Quaternion(-self._a, -self._b, -self._c, -self.d)
def _eval_Integral(self, *args):
return self.integrate(*args)
def diff(self, *symbols, **kwargs):
kwargs.setdefault('evaluate', True)
return self.func(*[a.diff(*symbols, **kwargs) for a in self.args])
def add(self, other):
"""Adds quaternions.
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> q1 = Quaternion(1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> q2 = Quaternion(5, 6, 7, 8)
>>> q1.add(q2)
6 + 8*i + 10*j + 12*k
>>> q1 + 5
6 + 2*i + 3*j + 4*k
>>> x = symbols('x', real = True)
>>> q1.add(x)
(x + 1) + 2*i + 3*j + 4*k
Quaternions over complex fields :
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import I
>>> q3 = Quaternion(3 + 4*I, 2 + 5*I, 0, 7 + 8*I, real_field = False)
>>> q3.add(2 + 3*I)
(5 + 7*I) + (2 + 5*I)*i + 0*j + (7 + 8*I)*k
"""
q1 = self
q2 = sympify(other)
# If q2 is a number or a sympy expression instead of a quaternion
if not isinstance(q2, Quaternion):
if q1.real_field:
if q2.is_complex:
return Quaternion(re(q2) + q1.a, im(q2) + q1.b, q1.c, q1.d)
else:
# q2 is something strange, do not evaluate:
return Add(q1, q2)
else:
return Quaternion(q1.a + q2, q1.b, q1.c, q1.d)
return Quaternion(q1.a + q2.a, q1.b + q2.b, q1.c + q2.c, q1.d
+ q2.d)
def mul(self, other):
"""Multiplies quaternions.
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> q1 = Quaternion(1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> q2 = Quaternion(5, 6, 7, 8)
>>> q1.mul(q2)
(-60) + 12*i + 30*j + 24*k
>>> q1.mul(2)
2 + 4*i + 6*j + 8*k
>>> x = symbols('x', real = True)
>>> q1.mul(x)
x + 2*x*i + 3*x*j + 4*x*k
Quaternions over complex fields :
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import I
>>> q3 = Quaternion(3 + 4*I, 2 + 5*I, 0, 7 + 8*I, real_field = False)
>>> q3.mul(2 + 3*I)
(2 + 3*I)*(3 + 4*I) + (2 + 3*I)*(2 + 5*I)*i + 0*j + (2 + 3*I)*(7 + 8*I)*k
"""
return self._generic_mul(self, other)
@staticmethod
def _generic_mul(q1, q2):
q1 = sympify(q1)
q2 = sympify(q2)
# None is a Quaternion:
if not isinstance(q1, Quaternion) and not isinstance(q2, Quaternion):
return q1 * q2
# If q1 is a number or a sympy expression instead of a quaternion
if not isinstance(q1, Quaternion):
if q2.real_field:
if q1.is_complex:
return q2 * Quaternion(re(q1), im(q1), 0, 0)
else:
return Mul(q1, q2)
else:
return Quaternion(q1 * q2.a, q1 * q2.b, q1 * q2.c, q1 * q2.d)
# If q2 is a number or a sympy expression instead of a quaternion
if not isinstance(q2, Quaternion):
if q1.real_field:
if q2.is_complex:
return q1 * Quaternion(re(q2), im(q2), 0, 0)
else:
return Mul(q1, q2)
else:
return Quaternion(q2 * q1.a, q2 * q1.b, q2 * q1.c, q2 * q1.d)
return Quaternion(-q1.b*q2.b - q1.c*q2.c - q1.d*q2.d + q1.a*q2.a,
q1.b*q2.a + q1.c*q2.d - q1.d*q2.c + q1.a*q2.b,
-q1.b*q2.d + q1.c*q2.a + q1.d*q2.b + q1.a*q2.c,
q1.b*q2.c - q1.c*q2.b + q1.d*q2.a + q1.a * q2.d)
def _eval_conjugate(self):
"""Returns the conjugate of the quaternion."""
q = self
return Quaternion(q.a, -q.b, -q.c, -q.d)
def norm(self):
"""Returns the norm of the quaternion."""
q = self
# trigsimp is used to simplify sin(x)^2 + cos(x)^2 (these terms
# arise when from_axis_angle is used).
return sqrt(trigsimp(q.a**2 + q.b**2 + q.c**2 + q.d**2))
def normalize(self):
"""Returns the normalized form of the quaternion."""
q = self
return q * (1/q.norm())
def inverse(self):
"""Returns the inverse of the quaternion."""
q = self
if not q.norm():
raise ValueError("Cannot compute inverse for a quaternion with zero norm")
return conjugate(q) * (1/q.norm()**2)
def pow(self, p):
"""Finds the pth power of the quaternion.
Returns the inverse if p = -1.
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> q = Quaternion(1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> q.pow(4)
668 + (-224)*i + (-336)*j + (-448)*k
"""
q = self
if p == -1:
return q.inverse()
res = 1
if p < 0:
q, p = q.inverse(), -p
if not (isinstance(p, (Integer, SYMPY_INTS))):
return NotImplemented
while p > 0:
if p & 1:
res = q * res
p = p >> 1
q = q * q
return res
def exp(self):
"""Returns the exponential of q (e^q).
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> q = Quaternion(1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> q.exp()
E*cos(sqrt(29))
+ 2*sqrt(29)*E*sin(sqrt(29))/29*i
+ 3*sqrt(29)*E*sin(sqrt(29))/29*j
+ 4*sqrt(29)*E*sin(sqrt(29))/29*k
"""
# exp(q) = e^a(cos||v|| + v/||v||*sin||v||)
q = self
vector_norm = sqrt(q.b**2 + q.c**2 + q.d**2)
a = exp(q.a) * cos(vector_norm)
b = exp(q.a) * sin(vector_norm) * q.b / vector_norm
c = exp(q.a) * sin(vector_norm) * q.c / vector_norm
d = exp(q.a) * sin(vector_norm) * q.d / vector_norm
return Quaternion(a, b, c, d)
def _ln(self):
"""Returns the natural logarithm of the quaternion (_ln(q)).
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> q = Quaternion(1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> q._ln()
log(sqrt(30))
+ 2*sqrt(29)*acos(sqrt(30)/30)/29*i
+ 3*sqrt(29)*acos(sqrt(30)/30)/29*j
+ 4*sqrt(29)*acos(sqrt(30)/30)/29*k
"""
# _ln(q) = _ln||q|| + v/||v||*arccos(a/||q||)
q = self
vector_norm = sqrt(q.b**2 + q.c**2 + q.d**2)
q_norm = q.norm()
a = ln(q_norm)
b = q.b * acos(q.a / q_norm) / vector_norm
c = q.c * acos(q.a / q_norm) / vector_norm
d = q.d * acos(q.a / q_norm) / vector_norm
return Quaternion(a, b, c, d)
def pow_cos_sin(self, p):
"""Computes the pth power in the cos-sin form.
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> q = Quaternion(1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> q.pow_cos_sin(4)
900*cos(4*acos(sqrt(30)/30))
+ 1800*sqrt(29)*sin(4*acos(sqrt(30)/30))/29*i
+ 2700*sqrt(29)*sin(4*acos(sqrt(30)/30))/29*j
+ 3600*sqrt(29)*sin(4*acos(sqrt(30)/30))/29*k
"""
# q = ||q||*(cos(a) + u*sin(a))
# q^p = ||q||^p * (cos(p*a) + u*sin(p*a))
q = self
(v, angle) = q.to_axis_angle()
q2 = Quaternion.from_axis_angle(v, p * angle)
return q2 * (q.norm()**p)
def integrate(self, *args):
# TODO: is this expression correct?
return Quaternion(integrate(self.a, *args), integrate(self.b, *args),
integrate(self.c, *args), integrate(self.d, *args))
@staticmethod
def rotate_point(pin, r):
"""Returns the coordinates of the point pin(a 3 tuple) after rotation.
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import symbols, trigsimp, cos, sin
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> q = Quaternion(cos(x/2), 0, 0, sin(x/2))
>>> trigsimp(Quaternion.rotate_point((1, 1, 1), q))
(sqrt(2)*cos(x + pi/4), sqrt(2)*sin(x + pi/4), 1)
>>> (axis, angle) = q.to_axis_angle()
>>> trigsimp(Quaternion.rotate_point((1, 1, 1), (axis, angle)))
(sqrt(2)*cos(x + pi/4), sqrt(2)*sin(x + pi/4), 1)
"""
if isinstance(r, tuple):
# if r is of the form (vector, angle)
q = Quaternion.from_axis_angle(r[0], r[1])
else:
# if r is a quaternion
q = r.normalize()
pout = q * Quaternion(0, pin[0], pin[1], pin[2]) * conjugate(q)
return (pout.b, pout.c, pout.d)
def to_axis_angle(self):
"""Returns the axis and angle of rotation of a quaternion
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> q = Quaternion(1, 1, 1, 1)
>>> (axis, angle) = q.to_axis_angle()
>>> axis
(sqrt(3)/3, sqrt(3)/3, sqrt(3)/3)
>>> angle
2*pi/3
"""
q = self
try:
# Skips it if it doesn't know whether q.a is negative
if q.a < 0:
# avoid error with acos
# axis and angle of rotation of q and q*-1 will be the same
q = q * -1
except BaseException:
pass
q = q.normalize()
angle = trigsimp(2 * acos(q.a))
# Since quaternion is normalised, q.a is less than 1.
s = sqrt(1 - q.a*q.a)
x = trigsimp(q.b / s)
y = trigsimp(q.c / s)
z = trigsimp(q.d / s)
v = (x, y, z)
t = (v, angle)
return t
def to_rotation_matrix(self, v=None):
"""Returns the equivalent rotation transformation matrix of the quaternion
which represents rotation about the origin if v is not passed.
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import symbols, trigsimp, cos, sin
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> q = Quaternion(cos(x/2), 0, 0, sin(x/2))
>>> trigsimp(q.to_rotation_matrix())
Matrix([
[cos(x), -sin(x), 0],
[sin(x), cos(x), 0],
[ 0, 0, 1]])
Generates a 4x4 transformation matrix (used for rotation about a point
other than the origin) if the point(v) is passed as an argument.
Example
========
>>> from sympy.algebras.quaternion import Quaternion
>>> from sympy import symbols, trigsimp, cos, sin
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> q = Quaternion(cos(x/2), 0, 0, sin(x/2))
>>> trigsimp(q.to_rotation_matrix((1, 1, 1)))
Matrix([
[cos(x), -sin(x), 0, sin(x) - cos(x) + 1],
[sin(x), cos(x), 0, -sin(x) - cos(x) + 1],
[ 0, 0, 1, 0],
[ 0, 0, 0, 1]])
"""
q = self
s = q.norm()**-2
m00 = 1 - 2*s*(q.c**2 + q.d**2)
m01 = 2*s*(q.b*q.c - q.d*q.a)
m02 = 2*s*(q.b*q.d + q.c*q.a)
m10 = 2*s*(q.b*q.c + q.d*q.a)
m11 = 1 - 2*s*(q.b**2 + q.d**2)
m12 = 2*s*(q.c*q.d - q.b*q.a)
m20 = 2*s*(q.b*q.d - q.c*q.a)
m21 = 2*s*(q.c*q.d + q.b*q.a)
m22 = 1 - 2*s*(q.b**2 + q.c**2)
if not v:
return Matrix([[m00, m01, m02], [m10, m11, m12], [m20, m21, m22]])
else:
(x, y, z) = v
m03 = x - x*m00 - y*m01 - z*m02
m13 = y - x*m10 - y*m11 - z*m12
m23 = z - x*m20 - y*m21 - z*m22
m30 = m31 = m32 = 0
m33 = 1
return Matrix([[m00, m01, m02, m03], [m10, m11, m12, m13],
[m20, m21, m22, m23], [m30, m31, m32, m33]])
|
d68c043ea6ba03e3791d54a468b6876023f05fc15736e1bf2da43df71b0c1aed
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from itertools import permutations
from sympy.matrices import Matrix
from sympy.core import AtomicExpr, Basic, Expr, Dummy, Function, sympify, diff, Pow, Mul, Add, symbols, Tuple
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
from sympy.core.numbers import Zero
from sympy.solvers import solve
from sympy.functions import factorial
from sympy.simplify import simplify
from sympy.core.compatibility import reduce
from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
# TODO you are a bit excessive in the use of Dummies
# TODO dummy point, literal field
# TODO too often one needs to call doit or simplify on the output, check the
# tests and find out why
from sympy.tensor.array import ImmutableDenseNDimArray
class Manifold(Basic):
"""Object representing a mathematical manifold.
The only role that this object plays is to keep a list of all patches
defined on the manifold. It does not provide any means to study the
topological characteristics of the manifold that it represents.
"""
def __new__(cls, name, dim):
name = sympify(name)
dim = sympify(dim)
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, name, dim)
obj.name = name
obj.dim = dim
obj.patches = []
# The patches list is necessary if a Patch instance needs to enumerate
# other Patch instance on the same manifold.
return obj
def _latex(self, printer, *args):
return r'\mathrm{%s}' % self.name
class Patch(Basic):
"""Object representing a patch on a manifold.
On a manifold one can have many patches that do not always include the
whole manifold. On these patches coordinate charts can be defined that
permit the parameterization of any point on the patch in terms of a tuple
of real numbers (the coordinates).
This object serves as a container/parent for all coordinate system charts
that can be defined on the patch it represents.
Examples
========
Define a Manifold and a Patch on that Manifold:
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import Manifold, Patch
>>> m = Manifold('M', 3)
>>> p = Patch('P', m)
>>> p in m.patches
True
"""
# Contains a reference to the parent manifold in order to be able to access
# other patches.
def __new__(cls, name, manifold):
name = sympify(name)
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, name, manifold)
obj.name = name
obj.manifold = manifold
obj.manifold.patches.append(obj)
obj.coord_systems = []
# The list of coordinate systems is necessary for an instance of
# CoordSystem to enumerate other coord systems on the patch.
return obj
@property
def dim(self):
return self.manifold.dim
def _latex(self, printer, *args):
return r'\mathrm{%s}_{%s}' % (self.name, self.manifold._latex(printer, *args))
class CoordSystem(Basic):
"""Contains all coordinate transformation logic.
Examples
========
Define a Manifold and a Patch, and then define two coord systems on that
patch:
>>> from sympy import symbols, sin, cos, pi
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import Manifold, Patch, CoordSystem
>>> from sympy.simplify import simplify
>>> r, theta = symbols('r, theta')
>>> m = Manifold('M', 2)
>>> patch = Patch('P', m)
>>> rect = CoordSystem('rect', patch)
>>> polar = CoordSystem('polar', patch)
>>> rect in patch.coord_systems
True
Connect the coordinate systems. An inverse transformation is automatically
found by ``solve`` when possible:
>>> polar.connect_to(rect, [r, theta], [r*cos(theta), r*sin(theta)])
>>> polar.coord_tuple_transform_to(rect, [0, 2])
Matrix([
[0],
[0]])
>>> polar.coord_tuple_transform_to(rect, [2, pi/2])
Matrix([
[0],
[2]])
>>> rect.coord_tuple_transform_to(polar, [1, 1]).applyfunc(simplify)
Matrix([
[sqrt(2)],
[ pi/4]])
Calculate the jacobian of the polar to cartesian transformation:
>>> polar.jacobian(rect, [r, theta])
Matrix([
[cos(theta), -r*sin(theta)],
[sin(theta), r*cos(theta)]])
Define a point using coordinates in one of the coordinate systems:
>>> p = polar.point([1, 3*pi/4])
>>> rect.point_to_coords(p)
Matrix([
[-sqrt(2)/2],
[ sqrt(2)/2]])
Define a basis scalar field (i.e. a coordinate function), that takes a
point and returns its coordinates. It is an instance of ``BaseScalarField``.
>>> rect.coord_function(0)(p)
-sqrt(2)/2
>>> rect.coord_function(1)(p)
sqrt(2)/2
Define a basis vector field (i.e. a unit vector field along the coordinate
line). Vectors are also differential operators on scalar fields. It is an
instance of ``BaseVectorField``.
>>> v_x = rect.base_vector(0)
>>> x = rect.coord_function(0)
>>> v_x(x)
1
>>> v_x(v_x(x))
0
Define a basis oneform field:
>>> dx = rect.base_oneform(0)
>>> dx(v_x)
1
If you provide a list of names the fields will print nicely:
- without provided names:
>>> x, v_x, dx
(rect_0, e_rect_0, drect_0)
- with provided names
>>> rect = CoordSystem('rect', patch, ['x', 'y'])
>>> rect.coord_function(0), rect.base_vector(0), rect.base_oneform(0)
(x, e_x, dx)
"""
# Contains a reference to the parent patch in order to be able to access
# other coordinate system charts.
def __new__(cls, name, patch, names=None):
name = sympify(name)
# names is not in args because it is related only to printing, not to
# identifying the CoordSystem instance.
if not names:
names = ['%s_%d' % (name, i) for i in range(patch.dim)]
if isinstance(names, Tuple):
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, name, patch, names)
else:
names = Tuple(*symbols(names))
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, name, patch, names)
obj.name = name
obj._names = [str(i) for i in names.args]
obj.patch = patch
obj.patch.coord_systems.append(obj)
obj.transforms = {}
# All the coordinate transformation logic is in this dictionary in the
# form of:
# key = other coordinate system
# value = tuple of # TODO make these Lambda instances
# - list of `Dummy` coordinates in this coordinate system
# - list of expressions as a function of the Dummies giving
# the coordinates in another coordinate system
obj._dummies = [Dummy(str(n)) for n in names]
obj._dummy = Dummy()
return obj
@property
def dim(self):
return self.patch.dim
##########################################################################
# Coordinate transformations.
##########################################################################
def connect_to(self, to_sys, from_coords, to_exprs, inverse=True, fill_in_gaps=False):
"""Register the transformation used to switch to another coordinate system.
Parameters
==========
to_sys
another instance of ``CoordSystem``
from_coords
list of symbols in terms of which ``to_exprs`` is given
to_exprs
list of the expressions of the new coordinate tuple
inverse
try to deduce and register the inverse transformation
fill_in_gaps
try to deduce other transformation that are made
possible by composing the present transformation with other already
registered transformation
"""
from_coords, to_exprs = dummyfy(from_coords, to_exprs)
self.transforms[to_sys] = Matrix(from_coords), Matrix(to_exprs)
if inverse:
to_sys.transforms[self] = self._inv_transf(from_coords, to_exprs)
if fill_in_gaps:
self._fill_gaps_in_transformations()
@staticmethod
def _inv_transf(from_coords, to_exprs):
inv_from = [i.as_dummy() for i in from_coords]
inv_to = solve(
[t[0] - t[1] for t in zip(inv_from, to_exprs)],
list(from_coords), dict=True)[0]
inv_to = [inv_to[fc] for fc in from_coords]
return Matrix(inv_from), Matrix(inv_to)
@staticmethod
def _fill_gaps_in_transformations():
raise NotImplementedError
# TODO
def coord_tuple_transform_to(self, to_sys, coords):
"""Transform ``coords`` to coord system ``to_sys``.
See the docstring of ``CoordSystem`` for examples."""
coords = Matrix(coords)
if self != to_sys:
transf = self.transforms[to_sys]
coords = transf[1].subs(list(zip(transf[0], coords)))
return coords
def jacobian(self, to_sys, coords):
"""Return the jacobian matrix of a transformation."""
with_dummies = self.coord_tuple_transform_to(
to_sys, self._dummies).jacobian(self._dummies)
return with_dummies.subs(list(zip(self._dummies, coords)))
##########################################################################
# Base fields.
##########################################################################
def coord_function(self, coord_index):
"""Return a ``BaseScalarField`` that takes a point and returns one of the coords.
Takes a point and returns its coordinate in this coordinate system.
See the docstring of ``CoordSystem`` for examples."""
return BaseScalarField(self, coord_index)
def coord_functions(self):
"""Returns a list of all coordinate functions.
For more details see the ``coord_function`` method of this class."""
return [self.coord_function(i) for i in range(self.dim)]
def base_vector(self, coord_index):
"""Return a basis vector field.
The basis vector field for this coordinate system. It is also an
operator on scalar fields.
See the docstring of ``CoordSystem`` for examples."""
return BaseVectorField(self, coord_index)
def base_vectors(self):
"""Returns a list of all base vectors.
For more details see the ``base_vector`` method of this class."""
return [self.base_vector(i) for i in range(self.dim)]
def base_oneform(self, coord_index):
"""Return a basis 1-form field.
The basis one-form field for this coordinate system. It is also an
operator on vector fields.
See the docstring of ``CoordSystem`` for examples."""
return Differential(self.coord_function(coord_index))
def base_oneforms(self):
"""Returns a list of all base oneforms.
For more details see the ``base_oneform`` method of this class."""
return [self.base_oneform(i) for i in range(self.dim)]
##########################################################################
# Points.
##########################################################################
def point(self, coords):
"""Create a ``Point`` with coordinates given in this coord system.
See the docstring of ``CoordSystem`` for examples."""
return Point(self, coords)
def point_to_coords(self, point):
"""Calculate the coordinates of a point in this coord system.
See the docstring of ``CoordSystem`` for examples."""
return point.coords(self)
##########################################################################
# Printing.
##########################################################################
def _latex(self, printer, *args):
return r'\mathrm{%s}^{\mathrm{%s}}_{%s}' % (
self.name, self.patch.name, self.patch.manifold._latex(printer, *args))
class Point(Basic):
"""Point in a Manifold object.
To define a point you must supply coordinates and a coordinate system.
The usage of this object after its definition is independent of the
coordinate system that was used in order to define it, however due to
limitations in the simplification routines you can arrive at complicated
expressions if you use inappropriate coordinate systems.
Examples
========
Define the boilerplate Manifold, Patch and coordinate systems:
>>> from sympy import symbols, sin, cos, pi
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import (
... Manifold, Patch, CoordSystem, Point)
>>> r, theta = symbols('r, theta')
>>> m = Manifold('M', 2)
>>> p = Patch('P', m)
>>> rect = CoordSystem('rect', p)
>>> polar = CoordSystem('polar', p)
>>> polar.connect_to(rect, [r, theta], [r*cos(theta), r*sin(theta)])
Define a point using coordinates from one of the coordinate systems:
>>> p = Point(polar, [r, 3*pi/4])
>>> p.coords()
Matrix([
[ r],
[3*pi/4]])
>>> p.coords(rect)
Matrix([
[-sqrt(2)*r/2],
[ sqrt(2)*r/2]])
"""
def __init__(self, coord_sys, coords):
super(Point, self).__init__()
self._coord_sys = coord_sys
self._coords = Matrix(coords)
self._args = self._coord_sys, self._coords
def coords(self, to_sys=None):
"""Coordinates of the point in a given coordinate system.
If ``to_sys`` is ``None`` it returns the coordinates in the system in
which the point was defined."""
if to_sys:
return self._coord_sys.coord_tuple_transform_to(to_sys, self._coords)
else:
return self._coords
@property
def free_symbols(self):
raise NotImplementedError
return self._coords.free_symbols
class BaseScalarField(AtomicExpr):
"""Base Scalar Field over a Manifold for a given Coordinate System.
A scalar field takes a point as an argument and returns a scalar.
A base scalar field of a coordinate system takes a point and returns one of
the coordinates of that point in the coordinate system in question.
To define a scalar field you need to choose the coordinate system and the
index of the coordinate.
The use of the scalar field after its definition is independent of the
coordinate system in which it was defined, however due to limitations in
the simplification routines you may arrive at more complicated
expression if you use unappropriate coordinate systems.
You can build complicated scalar fields by just building up SymPy
expressions containing ``BaseScalarField`` instances.
Examples
========
Define boilerplate Manifold, Patch and coordinate systems:
>>> from sympy import symbols, sin, cos, pi, Function
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import (
... Manifold, Patch, CoordSystem, Point, BaseScalarField)
>>> r0, theta0 = symbols('r0, theta0')
>>> m = Manifold('M', 2)
>>> p = Patch('P', m)
>>> rect = CoordSystem('rect', p)
>>> polar = CoordSystem('polar', p)
>>> polar.connect_to(rect, [r0, theta0], [r0*cos(theta0), r0*sin(theta0)])
Point to be used as an argument for the filed:
>>> point = polar.point([r0, 0])
Examples of fields:
>>> fx = BaseScalarField(rect, 0)
>>> fy = BaseScalarField(rect, 1)
>>> (fx**2+fy**2).rcall(point)
r0**2
>>> g = Function('g')
>>> ftheta = BaseScalarField(polar, 1)
>>> fg = g(ftheta-pi)
>>> fg.rcall(point)
g(-pi)
"""
is_commutative = True
def __new__(cls, coord_sys, index):
obj = AtomicExpr.__new__(cls, coord_sys, sympify(index))
obj._coord_sys = coord_sys
obj._index = index
return obj
def __call__(self, *args):
"""Evaluating the field at a point or doing nothing.
If the argument is a ``Point`` instance, the field is evaluated at that
point. The field is returned itself if the argument is any other
object. It is so in order to have working recursive calling mechanics
for all fields (check the ``__call__`` method of ``Expr``).
"""
point = args[0]
if len(args) != 1 or not isinstance(point, Point):
return self
coords = point.coords(self._coord_sys)
# XXX Calling doit is necessary with all the Subs expressions
# XXX Calling simplify is necessary with all the trig expressions
return simplify(coords[self._index]).doit()
# XXX Workaround for limitations on the content of args
free_symbols = set()
def doit(self):
return self
class BaseVectorField(AtomicExpr):
r"""Vector Field over a Manifold.
A vector field is an operator taking a scalar field and returning a
directional derivative (which is also a scalar field).
A base vector field is the same type of operator, however the derivation is
specifically done with respect to a chosen coordinate.
To define a base vector field you need to choose the coordinate system and
the index of the coordinate.
The use of the vector field after its definition is independent of the
coordinate system in which it was defined, however due to limitations in the
simplification routines you may arrive at more complicated expression if you
use unappropriate coordinate systems.
Examples
========
Use the predefined R2 manifold, setup some boilerplate.
>>> from sympy import symbols, pi, Function
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2, R2_p, R2_r
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import BaseVectorField
>>> from sympy import pprint
>>> x0, y0, r0, theta0 = symbols('x0, y0, r0, theta0')
Points to be used as arguments for the field:
>>> point_p = R2_p.point([r0, theta0])
>>> point_r = R2_r.point([x0, y0])
Scalar field to operate on:
>>> g = Function('g')
>>> s_field = g(R2.x, R2.y)
>>> s_field.rcall(point_r)
g(x0, y0)
>>> s_field.rcall(point_p)
g(r0*cos(theta0), r0*sin(theta0))
Vector field:
>>> v = BaseVectorField(R2_r, 1)
>>> pprint(v(s_field))
/ d \|
|-----(g(x, xi_2))||
\dxi_2 /|xi_2=y
>>> pprint(v(s_field).rcall(point_r).doit())
d
---(g(x0, y0))
dy0
>>> pprint(v(s_field).rcall(point_p))
/ d \|
|-----(g(r0*cos(theta0), xi_2))||
\dxi_2 /|xi_2=r0*sin(theta0)
"""
is_commutative = False
def __new__(cls, coord_sys, index):
index = sympify(index)
obj = AtomicExpr.__new__(cls, coord_sys, index)
obj._coord_sys = coord_sys
obj._index = index
return obj
def __call__(self, scalar_field):
"""Apply on a scalar field.
The action of a vector field on a scalar field is a directional
differentiation.
If the argument is not a scalar field an error is raised.
"""
if covariant_order(scalar_field) or contravariant_order(scalar_field):
raise ValueError('Only scalar fields can be supplied as arguments to vector fields.')
if scalar_field is None:
return self
base_scalars = list(scalar_field.atoms(BaseScalarField))
# First step: e_x(x+r**2) -> e_x(x) + 2*r*e_x(r)
d_var = self._coord_sys._dummy
# TODO: you need a real dummy function for the next line
d_funcs = [Function('_#_%s' % i)(d_var) for i,
b in enumerate(base_scalars)]
d_result = scalar_field.subs(list(zip(base_scalars, d_funcs)))
d_result = d_result.diff(d_var)
# Second step: e_x(x) -> 1 and e_x(r) -> cos(atan2(x, y))
coords = self._coord_sys._dummies
d_funcs_deriv = [f.diff(d_var) for f in d_funcs]
d_funcs_deriv_sub = []
for b in base_scalars:
jac = self._coord_sys.jacobian(b._coord_sys, coords)
d_funcs_deriv_sub.append(jac[b._index, self._index])
d_result = d_result.subs(list(zip(d_funcs_deriv, d_funcs_deriv_sub)))
# Remove the dummies
result = d_result.subs(list(zip(d_funcs, base_scalars)))
result = result.subs(list(zip(coords, self._coord_sys.coord_functions())))
return result.doit()
class Commutator(Expr):
r"""Commutator of two vector fields.
The commutator of two vector fields `v_1` and `v_2` is defined as the
vector field `[v_1, v_2]` that evaluated on each scalar field `f` is equal
to `v_1(v_2(f)) - v_2(v_1(f))`.
Examples
========
Use the predefined R2 manifold, setup some boilerplate.
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import Commutator
>>> from sympy import pprint
>>> from sympy.simplify import simplify
Vector fields:
>>> e_x, e_y, e_r = R2.e_x, R2.e_y, R2.e_r
>>> c_xy = Commutator(e_x, e_y)
>>> c_xr = Commutator(e_x, e_r)
>>> c_xy
0
Unfortunately, the current code is not able to compute everything:
>>> c_xr
Commutator(e_x, e_r)
>>> simplify(c_xr(R2.y**2))
-2*y**2*cos(theta)/(x**2 + y**2)
"""
def __new__(cls, v1, v2):
if (covariant_order(v1) or contravariant_order(v1) != 1
or covariant_order(v2) or contravariant_order(v2) != 1):
raise ValueError(
'Only commutators of vector fields are supported.')
if v1 == v2:
return Zero()
coord_sys = set().union(*[v.atoms(CoordSystem) for v in (v1, v2)])
if len(coord_sys) == 1:
# Only one coordinate systems is used, hence it is easy enough to
# actually evaluate the commutator.
if all(isinstance(v, BaseVectorField) for v in (v1, v2)):
return Zero()
bases_1, bases_2 = [list(v.atoms(BaseVectorField))
for v in (v1, v2)]
coeffs_1 = [v1.expand().coeff(b) for b in bases_1]
coeffs_2 = [v2.expand().coeff(b) for b in bases_2]
res = 0
for c1, b1 in zip(coeffs_1, bases_1):
for c2, b2 in zip(coeffs_2, bases_2):
res += c1*b1(c2)*b2 - c2*b2(c1)*b1
return res
else:
return super(Commutator, cls).__new__(cls, v1, v2)
def __init__(self, v1, v2):
super(Commutator, self).__init__()
self._args = (v1, v2)
self._v1 = v1
self._v2 = v2
def __call__(self, scalar_field):
"""Apply on a scalar field.
If the argument is not a scalar field an error is raised.
"""
return self._v1(self._v2(scalar_field)) - self._v2(self._v1(scalar_field))
class Differential(Expr):
r"""Return the differential (exterior derivative) of a form field.
The differential of a form (i.e. the exterior derivative) has a complicated
definition in the general case.
The differential `df` of the 0-form `f` is defined for any vector field `v`
as `df(v) = v(f)`.
Examples
========
Use the predefined R2 manifold, setup some boilerplate.
>>> from sympy import Function
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import Differential
>>> from sympy import pprint
Scalar field (0-forms):
>>> g = Function('g')
>>> s_field = g(R2.x, R2.y)
Vector fields:
>>> e_x, e_y, = R2.e_x, R2.e_y
Differentials:
>>> dg = Differential(s_field)
>>> dg
d(g(x, y))
>>> pprint(dg(e_x))
/ d \|
|-----(g(xi_1, y))||
\dxi_1 /|xi_1=x
>>> pprint(dg(e_y))
/ d \|
|-----(g(x, xi_2))||
\dxi_2 /|xi_2=y
Applying the exterior derivative operator twice always results in:
>>> Differential(dg)
0
"""
is_commutative = False
def __new__(cls, form_field):
if contravariant_order(form_field):
raise ValueError(
'A vector field was supplied as an argument to Differential.')
if isinstance(form_field, Differential):
return Zero()
else:
return super(Differential, cls).__new__(cls, form_field)
def __init__(self, form_field):
super(Differential, self).__init__()
self._form_field = form_field
self._args = (self._form_field, )
def __call__(self, *vector_fields):
"""Apply on a list of vector_fields.
If the number of vector fields supplied is not equal to 1 + the order of
the form field inside the differential the result is undefined.
For 1-forms (i.e. differentials of scalar fields) the evaluation is
done as `df(v)=v(f)`. However if `v` is ``None`` instead of a vector
field, the differential is returned unchanged. This is done in order to
permit partial contractions for higher forms.
In the general case the evaluation is done by applying the form field
inside the differential on a list with one less elements than the number
of elements in the original list. Lowering the number of vector fields
is achieved through replacing each pair of fields by their
commutator.
If the arguments are not vectors or ``None``s an error is raised.
"""
if any((contravariant_order(a) != 1 or covariant_order(a)) and a is not None
for a in vector_fields):
raise ValueError('The arguments supplied to Differential should be vector fields or Nones.')
k = len(vector_fields)
if k == 1:
if vector_fields[0]:
return vector_fields[0].rcall(self._form_field)
return self
else:
# For higher form it is more complicated:
# Invariant formula:
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exterior_derivative#Invariant_formula
# df(v1, ... vn) = +/- vi(f(v1..no i..vn))
# +/- f([vi,vj],v1..no i, no j..vn)
f = self._form_field
v = vector_fields
ret = 0
for i in range(k):
t = v[i].rcall(f.rcall(*v[:i] + v[i + 1:]))
ret += (-1)**i*t
for j in range(i + 1, k):
c = Commutator(v[i], v[j])
if c: # TODO this is ugly - the Commutator can be Zero and
# this causes the next line to fail
t = f.rcall(*(c,) + v[:i] + v[i + 1:j] + v[j + 1:])
ret += (-1)**(i + j)*t
return ret
class TensorProduct(Expr):
"""Tensor product of forms.
The tensor product permits the creation of multilinear functionals (i.e.
higher order tensors) out of lower order fields (e.g. 1-forms and vector
fields). However, the higher tensors thus created lack the interesting
features provided by the other type of product, the wedge product, namely
they are not antisymmetric and hence are not form fields.
Examples
========
Use the predefined R2 manifold, setup some boilerplate.
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import TensorProduct
>>> TensorProduct(R2.dx, R2.dy)(R2.e_x, R2.e_y)
1
>>> TensorProduct(R2.dx, R2.dy)(R2.e_y, R2.e_x)
0
>>> TensorProduct(R2.dx, R2.x*R2.dy)(R2.x*R2.e_x, R2.e_y)
x**2
>>> TensorProduct(R2.e_x, R2.e_y)(R2.x**2, R2.y**2)
4*x*y
>>> TensorProduct(R2.e_y, R2.dx)(R2.y)
dx
You can nest tensor products.
>>> tp1 = TensorProduct(R2.dx, R2.dy)
>>> TensorProduct(tp1, R2.dx)(R2.e_x, R2.e_y, R2.e_x)
1
You can make partial contraction for instance when 'raising an index'.
Putting ``None`` in the second argument of ``rcall`` means that the
respective position in the tensor product is left as it is.
>>> TP = TensorProduct
>>> metric = TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + 3*TP(R2.dy, R2.dy)
>>> metric.rcall(R2.e_y, None)
3*dy
Or automatically pad the args with ``None`` without specifying them.
>>> metric.rcall(R2.e_y)
3*dy
"""
def __new__(cls, *args):
scalar = Mul(*[m for m in args if covariant_order(m) + contravariant_order(m) == 0])
multifields = [m for m in args if covariant_order(m) + contravariant_order(m)]
if multifields:
if len(multifields) == 1:
return scalar*multifields[0]
return scalar*super(TensorProduct, cls).__new__(cls, *multifields)
else:
return scalar
def __init__(self, *args):
super(TensorProduct, self).__init__()
self._args = args
def __call__(self, *fields):
"""Apply on a list of fields.
If the number of input fields supplied is not equal to the order of
the tensor product field, the list of arguments is padded with ``None``'s.
The list of arguments is divided in sublists depending on the order of
the forms inside the tensor product. The sublists are provided as
arguments to these forms and the resulting expressions are given to the
constructor of ``TensorProduct``.
"""
tot_order = covariant_order(self) + contravariant_order(self)
tot_args = len(fields)
if tot_args != tot_order:
fields = list(fields) + [None]*(tot_order - tot_args)
orders = [covariant_order(f) + contravariant_order(f) for f in self._args]
indices = [sum(orders[:i + 1]) for i in range(len(orders) - 1)]
fields = [fields[i:j] for i, j in zip([0] + indices, indices + [None])]
multipliers = [t[0].rcall(*t[1]) for t in zip(self._args, fields)]
return TensorProduct(*multipliers)
class WedgeProduct(TensorProduct):
"""Wedge product of forms.
In the context of integration only completely antisymmetric forms make
sense. The wedge product permits the creation of such forms.
Examples
========
Use the predefined R2 manifold, setup some boilerplate.
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import WedgeProduct
>>> WedgeProduct(R2.dx, R2.dy)(R2.e_x, R2.e_y)
1
>>> WedgeProduct(R2.dx, R2.dy)(R2.e_y, R2.e_x)
-1
>>> WedgeProduct(R2.dx, R2.x*R2.dy)(R2.x*R2.e_x, R2.e_y)
x**2
>>> WedgeProduct(R2.e_x,R2.e_y)(R2.y,None)
-e_x
You can nest wedge products.
>>> wp1 = WedgeProduct(R2.dx, R2.dy)
>>> WedgeProduct(wp1, R2.dx)(R2.e_x, R2.e_y, R2.e_x)
0
"""
# TODO the calculation of signatures is slow
# TODO you do not need all these permutations (neither the prefactor)
def __call__(self, *fields):
"""Apply on a list of vector_fields.
The expression is rewritten internally in terms of tensor products and evaluated."""
orders = (covariant_order(e) + contravariant_order(e) for e in self.args)
mul = 1/Mul(*(factorial(o) for o in orders))
perms = permutations(fields)
perms_par = (Permutation(
p).signature() for p in permutations(list(range(len(fields)))))
tensor_prod = TensorProduct(*self.args)
return mul*Add(*[tensor_prod(*p[0])*p[1] for p in zip(perms, perms_par)])
class LieDerivative(Expr):
"""Lie derivative with respect to a vector field.
The transport operator that defines the Lie derivative is the pushforward of
the field to be derived along the integral curve of the field with respect
to which one derives.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import (LieDerivative, TensorProduct)
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> LieDerivative(R2.e_x, R2.y)
0
>>> LieDerivative(R2.e_x, R2.x)
1
>>> LieDerivative(R2.e_x, R2.e_x)
0
The Lie derivative of a tensor field by another tensor field is equal to
their commutator:
>>> LieDerivative(R2.e_x, R2.e_r)
Commutator(e_x, e_r)
>>> LieDerivative(R2.e_x + R2.e_y, R2.x)
1
>>> tp = TensorProduct(R2.dx, R2.dy)
>>> LieDerivative(R2.e_x, tp)
LieDerivative(e_x, TensorProduct(dx, dy))
>>> LieDerivative(R2.e_x, tp)
LieDerivative(e_x, TensorProduct(dx, dy))
"""
def __new__(cls, v_field, expr):
expr_form_ord = covariant_order(expr)
if contravariant_order(v_field) != 1 or covariant_order(v_field):
raise ValueError('Lie derivatives are defined only with respect to'
' vector fields. The supplied argument was not a '
'vector field.')
if expr_form_ord > 0:
return super(LieDerivative, cls).__new__(cls, v_field, expr)
if expr.atoms(BaseVectorField):
return Commutator(v_field, expr)
else:
return v_field.rcall(expr)
def __init__(self, v_field, expr):
super(LieDerivative, self).__init__()
self._v_field = v_field
self._expr = expr
self._args = (self._v_field, self._expr)
def __call__(self, *args):
v = self._v_field
expr = self._expr
lead_term = v(expr(*args))
rest = Add(*[Mul(*args[:i] + (Commutator(v, args[i]),) + args[i + 1:])
for i in range(len(args))])
return lead_term - rest
class BaseCovarDerivativeOp(Expr):
"""Covariant derivative operator with respect to a base vector.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2, R2_r
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import BaseCovarDerivativeOp
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import metric_to_Christoffel_2nd, TensorProduct
>>> TP = TensorProduct
>>> ch = metric_to_Christoffel_2nd(TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
>>> ch
[[[0, 0], [0, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]]
>>> cvd = BaseCovarDerivativeOp(R2_r, 0, ch)
>>> cvd(R2.x)
1
>>> cvd(R2.x*R2.e_x)
e_x
"""
def __init__(self, coord_sys, index, christoffel):
super(BaseCovarDerivativeOp, self).__init__()
self._coord_sys = coord_sys
self._index = index
self._christoffel = christoffel
self._args = self._coord_sys, self._index, self._christoffel
def __call__(self, field):
"""Apply on a scalar field.
The action of a vector field on a scalar field is a directional
differentiation.
If the argument is not a scalar field the behaviour is undefined.
"""
if covariant_order(field) != 0:
raise NotImplementedError()
field = vectors_in_basis(field, self._coord_sys)
wrt_vector = self._coord_sys.base_vector(self._index)
wrt_scalar = self._coord_sys.coord_function(self._index)
vectors = list(field.atoms(BaseVectorField))
# First step: replace all vectors with something susceptible to
# derivation and do the derivation
# TODO: you need a real dummy function for the next line
d_funcs = [Function('_#_%s' % i)(wrt_scalar) for i,
b in enumerate(vectors)]
d_result = field.subs(list(zip(vectors, d_funcs)))
d_result = wrt_vector(d_result)
# Second step: backsubstitute the vectors in
d_result = d_result.subs(list(zip(d_funcs, vectors)))
# Third step: evaluate the derivatives of the vectors
derivs = []
for v in vectors:
d = Add(*[(self._christoffel[k, wrt_vector._index, v._index]
*v._coord_sys.base_vector(k))
for k in range(v._coord_sys.dim)])
derivs.append(d)
to_subs = [wrt_vector(d) for d in d_funcs]
result = d_result.subs(list(zip(to_subs, derivs)))
# Remove the dummies
result = result.subs(list(zip(d_funcs, vectors)))
return result.doit()
class CovarDerivativeOp(Expr):
"""Covariant derivative operator.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import CovarDerivativeOp
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import metric_to_Christoffel_2nd, TensorProduct
>>> TP = TensorProduct
>>> ch = metric_to_Christoffel_2nd(TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
>>> ch
[[[0, 0], [0, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]]
>>> cvd = CovarDerivativeOp(R2.x*R2.e_x, ch)
>>> cvd(R2.x)
x
>>> cvd(R2.x*R2.e_x)
x*e_x
"""
def __init__(self, wrt, christoffel):
super(CovarDerivativeOp, self).__init__()
if len(set(v._coord_sys for v in wrt.atoms(BaseVectorField))) > 1:
raise NotImplementedError()
if contravariant_order(wrt) != 1 or covariant_order(wrt):
raise ValueError('Covariant derivatives are defined only with '
'respect to vector fields. The supplied argument '
'was not a vector field.')
self._wrt = wrt
self._christoffel = christoffel
self._args = self._wrt, self._christoffel
def __call__(self, field):
vectors = list(self._wrt.atoms(BaseVectorField))
base_ops = [BaseCovarDerivativeOp(v._coord_sys, v._index, self._christoffel)
for v in vectors]
return self._wrt.subs(list(zip(vectors, base_ops))).rcall(field)
def _latex(self, printer, *args):
return r'\mathbb{\nabla}_{%s}' % printer._print(self._wrt)
###############################################################################
# Integral curves on vector fields
###############################################################################
def intcurve_series(vector_field, param, start_point, n=6, coord_sys=None, coeffs=False):
r"""Return the series expansion for an integral curve of the field.
Integral curve is a function `\gamma` taking a parameter in `R` to a point
in the manifold. It verifies the equation:
`V(f)\big(\gamma(t)\big) = \frac{d}{dt}f\big(\gamma(t)\big)`
where the given ``vector_field`` is denoted as `V`. This holds for any
value `t` for the parameter and any scalar field `f`.
This equation can also be decomposed of a basis of coordinate functions
`V(f_i)\big(\gamma(t)\big) = \frac{d}{dt}f_i\big(\gamma(t)\big) \quad \forall i`
This function returns a series expansion of `\gamma(t)` in terms of the
coordinate system ``coord_sys``. The equations and expansions are necessarily
done in coordinate-system-dependent way as there is no other way to
represent movement between points on the manifold (i.e. there is no such
thing as a difference of points for a general manifold).
See Also
========
intcurve_diffequ
Parameters
==========
vector_field
the vector field for which an integral curve will be given
param
the argument of the function `\gamma` from R to the curve
start_point
the point which corresponds to `\gamma(0)`
n
the order to which to expand
coord_sys
the coordinate system in which to expand
coeffs (default False) - if True return a list of elements of the expansion
Examples
========
Use the predefined R2 manifold:
>>> from sympy.abc import t, x, y
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2, R2_p, R2_r
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import intcurve_series
Specify a starting point and a vector field:
>>> start_point = R2_r.point([x, y])
>>> vector_field = R2_r.e_x
Calculate the series:
>>> intcurve_series(vector_field, t, start_point, n=3)
Matrix([
[t + x],
[ y]])
Or get the elements of the expansion in a list:
>>> series = intcurve_series(vector_field, t, start_point, n=3, coeffs=True)
>>> series[0]
Matrix([
[x],
[y]])
>>> series[1]
Matrix([
[t],
[0]])
>>> series[2]
Matrix([
[0],
[0]])
The series in the polar coordinate system:
>>> series = intcurve_series(vector_field, t, start_point,
... n=3, coord_sys=R2_p, coeffs=True)
>>> series[0]
Matrix([
[sqrt(x**2 + y**2)],
[ atan2(y, x)]])
>>> series[1]
Matrix([
[t*x/sqrt(x**2 + y**2)],
[ -t*y/(x**2 + y**2)]])
>>> series[2]
Matrix([
[t**2*(-x**2/(x**2 + y**2)**(3/2) + 1/sqrt(x**2 + y**2))/2],
[ t**2*x*y/(x**2 + y**2)**2]])
"""
if contravariant_order(vector_field) != 1 or covariant_order(vector_field):
raise ValueError('The supplied field was not a vector field.')
def iter_vfield(scalar_field, i):
"""Return ``vector_field`` called `i` times on ``scalar_field``."""
return reduce(lambda s, v: v.rcall(s), [vector_field, ]*i, scalar_field)
def taylor_terms_per_coord(coord_function):
"""Return the series for one of the coordinates."""
return [param**i*iter_vfield(coord_function, i).rcall(start_point)/factorial(i)
for i in range(n)]
coord_sys = coord_sys if coord_sys else start_point._coord_sys
coord_functions = coord_sys.coord_functions()
taylor_terms = [taylor_terms_per_coord(f) for f in coord_functions]
if coeffs:
return [Matrix(t) for t in zip(*taylor_terms)]
else:
return Matrix([sum(c) for c in taylor_terms])
def intcurve_diffequ(vector_field, param, start_point, coord_sys=None):
r"""Return the differential equation for an integral curve of the field.
Integral curve is a function `\gamma` taking a parameter in `R` to a point
in the manifold. It verifies the equation:
`V(f)\big(\gamma(t)\big) = \frac{d}{dt}f\big(\gamma(t)\big)`
where the given ``vector_field`` is denoted as `V`. This holds for any
value `t` for the parameter and any scalar field `f`.
This function returns the differential equation of `\gamma(t)` in terms of the
coordinate system ``coord_sys``. The equations and expansions are necessarily
done in coordinate-system-dependent way as there is no other way to
represent movement between points on the manifold (i.e. there is no such
thing as a difference of points for a general manifold).
See Also
========
intcurve_series
Parameters
==========
vector_field
the vector field for which an integral curve will be given
param
the argument of the function `\gamma` from R to the curve
start_point
the point which corresponds to `\gamma(0)`
coord_sys
the coordinate system in which to give the equations
Returns
=======
a tuple of (equations, initial conditions)
Examples
========
Use the predefined R2 manifold:
>>> from sympy.abc import t
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2, R2_p, R2_r
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import intcurve_diffequ
Specify a starting point and a vector field:
>>> start_point = R2_r.point([0, 1])
>>> vector_field = -R2.y*R2.e_x + R2.x*R2.e_y
Get the equation:
>>> equations, init_cond = intcurve_diffequ(vector_field, t, start_point)
>>> equations
[f_1(t) + Derivative(f_0(t), t), -f_0(t) + Derivative(f_1(t), t)]
>>> init_cond
[f_0(0), f_1(0) - 1]
The series in the polar coordinate system:
>>> equations, init_cond = intcurve_diffequ(vector_field, t, start_point, R2_p)
>>> equations
[Derivative(f_0(t), t), Derivative(f_1(t), t) - 1]
>>> init_cond
[f_0(0) - 1, f_1(0) - pi/2]
"""
if contravariant_order(vector_field) != 1 or covariant_order(vector_field):
raise ValueError('The supplied field was not a vector field.')
coord_sys = coord_sys if coord_sys else start_point._coord_sys
gammas = [Function('f_%d' % i)(param) for i in range(
start_point._coord_sys.dim)]
arbitrary_p = Point(coord_sys, gammas)
coord_functions = coord_sys.coord_functions()
equations = [simplify(diff(cf.rcall(arbitrary_p), param) - vector_field.rcall(cf).rcall(arbitrary_p))
for cf in coord_functions]
init_cond = [simplify(cf.rcall(arbitrary_p).subs(param, 0) - cf.rcall(start_point))
for cf in coord_functions]
return equations, init_cond
###############################################################################
# Helpers
###############################################################################
def dummyfy(args, exprs):
# TODO Is this a good idea?
d_args = Matrix([s.as_dummy() for s in args])
reps = dict(zip(args, d_args))
d_exprs = Matrix([sympify(expr).subs(reps) for expr in exprs])
return d_args, d_exprs
###############################################################################
# Helpers
###############################################################################
def contravariant_order(expr, _strict=False):
"""Return the contravariant order of an expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import contravariant_order
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.abc import a
>>> contravariant_order(a)
0
>>> contravariant_order(a*R2.x + 2)
0
>>> contravariant_order(a*R2.x*R2.e_y + R2.e_x)
1
"""
# TODO move some of this to class methods.
# TODO rewrite using the .as_blah_blah methods
if isinstance(expr, Add):
orders = [contravariant_order(e) for e in expr.args]
if len(set(orders)) != 1:
raise ValueError('Misformed expression containing contravariant fields of varying order.')
return orders[0]
elif isinstance(expr, Mul):
orders = [contravariant_order(e) for e in expr.args]
not_zero = [o for o in orders if o != 0]
if len(not_zero) > 1:
raise ValueError('Misformed expression containing multiplication between vectors.')
return 0 if not not_zero else not_zero[0]
elif isinstance(expr, Pow):
if covariant_order(expr.base) or covariant_order(expr.exp):
raise ValueError(
'Misformed expression containing a power of a vector.')
return 0
elif isinstance(expr, BaseVectorField):
return 1
elif isinstance(expr, TensorProduct):
return sum(contravariant_order(a) for a in expr.args)
elif not _strict or expr.atoms(BaseScalarField):
return 0
else: # If it does not contain anything related to the diffgeom module and it is _strict
return -1
def covariant_order(expr, _strict=False):
"""Return the covariant order of an expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import covariant_order
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.abc import a
>>> covariant_order(a)
0
>>> covariant_order(a*R2.x + 2)
0
>>> covariant_order(a*R2.x*R2.dy + R2.dx)
1
"""
# TODO move some of this to class methods.
# TODO rewrite using the .as_blah_blah methods
if isinstance(expr, Add):
orders = [covariant_order(e) for e in expr.args]
if len(set(orders)) != 1:
raise ValueError('Misformed expression containing form fields of varying order.')
return orders[0]
elif isinstance(expr, Mul):
orders = [covariant_order(e) for e in expr.args]
not_zero = [o for o in orders if o != 0]
if len(not_zero) > 1:
raise ValueError('Misformed expression containing multiplication between forms.')
return 0 if not not_zero else not_zero[0]
elif isinstance(expr, Pow):
if covariant_order(expr.base) or covariant_order(expr.exp):
raise ValueError(
'Misformed expression containing a power of a form.')
return 0
elif isinstance(expr, Differential):
return covariant_order(*expr.args) + 1
elif isinstance(expr, TensorProduct):
return sum(covariant_order(a) for a in expr.args)
elif not _strict or expr.atoms(BaseScalarField):
return 0
else: # If it does not contain anything related to the diffgeom module and it is _strict
return -1
###############################################################################
# Coordinate transformation functions
###############################################################################
def vectors_in_basis(expr, to_sys):
"""Transform all base vectors in base vectors of a specified coord basis.
While the new base vectors are in the new coordinate system basis, any
coefficients are kept in the old system.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import vectors_in_basis
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2_r, R2_p
>>> vectors_in_basis(R2_r.e_x, R2_p)
x*e_r/sqrt(x**2 + y**2) - y*e_theta/(x**2 + y**2)
>>> vectors_in_basis(R2_p.e_r, R2_r)
sin(theta)*e_y + cos(theta)*e_x
"""
vectors = list(expr.atoms(BaseVectorField))
new_vectors = []
for v in vectors:
cs = v._coord_sys
jac = cs.jacobian(to_sys, cs.coord_functions())
new = (jac.T*Matrix(to_sys.base_vectors()))[v._index]
new_vectors.append(new)
return expr.subs(list(zip(vectors, new_vectors)))
###############################################################################
# Coordinate-dependent functions
###############################################################################
def twoform_to_matrix(expr):
"""Return the matrix representing the twoform.
For the twoform `w` return the matrix `M` such that `M[i,j]=w(e_i, e_j)`,
where `e_i` is the i-th base vector field for the coordinate system in
which the expression of `w` is given.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import twoform_to_matrix, TensorProduct
>>> TP = TensorProduct
>>> twoform_to_matrix(TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
Matrix([
[1, 0],
[0, 1]])
>>> twoform_to_matrix(R2.x*TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
Matrix([
[x, 0],
[0, 1]])
>>> twoform_to_matrix(TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy) - TP(R2.dx, R2.dy)/2)
Matrix([
[ 1, 0],
[-1/2, 1]])
"""
if covariant_order(expr) != 2 or contravariant_order(expr):
raise ValueError('The input expression is not a two-form.')
coord_sys = expr.atoms(CoordSystem)
if len(coord_sys) != 1:
raise ValueError('The input expression concerns more than one '
'coordinate systems, hence there is no unambiguous '
'way to choose a coordinate system for the matrix.')
coord_sys = coord_sys.pop()
vectors = coord_sys.base_vectors()
expr = expr.expand()
matrix_content = [[expr.rcall(v1, v2) for v1 in vectors]
for v2 in vectors]
return Matrix(matrix_content)
def metric_to_Christoffel_1st(expr):
"""Return the nested list of Christoffel symbols for the given metric.
This returns the Christoffel symbol of first kind that represents the
Levi-Civita connection for the given metric.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import metric_to_Christoffel_1st, TensorProduct
>>> TP = TensorProduct
>>> metric_to_Christoffel_1st(TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
[[[0, 0], [0, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]]
>>> metric_to_Christoffel_1st(R2.x*TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
[[[1/2, 0], [0, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]]
"""
matrix = twoform_to_matrix(expr)
if not matrix.is_symmetric():
raise ValueError(
'The two-form representing the metric is not symmetric.')
coord_sys = expr.atoms(CoordSystem).pop()
deriv_matrices = [matrix.applyfunc(lambda a: d(a))
for d in coord_sys.base_vectors()]
indices = list(range(coord_sys.dim))
christoffel = [[[(deriv_matrices[k][i, j] + deriv_matrices[j][i, k] - deriv_matrices[i][j, k])/2
for k in indices]
for j in indices]
for i in indices]
return ImmutableDenseNDimArray(christoffel)
def metric_to_Christoffel_2nd(expr):
"""Return the nested list of Christoffel symbols for the given metric.
This returns the Christoffel symbol of second kind that represents the
Levi-Civita connection for the given metric.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import metric_to_Christoffel_2nd, TensorProduct
>>> TP = TensorProduct
>>> metric_to_Christoffel_2nd(TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
[[[0, 0], [0, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]]
>>> metric_to_Christoffel_2nd(R2.x*TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
[[[1/(2*x), 0], [0, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]]
"""
ch_1st = metric_to_Christoffel_1st(expr)
coord_sys = expr.atoms(CoordSystem).pop()
indices = list(range(coord_sys.dim))
# XXX workaround, inverting a matrix does not work if it contains non
# symbols
#matrix = twoform_to_matrix(expr).inv()
matrix = twoform_to_matrix(expr)
s_fields = set()
for e in matrix:
s_fields.update(e.atoms(BaseScalarField))
s_fields = list(s_fields)
dums = coord_sys._dummies
matrix = matrix.subs(list(zip(s_fields, dums))).inv().subs(list(zip(dums, s_fields)))
# XXX end of workaround
christoffel = [[[Add(*[matrix[i, l]*ch_1st[l, j, k] for l in indices])
for k in indices]
for j in indices]
for i in indices]
return ImmutableDenseNDimArray(christoffel)
def metric_to_Riemann_components(expr):
"""Return the components of the Riemann tensor expressed in a given basis.
Given a metric it calculates the components of the Riemann tensor in the
canonical basis of the coordinate system in which the metric expression is
given.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import metric_to_Riemann_components, TensorProduct
>>> TP = TensorProduct
>>> metric_to_Riemann_components(TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
[[[[0, 0], [0, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]], [[[0, 0], [0, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]]]
>>> non_trivial_metric = exp(2*R2.r)*TP(R2.dr, R2.dr) + \
R2.r**2*TP(R2.dtheta, R2.dtheta)
>>> non_trivial_metric
r**2*TensorProduct(dtheta, dtheta) + exp(2*r)*TensorProduct(dr, dr)
>>> riemann = metric_to_Riemann_components(non_trivial_metric)
>>> riemann[0, :, :, :]
[[[0, 0], [0, 0]], [[0, r*exp(-2*r)], [-r*exp(-2*r), 0]]]
>>> riemann[1, :, :, :]
[[[0, -1/r], [1/r, 0]], [[0, 0], [0, 0]]]
"""
ch_2nd = metric_to_Christoffel_2nd(expr)
coord_sys = expr.atoms(CoordSystem).pop()
indices = list(range(coord_sys.dim))
deriv_ch = [[[[d(ch_2nd[i, j, k])
for d in coord_sys.base_vectors()]
for k in indices]
for j in indices]
for i in indices]
riemann_a = [[[[deriv_ch[rho][sig][nu][mu] - deriv_ch[rho][sig][mu][nu]
for nu in indices]
for mu in indices]
for sig in indices]
for rho in indices]
riemann_b = [[[[Add(*[ch_2nd[rho, l, mu]*ch_2nd[l, sig, nu] - ch_2nd[rho, l, nu]*ch_2nd[l, sig, mu] for l in indices])
for nu in indices]
for mu in indices]
for sig in indices]
for rho in indices]
riemann = [[[[riemann_a[rho][sig][mu][nu] + riemann_b[rho][sig][mu][nu]
for nu in indices]
for mu in indices]
for sig in indices]
for rho in indices]
return ImmutableDenseNDimArray(riemann)
def metric_to_Ricci_components(expr):
"""Return the components of the Ricci tensor expressed in a given basis.
Given a metric it calculates the components of the Ricci tensor in the
canonical basis of the coordinate system in which the metric expression is
given.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp
>>> from sympy.diffgeom.rn import R2
>>> from sympy.diffgeom import metric_to_Ricci_components, TensorProduct
>>> TP = TensorProduct
>>> metric_to_Ricci_components(TP(R2.dx, R2.dx) + TP(R2.dy, R2.dy))
[[0, 0], [0, 0]]
>>> non_trivial_metric = exp(2*R2.r)*TP(R2.dr, R2.dr) + \
R2.r**2*TP(R2.dtheta, R2.dtheta)
>>> non_trivial_metric
r**2*TensorProduct(dtheta, dtheta) + exp(2*r)*TensorProduct(dr, dr)
>>> metric_to_Ricci_components(non_trivial_metric)
[[1/r, 0], [0, r*exp(-2*r)]]
"""
riemann = metric_to_Riemann_components(expr)
coord_sys = expr.atoms(CoordSystem).pop()
indices = list(range(coord_sys.dim))
ricci = [[Add(*[riemann[k, i, k, j] for k in indices])
for j in indices]
for i in indices]
return ImmutableDenseNDimArray(ricci)
|
666a866942c76995c50760ab2f0779d912208ad9d8ceb8e8786f57d449d4cf02
|
import itertools
from functools import reduce
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy import Indexed, IndexedBase, Tuple, Sum, Add, S
from sympy.core.basic import Basic
from sympy.core.sympify import _sympify
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.compatibility import accumulate, default_sort_key
from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
from sympy.matrices.expressions import (MatAdd, MatMul, Trace, Transpose,
MatrixSymbol)
from sympy.matrices.expressions.matexpr import MatrixExpr, MatrixElement
from sympy.functions.special.tensor_functions import KroneckerDelta
from sympy.tensor.array import NDimArray
class _CodegenArrayAbstract(Basic):
@property
def subranks(self):
"""
Returns the ranks of the objects in the uppermost tensor product inside
the current object. In case no tensor products are contained, return
the atomic ranks.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayTensorProduct, CodegenArrayContraction
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol
>>> M = MatrixSymbol("M", 3, 3)
>>> N = MatrixSymbol("N", 3, 3)
>>> P = MatrixSymbol("P", 3, 3)
Important: do not confuse the rank of the matrix with the rank of an array.
>>> tp = CodegenArrayTensorProduct(M, N, P)
>>> tp.subranks
[2, 2, 2]
>>> co = CodegenArrayContraction(tp, (1, 2), (3, 4))
>>> co.subranks
[2, 2, 2]
"""
return self._subranks[:]
def subrank(self):
"""
The sum of ``subranks``.
"""
return sum(self.subranks)
@property
def shape(self):
return self._shape
class CodegenArrayContraction(_CodegenArrayAbstract):
r"""
This class is meant to represent contractions of arrays in a form easily
processable by the code printers.
"""
def __new__(cls, expr, *contraction_indices, **kwargs):
contraction_indices = _sort_contraction_indices(contraction_indices)
expr = _sympify(expr)
if len(contraction_indices) == 0:
return expr
if isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayContraction):
return cls._flatten(expr, *contraction_indices)
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, expr, *contraction_indices)
obj._subranks = _get_subranks(expr)
obj._mapping = _get_mapping_from_subranks(obj._subranks)
free_indices_to_position = {i: i for i in range(sum(obj._subranks)) if all([i not in cind for cind in contraction_indices])}
obj._free_indices_to_position = free_indices_to_position
shape = expr.shape
if shape:
# Check that no contraction happens when the shape is mismatched:
for i in contraction_indices:
if len(set(shape[j] for j in i)) != 1:
raise ValueError("contracting indices of different dimensions")
shape = tuple(shp for i, shp in enumerate(shape) if not any(i in j for j in contraction_indices))
obj._shape = shape
return obj
@staticmethod
def _get_free_indices_to_position_map(free_indices, contraction_indices):
free_indices_to_position = {}
flattened_contraction_indices = [j for i in contraction_indices for j in i]
counter = 0
for ind in free_indices:
while counter in flattened_contraction_indices:
counter += 1
free_indices_to_position[ind] = counter
counter += 1
return free_indices_to_position
@staticmethod
def _get_index_shifts(expr):
"""
Get the mapping of indices at the positions before the contraction
occures.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayContraction, CodegenArrayTensorProduct
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol
>>> M = MatrixSymbol("M", 3, 3)
>>> N = MatrixSymbol("N", 3, 3)
>>> cg = CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(M, N), [1, 2])
>>> cg._get_index_shifts(cg)
[0, 2]
Indeed, ``cg`` after the contraction has two dimensions, 0 and 1. They
need to be shifted by 0 and 2 to get the corresponding positions before
the contraction (that is, 0 and 3).
"""
inner_contraction_indices = expr.contraction_indices
all_inner = [j for i in inner_contraction_indices for j in i]
all_inner.sort()
# TODO: add API for total rank and cumulative rank:
total_rank = get_rank(expr)
inner_rank = len(all_inner)
outer_rank = total_rank - inner_rank
shifts = [0 for i in range(outer_rank)]
counter = 0
pointer = 0
for i in range(outer_rank):
while pointer < inner_rank and counter >= all_inner[pointer]:
counter += 1
pointer += 1
shifts[i] += pointer
counter += 1
return shifts
@staticmethod
def _convert_outer_indices_to_inner_indices(expr, *outer_contraction_indices):
shifts = CodegenArrayContraction._get_index_shifts(expr)
outer_contraction_indices = tuple(tuple(shifts[j] + j for j in i) for i in outer_contraction_indices)
return outer_contraction_indices
@staticmethod
def _flatten(expr, *outer_contraction_indices):
inner_contraction_indices = expr.contraction_indices
outer_contraction_indices = CodegenArrayContraction._convert_outer_indices_to_inner_indices(expr, *outer_contraction_indices)
contraction_indices = inner_contraction_indices + outer_contraction_indices
return CodegenArrayContraction(expr.expr, *contraction_indices)
def _get_contraction_tuples(self):
r"""
Return tuples containing the argument index and position within the
argument of the index position.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol, MatrixExpr, Sum, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import i, j, k, l, N
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayContraction, CodegenArrayTensorProduct
>>> A = MatrixSymbol("A", N, N)
>>> B = MatrixSymbol("B", N, N)
>>> cg = CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(A, B), (1, 2))
>>> cg._get_contraction_tuples()
[[(0, 1), (1, 0)]]
Here the contraction pair `(1, 2)` meaning that the 2nd and 3rd indices
of the tensor product `A\otimes B` are contracted, has been transformed
into `(0, 1)` and `(1, 0)`, identifying the same indices in a different
notation. `(0, 1)` is the second index (1) of the first argument (i.e.
0 or `A`). `(1, 0)` is the first index (i.e. 0) of the second
argument (i.e. 1 or `B`).
"""
mapping = self._mapping
return [[mapping[j] for j in i] for i in self.contraction_indices]
@staticmethod
def _contraction_tuples_to_contraction_indices(expr, contraction_tuples):
# TODO: check that `expr` has `.subranks`:
ranks = expr.subranks
cumulative_ranks = [0] + list(accumulate(ranks))
return [tuple(cumulative_ranks[j]+k for j, k in i) for i in contraction_tuples]
@property
def free_indices(self):
return self._free_indices[:]
@property
def free_indices_to_position(self):
return dict(self._free_indices_to_position)
@property
def expr(self):
return self.args[0]
@property
def contraction_indices(self):
return self.args[1:]
def _contraction_indices_to_components(self):
expr = self.expr
if not isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayTensorProduct):
raise NotImplementedError("only for contractions of tensor products")
contraction_indices = self.contraction_indices
args = expr.args
ranks = expr.subranks
mapping = {}
counter = 0
for i, rank in enumerate(ranks):
for j in range(rank):
mapping[counter] = (i, j)
counter += 1
return mapping
def sort_args_by_name(self):
"""
Sort arguments in the tensor product so that their order is lexicographical.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol, MatrixExpr, Sum, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import i, j, k, l, N
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayContraction
>>> A = MatrixSymbol("A", N, N)
>>> B = MatrixSymbol("B", N, N)
>>> C = MatrixSymbol("C", N, N)
>>> D = MatrixSymbol("D", N, N)
>>> cg = CodegenArrayContraction.from_MatMul(C*D*A*B)
>>> cg
CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(C, D, A, B), (1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6))
>>> cg.sort_args_by_name()
CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(A, B, C, D), (0, 7), (1, 2), (5, 6))
"""
expr = self.expr
if not isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayTensorProduct):
return self
args = expr.args
sorted_data = sorted(enumerate(args), key=lambda x: default_sort_key(x[1]))
pos_sorted, args_sorted = zip(*sorted_data)
reordering_map = {i: pos_sorted.index(i) for i, arg in enumerate(args)}
contraction_tuples = self._get_contraction_tuples()
contraction_tuples = [[(reordering_map[j], k) for j, k in i] for i in contraction_tuples]
c_tp = CodegenArrayTensorProduct(*args_sorted)
new_contr_indices = self._contraction_tuples_to_contraction_indices(
c_tp,
contraction_tuples
)
return CodegenArrayContraction(c_tp, *new_contr_indices)
def _get_contraction_links(self):
r"""
Returns a dictionary of links between arguments in the tensor product
being contracted.
See the example for an explanation of the values.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol, MatrixExpr, Sum, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import i, j, k, l, N
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayContraction
>>> A = MatrixSymbol("A", N, N)
>>> B = MatrixSymbol("B", N, N)
>>> C = MatrixSymbol("C", N, N)
>>> D = MatrixSymbol("D", N, N)
Matrix multiplications are pairwise contractions between neighboring
matrices:
`A_{ij} B_{jk} C_{kl} D_{lm}`
>>> cg = CodegenArrayContraction.from_MatMul(A*B*C*D)
>>> cg
CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(A, B, C, D), (1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6))
>>> cg._get_contraction_links()
{0: {1: (1, 0)}, 1: {0: (0, 1), 1: (2, 0)}, 2: {0: (1, 1), 1: (3, 0)}, 3: {0: (2, 1)}}
This dictionary is interpreted as follows: argument in position 0 (i.e.
matrix `A`) has its second index (i.e. 1) contracted to `(1, 0)`, that
is argument in position 1 (matrix `B`) on the first index slot of `B`,
this is the contraction provided by the index `j` from `A`.
The argument in position 1 (that is, matrix `B`) has two contractions,
the ones provided by the indices `j` and `k`, respectively the first
and second indices (0 and 1 in the sub-dict). The link `(0, 1)` and
`(2, 0)` respectively. `(0, 1)` is the index slot 1 (the 2nd) of
argument in position 0 (that is, `A_{\ldot j}`), and so on.
"""
return _get_contraction_links(self.subranks, *self.contraction_indices)
@staticmethod
def from_MatMul(expr):
args_nonmat = []
args = []
contractions = []
for arg in expr.args:
if isinstance(arg, MatrixExpr):
args.append(arg)
else:
args_nonmat.append(arg)
contractions = [(2*i+1, 2*i+2) for i in range(len(args)-1)]
return Mul.fromiter(args_nonmat)*CodegenArrayContraction(
CodegenArrayTensorProduct(*args),
*contractions
)
class CodegenArrayTensorProduct(_CodegenArrayAbstract):
r"""
Class to represent the tensor product of array-like objects.
"""
def __new__(cls, *args):
args = [_sympify(arg) for arg in args]
args = cls._flatten(args)
ranks = [get_rank(arg) for arg in args]
if len(args) == 1:
return args[0]
# If there are contraction objects inside, transform the whole
# expression into `CodegenArrayContraction`:
contractions = {i: arg for i, arg in enumerate(args) if isinstance(arg, CodegenArrayContraction)}
if contractions:
cumulative_ranks = list(accumulate([0] + ranks))[:-1]
tp = cls(*[arg.expr if isinstance(arg, CodegenArrayContraction) else arg for arg in args])
contraction_indices = [tuple(cumulative_ranks[i] + k for k in j) for i, arg in contractions.items() for j in arg.contraction_indices]
return CodegenArrayContraction(tp, *contraction_indices)
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, *args)
obj._subranks = ranks
shapes = [i.shape for i in args]
if any(i is None for i in shapes):
obj._shape = None
else:
obj._shape = tuple(j for i in shapes for j in i)
return obj
@classmethod
def _flatten(cls, args):
args = [i for arg in args for i in (arg.args if isinstance(arg, cls) else [arg])]
return args
class CodegenArrayElementwiseAdd(_CodegenArrayAbstract):
r"""
Class for elementwise array additions.
"""
def __new__(cls, *args):
args = [_sympify(arg) for arg in args]
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, *args)
ranks = [get_rank(arg) for arg in args]
ranks = list(set(ranks))
if len(ranks) != 1:
raise ValueError("summing arrays of different ranks")
obj._subranks = ranks
shapes = [arg.shape for arg in args]
if len(set([i for i in shapes if i is not None])) > 1:
raise ValueError("mismatching shapes in addition")
if any(i is None for i in shapes):
obj._shape = None
else:
obj._shape = shapes[0]
return obj
class CodegenArrayPermuteDims(_CodegenArrayAbstract):
r"""
Class to represent permutation of axes of arrays.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayPermuteDims
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol
>>> M = MatrixSymbol("M", 3, 3)
>>> cg = CodegenArrayPermuteDims(M, [1, 0])
The object ``cg`` represents the transposition of ``M``, as the permutation
``[1, 0]`` will act on its indices by switching them:
`M_{ij} \Rightarrow M_{ji}`
This is evident when transforming back to matrix form:
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import recognize_matrix_expression
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
M.T
>>> N = MatrixSymbol("N", 3, 2)
>>> cg = CodegenArrayPermuteDims(N, [1, 0])
>>> cg.shape
(2, 3)
"""
def __new__(cls, expr, permutation):
from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
expr = _sympify(expr)
permutation = Permutation(permutation)
plist = permutation.args[0]
if plist == sorted(plist):
return expr
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, expr, permutation)
obj._subranks = [get_rank(expr)]
shape = expr.shape
if shape is None:
obj._shape = None
else:
obj._shape = tuple(shape[permutation(i)] for i in range(len(shape)))
return obj
@property
def expr(self):
return self.args[0]
@property
def permutation(self):
return self.args[1]
def nest_permutation(self):
r"""
Nest the permutation down the expression tree.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import (CodegenArrayPermuteDims, CodegenArrayTensorProduct, nest_permutation)
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> M = MatrixSymbol("M", 3, 3)
>>> N = MatrixSymbol("N", 3, 3)
>>> cg = CodegenArrayPermuteDims(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(M, N), [1, 0, 3, 2])
>>> cg
CodegenArrayPermuteDims(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(M, N), (0 1)(2 3))
>>> nest_permutation(cg)
CodegenArrayTensorProduct(CodegenArrayPermuteDims(M, (0 1)), CodegenArrayPermuteDims(N, (0 1)))
In ``cg`` both ``M`` and ``N`` are transposed. The cyclic
representation of the permutation after the tensor product is
`(0 1)(2 3)`. After nesting it down the expression tree, the usual
transposition permutation `(0 1)` appears.
"""
expr = self.expr
if isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayTensorProduct):
# Check if the permutation keeps the subranks separated:
subranks = expr.subranks
subrank = expr.subrank()
l = list(range(subrank))
p = [self.permutation(i) for i in l]
dargs = {}
counter = 0
for i, arg in zip(subranks, expr.args):
p0 = p[counter:counter+i]
counter += i
s0 = sorted(p0)
if not all([s0[j+1]-s0[j] == 1 for j in range(len(s0)-1)]):
# Cross-argument permutations, impossible to nest the object:
return self
subpermutation = [p0.index(j) for j in s0]
dargs[s0[0]] = CodegenArrayPermuteDims(arg, subpermutation)
# Read the arguments sorting the according to the keys of the dict:
args = [dargs[i] for i in sorted(dargs)]
return CodegenArrayTensorProduct(*args)
elif isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayContraction):
# Invert tree hierarchy: put the contraction above.
shifts = expr._get_index_shifts(expr)
cycles = self.permutation.cyclic_form
newcycles = CodegenArrayContraction._convert_outer_indices_to_inner_indices(expr, *cycles)
newpermutation = Permutation(newcycles)
new_contr_indices = [tuple(newpermutation(j) for j in i) for i in expr.contraction_indices]
return CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayPermuteDims(expr.expr, newpermutation), *new_contr_indices)
elif isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayElementwiseAdd):
return CodegenArrayElementwiseAdd(*[CodegenArrayPermuteDims(arg, self.permutation) for arg in expr.args])
return self
def nest_permutation(expr):
if isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayPermuteDims):
return expr.nest_permutation()
else:
return expr
class CodegenArrayDiagonal(_CodegenArrayAbstract):
r"""
Class to represent the diagonal operator.
In a 2-dimensional array it returns the diagonal, this looks like the
operation:
`A_{ij} \rightarrow A_{ii}`
The diagonal over axes 1 and 2 (the second and third) of the tensor product
of two 2-dimensional arrays `A \otimes B` is
`\Big[ A_{ab} B_{cd} \Big]_{abcd} \rightarrow \Big[ A_{ai} B_{id} \Big]_{adi}`
In this last example the array expression has been reduced from
4-dimensional to 3-dimensional. Notice that no contraction has occurred,
rather there is a new index `i` for the diagonal, contraction would have
reduced the array to 2 dimensions.
Notice that the diagonalized out dimensions are added as new dimensions at
the end of the indices.
"""
def __new__(cls, expr, *diagonal_indices):
expr = _sympify(expr)
diagonal_indices = [Tuple(*sorted(i)) for i in diagonal_indices]
if isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayDiagonal):
return cls._flatten(expr, *diagonal_indices)
obj = Basic.__new__(cls, expr, *diagonal_indices)
obj._subranks = _get_subranks(expr)
shape = expr.shape
if shape is None:
obj._shape = None
else:
# Check that no diagonalization happens on indices with mismatched
# dimensions:
for i in diagonal_indices:
if len(set(shape[j] for j in i)) != 1:
raise ValueError("contracting indices of different dimensions")
# Get new shape:
shp1 = tuple(shp for i,shp in enumerate(shape) if not any(i in j for j in diagonal_indices))
shp2 = tuple(shape[i[0]] for i in diagonal_indices)
obj._shape = shp1 + shp2
return obj
@property
def expr(self):
return self.args[0]
@property
def diagonal_indices(self):
return self.args[1:]
@staticmethod
def _flatten(expr, *outer_diagonal_indices):
inner_diagonal_indices = expr.diagonal_indices
all_inner = [j for i in inner_diagonal_indices for j in i]
all_inner.sort()
# TODO: add API for total rank and cumulative rank:
total_rank = get_rank(expr)
inner_rank = len(all_inner)
outer_rank = total_rank - inner_rank
shifts = [0 for i in range(outer_rank)]
counter = 0
pointer = 0
for i in range(outer_rank):
while pointer < inner_rank and counter >= all_inner[pointer]:
counter += 1
pointer += 1
shifts[i] += pointer
counter += 1
outer_diagonal_indices = tuple(tuple(shifts[j] + j for j in i) for i in outer_diagonal_indices)
diagonal_indices = inner_diagonal_indices + outer_diagonal_indices
return CodegenArrayDiagonal(expr.expr, *diagonal_indices)
def get_rank(expr):
if isinstance(expr, (MatrixExpr, MatrixElement)):
return 2
if isinstance(expr, _CodegenArrayAbstract):
return expr.subrank()
if isinstance(expr, NDimArray):
return expr.rank()
if isinstance(expr, Indexed):
return expr.rank
if isinstance(expr, IndexedBase):
shape = expr.shape
if shape is None:
return -1
else:
return len(shape)
if isinstance(expr, _RecognizeMatOp):
return expr.rank()
if isinstance(expr, _RecognizeMatMulLines):
return expr.rank()
return 0
def _get_subranks(expr):
if isinstance(expr, _CodegenArrayAbstract):
return expr.subranks
else:
return [get_rank(expr)]
def _get_mapping_from_subranks(subranks):
mapping = {}
counter = 0
for i, rank in enumerate(subranks):
for j in range(rank):
mapping[counter] = (i, j)
counter += 1
return mapping
def _get_contraction_links(subranks, *contraction_indices):
mapping = _get_mapping_from_subranks(subranks)
contraction_tuples = [[mapping[j] for j in i] for i in contraction_indices]
dlinks = defaultdict(dict)
for links in contraction_tuples:
if len(links) > 2:
raise NotImplementedError("three or more axes contracted at the same time")
(arg1, pos1), (arg2, pos2) = links
dlinks[arg1][pos1] = (arg2, pos2)
dlinks[arg2][pos2] = (arg1, pos1)
return dict(dlinks)
def _sort_contraction_indices(pairing_indices):
pairing_indices = [Tuple(*sorted(i)) for i in pairing_indices]
pairing_indices.sort(key=lambda x: min(x))
return pairing_indices
def _get_diagonal_indices(flattened_indices):
axes_contraction = defaultdict(list)
for i, ind in enumerate(flattened_indices):
axes_contraction[ind].append(i)
axes_contraction = {k: v for k, v in axes_contraction.items() if len(v) > 1}
# Put the diagonalized indices at the end:
ret_indices = [i for i in flattened_indices if i not in axes_contraction]
diag_indices = list(axes_contraction)
diag_indices.sort(key=lambda x: flattened_indices.index(x))
diagonal_indices = [tuple(axes_contraction[i]) for i in diag_indices]
ret_indices += diag_indices
ret_indices = tuple(ret_indices)
return diagonal_indices, ret_indices
def _get_argindex(subindices, ind):
for i, sind in enumerate(subindices):
if ind == sind:
return i
if isinstance(sind, (set, frozenset)) and ind in sind:
return i
raise IndexError("%s not found in %s" % (ind, subindices))
def _codegen_array_parse(expr):
if isinstance(expr, Sum):
function = expr.function
summation_indices = expr.variables
subexpr, subindices = _codegen_array_parse(function)
# Check dimensional consistency:
shape = subexpr.shape
if shape:
for ind, istart, iend in expr.limits:
i = _get_argindex(subindices, ind)
if istart != 0 or iend+1 != shape[i]:
raise ValueError("summation index and array dimension mismatch: %s" % ind)
contraction_indices = []
subindices = list(subindices)
if isinstance(subexpr, CodegenArrayDiagonal):
diagonal_indices = list(subexpr.diagonal_indices)
dindices = subindices[-len(diagonal_indices):]
subindices = subindices[:-len(diagonal_indices)]
for index in summation_indices:
if index in dindices:
position = dindices.index(index)
contraction_indices.append(diagonal_indices[position])
diagonal_indices[position] = None
diagonal_indices = [i for i in diagonal_indices if i is not None]
for i, ind in enumerate(subindices):
if ind in summation_indices:
pass
if diagonal_indices:
subexpr = CodegenArrayDiagonal(subexpr.expr, *diagonal_indices)
else:
subexpr = subexpr.expr
else:
function_args = [subexpr]
subindices = subindices
axes_contraction = defaultdict(list)
for i, ind in enumerate(subindices):
if ind in summation_indices:
axes_contraction[ind].append(i)
subindices[i] = None
for k, v in axes_contraction.items():
contraction_indices.append(tuple(v))
free_indices = [i for i in subindices if i is not None]
indices_ret = list(free_indices)
indices_ret.sort(key=lambda x: free_indices.index(x))
return CodegenArrayContraction(
subexpr,
*contraction_indices,
free_indices=free_indices
), tuple(indices_ret)
if isinstance(expr, Mul):
args, indices = zip(*[_codegen_array_parse(arg) for arg in expr.args])
# Check if there are KroneckerDelta objects:
kronecker_delta_repl = {}
for arg in args:
if not isinstance(arg, KroneckerDelta):
continue
# Diagonalize two indices:
i, j = arg.indices
kindices = set(arg.indices)
if i in kronecker_delta_repl:
kindices.update(kronecker_delta_repl[i])
if j in kronecker_delta_repl:
kindices.update(kronecker_delta_repl[j])
kindices = frozenset(kindices)
for index in kindices:
kronecker_delta_repl[index] = kindices
# Remove KroneckerDelta objects, their relations should be handled by
# CodegenArrayDiagonal:
newargs = []
newindices = []
for arg, loc_indices in zip(args, indices):
if isinstance(arg, KroneckerDelta):
continue
newargs.append(arg)
newindices.append(loc_indices)
flattened_indices = [kronecker_delta_repl.get(j, j) for i in newindices for j in i]
diagonal_indices, ret_indices = _get_diagonal_indices(flattened_indices)
tp = CodegenArrayTensorProduct(*newargs)
if diagonal_indices:
return (CodegenArrayDiagonal(tp, *diagonal_indices), ret_indices)
else:
return tp, ret_indices
if isinstance(expr, MatrixElement):
indices = expr.args[1:]
diagonal_indices, ret_indices = _get_diagonal_indices(indices)
if diagonal_indices:
return (CodegenArrayDiagonal(expr.args[0], *diagonal_indices), ret_indices)
else:
return expr.args[0], ret_indices
if isinstance(expr, Indexed):
indices = expr.indices
diagonal_indices, ret_indices = _get_diagonal_indices(indices)
if diagonal_indices:
return (CodegenArrayDiagonal(expr.base, *diagonal_indices), ret_indices)
else:
return expr.args[0], ret_indices
if isinstance(expr, IndexedBase):
raise NotImplementedError
if isinstance(expr, KroneckerDelta):
return expr, expr.indices
if isinstance(expr, Add):
args, indices = zip(*[_codegen_array_parse(arg) for arg in expr.args])
args = list(args)
# Check if all indices are compatible. Otherwise expand the dimensions:
index0set = set(indices[0])
index0 = indices[0]
for i in range(1, len(args)):
if set(indices[i]) != index0set:
raise NotImplementedError("indices must be the same")
permutation = Permutation([index0.index(j) for j in indices[i]])
# Perform index permutations:
args[i] = CodegenArrayPermuteDims(args[i], permutation)
return CodegenArrayElementwiseAdd(*args), index0
raise NotImplementedError("could not recognize expression %s" % expr)
def parse_indexed_expression(expr, first_indices=[]):
r"""
Parse indexed expression into a form useful for code generation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import parse_indexed_expression
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol, Sum, symbols
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> i, j, k, d = symbols("i j k d")
>>> M = MatrixSymbol("M", d, d)
>>> N = MatrixSymbol("N", d, d)
Recognize the trace in summation form:
>>> expr = Sum(M[i, i], (i, 0, d-1))
>>> parse_indexed_expression(expr)
CodegenArrayContraction(M, (0, 1))
Recognize the extraction of the diagonal by using the same index `i` on
both axes of the matrix:
>>> expr = M[i, i]
>>> parse_indexed_expression(expr)
CodegenArrayDiagonal(M, (0, 1))
This function can help perform the transformation expressed in two
different mathematical notations as:
`\sum_{j=0}^{N-1} A_{i,j} B_{j,k} \Longrightarrow \mathbf{A}\cdot \mathbf{B}`
Recognize the matrix multiplication in summation form:
>>> expr = Sum(M[i, j]*N[j, k], (j, 0, d-1))
>>> parse_indexed_expression(expr)
CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(M, N), (1, 2))
Specify that ``k`` has to be the starting index:
>>> parse_indexed_expression(expr, first_indices=[k])
CodegenArrayPermuteDims(CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(M, N), (1, 2)), (0 1))
"""
result, indices = _codegen_array_parse(expr)
if not first_indices:
return result
for i in first_indices:
if i not in indices:
first_indices.remove(i)
#raise ValueError("index %s not found or not a free index" % i)
first_indices.extend([i for i in indices if i not in first_indices])
permutation = [first_indices.index(i) for i in indices]
return CodegenArrayPermuteDims(result, permutation)
def _has_multiple_lines(expr):
if isinstance(expr, _RecognizeMatMulLines):
return True
if isinstance(expr, _RecognizeMatOp):
return expr.multiple_lines
return False
class _RecognizeMatOp(object):
"""
Class to help parsing matrix multiplication lines.
"""
def __init__(self, operator, args):
self.operator = operator
self.args = args
if any(_has_multiple_lines(arg) for arg in args):
multiple_lines = True
else:
multiple_lines = False
self.multiple_lines = multiple_lines
def rank(self):
if self.operator == Trace:
return 0
# TODO: check
return 2
def __repr__(self):
op = self.operator
if op == MatMul:
s = "*"
elif op == MatAdd:
s = "+"
else:
s = op.__name__
return "_RecognizeMatOp(%s, %s)" % (s, repr(self.args))
return "_RecognizeMatOp(%s)" % (s.join(repr(i) for i in self.args))
def __eq__(self, other):
if not isinstance(other, type(self)):
return False
if self.operator != other.operator:
return False
if self.args != other.args:
return False
return True
def __iter__(self):
return iter(self.args)
class _RecognizeMatMulLines(list):
"""
This class handles multiple parsed multiplication lines.
"""
def __new__(cls, args):
if len(args) == 1:
return args[0]
return list.__new__(cls, args)
def rank(self):
return reduce(lambda x, y: x*y, [get_rank(i) for i in self], S.One)
def __repr__(self):
return "_RecognizeMatMulLines(%s)" % super(_RecognizeMatMulLines, self).__repr__()
def _support_function_tp1_recognize(contraction_indices, args):
if not isinstance(args, list):
args = [args]
subranks = [get_rank(i) for i in args]
mapping = _get_mapping_from_subranks(subranks)
dlinks = _get_contraction_links(subranks, *contraction_indices)
flatten_contractions = [j for i in contraction_indices for j in i]
total_rank = sum(subranks)
# TODO: turn `free_indices` into a list?
free_indices = {i: i for i in range(total_rank) if i not in flatten_contractions}
return_list = []
while dlinks:
if free_indices:
first_index, starting_argind = min(free_indices.items(), key=lambda x: x[1])
free_indices.pop(first_index)
starting_argind, starting_pos = mapping[starting_argind]
else:
# Maybe a Trace
first_index = None
starting_argind = min(dlinks)
starting_pos = 0
current_argind, current_pos = starting_argind, starting_pos
matmul_args = []
prev_argind = None
prev_pos = None
last_index = None
while True:
elem = args[current_argind]
if current_pos == 1:
elem = _RecognizeMatOp(Transpose, [elem])
matmul_args.append(elem)
if current_argind not in dlinks:
break
other_pos = 1 - current_pos
link_dict = dlinks.pop(current_argind)
if other_pos not in link_dict:
if free_indices:
last_index = [i for i, j in free_indices.items() if mapping[j] == (current_argind, other_pos)][0]
else:
last_index = None
break
if len(link_dict) > 2:
raise NotImplementedError("not a matrix multiplication line")
prev_argind = current_argind
prev_pos = current_pos
# Get the last element of `link_dict` as the next link. The last
# element is the correct start for trace expressions:
current_argind, current_pos = link_dict[other_pos]
if current_argind == starting_argind:
# This is a trace:
if len(matmul_args) > 1:
matmul_args = [_RecognizeMatOp(Trace, [_RecognizeMatOp(MatMul, matmul_args)])]
else:
matmul_args = [_RecognizeMatOp(Trace, matmul_args)]
break
dlinks.pop(starting_argind, None)
free_indices.pop(last_index, None)
return_list.append(_RecognizeMatOp(MatMul, matmul_args))
return _RecognizeMatMulLines(return_list)
def recognize_matrix_expression(expr):
r"""
Recognize matrix expressions in codegen objects.
If more than one matrix multiplication line have been detected, return a
list with the matrix expressions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol, MatrixExpr, Sum, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import i, j, k, l, N
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayContraction, CodegenArrayTensorProduct
>>> from sympy.codegen.array_utils import recognize_matrix_expression, parse_indexed_expression
>>> A = MatrixSymbol("A", N, N)
>>> B = MatrixSymbol("B", N, N)
>>> C = MatrixSymbol("C", N, N)
>>> D = MatrixSymbol("D", N, N)
>>> expr = Sum(A[i, j]*B[j, k], (j, 0, N-1))
>>> cg = parse_indexed_expression(expr)
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
A*B
>>> cg = parse_indexed_expression(expr, first_indices=[k])
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
(A*B).T
Transposition is detected:
>>> expr = Sum(A[j, i]*B[j, k], (j, 0, N-1))
>>> cg = parse_indexed_expression(expr)
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
A.T*B
>>> cg = parse_indexed_expression(expr, first_indices=[k])
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
(A.T*B).T
Detect the trace:
>>> expr = Sum(A[i, i], (i, 0, N-1))
>>> cg = parse_indexed_expression(expr)
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
Trace(A)
Recognize some more complex traces:
>>> expr = Sum(A[i, j]*B[j, i], (i, 0, N-1), (j, 0, N-1))
>>> cg = parse_indexed_expression(expr)
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
Trace(A*B)
More complicated expressions:
>>> expr = Sum(A[i, j]*B[k, j]*A[l, k], (j, 0, N-1), (k, 0, N-1))
>>> cg = parse_indexed_expression(expr)
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
A*B.T*A.T
Expressions constructed from matrix expressions do not contain literal
indices, the positions of free indices are returned instead:
>>> expr = A*B
>>> cg = CodegenArrayContraction.from_MatMul(expr)
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
A*B
If more than one line of matrix multiplications is detected, return
separate matrix multiplication factors:
>>> cg = CodegenArrayContraction(CodegenArrayTensorProduct(A, B, C, D), (1, 2), (5, 6))
>>> recognize_matrix_expression(cg)
[A*B, C*D]
The two lines have free indices at axes 0, 3 and 4, 7, respectively.
"""
# TODO: expr has to be a CodegenArray... type
rec = _recognize_matrix_expression(expr)
return _unfold_recognized_expr(rec)
def _recognize_matrix_expression(expr):
if isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayContraction):
args = _recognize_matrix_expression(expr.expr)
contraction_indices = expr.contraction_indices
if isinstance(args, _RecognizeMatOp) and args.operator == MatAdd:
addends = []
for arg in args.args:
addends.append(_support_function_tp1_recognize(contraction_indices, arg))
return _RecognizeMatOp(MatAdd, addends)
elif isinstance(args, _RecognizeMatMulLines):
return _support_function_tp1_recognize(contraction_indices, args)
return _support_function_tp1_recognize(contraction_indices, [args])
elif isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayElementwiseAdd):
add_args = []
for arg in expr.args:
add_args.append(_recognize_matrix_expression(arg))
return _RecognizeMatOp(MatAdd, add_args)
elif isinstance(expr, (MatrixSymbol, IndexedBase)):
return expr
elif isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayPermuteDims):
if expr.permutation.args[0] == [1, 0]:
return _RecognizeMatOp(Transpose, [_recognize_matrix_expression(expr.expr)])
elif isinstance(expr.expr, CodegenArrayTensorProduct):
ranks = expr.expr.subranks
intrange = list(range(sum(ranks)))
newrange = [expr.permutation(i) for i in range(sum(ranks))]
newpos = []
counter = 0
for rank in ranks:
newpos.append(newrange[counter:counter+rank])
counter += rank
newargs = []
for pos, arg in zip(newpos, expr.expr.args):
if pos == sorted(pos):
newargs.append((_recognize_matrix_expression(arg), pos[0]))
elif len(pos) == 2:
newargs.append((_RecognizeMatOp(Transpose, [_recognize_matrix_expression(arg)]), pos[0]))
else:
raise NotImplementedError
newargs.sort(key=lambda x: x[1])
newargs = [i[0] for i in newargs]
return _RecognizeMatMulLines(newargs)
else:
raise NotImplementedError
elif isinstance(expr, CodegenArrayTensorProduct):
args = [_recognize_matrix_expression(arg) for arg in expr.args]
multiple_lines = [_has_multiple_lines(arg) for arg in args]
if any(multiple_lines):
if any(a.operator != MatAdd for i, a in enumerate(args) if multiple_lines[i]):
raise NotImplementedError
expand_args = [arg.args if multiple_lines[i] else [arg] for i, arg in enumerate(args)]
it = itertools.product(*expand_args)
ret = _RecognizeMatOp(MatAdd, [_RecognizeMatMulLines([k for j in i for k in (j if isinstance(j, _RecognizeMatMulLines) else [j])]) for i in it])
return ret
return _RecognizeMatMulLines(args)
elif isinstance(expr, Transpose):
return expr
raise NotImplementedError
def _unfold_recognized_expr(expr):
if isinstance(expr, _RecognizeMatOp):
return expr.operator(*[_unfold_recognized_expr(i) for i in expr.args])
elif isinstance(expr, _RecognizeMatMulLines):
return [_unfold_recognized_expr(i) for i in expr]
else:
return expr
|
92bfa286f15b32760782ffea303c4e65b03c29faf2db6cb1c77e1e718194375c
|
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
This file contains some classical ciphers and routines
implementing a linear-feedback shift register (LFSR)
and the Diffie-Hellman key exchange.
.. warning::
This module is intended for educational purposes only. Do not use the
functions in this module for real cryptographic applications. If you wish
to encrypt real data, we recommend using something like the `cryptography
<https://cryptography.io/en/latest/>`_ module.
"""
from __future__ import print_function
from string import whitespace, ascii_uppercase as uppercase, printable
from sympy import nextprime
from sympy.core import Rational, Symbol
from sympy.core.numbers import igcdex, mod_inverse
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
from sympy.matrices import Matrix
from sympy.ntheory import isprime, totient, primitive_root
from sympy.polys.domains import FF
from sympy.polys.polytools import gcd, Poly
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent, translate
from sympy.utilities.iterables import uniq
from sympy.utilities.randtest import _randrange
def AZ(s=None):
"""Return the letters of ``s`` in uppercase. In case more than
one string is passed, each of them will be processed and a list
of upper case strings will be returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import AZ
>>> AZ('Hello, world!')
'HELLOWORLD'
>>> AZ('Hello, world!'.split())
['HELLO', 'WORLD']
See Also
========
check_and_join
"""
if not s:
return uppercase
t = type(s) is str
if t:
s = [s]
rv = [check_and_join(i.upper().split(), uppercase, filter=True)
for i in s]
if t:
return rv[0]
return rv
bifid5 = AZ().replace('J', '')
bifid6 = AZ() + '0123456789'
bifid10 = printable
def padded_key(key, symbols, filter=True):
"""Return a string of the distinct characters of ``symbols`` with
those of ``key`` appearing first, omitting characters in ``key``
that are not in ``symbols``. A ValueError is raised if a) there are
duplicate characters in ``symbols`` or b) there are characters
in ``key`` that are not in ``symbols``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import padded_key
>>> padded_key('PUPPY', 'OPQRSTUVWXY')
'PUYOQRSTVWX'
>>> padded_key('RSA', 'ARTIST')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: duplicate characters in symbols: T
"""
syms = list(uniq(symbols))
if len(syms) != len(symbols):
extra = ''.join(sorted(set(
[i for i in symbols if symbols.count(i) > 1])))
raise ValueError('duplicate characters in symbols: %s' % extra)
extra = set(key) - set(syms)
if extra:
raise ValueError(
'characters in key but not symbols: %s' % ''.join(
sorted(extra)))
key0 = ''.join(list(uniq(key)))
return key0 + ''.join([i for i in syms if i not in key0])
def check_and_join(phrase, symbols=None, filter=None):
"""
Joins characters of `phrase` and if ``symbols`` is given, raises
an error if any character in ``phrase`` is not in ``symbols``.
Parameters
==========
phrase: string or list of strings to be returned as a string
symbols: iterable of characters allowed in ``phrase``;
if ``symbols`` is None, no checking is performed
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import check_and_join
>>> check_and_join('a phrase')
'a phrase'
>>> check_and_join('a phrase'.upper().split())
'APHRASE'
>>> check_and_join('a phrase!'.upper().split(), 'ARE', filter=True)
'ARAE'
>>> check_and_join('a phrase!'.upper().split(), 'ARE')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: characters in phrase but not symbols: "!HPS"
"""
rv = ''.join(''.join(phrase))
if symbols is not None:
symbols = check_and_join(symbols)
missing = ''.join(list(sorted(set(rv) - set(symbols))))
if missing:
if not filter:
raise ValueError(
'characters in phrase but not symbols: "%s"' % missing)
rv = translate(rv, None, missing)
return rv
def _prep(msg, key, alp, default=None):
if not alp:
if not default:
alp = AZ()
msg = AZ(msg)
key = AZ(key)
else:
alp = default
else:
alp = ''.join(alp)
key = check_and_join(key, alp, filter=True)
msg = check_and_join(msg, alp, filter=True)
return msg, key, alp
def cycle_list(k, n):
"""
Returns the elements of the list ``range(n)`` shifted to the
left by ``k`` (so the list starts with ``k`` (mod ``n``)).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import cycle_list
>>> cycle_list(3, 10)
[3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0, 1, 2]
"""
k = k % n
return list(range(k, n)) + list(range(k))
######## shift cipher examples ############
def encipher_shift(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Performs shift cipher encryption on plaintext msg, and returns the
ciphertext.
Notes
=====
The shift cipher is also called the Caesar cipher, after
Julius Caesar, who, according to Suetonius, used it with a
shift of three to protect messages of military significance.
Caesar's nephew Augustus reportedly used a similar cipher, but
with a right shift of 1.
ALGORITHM:
INPUT:
``key``: an integer (the secret key)
``msg``: plaintext of upper-case letters
OUTPUT:
``ct``: ciphertext of upper-case letters
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L1`` of
corresponding integers.
2. Compute from the list ``L1`` a new list ``L2``, given by
adding ``(k mod 26)`` to each element in ``L1``.
3. Compute from the list ``L2`` a string ``ct`` of
corresponding letters.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_shift, decipher_shift
>>> msg = "GONAVYBEATARMY"
>>> ct = encipher_shift(msg, 1); ct
'HPOBWZCFBUBSNZ'
To decipher the shifted text, change the sign of the key:
>>> encipher_shift(ct, -1)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
There is also a convenience function that does this with the
original key:
>>> decipher_shift(ct, 1)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
"""
msg, _, A = _prep(msg, '', symbols)
shift = len(A) - key % len(A)
key = A[shift:] + A[:shift]
return translate(msg, key, A)
def decipher_shift(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Return the text by shifting the characters of ``msg`` to the
left by the amount given by ``key``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_shift, decipher_shift
>>> msg = "GONAVYBEATARMY"
>>> ct = encipher_shift(msg, 1); ct
'HPOBWZCFBUBSNZ'
To decipher the shifted text, change the sign of the key:
>>> encipher_shift(ct, -1)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
Or use this function with the original key:
>>> decipher_shift(ct, 1)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
"""
return encipher_shift(msg, -key, symbols)
######## affine cipher examples ############
def encipher_affine(msg, key, symbols=None, _inverse=False):
r"""
Performs the affine cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
Encryption is based on the map `x \rightarrow ax+b` (mod `N`)
where ``N`` is the number of characters in the alphabet.
Decryption is based on the map `x \rightarrow cx+d` (mod `N`),
where `c = a^{-1}` (mod `N`) and `d = -a^{-1}b` (mod `N`).
In particular, for the map to be invertible, we need
`\mathrm{gcd}(a, N) = 1` and an error will be raised if this is
not true.
Notes
=====
This is a straightforward generalization of the shift cipher with
the added complexity of requiring 2 characters to be deciphered in
order to recover the key.
ALGORITHM:
INPUT:
``msg``: string of characters that appear in ``symbols``
``a, b``: a pair integers, with ``gcd(a, N) = 1``
(the secret key)
``symbols``: string of characters (default = uppercase
letters). When no symbols are given, ``msg`` is converted
to upper case letters and all other charactes are ignored.
OUTPUT:
``ct``: string of characters (the ciphertext message)
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L1`` of
corresponding integers.
2. Compute from the list ``L1`` a new list ``L2``, given by
replacing ``x`` by ``a*x + b (mod N)``, for each element
``x`` in ``L1``.
3. Compute from the list ``L2`` a string ``ct`` of
corresponding letters.
See Also
========
decipher_affine
"""
msg, _, A = _prep(msg, '', symbols)
N = len(A)
a, b = key
assert gcd(a, N) == 1
if _inverse:
c = mod_inverse(a, N)
d = -b*c
a, b = c, d
B = ''.join([A[(a*i + b) % N] for i in range(N)])
return translate(msg, A, B)
def decipher_affine(msg, key, symbols=None):
r"""
Return the deciphered text that was made from the mapping,
`x \rightarrow ax+b` (mod `N`), where ``N`` is the
number of characters in the alphabet. Deciphering is done by
reciphering with a new key: `x \rightarrow cx+d` (mod `N`),
where `c = a^{-1}` (mod `N`) and `d = -a^{-1}b` (mod `N`).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_affine, decipher_affine
>>> msg = "GO NAVY BEAT ARMY"
>>> key = (3, 1)
>>> encipher_affine(msg, key)
'TROBMVENBGBALV'
>>> decipher_affine(_, key)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
"""
return encipher_affine(msg, key, symbols, _inverse=True)
#################### substitution cipher ###########################
def encipher_substitution(msg, old, new=None):
r"""
Returns the ciphertext obtained by replacing each character that
appears in ``old`` with the corresponding character in ``new``.
If ``old`` is a mapping, then new is ignored and the replacements
defined by ``old`` are used.
Notes
=====
This is a more general than the affine cipher in that the key can
only be recovered by determining the mapping for each symbol.
Though in practice, once a few symbols are recognized the mappings
for other characters can be quickly guessed.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_substitution, AZ
>>> old = 'OEYAG'
>>> new = '034^6'
>>> msg = AZ("go navy! beat army!")
>>> ct = encipher_substitution(msg, old, new); ct
'60N^V4B3^T^RM4'
To decrypt a substitution, reverse the last two arguments:
>>> encipher_substitution(ct, new, old)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
In the special case where ``old`` and ``new`` are a permutation of
order 2 (representing a transposition of characters) their order
is immaterial:
>>> old = 'NAVY'
>>> new = 'ANYV'
>>> encipher = lambda x: encipher_substitution(x, old, new)
>>> encipher('NAVY')
'ANYV'
>>> encipher(_)
'NAVY'
The substitution cipher, in general, is a method
whereby "units" (not necessarily single characters) of plaintext
are replaced with ciphertext according to a regular system.
>>> ords = dict(zip('abc', ['\\%i' % ord(i) for i in 'abc']))
>>> print(encipher_substitution('abc', ords))
\97\98\99
"""
return translate(msg, old, new)
######################################################################
#################### Vigenère cipher examples ########################
######################################################################
def encipher_vigenere(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Performs the Vigenère cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_vigenere, AZ
>>> key = "encrypt"
>>> msg = "meet me on monday"
>>> encipher_vigenere(msg, key)
'QRGKKTHRZQEBPR'
Section 1 of the Kryptos sculpture at the CIA headquarters
uses this cipher and also changes the order of the the
alphabet [2]_. Here is the first line of that section of
the sculpture:
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_vigenere, padded_key
>>> alp = padded_key('KRYPTOS', AZ())
>>> key = 'PALIMPSEST'
>>> msg = 'EMUFPHZLRFAXYUSDJKZLDKRNSHGNFIVJ'
>>> decipher_vigenere(msg, key, alp)
'BETWEENSUBTLESHADINGANDTHEABSENC'
Notes
=====
The Vigenère cipher is named after Blaise de Vigenère, a sixteenth
century diplomat and cryptographer, by a historical accident.
Vigenère actually invented a different and more complicated cipher.
The so-called *Vigenère cipher* was actually invented
by Giovan Batista Belaso in 1553.
This cipher was used in the 1800's, for example, during the American
Civil War. The Confederacy used a brass cipher disk to implement the
Vigenère cipher (now on display in the NSA Museum in Fort
Meade) [1]_.
The Vigenère cipher is a generalization of the shift cipher.
Whereas the shift cipher shifts each letter by the same amount
(that amount being the key of the shift cipher) the Vigenère
cipher shifts a letter by an amount determined by the key (which is
a word or phrase known only to the sender and receiver).
For example, if the key was a single letter, such as "C", then the
so-called Vigenere cipher is actually a shift cipher with a
shift of `2` (since "C" is the 2nd letter of the alphabet, if
you start counting at `0`). If the key was a word with two
letters, such as "CA", then the so-called Vigenère cipher will
shift letters in even positions by `2` and letters in odd positions
are left alone (shifted by `0`, since "A" is the 0th letter, if
you start counting at `0`).
ALGORITHM:
INPUT:
``msg``: string of characters that appear in ``symbols``
(the plaintext)
``key``: a string of characters that appear in ``symbols``
(the secret key)
``symbols``: a string of letters defining the alphabet
OUTPUT:
``ct``: string of characters (the ciphertext message)
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``key`` a list ``L1`` of
corresponding integers. Let ``n1 = len(L1)``.
2. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L2`` of
corresponding integers. Let ``n2 = len(L2)``.
3. Break ``L2`` up sequentially into sublists of size
``n1``; the last sublist may be smaller than ``n1``
4. For each of these sublists ``L`` of ``L2``, compute a
new list ``C`` given by ``C[i] = L[i] + L1[i] (mod N)``
to the ``i``-th element in the sublist, for each ``i``.
5. Assemble these lists ``C`` by concatenation into a new
list of length ``n2``.
6. Compute from the new list a string ``ct`` of
corresponding letters.
Once it is known that the key is, say, `n` characters long,
frequency analysis can be applied to every `n`-th letter of
the ciphertext to determine the plaintext. This method is
called *Kasiski examination* (although it was first discovered
by Babbage). If they key is as long as the message and is
comprised of randomly selected characters -- a one-time pad -- the
message is theoretically unbreakable.
The cipher Vigenère actually discovered is an "auto-key" cipher
described as follows.
ALGORITHM:
INPUT:
``key``: a string of letters (the secret key)
``msg``: string of letters (the plaintext message)
OUTPUT:
``ct``: string of upper-case letters (the ciphertext message)
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L2`` of
corresponding integers. Let ``n2 = len(L2)``.
2. Let ``n1`` be the length of the key. Append to the
string ``key`` the first ``n2 - n1`` characters of
the plaintext message. Compute from this string (also of
length ``n2``) a list ``L1`` of integers corresponding
to the letter numbers in the first step.
3. Compute a new list ``C`` given by
``C[i] = L1[i] + L2[i] (mod N)``.
4. Compute from the new list a string ``ct`` of letters
corresponding to the new integers.
To decipher the auto-key ciphertext, the key is used to decipher
the first ``n1`` characters and then those characters become the
key to decipher the next ``n1`` characters, etc...:
>>> m = AZ('go navy, beat army! yes you can'); m
'GONAVYBEATARMYYESYOUCAN'
>>> key = AZ('gold bug'); n1 = len(key); n2 = len(m)
>>> auto_key = key + m[:n2 - n1]; auto_key
'GOLDBUGGONAVYBEATARMYYE'
>>> ct = encipher_vigenere(m, auto_key); ct
'MCYDWSHKOGAMKZCELYFGAYR'
>>> n1 = len(key)
>>> pt = []
>>> while ct:
... part, ct = ct[:n1], ct[n1:]
... pt.append(decipher_vigenere(part, key))
... key = pt[-1]
...
>>> ''.join(pt) == m
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vigenere_cipher
.. [2] http://web.archive.org/web/20071116100808/
http://filebox.vt.edu/users/batman/kryptos.html
(short URL: https://goo.gl/ijr22d)
"""
msg, key, A = _prep(msg, key, symbols)
map = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(A)}
key = [map[c] for c in key]
N = len(map)
k = len(key)
rv = []
for i, m in enumerate(msg):
rv.append(A[(map[m] + key[i % k]) % N])
rv = ''.join(rv)
return rv
def decipher_vigenere(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Decode using the Vigenère cipher.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_vigenere
>>> key = "encrypt"
>>> ct = "QRGK kt HRZQE BPR"
>>> decipher_vigenere(ct, key)
'MEETMEONMONDAY'
"""
msg, key, A = _prep(msg, key, symbols)
map = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(A)}
N = len(A) # normally, 26
K = [map[c] for c in key]
n = len(K)
C = [map[c] for c in msg]
rv = ''.join([A[(-K[i % n] + c) % N] for i, c in enumerate(C)])
return rv
#################### Hill cipher ########################
def encipher_hill(msg, key, symbols=None, pad="Q"):
r"""
Return the Hill cipher encryption of ``msg``.
Notes
=====
The Hill cipher [1]_, invented by Lester S. Hill in the 1920's [2]_,
was the first polygraphic cipher in which it was practical
(though barely) to operate on more than three symbols at once.
The following discussion assumes an elementary knowledge of
matrices.
First, each letter is first encoded as a number starting with 0.
Suppose your message `msg` consists of `n` capital letters, with no
spaces. This may be regarded an `n`-tuple M of elements of
`Z_{26}` (if the letters are those of the English alphabet). A key
in the Hill cipher is a `k x k` matrix `K`, all of whose entries
are in `Z_{26}`, such that the matrix `K` is invertible (i.e., the
linear transformation `K: Z_{N}^k \rightarrow Z_{N}^k`
is one-to-one).
ALGORITHM:
INPUT:
``msg``: plaintext message of `n` upper-case letters
``key``: a `k x k` invertible matrix `K`, all of whose
entries are in `Z_{26}` (or whatever number of symbols
are being used).
``pad``: character (default "Q") to use to make length
of text be a multiple of ``k``
OUTPUT:
``ct``: ciphertext of upper-case letters
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L`` of
corresponding integers. Let ``n = len(L)``.
2. Break the list ``L`` up into ``t = ceiling(n/k)``
sublists ``L_1``, ..., ``L_t`` of size ``k`` (with
the last list "padded" to ensure its size is
``k``).
3. Compute new list ``C_1``, ..., ``C_t`` given by
``C[i] = K*L_i`` (arithmetic is done mod N), for each
``i``.
4. Concatenate these into a list ``C = C_1 + ... + C_t``.
5. Compute from ``C`` a string ``ct`` of corresponding
letters. This has length ``k*t``.
References
==========
.. [1] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_cipher
.. [2] Lester S. Hill, Cryptography in an Algebraic Alphabet,
The American Mathematical Monthly Vol.36, June-July 1929,
pp.306-312.
See Also
========
decipher_hill
"""
assert key.is_square
assert len(pad) == 1
msg, pad, A = _prep(msg, pad, symbols)
map = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(A)}
P = [map[c] for c in msg]
N = len(A)
k = key.cols
n = len(P)
m, r = divmod(n, k)
if r:
P = P + [map[pad]]*(k - r)
m += 1
rv = ''.join([A[c % N] for j in range(m) for c in
list(key*Matrix(k, 1, [P[i]
for i in range(k*j, k*(j + 1))]))])
return rv
def decipher_hill(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Deciphering is the same as enciphering but using the inverse of the
key matrix.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_hill, decipher_hill
>>> from sympy import Matrix
>>> key = Matrix([[1, 2], [3, 5]])
>>> encipher_hill("meet me on monday", key)
'UEQDUEODOCTCWQ'
>>> decipher_hill(_, key)
'MEETMEONMONDAY'
When the length of the plaintext (stripped of invalid characters)
is not a multiple of the key dimension, extra characters will
appear at the end of the enciphered and deciphered text. In order to
decipher the text, those characters must be included in the text to
be deciphered. In the following, the key has a dimension of 4 but
the text is 2 short of being a multiple of 4 so two characters will
be added.
>>> key = Matrix([[1, 1, 1, 2], [0, 1, 1, 0],
... [2, 2, 3, 4], [1, 1, 0, 1]])
>>> msg = "ST"
>>> encipher_hill(msg, key)
'HJEB'
>>> decipher_hill(_, key)
'STQQ'
>>> encipher_hill(msg, key, pad="Z")
'ISPK'
>>> decipher_hill(_, key)
'STZZ'
If the last two characters of the ciphertext were ignored in
either case, the wrong plaintext would be recovered:
>>> decipher_hill("HD", key)
'ORMV'
>>> decipher_hill("IS", key)
'UIKY'
"""
assert key.is_square
msg, _, A = _prep(msg, '', symbols)
map = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(A)}
C = [map[c] for c in msg]
N = len(A)
k = key.cols
n = len(C)
m, r = divmod(n, k)
if r:
C = C + [0]*(k - r)
m += 1
key_inv = key.inv_mod(N)
rv = ''.join([A[p % N] for j in range(m) for p in
list(key_inv*Matrix(
k, 1, [C[i] for i in range(k*j, k*(j + 1))]))])
return rv
#################### Bifid cipher ########################
def encipher_bifid(msg, key, symbols=None):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses an `n \times n`
Polybius square.
INPUT:
``msg``: plaintext string
``key``: short string for key; duplicate characters are
ignored and then it is padded with the characters in
``symbols`` that were not in the short key
``symbols``: `n \times n` characters defining the alphabet
(default is string.printable)
OUTPUT:
ciphertext (using Bifid5 cipher without spaces)
See Also
========
decipher_bifid, encipher_bifid5, encipher_bifid6
"""
msg, key, A = _prep(msg, key, symbols, bifid10)
long_key = ''.join(uniq(key)) or A
n = len(A)**.5
if n != int(n):
raise ValueError(
'Length of alphabet (%s) is not a square number.' % len(A))
N = int(n)
if len(long_key) < N**2:
long_key = list(long_key) + [x for x in A if x not in long_key]
# the fractionalization
row_col = dict([(ch, divmod(i, N))
for i, ch in enumerate(long_key)])
r, c = zip(*[row_col[x] for x in msg])
rc = r + c
ch = {i: ch for ch, i in row_col.items()}
rv = ''.join((ch[i] for i in zip(rc[::2], rc[1::2])))
return rv
def decipher_bifid(msg, key, symbols=None):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher decryption on ciphertext ``msg``, and
returns the plaintext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `n \times n`
Polybius square.
INPUT:
``msg``: ciphertext string
``key``: short string for key; duplicate characters are
ignored and then it is padded with the characters in
``symbols`` that were not in the short key
``symbols``: `n \times n` characters defining the alphabet
(default=string.printable, a `10 \times 10` matrix)
OUTPUT:
deciphered text
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... encipher_bifid, decipher_bifid, AZ)
Do an encryption using the bifid5 alphabet:
>>> alp = AZ().replace('J', '')
>>> ct = AZ("meet me on monday!")
>>> key = AZ("gold bug")
>>> encipher_bifid(ct, key, alp)
'IEILHHFSTSFQYE'
When entering the text or ciphertext, spaces are ignored so it
can be formatted as desired. Re-entering the ciphertext from the
preceding, putting 4 characters per line and padding with an extra
J, does not cause problems for the deciphering:
>>> decipher_bifid('''
... IEILH
... HFSTS
... FQYEJ''', key, alp)
'MEETMEONMONDAY'
When no alphabet is given, all 100 printable characters will be
used:
>>> key = ''
>>> encipher_bifid('hello world!', key)
'bmtwmg-bIo*w'
>>> decipher_bifid(_, key)
'hello world!'
If the key is changed, a different encryption is obtained:
>>> key = 'gold bug'
>>> encipher_bifid('hello world!', 'gold_bug')
'hg2sfuei7t}w'
And if the key used to decrypt the message is not exact, the
original text will not be perfectly obtained:
>>> decipher_bifid(_, 'gold pug')
'heldo~wor6d!'
"""
msg, _, A = _prep(msg, '', symbols, bifid10)
long_key = ''.join(uniq(key)) or A
n = len(A)**.5
if n != int(n):
raise ValueError(
'Length of alphabet (%s) is not a square number.' % len(A))
N = int(n)
if len(long_key) < N**2:
long_key = list(long_key) + [x for x in A if x not in long_key]
# the reverse fractionalization
row_col = dict(
[(ch, divmod(i, N)) for i, ch in enumerate(long_key)])
rc = [i for c in msg for i in row_col[c]]
n = len(msg)
rc = zip(*(rc[:n], rc[n:]))
ch = {i: ch for ch, i in row_col.items()}
rv = ''.join((ch[i] for i in rc))
return rv
def bifid_square(key):
"""Return characters of ``key`` arranged in a square.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... bifid_square, AZ, padded_key, bifid5)
>>> bifid_square(AZ().replace('J', ''))
Matrix([
[A, B, C, D, E],
[F, G, H, I, K],
[L, M, N, O, P],
[Q, R, S, T, U],
[V, W, X, Y, Z]])
>>> bifid_square(padded_key(AZ('gold bug!'), bifid5))
Matrix([
[G, O, L, D, B],
[U, A, C, E, F],
[H, I, K, M, N],
[P, Q, R, S, T],
[V, W, X, Y, Z]])
See Also
========
padded_key
"""
A = ''.join(uniq(''.join(key)))
n = len(A)**.5
if n != int(n):
raise ValueError(
'Length of alphabet (%s) is not a square number.' % len(A))
n = int(n)
f = lambda i, j: Symbol(A[n*i + j])
rv = Matrix(n, n, f)
return rv
def encipher_bifid5(msg, key):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `5 \times 5`
Polybius square. The letter "J" is ignored so it must be replaced
with something else (traditionally an "I") before encryption.
Notes
=====
The Bifid cipher was invented around 1901 by Felix Delastelle.
It is a *fractional substitution* cipher, where letters are
replaced by pairs of symbols from a smaller alphabet. The
cipher uses a `5 \times 5` square filled with some ordering of the
alphabet, except that "J" is replaced with "I" (this is a so-called
Polybius square; there is a `6 \times 6` analog if you add back in
"J" and also append onto the usual 26 letter alphabet, the digits
0, 1, ..., 9).
According to Helen Gaines' book *Cryptanalysis*, this type of cipher
was used in the field by the German Army during World War I.
ALGORITHM: (5x5 case)
INPUT:
``msg``: plaintext string; converted to upper case and
filtered of anything but all letters except J.
``key``: short string for key; non-alphabetic letters, J
and duplicated characters are ignored and then, if the
length is less than 25 characters, it is padded with other
letters of the alphabet (in alphabetical order).
OUTPUT:
ciphertext (all caps, no spaces)
STEPS:
0. Create the `5 \times 5` Polybius square ``S`` associated
to ``key`` as follows:
a) moving from left-to-right, top-to-bottom,
place the letters of the key into a `5 \times 5`
matrix,
b) if the key has less than 25 letters, add the
letters of the alphabet not in the key until the
`5 \times 5` square is filled.
1. Create a list ``P`` of pairs of numbers which are the
coordinates in the Polybius square of the letters in
``msg``.
2. Let ``L1`` be the list of all first coordinates of ``P``
(length of ``L1 = n``), let ``L2`` be the list of all
second coordinates of ``P`` (so the length of ``L2``
is also ``n``).
3. Let ``L`` be the concatenation of ``L1`` and ``L2``
(length ``L = 2*n``), except that consecutive numbers
are paired ``(L[2*i], L[2*i + 1])``. You can regard
``L`` as a list of pairs of length ``n``.
4. Let ``C`` be the list of all letters which are of the
form ``S[i, j]``, for all ``(i, j)`` in ``L``. As a
string, this is the ciphertext of ``msg``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... encipher_bifid5, decipher_bifid5)
"J" will be omitted unless it is replaced with something else:
>>> round_trip = lambda m, k: \
... decipher_bifid5(encipher_bifid5(m, k), k)
>>> key = 'a'
>>> msg = "JOSIE"
>>> round_trip(msg, key)
'OSIE'
>>> round_trip(msg.replace("J", "I"), key)
'IOSIE'
>>> j = "QIQ"
>>> round_trip(msg.replace("J", j), key).replace(j, "J")
'JOSIE'
See Also
========
decipher_bifid5, encipher_bifid
"""
msg, key, _ = _prep(msg.upper(), key.upper(), None, bifid5)
key = padded_key(key, bifid5)
return encipher_bifid(msg, '', key)
def decipher_bifid5(msg, key):
r"""
Return the Bifid cipher decryption of ``msg``.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `5 \times 5`
Polybius square; the letter "J" is ignored unless a ``key`` of
length 25 is used.
INPUT:
``msg``: ciphertext string
``key``: short string for key; duplicated characters are
ignored and if the length is less then 25 characters, it
will be padded with other letters from the alphabet omitting
"J". Non-alphabetic characters are ignored.
OUTPUT:
plaintext from Bifid5 cipher (all caps, no spaces)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_bifid5, decipher_bifid5
>>> key = "gold bug"
>>> encipher_bifid5('meet me on friday', key)
'IEILEHFSTSFXEE'
>>> encipher_bifid5('meet me on monday', key)
'IEILHHFSTSFQYE'
>>> decipher_bifid5(_, key)
'MEETMEONMONDAY'
"""
msg, key, _ = _prep(msg.upper(), key.upper(), None, bifid5)
key = padded_key(key, bifid5)
return decipher_bifid(msg, '', key)
def bifid5_square(key=None):
r"""
5x5 Polybius square.
Produce the Polybius square for the `5 \times 5` Bifid cipher.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import bifid5_square
>>> bifid5_square("gold bug")
Matrix([
[G, O, L, D, B],
[U, A, C, E, F],
[H, I, K, M, N],
[P, Q, R, S, T],
[V, W, X, Y, Z]])
"""
if not key:
key = bifid5
else:
_, key, _ = _prep('', key.upper(), None, bifid5)
key = padded_key(key, bifid5)
return bifid_square(key)
def encipher_bifid6(msg, key):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `6 \times 6`
Polybius square.
INPUT:
``msg``: plaintext string (digits okay)
``key``: short string for key (digits okay). If ``key`` is
less than 36 characters long, the square will be filled with
letters A through Z and digits 0 through 9.
OUTPUT:
ciphertext from Bifid cipher (all caps, no spaces)
See Also
========
decipher_bifid6, encipher_bifid
"""
msg, key, _ = _prep(msg.upper(), key.upper(), None, bifid6)
key = padded_key(key, bifid6)
return encipher_bifid(msg, '', key)
def decipher_bifid6(msg, key):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher decryption on ciphertext ``msg``, and
returns the plaintext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `6 \times 6`
Polybius square.
INPUT:
``msg``: ciphertext string (digits okay); converted to upper case
``key``: short string for key (digits okay). If ``key`` is
less than 36 characters long, the square will be filled with
letters A through Z and digits 0 through 9. All letters are
converted to uppercase.
OUTPUT:
plaintext from Bifid cipher (all caps, no spaces)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_bifid6, decipher_bifid6
>>> key = "gold bug"
>>> encipher_bifid6('meet me on monday at 8am', key)
'KFKLJJHF5MMMKTFRGPL'
>>> decipher_bifid6(_, key)
'MEETMEONMONDAYAT8AM'
"""
msg, key, _ = _prep(msg.upper(), key.upper(), None, bifid6)
key = padded_key(key, bifid6)
return decipher_bifid(msg, '', key)
def bifid6_square(key=None):
r"""
6x6 Polybius square.
Produces the Polybius square for the `6 \times 6` Bifid cipher.
Assumes alphabet of symbols is "A", ..., "Z", "0", ..., "9".
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import bifid6_square
>>> key = "gold bug"
>>> bifid6_square(key)
Matrix([
[G, O, L, D, B, U],
[A, C, E, F, H, I],
[J, K, M, N, P, Q],
[R, S, T, V, W, X],
[Y, Z, 0, 1, 2, 3],
[4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]])
"""
if not key:
key = bifid6
else:
_, key, _ = _prep('', key.upper(), None, bifid6)
key = padded_key(key, bifid6)
return bifid_square(key)
#################### RSA #############################
def rsa_public_key(p, q, e):
r"""
Return the RSA *public key* pair, `(n, e)`, where `n`
is a product of two primes and `e` is relatively
prime (coprime) to the Euler totient `\phi(n)`. False
is returned if any assumption is violated.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_public_key
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> rsa_public_key(p, q, e)
(15, 7)
>>> rsa_public_key(p, q, 30)
False
"""
n = p*q
if isprime(p) and isprime(q):
phi = totient(n)
if gcd(e, phi) == 1:
return n, e
return False
def rsa_private_key(p, q, e):
r"""
Return the RSA *private key*, `(n,d)`, where `n`
is a product of two primes and `d` is the inverse of
`e` (mod `\phi(n)`). False is returned if any assumption
is violated.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_private_key
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> rsa_private_key(p, q, e)
(15, 7)
>>> rsa_private_key(p, q, 30)
False
"""
n = p*q
if isprime(p) and isprime(q):
phi = totient(n)
if gcd(e, phi) == 1:
d = mod_inverse(e, phi)
return n, d
return False
def encipher_rsa(i, key):
"""
Return encryption of ``i`` by computing `i^e` (mod `n`),
where ``key`` is the public key `(n, e)`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_rsa, rsa_public_key
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> puk = rsa_public_key(p, q, e)
>>> msg = 12
>>> encipher_rsa(msg, puk)
3
"""
n, e = key
return pow(i, e, n)
def decipher_rsa(i, key):
"""
Return decyption of ``i`` by computing `i^d` (mod `n`),
where ``key`` is the private key `(n, d)`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_rsa, rsa_private_key
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> prk = rsa_private_key(p, q, e)
>>> msg = 3
>>> decipher_rsa(msg, prk)
12
"""
n, d = key
return pow(i, d, n)
#################### kid krypto (kid RSA) #############################
def kid_rsa_public_key(a, b, A, B):
r"""
Kid RSA is a version of RSA useful to teach grade school children
since it does not involve exponentiation.
Alice wants to talk to Bob. Bob generates keys as follows.
Key generation:
* Select positive integers `a, b, A, B` at random.
* Compute `M = a b - 1`, `e = A M + a`, `d = B M + b`,
`n = (e d - 1)//M`.
* The *public key* is `(n, e)`. Bob sends these to Alice.
* The *private key* is `(n, d)`, which Bob keeps secret.
Encryption: If `p` is the plaintext message then the
ciphertext is `c = p e \pmod n`.
Decryption: If `c` is the ciphertext message then the
plaintext is `p = c d \pmod n`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import kid_rsa_public_key
>>> a, b, A, B = 3, 4, 5, 6
>>> kid_rsa_public_key(a, b, A, B)
(369, 58)
"""
M = a*b - 1
e = A*M + a
d = B*M + b
n = (e*d - 1)//M
return n, e
def kid_rsa_private_key(a, b, A, B):
"""
Compute `M = a b - 1`, `e = A M + a`, `d = B M + b`,
`n = (e d - 1) / M`. The *private key* is `d`, which Bob
keeps secret.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import kid_rsa_private_key
>>> a, b, A, B = 3, 4, 5, 6
>>> kid_rsa_private_key(a, b, A, B)
(369, 70)
"""
M = a*b - 1
e = A*M + a
d = B*M + b
n = (e*d - 1)//M
return n, d
def encipher_kid_rsa(msg, key):
"""
Here ``msg`` is the plaintext and ``key`` is the public key.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... encipher_kid_rsa, kid_rsa_public_key)
>>> msg = 200
>>> a, b, A, B = 3, 4, 5, 6
>>> key = kid_rsa_public_key(a, b, A, B)
>>> encipher_kid_rsa(msg, key)
161
"""
n, e = key
return (msg*e) % n
def decipher_kid_rsa(msg, key):
"""
Here ``msg`` is the plaintext and ``key`` is the private key.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... kid_rsa_public_key, kid_rsa_private_key,
... decipher_kid_rsa, encipher_kid_rsa)
>>> a, b, A, B = 3, 4, 5, 6
>>> d = kid_rsa_private_key(a, b, A, B)
>>> msg = 200
>>> pub = kid_rsa_public_key(a, b, A, B)
>>> pri = kid_rsa_private_key(a, b, A, B)
>>> ct = encipher_kid_rsa(msg, pub)
>>> decipher_kid_rsa(ct, pri)
200
"""
n, d = key
return (msg*d) % n
#################### Morse Code ######################################
morse_char = {
".-": "A", "-...": "B",
"-.-.": "C", "-..": "D",
".": "E", "..-.": "F",
"--.": "G", "....": "H",
"..": "I", ".---": "J",
"-.-": "K", ".-..": "L",
"--": "M", "-.": "N",
"---": "O", ".--.": "P",
"--.-": "Q", ".-.": "R",
"...": "S", "-": "T",
"..-": "U", "...-": "V",
".--": "W", "-..-": "X",
"-.--": "Y", "--..": "Z",
"-----": "0", "----": "1",
"..---": "2", "...--": "3",
"....-": "4", ".....": "5",
"-....": "6", "--...": "7",
"---..": "8", "----.": "9",
".-.-.-": ".", "--..--": ",",
"---...": ":", "-.-.-.": ";",
"..--..": "?", "-....-": "-",
"..--.-": "_", "-.--.": "(",
"-.--.-": ")", ".----.": "'",
"-...-": "=", ".-.-.": "+",
"-..-.": "/", ".--.-.": "@",
"...-..-": "$", "-.-.--": "!"}
char_morse = {v: k for k, v in morse_char.items()}
def encode_morse(msg, sep='|', mapping=None):
"""
Encodes a plaintext into popular Morse Code with letters
separated by `sep` and words by a double `sep`.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_code
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encode_morse
>>> msg = 'ATTACK RIGHT FLANK'
>>> encode_morse(msg)
'.-|-|-|.-|-.-.|-.-||.-.|..|--.|....|-||..-.|.-..|.-|-.|-.-'
"""
mapping = mapping or char_morse
assert sep not in mapping
word_sep = 2*sep
mapping[" "] = word_sep
suffix = msg and msg[-1] in whitespace
# normalize whitespace
msg = (' ' if word_sep else '').join(msg.split())
# omit unmapped chars
chars = set(''.join(msg.split()))
ok = set(mapping.keys())
msg = translate(msg, None, ''.join(chars - ok))
morsestring = []
words = msg.split()
for word in words:
morseword = []
for letter in word:
morseletter = mapping[letter]
morseword.append(morseletter)
word = sep.join(morseword)
morsestring.append(word)
return word_sep.join(morsestring) + (word_sep if suffix else '')
def decode_morse(msg, sep='|', mapping=None):
"""
Decodes a Morse Code with letters separated by `sep`
(default is '|') and words by `word_sep` (default is '||)
into plaintext.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_code
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decode_morse
>>> mc = '--|---|...-|.||.|.-|...|-'
>>> decode_morse(mc)
'MOVE EAST'
"""
mapping = mapping or morse_char
word_sep = 2*sep
characterstring = []
words = msg.strip(word_sep).split(word_sep)
for word in words:
letters = word.split(sep)
chars = [mapping[c] for c in letters]
word = ''.join(chars)
characterstring.append(word)
rv = " ".join(characterstring)
return rv
#################### LFSRs ##########################################
def lfsr_sequence(key, fill, n):
r"""
This function creates an lfsr sequence.
INPUT:
``key``: a list of finite field elements,
`[c_0, c_1, \ldots, c_k].`
``fill``: the list of the initial terms of the lfsr
sequence, `[x_0, x_1, \ldots, x_k].`
``n``: number of terms of the sequence that the
function returns.
OUTPUT:
The lfsr sequence defined by
`x_{n+1} = c_k x_n + \ldots + c_0 x_{n-k}`, for
`n \leq k`.
Notes
=====
S. Golomb [G]_ gives a list of three statistical properties a
sequence of numbers `a = \{a_n\}_{n=1}^\infty`,
`a_n \in \{0,1\}`, should display to be considered
"random". Define the autocorrelation of `a` to be
.. math::
C(k) = C(k,a) = \lim_{N\rightarrow \infty} {1\over N}\sum_{n=1}^N (-1)^{a_n + a_{n+k}}.
In the case where `a` is periodic with period
`P` then this reduces to
.. math::
C(k) = {1\over P}\sum_{n=1}^P (-1)^{a_n + a_{n+k}}.
Assume `a` is periodic with period `P`.
- balance:
.. math::
\left|\sum_{n=1}^P(-1)^{a_n}\right| \leq 1.
- low autocorrelation:
.. math::
C(k) = \left\{ \begin{array}{cc} 1,& k = 0,\\ \epsilon, & k \ne 0. \end{array} \right.
(For sequences satisfying these first two properties, it is known
that `\epsilon = -1/P` must hold.)
- proportional runs property: In each period, half the runs have
length `1`, one-fourth have length `2`, etc.
Moreover, there are as many runs of `1`'s as there are of
`0`'s.
References
==========
.. [G] Solomon Golomb, Shift register sequences, Aegean Park Press,
Laguna Hills, Ca, 1967
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import lfsr_sequence
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import FF
>>> F = FF(2)
>>> fill = [F(1), F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(0), F(0), F(1)]
>>> lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 10)
[1 mod 2, 1 mod 2, 0 mod 2, 1 mod 2, 0 mod 2,
1 mod 2, 1 mod 2, 0 mod 2, 0 mod 2, 1 mod 2]
"""
if not isinstance(key, list):
raise TypeError("key must be a list")
if not isinstance(fill, list):
raise TypeError("fill must be a list")
p = key[0].mod
F = FF(p)
s = fill
k = len(fill)
L = []
for i in range(n):
s0 = s[:]
L.append(s[0])
s = s[1:k]
x = sum([int(key[i]*s0[i]) for i in range(k)])
s.append(F(x))
return L # use [x.to_int() for x in L] for int version
def lfsr_autocorrelation(L, P, k):
"""
This function computes the LFSR autocorrelation function.
INPUT:
``L``: is a periodic sequence of elements of `GF(2)`.
``L`` must have length larger than ``P``.
``P``: the period of ``L``
``k``: an integer (`0 < k < p`)
OUTPUT:
the ``k``-th value of the autocorrelation of the LFSR ``L``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... lfsr_sequence, lfsr_autocorrelation)
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import FF
>>> F = FF(2)
>>> fill = [F(1), F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(0), F(0), F(1)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_autocorrelation(s, 15, 7)
-1/15
>>> lfsr_autocorrelation(s, 15, 0)
1
"""
if not isinstance(L, list):
raise TypeError("L (=%s) must be a list" % L)
P = int(P)
k = int(k)
L0 = L[:P] # slices makes a copy
L1 = L0 + L0[:k]
L2 = [(-1)**(L1[i].to_int() + L1[i + k].to_int()) for i in range(P)]
tot = sum(L2)
return Rational(tot, P)
def lfsr_connection_polynomial(s):
"""
This function computes the LFSR connection polynomial.
INPUT:
``s``: a sequence of elements of even length, with entries in
a finite field
OUTPUT:
``C(x)``: the connection polynomial of a minimal LFSR yielding
``s``.
This implements the algorithm in section 3 of J. L. Massey's
article [M]_.
References
==========
.. [M] James L. Massey, "Shift-Register Synthesis and BCH Decoding."
IEEE Trans. on Information Theory, vol. 15(1), pp. 122-127,
Jan 1969.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... lfsr_sequence, lfsr_connection_polynomial)
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import FF
>>> F = FF(2)
>>> fill = [F(1), F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(0), F(0), F(1)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_connection_polynomial(s)
x**4 + x + 1
>>> fill = [F(1), F(0), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_connection_polynomial(s)
x**3 + 1
>>> fill = [F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(1), F(0)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_connection_polynomial(s)
x**3 + x**2 + 1
>>> fill = [F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_connection_polynomial(s)
x**3 + x + 1
"""
# Initialization:
p = s[0].mod
F = FF(p)
x = Symbol("x")
C = 1*x**0
B = 1*x**0
m = 1
b = 1*x**0
L = 0
N = 0
while N < len(s):
if L > 0:
dC = Poly(C).degree()
r = min(L + 1, dC + 1)
coeffsC = [C.subs(x, 0)] + [C.coeff(x**i)
for i in range(1, dC + 1)]
d = (s[N].to_int() + sum([coeffsC[i]*s[N - i].to_int()
for i in range(1, r)])) % p
if L == 0:
d = s[N].to_int()*x**0
if d == 0:
m += 1
N += 1
if d > 0:
if 2*L > N:
C = (C - d*((b**(p - 2)) % p)*x**m*B).expand()
m += 1
N += 1
else:
T = C
C = (C - d*((b**(p - 2)) % p)*x**m*B).expand()
L = N + 1 - L
m = 1
b = d
B = T
N += 1
dC = Poly(C).degree()
coeffsC = [C.subs(x, 0)] + [C.coeff(x**i) for i in range(1, dC + 1)]
return sum([coeffsC[i] % p*x**i for i in range(dC + 1)
if coeffsC[i] is not None])
#################### ElGamal #############################
def elgamal_private_key(digit=10, seed=None):
r"""
Return three number tuple as private key.
Elgamal encryption is based on the mathmatical problem
called the Discrete Logarithm Problem (DLP). For example,
`a^{b} \equiv c \pmod p`
In general, if ``a`` and ``b`` are known, ``ct`` is easily
calculated. If ``b`` is unknown, it is hard to use
``a`` and ``ct`` to get ``b``.
Parameters
==========
digit : minimum number of binary digits for key
Returns
=======
(p, r, d) : p = prime number, r = primitive root, d = random number
Notes
=====
For testing purposes, the ``seed`` parameter may be set to control
the output of this routine. See sympy.utilities.randtest._randrange.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import elgamal_private_key
>>> from sympy.ntheory import is_primitive_root, isprime
>>> a, b, _ = elgamal_private_key()
>>> isprime(a)
True
>>> is_primitive_root(b, a)
True
"""
randrange = _randrange(seed)
p = nextprime(2**digit)
return p, primitive_root(p), randrange(2, p)
def elgamal_public_key(key):
"""
Return three number tuple as public key.
Parameters
==========
key : Tuple (p, r, e) generated by ``elgamal_private_key``
Returns
=======
(p, r, e = r**d mod p) : d is a random number in private key.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import elgamal_public_key
>>> elgamal_public_key((1031, 14, 636))
(1031, 14, 212)
"""
p, r, e = key
return p, r, pow(r, e, p)
def encipher_elgamal(i, key, seed=None):
r"""
Encrypt message with public key
``i`` is a plaintext message expressed as an integer.
``key`` is public key (p, r, e). In order to encrypt
a message, a random number ``a`` in ``range(2, p)``
is generated and the encryped message is returned as
`c_{1}` and `c_{2}` where:
`c_{1} \equiv r^{a} \pmod p`
`c_{2} \equiv m e^{a} \pmod p`
Parameters
==========
msg : int of encoded message
key : public key
Returns
=======
(c1, c2) : Encipher into two number
Notes
=====
For testing purposes, the ``seed`` parameter may be set to control
the output of this routine. See sympy.utilities.randtest._randrange.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_elgamal, elgamal_private_key, elgamal_public_key
>>> pri = elgamal_private_key(5, seed=[3]); pri
(37, 2, 3)
>>> pub = elgamal_public_key(pri); pub
(37, 2, 8)
>>> msg = 36
>>> encipher_elgamal(msg, pub, seed=[3])
(8, 6)
"""
p, r, e = key
if i < 0 or i >= p:
raise ValueError(
'Message (%s) should be in range(%s)' % (i, p))
randrange = _randrange(seed)
a = randrange(2, p)
return pow(r, a, p), i*pow(e, a, p) % p
def decipher_elgamal(msg, key):
r"""
Decrypt message with private key
`msg = (c_{1}, c_{2})`
`key = (p, r, d)`
According to extended Eucliden theorem,
`u c_{1}^{d} + p n = 1`
`u \equiv 1/{{c_{1}}^d} \pmod p`
`u c_{2} \equiv \frac{1}{c_{1}^d} c_{2} \equiv \frac{1}{r^{ad}} c_{2} \pmod p`
`\frac{1}{r^{ad}} m e^a \equiv \frac{1}{r^{ad}} m {r^{d a}} \equiv m \pmod p`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_elgamal
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_elgamal
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import elgamal_private_key
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import elgamal_public_key
>>> pri = elgamal_private_key(5, seed=[3])
>>> pub = elgamal_public_key(pri); pub
(37, 2, 8)
>>> msg = 17
>>> decipher_elgamal(encipher_elgamal(msg, pub), pri) == msg
True
"""
p, r, d = key
c1, c2 = msg
u = igcdex(c1**d, p)[0]
return u * c2 % p
################ Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange #########################
def dh_private_key(digit=10, seed=None):
r"""
Return three integer tuple as private key.
Diffie-Hellman key exchange is based on the mathematical problem
called the Discrete Logarithm Problem (see ElGamal).
Diffie-Hellman key exchange is divided into the following steps:
* Alice and Bob agree on a base that consist of a prime ``p``
and a primitive root of ``p`` called ``g``
* Alice choses a number ``a`` and Bob choses a number ``b`` where
``a`` and ``b`` are random numbers in range `[2, p)`. These are
their private keys.
* Alice then publicly sends Bob `g^{a} \pmod p` while Bob sends
Alice `g^{b} \pmod p`
* They both raise the received value to their secretly chosen
number (``a`` or ``b``) and now have both as their shared key
`g^{ab} \pmod p`
Parameters
==========
digit: minimum number of binary digits required in key
Returns
=======
(p, g, a) : p = prime number, g = primitive root of p,
a = random number from 2 through p - 1
Notes
=====
For testing purposes, the ``seed`` parameter may be set to control
the output of this routine. See sympy.utilities.randtest._randrange.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import dh_private_key
>>> from sympy.ntheory import isprime, is_primitive_root
>>> p, g, _ = dh_private_key()
>>> isprime(p)
True
>>> is_primitive_root(g, p)
True
>>> p, g, _ = dh_private_key(5)
>>> isprime(p)
True
>>> is_primitive_root(g, p)
True
"""
p = nextprime(2**digit)
g = primitive_root(p)
randrange = _randrange(seed)
a = randrange(2, p)
return p, g, a
def dh_public_key(key):
"""
Return three number tuple as public key.
This is the tuple that Alice sends to Bob.
Parameters
==========
key: Tuple (p, g, a) generated by ``dh_private_key``
Returns
=======
(p, g, g^a mod p) : p, g and a as in Parameters
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import dh_private_key, dh_public_key
>>> p, g, a = dh_private_key();
>>> _p, _g, x = dh_public_key((p, g, a))
>>> p == _p and g == _g
True
>>> x == pow(g, a, p)
True
"""
p, g, a = key
return p, g, pow(g, a, p)
def dh_shared_key(key, b):
"""
Return an integer that is the shared key.
This is what Bob and Alice can both calculate using the public
keys they received from each other and their private keys.
Parameters
==========
key: Tuple (p, g, x) generated by ``dh_public_key``
b: Random number in the range of 2 to p - 1
(Chosen by second key exchange member (Bob))
Returns
=======
shared key (int)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... dh_private_key, dh_public_key, dh_shared_key)
>>> prk = dh_private_key();
>>> p, g, x = dh_public_key(prk);
>>> sk = dh_shared_key((p, g, x), 1000)
>>> sk == pow(x, 1000, p)
True
"""
p, _, x = key
if 1 >= b or b >= p:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Value of b should be greater 1 and less
than prime %s.''' % p))
return pow(x, b, p)
################ Goldwasser-Micali Encryption #########################
def _legendre(a, p):
"""
Returns the legendre symbol of a and p
assuming that p is a prime
i.e. 1 if a is a quadratic residue mod p
-1 if a is not a quadratic residue mod p
0 if a is divisible by p
Parameters
==========
a : int the number to test
p : the prime to test a against
Returns
=======
legendre symbol (a / p) (int)
"""
sig = pow(a, (p - 1)//2, p)
if sig == 1:
return 1
elif sig == 0:
return 0
else:
return -1
def _random_coprime_stream(n, seed=None):
randrange = _randrange(seed)
while True:
y = randrange(n)
if gcd(y, n) == 1:
yield y
def gm_private_key(p, q, a=None):
"""
Check if p and q can be used as private keys for
the Goldwasser-Micali encryption. The method works
roughly as follows.
Pick two large primes p ands q. Call their product N.
Given a message as an integer i, write i in its
bit representation b_0,...,b_n. For each k,
if b_k = 0:
let a_k be a random square
(quadratic residue) modulo p * q
such that jacobi_symbol(a, p * q) = 1
if b_k = 1:
let a_k be a random non-square
(non-quadratic residue) modulo p * q
such that jacobi_symbol(a, p * q) = 1
return [a_1, a_2,...]
b_k can be recovered by checking whether or not
a_k is a residue. And from the b_k's, the message
can be reconstructed.
The idea is that, while jacobi_symbol(a, p * q)
can be easily computed (and when it is equal to -1 will
tell you that a is not a square mod p * q), quadratic
residuosity modulo a composite number is hard to compute
without knowing its factorization.
Moreover, approximately half the numbers coprime to p * q have
jacobi_symbol equal to 1. And among those, approximately half
are residues and approximately half are not. This maximizes the
entropy of the code.
Parameters
==========
p, q, a : initialization variables
Returns
=======
p, q : the input value p and q
Raises
======
ValueError : if p and q are not distinct odd primes
"""
if p == q:
raise ValueError("expected distinct primes, "
"got two copies of %i" % p)
elif not isprime(p) or not isprime(q):
raise ValueError("first two arguments must be prime, "
"got %i of %i" % (p, q))
elif p == 2 or q == 2:
raise ValueError("first two arguments must not be even, "
"got %i of %i" % (p, q))
return p, q
def gm_public_key(p, q, a=None, seed=None):
"""
Compute public keys for p and q.
Note that in Goldwasser-Micali Encrpytion,
public keys are randomly selected.
Parameters
==========
p, q, a : (int) initialization variables
Returns
=======
(a, N) : tuple[int]
a is the input a if it is not None otherwise
some random integer coprime to p and q.
N is the product of p and q
"""
p, q = gm_private_key(p, q)
N = p * q
if a is None:
randrange = _randrange(seed)
while True:
a = randrange(N)
if _legendre(a, p) == _legendre(a, q) == -1:
break
else:
if _legendre(a, p) != -1 or _legendre(a, q) != -1:
return False
return (a, N)
def encipher_gm(i, key, seed=None):
"""
Encrypt integer 'i' using public_key 'key'
Note that gm uses random encrpytion.
Parameters
==========
i: (int) the message to encrypt
key: Tuple (a, N) the public key
Returns
=======
List[int] the randomized encrpyted message.
"""
if i < 0:
raise ValueError(
"message must be a non-negative "
"integer: got %d instead" % i)
a, N = key
bits = []
while i > 0:
bits.append(i % 2)
i //= 2
gen = _random_coprime_stream(N, seed)
rev = reversed(bits)
encode = lambda b: next(gen)**2*pow(a, b) % N
return [ encode(b) for b in rev ]
def decipher_gm(message, key):
"""
Decrypt message 'message' using public_key 'key'.
Parameters
==========
List[int]: the randomized encrpyted message.
key: Tuple (p, q) the private key
Returns
=======
i (int) the encrpyted message
"""
p, q = key
res = lambda m, p: _legendre(m, p) > 0
bits = [res(m, p) * res(m, q) for m in message]
m = 0
for b in bits:
m <<= 1
m += not b
return m
|
0ddb329da23d54e6ab788e5277431d3ad0389cffd164a09d20324182c04f8d76
|
"""Module for querying SymPy objects about assumptions."""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import sympify
from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
from sympy.core.relational import Relational
from sympy.logic.boolalg import (to_cnf, And, Not, Or, Implies, Equivalent,
BooleanFunction, BooleanAtom)
from sympy.logic.inference import satisfiable
from sympy.assumptions.assume import (global_assumptions, Predicate,
AppliedPredicate)
from sympy.core.decorators import deprecated
from sympy.utilities.decorator import memoize_property
# Deprecated predicates should be added to this list
deprecated_predicates = [
'bounded',
'infinity',
'infinitesimal'
]
# Memoization storage for predicates
predicate_storage = {}
predicate_memo = memoize_property(predicate_storage)
# Memoization is necessary for the properties of AssumptionKeys to
# ensure that only one object of Predicate objects are created.
# This is because assumption handlers are registered on those objects.
class AssumptionKeys(object):
"""
This class contains all the supported keys by ``ask``.
"""
@predicate_memo
def hermitian(self):
"""
Hermitian predicate.
``ask(Q.hermitian(x))`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of
Hermitian operators.
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/HermitianOperator.html
"""
# TODO: Add examples
return Predicate('hermitian')
@predicate_memo
def antihermitian(self):
"""
Antihermitian predicate.
``Q.antihermitian(x)`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the field of
antihermitian operators, i.e., operators in the form ``x*I``, where
``x`` is Hermitian.
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/HermitianOperator.html
"""
# TODO: Add examples
return Predicate('antihermitian')
@predicate_memo
def real(self):
r"""
Real number predicate.
``Q.real(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is a real number, i.e., it is in the
interval `(-\infty, \infty)`. Note that, in particular the infinities
are not real. Use ``Q.extended_real`` if you want to consider those as
well.
A few important facts about reals:
- Every real number is positive, negative, or zero. Furthermore,
because these sets are pairwise disjoint, each real number is exactly
one of those three.
- Every real number is also complex.
- Every real number is finite.
- Every real number is either rational or irrational.
- Every real number is either algebraic or transcendental.
- The facts ``Q.negative``, ``Q.zero``, ``Q.positive``,
``Q.nonnegative``, ``Q.nonpositive``, ``Q.nonzero``, ``Q.integer``,
``Q.rational``, and ``Q.irrational`` all imply ``Q.real``, as do all
facts that imply those facts.
- The facts ``Q.algebraic``, and ``Q.transcendental`` do not imply
``Q.real``; they imply ``Q.complex``. An algebraic or transcendental
number may or may not be real.
- The "non" facts (i.e., ``Q.nonnegative``, ``Q.nonzero``,
``Q.nonpositive`` and ``Q.noninteger``) are not equivalent to not the
fact, but rather, not the fact *and* ``Q.real``. For example,
``Q.nonnegative`` means ``~Q.negative & Q.real``. So for example,
``I`` is not nonnegative, nonzero, or nonpositive.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, symbols
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> ask(Q.real(x), Q.positive(x))
True
>>> ask(Q.real(0))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_number
"""
return Predicate('real')
@predicate_memo
def extended_real(self):
r"""
Extended real predicate.
``Q.extended_real(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is a real number or
`\{-\infty, \infty\}`.
See documentation of ``Q.real`` for more information about related facts.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ask, Q, oo, I
>>> ask(Q.extended_real(1))
True
>>> ask(Q.extended_real(I))
False
>>> ask(Q.extended_real(oo))
True
"""
return Predicate('extended_real')
@predicate_memo
def imaginary(self):
"""
Imaginary number predicate.
``Q.imaginary(x)`` is true iff ``x`` can be written as a real
number multiplied by the imaginary unit ``I``. Please note that ``0``
is not considered to be an imaginary number.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, I
>>> ask(Q.imaginary(3*I))
True
>>> ask(Q.imaginary(2 + 3*I))
False
>>> ask(Q.imaginary(0))
False
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imaginary_number
"""
return Predicate('imaginary')
@predicate_memo
def complex(self):
"""
Complex number predicate.
``Q.complex(x)`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of complex
numbers. Note that every complex number is finite.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, Symbol, ask, I, oo
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> ask(Q.complex(0))
True
>>> ask(Q.complex(2 + 3*I))
True
>>> ask(Q.complex(oo))
False
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complex_number
"""
return Predicate('complex')
@predicate_memo
def algebraic(self):
r"""
Algebraic number predicate.
``Q.algebraic(x)`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of
algebraic numbers. ``x`` is algebraic if there is some polynomial
in ``p(x)\in \mathbb\{Q\}[x]`` such that ``p(x) = 0``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ask, Q, sqrt, I, pi
>>> ask(Q.algebraic(sqrt(2)))
True
>>> ask(Q.algebraic(I))
True
>>> ask(Q.algebraic(pi))
False
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algebraic_number
"""
return Predicate('algebraic')
@predicate_memo
def transcendental(self):
"""
Transcedental number predicate.
``Q.transcendental(x)`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of
transcendental numbers. A transcendental number is a real
or complex number that is not algebraic.
"""
# TODO: Add examples
return Predicate('transcendental')
@predicate_memo
def integer(self):
"""
Integer predicate.
``Q.integer(x)`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of integer numbers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, S
>>> ask(Q.integer(5))
True
>>> ask(Q.integer(S(1)/2))
False
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integer
"""
return Predicate('integer')
@predicate_memo
def rational(self):
"""
Rational number predicate.
``Q.rational(x)`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of
rational numbers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ask, Q, pi, S
>>> ask(Q.rational(0))
True
>>> ask(Q.rational(S(1)/2))
True
>>> ask(Q.rational(pi))
False
References
==========
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_number
"""
return Predicate('rational')
@predicate_memo
def irrational(self):
"""
Irrational number predicate.
``Q.irrational(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is any real number that
cannot be expressed as a ratio of integers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ask, Q, pi, S, I
>>> ask(Q.irrational(0))
False
>>> ask(Q.irrational(S(1)/2))
False
>>> ask(Q.irrational(pi))
True
>>> ask(Q.irrational(I))
False
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrational_number
"""
return Predicate('irrational')
@predicate_memo
def finite(self):
"""
Finite predicate.
``Q.finite(x)`` is true if ``x`` is neither an infinity
nor a ``NaN``. In other words, ``ask(Q.finite(x))`` is true for all ``x``
having a bounded absolute value.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, Symbol, S, oo, I
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> ask(Q.finite(S.NaN))
False
>>> ask(Q.finite(oo))
False
>>> ask(Q.finite(1))
True
>>> ask(Q.finite(2 + 3*I))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite
"""
return Predicate('finite')
@predicate_memo
@deprecated(useinstead="finite", issue=9425, deprecated_since_version="1.0")
def bounded(self):
"""
See documentation of ``Q.finite``.
"""
return Predicate('finite')
@predicate_memo
def infinite(self):
"""
Infinite number predicate.
``Q.infinite(x)`` is true iff the absolute value of ``x`` is
infinity.
"""
# TODO: Add examples
return Predicate('infinite')
@predicate_memo
@deprecated(useinstead="infinite", issue=9426, deprecated_since_version="1.0")
def infinity(self):
"""
See documentation of ``Q.infinite``.
"""
return Predicate('infinite')
@predicate_memo
@deprecated(useinstead="zero", issue=9675, deprecated_since_version="1.0")
def infinitesimal(self):
"""
See documentation of ``Q.zero``.
"""
return Predicate('zero')
@predicate_memo
def positive(self):
r"""
Positive real number predicate.
``Q.positive(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is real and `x > 0`, that is if ``x``
is in the interval `(0, \infty)`. In particular, infinity is not
positive.
A few important facts about positive numbers:
- Note that ``Q.nonpositive`` and ``~Q.positive`` are *not* the same
thing. ``~Q.positive(x)`` simply means that ``x`` is not positive,
whereas ``Q.nonpositive(x)`` means that ``x`` is real and not
positive, i.e., ``Q.nonpositive(x)`` is logically equivalent to
`Q.negative(x) | Q.zero(x)``. So for example, ``~Q.positive(I)`` is
true, whereas ``Q.nonpositive(I)`` is false.
- See the documentation of ``Q.real`` for more information about
related facts.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, symbols, I
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> ask(Q.positive(x), Q.real(x) & ~Q.negative(x) & ~Q.zero(x))
True
>>> ask(Q.positive(1))
True
>>> ask(Q.nonpositive(I))
False
>>> ask(~Q.positive(I))
True
"""
return Predicate('positive')
@predicate_memo
def negative(self):
r"""
Negative number predicate.
``Q.negative(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is a real number and :math:`x < 0`, that is,
it is in the interval :math:`(-\infty, 0)`. Note in particular that negative
infinity is not negative.
A few important facts about negative numbers:
- Note that ``Q.nonnegative`` and ``~Q.negative`` are *not* the same
thing. ``~Q.negative(x)`` simply means that ``x`` is not negative,
whereas ``Q.nonnegative(x)`` means that ``x`` is real and not
negative, i.e., ``Q.nonnegative(x)`` is logically equivalent to
``Q.zero(x) | Q.positive(x)``. So for example, ``~Q.negative(I)`` is
true, whereas ``Q.nonnegative(I)`` is false.
- See the documentation of ``Q.real`` for more information about
related facts.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, symbols, I
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> ask(Q.negative(x), Q.real(x) & ~Q.positive(x) & ~Q.zero(x))
True
>>> ask(Q.negative(-1))
True
>>> ask(Q.nonnegative(I))
False
>>> ask(~Q.negative(I))
True
"""
return Predicate('negative')
@predicate_memo
def zero(self):
"""
Zero number predicate.
``ask(Q.zero(x))`` is true iff the value of ``x`` is zero.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ask, Q, oo, symbols
>>> x, y = symbols('x, y')
>>> ask(Q.zero(0))
True
>>> ask(Q.zero(1/oo))
True
>>> ask(Q.zero(0*oo))
False
>>> ask(Q.zero(1))
False
>>> ask(Q.zero(x*y), Q.zero(x) | Q.zero(y))
True
"""
return Predicate('zero')
@predicate_memo
def nonzero(self):
"""
Nonzero real number predicate.
``ask(Q.nonzero(x))`` is true iff ``x`` is real and ``x`` is not zero. Note in
particular that ``Q.nonzero(x)`` is false if ``x`` is not real. Use
``~Q.zero(x)`` if you want the negation of being zero without any real
assumptions.
A few important facts about nonzero numbers:
- ``Q.nonzero`` is logically equivalent to ``Q.positive | Q.negative``.
- See the documentation of ``Q.real`` for more information about
related facts.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, symbols, I, oo
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> print(ask(Q.nonzero(x), ~Q.zero(x)))
None
>>> ask(Q.nonzero(x), Q.positive(x))
True
>>> ask(Q.nonzero(x), Q.zero(x))
False
>>> ask(Q.nonzero(0))
False
>>> ask(Q.nonzero(I))
False
>>> ask(~Q.zero(I))
True
>>> ask(Q.nonzero(oo)) #doctest: +SKIP
False
"""
return Predicate('nonzero')
@predicate_memo
def nonpositive(self):
"""
Nonpositive real number predicate.
``ask(Q.nonpositive(x))`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of
negative numbers including zero.
- Note that ``Q.nonpositive`` and ``~Q.positive`` are *not* the same
thing. ``~Q.positive(x)`` simply means that ``x`` is not positive,
whereas ``Q.nonpositive(x)`` means that ``x`` is real and not
positive, i.e., ``Q.nonpositive(x)`` is logically equivalent to
`Q.negative(x) | Q.zero(x)``. So for example, ``~Q.positive(I)`` is
true, whereas ``Q.nonpositive(I)`` is false.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, I
>>> ask(Q.nonpositive(-1))
True
>>> ask(Q.nonpositive(0))
True
>>> ask(Q.nonpositive(1))
False
>>> ask(Q.nonpositive(I))
False
>>> ask(Q.nonpositive(-I))
False
"""
return Predicate('nonpositive')
@predicate_memo
def nonnegative(self):
"""
Nonnegative real number predicate.
``ask(Q.nonnegative(x))`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of
positive numbers including zero.
- Note that ``Q.nonnegative`` and ``~Q.negative`` are *not* the same
thing. ``~Q.negative(x)`` simply means that ``x`` is not negative,
whereas ``Q.nonnegative(x)`` means that ``x`` is real and not
negative, i.e., ``Q.nonnegative(x)`` is logically equivalent to
``Q.zero(x) | Q.positive(x)``. So for example, ``~Q.negative(I)`` is
true, whereas ``Q.nonnegative(I)`` is false.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, I
>>> ask(Q.nonnegative(1))
True
>>> ask(Q.nonnegative(0))
True
>>> ask(Q.nonnegative(-1))
False
>>> ask(Q.nonnegative(I))
False
>>> ask(Q.nonnegative(-I))
False
"""
return Predicate('nonnegative')
@predicate_memo
def even(self):
"""
Even number predicate.
``ask(Q.even(x))`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of even
integers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, pi
>>> ask(Q.even(0))
True
>>> ask(Q.even(2))
True
>>> ask(Q.even(3))
False
>>> ask(Q.even(pi))
False
"""
return Predicate('even')
@predicate_memo
def odd(self):
"""
Odd number predicate.
``ask(Q.odd(x))`` is true iff ``x`` belongs to the set of odd numbers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, pi
>>> ask(Q.odd(0))
False
>>> ask(Q.odd(2))
False
>>> ask(Q.odd(3))
True
>>> ask(Q.odd(pi))
False
"""
return Predicate('odd')
@predicate_memo
def prime(self):
"""
Prime number predicate.
``ask(Q.prime(x))`` is true iff ``x`` is a natural number greater
than 1 that has no positive divisors other than ``1`` and the
number itself.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask
>>> ask(Q.prime(0))
False
>>> ask(Q.prime(1))
False
>>> ask(Q.prime(2))
True
>>> ask(Q.prime(20))
False
>>> ask(Q.prime(-3))
False
"""
return Predicate('prime')
@predicate_memo
def composite(self):
"""
Composite number predicate.
``ask(Q.composite(x))`` is true iff ``x`` is a positive integer and has
at least one positive divisor other than ``1`` and the number itself.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask
>>> ask(Q.composite(0))
False
>>> ask(Q.composite(1))
False
>>> ask(Q.composite(2))
False
>>> ask(Q.composite(20))
True
"""
return Predicate('composite')
@predicate_memo
def commutative(self):
"""
Commutative predicate.
``ask(Q.commutative(x))`` is true iff ``x`` commutes with any other
object with respect to multiplication operation.
"""
# TODO: Add examples
return Predicate('commutative')
@predicate_memo
def is_true(self):
"""
Generic predicate.
``ask(Q.is_true(x))`` is true iff ``x`` is true. This only makes
sense if ``x`` is a predicate.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ask, Q, symbols
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> ask(Q.is_true(True))
True
"""
return Predicate('is_true')
@predicate_memo
def symmetric(self):
"""
Symmetric matrix predicate.
``Q.symmetric(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is a square matrix and is equal to
its transpose. Every square diagonal matrix is a symmetric matrix.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 2)
>>> Y = MatrixSymbol('Y', 2, 3)
>>> Z = MatrixSymbol('Z', 2, 2)
>>> ask(Q.symmetric(X*Z), Q.symmetric(X) & Q.symmetric(Z))
True
>>> ask(Q.symmetric(X + Z), Q.symmetric(X) & Q.symmetric(Z))
True
>>> ask(Q.symmetric(Y))
False
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetric_matrix
"""
# TODO: Add handlers to make these keys work with
# actual matrices and add more examples in the docstring.
return Predicate('symmetric')
@predicate_memo
def invertible(self):
"""
Invertible matrix predicate.
``Q.invertible(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is an invertible matrix.
A square matrix is called invertible only if its determinant is 0.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 2)
>>> Y = MatrixSymbol('Y', 2, 3)
>>> Z = MatrixSymbol('Z', 2, 2)
>>> ask(Q.invertible(X*Y), Q.invertible(X))
False
>>> ask(Q.invertible(X*Z), Q.invertible(X) & Q.invertible(Z))
True
>>> ask(Q.invertible(X), Q.fullrank(X) & Q.square(X))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invertible_matrix
"""
return Predicate('invertible')
@predicate_memo
def orthogonal(self):
"""
Orthogonal matrix predicate.
``Q.orthogonal(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is an orthogonal matrix.
A square matrix ``M`` is an orthogonal matrix if it satisfies
``M^TM = MM^T = I`` where ``M^T`` is the transpose matrix of
``M`` and ``I`` is an identity matrix. Note that an orthogonal
matrix is necessarily invertible.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol, Identity
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 2)
>>> Y = MatrixSymbol('Y', 2, 3)
>>> Z = MatrixSymbol('Z', 2, 2)
>>> ask(Q.orthogonal(Y))
False
>>> ask(Q.orthogonal(X*Z*X), Q.orthogonal(X) & Q.orthogonal(Z))
True
>>> ask(Q.orthogonal(Identity(3)))
True
>>> ask(Q.invertible(X), Q.orthogonal(X))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthogonal_matrix
"""
return Predicate('orthogonal')
@predicate_memo
def unitary(self):
"""
Unitary matrix predicate.
``Q.unitary(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is a unitary matrix.
Unitary matrix is an analogue to orthogonal matrix. A square
matrix ``M`` with complex elements is unitary if :math:``M^TM = MM^T= I``
where :math:``M^T`` is the conjugate transpose matrix of ``M``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol, Identity
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 2)
>>> Y = MatrixSymbol('Y', 2, 3)
>>> Z = MatrixSymbol('Z', 2, 2)
>>> ask(Q.unitary(Y))
False
>>> ask(Q.unitary(X*Z*X), Q.unitary(X) & Q.unitary(Z))
True
>>> ask(Q.unitary(Identity(3)))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unitary_matrix
"""
return Predicate('unitary')
@predicate_memo
def positive_definite(self):
r"""
Positive definite matrix predicate.
If ``M`` is a :math:``n \times n`` symmetric real matrix, it is said
to be positive definite if :math:`Z^TMZ` is positive for
every non-zero column vector ``Z`` of ``n`` real numbers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol, Identity
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 2)
>>> Y = MatrixSymbol('Y', 2, 3)
>>> Z = MatrixSymbol('Z', 2, 2)
>>> ask(Q.positive_definite(Y))
False
>>> ask(Q.positive_definite(Identity(3)))
True
>>> ask(Q.positive_definite(X + Z), Q.positive_definite(X) &
... Q.positive_definite(Z))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive-definite_matrix
"""
return Predicate('positive_definite')
@predicate_memo
def upper_triangular(self):
"""
Upper triangular matrix predicate.
A matrix ``M`` is called upper triangular matrix if :math:`M_{ij}=0`
for :math:`i<j`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, ZeroMatrix, Identity
>>> ask(Q.upper_triangular(Identity(3)))
True
>>> ask(Q.upper_triangular(ZeroMatrix(3, 3)))
True
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/UpperTriangularMatrix.html
"""
return Predicate('upper_triangular')
@predicate_memo
def lower_triangular(self):
"""
Lower triangular matrix predicate.
A matrix ``M`` is called lower triangular matrix if :math:`a_{ij}=0`
for :math:`i>j`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, ZeroMatrix, Identity
>>> ask(Q.lower_triangular(Identity(3)))
True
>>> ask(Q.lower_triangular(ZeroMatrix(3, 3)))
True
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/LowerTriangularMatrix.html
"""
return Predicate('lower_triangular')
@predicate_memo
def diagonal(self):
"""
Diagonal matrix predicate.
``Q.diagonal(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is a diagonal matrix. A diagonal
matrix is a matrix in which the entries outside the main diagonal
are all zero.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol, ZeroMatrix
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 2)
>>> ask(Q.diagonal(ZeroMatrix(3, 3)))
True
>>> ask(Q.diagonal(X), Q.lower_triangular(X) &
... Q.upper_triangular(X))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagonal_matrix
"""
return Predicate('diagonal')
@predicate_memo
def fullrank(self):
"""
Fullrank matrix predicate.
``Q.fullrank(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is a full rank matrix.
A matrix is full rank if all rows and columns of the matrix
are linearly independent. A square matrix is full rank iff
its determinant is nonzero.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol, ZeroMatrix, Identity
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 2)
>>> ask(Q.fullrank(X.T), Q.fullrank(X))
True
>>> ask(Q.fullrank(ZeroMatrix(3, 3)))
False
>>> ask(Q.fullrank(Identity(3)))
True
"""
return Predicate('fullrank')
@predicate_memo
def square(self):
"""
Square matrix predicate.
``Q.square(x)`` is true iff ``x`` is a square matrix. A square matrix
is a matrix with the same number of rows and columns.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol, ZeroMatrix, Identity
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 2)
>>> Y = MatrixSymbol('X', 2, 3)
>>> ask(Q.square(X))
True
>>> ask(Q.square(Y))
False
>>> ask(Q.square(ZeroMatrix(3, 3)))
True
>>> ask(Q.square(Identity(3)))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_matrix
"""
return Predicate('square')
@predicate_memo
def integer_elements(self):
"""
Integer elements matrix predicate.
``Q.integer_elements(x)`` is true iff all the elements of ``x``
are integers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 4, 4)
>>> ask(Q.integer(X[1, 2]), Q.integer_elements(X))
True
"""
return Predicate('integer_elements')
@predicate_memo
def real_elements(self):
"""
Real elements matrix predicate.
``Q.real_elements(x)`` is true iff all the elements of ``x``
are real numbers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 4, 4)
>>> ask(Q.real(X[1, 2]), Q.real_elements(X))
True
"""
return Predicate('real_elements')
@predicate_memo
def complex_elements(self):
"""
Complex elements matrix predicate.
``Q.complex_elements(x)`` is true iff all the elements of ``x``
are complex numbers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 4, 4)
>>> ask(Q.complex(X[1, 2]), Q.complex_elements(X))
True
>>> ask(Q.complex_elements(X), Q.integer_elements(X))
True
"""
return Predicate('complex_elements')
@predicate_memo
def singular(self):
"""
Singular matrix predicate.
A matrix is singular iff the value of its determinant is 0.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 4, 4)
>>> ask(Q.singular(X), Q.invertible(X))
False
>>> ask(Q.singular(X), ~Q.invertible(X))
True
References
==========
.. [1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/SingularMatrix.html
"""
return Predicate('singular')
@predicate_memo
def normal(self):
"""
Normal matrix predicate.
A matrix is normal if it commutes with its conjugate transpose.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 4, 4)
>>> ask(Q.normal(X), Q.unitary(X))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_matrix
"""
return Predicate('normal')
@predicate_memo
def triangular(self):
"""
Triangular matrix predicate.
``Q.triangular(X)`` is true if ``X`` is one that is either lower
triangular or upper triangular.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 4, 4)
>>> ask(Q.triangular(X), Q.upper_triangular(X))
True
>>> ask(Q.triangular(X), Q.lower_triangular(X))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangular_matrix
"""
return Predicate('triangular')
@predicate_memo
def unit_triangular(self):
"""
Unit triangular matrix predicate.
A unit triangular matrix is a triangular matrix with 1s
on the diagonal.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Q, ask, MatrixSymbol
>>> X = MatrixSymbol('X', 4, 4)
>>> ask(Q.triangular(X), Q.unit_triangular(X))
True
"""
return Predicate('unit_triangular')
Q = AssumptionKeys()
def _extract_facts(expr, symbol, check_reversed_rel=True):
"""
Helper for ask().
Extracts the facts relevant to the symbol from an assumption.
Returns None if there is nothing to extract.
"""
if isinstance(symbol, Relational):
if check_reversed_rel:
rev = _extract_facts(expr, symbol.reversed, False)
if rev is not None:
return rev
if isinstance(expr, bool):
return
if not expr.has(symbol):
return
if isinstance(expr, AppliedPredicate):
if expr.arg == symbol:
return expr.func
else:
return
if isinstance(expr, Not) and expr.args[0].func in (And, Or):
cls = Or if expr.args[0] == And else And
expr = cls(*[~arg for arg in expr.args[0].args])
args = [_extract_facts(arg, symbol) for arg in expr.args]
if isinstance(expr, And):
args = [x for x in args if x is not None]
if args:
return expr.func(*args)
if args and all(x != None for x in args):
return expr.func(*args)
def ask(proposition, assumptions=True, context=global_assumptions):
"""
Method for inferring properties about objects.
**Syntax**
* ask(proposition)
* ask(proposition, assumptions)
where ``proposition`` is any boolean expression
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ask, Q, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> ask(Q.rational(pi))
False
>>> ask(Q.even(x*y), Q.even(x) & Q.integer(y))
True
>>> ask(Q.prime(4*x), Q.integer(x))
False
**Remarks**
Relations in assumptions are not implemented (yet), so the following
will not give a meaningful result.
>>> ask(Q.positive(x), Q.is_true(x > 0)) # doctest: +SKIP
It is however a work in progress.
"""
from sympy.assumptions.satask import satask
if not isinstance(proposition, (BooleanFunction, AppliedPredicate, bool, BooleanAtom)):
raise TypeError("proposition must be a valid logical expression")
if not isinstance(assumptions, (BooleanFunction, AppliedPredicate, bool, BooleanAtom)):
raise TypeError("assumptions must be a valid logical expression")
if isinstance(proposition, AppliedPredicate):
key, expr = proposition.func, sympify(proposition.arg)
else:
key, expr = Q.is_true, sympify(proposition)
assumptions = And(assumptions, And(*context))
assumptions = to_cnf(assumptions)
local_facts = _extract_facts(assumptions, expr)
known_facts_cnf = get_known_facts_cnf()
known_facts_dict = get_known_facts_dict()
if local_facts and satisfiable(And(local_facts, known_facts_cnf)) is False:
raise ValueError("inconsistent assumptions %s" % assumptions)
# direct resolution method, no logic
res = key(expr)._eval_ask(assumptions)
if res is not None:
return bool(res)
if local_facts is None:
return satask(proposition, assumptions=assumptions, context=context)
# See if there's a straight-forward conclusion we can make for the inference
if local_facts.is_Atom:
if key in known_facts_dict[local_facts]:
return True
if Not(key) in known_facts_dict[local_facts]:
return False
elif (isinstance(local_facts, And) and
all(k in known_facts_dict for k in local_facts.args)):
for assum in local_facts.args:
if assum.is_Atom:
if key in known_facts_dict[assum]:
return True
if Not(key) in known_facts_dict[assum]:
return False
elif isinstance(assum, Not) and assum.args[0].is_Atom:
if key in known_facts_dict[assum]:
return False
if Not(key) in known_facts_dict[assum]:
return True
elif (isinstance(key, Predicate) and
isinstance(local_facts, Not) and local_facts.args[0].is_Atom):
if local_facts.args[0] in known_facts_dict[key]:
return False
# Failing all else, we do a full logical inference
res = ask_full_inference(key, local_facts, known_facts_cnf)
if res is None:
return satask(proposition, assumptions=assumptions, context=context)
return res
def ask_full_inference(proposition, assumptions, known_facts_cnf):
"""
Method for inferring properties about objects.
"""
if not satisfiable(And(known_facts_cnf, assumptions, proposition)):
return False
if not satisfiable(And(known_facts_cnf, assumptions, Not(proposition))):
return True
return None
def register_handler(key, handler):
"""
Register a handler in the ask system. key must be a string and handler a
class inheriting from AskHandler::
>>> from sympy.assumptions import register_handler, ask, Q
>>> from sympy.assumptions.handlers import AskHandler
>>> class MersenneHandler(AskHandler):
... # Mersenne numbers are in the form 2**n - 1, n integer
... @staticmethod
... def Integer(expr, assumptions):
... from sympy import log
... return ask(Q.integer(log(expr + 1, 2)))
>>> register_handler('mersenne', MersenneHandler)
>>> ask(Q.mersenne(7))
True
"""
if type(key) is Predicate:
key = key.name
try:
getattr(Q, key).add_handler(handler)
except AttributeError:
setattr(Q, key, Predicate(key, handlers=[handler]))
def remove_handler(key, handler):
"""Removes a handler from the ask system. Same syntax as register_handler"""
if type(key) is Predicate:
key = key.name
getattr(Q, key).remove_handler(handler)
def single_fact_lookup(known_facts_keys, known_facts_cnf):
# Compute the quick lookup for single facts
mapping = {}
for key in known_facts_keys:
mapping[key] = {key}
for other_key in known_facts_keys:
if other_key != key:
if ask_full_inference(other_key, key, known_facts_cnf):
mapping[key].add(other_key)
return mapping
def compute_known_facts(known_facts, known_facts_keys):
"""Compute the various forms of knowledge compilation used by the
assumptions system.
This function is typically applied to the results of the ``get_known_facts``
and ``get_known_facts_keys`` functions defined at the bottom of
this file.
"""
from textwrap import dedent, wrap
fact_string = dedent('''\
"""
The contents of this file are the return value of
``sympy.assumptions.ask.compute_known_facts``.
Do NOT manually edit this file.
Instead, run ./bin/ask_update.py.
"""
from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
from sympy.logic.boolalg import And, Not, Or
from sympy.assumptions.ask import Q
# -{ Known facts in Conjunctive Normal Form }-
@cacheit
def get_known_facts_cnf():
return And(
%s
)
# -{ Known facts in compressed sets }-
@cacheit
def get_known_facts_dict():
return {
%s
}
''')
# Compute the known facts in CNF form for logical inference
LINE = ",\n "
HANG = ' '*8
cnf = to_cnf(known_facts)
c = LINE.join([str(a) for a in cnf.args])
mapping = single_fact_lookup(known_facts_keys, cnf)
items = sorted(mapping.items(), key=str)
keys = [str(i[0]) for i in items]
values = ['set(%s)' % sorted(i[1], key=str) for i in items]
m = LINE.join(['\n'.join(
wrap("%s: %s" % (k, v),
subsequent_indent=HANG,
break_long_words=False))
for k, v in zip(keys, values)]) + ','
return fact_string % (c, m)
# handlers tells us what ask handler we should use
# for a particular key
_val_template = 'sympy.assumptions.handlers.%s'
_handlers = [
("antihermitian", "sets.AskAntiHermitianHandler"),
("finite", "calculus.AskFiniteHandler"),
("commutative", "AskCommutativeHandler"),
("complex", "sets.AskComplexHandler"),
("composite", "ntheory.AskCompositeHandler"),
("even", "ntheory.AskEvenHandler"),
("extended_real", "sets.AskExtendedRealHandler"),
("hermitian", "sets.AskHermitianHandler"),
("imaginary", "sets.AskImaginaryHandler"),
("integer", "sets.AskIntegerHandler"),
("irrational", "sets.AskIrrationalHandler"),
("rational", "sets.AskRationalHandler"),
("negative", "order.AskNegativeHandler"),
("nonzero", "order.AskNonZeroHandler"),
("nonpositive", "order.AskNonPositiveHandler"),
("nonnegative", "order.AskNonNegativeHandler"),
("zero", "order.AskZeroHandler"),
("positive", "order.AskPositiveHandler"),
("prime", "ntheory.AskPrimeHandler"),
("real", "sets.AskRealHandler"),
("odd", "ntheory.AskOddHandler"),
("algebraic", "sets.AskAlgebraicHandler"),
("is_true", "common.TautologicalHandler"),
("symmetric", "matrices.AskSymmetricHandler"),
("invertible", "matrices.AskInvertibleHandler"),
("orthogonal", "matrices.AskOrthogonalHandler"),
("unitary", "matrices.AskUnitaryHandler"),
("positive_definite", "matrices.AskPositiveDefiniteHandler"),
("upper_triangular", "matrices.AskUpperTriangularHandler"),
("lower_triangular", "matrices.AskLowerTriangularHandler"),
("diagonal", "matrices.AskDiagonalHandler"),
("fullrank", "matrices.AskFullRankHandler"),
("square", "matrices.AskSquareHandler"),
("integer_elements", "matrices.AskIntegerElementsHandler"),
("real_elements", "matrices.AskRealElementsHandler"),
("complex_elements", "matrices.AskComplexElementsHandler"),
]
for name, value in _handlers:
register_handler(name, _val_template % value)
@cacheit
def get_known_facts_keys():
return [
getattr(Q, attr)
for attr in Q.__class__.__dict__
if not (attr.startswith('__') or
attr in deprecated_predicates)]
@cacheit
def get_known_facts():
return And(
Implies(Q.infinite, ~Q.finite),
Implies(Q.real, Q.complex),
Implies(Q.real, Q.hermitian),
Equivalent(Q.extended_real, Q.real | Q.infinite),
Equivalent(Q.even | Q.odd, Q.integer),
Implies(Q.even, ~Q.odd),
Equivalent(Q.prime, Q.integer & Q.positive & ~Q.composite),
Implies(Q.integer, Q.rational),
Implies(Q.rational, Q.algebraic),
Implies(Q.algebraic, Q.complex),
Equivalent(Q.transcendental | Q.algebraic, Q.complex),
Implies(Q.transcendental, ~Q.algebraic),
Implies(Q.imaginary, Q.complex & ~Q.real),
Implies(Q.imaginary, Q.antihermitian),
Implies(Q.antihermitian, ~Q.hermitian),
Equivalent(Q.irrational | Q.rational, Q.real),
Implies(Q.irrational, ~Q.rational),
Implies(Q.zero, Q.even),
Equivalent(Q.real, Q.negative | Q.zero | Q.positive),
Implies(Q.zero, ~Q.negative & ~Q.positive),
Implies(Q.negative, ~Q.positive),
Equivalent(Q.nonnegative, Q.zero | Q.positive),
Equivalent(Q.nonpositive, Q.zero | Q.negative),
Equivalent(Q.nonzero, Q.negative | Q.positive),
Implies(Q.orthogonal, Q.positive_definite),
Implies(Q.orthogonal, Q.unitary),
Implies(Q.unitary & Q.real, Q.orthogonal),
Implies(Q.unitary, Q.normal),
Implies(Q.unitary, Q.invertible),
Implies(Q.normal, Q.square),
Implies(Q.diagonal, Q.normal),
Implies(Q.positive_definite, Q.invertible),
Implies(Q.diagonal, Q.upper_triangular),
Implies(Q.diagonal, Q.lower_triangular),
Implies(Q.lower_triangular, Q.triangular),
Implies(Q.upper_triangular, Q.triangular),
Implies(Q.triangular, Q.upper_triangular | Q.lower_triangular),
Implies(Q.upper_triangular & Q.lower_triangular, Q.diagonal),
Implies(Q.diagonal, Q.symmetric),
Implies(Q.unit_triangular, Q.triangular),
Implies(Q.invertible, Q.fullrank),
Implies(Q.invertible, Q.square),
Implies(Q.symmetric, Q.square),
Implies(Q.fullrank & Q.square, Q.invertible),
Equivalent(Q.invertible, ~Q.singular),
Implies(Q.integer_elements, Q.real_elements),
Implies(Q.real_elements, Q.complex_elements),
)
from sympy.assumptions.ask_generated import (
get_known_facts_dict, get_known_facts_cnf)
|
373be9a8457df51b7f426e89955ef1fb96f72a331908b2fb91dce13908fa2d2d
|
"""A functions module, includes all the standard functions.
Combinatorial - factorial, fibonacci, harmonic, bernoulli...
Elementary - hyperbolic, trigonometric, exponential, floor and ceiling, sqrt...
Special - gamma, zeta,spherical harmonics...
"""
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import (factorial, factorial2,
rf, ff, binomial, RisingFactorial, FallingFactorial, subfactorial)
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.numbers import (carmichael, fibonacci, lucas, tribonacci,
harmonic, bernoulli, bell, euler, catalan, genocchi, partition)
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import (sqrt, root, Min, Max,
Id, real_root, cbrt)
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import (re, im, sign, Abs,
conjugate, arg, polar_lift, periodic_argument, unbranched_argument,
principal_branch, transpose, adjoint, polarify, unpolarify)
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import (sin, cos, tan,
sec, csc, cot, sinc, asin, acos, atan, asec, acsc, acot, atan2)
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import (exp_polar, exp, log,
LambertW)
from sympy.functions.elementary.hyperbolic import (sinh, cosh, tanh, coth,
sech, csch, asinh, acosh, atanh, acoth, asech, acsch)
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import floor, ceiling, frac
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise, piecewise_fold
from sympy.functions.special.error_functions import (erf, erfc, erfi, erf2,
erfinv, erfcinv, erf2inv, Ei, expint, E1, li, Li, Si, Ci, Shi, Chi,
fresnels, fresnelc)
from sympy.functions.special.gamma_functions import (gamma, lowergamma,
uppergamma, polygamma, loggamma, digamma, trigamma)
from sympy.functions.special.zeta_functions import (dirichlet_eta, zeta,
lerchphi, polylog, stieltjes)
from sympy.functions.special.tensor_functions import (Eijk, LeviCivita,
KroneckerDelta)
from sympy.functions.special.singularity_functions import SingularityFunction
from sympy.functions.special.delta_functions import DiracDelta, Heaviside
from sympy.functions.special.bsplines import bspline_basis, bspline_basis_set, interpolating_spline
from sympy.functions.special.bessel import (besselj, bessely, besseli, besselk,
hankel1, hankel2, jn, yn, jn_zeros, hn1, hn2, airyai, airybi, airyaiprime, airybiprime)
from sympy.functions.special.hyper import hyper, meijerg, appellf1
from sympy.functions.special.polynomials import (legendre, assoc_legendre,
hermite, chebyshevt, chebyshevu, chebyshevu_root, chebyshevt_root,
laguerre, assoc_laguerre, gegenbauer, jacobi, jacobi_normalized)
from sympy.functions.special.spherical_harmonics import Ynm, Ynm_c, Znm
from sympy.functions.special.elliptic_integrals import (elliptic_k,
elliptic_f, elliptic_e, elliptic_pi)
from sympy.functions.special.beta_functions import beta
from sympy.functions.special.mathieu_functions import (mathieus, mathieuc,
mathieusprime, mathieucprime)
ln = log
|
3ab45605b4daae7c513033edbabb5ddaa6943df3d3f7df53d8fff1572cc46b9e
|
r"""
This module contains :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` and different helper
functions that it uses.
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` solves ordinary differential equations.
See the docstring on the various functions for their uses. Note that partial
differential equations support is in ``pde.py``. Note that hint functions
have docstrings describing their various methods, but they are intended for
internal use. Use ``dsolve(ode, func, hint=hint)`` to solve an ODE using a
specific hint. See also the docstring on
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`.
**Functions in this module**
These are the user functions in this module:
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` - Solves ODEs.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` - Classifies ODEs into
possible hints for :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.checkodesol` - Checks if an equation is the
solution to an ODE.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.homogeneous_order` - Returns the
homogeneous order of an expression.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.infinitesimals` - Returns the infinitesimals
of the Lie group of point transformations of an ODE, such that it is
invariant.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode_checkinfsol` - Checks if the given infinitesimals
are the actual infinitesimals of a first order ODE.
These are the non-solver helper functions that are for internal use. The
user should use the various options to
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` to obtain the functionality provided
by these functions:
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp` - Does all forms of ODE
simplification.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_sol_simplicity` - A key function for
comparing solutions by simplicity.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.constantsimp` - Simplifies arbitrary
constants.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.constant_renumber` - Renumber arbitrary
constants.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode._handle_Integral` - Evaluate unevaluated
Integrals.
See also the docstrings of these functions.
**Currently implemented solver methods**
The following methods are implemented for solving ordinary differential
equations. See the docstrings of the various hint functions for more
information on each (run ``help(ode)``):
- 1st order separable differential equations.
- 1st order differential equations whose coefficients or `dx` and `dy` are
functions homogeneous of the same order.
- 1st order exact differential equations.
- 1st order linear differential equations.
- 1st order Bernoulli differential equations.
- Power series solutions for first order differential equations.
- Lie Group method of solving first order differential equations.
- 2nd order Liouville differential equations.
- Power series solutions for second order differential equations
at ordinary and regular singular points.
- `n`\th order differential equation that can be solved with algebraic
rearrangement and integration.
- `n`\th order linear homogeneous differential equation with constant
coefficients.
- `n`\th order linear inhomogeneous differential equation with constant
coefficients using the method of undetermined coefficients.
- `n`\th order linear inhomogeneous differential equation with constant
coefficients using the method of variation of parameters.
**Philosophy behind this module**
This module is designed to make it easy to add new ODE solving methods without
having to mess with the solving code for other methods. The idea is that
there is a :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` function, which takes in
an ODE and tells you what hints, if any, will solve the ODE. It does this
without attempting to solve the ODE, so it is fast. Each solving method is a
hint, and it has its own function, named ``ode_<hint>``. That function takes
in the ODE and any match expression gathered by
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` and returns a solved result. If
this result has any integrals in it, the hint function will return an
unevaluated :py:class:`~sympy.integrals.Integral` class.
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`, which is the user wrapper function
around all of this, will then call :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp` on
the result, which, among other things, will attempt to solve the equation for
the dependent variable (the function we are solving for), simplify the
arbitrary constants in the expression, and evaluate any integrals, if the hint
allows it.
**How to add new solution methods**
If you have an ODE that you want :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` to be
able to solve, try to avoid adding special case code here. Instead, try
finding a general method that will solve your ODE, as well as others. This
way, the :py:mod:`~sympy.solvers.ode` module will become more robust, and
unhindered by special case hacks. WolphramAlpha and Maple's
DETools[odeadvisor] function are two resources you can use to classify a
specific ODE. It is also better for a method to work with an `n`\th order ODE
instead of only with specific orders, if possible.
To add a new method, there are a few things that you need to do. First, you
need a hint name for your method. Try to name your hint so that it is
unambiguous with all other methods, including ones that may not be implemented
yet. If your method uses integrals, also include a ``hint_Integral`` hint.
If there is more than one way to solve ODEs with your method, include a hint
for each one, as well as a ``<hint>_best`` hint. Your ``ode_<hint>_best()``
function should choose the best using min with ``ode_sol_simplicity`` as the
key argument. See
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_best`, for example.
The function that uses your method will be called ``ode_<hint>()``, so the
hint must only use characters that are allowed in a Python function name
(alphanumeric characters and the underscore '``_``' character). Include a
function for every hint, except for ``_Integral`` hints
(:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` takes care of those automatically).
Hint names should be all lowercase, unless a word is commonly capitalized
(such as Integral or Bernoulli). If you have a hint that you do not want to
run with ``all_Integral`` that doesn't have an ``_Integral`` counterpart (such
as a best hint that would defeat the purpose of ``all_Integral``), you will
need to remove it manually in the :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` code.
See also the :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` docstring for
guidelines on writing a hint name.
Determine *in general* how the solutions returned by your method compare with
other methods that can potentially solve the same ODEs. Then, put your hints
in the :py:data:`~sympy.solvers.ode.allhints` tuple in the order that they
should be called. The ordering of this tuple determines which hints are
default. Note that exceptions are ok, because it is easy for the user to
choose individual hints with :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`. In
general, ``_Integral`` variants should go at the end of the list, and
``_best`` variants should go before the various hints they apply to. For
example, the ``undetermined_coefficients`` hint comes before the
``variation_of_parameters`` hint because, even though variation of parameters
is more general than undetermined coefficients, undetermined coefficients
generally returns cleaner results for the ODEs that it can solve than
variation of parameters does, and it does not require integration, so it is
much faster.
Next, you need to have a match expression or a function that matches the type
of the ODE, which you should put in :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode`
(if the match function is more than just a few lines, like
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode._undetermined_coefficients_match`, it should go
outside of :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode`). It should match the
ODE without solving for it as much as possible, so that
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` remains fast and is not hindered by
bugs in solving code. Be sure to consider corner cases. For example, if your
solution method involves dividing by something, make sure you exclude the case
where that division will be 0.
In most cases, the matching of the ODE will also give you the various parts
that you need to solve it. You should put that in a dictionary (``.match()``
will do this for you), and add that as ``matching_hints['hint'] = matchdict``
in the relevant part of :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode`.
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` will then send this to
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`, which will send it to your function as
the ``match`` argument. Your function should be named ``ode_<hint>(eq, func,
order, match)`. If you need to send more information, put it in the ``match``
dictionary. For example, if you had to substitute in a dummy variable in
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` to match the ODE, you will need to
pass it to your function using the `match` dict to access it. You can access
the independent variable using ``func.args[0]``, and the dependent variable
(the function you are trying to solve for) as ``func.func``. If, while trying
to solve the ODE, you find that you cannot, raise ``NotImplementedError``.
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` will catch this error with the ``all``
meta-hint, rather than causing the whole routine to fail.
Add a docstring to your function that describes the method employed. Like
with anything else in SymPy, you will need to add a doctest to the docstring,
in addition to real tests in ``test_ode.py``. Try to maintain consistency
with the other hint functions' docstrings. Add your method to the list at the
top of this docstring. Also, add your method to ``ode.rst`` in the
``docs/src`` directory, so that the Sphinx docs will pull its docstring into
the main SymPy documentation. Be sure to make the Sphinx documentation by
running ``make html`` from within the doc directory to verify that the
docstring formats correctly.
If your solution method involves integrating, use :py:meth:`Integral()
<sympy.integrals.integrals.Integral>` instead of
:py:meth:`~sympy.core.expr.Expr.integrate`. This allows the user to bypass
hard/slow integration by using the ``_Integral`` variant of your hint. In
most cases, calling :py:meth:`sympy.core.basic.Basic.doit` will integrate your
solution. If this is not the case, you will need to write special code in
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode._handle_Integral`. Arbitrary constants should be
symbols named ``C1``, ``C2``, and so on. All solution methods should return
an equality instance. If you need an arbitrary number of arbitrary constants,
you can use ``constants = numbered_symbols(prefix='C', cls=Symbol, start=1)``.
If it is possible to solve for the dependent function in a general way, do so.
Otherwise, do as best as you can, but do not call solve in your
``ode_<hint>()`` function. :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp` will attempt
to solve the solution for you, so you do not need to do that. Lastly, if your
ODE has a common simplification that can be applied to your solutions, you can
add a special case in :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp` for it. For
example, solutions returned from the ``1st_homogeneous_coeff`` hints often
have many :py:meth:`~sympy.functions.log` terms, so
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp` calls
:py:meth:`~sympy.simplify.simplify.logcombine` on them (it also helps to write
the arbitrary constant as ``log(C1)`` instead of ``C1`` in this case). Also
consider common ways that you can rearrange your solution to have
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.constantsimp` take better advantage of it. It is
better to put simplification in :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp` than in
your method, because it can then be turned off with the simplify flag in
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`. If you have any extraneous
simplification in your function, be sure to only run it using ``if
match.get('simplify', True):``, especially if it can be slow or if it can
reduce the domain of the solution.
Finally, as with every contribution to SymPy, your method will need to be
tested. Add a test for each method in ``test_ode.py``. Follow the
conventions there, i.e., test the solver using ``dsolve(eq, f(x),
hint=your_hint)``, and also test the solution using
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.checkodesol` (you can put these in a separate
tests and skip/XFAIL if it runs too slow/doesn't work). Be sure to call your
hint specifically in :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`, that way the test
won't be broken simply by the introduction of another matching hint. If your
method works for higher order (>1) ODEs, you will need to run ``sol =
constant_renumber(sol, 'C', 1, order)`` for each solution, where ``order`` is
the order of the ODE. This is because ``constant_renumber`` renumbers the
arbitrary constants by printing order, which is platform dependent. Try to
test every corner case of your solver, including a range of orders if it is a
`n`\th order solver, but if your solver is slow, such as if it involves hard
integration, try to keep the test run time down.
Feel free to refactor existing hints to avoid duplicating code or creating
inconsistencies. If you can show that your method exactly duplicates an
existing method, including in the simplicity and speed of obtaining the
solutions, then you can remove the old, less general method. The existing
code is tested extensively in ``test_ode.py``, so if anything is broken, one
of those tests will surely fail.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from itertools import islice
from functools import cmp_to_key
from sympy.core import Add, S, Mul, Pow, oo
from sympy.core.compatibility import ordered, iterable, is_sequence, range
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
from sympy.core.expr import AtomicExpr, Expr
from sympy.core.function import (Function, Derivative, AppliedUndef, diff,
expand, expand_mul, Subs, _mexpand)
from sympy.core.multidimensional import vectorize
from sympy.core.numbers import NaN, zoo, I, Number
from sympy.core.relational import Equality, Eq
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol, Wild, Dummy, symbols
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.logic.boolalg import (BooleanAtom, And, Or, Not, BooleanTrue,
BooleanFalse)
from sympy.functions import cos, exp, im, log, re, sin, tan, sqrt, \
atan2, conjugate, Piecewise
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import factorial
from sympy.integrals.integrals import Integral, integrate
from sympy.matrices import wronskian, Matrix, eye, zeros
from sympy.polys import (Poly, RootOf, rootof, terms_gcd,
PolynomialError, lcm, roots)
from sympy.polys.polyroots import roots_quartic
from sympy.polys.polytools import cancel, degree, div
from sympy.series import Order
from sympy.series.series import series
from sympy.simplify import collect, logcombine, powsimp, separatevars, \
simplify, trigsimp, denom, posify, cse
from sympy.simplify.powsimp import powdenest
from sympy.simplify.radsimp import collect_const
from sympy.solvers import solve
from sympy.solvers.pde import pdsolve
from sympy.utilities import numbered_symbols, default_sort_key, sift
from sympy.solvers.deutils import _preprocess, ode_order, _desolve
#: This is a list of hints in the order that they should be preferred by
#: :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode`. In general, hints earlier in the
#: list should produce simpler solutions than those later in the list (for
#: ODEs that fit both). For now, the order of this list is based on empirical
#: observations by the developers of SymPy.
#:
#: The hint used by :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` for a specific ODE
#: can be overridden (see the docstring).
#:
#: In general, ``_Integral`` hints are grouped at the end of the list, unless
#: there is a method that returns an unevaluable integral most of the time
#: (which go near the end of the list anyway). ``default``, ``all``,
#: ``best``, and ``all_Integral`` meta-hints should not be included in this
#: list, but ``_best`` and ``_Integral`` hints should be included.
allhints = (
"nth_algebraic",
"separable",
"1st_exact",
"1st_linear",
"Bernoulli",
"Riccati_special_minus2",
"1st_homogeneous_coeff_best",
"1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep",
"1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep",
"almost_linear",
"linear_coefficients",
"separable_reduced",
"1st_power_series",
"lie_group",
"nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous",
"nth_linear_euler_eq_homogeneous",
"nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients",
"nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_undetermined_coefficients",
"nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters",
"nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_variation_of_parameters",
"Liouville",
"2nd_power_series_ordinary",
"2nd_power_series_regular",
"nth_algebraic_Integral",
"separable_Integral",
"1st_exact_Integral",
"1st_linear_Integral",
"Bernoulli_Integral",
"1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep_Integral",
"1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep_Integral",
"almost_linear_Integral",
"linear_coefficients_Integral",
"separable_reduced_Integral",
"nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters_Integral",
"nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_variation_of_parameters_Integral",
"Liouville_Integral",
)
lie_heuristics = (
"abaco1_simple",
"abaco1_product",
"abaco2_similar",
"abaco2_unique_unknown",
"abaco2_unique_general",
"linear",
"function_sum",
"bivariate",
"chi"
)
def sub_func_doit(eq, func, new):
r"""
When replacing the func with something else, we usually want the
derivative evaluated, so this function helps in making that happen.
To keep subs from having to look through all derivatives, we mask them off
with dummy variables, do the func sub, and then replace masked-off
derivatives with their doit values.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Derivative, symbols, Function
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import sub_func_doit
>>> x, z = symbols('x, z')
>>> y = Function('y')
>>> sub_func_doit(3*Derivative(y(x), x) - 1, y(x), x)
2
>>> sub_func_doit(x*Derivative(y(x), x) - y(x)**2 + y(x), y(x),
... 1/(x*(z + 1/x)))
x*(-1/(x**2*(z + 1/x)) + 1/(x**3*(z + 1/x)**2)) + 1/(x*(z + 1/x))
...- 1/(x**2*(z + 1/x)**2)
"""
reps = {}
repu = {}
for d in eq.atoms(Derivative):
u = Dummy('u')
repu[u] = d.subs(func, new).doit()
reps[d] = u
# Make sure that expressions such as ``Derivative(f(x), (x, 2))`` get
# replaced before ``Derivative(f(x), x)``:
#
# Also replace e.g. Derivative(x*Derivative(f(x), x), x) before
# Derivative(f(x), x)
def cmp(subs1, subs2):
return subs2[0].has(subs1[0]) - subs1[0].has(subs2[0])
key = lambda x: (-x[0].derivative_count, cmp_to_key(cmp)(x))
reps = sorted(reps.items(), key=key)
return eq.subs(reps).subs(func, new).subs(repu)
def get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1, start=1, prefix='C'):
"""
Returns a list of constants that do not occur
in eq already.
"""
if isinstance(eq, Expr):
eq = [eq]
elif not iterable(eq):
raise ValueError("Expected Expr or iterable but got %s" % eq)
atom_set = set().union(*[i.free_symbols for i in eq])
func_set = set().union(*[i.atoms(Function) for i in eq])
if func_set:
atom_set |= {Symbol(str(f.func)) for f in func_set}
ncs = numbered_symbols(start=start, prefix=prefix, exclude=atom_set)
Cs = [next(ncs) for i in range(num)]
return (Cs[0] if num == 1 else tuple(Cs))
def dsolve(eq, func=None, hint="default", simplify=True,
ics= None, xi=None, eta=None, x0=0, n=6, **kwargs):
r"""
Solves any (supported) kind of ordinary differential equation and
system of ordinary differential equations.
For single ordinary differential equation
=========================================
It is classified under this when number of equation in ``eq`` is one.
**Usage**
``dsolve(eq, f(x), hint)`` -> Solve ordinary differential equation
``eq`` for function ``f(x)``, using method ``hint``.
**Details**
``eq`` can be any supported ordinary differential equation (see the
:py:mod:`~sympy.solvers.ode` docstring for supported methods).
This can either be an :py:class:`~sympy.core.relational.Equality`,
or an expression, which is assumed to be equal to ``0``.
``f(x)`` is a function of one variable whose derivatives in that
variable make up the ordinary differential equation ``eq``. In
many cases it is not necessary to provide this; it will be
autodetected (and an error raised if it couldn't be detected).
``hint`` is the solving method that you want dsolve to use. Use
``classify_ode(eq, f(x))`` to get all of the possible hints for an
ODE. The default hint, ``default``, will use whatever hint is
returned first by :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode`. See
Hints below for more options that you can use for hint.
``simplify`` enables simplification by
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp`. See its docstring for more
information. Turn this off, for example, to disable solving of
solutions for ``func`` or simplification of arbitrary constants.
It will still integrate with this hint. Note that the solution may
contain more arbitrary constants than the order of the ODE with
this option enabled.
``xi`` and ``eta`` are the infinitesimal functions of an ordinary
differential equation. They are the infinitesimals of the Lie group
of point transformations for which the differential equation is
invariant. The user can specify values for the infinitesimals. If
nothing is specified, ``xi`` and ``eta`` are calculated using
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.infinitesimals` with the help of various
heuristics.
``ics`` is the set of initial/boundary conditions for the differential equation.
It should be given in the form of ``{f(x0): x1, f(x).diff(x).subs(x, x2):
x3}`` and so on. For power series solutions, if no initial
conditions are specified ``f(0)`` is assumed to be ``C0`` and the power
series solution is calculated about 0.
``x0`` is the point about which the power series solution of a differential
equation is to be evaluated.
``n`` gives the exponent of the dependent variable up to which the power series
solution of a differential equation is to be evaluated.
**Hints**
Aside from the various solving methods, there are also some meta-hints
that you can pass to :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`:
``default``:
This uses whatever hint is returned first by
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode`. This is the
default argument to :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`.
``all``:
To make :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` apply all
relevant classification hints, use ``dsolve(ODE, func,
hint="all")``. This will return a dictionary of
``hint:solution`` terms. If a hint causes dsolve to raise the
``NotImplementedError``, value of that hint's key will be the
exception object raised. The dictionary will also include
some special keys:
- ``order``: The order of the ODE. See also
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.deutils.ode_order` in
``deutils.py``.
- ``best``: The simplest hint; what would be returned by
``best`` below.
- ``best_hint``: The hint that would produce the solution
given by ``best``. If more than one hint produces the best
solution, the first one in the tuple returned by
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` is chosen.
- ``default``: The solution that would be returned by default.
This is the one produced by the hint that appears first in
the tuple returned by
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode`.
``all_Integral``:
This is the same as ``all``, except if a hint also has a
corresponding ``_Integral`` hint, it only returns the
``_Integral`` hint. This is useful if ``all`` causes
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` to hang because of a
difficult or impossible integral. This meta-hint will also be
much faster than ``all``, because
:py:meth:`~sympy.core.expr.Expr.integrate` is an expensive
routine.
``best``:
To have :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` try all methods
and return the simplest one. This takes into account whether
the solution is solvable in the function, whether it contains
any Integral classes (i.e. unevaluatable integrals), and
which one is the shortest in size.
See also the :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` docstring for
more info on hints, and the :py:mod:`~sympy.solvers.ode` docstring for
a list of all supported hints.
**Tips**
- You can declare the derivative of an unknown function this way:
>>> from sympy import Function, Derivative
>>> from sympy.abc import x # x is the independent variable
>>> f = Function("f")(x) # f is a function of x
>>> # f_ will be the derivative of f with respect to x
>>> f_ = Derivative(f, x)
- See ``test_ode.py`` for many tests, which serves also as a set of
examples for how to use :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`.
- :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` always returns an
:py:class:`~sympy.core.relational.Equality` class (except for the
case when the hint is ``all`` or ``all_Integral``). If possible, it
solves the solution explicitly for the function being solved for.
Otherwise, it returns an implicit solution.
- Arbitrary constants are symbols named ``C1``, ``C2``, and so on.
- Because all solutions should be mathematically equivalent, some
hints may return the exact same result for an ODE. Often, though,
two different hints will return the same solution formatted
differently. The two should be equivalent. Also note that sometimes
the values of the arbitrary constants in two different solutions may
not be the same, because one constant may have "absorbed" other
constants into it.
- Do ``help(ode.ode_<hintname>)`` to get help more information on a
specific hint, where ``<hintname>`` is the name of a hint without
``_Integral``.
For system of ordinary differential equations
=============================================
**Usage**
``dsolve(eq, func)`` -> Solve a system of ordinary differential
equations ``eq`` for ``func`` being list of functions including
`x(t)`, `y(t)`, `z(t)` where number of functions in the list depends
upon the number of equations provided in ``eq``.
**Details**
``eq`` can be any supported system of ordinary differential equations
This can either be an :py:class:`~sympy.core.relational.Equality`,
or an expression, which is assumed to be equal to ``0``.
``func`` holds ``x(t)`` and ``y(t)`` being functions of one variable which
together with some of their derivatives make up the system of ordinary
differential equation ``eq``. It is not necessary to provide this; it
will be autodetected (and an error raised if it couldn't be detected).
**Hints**
The hints are formed by parameters returned by classify_sysode, combining
them give hints name used later for forming method name.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, Derivative, sin, cos, symbols
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> dsolve(Derivative(f(x), x, x) + 9*f(x), f(x))
Eq(f(x), C1*sin(3*x) + C2*cos(3*x))
>>> eq = sin(x)*cos(f(x)) + cos(x)*sin(f(x))*f(x).diff(x)
>>> dsolve(eq, hint='1st_exact')
[Eq(f(x), -acos(C1/cos(x)) + 2*pi), Eq(f(x), acos(C1/cos(x)))]
>>> dsolve(eq, hint='almost_linear')
[Eq(f(x), -acos(C1/cos(x)) + 2*pi), Eq(f(x), acos(C1/cos(x)))]
>>> t = symbols('t')
>>> x, y = symbols('x, y', cls=Function)
>>> eq = (Eq(Derivative(x(t),t), 12*t*x(t) + 8*y(t)), Eq(Derivative(y(t),t), 21*x(t) + 7*t*y(t)))
>>> dsolve(eq)
[Eq(x(t), C1*x0(t) + C2*x0(t)*Integral(8*exp(Integral(7*t, t))*exp(Integral(12*t, t))/x0(t)**2, t)),
Eq(y(t), C1*y0(t) + C2*(y0(t)*Integral(8*exp(Integral(7*t, t))*exp(Integral(12*t, t))/x0(t)**2, t) +
exp(Integral(7*t, t))*exp(Integral(12*t, t))/x0(t)))]
>>> eq = (Eq(Derivative(x(t),t),x(t)*y(t)*sin(t)), Eq(Derivative(y(t),t),y(t)**2*sin(t)))
>>> dsolve(eq)
{Eq(x(t), -exp(C1)/(C2*exp(C1) - cos(t))), Eq(y(t), -1/(C1 - cos(t)))}
"""
if iterable(eq):
match = classify_sysode(eq, func)
eq = match['eq']
order = match['order']
func = match['func']
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
# keep highest order term coefficient positive
for i in range(len(eq)):
for func_ in func:
if isinstance(func_, list):
pass
else:
if eq[i].coeff(diff(func[i],t,ode_order(eq[i], func[i]))).is_negative:
eq[i] = -eq[i]
match['eq'] = eq
if len(set(order.values()))!=1:
raise ValueError("It solves only those systems of equations whose orders are equal")
match['order'] = list(order.values())[0]
def recur_len(l):
return sum(recur_len(item) if isinstance(item,list) else 1 for item in l)
if recur_len(func) != len(eq):
raise ValueError("dsolve() and classify_sysode() work with "
"number of functions being equal to number of equations")
if match['type_of_equation'] is None:
raise NotImplementedError
else:
if match['is_linear'] == True:
if match['no_of_equation'] > 3:
solvefunc = globals()['sysode_linear_neq_order%(order)s' % match]
else:
solvefunc = globals()['sysode_linear_%(no_of_equation)seq_order%(order)s' % match]
else:
solvefunc = globals()['sysode_nonlinear_%(no_of_equation)seq_order%(order)s' % match]
sols = solvefunc(match)
if ics:
constants = Tuple(*sols).free_symbols - Tuple(*eq).free_symbols
solved_constants = solve_ics(sols, func, constants, ics)
return [sol.subs(solved_constants) for sol in sols]
return sols
else:
given_hint = hint # hint given by the user
# See the docstring of _desolve for more details.
hints = _desolve(eq, func=func,
hint=hint, simplify=True, xi=xi, eta=eta, type='ode', ics=ics,
x0=x0, n=n, **kwargs)
eq = hints.pop('eq', eq)
all_ = hints.pop('all', False)
if all_:
retdict = {}
failed_hints = {}
gethints = classify_ode(eq, dict=True)
orderedhints = gethints['ordered_hints']
for hint in hints:
try:
rv = _helper_simplify(eq, hint, hints[hint], simplify)
except NotImplementedError as detail:
failed_hints[hint] = detail
else:
retdict[hint] = rv
func = hints[hint]['func']
retdict['best'] = min(list(retdict.values()), key=lambda x:
ode_sol_simplicity(x, func, trysolving=not simplify))
if given_hint == 'best':
return retdict['best']
for i in orderedhints:
if retdict['best'] == retdict.get(i, None):
retdict['best_hint'] = i
break
retdict['default'] = gethints['default']
retdict['order'] = gethints['order']
retdict.update(failed_hints)
return retdict
else:
# The key 'hint' stores the hint needed to be solved for.
hint = hints['hint']
return _helper_simplify(eq, hint, hints, simplify, ics=ics)
def _helper_simplify(eq, hint, match, simplify=True, ics=None, **kwargs):
r"""
Helper function of dsolve that calls the respective
:py:mod:`~sympy.solvers.ode` functions to solve for the ordinary
differential equations. This minimizes the computation in calling
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.deutils._desolve` multiple times.
"""
r = match
if hint.endswith('_Integral'):
solvefunc = globals()['ode_' + hint[:-len('_Integral')]]
else:
solvefunc = globals()['ode_' + hint]
func = r['func']
order = r['order']
match = r[hint]
free = eq.free_symbols
cons = lambda s: s.free_symbols.difference(free)
if simplify:
# odesimp() will attempt to integrate, if necessary, apply constantsimp(),
# attempt to solve for func, and apply any other hint specific
# simplifications
sols = solvefunc(eq, func, order, match)
if isinstance(sols, Expr):
rv = odesimp(sols, func, order, cons(sols), hint)
else:
rv = [odesimp(s, func, order, cons(s), hint) for s in sols]
else:
# We still want to integrate (you can disable it separately with the hint)
match['simplify'] = False # Some hints can take advantage of this option
rv = _handle_Integral(solvefunc(eq, func, order, match),
func, order, hint)
if ics and not 'power_series' in hint:
if isinstance(rv, Expr):
solved_constants = solve_ics([rv], [r['func']], cons(rv), ics)
rv = rv.subs(solved_constants)
else:
rv1 = []
for s in rv:
solved_constants = solve_ics([s], [r['func']], cons(s), ics)
rv1.append(s.subs(solved_constants))
rv = rv1
return rv
def solve_ics(sols, funcs, constants, ics):
"""
Solve for the constants given initial conditions
``sols`` is a list of solutions.
``funcs`` is a list of functions.
``constants`` is a list of constants.
``ics`` is the set of initial/boundary conditions for the differential
equation. It should be given in the form of ``{f(x0): x1,
f(x).diff(x).subs(x, x2): x3}`` and so on.
Returns a dictionary mapping constants to values.
``solution.subs(constants)`` will replace the constants in ``solution``.
Example
=======
>>> # From dsolve(f(x).diff(x) - f(x), f(x))
>>> from sympy import symbols, Eq, exp, Function
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import solve_ics
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> x, C1 = symbols('x C1')
>>> sols = [Eq(f(x), C1*exp(x))]
>>> funcs = [f(x)]
>>> constants = [C1]
>>> ics = {f(0): 2}
>>> solved_constants = solve_ics(sols, funcs, constants, ics)
>>> solved_constants
{C1: 2}
>>> sols[0].subs(solved_constants)
Eq(f(x), 2*exp(x))
"""
# Assume ics are of the form f(x0): value or Subs(diff(f(x), x, n), (x,
# x0)): value (currently checked by classify_ode). To solve, replace x
# with x0, f(x0) with value, then solve for constants. For f^(n)(x0),
# differentiate the solution n times, so that f^(n)(x) appears.
x = funcs[0].args[0]
diff_sols = []
subs_sols = []
diff_variables = set()
for funcarg, value in ics.items():
if isinstance(funcarg, AppliedUndef):
x0 = funcarg.args[0]
matching_func = [f for f in funcs if f.func == funcarg.func][0]
S = sols
elif isinstance(funcarg, (Subs, Derivative)):
if isinstance(funcarg, Subs):
# Make sure it stays a subs. Otherwise subs below will produce
# a different looking term.
funcarg = funcarg.doit()
if isinstance(funcarg, Subs):
deriv = funcarg.expr
x0 = funcarg.point[0]
variables = funcarg.expr.variables
matching_func = deriv
elif isinstance(funcarg, Derivative):
deriv = funcarg
x0 = funcarg.variables[0]
variables = (x,)*len(funcarg.variables)
matching_func = deriv.subs(x0, x)
if variables not in diff_variables:
for sol in sols:
if sol.has(deriv.expr.func):
diff_sols.append(Eq(sol.lhs.diff(*variables), sol.rhs.diff(*variables)))
diff_variables.add(variables)
S = diff_sols
else:
raise NotImplementedError("Unrecognized initial condition")
for sol in S:
if sol.has(matching_func):
sol2 = sol
sol2 = sol2.subs(x, x0)
sol2 = sol2.subs(funcarg, value)
subs_sols.append(sol2)
# TODO: Use solveset here
try:
solved_constants = solve(subs_sols, constants, dict=True)
except NotImplementedError:
solved_constants = []
# XXX: We can't differentiate between the solution not existing because of
# invalid initial conditions, and not existing because solve is not smart
# enough. If we could use solveset, this might be improvable, but for now,
# we use NotImplementedError in this case.
if not solved_constants:
raise NotImplementedError("Couldn't solve for initial conditions")
if solved_constants == True:
raise ValueError("Initial conditions did not produce any solutions for constants. Perhaps they are degenerate.")
if len(solved_constants) > 1:
raise NotImplementedError("Initial conditions produced too many solutions for constants")
if len(solved_constants[0]) != len(constants):
raise ValueError("Initial conditions did not produce a solution for all constants. Perhaps they are under-specified.")
return solved_constants[0]
def classify_ode(eq, func=None, dict=False, ics=None, **kwargs):
r"""
Returns a tuple of possible :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`
classifications for an ODE.
The tuple is ordered so that first item is the classification that
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` uses to solve the ODE by default. In
general, classifications at the near the beginning of the list will
produce better solutions faster than those near the end, thought there are
always exceptions. To make :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` use a
different classification, use ``dsolve(ODE, func,
hint=<classification>)``. See also the
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` docstring for different meta-hints
you can use.
If ``dict`` is true, :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode` will
return a dictionary of ``hint:match`` expression terms. This is intended
for internal use by :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`. Note that
because dictionaries are ordered arbitrarily, this will most likely not be
in the same order as the tuple.
You can get help on different hints by executing
``help(ode.ode_hintname)``, where ``hintname`` is the name of the hint
without ``_Integral``.
See :py:data:`~sympy.solvers.ode.allhints` or the
:py:mod:`~sympy.solvers.ode` docstring for a list of all supported hints
that can be returned from :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.classify_ode`.
Notes
=====
These are remarks on hint names.
``_Integral``
If a classification has ``_Integral`` at the end, it will return the
expression with an unevaluated :py:class:`~sympy.integrals.Integral`
class in it. Note that a hint may do this anyway if
:py:meth:`~sympy.core.expr.Expr.integrate` cannot do the integral,
though just using an ``_Integral`` will do so much faster. Indeed, an
``_Integral`` hint will always be faster than its corresponding hint
without ``_Integral`` because
:py:meth:`~sympy.core.expr.Expr.integrate` is an expensive routine.
If :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` hangs, it is probably because
:py:meth:`~sympy.core.expr.Expr.integrate` is hanging on a tough or
impossible integral. Try using an ``_Integral`` hint or
``all_Integral`` to get it return something.
Note that some hints do not have ``_Integral`` counterparts. This is
because :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.integrate` is not used in solving
the ODE for those method. For example, `n`\th order linear homogeneous
ODEs with constant coefficients do not require integration to solve,
so there is no ``nth_linear_homogeneous_constant_coeff_Integrate``
hint. You can easily evaluate any unevaluated
:py:class:`~sympy.integrals.Integral`\s in an expression by doing
``expr.doit()``.
Ordinals
Some hints contain an ordinal such as ``1st_linear``. This is to help
differentiate them from other hints, as well as from other methods
that may not be implemented yet. If a hint has ``nth`` in it, such as
the ``nth_linear`` hints, this means that the method used to applies
to ODEs of any order.
``indep`` and ``dep``
Some hints contain the words ``indep`` or ``dep``. These reference
the independent variable and the dependent function, respectively. For
example, if an ODE is in terms of `f(x)`, then ``indep`` will refer to
`x` and ``dep`` will refer to `f`.
``subs``
If a hints has the word ``subs`` in it, it means the the ODE is solved
by substituting the expression given after the word ``subs`` for a
single dummy variable. This is usually in terms of ``indep`` and
``dep`` as above. The substituted expression will be written only in
characters allowed for names of Python objects, meaning operators will
be spelled out. For example, ``indep``/``dep`` will be written as
``indep_div_dep``.
``coeff``
The word ``coeff`` in a hint refers to the coefficients of something
in the ODE, usually of the derivative terms. See the docstring for
the individual methods for more info (``help(ode)``). This is
contrast to ``coefficients``, as in ``undetermined_coefficients``,
which refers to the common name of a method.
``_best``
Methods that have more than one fundamental way to solve will have a
hint for each sub-method and a ``_best`` meta-classification. This
will evaluate all hints and return the best, using the same
considerations as the normal ``best`` meta-hint.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, classify_ode, Eq
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> classify_ode(Eq(f(x).diff(x), 0), f(x))
('nth_algebraic', 'separable', '1st_linear', '1st_homogeneous_coeff_best',
'1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep',
'1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep',
'1st_power_series', 'lie_group',
'nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous',
'nth_linear_euler_eq_homogeneous', 'nth_algebraic_Integral',
'separable_Integral', '1st_linear_Integral',
'1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep_Integral',
'1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep_Integral')
>>> classify_ode(f(x).diff(x, 2) + 3*f(x).diff(x) + 2*f(x) - 4)
('nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients',
'nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters',
'nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters_Integral')
"""
ics = sympify(ics)
prep = kwargs.pop('prep', True)
if func and len(func.args) != 1:
raise ValueError("dsolve() and classify_ode() only "
"work with functions of one variable, not %s" % func)
if prep or func is None:
eq, func_ = _preprocess(eq, func)
if func is None:
func = func_
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
y = Dummy('y')
xi = kwargs.get('xi')
eta = kwargs.get('eta')
terms = kwargs.get('n')
if isinstance(eq, Equality):
if eq.rhs != 0:
return classify_ode(eq.lhs - eq.rhs, func, dict=dict, ics=ics, xi=xi,
n=terms, eta=eta, prep=False)
eq = eq.lhs
order = ode_order(eq, f(x))
# hint:matchdict or hint:(tuple of matchdicts)
# Also will contain "default":<default hint> and "order":order items.
matching_hints = {"order": order}
if not order:
if dict:
matching_hints["default"] = None
return matching_hints
else:
return ()
df = f(x).diff(x)
a = Wild('a', exclude=[f(x)])
b = Wild('b', exclude=[f(x)])
c = Wild('c', exclude=[f(x)])
d = Wild('d', exclude=[df, f(x).diff(x, 2)])
e = Wild('e', exclude=[df])
k = Wild('k', exclude=[df])
n = Wild('n', exclude=[x, f(x), df])
c1 = Wild('c1', exclude=[x])
a2 = Wild('a2', exclude=[x, f(x), df])
b2 = Wild('b2', exclude=[x, f(x), df])
c2 = Wild('c2', exclude=[x, f(x), df])
d2 = Wild('d2', exclude=[x, f(x), df])
a3 = Wild('a3', exclude=[f(x), df, f(x).diff(x, 2)])
b3 = Wild('b3', exclude=[f(x), df, f(x).diff(x, 2)])
c3 = Wild('c3', exclude=[f(x), df, f(x).diff(x, 2)])
r3 = {'xi': xi, 'eta': eta} # Used for the lie_group hint
boundary = {} # Used to extract initial conditions
C1 = Symbol("C1")
eq = expand(eq)
# Preprocessing to get the initial conditions out
if ics is not None:
for funcarg in ics:
# Separating derivatives
if isinstance(funcarg, (Subs, Derivative)):
# f(x).diff(x).subs(x, 0) is a Subs, but f(x).diff(x).subs(x,
# y) is a Derivative
if isinstance(funcarg, Subs):
deriv = funcarg.expr
old = funcarg.variables[0]
new = funcarg.point[0]
elif isinstance(funcarg, Derivative):
deriv = funcarg
# No information on this. Just assume it was x
old = x
new = funcarg.variables[0]
if (isinstance(deriv, Derivative) and isinstance(deriv.args[0],
AppliedUndef) and deriv.args[0].func == f and
len(deriv.args[0].args) == 1 and old == x and not
new.has(x) and all(i == deriv.variables[0] for i in
deriv.variables) and not ics[funcarg].has(f)):
dorder = ode_order(deriv, x)
temp = 'f' + str(dorder)
boundary.update({temp: new, temp + 'val': ics[funcarg]})
else:
raise ValueError("Enter valid boundary conditions for Derivatives")
# Separating functions
elif isinstance(funcarg, AppliedUndef):
if (funcarg.func == f and len(funcarg.args) == 1 and
not funcarg.args[0].has(x) and not ics[funcarg].has(f)):
boundary.update({'f0': funcarg.args[0], 'f0val': ics[funcarg]})
else:
raise ValueError("Enter valid boundary conditions for Function")
else:
raise ValueError("Enter boundary conditions of the form ics={f(point}: value, f(x).diff(x, order).subs(x, point): value}")
# Precondition to try remove f(x) from highest order derivative
reduced_eq = None
if eq.is_Add:
deriv_coef = eq.coeff(f(x).diff(x, order))
if deriv_coef not in (1, 0):
r = deriv_coef.match(a*f(x)**c1)
if r and r[c1]:
den = f(x)**r[c1]
reduced_eq = Add(*[arg/den for arg in eq.args])
if not reduced_eq:
reduced_eq = eq
if order == 1:
## Linear case: a(x)*y'+b(x)*y+c(x) == 0
if eq.is_Add:
ind, dep = reduced_eq.as_independent(f)
else:
u = Dummy('u')
ind, dep = (reduced_eq + u).as_independent(f)
ind, dep = [tmp.subs(u, 0) for tmp in [ind, dep]]
r = {a: dep.coeff(df),
b: dep.coeff(f(x)),
c: ind}
# double check f[a] since the preconditioning may have failed
if not r[a].has(f) and not r[b].has(f) and (
r[a]*df + r[b]*f(x) + r[c]).expand() - reduced_eq == 0:
r['a'] = a
r['b'] = b
r['c'] = c
matching_hints["1st_linear"] = r
matching_hints["1st_linear_Integral"] = r
## Bernoulli case: a(x)*y'+b(x)*y+c(x)*y**n == 0
r = collect(
reduced_eq, f(x), exact=True).match(a*df + b*f(x) + c*f(x)**n)
if r and r[c] != 0 and r[n] != 1: # See issue 4676
r['a'] = a
r['b'] = b
r['c'] = c
r['n'] = n
matching_hints["Bernoulli"] = r
matching_hints["Bernoulli_Integral"] = r
## Riccati special n == -2 case: a2*y'+b2*y**2+c2*y/x+d2/x**2 == 0
r = collect(reduced_eq,
f(x), exact=True).match(a2*df + b2*f(x)**2 + c2*f(x)/x + d2/x**2)
if r and r[b2] != 0 and (r[c2] != 0 or r[d2] != 0):
r['a2'] = a2
r['b2'] = b2
r['c2'] = c2
r['d2'] = d2
matching_hints["Riccati_special_minus2"] = r
# NON-REDUCED FORM OF EQUATION matches
r = collect(eq, df, exact=True).match(d + e * df)
if r:
r['d'] = d
r['e'] = e
r['y'] = y
r[d] = r[d].subs(f(x), y)
r[e] = r[e].subs(f(x), y)
# FIRST ORDER POWER SERIES WHICH NEEDS INITIAL CONDITIONS
# TODO: Hint first order series should match only if d/e is analytic.
# For now, only d/e and (d/e).diff(arg) is checked for existence at
# at a given point.
# This is currently done internally in ode_1st_power_series.
point = boundary.get('f0', 0)
value = boundary.get('f0val', C1)
check = cancel(r[d]/r[e])
check1 = check.subs({x: point, y: value})
if not check1.has(oo) and not check1.has(zoo) and \
not check1.has(NaN) and not check1.has(-oo):
check2 = (check1.diff(x)).subs({x: point, y: value})
if not check2.has(oo) and not check2.has(zoo) and \
not check2.has(NaN) and not check2.has(-oo):
rseries = r.copy()
rseries.update({'terms': terms, 'f0': point, 'f0val': value})
matching_hints["1st_power_series"] = rseries
r3.update(r)
## Exact Differential Equation: P(x, y) + Q(x, y)*y' = 0 where
# dP/dy == dQ/dx
try:
if r[d] != 0:
numerator = simplify(r[d].diff(y) - r[e].diff(x))
# The following few conditions try to convert a non-exact
# differential equation into an exact one.
# References : Differential equations with applications
# and historical notes - George E. Simmons
if numerator:
# If (dP/dy - dQ/dx) / Q = f(x)
# then exp(integral(f(x))*equation becomes exact
factor = simplify(numerator/r[e])
variables = factor.free_symbols
if len(variables) == 1 and x == variables.pop():
factor = exp(Integral(factor).doit())
r[d] *= factor
r[e] *= factor
matching_hints["1st_exact"] = r
matching_hints["1st_exact_Integral"] = r
else:
# If (dP/dy - dQ/dx) / -P = f(y)
# then exp(integral(f(y))*equation becomes exact
factor = simplify(-numerator/r[d])
variables = factor.free_symbols
if len(variables) == 1 and y == variables.pop():
factor = exp(Integral(factor).doit())
r[d] *= factor
r[e] *= factor
matching_hints["1st_exact"] = r
matching_hints["1st_exact_Integral"] = r
else:
matching_hints["1st_exact"] = r
matching_hints["1st_exact_Integral"] = r
except NotImplementedError:
# Differentiating the coefficients might fail because of things
# like f(2*x).diff(x). See issue 4624 and issue 4719.
pass
# Any first order ODE can be ideally solved by the Lie Group
# method
matching_hints["lie_group"] = r3
# This match is used for several cases below; we now collect on
# f(x) so the matching works.
r = collect(reduced_eq, df, exact=True).match(d + e*df)
if r:
# Using r[d] and r[e] without any modification for hints
# linear-coefficients and separable-reduced.
num, den = r[d], r[e] # ODE = d/e + df
r['d'] = d
r['e'] = e
r['y'] = y
r[d] = num.subs(f(x), y)
r[e] = den.subs(f(x), y)
## Separable Case: y' == P(y)*Q(x)
r[d] = separatevars(r[d])
r[e] = separatevars(r[e])
# m1[coeff]*m1[x]*m1[y] + m2[coeff]*m2[x]*m2[y]*y'
m1 = separatevars(r[d], dict=True, symbols=(x, y))
m2 = separatevars(r[e], dict=True, symbols=(x, y))
if m1 and m2:
r1 = {'m1': m1, 'm2': m2, 'y': y}
matching_hints["separable"] = r1
matching_hints["separable_Integral"] = r1
## First order equation with homogeneous coefficients:
# dy/dx == F(y/x) or dy/dx == F(x/y)
ordera = homogeneous_order(r[d], x, y)
if ordera is not None:
orderb = homogeneous_order(r[e], x, y)
if ordera == orderb:
# u1=y/x and u2=x/y
u1 = Dummy('u1')
u2 = Dummy('u2')
s = "1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs"
s1 = s + "_dep_div_indep"
s2 = s + "_indep_div_dep"
if simplify((r[d] + u1*r[e]).subs({x: 1, y: u1})) != 0:
matching_hints[s1] = r
matching_hints[s1 + "_Integral"] = r
if simplify((r[e] + u2*r[d]).subs({x: u2, y: 1})) != 0:
matching_hints[s2] = r
matching_hints[s2 + "_Integral"] = r
if s1 in matching_hints and s2 in matching_hints:
matching_hints["1st_homogeneous_coeff_best"] = r
## Linear coefficients of the form
# y'+ F((a*x + b*y + c)/(a'*x + b'y + c')) = 0
# that can be reduced to homogeneous form.
F = num/den
params = _linear_coeff_match(F, func)
if params:
xarg, yarg = params
u = Dummy('u')
t = Dummy('t')
# Dummy substitution for df and f(x).
dummy_eq = reduced_eq.subs(((df, t), (f(x), u)))
reps = ((x, x + xarg), (u, u + yarg), (t, df), (u, f(x)))
dummy_eq = simplify(dummy_eq.subs(reps))
# get the re-cast values for e and d
r2 = collect(expand(dummy_eq), [df, f(x)]).match(e*df + d)
if r2:
orderd = homogeneous_order(r2[d], x, f(x))
if orderd is not None:
ordere = homogeneous_order(r2[e], x, f(x))
if orderd == ordere:
# Match arguments are passed in such a way that it
# is coherent with the already existing homogeneous
# functions.
r2[d] = r2[d].subs(f(x), y)
r2[e] = r2[e].subs(f(x), y)
r2.update({'xarg': xarg, 'yarg': yarg,
'd': d, 'e': e, 'y': y})
matching_hints["linear_coefficients"] = r2
matching_hints["linear_coefficients_Integral"] = r2
## Equation of the form y' + (y/x)*H(x^n*y) = 0
# that can be reduced to separable form
factor = simplify(x/f(x)*num/den)
# Try representing factor in terms of x^n*y
# where n is lowest power of x in factor;
# first remove terms like sqrt(2)*3 from factor.atoms(Mul)
u = None
for mul in ordered(factor.atoms(Mul)):
if mul.has(x):
_, u = mul.as_independent(x, f(x))
break
if u and u.has(f(x)):
h = x**(degree(Poly(u.subs(f(x), y), gen=x)))*f(x)
p = Wild('p')
if (u/h == 1) or ((u/h).simplify().match(x**p)):
t = Dummy('t')
r2 = {'t': t}
xpart, ypart = u.as_independent(f(x))
test = factor.subs(((u, t), (1/u, 1/t)))
free = test.free_symbols
if len(free) == 1 and free.pop() == t:
r2.update({'power': xpart.as_base_exp()[1], 'u': test})
matching_hints["separable_reduced"] = r2
matching_hints["separable_reduced_Integral"] = r2
## Almost-linear equation of the form f(x)*g(y)*y' + k(x)*l(y) + m(x) = 0
r = collect(eq, [df, f(x)]).match(e*df + d)
if r:
r2 = r.copy()
r2[c] = S.Zero
if r2[d].is_Add:
# Separate the terms having f(x) to r[d] and
# remaining to r[c]
no_f, r2[d] = r2[d].as_independent(f(x))
r2[c] += no_f
factor = simplify(r2[d].diff(f(x))/r[e])
if factor and not factor.has(f(x)):
r2[d] = factor_terms(r2[d])
u = r2[d].as_independent(f(x), as_Add=False)[1]
r2.update({'a': e, 'b': d, 'c': c, 'u': u})
r2[d] /= u
r2[e] /= u.diff(f(x))
matching_hints["almost_linear"] = r2
matching_hints["almost_linear_Integral"] = r2
elif order == 2:
# Liouville ODE in the form
# f(x).diff(x, 2) + g(f(x))*(f(x).diff(x))**2 + h(x)*f(x).diff(x)
# See Goldstein and Braun, "Advanced Methods for the Solution of
# Differential Equations", pg. 98
s = d*f(x).diff(x, 2) + e*df**2 + k*df
r = reduced_eq.match(s)
if r and r[d] != 0:
y = Dummy('y')
g = simplify(r[e]/r[d]).subs(f(x), y)
h = simplify(r[k]/r[d]).subs(f(x), y)
if y in h.free_symbols or x in g.free_symbols:
pass
else:
r = {'g': g, 'h': h, 'y': y}
matching_hints["Liouville"] = r
matching_hints["Liouville_Integral"] = r
# Homogeneous second order differential equation of the form
# a3*f(x).diff(x, 2) + b3*f(x).diff(x) + c3, where
# for simplicity, a3, b3 and c3 are assumed to be polynomials.
# It has a definite power series solution at point x0 if, b3/a3 and c3/a3
# are analytic at x0.
deq = a3*(f(x).diff(x, 2)) + b3*df + c3*f(x)
r = collect(reduced_eq,
[f(x).diff(x, 2), f(x).diff(x), f(x)]).match(deq)
ordinary = False
if r and r[a3] != 0:
if all([r[key].is_polynomial() for key in r]):
p = cancel(r[b3]/r[a3]) # Used below
q = cancel(r[c3]/r[a3]) # Used below
point = kwargs.get('x0', 0)
check = p.subs(x, point)
if not check.has(oo) and not check.has(NaN) and \
not check.has(zoo) and not check.has(-oo):
check = q.subs(x, point)
if not check.has(oo) and not check.has(NaN) and \
not check.has(zoo) and not check.has(-oo):
ordinary = True
r.update({'a3': a3, 'b3': b3, 'c3': c3, 'x0': point, 'terms': terms})
matching_hints["2nd_power_series_ordinary"] = r
# Checking if the differential equation has a regular singular point
# at x0. It has a regular singular point at x0, if (b3/a3)*(x - x0)
# and (c3/a3)*((x - x0)**2) are analytic at x0.
if not ordinary:
p = cancel((x - point)*p)
check = p.subs(x, point)
if not check.has(oo) and not check.has(NaN) and \
not check.has(zoo) and not check.has(-oo):
q = cancel(((x - point)**2)*q)
check = q.subs(x, point)
if not check.has(oo) and not check.has(NaN) and \
not check.has(zoo) and not check.has(-oo):
coeff_dict = {'p': p, 'q': q, 'x0': point, 'terms': terms}
matching_hints["2nd_power_series_regular"] = coeff_dict
if order > 0:
# Any ODE that can be solved with a combination of algebra and
# integrals e.g.:
# d^3/dx^3(x y) = F(x)
r = _nth_algebraic_match(reduced_eq, func)
if r['solutions']:
matching_hints['nth_algebraic'] = r
matching_hints['nth_algebraic_Integral'] = r
# nth order linear ODE
# a_n(x)y^(n) + ... + a_1(x)y' + a_0(x)y = F(x) = b
r = _nth_linear_match(reduced_eq, func, order)
# Constant coefficient case (a_i is constant for all i)
if r and not any(r[i].has(x) for i in r if i >= 0):
# Inhomogeneous case: F(x) is not identically 0
if r[-1]:
undetcoeff = _undetermined_coefficients_match(r[-1], x)
s = "nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters"
matching_hints[s] = r
matching_hints[s + "_Integral"] = r
if undetcoeff['test']:
r['trialset'] = undetcoeff['trialset']
matching_hints[
"nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients"
] = r
# Homogeneous case: F(x) is identically 0
else:
matching_hints["nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous"] = r
# nth order Euler equation a_n*x**n*y^(n) + ... + a_1*x*y' + a_0*y = F(x)
#In case of Homogeneous euler equation F(x) = 0
def _test_term(coeff, order):
r"""
Linear Euler ODEs have the form K*x**order*diff(y(x),x,order) = F(x),
where K is independent of x and y(x), order>= 0.
So we need to check that for each term, coeff == K*x**order from
some K. We have a few cases, since coeff may have several
different types.
"""
if order < 0:
raise ValueError("order should be greater than 0")
if coeff == 0:
return True
if order == 0:
if x in coeff.free_symbols:
return False
return True
if coeff.is_Mul:
if coeff.has(f(x)):
return False
return x**order in coeff.args
elif coeff.is_Pow:
return coeff.as_base_exp() == (x, order)
elif order == 1:
return x == coeff
return False
# Find coefficient for higest derivative, multiply coefficients to
# bring the equation into Euler form if possible
r_rescaled = None
if r is not None:
coeff = r[order]
factor = x**order / coeff
r_rescaled = {i: factor*r[i] for i in r}
if r_rescaled and not any(not _test_term(r_rescaled[i], i) for i in
r_rescaled if i != 'trialset' and i >= 0):
if not r_rescaled[-1]:
matching_hints["nth_linear_euler_eq_homogeneous"] = r_rescaled
else:
matching_hints["nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_variation_of_parameters"] = r_rescaled
matching_hints["nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_variation_of_parameters_Integral"] = r_rescaled
e, re = posify(r_rescaled[-1].subs(x, exp(x)))
undetcoeff = _undetermined_coefficients_match(e.subs(re), x)
if undetcoeff['test']:
r_rescaled['trialset'] = undetcoeff['trialset']
matching_hints["nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_undetermined_coefficients"] = r_rescaled
# Order keys based on allhints.
retlist = [i for i in allhints if i in matching_hints]
if dict:
# Dictionaries are ordered arbitrarily, so make note of which
# hint would come first for dsolve(). Use an ordered dict in Py 3.
matching_hints["default"] = retlist[0] if retlist else None
matching_hints["ordered_hints"] = tuple(retlist)
return matching_hints
else:
return tuple(retlist)
def classify_sysode(eq, funcs=None, **kwargs):
r"""
Returns a dictionary of parameter names and values that define the system
of ordinary differential equations in ``eq``.
The parameters are further used in
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` for solving that system.
The parameter names and values are:
'is_linear' (boolean), which tells whether the given system is linear.
Note that "linear" here refers to the operator: terms such as ``x*diff(x,t)`` are
nonlinear, whereas terms like ``sin(t)*diff(x,t)`` are still linear operators.
'func' (list) contains the :py:class:`~sympy.core.function.Function`s that
appear with a derivative in the ODE, i.e. those that we are trying to solve
the ODE for.
'order' (dict) with the maximum derivative for each element of the 'func'
parameter.
'func_coeff' (dict) with the coefficient for each triple ``(equation number,
function, order)```. The coefficients are those subexpressions that do not
appear in 'func', and hence can be considered constant for purposes of ODE
solving.
'eq' (list) with the equations from ``eq``, sympified and transformed into
expressions (we are solving for these expressions to be zero).
'no_of_equations' (int) is the number of equations (same as ``len(eq)``).
'type_of_equation' (string) is an internal classification of the type of
ODE.
References
==========
-http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/sysode/sode-toc1.htm
-A. D. Polyanin and A. V. Manzhirov, Handbook of Mathematics for Engineers and Scientists
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Eq, symbols, diff
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import classify_sysode
>>> from sympy.abc import t
>>> f, x, y = symbols('f, x, y', cls=Function)
>>> k, l, m, n = symbols('k, l, m, n', Integer=True)
>>> x1 = diff(x(t), t) ; y1 = diff(y(t), t)
>>> x2 = diff(x(t), t, t) ; y2 = diff(y(t), t, t)
>>> eq = (Eq(5*x1, 12*x(t) - 6*y(t)), Eq(2*y1, 11*x(t) + 3*y(t)))
>>> classify_sysode(eq)
{'eq': [-12*x(t) + 6*y(t) + 5*Derivative(x(t), t), -11*x(t) - 3*y(t) + 2*Derivative(y(t), t)],
'func': [x(t), y(t)], 'func_coeff': {(0, x(t), 0): -12, (0, x(t), 1): 5, (0, y(t), 0): 6,
(0, y(t), 1): 0, (1, x(t), 0): -11, (1, x(t), 1): 0, (1, y(t), 0): -3, (1, y(t), 1): 2},
'is_linear': True, 'no_of_equation': 2, 'order': {x(t): 1, y(t): 1}, 'type_of_equation': 'type1'}
>>> eq = (Eq(diff(x(t),t), 5*t*x(t) + t**2*y(t)), Eq(diff(y(t),t), -t**2*x(t) + 5*t*y(t)))
>>> classify_sysode(eq)
{'eq': [-t**2*y(t) - 5*t*x(t) + Derivative(x(t), t), t**2*x(t) - 5*t*y(t) + Derivative(y(t), t)],
'func': [x(t), y(t)], 'func_coeff': {(0, x(t), 0): -5*t, (0, x(t), 1): 1, (0, y(t), 0): -t**2,
(0, y(t), 1): 0, (1, x(t), 0): t**2, (1, x(t), 1): 0, (1, y(t), 0): -5*t, (1, y(t), 1): 1},
'is_linear': True, 'no_of_equation': 2, 'order': {x(t): 1, y(t): 1}, 'type_of_equation': 'type4'}
"""
# Sympify equations and convert iterables of equations into
# a list of equations
def _sympify(eq):
return list(map(sympify, eq if iterable(eq) else [eq]))
eq, funcs = (_sympify(w) for w in [eq, funcs])
for i, fi in enumerate(eq):
if isinstance(fi, Equality):
eq[i] = fi.lhs - fi.rhs
matching_hints = {"no_of_equation":i+1}
matching_hints['eq'] = eq
if i==0:
raise ValueError("classify_sysode() works for systems of ODEs. "
"For scalar ODEs, classify_ode should be used")
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
# find all the functions if not given
order = dict()
if funcs==[None]:
funcs = []
for eqs in eq:
derivs = eqs.atoms(Derivative)
func = set().union(*[d.atoms(AppliedUndef) for d in derivs])
for func_ in func:
funcs.append(func_)
funcs = list(set(funcs))
if len(funcs) < len(eq):
raise ValueError("Number of functions given is less than number of equations %s" % funcs)
func_dict = dict()
for func in funcs:
if not order.get(func, False):
max_order = 0
for i, eqs_ in enumerate(eq):
order_ = ode_order(eqs_,func)
if max_order < order_:
max_order = order_
eq_no = i
if eq_no in func_dict:
list_func = []
list_func.append(func_dict[eq_no])
list_func.append(func)
func_dict[eq_no] = list_func
else:
func_dict[eq_no] = func
order[func] = max_order
funcs = [func_dict[i] for i in range(len(func_dict))]
matching_hints['func'] = funcs
for func in funcs:
if isinstance(func, list):
for func_elem in func:
if len(func_elem.args) != 1:
raise ValueError("dsolve() and classify_sysode() work with "
"functions of one variable only, not %s" % func)
else:
if func and len(func.args) != 1:
raise ValueError("dsolve() and classify_sysode() work with "
"functions of one variable only, not %s" % func)
# find the order of all equation in system of odes
matching_hints["order"] = order
# find coefficients of terms f(t), diff(f(t),t) and higher derivatives
# and similarly for other functions g(t), diff(g(t),t) in all equations.
# Here j denotes the equation number, funcs[l] denotes the function about
# which we are talking about and k denotes the order of function funcs[l]
# whose coefficient we are calculating.
def linearity_check(eqs, j, func, is_linear_):
for k in range(order[func] + 1):
func_coef[j, func, k] = collect(eqs.expand(), [diff(func, t, k)]).coeff(diff(func, t, k))
if is_linear_ == True:
if func_coef[j, func, k] == 0:
if k == 0:
coef = eqs.as_independent(func, as_Add=True)[1]
for xr in range(1, ode_order(eqs,func) + 1):
coef -= eqs.as_independent(diff(func, t, xr), as_Add=True)[1]
if coef != 0:
is_linear_ = False
else:
if eqs.as_independent(diff(func, t, k), as_Add=True)[1]:
is_linear_ = False
else:
for func_ in funcs:
if isinstance(func_, list):
for elem_func_ in func_:
dep = func_coef[j, func, k].as_independent(elem_func_, as_Add=True)[1]
if dep != 0:
is_linear_ = False
else:
dep = func_coef[j, func, k].as_independent(func_, as_Add=True)[1]
if dep != 0:
is_linear_ = False
return is_linear_
func_coef = {}
is_linear = True
for j, eqs in enumerate(eq):
for func in funcs:
if isinstance(func, list):
for func_elem in func:
is_linear = linearity_check(eqs, j, func_elem, is_linear)
else:
is_linear = linearity_check(eqs, j, func, is_linear)
matching_hints['func_coeff'] = func_coef
matching_hints['is_linear'] = is_linear
if len(set(order.values()))==1:
order_eq = list(matching_hints['order'].values())[0]
if matching_hints['is_linear'] == True:
if matching_hints['no_of_equation'] == 2:
if order_eq == 1:
type_of_equation = check_linear_2eq_order1(eq, funcs, func_coef)
elif order_eq == 2:
type_of_equation = check_linear_2eq_order2(eq, funcs, func_coef)
else:
type_of_equation = None
elif matching_hints['no_of_equation'] == 3:
if order_eq == 1:
type_of_equation = check_linear_3eq_order1(eq, funcs, func_coef)
if type_of_equation==None:
type_of_equation = check_linear_neq_order1(eq, funcs, func_coef)
else:
type_of_equation = None
else:
if order_eq == 1:
type_of_equation = check_linear_neq_order1(eq, funcs, func_coef)
else:
type_of_equation = None
else:
if matching_hints['no_of_equation'] == 2:
if order_eq == 1:
type_of_equation = check_nonlinear_2eq_order1(eq, funcs, func_coef)
else:
type_of_equation = None
elif matching_hints['no_of_equation'] == 3:
if order_eq == 1:
type_of_equation = check_nonlinear_3eq_order1(eq, funcs, func_coef)
else:
type_of_equation = None
else:
type_of_equation = None
else:
type_of_equation = None
matching_hints['type_of_equation'] = type_of_equation
return matching_hints
def check_linear_2eq_order1(eq, func, func_coef):
x = func[0].func
y = func[1].func
fc = func_coef
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
r = dict()
# for equations Eq(a1*diff(x(t),t), b1*x(t) + c1*y(t) + d1)
# and Eq(a2*diff(y(t),t), b2*x(t) + c2*y(t) + d2)
r['a1'] = fc[0,x(t),1] ; r['a2'] = fc[1,y(t),1]
r['b1'] = -fc[0,x(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),1] ; r['b2'] = -fc[1,x(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),1]
r['c1'] = -fc[0,y(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),1] ; r['c2'] = -fc[1,y(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),1]
forcing = [S(0),S(0)]
for i in range(2):
for j in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
if not j.has(x(t), y(t)):
forcing[i] += j
if not (forcing[0].has(t) or forcing[1].has(t)):
# We can handle homogeneous case and simple constant forcings
r['d1'] = forcing[0]
r['d2'] = forcing[1]
else:
# Issue #9244: nonhomogeneous linear systems are not supported
return None
# Conditions to check for type 6 whose equations are Eq(diff(x(t),t), f(t)*x(t) + g(t)*y(t)) and
# Eq(diff(y(t),t), a*[f(t) + a*h(t)]x(t) + a*[g(t) - h(t)]*y(t))
p = 0
q = 0
p1 = cancel(r['b2']/(cancel(r['b2']/r['c2']).as_numer_denom()[0]))
p2 = cancel(r['b1']/(cancel(r['b1']/r['c1']).as_numer_denom()[0]))
for n, i in enumerate([p1, p2]):
for j in Mul.make_args(collect_const(i)):
if not j.has(t):
q = j
if q and n==0:
if ((r['b2']/j - r['b1'])/(r['c1'] - r['c2']/j)) == j:
p = 1
elif q and n==1:
if ((r['b1']/j - r['b2'])/(r['c2'] - r['c1']/j)) == j:
p = 2
# End of condition for type 6
if r['d1']!=0 or r['d2']!=0:
if not r['d1'].has(t) and not r['d2'].has(t):
if all(not r[k].has(t) for k in 'a1 a2 b1 b2 c1 c2'.split()):
# Equations for type 2 are Eq(a1*diff(x(t),t),b1*x(t)+c1*y(t)+d1) and Eq(a2*diff(y(t),t),b2*x(t)+c2*y(t)+d2)
return "type2"
else:
return None
else:
if all(not r[k].has(t) for k in 'a1 a2 b1 b2 c1 c2'.split()):
# Equations for type 1 are Eq(a1*diff(x(t),t),b1*x(t)+c1*y(t)) and Eq(a2*diff(y(t),t),b2*x(t)+c2*y(t))
return "type1"
else:
r['b1'] = r['b1']/r['a1'] ; r['b2'] = r['b2']/r['a2']
r['c1'] = r['c1']/r['a1'] ; r['c2'] = r['c2']/r['a2']
if (r['b1'] == r['c2']) and (r['c1'] == r['b2']):
# Equation for type 3 are Eq(diff(x(t),t), f(t)*x(t) + g(t)*y(t)) and Eq(diff(y(t),t), g(t)*x(t) + f(t)*y(t))
return "type3"
elif (r['b1'] == r['c2']) and (r['c1'] == -r['b2']) or (r['b1'] == -r['c2']) and (r['c1'] == r['b2']):
# Equation for type 4 are Eq(diff(x(t),t), f(t)*x(t) + g(t)*y(t)) and Eq(diff(y(t),t), -g(t)*x(t) + f(t)*y(t))
return "type4"
elif (not cancel(r['b2']/r['c1']).has(t) and not cancel((r['c2']-r['b1'])/r['c1']).has(t)) \
or (not cancel(r['b1']/r['c2']).has(t) and not cancel((r['c1']-r['b2'])/r['c2']).has(t)):
# Equations for type 5 are Eq(diff(x(t),t), f(t)*x(t) + g(t)*y(t)) and Eq(diff(y(t),t), a*g(t)*x(t) + [f(t) + b*g(t)]*y(t)
return "type5"
elif p:
return "type6"
else:
# Equations for type 7 are Eq(diff(x(t),t), f(t)*x(t) + g(t)*y(t)) and Eq(diff(y(t),t), h(t)*x(t) + p(t)*y(t))
return "type7"
def check_linear_2eq_order2(eq, func, func_coef):
x = func[0].func
y = func[1].func
fc = func_coef
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
r = dict()
a = Wild('a', exclude=[1/t])
b = Wild('b', exclude=[1/t**2])
u = Wild('u', exclude=[t, t**2])
v = Wild('v', exclude=[t, t**2])
w = Wild('w', exclude=[t, t**2])
p = Wild('p', exclude=[t, t**2])
r['a1'] = fc[0,x(t),2] ; r['a2'] = fc[1,y(t),2]
r['b1'] = fc[0,x(t),1] ; r['b2'] = fc[1,x(t),1]
r['c1'] = fc[0,y(t),1] ; r['c2'] = fc[1,y(t),1]
r['d1'] = fc[0,x(t),0] ; r['d2'] = fc[1,x(t),0]
r['e1'] = fc[0,y(t),0] ; r['e2'] = fc[1,y(t),0]
const = [S(0), S(0)]
for i in range(2):
for j in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
if not (j.has(x(t)) or j.has(y(t))):
const[i] += j
r['f1'] = const[0]
r['f2'] = const[1]
if r['f1']!=0 or r['f2']!=0:
if all(not r[k].has(t) for k in 'a1 a2 d1 d2 e1 e2 f1 f2'.split()) \
and r['b1']==r['c1']==r['b2']==r['c2']==0:
return "type2"
elif all(not r[k].has(t) for k in 'a1 a2 b1 b2 c1 c2 d1 d2 e1 e1'.split()):
p = [S(0), S(0)] ; q = [S(0), S(0)]
for n, e in enumerate([r['f1'], r['f2']]):
if e.has(t):
tpart = e.as_independent(t, Mul)[1]
for i in Mul.make_args(tpart):
if i.has(exp):
b, e = i.as_base_exp()
co = e.coeff(t)
if co and not co.has(t) and co.has(I):
p[n] = 1
else:
q[n] = 1
else:
q[n] = 1
else:
q[n] = 1
if p[0]==1 and p[1]==1 and q[0]==0 and q[1]==0:
return "type4"
else:
return None
else:
return None
else:
if r['b1']==r['b2']==r['c1']==r['c2']==0 and all(not r[k].has(t) \
for k in 'a1 a2 d1 d2 e1 e2'.split()):
return "type1"
elif r['b1']==r['e1']==r['c2']==r['d2']==0 and all(not r[k].has(t) \
for k in 'a1 a2 b2 c1 d1 e2'.split()) and r['c1'] == -r['b2'] and \
r['d1'] == r['e2']:
return "type3"
elif cancel(-r['b2']/r['d2'])==t and cancel(-r['c1']/r['e1'])==t and not \
(r['d2']/r['a2']).has(t) and not (r['e1']/r['a1']).has(t) and \
r['b1']==r['d1']==r['c2']==r['e2']==0:
return "type5"
elif ((r['a1']/r['d1']).expand()).match((p*(u*t**2+v*t+w)**2).expand()) and not \
(cancel(r['a1']*r['d2']/(r['a2']*r['d1']))).has(t) and not (r['d1']/r['e1']).has(t) and not \
(r['d2']/r['e2']).has(t) and r['b1'] == r['b2'] == r['c1'] == r['c2'] == 0:
return "type10"
elif not cancel(r['d1']/r['e1']).has(t) and not cancel(r['d2']/r['e2']).has(t) and not \
cancel(r['d1']*r['a2']/(r['d2']*r['a1'])).has(t) and r['b1']==r['b2']==r['c1']==r['c2']==0:
return "type6"
elif not cancel(r['b1']/r['c1']).has(t) and not cancel(r['b2']/r['c2']).has(t) and not \
cancel(r['b1']*r['a2']/(r['b2']*r['a1'])).has(t) and r['d1']==r['d2']==r['e1']==r['e2']==0:
return "type7"
elif cancel(-r['b2']/r['d2'])==t and cancel(-r['c1']/r['e1'])==t and not \
cancel(r['e1']*r['a2']/(r['d2']*r['a1'])).has(t) and r['e1'].has(t) \
and r['b1']==r['d1']==r['c2']==r['e2']==0:
return "type8"
elif (r['b1']/r['a1']).match(a/t) and (r['b2']/r['a2']).match(a/t) and not \
(r['b1']/r['c1']).has(t) and not (r['b2']/r['c2']).has(t) and \
(r['d1']/r['a1']).match(b/t**2) and (r['d2']/r['a2']).match(b/t**2) \
and not (r['d1']/r['e1']).has(t) and not (r['d2']/r['e2']).has(t):
return "type9"
elif -r['b1']/r['d1']==-r['c1']/r['e1']==-r['b2']/r['d2']==-r['c2']/r['e2']==t:
return "type11"
else:
return None
def check_linear_3eq_order1(eq, func, func_coef):
x = func[0].func
y = func[1].func
z = func[2].func
fc = func_coef
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
r = dict()
r['a1'] = fc[0,x(t),1]; r['a2'] = fc[1,y(t),1]; r['a3'] = fc[2,z(t),1]
r['b1'] = fc[0,x(t),0]; r['b2'] = fc[1,x(t),0]; r['b3'] = fc[2,x(t),0]
r['c1'] = fc[0,y(t),0]; r['c2'] = fc[1,y(t),0]; r['c3'] = fc[2,y(t),0]
r['d1'] = fc[0,z(t),0]; r['d2'] = fc[1,z(t),0]; r['d3'] = fc[2,z(t),0]
forcing = [S(0), S(0), S(0)]
for i in range(3):
for j in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
if not j.has(x(t), y(t), z(t)):
forcing[i] += j
if forcing[0].has(t) or forcing[1].has(t) or forcing[2].has(t):
# We can handle homogeneous case and simple constant forcings.
# Issue #9244: nonhomogeneous linear systems are not supported
return None
if all(not r[k].has(t) for k in 'a1 a2 a3 b1 b2 b3 c1 c2 c3 d1 d2 d3'.split()):
if r['c1']==r['d1']==r['d2']==0:
return 'type1'
elif r['c1'] == -r['b2'] and r['d1'] == -r['b3'] and r['d2'] == -r['c3'] \
and r['b1'] == r['c2'] == r['d3'] == 0:
return 'type2'
elif r['b1'] == r['c2'] == r['d3'] == 0 and r['c1']/r['a1'] == -r['d1']/r['a1'] \
and r['d2']/r['a2'] == -r['b2']/r['a2'] and r['b3']/r['a3'] == -r['c3']/r['a3']:
return 'type3'
else:
return None
else:
for k1 in 'c1 d1 b2 d2 b3 c3'.split():
if r[k1] == 0:
continue
else:
if all(not cancel(r[k1]/r[k]).has(t) for k in 'd1 b2 d2 b3 c3'.split() if r[k]!=0) \
and all(not cancel(r[k1]/(r['b1'] - r[k])).has(t) for k in 'b1 c2 d3'.split() if r['b1']!=r[k]):
return 'type4'
else:
break
return None
def check_linear_neq_order1(eq, func, func_coef):
x = func[0].func
y = func[1].func
z = func[2].func
fc = func_coef
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
r = dict()
n = len(eq)
for i in range(n):
for j in range(n):
if (fc[i,func[j],0]/fc[i,func[i],1]).has(t):
return None
if len(eq)==3:
return 'type6'
return 'type1'
def check_nonlinear_2eq_order1(eq, func, func_coef):
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
f = Wild('f')
g = Wild('g')
u, v = symbols('u, v', cls=Dummy)
def check_type(x, y):
r1 = eq[0].match(t*diff(x(t),t) - x(t) + f)
r2 = eq[1].match(t*diff(y(t),t) - y(t) + g)
if not (r1 and r2):
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - x(t)/t + f/t)
r2 = eq[1].match(diff(y(t),t) - y(t)/t + g/t)
if not (r1 and r2):
r1 = (-eq[0]).match(t*diff(x(t),t) - x(t) + f)
r2 = (-eq[1]).match(t*diff(y(t),t) - y(t) + g)
if not (r1 and r2):
r1 = (-eq[0]).match(diff(x(t),t) - x(t)/t + f/t)
r2 = (-eq[1]).match(diff(y(t),t) - y(t)/t + g/t)
if r1 and r2 and not (r1[f].subs(diff(x(t),t),u).subs(diff(y(t),t),v).has(t) \
or r2[g].subs(diff(x(t),t),u).subs(diff(y(t),t),v).has(t)):
return 'type5'
else:
return None
for func_ in func:
if isinstance(func_, list):
x = func[0][0].func
y = func[0][1].func
eq_type = check_type(x, y)
if not eq_type:
eq_type = check_type(y, x)
return eq_type
x = func[0].func
y = func[1].func
fc = func_coef
n = Wild('n', exclude=[x(t),y(t)])
f1 = Wild('f1', exclude=[v,t])
f2 = Wild('f2', exclude=[v,t])
g1 = Wild('g1', exclude=[u,t])
g2 = Wild('g2', exclude=[u,t])
for i in range(2):
eqs = 0
for terms in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
eqs += terms/fc[i,func[i],1]
eq[i] = eqs
r = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - x(t)**n*f)
if r:
g = (diff(y(t),t) - eq[1])/r[f]
if r and not (g.has(x(t)) or g.subs(y(t),v).has(t) or r[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).has(t)):
return 'type1'
r = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - exp(n*x(t))*f)
if r:
g = (diff(y(t),t) - eq[1])/r[f]
if r and not (g.has(x(t)) or g.subs(y(t),v).has(t) or r[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).has(t)):
return 'type2'
g = Wild('g')
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - f)
r2 = eq[1].match(diff(y(t),t) - g)
if r1 and r2 and not (r1[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).has(t) or \
r2[g].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).has(t)):
return 'type3'
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - f)
r2 = eq[1].match(diff(y(t),t) - g)
num, den = (
(r1[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v))/
(r2[g].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v))).as_numer_denom()
R1 = num.match(f1*g1)
R2 = den.match(f2*g2)
phi = (r1[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v))/num
if R1 and R2:
return 'type4'
return None
def check_nonlinear_2eq_order2(eq, func, func_coef):
return None
def check_nonlinear_3eq_order1(eq, func, func_coef):
x = func[0].func
y = func[1].func
z = func[2].func
fc = func_coef
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
u, v, w = symbols('u, v, w', cls=Dummy)
a = Wild('a', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
b = Wild('b', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
c = Wild('c', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
f = Wild('f')
F1 = Wild('F1')
F2 = Wild('F2')
F3 = Wild('F3')
for i in range(3):
eqs = 0
for terms in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
eqs += terms/fc[i,func[i],1]
eq[i] = eqs
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - a*y(t)*z(t))
r2 = eq[1].match(diff(y(t),t) - b*z(t)*x(t))
r3 = eq[2].match(diff(z(t),t) - c*x(t)*y(t))
if r1 and r2 and r3:
num1, den1 = r1[a].as_numer_denom()
num2, den2 = r2[b].as_numer_denom()
num3, den3 = r3[c].as_numer_denom()
if solve([num1*u-den1*(v-w), num2*v-den2*(w-u), num3*w-den3*(u-v)],[u, v]):
return 'type1'
r = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - y(t)*z(t)*f)
if r:
r1 = collect_const(r[f]).match(a*f)
r2 = ((diff(y(t),t) - eq[1])/r1[f]).match(b*z(t)*x(t))
r3 = ((diff(z(t),t) - eq[2])/r1[f]).match(c*x(t)*y(t))
if r1 and r2 and r3:
num1, den1 = r1[a].as_numer_denom()
num2, den2 = r2[b].as_numer_denom()
num3, den3 = r3[c].as_numer_denom()
if solve([num1*u-den1*(v-w), num2*v-den2*(w-u), num3*w-den3*(u-v)],[u, v]):
return 'type2'
r = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - (F2-F3))
if r:
r1 = collect_const(r[F2]).match(c*F2)
r1.update(collect_const(r[F3]).match(b*F3))
if r1:
if eq[1].has(r1[F2]) and not eq[1].has(r1[F3]):
r1[F2], r1[F3] = r1[F3], r1[F2]
r1[c], r1[b] = -r1[b], -r1[c]
r2 = eq[1].match(diff(y(t),t) - a*r1[F3] + r1[c]*F1)
if r2:
r3 = (eq[2] == diff(z(t),t) - r1[b]*r2[F1] + r2[a]*r1[F2])
if r1 and r2 and r3:
return 'type3'
r = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - z(t)*F2 + y(t)*F3)
if r:
r1 = collect_const(r[F2]).match(c*F2)
r1.update(collect_const(r[F3]).match(b*F3))
if r1:
if eq[1].has(r1[F2]) and not eq[1].has(r1[F3]):
r1[F2], r1[F3] = r1[F3], r1[F2]
r1[c], r1[b] = -r1[b], -r1[c]
r2 = (diff(y(t),t) - eq[1]).match(a*x(t)*r1[F3] - r1[c]*z(t)*F1)
if r2:
r3 = (diff(z(t),t) - eq[2] == r1[b]*y(t)*r2[F1] - r2[a]*x(t)*r1[F2])
if r1 and r2 and r3:
return 'type4'
r = (diff(x(t),t) - eq[0]).match(x(t)*(F2 - F3))
if r:
r1 = collect_const(r[F2]).match(c*F2)
r1.update(collect_const(r[F3]).match(b*F3))
if r1:
if eq[1].has(r1[F2]) and not eq[1].has(r1[F3]):
r1[F2], r1[F3] = r1[F3], r1[F2]
r1[c], r1[b] = -r1[b], -r1[c]
r2 = (diff(y(t),t) - eq[1]).match(y(t)*(a*r1[F3] - r1[c]*F1))
if r2:
r3 = (diff(z(t),t) - eq[2] == z(t)*(r1[b]*r2[F1] - r2[a]*r1[F2]))
if r1 and r2 and r3:
return 'type5'
return None
def check_nonlinear_3eq_order2(eq, func, func_coef):
return None
def checksysodesol(eqs, sols, func=None):
r"""
Substitutes corresponding ``sols`` for each functions into each ``eqs`` and
checks that the result of substitutions for each equation is ``0``. The
equations and solutions passed can be any iterable.
This only works when each ``sols`` have one function only, like `x(t)` or `y(t)`.
For each function, ``sols`` can have a single solution or a list of solutions.
In most cases it will not be necessary to explicitly identify the function,
but if the function cannot be inferred from the original equation it
can be supplied through the ``func`` argument.
When a sequence of equations is passed, the same sequence is used to return
the result for each equation with each function substituted with corresponding
solutions.
It tries the following method to find zero equivalence for each equation:
Substitute the solutions for functions, like `x(t)` and `y(t)` into the
original equations containing those functions.
This function returns a tuple. The first item in the tuple is ``True`` if
the substitution results for each equation is ``0``, and ``False`` otherwise.
The second item in the tuple is what the substitution results in. Each element
of the ``list`` should always be ``0`` corresponding to each equation if the
first item is ``True``. Note that sometimes this function may return ``False``,
but with an expression that is identically equal to ``0``, instead of returning
``True``. This is because :py:meth:`~sympy.simplify.simplify.simplify` cannot
reduce the expression to ``0``. If an expression returned by each function
vanishes identically, then ``sols`` really is a solution to ``eqs``.
If this function seems to hang, it is probably because of a difficult simplification.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Eq, diff, symbols, sin, cos, exp, sqrt, S, Function
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import checksysodesol
>>> C1, C2 = symbols('C1:3')
>>> t = symbols('t')
>>> x, y = symbols('x, y', cls=Function)
>>> eq = (Eq(diff(x(t),t), x(t) + y(t) + 17), Eq(diff(y(t),t), -2*x(t) + y(t) + 12))
>>> sol = [Eq(x(t), (C1*sin(sqrt(2)*t) + C2*cos(sqrt(2)*t))*exp(t) - S(5)/3),
... Eq(y(t), (sqrt(2)*C1*cos(sqrt(2)*t) - sqrt(2)*C2*sin(sqrt(2)*t))*exp(t) - S(46)/3)]
>>> checksysodesol(eq, sol)
(True, [0, 0])
>>> eq = (Eq(diff(x(t),t),x(t)*y(t)**4), Eq(diff(y(t),t),y(t)**3))
>>> sol = [Eq(x(t), C1*exp(-1/(4*(C2 + t)))), Eq(y(t), -sqrt(2)*sqrt(-1/(C2 + t))/2),
... Eq(x(t), C1*exp(-1/(4*(C2 + t)))), Eq(y(t), sqrt(2)*sqrt(-1/(C2 + t))/2)]
>>> checksysodesol(eq, sol)
(True, [0, 0])
"""
def _sympify(eq):
return list(map(sympify, eq if iterable(eq) else [eq]))
eqs = _sympify(eqs)
for i in range(len(eqs)):
if isinstance(eqs[i], Equality):
eqs[i] = eqs[i].lhs - eqs[i].rhs
if func is None:
funcs = []
for eq in eqs:
derivs = eq.atoms(Derivative)
func = set().union(*[d.atoms(AppliedUndef) for d in derivs])
for func_ in func:
funcs.append(func_)
funcs = list(set(funcs))
if not all(isinstance(func, AppliedUndef) and len(func.args) == 1 for func in funcs)\
and len({func.args for func in funcs})!=1:
raise ValueError("func must be a function of one variable, not %s" % func)
for sol in sols:
if len(sol.atoms(AppliedUndef)) != 1:
raise ValueError("solutions should have one function only")
if len(funcs) != len({sol.lhs for sol in sols}):
raise ValueError("number of solutions provided does not match the number of equations")
t = funcs[0].args[0]
dictsol = dict()
for sol in sols:
func = list(sol.atoms(AppliedUndef))[0]
if sol.rhs == func:
sol = sol.reversed
solved = sol.lhs == func and not sol.rhs.has(func)
if not solved:
rhs = solve(sol, func)
if not rhs:
raise NotImplementedError
else:
rhs = sol.rhs
dictsol[func] = rhs
checkeq = []
for eq in eqs:
for func in funcs:
eq = sub_func_doit(eq, func, dictsol[func])
ss = simplify(eq)
if ss != 0:
eq = ss.expand(force=True)
else:
eq = 0
checkeq.append(eq)
if len(set(checkeq)) == 1 and list(set(checkeq))[0] == 0:
return (True, checkeq)
else:
return (False, checkeq)
@vectorize(0)
def odesimp(eq, func, order, constants, hint):
r"""
Simplifies ODEs, including trying to solve for ``func`` and running
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.constantsimp`.
It may use knowledge of the type of solution that the hint returns to
apply additional simplifications.
It also attempts to integrate any :py:class:`~sympy.integrals.Integral`\s
in the expression, if the hint is not an ``_Integral`` hint.
This function should have no effect on expressions returned by
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`, as
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` already calls
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp`, but the individual hint functions
do not call :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.odesimp` (because the
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` wrapper does). Therefore, this
function is designed for mainly internal use.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, symbols, dsolve, pprint, Function
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import odesimp
>>> x , u2, C1= symbols('x,u2,C1')
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> eq = dsolve(x*f(x).diff(x) - f(x) - x*sin(f(x)/x), f(x),
... hint='1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep_Integral',
... simplify=False)
>>> pprint(eq, wrap_line=False)
x
----
f(x)
/
|
| / 1 \
| -|u2 + -------|
| | /1 \|
| | sin|--||
| \ \u2//
log(f(x)) = log(C1) + | ---------------- d(u2)
| 2
| u2
|
/
>>> pprint(odesimp(eq, f(x), 1, {C1},
... hint='1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep'
... )) #doctest: +SKIP
x
--------- = C1
/f(x)\
tan|----|
\2*x /
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
# First, integrate if the hint allows it.
eq = _handle_Integral(eq, func, order, hint)
if hint.startswith("nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous"):
eq = simplify(eq)
if not isinstance(eq, Equality):
raise TypeError("eq should be an instance of Equality")
# Second, clean up the arbitrary constants.
# Right now, nth linear hints can put as many as 2*order constants in an
# expression. If that number grows with another hint, the third argument
# here should be raised accordingly, or constantsimp() rewritten to handle
# an arbitrary number of constants.
eq = constantsimp(eq, constants)
# Lastly, now that we have cleaned up the expression, try solving for func.
# When CRootOf is implemented in solve(), we will want to return a CRootOf
# every time instead of an Equality.
# Get the f(x) on the left if possible.
if eq.rhs == func and not eq.lhs.has(func):
eq = [Eq(eq.rhs, eq.lhs)]
# make sure we are working with lists of solutions in simplified form.
if eq.lhs == func and not eq.rhs.has(func):
# The solution is already solved
eq = [eq]
# special simplification of the rhs
if hint.startswith("nth_linear_constant_coeff"):
# Collect terms to make the solution look nice.
# This is also necessary for constantsimp to remove unnecessary
# terms from the particular solution from variation of parameters
#
# Collect is not behaving reliably here. The results for
# some linear constant-coefficient equations with repeated
# roots do not properly simplify all constants sometimes.
# 'collectterms' gives different orders sometimes, and results
# differ in collect based on that order. The
# sort-reverse trick fixes things, but may fail in the
# future. In addition, collect is splitting exponentials with
# rational powers for no reason. We have to do a match
# to fix this using Wilds.
global collectterms
try:
collectterms.sort(key=default_sort_key)
collectterms.reverse()
except Exception:
pass
assert len(eq) == 1 and eq[0].lhs == f(x)
sol = eq[0].rhs
sol = expand_mul(sol)
for i, reroot, imroot in collectterms:
sol = collect(sol, x**i*exp(reroot*x)*sin(abs(imroot)*x))
sol = collect(sol, x**i*exp(reroot*x)*cos(imroot*x))
for i, reroot, imroot in collectterms:
sol = collect(sol, x**i*exp(reroot*x))
del collectterms
# Collect is splitting exponentials with rational powers for
# no reason. We call powsimp to fix.
sol = powsimp(sol)
eq[0] = Eq(f(x), sol)
else:
# The solution is not solved, so try to solve it
try:
floats = any(i.is_Float for i in eq.atoms(Number))
eqsol = solve(eq, func, force=True, rational=False if floats else None)
if not eqsol:
raise NotImplementedError
except (NotImplementedError, PolynomialError):
eq = [eq]
else:
def _expand(expr):
numer, denom = expr.as_numer_denom()
if denom.is_Add:
return expr
else:
return powsimp(expr.expand(), combine='exp', deep=True)
# XXX: the rest of odesimp() expects each ``t`` to be in a
# specific normal form: rational expression with numerator
# expanded, but with combined exponential functions (at
# least in this setup all tests pass).
eq = [Eq(f(x), _expand(t)) for t in eqsol]
# special simplification of the lhs.
if hint.startswith("1st_homogeneous_coeff"):
for j, eqi in enumerate(eq):
newi = logcombine(eqi, force=True)
if isinstance(newi.lhs, log) and newi.rhs == 0:
newi = Eq(newi.lhs.args[0]/C1, C1)
eq[j] = newi
# We cleaned up the constants before solving to help the solve engine with
# a simpler expression, but the solved expression could have introduced
# things like -C1, so rerun constantsimp() one last time before returning.
for i, eqi in enumerate(eq):
eq[i] = constantsimp(eqi, constants)
eq[i] = constant_renumber(eq[i], 'C', 1, 2*order)
# If there is only 1 solution, return it;
# otherwise return the list of solutions.
if len(eq) == 1:
eq = eq[0]
return eq
def checkodesol(ode, sol, func=None, order='auto', solve_for_func=True):
r"""
Substitutes ``sol`` into ``ode`` and checks that the result is ``0``.
This only works when ``func`` is one function, like `f(x)`. ``sol`` can
be a single solution or a list of solutions. Each solution may be an
:py:class:`~sympy.core.relational.Equality` that the solution satisfies,
e.g. ``Eq(f(x), C1), Eq(f(x) + C1, 0)``; or simply an
:py:class:`~sympy.core.expr.Expr`, e.g. ``f(x) - C1``. In most cases it
will not be necessary to explicitly identify the function, but if the
function cannot be inferred from the original equation it can be supplied
through the ``func`` argument.
If a sequence of solutions is passed, the same sort of container will be
used to return the result for each solution.
It tries the following methods, in order, until it finds zero equivalence:
1. Substitute the solution for `f` in the original equation. This only
works if ``ode`` is solved for `f`. It will attempt to solve it first
unless ``solve_for_func == False``.
2. Take `n` derivatives of the solution, where `n` is the order of
``ode``, and check to see if that is equal to the solution. This only
works on exact ODEs.
3. Take the 1st, 2nd, ..., `n`\th derivatives of the solution, each time
solving for the derivative of `f` of that order (this will always be
possible because `f` is a linear operator). Then back substitute each
derivative into ``ode`` in reverse order.
This function returns a tuple. The first item in the tuple is ``True`` if
the substitution results in ``0``, and ``False`` otherwise. The second
item in the tuple is what the substitution results in. It should always
be ``0`` if the first item is ``True``. Sometimes this function will
return ``False`` even when an expression is identically equal to ``0``.
This happens when :py:meth:`~sympy.simplify.simplify.simplify` does not
reduce the expression to ``0``. If an expression returned by this
function vanishes identically, then ``sol`` really is a solution to
the ``ode``.
If this function seems to hang, it is probably because of a hard
simplification.
To use this function to test, test the first item of the tuple.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Eq, Function, checkodesol, symbols
>>> x, C1 = symbols('x,C1')
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> checkodesol(f(x).diff(x), Eq(f(x), C1))
(True, 0)
>>> assert checkodesol(f(x).diff(x), C1)[0]
>>> assert not checkodesol(f(x).diff(x), x)[0]
>>> checkodesol(f(x).diff(x, 2), x**2)
(False, 2)
"""
if not isinstance(ode, Equality):
ode = Eq(ode, 0)
if func is None:
try:
_, func = _preprocess(ode.lhs)
except ValueError:
funcs = [s.atoms(AppliedUndef) for s in (
sol if is_sequence(sol, set) else [sol])]
funcs = set().union(*funcs)
if len(funcs) != 1:
raise ValueError(
'must pass func arg to checkodesol for this case.')
func = funcs.pop()
if not isinstance(func, AppliedUndef) or len(func.args) != 1:
raise ValueError(
"func must be a function of one variable, not %s" % func)
if is_sequence(sol, set):
return type(sol)([checkodesol(ode, i, order=order, solve_for_func=solve_for_func) for i in sol])
if not isinstance(sol, Equality):
sol = Eq(func, sol)
elif sol.rhs == func:
sol = sol.reversed
if order == 'auto':
order = ode_order(ode, func)
solved = sol.lhs == func and not sol.rhs.has(func)
if solve_for_func and not solved:
rhs = solve(sol, func)
if rhs:
eqs = [Eq(func, t) for t in rhs]
if len(rhs) == 1:
eqs = eqs[0]
return checkodesol(ode, eqs, order=order,
solve_for_func=False)
s = True
testnum = 0
x = func.args[0]
while s:
if testnum == 0:
# First pass, try substituting a solved solution directly into the
# ODE. This has the highest chance of succeeding.
ode_diff = ode.lhs - ode.rhs
if sol.lhs == func:
s = sub_func_doit(ode_diff, func, sol.rhs)
else:
testnum += 1
continue
ss = simplify(s)
if ss:
# with the new numer_denom in power.py, if we do a simple
# expansion then testnum == 0 verifies all solutions.
s = ss.expand(force=True)
else:
s = 0
testnum += 1
elif testnum == 1:
# Second pass. If we cannot substitute f, try seeing if the nth
# derivative is equal, this will only work for odes that are exact,
# by definition.
s = simplify(
trigsimp(diff(sol.lhs, x, order) - diff(sol.rhs, x, order)) -
trigsimp(ode.lhs) + trigsimp(ode.rhs))
# s2 = simplify(
# diff(sol.lhs, x, order) - diff(sol.rhs, x, order) - \
# ode.lhs + ode.rhs)
testnum += 1
elif testnum == 2:
# Third pass. Try solving for df/dx and substituting that into the
# ODE. Thanks to Chris Smith for suggesting this method. Many of
# the comments below are his, too.
# The method:
# - Take each of 1..n derivatives of the solution.
# - Solve each nth derivative for d^(n)f/dx^(n)
# (the differential of that order)
# - Back substitute into the ODE in decreasing order
# (i.e., n, n-1, ...)
# - Check the result for zero equivalence
if sol.lhs == func and not sol.rhs.has(func):
diffsols = {0: sol.rhs}
elif sol.rhs == func and not sol.lhs.has(func):
diffsols = {0: sol.lhs}
else:
diffsols = {}
sol = sol.lhs - sol.rhs
for i in range(1, order + 1):
# Differentiation is a linear operator, so there should always
# be 1 solution. Nonetheless, we test just to make sure.
# We only need to solve once. After that, we automatically
# have the solution to the differential in the order we want.
if i == 1:
ds = sol.diff(x)
try:
sdf = solve(ds, func.diff(x, i))
if not sdf:
raise NotImplementedError
except NotImplementedError:
testnum += 1
break
else:
diffsols[i] = sdf[0]
else:
# This is what the solution says df/dx should be.
diffsols[i] = diffsols[i - 1].diff(x)
# Make sure the above didn't fail.
if testnum > 2:
continue
else:
# Substitute it into ODE to check for self consistency.
lhs, rhs = ode.lhs, ode.rhs
for i in range(order, -1, -1):
if i == 0 and 0 not in diffsols:
# We can only substitute f(x) if the solution was
# solved for f(x).
break
lhs = sub_func_doit(lhs, func.diff(x, i), diffsols[i])
rhs = sub_func_doit(rhs, func.diff(x, i), diffsols[i])
ode_or_bool = Eq(lhs, rhs)
ode_or_bool = simplify(ode_or_bool)
if isinstance(ode_or_bool, (bool, BooleanAtom)):
if ode_or_bool:
lhs = rhs = S.Zero
else:
lhs = ode_or_bool.lhs
rhs = ode_or_bool.rhs
# No sense in overworking simplify -- just prove that the
# numerator goes to zero
num = trigsimp((lhs - rhs).as_numer_denom()[0])
# since solutions are obtained using force=True we test
# using the same level of assumptions
## replace function with dummy so assumptions will work
_func = Dummy('func')
num = num.subs(func, _func)
## posify the expression
num, reps = posify(num)
s = simplify(num).xreplace(reps).xreplace({_func: func})
testnum += 1
else:
break
if not s:
return (True, s)
elif s is True: # The code above never was able to change s
raise NotImplementedError("Unable to test if " + str(sol) +
" is a solution to " + str(ode) + ".")
else:
return (False, s)
def ode_sol_simplicity(sol, func, trysolving=True):
r"""
Returns an extended integer representing how simple a solution to an ODE
is.
The following things are considered, in order from most simple to least:
- ``sol`` is solved for ``func``.
- ``sol`` is not solved for ``func``, but can be if passed to solve (e.g.,
a solution returned by ``dsolve(ode, func, simplify=False``).
- If ``sol`` is not solved for ``func``, then base the result on the
length of ``sol``, as computed by ``len(str(sol))``.
- If ``sol`` has any unevaluated :py:class:`~sympy.integrals.Integral`\s,
this will automatically be considered less simple than any of the above.
This function returns an integer such that if solution A is simpler than
solution B by above metric, then ``ode_sol_simplicity(sola, func) <
ode_sol_simplicity(solb, func)``.
Currently, the following are the numbers returned, but if the heuristic is
ever improved, this may change. Only the ordering is guaranteed.
+----------------------------------------------+-------------------+
| Simplicity | Return |
+==============================================+===================+
| ``sol`` solved for ``func`` | ``-2`` |
+----------------------------------------------+-------------------+
| ``sol`` not solved for ``func`` but can be | ``-1`` |
+----------------------------------------------+-------------------+
| ``sol`` is not solved nor solvable for | ``len(str(sol))`` |
| ``func`` | |
+----------------------------------------------+-------------------+
| ``sol`` contains an | ``oo`` |
| :py:class:`~sympy.integrals.Integral` | |
+----------------------------------------------+-------------------+
``oo`` here means the SymPy infinity, which should compare greater than
any integer.
If you already know :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.solvers.solve` cannot solve
``sol``, you can use ``trysolving=False`` to skip that step, which is the
only potentially slow step. For example,
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` with the ``simplify=False`` flag
should do this.
If ``sol`` is a list of solutions, if the worst solution in the list
returns ``oo`` it returns that, otherwise it returns ``len(str(sol))``,
that is, the length of the string representation of the whole list.
Examples
========
This function is designed to be passed to ``min`` as the key argument,
such as ``min(listofsolutions, key=lambda i: ode_sol_simplicity(i,
f(x)))``.
>>> from sympy import symbols, Function, Eq, tan, cos, sqrt, Integral
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import ode_sol_simplicity
>>> x, C1, C2 = symbols('x, C1, C2')
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> ode_sol_simplicity(Eq(f(x), C1*x**2), f(x))
-2
>>> ode_sol_simplicity(Eq(x**2 + f(x), C1), f(x))
-1
>>> ode_sol_simplicity(Eq(f(x), C1*Integral(2*x, x)), f(x))
oo
>>> eq1 = Eq(f(x)/tan(f(x)/(2*x)), C1)
>>> eq2 = Eq(f(x)/tan(f(x)/(2*x) + f(x)), C2)
>>> [ode_sol_simplicity(eq, f(x)) for eq in [eq1, eq2]]
[28, 35]
>>> min([eq1, eq2], key=lambda i: ode_sol_simplicity(i, f(x)))
Eq(f(x)/tan(f(x)/(2*x)), C1)
"""
# TODO: if two solutions are solved for f(x), we still want to be
# able to get the simpler of the two
# See the docstring for the coercion rules. We check easier (faster)
# things here first, to save time.
if iterable(sol):
# See if there are Integrals
for i in sol:
if ode_sol_simplicity(i, func, trysolving=trysolving) == oo:
return oo
return len(str(sol))
if sol.has(Integral):
return oo
# Next, try to solve for func. This code will change slightly when CRootOf
# is implemented in solve(). Probably a CRootOf solution should fall
# somewhere between a normal solution and an unsolvable expression.
# First, see if they are already solved
if sol.lhs == func and not sol.rhs.has(func) or \
sol.rhs == func and not sol.lhs.has(func):
return -2
# We are not so lucky, try solving manually
if trysolving:
try:
sols = solve(sol, func)
if not sols:
raise NotImplementedError
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
return -1
# Finally, a naive computation based on the length of the string version
# of the expression. This may favor combined fractions because they
# will not have duplicate denominators, and may slightly favor expressions
# with fewer additions and subtractions, as those are separated by spaces
# by the printer.
# Additional ideas for simplicity heuristics are welcome, like maybe
# checking if a equation has a larger domain, or if constantsimp has
# introduced arbitrary constants numbered higher than the order of a
# given ODE that sol is a solution of.
return len(str(sol))
def _get_constant_subexpressions(expr, Cs):
Cs = set(Cs)
Ces = []
def _recursive_walk(expr):
expr_syms = expr.free_symbols
if len(expr_syms) > 0 and expr_syms.issubset(Cs):
Ces.append(expr)
else:
if expr.func == exp:
expr = expr.expand(mul=True)
if expr.func in (Add, Mul):
d = sift(expr.args, lambda i : i.free_symbols.issubset(Cs))
if len(d[True]) > 1:
x = expr.func(*d[True])
if not x.is_number:
Ces.append(x)
elif isinstance(expr, Integral):
if expr.free_symbols.issubset(Cs) and \
all(len(x) == 3 for x in expr.limits):
Ces.append(expr)
for i in expr.args:
_recursive_walk(i)
return
_recursive_walk(expr)
return Ces
def __remove_linear_redundancies(expr, Cs):
cnts = {i: expr.count(i) for i in Cs}
Cs = [i for i in Cs if cnts[i] > 0]
def _linear(expr):
if isinstance(expr, Add):
xs = [i for i in Cs if expr.count(i)==cnts[i] \
and 0 == expr.diff(i, 2)]
d = {}
for x in xs:
y = expr.diff(x)
if y not in d:
d[y]=[]
d[y].append(x)
for y in d:
if len(d[y]) > 1:
d[y].sort(key=str)
for x in d[y][1:]:
expr = expr.subs(x, 0)
return expr
def _recursive_walk(expr):
if len(expr.args) != 0:
expr = expr.func(*[_recursive_walk(i) for i in expr.args])
expr = _linear(expr)
return expr
if isinstance(expr, Equality):
lhs, rhs = [_recursive_walk(i) for i in expr.args]
f = lambda i: isinstance(i, Number) or i in Cs
if isinstance(lhs, Symbol) and lhs in Cs:
rhs, lhs = lhs, rhs
if lhs.func in (Add, Symbol) and rhs.func in (Add, Symbol):
dlhs = sift([lhs] if isinstance(lhs, AtomicExpr) else lhs.args, f)
drhs = sift([rhs] if isinstance(rhs, AtomicExpr) else rhs.args, f)
for i in [True, False]:
for hs in [dlhs, drhs]:
if i not in hs:
hs[i] = [0]
# this calculation can be simplified
lhs = Add(*dlhs[False]) - Add(*drhs[False])
rhs = Add(*drhs[True]) - Add(*dlhs[True])
elif lhs.func in (Mul, Symbol) and rhs.func in (Mul, Symbol):
dlhs = sift([lhs] if isinstance(lhs, AtomicExpr) else lhs.args, f)
if True in dlhs:
if False not in dlhs:
dlhs[False] = [1]
lhs = Mul(*dlhs[False])
rhs = rhs/Mul(*dlhs[True])
return Eq(lhs, rhs)
else:
return _recursive_walk(expr)
@vectorize(0)
def constantsimp(expr, constants):
r"""
Simplifies an expression with arbitrary constants in it.
This function is written specifically to work with
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`, and is not intended for general use.
Simplification is done by "absorbing" the arbitrary constants into other
arbitrary constants, numbers, and symbols that they are not independent
of.
The symbols must all have the same name with numbers after it, for
example, ``C1``, ``C2``, ``C3``. The ``symbolname`` here would be
'``C``', the ``startnumber`` would be 1, and the ``endnumber`` would be 3.
If the arbitrary constants are independent of the variable ``x``, then the
independent symbol would be ``x``. There is no need to specify the
dependent function, such as ``f(x)``, because it already has the
independent symbol, ``x``, in it.
Because terms are "absorbed" into arbitrary constants and because
constants are renumbered after simplifying, the arbitrary constants in
expr are not necessarily equal to the ones of the same name in the
returned result.
If two or more arbitrary constants are added, multiplied, or raised to the
power of each other, they are first absorbed together into a single
arbitrary constant. Then the new constant is combined into other terms if
necessary.
Absorption of constants is done with limited assistance:
1. terms of :py:class:`~sympy.core.add.Add`\s are collected to try join
constants so `e^x (C_1 \cos(x) + C_2 \cos(x))` will simplify to `e^x
C_1 \cos(x)`;
2. powers with exponents that are :py:class:`~sympy.core.add.Add`\s are
expanded so `e^{C_1 + x}` will be simplified to `C_1 e^x`.
Use :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.constant_renumber` to renumber constants
after simplification or else arbitrary numbers on constants may appear,
e.g. `C_1 + C_3 x`.
In rare cases, a single constant can be "simplified" into two constants.
Every differential equation solution should have as many arbitrary
constants as the order of the differential equation. The result here will
be technically correct, but it may, for example, have `C_1` and `C_2` in
an expression, when `C_1` is actually equal to `C_2`. Use your discretion
in such situations, and also take advantage of the ability to use hints in
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import constantsimp
>>> C1, C2, C3, x, y = symbols('C1, C2, C3, x, y')
>>> constantsimp(2*C1*x, {C1, C2, C3})
C1*x
>>> constantsimp(C1 + 2 + x, {C1, C2, C3})
C1 + x
>>> constantsimp(C1*C2 + 2 + C2 + C3*x, {C1, C2, C3})
C1 + C3*x
"""
# This function works recursively. The idea is that, for Mul,
# Add, Pow, and Function, if the class has a constant in it, then
# we can simplify it, which we do by recursing down and
# simplifying up. Otherwise, we can skip that part of the
# expression.
Cs = constants
orig_expr = expr
constant_subexprs = _get_constant_subexpressions(expr, Cs)
for xe in constant_subexprs:
xes = list(xe.free_symbols)
if not xes:
continue
if all([expr.count(c) == xe.count(c) for c in xes]):
xes.sort(key=str)
expr = expr.subs(xe, xes[0])
# try to perform common sub-expression elimination of constant terms
try:
commons, rexpr = cse(expr)
commons.reverse()
rexpr = rexpr[0]
for s in commons:
cs = list(s[1].atoms(Symbol))
if len(cs) == 1 and cs[0] in Cs and \
cs[0] not in rexpr.atoms(Symbol) and \
not any(cs[0] in ex for ex in commons if ex != s):
rexpr = rexpr.subs(s[0], cs[0])
else:
rexpr = rexpr.subs(*s)
expr = rexpr
except Exception:
pass
expr = __remove_linear_redundancies(expr, Cs)
def _conditional_term_factoring(expr):
new_expr = terms_gcd(expr, clear=False, deep=True, expand=False)
# we do not want to factor exponentials, so handle this separately
if new_expr.is_Mul:
infac = False
asfac = False
for m in new_expr.args:
if isinstance(m, exp):
asfac = True
elif m.is_Add:
infac = any(isinstance(fi, exp) for t in m.args
for fi in Mul.make_args(t))
if asfac and infac:
new_expr = expr
break
return new_expr
expr = _conditional_term_factoring(expr)
# call recursively if more simplification is possible
if orig_expr != expr:
return constantsimp(expr, Cs)
return expr
def constant_renumber(expr, symbolname, startnumber, endnumber):
r"""
Renumber arbitrary constants in ``expr`` to have numbers 1 through `N`
where `N` is ``endnumber - startnumber + 1`` at most.
In the process, this reorders expression terms in a standard way.
This is a simple function that goes through and renumbers any
:py:class:`~sympy.core.symbol.Symbol` with a name in the form ``symbolname
+ num`` where ``num`` is in the range from ``startnumber`` to
``endnumber``.
Symbols are renumbered based on ``.sort_key()``, so they should be
numbered roughly in the order that they appear in the final, printed
expression. Note that this ordering is based in part on hashes, so it can
produce different results on different machines.
The structure of this function is very similar to that of
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.constantsimp`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, Eq, pprint
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import constant_renumber
>>> x, C0, C1, C2, C3, C4 = symbols('x,C:5')
Only constants in the given range (inclusive) are renumbered;
the renumbering always starts from 1:
>>> constant_renumber(C1 + C3 + C4, 'C', 1, 3)
C1 + C2 + C4
>>> constant_renumber(C0 + C1 + C3 + C4, 'C', 2, 4)
C0 + 2*C1 + C2
>>> constant_renumber(C0 + 2*C1 + C2, 'C', 0, 1)
C1 + 3*C2
>>> pprint(C2 + C1*x + C3*x**2)
2
C1*x + C2 + C3*x
>>> pprint(constant_renumber(C2 + C1*x + C3*x**2, 'C', 1, 3))
2
C1 + C2*x + C3*x
"""
if type(expr) in (set, list, tuple):
return type(expr)(
[constant_renumber(i, symbolname=symbolname, startnumber=startnumber, endnumber=endnumber)
for i in expr]
)
global newstartnumber
newstartnumber = 1
constants_found = [None]*(endnumber + 2)
constantsymbols = [Symbol(
symbolname + "%d" % t) for t in range(startnumber,
endnumber + 1)]
# make a mapping to send all constantsymbols to S.One and use
# that to make sure that term ordering is not dependent on
# the indexed value of C
C_1 = [(ci, S.One) for ci in constantsymbols]
sort_key=lambda arg: default_sort_key(arg.subs(C_1))
def _constant_renumber(expr):
r"""
We need to have an internal recursive function so that
newstartnumber maintains its values throughout recursive calls.
"""
global newstartnumber
if isinstance(expr, Equality):
return Eq(
_constant_renumber(expr.lhs),
_constant_renumber(expr.rhs))
if type(expr) not in (Mul, Add, Pow) and not expr.is_Function and \
not expr.has(*constantsymbols):
# Base case, as above. Hope there aren't constants inside
# of some other class, because they won't be renumbered.
return expr
elif expr.is_Piecewise:
return expr
elif expr in constantsymbols:
if expr not in constants_found:
constants_found[newstartnumber] = expr
newstartnumber += 1
return expr
elif expr.is_Function or expr.is_Pow or isinstance(expr, Tuple):
return expr.func(
*[_constant_renumber(x) for x in expr.args])
else:
sortedargs = list(expr.args)
sortedargs.sort(key=sort_key)
return expr.func(*[_constant_renumber(x) for x in sortedargs])
expr = _constant_renumber(expr)
# Renumbering happens here
newconsts = symbols('C1:%d' % newstartnumber)
expr = expr.subs(zip(constants_found[1:], newconsts), simultaneous=True)
return expr
def _handle_Integral(expr, func, order, hint):
r"""
Converts a solution with Integrals in it into an actual solution.
For most hints, this simply runs ``expr.doit()``.
"""
global y
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
if hint == "1st_exact":
sol = (expr.doit()).subs(y, f(x))
del y
elif hint == "1st_exact_Integral":
sol = Eq(Subs(expr.lhs, y, f(x)), expr.rhs)
del y
elif hint == "nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous":
sol = expr
elif not hint.endswith("_Integral"):
sol = expr.doit()
else:
sol = expr
return sol
# FIXME: replace the general solution in the docstring with
# dsolve(equation, hint='1st_exact_Integral'). You will need to be able
# to have assumptions on P and Q that dP/dy = dQ/dx.
def ode_1st_exact(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves 1st order exact ordinary differential equations.
A 1st order differential equation is called exact if it is the total
differential of a function. That is, the differential equation
.. math:: P(x, y) \,\partial{}x + Q(x, y) \,\partial{}y = 0
is exact if there is some function `F(x, y)` such that `P(x, y) =
\partial{}F/\partial{}x` and `Q(x, y) = \partial{}F/\partial{}y`. It can
be shown that a necessary and sufficient condition for a first order ODE
to be exact is that `\partial{}P/\partial{}y = \partial{}Q/\partial{}x`.
Then, the solution will be as given below::
>>> from sympy import Function, Eq, Integral, symbols, pprint
>>> x, y, t, x0, y0, C1= symbols('x,y,t,x0,y0,C1')
>>> P, Q, F= map(Function, ['P', 'Q', 'F'])
>>> pprint(Eq(Eq(F(x, y), Integral(P(t, y), (t, x0, x)) +
... Integral(Q(x0, t), (t, y0, y))), C1))
x y
/ /
| |
F(x, y) = | P(t, y) dt + | Q(x0, t) dt = C1
| |
/ /
x0 y0
Where the first partials of `P` and `Q` exist and are continuous in a
simply connected region.
A note: SymPy currently has no way to represent inert substitution on an
expression, so the hint ``1st_exact_Integral`` will return an integral
with `dy`. This is supposed to represent the function that you are
solving for.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, cos, sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> dsolve(cos(f(x)) - (x*sin(f(x)) - f(x)**2)*f(x).diff(x),
... f(x), hint='1st_exact')
Eq(x*cos(f(x)) + f(x)**3/3, C1)
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exact_differential_equation
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 73
# indirect doctest
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match # d+e*diff(f(x),x)
e = r[r['e']]
d = r[r['d']]
global y # This is the only way to pass dummy y to _handle_Integral
y = r['y']
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
# Refer Joel Moses, "Symbolic Integration - The Stormy Decade",
# Communications of the ACM, Volume 14, Number 8, August 1971, pp. 558
# which gives the method to solve an exact differential equation.
sol = Integral(d, x) + Integral((e - (Integral(d, x).diff(y))), y)
return Eq(sol, C1)
def ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_best(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Returns the best solution to an ODE from the two hints
``1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep`` and
``1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep``.
This is as determined by :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_sol_simplicity`.
See the
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep`
and
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep`
docstrings for more information on these hints. Note that there is no
``ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_best_Integral`` hint.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(2*x*f(x) + (x**2 + f(x)**2)*f(x).diff(x), f(x),
... hint='1st_homogeneous_coeff_best', simplify=False))
/ 2 \
| 3*x |
log|----- + 1|
| 2 |
\f (x) /
log(f(x)) = log(C1) - --------------
3
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homogeneous_differential_equation
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 59
# indirect doctest
"""
# There are two substitutions that solve the equation, u1=y/x and u2=x/y
# They produce different integrals, so try them both and see which
# one is easier.
sol1 = ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep(eq,
func, order, match)
sol2 = ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep(eq,
func, order, match)
simplify = match.get('simplify', True)
if simplify:
# why is odesimp called here? Should it be at the usual spot?
constants = sol1.free_symbols.difference(eq.free_symbols)
sol1 = odesimp(
sol1, func, order, constants,
"1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep")
constants = sol2.free_symbols.difference(eq.free_symbols)
sol2 = odesimp(
sol2, func, order, constants,
"1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep")
return min([sol1, sol2], key=lambda x: ode_sol_simplicity(x, func,
trysolving=not simplify))
def ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves a 1st order differential equation with homogeneous coefficients
using the substitution `u_1 = \frac{\text{<dependent
variable>}}{\text{<independent variable>}}`.
This is a differential equation
.. math:: P(x, y) + Q(x, y) dy/dx = 0
such that `P` and `Q` are homogeneous and of the same order. A function
`F(x, y)` is homogeneous of order `n` if `F(x t, y t) = t^n F(x, y)`.
Equivalently, `F(x, y)` can be rewritten as `G(y/x)` or `H(x/y)`. See
also the docstring of :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.homogeneous_order`.
If the coefficients `P` and `Q` in the differential equation above are
homogeneous functions of the same order, then it can be shown that the
substitution `y = u_1 x` (i.e. `u_1 = y/x`) will turn the differential
equation into an equation separable in the variables `x` and `u`. If
`h(u_1)` is the function that results from making the substitution `u_1 =
f(x)/x` on `P(x, f(x))` and `g(u_2)` is the function that results from the
substitution on `Q(x, f(x))` in the differential equation `P(x, f(x)) +
Q(x, f(x)) f'(x) = 0`, then the general solution is::
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f, g, h = map(Function, ['f', 'g', 'h'])
>>> genform = g(f(x)/x) + h(f(x)/x)*f(x).diff(x)
>>> pprint(genform)
/f(x)\ /f(x)\ d
g|----| + h|----|*--(f(x))
\ x / \ x / dx
>>> pprint(dsolve(genform, f(x),
... hint='1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep_Integral'))
f(x)
----
x
/
|
| -h(u1)
log(x) = C1 + | ---------------- d(u1)
| u1*h(u1) + g(u1)
|
/
Where `u_1 h(u_1) + g(u_1) \ne 0` and `x \ne 0`.
See also the docstrings of
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_best` and
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(2*x*f(x) + (x**2 + f(x)**2)*f(x).diff(x), f(x),
... hint='1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep', simplify=False))
/ 3 \
|3*f(x) f (x)|
log|------ + -----|
| x 3 |
\ x /
log(x) = log(C1) - -------------------
3
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homogeneous_differential_equation
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 59
# indirect doctest
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
u = Dummy('u')
u1 = Dummy('u1') # u1 == f(x)/x
r = match # d+e*diff(f(x),x)
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
xarg = match.get('xarg', 0)
yarg = match.get('yarg', 0)
int = Integral(
(-r[r['e']]/(r[r['d']] + u1*r[r['e']])).subs({x: 1, r['y']: u1}),
(u1, None, f(x)/x))
sol = logcombine(Eq(log(x), int + log(C1)), force=True)
sol = sol.subs(f(x), u).subs(((u, u - yarg), (x, x - xarg), (u, f(x))))
return sol
def ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves a 1st order differential equation with homogeneous coefficients
using the substitution `u_2 = \frac{\text{<independent
variable>}}{\text{<dependent variable>}}`.
This is a differential equation
.. math:: P(x, y) + Q(x, y) dy/dx = 0
such that `P` and `Q` are homogeneous and of the same order. A function
`F(x, y)` is homogeneous of order `n` if `F(x t, y t) = t^n F(x, y)`.
Equivalently, `F(x, y)` can be rewritten as `G(y/x)` or `H(x/y)`. See
also the docstring of :py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.homogeneous_order`.
If the coefficients `P` and `Q` in the differential equation above are
homogeneous functions of the same order, then it can be shown that the
substitution `x = u_2 y` (i.e. `u_2 = x/y`) will turn the differential
equation into an equation separable in the variables `y` and `u_2`. If
`h(u_2)` is the function that results from making the substitution `u_2 =
x/f(x)` on `P(x, f(x))` and `g(u_2)` is the function that results from the
substitution on `Q(x, f(x))` in the differential equation `P(x, f(x)) +
Q(x, f(x)) f'(x) = 0`, then the general solution is:
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f, g, h = map(Function, ['f', 'g', 'h'])
>>> genform = g(x/f(x)) + h(x/f(x))*f(x).diff(x)
>>> pprint(genform)
/ x \ / x \ d
g|----| + h|----|*--(f(x))
\f(x)/ \f(x)/ dx
>>> pprint(dsolve(genform, f(x),
... hint='1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep_Integral'))
x
----
f(x)
/
|
| -g(u2)
| ---------------- d(u2)
| u2*g(u2) + h(u2)
|
/
<BLANKLINE>
f(x) = C1*e
Where `u_2 g(u_2) + h(u_2) \ne 0` and `f(x) \ne 0`.
See also the docstrings of
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_best` and
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, pprint, dsolve
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(2*x*f(x) + (x**2 + f(x)**2)*f(x).diff(x), f(x),
... hint='1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep',
... simplify=False))
/ 2 \
| 3*x |
log|----- + 1|
| 2 |
\f (x) /
log(f(x)) = log(C1) - --------------
3
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homogeneous_differential_equation
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 59
# indirect doctest
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
u = Dummy('u')
u2 = Dummy('u2') # u2 == x/f(x)
r = match # d+e*diff(f(x),x)
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
xarg = match.get('xarg', 0) # If xarg present take xarg, else zero
yarg = match.get('yarg', 0) # If yarg present take yarg, else zero
int = Integral(
simplify(
(-r[r['d']]/(r[r['e']] + u2*r[r['d']])).subs({x: u2, r['y']: 1})),
(u2, None, x/f(x)))
sol = logcombine(Eq(log(f(x)), int + log(C1)), force=True)
sol = sol.subs(f(x), u).subs(((u, u - yarg), (x, x - xarg), (u, f(x))))
return sol
# XXX: Should this function maybe go somewhere else?
def homogeneous_order(eq, *symbols):
r"""
Returns the order `n` if `g` is homogeneous and ``None`` if it is not
homogeneous.
Determines if a function is homogeneous and if so of what order. A
function `f(x, y, \cdots)` is homogeneous of order `n` if `f(t x, t y,
\cdots) = t^n f(x, y, \cdots)`.
If the function is of two variables, `F(x, y)`, then `f` being homogeneous
of any order is equivalent to being able to rewrite `F(x, y)` as `G(x/y)`
or `H(y/x)`. This fact is used to solve 1st order ordinary differential
equations whose coefficients are homogeneous of the same order (see the
docstrings of
:py:meth:`~solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep` and
:py:meth:`~solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep`).
Symbols can be functions, but every argument of the function must be a
symbol, and the arguments of the function that appear in the expression
must match those given in the list of symbols. If a declared function
appears with different arguments than given in the list of symbols,
``None`` is returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, homogeneous_order, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> homogeneous_order(f(x), f(x)) is None
True
>>> homogeneous_order(f(x,y), f(y, x), x, y) is None
True
>>> homogeneous_order(f(x), f(x), x)
1
>>> homogeneous_order(x**2*f(x)/sqrt(x**2+f(x)**2), x, f(x))
2
>>> homogeneous_order(x**2+f(x), x, f(x)) is None
True
"""
if not symbols:
raise ValueError("homogeneous_order: no symbols were given.")
symset = set(symbols)
eq = sympify(eq)
# The following are not supported
if eq.has(Order, Derivative):
return None
# These are all constants
if (eq.is_Number or
eq.is_NumberSymbol or
eq.is_number
):
return S.Zero
# Replace all functions with dummy variables
dum = numbered_symbols(prefix='d', cls=Dummy)
newsyms = set()
for i in [j for j in symset if getattr(j, 'is_Function')]:
iargs = set(i.args)
if iargs.difference(symset):
return None
else:
dummyvar = next(dum)
eq = eq.subs(i, dummyvar)
symset.remove(i)
newsyms.add(dummyvar)
symset.update(newsyms)
if not eq.free_symbols & symset:
return None
# assuming order of a nested function can only be equal to zero
if isinstance(eq, Function):
return None if homogeneous_order(
eq.args[0], *tuple(symset)) != 0 else S.Zero
# make the replacement of x with x*t and see if t can be factored out
t = Dummy('t', positive=True) # It is sufficient that t > 0
eqs = separatevars(eq.subs([(i, t*i) for i in symset]), [t], dict=True)[t]
if eqs is S.One:
return S.Zero # there was no term with only t
i, d = eqs.as_independent(t, as_Add=False)
b, e = d.as_base_exp()
if b == t:
return e
def ode_1st_linear(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves 1st order linear differential equations.
These are differential equations of the form
.. math:: dy/dx + P(x) y = Q(x)\text{.}
These kinds of differential equations can be solved in a general way. The
integrating factor `e^{\int P(x) \,dx}` will turn the equation into a
separable equation. The general solution is::
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, pprint, diff, sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f, P, Q = map(Function, ['f', 'P', 'Q'])
>>> genform = Eq(f(x).diff(x) + P(x)*f(x), Q(x))
>>> pprint(genform)
d
P(x)*f(x) + --(f(x)) = Q(x)
dx
>>> pprint(dsolve(genform, f(x), hint='1st_linear_Integral'))
/ / \
| | |
| | / | /
| | | | |
| | | P(x) dx | - | P(x) dx
| | | | |
| | / | /
f(x) = |C1 + | Q(x)*e dx|*e
| | |
\ / /
Examples
========
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(Eq(x*diff(f(x), x) - f(x), x**2*sin(x)),
... f(x), '1st_linear'))
f(x) = x*(C1 - cos(x))
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_differential_equation#First_order_equation
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 92
# indirect doctest
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match # a*diff(f(x),x) + b*f(x) + c
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
t = exp(Integral(r[r['b']]/r[r['a']], x))
tt = Integral(t*(-r[r['c']]/r[r['a']]), x)
f = match.get('u', f(x)) # take almost-linear u if present, else f(x)
return Eq(f, (tt + C1)/t)
def ode_Bernoulli(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves Bernoulli differential equations.
These are equations of the form
.. math:: dy/dx + P(x) y = Q(x) y^n\text{, }n \ne 1`\text{.}
The substitution `w = 1/y^{1-n}` will transform an equation of this form
into one that is linear (see the docstring of
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_linear`). The general solution is::
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x, n
>>> f, P, Q = map(Function, ['f', 'P', 'Q'])
>>> genform = Eq(f(x).diff(x) + P(x)*f(x), Q(x)*f(x)**n)
>>> pprint(genform)
d n
P(x)*f(x) + --(f(x)) = Q(x)*f (x)
dx
>>> pprint(dsolve(genform, f(x), hint='Bernoulli_Integral')) #doctest: +SKIP
1
----
1 - n
// / \ \
|| | | |
|| | / | / |
|| | | | | |
|| | (1 - n)* | P(x) dx | (-1 + n)* | P(x) dx|
|| | | | | |
|| | / | / |
f(x) = ||C1 + (-1 + n)* | -Q(x)*e dx|*e |
|| | | |
\\ / / /
Note that the equation is separable when `n = 1` (see the docstring of
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_separable`).
>>> pprint(dsolve(Eq(f(x).diff(x) + P(x)*f(x), Q(x)*f(x)), f(x),
... hint='separable_Integral'))
f(x)
/
| /
| 1 |
| - dy = C1 + | (-P(x) + Q(x)) dx
| y |
| /
/
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, pprint, log
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(Eq(x*f(x).diff(x) + f(x), log(x)*f(x)**2),
... f(x), hint='Bernoulli'))
1
f(x) = -------------------
/ log(x) 1\
x*|C1 + ------ + -|
\ x x/
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernoulli_differential_equation
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 95
# indirect doctest
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match # a*diff(f(x),x) + b*f(x) + c*f(x)**n, n != 1
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
t = exp((1 - r[r['n']])*Integral(r[r['b']]/r[r['a']], x))
tt = (r[r['n']] - 1)*Integral(t*r[r['c']]/r[r['a']], x)
return Eq(f(x), ((tt + C1)/t)**(1/(1 - r[r['n']])))
def ode_Riccati_special_minus2(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
The general Riccati equation has the form
.. math:: dy/dx = f(x) y^2 + g(x) y + h(x)\text{.}
While it does not have a general solution [1], the "special" form, `dy/dx
= a y^2 - b x^c`, does have solutions in many cases [2]. This routine
returns a solution for `a(dy/dx) = b y^2 + c y/x + d/x^2` that is obtained
by using a suitable change of variables to reduce it to the special form
and is valid when neither `a` nor `b` are zero and either `c` or `d` is
zero.
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, a, b, c, d
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import dsolve, checkodesol
>>> from sympy import pprint, Function
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> y = f(x)
>>> genform = a*y.diff(x) - (b*y**2 + c*y/x + d/x**2)
>>> sol = dsolve(genform, y)
>>> pprint(sol, wrap_line=False)
/ / __________________ \\
| __________________ | / 2 ||
| / 2 | \/ 4*b*d - (a + c) *log(x)||
-|a + c - \/ 4*b*d - (a + c) *tan|C1 + ----------------------------||
\ \ 2*a //
f(x) = ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2*b*x
>>> checkodesol(genform, sol, order=1)[0]
True
References
==========
1. http://www.maplesoft.com/support/help/Maple/view.aspx?path=odeadvisor/Riccati
2. http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/ode/ode0106.pdf -
http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/ode/ode0123.pdf
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match # a2*diff(f(x),x) + b2*f(x) + c2*f(x)/x + d2/x**2
a2, b2, c2, d2 = [r[r[s]] for s in 'a2 b2 c2 d2'.split()]
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
mu = sqrt(4*d2*b2 - (a2 - c2)**2)
return Eq(f(x), (a2 - c2 - mu*tan(mu/(2*a2)*log(x) + C1))/(2*b2*x))
def ode_Liouville(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves 2nd order Liouville differential equations.
The general form of a Liouville ODE is
.. math:: \frac{d^2 y}{dx^2} + g(y) \left(\!
\frac{dy}{dx}\!\right)^2 + h(x)
\frac{dy}{dx}\text{.}
The general solution is:
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, pprint, diff
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f, g, h = map(Function, ['f', 'g', 'h'])
>>> genform = Eq(diff(f(x),x,x) + g(f(x))*diff(f(x),x)**2 +
... h(x)*diff(f(x),x), 0)
>>> pprint(genform)
2 2
/d \ d d
g(f(x))*|--(f(x))| + h(x)*--(f(x)) + ---(f(x)) = 0
\dx / dx 2
dx
>>> pprint(dsolve(genform, f(x), hint='Liouville_Integral'))
f(x)
/ /
| |
| / | /
| | | |
| - | h(x) dx | | g(y) dy
| | | |
| / | /
C1 + C2* | e dx + | e dy = 0
| |
/ /
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(diff(f(x), x, x) + diff(f(x), x)**2/f(x) +
... diff(f(x), x)/x, f(x), hint='Liouville'))
________________ ________________
[f(x) = -\/ C1 + C2*log(x) , f(x) = \/ C1 + C2*log(x) ]
References
==========
- Goldstein and Braun, "Advanced Methods for the Solution of Differential
Equations", pp. 98
- http://www.maplesoft.com/support/help/Maple/view.aspx?path=odeadvisor/Liouville
# indirect doctest
"""
# Liouville ODE:
# f(x).diff(x, 2) + g(f(x))*(f(x).diff(x, 2))**2 + h(x)*f(x).diff(x)
# See Goldstein and Braun, "Advanced Methods for the Solution of
# Differential Equations", pg. 98, as well as
# http://www.maplesoft.com/support/help/view.aspx?path=odeadvisor/Liouville
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match # f(x).diff(x, 2) + g*f(x).diff(x)**2 + h*f(x).diff(x)
y = r['y']
C1, C2 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
int = Integral(exp(Integral(r['g'], y)), (y, None, f(x)))
sol = Eq(int + C1*Integral(exp(-Integral(r['h'], x)), x) + C2, 0)
return sol
def ode_2nd_power_series_ordinary(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Gives a power series solution to a second order homogeneous differential
equation with polynomial coefficients at an ordinary point. A homogenous
differential equation is of the form
.. math :: P(x)\frac{d^2y}{dx^2} + Q(x)\frac{dy}{dx} + R(x) = 0
For simplicity it is assumed that `P(x)`, `Q(x)` and `R(x)` are polynomials,
it is sufficient that `\frac{Q(x)}{P(x)}` and `\frac{R(x)}{P(x)}` exists at
`x_{0}`. A recurrence relation is obtained by substituting `y` as `\sum_{n=0}^\infty a_{n}x^{n}`,
in the differential equation, and equating the nth term. Using this relation
various terms can be generated.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import dsolve, Function, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Function("f")
>>> eq = f(x).diff(x, 2) + f(x)
>>> pprint(dsolve(eq, hint='2nd_power_series_ordinary'))
/ 4 2 \ / 2 \
|x x | | x | / 6\
f(x) = C2*|-- - -- + 1| + C1*x*|- -- + 1| + O\x /
\24 2 / \ 6 /
References
==========
- http://tutorial.math.lamar.edu/Classes/DE/SeriesSolutions.aspx
- George E. Simmons, "Differential Equations with Applications and
Historical Notes", p.p 176 - 184
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
C0, C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
n = Dummy("n", integer=True)
s = Wild("s")
k = Wild("k", exclude=[x])
x0 = match.get('x0')
terms = match.get('terms', 5)
p = match[match['a3']]
q = match[match['b3']]
r = match[match['c3']]
seriesdict = {}
recurr = Function("r")
# Generating the recurrence relation which works this way:
# for the second order term the summation begins at n = 2. The coefficients
# p is multiplied with an*(n - 1)*(n - 2)*x**n-2 and a substitution is made such that
# the exponent of x becomes n.
# For example, if p is x, then the second degree recurrence term is
# an*(n - 1)*(n - 2)*x**n-1, substituting (n - 1) as n, it transforms to
# an+1*n*(n - 1)*x**n.
# A similar process is done with the first order and zeroth order term.
coefflist = [(recurr(n), r), (n*recurr(n), q), (n*(n - 1)*recurr(n), p)]
for index, coeff in enumerate(coefflist):
if coeff[1]:
f2 = powsimp(expand((coeff[1]*(x - x0)**(n - index)).subs(x, x + x0)))
if f2.is_Add:
addargs = f2.args
else:
addargs = [f2]
for arg in addargs:
powm = arg.match(s*x**k)
term = coeff[0]*powm[s]
if not powm[k].is_Symbol:
term = term.subs(n, n - powm[k].as_independent(n)[0])
startind = powm[k].subs(n, index)
# Seeing if the startterm can be reduced further.
# If it vanishes for n lesser than startind, it is
# equal to summation from n.
if startind:
for i in reversed(range(startind)):
if not term.subs(n, i):
seriesdict[term] = i
else:
seriesdict[term] = i + 1
break
else:
seriesdict[term] = S(0)
# Stripping of terms so that the sum starts with the same number.
teq = S(0)
suminit = seriesdict.values()
rkeys = seriesdict.keys()
req = Add(*rkeys)
if any(suminit):
maxval = max(suminit)
for term in seriesdict:
val = seriesdict[term]
if val != maxval:
for i in range(val, maxval):
teq += term.subs(n, val)
finaldict = {}
if teq:
fargs = teq.atoms(AppliedUndef)
if len(fargs) == 1:
finaldict[fargs.pop()] = 0
else:
maxf = max(fargs, key = lambda x: x.args[0])
sol = solve(teq, maxf)
if isinstance(sol, list):
sol = sol[0]
finaldict[maxf] = sol
# Finding the recurrence relation in terms of the largest term.
fargs = req.atoms(AppliedUndef)
maxf = max(fargs, key = lambda x: x.args[0])
minf = min(fargs, key = lambda x: x.args[0])
if minf.args[0].is_Symbol:
startiter = 0
else:
startiter = -minf.args[0].as_independent(n)[0]
lhs = maxf
rhs = solve(req, maxf)
if isinstance(rhs, list):
rhs = rhs[0]
# Checking how many values are already present
tcounter = len([t for t in finaldict.values() if t])
for _ in range(tcounter, terms - 3): # Assuming c0 and c1 to be arbitrary
check = rhs.subs(n, startiter)
nlhs = lhs.subs(n, startiter)
nrhs = check.subs(finaldict)
finaldict[nlhs] = nrhs
startiter += 1
# Post processing
series = C0 + C1*(x - x0)
for term in finaldict:
if finaldict[term]:
fact = term.args[0]
series += (finaldict[term].subs([(recurr(0), C0), (recurr(1), C1)])*(
x - x0)**fact)
series = collect(expand_mul(series), [C0, C1]) + Order(x**terms)
return Eq(f(x), series)
def ode_2nd_power_series_regular(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Gives a power series solution to a second order homogeneous differential
equation with polynomial coefficients at a regular point. A second order
homogenous differential equation is of the form
.. math :: P(x)\frac{d^2y}{dx^2} + Q(x)\frac{dy}{dx} + R(x) = 0
A point is said to regular singular at `x0` if `x - x0\frac{Q(x)}{P(x)}`
and `(x - x0)^{2}\frac{R(x)}{P(x)}` are analytic at `x0`. For simplicity
`P(x)`, `Q(x)` and `R(x)` are assumed to be polynomials. The algorithm for
finding the power series solutions is:
1. Try expressing `(x - x0)P(x)` and `((x - x0)^{2})Q(x)` as power series
solutions about x0. Find `p0` and `q0` which are the constants of the
power series expansions.
2. Solve the indicial equation `f(m) = m(m - 1) + m*p0 + q0`, to obtain the
roots `m1` and `m2` of the indicial equation.
3. If `m1 - m2` is a non integer there exists two series solutions. If
`m1 = m2`, there exists only one solution. If `m1 - m2` is an integer,
then the existence of one solution is confirmed. The other solution may
or may not exist.
The power series solution is of the form `x^{m}\sum_{n=0}^\infty a_{n}x^{n}`. The
coefficients are determined by the following recurrence relation.
`a_{n} = -\frac{\sum_{k=0}^{n-1} q_{n-k} + (m + k)p_{n-k}}{f(m + n)}`. For the case
in which `m1 - m2` is an integer, it can be seen from the recurrence relation
that for the lower root `m`, when `n` equals the difference of both the
roots, the denominator becomes zero. So if the numerator is not equal to zero,
a second series solution exists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import dsolve, Function, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Function("f")
>>> eq = x*(f(x).diff(x, 2)) + 2*(f(x).diff(x)) + x*f(x)
>>> pprint(dsolve(eq))
/ 6 4 2 \
| x x x |
/ 4 2 \ C1*|- --- + -- - -- + 1|
| x x | \ 720 24 2 / / 6\
f(x) = C2*|--- - -- + 1| + ------------------------ + O\x /
\120 6 / x
References
==========
- George E. Simmons, "Differential Equations with Applications and
Historical Notes", p.p 176 - 184
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
C0, C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
n = Dummy("n")
m = Dummy("m") # for solving the indicial equation
s = Wild("s")
k = Wild("k", exclude=[x])
x0 = match.get('x0')
terms = match.get('terms', 5)
p = match['p']
q = match['q']
# Generating the indicial equation
indicial = []
for term in [p, q]:
if not term.has(x):
indicial.append(term)
else:
term = series(term, n=1, x0=x0)
if isinstance(term, Order):
indicial.append(S(0))
else:
for arg in term.args:
if not arg.has(x):
indicial.append(arg)
break
p0, q0 = indicial
sollist = solve(m*(m - 1) + m*p0 + q0, m)
if sollist and isinstance(sollist, list) and all(
[sol.is_real for sol in sollist]):
serdict1 = {}
serdict2 = {}
if len(sollist) == 1:
# Only one series solution exists in this case.
m1 = m2 = sollist.pop()
if terms-m1-1 <= 0:
return Eq(f(x), Order(terms))
serdict1 = _frobenius(terms-m1-1, m1, p0, q0, p, q, x0, x, C0)
else:
m1 = sollist[0]
m2 = sollist[1]
if m1 < m2:
m1, m2 = m2, m1
# Irrespective of whether m1 - m2 is an integer or not, one
# Frobenius series solution exists.
serdict1 = _frobenius(terms-m1-1, m1, p0, q0, p, q, x0, x, C0)
if not (m1 - m2).is_integer:
# Second frobenius series solution exists.
serdict2 = _frobenius(terms-m2-1, m2, p0, q0, p, q, x0, x, C1)
else:
# Check if second frobenius series solution exists.
serdict2 = _frobenius(terms-m2-1, m2, p0, q0, p, q, x0, x, C1, check=m1)
if serdict1:
finalseries1 = C0
for key in serdict1:
power = int(key.name[1:])
finalseries1 += serdict1[key]*(x - x0)**power
finalseries1 = (x - x0)**m1*finalseries1
finalseries2 = S(0)
if serdict2:
for key in serdict2:
power = int(key.name[1:])
finalseries2 += serdict2[key]*(x - x0)**power
finalseries2 += C1
finalseries2 = (x - x0)**m2*finalseries2
return Eq(f(x), collect(finalseries1 + finalseries2,
[C0, C1]) + Order(x**terms))
def _frobenius(n, m, p0, q0, p, q, x0, x, c, check=None):
r"""
Returns a dict with keys as coefficients and values as their values in terms of C0
"""
n = int(n)
# In cases where m1 - m2 is not an integer
m2 = check
d = Dummy("d")
numsyms = numbered_symbols("C", start=0)
numsyms = [next(numsyms) for i in range(n + 1)]
C0 = Symbol("C0")
serlist = []
for ser in [p, q]:
# Order term not present
if ser.is_polynomial(x) and Poly(ser, x).degree() <= n:
if x0:
ser = ser.subs(x, x + x0)
dict_ = Poly(ser, x).as_dict()
# Order term present
else:
tseries = series(ser, x=x0, n=n+1)
# Removing order
dict_ = Poly(list(ordered(tseries.args))[: -1], x).as_dict()
# Fill in with zeros, if coefficients are zero.
for i in range(n + 1):
if (i,) not in dict_:
dict_[(i,)] = S(0)
serlist.append(dict_)
pseries = serlist[0]
qseries = serlist[1]
indicial = d*(d - 1) + d*p0 + q0
frobdict = {}
for i in range(1, n + 1):
num = c*(m*pseries[(i,)] + qseries[(i,)])
for j in range(1, i):
sym = Symbol("C" + str(j))
num += frobdict[sym]*((m + j)*pseries[(i - j,)] + qseries[(i - j,)])
# Checking for cases when m1 - m2 is an integer. If num equals zero
# then a second Frobenius series solution cannot be found. If num is not zero
# then set constant as zero and proceed.
if m2 is not None and i == m2 - m:
if num:
return False
else:
frobdict[numsyms[i]] = S(0)
else:
frobdict[numsyms[i]] = -num/(indicial.subs(d, m+i))
return frobdict
def _nth_algebraic_match(eq, func):
r"""
Matches any differential equation that nth_algebraic can solve. Uses
`sympy.solve` but teaches it how to integrate derivatives.
This involves calling `sympy.solve` and does most of the work of finding a
solution (apart from evaluating the integrals).
"""
# Each integration should generate a different constant
constants = iter(numbered_symbols(prefix='C', cls=Symbol, start=1))
constant = lambda: next(constants, None)
# Like Derivative but "invertible"
class diffx(Function):
def inverse(self):
# We mustn't use integrate here because fx has been replaced by _t
# in the equation so integrals will not be correct while solve is
# still working.
return lambda expr: Integral(expr, var) + constant()
# Replace derivatives wrt the independent variable with diffx
def replace(eq, var):
def expand_diffx(*args):
differand, diffs = args[0], args[1:]
toreplace = differand
for v, n in diffs:
for _ in range(n):
if v == var:
toreplace = diffx(toreplace)
else:
toreplace = Derivative(toreplace, v)
return toreplace
return eq.replace(Derivative, expand_diffx)
# Restore derivatives in solution afterwards
def unreplace(eq, var):
return eq.replace(diffx, lambda e: Derivative(e, var))
# The independent variable
var = func.args[0]
subs_eqn = replace(eq, var)
try:
solns = solve(subs_eqn, func)
except NotImplementedError:
solns = []
solns = [unreplace(soln, var) for soln in solns]
solns = [Equality(func, soln) for soln in solns]
return {'var':var, 'solutions':solns}
def ode_nth_algebraic(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves an `n`\th order ordinary differential equation using algebra and
integrals.
There is no general form for the kind of equation that this can solve. The
the equation is solved algebraically treating differentiation as an
invertible algebraic function.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> eq = Eq(f(x) * (f(x).diff(x)**2 - 1), 0)
>>> dsolve(eq, f(x), hint='nth_algebraic')
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[Eq(f(x), 0), Eq(f(x), C1 - x), Eq(f(x), C1 + x)]
Note that this solver can return algebraic solutions that do not have any
integration constants (f(x) = 0 in the above example).
# indirect doctest
"""
solns = match['solutions']
var = match['var']
solns = _nth_algebraic_remove_redundant_solutions(eq, solns, order, var)
if len(solns) == 1:
return solns[0]
else:
return solns
# FIXME: Maybe something like this function should be applied to the solutions
# returned by dsolve in general rather than just for nth_algebraic...
def _nth_algebraic_remove_redundant_solutions(eq, solns, order, var):
r"""
Remove redundant solutions from the set of solutions returned by
nth_algebraic.
This function is needed because otherwise nth_algebraic can return
redundant solutions where both algebraic solutions and integral
solutions are found to the ODE. As an example consider:
eq = Eq(f(x) * f(x).diff(x), 0)
There are two ways to find solutions to eq. The first is the algebraic
solution f(x)=0. The second is to solve the equation f(x).diff(x) = 0
leading to the solution f(x) = C1. In this particular case we then see
that the first solution is a special case of the second and we don't
want to return it.
This does not always happen for algebraic solutions though since if we
have
eq = Eq(f(x)*(1 + f(x).diff(x)), 0)
then we get the algebraic solution f(x) = 0 and the integral solution
f(x) = -x + C1 and in this case the two solutions are not equivalent wrt
initial conditions so both should be returned.
"""
def is_special_case_of(soln1, soln2):
return _nth_algebraic_is_special_case_of(soln1, soln2, eq, order, var)
unique_solns = []
for soln1 in solns:
for soln2 in unique_solns[:]:
if is_special_case_of(soln1, soln2):
break
elif is_special_case_of(soln2, soln1):
unique_solns.remove(soln2)
else:
unique_solns.append(soln1)
return unique_solns
def _nth_algebraic_is_special_case_of(soln1, soln2, eq, order, var):
r"""
True if soln1 is found to be a special case of soln2 wrt some value of the
constants that appear in soln2. False otherwise.
"""
# The solutions returned by nth_algebraic should be given explicitly as in
# Eq(f(x), expr). We will equate the RHSs of the two solutions giving an
# equation f1(x) = f2(x).
#
# Since this is supposed to hold for all x it also holds for derivatives
# f1'(x) and f2'(x). For an order n ode we should be able to differentiate
# each solution n times to get n+1 equations.
#
# We then try to solve those n+1 equations for the integrations constants
# in f2(x). If we can find a solution that doesn't depend on x then it
# means that some value of the constants in f1(x) is a special case of
# f2(x) corresponding to a paritcular choice of the integration constants.
constants1 = soln1.free_symbols.difference(eq.free_symbols)
constants2 = soln2.free_symbols.difference(eq.free_symbols)
constants1_new = get_numbered_constants(soln1.rhs - soln2.rhs, len(constants1))
if len(constants1) == 1:
constants1_new = {constants1_new}
for c_old, c_new in zip(constants1, constants1_new):
soln1 = soln1.subs(c_old, c_new)
# n equations for f1(x)=f2(x), f1'(x)=f2'(x), ...
lhs = soln1.rhs.doit()
rhs = soln2.rhs.doit()
eqns = [Eq(lhs, rhs)]
for n in range(1, order):
lhs = lhs.diff(var)
rhs = rhs.diff(var)
eq = Eq(lhs, rhs)
eqns.append(eq)
# BooleanTrue/False awkwardly show up for trivial equations
if any(isinstance(eq, BooleanFalse) for eq in eqns):
return False
eqns = [eq for eq in eqns if not isinstance(eq, BooleanTrue)]
constant_solns = solve(eqns, constants2)
# Sometimes returns a dict and sometimes a list of dicts
if isinstance(constant_solns, dict):
constant_solns = [constant_solns]
# If any solution gives all constants as expressions that don't depend on
# x then there exists constants for soln2 that give soln1
for constant_soln in constant_solns:
if not any(c.has(var) for c in constant_soln.values()):
return True
else:
return False
def _nth_linear_match(eq, func, order):
r"""
Matches a differential equation to the linear form:
.. math:: a_n(x) y^{(n)} + \cdots + a_1(x)y' + a_0(x) y + B(x) = 0
Returns a dict of order:coeff terms, where order is the order of the
derivative on each term, and coeff is the coefficient of that derivative.
The key ``-1`` holds the function `B(x)`. Returns ``None`` if the ODE is
not linear. This function assumes that ``func`` has already been checked
to be good.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, cos, sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import _nth_linear_match
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> _nth_linear_match(f(x).diff(x, 3) + 2*f(x).diff(x) +
... x*f(x).diff(x, 2) + cos(x)*f(x).diff(x) + x - f(x) -
... sin(x), f(x), 3)
{-1: x - sin(x), 0: -1, 1: cos(x) + 2, 2: x, 3: 1}
>>> _nth_linear_match(f(x).diff(x, 3) + 2*f(x).diff(x) +
... x*f(x).diff(x, 2) + cos(x)*f(x).diff(x) + x - f(x) -
... sin(f(x)), f(x), 3) == None
True
"""
x = func.args[0]
one_x = {x}
terms = {i: S.Zero for i in range(-1, order + 1)}
for i in Add.make_args(eq):
if not i.has(func):
terms[-1] += i
else:
c, f = i.as_independent(func)
if (isinstance(f, Derivative)
and set(f.variables) == one_x
and f.args[0] == func):
terms[f.derivative_count] += c
elif f == func:
terms[len(f.args[1:])] += c
else:
return None
return terms
def ode_nth_linear_euler_eq_homogeneous(eq, func, order, match, returns='sol'):
r"""
Solves an `n`\th order linear homogeneous variable-coefficient
Cauchy-Euler equidimensional ordinary differential equation.
This is an equation with form `0 = a_0 f(x) + a_1 x f'(x) + a_2 x^2 f''(x)
\cdots`.
These equations can be solved in a general manner, by substituting
solutions of the form `f(x) = x^r`, and deriving a characteristic equation
for `r`. When there are repeated roots, we include extra terms of the
form `C_{r k} \ln^k(x) x^r`, where `C_{r k}` is an arbitrary integration
constant, `r` is a root of the characteristic equation, and `k` ranges
over the multiplicity of `r`. In the cases where the roots are complex,
solutions of the form `C_1 x^a \sin(b \log(x)) + C_2 x^a \cos(b \log(x))`
are returned, based on expansions with Euler's formula. The general
solution is the sum of the terms found. If SymPy cannot find exact roots
to the characteristic equation, a
:py:class:`~sympy.polys.rootoftools.CRootOf` instance will be returned
instead.
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> dsolve(4*x**2*f(x).diff(x, 2) + f(x), f(x),
... hint='nth_linear_euler_eq_homogeneous')
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
Eq(f(x), sqrt(x)*(C1 + C2*log(x)))
Note that because this method does not involve integration, there is no
``nth_linear_euler_eq_homogeneous_Integral`` hint.
The following is for internal use:
- ``returns = 'sol'`` returns the solution to the ODE.
- ``returns = 'list'`` returns a list of linearly independent solutions,
corresponding to the fundamental solution set, for use with non
homogeneous solution methods like variation of parameters and
undetermined coefficients. Note that, though the solutions should be
linearly independent, this function does not explicitly check that. You
can do ``assert simplify(wronskian(sollist)) != 0`` to check for linear
independence. Also, ``assert len(sollist) == order`` will need to pass.
- ``returns = 'both'``, return a dictionary ``{'sol': <solution to ODE>,
'list': <list of linearly independent solutions>}``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> eq = f(x).diff(x, 2)*x**2 - 4*f(x).diff(x)*x + 6*f(x)
>>> pprint(dsolve(eq, f(x),
... hint='nth_linear_euler_eq_homogeneous'))
2
f(x) = x *(C1 + C2*x)
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cauchy%E2%80%93Euler_equation
- C. Bender & S. Orszag, "Advanced Mathematical Methods for Scientists and
Engineers", Springer 1999, pp. 12
# indirect doctest
"""
global collectterms
collectterms = []
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match
# First, set up characteristic equation.
chareq, symbol = S.Zero, Dummy('x')
for i in r.keys():
if not isinstance(i, str) and i >= 0:
chareq += (r[i]*diff(x**symbol, x, i)*x**-symbol).expand()
chareq = Poly(chareq, symbol)
chareqroots = [rootof(chareq, k) for k in range(chareq.degree())]
# A generator of constants
constants = list(get_numbered_constants(eq, num=chareq.degree()*2))
constants.reverse()
# Create a dict root: multiplicity or charroots
charroots = defaultdict(int)
for root in chareqroots:
charroots[root] += 1
gsol = S(0)
# We need keep track of terms so we can run collect() at the end.
# This is necessary for constantsimp to work properly.
ln = log
for root, multiplicity in charroots.items():
for i in range(multiplicity):
if isinstance(root, RootOf):
gsol += (x**root) * constants.pop()
if multiplicity != 1:
raise ValueError("Value should be 1")
collectterms = [(0, root, 0)] + collectterms
elif root.is_real:
gsol += ln(x)**i*(x**root) * constants.pop()
collectterms = [(i, root, 0)] + collectterms
else:
reroot = re(root)
imroot = im(root)
gsol += ln(x)**i * (x**reroot) * (
constants.pop() * sin(abs(imroot)*ln(x))
+ constants.pop() * cos(imroot*ln(x)))
# Preserve ordering (multiplicity, real part, imaginary part)
# It will be assumed implicitly when constructing
# fundamental solution sets.
collectterms = [(i, reroot, imroot)] + collectterms
if returns == 'sol':
return Eq(f(x), gsol)
elif returns in ('list' 'both'):
# HOW TO TEST THIS CODE? (dsolve does not pass 'returns' through)
# Create a list of (hopefully) linearly independent solutions
gensols = []
# Keep track of when to use sin or cos for nonzero imroot
for i, reroot, imroot in collectterms:
if imroot == 0:
gensols.append(ln(x)**i*x**reroot)
else:
sin_form = ln(x)**i*x**reroot*sin(abs(imroot)*ln(x))
if sin_form in gensols:
cos_form = ln(x)**i*x**reroot*cos(imroot*ln(x))
gensols.append(cos_form)
else:
gensols.append(sin_form)
if returns == 'list':
return gensols
else:
return {'sol': Eq(f(x), gsol), 'list': gensols}
else:
raise ValueError('Unknown value for key "returns".')
def ode_nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_undetermined_coefficients(eq, func, order, match, returns='sol'):
r"""
Solves an `n`\th order linear non homogeneous Cauchy-Euler equidimensional
ordinary differential equation using undetermined coefficients.
This is an equation with form `g(x) = a_0 f(x) + a_1 x f'(x) + a_2 x^2 f''(x)
\cdots`.
These equations can be solved in a general manner, by substituting
solutions of the form `x = exp(t)`, and deriving a characteristic equation
of form `g(exp(t)) = b_0 f(t) + b_1 f'(t) + b_2 f''(t) \cdots` which can
be then solved by nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients if
g(exp(t)) has finite number of linearly independent derivatives.
Functions that fit this requirement are finite sums functions of the form
`a x^i e^{b x} \sin(c x + d)` or `a x^i e^{b x} \cos(c x + d)`, where `i`
is a non-negative integer and `a`, `b`, `c`, and `d` are constants. For
example any polynomial in `x`, functions like `x^2 e^{2 x}`, `x \sin(x)`,
and `e^x \cos(x)` can all be used. Products of `\sin`'s and `\cos`'s have
a finite number of derivatives, because they can be expanded into `\sin(a
x)` and `\cos(b x)` terms. However, SymPy currently cannot do that
expansion, so you will need to manually rewrite the expression in terms of
the above to use this method. So, for example, you will need to manually
convert `\sin^2(x)` into `(1 + \cos(2 x))/2` to properly apply the method
of undetermined coefficients on it.
After replacement of x by exp(t), this method works by creating a trial function
from the expression and all of its linear independent derivatives and
substituting them into the original ODE. The coefficients for each term
will be a system of linear equations, which are be solved for and
substituted, giving the solution. If any of the trial functions are linearly
dependent on the solution to the homogeneous equation, they are multiplied
by sufficient `x` to make them linearly independent.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import dsolve, Function, Derivative, log
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> eq = x**2*Derivative(f(x), x, x) - 2*x*Derivative(f(x), x) + 2*f(x) - log(x)
>>> dsolve(eq, f(x),
... hint='nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_undetermined_coefficients').expand()
Eq(f(x), C1*x + C2*x**2 + log(x)/2 + 3/4)
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match
chareq, eq, symbol = S.Zero, S.Zero, Dummy('x')
for i in r.keys():
if not isinstance(i, str) and i >= 0:
chareq += (r[i]*diff(x**symbol, x, i)*x**-symbol).expand()
for i in range(1,degree(Poly(chareq, symbol))+1):
eq += chareq.coeff(symbol**i)*diff(f(x), x, i)
if chareq.as_coeff_add(symbol)[0]:
eq += chareq.as_coeff_add(symbol)[0]*f(x)
e, re = posify(r[-1].subs(x, exp(x)))
eq += e.subs(re)
match = _nth_linear_match(eq, f(x), ode_order(eq, f(x)))
match['trialset'] = r['trialset']
return ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients(eq, func, order, match).subs(x, log(x)).subs(f(log(x)), f(x)).expand()
def ode_nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_variation_of_parameters(eq, func, order, match, returns='sol'):
r"""
Solves an `n`\th order linear non homogeneous Cauchy-Euler equidimensional
ordinary differential equation using variation of parameters.
This is an equation with form `g(x) = a_0 f(x) + a_1 x f'(x) + a_2 x^2 f''(x)
\cdots`.
This method works by assuming that the particular solution takes the form
.. math:: \sum_{x=1}^{n} c_i(x) y_i(x) {a_n} {x^n} \text{,}
where `y_i` is the `i`\th solution to the homogeneous equation. The
solution is then solved using Wronskian's and Cramer's Rule. The
particular solution is given by multiplying eq given below with `a_n x^{n}`
.. math:: \sum_{x=1}^n \left( \int \frac{W_i(x)}{W(x)} \,dx
\right) y_i(x) \text{,}
where `W(x)` is the Wronskian of the fundamental system (the system of `n`
linearly independent solutions to the homogeneous equation), and `W_i(x)`
is the Wronskian of the fundamental system with the `i`\th column replaced
with `[0, 0, \cdots, 0, \frac{x^{- n}}{a_n} g{\left (x \right )}]`.
This method is general enough to solve any `n`\th order inhomogeneous
linear differential equation, but sometimes SymPy cannot simplify the
Wronskian well enough to integrate it. If this method hangs, try using the
``nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters_Integral`` hint and
simplifying the integrals manually. Also, prefer using
``nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients`` when it
applies, because it doesn't use integration, making it faster and more
reliable.
Warning, using simplify=False with
'nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters' in
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` may cause it to hang, because it will
not attempt to simplify the Wronskian before integrating. It is
recommended that you only use simplify=False with
'nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters_Integral' for this
method, especially if the solution to the homogeneous equation has
trigonometric functions in it.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Derivative
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> eq = x**2*Derivative(f(x), x, x) - 2*x*Derivative(f(x), x) + 2*f(x) - x**4
>>> dsolve(eq, f(x),
... hint='nth_linear_euler_eq_nonhomogeneous_variation_of_parameters').expand()
Eq(f(x), C1*x + C2*x**2 + x**4/6)
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match
gensol = ode_nth_linear_euler_eq_homogeneous(eq, func, order, match, returns='both')
match.update(gensol)
r[-1] = r[-1]/r[ode_order(eq, f(x))]
sol = _solve_variation_of_parameters(eq, func, order, match)
return Eq(f(x), r['sol'].rhs + (sol.rhs - r['sol'].rhs)*r[ode_order(eq, f(x))])
def ode_almost_linear(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves an almost-linear differential equation.
The general form of an almost linear differential equation is
.. math:: f(x) g(y) y + k(x) l(y) + m(x) = 0
\text{where} l'(y) = g(y)\text{.}
This can be solved by substituting `l(y) = u(y)`. Making the given
substitution reduces it to a linear differential equation of the form `u'
+ P(x) u + Q(x) = 0`.
The general solution is
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, n
>>> f, g, k, l = map(Function, ['f', 'g', 'k', 'l'])
>>> genform = Eq(f(x)*(l(y).diff(y)) + k(x)*l(y) + g(x))
>>> pprint(genform)
d
f(x)*--(l(y)) + g(x) + k(x)*l(y) = 0
dy
>>> pprint(dsolve(genform, hint = 'almost_linear'))
/ // y*k(x) \\
| || ------ ||
| || f(x) || -y*k(x)
| ||-g(x)*e || --------
| ||-------------- for k(x) != 0|| f(x)
l(y) = |C1 + |< k(x) ||*e
| || ||
| || -y*g(x) ||
| || -------- otherwise ||
| || f(x) ||
\ \\ //
See Also
========
:meth:`sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_linear`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Derivative, pprint
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import dsolve, classify_ode
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> d = f(x).diff(x)
>>> eq = x*d + x*f(x) + 1
>>> dsolve(eq, f(x), hint='almost_linear')
Eq(f(x), (C1 - Ei(x))*exp(-x))
>>> pprint(dsolve(eq, f(x), hint='almost_linear'))
-x
f(x) = (C1 - Ei(x))*e
References
==========
- Joel Moses, "Symbolic Integration - The Stormy Decade", Communications
of the ACM, Volume 14, Number 8, August 1971, pp. 558
"""
# Since ode_1st_linear has already been implemented, and the
# coefficients have been modified to the required form in
# classify_ode, just passing eq, func, order and match to
# ode_1st_linear will give the required output.
return ode_1st_linear(eq, func, order, match)
def _linear_coeff_match(expr, func):
r"""
Helper function to match hint ``linear_coefficients``.
Matches the expression to the form `(a_1 x + b_1 f(x) + c_1)/(a_2 x + b_2
f(x) + c_2)` where the following conditions hold:
1. `a_1`, `b_1`, `c_1`, `a_2`, `b_2`, `c_2` are Rationals;
2. `c_1` or `c_2` are not equal to zero;
3. `a_2 b_1 - a_1 b_2` is not equal to zero.
Return ``xarg``, ``yarg`` where
1. ``xarg`` = `(b_2 c_1 - b_1 c_2)/(a_2 b_1 - a_1 b_2)`
2. ``yarg`` = `(a_1 c_2 - a_2 c_1)/(a_2 b_1 - a_1 b_2)`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import _linear_coeff_match
>>> from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import sin
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> _linear_coeff_match((
... (-25*f(x) - 8*x + 62)/(4*f(x) + 11*x - 11)), f(x))
(1/9, 22/9)
>>> _linear_coeff_match(
... sin((-5*f(x) - 8*x + 6)/(4*f(x) + x - 1)), f(x))
(19/27, 2/27)
>>> _linear_coeff_match(sin(f(x)/x), f(x))
"""
f = func.func
x = func.args[0]
def abc(eq):
r'''
Internal function of _linear_coeff_match
that returns Rationals a, b, c
if eq is a*x + b*f(x) + c, else None.
'''
eq = _mexpand(eq)
c = eq.as_independent(x, f(x), as_Add=True)[0]
if not c.is_Rational:
return
a = eq.coeff(x)
if not a.is_Rational:
return
b = eq.coeff(f(x))
if not b.is_Rational:
return
if eq == a*x + b*f(x) + c:
return a, b, c
def match(arg):
r'''
Internal function of _linear_coeff_match that returns Rationals a1,
b1, c1, a2, b2, c2 and a2*b1 - a1*b2 of the expression (a1*x + b1*f(x)
+ c1)/(a2*x + b2*f(x) + c2) if one of c1 or c2 and a2*b1 - a1*b2 is
non-zero, else None.
'''
n, d = arg.together().as_numer_denom()
m = abc(n)
if m is not None:
a1, b1, c1 = m
m = abc(d)
if m is not None:
a2, b2, c2 = m
d = a2*b1 - a1*b2
if (c1 or c2) and d:
return a1, b1, c1, a2, b2, c2, d
m = [fi.args[0] for fi in expr.atoms(Function) if fi.func != f and
len(fi.args) == 1 and not fi.args[0].is_Function] or {expr}
m1 = match(m.pop())
if m1 and all(match(mi) == m1 for mi in m):
a1, b1, c1, a2, b2, c2, denom = m1
return (b2*c1 - b1*c2)/denom, (a1*c2 - a2*c1)/denom
def ode_linear_coefficients(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves a differential equation with linear coefficients.
The general form of a differential equation with linear coefficients is
.. math:: y' + F\left(\!\frac{a_1 x + b_1 y + c_1}{a_2 x + b_2 y +
c_2}\!\right) = 0\text{,}
where `a_1`, `b_1`, `c_1`, `a_2`, `b_2`, `c_2` are constants and `a_1 b_2
- a_2 b_1 \ne 0`.
This can be solved by substituting:
.. math:: x = x' + \frac{b_2 c_1 - b_1 c_2}{a_2 b_1 - a_1 b_2}
y = y' + \frac{a_1 c_2 - a_2 c_1}{a_2 b_1 - a_1
b_2}\text{.}
This substitution reduces the equation to a homogeneous differential
equation.
See Also
========
:meth:`sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_best`
:meth:`sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_indep_div_dep`
:meth:`sympy.solvers.ode.ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_subs_dep_div_indep`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Derivative, pprint
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import dsolve, classify_ode
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> df = f(x).diff(x)
>>> eq = (x + f(x) + 1)*df + (f(x) - 6*x + 1)
>>> dsolve(eq, hint='linear_coefficients')
[Eq(f(x), -x - sqrt(C1 + 7*x**2) - 1), Eq(f(x), -x + sqrt(C1 + 7*x**2) - 1)]
>>> pprint(dsolve(eq, hint='linear_coefficients'))
___________ ___________
/ 2 / 2
[f(x) = -x - \/ C1 + 7*x - 1, f(x) = -x + \/ C1 + 7*x - 1]
References
==========
- Joel Moses, "Symbolic Integration - The Stormy Decade", Communications
of the ACM, Volume 14, Number 8, August 1971, pp. 558
"""
return ode_1st_homogeneous_coeff_best(eq, func, order, match)
def ode_separable_reduced(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves a differential equation that can be reduced to the separable form.
The general form of this equation is
.. math:: y' + (y/x) H(x^n y) = 0\text{}.
This can be solved by substituting `u(y) = x^n y`. The equation then
reduces to the separable form `\frac{u'}{u (\mathrm{power} - H(u))} -
\frac{1}{x} = 0`.
The general solution is:
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x, n
>>> f, g = map(Function, ['f', 'g'])
>>> genform = f(x).diff(x) + (f(x)/x)*g(x**n*f(x))
>>> pprint(genform)
/ n \
d f(x)*g\x *f(x)/
--(f(x)) + ---------------
dx x
>>> pprint(dsolve(genform, hint='separable_reduced'))
n
x *f(x)
/
|
| 1
| ------------ dy = C1 + log(x)
| y*(n - g(y))
|
/
See Also
========
:meth:`sympy.solvers.ode.ode_separable`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Derivative, pprint
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import dsolve, classify_ode
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> d = f(x).diff(x)
>>> eq = (x - x**2*f(x))*d - f(x)
>>> dsolve(eq, hint='separable_reduced')
[Eq(f(x), (-sqrt(C1*x**2 + 1) + 1)/x), Eq(f(x), (sqrt(C1*x**2 + 1) + 1)/x)]
>>> pprint(dsolve(eq, hint='separable_reduced'))
___________ ___________
/ 2 / 2
- \/ C1*x + 1 + 1 \/ C1*x + 1 + 1
[f(x) = --------------------, f(x) = ------------------]
x x
References
==========
- Joel Moses, "Symbolic Integration - The Stormy Decade", Communications
of the ACM, Volume 14, Number 8, August 1971, pp. 558
"""
# Arguments are passed in a way so that they are coherent with the
# ode_separable function
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
y = Dummy('y')
u = match['u'].subs(match['t'], y)
ycoeff = 1/(y*(match['power'] - u))
m1 = {y: 1, x: -1/x, 'coeff': 1}
m2 = {y: ycoeff, x: 1, 'coeff': 1}
r = {'m1': m1, 'm2': m2, 'y': y, 'hint': x**match['power']*f(x)}
return ode_separable(eq, func, order, r)
def ode_1st_power_series(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
The power series solution is a method which gives the Taylor series expansion
to the solution of a differential equation.
For a first order differential equation `\frac{dy}{dx} = h(x, y)`, a power
series solution exists at a point `x = x_{0}` if `h(x, y)` is analytic at `x_{0}`.
The solution is given by
.. math:: y(x) = y(x_{0}) + \sum_{n = 1}^{\infty} \frac{F_{n}(x_{0},b)(x - x_{0})^n}{n!},
where `y(x_{0}) = b` is the value of y at the initial value of `x_{0}`.
To compute the values of the `F_{n}(x_{0},b)` the following algorithm is
followed, until the required number of terms are generated.
1. `F_1 = h(x_{0}, b)`
2. `F_{n+1} = \frac{\partial F_{n}}{\partial x} + \frac{\partial F_{n}}{\partial y}F_{1}`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Derivative, pprint, exp
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import dsolve
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> eq = exp(x)*(f(x).diff(x)) - f(x)
>>> pprint(dsolve(eq, hint='1st_power_series'))
3 4 5
C1*x C1*x C1*x / 6\
f(x) = C1 + C1*x - ----- + ----- + ----- + O\x /
6 24 60
References
==========
- Travis W. Walker, Analytic power series technique for solving first-order
differential equations, p.p 17, 18
"""
x = func.args[0]
y = match['y']
f = func.func
h = -match[match['d']]/match[match['e']]
point = match.get('f0')
value = match.get('f0val')
terms = match.get('terms')
# First term
F = h
if not h:
return Eq(f(x), value)
# Initialization
series = value
if terms > 1:
hc = h.subs({x: point, y: value})
if hc.has(oo) or hc.has(NaN) or hc.has(zoo):
# Derivative does not exist, not analytic
return Eq(f(x), oo)
elif hc:
series += hc*(x - point)
for factcount in range(2, terms):
Fnew = F.diff(x) + F.diff(y)*h
Fnewc = Fnew.subs({x: point, y: value})
# Same logic as above
if Fnewc.has(oo) or Fnewc.has(NaN) or Fnewc.has(-oo) or Fnewc.has(zoo):
return Eq(f(x), oo)
series += Fnewc*((x - point)**factcount)/factorial(factcount)
F = Fnew
series += Order(x**terms)
return Eq(f(x), series)
def ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous(eq, func, order, match,
returns='sol'):
r"""
Solves an `n`\th order linear homogeneous differential equation with
constant coefficients.
This is an equation of the form
.. math:: a_n f^{(n)}(x) + a_{n-1} f^{(n-1)}(x) + \cdots + a_1 f'(x)
+ a_0 f(x) = 0\text{.}
These equations can be solved in a general manner, by taking the roots of
the characteristic equation `a_n m^n + a_{n-1} m^{n-1} + \cdots + a_1 m +
a_0 = 0`. The solution will then be the sum of `C_n x^i e^{r x}` terms,
for each where `C_n` is an arbitrary constant, `r` is a root of the
characteristic equation and `i` is one of each from 0 to the multiplicity
of the root - 1 (for example, a root 3 of multiplicity 2 would create the
terms `C_1 e^{3 x} + C_2 x e^{3 x}`). The exponential is usually expanded
for complex roots using Euler's equation `e^{I x} = \cos(x) + I \sin(x)`.
Complex roots always come in conjugate pairs in polynomials with real
coefficients, so the two roots will be represented (after simplifying the
constants) as `e^{a x} \left(C_1 \cos(b x) + C_2 \sin(b x)\right)`.
If SymPy cannot find exact roots to the characteristic equation, a
:py:class:`~sympy.polys.rootoftools.CRootOf` instance will be return
instead.
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> dsolve(f(x).diff(x, 5) + 10*f(x).diff(x) - 2*f(x), f(x),
... hint='nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous')
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
Eq(f(x), C1*exp(x*CRootOf(_x**5 + 10*_x - 2, 0)) +
C2*exp(x*CRootOf(_x**5 + 10*_x - 2, 1)) +
C3*exp(x*CRootOf(_x**5 + 10*_x - 2, 2)) +
C4*exp(x*CRootOf(_x**5 + 10*_x - 2, 3)) +
C5*exp(x*CRootOf(_x**5 + 10*_x - 2, 4)))
Note that because this method does not involve integration, there is no
``nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous_Integral`` hint.
The following is for internal use:
- ``returns = 'sol'`` returns the solution to the ODE.
- ``returns = 'list'`` returns a list of linearly independent solutions,
for use with non homogeneous solution methods like variation of
parameters and undetermined coefficients. Note that, though the
solutions should be linearly independent, this function does not
explicitly check that. You can do ``assert simplify(wronskian(sollist))
!= 0`` to check for linear independence. Also, ``assert len(sollist) ==
order`` will need to pass.
- ``returns = 'both'``, return a dictionary ``{'sol': <solution to ODE>,
'list': <list of linearly independent solutions>}``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(f(x).diff(x, 4) + 2*f(x).diff(x, 3) -
... 2*f(x).diff(x, 2) - 6*f(x).diff(x) + 5*f(x), f(x),
... hint='nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous'))
x -2*x
f(x) = (C1 + C2*x)*e + (C3*sin(x) + C4*cos(x))*e
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_differential_equation section:
Nonhomogeneous_equation_with_constant_coefficients
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 211
# indirect doctest
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match
# First, set up characteristic equation.
chareq, symbol = S.Zero, Dummy('x')
for i in r.keys():
if type(i) == str or i < 0:
pass
else:
chareq += r[i]*symbol**i
chareq = Poly(chareq, symbol)
# Can't just call roots because it doesn't return rootof for unsolveable
# polynomials.
chareqroots = roots(chareq, multiple=True)
if len(chareqroots) != order:
chareqroots = [rootof(chareq, k) for k in range(chareq.degree())]
chareq_is_complex = not all([i.is_real for i in chareq.all_coeffs()])
# A generator of constants
constants = list(get_numbered_constants(eq, num=chareq.degree()*2))
# Create a dict root: multiplicity or charroots
charroots = defaultdict(int)
for root in chareqroots:
charroots[root] += 1
gsol = S(0)
# We need to keep track of terms so we can run collect() at the end.
# This is necessary for constantsimp to work properly.
global collectterms
collectterms = []
gensols = []
conjugate_roots = [] # used to prevent double-use of conjugate roots
for root, multiplicity in charroots.items():
for i in range(multiplicity):
if isinstance(root, RootOf):
gensols.append(exp(root*x))
if multiplicity != 1:
raise ValueError("Value should be 1")
# This ordering is important
collectterms = [(0, root, 0)] + collectterms
else:
if chareq_is_complex:
gensols.append(x**i*exp(root*x))
collectterms = [(i, root, 0)] + collectterms
continue
reroot = re(root)
imroot = im(root)
if imroot.has(atan2) and reroot.has(atan2):
# Remove this condition when re and im stop returning
# circular atan2 usages.
gensols.append(x**i*exp(root*x))
collectterms = [(i, root, 0)] + collectterms
else:
if root in conjugate_roots:
collectterms = [(i, reroot, imroot)] + collectterms
continue
if imroot == 0:
gensols.append(x**i*exp(reroot*x))
collectterms = [(i, reroot, 0)] + collectterms
continue
conjugate_roots.append(conjugate(root))
gensols.append(x**i*exp(reroot*x) * sin(abs(imroot) * x))
gensols.append(x**i*exp(reroot*x) * cos( imroot * x))
# This ordering is important
collectterms = [(i, reroot, imroot)] + collectterms
if returns == 'list':
return gensols
elif returns in ('sol' 'both'):
gsol = Add(*[i*j for (i,j) in zip(constants, gensols)])
if returns == 'sol':
return Eq(f(x), gsol)
else:
return {'sol': Eq(f(x), gsol), 'list': gensols}
else:
raise ValueError('Unknown value for key "returns".')
def ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves an `n`\th order linear differential equation with constant
coefficients using the method of undetermined coefficients.
This method works on differential equations of the form
.. math:: a_n f^{(n)}(x) + a_{n-1} f^{(n-1)}(x) + \cdots + a_1 f'(x)
+ a_0 f(x) = P(x)\text{,}
where `P(x)` is a function that has a finite number of linearly
independent derivatives.
Functions that fit this requirement are finite sums functions of the form
`a x^i e^{b x} \sin(c x + d)` or `a x^i e^{b x} \cos(c x + d)`, where `i`
is a non-negative integer and `a`, `b`, `c`, and `d` are constants. For
example any polynomial in `x`, functions like `x^2 e^{2 x}`, `x \sin(x)`,
and `e^x \cos(x)` can all be used. Products of `\sin`'s and `\cos`'s have
a finite number of derivatives, because they can be expanded into `\sin(a
x)` and `\cos(b x)` terms. However, SymPy currently cannot do that
expansion, so you will need to manually rewrite the expression in terms of
the above to use this method. So, for example, you will need to manually
convert `\sin^2(x)` into `(1 + \cos(2 x))/2` to properly apply the method
of undetermined coefficients on it.
This method works by creating a trial function from the expression and all
of its linear independent derivatives and substituting them into the
original ODE. The coefficients for each term will be a system of linear
equations, which are be solved for and substituted, giving the solution.
If any of the trial functions are linearly dependent on the solution to
the homogeneous equation, they are multiplied by sufficient `x` to make
them linearly independent.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, pprint, exp, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(f(x).diff(x, 2) + 2*f(x).diff(x) + f(x) -
... 4*exp(-x)*x**2 + cos(2*x), f(x),
... hint='nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients'))
/ 4\
| x | -x 4*sin(2*x) 3*cos(2*x)
f(x) = |C1 + C2*x + --|*e - ---------- + ----------
\ 3 / 25 25
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_of_undetermined_coefficients
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 221
# indirect doctest
"""
gensol = ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous(eq, func, order, match,
returns='both')
match.update(gensol)
return _solve_undetermined_coefficients(eq, func, order, match)
def _solve_undetermined_coefficients(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Helper function for the method of undetermined coefficients.
See the
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients`
docstring for more information on this method.
The parameter ``match`` should be a dictionary that has the following
keys:
``list``
A list of solutions to the homogeneous equation, such as the list
returned by
``ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous(returns='list')``.
``sol``
The general solution, such as the solution returned by
``ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous(returns='sol')``.
``trialset``
The set of trial functions as returned by
``_undetermined_coefficients_match()['trialset']``.
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match
coeffs = numbered_symbols('a', cls=Dummy)
coefflist = []
gensols = r['list']
gsol = r['sol']
trialset = r['trialset']
notneedset = set([])
newtrialset = set([])
global collectterms
if len(gensols) != order:
raise NotImplementedError("Cannot find " + str(order) +
" solutions to the homogeneous equation necessary to apply" +
" undetermined coefficients to " + str(eq) +
" (number of terms != order)")
usedsin = set([])
mult = 0 # The multiplicity of the root
getmult = True
for i, reroot, imroot in collectterms:
if getmult:
mult = i + 1
getmult = False
if i == 0:
getmult = True
if imroot:
# Alternate between sin and cos
if (i, reroot) in usedsin:
check = x**i*exp(reroot*x)*cos(imroot*x)
else:
check = x**i*exp(reroot*x)*sin(abs(imroot)*x)
usedsin.add((i, reroot))
else:
check = x**i*exp(reroot*x)
if check in trialset:
# If an element of the trial function is already part of the
# homogeneous solution, we need to multiply by sufficient x to
# make it linearly independent. We also don't need to bother
# checking for the coefficients on those elements, since we
# already know it will be 0.
while True:
if check*x**mult in trialset:
mult += 1
else:
break
trialset.add(check*x**mult)
notneedset.add(check)
newtrialset = trialset - notneedset
trialfunc = 0
for i in newtrialset:
c = next(coeffs)
coefflist.append(c)
trialfunc += c*i
eqs = sub_func_doit(eq, f(x), trialfunc)
coeffsdict = dict(list(zip(trialset, [0]*(len(trialset) + 1))))
eqs = _mexpand(eqs)
for i in Add.make_args(eqs):
s = separatevars(i, dict=True, symbols=[x])
coeffsdict[s[x]] += s['coeff']
coeffvals = solve(list(coeffsdict.values()), coefflist)
if not coeffvals:
raise NotImplementedError(
"Could not solve `%s` using the "
"method of undetermined coefficients "
"(unable to solve for coefficients)." % eq)
psol = trialfunc.subs(coeffvals)
return Eq(f(x), gsol.rhs + psol)
def _undetermined_coefficients_match(expr, x):
r"""
Returns a trial function match if undetermined coefficients can be applied
to ``expr``, and ``None`` otherwise.
A trial expression can be found for an expression for use with the method
of undetermined coefficients if the expression is an
additive/multiplicative combination of constants, polynomials in `x` (the
independent variable of expr), `\sin(a x + b)`, `\cos(a x + b)`, and
`e^{a x}` terms (in other words, it has a finite number of linearly
independent derivatives).
Note that you may still need to multiply each term returned here by
sufficient `x` to make it linearly independent with the solutions to the
homogeneous equation.
This is intended for internal use by ``undetermined_coefficients`` hints.
SymPy currently has no way to convert `\sin^n(x) \cos^m(y)` into a sum of
only `\sin(a x)` and `\cos(b x)` terms, so these are not implemented. So,
for example, you will need to manually convert `\sin^2(x)` into `[1 +
\cos(2 x)]/2` to properly apply the method of undetermined coefficients on
it.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import log, exp
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import _undetermined_coefficients_match
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> _undetermined_coefficients_match(9*x*exp(x) + exp(-x), x)
{'test': True, 'trialset': {x*exp(x), exp(-x), exp(x)}}
>>> _undetermined_coefficients_match(log(x), x)
{'test': False}
"""
a = Wild('a', exclude=[x])
b = Wild('b', exclude=[x])
expr = powsimp(expr, combine='exp') # exp(x)*exp(2*x + 1) => exp(3*x + 1)
retdict = {}
def _test_term(expr, x):
r"""
Test if ``expr`` fits the proper form for undetermined coefficients.
"""
if not expr.has(x):
return True
elif expr.is_Add:
return all(_test_term(i, x) for i in expr.args)
elif expr.is_Mul:
if expr.has(sin, cos):
foundtrig = False
# Make sure that there is only one trig function in the args.
# See the docstring.
for i in expr.args:
if i.has(sin, cos):
if foundtrig:
return False
else:
foundtrig = True
return all(_test_term(i, x) for i in expr.args)
elif expr.is_Function:
if expr.func in (sin, cos, exp):
if expr.args[0].match(a*x + b):
return True
else:
return False
else:
return False
elif expr.is_Pow and expr.base.is_Symbol and expr.exp.is_Integer and \
expr.exp >= 0:
return True
elif expr.is_Pow and expr.base.is_number:
if expr.exp.match(a*x + b):
return True
else:
return False
elif expr.is_Symbol or expr.is_number:
return True
else:
return False
def _get_trial_set(expr, x, exprs=set([])):
r"""
Returns a set of trial terms for undetermined coefficients.
The idea behind undetermined coefficients is that the terms expression
repeat themselves after a finite number of derivatives, except for the
coefficients (they are linearly dependent). So if we collect these,
we should have the terms of our trial function.
"""
def _remove_coefficient(expr, x):
r"""
Returns the expression without a coefficient.
Similar to expr.as_independent(x)[1], except it only works
multiplicatively.
"""
term = S.One
if expr.is_Mul:
for i in expr.args:
if i.has(x):
term *= i
elif expr.has(x):
term = expr
return term
expr = expand_mul(expr)
if expr.is_Add:
for term in expr.args:
if _remove_coefficient(term, x) in exprs:
pass
else:
exprs.add(_remove_coefficient(term, x))
exprs = exprs.union(_get_trial_set(term, x, exprs))
else:
term = _remove_coefficient(expr, x)
tmpset = exprs.union({term})
oldset = set([])
while tmpset != oldset:
# If you get stuck in this loop, then _test_term is probably
# broken
oldset = tmpset.copy()
expr = expr.diff(x)
term = _remove_coefficient(expr, x)
if term.is_Add:
tmpset = tmpset.union(_get_trial_set(term, x, tmpset))
else:
tmpset.add(term)
exprs = tmpset
return exprs
retdict['test'] = _test_term(expr, x)
if retdict['test']:
# Try to generate a list of trial solutions that will have the
# undetermined coefficients. Note that if any of these are not linearly
# independent with any of the solutions to the homogeneous equation,
# then they will need to be multiplied by sufficient x to make them so.
# This function DOES NOT do that (it doesn't even look at the
# homogeneous equation).
retdict['trialset'] = _get_trial_set(expr, x)
return retdict
def ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves an `n`\th order linear differential equation with constant
coefficients using the method of variation of parameters.
This method works on any differential equations of the form
.. math:: f^{(n)}(x) + a_{n-1} f^{(n-1)}(x) + \cdots + a_1 f'(x) + a_0
f(x) = P(x)\text{.}
This method works by assuming that the particular solution takes the form
.. math:: \sum_{x=1}^{n} c_i(x) y_i(x)\text{,}
where `y_i` is the `i`\th solution to the homogeneous equation. The
solution is then solved using Wronskian's and Cramer's Rule. The
particular solution is given by
.. math:: \sum_{x=1}^n \left( \int \frac{W_i(x)}{W(x)} \,dx
\right) y_i(x) \text{,}
where `W(x)` is the Wronskian of the fundamental system (the system of `n`
linearly independent solutions to the homogeneous equation), and `W_i(x)`
is the Wronskian of the fundamental system with the `i`\th column replaced
with `[0, 0, \cdots, 0, P(x)]`.
This method is general enough to solve any `n`\th order inhomogeneous
linear differential equation with constant coefficients, but sometimes
SymPy cannot simplify the Wronskian well enough to integrate it. If this
method hangs, try using the
``nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters_Integral`` hint and
simplifying the integrals manually. Also, prefer using
``nth_linear_constant_coeff_undetermined_coefficients`` when it
applies, because it doesn't use integration, making it faster and more
reliable.
Warning, using simplify=False with
'nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters' in
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.dsolve` may cause it to hang, because it will
not attempt to simplify the Wronskian before integrating. It is
recommended that you only use simplify=False with
'nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters_Integral' for this
method, especially if the solution to the homogeneous equation has
trigonometric functions in it.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, pprint, exp, log
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(f(x).diff(x, 3) - 3*f(x).diff(x, 2) +
... 3*f(x).diff(x) - f(x) - exp(x)*log(x), f(x),
... hint='nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters'))
/ 3 \
| 2 x *(6*log(x) - 11)| x
f(x) = |C1 + C2*x + C3*x + ------------------|*e
\ 36 /
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variation_of_parameters
- http://planetmath.org/VariationOfParameters
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 233
# indirect doctest
"""
gensol = ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous(eq, func, order, match,
returns='both')
match.update(gensol)
return _solve_variation_of_parameters(eq, func, order, match)
def _solve_variation_of_parameters(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Helper function for the method of variation of parameters and nonhomogeneous euler eq.
See the
:py:meth:`~sympy.solvers.ode.ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_variation_of_parameters`
docstring for more information on this method.
The parameter ``match`` should be a dictionary that has the following
keys:
``list``
A list of solutions to the homogeneous equation, such as the list
returned by
``ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous(returns='list')``.
``sol``
The general solution, such as the solution returned by
``ode_nth_linear_constant_coeff_homogeneous(returns='sol')``.
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
r = match
psol = 0
gensols = r['list']
gsol = r['sol']
wr = wronskian(gensols, x)
if r.get('simplify', True):
wr = simplify(wr) # We need much better simplification for
# some ODEs. See issue 4662, for example.
# To reduce commonly occurring sin(x)**2 + cos(x)**2 to 1
wr = trigsimp(wr, deep=True, recursive=True)
if not wr:
# The wronskian will be 0 iff the solutions are not linearly
# independent.
raise NotImplementedError("Cannot find " + str(order) +
" solutions to the homogeneous equation necessary to apply " +
"variation of parameters to " + str(eq) + " (Wronskian == 0)")
if len(gensols) != order:
raise NotImplementedError("Cannot find " + str(order) +
" solutions to the homogeneous equation necessary to apply " +
"variation of parameters to " +
str(eq) + " (number of terms != order)")
negoneterm = (-1)**(order)
for i in gensols:
psol += negoneterm*Integral(wronskian([sol for sol in gensols if sol != i], x)*r[-1]/wr, x)*i/r[order]
negoneterm *= -1
if r.get('simplify', True):
psol = simplify(psol)
psol = trigsimp(psol, deep=True)
return Eq(f(x), gsol.rhs + psol)
def ode_separable(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
Solves separable 1st order differential equations.
This is any differential equation that can be written as `P(y)
\tfrac{dy}{dx} = Q(x)`. The solution can then just be found by
rearranging terms and integrating: `\int P(y) \,dy = \int Q(x) \,dx`.
This hint uses :py:meth:`sympy.simplify.simplify.separatevars` as its back
end, so if a separable equation is not caught by this solver, it is most
likely the fault of that function.
:py:meth:`~sympy.simplify.simplify.separatevars` is
smart enough to do most expansion and factoring necessary to convert a
separable equation `F(x, y)` into the proper form `P(x)\cdot{}Q(y)`. The
general solution is::
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> a, b, c, d, f = map(Function, ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'f'])
>>> genform = Eq(a(x)*b(f(x))*f(x).diff(x), c(x)*d(f(x)))
>>> pprint(genform)
d
a(x)*b(f(x))*--(f(x)) = c(x)*d(f(x))
dx
>>> pprint(dsolve(genform, f(x), hint='separable_Integral'))
f(x)
/ /
| |
| b(y) | c(x)
| ---- dy = C1 + | ---- dx
| d(y) | a(x)
| |
/ /
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(Eq(f(x)*f(x).diff(x) + x, 3*x*f(x)**2), f(x),
... hint='separable', simplify=False))
/ 2 \ 2
log\3*f (x) - 1/ x
---------------- = C1 + --
6 2
References
==========
- M. Tenenbaum & H. Pollard, "Ordinary Differential Equations",
Dover 1963, pp. 52
# indirect doctest
"""
x = func.args[0]
f = func.func
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
r = match # {'m1':m1, 'm2':m2, 'y':y}
u = r.get('hint', f(x)) # get u from separable_reduced else get f(x)
return Eq(Integral(r['m2']['coeff']*r['m2'][r['y']]/r['m1'][r['y']],
(r['y'], None, u)), Integral(-r['m1']['coeff']*r['m1'][x]/
r['m2'][x], x) + C1)
def checkinfsol(eq, infinitesimals, func=None, order=None):
r"""
This function is used to check if the given infinitesimals are the
actual infinitesimals of the given first order differential equation.
This method is specific to the Lie Group Solver of ODEs.
As of now, it simply checks, by substituting the infinitesimals in the
partial differential equation.
.. math:: \frac{\partial \eta}{\partial x} + \left(\frac{\partial \eta}{\partial y}
- \frac{\partial \xi}{\partial x}\right)*h
- \frac{\partial \xi}{\partial y}*h^{2}
- \xi\frac{\partial h}{\partial x} - \eta\frac{\partial h}{\partial y} = 0
where `\eta`, and `\xi` are the infinitesimals and `h(x,y) = \frac{dy}{dx}`
The infinitesimals should be given in the form of a list of dicts
``[{xi(x, y): inf, eta(x, y): inf}]``, corresponding to the
output of the function infinitesimals. It returns a list
of values of the form ``[(True/False, sol)]`` where ``sol`` is the value
obtained after substituting the infinitesimals in the PDE. If it
is ``True``, then ``sol`` would be 0.
"""
if isinstance(eq, Equality):
eq = eq.lhs - eq.rhs
if not func:
eq, func = _preprocess(eq)
variables = func.args
if len(variables) != 1:
raise ValueError("ODE's have only one independent variable")
else:
x = variables[0]
if not order:
order = ode_order(eq, func)
if order != 1:
raise NotImplementedError("Lie groups solver has been implemented "
"only for first order differential equations")
else:
df = func.diff(x)
a = Wild('a', exclude = [df])
b = Wild('b', exclude = [df])
match = collect(expand(eq), df).match(a*df + b)
if match:
h = -simplify(match[b]/match[a])
else:
try:
sol = solve(eq, df)
except NotImplementedError:
raise NotImplementedError("Infinitesimals for the "
"first order ODE could not be found")
else:
h = sol[0] # Find infinitesimals for one solution
y = Dummy('y')
h = h.subs(func, y)
xi = Function('xi')(x, y)
eta = Function('eta')(x, y)
dxi = Function('xi')(x, func)
deta = Function('eta')(x, func)
pde = (eta.diff(x) + (eta.diff(y) - xi.diff(x))*h -
(xi.diff(y))*h**2 - xi*(h.diff(x)) - eta*(h.diff(y)))
soltup = []
for sol in infinitesimals:
tsol = {xi: S(sol[dxi]).subs(func, y),
eta: S(sol[deta]).subs(func, y)}
sol = simplify(pde.subs(tsol).doit())
if sol:
soltup.append((False, sol.subs(y, func)))
else:
soltup.append((True, 0))
return soltup
def ode_lie_group(eq, func, order, match):
r"""
This hint implements the Lie group method of solving first order differential
equations. The aim is to convert the given differential equation from the
given coordinate given system into another coordinate system where it becomes
invariant under the one-parameter Lie group of translations. The converted ODE is
quadrature and can be solved easily. It makes use of the
:py:meth:`sympy.solvers.ode.infinitesimals` function which returns the
infinitesimals of the transformation.
The coordinates `r` and `s` can be found by solving the following Partial
Differential Equations.
.. math :: \xi\frac{\partial r}{\partial x} + \eta\frac{\partial r}{\partial y}
= 0
.. math :: \xi\frac{\partial s}{\partial x} + \eta\frac{\partial s}{\partial y}
= 1
The differential equation becomes separable in the new coordinate system
.. math :: \frac{ds}{dr} = \frac{\frac{\partial s}{\partial x} +
h(x, y)\frac{\partial s}{\partial y}}{
\frac{\partial r}{\partial x} + h(x, y)\frac{\partial r}{\partial y}}
After finding the solution by integration, it is then converted back to the original
coordinate system by substituting `r` and `s` in terms of `x` and `y` again.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, dsolve, Eq, exp, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> pprint(dsolve(f(x).diff(x) + 2*x*f(x) - x*exp(-x**2), f(x),
... hint='lie_group'))
/ 2\ 2
| x | -x
f(x) = |C1 + --|*e
\ 2 /
References
==========
- Solving differential equations by Symmetry Groups,
John Starrett, pp. 1 - pp. 14
"""
heuristics = lie_heuristics
inf = {}
f = func.func
x = func.args[0]
df = func.diff(x)
xi = Function("xi")
eta = Function("eta")
a = Wild('a', exclude = [df])
b = Wild('b', exclude = [df])
xis = match.pop('xi')
etas = match.pop('eta')
if match:
h = -simplify(match[match['d']]/match[match['e']])
y = match['y']
else:
try:
sol = solve(eq, df)
if sol == []:
raise NotImplementedError
except NotImplementedError:
raise NotImplementedError("Unable to solve the differential equation " +
str(eq) + " by the lie group method")
else:
y = Dummy("y")
h = sol[0].subs(func, y)
if xis is not None and etas is not None:
inf = [{xi(x, f(x)): S(xis), eta(x, f(x)): S(etas)}]
if not checkinfsol(eq, inf, func=f(x), order=1)[0][0]:
raise ValueError("The given infinitesimals xi and eta"
" are not the infinitesimals to the given equation")
else:
heuristics = ["user_defined"]
match = {'h': h, 'y': y}
# This is done so that if:
# a] solve raises a NotImplementedError.
# b] any heuristic raises a ValueError
# another heuristic can be used.
tempsol = [] # Used by solve below
for heuristic in heuristics:
try:
if not inf:
inf = infinitesimals(eq, hint=heuristic, func=func, order=1, match=match)
except ValueError:
continue
else:
for infsim in inf:
xiinf = (infsim[xi(x, func)]).subs(func, y)
etainf = (infsim[eta(x, func)]).subs(func, y)
# This condition creates recursion while using pdsolve.
# Since the first step while solving a PDE of form
# a*(f(x, y).diff(x)) + b*(f(x, y).diff(y)) + c = 0
# is to solve the ODE dy/dx = b/a
if simplify(etainf/xiinf) == h:
continue
rpde = f(x, y).diff(x)*xiinf + f(x, y).diff(y)*etainf
r = pdsolve(rpde, func=f(x, y)).rhs
s = pdsolve(rpde - 1, func=f(x, y)).rhs
newcoord = [_lie_group_remove(coord) for coord in [r, s]]
r = Dummy("r")
s = Dummy("s")
C1 = Symbol("C1")
rcoord = newcoord[0]
scoord = newcoord[-1]
try:
sol = solve([r - rcoord, s - scoord], x, y, dict=True)
except NotImplementedError:
continue
else:
sol = sol[0]
xsub = sol[x]
ysub = sol[y]
num = simplify(scoord.diff(x) + scoord.diff(y)*h)
denom = simplify(rcoord.diff(x) + rcoord.diff(y)*h)
if num and denom:
diffeq = simplify((num/denom).subs([(x, xsub), (y, ysub)]))
sep = separatevars(diffeq, symbols=[r, s], dict=True)
if sep:
# Trying to separate, r and s coordinates
deq = integrate((1/sep[s]), s) + C1 - integrate(sep['coeff']*sep[r], r)
# Substituting and reverting back to original coordinates
deq = deq.subs([(r, rcoord), (s, scoord)])
try:
sdeq = solve(deq, y)
except NotImplementedError:
tempsol.append(deq)
else:
if len(sdeq) == 1:
return Eq(f(x), sdeq.pop())
else:
return [Eq(f(x), sol) for sol in sdeq]
elif denom: # (ds/dr) is zero which means s is constant
return Eq(f(x), solve(scoord - C1, y)[0])
elif num: # (dr/ds) is zero which means r is constant
return Eq(f(x), solve(rcoord - C1, y)[0])
# If nothing works, return solution as it is, without solving for y
if tempsol:
if len(tempsol) == 1:
return Eq(tempsol.pop().subs(y, f(x)), 0)
else:
return [Eq(sol.subs(y, f(x)), 0) for sol in tempsol]
raise NotImplementedError("The given ODE " + str(eq) + " cannot be solved by"
+ " the lie group method")
def _lie_group_remove(coords):
r"""
This function is strictly meant for internal use by the Lie group ODE solving
method. It replaces arbitrary functions returned by pdsolve with either 0 or 1 or the
args of the arbitrary function.
The algorithm used is:
1] If coords is an instance of an Undefined Function, then the args are returned
2] If the arbitrary function is present in an Add object, it is replaced by zero.
3] If the arbitrary function is present in an Mul object, it is replaced by one.
4] If coords has no Undefined Function, it is returned as it is.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import _lie_group_remove
>>> from sympy import Function
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> F = Function("F")
>>> eq = x**2*y
>>> _lie_group_remove(eq)
x**2*y
>>> eq = F(x**2*y)
>>> _lie_group_remove(eq)
x**2*y
>>> eq = y**2*x + F(x**3)
>>> _lie_group_remove(eq)
x*y**2
>>> eq = (F(x**3) + y)*x**4
>>> _lie_group_remove(eq)
x**4*y
"""
if isinstance(coords, AppliedUndef):
return coords.args[0]
elif coords.is_Add:
subfunc = coords.atoms(AppliedUndef)
if subfunc:
for func in subfunc:
coords = coords.subs(func, 0)
return coords
elif coords.is_Pow:
base, expr = coords.as_base_exp()
base = _lie_group_remove(base)
expr = _lie_group_remove(expr)
return base**expr
elif coords.is_Mul:
mulargs = []
coordargs = coords.args
for arg in coordargs:
if not isinstance(coords, AppliedUndef):
mulargs.append(_lie_group_remove(arg))
return Mul(*mulargs)
return coords
def infinitesimals(eq, func=None, order=None, hint='default', match=None):
r"""
The infinitesimal functions of an ordinary differential equation, `\xi(x,y)`
and `\eta(x,y)`, are the infinitesimals of the Lie group of point transformations
for which the differential equation is invariant. So, the ODE `y'=f(x,y)`
would admit a Lie group `x^*=X(x,y;\varepsilon)=x+\varepsilon\xi(x,y)`,
`y^*=Y(x,y;\varepsilon)=y+\varepsilon\eta(x,y)` such that `(y^*)'=f(x^*, y^*)`.
A change of coordinates, to `r(x,y)` and `s(x,y)`, can be performed so this Lie group
becomes the translation group, `r^*=r` and `s^*=s+\varepsilon`.
They are tangents to the coordinate curves of the new system.
Consider the transformation `(x, y) \to (X, Y)` such that the
differential equation remains invariant. `\xi` and `\eta` are the tangents to
the transformed coordinates `X` and `Y`, at `\varepsilon=0`.
.. math:: \left(\frac{\partial X(x,y;\varepsilon)}{\partial\varepsilon
}\right)|_{\varepsilon=0} = \xi,
\left(\frac{\partial Y(x,y;\varepsilon)}{\partial\varepsilon
}\right)|_{\varepsilon=0} = \eta,
The infinitesimals can be found by solving the following PDE:
>>> from sympy import Function, diff, Eq, pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> xi, eta, h = map(Function, ['xi', 'eta', 'h'])
>>> h = h(x, y) # dy/dx = h
>>> eta = eta(x, y)
>>> xi = xi(x, y)
>>> genform = Eq(eta.diff(x) + (eta.diff(y) - xi.diff(x))*h
... - (xi.diff(y))*h**2 - xi*(h.diff(x)) - eta*(h.diff(y)), 0)
>>> pprint(genform)
/d d \ d 2 d
|--(eta(x, y)) - --(xi(x, y))|*h(x, y) - eta(x, y)*--(h(x, y)) - h (x, y)*--(x
\dy dx / dy dy
<BLANKLINE>
d d
i(x, y)) - xi(x, y)*--(h(x, y)) + --(eta(x, y)) = 0
dx dx
Solving the above mentioned PDE is not trivial, and can be solved only by
making intelligent assumptions for `\xi` and `\eta` (heuristics). Once an
infinitesimal is found, the attempt to find more heuristics stops. This is done to
optimise the speed of solving the differential equation. If a list of all the
infinitesimals is needed, ``hint`` should be flagged as ``all``, which gives
the complete list of infinitesimals. If the infinitesimals for a particular
heuristic needs to be found, it can be passed as a flag to ``hint``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, diff
>>> from sympy.solvers.ode import infinitesimals
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> eq = f(x).diff(x) - x**2*f(x)
>>> infinitesimals(eq)
[{eta(x, f(x)): exp(x**3/3), xi(x, f(x)): 0}]
References
==========
- Solving differential equations by Symmetry Groups,
John Starrett, pp. 1 - pp. 14
"""
if isinstance(eq, Equality):
eq = eq.lhs - eq.rhs
if not func:
eq, func = _preprocess(eq)
variables = func.args
if len(variables) != 1:
raise ValueError("ODE's have only one independent variable")
else:
x = variables[0]
if not order:
order = ode_order(eq, func)
if order != 1:
raise NotImplementedError("Infinitesimals for only "
"first order ODE's have been implemented")
else:
df = func.diff(x)
# Matching differential equation of the form a*df + b
a = Wild('a', exclude = [df])
b = Wild('b', exclude = [df])
if match: # Used by lie_group hint
h = match['h']
y = match['y']
else:
match = collect(expand(eq), df).match(a*df + b)
if match:
h = -simplify(match[b]/match[a])
else:
try:
sol = solve(eq, df)
except NotImplementedError:
raise NotImplementedError("Infinitesimals for the "
"first order ODE could not be found")
else:
h = sol[0] # Find infinitesimals for one solution
y = Dummy("y")
h = h.subs(func, y)
u = Dummy("u")
hx = h.diff(x)
hy = h.diff(y)
hinv = ((1/h).subs([(x, u), (y, x)])).subs(u, y) # Inverse ODE
match = {'h': h, 'func': func, 'hx': hx, 'hy': hy, 'y': y, 'hinv': hinv}
if hint == 'all':
xieta = []
for heuristic in lie_heuristics:
function = globals()['lie_heuristic_' + heuristic]
inflist = function(match, comp=True)
if inflist:
xieta.extend([inf for inf in inflist if inf not in xieta])
if xieta:
return xieta
else:
raise NotImplementedError("Infinitesimals could not be found for "
"the given ODE")
elif hint == 'default':
for heuristic in lie_heuristics:
function = globals()['lie_heuristic_' + heuristic]
xieta = function(match, comp=False)
if xieta:
return xieta
raise NotImplementedError("Infinitesimals could not be found for"
" the given ODE")
elif hint not in lie_heuristics:
raise ValueError("Heuristic not recognized: " + hint)
else:
function = globals()['lie_heuristic_' + hint]
xieta = function(match, comp=True)
if xieta:
return xieta
else:
raise ValueError("Infinitesimals could not be found using the"
" given heuristic")
def lie_heuristic_abaco1_simple(match, comp=False):
r"""
The first heuristic uses the following four sets of
assumptions on `\xi` and `\eta`
.. math:: \xi = 0, \eta = f(x)
.. math:: \xi = 0, \eta = f(y)
.. math:: \xi = f(x), \eta = 0
.. math:: \xi = f(y), \eta = 0
The success of this heuristic is determined by algebraic factorisation.
For the first assumption `\xi = 0` and `\eta` to be a function of `x`, the PDE
.. math:: \frac{\partial \eta}{\partial x} + (\frac{\partial \eta}{\partial y}
- \frac{\partial \xi}{\partial x})*h
- \frac{\partial \xi}{\partial y}*h^{2}
- \xi*\frac{\partial h}{\partial x} - \eta*\frac{\partial h}{\partial y} = 0
reduces to `f'(x) - f\frac{\partial h}{\partial y} = 0`
If `\frac{\partial h}{\partial y}` is a function of `x`, then this can usually
be integrated easily. A similar idea is applied to the other 3 assumptions as well.
References
==========
- E.S Cheb-Terrab, L.G.S Duarte and L.A,C.P da Mota, Computer Algebra
Solving of First Order ODEs Using Symmetry Methods, pp. 8
"""
xieta = []
y = match['y']
h = match['h']
func = match['func']
x = func.args[0]
hx = match['hx']
hy = match['hy']
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
hysym = hy.free_symbols
if y not in hysym:
try:
fx = exp(integrate(hy, x))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
inf = {xi: S(0), eta: fx}
if not comp:
return [inf]
if comp and inf not in xieta:
xieta.append(inf)
factor = hy/h
facsym = factor.free_symbols
if x not in facsym:
try:
fy = exp(integrate(factor, y))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
inf = {xi: S(0), eta: fy.subs(y, func)}
if not comp:
return [inf]
if comp and inf not in xieta:
xieta.append(inf)
factor = -hx/h
facsym = factor.free_symbols
if y not in facsym:
try:
fx = exp(integrate(factor, x))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
inf = {xi: fx, eta: S(0)}
if not comp:
return [inf]
if comp and inf not in xieta:
xieta.append(inf)
factor = -hx/(h**2)
facsym = factor.free_symbols
if x not in facsym:
try:
fy = exp(integrate(factor, y))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
inf = {xi: fy.subs(y, func), eta: S(0)}
if not comp:
return [inf]
if comp and inf not in xieta:
xieta.append(inf)
if xieta:
return xieta
def lie_heuristic_abaco1_product(match, comp=False):
r"""
The second heuristic uses the following two assumptions on `\xi` and `\eta`
.. math:: \eta = 0, \xi = f(x)*g(y)
.. math:: \eta = f(x)*g(y), \xi = 0
The first assumption of this heuristic holds good if
`\frac{1}{h^{2}}\frac{\partial^2}{\partial x \partial y}\log(h)` is
separable in `x` and `y`, then the separated factors containing `x`
is `f(x)`, and `g(y)` is obtained by
.. math:: e^{\int f\frac{\partial}{\partial x}\left(\frac{1}{f*h}\right)\,dy}
provided `f\frac{\partial}{\partial x}\left(\frac{1}{f*h}\right)` is a function
of `y` only.
The second assumption holds good if `\frac{dy}{dx} = h(x, y)` is rewritten as
`\frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{1}{h(y, x)}` and the same properties of the first assumption
satisfies. After obtaining `f(x)` and `g(y)`, the coordinates are again
interchanged, to get `\eta` as `f(x)*g(y)`
References
==========
- E.S. Cheb-Terrab, A.D. Roche, Symmetries and First Order
ODE Patterns, pp. 7 - pp. 8
"""
xieta = []
y = match['y']
h = match['h']
hinv = match['hinv']
func = match['func']
x = func.args[0]
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
inf = separatevars(((log(h).diff(y)).diff(x))/h**2, dict=True, symbols=[x, y])
if inf and inf['coeff']:
fx = inf[x]
gy = simplify(fx*((1/(fx*h)).diff(x)))
gysyms = gy.free_symbols
if x not in gysyms:
gy = exp(integrate(gy, y))
inf = {eta: S(0), xi: (fx*gy).subs(y, func)}
if not comp:
return [inf]
if comp and inf not in xieta:
xieta.append(inf)
u1 = Dummy("u1")
inf = separatevars(((log(hinv).diff(y)).diff(x))/hinv**2, dict=True, symbols=[x, y])
if inf and inf['coeff']:
fx = inf[x]
gy = simplify(fx*((1/(fx*hinv)).diff(x)))
gysyms = gy.free_symbols
if x not in gysyms:
gy = exp(integrate(gy, y))
etaval = fx*gy
etaval = (etaval.subs([(x, u1), (y, x)])).subs(u1, y)
inf = {eta: etaval.subs(y, func), xi: S(0)}
if not comp:
return [inf]
if comp and inf not in xieta:
xieta.append(inf)
if xieta:
return xieta
def lie_heuristic_bivariate(match, comp=False):
r"""
The third heuristic assumes the infinitesimals `\xi` and `\eta`
to be bi-variate polynomials in `x` and `y`. The assumption made here
for the logic below is that `h` is a rational function in `x` and `y`
though that may not be necessary for the infinitesimals to be
bivariate polynomials. The coefficients of the infinitesimals
are found out by substituting them in the PDE and grouping similar terms
that are polynomials and since they form a linear system, solve and check
for non trivial solutions. The degree of the assumed bivariates
are increased till a certain maximum value.
References
==========
- Lie Groups and Differential Equations
pp. 327 - pp. 329
"""
h = match['h']
hx = match['hx']
hy = match['hy']
func = match['func']
x = func.args[0]
y = match['y']
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
if h.is_rational_function():
# The maximum degree that the infinitesimals can take is
# calculated by this technique.
etax, etay, etad, xix, xiy, xid = symbols("etax etay etad xix xiy xid")
ipde = etax + (etay - xix)*h - xiy*h**2 - xid*hx - etad*hy
num, denom = cancel(ipde).as_numer_denom()
deg = Poly(num, x, y).total_degree()
deta = Function('deta')(x, y)
dxi = Function('dxi')(x, y)
ipde = (deta.diff(x) + (deta.diff(y) - dxi.diff(x))*h - (dxi.diff(y))*h**2
- dxi*hx - deta*hy)
xieq = Symbol("xi0")
etaeq = Symbol("eta0")
for i in range(deg + 1):
if i:
xieq += Add(*[
Symbol("xi_" + str(power) + "_" + str(i - power))*x**power*y**(i - power)
for power in range(i + 1)])
etaeq += Add(*[
Symbol("eta_" + str(power) + "_" + str(i - power))*x**power*y**(i - power)
for power in range(i + 1)])
pden, denom = (ipde.subs({dxi: xieq, deta: etaeq}).doit()).as_numer_denom()
pden = expand(pden)
# If the individual terms are monomials, the coefficients
# are grouped
if pden.is_polynomial(x, y) and pden.is_Add:
polyy = Poly(pden, x, y).as_dict()
if polyy:
symset = xieq.free_symbols.union(etaeq.free_symbols) - {x, y}
soldict = solve(polyy.values(), *symset)
if isinstance(soldict, list):
soldict = soldict[0]
if any(x for x in soldict.values()):
xired = xieq.subs(soldict)
etared = etaeq.subs(soldict)
# Scaling is done by substituting one for the parameters
# This can be any number except zero.
dict_ = dict((sym, 1) for sym in symset)
inf = {eta: etared.subs(dict_).subs(y, func),
xi: xired.subs(dict_).subs(y, func)}
return [inf]
def lie_heuristic_chi(match, comp=False):
r"""
The aim of the fourth heuristic is to find the function `\chi(x, y)`
that satisfies the PDE `\frac{d\chi}{dx} + h\frac{d\chi}{dx}
- \frac{\partial h}{\partial y}\chi = 0`.
This assumes `\chi` to be a bivariate polynomial in `x` and `y`. By intuition,
`h` should be a rational function in `x` and `y`. The method used here is
to substitute a general binomial for `\chi` up to a certain maximum degree
is reached. The coefficients of the polynomials, are calculated by by collecting
terms of the same order in `x` and `y`.
After finding `\chi`, the next step is to use `\eta = \xi*h + \chi`, to
determine `\xi` and `\eta`. This can be done by dividing `\chi` by `h`
which would give `-\xi` as the quotient and `\eta` as the remainder.
References
==========
- E.S Cheb-Terrab, L.G.S Duarte and L.A,C.P da Mota, Computer Algebra
Solving of First Order ODEs Using Symmetry Methods, pp. 8
"""
h = match['h']
hx = match['hx']
hy = match['hy']
func = match['func']
x = func.args[0]
y = match['y']
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
if h.is_rational_function():
schi, schix, schiy = symbols("schi, schix, schiy")
cpde = schix + h*schiy - hy*schi
num, denom = cancel(cpde).as_numer_denom()
deg = Poly(num, x, y).total_degree()
chi = Function('chi')(x, y)
chix = chi.diff(x)
chiy = chi.diff(y)
cpde = chix + h*chiy - hy*chi
chieq = Symbol("chi")
for i in range(1, deg + 1):
chieq += Add(*[
Symbol("chi_" + str(power) + "_" + str(i - power))*x**power*y**(i - power)
for power in range(i + 1)])
cnum, cden = cancel(cpde.subs({chi : chieq}).doit()).as_numer_denom()
cnum = expand(cnum)
if cnum.is_polynomial(x, y) and cnum.is_Add:
cpoly = Poly(cnum, x, y).as_dict()
if cpoly:
solsyms = chieq.free_symbols - {x, y}
soldict = solve(cpoly.values(), *solsyms)
if isinstance(soldict, list):
soldict = soldict[0]
if any(x for x in soldict.values()):
chieq = chieq.subs(soldict)
dict_ = dict((sym, 1) for sym in solsyms)
chieq = chieq.subs(dict_)
# After finding chi, the main aim is to find out
# eta, xi by the equation eta = xi*h + chi
# One method to set xi, would be rearranging it to
# (eta/h) - xi = (chi/h). This would mean dividing
# chi by h would give -xi as the quotient and eta
# as the remainder. Thanks to Sean Vig for suggesting
# this method.
xic, etac = div(chieq, h)
inf = {eta: etac.subs(y, func), xi: -xic.subs(y, func)}
return [inf]
def lie_heuristic_function_sum(match, comp=False):
r"""
This heuristic uses the following two assumptions on `\xi` and `\eta`
.. math:: \eta = 0, \xi = f(x) + g(y)
.. math:: \eta = f(x) + g(y), \xi = 0
The first assumption of this heuristic holds good if
.. math:: \frac{\partial}{\partial y}[(h\frac{\partial^{2}}{
\partial x^{2}}(h^{-1}))^{-1}]
is separable in `x` and `y`,
1. The separated factors containing `y` is `\frac{\partial g}{\partial y}`.
From this `g(y)` can be determined.
2. The separated factors containing `x` is `f''(x)`.
3. `h\frac{\partial^{2}}{\partial x^{2}}(h^{-1})` equals
`\frac{f''(x)}{f(x) + g(y)}`. From this `f(x)` can be determined.
The second assumption holds good if `\frac{dy}{dx} = h(x, y)` is rewritten as
`\frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{1}{h(y, x)}` and the same properties of the first
assumption satisfies. After obtaining `f(x)` and `g(y)`, the coordinates
are again interchanged, to get `\eta` as `f(x) + g(y)`.
For both assumptions, the constant factors are separated among `g(y)`
and `f''(x)`, such that `f''(x)` obtained from 3] is the same as that
obtained from 2]. If not possible, then this heuristic fails.
References
==========
- E.S. Cheb-Terrab, A.D. Roche, Symmetries and First Order
ODE Patterns, pp. 7 - pp. 8
"""
xieta = []
h = match['h']
hx = match['hx']
hy = match['hy']
func = match['func']
hinv = match['hinv']
x = func.args[0]
y = match['y']
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
for odefac in [h, hinv]:
factor = odefac*((1/odefac).diff(x, 2))
sep = separatevars((1/factor).diff(y), dict=True, symbols=[x, y])
if sep and sep['coeff'] and sep[x].has(x) and sep[y].has(y):
k = Dummy("k")
try:
gy = k*integrate(sep[y], y)
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
fdd = 1/(k*sep[x]*sep['coeff'])
fx = simplify(fdd/factor - gy)
check = simplify(fx.diff(x, 2) - fdd)
if fx:
if not check:
fx = fx.subs(k, 1)
gy = (gy/k)
else:
sol = solve(check, k)
if sol:
sol = sol[0]
fx = fx.subs(k, sol)
gy = (gy/k)*sol
else:
continue
if odefac == hinv: # Inverse ODE
fx = fx.subs(x, y)
gy = gy.subs(y, x)
etaval = factor_terms(fx + gy)
if etaval.is_Mul:
etaval = Mul(*[arg for arg in etaval.args if arg.has(x, y)])
if odefac == hinv: # Inverse ODE
inf = {eta: etaval.subs(y, func), xi : S(0)}
else:
inf = {xi: etaval.subs(y, func), eta : S(0)}
if not comp:
return [inf]
else:
xieta.append(inf)
if xieta:
return xieta
def lie_heuristic_abaco2_similar(match, comp=False):
r"""
This heuristic uses the following two assumptions on `\xi` and `\eta`
.. math:: \eta = g(x), \xi = f(x)
.. math:: \eta = f(y), \xi = g(y)
For the first assumption,
1. First `\frac{\frac{\partial h}{\partial y}}{\frac{\partial^{2} h}{
\partial yy}}` is calculated. Let us say this value is A
2. If this is constant, then `h` is matched to the form `A(x) + B(x)e^{
\frac{y}{C}}` then, `\frac{e^{\int \frac{A(x)}{C} \,dx}}{B(x)}` gives `f(x)`
and `A(x)*f(x)` gives `g(x)`
3. Otherwise `\frac{\frac{\partial A}{\partial X}}{\frac{\partial A}{
\partial Y}} = \gamma` is calculated. If
a] `\gamma` is a function of `x` alone
b] `\frac{\gamma\frac{\partial h}{\partial y} - \gamma'(x) - \frac{
\partial h}{\partial x}}{h + \gamma} = G` is a function of `x` alone.
then, `e^{\int G \,dx}` gives `f(x)` and `-\gamma*f(x)` gives `g(x)`
The second assumption holds good if `\frac{dy}{dx} = h(x, y)` is rewritten as
`\frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{1}{h(y, x)}` and the same properties of the first assumption
satisfies. After obtaining `f(x)` and `g(x)`, the coordinates are again
interchanged, to get `\xi` as `f(x^*)` and `\eta` as `g(y^*)`
References
==========
- E.S. Cheb-Terrab, A.D. Roche, Symmetries and First Order
ODE Patterns, pp. 10 - pp. 12
"""
xieta = []
h = match['h']
hx = match['hx']
hy = match['hy']
func = match['func']
hinv = match['hinv']
x = func.args[0]
y = match['y']
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
factor = cancel(h.diff(y)/h.diff(y, 2))
factorx = factor.diff(x)
factory = factor.diff(y)
if not factor.has(x) and not factor.has(y):
A = Wild('A', exclude=[y])
B = Wild('B', exclude=[y])
C = Wild('C', exclude=[x, y])
match = h.match(A + B*exp(y/C))
try:
tau = exp(-integrate(match[A]/match[C]), x)/match[B]
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
gx = match[A]*tau
return [{xi: tau, eta: gx}]
else:
gamma = cancel(factorx/factory)
if not gamma.has(y):
tauint = cancel((gamma*hy - gamma.diff(x) - hx)/(h + gamma))
if not tauint.has(y):
try:
tau = exp(integrate(tauint, x))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
gx = -tau*gamma
return [{xi: tau, eta: gx}]
factor = cancel(hinv.diff(y)/hinv.diff(y, 2))
factorx = factor.diff(x)
factory = factor.diff(y)
if not factor.has(x) and not factor.has(y):
A = Wild('A', exclude=[y])
B = Wild('B', exclude=[y])
C = Wild('C', exclude=[x, y])
match = h.match(A + B*exp(y/C))
try:
tau = exp(-integrate(match[A]/match[C]), x)/match[B]
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
gx = match[A]*tau
return [{eta: tau.subs(x, func), xi: gx.subs(x, func)}]
else:
gamma = cancel(factorx/factory)
if not gamma.has(y):
tauint = cancel((gamma*hinv.diff(y) - gamma.diff(x) - hinv.diff(x))/(
hinv + gamma))
if not tauint.has(y):
try:
tau = exp(integrate(tauint, x))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
gx = -tau*gamma
return [{eta: tau.subs(x, func), xi: gx.subs(x, func)}]
def lie_heuristic_abaco2_unique_unknown(match, comp=False):
r"""
This heuristic assumes the presence of unknown functions or known functions
with non-integer powers.
1. A list of all functions and non-integer powers containing x and y
2. Loop over each element `f` in the list, find `\frac{\frac{\partial f}{\partial x}}{
\frac{\partial f}{\partial x}} = R`
If it is separable in `x` and `y`, let `X` be the factors containing `x`. Then
a] Check if `\xi = X` and `\eta = -\frac{X}{R}` satisfy the PDE. If yes, then return
`\xi` and `\eta`
b] Check if `\xi = \frac{-R}{X}` and `\eta = -\frac{1}{X}` satisfy the PDE.
If yes, then return `\xi` and `\eta`
If not, then check if
a] :math:`\xi = -R,\eta = 1`
b] :math:`\xi = 1, \eta = -\frac{1}{R}`
are solutions.
References
==========
- E.S. Cheb-Terrab, A.D. Roche, Symmetries and First Order
ODE Patterns, pp. 10 - pp. 12
"""
xieta = []
h = match['h']
hx = match['hx']
hy = match['hy']
func = match['func']
hinv = match['hinv']
x = func.args[0]
y = match['y']
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
funclist = []
for atom in h.atoms(Pow):
base, exp = atom.as_base_exp()
if base.has(x) and base.has(y):
if not exp.is_Integer:
funclist.append(atom)
for function in h.atoms(AppliedUndef):
syms = function.free_symbols
if x in syms and y in syms:
funclist.append(function)
for f in funclist:
frac = cancel(f.diff(y)/f.diff(x))
sep = separatevars(frac, dict=True, symbols=[x, y])
if sep and sep['coeff']:
xitry1 = sep[x]
etatry1 = -1/(sep[y]*sep['coeff'])
pde1 = etatry1.diff(y)*h - xitry1.diff(x)*h - xitry1*hx - etatry1*hy
if not simplify(pde1):
return [{xi: xitry1, eta: etatry1.subs(y, func)}]
xitry2 = 1/etatry1
etatry2 = 1/xitry1
pde2 = etatry2.diff(x) - (xitry2.diff(y))*h**2 - xitry2*hx - etatry2*hy
if not simplify(expand(pde2)):
return [{xi: xitry2.subs(y, func), eta: etatry2}]
else:
etatry = -1/frac
pde = etatry.diff(x) + etatry.diff(y)*h - hx - etatry*hy
if not simplify(pde):
return [{xi: S(1), eta: etatry.subs(y, func)}]
xitry = -frac
pde = -xitry.diff(x)*h -xitry.diff(y)*h**2 - xitry*hx -hy
if not simplify(expand(pde)):
return [{xi: xitry.subs(y, func), eta: S(1)}]
def lie_heuristic_abaco2_unique_general(match, comp=False):
r"""
This heuristic finds if infinitesimals of the form `\eta = f(x)`, `\xi = g(y)`
without making any assumptions on `h`.
The complete sequence of steps is given in the paper mentioned below.
References
==========
- E.S. Cheb-Terrab, A.D. Roche, Symmetries and First Order
ODE Patterns, pp. 10 - pp. 12
"""
xieta = []
h = match['h']
hx = match['hx']
hy = match['hy']
func = match['func']
hinv = match['hinv']
x = func.args[0]
y = match['y']
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
C = S(0)
A = hx.diff(y)
B = hy.diff(y) + hy**2
C = hx.diff(x) - hx**2
if not (A and B and C):
return
Ax = A.diff(x)
Ay = A.diff(y)
Axy = Ax.diff(y)
Axx = Ax.diff(x)
Ayy = Ay.diff(y)
D = simplify(2*Axy + hx*Ay - Ax*hy + (hx*hy + 2*A)*A)*A - 3*Ax*Ay
if not D:
E1 = simplify(3*Ax**2 + ((hx**2 + 2*C)*A - 2*Axx)*A)
if E1:
E2 = simplify((2*Ayy + (2*B - hy**2)*A)*A - 3*Ay**2)
if not E2:
E3 = simplify(
E1*((28*Ax + 4*hx*A)*A**3 - E1*(hy*A + Ay)) - E1.diff(x)*8*A**4)
if not E3:
etaval = cancel((4*A**3*(Ax - hx*A) + E1*(hy*A - Ay))/(S(2)*A*E1))
if x not in etaval:
try:
etaval = exp(integrate(etaval, y))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
xival = -4*A**3*etaval/E1
if y not in xival:
return [{xi: xival, eta: etaval.subs(y, func)}]
else:
E1 = simplify((2*Ayy + (2*B - hy**2)*A)*A - 3*Ay**2)
if E1:
E2 = simplify(
4*A**3*D - D**2 + E1*((2*Axx - (hx**2 + 2*C)*A)*A - 3*Ax**2))
if not E2:
E3 = simplify(
-(A*D)*E1.diff(y) + ((E1.diff(x) - hy*D)*A + 3*Ay*D +
(A*hx - 3*Ax)*E1)*E1)
if not E3:
etaval = cancel(((A*hx - Ax)*E1 - (Ay + A*hy)*D)/(S(2)*A*D))
if x not in etaval:
try:
etaval = exp(integrate(etaval, y))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
xival = -E1*etaval/D
if y not in xival:
return [{xi: xival, eta: etaval.subs(y, func)}]
def lie_heuristic_linear(match, comp=False):
r"""
This heuristic assumes
1. `\xi = ax + by + c` and
2. `\eta = fx + gy + h`
After substituting the following assumptions in the determining PDE, it
reduces to
.. math:: f + (g - a)h - bh^{2} - (ax + by + c)\frac{\partial h}{\partial x}
- (fx + gy + c)\frac{\partial h}{\partial y}
Solving the reduced PDE obtained, using the method of characteristics, becomes
impractical. The method followed is grouping similar terms and solving the system
of linear equations obtained. The difference between the bivariate heuristic is that
`h` need not be a rational function in this case.
References
==========
- E.S. Cheb-Terrab, A.D. Roche, Symmetries and First Order
ODE Patterns, pp. 10 - pp. 12
"""
xieta = []
h = match['h']
hx = match['hx']
hy = match['hy']
func = match['func']
hinv = match['hinv']
x = func.args[0]
y = match['y']
xi = Function('xi')(x, func)
eta = Function('eta')(x, func)
coeffdict = {}
symbols = numbered_symbols("c", cls=Dummy)
symlist = [next(symbols) for i in islice(symbols, 6)]
C0, C1, C2, C3, C4, C5 = symlist
pde = C3 + (C4 - C0)*h -(C0*x + C1*y + C2)*hx - (C3*x + C4*y + C5)*hy - C1*h**2
pde, denom = pde.as_numer_denom()
pde = powsimp(expand(pde))
if pde.is_Add:
terms = pde.args
for term in terms:
if term.is_Mul:
rem = Mul(*[m for m in term.args if not m.has(x, y)])
xypart = term/rem
if xypart not in coeffdict:
coeffdict[xypart] = rem
else:
coeffdict[xypart] += rem
else:
if term not in coeffdict:
coeffdict[term] = S(1)
else:
coeffdict[term] += S(1)
sollist = coeffdict.values()
soldict = solve(sollist, symlist)
if soldict:
if isinstance(soldict, list):
soldict = soldict[0]
subval = soldict.values()
if any(t for t in subval):
onedict = dict(zip(symlist, [1]*6))
xival = C0*x + C1*func + C2
etaval = C3*x + C4*func + C5
xival = xival.subs(soldict)
etaval = etaval.subs(soldict)
xival = xival.subs(onedict)
etaval = etaval.subs(onedict)
return [{xi: xival, eta: etaval}]
def sysode_linear_2eq_order1(match_):
x = match_['func'][0].func
y = match_['func'][1].func
func = match_['func']
fc = match_['func_coeff']
eq = match_['eq']
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
r = dict()
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
for i in range(2):
eqs = 0
for terms in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
eqs += terms/fc[i,func[i],1]
eq[i] = eqs
# for equations Eq(a1*diff(x(t),t), a*x(t) + b*y(t) + k1)
# and Eq(a2*diff(x(t),t), c*x(t) + d*y(t) + k2)
r['a'] = -fc[0,x(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),1]
r['c'] = -fc[1,x(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),1]
r['b'] = -fc[0,y(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),1]
r['d'] = -fc[1,y(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),1]
forcing = [S(0),S(0)]
for i in range(2):
for j in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
if not j.has(x(t), y(t)):
forcing[i] += j
if not (forcing[0].has(t) or forcing[1].has(t)):
r['k1'] = forcing[0]
r['k2'] = forcing[1]
else:
raise NotImplementedError("Only homogeneous problems are supported" +
" (and constant inhomogeneity)")
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type1':
sol = _linear_2eq_order1_type1(x, y, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type2':
gsol = _linear_2eq_order1_type1(x, y, t, r, eq)
psol = _linear_2eq_order1_type2(x, y, t, r, eq)
sol = [Eq(x(t), gsol[0].rhs+psol[0]), Eq(y(t), gsol[1].rhs+psol[1])]
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type3':
sol = _linear_2eq_order1_type3(x, y, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type4':
sol = _linear_2eq_order1_type4(x, y, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type5':
sol = _linear_2eq_order1_type5(x, y, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type6':
sol = _linear_2eq_order1_type6(x, y, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type7':
sol = _linear_2eq_order1_type7(x, y, t, r, eq)
return sol
def _linear_2eq_order1_type1(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
It is classified under system of two linear homogeneous first-order constant-coefficient
ordinary differential equations.
The equations which come under this type are
.. math:: x' = ax + by,
.. math:: y' = cx + dy
The characteristics equation is written as
.. math:: \lambda^{2} + (a+d) \lambda + ad - bc = 0
and its discriminant is `D = (a-d)^{2} + 4bc`. There are several cases
1. Case when `ad - bc \neq 0`. The origin of coordinates, `x = y = 0`,
is the only stationary point; it is
- a node if `D = 0`
- a node if `D > 0` and `ad - bc > 0`
- a saddle if `D > 0` and `ad - bc < 0`
- a focus if `D < 0` and `a + d \neq 0`
- a centre if `D < 0` and `a + d \neq 0`.
1.1. If `D > 0`. The characteristic equation has two distinct real roots
`\lambda_1` and `\lambda_ 2` . The general solution of the system in question is expressed as
.. math:: x = C_1 b e^{\lambda_1 t} + C_2 b e^{\lambda_2 t}
.. math:: y = C_1 (\lambda_1 - a) e^{\lambda_1 t} + C_2 (\lambda_2 - a) e^{\lambda_2 t}
where `C_1` and `C_2` being arbitrary constants
1.2. If `D < 0`. The characteristics equation has two conjugate
roots, `\lambda_1 = \sigma + i \beta` and `\lambda_2 = \sigma - i \beta`.
The general solution of the system is given by
.. math:: x = b e^{\sigma t} (C_1 \sin(\beta t) + C_2 \cos(\beta t))
.. math:: y = e^{\sigma t} ([(\sigma - a) C_1 - \beta C_2] \sin(\beta t) + [\beta C_1 + (\sigma - a) C_2 \cos(\beta t)])
1.3. If `D = 0` and `a \neq d`. The characteristic equation has
two equal roots, `\lambda_1 = \lambda_2`. The general solution of the system is written as
.. math:: x = 2b (C_1 + \frac{C_2}{a-d} + C_2 t) e^{\frac{a+d}{2} t}
.. math:: y = [(d - a) C_1 + C_2 + (d - a) C_2 t] e^{\frac{a+d}{2} t}
1.4. If `D = 0` and `a = d \neq 0` and `b = 0`
.. math:: x = C_1 e^{a t} , y = (c C_1 t + C_2) e^{a t}
1.5. If `D = 0` and `a = d \neq 0` and `c = 0`
.. math:: x = (b C_1 t + C_2) e^{a t} , y = C_1 e^{a t}
2. Case when `ad - bc = 0` and `a^{2} + b^{2} > 0`. The whole straight
line `ax + by = 0` consists of singular points. The original system of differential
equations can be rewritten as
.. math:: x' = ax + by , y' = k (ax + by)
2.1 If `a + bk \neq 0`, solution will be
.. math:: x = b C_1 + C_2 e^{(a + bk) t} , y = -a C_1 + k C_2 e^{(a + bk) t}
2.2 If `a + bk = 0`, solution will be
.. math:: x = C_1 (bk t - 1) + b C_2 t , y = k^{2} b C_1 t + (b k^{2} t + 1) C_2
"""
l = Dummy('l')
C1, C2 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
a, b, c, d = r['a'], r['b'], r['c'], r['d']
real_coeff = all(v.is_real for v in (a, b, c, d))
D = (a - d)**2 + 4*b*c
l1 = (a + d + sqrt(D))/2
l2 = (a + d - sqrt(D))/2
equal_roots = Eq(D, 0).expand()
gsol1, gsol2 = [], []
# Solutions have exponential form if either D > 0 with real coefficients
# or D != 0 with complex coefficients. Eigenvalues are distinct.
# For each eigenvalue lam, pick an eigenvector, making sure we don't get (0, 0)
# The candidates are (b, lam-a) and (lam-d, c).
exponential_form = D > 0 if real_coeff else Not(equal_roots)
bad_ab_vector1 = And(Eq(b, 0), Eq(l1, a))
bad_ab_vector2 = And(Eq(b, 0), Eq(l2, a))
vector1 = Matrix((Piecewise((l1 - d, bad_ab_vector1), (b, True)),
Piecewise((c, bad_ab_vector1), (l1 - a, True))))
vector2 = Matrix((Piecewise((l2 - d, bad_ab_vector2), (b, True)),
Piecewise((c, bad_ab_vector2), (l2 - a, True))))
sol_vector = C1*exp(l1*t)*vector1 + C2*exp(l2*t)*vector2
gsol1.append((sol_vector[0], exponential_form))
gsol2.append((sol_vector[1], exponential_form))
# Solutions have trigonometric form for real coefficients with D < 0
# Both b and c are nonzero in this case, so (b, lam-a) is an eigenvector
# It splits into real/imag parts as (b, sigma-a) and (0, beta). Then
# multiply it by C1(cos(beta*t) + I*C2*sin(beta*t)) and separate real/imag
trigonometric_form = D < 0 if real_coeff else False
sigma = re(l1)
if im(l1).is_positive:
beta = im(l1)
else:
beta = im(l2)
vector1 = Matrix((b, sigma - a))
vector2 = Matrix((0, beta))
sol_vector = exp(sigma*t) * (C1*(cos(beta*t)*vector1 - sin(beta*t)*vector2) + \
C2*(sin(beta*t)*vector1 + cos(beta*t)*vector2))
gsol1.append((sol_vector[0], trigonometric_form))
gsol2.append((sol_vector[1], trigonometric_form))
# Final case is D == 0, a single eigenvalue. If the eigenspace is 2-dimensional
# then we have a scalar matrix, deal with this case first.
scalar_matrix = And(Eq(a, d), Eq(b, 0), Eq(c, 0))
vector1 = Matrix((S.One, S.Zero))
vector2 = Matrix((S.Zero, S.One))
sol_vector = exp(l1*t) * (C1*vector1 + C2*vector2)
gsol1.append((sol_vector[0], scalar_matrix))
gsol2.append((sol_vector[1], scalar_matrix))
# Have one eigenvector. Get a generalized eigenvector from (A-lam)*vector2 = vector1
vector1 = Matrix((Piecewise((l1 - d, bad_ab_vector1), (b, True)),
Piecewise((c, bad_ab_vector1), (l1 - a, True))))
vector2 = Matrix((Piecewise((S.One, bad_ab_vector1), (S.Zero, Eq(a, l1)),
(b/(a - l1), True)),
Piecewise((S.Zero, bad_ab_vector1), (S.One, Eq(a, l1)),
(S.Zero, True))))
sol_vector = exp(l1*t) * (C1*vector1 + C2*(vector2 + t*vector1))
gsol1.append((sol_vector[0], equal_roots))
gsol2.append((sol_vector[1], equal_roots))
return [Eq(x(t), Piecewise(*gsol1)), Eq(y(t), Piecewise(*gsol2))]
def _linear_2eq_order1_type2(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations of this type are
.. math:: x' = ax + by + k1 , y' = cx + dy + k2
The general solution of this system is given by sum of its particular solution and the
general solution of the corresponding homogeneous system is obtained from type1.
1. When `ad - bc \neq 0`. The particular solution will be
`x = x_0` and `y = y_0` where `x_0` and `y_0` are determined by solving linear system of equations
.. math:: a x_0 + b y_0 + k1 = 0 , c x_0 + d y_0 + k2 = 0
2. When `ad - bc = 0` and `a^{2} + b^{2} > 0`. In this case, the system of equation becomes
.. math:: x' = ax + by + k_1 , y' = k (ax + by) + k_2
2.1 If `\sigma = a + bk \neq 0`, particular solution is given by
.. math:: x = b \sigma^{-1} (c_1 k - c_2) t - \sigma^{-2} (a c_1 + b c_2)
.. math:: y = kx + (c_2 - c_1 k) t
2.2 If `\sigma = a + bk = 0`, particular solution is given by
.. math:: x = \frac{1}{2} b (c_2 - c_1 k) t^{2} + c_1 t
.. math:: y = kx + (c_2 - c_1 k) t
"""
r['k1'] = -r['k1']; r['k2'] = -r['k2']
if (r['a']*r['d'] - r['b']*r['c']) != 0:
x0, y0 = symbols('x0, y0', cls=Dummy)
sol = solve((r['a']*x0+r['b']*y0+r['k1'], r['c']*x0+r['d']*y0+r['k2']), x0, y0)
psol = [sol[x0], sol[y0]]
elif (r['a']*r['d'] - r['b']*r['c']) == 0 and (r['a']**2+r['b']**2) > 0:
k = r['c']/r['a']
sigma = r['a'] + r['b']*k
if sigma != 0:
sol1 = r['b']*sigma**-1*(r['k1']*k-r['k2'])*t - sigma**-2*(r['a']*r['k1']+r['b']*r['k2'])
sol2 = k*sol1 + (r['k2']-r['k1']*k)*t
else:
# FIXME: a previous typo fix shows this is not covered by tests
sol1 = r['b']*(r['k2']-r['k1']*k)*t**2 + r['k1']*t
sol2 = k*sol1 + (r['k2']-r['k1']*k)*t
psol = [sol1, sol2]
return psol
def _linear_2eq_order1_type3(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations of this type of ode are
.. math:: x' = f(t) x + g(t) y
.. math:: y' = g(t) x + f(t) y
The solution of such equations is given by
.. math:: x = e^{F} (C_1 e^{G} + C_2 e^{-G}) , y = e^{F} (C_1 e^{G} - C_2 e^{-G})
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants, and
.. math:: F = \int f(t) \,dt , G = \int g(t) \,dt
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
F = Integral(r['a'], t)
G = Integral(r['b'], t)
sol1 = exp(F)*(C1*exp(G) + C2*exp(-G))
sol2 = exp(F)*(C1*exp(G) - C2*exp(-G))
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order1_type4(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations of this type of ode are .
.. math:: x' = f(t) x + g(t) y
.. math:: y' = -g(t) x + f(t) y
The solution is given by
.. math:: x = F (C_1 \cos(G) + C_2 \sin(G)), y = F (-C_1 \sin(G) + C_2 \cos(G))
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants, and
.. math:: F = \int f(t) \,dt , G = \int g(t) \,dt
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
if r['b'] == -r['c']:
F = exp(Integral(r['a'], t))
G = Integral(r['b'], t)
sol1 = F*(C1*cos(G) + C2*sin(G))
sol2 = F*(-C1*sin(G) + C2*cos(G))
elif r['d'] == -r['a']:
F = exp(Integral(r['c'], t))
G = Integral(r['d'], t)
sol1 = F*(-C1*sin(G) + C2*cos(G))
sol2 = F*(C1*cos(G) + C2*sin(G))
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order1_type5(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations of this type of ode are .
.. math:: x' = f(t) x + g(t) y
.. math:: y' = a g(t) x + [f(t) + b g(t)] y
The transformation of
.. math:: x = e^{\int f(t) \,dt} u , y = e^{\int f(t) \,dt} v , T = \int g(t) \,dt
leads to a system of constant coefficient linear differential equations
.. math:: u'(T) = v , v'(T) = au + bv
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
u, v = symbols('u, v', cls=Function)
T = Symbol('T')
if not cancel(r['c']/r['b']).has(t):
p = cancel(r['c']/r['b'])
q = cancel((r['d']-r['a'])/r['b'])
eq = (Eq(diff(u(T),T), v(T)), Eq(diff(v(T),T), p*u(T)+q*v(T)))
sol = dsolve(eq)
sol1 = exp(Integral(r['a'], t))*sol[0].rhs.subs(T, Integral(r['b'],t))
sol2 = exp(Integral(r['a'], t))*sol[1].rhs.subs(T, Integral(r['b'],t))
if not cancel(r['a']/r['d']).has(t):
p = cancel(r['a']/r['d'])
q = cancel((r['b']-r['c'])/r['d'])
sol = dsolve(Eq(diff(u(T),T), v(T)), Eq(diff(v(T),T), p*u(T)+q*v(T)))
sol1 = exp(Integral(r['c'], t))*sol[1].rhs.subs(T, Integral(r['d'],t))
sol2 = exp(Integral(r['c'], t))*sol[0].rhs.subs(T, Integral(r['d'],t))
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order1_type6(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations of this type of ode are .
.. math:: x' = f(t) x + g(t) y
.. math:: y' = a [f(t) + a h(t)] x + a [g(t) - h(t)] y
This is solved by first multiplying the first equation by `-a` and adding
it to the second equation to obtain
.. math:: y' - a x' = -a h(t) (y - a x)
Setting `U = y - ax` and integrating the equation we arrive at
.. math:: y - ax = C_1 e^{-a \int h(t) \,dt}
and on substituting the value of y in first equation give rise to first order ODEs. After solving for
`x`, we can obtain `y` by substituting the value of `x` in second equation.
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
p = 0
q = 0
p1 = cancel(r['c']/cancel(r['c']/r['d']).as_numer_denom()[0])
p2 = cancel(r['a']/cancel(r['a']/r['b']).as_numer_denom()[0])
for n, i in enumerate([p1, p2]):
for j in Mul.make_args(collect_const(i)):
if not j.has(t):
q = j
if q!=0 and n==0:
if ((r['c']/j - r['a'])/(r['b'] - r['d']/j)) == j:
p = 1
s = j
break
if q!=0 and n==1:
if ((r['a']/j - r['c'])/(r['d'] - r['b']/j)) == j:
p = 2
s = j
break
if p == 1:
equ = diff(x(t),t) - r['a']*x(t) - r['b']*(s*x(t) + C1*exp(-s*Integral(r['b'] - r['d']/s, t)))
hint1 = classify_ode(equ)[1]
sol1 = dsolve(equ, hint=hint1+'_Integral').rhs
sol2 = s*sol1 + C1*exp(-s*Integral(r['b'] - r['d']/s, t))
elif p ==2:
equ = diff(y(t),t) - r['c']*y(t) - r['d']*s*y(t) + C1*exp(-s*Integral(r['d'] - r['b']/s, t))
hint1 = classify_ode(equ)[1]
sol2 = dsolve(equ, hint=hint1+'_Integral').rhs
sol1 = s*sol2 + C1*exp(-s*Integral(r['d'] - r['b']/s, t))
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order1_type7(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations of this type of ode are .
.. math:: x' = f(t) x + g(t) y
.. math:: y' = h(t) x + p(t) y
Differentiating the first equation and substituting the value of `y`
from second equation will give a second-order linear equation
.. math:: g x'' - (fg + gp + g') x' + (fgp - g^{2} h + f g' - f' g) x = 0
This above equation can be easily integrated if following conditions are satisfied.
1. `fgp - g^{2} h + f g' - f' g = 0`
2. `fgp - g^{2} h + f g' - f' g = ag, fg + gp + g' = bg`
If first condition is satisfied then it is solved by current dsolve solver and in second case it becomes
a constant coefficient differential equation which is also solved by current solver.
Otherwise if the above condition fails then,
a particular solution is assumed as `x = x_0(t)` and `y = y_0(t)`
Then the general solution is expressed as
.. math:: x = C_1 x_0(t) + C_2 x_0(t) \int \frac{g(t) F(t) P(t)}{x_0^{2}(t)} \,dt
.. math:: y = C_1 y_0(t) + C_2 [\frac{F(t) P(t)}{x_0(t)} + y_0(t) \int \frac{g(t) F(t) P(t)}{x_0^{2}(t)} \,dt]
where C1 and C2 are arbitrary constants and
.. math:: F(t) = e^{\int f(t) \,dt} , P(t) = e^{\int p(t) \,dt}
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
e1 = r['a']*r['b']*r['c'] - r['b']**2*r['c'] + r['a']*diff(r['b'],t) - diff(r['a'],t)*r['b']
e2 = r['a']*r['c']*r['d'] - r['b']*r['c']**2 + diff(r['c'],t)*r['d'] - r['c']*diff(r['d'],t)
m1 = r['a']*r['b'] + r['b']*r['d'] + diff(r['b'],t)
m2 = r['a']*r['c'] + r['c']*r['d'] + diff(r['c'],t)
if e1 == 0:
sol1 = dsolve(r['b']*diff(x(t),t,t) - m1*diff(x(t),t)).rhs
sol2 = dsolve(diff(y(t),t) - r['c']*sol1 - r['d']*y(t)).rhs
elif e2 == 0:
sol2 = dsolve(r['c']*diff(y(t),t,t) - m2*diff(y(t),t)).rhs
sol1 = dsolve(diff(x(t),t) - r['a']*x(t) - r['b']*sol2).rhs
elif not (e1/r['b']).has(t) and not (m1/r['b']).has(t):
sol1 = dsolve(diff(x(t),t,t) - (m1/r['b'])*diff(x(t),t) - (e1/r['b'])*x(t)).rhs
sol2 = dsolve(diff(y(t),t) - r['c']*sol1 - r['d']*y(t)).rhs
elif not (e2/r['c']).has(t) and not (m2/r['c']).has(t):
sol2 = dsolve(diff(y(t),t,t) - (m2/r['c'])*diff(y(t),t) - (e2/r['c'])*y(t)).rhs
sol1 = dsolve(diff(x(t),t) - r['a']*x(t) - r['b']*sol2).rhs
else:
x0 = Function('x0')(t) # x0 and y0 being particular solutions
y0 = Function('y0')(t)
F = exp(Integral(r['a'],t))
P = exp(Integral(r['d'],t))
sol1 = C1*x0 + C2*x0*Integral(r['b']*F*P/x0**2, t)
sol2 = C1*y0 + C2*(F*P/x0 + y0*Integral(r['b']*F*P/x0**2, t))
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def sysode_linear_2eq_order2(match_):
x = match_['func'][0].func
y = match_['func'][1].func
func = match_['func']
fc = match_['func_coeff']
eq = match_['eq']
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
r = dict()
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
for i in range(2):
eqs = []
for terms in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
eqs.append(terms/fc[i,func[i],2])
eq[i] = Add(*eqs)
# for equations Eq(diff(x(t),t,t), a1*diff(x(t),t)+b1*diff(y(t),t)+c1*x(t)+d1*y(t)+e1)
# and Eq(a2*diff(y(t),t,t), a2*diff(x(t),t)+b2*diff(y(t),t)+c2*x(t)+d2*y(t)+e2)
r['a1'] = -fc[0,x(t),1]/fc[0,x(t),2] ; r['a2'] = -fc[1,x(t),1]/fc[1,y(t),2]
r['b1'] = -fc[0,y(t),1]/fc[0,x(t),2] ; r['b2'] = -fc[1,y(t),1]/fc[1,y(t),2]
r['c1'] = -fc[0,x(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),2] ; r['c2'] = -fc[1,x(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),2]
r['d1'] = -fc[0,y(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),2] ; r['d2'] = -fc[1,y(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),2]
const = [S(0), S(0)]
for i in range(2):
for j in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
if not (j.has(x(t)) or j.has(y(t))):
const[i] += j
r['e1'] = -const[0]
r['e2'] = -const[1]
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type1':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type1(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type2':
gsol = _linear_2eq_order2_type1(x, y, t, r, eq)
psol = _linear_2eq_order2_type2(x, y, t, r, eq)
sol = [Eq(x(t), gsol[0].rhs+psol[0]), Eq(y(t), gsol[1].rhs+psol[1])]
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type3':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type3(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type4':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type4(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type5':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type5(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type6':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type6(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type7':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type7(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type8':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type8(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type9':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type9(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type10':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type10(x, y, t, r, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type11':
sol = _linear_2eq_order2_type11(x, y, t, r, eq)
return sol
def _linear_2eq_order2_type1(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
System of two constant-coefficient second-order linear homogeneous differential equations
.. math:: x'' = ax + by
.. math:: y'' = cx + dy
The characteristic equation for above equations
.. math:: \lambda^4 - (a + d) \lambda^2 + ad - bc = 0
whose discriminant is `D = (a - d)^2 + 4bc \neq 0`
1. When `ad - bc \neq 0`
1.1. If `D \neq 0`. The characteristic equation has four distinct roots, `\lambda_1, \lambda_2, \lambda_3, \lambda_4`.
The general solution of the system is
.. math:: x = C_1 b e^{\lambda_1 t} + C_2 b e^{\lambda_2 t} + C_3 b e^{\lambda_3 t} + C_4 b e^{\lambda_4 t}
.. math:: y = C_1 (\lambda_1^{2} - a) e^{\lambda_1 t} + C_2 (\lambda_2^{2} - a) e^{\lambda_2 t} + C_3 (\lambda_3^{2} - a) e^{\lambda_3 t} + C_4 (\lambda_4^{2} - a) e^{\lambda_4 t}
where `C_1,..., C_4` are arbitrary constants.
1.2. If `D = 0` and `a \neq d`:
.. math:: x = 2 C_1 (bt + \frac{2bk}{a - d}) e^{\frac{kt}{2}} + 2 C_2 (bt + \frac{2bk}{a - d}) e^{\frac{-kt}{2}} + 2b C_3 t e^{\frac{kt}{2}} + 2b C_4 t e^{\frac{-kt}{2}}
.. math:: y = C_1 (d - a) t e^{\frac{kt}{2}} + C_2 (d - a) t e^{\frac{-kt}{2}} + C_3 [(d - a) t + 2k] e^{\frac{kt}{2}} + C_4 [(d - a) t - 2k] e^{\frac{-kt}{2}}
where `C_1,..., C_4` are arbitrary constants and `k = \sqrt{2 (a + d)}`
1.3. If `D = 0` and `a = d \neq 0` and `b = 0`:
.. math:: x = 2 \sqrt{a} C_1 e^{\sqrt{a} t} + 2 \sqrt{a} C_2 e^{-\sqrt{a} t}
.. math:: y = c C_1 t e^{\sqrt{a} t} - c C_2 t e^{-\sqrt{a} t} + C_3 e^{\sqrt{a} t} + C_4 e^{-\sqrt{a} t}
1.4. If `D = 0` and `a = d \neq 0` and `c = 0`:
.. math:: x = b C_1 t e^{\sqrt{a} t} - b C_2 t e^{-\sqrt{a} t} + C_3 e^{\sqrt{a} t} + C_4 e^{-\sqrt{a} t}
.. math:: y = 2 \sqrt{a} C_1 e^{\sqrt{a} t} + 2 \sqrt{a} C_2 e^{-\sqrt{a} t}
2. When `ad - bc = 0` and `a^2 + b^2 > 0`. Then the original system becomes
.. math:: x'' = ax + by
.. math:: y'' = k (ax + by)
2.1. If `a + bk \neq 0`:
.. math:: x = C_1 e^{t \sqrt{a + bk}} + C_2 e^{-t \sqrt{a + bk}} + C_3 bt + C_4 b
.. math:: y = C_1 k e^{t \sqrt{a + bk}} + C_2 k e^{-t \sqrt{a + bk}} - C_3 at - C_4 a
2.2. If `a + bk = 0`:
.. math:: x = C_1 b t^3 + C_2 b t^2 + C_3 t + C_4
.. math:: y = kx + 6 C_1 t + 2 C_2
"""
r['a'] = r['c1']
r['b'] = r['d1']
r['c'] = r['c2']
r['d'] = r['d2']
l = Symbol('l')
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
chara_eq = l**4 - (r['a']+r['d'])*l**2 + r['a']*r['d'] - r['b']*r['c']
l1 = rootof(chara_eq, 0)
l2 = rootof(chara_eq, 1)
l3 = rootof(chara_eq, 2)
l4 = rootof(chara_eq, 3)
D = (r['a'] - r['d'])**2 + 4*r['b']*r['c']
if (r['a']*r['d'] - r['b']*r['c']) != 0:
if D != 0:
gsol1 = C1*r['b']*exp(l1*t) + C2*r['b']*exp(l2*t) + C3*r['b']*exp(l3*t) \
+ C4*r['b']*exp(l4*t)
gsol2 = C1*(l1**2-r['a'])*exp(l1*t) + C2*(l2**2-r['a'])*exp(l2*t) + \
C3*(l3**2-r['a'])*exp(l3*t) + C4*(l4**2-r['a'])*exp(l4*t)
else:
if r['a'] != r['d']:
k = sqrt(2*(r['a']+r['d']))
mid = r['b']*t+2*r['b']*k/(r['a']-r['d'])
gsol1 = 2*C1*mid*exp(k*t/2) + 2*C2*mid*exp(-k*t/2) + \
2*r['b']*C3*t*exp(k*t/2) + 2*r['b']*C4*t*exp(-k*t/2)
gsol2 = C1*(r['d']-r['a'])*t*exp(k*t/2) + C2*(r['d']-r['a'])*t*exp(-k*t/2) + \
C3*((r['d']-r['a'])*t+2*k)*exp(k*t/2) + C4*((r['d']-r['a'])*t-2*k)*exp(-k*t/2)
elif r['a'] == r['d'] != 0 and r['b'] == 0:
sa = sqrt(r['a'])
gsol1 = 2*sa*C1*exp(sa*t) + 2*sa*C2*exp(-sa*t)
gsol2 = r['c']*C1*t*exp(sa*t)-r['c']*C2*t*exp(-sa*t)+C3*exp(sa*t)+C4*exp(-sa*t)
elif r['a'] == r['d'] != 0 and r['c'] == 0:
sa = sqrt(r['a'])
gsol1 = r['b']*C1*t*exp(sa*t)-r['b']*C2*t*exp(-sa*t)+C3*exp(sa*t)+C4*exp(-sa*t)
gsol2 = 2*sa*C1*exp(sa*t) + 2*sa*C2*exp(-sa*t)
elif (r['a']*r['d'] - r['b']*r['c']) == 0 and (r['a']**2 + r['b']**2) > 0:
k = r['c']/r['a']
if r['a'] + r['b']*k != 0:
mid = sqrt(r['a'] + r['b']*k)
gsol1 = C1*exp(mid*t) + C2*exp(-mid*t) + C3*r['b']*t + C4*r['b']
gsol2 = C1*k*exp(mid*t) + C2*k*exp(-mid*t) - C3*r['a']*t - C4*r['a']
else:
gsol1 = C1*r['b']*t**3 + C2*r['b']*t**2 + C3*t + C4
gsol2 = k*gsol1 + 6*C1*t + 2*C2
return [Eq(x(t), gsol1), Eq(y(t), gsol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type2(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations in this type are
.. math:: x'' = a_1 x + b_1 y + c_1
.. math:: y'' = a_2 x + b_2 y + c_2
The general solution of this system is given by the sum of its particular solution
and the general solution of the homogeneous system. The general solution is given
by the linear system of 2 equation of order 2 and type 1
1. If `a_1 b_2 - a_2 b_1 \neq 0`. A particular solution will be `x = x_0` and `y = y_0`
where the constants `x_0` and `y_0` are determined by solving the linear algebraic system
.. math:: a_1 x_0 + b_1 y_0 + c_1 = 0, a_2 x_0 + b_2 y_0 + c_2 = 0
2. If `a_1 b_2 - a_2 b_1 = 0` and `a_1^2 + b_1^2 > 0`. In this case, the system in question becomes
.. math:: x'' = ax + by + c_1, y'' = k (ax + by) + c_2
2.1. If `\sigma = a + bk \neq 0`, the particular solution will be
.. math:: x = \frac{1}{2} b \sigma^{-1} (c_1 k - c_2) t^2 - \sigma^{-2} (a c_1 + b c_2)
.. math:: y = kx + \frac{1}{2} (c_2 - c_1 k) t^2
2.2. If `\sigma = a + bk = 0`, the particular solution will be
.. math:: x = \frac{1}{24} b (c_2 - c_1 k) t^4 + \frac{1}{2} c_1 t^2
.. math:: y = kx + \frac{1}{2} (c_2 - c_1 k) t^2
"""
x0, y0 = symbols('x0, y0')
if r['c1']*r['d2'] - r['c2']*r['d1'] != 0:
sol = solve((r['c1']*x0+r['d1']*y0+r['e1'], r['c2']*x0+r['d2']*y0+r['e2']), x0, y0)
psol = [sol[x0], sol[y0]]
elif r['c1']*r['d2'] - r['c2']*r['d1'] == 0 and (r['c1']**2 + r['d1']**2) > 0:
k = r['c2']/r['c1']
sig = r['c1'] + r['d1']*k
if sig != 0:
psol1 = r['d1']*sig**-1*(r['e1']*k-r['e2'])*t**2/2 - \
sig**-2*(r['c1']*r['e1']+r['d1']*r['e2'])
psol2 = k*psol1 + (r['e2'] - r['e1']*k)*t**2/2
psol = [psol1, psol2]
else:
psol1 = r['d1']*(r['e2']-r['e1']*k)*t**4/24 + r['e1']*t**2/2
psol2 = k*psol1 + (r['e2']-r['e1']*k)*t**2/2
psol = [psol1, psol2]
return psol
def _linear_2eq_order2_type3(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
These type of equation is used for describing the horizontal motion of a pendulum
taking into account the Earth rotation.
The solution is given with `a^2 + 4b > 0`:
.. math:: x = C_1 \cos(\alpha t) + C_2 \sin(\alpha t) + C_3 \cos(\beta t) + C_4 \sin(\beta t)
.. math:: y = -C_1 \sin(\alpha t) + C_2 \cos(\alpha t) - C_3 \sin(\beta t) + C_4 \cos(\beta t)
where `C_1,...,C_4` and
.. math:: \alpha = \frac{1}{2} a + \frac{1}{2} \sqrt{a^2 + 4b}, \beta = \frac{1}{2} a - \frac{1}{2} \sqrt{a^2 + 4b}
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
if r['b1']**2 - 4*r['c1'] > 0:
r['a'] = r['b1'] ; r['b'] = -r['c1']
alpha = r['a']/2 + sqrt(r['a']**2 + 4*r['b'])/2
beta = r['a']/2 - sqrt(r['a']**2 + 4*r['b'])/2
sol1 = C1*cos(alpha*t) + C2*sin(alpha*t) + C3*cos(beta*t) + C4*sin(beta*t)
sol2 = -C1*sin(alpha*t) + C2*cos(alpha*t) - C3*sin(beta*t) + C4*cos(beta*t)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type4(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
These equations are found in the theory of oscillations
.. math:: x'' + a_1 x' + b_1 y' + c_1 x + d_1 y = k_1 e^{i \omega t}
.. math:: y'' + a_2 x' + b_2 y' + c_2 x + d_2 y = k_2 e^{i \omega t}
The general solution of this linear nonhomogeneous system of constant-coefficient
differential equations is given by the sum of its particular solution and the
general solution of the corresponding homogeneous system (with `k_1 = k_2 = 0`)
1. A particular solution is obtained by the method of undetermined coefficients:
.. math:: x = A_* e^{i \omega t}, y = B_* e^{i \omega t}
On substituting these expressions into the original system of differential equations,
one arrive at a linear nonhomogeneous system of algebraic equations for the
coefficients `A` and `B`.
2. The general solution of the homogeneous system of differential equations is determined
by a linear combination of linearly independent particular solutions determined by
the method of undetermined coefficients in the form of exponentials:
.. math:: x = A e^{\lambda t}, y = B e^{\lambda t}
On substituting these expressions into the original system and collecting the
coefficients of the unknown `A` and `B`, one obtains
.. math:: (\lambda^{2} + a_1 \lambda + c_1) A + (b_1 \lambda + d_1) B = 0
.. math:: (a_2 \lambda + c_2) A + (\lambda^{2} + b_2 \lambda + d_2) B = 0
The determinant of this system must vanish for nontrivial solutions A, B to exist.
This requirement results in the following characteristic equation for `\lambda`
.. math:: (\lambda^2 + a_1 \lambda + c_1) (\lambda^2 + b_2 \lambda + d_2) - (b_1 \lambda + d_1) (a_2 \lambda + c_2) = 0
If all roots `k_1,...,k_4` of this equation are distinct, the general solution of the original
system of the differential equations has the form
.. math:: x = C_1 (b_1 \lambda_1 + d_1) e^{\lambda_1 t} - C_2 (b_1 \lambda_2 + d_1) e^{\lambda_2 t} - C_3 (b_1 \lambda_3 + d_1) e^{\lambda_3 t} - C_4 (b_1 \lambda_4 + d_1) e^{\lambda_4 t}
.. math:: y = C_1 (\lambda_1^{2} + a_1 \lambda_1 + c_1) e^{\lambda_1 t} + C_2 (\lambda_2^{2} + a_1 \lambda_2 + c_1) e^{\lambda_2 t} + C_3 (\lambda_3^{2} + a_1 \lambda_3 + c_1) e^{\lambda_3 t} + C_4 (\lambda_4^{2} + a_1 \lambda_4 + c_1) e^{\lambda_4 t}
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
k = Symbol('k')
Ra, Ca, Rb, Cb = symbols('Ra, Ca, Rb, Cb')
a1 = r['a1'] ; a2 = r['a2']
b1 = r['b1'] ; b2 = r['b2']
c1 = r['c1'] ; c2 = r['c2']
d1 = r['d1'] ; d2 = r['d2']
k1 = r['e1'].expand().as_independent(t)[0]
k2 = r['e2'].expand().as_independent(t)[0]
ew1 = r['e1'].expand().as_independent(t)[1]
ew2 = powdenest(ew1).as_base_exp()[1]
ew3 = collect(ew2, t).coeff(t)
w = cancel(ew3/I)
# The particular solution is assumed to be (Ra+I*Ca)*exp(I*w*t) and
# (Rb+I*Cb)*exp(I*w*t) for x(t) and y(t) respectively
peq1 = (-w**2+c1)*Ra - a1*w*Ca + d1*Rb - b1*w*Cb - k1
peq2 = a1*w*Ra + (-w**2+c1)*Ca + b1*w*Rb + d1*Cb
peq3 = c2*Ra - a2*w*Ca + (-w**2+d2)*Rb - b2*w*Cb - k2
peq4 = a2*w*Ra + c2*Ca + b2*w*Rb + (-w**2+d2)*Cb
# FIXME: solve for what in what? Ra, Rb, etc I guess
# but then psol not used for anything?
psol = solve([peq1, peq2, peq3, peq4])
chareq = (k**2+a1*k+c1)*(k**2+b2*k+d2) - (b1*k+d1)*(a2*k+c2)
[k1, k2, k3, k4] = roots_quartic(Poly(chareq))
sol1 = -C1*(b1*k1+d1)*exp(k1*t) - C2*(b1*k2+d1)*exp(k2*t) - \
C3*(b1*k3+d1)*exp(k3*t) - C4*(b1*k4+d1)*exp(k4*t) + (Ra+I*Ca)*exp(I*w*t)
a1_ = (a1-1)
sol2 = C1*(k1**2+a1_*k1+c1)*exp(k1*t) + C2*(k2**2+a1_*k2+c1)*exp(k2*t) + \
C3*(k3**2+a1_*k3+c1)*exp(k3*t) + C4*(k4**2+a1_*k4+c1)*exp(k4*t) + (Rb+I*Cb)*exp(I*w*t)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type5(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equation which come under this category are
.. math:: x'' = a (t y' - y)
.. math:: y'' = b (t x' - x)
The transformation
.. math:: u = t x' - x, b = t y' - y
leads to the first-order system
.. math:: u' = atv, v' = btu
The general solution of this system is given by
If `ab > 0`:
.. math:: u = C_1 a e^{\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{ab} t^2} + C_2 a e^{-\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{ab} t^2}
.. math:: v = C_1 \sqrt{ab} e^{\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{ab} t^2} - C_2 \sqrt{ab} e^{-\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{ab} t^2}
If `ab < 0`:
.. math:: u = C_1 a \cos(\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\left|ab\right|} t^2) + C_2 a \sin(-\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\left|ab\right|} t^2)
.. math:: v = C_1 \sqrt{\left|ab\right|} \sin(\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\left|ab\right|} t^2) + C_2 \sqrt{\left|ab\right|} \cos(-\frac{1}{2} \sqrt{\left|ab\right|} t^2)
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants. On substituting the value of `u` and `v`
in above equations and integrating the resulting expressions, the general solution will become
.. math:: x = C_3 t + t \int \frac{u}{t^2} \,dt, y = C_4 t + t \int \frac{u}{t^2} \,dt
where `C_3` and `C_4` are arbitrary constants.
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
r['a'] = -r['d1'] ; r['b'] = -r['c2']
mul = sqrt(abs(r['a']*r['b']))
if r['a']*r['b'] > 0:
u = C1*r['a']*exp(mul*t**2/2) + C2*r['a']*exp(-mul*t**2/2)
v = C1*mul*exp(mul*t**2/2) - C2*mul*exp(-mul*t**2/2)
else:
u = C1*r['a']*cos(mul*t**2/2) + C2*r['a']*sin(mul*t**2/2)
v = -C1*mul*sin(mul*t**2/2) + C2*mul*cos(mul*t**2/2)
sol1 = C3*t + t*Integral(u/t**2, t)
sol2 = C4*t + t*Integral(v/t**2, t)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type6(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations are
.. math:: x'' = f(t) (a_1 x + b_1 y)
.. math:: y'' = f(t) (a_2 x + b_2 y)
If `k_1` and `k_2` are roots of the quadratic equation
.. math:: k^2 - (a_1 + b_2) k + a_1 b_2 - a_2 b_1 = 0
Then by multiplying appropriate constants and adding together original equations
we obtain two independent equations:
.. math:: z_1'' = k_1 f(t) z_1, z_1 = a_2 x + (k_1 - a_1) y
.. math:: z_2'' = k_2 f(t) z_2, z_2 = a_2 x + (k_2 - a_1) y
Solving the equations will give the values of `x` and `y` after obtaining the value
of `z_1` and `z_2` by solving the differential equation and substituting the result.
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
k = Symbol('k')
z = Function('z')
num, den = cancel(
(r['c1']*x(t) + r['d1']*y(t))/
(r['c2']*x(t) + r['d2']*y(t))).as_numer_denom()
f = r['c1']/num.coeff(x(t))
a1 = num.coeff(x(t))
b1 = num.coeff(y(t))
a2 = den.coeff(x(t))
b2 = den.coeff(y(t))
chareq = k**2 - (a1 + b2)*k + a1*b2 - a2*b1
k1, k2 = [rootof(chareq, k) for k in range(Poly(chareq).degree())]
z1 = dsolve(diff(z(t),t,t) - k1*f*z(t)).rhs
z2 = dsolve(diff(z(t),t,t) - k2*f*z(t)).rhs
sol1 = (k1*z2 - k2*z1 + a1*(z1 - z2))/(a2*(k1-k2))
sol2 = (z1 - z2)/(k1 - k2)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type7(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations are given as
.. math:: x'' = f(t) (a_1 x' + b_1 y')
.. math:: y'' = f(t) (a_2 x' + b_2 y')
If `k_1` and 'k_2` are roots of the quadratic equation
.. math:: k^2 - (a_1 + b_2) k + a_1 b_2 - a_2 b_1 = 0
Then the system can be reduced by adding together the two equations multiplied
by appropriate constants give following two independent equations:
.. math:: z_1'' = k_1 f(t) z_1', z_1 = a_2 x + (k_1 - a_1) y
.. math:: z_2'' = k_2 f(t) z_2', z_2 = a_2 x + (k_2 - a_1) y
Integrating these and returning to the original variables, one arrives at a linear
algebraic system for the unknowns `x` and `y`:
.. math:: a_2 x + (k_1 - a_1) y = C_1 \int e^{k_1 F(t)} \,dt + C_2
.. math:: a_2 x + (k_2 - a_1) y = C_3 \int e^{k_2 F(t)} \,dt + C_4
where `C_1,...,C_4` are arbitrary constants and `F(t) = \int f(t) \,dt`
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
k = Symbol('k')
num, den = cancel(
(r['a1']*x(t) + r['b1']*y(t))/
(r['a2']*x(t) + r['b2']*y(t))).as_numer_denom()
f = r['a1']/num.coeff(x(t))
a1 = num.coeff(x(t))
b1 = num.coeff(y(t))
a2 = den.coeff(x(t))
b2 = den.coeff(y(t))
chareq = k**2 - (a1 + b2)*k + a1*b2 - a2*b1
[k1, k2] = [rootof(chareq, k) for k in range(Poly(chareq).degree())]
F = Integral(f, t)
z1 = C1*Integral(exp(k1*F), t) + C2
z2 = C3*Integral(exp(k2*F), t) + C4
sol1 = (k1*z2 - k2*z1 + a1*(z1 - z2))/(a2*(k1-k2))
sol2 = (z1 - z2)/(k1 - k2)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type8(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equation of this category are
.. math:: x'' = a f(t) (t y' - y)
.. math:: y'' = b f(t) (t x' - x)
The transformation
.. math:: u = t x' - x, v = t y' - y
leads to the system of first-order equations
.. math:: u' = a t f(t) v, v' = b t f(t) u
The general solution of this system has the form
If `ab > 0`:
.. math:: u = C_1 a e^{\sqrt{ab} \int t f(t) \,dt} + C_2 a e^{-\sqrt{ab} \int t f(t) \,dt}
.. math:: v = C_1 \sqrt{ab} e^{\sqrt{ab} \int t f(t) \,dt} - C_2 \sqrt{ab} e^{-\sqrt{ab} \int t f(t) \,dt}
If `ab < 0`:
.. math:: u = C_1 a \cos(\sqrt{\left|ab\right|} \int t f(t) \,dt) + C_2 a \sin(-\sqrt{\left|ab\right|} \int t f(t) \,dt)
.. math:: v = C_1 \sqrt{\left|ab\right|} \sin(\sqrt{\left|ab\right|} \int t f(t) \,dt) + C_2 \sqrt{\left|ab\right|} \cos(-\sqrt{\left|ab\right|} \int t f(t) \,dt)
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants. On substituting the value of `u` and `v`
in above equations and integrating the resulting expressions, the general solution will become
.. math:: x = C_3 t + t \int \frac{u}{t^2} \,dt, y = C_4 t + t \int \frac{u}{t^2} \,dt
where `C_3` and `C_4` are arbitrary constants.
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
num, den = cancel(r['d1']/r['c2']).as_numer_denom()
f = -r['d1']/num
a = num
b = den
mul = sqrt(abs(a*b))
Igral = Integral(t*f, t)
if a*b > 0:
u = C1*a*exp(mul*Igral) + C2*a*exp(-mul*Igral)
v = C1*mul*exp(mul*Igral) - C2*mul*exp(-mul*Igral)
else:
u = C1*a*cos(mul*Igral) + C2*a*sin(mul*Igral)
v = -C1*mul*sin(mul*Igral) + C2*mul*cos(mul*Igral)
sol1 = C3*t + t*Integral(u/t**2, t)
sol2 = C4*t + t*Integral(v/t**2, t)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type9(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
.. math:: t^2 x'' + a_1 t x' + b_1 t y' + c_1 x + d_1 y = 0
.. math:: t^2 y'' + a_2 t x' + b_2 t y' + c_2 x + d_2 y = 0
These system of equations are euler type.
The substitution of `t = \sigma e^{\tau} (\sigma \neq 0)` leads to the system of constant
coefficient linear differential equations
.. math:: x'' + (a_1 - 1) x' + b_1 y' + c_1 x + d_1 y = 0
.. math:: y'' + a_2 x' + (b_2 - 1) y' + c_2 x + d_2 y = 0
The general solution of the homogeneous system of differential equations is determined
by a linear combination of linearly independent particular solutions determined by
the method of undetermined coefficients in the form of exponentials
.. math:: x = A e^{\lambda t}, y = B e^{\lambda t}
On substituting these expressions into the original system and collecting the
coefficients of the unknown `A` and `B`, one obtains
.. math:: (\lambda^{2} + (a_1 - 1) \lambda + c_1) A + (b_1 \lambda + d_1) B = 0
.. math:: (a_2 \lambda + c_2) A + (\lambda^{2} + (b_2 - 1) \lambda + d_2) B = 0
The determinant of this system must vanish for nontrivial solutions A, B to exist.
This requirement results in the following characteristic equation for `\lambda`
.. math:: (\lambda^2 + (a_1 - 1) \lambda + c_1) (\lambda^2 + (b_2 - 1) \lambda + d_2) - (b_1 \lambda + d_1) (a_2 \lambda + c_2) = 0
If all roots `k_1,...,k_4` of this equation are distinct, the general solution of the original
system of the differential equations has the form
.. math:: x = C_1 (b_1 \lambda_1 + d_1) e^{\lambda_1 t} - C_2 (b_1 \lambda_2 + d_1) e^{\lambda_2 t} - C_3 (b_1 \lambda_3 + d_1) e^{\lambda_3 t} - C_4 (b_1 \lambda_4 + d_1) e^{\lambda_4 t}
.. math:: y = C_1 (\lambda_1^{2} + (a_1 - 1) \lambda_1 + c_1) e^{\lambda_1 t} + C_2 (\lambda_2^{2} + (a_1 - 1) \lambda_2 + c_1) e^{\lambda_2 t} + C_3 (\lambda_3^{2} + (a_1 - 1) \lambda_3 + c_1) e^{\lambda_3 t} + C_4 (\lambda_4^{2} + (a_1 - 1) \lambda_4 + c_1) e^{\lambda_4 t}
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
k = Symbol('k')
a1 = -r['a1']*t; a2 = -r['a2']*t
b1 = -r['b1']*t; b2 = -r['b2']*t
c1 = -r['c1']*t**2; c2 = -r['c2']*t**2
d1 = -r['d1']*t**2; d2 = -r['d2']*t**2
eq = (k**2+(a1-1)*k+c1)*(k**2+(b2-1)*k+d2)-(b1*k+d1)*(a2*k+c2)
[k1, k2, k3, k4] = roots_quartic(Poly(eq))
sol1 = -C1*(b1*k1+d1)*exp(k1*log(t)) - C2*(b1*k2+d1)*exp(k2*log(t)) - \
C3*(b1*k3+d1)*exp(k3*log(t)) - C4*(b1*k4+d1)*exp(k4*log(t))
a1_ = (a1-1)
sol2 = C1*(k1**2+a1_*k1+c1)*exp(k1*log(t)) + C2*(k2**2+a1_*k2+c1)*exp(k2*log(t)) \
+ C3*(k3**2+a1_*k3+c1)*exp(k3*log(t)) + C4*(k4**2+a1_*k4+c1)*exp(k4*log(t))
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type10(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equation of this category are
.. math:: (\alpha t^2 + \beta t + \gamma)^{2} x'' = ax + by
.. math:: (\alpha t^2 + \beta t + \gamma)^{2} y'' = cx + dy
The transformation
.. math:: \tau = \int \frac{1}{\alpha t^2 + \beta t + \gamma} \,dt , u = \frac{x}{\sqrt{\left|\alpha t^2 + \beta t + \gamma\right|}} , v = \frac{y}{\sqrt{\left|\alpha t^2 + \beta t + \gamma\right|}}
leads to a constant coefficient linear system of equations
.. math:: u'' = (a - \alpha \gamma + \frac{1}{4} \beta^{2}) u + b v
.. math:: v'' = c u + (d - \alpha \gamma + \frac{1}{4} \beta^{2}) v
These system of equations obtained can be solved by type1 of System of two
constant-coefficient second-order linear homogeneous differential equations.
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
u, v = symbols('u, v', cls=Function)
assert False
T = Symbol('T')
p = Wild('p', exclude=[t, t**2])
q = Wild('q', exclude=[t, t**2])
s = Wild('s', exclude=[t, t**2])
n = Wild('n', exclude=[t, t**2])
num, den = r['c1'].as_numer_denom()
dic = den.match((n*(p*t**2+q*t+s)**2).expand())
eqz = dic[p]*t**2 + dic[q]*t + dic[s]
a = num/dic[n]
b = cancel(r['d1']*eqz**2)
c = cancel(r['c2']*eqz**2)
d = cancel(r['d2']*eqz**2)
[msol1, msol2] = dsolve([Eq(diff(u(t), t, t), (a - dic[p]*dic[s] + dic[q]**2/4)*u(t) \
+ b*v(t)), Eq(diff(v(t),t,t), c*u(t) + (d - dic[p]*dic[s] + dic[q]**2/4)*v(t))])
sol1 = (msol1.rhs*sqrt(abs(eqz))).subs(t, Integral(1/eqz, t))
sol2 = (msol2.rhs*sqrt(abs(eqz))).subs(t, Integral(1/eqz, t))
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def _linear_2eq_order2_type11(x, y, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations which comes under this type are
.. math:: x'' = f(t) (t x' - x) + g(t) (t y' - y)
.. math:: y'' = h(t) (t x' - x) + p(t) (t y' - y)
The transformation
.. math:: u = t x' - x, v = t y' - y
leads to the linear system of first-order equations
.. math:: u' = t f(t) u + t g(t) v, v' = t h(t) u + t p(t) v
On substituting the value of `u` and `v` in transformed equation gives value of `x` and `y` as
.. math:: x = C_3 t + t \int \frac{u}{t^2} \,dt , y = C_4 t + t \int \frac{v}{t^2} \,dt.
where `C_3` and `C_4` are arbitrary constants.
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
u, v = symbols('u, v', cls=Function)
f = -r['c1'] ; g = -r['d1']
h = -r['c2'] ; p = -r['d2']
[msol1, msol2] = dsolve([Eq(diff(u(t),t), t*f*u(t) + t*g*v(t)), Eq(diff(v(t),t), t*h*u(t) + t*p*v(t))])
sol1 = C3*t + t*Integral(msol1.rhs/t**2, t)
sol2 = C4*t + t*Integral(msol2.rhs/t**2, t)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2)]
def sysode_linear_3eq_order1(match_):
x = match_['func'][0].func
y = match_['func'][1].func
z = match_['func'][2].func
func = match_['func']
fc = match_['func_coeff']
eq = match_['eq']
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
r = dict()
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
for i in range(3):
eqs = 0
for terms in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
eqs += terms/fc[i,func[i],1]
eq[i] = eqs
# for equations:
# Eq(g1*diff(x(t),t), a1*x(t)+b1*y(t)+c1*z(t)+d1),
# Eq(g2*diff(y(t),t), a2*x(t)+b2*y(t)+c2*z(t)+d2), and
# Eq(g3*diff(z(t),t), a3*x(t)+b3*y(t)+c3*z(t)+d3)
r['a1'] = fc[0,x(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),1]; r['a2'] = fc[1,x(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),1];
r['a3'] = fc[2,x(t),0]/fc[2,z(t),1]
r['b1'] = fc[0,y(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),1]; r['b2'] = fc[1,y(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),1];
r['b3'] = fc[2,y(t),0]/fc[2,z(t),1]
r['c1'] = fc[0,z(t),0]/fc[0,x(t),1]; r['c2'] = fc[1,z(t),0]/fc[1,y(t),1];
r['c3'] = fc[2,z(t),0]/fc[2,z(t),1]
for i in range(3):
for j in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
if not j.has(x(t), y(t), z(t)):
raise NotImplementedError("Only homogeneous problems are supported, non-homogenous are not supported currently.")
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type1':
sol = _linear_3eq_order1_type1(x, y, z, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type2':
sol = _linear_3eq_order1_type2(x, y, z, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type3':
sol = _linear_3eq_order1_type3(x, y, z, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type4':
sol = _linear_3eq_order1_type4(x, y, z, t, r, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type6':
sol = _linear_neq_order1_type1(match_)
return sol
def _linear_3eq_order1_type1(x, y, z, t, r, eq):
r"""
.. math:: x' = ax
.. math:: y' = bx + cy
.. math:: z' = dx + ky + pz
Solution of such equations are forward substitution. Solving first equations
gives the value of `x`, substituting it in second and third equation and
solving second equation gives `y` and similarly substituting `y` in third
equation give `z`.
.. math:: x = C_1 e^{at}
.. math:: y = \frac{b C_1}{a - c} e^{at} + C_2 e^{ct}
.. math:: z = \frac{C_1}{a - p} (d + \frac{bk}{a - c}) e^{at} + \frac{k C_2}{c - p} e^{ct} + C_3 e^{pt}
where `C_1, C_2` and `C_3` are arbitrary constants.
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
a = -r['a1']; b = -r['a2']; c = -r['b2']
d = -r['a3']; k = -r['b3']; p = -r['c3']
sol1 = C1*exp(a*t)
sol2 = b*C1*exp(a*t)/(a-c) + C2*exp(c*t)
sol3 = C1*(d+b*k/(a-c))*exp(a*t)/(a-p) + k*C2*exp(c*t)/(c-p) + C3*exp(p*t)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2), Eq(z(t), sol3)]
def _linear_3eq_order1_type2(x, y, z, t, r, eq):
r"""
The equations of this type are
.. math:: x' = cy - bz
.. math:: y' = az - cx
.. math:: z' = bx - ay
1. First integral:
.. math:: ax + by + cz = A \qquad - (1)
.. math:: x^2 + y^2 + z^2 = B^2 \qquad - (2)
where `A` and `B` are arbitrary constants. It follows from these integrals
that the integral lines are circles formed by the intersection of the planes
`(1)` and sphere `(2)`
2. Solution:
.. math:: x = a C_0 + k C_1 \cos(kt) + (c C_2 - b C_3) \sin(kt)
.. math:: y = b C_0 + k C_2 \cos(kt) + (a C_2 - c C_3) \sin(kt)
.. math:: z = c C_0 + k C_3 \cos(kt) + (b C_2 - a C_3) \sin(kt)
where `k = \sqrt{a^2 + b^2 + c^2}` and the four constants of integration,
`C_1,...,C_4` are constrained by a single relation,
.. math:: a C_1 + b C_2 + c C_3 = 0
"""
C0, C1, C2, C3 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4, start=0)
a = -r['c2']; b = -r['a3']; c = -r['b1']
k = sqrt(a**2 + b**2 + c**2)
C3 = (-a*C1 - b*C2)/c
sol1 = a*C0 + k*C1*cos(k*t) + (c*C2-b*C3)*sin(k*t)
sol2 = b*C0 + k*C2*cos(k*t) + (a*C3-c*C1)*sin(k*t)
sol3 = c*C0 + k*C3*cos(k*t) + (b*C1-a*C2)*sin(k*t)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2), Eq(z(t), sol3)]
def _linear_3eq_order1_type3(x, y, z, t, r, eq):
r"""
Equations of this system of ODEs
.. math:: a x' = bc (y - z)
.. math:: b y' = ac (z - x)
.. math:: c z' = ab (x - y)
1. First integral:
.. math:: a^2 x + b^2 y + c^2 z = A
where A is an arbitrary constant. It follows that the integral lines are plane curves.
2. Solution:
.. math:: x = C_0 + k C_1 \cos(kt) + a^{-1} bc (C_2 - C_3) \sin(kt)
.. math:: y = C_0 + k C_2 \cos(kt) + a b^{-1} c (C_3 - C_1) \sin(kt)
.. math:: z = C_0 + k C_3 \cos(kt) + ab c^{-1} (C_1 - C_2) \sin(kt)
where `k = \sqrt{a^2 + b^2 + c^2}` and the four constants of integration,
`C_1,...,C_4` are constrained by a single relation
.. math:: a^2 C_1 + b^2 C_2 + c^2 C_3 = 0
"""
C0, C1, C2, C3 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4, start=0)
c = sqrt(r['b1']*r['c2'])
b = sqrt(r['b1']*r['a3'])
a = sqrt(r['c2']*r['a3'])
C3 = (-a**2*C1-b**2*C2)/c**2
k = sqrt(a**2 + b**2 + c**2)
sol1 = C0 + k*C1*cos(k*t) + a**-1*b*c*(C2-C3)*sin(k*t)
sol2 = C0 + k*C2*cos(k*t) + a*b**-1*c*(C3-C1)*sin(k*t)
sol3 = C0 + k*C3*cos(k*t) + a*b*c**-1*(C1-C2)*sin(k*t)
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2), Eq(z(t), sol3)]
def _linear_3eq_order1_type4(x, y, z, t, r, eq):
r"""
Equations:
.. math:: x' = (a_1 f(t) + g(t)) x + a_2 f(t) y + a_3 f(t) z
.. math:: y' = b_1 f(t) x + (b_2 f(t) + g(t)) y + b_3 f(t) z
.. math:: z' = c_1 f(t) x + c_2 f(t) y + (c_3 f(t) + g(t)) z
The transformation
.. math:: x = e^{\int g(t) \,dt} u, y = e^{\int g(t) \,dt} v, z = e^{\int g(t) \,dt} w, \tau = \int f(t) \,dt
leads to the system of constant coefficient linear differential equations
.. math:: u' = a_1 u + a_2 v + a_3 w
.. math:: v' = b_1 u + b_2 v + b_3 w
.. math:: w' = c_1 u + c_2 v + c_3 w
These system of equations are solved by homogeneous linear system of constant
coefficients of `n` equations of first order. Then substituting the value of
`u, v` and `w` in transformed equation gives value of `x, y` and `z`.
"""
u, v, w = symbols('u, v, w', cls=Function)
a2, a3 = cancel(r['b1']/r['c1']).as_numer_denom()
f = cancel(r['b1']/a2)
b1 = cancel(r['a2']/f); b3 = cancel(r['c2']/f)
c1 = cancel(r['a3']/f); c2 = cancel(r['b3']/f)
a1, g = div(r['a1'],f)
b2 = div(r['b2'],f)[0]
c3 = div(r['c3'],f)[0]
trans_eq = (diff(u(t),t)-a1*u(t)-a2*v(t)-a3*w(t), diff(v(t),t)-b1*u(t)-\
b2*v(t)-b3*w(t), diff(w(t),t)-c1*u(t)-c2*v(t)-c3*w(t))
sol = dsolve(trans_eq)
sol1 = exp(Integral(g,t))*((sol[0].rhs).subs(t, Integral(f,t)))
sol2 = exp(Integral(g,t))*((sol[1].rhs).subs(t, Integral(f,t)))
sol3 = exp(Integral(g,t))*((sol[2].rhs).subs(t, Integral(f,t)))
return [Eq(x(t), sol1), Eq(y(t), sol2), Eq(z(t), sol3)]
def sysode_linear_neq_order1(match_):
sol = _linear_neq_order1_type1(match_)
return sol
def _linear_neq_order1_type1(match_):
r"""
System of n first-order constant-coefficient linear nonhomogeneous differential equation
.. math:: y'_k = a_{k1} y_1 + a_{k2} y_2 +...+ a_{kn} y_n; k = 1,2,...,n
or that can be written as `\vec{y'} = A . \vec{y}`
where `\vec{y}` is matrix of `y_k` for `k = 1,2,...n` and `A` is a `n \times n` matrix.
Since these equations are equivalent to a first order homogeneous linear
differential equation. So the general solution will contain `n` linearly
independent parts and solution will consist some type of exponential
functions. Assuming `y = \vec{v} e^{rt}` is a solution of the system where
`\vec{v}` is a vector of coefficients of `y_1,...,y_n`. Substituting `y` and
`y' = r v e^{r t}` into the equation `\vec{y'} = A . \vec{y}`, we get
.. math:: r \vec{v} e^{rt} = A \vec{v} e^{rt}
.. math:: r \vec{v} = A \vec{v}
where `r` comes out to be eigenvalue of `A` and vector `\vec{v}` is the eigenvector
of `A` corresponding to `r`. There are three possibilities of eigenvalues of `A`
- `n` distinct real eigenvalues
- complex conjugate eigenvalues
- eigenvalues with multiplicity `k`
1. When all eigenvalues `r_1,..,r_n` are distinct with `n` different eigenvectors
`v_1,...v_n` then the solution is given by
.. math:: \vec{y} = C_1 e^{r_1 t} \vec{v_1} + C_2 e^{r_2 t} \vec{v_2} +...+ C_n e^{r_n t} \vec{v_n}
where `C_1,C_2,...,C_n` are arbitrary constants.
2. When some eigenvalues are complex then in order to make the solution real,
we take a linear combination: if `r = a + bi` has an eigenvector
`\vec{v} = \vec{w_1} + i \vec{w_2}` then to obtain real-valued solutions to
the system, replace the complex-valued solutions `e^{rx} \vec{v}`
with real-valued solution `e^{ax} (\vec{w_1} \cos(bx) - \vec{w_2} \sin(bx))`
and for `r = a - bi` replace the solution `e^{-r x} \vec{v}` with
`e^{ax} (\vec{w_1} \sin(bx) + \vec{w_2} \cos(bx))`
3. If some eigenvalues are repeated. Then we get fewer than `n` linearly
independent eigenvectors, we miss some of the solutions and need to
construct the missing ones. We do this via generalized eigenvectors, vectors
which are not eigenvectors but are close enough that we can use to write
down the remaining solutions. For a eigenvalue `r` with eigenvector `\vec{w}`
we obtain `\vec{w_2},...,\vec{w_k}` using
.. math:: (A - r I) . \vec{w_2} = \vec{w}
.. math:: (A - r I) . \vec{w_3} = \vec{w_2}
.. math:: \vdots
.. math:: (A - r I) . \vec{w_k} = \vec{w_{k-1}}
Then the solutions to the system for the eigenspace are `e^{rt} [\vec{w}],
e^{rt} [t \vec{w} + \vec{w_2}], e^{rt} [\frac{t^2}{2} \vec{w} + t \vec{w_2} + \vec{w_3}],
...,e^{rt} [\frac{t^{k-1}}{(k-1)!} \vec{w} + \frac{t^{k-2}}{(k-2)!} \vec{w_2} +...+ t \vec{w_{k-1}}
+ \vec{w_k}]`
So, If `\vec{y_1},...,\vec{y_n}` are `n` solution of obtained from three
categories of `A`, then general solution to the system `\vec{y'} = A . \vec{y}`
.. math:: \vec{y} = C_1 \vec{y_1} + C_2 \vec{y_2} + \cdots + C_n \vec{y_n}
"""
eq = match_['eq']
func = match_['func']
fc = match_['func_coeff']
n = len(eq)
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
constants = numbered_symbols(prefix='C', cls=Symbol, start=1)
M = Matrix(n,n,lambda i,j:-fc[i,func[j],0])
evector = M.eigenvects(simplify=True)
def is_complex(mat, root):
return Matrix(n, 1, lambda i,j: re(mat[i])*cos(im(root)*t) - im(mat[i])*sin(im(root)*t))
def is_complex_conjugate(mat, root):
return Matrix(n, 1, lambda i,j: re(mat[i])*sin(abs(im(root))*t) + im(mat[i])*cos(im(root)*t)*abs(im(root))/im(root))
conjugate_root = []
e_vector = zeros(n,1)
for evects in evector:
if evects[0] not in conjugate_root:
# If number of column of an eigenvector is not equal to the multiplicity
# of its eigenvalue then the legt eigenvectors are calculated
if len(evects[2])!=evects[1]:
var_mat = Matrix(n, 1, lambda i,j: Symbol('x'+str(i)))
Mnew = (M - evects[0]*eye(evects[2][-1].rows))*var_mat
w = [0 for i in range(evects[1])]
w[0] = evects[2][-1]
for r in range(1, evects[1]):
w_ = Mnew - w[r-1]
sol_dict = solve(list(w_), var_mat[1:])
sol_dict[var_mat[0]] = var_mat[0]
for key, value in sol_dict.items():
sol_dict[key] = value.subs(var_mat[0],1)
w[r] = Matrix(n, 1, lambda i,j: sol_dict[var_mat[i]])
evects[2].append(w[r])
for i in range(evects[1]):
C = next(constants)
for j in range(i+1):
if evects[0].has(I):
evects[2][j] = simplify(evects[2][j])
e_vector += C*is_complex(evects[2][j], evects[0])*t**(i-j)*exp(re(evects[0])*t)/factorial(i-j)
C = next(constants)
e_vector += C*is_complex_conjugate(evects[2][j], evects[0])*t**(i-j)*exp(re(evects[0])*t)/factorial(i-j)
else:
e_vector += C*evects[2][j]*t**(i-j)*exp(evects[0]*t)/factorial(i-j)
if evects[0].has(I):
conjugate_root.append(conjugate(evects[0]))
sol = []
for i in range(len(eq)):
sol.append(Eq(func[i],e_vector[i]))
return sol
def sysode_nonlinear_2eq_order1(match_):
func = match_['func']
eq = match_['eq']
fc = match_['func_coeff']
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type5':
sol = _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type5(func, t, eq)
return sol
x = func[0].func
y = func[1].func
for i in range(2):
eqs = 0
for terms in Add.make_args(eq[i]):
eqs += terms/fc[i,func[i],1]
eq[i] = eqs
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type1':
sol = _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type1(x, y, t, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type2':
sol = _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type2(x, y, t, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type3':
sol = _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type3(x, y, t, eq)
elif match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type4':
sol = _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type4(x, y, t, eq)
return sol
def _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type1(x, y, t, eq):
r"""
Equations:
.. math:: x' = x^n F(x,y)
.. math:: y' = g(y) F(x,y)
Solution:
.. math:: x = \varphi(y), \int \frac{1}{g(y) F(\varphi(y),y)} \,dy = t + C_2
where
if `n \neq 1`
.. math:: \varphi = [C_1 + (1-n) \int \frac{1}{g(y)} \,dy]^{\frac{1}{1-n}}
if `n = 1`
.. math:: \varphi = C_1 e^{\int \frac{1}{g(y)} \,dy}
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants.
"""
C1, C2 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
n = Wild('n', exclude=[x(t),y(t)])
f = Wild('f')
u, v = symbols('u, v')
r = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - x(t)**n*f)
g = ((diff(y(t),t) - eq[1])/r[f]).subs(y(t),v)
F = r[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v)
n = r[n]
if n!=1:
phi = (C1 + (1-n)*Integral(1/g, v))**(1/(1-n))
else:
phi = C1*exp(Integral(1/g, v))
phi = phi.doit()
sol2 = solve(Integral(1/(g*F.subs(u,phi)), v).doit() - t - C2, v)
sol = []
for sols in sol2:
sol.append(Eq(x(t),phi.subs(v, sols)))
sol.append(Eq(y(t), sols))
return sol
def _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type2(x, y, t, eq):
r"""
Equations:
.. math:: x' = e^{\lambda x} F(x,y)
.. math:: y' = g(y) F(x,y)
Solution:
.. math:: x = \varphi(y), \int \frac{1}{g(y) F(\varphi(y),y)} \,dy = t + C_2
where
if `\lambda \neq 0`
.. math:: \varphi = -\frac{1}{\lambda} log(C_1 - \lambda \int \frac{1}{g(y)} \,dy)
if `\lambda = 0`
.. math:: \varphi = C_1 + \int \frac{1}{g(y)} \,dy
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants.
"""
C1, C2 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
n = Wild('n', exclude=[x(t),y(t)])
f = Wild('f')
u, v = symbols('u, v')
r = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - exp(n*x(t))*f)
g = ((diff(y(t),t) - eq[1])/r[f]).subs(y(t),v)
F = r[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v)
n = r[n]
if n:
phi = -1/n*log(C1 - n*Integral(1/g, v))
else:
phi = C1 + Integral(1/g, v)
phi = phi.doit()
sol2 = solve(Integral(1/(g*F.subs(u,phi)), v).doit() - t - C2, v)
sol = []
for sols in sol2:
sol.append(Eq(x(t),phi.subs(v, sols)))
sol.append(Eq(y(t), sols))
return sol
def _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type3(x, y, t, eq):
r"""
Autonomous system of general form
.. math:: x' = F(x,y)
.. math:: y' = G(x,y)
Assuming `y = y(x, C_1)` where `C_1` is an arbitrary constant is the general
solution of the first-order equation
.. math:: F(x,y) y'_x = G(x,y)
Then the general solution of the original system of equations has the form
.. math:: \int \frac{1}{F(x,y(x,C_1))} \,dx = t + C_1
"""
C1, C2, C3, C4 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=4)
v = Function('v')
u = Symbol('u')
f = Wild('f')
g = Wild('g')
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - f)
r2 = eq[1].match(diff(y(t),t) - g)
F = r1[f].subs(x(t), u).subs(y(t), v(u))
G = r2[g].subs(x(t), u).subs(y(t), v(u))
sol2r = dsolve(Eq(diff(v(u), u), G/F))
for sol2s in sol2r:
sol1 = solve(Integral(1/F.subs(v(u), sol2s.rhs), u).doit() - t - C2, u)
sol = []
for sols in sol1:
sol.append(Eq(x(t), sols))
sol.append(Eq(y(t), (sol2s.rhs).subs(u, sols)))
return sol
def _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type4(x, y, t, eq):
r"""
Equation:
.. math:: x' = f_1(x) g_1(y) \phi(x,y,t)
.. math:: y' = f_2(x) g_2(y) \phi(x,y,t)
First integral:
.. math:: \int \frac{f_2(x)}{f_1(x)} \,dx - \int \frac{g_1(y)}{g_2(y)} \,dy = C
where `C` is an arbitrary constant.
On solving the first integral for `x` (resp., `y` ) and on substituting the
resulting expression into either equation of the original solution, one
arrives at a first-order equation for determining `y` (resp., `x` ).
"""
C1, C2 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
u, v = symbols('u, v')
U, V = symbols('U, V', cls=Function)
f = Wild('f')
g = Wild('g')
f1 = Wild('f1', exclude=[v,t])
f2 = Wild('f2', exclude=[v,t])
g1 = Wild('g1', exclude=[u,t])
g2 = Wild('g2', exclude=[u,t])
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - f)
r2 = eq[1].match(diff(y(t),t) - g)
num, den = (
(r1[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v))/
(r2[g].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v))).as_numer_denom()
R1 = num.match(f1*g1)
R2 = den.match(f2*g2)
phi = (r1[f].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v))/num
F1 = R1[f1]; F2 = R2[f2]
G1 = R1[g1]; G2 = R2[g2]
sol1r = solve(Integral(F2/F1, u).doit() - Integral(G1/G2,v).doit() - C1, u)
sol2r = solve(Integral(F2/F1, u).doit() - Integral(G1/G2,v).doit() - C1, v)
sol = []
for sols in sol1r:
sol.append(Eq(y(t), dsolve(diff(V(t),t) - F2.subs(u,sols).subs(v,V(t))*G2.subs(v,V(t))*phi.subs(u,sols).subs(v,V(t))).rhs))
for sols in sol2r:
sol.append(Eq(x(t), dsolve(diff(U(t),t) - F1.subs(u,U(t))*G1.subs(v,sols).subs(u,U(t))*phi.subs(v,sols).subs(u,U(t))).rhs))
return set(sol)
def _nonlinear_2eq_order1_type5(func, t, eq):
r"""
Clairaut system of ODEs
.. math:: x = t x' + F(x',y')
.. math:: y = t y' + G(x',y')
The following are solutions of the system
`(i)` straight lines:
.. math:: x = C_1 t + F(C_1, C_2), y = C_2 t + G(C_1, C_2)
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants;
`(ii)` envelopes of the above lines;
`(iii)` continuously differentiable lines made up from segments of the lines
`(i)` and `(ii)`.
"""
C1, C2 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
f = Wild('f')
g = Wild('g')
def check_type(x, y):
r1 = eq[0].match(t*diff(x(t),t) - x(t) + f)
r2 = eq[1].match(t*diff(y(t),t) - y(t) + g)
if not (r1 and r2):
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - x(t)/t + f/t)
r2 = eq[1].match(diff(y(t),t) - y(t)/t + g/t)
if not (r1 and r2):
r1 = (-eq[0]).match(t*diff(x(t),t) - x(t) + f)
r2 = (-eq[1]).match(t*diff(y(t),t) - y(t) + g)
if not (r1 and r2):
r1 = (-eq[0]).match(diff(x(t),t) - x(t)/t + f/t)
r2 = (-eq[1]).match(diff(y(t),t) - y(t)/t + g/t)
return [r1, r2]
for func_ in func:
if isinstance(func_, list):
x = func[0][0].func
y = func[0][1].func
[r1, r2] = check_type(x, y)
if not (r1 and r2):
[r1, r2] = check_type(y, x)
x, y = y, x
x1 = diff(x(t),t); y1 = diff(y(t),t)
return {Eq(x(t), C1*t + r1[f].subs(x1,C1).subs(y1,C2)), Eq(y(t), C2*t + r2[g].subs(x1,C1).subs(y1,C2))}
def sysode_nonlinear_3eq_order1(match_):
x = match_['func'][0].func
y = match_['func'][1].func
z = match_['func'][2].func
eq = match_['eq']
fc = match_['func_coeff']
func = match_['func']
t = list(list(eq[0].atoms(Derivative))[0].atoms(Symbol))[0]
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type1':
sol = _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type1(x, y, z, t, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type2':
sol = _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type2(x, y, z, t, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type3':
sol = _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type3(x, y, z, t, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type4':
sol = _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type4(x, y, z, t, eq)
if match_['type_of_equation'] == 'type5':
sol = _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type5(x, y, z, t, eq)
return sol
def _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type1(x, y, z, t, eq):
r"""
Equations:
.. math:: a x' = (b - c) y z, \enspace b y' = (c - a) z x, \enspace c z' = (a - b) x y
First Integrals:
.. math:: a x^{2} + b y^{2} + c z^{2} = C_1
.. math:: a^{2} x^{2} + b^{2} y^{2} + c^{2} z^{2} = C_2
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants. On solving the integrals for `y` and
`z` and on substituting the resulting expressions into the first equation of the
system, we arrives at a separable first-order equation on `x`. Similarly doing that
for other two equations, we will arrive at first order equation on `y` and `z` too.
References
==========
-http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/sysode/sode0401.pdf
"""
C1, C2 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
u, v, w = symbols('u, v, w')
p = Wild('p', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
q = Wild('q', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
s = Wild('s', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
r = (diff(x(t),t) - eq[0]).match(p*y(t)*z(t))
r.update((diff(y(t),t) - eq[1]).match(q*z(t)*x(t)))
r.update((diff(z(t),t) - eq[2]).match(s*x(t)*y(t)))
n1, d1 = r[p].as_numer_denom()
n2, d2 = r[q].as_numer_denom()
n3, d3 = r[s].as_numer_denom()
val = solve([n1*u-d1*v+d1*w, d2*u+n2*v-d2*w, d3*u-d3*v-n3*w],[u,v])
vals = [val[v], val[u]]
c = lcm(vals[0].as_numer_denom()[1], vals[1].as_numer_denom()[1])
b = vals[0].subs(w,c)
a = vals[1].subs(w,c)
y_x = sqrt(((c*C1-C2) - a*(c-a)*x(t)**2)/(b*(c-b)))
z_x = sqrt(((b*C1-C2) - a*(b-a)*x(t)**2)/(c*(b-c)))
z_y = sqrt(((a*C1-C2) - b*(a-b)*y(t)**2)/(c*(a-c)))
x_y = sqrt(((c*C1-C2) - b*(c-b)*y(t)**2)/(a*(c-a)))
x_z = sqrt(((b*C1-C2) - c*(b-c)*z(t)**2)/(a*(b-a)))
y_z = sqrt(((a*C1-C2) - c*(a-c)*z(t)**2)/(b*(a-b)))
sol1 = dsolve(a*diff(x(t),t) - (b-c)*y_x*z_x)
sol2 = dsolve(b*diff(y(t),t) - (c-a)*z_y*x_y)
sol3 = dsolve(c*diff(z(t),t) - (a-b)*x_z*y_z)
return [sol1, sol2, sol3]
def _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type2(x, y, z, t, eq):
r"""
Equations:
.. math:: a x' = (b - c) y z f(x, y, z, t)
.. math:: b y' = (c - a) z x f(x, y, z, t)
.. math:: c z' = (a - b) x y f(x, y, z, t)
First Integrals:
.. math:: a x^{2} + b y^{2} + c z^{2} = C_1
.. math:: a^{2} x^{2} + b^{2} y^{2} + c^{2} z^{2} = C_2
where `C_1` and `C_2` are arbitrary constants. On solving the integrals for `y` and
`z` and on substituting the resulting expressions into the first equation of the
system, we arrives at a first-order differential equations on `x`. Similarly doing
that for other two equations we will arrive at first order equation on `y` and `z`.
References
==========
-http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/sysode/sode0402.pdf
"""
C1, C2 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=2)
u, v, w = symbols('u, v, w')
p = Wild('p', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
q = Wild('q', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
s = Wild('s', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
f = Wild('f')
r1 = (diff(x(t),t) - eq[0]).match(y(t)*z(t)*f)
r = collect_const(r1[f]).match(p*f)
r.update(((diff(y(t),t) - eq[1])/r[f]).match(q*z(t)*x(t)))
r.update(((diff(z(t),t) - eq[2])/r[f]).match(s*x(t)*y(t)))
n1, d1 = r[p].as_numer_denom()
n2, d2 = r[q].as_numer_denom()
n3, d3 = r[s].as_numer_denom()
val = solve([n1*u-d1*v+d1*w, d2*u+n2*v-d2*w, -d3*u+d3*v+n3*w],[u,v])
vals = [val[v], val[u]]
c = lcm(vals[0].as_numer_denom()[1], vals[1].as_numer_denom()[1])
a = vals[0].subs(w,c)
b = vals[1].subs(w,c)
y_x = sqrt(((c*C1-C2) - a*(c-a)*x(t)**2)/(b*(c-b)))
z_x = sqrt(((b*C1-C2) - a*(b-a)*x(t)**2)/(c*(b-c)))
z_y = sqrt(((a*C1-C2) - b*(a-b)*y(t)**2)/(c*(a-c)))
x_y = sqrt(((c*C1-C2) - b*(c-b)*y(t)**2)/(a*(c-a)))
x_z = sqrt(((b*C1-C2) - c*(b-c)*z(t)**2)/(a*(b-a)))
y_z = sqrt(((a*C1-C2) - c*(a-c)*z(t)**2)/(b*(a-b)))
sol1 = dsolve(a*diff(x(t),t) - (b-c)*y_x*z_x*r[f])
sol2 = dsolve(b*diff(y(t),t) - (c-a)*z_y*x_y*r[f])
sol3 = dsolve(c*diff(z(t),t) - (a-b)*x_z*y_z*r[f])
return [sol1, sol2, sol3]
def _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type3(x, y, z, t, eq):
r"""
Equations:
.. math:: x' = c F_2 - b F_3, \enspace y' = a F_3 - c F_1, \enspace z' = b F_1 - a F_2
where `F_n = F_n(x, y, z, t)`.
1. First Integral:
.. math:: a x + b y + c z = C_1,
where C is an arbitrary constant.
2. If we assume function `F_n` to be independent of `t`,i.e, `F_n` = `F_n (x, y, z)`
Then, on eliminating `t` and `z` from the first two equation of the system, one
arrives at the first-order equation
.. math:: \frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{a F_3 (x, y, z) - c F_1 (x, y, z)}{c F_2 (x, y, z) -
b F_3 (x, y, z)}
where `z = \frac{1}{c} (C_1 - a x - b y)`
References
==========
-http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/sysode/sode0404.pdf
"""
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
u, v, w = symbols('u, v, w')
p = Wild('p', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
q = Wild('q', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
s = Wild('s', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
F1, F2, F3 = symbols('F1, F2, F3', cls=Wild)
r1 = (diff(x(t),t) - eq[0]).match(F2-F3)
r = collect_const(r1[F2]).match(s*F2)
r.update(collect_const(r1[F3]).match(q*F3))
if eq[1].has(r[F2]) and not eq[1].has(r[F3]):
r[F2], r[F3] = r[F3], r[F2]
r[s], r[q] = -r[q], -r[s]
r.update((diff(y(t),t) - eq[1]).match(p*r[F3] - r[s]*F1))
a = r[p]; b = r[q]; c = r[s]
F1 = r[F1].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
F2 = r[F2].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
F3 = r[F3].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
z_xy = (C1-a*u-b*v)/c
y_zx = (C1-a*u-c*w)/b
x_yz = (C1-b*v-c*w)/a
y_x = dsolve(diff(v(u),u) - ((a*F3-c*F1)/(c*F2-b*F3)).subs(w,z_xy).subs(v,v(u))).rhs
z_x = dsolve(diff(w(u),u) - ((b*F1-a*F2)/(c*F2-b*F3)).subs(v,y_zx).subs(w,w(u))).rhs
z_y = dsolve(diff(w(v),v) - ((b*F1-a*F2)/(a*F3-c*F1)).subs(u,x_yz).subs(w,w(v))).rhs
x_y = dsolve(diff(u(v),v) - ((c*F2-b*F3)/(a*F3-c*F1)).subs(w,z_xy).subs(u,u(v))).rhs
y_z = dsolve(diff(v(w),w) - ((a*F3-c*F1)/(b*F1-a*F2)).subs(u,x_yz).subs(v,v(w))).rhs
x_z = dsolve(diff(u(w),w) - ((c*F2-b*F3)/(b*F1-a*F2)).subs(v,y_zx).subs(u,u(w))).rhs
sol1 = dsolve(diff(u(t),t) - (c*F2 - b*F3).subs(v,y_x).subs(w,z_x).subs(u,u(t))).rhs
sol2 = dsolve(diff(v(t),t) - (a*F3 - c*F1).subs(u,x_y).subs(w,z_y).subs(v,v(t))).rhs
sol3 = dsolve(diff(w(t),t) - (b*F1 - a*F2).subs(u,x_z).subs(v,y_z).subs(w,w(t))).rhs
return [sol1, sol2, sol3]
def _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type4(x, y, z, t, eq):
r"""
Equations:
.. math:: x' = c z F_2 - b y F_3, \enspace y' = a x F_3 - c z F_1, \enspace z' = b y F_1 - a x F_2
where `F_n = F_n (x, y, z, t)`
1. First integral:
.. math:: a x^{2} + b y^{2} + c z^{2} = C_1
where `C` is an arbitrary constant.
2. Assuming the function `F_n` is independent of `t`: `F_n = F_n (x, y, z)`. Then on
eliminating `t` and `z` from the first two equations of the system, one arrives at
the first-order equation
.. math:: \frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{a x F_3 (x, y, z) - c z F_1 (x, y, z)}
{c z F_2 (x, y, z) - b y F_3 (x, y, z)}
where `z = \pm \sqrt{\frac{1}{c} (C_1 - a x^{2} - b y^{2})}`
References
==========
-http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/sysode/sode0405.pdf
"""
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
u, v, w = symbols('u, v, w')
p = Wild('p', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
q = Wild('q', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
s = Wild('s', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
F1, F2, F3 = symbols('F1, F2, F3', cls=Wild)
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - z(t)*F2 + y(t)*F3)
r = collect_const(r1[F2]).match(s*F2)
r.update(collect_const(r1[F3]).match(q*F3))
if eq[1].has(r[F2]) and not eq[1].has(r[F3]):
r[F2], r[F3] = r[F3], r[F2]
r[s], r[q] = -r[q], -r[s]
r.update((diff(y(t),t) - eq[1]).match(p*x(t)*r[F3] - r[s]*z(t)*F1))
a = r[p]; b = r[q]; c = r[s]
F1 = r[F1].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
F2 = r[F2].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
F3 = r[F3].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
x_yz = sqrt((C1 - b*v**2 - c*w**2)/a)
y_zx = sqrt((C1 - c*w**2 - a*u**2)/b)
z_xy = sqrt((C1 - a*u**2 - b*v**2)/c)
y_x = dsolve(diff(v(u),u) - ((a*u*F3-c*w*F1)/(c*w*F2-b*v*F3)).subs(w,z_xy).subs(v,v(u))).rhs
z_x = dsolve(diff(w(u),u) - ((b*v*F1-a*u*F2)/(c*w*F2-b*v*F3)).subs(v,y_zx).subs(w,w(u))).rhs
z_y = dsolve(diff(w(v),v) - ((b*v*F1-a*u*F2)/(a*u*F3-c*w*F1)).subs(u,x_yz).subs(w,w(v))).rhs
x_y = dsolve(diff(u(v),v) - ((c*w*F2-b*v*F3)/(a*u*F3-c*w*F1)).subs(w,z_xy).subs(u,u(v))).rhs
y_z = dsolve(diff(v(w),w) - ((a*u*F3-c*w*F1)/(b*v*F1-a*u*F2)).subs(u,x_yz).subs(v,v(w))).rhs
x_z = dsolve(diff(u(w),w) - ((c*w*F2-b*v*F3)/(b*v*F1-a*u*F2)).subs(v,y_zx).subs(u,u(w))).rhs
sol1 = dsolve(diff(u(t),t) - (c*w*F2 - b*v*F3).subs(v,y_x).subs(w,z_x).subs(u,u(t))).rhs
sol2 = dsolve(diff(v(t),t) - (a*u*F3 - c*w*F1).subs(u,x_y).subs(w,z_y).subs(v,v(t))).rhs
sol3 = dsolve(diff(w(t),t) - (b*v*F1 - a*u*F2).subs(u,x_z).subs(v,y_z).subs(w,w(t))).rhs
return [sol1, sol2, sol3]
def _nonlinear_3eq_order1_type5(x, y, t, eq):
r"""
.. math:: x' = x (c F_2 - b F_3), \enspace y' = y (a F_3 - c F_1), \enspace z' = z (b F_1 - a F_2)
where `F_n = F_n (x, y, z, t)` and are arbitrary functions.
First Integral:
.. math:: \left|x\right|^{a} \left|y\right|^{b} \left|z\right|^{c} = C_1
where `C` is an arbitrary constant. If the function `F_n` is independent of `t`,
then, by eliminating `t` and `z` from the first two equations of the system, one
arrives at a first-order equation.
References
==========
-http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/sysode/sode0406.pdf
"""
C1 = get_numbered_constants(eq, num=1)
u, v, w = symbols('u, v, w')
p = Wild('p', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
q = Wild('q', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
s = Wild('s', exclude=[x(t), y(t), z(t), t])
F1, F2, F3 = symbols('F1, F2, F3', cls=Wild)
r1 = eq[0].match(diff(x(t),t) - x(t)*(F2 - F3))
r = collect_const(r1[F2]).match(s*F2)
r.update(collect_const(r1[F3]).match(q*F3))
if eq[1].has(r[F2]) and not eq[1].has(r[F3]):
r[F2], r[F3] = r[F3], r[F2]
r[s], r[q] = -r[q], -r[s]
r.update((diff(y(t),t) - eq[1]).match(y(t)*(a*r[F3] - r[c]*F1)))
a = r[p]; b = r[q]; c = r[s]
F1 = r[F1].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
F2 = r[F2].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
F3 = r[F3].subs(x(t),u).subs(y(t),v).subs(z(t),w)
x_yz = (C1*v**-b*w**-c)**-a
y_zx = (C1*w**-c*u**-a)**-b
z_xy = (C1*u**-a*v**-b)**-c
y_x = dsolve(diff(v(u),u) - ((v*(a*F3-c*F1))/(u*(c*F2-b*F3))).subs(w,z_xy).subs(v,v(u))).rhs
z_x = dsolve(diff(w(u),u) - ((w*(b*F1-a*F2))/(u*(c*F2-b*F3))).subs(v,y_zx).subs(w,w(u))).rhs
z_y = dsolve(diff(w(v),v) - ((w*(b*F1-a*F2))/(v*(a*F3-c*F1))).subs(u,x_yz).subs(w,w(v))).rhs
x_y = dsolve(diff(u(v),v) - ((u*(c*F2-b*F3))/(v*(a*F3-c*F1))).subs(w,z_xy).subs(u,u(v))).rhs
y_z = dsolve(diff(v(w),w) - ((v*(a*F3-c*F1))/(w*(b*F1-a*F2))).subs(u,x_yz).subs(v,v(w))).rhs
x_z = dsolve(diff(u(w),w) - ((u*(c*F2-b*F3))/(w*(b*F1-a*F2))).subs(v,y_zx).subs(u,u(w))).rhs
sol1 = dsolve(diff(u(t),t) - (u*(c*F2-b*F3)).subs(v,y_x).subs(w,z_x).subs(u,u(t))).rhs
sol2 = dsolve(diff(v(t),t) - (v*(a*F3-c*F1)).subs(u,x_y).subs(w,z_y).subs(v,v(t))).rhs
sol3 = dsolve(diff(w(t),t) - (w*(b*F1-a*F2)).subs(u,x_z).subs(v,y_z).subs(w,w(t))).rhs
return [sol1, sol2, sol3]
|
342684f22dec56ce417f304a02a5170d43fa7b510b312f8fe0866f9e3f9430e2
|
"""
This module contains functions to:
- solve a single equation for a single variable, in any domain either real or complex.
- solve a single transcendental equation for a single variable in any domain either real or complex.
(currently supports solving in real domain only)
- solve a system of linear equations with N variables and M equations.
- solve a system of Non Linear Equations with N variables and M equations
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.core import (S, Pow, Dummy, pi, Expr, Wild, Mul, Equality,
Add)
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
from sympy.core.facts import InconsistentAssumptions
from sympy.core.numbers import I, Number, Rational, oo
from sympy.core.function import (Lambda, expand_complex, AppliedUndef,
expand_log, _mexpand)
from sympy.core.relational import Eq, Ne
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol
from sympy.core.sympify import _sympify
from sympy.simplify.simplify import simplify, fraction, trigsimp
from sympy.simplify import powdenest, logcombine
from sympy.functions import (log, Abs, tan, cot, sin, cos, sec, csc, exp,
acos, asin, acsc, asec, arg,
piecewise_fold, Piecewise)
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import (TrigonometricFunction,
HyperbolicFunction)
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import real_root
from sympy.logic.boolalg import And
from sympy.sets import (FiniteSet, EmptySet, imageset, Interval, Intersection,
Union, ConditionSet, ImageSet, Complement, Contains)
from sympy.sets.sets import Set
from sympy.matrices import Matrix, MatrixBase
from sympy.polys import (roots, Poly, degree, together, PolynomialError,
RootOf, factor)
from sympy.solvers.solvers import (checksol, denoms, unrad,
_simple_dens, recast_to_symbols)
from sympy.solvers.polysys import solve_poly_system
from sympy.solvers.inequalities import solve_univariate_inequality
from sympy.utilities import filldedent
from sympy.utilities.iterables import numbered_symbols, has_dups
from sympy.calculus.util import periodicity, continuous_domain
from sympy.core.compatibility import ordered, default_sort_key, is_sequence
from types import GeneratorType
from collections import defaultdict
def _masked(f, *atoms):
"""Return ``f``, with all objects given by ``atoms`` replaced with
Dummy symbols, ``d``, and the list of replacements, ``(d, e)``,
where ``e`` is an object of type given by ``atoms`` in which
any other instances of atoms have been recursively replaced with
Dummy symbols, too. The tuples are ordered so that if they are
applied in sequence, the origin ``f`` will be restored.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _masked
>>> f = cos(cos(x) + 1)
>>> f, reps = _masked(cos(1 + cos(x)), cos)
>>> f
_a1
>>> reps
[(_a1, cos(_a0 + 1)), (_a0, cos(x))]
>>> for d, e in reps:
... f = f.xreplace({d: e})
>>> f
cos(cos(x) + 1)
"""
sym = numbered_symbols('a', cls=Dummy, real=True)
mask = []
for a in ordered(f.atoms(*atoms)):
for i in mask:
a = a.replace(*i)
mask.append((a, next(sym)))
for i, (o, n) in enumerate(mask):
f = f.replace(o, n)
mask[i] = (n, o)
mask = list(reversed(mask))
return f, mask
def _invert(f_x, y, x, domain=S.Complexes):
r"""
Reduce the complex valued equation ``f(x) = y`` to a set of equations
``{g(x) = h_1(y), g(x) = h_2(y), ..., g(x) = h_n(y) }`` where ``g(x)`` is
a simpler function than ``f(x)``. The return value is a tuple ``(g(x),
set_h)``, where ``g(x)`` is a function of ``x`` and ``set_h`` is
the set of function ``{h_1(y), h_2(y), ..., h_n(y)}``.
Here, ``y`` is not necessarily a symbol.
The ``set_h`` contains the functions, along with the information
about the domain in which they are valid, through set
operations. For instance, if ``y = Abs(x) - n`` is inverted
in the real domain, then ``set_h`` is not simply
`{-n, n}` as the nature of `n` is unknown; rather, it is:
`Intersection([0, oo) {n}) U Intersection((-oo, 0], {-n})`
By default, the complex domain is used which means that inverting even
seemingly simple functions like ``exp(x)`` will give very different
results from those obtained in the real domain.
(In the case of ``exp(x)``, the inversion via ``log`` is multi-valued
in the complex domain, having infinitely many branches.)
If you are working with real values only (or you are not sure which
function to use) you should probably set the domain to
``S.Reals`` (or use `invert\_real` which does that automatically).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import invert_complex, invert_real
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import exp, log
When does exp(x) == y?
>>> invert_complex(exp(x), y, x)
(x, ImageSet(Lambda(_n, I*(2*_n*pi + arg(y)) + log(Abs(y))), Integers))
>>> invert_real(exp(x), y, x)
(x, Intersection(Reals, {log(y)}))
When does exp(x) == 1?
>>> invert_complex(exp(x), 1, x)
(x, ImageSet(Lambda(_n, 2*_n*I*pi), Integers))
>>> invert_real(exp(x), 1, x)
(x, {0})
See Also
========
invert_real, invert_complex
"""
x = sympify(x)
if not x.is_Symbol:
raise ValueError("x must be a symbol")
f_x = sympify(f_x)
if x not in f_x.free_symbols:
raise ValueError("Inverse of constant function doesn't exist")
y = sympify(y)
if x in y.free_symbols:
raise ValueError("y should be independent of x ")
if domain.is_subset(S.Reals):
x1, s = _invert_real(f_x, FiniteSet(y), x)
else:
x1, s = _invert_complex(f_x, FiniteSet(y), x)
if not isinstance(s, FiniteSet) or x1 != x:
return x1, s
return x1, s.intersection(domain)
invert_complex = _invert
def invert_real(f_x, y, x, domain=S.Reals):
"""
Inverts a real-valued function. Same as _invert, but sets
the domain to ``S.Reals`` before inverting.
"""
return _invert(f_x, y, x, domain)
def _invert_real(f, g_ys, symbol):
"""Helper function for _invert."""
if f == symbol:
return (f, g_ys)
n = Dummy('n', real=True)
if hasattr(f, 'inverse') and not isinstance(f, (
TrigonometricFunction,
HyperbolicFunction,
)):
if len(f.args) > 1:
raise ValueError("Only functions with one argument are supported.")
return _invert_real(f.args[0],
imageset(Lambda(n, f.inverse()(n)), g_ys),
symbol)
if isinstance(f, Abs):
return _invert_abs(f.args[0], g_ys, symbol)
if f.is_Add:
# f = g + h
g, h = f.as_independent(symbol)
if g is not S.Zero:
return _invert_real(h, imageset(Lambda(n, n - g), g_ys), symbol)
if f.is_Mul:
# f = g*h
g, h = f.as_independent(symbol)
if g is not S.One:
return _invert_real(h, imageset(Lambda(n, n/g), g_ys), symbol)
if f.is_Pow:
base, expo = f.args
base_has_sym = base.has(symbol)
expo_has_sym = expo.has(symbol)
if not expo_has_sym:
res = imageset(Lambda(n, real_root(n, expo)), g_ys)
if expo.is_rational:
numer, denom = expo.as_numer_denom()
if denom % 2 == 0:
base_positive = solveset(base >= 0, symbol, S.Reals)
res = imageset(Lambda(n, real_root(n, expo)
), g_ys.intersect(
Interval.Ropen(S.Zero, S.Infinity)))
_inv, _set = _invert_real(base, res, symbol)
return (_inv, _set.intersect(base_positive))
elif numer % 2 == 0:
n = Dummy('n')
neg_res = imageset(Lambda(n, -n), res)
return _invert_real(base, res + neg_res, symbol)
else:
return _invert_real(base, res, symbol)
else:
if not base.is_positive:
raise ValueError("x**w where w is irrational is not "
"defined for negative x")
return _invert_real(base, res, symbol)
if not base_has_sym:
rhs = g_ys.args[0]
if base.is_positive:
return _invert_real(expo,
imageset(Lambda(n, log(n, base, evaluate=False)), g_ys), symbol)
elif base.is_negative:
from sympy.core.power import integer_log
s, b = integer_log(rhs, base)
if b:
return _invert_real(expo, FiniteSet(s), symbol)
else:
return _invert_real(expo, S.EmptySet, symbol)
elif base.is_zero:
one = Eq(rhs, 1)
if one == S.true:
# special case: 0**x - 1
return _invert_real(expo, FiniteSet(0), symbol)
elif one == S.false:
return _invert_real(expo, S.EmptySet, symbol)
if isinstance(f, TrigonometricFunction):
if isinstance(g_ys, FiniteSet):
def inv(trig):
if isinstance(f, (sin, csc)):
F = asin if isinstance(f, sin) else acsc
return (lambda a: n*pi + (-1)**n*F(a),)
if isinstance(f, (cos, sec)):
F = acos if isinstance(f, cos) else asec
return (
lambda a: 2*n*pi + F(a),
lambda a: 2*n*pi - F(a),)
if isinstance(f, (tan, cot)):
return (lambda a: n*pi + f.inverse()(a),)
n = Dummy('n', integer=True)
invs = S.EmptySet
for L in inv(f):
invs += Union(*[imageset(Lambda(n, L(g)), S.Integers) for g in g_ys])
return _invert_real(f.args[0], invs, symbol)
return (f, g_ys)
def _invert_complex(f, g_ys, symbol):
"""Helper function for _invert."""
if f == symbol:
return (f, g_ys)
n = Dummy('n')
if f.is_Add:
# f = g + h
g, h = f.as_independent(symbol)
if g is not S.Zero:
return _invert_complex(h, imageset(Lambda(n, n - g), g_ys), symbol)
if f.is_Mul:
# f = g*h
g, h = f.as_independent(symbol)
if g is not S.One:
if g in set([S.NegativeInfinity, S.ComplexInfinity, S.Infinity]):
return (h, S.EmptySet)
return _invert_complex(h, imageset(Lambda(n, n/g), g_ys), symbol)
if hasattr(f, 'inverse') and \
not isinstance(f, TrigonometricFunction) and \
not isinstance(f, HyperbolicFunction) and \
not isinstance(f, exp):
if len(f.args) > 1:
raise ValueError("Only functions with one argument are supported.")
return _invert_complex(f.args[0],
imageset(Lambda(n, f.inverse()(n)), g_ys), symbol)
if isinstance(f, exp):
if isinstance(g_ys, FiniteSet):
exp_invs = Union(*[imageset(Lambda(n, I*(2*n*pi + arg(g_y)) +
log(Abs(g_y))), S.Integers)
for g_y in g_ys if g_y != 0])
return _invert_complex(f.args[0], exp_invs, symbol)
return (f, g_ys)
def _invert_abs(f, g_ys, symbol):
"""Helper function for inverting absolute value functions.
Returns the complete result of inverting an absolute value
function along with the conditions which must also be satisfied.
If it is certain that all these conditions are met, a `FiniteSet`
of all possible solutions is returned. If any condition cannot be
satisfied, an `EmptySet` is returned. Otherwise, a `ConditionSet`
of the solutions, with all the required conditions specified, is
returned.
"""
if not g_ys.is_FiniteSet:
# this could be used for FiniteSet, but the
# results are more compact if they aren't, e.g.
# ConditionSet(x, Contains(n, Interval(0, oo)), {-n, n}) vs
# Union(Intersection(Interval(0, oo), {n}), Intersection(Interval(-oo, 0), {-n}))
# for the solution of abs(x) - n
pos = Intersection(g_ys, Interval(0, S.Infinity))
parg = _invert_real(f, pos, symbol)
narg = _invert_real(-f, pos, symbol)
if parg[0] != narg[0]:
raise NotImplementedError
return parg[0], Union(narg[1], parg[1])
# check conditions: all these must be true. If any are unknown
# then return them as conditions which must be satisfied
unknown = []
for a in g_ys.args:
ok = a.is_nonnegative if a.is_Number else a.is_positive
if ok is None:
unknown.append(a)
elif not ok:
return symbol, S.EmptySet
if unknown:
conditions = And(*[Contains(i, Interval(0, oo))
for i in unknown])
else:
conditions = True
n = Dummy('n', real=True)
# this is slightly different than above: instead of solving
# +/-f on positive values, here we solve for f on +/- g_ys
g_x, values = _invert_real(f, Union(
imageset(Lambda(n, n), g_ys),
imageset(Lambda(n, -n), g_ys)), symbol)
return g_x, ConditionSet(g_x, conditions, values)
def domain_check(f, symbol, p):
"""Returns False if point p is infinite or any subexpression of f
is infinite or becomes so after replacing symbol with p. If none of
these conditions is met then True will be returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Mul, oo
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import domain_check
>>> g = 1/(1 + (1/(x + 1))**2)
>>> domain_check(g, x, -1)
False
>>> domain_check(x**2, x, 0)
True
>>> domain_check(1/x, x, oo)
False
* The function relies on the assumption that the original form
of the equation has not been changed by automatic simplification.
>>> domain_check(x/x, x, 0) # x/x is automatically simplified to 1
True
* To deal with automatic evaluations use evaluate=False:
>>> domain_check(Mul(x, 1/x, evaluate=False), x, 0)
False
"""
f, p = sympify(f), sympify(p)
if p.is_infinite:
return False
return _domain_check(f, symbol, p)
def _domain_check(f, symbol, p):
# helper for domain check
if f.is_Atom and f.is_finite:
return True
elif f.subs(symbol, p).is_infinite:
return False
else:
return all([_domain_check(g, symbol, p)
for g in f.args])
def _is_finite_with_finite_vars(f, domain=S.Complexes):
"""
Return True if the given expression is finite. For symbols that
don't assign a value for `complex` and/or `real`, the domain will
be used to assign a value; symbols that don't assign a value
for `finite` will be made finite. All other assumptions are
left unmodified.
"""
def assumptions(s):
A = s.assumptions0
A.setdefault('finite', A.get('finite', True))
if domain.is_subset(S.Reals):
# if this gets set it will make complex=True, too
A.setdefault('real', True)
else:
# don't change 'real' because being complex implies
# nothing about being real
A.setdefault('complex', True)
return A
reps = {s: Dummy(**assumptions(s)) for s in f.free_symbols}
return f.xreplace(reps).is_finite
def _is_function_class_equation(func_class, f, symbol):
""" Tests whether the equation is an equation of the given function class.
The given equation belongs to the given function class if it is
comprised of functions of the function class which are multiplied by
or added to expressions independent of the symbol. In addition, the
arguments of all such functions must be linear in the symbol as well.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _is_function_class_equation
>>> from sympy import tan, sin, tanh, sinh, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import (TrigonometricFunction,
... HyperbolicFunction)
>>> _is_function_class_equation(TrigonometricFunction, exp(x) + tan(x), x)
False
>>> _is_function_class_equation(TrigonometricFunction, tan(x) + sin(x), x)
True
>>> _is_function_class_equation(TrigonometricFunction, tan(x**2), x)
False
>>> _is_function_class_equation(TrigonometricFunction, tan(x + 2), x)
True
>>> _is_function_class_equation(HyperbolicFunction, tanh(x) + sinh(x), x)
True
"""
if f.is_Mul or f.is_Add:
return all(_is_function_class_equation(func_class, arg, symbol)
for arg in f.args)
if f.is_Pow:
if not f.exp.has(symbol):
return _is_function_class_equation(func_class, f.base, symbol)
else:
return False
if not f.has(symbol):
return True
if isinstance(f, func_class):
try:
g = Poly(f.args[0], symbol)
return g.degree() <= 1
except PolynomialError:
return False
else:
return False
def _solve_as_rational(f, symbol, domain):
""" solve rational functions"""
f = together(f, deep=True)
g, h = fraction(f)
if not h.has(symbol):
try:
return _solve_as_poly(g, symbol, domain)
except NotImplementedError:
# The polynomial formed from g could end up having
# coefficients in a ring over which finding roots
# isn't implemented yet, e.g. ZZ[a] for some symbol a
return ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
else:
valid_solns = _solveset(g, symbol, domain)
invalid_solns = _solveset(h, symbol, domain)
return valid_solns - invalid_solns
def _solve_trig(f, symbol, domain):
"""Function to call other helpers to solve trigonometric equations """
sol1 = sol = None
try:
sol1 = _solve_trig1(f, symbol, domain)
except BaseException as error:
pass
if sol1 is None or isinstance(sol1, ConditionSet):
try:
sol = _solve_trig2(f, symbol, domain)
except BaseException as error:
sol = sol1
if isinstance(sol1, ConditionSet) and isinstance(sol, ConditionSet):
if sol1.count_ops() < sol.count_ops():
sol = sol1
else:
sol = sol1
if sol is None:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
Solution to this kind of trigonometric equations
is yet to be implemented'''))
return sol
def _solve_trig1(f, symbol, domain):
"""Primary Helper to solve trigonometric equations """
f = trigsimp(f)
f_original = f
f = f.rewrite(exp)
f = together(f)
g, h = fraction(f)
y = Dummy('y')
g, h = g.expand(), h.expand()
g, h = g.subs(exp(I*symbol), y), h.subs(exp(I*symbol), y)
if g.has(symbol) or h.has(symbol):
return ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), S.Reals)
solns = solveset_complex(g, y) - solveset_complex(h, y)
if isinstance(solns, ConditionSet):
raise NotImplementedError
if isinstance(solns, FiniteSet):
if any(isinstance(s, RootOf) for s in solns):
raise NotImplementedError
result = Union(*[invert_complex(exp(I*symbol), s, symbol)[1]
for s in solns])
return Intersection(result, domain)
elif solns is S.EmptySet:
return S.EmptySet
else:
return ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f_original, 0), S.Reals)
def _solve_trig2(f, symbol, domain):
"""Secondary helper to solve trigonometric equations,
called when first helper fails """
from sympy import ilcm, igcd, expand_trig, degree, simplify
f = trigsimp(f)
f_original = f
trig_functions = f.atoms(sin, cos, tan, sec, cot, csc)
trig_arguments = [e.args[0] for e in trig_functions]
denominators = []
numerators = []
for ar in trig_arguments:
try:
poly_ar = Poly(ar, symbol)
except ValueError:
raise ValueError("give up, we can't solve if this is not a polynomial in x")
if poly_ar.degree() > 1: # degree >1 still bad
raise ValueError("degree of variable inside polynomial should not exceed one")
if poly_ar.degree() == 0: # degree 0, don't care
continue
c = poly_ar.all_coeffs()[0] # got the coefficient of 'symbol'
numerators.append(Rational(c).p)
denominators.append(Rational(c).q)
x = Dummy('x')
# ilcm() and igcd() require more than one argument
if len(numerators) > 1:
mu = Rational(2)*ilcm(*denominators)/igcd(*numerators)
else:
assert len(numerators) == 1
mu = Rational(2)*denominators[0]/numerators[0]
f = f.subs(symbol, mu*x)
f = f.rewrite(tan)
f = expand_trig(f)
f = together(f)
g, h = fraction(f)
y = Dummy('y')
g, h = g.expand(), h.expand()
g, h = g.subs(tan(x), y), h.subs(tan(x), y)
if g.has(x) or h.has(x):
return ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f_original, 0), domain)
solns = solveset(g, y, S.Reals) - solveset(h, y, S.Reals)
if isinstance(solns, FiniteSet):
result = Union(*[invert_real(tan(symbol/mu), s, symbol)[1]
for s in solns])
dsol = invert_real(tan(symbol/mu), oo, symbol)[1]
if degree(h) > degree(g): # If degree(denom)>degree(num) then there
result = Union(result, dsol) # would be another sol at Lim(denom-->oo)
return Intersection(result, domain)
elif solns is S.EmptySet:
return S.EmptySet
else:
return ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f_original, 0), S.Reals)
def _solve_as_poly(f, symbol, domain=S.Complexes):
"""
Solve the equation using polynomial techniques if it already is a
polynomial equation or, with a change of variables, can be made so.
"""
result = None
if f.is_polynomial(symbol):
solns = roots(f, symbol, cubics=True, quartics=True,
quintics=True, domain='EX')
num_roots = sum(solns.values())
if degree(f, symbol) <= num_roots:
result = FiniteSet(*solns.keys())
else:
poly = Poly(f, symbol)
solns = poly.all_roots()
if poly.degree() <= len(solns):
result = FiniteSet(*solns)
else:
result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
else:
poly = Poly(f)
if poly is None:
result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
gens = [g for g in poly.gens if g.has(symbol)]
if len(gens) == 1:
poly = Poly(poly, gens[0])
gen = poly.gen
deg = poly.degree()
poly = Poly(poly.as_expr(), poly.gen, composite=True)
poly_solns = FiniteSet(*roots(poly, cubics=True, quartics=True,
quintics=True).keys())
if len(poly_solns) < deg:
result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
if gen != symbol:
y = Dummy('y')
inverter = invert_real if domain.is_subset(S.Reals) else invert_complex
lhs, rhs_s = inverter(gen, y, symbol)
if lhs == symbol:
result = Union(*[rhs_s.subs(y, s) for s in poly_solns])
else:
result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
else:
result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
if result is not None:
if isinstance(result, FiniteSet):
# this is to simplify solutions like -sqrt(-I) to sqrt(2)/2
# - sqrt(2)*I/2. We are not expanding for solution with symbols
# or undefined functions because that makes the solution more complicated.
# For example, expand_complex(a) returns re(a) + I*im(a)
if all([s.atoms(Symbol, AppliedUndef) == set() and not isinstance(s, RootOf)
for s in result]):
s = Dummy('s')
result = imageset(Lambda(s, expand_complex(s)), result)
if isinstance(result, FiniteSet):
result = result.intersection(domain)
return result
else:
return ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
def _has_rational_power(expr, symbol):
"""
Returns (bool, den) where bool is True if the term has a
non-integer rational power and den is the denominator of the
expression's exponent.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _has_rational_power
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> _has_rational_power(sqrt(x), x)
(True, 2)
>>> _has_rational_power(x**2, x)
(False, 1)
"""
a, p, q = Wild('a'), Wild('p'), Wild('q')
pattern_match = expr.match(a*p**q) or {}
if pattern_match.get(a, S.Zero) is S.Zero:
return (False, S.One)
elif p not in pattern_match.keys():
return (False, S.One)
elif isinstance(pattern_match[q], Rational) \
and pattern_match[p].has(symbol):
if not pattern_match[q].q == S.One:
return (True, pattern_match[q].q)
if not isinstance(pattern_match[a], Pow) \
or isinstance(pattern_match[a], Mul):
return (False, S.One)
else:
return _has_rational_power(pattern_match[a], symbol)
def _solve_radical(f, symbol, solveset_solver):
""" Helper function to solve equations with radicals """
eq, cov = unrad(f)
if not cov:
result = solveset_solver(eq, symbol) - \
Union(*[solveset_solver(g, symbol) for g in denoms(f, symbol)])
else:
y, yeq = cov
if not solveset_solver(y - I, y):
yreal = Dummy('yreal', real=True)
yeq = yeq.xreplace({y: yreal})
eq = eq.xreplace({y: yreal})
y = yreal
g_y_s = solveset_solver(yeq, symbol)
f_y_sols = solveset_solver(eq, y)
result = Union(*[imageset(Lambda(y, g_y), f_y_sols)
for g_y in g_y_s])
if isinstance(result, Complement) or isinstance(result,ConditionSet):
solution_set = result
else:
f_set = [] # solutions for FiniteSet
c_set = [] # solutions for ConditionSet
for s in result:
if checksol(f, symbol, s):
f_set.append(s)
else:
c_set.append(s)
solution_set = FiniteSet(*f_set) + ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), FiniteSet(*c_set))
return solution_set
def _solve_abs(f, symbol, domain):
""" Helper function to solve equation involving absolute value function """
if not domain.is_subset(S.Reals):
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Absolute values cannot be inverted in the
complex domain.'''))
p, q, r = Wild('p'), Wild('q'), Wild('r')
pattern_match = f.match(p*Abs(q) + r) or {}
f_p, f_q, f_r = [pattern_match.get(i, S.Zero) for i in (p, q, r)]
if not (f_p.is_zero or f_q.is_zero):
domain = continuous_domain(f_q, symbol, domain)
q_pos_cond = solve_univariate_inequality(f_q >= 0, symbol,
relational=False, domain=domain, continuous=True)
q_neg_cond = q_pos_cond.complement(domain)
sols_q_pos = solveset_real(f_p*f_q + f_r,
symbol).intersect(q_pos_cond)
sols_q_neg = solveset_real(f_p*(-f_q) + f_r,
symbol).intersect(q_neg_cond)
return Union(sols_q_pos, sols_q_neg)
else:
return ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
def solve_decomposition(f, symbol, domain):
"""
Function to solve equations via the principle of "Decomposition
and Rewriting".
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp, sin, Symbol, pprint, S
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import solve_decomposition as sd
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> f1 = exp(2*x) - 3*exp(x) + 2
>>> sd(f1, x, S.Reals)
{0, log(2)}
>>> f2 = sin(x)**2 + 2*sin(x) + 1
>>> pprint(sd(f2, x, S.Reals), use_unicode=False)
3*pi
{2*n*pi + ---- | n in Integers}
2
>>> f3 = sin(x + 2)
>>> pprint(sd(f3, x, S.Reals), use_unicode=False)
{2*n*pi - 2 | n in Integers} U {2*n*pi - 2 + pi | n in Integers}
"""
from sympy.solvers.decompogen import decompogen
from sympy.calculus.util import function_range
# decompose the given function
g_s = decompogen(f, symbol)
# `y_s` represents the set of values for which the function `g` is to be
# solved.
# `solutions` represent the solutions of the equations `g = y_s` or
# `g = 0` depending on the type of `y_s`.
# As we are interested in solving the equation: f = 0
y_s = FiniteSet(0)
for g in g_s:
frange = function_range(g, symbol, domain)
y_s = Intersection(frange, y_s)
result = S.EmptySet
if isinstance(y_s, FiniteSet):
for y in y_s:
solutions = solveset(Eq(g, y), symbol, domain)
if not isinstance(solutions, ConditionSet):
result += solutions
else:
if isinstance(y_s, ImageSet):
iter_iset = (y_s,)
elif isinstance(y_s, Union):
iter_iset = y_s.args
elif isinstance(y_s, EmptySet):
# y_s is not in the range of g in g_s, so no solution exists
#in the given domain
return y_s
for iset in iter_iset:
new_solutions = solveset(Eq(iset.lamda.expr, g), symbol, domain)
dummy_var = tuple(iset.lamda.expr.free_symbols)[0]
base_set = iset.base_set
if isinstance(new_solutions, FiniteSet):
new_exprs = new_solutions
elif isinstance(new_solutions, Intersection):
if isinstance(new_solutions.args[1], FiniteSet):
new_exprs = new_solutions.args[1]
for new_expr in new_exprs:
result += ImageSet(Lambda(dummy_var, new_expr), base_set)
if result is S.EmptySet:
return ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
y_s = result
return y_s
def _solveset(f, symbol, domain, _check=False):
"""Helper for solveset to return a result from an expression
that has already been sympify'ed and is known to contain the
given symbol."""
# _check controls whether the answer is checked or not
from sympy.simplify.simplify import signsimp
orig_f = f
if f.is_Mul:
coeff, f = f.as_independent(symbol, as_Add=False)
if coeff in set([S.ComplexInfinity, S.NegativeInfinity, S.Infinity]):
f = together(orig_f)
elif f.is_Add:
a, h = f.as_independent(symbol)
m, h = h.as_independent(symbol, as_Add=False)
if m not in set([S.ComplexInfinity, S.Zero, S.Infinity,
S.NegativeInfinity]):
f = a/m + h # XXX condition `m != 0` should be added to soln
# assign the solvers to use
solver = lambda f, x, domain=domain: _solveset(f, x, domain)
inverter = lambda f, rhs, symbol: _invert(f, rhs, symbol, domain)
result = EmptySet()
if f.expand().is_zero:
return domain
elif not f.has(symbol):
return EmptySet()
elif f.is_Mul and all(_is_finite_with_finite_vars(m, domain)
for m in f.args):
# if f(x) and g(x) are both finite we can say that the solution of
# f(x)*g(x) == 0 is same as Union(f(x) == 0, g(x) == 0) is not true in
# general. g(x) can grow to infinitely large for the values where
# f(x) == 0. To be sure that we are not silently allowing any
# wrong solutions we are using this technique only if both f and g are
# finite for a finite input.
result = Union(*[solver(m, symbol) for m in f.args])
elif _is_function_class_equation(TrigonometricFunction, f, symbol) or \
_is_function_class_equation(HyperbolicFunction, f, symbol):
result = _solve_trig(f, symbol, domain)
elif isinstance(f, arg):
a = f.args[0]
result = solveset_real(a > 0, symbol)
elif f.is_Piecewise:
result = EmptySet()
expr_set_pairs = f.as_expr_set_pairs(domain)
for (expr, in_set) in expr_set_pairs:
if in_set.is_Relational:
in_set = in_set.as_set()
solns = solver(expr, symbol, in_set)
result += solns
elif isinstance(f, Eq):
result = solver(Add(f.lhs, - f.rhs, evaluate=False), symbol, domain)
elif f.is_Relational:
if not domain.is_subset(S.Reals):
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
Inequalities in the complex domain are
not supported. Try the real domain by
setting domain=S.Reals'''))
try:
result = solve_univariate_inequality(
f, symbol, domain=domain, relational=False)
except NotImplementedError:
result = ConditionSet(symbol, f, domain)
return result
else:
lhs, rhs_s = inverter(f, 0, symbol)
if lhs == symbol:
# do some very minimal simplification since
# repeated inversion may have left the result
# in a state that other solvers (e.g. poly)
# would have simplified; this is done here
# rather than in the inverter since here it
# is only done once whereas there it would
# be repeated for each step of the inversion
if isinstance(rhs_s, FiniteSet):
rhs_s = FiniteSet(*[Mul(*
signsimp(i).as_content_primitive())
for i in rhs_s])
result = rhs_s
elif isinstance(rhs_s, FiniteSet):
for equation in [lhs - rhs for rhs in rhs_s]:
if equation == f:
if any(_has_rational_power(g, symbol)[0]
for g in equation.args) or _has_rational_power(
equation, symbol)[0]:
result += _solve_radical(equation,
symbol,
solver)
elif equation.has(Abs):
result += _solve_abs(f, symbol, domain)
else:
result_rational = _solve_as_rational(equation, symbol, domain)
if isinstance(result_rational, ConditionSet):
# may be a transcendental type equation
result += _transolve(equation, symbol, domain)
else:
result += result_rational
else:
result += solver(equation, symbol)
elif rhs_s is not S.EmptySet:
result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
if isinstance(result, ConditionSet):
num, den = f.as_numer_denom()
if den.has(symbol):
_result = _solveset(num, symbol, domain)
if not isinstance(_result, ConditionSet):
singularities = _solveset(den, symbol, domain)
result = _result - singularities
if _check:
if isinstance(result, ConditionSet):
# it wasn't solved or has enumerated all conditions
# -- leave it alone
return result
# whittle away all but the symbol-containing core
# to use this for testing
fx = orig_f.as_independent(symbol, as_Add=True)[1]
fx = fx.as_independent(symbol, as_Add=False)[1]
if isinstance(result, FiniteSet):
# check the result for invalid solutions
result = FiniteSet(*[s for s in result
if isinstance(s, RootOf)
or domain_check(fx, symbol, s)])
return result
def _term_factors(f):
"""
Iterator to get the factors of all terms present
in the given equation.
Parameters
==========
f : Expr
Equation that needs to be addressed
Returns
=======
Factors of all terms present in the equation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _term_factors
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> list(_term_factors(-2 - x**2 + x*(x + 1)))
[-2, -1, x**2, x, x + 1]
"""
for add_arg in Add.make_args(f):
for mul_arg in Mul.make_args(add_arg):
yield mul_arg
def _solve_exponential(lhs, rhs, symbol, domain):
r"""
Helper function for solving (supported) exponential equations.
Exponential equations are the sum of (currently) at most
two terms with one or both of them having a power with a
symbol-dependent exponent.
For example
.. math:: 5^{2x + 3} - 5^{3x - 1}
.. math:: 4^{5 - 9x} - e^{2 - x}
Parameters
==========
lhs, rhs : Expr
The exponential equation to be solved, `lhs = rhs`
symbol : Symbol
The variable in which the equation is solved
domain : Set
A set over which the equation is solved.
Returns
=======
A set of solutions satisfying the given equation.
A ``ConditionSet`` if the equation is unsolvable or
if the assumptions are not properly defined, in that case
a different style of ``ConditionSet`` is returned having the
solution(s) of the equation with the desired assumptions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _solve_exponential as solve_expo
>>> from sympy import symbols, S
>>> x = symbols('x', real=True)
>>> a, b = symbols('a b')
>>> solve_expo(2**x + 3**x - 5**x, 0, x, S.Reals) # not solvable
ConditionSet(x, Eq(2**x + 3**x - 5**x, 0), Reals)
>>> solve_expo(a**x - b**x, 0, x, S.Reals) # solvable but incorrect assumptions
ConditionSet(x, (a > 0) & (b > 0), {0})
>>> solve_expo(3**(2*x) - 2**(x + 3), 0, x, S.Reals)
{-3*log(2)/(-2*log(3) + log(2))}
>>> solve_expo(2**x - 4**x, 0, x, S.Reals)
{0}
* Proof of correctness of the method
The logarithm function is the inverse of the exponential function.
The defining relation between exponentiation and logarithm is:
.. math:: {\log_b x} = y \enspace if \enspace b^y = x
Therefore if we are given an equation with exponent terms, we can
convert every term to its corresponding logarithmic form. This is
achieved by taking logarithms and expanding the equation using
logarithmic identities so that it can easily be handled by ``solveset``.
For example:
.. math:: 3^{2x} = 2^{x + 3}
Taking log both sides will reduce the equation to
.. math:: (2x)\log(3) = (x + 3)\log(2)
This form can be easily handed by ``solveset``.
"""
unsolved_result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(lhs - rhs), domain)
newlhs = powdenest(lhs)
if lhs != newlhs:
# it may also be advantageous to factor the new expr
return _solveset(factor(newlhs - rhs), symbol, domain) # try again with _solveset
if not (isinstance(lhs, Add) and len(lhs.args) == 2):
# solving for the sum of more than two powers is possible
# but not yet implemented
return unsolved_result
if rhs != 0:
return unsolved_result
a, b = list(ordered(lhs.args))
a_term = a.as_independent(symbol)[1]
b_term = b.as_independent(symbol)[1]
a_base, a_exp = a_term.base, a_term.exp
b_base, b_exp = b_term.base, b_term.exp
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import im
if domain.is_subset(S.Reals):
conditions = And(
a_base > 0,
b_base > 0,
Eq(im(a_exp), 0),
Eq(im(b_exp), 0))
else:
conditions = And(
Ne(a_base, 0),
Ne(b_base, 0))
L, R = map(lambda i: expand_log(log(i), force=True), (a, -b))
solutions = _solveset(L - R, symbol, domain)
return ConditionSet(symbol, conditions, solutions)
def _is_exponential(f, symbol):
r"""
Return ``True`` if one or more terms contain ``symbol`` only in
exponents, else ``False``.
Parameters
==========
f : Expr
The equation to be checked
symbol : Symbol
The variable in which the equation is checked
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, cos, exp
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _is_exponential as check
>>> x, y = symbols('x y')
>>> check(y, y)
False
>>> check(x**y - 1, y)
True
>>> check(x**y*2**y - 1, y)
True
>>> check(exp(x + 3) + 3**x, x)
True
>>> check(cos(2**x), x)
False
* Philosophy behind the helper
The function extracts each term of the equation and checks if it is
of exponential form w.r.t ``symbol``.
"""
rv = False
for expr_arg in _term_factors(f):
if symbol not in expr_arg.free_symbols:
continue
if (isinstance(expr_arg, Pow) and
symbol not in expr_arg.base.free_symbols or
isinstance(expr_arg, exp)):
rv = True # symbol in exponent
else:
return False # dependent on symbol in non-exponential way
return rv
def _solve_logarithm(lhs, rhs, symbol, domain):
r"""
Helper to solve logarithmic equations which are reducible
to a single instance of `\log`.
Logarithmic equations are (currently) the equations that contains
`\log` terms which can be reduced to a single `\log` term or
a constant using various logarithmic identities.
For example:
.. math:: \log(x) + \log(x - 4)
can be reduced to:
.. math:: \log(x(x - 4))
Parameters
==========
lhs, rhs : Expr
The logarithmic equation to be solved, `lhs = rhs`
symbol : Symbol
The variable in which the equation is solved
domain : Set
A set over which the equation is solved.
Returns
=======
A set of solutions satisfying the given equation.
A ``ConditionSet`` if the equation is unsolvable.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, log, S
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _solve_logarithm as solve_log
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> f = log(x - 3) + log(x + 3)
>>> solve_log(f, 0, x, S.Reals)
{-sqrt(10), sqrt(10)}
* Proof of correctness
A logarithm is another way to write exponent and is defined by
.. math:: {\log_b x} = y \enspace if \enspace b^y = x
When one side of the equation contains a single logarithm, the
equation can be solved by rewriting the equation as an equivalent
exponential equation as defined above. But if one side contains
more than one logarithm, we need to use the properties of logarithm
to condense it into a single logarithm.
Take for example
.. math:: \log(2x) - 15 = 0
contains single logarithm, therefore we can directly rewrite it to
exponential form as
.. math:: x = \frac{e^{15}}{2}
But if the equation has more than one logarithm as
.. math:: \log(x - 3) + \log(x + 3) = 0
we use logarithmic identities to convert it into a reduced form
Using,
.. math:: \log(a) + \log(b) = \log(ab)
the equation becomes,
.. math:: \log((x - 3)(x + 3))
This equation contains one logarithm and can be solved by rewriting
to exponents.
"""
new_lhs = logcombine(lhs, force=True)
new_f = new_lhs - rhs
return _solveset(new_f, symbol, domain)
def _is_logarithmic(f, symbol):
r"""
Return ``True`` if the equation is in the form
`a\log(f(x)) + b\log(g(x)) + ... + c` else ``False``.
Parameters
==========
f : Expr
The equation to be checked
symbol : Symbol
The variable in which the equation is checked
Returns
=======
``True`` if the equation is logarithmic otherwise ``False``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, tan, log
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _is_logarithmic as check
>>> x, y = symbols('x y')
>>> check(log(x + 2) - log(x + 3), x)
True
>>> check(tan(log(2*x)), x)
False
>>> check(x*log(x), x)
False
>>> check(x + log(x), x)
False
>>> check(y + log(x), x)
True
* Philosophy behind the helper
The function extracts each term and checks whether it is
logarithmic w.r.t ``symbol``.
"""
rv = False
for term in Add.make_args(f):
saw_log = False
for term_arg in Mul.make_args(term):
if symbol not in term_arg.free_symbols:
continue
if isinstance(term_arg, log):
if saw_log:
return False # more than one log in term
saw_log = True
else:
return False # dependent on symbol in non-log way
if saw_log:
rv = True
return rv
def _transolve(f, symbol, domain):
r"""
Function to solve transcendental equations. It is a helper to
``solveset`` and should be used internally. ``_transolve``
currently supports the following class of equations:
- Exponential equations
- Logarithmic equations
Parameters
==========
f : Any transcendental equation that needs to be solved.
This needs to be an expression, which is assumed
to be equal to ``0``.
symbol : The variable for which the equation is solved.
This needs to be of class ``Symbol``.
domain : A set over which the equation is solved.
This needs to be of class ``Set``.
Returns
=======
Set
A set of values for ``symbol`` for which ``f`` is equal to
zero. An ``EmptySet`` is returned if ``f`` does not have solutions
in respective domain. A ``ConditionSet`` is returned as unsolved
object if algorithms to evaluate complete solution are not
yet implemented.
How to use ``_transolve``
=========================
``_transolve`` should not be used as an independent function, because
it assumes that the equation (``f``) and the ``symbol`` comes from
``solveset`` and might have undergone a few modification(s).
To use ``_transolve`` as an independent function the equation (``f``)
and the ``symbol`` should be passed as they would have been by
``solveset``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import _transolve as transolve
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import _tsolve as tsolve
>>> from sympy import symbols, S, pprint
>>> x = symbols('x', real=True) # assumption added
>>> transolve(5**(x - 3) - 3**(2*x + 1), x, S.Reals)
{-(log(3) + 3*log(5))/(-log(5) + 2*log(3))}
How ``_transolve`` works
========================
``_transolve`` uses two types of helper functions to solve equations
of a particular class:
Identifying helpers: To determine whether a given equation
belongs to a certain class of equation or not. Returns either
``True`` or ``False``.
Solving helpers: Once an equation is identified, a corresponding
helper either solves the equation or returns a form of the equation
that ``solveset`` might better be able to handle.
* Philosophy behind the module
The purpose of ``_transolve`` is to take equations which are not
already polynomial in their generator(s) and to either recast them
as such through a valid transformation or to solve them outright.
A pair of helper functions for each class of supported
transcendental functions are employed for this purpose. One
identifies the transcendental form of an equation and the other
either solves it or recasts it into a tractable form that can be
solved by ``solveset``.
For example, an equation in the form `ab^{f(x)} - cd^{g(x)} = 0`
can be transformed to
`\log(a) + f(x)\log(b) - \log(c) - g(x)\log(d) = 0`
(under certain assumptions) and this can be solved with ``solveset``
if `f(x)` and `g(x)` are in polynomial form.
How ``_transolve`` is better than ``_tsolve``
=============================================
1) Better output
``_transolve`` provides expressions in a more simplified form.
Consider a simple exponential equation
>>> f = 3**(2*x) - 2**(x + 3)
>>> pprint(transolve(f, x, S.Reals), use_unicode=False)
-3*log(2)
{------------------}
-2*log(3) + log(2)
>>> pprint(tsolve(f, x), use_unicode=False)
/ 3 \
| --------|
| log(2/9)|
[-log\2 /]
2) Extensible
The API of ``_transolve`` is designed such that it is easily
extensible, i.e. the code that solves a given class of
equations is encapsulated in a helper and not mixed in with
the code of ``_transolve`` itself.
3) Modular
``_transolve`` is designed to be modular i.e, for every class of
equation a separate helper for identification and solving is
implemented. This makes it easy to change or modify any of the
method implemented directly in the helpers without interfering
with the actual structure of the API.
4) Faster Computation
Solving equation via ``_transolve`` is much faster as compared to
``_tsolve``. In ``solve``, attempts are made computing every possibility
to get the solutions. This series of attempts makes solving a bit
slow. In ``_transolve``, computation begins only after a particular
type of equation is identified.
How to add new class of equations
=================================
Adding a new class of equation solver is a three-step procedure:
- Identify the type of the equations
Determine the type of the class of equations to which they belong:
it could be of ``Add``, ``Pow``, etc. types. Separate internal functions
are used for each type. Write identification and solving helpers
and use them from within the routine for the given type of equation
(after adding it, if necessary). Something like:
.. code-block:: python
def add_type(lhs, rhs, x):
....
if _is_exponential(lhs, x):
new_eq = _solve_exponential(lhs, rhs, x)
....
rhs, lhs = eq.as_independent(x)
if lhs.is_Add:
result = add_type(lhs, rhs, x)
- Define the identification helper.
- Define the solving helper.
Apart from this, a few other things needs to be taken care while
adding an equation solver:
- Naming conventions:
Name of the identification helper should be as
``_is_class`` where class will be the name or abbreviation
of the class of equation. The solving helper will be named as
``_solve_class``.
For example: for exponential equations it becomes
``_is_exponential`` and ``_solve_expo``.
- The identifying helpers should take two input parameters,
the equation to be checked and the variable for which a solution
is being sought, while solving helpers would require an additional
domain parameter.
- Be sure to consider corner cases.
- Add tests for each helper.
- Add a docstring to your helper that describes the method
implemented.
The documentation of the helpers should identify:
- the purpose of the helper,
- the method used to identify and solve the equation,
- a proof of correctness
- the return values of the helpers
"""
def add_type(lhs, rhs, symbol, domain):
"""
Helper for ``_transolve`` to handle equations of
``Add`` type, i.e. equations taking the form as
``a*f(x) + b*g(x) + .... = c``.
For example: 4**x + 8**x = 0
"""
result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(lhs - rhs, 0), domain)
# check if it is exponential type equation
if _is_exponential(lhs, symbol):
result = _solve_exponential(lhs, rhs, symbol, domain)
# check if it is logarithmic type equation
elif _is_logarithmic(lhs, symbol):
result = _solve_logarithm(lhs, rhs, symbol, domain)
return result
result = ConditionSet(symbol, Eq(f, 0), domain)
# invert_complex handles the call to the desired inverter based
# on the domain specified.
lhs, rhs_s = invert_complex(f, 0, symbol, domain)
if isinstance(rhs_s, FiniteSet):
assert (len(rhs_s.args)) == 1
rhs = rhs_s.args[0]
if lhs.is_Add:
result = add_type(lhs, rhs, symbol, domain)
else:
result = rhs_s
return result
def solveset(f, symbol=None, domain=S.Complexes):
r"""Solves a given inequality or equation with set as output
Parameters
==========
f : Expr or a relational.
The target equation or inequality
symbol : Symbol
The variable for which the equation is solved
domain : Set
The domain over which the equation is solved
Returns
=======
Set
A set of values for `symbol` for which `f` is True or is equal to
zero. An `EmptySet` is returned if `f` is False or nonzero.
A `ConditionSet` is returned as unsolved object if algorithms
to evaluate complete solution are not yet implemented.
`solveset` claims to be complete in the solution set that it returns.
Raises
======
NotImplementedError
The algorithms to solve inequalities in complex domain are
not yet implemented.
ValueError
The input is not valid.
RuntimeError
It is a bug, please report to the github issue tracker.
Notes
=====
Python interprets 0 and 1 as False and True, respectively, but
in this function they refer to solutions of an expression. So 0 and 1
return the Domain and EmptySet, respectively, while True and False
return the opposite (as they are assumed to be solutions of relational
expressions).
See Also
========
solveset_real: solver for real domain
solveset_complex: solver for complex domain
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp, sin, Symbol, pprint, S
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset, solveset_real
* The default domain is complex. Not specifying a domain will lead
to the solving of the equation in the complex domain (and this
is not affected by the assumptions on the symbol):
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> pprint(solveset(exp(x) - 1, x), use_unicode=False)
{2*n*I*pi | n in Integers}
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True)
>>> pprint(solveset(exp(x) - 1, x), use_unicode=False)
{2*n*I*pi | n in Integers}
* If you want to use `solveset` to solve the equation in the
real domain, provide a real domain. (Using ``solveset_real``
does this automatically.)
>>> R = S.Reals
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> solveset(exp(x) - 1, x, R)
{0}
>>> solveset_real(exp(x) - 1, x)
{0}
The solution is mostly unaffected by assumptions on the symbol,
but there may be some slight difference:
>>> pprint(solveset(sin(x)/x,x), use_unicode=False)
({2*n*pi | n in Integers} \ {0}) U ({2*n*pi + pi | n in Integers} \ {0})
>>> p = Symbol('p', positive=True)
>>> pprint(solveset(sin(p)/p, p), use_unicode=False)
{2*n*pi | n in Integers} U {2*n*pi + pi | n in Integers}
* Inequalities can be solved over the real domain only. Use of a complex
domain leads to a NotImplementedError.
>>> solveset(exp(x) > 1, x, R)
Interval.open(0, oo)
"""
f = sympify(f)
symbol = sympify(symbol)
if f is S.true:
return domain
if f is S.false:
return S.EmptySet
if not isinstance(f, (Expr, Number)):
raise ValueError("%s is not a valid SymPy expression" % f)
if not isinstance(symbol, Expr) and symbol is not None:
raise ValueError("%s is not a valid SymPy symbol" % symbol)
if not isinstance(domain, Set):
raise ValueError("%s is not a valid domain" %(domain))
free_symbols = f.free_symbols
if symbol is None and not free_symbols:
b = Eq(f, 0)
if b is S.true:
return domain
elif b is S.false:
return S.EmptySet
else:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
relationship between value and 0 is unknown: %s''' % b))
if symbol is None:
if len(free_symbols) == 1:
symbol = free_symbols.pop()
elif free_symbols:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
The independent variable must be specified for a
multivariate equation.'''))
elif not isinstance(symbol, Symbol):
f, s, swap = recast_to_symbols([f], [symbol])
# the xreplace will be needed if a ConditionSet is returned
return solveset(f[0], s[0], domain).xreplace(swap)
if domain.is_subset(S.Reals):
if not symbol.is_real:
assumptions = symbol.assumptions0
assumptions['real'] = True
try:
r = Dummy('r', **assumptions)
return solveset(f.xreplace({symbol: r}), r, domain
).xreplace({r: symbol})
except InconsistentAssumptions:
pass
# Abs has its own handling method which avoids the
# rewriting property that the first piece of abs(x)
# is for x >= 0 and the 2nd piece for x < 0 -- solutions
# can look better if the 2nd condition is x <= 0. Since
# the solution is a set, duplication of results is not
# an issue, e.g. {y, -y} when y is 0 will be {0}
f, mask = _masked(f, Abs)
f = f.rewrite(Piecewise) # everything that's not an Abs
for d, e in mask:
# everything *in* an Abs
e = e.func(e.args[0].rewrite(Piecewise))
f = f.xreplace({d: e})
f = piecewise_fold(f)
return _solveset(f, symbol, domain, _check=True)
def solveset_real(f, symbol):
return solveset(f, symbol, S.Reals)
def solveset_complex(f, symbol):
return solveset(f, symbol, S.Complexes)
def solvify(f, symbol, domain):
"""Solves an equation using solveset and returns the solution in accordance
with the `solve` output API.
Returns
=======
We classify the output based on the type of solution returned by `solveset`.
Solution | Output
----------------------------------------
FiniteSet | list
ImageSet, | list (if `f` is periodic)
Union |
EmptySet | empty list
Others | None
Raises
======
NotImplementedError
A ConditionSet is the input.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import solvify, solveset
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import S, tan, sin, exp
>>> solvify(x**2 - 9, x, S.Reals)
[-3, 3]
>>> solvify(sin(x) - 1, x, S.Reals)
[pi/2]
>>> solvify(tan(x), x, S.Reals)
[0]
>>> solvify(exp(x) - 1, x, S.Complexes)
>>> solvify(exp(x) - 1, x, S.Reals)
[0]
"""
solution_set = solveset(f, symbol, domain)
result = None
if solution_set is S.EmptySet:
result = []
elif isinstance(solution_set, ConditionSet):
raise NotImplementedError('solveset is unable to solve this equation.')
elif isinstance(solution_set, FiniteSet):
result = list(solution_set)
else:
period = periodicity(f, symbol)
if period is not None:
solutions = S.EmptySet
iter_solutions = ()
if isinstance(solution_set, ImageSet):
iter_solutions = (solution_set,)
elif isinstance(solution_set, Union):
if all(isinstance(i, ImageSet) for i in solution_set.args):
iter_solutions = solution_set.args
for solution in iter_solutions:
solutions += solution.intersect(Interval(0, period, False, True))
if isinstance(solutions, FiniteSet):
result = list(solutions)
else:
solution = solution_set.intersect(domain)
if isinstance(solution, FiniteSet):
result += solution
return result
###############################################################################
################################ LINSOLVE #####################################
###############################################################################
def linear_coeffs(eq, *syms, **_kw):
"""Return a list whose elements are the coefficients of the
corresponding symbols in the sum of terms in ``eq``.
The additive constant is returned as the last element of the
list.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import linear_coeffs
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> linear_coeffs(3*x + 2*y - 1, x, y)
[3, 2, -1]
It is not necessary to expand the expression:
>>> linear_coeffs(x + y*(z*(x*3 + 2) + 3), x)
[3*y*z + 1, y*(2*z + 3)]
But if there are nonlinear or cross terms -- even if they would
cancel after simplification -- an error is raised so the situation
does not pass silently past the caller's attention:
>>> eq = 1/x*(x - 1) + 1/x
>>> linear_coeffs(eq.expand(), x)
[0, 1]
>>> linear_coeffs(eq, x)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: nonlinear term encountered: 1/x
>>> linear_coeffs(x*(y + 1) - x*y, x, y)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: nonlinear term encountered: x*(y + 1)
"""
d = defaultdict(list)
c, terms = _sympify(eq).as_coeff_add(*syms)
d[0].extend(Add.make_args(c))
for t in terms:
m, f = t.as_coeff_mul(*syms)
if len(f) != 1:
break
f = f[0]
if f in syms:
d[f].append(m)
elif f.is_Add:
d1 = linear_coeffs(f, *syms, **{'dict': True})
d[0].append(m*d1.pop(0))
xf, vf = list(d1.items())[0]
d[xf].append(m*vf)
else:
break
else:
for k, v in d.items():
d[k] = Add(*v)
if not _kw:
return [d.get(s, S.Zero) for s in syms] + [d[0]]
return d # default is still list but this won't matter
raise ValueError('nonlinear term encountered: %s' % t)
def linear_eq_to_matrix(equations, *symbols):
r"""
Converts a given System of Equations into Matrix form.
Here `equations` must be a linear system of equations in
`symbols`. Element M[i, j] corresponds to the coefficient
of the jth symbol in the ith equation.
The Matrix form corresponds to the augmented matrix form.
For example:
.. math:: 4x + 2y + 3z = 1
.. math:: 3x + y + z = -6
.. math:: 2x + 4y + 9z = 2
This system would return `A` & `b` as given below:
::
[ 4 2 3 ] [ 1 ]
A = [ 3 1 1 ] b = [-6 ]
[ 2 4 9 ] [ 2 ]
The only simplification performed is to convert
`Eq(a, b) -> a - b`.
Raises
======
ValueError
The equations contain a nonlinear term.
The symbols are not given or are not unique.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import linear_eq_to_matrix, symbols
>>> c, x, y, z = symbols('c, x, y, z')
The coefficients (numerical or symbolic) of the symbols will
be returned as matrices:
>>> eqns = [c*x + z - 1 - c, y + z, x - y]
>>> A, b = linear_eq_to_matrix(eqns, [x, y, z])
>>> A
Matrix([
[c, 0, 1],
[0, 1, 1],
[1, -1, 0]])
>>> b
Matrix([
[c + 1],
[ 0],
[ 0]])
This routine does not simplify expressions and will raise an error
if nonlinearity is encountered:
>>> eqns = [
... (x**2 - 3*x)/(x - 3) - 3,
... y**2 - 3*y - y*(y - 4) + x - 4]
>>> linear_eq_to_matrix(eqns, [x, y])
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError:
The term (x**2 - 3*x)/(x - 3) is nonlinear in {x, y}
Simplifying these equations will discard the removable singularity
in the first, reveal the linear structure of the second:
>>> [e.simplify() for e in eqns]
[x - 3, x + y - 4]
Any such simplification needed to eliminate nonlinear terms must
be done before calling this routine.
"""
if not symbols:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Symbols must be given, for which coefficients
are to be found.
'''))
if hasattr(symbols[0], '__iter__'):
symbols = symbols[0]
for i in symbols:
if not isinstance(i, Symbol):
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Expecting a Symbol but got %s
''' % i))
if has_dups(symbols):
raise ValueError('Symbols must be unique')
equations = sympify(equations)
if isinstance(equations, MatrixBase):
equations = list(equations)
elif isinstance(equations, Expr):
equations = [equations]
elif not is_sequence(equations):
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Equation(s) must be given as a sequence, Expr,
Eq or Matrix.
'''))
A, b = [], []
for i, f in enumerate(equations):
if isinstance(f, Equality):
f = f.rewrite(Add, evaluate=False)
coeff_list = linear_coeffs(f, *symbols)
b.append(-coeff_list.pop())
A.append(coeff_list)
A, b = map(Matrix, (A, b))
return A, b
def linsolve(system, *symbols):
r"""
Solve system of N linear equations with M variables; both
underdetermined and overdetermined systems are supported.
The possible number of solutions is zero, one or infinite.
Zero solutions throws a ValueError, whereas infinite
solutions are represented parametrically in terms of the given
symbols. For unique solution a FiniteSet of ordered tuples
is returned.
All Standard input formats are supported:
For the given set of Equations, the respective input types
are given below:
.. math:: 3x + 2y - z = 1
.. math:: 2x - 2y + 4z = -2
.. math:: 2x - y + 2z = 0
* Augmented Matrix Form, `system` given below:
::
[3 2 -1 1]
system = [2 -2 4 -2]
[2 -1 2 0]
* List Of Equations Form
`system = [3x + 2y - z - 1, 2x - 2y + 4z + 2, 2x - y + 2z]`
* Input A & b Matrix Form (from Ax = b) are given as below:
::
[3 2 -1 ] [ 1 ]
A = [2 -2 4 ] b = [ -2 ]
[2 -1 2 ] [ 0 ]
`system = (A, b)`
Symbols can always be passed but are actually only needed
when 1) a system of equations is being passed and 2) the
system is passed as an underdetermined matrix and one wants
to control the name of the free variables in the result.
An error is raised if no symbols are used for case 1, but if
no symbols are provided for case 2, internally generated symbols
will be provided. When providing symbols for case 2, there should
be at least as many symbols are there are columns in matrix A.
The algorithm used here is Gauss-Jordan elimination, which
results, after elimination, in a row echelon form matrix.
Returns
=======
A FiniteSet containing an ordered tuple of values for the
unknowns for which the `system` has a solution. (Wrapping
the tuple in FiniteSet is used to maintain a consistent
output format throughout solveset.)
Returns EmptySet(), if the linear system is inconsistent.
Raises
======
ValueError
The input is not valid.
The symbols are not given.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Matrix, S, linsolve, symbols
>>> x, y, z = symbols("x, y, z")
>>> A = Matrix([[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 10]])
>>> b = Matrix([3, 6, 9])
>>> A
Matrix([
[1, 2, 3],
[4, 5, 6],
[7, 8, 10]])
>>> b
Matrix([
[3],
[6],
[9]])
>>> linsolve((A, b), [x, y, z])
{(-1, 2, 0)}
* Parametric Solution: In case the system is underdetermined, the
function will return a parametric solution in terms of the given
symbols. Those that are free will be returned unchanged. e.g. in
the system below, `z` is returned as the solution for variable z;
it can take on any value.
>>> A = Matrix([[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]])
>>> b = Matrix([3, 6, 9])
>>> linsolve((A, b), x, y, z)
{(z - 1, -2*z + 2, z)}
If no symbols are given, internally generated symbols will be used.
The `tau0` in the 3rd position indicates (as before) that the 3rd
variable -- whatever it's named -- can take on any value:
>>> linsolve((A, b))
{(tau0 - 1, -2*tau0 + 2, tau0)}
* List of Equations as input
>>> Eqns = [3*x + 2*y - z - 1, 2*x - 2*y + 4*z + 2, - x + y/2 - z]
>>> linsolve(Eqns, x, y, z)
{(1, -2, -2)}
* Augmented Matrix as input
>>> aug = Matrix([[2, 1, 3, 1], [2, 6, 8, 3], [6, 8, 18, 5]])
>>> aug
Matrix([
[2, 1, 3, 1],
[2, 6, 8, 3],
[6, 8, 18, 5]])
>>> linsolve(aug, x, y, z)
{(3/10, 2/5, 0)}
* Solve for symbolic coefficients
>>> a, b, c, d, e, f = symbols('a, b, c, d, e, f')
>>> eqns = [a*x + b*y - c, d*x + e*y - f]
>>> linsolve(eqns, x, y)
{((-b*f + c*e)/(a*e - b*d), (a*f - c*d)/(a*e - b*d))}
* A degenerate system returns solution as set of given
symbols.
>>> system = Matrix(([0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0]))
>>> linsolve(system, x, y)
{(x, y)}
* For an empty system linsolve returns empty set
>>> linsolve([], x)
EmptySet()
* An error is raised if, after expansion, any nonlinearity
is detected:
>>> linsolve([x*(1/x - 1), (y - 1)**2 - y**2 + 1], x, y)
{(1, 1)}
>>> linsolve([x**2 - 1], x)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError:
The term x**2 is nonlinear in {x}
"""
if not system:
return S.EmptySet
# If second argument is an iterable
if symbols and hasattr(symbols[0], '__iter__'):
symbols = symbols[0]
sym_gen = isinstance(symbols, GeneratorType)
swap = {}
b = None # if we don't get b the input was bad
syms_needed_msg = None
# unpack system
if hasattr(system, '__iter__'):
# 1). (A, b)
if len(system) == 2 and isinstance(system[0], Matrix):
A, b = system
# 2). (eq1, eq2, ...)
if not isinstance(system[0], Matrix):
if sym_gen or not symbols:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
When passing a system of equations, the explicit
symbols for which a solution is being sought must
be given as a sequence, too.
'''))
system = [
_mexpand(i.lhs - i.rhs if isinstance(i, Eq) else i,
recursive=True) for i in system]
system, symbols, swap = recast_to_symbols(system, symbols)
A, b = linear_eq_to_matrix(system, symbols)
syms_needed_msg = 'free symbols in the equations provided'
elif isinstance(system, Matrix) and not (
symbols and not isinstance(symbols, GeneratorType) and
isinstance(symbols[0], Matrix)):
# 3). A augmented with b
A, b = system[:, :-1], system[:, -1:]
if b is None:
raise ValueError("Invalid arguments")
syms_needed_msg = syms_needed_msg or 'columns of A'
if sym_gen:
symbols = [next(symbols) for i in range(A.cols)]
if any(set(symbols) & (A.free_symbols | b.free_symbols)):
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
At least one of the symbols provided
already appears in the system to be solved.
One way to avoid this is to use Dummy symbols in
the generator, e.g. numbered_symbols('%s', cls=Dummy)
''' % symbols[0].name.rstrip('1234567890')))
try:
solution, params, free_syms = A.gauss_jordan_solve(b, freevar=True)
except ValueError:
# No solution
return S.EmptySet
# Replace free parameters with free symbols
if params:
if not symbols:
symbols = [_ for _ in params]
# re-use the parameters but put them in order
# params [x, y, z]
# free_symbols [2, 0, 4]
# idx [1, 0, 2]
idx = list(zip(*sorted(zip(free_syms, range(len(free_syms))))))[1]
# simultaneous replacements {y: x, x: y, z: z}
replace_dict = dict(zip(symbols, [symbols[i] for i in idx]))
elif len(symbols) >= A.cols:
replace_dict = {v: symbols[free_syms[k]] for k, v in enumerate(params)}
else:
raise IndexError(filldedent('''
the number of symbols passed should have a length
equal to the number of %s.
''' % syms_needed_msg))
solution = [sol.xreplace(replace_dict) for sol in solution]
solution = [simplify(sol).xreplace(swap) for sol in solution]
return FiniteSet(tuple(solution))
##############################################################################
# ------------------------------nonlinsolve ---------------------------------#
##############################################################################
def _return_conditionset(eqs, symbols):
# return conditionset
condition_set = ConditionSet(
Tuple(*symbols),
FiniteSet(*eqs),
S.Complexes)
return condition_set
def substitution(system, symbols, result=[{}], known_symbols=[],
exclude=[], all_symbols=None):
r"""
Solves the `system` using substitution method. It is used in
`nonlinsolve`. This will be called from `nonlinsolve` when any
equation(s) is non polynomial equation.
Parameters
==========
system : list of equations
The target system of equations
symbols : list of symbols to be solved.
The variable(s) for which the system is solved
known_symbols : list of solved symbols
Values are known for these variable(s)
result : An empty list or list of dict
If No symbol values is known then empty list otherwise
symbol as keys and corresponding value in dict.
exclude : Set of expression.
Mostly denominator expression(s) of the equations of the system.
Final solution should not satisfy these expressions.
all_symbols : known_symbols + symbols(unsolved).
Returns
=======
A FiniteSet of ordered tuple of values of `all_symbols` for which the
`system` has solution. Order of values in the tuple is same as symbols
present in the parameter `all_symbols`. If parameter `all_symbols` is None
then same as symbols present in the parameter `symbols`.
Please note that general FiniteSet is unordered, the solution returned
here is not simply a FiniteSet of solutions, rather it is a FiniteSet of
ordered tuple, i.e. the first & only argument to FiniteSet is a tuple of
solutions, which is ordered, & hence the returned solution is ordered.
Also note that solution could also have been returned as an ordered tuple,
FiniteSet is just a wrapper `{}` around the tuple. It has no other
significance except for the fact it is just used to maintain a consistent
output format throughout the solveset.
Raises
======
ValueError
The input is not valid.
The symbols are not given.
AttributeError
The input symbols are not `Symbol` type.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.symbol import symbols
>>> x, y = symbols('x, y', real=True)
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import substitution
>>> substitution([x + y], [x], [{y: 1}], [y], set([]), [x, y])
{(-1, 1)}
* when you want soln should not satisfy eq `x + 1 = 0`
>>> substitution([x + y], [x], [{y: 1}], [y], set([x + 1]), [y, x])
EmptySet()
>>> substitution([x + y], [x], [{y: 1}], [y], set([x - 1]), [y, x])
{(1, -1)}
>>> substitution([x + y - 1, y - x**2 + 5], [x, y])
{(-3, 4), (2, -1)}
* Returns both real and complex solution
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x, y, z')
>>> from sympy import exp, sin
>>> substitution([exp(x) - sin(y), y**2 - 4], [x, y])
{(log(sin(2)), 2), (ImageSet(Lambda(_n, I*(2*_n*pi + pi) +
log(sin(2))), Integers), -2), (ImageSet(Lambda(_n, 2*_n*I*pi +
Mod(log(sin(2)), 2*I*pi)), Integers), 2)}
>>> eqs = [z**2 + exp(2*x) - sin(y), -3 + exp(-y)]
>>> substitution(eqs, [y, z])
{(-log(3), -sqrt(-exp(2*x) - sin(log(3)))),
(-log(3), sqrt(-exp(2*x) - sin(log(3)))),
(ImageSet(Lambda(_n, 2*_n*I*pi + Mod(-log(3), 2*I*pi)), Integers),
ImageSet(Lambda(_n, -sqrt(-exp(2*x) + sin(2*_n*I*pi +
Mod(-log(3), 2*I*pi)))), Integers)),
(ImageSet(Lambda(_n, 2*_n*I*pi + Mod(-log(3), 2*I*pi)), Integers),
ImageSet(Lambda(_n, sqrt(-exp(2*x) + sin(2*_n*I*pi +
Mod(-log(3), 2*I*pi)))), Integers))}
"""
from sympy import Complement
from sympy.core.compatibility import is_sequence
if not system:
return S.EmptySet
if not symbols:
msg = ('Symbols must be given, for which solution of the '
'system is to be found.')
raise ValueError(filldedent(msg))
if not is_sequence(symbols):
msg = ('symbols should be given as a sequence, e.g. a list.'
'Not type %s: %s')
raise TypeError(filldedent(msg % (type(symbols), symbols)))
try:
sym = symbols[0].is_Symbol
except AttributeError:
sym = False
if not sym:
msg = ('Iterable of symbols must be given as '
'second argument, not type %s: %s')
raise ValueError(filldedent(msg % (type(symbols[0]), symbols[0])))
# By default `all_symbols` will be same as `symbols`
if all_symbols is None:
all_symbols = symbols
old_result = result
# storing complements and intersection for particular symbol
complements = {}
intersections = {}
# when total_solveset_call is equals to total_conditionset
# means solvest fail to solve all the eq.
total_conditionset = -1
total_solveset_call = -1
def _unsolved_syms(eq, sort=False):
"""Returns the unsolved symbol present
in the equation `eq`.
"""
free = eq.free_symbols
unsolved = (free - set(known_symbols)) & set(all_symbols)
if sort:
unsolved = list(unsolved)
unsolved.sort(key=default_sort_key)
return unsolved
# end of _unsolved_syms()
# sort such that equation with the fewest potential symbols is first.
# means eq with less number of variable first in the list.
eqs_in_better_order = list(
ordered(system, lambda _: len(_unsolved_syms(_))))
def add_intersection_complement(result, sym_set, **flags):
# If solveset have returned some intersection/complement
# for any symbol. It will be added in final solution.
final_result = []
for res in result:
res_copy = res
for key_res, value_res in res.items():
# Intersection/complement is in Interval or Set.
intersection_true = flags.get('Intersection', True)
complements_true = flags.get('Complement', True)
for key_sym, value_sym in sym_set.items():
if key_sym == key_res:
if intersection_true:
# testcase is not added for this line(intersection)
new_value = \
Intersection(FiniteSet(value_res), value_sym)
if new_value is not S.EmptySet:
res_copy[key_res] = new_value
if complements_true:
new_value = \
Complement(FiniteSet(value_res), value_sym)
if new_value is not S.EmptySet:
res_copy[key_res] = new_value
final_result.append(res_copy)
return final_result
# end of def add_intersection_complement()
def _extract_main_soln(sol, soln_imageset):
"""separate the Complements, Intersections, ImageSet lambda expr
and it's base_set.
"""
# if there is union, then need to check
# Complement, Intersection, Imageset.
# Order should not be changed.
if isinstance(sol, Complement):
# extract solution and complement
complements[sym] = sol.args[1]
sol = sol.args[0]
# complement will be added at the end
# using `add_intersection_complement` method
if isinstance(sol, Intersection):
# Interval/Set will be at 0th index always
if sol.args[0] != Interval(-oo, oo):
# sometimes solveset returns soln
# with intersection `S.Reals`, to confirm that
# soln is in `domain=S.Reals` or not. We don't consider
# that intersection.
intersections[sym] = sol.args[0]
sol = sol.args[1]
# after intersection and complement Imageset should
# be checked.
if isinstance(sol, ImageSet):
soln_imagest = sol
expr2 = sol.lamda.expr
sol = FiniteSet(expr2)
soln_imageset[expr2] = soln_imagest
# if there is union of Imageset or other in soln.
# no testcase is written for this if block
if isinstance(sol, Union):
sol_args = sol.args
sol = S.EmptySet
# We need in sequence so append finteset elements
# and then imageset or other.
for sol_arg2 in sol_args:
if isinstance(sol_arg2, FiniteSet):
sol += sol_arg2
else:
# ImageSet, Intersection, complement then
# append them directly
sol += FiniteSet(sol_arg2)
if not isinstance(sol, FiniteSet):
sol = FiniteSet(sol)
return sol, soln_imageset
# end of def _extract_main_soln()
# helper function for _append_new_soln
def _check_exclude(rnew, imgset_yes):
rnew_ = rnew
if imgset_yes:
# replace all dummy variables (Imageset lambda variables)
# with zero before `checksol`. Considering fundamental soln
# for `checksol`.
rnew_copy = rnew.copy()
dummy_n = imgset_yes[0]
for key_res, value_res in rnew_copy.items():
rnew_copy[key_res] = value_res.subs(dummy_n, 0)
rnew_ = rnew_copy
# satisfy_exclude == true if it satisfies the expr of `exclude` list.
try:
# something like : `Mod(-log(3), 2*I*pi)` can't be
# simplified right now, so `checksol` returns `TypeError`.
# when this issue is fixed this try block should be
# removed. Mod(-log(3), 2*I*pi) == -log(3)
satisfy_exclude = any(
checksol(d, rnew_) for d in exclude)
except TypeError:
satisfy_exclude = None
return satisfy_exclude
# end of def _check_exclude()
# helper function for _append_new_soln
def _restore_imgset(rnew, original_imageset, newresult):
restore_sym = set(rnew.keys()) & \
set(original_imageset.keys())
for key_sym in restore_sym:
img = original_imageset[key_sym]
rnew[key_sym] = img
if rnew not in newresult:
newresult.append(rnew)
# end of def _restore_imgset()
def _append_eq(eq, result, res, delete_soln, n=None):
u = Dummy('u')
if n:
eq = eq.subs(n, 0)
satisfy = checksol(u, u, eq, minimal=True)
if satisfy is False:
delete_soln = True
res = {}
else:
result.append(res)
return result, res, delete_soln
def _append_new_soln(rnew, sym, sol, imgset_yes, soln_imageset,
original_imageset, newresult, eq=None):
"""If `rnew` (A dict <symbol: soln>) contains valid soln
append it to `newresult` list.
`imgset_yes` is (base, dummy_var) if there was imageset in previously
calculated result(otherwise empty tuple). `original_imageset` is dict
of imageset expr and imageset from this result.
`soln_imageset` dict of imageset expr and imageset of new soln.
"""
satisfy_exclude = _check_exclude(rnew, imgset_yes)
delete_soln = False
# soln should not satisfy expr present in `exclude` list.
if not satisfy_exclude:
local_n = None
# if it is imageset
if imgset_yes:
local_n = imgset_yes[0]
base = imgset_yes[1]
if sym and sol:
# when `sym` and `sol` is `None` means no new
# soln. In that case we will append rnew directly after
# substituting original imagesets in rnew values if present
# (second last line of this function using _restore_imgset)
dummy_list = list(sol.atoms(Dummy))
# use one dummy `n` which is in
# previous imageset
local_n_list = [
local_n for i in range(
0, len(dummy_list))]
dummy_zip = zip(dummy_list, local_n_list)
lam = Lambda(local_n, sol.subs(dummy_zip))
rnew[sym] = ImageSet(lam, base)
if eq is not None:
newresult, rnew, delete_soln = _append_eq(
eq, newresult, rnew, delete_soln, local_n)
elif eq is not None:
newresult, rnew, delete_soln = _append_eq(
eq, newresult, rnew, delete_soln)
elif soln_imageset:
rnew[sym] = soln_imageset[sol]
# restore original imageset
_restore_imgset(rnew, original_imageset, newresult)
else:
newresult.append(rnew)
elif satisfy_exclude:
delete_soln = True
rnew = {}
_restore_imgset(rnew, original_imageset, newresult)
return newresult, delete_soln
# end of def _append_new_soln()
def _new_order_result(result, eq):
# separate first, second priority. `res` that makes `eq` value equals
# to zero, should be used first then other result(second priority).
# If it is not done then we may miss some soln.
first_priority = []
second_priority = []
for res in result:
if not any(isinstance(val, ImageSet) for val in res.values()):
if eq.subs(res) == 0:
first_priority.append(res)
else:
second_priority.append(res)
if first_priority or second_priority:
return first_priority + second_priority
return result
def _solve_using_known_values(result, solver):
"""Solves the system using already known solution
(result contains the dict <symbol: value>).
solver is `solveset_complex` or `solveset_real`.
"""
# stores imageset <expr: imageset(Lambda(n, expr), base)>.
soln_imageset = {}
total_solvest_call = 0
total_conditionst = 0
# sort such that equation with the fewest potential symbols is first.
# means eq with less variable first
for index, eq in enumerate(eqs_in_better_order):
newresult = []
original_imageset = {}
# if imageset expr is used to solve other symbol
imgset_yes = False
result = _new_order_result(result, eq)
for res in result:
got_symbol = set() # symbols solved in one iteration
if soln_imageset:
# find the imageset and use its expr.
for key_res, value_res in res.items():
if isinstance(value_res, ImageSet):
res[key_res] = value_res.lamda.expr
original_imageset[key_res] = value_res
dummy_n = value_res.lamda.expr.atoms(Dummy).pop()
base = value_res.base_set
imgset_yes = (dummy_n, base)
# update eq with everything that is known so far
eq2 = eq.subs(res)
unsolved_syms = _unsolved_syms(eq2, sort=True)
if not unsolved_syms:
if res:
newresult, delete_res = _append_new_soln(
res, None, None, imgset_yes, soln_imageset,
original_imageset, newresult, eq2)
if delete_res:
# `delete_res` is true, means substituting `res` in
# eq2 doesn't return `zero` or deleting the `res`
# (a soln) since it staisfies expr of `exclude`
# list.
result.remove(res)
continue # skip as it's independent of desired symbols
depen = eq2.as_independent(unsolved_syms)[0]
if depen.has(Abs) and solver == solveset_complex:
# Absolute values cannot be inverted in the
# complex domain
continue
soln_imageset = {}
for sym in unsolved_syms:
not_solvable = False
try:
soln = solver(eq2, sym)
total_solvest_call += 1
soln_new = S.EmptySet
if isinstance(soln, Complement):
# separate solution and complement
complements[sym] = soln.args[1]
soln = soln.args[0]
# complement will be added at the end
if isinstance(soln, Intersection):
# Interval will be at 0th index always
if soln.args[0] != Interval(-oo, oo):
# sometimes solveset returns soln
# with intersection S.Reals, to confirm that
# soln is in domain=S.Reals
intersections[sym] = soln.args[0]
soln_new += soln.args[1]
soln = soln_new if soln_new else soln
if index > 0 and solver == solveset_real:
# one symbol's real soln , another symbol may have
# corresponding complex soln.
if not isinstance(soln, (ImageSet, ConditionSet)):
soln += solveset_complex(eq2, sym)
except NotImplementedError:
# If sovleset is not able to solve equation `eq2`. Next
# time we may get soln using next equation `eq2`
continue
if isinstance(soln, ConditionSet):
soln = S.EmptySet
# don't do `continue` we may get soln
# in terms of other symbol(s)
not_solvable = True
total_conditionst += 1
if soln is not S.EmptySet:
soln, soln_imageset = _extract_main_soln(
soln, soln_imageset)
for sol in soln:
# sol is not a `Union` since we checked it
# before this loop
sol, soln_imageset = _extract_main_soln(
sol, soln_imageset)
sol = set(sol).pop()
free = sol.free_symbols
if got_symbol and any([
ss in free for ss in got_symbol
]):
# sol depends on previously solved symbols
# then continue
continue
rnew = res.copy()
# put each solution in res and append the new result
# in the new result list (solution for symbol `s`)
# along with old results.
for k, v in res.items():
if isinstance(v, Expr):
# if any unsolved symbol is present
# Then subs known value
rnew[k] = v.subs(sym, sol)
# and add this new solution
if soln_imageset:
# replace all lambda variables with 0.
imgst = soln_imageset[sol]
rnew[sym] = imgst.lamda(
*[0 for i in range(0, len(
imgst.lamda.variables))])
else:
rnew[sym] = sol
newresult, delete_res = _append_new_soln(
rnew, sym, sol, imgset_yes, soln_imageset,
original_imageset, newresult)
if delete_res:
# deleting the `res` (a soln) since it staisfies
# eq of `exclude` list
result.remove(res)
# solution got for sym
if not not_solvable:
got_symbol.add(sym)
# next time use this new soln
if newresult:
result = newresult
return result, total_solvest_call, total_conditionst
# end def _solve_using_know_values()
new_result_real, solve_call1, cnd_call1 = _solve_using_known_values(
old_result, solveset_real)
new_result_complex, solve_call2, cnd_call2 = _solve_using_known_values(
old_result, solveset_complex)
# when `total_solveset_call` is equals to `total_conditionset`
# means solvest fails to solve all the eq.
# return conditionset in this case
total_conditionset += (cnd_call1 + cnd_call2)
total_solveset_call += (solve_call1 + solve_call2)
if total_conditionset == total_solveset_call and total_solveset_call != -1:
return _return_conditionset(eqs_in_better_order, all_symbols)
# overall result
result = new_result_real + new_result_complex
result_all_variables = []
result_infinite = []
for res in result:
if not res:
# means {None : None}
continue
# If length < len(all_symbols) means infinite soln.
# Some or all the soln is dependent on 1 symbol.
# eg. {x: y+2} then final soln {x: y+2, y: y}
if len(res) < len(all_symbols):
solved_symbols = res.keys()
unsolved = list(filter(
lambda x: x not in solved_symbols, all_symbols))
for unsolved_sym in unsolved:
res[unsolved_sym] = unsolved_sym
result_infinite.append(res)
if res not in result_all_variables:
result_all_variables.append(res)
if result_infinite:
# we have general soln
# eg : [{x: -1, y : 1}, {x : -y , y: y}] then
# return [{x : -y, y : y}]
result_all_variables = result_infinite
if intersections and complements:
# no testcase is added for this block
result_all_variables = add_intersection_complement(
result_all_variables, intersections,
Intersection=True, Complement=True)
elif intersections:
result_all_variables = add_intersection_complement(
result_all_variables, intersections, Intersection=True)
elif complements:
result_all_variables = add_intersection_complement(
result_all_variables, complements, Complement=True)
# convert to ordered tuple
result = S.EmptySet
for r in result_all_variables:
temp = [r[symb] for symb in all_symbols]
result += FiniteSet(tuple(temp))
return result
# end of def substitution()
def _solveset_work(system, symbols):
soln = solveset(system[0], symbols[0])
if isinstance(soln, FiniteSet):
_soln = FiniteSet(*[tuple((s,)) for s in soln])
return _soln
else:
return FiniteSet(tuple(FiniteSet(soln)))
def _handle_positive_dimensional(polys, symbols, denominators):
from sympy.polys.polytools import groebner
# substitution method where new system is groebner basis of the system
_symbols = list(symbols)
_symbols.sort(key=default_sort_key)
basis = groebner(polys, _symbols, polys=True)
new_system = []
for poly_eq in basis:
new_system.append(poly_eq.as_expr())
result = [{}]
result = substitution(
new_system, symbols, result, [],
denominators)
return result
# end of def _handle_positive_dimensional()
def _handle_zero_dimensional(polys, symbols, system):
# solve 0 dimensional poly system using `solve_poly_system`
result = solve_poly_system(polys, *symbols)
# May be some extra soln is added because
# we used `unrad` in `_separate_poly_nonpoly`, so
# need to check and remove if it is not a soln.
result_update = S.EmptySet
for res in result:
dict_sym_value = dict(list(zip(symbols, res)))
if all(checksol(eq, dict_sym_value) for eq in system):
result_update += FiniteSet(res)
return result_update
# end of def _handle_zero_dimensional()
def _separate_poly_nonpoly(system, symbols):
polys = []
polys_expr = []
nonpolys = []
denominators = set()
poly = None
for eq in system:
# Store denom expression if it contains symbol
denominators.update(_simple_dens(eq, symbols))
# try to remove sqrt and rational power
without_radicals = unrad(simplify(eq))
if without_radicals:
eq_unrad, cov = without_radicals
if not cov:
eq = eq_unrad
if isinstance(eq, Expr):
eq = eq.as_numer_denom()[0]
poly = eq.as_poly(*symbols, extension=True)
elif simplify(eq).is_number:
continue
if poly is not None:
polys.append(poly)
polys_expr.append(poly.as_expr())
else:
nonpolys.append(eq)
return polys, polys_expr, nonpolys, denominators
# end of def _separate_poly_nonpoly()
def nonlinsolve(system, *symbols):
r"""
Solve system of N non linear equations with M variables, which means both
under and overdetermined systems are supported. Positive dimensional
system is also supported (A system with infinitely many solutions is said
to be positive-dimensional). In Positive dimensional system solution will
be dependent on at least one symbol. Returns both real solution
and complex solution(If system have). The possible number of solutions
is zero, one or infinite.
Parameters
==========
system : list of equations
The target system of equations
symbols : list of Symbols
symbols should be given as a sequence eg. list
Returns
=======
A FiniteSet of ordered tuple of values of `symbols` for which the `system`
has solution. Order of values in the tuple is same as symbols present in
the parameter `symbols`.
Please note that general FiniteSet is unordered, the solution returned
here is not simply a FiniteSet of solutions, rather it is a FiniteSet of
ordered tuple, i.e. the first & only argument to FiniteSet is a tuple of
solutions, which is ordered, & hence the returned solution is ordered.
Also note that solution could also have been returned as an ordered tuple,
FiniteSet is just a wrapper `{}` around the tuple. It has no other
significance except for the fact it is just used to maintain a consistent
output format throughout the solveset.
For the given set of Equations, the respective input types
are given below:
.. math:: x*y - 1 = 0
.. math:: 4*x**2 + y**2 - 5 = 0
`system = [x*y - 1, 4*x**2 + y**2 - 5]`
`symbols = [x, y]`
Raises
======
ValueError
The input is not valid.
The symbols are not given.
AttributeError
The input symbols are not `Symbol` type.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.symbol import symbols
>>> from sympy.solvers.solveset import nonlinsolve
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x, y, z', real=True)
>>> nonlinsolve([x*y - 1, 4*x**2 + y**2 - 5], [x, y])
{(-1, -1), (-1/2, -2), (1/2, 2), (1, 1)}
1. Positive dimensional system and complements:
>>> from sympy import pprint
>>> from sympy.polys.polytools import is_zero_dimensional
>>> a, b, c, d = symbols('a, b, c, d', real=True)
>>> eq1 = a + b + c + d
>>> eq2 = a*b + b*c + c*d + d*a
>>> eq3 = a*b*c + b*c*d + c*d*a + d*a*b
>>> eq4 = a*b*c*d - 1
>>> system = [eq1, eq2, eq3, eq4]
>>> is_zero_dimensional(system)
False
>>> pprint(nonlinsolve(system, [a, b, c, d]), use_unicode=False)
-1 1 1 -1
{(---, -d, -, {d} \ {0}), (-, -d, ---, {d} \ {0})}
d d d d
>>> nonlinsolve([(x+y)**2 - 4, x + y - 2], [x, y])
{(-y + 2, y)}
2. If some of the equations are non polynomial equation then `nonlinsolve`
will call `substitution` function and returns real and complex solutions,
if present.
>>> from sympy import exp, sin
>>> nonlinsolve([exp(x) - sin(y), y**2 - 4], [x, y])
{(log(sin(2)), 2), (ImageSet(Lambda(_n, I*(2*_n*pi + pi) +
log(sin(2))), Integers), -2), (ImageSet(Lambda(_n, 2*_n*I*pi +
Mod(log(sin(2)), 2*I*pi)), Integers), 2)}
3. If system is Non linear polynomial zero dimensional then it returns
both solution (real and complex solutions, if present using
`solve_poly_system`):
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> nonlinsolve([x**2 - 2*y**2 -2, x*y - 2], [x, y])
{(-2, -1), (2, 1), (-sqrt(2)*I, sqrt(2)*I), (sqrt(2)*I, -sqrt(2)*I)}
4. `nonlinsolve` can solve some linear(zero or positive dimensional)
system (because it is using `groebner` function to get the
groebner basis and then `substitution` function basis as the new `system`).
But it is not recommended to solve linear system using `nonlinsolve`,
because `linsolve` is better for all kind of linear system.
>>> nonlinsolve([x + 2*y -z - 3, x - y - 4*z + 9 , y + z - 4], [x, y, z])
{(3*z - 5, -z + 4, z)}
5. System having polynomial equations and only real solution is present
(will be solved using `solve_poly_system`):
>>> e1 = sqrt(x**2 + y**2) - 10
>>> e2 = sqrt(y**2 + (-x + 10)**2) - 3
>>> nonlinsolve((e1, e2), (x, y))
{(191/20, -3*sqrt(391)/20), (191/20, 3*sqrt(391)/20)}
>>> nonlinsolve([x**2 + 2/y - 2, x + y - 3], [x, y])
{(1, 2), (1 + sqrt(5), -sqrt(5) + 2), (-sqrt(5) + 1, 2 + sqrt(5))}
>>> nonlinsolve([x**2 + 2/y - 2, x + y - 3], [y, x])
{(2, 1), (2 + sqrt(5), -sqrt(5) + 1), (-sqrt(5) + 2, 1 + sqrt(5))}
6. It is better to use symbols instead of Trigonometric Function or
Function (e.g. replace `sin(x)` with symbol, replace `f(x)` with symbol
and so on. Get soln from `nonlinsolve` and then using `solveset` get
the value of `x`)
How nonlinsolve is better than old solver `_solve_system` :
===========================================================
1. A positive dimensional system solver : nonlinsolve can return
solution for positive dimensional system. It finds the
Groebner Basis of the positive dimensional system(calling it as
basis) then we can start solving equation(having least number of
variable first in the basis) using solveset and substituting that
solved solutions into other equation(of basis) to get solution in
terms of minimum variables. Here the important thing is how we
are substituting the known values and in which equations.
2. Real and Complex both solutions : nonlinsolve returns both real
and complex solution. If all the equations in the system are polynomial
then using `solve_poly_system` both real and complex solution is returned.
If all the equations in the system are not polynomial equation then goes to
`substitution` method with this polynomial and non polynomial equation(s),
to solve for unsolved variables. Here to solve for particular variable
solveset_real and solveset_complex is used. For both real and complex
solution function `_solve_using_know_values` is used inside `substitution`
function.(`substitution` function will be called when there is any non
polynomial equation(s) is present). When solution is valid then add its
general solution in the final result.
3. Complement and Intersection will be added if any : nonlinsolve maintains
dict for complements and Intersections. If solveset find complements or/and
Intersection with any Interval or set during the execution of
`substitution` function ,then complement or/and Intersection for that
variable is added before returning final solution.
"""
from sympy.polys.polytools import is_zero_dimensional
if not system:
return S.EmptySet
if not symbols:
msg = ('Symbols must be given, for which solution of the '
'system is to be found.')
raise ValueError(filldedent(msg))
if hasattr(symbols[0], '__iter__'):
symbols = symbols[0]
if not is_sequence(symbols) or not symbols:
msg = ('Symbols must be given, for which solution of the '
'system is to be found.')
raise IndexError(filldedent(msg))
system, symbols, swap = recast_to_symbols(system, symbols)
if swap:
soln = nonlinsolve(system, symbols)
return FiniteSet(*[tuple(i.xreplace(swap) for i in s) for s in soln])
if len(system) == 1 and len(symbols) == 1:
return _solveset_work(system, symbols)
# main code of def nonlinsolve() starts from here
polys, polys_expr, nonpolys, denominators = _separate_poly_nonpoly(
system, symbols)
if len(symbols) == len(polys):
# If all the equations in the system are poly
if is_zero_dimensional(polys, symbols):
# finite number of soln (Zero dimensional system)
try:
return _handle_zero_dimensional(polys, symbols, system)
except NotImplementedError:
# Right now it doesn't fail for any polynomial system of
# equation. If `solve_poly_system` fails then `substitution`
# method will handle it.
result = substitution(
polys_expr, symbols, exclude=denominators)
return result
# positive dimensional system
return _handle_positive_dimensional(polys, symbols, denominators)
else:
# If all the equations are not polynomial.
# Use `substitution` method for the system
result = substitution(
polys_expr + nonpolys, symbols, exclude=denominators)
return result
|
96010aedd7fd3d391a2edf0c821c081498a5435a0aa7ef598ea41b257f072485
|
"""Tools for solving inequalities and systems of inequalities. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import Symbol, Dummy, sympify
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
from sympy.core.relational import Relational, Eq, Ge, Lt, Ne
from sympy.sets import Interval
from sympy.sets.sets import FiniteSet, Union, EmptySet, Intersection
from sympy.sets.fancysets import ImageSet
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.function import expand_mul
from sympy.functions import Abs
from sympy.logic import And
from sympy.polys import Poly, PolynomialError, parallel_poly_from_expr
from sympy.polys.polyutils import _nsort
from sympy.utilities.iterables import sift
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
def solve_poly_inequality(poly, rel):
"""Solve a polynomial inequality with rational coefficients.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import solve_poly_inequality
>>> solve_poly_inequality(Poly(x, x, domain='ZZ'), '==')
[{0}]
>>> solve_poly_inequality(Poly(x**2 - 1, x, domain='ZZ'), '!=')
[Interval.open(-oo, -1), Interval.open(-1, 1), Interval.open(1, oo)]
>>> solve_poly_inequality(Poly(x**2 - 1, x, domain='ZZ'), '==')
[{-1}, {1}]
See Also
========
solve_poly_inequalities
"""
if not isinstance(poly, Poly):
raise ValueError(
'For efficiency reasons, `poly` should be a Poly instance')
if poly.is_number:
t = Relational(poly.as_expr(), 0, rel)
if t is S.true:
return [S.Reals]
elif t is S.false:
return [S.EmptySet]
else:
raise NotImplementedError(
"could not determine truth value of %s" % t)
reals, intervals = poly.real_roots(multiple=False), []
if rel == '==':
for root, _ in reals:
interval = Interval(root, root)
intervals.append(interval)
elif rel == '!=':
left = S.NegativeInfinity
for right, _ in reals + [(S.Infinity, 1)]:
interval = Interval(left, right, True, True)
intervals.append(interval)
left = right
else:
if poly.LC() > 0:
sign = +1
else:
sign = -1
eq_sign, equal = None, False
if rel == '>':
eq_sign = +1
elif rel == '<':
eq_sign = -1
elif rel == '>=':
eq_sign, equal = +1, True
elif rel == '<=':
eq_sign, equal = -1, True
else:
raise ValueError("'%s' is not a valid relation" % rel)
right, right_open = S.Infinity, True
for left, multiplicity in reversed(reals):
if multiplicity % 2:
if sign == eq_sign:
intervals.insert(
0, Interval(left, right, not equal, right_open))
sign, right, right_open = -sign, left, not equal
else:
if sign == eq_sign and not equal:
intervals.insert(
0, Interval(left, right, True, right_open))
right, right_open = left, True
elif sign != eq_sign and equal:
intervals.insert(0, Interval(left, left))
if sign == eq_sign:
intervals.insert(
0, Interval(S.NegativeInfinity, right, True, right_open))
return intervals
def solve_poly_inequalities(polys):
"""Solve polynomial inequalities with rational coefficients.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import solve_poly_inequalities
>>> from sympy.polys import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> solve_poly_inequalities(((
... Poly(x**2 - 3), ">"), (
... Poly(-x**2 + 1), ">")))
Union(Interval.open(-oo, -sqrt(3)), Interval.open(-1, 1), Interval.open(sqrt(3), oo))
"""
from sympy import Union
return Union(*[solve_poly_inequality(*p) for p in polys])
def solve_rational_inequalities(eqs):
"""Solve a system of rational inequalities with rational coefficients.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import solve_rational_inequalities
>>> solve_rational_inequalities([[
... ((Poly(-x + 1), Poly(1, x)), '>='),
... ((Poly(-x + 1), Poly(1, x)), '<=')]])
{1}
>>> solve_rational_inequalities([[
... ((Poly(x), Poly(1, x)), '!='),
... ((Poly(-x + 1), Poly(1, x)), '>=')]])
Union(Interval.open(-oo, 0), Interval.Lopen(0, 1))
See Also
========
solve_poly_inequality
"""
result = S.EmptySet
for _eqs in eqs:
if not _eqs:
continue
global_intervals = [Interval(S.NegativeInfinity, S.Infinity)]
for (numer, denom), rel in _eqs:
numer_intervals = solve_poly_inequality(numer*denom, rel)
denom_intervals = solve_poly_inequality(denom, '==')
intervals = []
for numer_interval in numer_intervals:
for global_interval in global_intervals:
interval = numer_interval.intersect(global_interval)
if interval is not S.EmptySet:
intervals.append(interval)
global_intervals = intervals
intervals = []
for global_interval in global_intervals:
for denom_interval in denom_intervals:
global_interval -= denom_interval
if global_interval is not S.EmptySet:
intervals.append(global_interval)
global_intervals = intervals
if not global_intervals:
break
for interval in global_intervals:
result = result.union(interval)
return result
def reduce_rational_inequalities(exprs, gen, relational=True):
"""Reduce a system of rational inequalities with rational coefficients.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, Symbol
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import reduce_rational_inequalities
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True)
>>> reduce_rational_inequalities([[x**2 <= 0]], x)
Eq(x, 0)
>>> reduce_rational_inequalities([[x + 2 > 0]], x)
(-2 < x) & (x < oo)
>>> reduce_rational_inequalities([[(x + 2, ">")]], x)
(-2 < x) & (x < oo)
>>> reduce_rational_inequalities([[x + 2]], x)
Eq(x, -2)
"""
exact = True
eqs = []
solution = S.Reals if exprs else S.EmptySet
for _exprs in exprs:
_eqs = []
for expr in _exprs:
if isinstance(expr, tuple):
expr, rel = expr
else:
if expr.is_Relational:
expr, rel = expr.lhs - expr.rhs, expr.rel_op
else:
expr, rel = expr, '=='
if expr is S.true:
numer, denom, rel = S.Zero, S.One, '=='
elif expr is S.false:
numer, denom, rel = S.One, S.One, '=='
else:
numer, denom = expr.together().as_numer_denom()
try:
(numer, denom), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr(
(numer, denom), gen)
except PolynomialError:
raise PolynomialError(filldedent('''
only polynomials and rational functions are
supported in this context.
'''))
if not opt.domain.is_Exact:
numer, denom, exact = numer.to_exact(), denom.to_exact(), False
domain = opt.domain.get_exact()
if not (domain.is_ZZ or domain.is_QQ):
expr = numer/denom
expr = Relational(expr, 0, rel)
solution &= solve_univariate_inequality(expr, gen, relational=False)
else:
_eqs.append(((numer, denom), rel))
if _eqs:
eqs.append(_eqs)
if eqs:
solution &= solve_rational_inequalities(eqs)
exclude = solve_rational_inequalities([[((d, d.one), '==')
for i in eqs for ((n, d), _) in i if d.has(gen)]])
solution -= exclude
if not exact and solution:
solution = solution.evalf()
if relational:
solution = solution.as_relational(gen)
return solution
def reduce_abs_inequality(expr, rel, gen):
"""Reduce an inequality with nested absolute values.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Abs, Symbol
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import reduce_abs_inequality
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True)
>>> reduce_abs_inequality(Abs(x - 5) - 3, '<', x)
(2 < x) & (x < 8)
>>> reduce_abs_inequality(Abs(x + 2)*3 - 13, '<', x)
(-19/3 < x) & (x < 7/3)
See Also
========
reduce_abs_inequalities
"""
if gen.is_real is False:
raise TypeError(filldedent('''
can't solve inequalities with absolute values containing
non-real variables.
'''))
def _bottom_up_scan(expr):
exprs = []
if expr.is_Add or expr.is_Mul:
op = expr.func
for arg in expr.args:
_exprs = _bottom_up_scan(arg)
if not exprs:
exprs = _exprs
else:
args = []
for expr, conds in exprs:
for _expr, _conds in _exprs:
args.append((op(expr, _expr), conds + _conds))
exprs = args
elif expr.is_Pow:
n = expr.exp
if not n.is_Integer:
raise ValueError("Only Integer Powers are allowed on Abs.")
_exprs = _bottom_up_scan(expr.base)
for expr, conds in _exprs:
exprs.append((expr**n, conds))
elif isinstance(expr, Abs):
_exprs = _bottom_up_scan(expr.args[0])
for expr, conds in _exprs:
exprs.append(( expr, conds + [Ge(expr, 0)]))
exprs.append((-expr, conds + [Lt(expr, 0)]))
else:
exprs = [(expr, [])]
return exprs
exprs = _bottom_up_scan(expr)
mapping = {'<': '>', '<=': '>='}
inequalities = []
for expr, conds in exprs:
if rel not in mapping.keys():
expr = Relational( expr, 0, rel)
else:
expr = Relational(-expr, 0, mapping[rel])
inequalities.append([expr] + conds)
return reduce_rational_inequalities(inequalities, gen)
def reduce_abs_inequalities(exprs, gen):
"""Reduce a system of inequalities with nested absolute values.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Abs, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import reduce_abs_inequalities
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True)
>>> reduce_abs_inequalities([(Abs(3*x - 5) - 7, '<'),
... (Abs(x + 25) - 13, '>')], x)
(-2/3 < x) & (x < 4) & (((-oo < x) & (x < -38)) | ((-12 < x) & (x < oo)))
>>> reduce_abs_inequalities([(Abs(x - 4) + Abs(3*x - 5) - 7, '<')], x)
(1/2 < x) & (x < 4)
See Also
========
reduce_abs_inequality
"""
return And(*[ reduce_abs_inequality(expr, rel, gen)
for expr, rel in exprs ])
def solve_univariate_inequality(expr, gen, relational=True, domain=S.Reals, continuous=False):
"""Solves a real univariate inequality.
Parameters
==========
expr : Relational
The target inequality
gen : Symbol
The variable for which the inequality is solved
relational : bool
A Relational type output is expected or not
domain : Set
The domain over which the equation is solved
continuous: bool
True if expr is known to be continuous over the given domain
(and so continuous_domain() doesn't need to be called on it)
Raises
======
NotImplementedError
The solution of the inequality cannot be determined due to limitation
in `solvify`.
Notes
=====
Currently, we cannot solve all the inequalities due to limitations in
`solvify`. Also, the solution returned for trigonometric inequalities
are restricted in its periodic interval.
See Also
========
solvify: solver returning solveset solutions with solve's output API
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import solve_univariate_inequality
>>> from sympy import Symbol, sin, Interval, S
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> solve_univariate_inequality(x**2 >= 4, x)
((2 <= x) & (x < oo)) | ((x <= -2) & (-oo < x))
>>> solve_univariate_inequality(x**2 >= 4, x, relational=False)
Union(Interval(-oo, -2), Interval(2, oo))
>>> domain = Interval(0, S.Infinity)
>>> solve_univariate_inequality(x**2 >= 4, x, False, domain)
Interval(2, oo)
>>> solve_univariate_inequality(sin(x) > 0, x, relational=False)
Interval.open(0, pi)
"""
from sympy import im
from sympy.calculus.util import (continuous_domain, periodicity,
function_range)
from sympy.solvers.solvers import denoms
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset_real, solvify, solveset
from sympy.solvers.solvers import solve
# This keeps the function independent of the assumptions about `gen`.
# `solveset` makes sure this function is called only when the domain is
# real.
_gen = gen
_domain = domain
if gen.is_real is False:
rv = S.EmptySet
return rv if not relational else rv.as_relational(_gen)
elif gen.is_real is None:
gen = Dummy('gen', real=True)
try:
expr = expr.xreplace({_gen: gen})
except TypeError:
raise TypeError(filldedent('''
When gen is real, the relational has a complex part
which leads to an invalid comparison like I < 0.
'''))
rv = None
if expr is S.true:
rv = domain
elif expr is S.false:
rv = S.EmptySet
else:
e = expr.lhs - expr.rhs
period = periodicity(e, gen)
if period is S.Zero:
e = expand_mul(e)
const = expr.func(e, 0)
if const is S.true:
rv = domain
elif const is S.false:
rv = S.EmptySet
elif period is not None:
frange = function_range(e, gen, domain)
rel = expr.rel_op
if rel == '<' or rel == '<=':
if expr.func(frange.sup, 0):
rv = domain
elif not expr.func(frange.inf, 0):
rv = S.EmptySet
elif rel == '>' or rel == '>=':
if expr.func(frange.inf, 0):
rv = domain
elif not expr.func(frange.sup, 0):
rv = S.EmptySet
inf, sup = domain.inf, domain.sup
if sup - inf is S.Infinity:
domain = Interval(0, period, False, True)
if rv is None:
n, d = e.as_numer_denom()
try:
if gen not in n.free_symbols and len(e.free_symbols) > 1:
raise ValueError
# this might raise ValueError on its own
# or it might give None...
solns = solvify(e, gen, domain)
if solns is None:
# in which case we raise ValueError
raise ValueError
except (ValueError, NotImplementedError):
# replace gen with generic x since it's
# univariate anyway
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
The inequality, %s, cannot be solved using
solve_univariate_inequality.
''' % expr.subs(gen, Symbol('x'))))
expanded_e = expand_mul(e)
def valid(x):
# this is used to see if gen=x satisfies the
# relational by substituting it into the
# expanded form and testing against 0, e.g.
# if expr = x*(x + 1) < 2 then e = x*(x + 1) - 2
# and expanded_e = x**2 + x - 2; the test is
# whether a given value of x satisfies
# x**2 + x - 2 < 0
#
# expanded_e, expr and gen used from enclosing scope
v = expanded_e.subs(gen, expand_mul(x))
try:
r = expr.func(v, 0)
except TypeError:
r = S.false
if r in (S.true, S.false):
return r
if v.is_real is False:
return S.false
else:
v = v.n(2)
if v.is_comparable:
return expr.func(v, 0)
# not comparable or couldn't be evaluated
raise NotImplementedError(
'relationship did not evaluate: %s' % r)
singularities = []
for d in denoms(expr, gen):
singularities.extend(solvify(d, gen, domain))
if not continuous:
domain = continuous_domain(expanded_e, gen, domain)
include_x = '=' in expr.rel_op and expr.rel_op != '!='
try:
discontinuities = set(domain.boundary -
FiniteSet(domain.inf, domain.sup))
# remove points that are not between inf and sup of domain
critical_points = FiniteSet(*(solns + singularities + list(
discontinuities))).intersection(
Interval(domain.inf, domain.sup,
domain.inf not in domain, domain.sup not in domain))
if all(r.is_number for r in critical_points):
reals = _nsort(critical_points, separated=True)[0]
else:
sifted = sift(critical_points, lambda x: x.is_real)
if sifted[None]:
# there were some roots that weren't known
# to be real
raise NotImplementedError
try:
reals = sifted[True]
if len(reals) > 1:
reals = list(sorted(reals))
except TypeError:
raise NotImplementedError
except NotImplementedError:
raise NotImplementedError('sorting of these roots is not supported')
# If expr contains imaginary coefficients, only take real
# values of x for which the imaginary part is 0
make_real = S.Reals
if im(expanded_e) != S.Zero:
check = True
im_sol = FiniteSet()
try:
a = solveset(im(expanded_e), gen, domain)
if not isinstance(a, Interval):
for z in a:
if z not in singularities and valid(z) and z.is_real:
im_sol += FiniteSet(z)
else:
start, end = a.inf, a.sup
for z in _nsort(critical_points + FiniteSet(end)):
valid_start = valid(start)
if start != end:
valid_z = valid(z)
pt = _pt(start, z)
if pt not in singularities and pt.is_real and valid(pt):
if valid_start and valid_z:
im_sol += Interval(start, z)
elif valid_start:
im_sol += Interval.Ropen(start, z)
elif valid_z:
im_sol += Interval.Lopen(start, z)
else:
im_sol += Interval.open(start, z)
start = z
for s in singularities:
im_sol -= FiniteSet(s)
except (TypeError):
im_sol = S.Reals
check = False
if isinstance(im_sol, EmptySet):
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
%s contains imaginary parts which cannot be
made 0 for any value of %s satisfying the
inequality, leading to relations like I < 0.
''' % (expr.subs(gen, _gen), _gen)))
make_real = make_real.intersect(im_sol)
empty = sol_sets = [S.EmptySet]
start = domain.inf
if valid(start) and start.is_finite:
sol_sets.append(FiniteSet(start))
for x in reals:
end = x
if valid(_pt(start, end)):
sol_sets.append(Interval(start, end, True, True))
if x in singularities:
singularities.remove(x)
else:
if x in discontinuities:
discontinuities.remove(x)
_valid = valid(x)
else: # it's a solution
_valid = include_x
if _valid:
sol_sets.append(FiniteSet(x))
start = end
end = domain.sup
if valid(end) and end.is_finite:
sol_sets.append(FiniteSet(end))
if valid(_pt(start, end)):
sol_sets.append(Interval.open(start, end))
if im(expanded_e) != S.Zero and check:
rv = (make_real).intersect(_domain)
else:
rv = Intersection(
(Union(*sol_sets)), make_real, _domain).subs(gen, _gen)
return rv if not relational else rv.as_relational(_gen)
def _pt(start, end):
"""Return a point between start and end"""
if not start.is_infinite and not end.is_infinite:
pt = (start + end)/2
elif start.is_infinite and end.is_infinite:
pt = S.Zero
else:
if (start.is_infinite and start.is_positive is None or
end.is_infinite and end.is_positive is None):
raise ValueError('cannot proceed with unsigned infinite values')
if (end.is_infinite and end.is_negative or
start.is_infinite and start.is_positive):
start, end = end, start
# if possible, use a multiple of self which has
# better behavior when checking assumptions than
# an expression obtained by adding or subtracting 1
if end.is_infinite:
if start.is_positive:
pt = start*2
elif start.is_negative:
pt = start*S.Half
else:
pt = start + 1
elif start.is_infinite:
if end.is_positive:
pt = end*S.Half
elif end.is_negative:
pt = end*2
else:
pt = end - 1
return pt
def _solve_inequality(ie, s, linear=False):
"""Return the inequality with s isolated on the left, if possible.
If the relationship is non-linear, a solution involving And or Or
may be returned. False or True are returned if the relationship
is never True or always True, respectively.
If `linear` is True (default is False) an `s`-dependent expression
will be isolated on the left, if possible
but it will not be solved for `s` unless the expression is linear
in `s`. Furthermore, only "safe" operations which don't change the
sense of the relationship are applied: no division by an unsigned
value is attempted unless the relationship involves Eq or Ne and
no division by a value not known to be nonzero is ever attempted.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Eq, Symbol
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import _solve_inequality as f
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
For linear expressions, the symbol can be isolated:
>>> f(x - 2 < 0, x)
x < 2
>>> f(-x - 6 < x, x)
x > -3
Sometimes nonlinear relationships will be False
>>> f(x**2 + 4 < 0, x)
False
Or they may involve more than one region of values:
>>> f(x**2 - 4 < 0, x)
(-2 < x) & (x < 2)
To restrict the solution to a relational, set linear=True
and only the x-dependent portion will be isolated on the left:
>>> f(x**2 - 4 < 0, x, linear=True)
x**2 < 4
Division of only nonzero quantities is allowed, so x cannot
be isolated by dividing by y:
>>> y.is_nonzero is None # it is unknown whether it is 0 or not
True
>>> f(x*y < 1, x)
x*y < 1
And while an equality (or inequality) still holds after dividing by a
non-zero quantity
>>> nz = Symbol('nz', nonzero=True)
>>> f(Eq(x*nz, 1), x)
Eq(x, 1/nz)
the sign must be known for other inequalities involving > or <:
>>> f(x*nz <= 1, x)
nz*x <= 1
>>> p = Symbol('p', positive=True)
>>> f(x*p <= 1, x)
x <= 1/p
When there are denominators in the original expression that
are removed by expansion, conditions for them will be returned
as part of the result:
>>> f(x < x*(2/x - 1), x)
(x < 1) & Ne(x, 0)
"""
from sympy.solvers.solvers import denoms
if s not in ie.free_symbols:
return ie
if ie.rhs == s:
ie = ie.reversed
if ie.lhs == s and s not in ie.rhs.free_symbols:
return ie
def classify(ie, s, i):
# return True or False if ie evaluates when substituting s with
# i else None (if unevaluated) or NaN (when there is an error
# in evaluating)
try:
v = ie.subs(s, i)
if v is S.NaN:
return v
elif v not in (True, False):
return
return v
except TypeError:
return S.NaN
rv = None
oo = S.Infinity
expr = ie.lhs - ie.rhs
try:
p = Poly(expr, s)
if p.degree() == 0:
rv = ie.func(p.as_expr(), 0)
elif not linear and p.degree() > 1:
# handle in except clause
raise NotImplementedError
except (PolynomialError, NotImplementedError):
if not linear:
try:
rv = reduce_rational_inequalities([[ie]], s)
except PolynomialError:
rv = solve_univariate_inequality(ie, s)
# remove restrictions wrt +/-oo that may have been
# applied when using sets to simplify the relationship
okoo = classify(ie, s, oo)
if okoo is S.true and classify(rv, s, oo) is S.false:
rv = rv.subs(s < oo, True)
oknoo = classify(ie, s, -oo)
if (oknoo is S.true and
classify(rv, s, -oo) is S.false):
rv = rv.subs(-oo < s, True)
rv = rv.subs(s > -oo, True)
if rv is S.true:
rv = (s <= oo) if okoo is S.true else (s < oo)
if oknoo is not S.true:
rv = And(-oo < s, rv)
else:
p = Poly(expr)
conds = []
if rv is None:
e = p.as_expr() # this is in expanded form
# Do a safe inversion of e, moving non-s terms
# to the rhs and dividing by a nonzero factor if
# the relational is Eq/Ne; for other relationals
# the sign must also be positive or negative
rhs = 0
b, ax = e.as_independent(s, as_Add=True)
e -= b
rhs -= b
ef = factor_terms(e)
a, e = ef.as_independent(s, as_Add=False)
if (a.is_zero != False or # don't divide by potential 0
a.is_negative ==
a.is_positive == None and # if sign is not known then
ie.rel_op not in ('!=', '==')): # reject if not Eq/Ne
e = ef
a = S.One
rhs /= a
if a.is_positive:
rv = ie.func(e, rhs)
else:
rv = ie.reversed.func(e, rhs)
# return conditions under which the value is
# valid, too.
beginning_denoms = denoms(ie.lhs) | denoms(ie.rhs)
current_denoms = denoms(rv)
for d in beginning_denoms - current_denoms:
c = _solve_inequality(Eq(d, 0), s, linear=linear)
if isinstance(c, Eq) and c.lhs == s:
if classify(rv, s, c.rhs) is S.true:
# rv is permitting this value but it shouldn't
conds.append(~c)
for i in (-oo, oo):
if (classify(rv, s, i) is S.true and
classify(ie, s, i) is not S.true):
conds.append(s < i if i is oo else i < s)
conds.append(rv)
return And(*conds)
def _reduce_inequalities(inequalities, symbols):
# helper for reduce_inequalities
poly_part, abs_part = {}, {}
other = []
for inequality in inequalities:
expr, rel = inequality.lhs, inequality.rel_op # rhs is 0
# check for gens using atoms which is more strict than free_symbols to
# guard against EX domain which won't be handled by
# reduce_rational_inequalities
gens = expr.atoms(Symbol)
if len(gens) == 1:
gen = gens.pop()
else:
common = expr.free_symbols & symbols
if len(common) == 1:
gen = common.pop()
other.append(_solve_inequality(Relational(expr, 0, rel), gen))
continue
else:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
inequality has more than one symbol of interest.
'''))
if expr.is_polynomial(gen):
poly_part.setdefault(gen, []).append((expr, rel))
else:
components = expr.find(lambda u:
u.has(gen) and (
u.is_Function or u.is_Pow and not u.exp.is_Integer))
if components and all(isinstance(i, Abs) for i in components):
abs_part.setdefault(gen, []).append((expr, rel))
else:
other.append(_solve_inequality(Relational(expr, 0, rel), gen))
poly_reduced = []
abs_reduced = []
for gen, exprs in poly_part.items():
poly_reduced.append(reduce_rational_inequalities([exprs], gen))
for gen, exprs in abs_part.items():
abs_reduced.append(reduce_abs_inequalities(exprs, gen))
return And(*(poly_reduced + abs_reduced + other))
def reduce_inequalities(inequalities, symbols=[]):
"""Reduce a system of inequalities with rational coefficients.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sympify as S, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy.solvers.inequalities import reduce_inequalities
>>> reduce_inequalities(0 <= x + 3, [])
(-3 <= x) & (x < oo)
>>> reduce_inequalities(0 <= x + y*2 - 1, [x])
(x < oo) & (x >= -2*y + 1)
"""
if not iterable(inequalities):
inequalities = [inequalities]
inequalities = [sympify(i) for i in inequalities]
gens = set().union(*[i.free_symbols for i in inequalities])
if not iterable(symbols):
symbols = [symbols]
symbols = (set(symbols) or gens) & gens
if any(i.is_real is False for i in symbols):
raise TypeError(filldedent('''
inequalities cannot contain symbols that are not real.
'''))
# make vanilla symbol real
recast = dict([(i, Dummy(i.name, real=True))
for i in gens if i.is_real is None])
inequalities = [i.xreplace(recast) for i in inequalities]
symbols = {i.xreplace(recast) for i in symbols}
# prefilter
keep = []
for i in inequalities:
if isinstance(i, Relational):
i = i.func(i.lhs.as_expr() - i.rhs.as_expr(), 0)
elif i not in (True, False):
i = Eq(i, 0)
if i == True:
continue
elif i == False:
return S.false
if i.lhs.is_number:
raise NotImplementedError(
"could not determine truth value of %s" % i)
keep.append(i)
inequalities = keep
del keep
# solve system
rv = _reduce_inequalities(inequalities, symbols)
# restore original symbols and return
return rv.xreplace({v: k for k, v in recast.items()})
|
5c0e0cde1dd47bd7112c11918a031166b3bccc9bf28ebd030f3c5a7d8ecf1fd3
|
"""
This module contain solvers for all kinds of equations:
- algebraic or transcendental, use solve()
- recurrence, use rsolve()
- differential, use dsolve()
- nonlinear (numerically), use nsolve()
(you will need a good starting point)
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.compatibility import (iterable, is_sequence, ordered,
default_sort_key, range)
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.core import (S, Add, Symbol, Equality, Dummy, Expr, Mul,
Pow, Unequality)
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
from sympy.core.function import (expand_mul, expand_multinomial, expand_log,
Derivative, AppliedUndef, UndefinedFunction, nfloat,
Function, expand_power_exp, Lambda, _mexpand)
from sympy.integrals.integrals import Integral
from sympy.core.numbers import ilcm, Float
from sympy.core.relational import Relational, Ge, _canonical
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_not, fuzzy_and
from sympy.logic.boolalg import And, Or, BooleanAtom
from sympy.core.basic import preorder_traversal
from sympy.functions import (log, exp, LambertW, cos, sin, tan, acos, asin, atan,
Abs, re, im, arg, sqrt, atan2)
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import (TrigonometricFunction,
HyperbolicFunction)
from sympy.simplify import (simplify, collect, powsimp, posify, powdenest,
nsimplify, denom, logcombine)
from sympy.simplify.sqrtdenest import sqrt_depth
from sympy.simplify.fu import TR1
from sympy.matrices import Matrix, zeros
from sympy.polys import roots, cancel, factor, Poly, together, degree
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import GeneratorsNeeded, PolynomialError
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import piecewise_fold, Piecewise
from sympy.utilities.lambdify import lambdify
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
from sympy.utilities.iterables import uniq, generate_bell, flatten
from sympy.utilities.decorator import conserve_mpmath_dps
from mpmath import findroot
from sympy.solvers.polysys import solve_poly_system
from sympy.solvers.inequalities import reduce_inequalities
from types import GeneratorType
from collections import defaultdict
import warnings
def recast_to_symbols(eqs, symbols):
"""Return (e, s, d) where e and s are versions of eqs and
symbols in which any non-Symbol objects in symbols have
been replaced with generic Dummy symbols and d is a dictionary
that can be used to restore the original expressions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import recast_to_symbols
>>> from sympy import symbols, Function
>>> x, y = symbols('x y')
>>> fx = Function('f')(x)
>>> eqs, syms = [fx + 1, x, y], [fx, y]
>>> e, s, d = recast_to_symbols(eqs, syms); (e, s, d)
([_X0 + 1, x, y], [_X0, y], {_X0: f(x)})
The original equations and symbols can be restored using d:
>>> assert [i.xreplace(d) for i in eqs] == eqs
>>> assert [d.get(i, i) for i in s] == syms
"""
if not iterable(eqs) and iterable(symbols):
raise ValueError('Both eqs and symbols must be iterable')
new_symbols = list(symbols)
swap_sym = {}
for i, s in enumerate(symbols):
if not isinstance(s, Symbol) and s not in swap_sym:
swap_sym[s] = Dummy('X%d' % i)
new_symbols[i] = swap_sym[s]
new_f = []
for i in eqs:
try:
new_f.append(i.subs(swap_sym))
except AttributeError:
new_f.append(i)
swap_sym = {v: k for k, v in swap_sym.items()}
return new_f, new_symbols, swap_sym
def _ispow(e):
"""Return True if e is a Pow or is exp."""
return isinstance(e, Expr) and (e.is_Pow or isinstance(e, exp))
def _simple_dens(f, symbols):
# when checking if a denominator is zero, we can just check the
# base of powers with nonzero exponents since if the base is zero
# the power will be zero, too. To keep it simple and fast, we
# limit simplification to exponents that are Numbers
dens = set()
for d in denoms(f, symbols):
if d.is_Pow and d.exp.is_Number:
if d.exp.is_zero:
continue # foo**0 is never 0
d = d.base
dens.add(d)
return dens
def denoms(eq, *symbols):
"""Return (recursively) set of all denominators that appear in eq
that contain any symbol in ``symbols``; if ``symbols`` are not
provided then all denominators will be returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import denoms
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> denoms(x/y)
{y}
>>> denoms(x/(y*z))
{y, z}
>>> denoms(3/x + y/z)
{x, z}
>>> denoms(x/2 + y/z)
{2, z}
If `symbols` are provided then only denominators containing
those symbols will be returned
>>> denoms(1/x + 1/y + 1/z, y, z)
{y, z}
"""
pot = preorder_traversal(eq)
dens = set()
for p in pot:
den = denom(p)
if den is S.One:
continue
for d in Mul.make_args(den):
dens.add(d)
if not symbols:
return dens
elif len(symbols) == 1:
if iterable(symbols[0]):
symbols = symbols[0]
rv = []
for d in dens:
free = d.free_symbols
if any(s in free for s in symbols):
rv.append(d)
return set(rv)
def checksol(f, symbol, sol=None, **flags):
"""Checks whether sol is a solution of equation f == 0.
Input can be either a single symbol and corresponding value
or a dictionary of symbols and values. When given as a dictionary
and flag ``simplify=True``, the values in the dictionary will be
simplified. ``f`` can be a single equation or an iterable of equations.
A solution must satisfy all equations in ``f`` to be considered valid;
if a solution does not satisfy any equation, False is returned; if one or
more checks are inconclusive (and none are False) then None
is returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> from sympy.solvers import checksol
>>> x, y = symbols('x,y')
>>> checksol(x**4 - 1, x, 1)
True
>>> checksol(x**4 - 1, x, 0)
False
>>> checksol(x**2 + y**2 - 5**2, {x: 3, y: 4})
True
To check if an expression is zero using checksol, pass it
as ``f`` and send an empty dictionary for ``symbol``:
>>> checksol(x**2 + x - x*(x + 1), {})
True
None is returned if checksol() could not conclude.
flags:
'numerical=True (default)'
do a fast numerical check if ``f`` has only one symbol.
'minimal=True (default is False)'
a very fast, minimal testing.
'warn=True (default is False)'
show a warning if checksol() could not conclude.
'simplify=True (default)'
simplify solution before substituting into function and
simplify the function before trying specific simplifications
'force=True (default is False)'
make positive all symbols without assumptions regarding sign.
"""
from sympy.physics.units import Unit
minimal = flags.get('minimal', False)
if sol is not None:
sol = {symbol: sol}
elif isinstance(symbol, dict):
sol = symbol
else:
msg = 'Expecting (sym, val) or ({sym: val}, None) but got (%s, %s)'
raise ValueError(msg % (symbol, sol))
if iterable(f):
if not f:
raise ValueError('no functions to check')
rv = True
for fi in f:
check = checksol(fi, sol, **flags)
if check:
continue
if check is False:
return False
rv = None # don't return, wait to see if there's a False
return rv
if isinstance(f, Poly):
f = f.as_expr()
elif isinstance(f, (Equality, Unequality)):
if f.rhs in (S.true, S.false):
f = f.reversed
B, E = f.args
if B in (S.true, S.false):
f = f.subs(sol)
if f not in (S.true, S.false):
return
else:
f = f.rewrite(Add, evaluate=False)
if isinstance(f, BooleanAtom):
return bool(f)
elif not f.is_Relational and not f:
return True
if sol and not f.free_symbols & set(sol.keys()):
# if f(y) == 0, x=3 does not set f(y) to zero...nor does it not
return None
illegal = set([S.NaN,
S.ComplexInfinity,
S.Infinity,
S.NegativeInfinity])
if any(sympify(v).atoms() & illegal for k, v in sol.items()):
return False
was = f
attempt = -1
numerical = flags.get('numerical', True)
while 1:
attempt += 1
if attempt == 0:
val = f.subs(sol)
if isinstance(val, Mul):
val = val.as_independent(Unit)[0]
if val.atoms() & illegal:
return False
elif attempt == 1:
if val.free_symbols:
if not val.is_constant(*list(sol.keys()), simplify=not minimal):
return False
# there are free symbols -- simple expansion might work
_, val = val.as_content_primitive()
val = _mexpand(val.as_numer_denom()[0], recursive=True)
elif attempt == 2:
if minimal:
return
if flags.get('simplify', True):
for k in sol:
sol[k] = simplify(sol[k])
# start over without the failed expanded form, possibly
# with a simplified solution
val = simplify(f.subs(sol))
if flags.get('force', True):
val, reps = posify(val)
# expansion may work now, so try again and check
exval = _mexpand(val, recursive=True)
if exval.is_number or not exval.free_symbols:
# we can decide now
val = exval
else:
# if there are no radicals and no functions then this can't be
# zero anymore -- can it?
pot = preorder_traversal(expand_mul(val))
seen = set()
saw_pow_func = False
for p in pot:
if p in seen:
continue
seen.add(p)
if p.is_Pow and not p.exp.is_Integer:
saw_pow_func = True
elif p.is_Function:
saw_pow_func = True
elif isinstance(p, UndefinedFunction):
saw_pow_func = True
if saw_pow_func:
break
if saw_pow_func is False:
return False
if flags.get('force', True):
# don't do a zero check with the positive assumptions in place
val = val.subs(reps)
nz = fuzzy_not(val.is_zero)
if nz is not None:
# issue 5673: nz may be True even when False
# so these are just hacks to keep a false positive
# from being returned
# HACK 1: LambertW (issue 5673)
if val.is_number and val.has(LambertW):
# don't eval this to verify solution since if we got here,
# numerical must be False
return None
# add other HACKs here if necessary, otherwise we assume
# the nz value is correct
return not nz
break
if val == was:
continue
elif val.is_Rational:
return val == 0
if numerical and not val.free_symbols:
if val in (S.true, S.false):
return bool(val)
return bool(abs(val.n(18).n(12, chop=True)) < 1e-9)
was = val
if flags.get('warn', False):
warnings.warn("\n\tWarning: could not verify solution %s." % sol)
# returns None if it can't conclude
# TODO: improve solution testing
def failing_assumptions(expr, **assumptions):
"""Return a dictionary containing assumptions with values not
matching those of the passed assumptions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import failing_assumptions, Symbol
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True, positive=True)
>>> y = Symbol('y')
>>> failing_assumptions(6*x + y, real=True, positive=True)
{'positive': None, 'real': None}
>>> failing_assumptions(x**2 - 1, positive=True)
{'positive': None}
If all assumptions satisfy the `expr` an empty dictionary is returned.
>>> failing_assumptions(x**2, positive=True)
{}
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
failed = {}
for key in list(assumptions.keys()):
test = getattr(expr, 'is_%s' % key, None)
if test is not assumptions[key]:
failed[key] = test
return failed # {} or {assumption: value != desired}
def check_assumptions(expr, against=None, **assumptions):
"""Checks whether expression `expr` satisfies all assumptions.
`assumptions` is a dict of assumptions: {'assumption': True|False, ...}.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, pi, I, exp, check_assumptions
>>> check_assumptions(-5, integer=True)
True
>>> check_assumptions(pi, real=True, integer=False)
True
>>> check_assumptions(pi, real=True, negative=True)
False
>>> check_assumptions(exp(I*pi/7), real=False)
True
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True, positive=True)
>>> check_assumptions(2*x + 1, real=True, positive=True)
True
>>> check_assumptions(-2*x - 5, real=True, positive=True)
False
To check assumptions of ``expr`` against another variable or expression,
pass the expression or variable as ``against``.
>>> check_assumptions(2*x + 1, x)
True
`None` is returned if check_assumptions() could not conclude.
>>> check_assumptions(2*x - 1, real=True, positive=True)
>>> z = Symbol('z')
>>> check_assumptions(z, real=True)
See Also
========
failing_assumptions
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
if against:
if not isinstance(against, Symbol):
raise TypeError('against should be of type Symbol')
if assumptions:
raise AssertionError('No assumptions should be specified')
assumptions = against.assumptions0
def _test(key):
v = getattr(expr, 'is_' + key, None)
if v is not None:
return assumptions[key] is v
return fuzzy_and(_test(key) for key in assumptions)
def solve(f, *symbols, **flags):
r"""
Algebraically solves equations and systems of equations.
Currently supported are:
- polynomial,
- transcendental
- piecewise combinations of the above
- systems of linear and polynomial equations
- systems containing relational expressions.
Input is formed as:
* f
- a single Expr or Poly that must be zero,
- an Equality
- a Relational expression or boolean
- iterable of one or more of the above
* symbols (object(s) to solve for) specified as
- none given (other non-numeric objects will be used)
- single symbol
- denested list of symbols
e.g. solve(f, x, y)
- ordered iterable of symbols
e.g. solve(f, [x, y])
* flags
'dict'=True (default is False)
return list (perhaps empty) of solution mappings
'set'=True (default is False)
return list of symbols and set of tuple(s) of solution(s)
'exclude=[] (default)'
don't try to solve for any of the free symbols in exclude;
if expressions are given, the free symbols in them will
be extracted automatically.
'check=True (default)'
If False, don't do any testing of solutions. This can be
useful if one wants to include solutions that make any
denominator zero.
'numerical=True (default)'
do a fast numerical check if ``f`` has only one symbol.
'minimal=True (default is False)'
a very fast, minimal testing.
'warn=True (default is False)'
show a warning if checksol() could not conclude.
'simplify=True (default)'
simplify all but polynomials of order 3 or greater before
returning them and (if check is not False) use the
general simplify function on the solutions and the
expression obtained when they are substituted into the
function which should be zero
'force=True (default is False)'
make positive all symbols without assumptions regarding sign.
'rational=True (default)'
recast Floats as Rational; if this option is not used, the
system containing floats may fail to solve because of issues
with polys. If rational=None, Floats will be recast as
rationals but the answer will be recast as Floats. If the
flag is False then nothing will be done to the Floats.
'manual=True (default is False)'
do not use the polys/matrix method to solve a system of
equations, solve them one at a time as you might "manually"
'implicit=True (default is False)'
allows solve to return a solution for a pattern in terms of
other functions that contain that pattern; this is only
needed if the pattern is inside of some invertible function
like cos, exp, ....
'particular=True (default is False)'
instructs solve to try to find a particular solution to a linear
system with as many zeros as possible; this is very expensive
'quick=True (default is False)'
when using particular=True, use a fast heuristic instead to find a
solution with many zeros (instead of using the very slow method
guaranteed to find the largest number of zeros possible)
'cubics=True (default)'
return explicit solutions when cubic expressions are encountered
'quartics=True (default)'
return explicit solutions when quartic expressions are encountered
'quintics=True (default)'
return explicit solutions (if possible) when quintic expressions
are encountered
Examples
========
The output varies according to the input and can be seen by example::
>>> from sympy import solve, Poly, Eq, Function, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z, a, b
>>> f = Function('f')
* boolean or univariate Relational
>>> solve(x < 3)
(-oo < x) & (x < 3)
* to always get a list of solution mappings, use flag dict=True
>>> solve(x - 3, dict=True)
[{x: 3}]
>>> sol = solve([x - 3, y - 1], dict=True)
>>> sol
[{x: 3, y: 1}]
>>> sol[0][x]
3
>>> sol[0][y]
1
* to get a list of symbols and set of solution(s) use flag set=True
>>> solve([x**2 - 3, y - 1], set=True)
([x, y], {(-sqrt(3), 1), (sqrt(3), 1)})
* single expression and single symbol that is in the expression
>>> solve(x - y, x)
[y]
>>> solve(x - 3, x)
[3]
>>> solve(Eq(x, 3), x)
[3]
>>> solve(Poly(x - 3), x)
[3]
>>> solve(x**2 - y**2, x, set=True)
([x], {(-y,), (y,)})
>>> solve(x**4 - 1, x, set=True)
([x], {(-1,), (1,), (-I,), (I,)})
* single expression with no symbol that is in the expression
>>> solve(3, x)
[]
>>> solve(x - 3, y)
[]
* single expression with no symbol given
In this case, all free symbols will be selected as potential
symbols to solve for. If the equation is univariate then a list
of solutions is returned; otherwise -- as is the case when symbols are
given as an iterable of length > 1 -- a list of mappings will be returned.
>>> solve(x - 3)
[3]
>>> solve(x**2 - y**2)
[{x: -y}, {x: y}]
>>> solve(z**2*x**2 - z**2*y**2)
[{x: -y}, {x: y}, {z: 0}]
>>> solve(z**2*x - z**2*y**2)
[{x: y**2}, {z: 0}]
* when an object other than a Symbol is given as a symbol, it is
isolated algebraically and an implicit solution may be obtained.
This is mostly provided as a convenience to save one from replacing
the object with a Symbol and solving for that Symbol. It will only
work if the specified object can be replaced with a Symbol using the
subs method.
>>> solve(f(x) - x, f(x))
[x]
>>> solve(f(x).diff(x) - f(x) - x, f(x).diff(x))
[x + f(x)]
>>> solve(f(x).diff(x) - f(x) - x, f(x))
[-x + Derivative(f(x), x)]
>>> solve(x + exp(x)**2, exp(x), set=True)
([exp(x)], {(-sqrt(-x),), (sqrt(-x),)})
>>> from sympy import Indexed, IndexedBase, Tuple, sqrt
>>> A = IndexedBase('A')
>>> eqs = Tuple(A[1] + A[2] - 3, A[1] - A[2] + 1)
>>> solve(eqs, eqs.atoms(Indexed))
{A[1]: 1, A[2]: 2}
* To solve for a *symbol* implicitly, use 'implicit=True':
>>> solve(x + exp(x), x)
[-LambertW(1)]
>>> solve(x + exp(x), x, implicit=True)
[-exp(x)]
* It is possible to solve for anything that can be targeted with
subs:
>>> solve(x + 2 + sqrt(3), x + 2)
[-sqrt(3)]
>>> solve((x + 2 + sqrt(3), x + 4 + y), y, x + 2)
{y: -2 + sqrt(3), x + 2: -sqrt(3)}
* Nothing heroic is done in this implicit solving so you may end up
with a symbol still in the solution:
>>> eqs = (x*y + 3*y + sqrt(3), x + 4 + y)
>>> solve(eqs, y, x + 2)
{y: -sqrt(3)/(x + 3), x + 2: (-2*x - 6 + sqrt(3))/(x + 3)}
>>> solve(eqs, y*x, x)
{x: -y - 4, x*y: -3*y - sqrt(3)}
* if you attempt to solve for a number remember that the number
you have obtained does not necessarily mean that the value is
equivalent to the expression obtained:
>>> solve(sqrt(2) - 1, 1)
[sqrt(2)]
>>> solve(x - y + 1, 1) # /!\ -1 is targeted, too
[x/(y - 1)]
>>> [_.subs(z, -1) for _ in solve((x - y + 1).subs(-1, z), 1)]
[-x + y]
* To solve for a function within a derivative, use dsolve.
* single expression and more than 1 symbol
* when there is a linear solution
>>> solve(x - y**2, x, y)
[(y**2, y)]
>>> solve(x**2 - y, x, y)
[(x, x**2)]
>>> solve(x**2 - y, x, y, dict=True)
[{y: x**2}]
* when undetermined coefficients are identified
* that are linear
>>> solve((a + b)*x - b + 2, a, b)
{a: -2, b: 2}
* that are nonlinear
>>> solve((a + b)*x - b**2 + 2, a, b, set=True)
([a, b], {(-sqrt(2), sqrt(2)), (sqrt(2), -sqrt(2))})
* if there is no linear solution then the first successful
attempt for a nonlinear solution will be returned
>>> solve(x**2 - y**2, x, y, dict=True)
[{x: -y}, {x: y}]
>>> solve(x**2 - y**2/exp(x), x, y, dict=True)
[{x: 2*LambertW(y/2)}]
>>> solve(x**2 - y**2/exp(x), y, x)
[(-x*sqrt(exp(x)), x), (x*sqrt(exp(x)), x)]
* iterable of one or more of the above
* involving relationals or bools
>>> solve([x < 3, x - 2])
Eq(x, 2)
>>> solve([x > 3, x - 2])
False
* when the system is linear
* with a solution
>>> solve([x - 3], x)
{x: 3}
>>> solve((x + 5*y - 2, -3*x + 6*y - 15), x, y)
{x: -3, y: 1}
>>> solve((x + 5*y - 2, -3*x + 6*y - 15), x, y, z)
{x: -3, y: 1}
>>> solve((x + 5*y - 2, -3*x + 6*y - z), z, x, y)
{x: -5*y + 2, z: 21*y - 6}
* without a solution
>>> solve([x + 3, x - 3])
[]
* when the system is not linear
>>> solve([x**2 + y -2, y**2 - 4], x, y, set=True)
([x, y], {(-2, -2), (0, 2), (2, -2)})
* if no symbols are given, all free symbols will be selected and a list
of mappings returned
>>> solve([x - 2, x**2 + y])
[{x: 2, y: -4}]
>>> solve([x - 2, x**2 + f(x)], {f(x), x})
[{x: 2, f(x): -4}]
* if any equation doesn't depend on the symbol(s) given it will be
eliminated from the equation set and an answer may be given
implicitly in terms of variables that were not of interest
>>> solve([x - y, y - 3], x)
{x: y}
Notes
=====
solve() with check=True (default) will run through the symbol tags to
elimate unwanted solutions. If no assumptions are included all possible
solutions will be returned.
>>> from sympy import Symbol, solve
>>> x = Symbol("x")
>>> solve(x**2 - 1)
[-1, 1]
By using the positive tag only one solution will be returned:
>>> pos = Symbol("pos", positive=True)
>>> solve(pos**2 - 1)
[1]
Assumptions aren't checked when `solve()` input involves
relationals or bools.
When the solutions are checked, those that make any denominator zero
are automatically excluded. If you do not want to exclude such solutions
then use the check=False option:
>>> from sympy import sin, limit
>>> solve(sin(x)/x) # 0 is excluded
[pi]
If check=False then a solution to the numerator being zero is found: x = 0.
In this case, this is a spurious solution since sin(x)/x has the well known
limit (without dicontinuity) of 1 at x = 0:
>>> solve(sin(x)/x, check=False)
[0, pi]
In the following case, however, the limit exists and is equal to the
value of x = 0 that is excluded when check=True:
>>> eq = x**2*(1/x - z**2/x)
>>> solve(eq, x)
[]
>>> solve(eq, x, check=False)
[0]
>>> limit(eq, x, 0, '-')
0
>>> limit(eq, x, 0, '+')
0
Disabling high-order, explicit solutions
----------------------------------------
When solving polynomial expressions, one might not want explicit solutions
(which can be quite long). If the expression is univariate, CRootOf
instances will be returned instead:
>>> solve(x**3 - x + 1)
[-1/((-1/2 - sqrt(3)*I/2)*(3*sqrt(69)/2 + 27/2)**(1/3)) - (-1/2 -
sqrt(3)*I/2)*(3*sqrt(69)/2 + 27/2)**(1/3)/3, -(-1/2 +
sqrt(3)*I/2)*(3*sqrt(69)/2 + 27/2)**(1/3)/3 - 1/((-1/2 +
sqrt(3)*I/2)*(3*sqrt(69)/2 + 27/2)**(1/3)), -(3*sqrt(69)/2 +
27/2)**(1/3)/3 - 1/(3*sqrt(69)/2 + 27/2)**(1/3)]
>>> solve(x**3 - x + 1, cubics=False)
[CRootOf(x**3 - x + 1, 0),
CRootOf(x**3 - x + 1, 1),
CRootOf(x**3 - x + 1, 2)]
If the expression is multivariate, no solution might be returned:
>>> solve(x**3 - x + a, x, cubics=False)
[]
Sometimes solutions will be obtained even when a flag is False because the
expression could be factored. In the following example, the equation can
be factored as the product of a linear and a quadratic factor so explicit
solutions (which did not require solving a cubic expression) are obtained:
>>> eq = x**3 + 3*x**2 + x - 1
>>> solve(eq, cubics=False)
[-1, -1 + sqrt(2), -sqrt(2) - 1]
Solving equations involving radicals
------------------------------------
Because of SymPy's use of the principle root (issue #8789), some solutions
to radical equations will be missed unless check=False:
>>> from sympy import root
>>> eq = root(x**3 - 3*x**2, 3) + 1 - x
>>> solve(eq)
[]
>>> solve(eq, check=False)
[1/3]
In the above example there is only a single solution to the
equation. Other expressions will yield spurious roots which
must be checked manually; roots which give a negative argument
to odd-powered radicals will also need special checking:
>>> from sympy import real_root, S
>>> eq = root(x, 3) - root(x, 5) + S(1)/7
>>> solve(eq) # this gives 2 solutions but misses a 3rd
[CRootOf(7*_p**5 - 7*_p**3 + 1, 1)**15,
CRootOf(7*_p**5 - 7*_p**3 + 1, 2)**15]
>>> sol = solve(eq, check=False)
>>> [abs(eq.subs(x,i).n(2)) for i in sol]
[0.48, 0.e-110, 0.e-110, 0.052, 0.052]
The first solution is negative so real_root must be used to see
that it satisfies the expression:
>>> abs(real_root(eq.subs(x, sol[0])).n(2))
0.e-110
If the roots of the equation are not real then more care will be
necessary to find the roots, especially for higher order equations.
Consider the following expression:
>>> expr = root(x, 3) - root(x, 5)
We will construct a known value for this expression at x = 3 by selecting
the 1-th root for each radical:
>>> expr1 = root(x, 3, 1) - root(x, 5, 1)
>>> v = expr1.subs(x, -3)
The solve function is unable to find any exact roots to this equation:
>>> eq = Eq(expr, v); eq1 = Eq(expr1, v)
>>> solve(eq, check=False), solve(eq1, check=False)
([], [])
The function unrad, however, can be used to get a form of the equation for
which numerical roots can be found:
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import unrad
>>> from sympy import nroots
>>> e, (p, cov) = unrad(eq)
>>> pvals = nroots(e)
>>> inversion = solve(cov, x)[0]
>>> xvals = [inversion.subs(p, i) for i in pvals]
Although eq or eq1 could have been used to find xvals, the solution can
only be verified with expr1:
>>> z = expr - v
>>> [xi.n(chop=1e-9) for xi in xvals if abs(z.subs(x, xi).n()) < 1e-9]
[]
>>> z1 = expr1 - v
>>> [xi.n(chop=1e-9) for xi in xvals if abs(z1.subs(x, xi).n()) < 1e-9]
[-3.0]
See Also
========
- rsolve() for solving recurrence relationships
- dsolve() for solving differential equations
"""
# keeping track of how f was passed since if it is a list
# a dictionary of results will be returned.
###########################################################################
def _sympified_list(w):
return list(map(sympify, w if iterable(w) else [w]))
bare_f = not iterable(f)
ordered_symbols = (symbols and
symbols[0] and
(isinstance(symbols[0], Symbol) or
is_sequence(symbols[0],
include=GeneratorType)
)
)
f, symbols = (_sympified_list(w) for w in [f, symbols])
implicit = flags.get('implicit', False)
# preprocess symbol(s)
###########################################################################
if not symbols:
# get symbols from equations
symbols = set().union(*[fi.free_symbols for fi in f])
if len(symbols) < len(f):
for fi in f:
pot = preorder_traversal(fi)
for p in pot:
if isinstance(p, AppliedUndef):
flags['dict'] = True # better show symbols
symbols.add(p)
pot.skip() # don't go any deeper
symbols = list(symbols)
ordered_symbols = False
elif len(symbols) == 1 and iterable(symbols[0]):
symbols = symbols[0]
# remove symbols the user is not interested in
exclude = flags.pop('exclude', set())
if exclude:
if isinstance(exclude, Expr):
exclude = [exclude]
exclude = set().union(*[e.free_symbols for e in sympify(exclude)])
symbols = [s for s in symbols if s not in exclude]
# preprocess equation(s)
###########################################################################
for i, fi in enumerate(f):
if isinstance(fi, (Equality, Unequality)):
if 'ImmutableDenseMatrix' in [type(a).__name__ for a in fi.args]:
fi = fi.lhs - fi.rhs
else:
args = fi.args
if args[1] in (S.true, S.false):
args = args[1], args[0]
L, R = args
if L in (S.false, S.true):
if isinstance(fi, Unequality):
L = ~L
if R.is_Relational:
fi = ~R if L is S.false else R
elif R.is_Symbol:
return L
elif R.is_Boolean and (~R).is_Symbol:
return ~L
else:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
Unanticipated argument of Eq when other arg
is True or False.
'''))
else:
fi = fi.rewrite(Add, evaluate=False)
f[i] = fi
if isinstance(fi, (bool, BooleanAtom)) or fi.is_Relational:
return reduce_inequalities(f, symbols=symbols)
if isinstance(fi, Poly):
f[i] = fi.as_expr()
# rewrite hyperbolics in terms of exp
f[i] = f[i].replace(lambda w: isinstance(w, HyperbolicFunction),
lambda w: w.rewrite(exp))
# if we have a Matrix, we need to iterate over its elements again
if f[i].is_Matrix:
bare_f = False
f.extend(list(f[i]))
f[i] = S.Zero
# if we can split it into real and imaginary parts then do so
freei = f[i].free_symbols
if freei and all(s.is_real or s.is_imaginary for s in freei):
fr, fi = f[i].as_real_imag()
# accept as long as new re, im, arg or atan2 are not introduced
had = f[i].atoms(re, im, arg, atan2)
if fr and fi and fr != fi and not any(
i.atoms(re, im, arg, atan2) - had for i in (fr, fi)):
if bare_f:
bare_f = False
f[i: i + 1] = [fr, fi]
# real/imag handling -----------------------------
w = Dummy('w')
piece = Lambda(w, Piecewise((w, Ge(w, 0)), (-w, True)))
for i, fi in enumerate(f):
# Abs
reps = []
for a in fi.atoms(Abs):
if not a.has(*symbols):
continue
if a.args[0].is_real is None:
raise NotImplementedError('solving %s when the argument '
'is not real or imaginary.' % a)
reps.append((a, piece(a.args[0]) if a.args[0].is_real else \
piece(a.args[0]*S.ImaginaryUnit)))
fi = fi.subs(reps)
# arg
_arg = [a for a in fi.atoms(arg) if a.has(*symbols)]
fi = fi.xreplace(dict(list(zip(_arg,
[atan(im(a.args[0])/re(a.args[0])) for a in _arg]))))
# save changes
f[i] = fi
# see if re(s) or im(s) appear
irf = []
for s in symbols:
if s.is_real or s.is_imaginary:
continue # neither re(x) nor im(x) will appear
# if re(s) or im(s) appear, the auxiliary equation must be present
if any(fi.has(re(s), im(s)) for fi in f):
irf.append((s, re(s) + S.ImaginaryUnit*im(s)))
if irf:
for s, rhs in irf:
for i, fi in enumerate(f):
f[i] = fi.xreplace({s: rhs})
f.append(s - rhs)
symbols.extend([re(s), im(s)])
if bare_f:
bare_f = False
flags['dict'] = True
# end of real/imag handling -----------------------------
symbols = list(uniq(symbols))
if not ordered_symbols:
# we do this to make the results returned canonical in case f
# contains a system of nonlinear equations; all other cases should
# be unambiguous
symbols = sorted(symbols, key=default_sort_key)
# we can solve for non-symbol entities by replacing them with Dummy symbols
f, symbols, swap_sym = recast_to_symbols(f, symbols)
# this is needed in the next two events
symset = set(symbols)
# get rid of equations that have no symbols of interest; we don't
# try to solve them because the user didn't ask and they might be
# hard to solve; this means that solutions may be given in terms
# of the eliminated equations e.g. solve((x-y, y-3), x) -> {x: y}
newf = []
for fi in f:
# let the solver handle equations that..
# - have no symbols but are expressions
# - have symbols of interest
# - have no symbols of interest but are constant
# but when an expression is not constant and has no symbols of
# interest, it can't change what we obtain for a solution from
# the remaining equations so we don't include it; and if it's
# zero it can be removed and if it's not zero, there is no
# solution for the equation set as a whole
#
# The reason for doing this filtering is to allow an answer
# to be obtained to queries like solve((x - y, y), x); without
# this mod the return value is []
ok = False
if fi.has(*symset):
ok = True
else:
free = fi.free_symbols
if not free:
if fi.is_Number:
if fi.is_zero:
continue
return []
ok = True
else:
if fi.is_constant():
ok = True
if ok:
newf.append(fi)
if not newf:
return []
f = newf
del newf
# mask off any Object that we aren't going to invert: Derivative,
# Integral, etc... so that solving for anything that they contain will
# give an implicit solution
seen = set()
non_inverts = set()
for fi in f:
pot = preorder_traversal(fi)
for p in pot:
if not isinstance(p, Expr) or isinstance(p, Piecewise):
pass
elif (isinstance(p, bool) or
not p.args or
p in symset or
p.is_Add or p.is_Mul or
p.is_Pow and not implicit or
p.is_Function and not implicit) and p.func not in (re, im):
continue
elif not p in seen:
seen.add(p)
if p.free_symbols & symset:
non_inverts.add(p)
else:
continue
pot.skip()
del seen
non_inverts = dict(list(zip(non_inverts, [Dummy() for d in non_inverts])))
f = [fi.subs(non_inverts) for fi in f]
# Both xreplace and subs are needed below: xreplace to force substitution
# inside Derivative, subs to handle non-straightforward substitutions
non_inverts = [(v, k.xreplace(swap_sym).subs(swap_sym)) for k, v in non_inverts.items()]
# rationalize Floats
floats = False
if flags.get('rational', True) is not False:
for i, fi in enumerate(f):
if fi.has(Float):
floats = True
f[i] = nsimplify(fi, rational=True)
# capture any denominators before rewriting since
# they may disappear after the rewrite, e.g. issue 14779
flags['_denominators'] = _simple_dens(f[0], symbols)
# Any embedded piecewise functions need to be brought out to the
# top level so that the appropriate strategy gets selected.
# However, this is necessary only if one of the piecewise
# functions depends on one of the symbols we are solving for.
def _has_piecewise(e):
if e.is_Piecewise:
return e.has(*symbols)
return any([_has_piecewise(a) for a in e.args])
for i, fi in enumerate(f):
if _has_piecewise(fi):
f[i] = piecewise_fold(fi)
#
# try to get a solution
###########################################################################
if bare_f:
solution = _solve(f[0], *symbols, **flags)
else:
solution = _solve_system(f, symbols, **flags)
#
# postprocessing
###########################################################################
# Restore masked-off objects
if non_inverts:
def _do_dict(solution):
return dict([(k, v.subs(non_inverts)) for k, v in
solution.items()])
for i in range(1):
if isinstance(solution, dict):
solution = _do_dict(solution)
break
elif solution and isinstance(solution, list):
if isinstance(solution[0], dict):
solution = [_do_dict(s) for s in solution]
break
elif isinstance(solution[0], tuple):
solution = [tuple([v.subs(non_inverts) for v in s]) for s
in solution]
break
else:
solution = [v.subs(non_inverts) for v in solution]
break
elif not solution:
break
else:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
no handling of %s was implemented''' % solution))
# Restore original "symbols" if a dictionary is returned.
# This is not necessary for
# - the single univariate equation case
# since the symbol will have been removed from the solution;
# - the nonlinear poly_system since that only supports zero-dimensional
# systems and those results come back as a list
#
# ** unless there were Derivatives with the symbols, but those were handled
# above.
if swap_sym:
symbols = [swap_sym.get(k, k) for k in symbols]
if isinstance(solution, dict):
solution = dict([(swap_sym.get(k, k), v.subs(swap_sym))
for k, v in solution.items()])
elif solution and isinstance(solution, list) and isinstance(solution[0], dict):
for i, sol in enumerate(solution):
solution[i] = dict([(swap_sym.get(k, k), v.subs(swap_sym))
for k, v in sol.items()])
# undo the dictionary solutions returned when the system was only partially
# solved with poly-system if all symbols are present
if (
not flags.get('dict', False) and
solution and
ordered_symbols and
not isinstance(solution, dict) and
all(isinstance(sol, dict) for sol in solution)
):
solution = [tuple([r.get(s, s).subs(r) for s in symbols])
for r in solution]
# Get assumptions about symbols, to filter solutions.
# Note that if assumptions about a solution can't be verified, it is still
# returned.
check = flags.get('check', True)
# restore floats
if floats and solution and flags.get('rational', None) is None:
solution = nfloat(solution, exponent=False)
if check and solution: # assumption checking
warn = flags.get('warn', False)
got_None = [] # solutions for which one or more symbols gave None
no_False = [] # solutions for which no symbols gave False
if isinstance(solution, tuple):
# this has already been checked and is in as_set form
return solution
elif isinstance(solution, list):
if isinstance(solution[0], tuple):
for sol in solution:
for symb, val in zip(symbols, sol):
test = check_assumptions(val, **symb.assumptions0)
if test is False:
break
if test is None:
got_None.append(sol)
else:
no_False.append(sol)
elif isinstance(solution[0], dict):
for sol in solution:
a_None = False
for symb, val in sol.items():
test = check_assumptions(val, **symb.assumptions0)
if test:
continue
if test is False:
break
a_None = True
else:
no_False.append(sol)
if a_None:
got_None.append(sol)
else: # list of expressions
for sol in solution:
test = check_assumptions(sol, **symbols[0].assumptions0)
if test is False:
continue
no_False.append(sol)
if test is None:
got_None.append(sol)
elif isinstance(solution, dict):
a_None = False
for symb, val in solution.items():
test = check_assumptions(val, **symb.assumptions0)
if test:
continue
if test is False:
no_False = None
break
a_None = True
else:
no_False = solution
if a_None:
got_None.append(solution)
elif isinstance(solution, (Relational, And, Or)):
if len(symbols) != 1:
raise ValueError("Length should be 1")
if warn and symbols[0].assumptions0:
warnings.warn(filldedent("""
\tWarning: assumptions about variable '%s' are
not handled currently.""" % symbols[0]))
# TODO: check also variable assumptions for inequalities
else:
raise TypeError('Unrecognized solution') # improve the checker
solution = no_False
if warn and got_None:
warnings.warn(filldedent("""
\tWarning: assumptions concerning following solution(s)
can't be checked:""" + '\n\t' +
', '.join(str(s) for s in got_None)))
#
# done
###########################################################################
as_dict = flags.get('dict', False)
as_set = flags.get('set', False)
if not as_set and isinstance(solution, list):
# Make sure that a list of solutions is ordered in a canonical way.
solution.sort(key=default_sort_key)
if not as_dict and not as_set:
return solution or []
# return a list of mappings or []
if not solution:
solution = []
else:
if isinstance(solution, dict):
solution = [solution]
elif iterable(solution[0]):
solution = [dict(list(zip(symbols, s))) for s in solution]
elif isinstance(solution[0], dict):
pass
else:
if len(symbols) != 1:
raise ValueError("Length should be 1")
solution = [{symbols[0]: s} for s in solution]
if as_dict:
return solution
assert as_set
if not solution:
return [], set()
k = list(ordered(solution[0].keys()))
return k, {tuple([s[ki] for ki in k]) for s in solution}
def _solve(f, *symbols, **flags):
"""Return a checked solution for f in terms of one or more of the
symbols. A list should be returned except for the case when a linear
undetermined-coefficients equation is encountered (in which case
a dictionary is returned).
If no method is implemented to solve the equation, a NotImplementedError
will be raised. In the case that conversion of an expression to a Poly
gives None a ValueError will be raised."""
not_impl_msg = "No algorithms are implemented to solve equation %s"
if len(symbols) != 1:
soln = None
free = f.free_symbols
ex = free - set(symbols)
if len(ex) != 1:
ind, dep = f.as_independent(*symbols)
ex = ind.free_symbols & dep.free_symbols
if len(ex) == 1:
ex = ex.pop()
try:
# soln may come back as dict, list of dicts or tuples, or
# tuple of symbol list and set of solution tuples
soln = solve_undetermined_coeffs(f, symbols, ex, **flags)
except NotImplementedError:
pass
if soln:
if flags.get('simplify', True):
if isinstance(soln, dict):
for k in soln:
soln[k] = simplify(soln[k])
elif isinstance(soln, list):
if isinstance(soln[0], dict):
for d in soln:
for k in d:
d[k] = simplify(d[k])
elif isinstance(soln[0], tuple):
soln = [tuple(simplify(i) for i in j) for j in soln]
else:
raise TypeError('unrecognized args in list')
elif isinstance(soln, tuple):
sym, sols = soln
soln = sym, {tuple(simplify(i) for i in j) for j in sols}
else:
raise TypeError('unrecognized solution type')
return soln
# find first successful solution
failed = []
got_s = set([])
result = []
for s in symbols:
xi, v = solve_linear(f, symbols=[s])
if xi == s:
# no need to check but we should simplify if desired
if flags.get('simplify', True):
v = simplify(v)
vfree = v.free_symbols
if got_s and any([ss in vfree for ss in got_s]):
# sol depends on previously solved symbols: discard it
continue
got_s.add(xi)
result.append({xi: v})
elif xi: # there might be a non-linear solution if xi is not 0
failed.append(s)
if not failed:
return result
for s in failed:
try:
soln = _solve(f, s, **flags)
for sol in soln:
if got_s and any([ss in sol.free_symbols for ss in got_s]):
# sol depends on previously solved symbols: discard it
continue
got_s.add(s)
result.append({s: sol})
except NotImplementedError:
continue
if got_s:
return result
else:
raise NotImplementedError(not_impl_msg % f)
symbol = symbols[0]
# /!\ capture this flag then set it to False so that no checking in
# recursive calls will be done; only the final answer is checked
flags['check'] = checkdens = check = flags.pop('check', True)
# build up solutions if f is a Mul
if f.is_Mul:
result = set()
for m in f.args:
if m in set([S.NegativeInfinity, S.ComplexInfinity, S.Infinity]):
result = set()
break
soln = _solve(m, symbol, **flags)
result.update(set(soln))
result = list(result)
if check:
# all solutions have been checked but now we must
# check that the solutions do not set denominators
# in any factor to zero
dens = flags.get('_denominators', _simple_dens(f, symbols))
result = [s for s in result if
all(not checksol(den, {symbol: s}, **flags) for den in
dens)]
# set flags for quick exit at end; solutions for each
# factor were already checked and simplified
check = False
flags['simplify'] = False
elif f.is_Piecewise:
result = set()
for i, (expr, cond) in enumerate(f.args):
if expr.is_zero:
raise NotImplementedError(
'solve cannot represent interval solutions')
candidates = _solve(expr, symbol, **flags)
# the explicit condition for this expr is the current cond
# and none of the previous conditions
args = [~c for _, c in f.args[:i]] + [cond]
cond = And(*args)
for candidate in candidates:
if candidate in result:
# an unconditional value was already there
continue
try:
v = cond.subs(symbol, candidate)
try:
# unconditionally take the simplification of v
v = v._eval_simpify(
ratio=2, measure=lambda x: 1)
except AttributeError:
pass
except TypeError:
# incompatible type with condition(s)
continue
if v == False:
continue
result.add(Piecewise(
(candidate, v),
(S.NaN, True)))
# set flags for quick exit at end; solutions for each
# piece were already checked and simplified
check = False
flags['simplify'] = False
else:
# first see if it really depends on symbol and whether there
# is only a linear solution
f_num, sol = solve_linear(f, symbols=symbols)
if f_num is S.Zero or sol is S.NaN:
return []
elif f_num.is_Symbol:
# no need to check but simplify if desired
if flags.get('simplify', True):
sol = simplify(sol)
return [sol]
result = False # no solution was obtained
msg = '' # there is no failure message
# Poly is generally robust enough to convert anything to
# a polynomial and tell us the different generators that it
# contains, so we will inspect the generators identified by
# polys to figure out what to do.
# try to identify a single generator that will allow us to solve this
# as a polynomial, followed (perhaps) by a change of variables if the
# generator is not a symbol
try:
poly = Poly(f_num)
if poly is None:
raise ValueError('could not convert %s to Poly' % f_num)
except GeneratorsNeeded:
simplified_f = simplify(f_num)
if simplified_f != f_num:
return _solve(simplified_f, symbol, **flags)
raise ValueError('expression appears to be a constant')
gens = [g for g in poly.gens if g.has(symbol)]
def _as_base_q(x):
"""Return (b**e, q) for x = b**(p*e/q) where p/q is the leading
Rational of the exponent of x, e.g. exp(-2*x/3) -> (exp(x), 3)
"""
b, e = x.as_base_exp()
if e.is_Rational:
return b, e.q
if not e.is_Mul:
return x, 1
c, ee = e.as_coeff_Mul()
if c.is_Rational and c is not S.One: # c could be a Float
return b**ee, c.q
return x, 1
if len(gens) > 1:
# If there is more than one generator, it could be that the
# generators have the same base but different powers, e.g.
# >>> Poly(exp(x) + 1/exp(x))
# Poly(exp(-x) + exp(x), exp(-x), exp(x), domain='ZZ')
#
# If unrad was not disabled then there should be no rational
# exponents appearing as in
# >>> Poly(sqrt(x) + sqrt(sqrt(x)))
# Poly(sqrt(x) + x**(1/4), sqrt(x), x**(1/4), domain='ZZ')
bases, qs = list(zip(*[_as_base_q(g) for g in gens]))
bases = set(bases)
if len(bases) > 1 or not all(q == 1 for q in qs):
funcs = set(b for b in bases if b.is_Function)
trig = set([_ for _ in funcs if
isinstance(_, TrigonometricFunction)])
other = funcs - trig
if not other and len(funcs.intersection(trig)) > 1:
newf = TR1(f_num).rewrite(tan)
if newf != f_num:
# don't check the rewritten form --check
# solutions in the un-rewritten form below
flags['check'] = False
result = _solve(newf, symbol, **flags)
flags['check'] = check
# just a simple case - see if replacement of single function
# clears all symbol-dependent functions, e.g.
# log(x) - log(log(x) - 1) - 3 can be solved even though it has
# two generators.
if result is False and funcs:
funcs = list(ordered(funcs)) # put shallowest function first
f1 = funcs[0]
t = Dummy('t')
# perform the substitution
ftry = f_num.subs(f1, t)
# if no Functions left, we can proceed with usual solve
if not ftry.has(symbol):
cv_sols = _solve(ftry, t, **flags)
cv_inv = _solve(t - f1, symbol, **flags)[0]
sols = list()
for sol in cv_sols:
sols.append(cv_inv.subs(t, sol))
result = list(ordered(sols))
if result is False:
msg = 'multiple generators %s' % gens
else:
# e.g. case where gens are exp(x), exp(-x)
u = bases.pop()
t = Dummy('t')
inv = _solve(u - t, symbol, **flags)
if isinstance(u, (Pow, exp)):
# this will be resolved by factor in _tsolve but we might
# as well try a simple expansion here to get things in
# order so something like the following will work now without
# having to factor:
#
# >>> eq = (exp(I*(-x-2))+exp(I*(x+2)))
# >>> eq.subs(exp(x),y) # fails
# exp(I*(-x - 2)) + exp(I*(x + 2))
# >>> eq.expand().subs(exp(x),y) # works
# y**I*exp(2*I) + y**(-I)*exp(-2*I)
def _expand(p):
b, e = p.as_base_exp()
e = expand_mul(e)
return expand_power_exp(b**e)
ftry = f_num.replace(
lambda w: w.is_Pow or isinstance(w, exp),
_expand).subs(u, t)
if not ftry.has(symbol):
soln = _solve(ftry, t, **flags)
sols = list()
for sol in soln:
for i in inv:
sols.append(i.subs(t, sol))
result = list(ordered(sols))
elif len(gens) == 1:
# There is only one generator that we are interested in, but
# there may have been more than one generator identified by
# polys (e.g. for symbols other than the one we are interested
# in) so recast the poly in terms of our generator of interest.
# Also use composite=True with f_num since Poly won't update
# poly as documented in issue 8810.
poly = Poly(f_num, gens[0], composite=True)
# if we aren't on the tsolve-pass, use roots
if not flags.pop('tsolve', False):
soln = None
deg = poly.degree()
flags['tsolve'] = True
solvers = dict([(k, flags.get(k, True)) for k in
('cubics', 'quartics', 'quintics')])
soln = roots(poly, **solvers)
if sum(soln.values()) < deg:
# e.g. roots(32*x**5 + 400*x**4 + 2032*x**3 +
# 5000*x**2 + 6250*x + 3189) -> {}
# so all_roots is used and RootOf instances are
# returned *unless* the system is multivariate
# or high-order EX domain.
try:
soln = poly.all_roots()
except NotImplementedError:
if not flags.get('incomplete', True):
raise NotImplementedError(
filldedent('''
Neither high-order multivariate polynomials
nor sorting of EX-domain polynomials is supported.
If you want to see any results, pass keyword incomplete=True to
solve; to see numerical values of roots
for univariate expressions, use nroots.
'''))
else:
pass
else:
soln = list(soln.keys())
if soln is not None:
u = poly.gen
if u != symbol:
try:
t = Dummy('t')
iv = _solve(u - t, symbol, **flags)
soln = list(ordered({i.subs(t, s) for i in iv for s in soln}))
except NotImplementedError:
# perhaps _tsolve can handle f_num
soln = None
else:
check = False # only dens need to be checked
if soln is not None:
if len(soln) > 2:
# if the flag wasn't set then unset it since high-order
# results are quite long. Perhaps one could base this
# decision on a certain critical length of the
# roots. In addition, wester test M2 has an expression
# whose roots can be shown to be real with the
# unsimplified form of the solution whereas only one of
# the simplified forms appears to be real.
flags['simplify'] = flags.get('simplify', False)
result = soln
# fallback if above fails
# -----------------------
if result is False:
# try unrad
if flags.pop('_unrad', True):
try:
u = unrad(f_num, symbol)
except (ValueError, NotImplementedError):
u = False
if u:
eq, cov = u
if cov:
isym, ieq = cov
inv = _solve(ieq, symbol, **flags)[0]
rv = {inv.subs(isym, xi) for xi in _solve(eq, isym, **flags)}
else:
try:
rv = set(_solve(eq, symbol, **flags))
except NotImplementedError:
rv = None
if rv is not None:
result = list(ordered(rv))
# if the flag wasn't set then unset it since unrad results
# can be quite long or of very high order
flags['simplify'] = flags.get('simplify', False)
else:
pass # for coverage
# try _tsolve
if result is False:
flags.pop('tsolve', None) # allow tsolve to be used on next pass
try:
soln = _tsolve(f_num, symbol, **flags)
if soln is not None:
result = soln
except PolynomialError:
pass
# ----------- end of fallback ----------------------------
if result is False:
raise NotImplementedError('\n'.join([msg, not_impl_msg % f]))
if flags.get('simplify', True):
result = list(map(simplify, result))
# we just simplified the solution so we now set the flag to
# False so the simplification doesn't happen again in checksol()
flags['simplify'] = False
if checkdens:
# reject any result that makes any denom. affirmatively 0;
# if in doubt, keep it
dens = _simple_dens(f, symbols)
result = [s for s in result if
all(not checksol(d, {symbol: s}, **flags)
for d in dens)]
if check:
# keep only results if the check is not False
result = [r for r in result if
checksol(f_num, {symbol: r}, **flags) is not False]
return result
def _solve_system(exprs, symbols, **flags):
if not exprs:
return []
polys = []
dens = set()
failed = []
result = False
linear = False
manual = flags.get('manual', False)
checkdens = check = flags.get('check', True)
for j, g in enumerate(exprs):
dens.update(_simple_dens(g, symbols))
i, d = _invert(g, *symbols)
g = d - i
g = g.as_numer_denom()[0]
if manual:
failed.append(g)
continue
poly = g.as_poly(*symbols, extension=True)
if poly is not None:
polys.append(poly)
else:
failed.append(g)
if not polys:
solved_syms = []
else:
if all(p.is_linear for p in polys):
n, m = len(polys), len(symbols)
matrix = zeros(n, m + 1)
for i, poly in enumerate(polys):
for monom, coeff in poly.terms():
try:
j = monom.index(1)
matrix[i, j] = coeff
except ValueError:
matrix[i, m] = -coeff
# returns a dictionary ({symbols: values}) or None
if flags.pop('particular', False):
result = minsolve_linear_system(matrix, *symbols, **flags)
else:
result = solve_linear_system(matrix, *symbols, **flags)
if failed:
if result:
solved_syms = list(result.keys())
else:
solved_syms = []
else:
linear = True
else:
if len(symbols) > len(polys):
from sympy.utilities.iterables import subsets
free = set().union(*[p.free_symbols for p in polys])
free = list(ordered(free.intersection(symbols)))
got_s = set()
result = []
for syms in subsets(free, len(polys)):
try:
# returns [] or list of tuples of solutions for syms
res = solve_poly_system(polys, *syms)
if res:
for r in res:
skip = False
for r1 in r:
if got_s and any([ss in r1.free_symbols
for ss in got_s]):
# sol depends on previously
# solved symbols: discard it
skip = True
if not skip:
got_s.update(syms)
result.extend([dict(list(zip(syms, r)))])
except NotImplementedError:
pass
if got_s:
solved_syms = list(got_s)
else:
raise NotImplementedError('no valid subset found')
else:
try:
result = solve_poly_system(polys, *symbols)
if result:
solved_syms = symbols
# we don't know here if the symbols provided
# were given or not, so let solve resolve that.
# A list of dictionaries is going to always be
# returned from here.
result = [dict(list(zip(solved_syms, r))) for r in result]
except NotImplementedError:
failed.extend([g.as_expr() for g in polys])
solved_syms = []
result = None
if result:
if isinstance(result, dict):
result = [result]
else:
result = [{}]
if failed:
# For each failed equation, see if we can solve for one of the
# remaining symbols from that equation. If so, we update the
# solution set and continue with the next failed equation,
# repeating until we are done or we get an equation that can't
# be solved.
def _ok_syms(e, sort=False):
rv = (e.free_symbols - solved_syms) & legal
if sort:
rv = list(rv)
rv.sort(key=default_sort_key)
return rv
solved_syms = set(solved_syms) # set of symbols we have solved for
legal = set(symbols) # what we are interested in
# sort so equation with the fewest potential symbols is first
u = Dummy() # used in solution checking
for eq in ordered(failed, lambda _: len(_ok_syms(_))):
newresult = []
bad_results = []
got_s = set()
hit = False
for r in result:
# update eq with everything that is known so far
eq2 = eq.subs(r)
# if check is True then we see if it satisfies this
# equation, otherwise we just accept it
if check and r:
b = checksol(u, u, eq2, minimal=True)
if b is not None:
# this solution is sufficient to know whether
# it is valid or not so we either accept or
# reject it, then continue
if b:
newresult.append(r)
else:
bad_results.append(r)
continue
# search for a symbol amongst those available that
# can be solved for
ok_syms = _ok_syms(eq2, sort=True)
if not ok_syms:
if r:
newresult.append(r)
break # skip as it's independent of desired symbols
for s in ok_syms:
try:
soln = _solve(eq2, s, **flags)
except NotImplementedError:
continue
# put each solution in r and append the now-expanded
# result in the new result list; use copy since the
# solution for s in being added in-place
for sol in soln:
if got_s and any([ss in sol.free_symbols for ss in got_s]):
# sol depends on previously solved symbols: discard it
continue
rnew = r.copy()
for k, v in r.items():
rnew[k] = v.subs(s, sol)
# and add this new solution
rnew[s] = sol
newresult.append(rnew)
hit = True
got_s.add(s)
if not hit:
raise NotImplementedError('could not solve %s' % eq2)
else:
result = newresult
for b in bad_results:
if b in result:
result.remove(b)
default_simplify = bool(failed) # rely on system-solvers to simplify
if flags.get('simplify', default_simplify):
for r in result:
for k in r:
r[k] = simplify(r[k])
flags['simplify'] = False # don't need to do so in checksol now
if checkdens:
result = [r for r in result
if not any(checksol(d, r, **flags) for d in dens)]
if check and not linear:
result = [r for r in result
if not any(checksol(e, r, **flags) is False for e in exprs)]
result = [r for r in result if r]
if linear and result:
result = result[0]
return result
def solve_linear(lhs, rhs=0, symbols=[], exclude=[]):
r""" Return a tuple derived from f = lhs - rhs that is one of
the following:
(0, 1) meaning that ``f`` is independent of the symbols in
``symbols`` that aren't in ``exclude``, e.g::
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import solve_linear
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy import cos, sin
>>> eq = y*cos(x)**2 + y*sin(x)**2 - y # = y*(1 - 1) = 0
>>> solve_linear(eq)
(0, 1)
>>> eq = cos(x)**2 + sin(x)**2 # = 1
>>> solve_linear(eq)
(0, 1)
>>> solve_linear(x, exclude=[x])
(0, 1)
(0, 0) meaning that there is no solution to the equation
amongst the symbols given.
(If the first element of the tuple is not zero then
the function is guaranteed to be dependent on a symbol
in ``symbols``.)
(symbol, solution) where symbol appears linearly in the
numerator of ``f``, is in ``symbols`` (if given) and is
not in ``exclude`` (if given). No simplification is done
to ``f`` other than a ``mul=True`` expansion, so the
solution will correspond strictly to a unique solution.
``(n, d)`` where ``n`` and ``d`` are the numerator and
denominator of ``f`` when the numerator was not linear
in any symbol of interest; ``n`` will never be a symbol
unless a solution for that symbol was found (in which case
the second element is the solution, not the denominator).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.power import Pow
>>> from sympy.polys.polytools import cancel
The variable ``x`` appears as a linear variable in each of the
following:
>>> solve_linear(x + y**2)
(x, -y**2)
>>> solve_linear(1/x - y**2)
(x, y**(-2))
When not linear in x or y then the numerator and denominator are returned.
>>> solve_linear(x**2/y**2 - 3)
(x**2 - 3*y**2, y**2)
If the numerator of the expression is a symbol then (0, 0) is
returned if the solution for that symbol would have set any
denominator to 0:
>>> eq = 1/(1/x - 2)
>>> eq.as_numer_denom()
(x, -2*x + 1)
>>> solve_linear(eq)
(0, 0)
But automatic rewriting may cause a symbol in the denominator to
appear in the numerator so a solution will be returned:
>>> (1/x)**-1
x
>>> solve_linear((1/x)**-1)
(x, 0)
Use an unevaluated expression to avoid this:
>>> solve_linear(Pow(1/x, -1, evaluate=False))
(0, 0)
If ``x`` is allowed to cancel in the following expression, then it
appears to be linear in ``x``, but this sort of cancellation is not
done by ``solve_linear`` so the solution will always satisfy the
original expression without causing a division by zero error.
>>> eq = x**2*(1/x - z**2/x)
>>> solve_linear(cancel(eq))
(x, 0)
>>> solve_linear(eq)
(x**2*(-z**2 + 1), x)
A list of symbols for which a solution is desired may be given:
>>> solve_linear(x + y + z, symbols=[y])
(y, -x - z)
A list of symbols to ignore may also be given:
>>> solve_linear(x + y + z, exclude=[x])
(y, -x - z)
(A solution for ``y`` is obtained because it is the first variable
from the canonically sorted list of symbols that had a linear
solution.)
"""
if isinstance(lhs, Equality):
if rhs:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
If lhs is an Equality, rhs must be 0 but was %s''' % rhs))
rhs = lhs.rhs
lhs = lhs.lhs
dens = None
eq = lhs - rhs
n, d = eq.as_numer_denom()
if not n:
return S.Zero, S.One
free = n.free_symbols
if not symbols:
symbols = free
else:
bad = [s for s in symbols if not s.is_Symbol]
if bad:
if len(bad) == 1:
bad = bad[0]
if len(symbols) == 1:
eg = 'solve(%s, %s)' % (eq, symbols[0])
else:
eg = 'solve(%s, *%s)' % (eq, list(symbols))
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
solve_linear only handles symbols, not %s. To isolate
non-symbols use solve, e.g. >>> %s <<<.
''' % (bad, eg)))
symbols = free.intersection(symbols)
symbols = symbols.difference(exclude)
if not symbols:
return S.Zero, S.One
dfree = d.free_symbols
# derivatives are easy to do but tricky to analyze to see if they
# are going to disallow a linear solution, so for simplicity we
# just evaluate the ones that have the symbols of interest
derivs = defaultdict(list)
for der in n.atoms(Derivative):
csym = der.free_symbols & symbols
for c in csym:
derivs[c].append(der)
all_zero = True
for xi in sorted(symbols, key=default_sort_key): # canonical order
# if there are derivatives in this var, calculate them now
if isinstance(derivs[xi], list):
derivs[xi] = {der: der.doit() for der in derivs[xi]}
newn = n.subs(derivs[xi])
dnewn_dxi = newn.diff(xi)
# dnewn_dxi can be nonzero if it survives differentation by any
# of its free symbols
free = dnewn_dxi.free_symbols
if dnewn_dxi and (not free or any(dnewn_dxi.diff(s) for s in free)):
all_zero = False
if dnewn_dxi is S.NaN:
break
if xi not in dnewn_dxi.free_symbols:
vi = -1/dnewn_dxi*(newn.subs(xi, 0))
if dens is None:
dens = _simple_dens(eq, symbols)
if not any(checksol(di, {xi: vi}, minimal=True) is True
for di in dens):
# simplify any trivial integral
irep = [(i, i.doit()) for i in vi.atoms(Integral) if
i.function.is_number]
# do a slight bit of simplification
vi = expand_mul(vi.subs(irep))
return xi, vi
if all_zero:
return S.Zero, S.One
if n.is_Symbol: # no solution for this symbol was found
return S.Zero, S.Zero
return n, d
def minsolve_linear_system(system, *symbols, **flags):
r"""
Find a particular solution to a linear system.
In particular, try to find a solution with the minimal possible number
of non-zero variables using a naive algorithm with exponential complexity.
If ``quick=True``, a heuristic is used.
"""
quick = flags.get('quick', False)
# Check if there are any non-zero solutions at all
s0 = solve_linear_system(system, *symbols, **flags)
if not s0 or all(v == 0 for v in s0.values()):
return s0
if quick:
# We just solve the system and try to heuristically find a nice
# solution.
s = solve_linear_system(system, *symbols)
def update(determined, solution):
delete = []
for k, v in solution.items():
solution[k] = v.subs(determined)
if not solution[k].free_symbols:
delete.append(k)
determined[k] = solution[k]
for k in delete:
del solution[k]
determined = {}
update(determined, s)
while s:
# NOTE sort by default_sort_key to get deterministic result
k = max((k for k in s.values()),
key=lambda x: (len(x.free_symbols), default_sort_key(x)))
x = max(k.free_symbols, key=default_sort_key)
if len(k.free_symbols) != 1:
determined[x] = S(0)
else:
val = solve(k)[0]
if val == 0 and all(v.subs(x, val) == 0 for v in s.values()):
determined[x] = S(1)
else:
determined[x] = val
update(determined, s)
return determined
else:
# We try to select n variables which we want to be non-zero.
# All others will be assumed zero. We try to solve the modified system.
# If there is a non-trivial solution, just set the free variables to
# one. If we do this for increasing n, trying all combinations of
# variables, we will find an optimal solution.
# We speed up slightly by starting at one less than the number of
# variables the quick method manages.
from itertools import combinations
from sympy.utilities.misc import debug
N = len(symbols)
bestsol = minsolve_linear_system(system, *symbols, quick=True)
n0 = len([x for x in bestsol.values() if x != 0])
for n in range(n0 - 1, 1, -1):
debug('minsolve: %s' % n)
thissol = None
for nonzeros in combinations(list(range(N)), n):
subm = Matrix([system.col(i).T for i in nonzeros] + [system.col(-1).T]).T
s = solve_linear_system(subm, *[symbols[i] for i in nonzeros])
if s and not all(v == 0 for v in s.values()):
subs = [(symbols[v], S(1)) for v in nonzeros]
for k, v in s.items():
s[k] = v.subs(subs)
for sym in symbols:
if sym not in s:
if symbols.index(sym) in nonzeros:
s[sym] = S(1)
else:
s[sym] = S(0)
thissol = s
break
if thissol is None:
break
bestsol = thissol
return bestsol
def solve_linear_system(system, *symbols, **flags):
r"""
Solve system of N linear equations with M variables, which means
both under- and overdetermined systems are supported. The possible
number of solutions is zero, one or infinite. Respectively, this
procedure will return None or a dictionary with solutions. In the
case of underdetermined systems, all arbitrary parameters are skipped.
This may cause a situation in which an empty dictionary is returned.
In that case, all symbols can be assigned arbitrary values.
Input to this functions is a Nx(M+1) matrix, which means it has
to be in augmented form. If you prefer to enter N equations and M
unknowns then use `solve(Neqs, *Msymbols)` instead. Note: a local
copy of the matrix is made by this routine so the matrix that is
passed will not be modified.
The algorithm used here is fraction-free Gaussian elimination,
which results, after elimination, in an upper-triangular matrix.
Then solutions are found using back-substitution. This approach
is more efficient and compact than the Gauss-Jordan method.
>>> from sympy import Matrix, solve_linear_system
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
Solve the following system::
x + 4 y == 2
-2 x + y == 14
>>> system = Matrix(( (1, 4, 2), (-2, 1, 14)))
>>> solve_linear_system(system, x, y)
{x: -6, y: 2}
A degenerate system returns an empty dictionary.
>>> system = Matrix(( (0,0,0), (0,0,0) ))
>>> solve_linear_system(system, x, y)
{}
"""
do_simplify = flags.get('simplify', True)
if system.rows == system.cols - 1 == len(symbols):
try:
# well behaved n-equations and n-unknowns
inv = inv_quick(system[:, :-1])
rv = dict(zip(symbols, inv*system[:, -1]))
if do_simplify:
for k, v in rv.items():
rv[k] = simplify(v)
if not all(i.is_zero for i in rv.values()):
# non-trivial solution
return rv
except ValueError:
pass
matrix = system[:, :]
syms = list(symbols)
i, m = 0, matrix.cols - 1 # don't count augmentation
while i < matrix.rows:
if i == m:
# an overdetermined system
if any(matrix[i:, m]):
return None # no solutions
else:
# remove trailing rows
matrix = matrix[:i, :]
break
if not matrix[i, i]:
# there is no pivot in current column
# so try to find one in other columns
for k in range(i + 1, m):
if matrix[i, k]:
break
else:
if matrix[i, m]:
# We need to know if this is always zero or not. We
# assume that if there are free symbols that it is not
# identically zero (or that there is more than one way
# to make this zero). Otherwise, if there are none, this
# is a constant and we assume that it does not simplify
# to zero XXX are there better (fast) ways to test this?
# The .equals(0) method could be used but that can be
# slow; numerical testing is prone to errors of scaling.
if not matrix[i, m].free_symbols:
return None # no solution
# A row of zeros with a non-zero rhs can only be accepted
# if there is another equivalent row. Any such rows will
# be deleted.
nrows = matrix.rows
rowi = matrix.row(i)
ip = None
j = i + 1
while j < matrix.rows:
# do we need to see if the rhs of j
# is a constant multiple of i's rhs?
rowj = matrix.row(j)
if rowj == rowi:
matrix.row_del(j)
elif rowj[:-1] == rowi[:-1]:
if ip is None:
_, ip = rowi[-1].as_content_primitive()
_, jp = rowj[-1].as_content_primitive()
if not (simplify(jp - ip) or simplify(jp + ip)):
matrix.row_del(j)
j += 1
if nrows == matrix.rows:
# no solution
return None
# zero row or was a linear combination of
# other rows or was a row with a symbolic
# expression that matched other rows, e.g. [0, 0, x - y]
# so now we can safely skip it
matrix.row_del(i)
if not matrix:
# every choice of variable values is a solution
# so we return an empty dict instead of None
return dict()
continue
# we want to change the order of columns so
# the order of variables must also change
syms[i], syms[k] = syms[k], syms[i]
matrix.col_swap(i, k)
pivot_inv = S.One/matrix[i, i]
# divide all elements in the current row by the pivot
matrix.row_op(i, lambda x, _: x * pivot_inv)
for k in range(i + 1, matrix.rows):
if matrix[k, i]:
coeff = matrix[k, i]
# subtract from the current row the row containing
# pivot and multiplied by extracted coefficient
matrix.row_op(k, lambda x, j: simplify(x - matrix[i, j]*coeff))
i += 1
# if there weren't any problems, augmented matrix is now
# in row-echelon form so we can check how many solutions
# there are and extract them using back substitution
if len(syms) == matrix.rows:
# this system is Cramer equivalent so there is
# exactly one solution to this system of equations
k, solutions = i - 1, {}
while k >= 0:
content = matrix[k, m]
# run back-substitution for variables
for j in range(k + 1, m):
content -= matrix[k, j]*solutions[syms[j]]
if do_simplify:
solutions[syms[k]] = simplify(content)
else:
solutions[syms[k]] = content
k -= 1
return solutions
elif len(syms) > matrix.rows:
# this system will have infinite number of solutions
# dependent on exactly len(syms) - i parameters
k, solutions = i - 1, {}
while k >= 0:
content = matrix[k, m]
# run back-substitution for variables
for j in range(k + 1, i):
content -= matrix[k, j]*solutions[syms[j]]
# run back-substitution for parameters
for j in range(i, m):
content -= matrix[k, j]*syms[j]
if do_simplify:
solutions[syms[k]] = simplify(content)
else:
solutions[syms[k]] = content
k -= 1
return solutions
else:
return [] # no solutions
def solve_undetermined_coeffs(equ, coeffs, sym, **flags):
"""Solve equation of a type p(x; a_1, ..., a_k) == q(x) where both
p, q are univariate polynomials and f depends on k parameters.
The result of this functions is a dictionary with symbolic
values of those parameters with respect to coefficients in q.
This functions accepts both Equations class instances and ordinary
SymPy expressions. Specification of parameters and variable is
obligatory for efficiency and simplicity reason.
>>> from sympy import Eq
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c, x
>>> from sympy.solvers import solve_undetermined_coeffs
>>> solve_undetermined_coeffs(Eq(2*a*x + a+b, x), [a, b], x)
{a: 1/2, b: -1/2}
>>> solve_undetermined_coeffs(Eq(a*c*x + a+b, x), [a, b], x)
{a: 1/c, b: -1/c}
"""
if isinstance(equ, Equality):
# got equation, so move all the
# terms to the left hand side
equ = equ.lhs - equ.rhs
equ = cancel(equ).as_numer_denom()[0]
system = list(collect(equ.expand(), sym, evaluate=False).values())
if not any(equ.has(sym) for equ in system):
# consecutive powers in the input expressions have
# been successfully collected, so solve remaining
# system using Gaussian elimination algorithm
return solve(system, *coeffs, **flags)
else:
return None # no solutions
def solve_linear_system_LU(matrix, syms):
"""
Solves the augmented matrix system using LUsolve and returns a dictionary
in which solutions are keyed to the symbols of syms *as ordered*.
The matrix must be invertible.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Matrix
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import solve_linear_system_LU
>>> solve_linear_system_LU(Matrix([
... [1, 2, 0, 1],
... [3, 2, 2, 1],
... [2, 0, 0, 1]]), [x, y, z])
{x: 1/2, y: 1/4, z: -1/2}
See Also
========
sympy.matrices.LUsolve
"""
if matrix.rows != matrix.cols - 1:
raise ValueError("Rows should be equal to columns - 1")
A = matrix[:matrix.rows, :matrix.rows]
b = matrix[:, matrix.cols - 1:]
soln = A.LUsolve(b)
solutions = {}
for i in range(soln.rows):
solutions[syms[i]] = soln[i, 0]
return solutions
def det_perm(M):
"""Return the det(``M``) by using permutations to select factors.
For size larger than 8 the number of permutations becomes prohibitively
large, or if there are no symbols in the matrix, it is better to use the
standard determinant routines, e.g. `M.det()`.
See Also
========
det_minor
det_quick
"""
args = []
s = True
n = M.rows
try:
list = M._mat
except AttributeError:
list = flatten(M.tolist())
for perm in generate_bell(n):
fac = []
idx = 0
for j in perm:
fac.append(list[idx + j])
idx += n
term = Mul(*fac) # disaster with unevaluated Mul -- takes forever for n=7
args.append(term if s else -term)
s = not s
return Add(*args)
def det_minor(M):
"""Return the ``det(M)`` computed from minors without
introducing new nesting in products.
See Also
========
det_perm
det_quick
"""
n = M.rows
if n == 2:
return M[0, 0]*M[1, 1] - M[1, 0]*M[0, 1]
else:
return sum([(1, -1)[i % 2]*Add(*[M[0, i]*d for d in
Add.make_args(det_minor(M.minor_submatrix(0, i)))])
if M[0, i] else S.Zero for i in range(n)])
def det_quick(M, method=None):
"""Return ``det(M)`` assuming that either
there are lots of zeros or the size of the matrix
is small. If this assumption is not met, then the normal
Matrix.det function will be used with method = ``method``.
See Also
========
det_minor
det_perm
"""
if any(i.has(Symbol) for i in M):
if M.rows < 8 and all(i.has(Symbol) for i in M):
return det_perm(M)
return det_minor(M)
else:
return M.det(method=method) if method else M.det()
def inv_quick(M):
"""Return the inverse of ``M``, assuming that either
there are lots of zeros or the size of the matrix
is small.
"""
from sympy.matrices import zeros
if not all(i.is_Number for i in M):
if not any(i.is_Number for i in M):
det = lambda _: det_perm(_)
else:
det = lambda _: det_minor(_)
else:
return M.inv()
n = M.rows
d = det(M)
if d is S.Zero:
raise ValueError("Matrix det == 0; not invertible.")
ret = zeros(n)
s1 = -1
for i in range(n):
s = s1 = -s1
for j in range(n):
di = det(M.minor_submatrix(i, j))
ret[j, i] = s*di/d
s = -s
return ret
# these are functions that have multiple inverse values per period
multi_inverses = {
sin: lambda x: (asin(x), S.Pi - asin(x)),
cos: lambda x: (acos(x), 2*S.Pi - acos(x)),
}
def _tsolve(eq, sym, **flags):
"""
Helper for _solve that solves a transcendental equation with respect
to the given symbol. Various equations containing powers and logarithms,
can be solved.
There is currently no guarantee that all solutions will be returned or
that a real solution will be favored over a complex one.
Either a list of potential solutions will be returned or None will be
returned (in the case that no method was known to get a solution
for the equation). All other errors (like the inability to cast an
expression as a Poly) are unhandled.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import log
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import _tsolve as tsolve
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> tsolve(3**(2*x + 5) - 4, x)
[-5/2 + log(2)/log(3), (-5*log(3)/2 + log(2) + I*pi)/log(3)]
>>> tsolve(log(x) + 2*x, x)
[LambertW(2)/2]
"""
if 'tsolve_saw' not in flags:
flags['tsolve_saw'] = []
if eq in flags['tsolve_saw']:
return None
else:
flags['tsolve_saw'].append(eq)
rhs, lhs = _invert(eq, sym)
if lhs == sym:
return [rhs]
try:
if lhs.is_Add:
# it's time to try factoring; powdenest is used
# to try get powers in standard form for better factoring
f = factor(powdenest(lhs - rhs))
if f.is_Mul:
return _solve(f, sym, **flags)
if rhs:
f = logcombine(lhs, force=flags.get('force', True))
if f.count(log) != lhs.count(log):
if isinstance(f, log):
return _solve(f.args[0] - exp(rhs), sym, **flags)
return _tsolve(f - rhs, sym, **flags)
elif lhs.is_Pow:
if lhs.exp.is_Integer:
if lhs - rhs != eq:
return _solve(lhs - rhs, sym, **flags)
elif sym not in lhs.exp.free_symbols:
return _solve(lhs.base - rhs**(1/lhs.exp), sym, **flags)
elif not rhs and sym in lhs.exp.free_symbols:
# f(x)**g(x) only has solutions where f(x) == 0 and g(x) != 0 at
# the same place
sol_base = _solve(lhs.base, sym, **flags)
if not sol_base:
return sol_base # no solutions to remove so return now
return list(ordered(set(sol_base) - set(
_solve(lhs.exp, sym, **flags))))
elif (rhs is not S.Zero and
lhs.base.is_positive and
lhs.exp.is_real):
return _solve(lhs.exp*log(lhs.base) - log(rhs), sym, **flags)
elif lhs.base == 0 and rhs == 1:
return _solve(lhs.exp, sym, **flags)
else:
raise NotImplementedError
elif lhs.is_Mul and rhs.is_positive:
llhs = expand_log(log(lhs))
if llhs.is_Add:
return _solve(llhs - log(rhs), sym, **flags)
elif lhs.is_Function and len(lhs.args) == 1:
if lhs.func in multi_inverses:
# sin(x) = 1/3 -> x - asin(1/3) & x - (pi - asin(1/3))
soln = []
for i in multi_inverses[lhs.func](rhs):
soln.extend(_solve(lhs.args[0] - i, sym, **flags))
return list(ordered(soln))
elif lhs.func == LambertW:
return _solve(lhs.args[0] - rhs*exp(rhs), sym, **flags)
rewrite = lhs.rewrite(exp)
if rewrite != lhs:
return _solve(rewrite - rhs, sym, **flags)
except NotImplementedError:
pass
# maybe it is a lambert pattern
if flags.pop('bivariate', True):
# lambert forms may need some help being recognized, e.g. changing
# 2**(3*x) + x**3*log(2)**3 + 3*x**2*log(2)**2 + 3*x*log(2) + 1
# to 2**(3*x) + (x*log(2) + 1)**3
g = _filtered_gens(eq.as_poly(), sym)
up_or_log = set()
for gi in g:
if isinstance(gi, exp) or isinstance(gi, log):
up_or_log.add(gi)
elif gi.is_Pow:
gisimp = powdenest(expand_power_exp(gi))
if gisimp.is_Pow and sym in gisimp.exp.free_symbols:
up_or_log.add(gi)
down = g.difference(up_or_log)
eq_down = expand_log(expand_power_exp(eq)).subs(
dict(list(zip(up_or_log, [0]*len(up_or_log)))))
eq = expand_power_exp(factor(eq_down, deep=True) + (eq - eq_down))
rhs, lhs = _invert(eq, sym)
if lhs.has(sym):
try:
poly = lhs.as_poly()
g = _filtered_gens(poly, sym)
return _solve_lambert(lhs - rhs, sym, g)
except NotImplementedError:
# maybe it's a convoluted function
if len(g) == 2:
try:
gpu = bivariate_type(lhs - rhs, *g)
if gpu is None:
raise NotImplementedError
g, p, u = gpu
flags['bivariate'] = False
inversion = _tsolve(g - u, sym, **flags)
if inversion:
sol = _solve(p, u, **flags)
return list(ordered(set([i.subs(u, s)
for i in inversion for s in sol])))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
pass
if flags.pop('force', True):
flags['force'] = False
pos, reps = posify(lhs - rhs)
for u, s in reps.items():
if s == sym:
break
else:
u = sym
if pos.has(u):
try:
soln = _solve(pos, u, **flags)
return list(ordered([s.subs(reps) for s in soln]))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
pass # here for coverage
return # here for coverage
# TODO: option for calculating J numerically
@conserve_mpmath_dps
def nsolve(*args, **kwargs):
r"""
Solve a nonlinear equation system numerically::
nsolve(f, [args,] x0, modules=['mpmath'], **kwargs)
f is a vector function of symbolic expressions representing the system.
args are the variables. If there is only one variable, this argument can
be omitted.
x0 is a starting vector close to a solution.
Use the modules keyword to specify which modules should be used to
evaluate the function and the Jacobian matrix. Make sure to use a module
that supports matrices. For more information on the syntax, please see the
docstring of lambdify.
If the keyword arguments contain 'dict'=True (default is False) nsolve
will return a list (perhaps empty) of solution mappings. This might be
especially useful if you want to use nsolve as a fallback to solve since
using the dict argument for both methods produces return values of
consistent type structure. Please note: to keep this consistency with
solve, the solution will be returned in a list even though nsolve
(currently at least) only finds one solution at a time.
Overdetermined systems are supported.
>>> from sympy import Symbol, nsolve
>>> import sympy
>>> import mpmath
>>> mpmath.mp.dps = 15
>>> x1 = Symbol('x1')
>>> x2 = Symbol('x2')
>>> f1 = 3 * x1**2 - 2 * x2**2 - 1
>>> f2 = x1**2 - 2 * x1 + x2**2 + 2 * x2 - 8
>>> print(nsolve((f1, f2), (x1, x2), (-1, 1)))
Matrix([[-1.19287309935246], [1.27844411169911]])
For one-dimensional functions the syntax is simplified:
>>> from sympy import sin, nsolve
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> nsolve(sin(x), x, 2)
3.14159265358979
>>> nsolve(sin(x), 2)
3.14159265358979
To solve with higher precision than the default, use the prec argument.
>>> from sympy import cos
>>> nsolve(cos(x) - x, 1)
0.739085133215161
>>> nsolve(cos(x) - x, 1, prec=50)
0.73908513321516064165531208767387340401341175890076
>>> cos(_)
0.73908513321516064165531208767387340401341175890076
To solve for complex roots of real functions, a nonreal initial point
must be specified:
>>> from sympy import I
>>> nsolve(x**2 + 2, I)
1.4142135623731*I
mpmath.findroot is used and you can find there more extensive
documentation, especially concerning keyword parameters and
available solvers. Note, however, that functions which are very
steep near the root the verification of the solution may fail. In
this case you should use the flag `verify=False` and
independently verify the solution.
>>> from sympy import cos, cosh
>>> from sympy.abc import i
>>> f = cos(x)*cosh(x) - 1
>>> nsolve(f, 3.14*100)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: Could not find root within given tolerance. (1.39267e+230 > 2.1684e-19)
>>> ans = nsolve(f, 3.14*100, verify=False); ans
312.588469032184
>>> f.subs(x, ans).n(2)
2.1e+121
>>> (f/f.diff(x)).subs(x, ans).n(2)
7.4e-15
One might safely skip the verification if bounds of the root are known
and a bisection method is used:
>>> bounds = lambda i: (3.14*i, 3.14*(i + 1))
>>> nsolve(f, bounds(100), solver='bisect', verify=False)
315.730061685774
Alternatively, a function may be better behaved when the
denominator is ignored. Since this is not always the case, however,
the decision of what function to use is left to the discretion of
the user.
>>> eq = x**2/(1 - x)/(1 - 2*x)**2 - 100
>>> nsolve(eq, 0.46)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: Could not find root within given tolerance. (10000 > 2.1684e-19)
Try another starting point or tweak arguments.
>>> nsolve(eq.as_numer_denom()[0], 0.46)
0.46792545969349058
"""
# there are several other SymPy functions that use method= so
# guard against that here
if 'method' in kwargs:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Keyword "method" should not be used in this context. When using
some mpmath solvers directly, the keyword "method" is
used, but when using nsolve (and findroot) the keyword to use is
"solver".'''))
if 'prec' in kwargs:
prec = kwargs.pop('prec')
import mpmath
mpmath.mp.dps = prec
else:
prec = None
# keyword argument to return result as a dictionary
as_dict = kwargs.pop('dict', False)
# interpret arguments
if len(args) == 3:
f = args[0]
fargs = args[1]
x0 = args[2]
if iterable(fargs) and iterable(x0):
if len(x0) != len(fargs):
raise TypeError('nsolve expected exactly %i guess vectors, got %i'
% (len(fargs), len(x0)))
elif len(args) == 2:
f = args[0]
fargs = None
x0 = args[1]
if iterable(f):
raise TypeError('nsolve expected 3 arguments, got 2')
elif len(args) < 2:
raise TypeError('nsolve expected at least 2 arguments, got %i'
% len(args))
else:
raise TypeError('nsolve expected at most 3 arguments, got %i'
% len(args))
modules = kwargs.get('modules', ['mpmath'])
if iterable(f):
f = list(f)
for i, fi in enumerate(f):
if isinstance(fi, Equality):
f[i] = fi.lhs - fi.rhs
f = Matrix(f).T
if iterable(x0):
x0 = list(x0)
if not isinstance(f, Matrix):
# assume it's a sympy expression
if isinstance(f, Equality):
f = f.lhs - f.rhs
syms = f.free_symbols
if fargs is None:
fargs = syms.copy().pop()
if not (len(syms) == 1 and (fargs in syms or fargs[0] in syms)):
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
expected a one-dimensional and numerical function'''))
# the function is much better behaved if there is no denominator
# but sending the numerator is left to the user since sometimes
# the function is better behaved when the denominator is present
# e.g., issue 11768
f = lambdify(fargs, f, modules)
x = sympify(findroot(f, x0, **kwargs))
if as_dict:
return [dict([(fargs, x)])]
return x
if len(fargs) > f.cols:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
need at least as many equations as variables'''))
verbose = kwargs.get('verbose', False)
if verbose:
print('f(x):')
print(f)
# derive Jacobian
J = f.jacobian(fargs)
if verbose:
print('J(x):')
print(J)
# create functions
f = lambdify(fargs, f.T, modules)
J = lambdify(fargs, J, modules)
# solve the system numerically
x = findroot(f, x0, J=J, **kwargs)
if as_dict:
return [dict(zip(fargs, [sympify(xi) for xi in x]))]
return Matrix(x)
def _invert(eq, *symbols, **kwargs):
"""Return tuple (i, d) where ``i`` is independent of ``symbols`` and ``d``
contains symbols. ``i`` and ``d`` are obtained after recursively using
algebraic inversion until an uninvertible ``d`` remains. If there are no
free symbols then ``d`` will be zero. Some (but not necessarily all)
solutions to the expression ``i - d`` will be related to the solutions of
the original expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import _invert as invert
>>> from sympy import sqrt, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> invert(x - 3)
(3, x)
>>> invert(3)
(3, 0)
>>> invert(2*cos(x) - 1)
(1/2, cos(x))
>>> invert(sqrt(x) - 3)
(3, sqrt(x))
>>> invert(sqrt(x) + y, x)
(-y, sqrt(x))
>>> invert(sqrt(x) + y, y)
(-sqrt(x), y)
>>> invert(sqrt(x) + y, x, y)
(0, sqrt(x) + y)
If there is more than one symbol in a power's base and the exponent
is not an Integer, then the principal root will be used for the
inversion:
>>> invert(sqrt(x + y) - 2)
(4, x + y)
>>> invert(sqrt(x + y) - 2)
(4, x + y)
If the exponent is an integer, setting ``integer_power`` to True
will force the principal root to be selected:
>>> invert(x**2 - 4, integer_power=True)
(2, x)
"""
eq = sympify(eq)
if eq.args:
# make sure we are working with flat eq
eq = eq.func(*eq.args)
free = eq.free_symbols
if not symbols:
symbols = free
if not free & set(symbols):
return eq, S.Zero
dointpow = bool(kwargs.get('integer_power', False))
lhs = eq
rhs = S.Zero
while True:
was = lhs
while True:
indep, dep = lhs.as_independent(*symbols)
# dep + indep == rhs
if lhs.is_Add:
# this indicates we have done it all
if indep is S.Zero:
break
lhs = dep
rhs -= indep
# dep * indep == rhs
else:
# this indicates we have done it all
if indep is S.One:
break
lhs = dep
rhs /= indep
# collect like-terms in symbols
if lhs.is_Add:
terms = {}
for a in lhs.args:
i, d = a.as_independent(*symbols)
terms.setdefault(d, []).append(i)
if any(len(v) > 1 for v in terms.values()):
args = []
for d, i in terms.items():
if len(i) > 1:
args.append(Add(*i)*d)
else:
args.append(i[0]*d)
lhs = Add(*args)
# if it's a two-term Add with rhs = 0 and two powers we can get the
# dependent terms together, e.g. 3*f(x) + 2*g(x) -> f(x)/g(x) = -2/3
if lhs.is_Add and not rhs and len(lhs.args) == 2 and \
not lhs.is_polynomial(*symbols):
a, b = ordered(lhs.args)
ai, ad = a.as_independent(*symbols)
bi, bd = b.as_independent(*symbols)
if any(_ispow(i) for i in (ad, bd)):
a_base, a_exp = ad.as_base_exp()
b_base, b_exp = bd.as_base_exp()
if a_base == b_base:
# a = -b
lhs = powsimp(powdenest(ad/bd))
rhs = -bi/ai
else:
rat = ad/bd
_lhs = powsimp(ad/bd)
if _lhs != rat:
lhs = _lhs
rhs = -bi/ai
elif ai == -bi:
if isinstance(ad, Function) and ad.func == bd.func:
if len(ad.args) == len(bd.args) == 1:
lhs = ad.args[0] - bd.args[0]
elif len(ad.args) == len(bd.args):
# should be able to solve
# f(x, y) - f(2 - x, 0) == 0 -> x == 1
raise NotImplementedError(
'equal function with more than 1 argument')
else:
raise ValueError(
'function with different numbers of args')
elif lhs.is_Mul and any(_ispow(a) for a in lhs.args):
lhs = powsimp(powdenest(lhs))
if lhs.is_Function:
if hasattr(lhs, 'inverse') and len(lhs.args) == 1:
# -1
# f(x) = g -> x = f (g)
#
# /!\ inverse should not be defined if there are multiple values
# for the function -- these are handled in _tsolve
#
rhs = lhs.inverse()(rhs)
lhs = lhs.args[0]
elif isinstance(lhs, atan2):
y, x = lhs.args
lhs = 2*atan(y/(sqrt(x**2 + y**2) + x))
elif lhs.func == rhs.func:
if len(lhs.args) == len(rhs.args) == 1:
lhs = lhs.args[0]
rhs = rhs.args[0]
elif len(lhs.args) == len(rhs.args):
# should be able to solve
# f(x, y) == f(2, 3) -> x == 2
# f(x, x + y) == f(2, 3) -> x == 2
raise NotImplementedError(
'equal function with more than 1 argument')
else:
raise ValueError(
'function with different numbers of args')
if rhs and lhs.is_Pow and lhs.exp.is_Integer and lhs.exp < 0:
lhs = 1/lhs
rhs = 1/rhs
# base**a = b -> base = b**(1/a) if
# a is an Integer and dointpow=True (this gives real branch of root)
# a is not an Integer and the equation is multivariate and the
# base has more than 1 symbol in it
# The rationale for this is that right now the multi-system solvers
# doesn't try to resolve generators to see, for example, if the whole
# system is written in terms of sqrt(x + y) so it will just fail, so we
# do that step here.
if lhs.is_Pow and (
lhs.exp.is_Integer and dointpow or not lhs.exp.is_Integer and
len(symbols) > 1 and len(lhs.base.free_symbols & set(symbols)) > 1):
rhs = rhs**(1/lhs.exp)
lhs = lhs.base
if lhs == was:
break
return rhs, lhs
def unrad(eq, *syms, **flags):
""" Remove radicals with symbolic arguments and return (eq, cov),
None or raise an error:
None is returned if there are no radicals to remove.
NotImplementedError is raised if there are radicals and they cannot be
removed or if the relationship between the original symbols and the
change of variable needed to rewrite the system as a polynomial cannot
be solved.
Otherwise the tuple, ``(eq, cov)``, is returned where::
``eq``, ``cov``
``eq`` is an equation without radicals (in the symbol(s) of
interest) whose solutions are a superset of the solutions to the
original expression. ``eq`` might be re-written in terms of a new
variable; the relationship to the original variables is given by
``cov`` which is a list containing ``v`` and ``v**p - b`` where
``p`` is the power needed to clear the radical and ``b`` is the
radical now expressed as a polynomial in the symbols of interest.
For example, for sqrt(2 - x) the tuple would be
``(c, c**2 - 2 + x)``. The solutions of ``eq`` will contain
solutions to the original equation (if there are any).
``syms``
an iterable of symbols which, if provided, will limit the focus of
radical removal: only radicals with one or more of the symbols of
interest will be cleared. All free symbols are used if ``syms`` is not
set.
``flags`` are used internally for communication during recursive calls.
Two options are also recognized::
``take``, when defined, is interpreted as a single-argument function
that returns True if a given Pow should be handled.
Radicals can be removed from an expression if::
* all bases of the radicals are the same; a change of variables is
done in this case.
* if all radicals appear in one term of the expression
* there are only 4 terms with sqrt() factors or there are less than
four terms having sqrt() factors
* there are only two terms with radicals
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.solvers.solvers import unrad
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import sqrt, Rational, root, real_roots, solve
>>> unrad(sqrt(x)*x**Rational(1, 3) + 2)
(x**5 - 64, [])
>>> unrad(sqrt(x) + root(x + 1, 3))
(x**3 - x**2 - 2*x - 1, [])
>>> eq = sqrt(x) + root(x, 3) - 2
>>> unrad(eq)
(_p**3 + _p**2 - 2, [_p, _p**6 - x])
"""
_inv_error = 'cannot get an analytical solution for the inversion'
uflags = dict(check=False, simplify=False)
def _cov(p, e):
if cov:
# XXX - uncovered
oldp, olde = cov
if Poly(e, p).degree(p) in (1, 2):
cov[:] = [p, olde.subs(oldp, _solve(e, p, **uflags)[0])]
else:
raise NotImplementedError
else:
cov[:] = [p, e]
def _canonical(eq, cov):
if cov:
# change symbol to vanilla so no solutions are eliminated
p, e = cov
rep = {p: Dummy(p.name)}
eq = eq.xreplace(rep)
cov = [p.xreplace(rep), e.xreplace(rep)]
# remove constants and powers of factors since these don't change
# the location of the root; XXX should factor or factor_terms be used?
eq = factor_terms(_mexpand(eq.as_numer_denom()[0], recursive=True), clear=True)
if eq.is_Mul:
args = []
for f in eq.args:
if f.is_number:
continue
if f.is_Pow and _take(f, True):
args.append(f.base)
else:
args.append(f)
eq = Mul(*args) # leave as Mul for more efficient solving
# make the sign canonical
free = eq.free_symbols
if len(free) == 1:
if eq.coeff(free.pop()**degree(eq)).could_extract_minus_sign():
eq = -eq
elif eq.could_extract_minus_sign():
eq = -eq
return eq, cov
def _Q(pow):
# return leading Rational of denominator of Pow's exponent
c = pow.as_base_exp()[1].as_coeff_Mul()[0]
if not c.is_Rational:
return S.One
return c.q
# define the _take method that will determine whether a term is of interest
def _take(d, take_int_pow):
# return True if coefficient of any factor's exponent's den is not 1
for pow in Mul.make_args(d):
if not (pow.is_Symbol or pow.is_Pow):
continue
b, e = pow.as_base_exp()
if not b.has(*syms):
continue
if not take_int_pow and _Q(pow) == 1:
continue
free = pow.free_symbols
if free.intersection(syms):
return True
return False
_take = flags.setdefault('_take', _take)
cov, nwas, rpt = [flags.setdefault(k, v) for k, v in
sorted(dict(cov=[], n=None, rpt=0).items())]
# preconditioning
eq = powdenest(factor_terms(eq, radical=True, clear=True))
eq, d = eq.as_numer_denom()
eq = _mexpand(eq, recursive=True)
if eq.is_number:
return
syms = set(syms) or eq.free_symbols
poly = eq.as_poly()
gens = [g for g in poly.gens if _take(g, True)]
if not gens:
return
# check for trivial case
# - already a polynomial in integer powers
if all(_Q(g) == 1 for g in gens):
return
# - an exponent has a symbol of interest (don't handle)
if any(g.as_base_exp()[1].has(*syms) for g in gens):
return
def _rads_bases_lcm(poly):
# if all the bases are the same or all the radicals are in one
# term, `lcm` will be the lcm of the denominators of the
# exponents of the radicals
lcm = 1
rads = set()
bases = set()
for g in poly.gens:
if not _take(g, False):
continue
q = _Q(g)
if q != 1:
rads.add(g)
lcm = ilcm(lcm, q)
bases.add(g.base)
return rads, bases, lcm
rads, bases, lcm = _rads_bases_lcm(poly)
if not rads:
return
covsym = Dummy('p', nonnegative=True)
# only keep in syms symbols that actually appear in radicals;
# and update gens
newsyms = set()
for r in rads:
newsyms.update(syms & r.free_symbols)
if newsyms != syms:
syms = newsyms
gens = [g for g in gens if g.free_symbols & syms]
# get terms together that have common generators
drad = dict(list(zip(rads, list(range(len(rads))))))
rterms = {(): []}
args = Add.make_args(poly.as_expr())
for t in args:
if _take(t, False):
common = set(t.as_poly().gens).intersection(rads)
key = tuple(sorted([drad[i] for i in common]))
else:
key = ()
rterms.setdefault(key, []).append(t)
others = Add(*rterms.pop(()))
rterms = [Add(*rterms[k]) for k in rterms.keys()]
# the output will depend on the order terms are processed, so
# make it canonical quickly
rterms = list(reversed(list(ordered(rterms))))
ok = False # we don't have a solution yet
depth = sqrt_depth(eq)
if len(rterms) == 1 and not (rterms[0].is_Add and lcm > 2):
eq = rterms[0]**lcm - ((-others)**lcm)
ok = True
else:
if len(rterms) == 1 and rterms[0].is_Add:
rterms = list(rterms[0].args)
if len(bases) == 1:
b = bases.pop()
if len(syms) > 1:
free = b.free_symbols
x = {g for g in gens if g.is_Symbol} & free
if not x:
x = free
x = ordered(x)
else:
x = syms
x = list(x)[0]
try:
inv = _solve(covsym**lcm - b, x, **uflags)
if not inv:
raise NotImplementedError
eq = poly.as_expr().subs(b, covsym**lcm).subs(x, inv[0])
_cov(covsym, covsym**lcm - b)
return _canonical(eq, cov)
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
# no longer consider integer powers as generators
gens = [g for g in gens if _Q(g) != 1]
if len(rterms) == 2:
if not others:
eq = rterms[0]**lcm - (-rterms[1])**lcm
ok = True
elif not log(lcm, 2).is_Integer:
# the lcm-is-power-of-two case is handled below
r0, r1 = rterms
if flags.get('_reverse', False):
r1, r0 = r0, r1
i0 = _rads0, _bases0, lcm0 = _rads_bases_lcm(r0.as_poly())
i1 = _rads1, _bases1, lcm1 = _rads_bases_lcm(r1.as_poly())
for reverse in range(2):
if reverse:
i0, i1 = i1, i0
r0, r1 = r1, r0
_rads1, _, lcm1 = i1
_rads1 = Mul(*_rads1)
t1 = _rads1**lcm1
c = covsym**lcm1 - t1
for x in syms:
try:
sol = _solve(c, x, **uflags)
if not sol:
raise NotImplementedError
neweq = r0.subs(x, sol[0]) + covsym*r1/_rads1 + \
others
tmp = unrad(neweq, covsym)
if tmp:
eq, newcov = tmp
if newcov:
newp, newc = newcov
_cov(newp, c.subs(covsym,
_solve(newc, covsym, **uflags)[0]))
else:
_cov(covsym, c)
else:
eq = neweq
_cov(covsym, c)
ok = True
break
except NotImplementedError:
if reverse:
raise NotImplementedError(
'no successful change of variable found')
else:
pass
if ok:
break
elif len(rterms) == 3:
# two cube roots and another with order less than 5
# (so an analytical solution can be found) or a base
# that matches one of the cube root bases
info = [_rads_bases_lcm(i.as_poly()) for i in rterms]
RAD = 0
BASES = 1
LCM = 2
if info[0][LCM] != 3:
info.append(info.pop(0))
rterms.append(rterms.pop(0))
elif info[1][LCM] != 3:
info.append(info.pop(1))
rterms.append(rterms.pop(1))
if info[0][LCM] == info[1][LCM] == 3:
if info[1][BASES] != info[2][BASES]:
info[0], info[1] = info[1], info[0]
rterms[0], rterms[1] = rterms[1], rterms[0]
if info[1][BASES] == info[2][BASES]:
eq = rterms[0]**3 + (rterms[1] + rterms[2] + others)**3
ok = True
elif info[2][LCM] < 5:
# a*root(A, 3) + b*root(B, 3) + others = c
a, b, c, d, A, B = [Dummy(i) for i in 'abcdAB']
# zz represents the unraded expression into which the
# specifics for this case are substituted
zz = (c - d)*(A**3*a**9 + 3*A**2*B*a**6*b**3 -
3*A**2*a**6*c**3 + 9*A**2*a**6*c**2*d - 9*A**2*a**6*c*d**2 +
3*A**2*a**6*d**3 + 3*A*B**2*a**3*b**6 + 21*A*B*a**3*b**3*c**3 -
63*A*B*a**3*b**3*c**2*d + 63*A*B*a**3*b**3*c*d**2 -
21*A*B*a**3*b**3*d**3 + 3*A*a**3*c**6 - 18*A*a**3*c**5*d +
45*A*a**3*c**4*d**2 - 60*A*a**3*c**3*d**3 + 45*A*a**3*c**2*d**4 -
18*A*a**3*c*d**5 + 3*A*a**3*d**6 + B**3*b**9 - 3*B**2*b**6*c**3 +
9*B**2*b**6*c**2*d - 9*B**2*b**6*c*d**2 + 3*B**2*b**6*d**3 +
3*B*b**3*c**6 - 18*B*b**3*c**5*d + 45*B*b**3*c**4*d**2 -
60*B*b**3*c**3*d**3 + 45*B*b**3*c**2*d**4 - 18*B*b**3*c*d**5 +
3*B*b**3*d**6 - c**9 + 9*c**8*d - 36*c**7*d**2 + 84*c**6*d**3 -
126*c**5*d**4 + 126*c**4*d**5 - 84*c**3*d**6 + 36*c**2*d**7 -
9*c*d**8 + d**9)
def _t(i):
b = Mul(*info[i][RAD])
return cancel(rterms[i]/b), Mul(*info[i][BASES])
aa, AA = _t(0)
bb, BB = _t(1)
cc = -rterms[2]
dd = others
eq = zz.xreplace(dict(zip(
(a, A, b, B, c, d),
(aa, AA, bb, BB, cc, dd))))
ok = True
# handle power-of-2 cases
if not ok:
if log(lcm, 2).is_Integer and (not others and
len(rterms) == 4 or len(rterms) < 4):
def _norm2(a, b):
return a**2 + b**2 + 2*a*b
if len(rterms) == 4:
# (r0+r1)**2 - (r2+r3)**2
r0, r1, r2, r3 = rterms
eq = _norm2(r0, r1) - _norm2(r2, r3)
ok = True
elif len(rterms) == 3:
# (r1+r2)**2 - (r0+others)**2
r0, r1, r2 = rterms
eq = _norm2(r1, r2) - _norm2(r0, others)
ok = True
elif len(rterms) == 2:
# r0**2 - (r1+others)**2
r0, r1 = rterms
eq = r0**2 - _norm2(r1, others)
ok = True
new_depth = sqrt_depth(eq) if ok else depth
rpt += 1 # XXX how many repeats with others unchanging is enough?
if not ok or (
nwas is not None and len(rterms) == nwas and
new_depth is not None and new_depth == depth and
rpt > 3):
raise NotImplementedError('Cannot remove all radicals')
flags.update(dict(cov=cov, n=len(rterms), rpt=rpt))
neq = unrad(eq, *syms, **flags)
if neq:
eq, cov = neq
eq, cov = _canonical(eq, cov)
return eq, cov
from sympy.solvers.bivariate import (
bivariate_type, _solve_lambert, _filtered_gens)
|
fe549aaf10bb3ef436b6fad99288b17b8e5946874117ec72b81ab84bc9fe6f4e
|
"""
Recurrences
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import S, Symbol, sympify
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int, range, iterable
def linrec(coeffs, init, n):
r"""
Evaluation of univariate linear recurrences of homogeneous type
having coefficients independent of the recurrence variable.
Parameters
==========
coeffs : iterable
Coefficients of the recurrence
init : iterable
Initial values of the recurrence
n : Integer
Point of evaluation for the recurrence
Notes
=====
Let `y(n)` be the recurrence of given type, ``c`` be the sequence
of coefficients, ``b`` be the sequence of initial/base values of the
recurrence and ``k`` (equal to ``len(c)``) be the order of recurrence.
Then,
.. math :: y(n) = \begin{cases} b_n & 0 \le n < k \\
c_0 y(n-1) + c_1 y(n-2) + \cdots + c_{k-1} y(n-k) & n \ge k
\end{cases}
Let `x_0, x_1, \ldots, x_n` be a sequence and consider the transformation
that maps each polynomial `f(x)` to `T(f(x))` where each power `x^i` is
replaced by the corresponding value `x_i`. The sequence is then a solution
of the recurrence if and only if `T(x^i p(x)) = 0` for each `i \ge 0` where
`p(x) = x^k - c_0 x^(k-1) - \cdots - c_{k-1}` is the characteristic
polynomial.
Then `T(f(x)p(x)) = 0` for each polynomial `f(x)` (as it is a linear
combination of powers `x^i`). Now, if `x^n` is congruent to
`g(x) = a_0 x^0 + a_1 x^1 + \cdots + a_{k-1} x^{k-1}` modulo `p(x)`, then
`T(x^n) = x_n` is equal to
`T(g(x)) = a_0 x_0 + a_1 x_1 + \cdots + a_{k-1} x_{k-1}`.
Computation of `x^n`,
given `x^k = c_0 x^{k-1} + c_1 x^{k-2} + \cdots + c_{k-1}`
is performed using exponentiation by squaring (refer to [1]_) with
an additional reduction step performed to retain only first `k` powers
of `x` in the representation of `x^n`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.discrete.recurrences import linrec
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> linrec(coeffs=[1, 1], init=[0, 1], n=10)
55
>>> linrec(coeffs=[1, 1], init=[x, y], n=10)
34*x + 55*y
>>> linrec(coeffs=[x, y], init=[0, 1], n=5)
x**2*y + x*(x**3 + 2*x*y) + y**2
>>> linrec(coeffs=[1, 2, 3, 0, 0, 4], init=[x, y, z], n=16)
13576*x + 5676*y + 2356*z
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponentiation_by_squaring
.. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Modular_exponentiation§ion=6#Matrices
See Also
========
sympy.polys.agca.extensions.ExtensionElement.__pow__
"""
if not coeffs:
return S.Zero
if not iterable(coeffs):
raise TypeError("Expected a sequence of coefficients for"
" the recurrence")
if not iterable(init):
raise TypeError("Expected a sequence of values for the initialization"
" of the recurrence")
n = as_int(n)
if n < 0:
raise ValueError("Point of evaluation of recurrence must be a "
"non-negative integer")
c = [sympify(arg) for arg in coeffs]
b = [sympify(arg) for arg in init]
k = len(c)
if len(b) > k:
raise TypeError("Count of initial values should not exceed the "
"order of the recurrence")
else:
b += [S.Zero]*(k - len(b)) # remaining initial values default to zero
def _square_and_reduce(u, offset):
# squares `(u_0 + u_1 x + u_2 x^2 + \cdots + u_{k-1} x^k)` (and
# multiplies by `x` if offset is 1) and reduces the above result of
# length upto `2k` to `k` using the characteristic equation of the
# recurrence given by, `x^k = c_0 x^{k-1} + c_1 x^{k-2} + \cdots + c_{k-1}`
w = [S.Zero]*(2*len(u) - 1 + offset)
for i, p in enumerate(u):
for j, q in enumerate(u):
w[offset + i + j] += p*q
for j in range(len(w) - 1, k - 1, -1):
for i in range(k):
w[j - i - 1] += w[j]*c[i]
return w[:k]
def _final_coeffs(n):
# computes the final coefficient list - `cf` corresponding to the
# point at which recurrence is to be evalauted - `n`, such that,
# `y(n) = cf_0 y(k-1) + cf_1 y(k-2) + \cdots + cf_{k-1} y(0)`
if n < k:
return [S.Zero]*n + [S.One] + [S.Zero]*(k - n - 1)
else:
return _square_and_reduce(_final_coeffs(n//2), n%2)
return b[n] if n < k else sum(u*v for u, v in zip(_final_coeffs(n), b))
|
cb766e6985f89e4c7262fdee70d732d6a0ac9cfa9ed2805e9fcc99284c204c7c
|
"""
Singularities
=============
This module implements algorithms for finding singularities for a function
and identifying types of functions.
The differential calculus methods in this module include methods to identify
the following function types in the given ``Interval``:
- Increasing
- Strictly Increasing
- Decreasing
- Strictly Decreasing
- Monotonic
"""
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset
from sympy.simplify import simplify
from sympy import S, Symbol
def singularities(expression, symbol):
"""
Find singularities of a given function.
Currently supported functions are:
- univariate rational (real or complex) functions
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.calculus.singularities import singularities
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True)
>>> y = Symbol('y', real=False)
>>> singularities(x**2 + x + 1, x)
EmptySet()
>>> singularities(1/(x + 1), x)
{-1}
>>> singularities(1/(y**2 + 1), y)
{-I, I}
>>> singularities(1/(y**3 + 1), y)
{-1, 1/2 - sqrt(3)*I/2, 1/2 + sqrt(3)*I/2}
Notes
=====
This function does not find nonisolated singularities
nor does it find branch points of the expression.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_singularity
"""
if not expression.is_rational_function(symbol):
raise NotImplementedError(
"Algorithms finding singularities for non-rational"
" functions are not yet implemented."
)
else:
domain = S.Reals if symbol.is_real else S.Complexes
return solveset(simplify(1 / expression), symbol, domain)
###########################################################################
###################### DIFFERENTIAL CALCULUS METHODS ######################
###########################################################################
def monotonicity_helper(expression, predicate, interval=S.Reals, symbol=None):
"""
Helper function for functions checking function monotonicity.
It returns a boolean indicating whether the interval in which
the function's derivative satisfies given predicate is a superset
of the given interval.
"""
expression = sympify(expression)
free = expression.free_symbols
if symbol is None:
if len(free) > 1:
raise NotImplementedError(
'The function has not yet been implemented'
' for all multivariate expressions.'
)
x = symbol or (free.pop() if free else Symbol('x'))
derivative = expression.diff(x)
predicate_interval = solveset(predicate(derivative), x, S.Reals)
return interval.is_subset(predicate_interval)
def is_increasing(expression, interval=S.Reals, symbol=None):
"""
Return whether the function is increasing in the given interval.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import is_increasing
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import S, Interval, oo
>>> is_increasing(x**3 - 3*x**2 + 4*x, S.Reals)
True
>>> is_increasing(-x**2, Interval(-oo, 0))
True
>>> is_increasing(-x**2, Interval(0, oo))
False
>>> is_increasing(4*x**3 - 6*x**2 - 72*x + 30, Interval(-2, 3))
False
>>> is_increasing(x**2 + y, Interval(1, 2), x)
True
"""
return monotonicity_helper(expression, lambda x: x >= 0, interval, symbol)
def is_strictly_increasing(expression, interval=S.Reals, symbol=None):
"""
Return whether the function is strictly increasing in the given interval.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import is_strictly_increasing
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import Interval, oo
>>> is_strictly_increasing(4*x**3 - 6*x**2 - 72*x + 30, Interval.Ropen(-oo, -2))
True
>>> is_strictly_increasing(4*x**3 - 6*x**2 - 72*x + 30, Interval.Lopen(3, oo))
True
>>> is_strictly_increasing(4*x**3 - 6*x**2 - 72*x + 30, Interval.open(-2, 3))
False
>>> is_strictly_increasing(-x**2, Interval(0, oo))
False
>>> is_strictly_increasing(-x**2 + y, Interval(-oo, 0), x)
False
"""
return monotonicity_helper(expression, lambda x: x > 0, interval, symbol)
def is_decreasing(expression, interval=S.Reals, symbol=None):
"""
Return whether the function is decreasing in the given interval.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import is_decreasing
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import S, Interval, oo
>>> is_decreasing(1/(x**2 - 3*x), Interval.open(1.5, 3))
True
>>> is_decreasing(1/(x**2 - 3*x), Interval.Lopen(3, oo))
True
>>> is_decreasing(1/(x**2 - 3*x), Interval.Ropen(-oo, S(3)/2))
False
>>> is_decreasing(-x**2, Interval(-oo, 0))
False
>>> is_decreasing(-x**2 + y, Interval(-oo, 0), x)
False
"""
return monotonicity_helper(expression, lambda x: x <= 0, interval, symbol)
def is_strictly_decreasing(expression, interval=S.Reals, symbol=None):
"""
Return whether the function is strictly decreasing in the given interval.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import is_strictly_decreasing
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import S, Interval, oo
>>> is_strictly_decreasing(1/(x**2 - 3*x), Interval.Lopen(3, oo))
True
>>> is_strictly_decreasing(1/(x**2 - 3*x), Interval.Ropen(-oo, S(3)/2))
False
>>> is_strictly_decreasing(-x**2, Interval(-oo, 0))
False
>>> is_strictly_decreasing(-x**2 + y, Interval(-oo, 0), x)
False
"""
return monotonicity_helper(expression, lambda x: x < 0, interval, symbol)
def is_monotonic(expression, interval=S.Reals, symbol=None):
"""
Return whether the function is monotonic in the given interval.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import is_monotonic
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import S, Interval, oo
>>> is_monotonic(1/(x**2 - 3*x), Interval.open(1.5, 3))
True
>>> is_monotonic(1/(x**2 - 3*x), Interval.Lopen(3, oo))
True
>>> is_monotonic(x**3 - 3*x**2 + 4*x, S.Reals)
True
>>> is_monotonic(-x**2, S.Reals)
False
>>> is_monotonic(x**2 + y + 1, Interval(1, 2), x)
True
"""
expression = sympify(expression)
free = expression.free_symbols
if symbol is None and len(free) > 1:
raise NotImplementedError(
'is_monotonic has not yet been implemented'
' for all multivariate expressions.'
)
x = symbol or (free.pop() if free else Symbol('x'))
turning_points = solveset(expression.diff(x), x, interval)
return interval.intersection(turning_points) is S.EmptySet
|
72185456447a27a822506b4558df586400bc4110f61c9341e6981605a74e21b2
|
"""
This module implements a method to find
Euler-Lagrange Equations for given Lagrangian.
"""
from itertools import combinations_with_replacement
from sympy import Function, sympify, diff, Eq, S, Symbol, Derivative
from sympy.core.compatibility import (iterable, range)
def euler_equations(L, funcs=(), vars=()):
r"""
Find the Euler-Lagrange equations [1]_ for a given Lagrangian.
Parameters
==========
L : Expr
The Lagrangian that should be a function of the functions listed
in the second argument and their derivatives.
For example, in the case of two functions `f(x,y)`, `g(x,y)` and
two independent variables `x`, `y` the Lagrangian would have the form:
.. math:: L\left(f(x,y),g(x,y),\frac{\partial f(x,y)}{\partial x},
\frac{\partial f(x,y)}{\partial y},
\frac{\partial g(x,y)}{\partial x},
\frac{\partial g(x,y)}{\partial y},x,y\right)
In many cases it is not necessary to provide anything, except the
Lagrangian, it will be auto-detected (and an error raised if this
couldn't be done).
funcs : Function or an iterable of Functions
The functions that the Lagrangian depends on. The Euler equations
are differential equations for each of these functions.
vars : Symbol or an iterable of Symbols
The Symbols that are the independent variables of the functions.
Returns
=======
eqns : list of Eq
The list of differential equations, one for each function.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, Function
>>> from sympy.calculus.euler import euler_equations
>>> x = Function('x')
>>> t = Symbol('t')
>>> L = (x(t).diff(t))**2/2 - x(t)**2/2
>>> euler_equations(L, x(t), t)
[Eq(-x(t) - Derivative(x(t), (t, 2)), 0)]
>>> u = Function('u')
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> L = (u(t, x).diff(t))**2/2 - (u(t, x).diff(x))**2/2
>>> euler_equations(L, u(t, x), [t, x])
[Eq(-Derivative(u(t, x), (t, 2)) + Derivative(u(t, x), (x, 2)), 0)]
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%E2%80%93Lagrange_equation
"""
funcs = tuple(funcs) if iterable(funcs) else (funcs,)
if not funcs:
funcs = tuple(L.atoms(Function))
else:
for f in funcs:
if not isinstance(f, Function):
raise TypeError('Function expected, got: %s' % f)
vars = tuple(vars) if iterable(vars) else (vars,)
if not vars:
vars = funcs[0].args
else:
vars = tuple(sympify(var) for var in vars)
if not all(isinstance(v, Symbol) for v in vars):
raise TypeError('Variables are not symbols, got %s' % vars)
for f in funcs:
if not vars == f.args:
raise ValueError("Variables %s don't match args: %s" % (vars, f))
order = max(len(d.variables) for d in L.atoms(Derivative)
if d.expr in funcs)
eqns = []
for f in funcs:
eq = diff(L, f)
for i in range(1, order + 1):
for p in combinations_with_replacement(vars, i):
eq = eq + S.NegativeOne**i*diff(L, diff(f, *p), *p)
eqns.append(Eq(eq))
return eqns
|
a1aea420a7c060029767611ab1fcaf028306e2603c03f1b5bc6fe083e15131eb
|
from sympy import Order, S, log, limit, lcm_list, pi, Abs
from sympy.core.basic import Basic
from sympy.core import Add, Mul, Pow
from sympy.logic.boolalg import And
from sympy.core.expr import AtomicExpr, Expr
from sympy.core.numbers import _sympifyit, oo
from sympy.core.sympify import _sympify
from sympy.sets.sets import (Interval, Intersection, FiniteSet, Union,
Complement, EmptySet)
from sympy.sets.conditionset import ConditionSet
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import Min, Max
from sympy.utilities import filldedent
from sympy.simplify.radsimp import denom
from sympy.polys.rationaltools import together
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable
def continuous_domain(f, symbol, domain):
"""
Returns the intervals in the given domain for which the function
is continuous.
This method is limited by the ability to determine the various
singularities and discontinuities of the given function.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, S, tan, log, pi, sqrt
>>> from sympy.sets import Interval
>>> from sympy.calculus.util import continuous_domain
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> continuous_domain(1/x, x, S.Reals)
Union(Interval.open(-oo, 0), Interval.open(0, oo))
>>> continuous_domain(tan(x), x, Interval(0, pi))
Union(Interval.Ropen(0, pi/2), Interval.Lopen(pi/2, pi))
>>> continuous_domain(sqrt(x - 2), x, Interval(-5, 5))
Interval(2, 5)
>>> continuous_domain(log(2*x - 1), x, S.Reals)
Interval.open(1/2, oo)
"""
from sympy.solvers.inequalities import solve_univariate_inequality
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset, _has_rational_power
if domain.is_subset(S.Reals):
constrained_interval = domain
for atom in f.atoms(Pow):
predicate, denomin = _has_rational_power(atom, symbol)
constraint = S.EmptySet
if predicate and denomin == 2:
constraint = solve_univariate_inequality(atom.base >= 0,
symbol).as_set()
constrained_interval = Intersection(constraint,
constrained_interval)
for atom in f.atoms(log):
constraint = solve_univariate_inequality(atom.args[0] > 0,
symbol).as_set()
constrained_interval = Intersection(constraint,
constrained_interval)
domain = constrained_interval
try:
sings = S.EmptySet
if f.has(Abs):
sings = solveset(1/f, symbol, domain) + \
solveset(denom(together(f)), symbol, domain)
else:
for atom in f.atoms(Pow):
predicate, denomin = _has_rational_power(atom, symbol)
if predicate and denomin == 2:
sings = solveset(1/f, symbol, domain) +\
solveset(denom(together(f)), symbol, domain)
break
else:
sings = Intersection(solveset(1/f, symbol), domain) + \
solveset(denom(together(f)), symbol, domain)
except NotImplementedError:
import sys
raise (NotImplementedError("Methods for determining the continuous domains"
" of this function have not been developed."),
None,
sys.exc_info()[2])
return domain - sings
def function_range(f, symbol, domain):
"""
Finds the range of a function in a given domain.
This method is limited by the ability to determine the singularities and
determine limits.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, S, exp, log, pi, sqrt, sin, tan
>>> from sympy.sets import Interval
>>> from sympy.calculus.util import function_range
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> function_range(sin(x), x, Interval(0, 2*pi))
Interval(-1, 1)
>>> function_range(tan(x), x, Interval(-pi/2, pi/2))
Interval(-oo, oo)
>>> function_range(1/x, x, S.Reals)
Union(Interval.open(-oo, 0), Interval.open(0, oo))
>>> function_range(exp(x), x, S.Reals)
Interval.open(0, oo)
>>> function_range(log(x), x, S.Reals)
Interval(-oo, oo)
>>> function_range(sqrt(x), x , Interval(-5, 9))
Interval(0, 3)
"""
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset
if isinstance(domain, EmptySet):
return S.EmptySet
period = periodicity(f, symbol)
if period is S.Zero:
# the expression is constant wrt symbol
return FiniteSet(f.expand())
if period is not None:
if isinstance(domain, Interval):
if (domain.inf - domain.sup).is_infinite:
domain = Interval(0, period)
elif isinstance(domain, Union):
for sub_dom in domain.args:
if isinstance(sub_dom, Interval) and \
((sub_dom.inf - sub_dom.sup).is_infinite):
domain = Interval(0, period)
intervals = continuous_domain(f, symbol, domain)
range_int = S.EmptySet
if isinstance(intervals,(Interval, FiniteSet)):
interval_iter = (intervals,)
elif isinstance(intervals, Union):
interval_iter = intervals.args
else:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
Unable to find range for the given domain.
'''))
for interval in interval_iter:
if isinstance(interval, FiniteSet):
for singleton in interval:
if singleton in domain:
range_int += FiniteSet(f.subs(symbol, singleton))
elif isinstance(interval, Interval):
vals = S.EmptySet
critical_points = S.EmptySet
critical_values = S.EmptySet
bounds = ((interval.left_open, interval.inf, '+'),
(interval.right_open, interval.sup, '-'))
for is_open, limit_point, direction in bounds:
if is_open:
critical_values += FiniteSet(limit(f, symbol, limit_point, direction))
vals += critical_values
else:
vals += FiniteSet(f.subs(symbol, limit_point))
solution = solveset(f.diff(symbol), symbol, interval)
if not iterable(solution):
raise NotImplementedError('Unable to find critical points for {}'.format(f))
critical_points += solution
for critical_point in critical_points:
vals += FiniteSet(f.subs(symbol, critical_point))
left_open, right_open = False, False
if critical_values is not S.EmptySet:
if critical_values.inf == vals.inf:
left_open = True
if critical_values.sup == vals.sup:
right_open = True
range_int += Interval(vals.inf, vals.sup, left_open, right_open)
else:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
Unable to find range for the given domain.
'''))
return range_int
def not_empty_in(finset_intersection, *syms):
""" Finds the domain of the functions in `finite_set` in which the
`finite_set` is not-empty
Parameters
==========
finset_intersection: The unevaluated intersection of FiniteSet containing
real-valued functions with Union of Sets
syms: Tuple of symbols
Symbol for which domain is to be found
Raises
======
NotImplementedError
The algorithms to find the non-emptiness of the given FiniteSet are
not yet implemented.
ValueError
The input is not valid.
RuntimeError
It is a bug, please report it to the github issue tracker
(https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import FiniteSet, Interval, not_empty_in, oo
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> not_empty_in(FiniteSet(x/2).intersect(Interval(0, 1)), x)
Interval(0, 2)
>>> not_empty_in(FiniteSet(x, x**2).intersect(Interval(1, 2)), x)
Union(Interval(-sqrt(2), -1), Interval(1, 2))
>>> not_empty_in(FiniteSet(x**2/(x + 2)).intersect(Interval(1, oo)), x)
Union(Interval.Lopen(-2, -1), Interval(2, oo))
"""
# TODO: handle piecewise defined functions
# TODO: handle transcendental functions
# TODO: handle multivariate functions
if len(syms) == 0:
raise ValueError("One or more symbols must be given in syms.")
if finset_intersection.is_EmptySet:
return EmptySet()
if isinstance(finset_intersection, Union):
elm_in_sets = finset_intersection.args[0]
return Union(not_empty_in(finset_intersection.args[1], *syms),
elm_in_sets)
if isinstance(finset_intersection, FiniteSet):
finite_set = finset_intersection
_sets = S.Reals
else:
finite_set = finset_intersection.args[1]
_sets = finset_intersection.args[0]
if not isinstance(finite_set, FiniteSet):
raise ValueError('A FiniteSet must be given, not %s: %s' %
(type(finite_set), finite_set))
if len(syms) == 1:
symb = syms[0]
else:
raise NotImplementedError('more than one variables %s not handled' %
(syms,))
def elm_domain(expr, intrvl):
""" Finds the domain of an expression in any given interval """
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset
_start = intrvl.start
_end = intrvl.end
_singularities = solveset(expr.as_numer_denom()[1], symb,
domain=S.Reals)
if intrvl.right_open:
if _end is S.Infinity:
_domain1 = S.Reals
else:
_domain1 = solveset(expr < _end, symb, domain=S.Reals)
else:
_domain1 = solveset(expr <= _end, symb, domain=S.Reals)
if intrvl.left_open:
if _start is S.NegativeInfinity:
_domain2 = S.Reals
else:
_domain2 = solveset(expr > _start, symb, domain=S.Reals)
else:
_domain2 = solveset(expr >= _start, symb, domain=S.Reals)
# domain in the interval
expr_with_sing = Intersection(_domain1, _domain2)
expr_domain = Complement(expr_with_sing, _singularities)
return expr_domain
if isinstance(_sets, Interval):
return Union(*[elm_domain(element, _sets) for element in finite_set])
if isinstance(_sets, Union):
_domain = S.EmptySet
for intrvl in _sets.args:
_domain_element = Union(*[elm_domain(element, intrvl)
for element in finite_set])
_domain = Union(_domain, _domain_element)
return _domain
def periodicity(f, symbol, check=False):
"""
Tests the given function for periodicity in the given symbol.
Parameters
==========
f : Expr.
The concerned function.
symbol : Symbol
The variable for which the period is to be determined.
check : Boolean
The flag to verify whether the value being returned is a period or not.
Returns
=======
period
The period of the function is returned.
`None` is returned when the function is aperiodic or has a complex period.
The value of `0` is returned as the period of a constant function.
Raises
======
NotImplementedError
The value of the period computed cannot be verified.
Notes
=====
Currently, we do not support functions with a complex period.
The period of functions having complex periodic values such
as `exp`, `sinh` is evaluated to `None`.
The value returned might not be the "fundamental" period of the given
function i.e. it may not be the smallest periodic value of the function.
The verification of the period through the `check` flag is not reliable
due to internal simplification of the given expression. Hence, it is set
to `False` by default.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, sin, cos, tan, exp
>>> from sympy.calculus.util import periodicity
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> f = sin(x) + sin(2*x) + sin(3*x)
>>> periodicity(f, x)
2*pi
>>> periodicity(sin(x)*cos(x), x)
pi
>>> periodicity(exp(tan(2*x) - 1), x)
pi/2
>>> periodicity(sin(4*x)**cos(2*x), x)
pi
>>> periodicity(exp(x), x)
"""
from sympy.core.function import diff
from sympy.core.mod import Mod
from sympy.core.relational import Relational
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import Abs
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import (
TrigonometricFunction, sin, cos, csc, sec)
from sympy.simplify.simplify import simplify
from sympy.solvers.decompogen import decompogen
from sympy.polys.polytools import degree, lcm_list
def _check(orig_f, period):
'''Return the checked period or raise an error.'''
new_f = orig_f.subs(symbol, symbol + period)
if new_f.equals(orig_f):
return period
else:
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent('''
The period of the given function cannot be verified.
When `%s` was replaced with `%s + %s` in `%s`, the result
was `%s` which was not recognized as being the same as
the original function.
So either the period was wrong or the two forms were
not recognized as being equal.
Set check=False to obtain the value.''' %
(symbol, symbol, period, orig_f, new_f)))
orig_f = f
period = None
if isinstance(f, Relational):
f = f.lhs - f.rhs
f = simplify(f)
if symbol not in f.free_symbols:
return S.Zero
if isinstance(f, TrigonometricFunction):
try:
period = f.period(symbol)
except NotImplementedError:
pass
if isinstance(f, Abs):
arg = f.args[0]
if isinstance(arg, (sec, csc, cos)):
# all but tan and cot might have a
# a period that is half as large
# so recast as sin
arg = sin(arg.args[0])
period = periodicity(arg, symbol)
if period is not None and isinstance(arg, sin):
# the argument of Abs was a trigonometric other than
# cot or tan; test to see if the half-period
# is valid. Abs(arg) has behaviour equivalent to
# orig_f, so use that for test:
orig_f = Abs(arg)
try:
return _check(orig_f, period/2)
except NotImplementedError as err:
if check:
raise NotImplementedError(err)
# else let new orig_f and period be
# checked below
if f.is_Pow:
base, expo = f.args
base_has_sym = base.has(symbol)
expo_has_sym = expo.has(symbol)
if base_has_sym and not expo_has_sym:
period = periodicity(base, symbol)
elif expo_has_sym and not base_has_sym:
period = periodicity(expo, symbol)
else:
period = _periodicity(f.args, symbol)
elif f.is_Mul:
coeff, g = f.as_independent(symbol, as_Add=False)
if isinstance(g, TrigonometricFunction) or coeff is not S.One:
period = periodicity(g, symbol)
else:
period = _periodicity(g.args, symbol)
elif f.is_Add:
k, g = f.as_independent(symbol)
if k is not S.Zero:
return periodicity(g, symbol)
period = _periodicity(g.args, symbol)
elif isinstance(f, Mod):
a, n = f.args
if a == symbol:
period = n
elif isinstance(a, TrigonometricFunction):
period = periodicity(a, symbol)
#check if 'f' is linear in 'symbol'
elif (a.is_polynomial(symbol) and degree(a, symbol) == 1 and
symbol not in n.free_symbols):
period = Abs(n / a.diff(symbol))
elif period is None:
from sympy.solvers.decompogen import compogen
g_s = decompogen(f, symbol)
num_of_gs = len(g_s)
if num_of_gs > 1:
for index, g in enumerate(reversed(g_s)):
start_index = num_of_gs - 1 - index
g = compogen(g_s[start_index:], symbol)
if g != orig_f and g != f: # Fix for issue 12620
period = periodicity(g, symbol)
if period is not None:
break
if period is not None:
if check:
return _check(orig_f, period)
return period
return None
def _periodicity(args, symbol):
"""Helper for periodicity to find the period of a list of simpler
functions. It uses the `lcim` method to find the least common period of
all the functions.
"""
periods = []
for f in args:
period = periodicity(f, symbol)
if period is None:
return None
if period is not S.Zero:
periods.append(period)
if len(periods) > 1:
return lcim(periods)
return periods[0]
def lcim(numbers):
"""Returns the least common integral multiple of a list of numbers.
The numbers can be rational or irrational or a mixture of both.
`None` is returned for incommensurable numbers.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S, pi
>>> from sympy.calculus.util import lcim
>>> lcim([S(1)/2, S(3)/4, S(5)/6])
15/2
>>> lcim([2*pi, 3*pi, pi, pi/2])
6*pi
>>> lcim([S(1), 2*pi])
"""
result = None
if all(num.is_irrational for num in numbers):
factorized_nums = list(map(lambda num: num.factor(), numbers))
factors_num = list(
map(lambda num: num.as_coeff_Mul(),
factorized_nums))
term = factors_num[0][1]
if all(factor == term for coeff, factor in factors_num):
common_term = term
coeffs = [coeff for coeff, factor in factors_num]
result = lcm_list(coeffs) * common_term
elif all(num.is_rational for num in numbers):
result = lcm_list(numbers)
else:
pass
return result
class AccumulationBounds(AtomicExpr):
r"""
# Note AccumulationBounds has an alias: AccumBounds
AccumulationBounds represent an interval `[a, b]`, which is always closed
at the ends. Here `a` and `b` can be any value from extended real numbers.
The intended meaning of AccummulationBounds is to give an approximate
location of the accumulation points of a real function at a limit point.
Let `a` and `b` be reals such that a <= b.
`\langle a, b\rangle = \{x \in \mathbb{R} \mid a \le x \le b\}`
`\langle -\infty, b\rangle = \{x \in \mathbb{R} \mid x \le b\} \cup \{-\infty, \infty\}`
`\langle a, \infty \rangle = \{x \in \mathbb{R} \mid a \le x\} \cup \{-\infty, \infty\}`
`\langle -\infty, \infty \rangle = \mathbb{R} \cup \{-\infty, \infty\}`
`oo` and `-oo` are added to the second and third definition respectively,
since if either `-oo` or `oo` is an argument, then the other one should
be included (though not as an end point). This is forced, since we have,
for example, `1/AccumBounds(0, 1) = AccumBounds(1, oo)`, and the limit at
`0` is not one-sided. As x tends to `0-`, then `1/x -> -oo`, so `-oo`
should be interpreted as belonging to `AccumBounds(1, oo)` though it need
not appear explicitly.
In many cases it suffices to know that the limit set is bounded.
However, in some other cases more exact information could be useful.
For example, all accumulation values of cos(x) + 1 are non-negative.
(AccumBounds(-1, 1) + 1 = AccumBounds(0, 2))
A AccumulationBounds object is defined to be real AccumulationBounds,
if its end points are finite reals.
Let `X`, `Y` be real AccumulationBounds, then their sum, difference,
product are defined to be the following sets:
`X + Y = \{ x+y \mid x \in X \cap y \in Y\}`
`X - Y = \{ x-y \mid x \in X \cap y \in Y\}`
`X * Y = \{ x*y \mid x \in X \cap y \in Y\}`
There is, however, no consensus on Interval division.
`X / Y = \{ z \mid \exists x \in X, y \in Y \mid y \neq 0, z = x/y\}`
Note: According to this definition the quotient of two AccumulationBounds
may not be a AccumulationBounds object but rather a union of
AccumulationBounds.
Note
====
The main focus in the interval arithmetic is on the simplest way to
calculate upper and lower endpoints for the range of values of a
function in one or more variables. These barriers are not necessarily
the supremum or infimum, since the precise calculation of those values
can be difficult or impossible.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds, sin, exp, log, pi, E, S, oo
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> AccumBounds(0, 1) + AccumBounds(1, 2)
AccumBounds(1, 3)
>>> AccumBounds(0, 1) - AccumBounds(0, 2)
AccumBounds(-2, 1)
>>> AccumBounds(-2, 3)*AccumBounds(-1, 1)
AccumBounds(-3, 3)
>>> AccumBounds(1, 2)*AccumBounds(3, 5)
AccumBounds(3, 10)
The exponentiation of AccumulationBounds is defined
as follows:
If 0 does not belong to `X` or `n > 0` then
`X^n = \{ x^n \mid x \in X\}`
otherwise
`X^n = \{ x^n \mid x \neq 0, x \in X\} \cup \{-\infty, \infty\}`
Here for fractional `n`, the part of `X` resulting in a complex
AccumulationBounds object is neglected.
>>> AccumBounds(-1, 4)**(S(1)/2)
AccumBounds(0, 2)
>>> AccumBounds(1, 2)**2
AccumBounds(1, 4)
>>> AccumBounds(-1, oo)**(-1)
AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
Note: `<a, b>^2` is not same as `<a, b>*<a, b>`
>>> AccumBounds(-1, 1)**2
AccumBounds(0, 1)
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3) < 4
True
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3) < -1
False
Some elementary functions can also take AccumulationBounds as input.
A function `f` evaluated for some real AccumulationBounds `<a, b>`
is defined as `f(\langle a, b\rangle) = \{ f(x) \mid a \le x \le b \}`
>>> sin(AccumBounds(pi/6, pi/3))
AccumBounds(1/2, sqrt(3)/2)
>>> exp(AccumBounds(0, 1))
AccumBounds(1, E)
>>> log(AccumBounds(1, E))
AccumBounds(0, 1)
Some symbol in an expression can be substituted for a AccumulationBounds
object. But it doesn't necessarily evaluate the AccumulationBounds for
that expression.
Same expression can be evaluated to different values depending upon
the form it is used for substitution. For example:
>>> (x**2 + 2*x + 1).subs(x, AccumBounds(-1, 1))
AccumBounds(-1, 4)
>>> ((x + 1)**2).subs(x, AccumBounds(-1, 1))
AccumBounds(0, 4)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_arithmetic
.. [2] http://fab.cba.mit.edu/classes/S62.12/docs/Hickey_interval.pdf
Notes
=====
Do not use ``AccumulationBounds`` for floating point interval arithmetic
calculations, use ``mpmath.iv`` instead.
"""
is_real = True
def __new__(cls, min, max):
min = _sympify(min)
max = _sympify(max)
inftys = [S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity]
# Only allow real intervals (use symbols with 'is_real=True').
if not (min.is_real or min in inftys) \
or not (max.is_real or max in inftys):
raise ValueError("Only real AccumulationBounds are supported")
# Make sure that the created AccumBounds object will be valid.
if max.is_comparable and min.is_comparable:
if max < min:
raise ValueError(
"Lower limit should be smaller than upper limit")
if max == min:
return max
return Basic.__new__(cls, min, max)
# setting the operation priority
_op_priority = 11.0
@property
def min(self):
"""
Returns the minimum possible value attained by AccumulationBounds
object.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3).min
1
"""
return self.args[0]
@property
def max(self):
"""
Returns the maximum possible value attained by AccumulationBounds
object.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3).max
3
"""
return self.args[1]
@property
def delta(self):
"""
Returns the difference of maximum possible value attained by
AccumulationBounds object and minimum possible value attained
by AccumulationBounds object.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3).delta
2
"""
return self.max - self.min
@property
def mid(self):
"""
Returns the mean of maximum possible value attained by
AccumulationBounds object and minimum possible value
attained by AccumulationBounds object.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3).mid
2
"""
return (self.min + self.max) / 2
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def _eval_power(self, other):
return self.__pow__(other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __add__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Expr):
if isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
return AccumBounds(
Add(self.min, other.min),
Add(self.max, other.max))
if other is S.Infinity and self.min is S.NegativeInfinity or \
other is S.NegativeInfinity and self.max is S.Infinity:
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
elif other.is_real:
return AccumBounds(Add(self.min, other), Add(self.max, other))
return Add(self, other, evaluate=False)
return NotImplemented
__radd__ = __add__
def __neg__(self):
return AccumBounds(-self.max, -self.min)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __sub__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Expr):
if isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
return AccumBounds(
Add(self.min, -other.max),
Add(self.max, -other.min))
if other is S.NegativeInfinity and self.min is S.NegativeInfinity or \
other is S.Infinity and self.max is S.Infinity:
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
elif other.is_real:
return AccumBounds(
Add(self.min, -other),
Add(self.max, -other))
return Add(self, -other, evaluate=False)
return NotImplemented
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __rsub__(self, other):
return self.__neg__() + other
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mul__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Expr):
if isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
return AccumBounds(Min(Mul(self.min, other.min),
Mul(self.min, other.max),
Mul(self.max, other.min),
Mul(self.max, other.max)),
Max(Mul(self.min, other.min),
Mul(self.min, other.max),
Mul(self.max, other.min),
Mul(self.max, other.max)))
if other is S.Infinity:
if self.min.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(0, oo)
if self.max.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(-oo, 0)
if other is S.NegativeInfinity:
if self.min.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(-oo, 0)
if self.max.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(0, oo)
if other.is_real:
if other.is_zero:
if self == AccumBounds(-oo, oo):
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
if self.max is S.Infinity:
return AccumBounds(0, oo)
if self.min is S.NegativeInfinity:
return AccumBounds(-oo, 0)
return S.Zero
if other.is_positive:
return AccumBounds(
Mul(self.min, other),
Mul(self.max, other))
elif other.is_negative:
return AccumBounds(
Mul(self.max, other),
Mul(self.min, other))
if isinstance(other, Order):
return other
return Mul(self, other, evaluate=False)
return NotImplemented
__rmul__ = __mul__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __div__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Expr):
if isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
if S.Zero not in other:
return self * AccumBounds(1/other.max, 1/other.min)
if S.Zero in self and S.Zero in other:
if self.min.is_zero and other.min.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(0, oo)
if self.max.is_zero and other.min.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(-oo, 0)
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
if self.max.is_negative:
if other.min.is_negative:
if other.max.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(self.max / other.min, oo)
if other.max.is_positive:
# the actual answer is a Union of AccumBounds,
# Union(AccumBounds(-oo, self.max/other.max),
# AccumBounds(self.max/other.min, oo))
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
if other.min.is_zero and other.max.is_positive:
return AccumBounds(-oo, self.max / other.max)
if self.min.is_positive:
if other.min.is_negative:
if other.max.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(-oo, self.min / other.min)
if other.max.is_positive:
# the actual answer is a Union of AccumBounds,
# Union(AccumBounds(-oo, self.min/other.min),
# AccumBounds(self.min/other.max, oo))
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
if other.min.is_zero and other.max.is_positive:
return AccumBounds(self.min / other.max, oo)
elif other.is_real:
if other is S.Infinity or other is S.NegativeInfinity:
if self == AccumBounds(-oo, oo):
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
if self.max is S.Infinity:
return AccumBounds(Min(0, other), Max(0, other))
if self.min is S.NegativeInfinity:
return AccumBounds(Min(0, -other), Max(0, -other))
if other.is_positive:
return AccumBounds(self.min / other, self.max / other)
elif other.is_negative:
return AccumBounds(self.max / other, self.min / other)
return Mul(self, 1 / other, evaluate=False)
return NotImplemented
__truediv__ = __div__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __rdiv__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Expr):
if other.is_real:
if other.is_zero:
return S.Zero
if S.Zero in self:
if self.min == S.Zero:
if other.is_positive:
return AccumBounds(Mul(other, 1 / self.max), oo)
if other.is_negative:
return AccumBounds(-oo, Mul(other, 1 / self.max))
if self.max == S.Zero:
if other.is_positive:
return AccumBounds(-oo, Mul(other, 1 / self.min))
if other.is_negative:
return AccumBounds(Mul(other, 1 / self.min), oo)
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
else:
return AccumBounds(Min(other / self.min, other / self.max),
Max(other / self.min, other / self.max))
return Mul(other, 1 / self, evaluate=False)
else:
return NotImplemented
__rtruediv__ = __rdiv__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __pow__(self, other):
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import real_root
if isinstance(other, Expr):
if other is S.Infinity:
if self.min.is_nonnegative:
if self.max < 1:
return S.Zero
if self.min > 1:
return S.Infinity
return AccumBounds(0, oo)
elif self.max.is_negative:
if self.min > -1:
return S.Zero
if self.max < -1:
return FiniteSet(-oo, oo)
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
else:
if self.min > -1:
if self.max < 1:
return S.Zero
return AccumBounds(0, oo)
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
if other is S.NegativeInfinity:
return (1 / self)**oo
if other.is_real and other.is_number:
if other.is_zero:
return S.One
if other.is_Integer:
if self.min.is_positive:
return AccumBounds(
Min(self.min ** other, self.max ** other),
Max(self.min ** other, self.max ** other))
elif self.max.is_negative:
return AccumBounds(
Min(self.max ** other, self.min ** other),
Max(self.max ** other, self.min ** other))
if other % 2 == 0:
if other.is_negative:
if self.min.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(self.max**other, oo)
if self.max.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(self.min**other, oo)
return AccumBounds(0, oo)
return AccumBounds(
S.Zero, Max(self.min**other, self.max**other))
else:
if other.is_negative:
if self.min.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(self.max**other, oo)
if self.max.is_zero:
return AccumBounds(-oo, self.min**other)
return AccumBounds(-oo, oo)
return AccumBounds(self.min**other, self.max**other)
num, den = other.as_numer_denom()
if num == S(1):
if den % 2 == 0:
if S.Zero in self:
if self.min.is_negative:
return AccumBounds(0, real_root(self.max, den))
return AccumBounds(real_root(self.min, den),
real_root(self.max, den))
num_pow = self**num
return num_pow**(1 / den)
return Pow(self, other, evaluate=False)
return NotImplemented
def __abs__(self):
if self.max.is_negative:
return self.__neg__()
elif self.min.is_negative:
return AccumBounds(S.Zero, Max(abs(self.min), self.max))
else:
return self
def __lt__(self, other):
"""
Returns True if range of values attained by `self` AccumulationBounds
object is less than the range of values attained by `other`, where
other may be any value of type AccumulationBounds object or extended
real number value, False if `other` satisfies the same property, else
an unevaluated Relational
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds, oo
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3) < AccumBounds(4, oo)
True
>>> AccumBounds(1, 4) < AccumBounds(3, 4)
AccumBounds(1, 4) < AccumBounds(3, 4)
>>> AccumBounds(1, oo) < -1
False
"""
other = _sympify(other)
if isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
if self.max < other.min:
return True
if self.min >= other.max:
return False
elif not(other.is_real or other is S.Infinity or
other is S.NegativeInfinity):
raise TypeError(
"Invalid comparison of %s %s" %
(type(other), other))
elif other.is_comparable:
if self.max < other:
return True
if self.min >= other:
return False
return super(AccumulationBounds, self).__lt__(other)
def __le__(self, other):
"""
Returns True if range of values attained by `self` AccumulationBounds
object is less than or equal to the range of values attained by
`other`, where other may be any value of type AccumulationBounds
object or extended real number value, False if `other`
satisfies the same property, else an unevaluated Relational.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds, oo
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3) <= AccumBounds(4, oo)
True
>>> AccumBounds(1, 4) <= AccumBounds(3, 4)
AccumBounds(1, 4) <= AccumBounds(3, 4)
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3) <= 0
False
"""
other = _sympify(other)
if isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
if self.max <= other.min:
return True
if self.min > other.max:
return False
elif not(other.is_real or other is S.Infinity or
other is S.NegativeInfinity):
raise TypeError(
"Invalid comparison of %s %s" %
(type(other), other))
elif other.is_comparable:
if self.max <= other:
return True
if self.min > other:
return False
return super(AccumulationBounds, self).__le__(other)
def __gt__(self, other):
"""
Returns True if range of values attained by `self` AccumulationBounds
object is greater than the range of values attained by `other`,
where other may be any value of type AccumulationBounds object or
extended real number value, False if `other` satisfies
the same property, else an unevaluated Relational.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds, oo
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3) > AccumBounds(4, oo)
False
>>> AccumBounds(1, 4) > AccumBounds(3, 4)
AccumBounds(1, 4) > AccumBounds(3, 4)
>>> AccumBounds(1, oo) > -1
True
"""
other = _sympify(other)
if isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
if self.min > other.max:
return True
if self.max <= other.min:
return False
elif not(other.is_real or other is S.Infinity or
other is S.NegativeInfinity):
raise TypeError(
"Invalid comparison of %s %s" %
(type(other), other))
elif other.is_comparable:
if self.min > other:
return True
if self.max <= other:
return False
return super(AccumulationBounds, self).__gt__(other)
def __ge__(self, other):
"""
Returns True if range of values attained by `self` AccumulationBounds
object is less that the range of values attained by `other`, where
other may be any value of type AccumulationBounds object or extended
real number value, False if `other` satisfies the same
property, else an unevaluated Relational.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds, oo
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3) >= AccumBounds(4, oo)
False
>>> AccumBounds(1, 4) >= AccumBounds(3, 4)
AccumBounds(1, 4) >= AccumBounds(3, 4)
>>> AccumBounds(1, oo) >= 1
True
"""
other = _sympify(other)
if isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
if self.min >= other.max:
return True
if self.max < other.min:
return False
elif not(other.is_real or other is S.Infinity or
other is S.NegativeInfinity):
raise TypeError(
"Invalid comparison of %s %s" %
(type(other), other))
elif other.is_comparable:
if self.min >= other:
return True
if self.max < other:
return False
return super(AccumulationBounds, self).__ge__(other)
def __contains__(self, other):
"""
Returns True if other is contained in self, where other
belongs to extended real numbers, False if not contained,
otherwise TypeError is raised.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds, oo
>>> 1 in AccumBounds(-1, 3)
True
-oo and oo go together as limits (in AccumulationBounds).
>>> -oo in AccumBounds(1, oo)
True
>>> oo in AccumBounds(-oo, 0)
True
"""
other = _sympify(other)
if other is S.Infinity or other is S.NegativeInfinity:
if self.min is S.NegativeInfinity or self.max is S.Infinity:
return True
return False
rv = And(self.min <= other, self.max >= other)
if rv not in (True, False):
raise TypeError("input failed to evaluate")
return rv
def intersection(self, other):
"""
Returns the intersection of 'self' and 'other'.
Here other can be an instance of FiniteSet or AccumulationBounds.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import AccumBounds, FiniteSet
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3).intersection(AccumBounds(2, 4))
AccumBounds(2, 3)
>>> AccumBounds(1, 3).intersection(AccumBounds(4, 6))
EmptySet()
>>> AccumBounds(1, 4).intersection(FiniteSet(1, 2, 5))
{1, 2}
"""
if not isinstance(other, (AccumBounds, FiniteSet)):
raise TypeError(
"Input must be AccumulationBounds or FiniteSet object")
if isinstance(other, FiniteSet):
fin_set = S.EmptySet
for i in other:
if i in self:
fin_set = fin_set + FiniteSet(i)
return fin_set
if self.max < other.min or self.min > other.max:
return S.EmptySet
if self.min <= other.min:
if self.max <= other.max:
return AccumBounds(other.min, self.max)
if self.max > other.max:
return other
if other.min <= self.min:
if other.max < self.max:
return AccumBounds(self.min, other.max)
if other.max > self.max:
return self
def union(self, other):
# TODO : Devise a better method for Union of AccumBounds
# this method is not actually correct and
# can be made better
if not isinstance(other, AccumBounds):
raise TypeError(
"Input must be AccumulationBounds or FiniteSet object")
if self.min <= other.min and self.max >= other.min:
return AccumBounds(self.min, Max(self.max, other.max))
if other.min <= self.min and other.max >= self.min:
return AccumBounds(other.min, Max(self.max, other.max))
# setting an alias for AccumulationBounds
AccumBounds = AccumulationBounds
|
db4aa970912343727fb28c9aaf7f0b90598763e96a9054df6ce21cf7d1c5d0f1
|
"""
module for generating C, C++, Fortran77, Fortran90, Julia, Rust
and Octave/Matlab routines that evaluate sympy expressions.
This module is work in progress.
Only the milestones with a '+' character in the list below have been completed.
--- How is sympy.utilities.codegen different from sympy.printing.ccode? ---
We considered the idea to extend the printing routines for sympy functions in
such a way that it prints complete compilable code, but this leads to a few
unsurmountable issues that can only be tackled with dedicated code generator:
- For C, one needs both a code and a header file, while the printing routines
generate just one string. This code generator can be extended to support
.pyf files for f2py.
- SymPy functions are not concerned with programming-technical issues, such
as input, output and input-output arguments. Other examples are contiguous
or non-contiguous arrays, including headers of other libraries such as gsl
or others.
- It is highly interesting to evaluate several sympy functions in one C
routine, eventually sharing common intermediate results with the help
of the cse routine. This is more than just printing.
- From the programming perspective, expressions with constants should be
evaluated in the code generator as much as possible. This is different
for printing.
--- Basic assumptions ---
* A generic Routine data structure describes the routine that must be
translated into C/Fortran/... code. This data structure covers all
features present in one or more of the supported languages.
* Descendants from the CodeGen class transform multiple Routine instances
into compilable code. Each derived class translates into a specific
language.
* In many cases, one wants a simple workflow. The friendly functions in the
last part are a simple api on top of the Routine/CodeGen stuff. They are
easier to use, but are less powerful.
--- Milestones ---
+ First working version with scalar input arguments, generating C code,
tests
+ Friendly functions that are easier to use than the rigorous
Routine/CodeGen workflow.
+ Integer and Real numbers as input and output
+ Output arguments
+ InputOutput arguments
+ Sort input/output arguments properly
+ Contiguous array arguments (numpy matrices)
+ Also generate .pyf code for f2py (in autowrap module)
+ Isolate constants and evaluate them beforehand in double precision
+ Fortran 90
+ Octave/Matlab
- Common Subexpression Elimination
- User defined comments in the generated code
- Optional extra include lines for libraries/objects that can eval special
functions
- Test other C compilers and libraries: gcc, tcc, libtcc, gcc+gsl, ...
- Contiguous array arguments (sympy matrices)
- Non-contiguous array arguments (sympy matrices)
- ccode must raise an error when it encounters something that can not be
translated into c. ccode(integrate(sin(x)/x, x)) does not make sense.
- Complex numbers as input and output
- A default complex datatype
- Include extra information in the header: date, user, hostname, sha1
hash, ...
- Fortran 77
- C++
- Python
- Julia
- Rust
- ...
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import os
import textwrap
from sympy import __version__ as sympy_version
from sympy.core import Symbol, S, Expr, Tuple, Equality, Function, Basic
from sympy.core.compatibility import is_sequence, StringIO, string_types
from sympy.printing.codeprinter import AssignmentError
from sympy.printing.ccode import c_code_printers
from sympy.printing.fcode import FCodePrinter
from sympy.printing.julia import JuliaCodePrinter
from sympy.printing.octave import OctaveCodePrinter
from sympy.printing.rust import RustCodePrinter
from sympy.tensor import Idx, Indexed, IndexedBase
from sympy.matrices import (MatrixSymbol, ImmutableMatrix, MatrixBase,
MatrixExpr, MatrixSlice)
__all__ = [
# description of routines
"Routine", "DataType", "default_datatypes", "get_default_datatype",
"Argument", "InputArgument", "OutputArgument", "Result",
# routines -> code
"CodeGen", "CCodeGen", "FCodeGen", "JuliaCodeGen", "OctaveCodeGen",
"RustCodeGen",
# friendly functions
"codegen", "make_routine",
]
#
# Description of routines
#
class Routine(object):
"""Generic description of evaluation routine for set of expressions.
A CodeGen class can translate instances of this class into code in a
particular language. The routine specification covers all the features
present in these languages. The CodeGen part must raise an exception
when certain features are not present in the target language. For
example, multiple return values are possible in Python, but not in C or
Fortran. Another example: Fortran and Python support complex numbers,
while C does not.
"""
def __init__(self, name, arguments, results, local_vars, global_vars):
"""Initialize a Routine instance.
Parameters
==========
name : string
Name of the routine.
arguments : list of Arguments
These are things that appear in arguments of a routine, often
appearing on the right-hand side of a function call. These are
commonly InputArguments but in some languages, they can also be
OutputArguments or InOutArguments (e.g., pass-by-reference in C
code).
results : list of Results
These are the return values of the routine, often appearing on
the left-hand side of a function call. The difference between
Results and OutputArguments and when you should use each is
language-specific.
local_vars : list of Results
These are variables that will be defined at the beginning of the
function.
global_vars : list of Symbols
Variables which will not be passed into the function.
"""
# extract all input symbols and all symbols appearing in an expression
input_symbols = set([])
symbols = set([])
for arg in arguments:
if isinstance(arg, OutputArgument):
symbols.update(arg.expr.free_symbols - arg.expr.atoms(Indexed))
elif isinstance(arg, InputArgument):
input_symbols.add(arg.name)
elif isinstance(arg, InOutArgument):
input_symbols.add(arg.name)
symbols.update(arg.expr.free_symbols - arg.expr.atoms(Indexed))
else:
raise ValueError("Unknown Routine argument: %s" % arg)
for r in results:
if not isinstance(r, Result):
raise ValueError("Unknown Routine result: %s" % r)
symbols.update(r.expr.free_symbols - r.expr.atoms(Indexed))
local_symbols = set()
for r in local_vars:
if isinstance(r, Result):
symbols.update(r.expr.free_symbols - r.expr.atoms(Indexed))
local_symbols.add(r.name)
else:
local_symbols.add(r)
symbols = set([s.label if isinstance(s, Idx) else s for s in symbols])
# Check that all symbols in the expressions are covered by
# InputArguments/InOutArguments---subset because user could
# specify additional (unused) InputArguments or local_vars.
notcovered = symbols.difference(
input_symbols.union(local_symbols).union(global_vars))
if notcovered != set([]):
raise ValueError("Symbols needed for output are not in input " +
", ".join([str(x) for x in notcovered]))
self.name = name
self.arguments = arguments
self.results = results
self.local_vars = local_vars
self.global_vars = global_vars
def __str__(self):
return self.__class__.__name__ + "({name!r}, {arguments}, {results}, {local_vars}, {global_vars})".format(**self.__dict__)
__repr__ = __str__
@property
def variables(self):
"""Returns a set of all variables possibly used in the routine.
For routines with unnamed return values, the dummies that may or
may not be used will be included in the set.
"""
v = set(self.local_vars)
for arg in self.arguments:
v.add(arg.name)
for res in self.results:
v.add(res.result_var)
return v
@property
def result_variables(self):
"""Returns a list of OutputArgument, InOutArgument and Result.
If return values are present, they are at the end ot the list.
"""
args = [arg for arg in self.arguments if isinstance(
arg, (OutputArgument, InOutArgument))]
args.extend(self.results)
return args
class DataType(object):
"""Holds strings for a certain datatype in different languages."""
def __init__(self, cname, fname, pyname, jlname, octname, rsname):
self.cname = cname
self.fname = fname
self.pyname = pyname
self.jlname = jlname
self.octname = octname
self.rsname = rsname
default_datatypes = {
"int": DataType("int", "INTEGER*4", "int", "", "", "i32"),
"float": DataType("double", "REAL*8", "float", "", "", "f64"),
}
def get_default_datatype(expr):
"""Derives an appropriate datatype based on the expression."""
if expr.is_integer:
return default_datatypes["int"]
elif isinstance(expr, MatrixBase):
for element in expr:
if not element.is_integer:
return default_datatypes["float"]
return default_datatypes["int"]
else:
return default_datatypes["float"]
class Variable(object):
"""Represents a typed variable."""
def __init__(self, name, datatype=None, dimensions=None, precision=None):
"""Return a new variable.
Parameters
==========
name : Symbol or MatrixSymbol
datatype : optional
When not given, the data type will be guessed based on the
assumptions on the symbol argument.
dimension : sequence containing tupes, optional
If present, the argument is interpreted as an array, where this
sequence of tuples specifies (lower, upper) bounds for each
index of the array.
precision : int, optional
Controls the precision of floating point constants.
"""
if not isinstance(name, (Symbol, MatrixSymbol)):
raise TypeError("The first argument must be a sympy symbol.")
if datatype is None:
datatype = get_default_datatype(name)
elif not isinstance(datatype, DataType):
raise TypeError("The (optional) `datatype' argument must be an "
"instance of the DataType class.")
if dimensions and not isinstance(dimensions, (tuple, list)):
raise TypeError(
"The dimension argument must be a sequence of tuples")
self._name = name
self._datatype = {
'C': datatype.cname,
'FORTRAN': datatype.fname,
'JULIA': datatype.jlname,
'OCTAVE': datatype.octname,
'PYTHON': datatype.pyname,
'RUST': datatype.rsname,
}
self.dimensions = dimensions
self.precision = precision
def __str__(self):
return "%s(%r)" % (self.__class__.__name__, self.name)
__repr__ = __str__
@property
def name(self):
return self._name
def get_datatype(self, language):
"""Returns the datatype string for the requested language.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> from sympy.utilities.codegen import Variable
>>> x = Variable(Symbol('x'))
>>> x.get_datatype('c')
'double'
>>> x.get_datatype('fortran')
'REAL*8'
"""
try:
return self._datatype[language.upper()]
except KeyError:
raise CodeGenError("Has datatypes for languages: %s" %
", ".join(self._datatype))
class Argument(Variable):
"""An abstract Argument data structure: a name and a data type.
This structure is refined in the descendants below.
"""
pass
class InputArgument(Argument):
pass
class ResultBase(object):
"""Base class for all "outgoing" information from a routine.
Objects of this class stores a sympy expression, and a sympy object
representing a result variable that will be used in the generated code
only if necessary.
"""
def __init__(self, expr, result_var):
self.expr = expr
self.result_var = result_var
def __str__(self):
return "%s(%r, %r)" % (self.__class__.__name__, self.expr,
self.result_var)
__repr__ = __str__
class OutputArgument(Argument, ResultBase):
"""OutputArgument are always initialized in the routine."""
def __init__(self, name, result_var, expr, datatype=None, dimensions=None, precision=None):
"""Return a new variable.
Parameters
==========
name : Symbol, MatrixSymbol
The name of this variable. When used for code generation, this
might appear, for example, in the prototype of function in the
argument list.
result_var : Symbol, Indexed
Something that can be used to assign a value to this variable.
Typically the same as `name` but for Indexed this should be e.g.,
"y[i]" whereas `name` should be the Symbol "y".
expr : object
The expression that should be output, typically a SymPy
expression.
datatype : optional
When not given, the data type will be guessed based on the
assumptions on the symbol argument.
dimension : sequence containing tupes, optional
If present, the argument is interpreted as an array, where this
sequence of tuples specifies (lower, upper) bounds for each
index of the array.
precision : int, optional
Controls the precision of floating point constants.
"""
Argument.__init__(self, name, datatype, dimensions, precision)
ResultBase.__init__(self, expr, result_var)
def __str__(self):
return "%s(%r, %r, %r)" % (self.__class__.__name__, self.name, self.result_var, self.expr)
__repr__ = __str__
class InOutArgument(Argument, ResultBase):
"""InOutArgument are never initialized in the routine."""
def __init__(self, name, result_var, expr, datatype=None, dimensions=None, precision=None):
if not datatype:
datatype = get_default_datatype(expr)
Argument.__init__(self, name, datatype, dimensions, precision)
ResultBase.__init__(self, expr, result_var)
__init__.__doc__ = OutputArgument.__init__.__doc__
def __str__(self):
return "%s(%r, %r, %r)" % (self.__class__.__name__, self.name, self.expr,
self.result_var)
__repr__ = __str__
class Result(Variable, ResultBase):
"""An expression for a return value.
The name result is used to avoid conflicts with the reserved word
"return" in the python language. It is also shorter than ReturnValue.
These may or may not need a name in the destination (e.g., "return(x*y)"
might return a value without ever naming it).
"""
def __init__(self, expr, name=None, result_var=None, datatype=None,
dimensions=None, precision=None):
"""Initialize a return value.
Parameters
==========
expr : SymPy expression
name : Symbol, MatrixSymbol, optional
The name of this return variable. When used for code generation,
this might appear, for example, in the prototype of function in a
list of return values. A dummy name is generated if omitted.
result_var : Symbol, Indexed, optional
Something that can be used to assign a value to this variable.
Typically the same as `name` but for Indexed this should be e.g.,
"y[i]" whereas `name` should be the Symbol "y". Defaults to
`name` if omitted.
datatype : optional
When not given, the data type will be guessed based on the
assumptions on the symbol argument.
dimension : sequence containing tupes, optional
If present, this variable is interpreted as an array,
where this sequence of tuples specifies (lower, upper)
bounds for each index of the array.
precision : int, optional
Controls the precision of floating point constants.
"""
# Basic because it is the base class for all types of expressions
if not isinstance(expr, (Basic, MatrixBase)):
raise TypeError("The first argument must be a sympy expression.")
if name is None:
name = 'result_%d' % abs(hash(expr))
if isinstance(name, string_types):
if isinstance(expr, (MatrixBase, MatrixExpr)):
name = MatrixSymbol(name, *expr.shape)
else:
name = Symbol(name)
if result_var is None:
result_var = name
Variable.__init__(self, name, datatype=datatype,
dimensions=dimensions, precision=precision)
ResultBase.__init__(self, expr, result_var)
def __str__(self):
return "%s(%r, %r, %r)" % (self.__class__.__name__, self.expr, self.name,
self.result_var)
__repr__ = __str__
#
# Transformation of routine objects into code
#
class CodeGen(object):
"""Abstract class for the code generators."""
printer = None # will be set to an instance of a CodePrinter subclass
def _indent_code(self, codelines):
return self.printer.indent_code(codelines)
def _printer_method_with_settings(self, method, settings=None, *args, **kwargs):
settings = settings or {}
ori = {k: self.printer._settings[k] for k in settings}
for k, v in settings.items():
self.printer._settings[k] = v
result = getattr(self.printer, method)(*args, **kwargs)
for k, v in ori.items():
self.printer._settings[k] = v
return result
def _get_symbol(self, s):
"""Returns the symbol as fcode prints it."""
if self.printer._settings['human']:
expr_str = self.printer.doprint(s)
else:
constants, not_supported, expr_str = self.printer.doprint(s)
if constants or not_supported:
raise ValueError("Failed to print %s" % str(s))
return expr_str.strip()
def __init__(self, project="project", cse=False):
"""Initialize a code generator.
Derived classes will offer more options that affect the generated
code.
"""
self.project = project
self.cse = cse
def routine(self, name, expr, argument_sequence=None, global_vars=None):
"""Creates an Routine object that is appropriate for this language.
This implementation is appropriate for at least C/Fortran. Subclasses
can override this if necessary.
Here, we assume at most one return value (the l-value) which must be
scalar. Additional outputs are OutputArguments (e.g., pointers on
right-hand-side or pass-by-reference). Matrices are always returned
via OutputArguments. If ``argument_sequence`` is None, arguments will
be ordered alphabetically, but with all InputArguments first, and then
OutputArgument and InOutArguments.
"""
if self.cse:
from sympy.simplify.cse_main import cse
if is_sequence(expr) and not isinstance(expr, (MatrixBase, MatrixExpr)):
if not expr:
raise ValueError("No expression given")
for e in expr:
if not e.is_Equality:
raise CodeGenError("Lists of expressions must all be Equalities. {} is not.".format(e))
lhs = [e.lhs for e in expr]
# create a list of right hand sides and simplify them
rhs = [e.rhs for e in expr]
common, simplified = cse(rhs)
# pack the simplified expressions back up with their left hand sides
expr = [Equality(e.lhs, rhs) for e, rhs in zip(expr, simplified)]
else:
rhs = [expr]
if isinstance(expr, Equality):
common, simplified = cse(expr.rhs) #, ignore=in_out_args)
expr = Equality(expr.lhs, simplified[0])
else:
common, simplified = cse(expr)
expr = simplified
local_vars = [Result(b,a) for a,b in common]
local_symbols = set([a for a,_ in common])
local_expressions = Tuple(*[b for _,b in common])
else:
local_expressions = Tuple()
if is_sequence(expr) and not isinstance(expr, (MatrixBase, MatrixExpr)):
if not expr:
raise ValueError("No expression given")
expressions = Tuple(*expr)
else:
expressions = Tuple(expr)
if self.cse:
if {i.label for i in expressions.atoms(Idx)} != set():
raise CodeGenError("CSE and Indexed expressions do not play well together yet")
else:
# local variables for indexed expressions
local_vars = {i.label for i in expressions.atoms(Idx)}
local_symbols = local_vars
# global variables
global_vars = set() if global_vars is None else set(global_vars)
# symbols that should be arguments
symbols = (expressions.free_symbols | local_expressions.free_symbols) - local_symbols - global_vars
new_symbols = set([])
new_symbols.update(symbols)
for symbol in symbols:
if isinstance(symbol, Idx):
new_symbols.remove(symbol)
new_symbols.update(symbol.args[1].free_symbols)
if isinstance(symbol, Indexed):
new_symbols.remove(symbol)
symbols = new_symbols
# Decide whether to use output argument or return value
return_val = []
output_args = []
for expr in expressions:
if isinstance(expr, Equality):
out_arg = expr.lhs
expr = expr.rhs
if isinstance(out_arg, Indexed):
dims = tuple([ (S.Zero, dim - 1) for dim in out_arg.shape])
symbol = out_arg.base.label
elif isinstance(out_arg, Symbol):
dims = []
symbol = out_arg
elif isinstance(out_arg, MatrixSymbol):
dims = tuple([ (S.Zero, dim - 1) for dim in out_arg.shape])
symbol = out_arg
else:
raise CodeGenError("Only Indexed, Symbol, or MatrixSymbol "
"can define output arguments.")
if expr.has(symbol):
output_args.append(
InOutArgument(symbol, out_arg, expr, dimensions=dims))
else:
output_args.append(
OutputArgument(symbol, out_arg, expr, dimensions=dims))
# remove duplicate arguments when they are not local variables
if symbol not in local_vars:
# avoid duplicate arguments
symbols.remove(symbol)
elif isinstance(expr, (ImmutableMatrix, MatrixSlice)):
# Create a "dummy" MatrixSymbol to use as the Output arg
out_arg = MatrixSymbol('out_%s' % abs(hash(expr)), *expr.shape)
dims = tuple([(S.Zero, dim - 1) for dim in out_arg.shape])
output_args.append(
OutputArgument(out_arg, out_arg, expr, dimensions=dims))
else:
return_val.append(Result(expr))
arg_list = []
# setup input argument list
array_symbols = {}
for array in expressions.atoms(Indexed) | local_expressions.atoms(Indexed):
array_symbols[array.base.label] = array
for array in expressions.atoms(MatrixSymbol) | local_expressions.atoms(MatrixSymbol):
array_symbols[array] = array
for symbol in sorted(symbols, key=str):
if symbol in array_symbols:
dims = []
array = array_symbols[symbol]
for dim in array.shape:
dims.append((S.Zero, dim - 1))
metadata = {'dimensions': dims}
else:
metadata = {}
arg_list.append(InputArgument(symbol, **metadata))
output_args.sort(key=lambda x: str(x.name))
arg_list.extend(output_args)
if argument_sequence is not None:
# if the user has supplied IndexedBase instances, we'll accept that
new_sequence = []
for arg in argument_sequence:
if isinstance(arg, IndexedBase):
new_sequence.append(arg.label)
else:
new_sequence.append(arg)
argument_sequence = new_sequence
missing = [x for x in arg_list if x.name not in argument_sequence]
if missing:
msg = "Argument list didn't specify: {0} "
msg = msg.format(", ".join([str(m.name) for m in missing]))
raise CodeGenArgumentListError(msg, missing)
# create redundant arguments to produce the requested sequence
name_arg_dict = {x.name: x for x in arg_list}
new_args = []
for symbol in argument_sequence:
try:
new_args.append(name_arg_dict[symbol])
except KeyError:
new_args.append(InputArgument(symbol))
arg_list = new_args
return Routine(name, arg_list, return_val, local_vars, global_vars)
def write(self, routines, prefix, to_files=False, header=True, empty=True):
"""Writes all the source code files for the given routines.
The generated source is returned as a list of (filename, contents)
tuples, or is written to files (see below). Each filename consists
of the given prefix, appended with an appropriate extension.
Parameters
==========
routines : list
A list of Routine instances to be written
prefix : string
The prefix for the output files
to_files : bool, optional
When True, the output is written to files. Otherwise, a list
of (filename, contents) tuples is returned. [default: False]
header : bool, optional
When True, a header comment is included on top of each source
file. [default: True]
empty : bool, optional
When True, empty lines are included to structure the source
files. [default: True]
"""
if to_files:
for dump_fn in self.dump_fns:
filename = "%s.%s" % (prefix, dump_fn.extension)
with open(filename, "w") as f:
dump_fn(self, routines, f, prefix, header, empty)
else:
result = []
for dump_fn in self.dump_fns:
filename = "%s.%s" % (prefix, dump_fn.extension)
contents = StringIO()
dump_fn(self, routines, contents, prefix, header, empty)
result.append((filename, contents.getvalue()))
return result
def dump_code(self, routines, f, prefix, header=True, empty=True):
"""Write the code by calling language specific methods.
The generated file contains all the definitions of the routines in
low-level code and refers to the header file if appropriate.
Parameters
==========
routines : list
A list of Routine instances.
f : file-like
Where to write the file.
prefix : string
The filename prefix, used to refer to the proper header file.
Only the basename of the prefix is used.
header : bool, optional
When True, a header comment is included on top of each source
file. [default : True]
empty : bool, optional
When True, empty lines are included to structure the source
files. [default : True]
"""
code_lines = self._preprocessor_statements(prefix)
for routine in routines:
if empty:
code_lines.append("\n")
code_lines.extend(self._get_routine_opening(routine))
code_lines.extend(self._declare_arguments(routine))
code_lines.extend(self._declare_globals(routine))
code_lines.extend(self._declare_locals(routine))
if empty:
code_lines.append("\n")
code_lines.extend(self._call_printer(routine))
if empty:
code_lines.append("\n")
code_lines.extend(self._get_routine_ending(routine))
code_lines = self._indent_code(''.join(code_lines))
if header:
code_lines = ''.join(self._get_header() + [code_lines])
if code_lines:
f.write(code_lines)
class CodeGenError(Exception):
pass
class CodeGenArgumentListError(Exception):
@property
def missing_args(self):
return self.args[1]
header_comment = """Code generated with sympy %(version)s
See http://www.sympy.org/ for more information.
This file is part of '%(project)s'
"""
class CCodeGen(CodeGen):
"""Generator for C code.
The .write() method inherited from CodeGen will output a code file and
an interface file, <prefix>.c and <prefix>.h respectively.
"""
code_extension = "c"
interface_extension = "h"
standard = 'c99'
def __init__(self, project="project", printer=None,
preprocessor_statements=None, cse=False):
super(CCodeGen, self).__init__(project=project, cse=cse)
self.printer = printer or c_code_printers[self.standard.lower()]()
self.preprocessor_statements = preprocessor_statements
if preprocessor_statements is None:
self.preprocessor_statements = ['#include <math.h>']
def _get_header(self):
"""Writes a common header for the generated files."""
code_lines = []
code_lines.append("/" + "*"*78 + '\n')
tmp = header_comment % {"version": sympy_version,
"project": self.project}
for line in tmp.splitlines():
code_lines.append(" *%s*\n" % line.center(76))
code_lines.append(" " + "*"*78 + "/\n")
return code_lines
def get_prototype(self, routine):
"""Returns a string for the function prototype of the routine.
If the routine has multiple result objects, an CodeGenError is
raised.
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function_prototype
"""
if len(routine.results) > 1:
raise CodeGenError("C only supports a single or no return value.")
elif len(routine.results) == 1:
ctype = routine.results[0].get_datatype('C')
else:
ctype = "void"
type_args = []
for arg in routine.arguments:
name = self.printer.doprint(arg.name)
if arg.dimensions or isinstance(arg, ResultBase):
type_args.append((arg.get_datatype('C'), "*%s" % name))
else:
type_args.append((arg.get_datatype('C'), name))
arguments = ", ".join([ "%s %s" % t for t in type_args])
return "%s %s(%s)" % (ctype, routine.name, arguments)
def _preprocessor_statements(self, prefix):
code_lines = []
code_lines.append('#include "{}.h"'.format(os.path.basename(prefix)))
code_lines.extend(self.preprocessor_statements)
code_lines = ['{}\n'.format(l) for l in code_lines]
return code_lines
def _get_routine_opening(self, routine):
prototype = self.get_prototype(routine)
return ["%s {\n" % prototype]
def _declare_arguments(self, routine):
# arguments are declared in prototype
return []
def _declare_globals(self, routine):
# global variables are not explicitly declared within C functions
return []
def _declare_locals(self, routine):
# Compose a list of symbols to be dereferenced in the function
# body. These are the arguments that were passed by a reference
# pointer, excluding arrays.
dereference = []
for arg in routine.arguments:
if isinstance(arg, ResultBase) and not arg.dimensions:
dereference.append(arg.name)
code_lines = []
for result in routine.local_vars:
# local variables that are simple symbols such as those used as indices into
# for loops are defined declared elsewhere.
if not isinstance(result, Result):
continue
if result.name != result.result_var:
raise CodeGen("Result variable and name should match: {}".format(result))
assign_to = result.name
t = result.get_datatype('c')
if isinstance(result.expr, (MatrixBase, MatrixExpr)):
dims = result.expr.shape
if dims[1] != 1:
raise CodeGenError("Only column vectors are supported in local variabels. Local result {} has dimensions {}".format(result, dims))
code_lines.append("{0} {1}[{2}];\n".format(t, str(assign_to), dims[0]))
prefix = ""
else:
prefix = "const {0} ".format(t)
constants, not_c, c_expr = self._printer_method_with_settings(
'doprint', dict(human=False, dereference=dereference),
result.expr, assign_to=assign_to)
for name, value in sorted(constants, key=str):
code_lines.append("double const %s = %s;\n" % (name, value))
code_lines.append("{}{}\n".format(prefix, c_expr))
return code_lines
def _call_printer(self, routine):
code_lines = []
# Compose a list of symbols to be dereferenced in the function
# body. These are the arguments that were passed by a reference
# pointer, excluding arrays.
dereference = []
for arg in routine.arguments:
if isinstance(arg, ResultBase) and not arg.dimensions:
dereference.append(arg.name)
return_val = None
for result in routine.result_variables:
if isinstance(result, Result):
assign_to = routine.name + "_result"
t = result.get_datatype('c')
code_lines.append("{0} {1};\n".format(t, str(assign_to)))
return_val = assign_to
else:
assign_to = result.result_var
try:
constants, not_c, c_expr = self._printer_method_with_settings(
'doprint', dict(human=False, dereference=dereference),
result.expr, assign_to=assign_to)
except AssignmentError:
assign_to = result.result_var
code_lines.append(
"%s %s;\n" % (result.get_datatype('c'), str(assign_to)))
constants, not_c, c_expr = self._printer_method_with_settings(
'doprint', dict(human=False, dereference=dereference),
result.expr, assign_to=assign_to)
for name, value in sorted(constants, key=str):
code_lines.append("double const %s = %s;\n" % (name, value))
code_lines.append("%s\n" % c_expr)
if return_val:
code_lines.append(" return %s;\n" % return_val)
return code_lines
def _get_routine_ending(self, routine):
return ["}\n"]
def dump_c(self, routines, f, prefix, header=True, empty=True):
self.dump_code(routines, f, prefix, header, empty)
dump_c.extension = code_extension
dump_c.__doc__ = CodeGen.dump_code.__doc__
def dump_h(self, routines, f, prefix, header=True, empty=True):
"""Writes the C header file.
This file contains all the function declarations.
Parameters
==========
routines : list
A list of Routine instances.
f : file-like
Where to write the file.
prefix : string
The filename prefix, used to construct the include guards.
Only the basename of the prefix is used.
header : bool, optional
When True, a header comment is included on top of each source
file. [default : True]
empty : bool, optional
When True, empty lines are included to structure the source
files. [default : True]
"""
if header:
print(''.join(self._get_header()), file=f)
guard_name = "%s__%s__H" % (self.project.replace(
" ", "_").upper(), prefix.replace("/", "_").upper())
# include guards
if empty:
print(file=f)
print("#ifndef %s" % guard_name, file=f)
print("#define %s" % guard_name, file=f)
if empty:
print(file=f)
# declaration of the function prototypes
for routine in routines:
prototype = self.get_prototype(routine)
print("%s;" % prototype, file=f)
# end if include guards
if empty:
print(file=f)
print("#endif", file=f)
if empty:
print(file=f)
dump_h.extension = interface_extension
# This list of dump functions is used by CodeGen.write to know which dump
# functions it has to call.
dump_fns = [dump_c, dump_h]
class C89CodeGen(CCodeGen):
standard = 'C89'
class C99CodeGen(CCodeGen):
standard = 'C99'
class FCodeGen(CodeGen):
"""Generator for Fortran 95 code
The .write() method inherited from CodeGen will output a code file and
an interface file, <prefix>.f90 and <prefix>.h respectively.
"""
code_extension = "f90"
interface_extension = "h"
def __init__(self, project='project', printer=None):
super(FCodeGen, self).__init__(project)
self.printer = printer or FCodePrinter()
def _get_header(self):
"""Writes a common header for the generated files."""
code_lines = []
code_lines.append("!" + "*"*78 + '\n')
tmp = header_comment % {"version": sympy_version,
"project": self.project}
for line in tmp.splitlines():
code_lines.append("!*%s*\n" % line.center(76))
code_lines.append("!" + "*"*78 + '\n')
return code_lines
def _preprocessor_statements(self, prefix):
return []
def _get_routine_opening(self, routine):
"""Returns the opening statements of the fortran routine."""
code_list = []
if len(routine.results) > 1:
raise CodeGenError(
"Fortran only supports a single or no return value.")
elif len(routine.results) == 1:
result = routine.results[0]
code_list.append(result.get_datatype('fortran'))
code_list.append("function")
else:
code_list.append("subroutine")
args = ", ".join("%s" % self._get_symbol(arg.name)
for arg in routine.arguments)
call_sig = "{0}({1})\n".format(routine.name, args)
# Fortran 95 requires all lines be less than 132 characters, so wrap
# this line before appending.
call_sig = ' &\n'.join(textwrap.wrap(call_sig,
width=60,
break_long_words=False)) + '\n'
code_list.append(call_sig)
code_list = [' '.join(code_list)]
code_list.append('implicit none\n')
return code_list
def _declare_arguments(self, routine):
# argument type declarations
code_list = []
array_list = []
scalar_list = []
for arg in routine.arguments:
if isinstance(arg, InputArgument):
typeinfo = "%s, intent(in)" % arg.get_datatype('fortran')
elif isinstance(arg, InOutArgument):
typeinfo = "%s, intent(inout)" % arg.get_datatype('fortran')
elif isinstance(arg, OutputArgument):
typeinfo = "%s, intent(out)" % arg.get_datatype('fortran')
else:
raise CodeGenError("Unknown Argument type: %s" % type(arg))
fprint = self._get_symbol
if arg.dimensions:
# fortran arrays start at 1
dimstr = ", ".join(["%s:%s" % (
fprint(dim[0] + 1), fprint(dim[1] + 1))
for dim in arg.dimensions])
typeinfo += ", dimension(%s)" % dimstr
array_list.append("%s :: %s\n" % (typeinfo, fprint(arg.name)))
else:
scalar_list.append("%s :: %s\n" % (typeinfo, fprint(arg.name)))
# scalars first, because they can be used in array declarations
code_list.extend(scalar_list)
code_list.extend(array_list)
return code_list
def _declare_globals(self, routine):
# Global variables not explicitly declared within Fortran 90 functions.
# Note: a future F77 mode may need to generate "common" blocks.
return []
def _declare_locals(self, routine):
code_list = []
for var in sorted(routine.local_vars, key=str):
typeinfo = get_default_datatype(var)
code_list.append("%s :: %s\n" % (
typeinfo.fname, self._get_symbol(var)))
return code_list
def _get_routine_ending(self, routine):
"""Returns the closing statements of the fortran routine."""
if len(routine.results) == 1:
return ["end function\n"]
else:
return ["end subroutine\n"]
def get_interface(self, routine):
"""Returns a string for the function interface.
The routine should have a single result object, which can be None.
If the routine has multiple result objects, a CodeGenError is
raised.
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function_prototype
"""
prototype = [ "interface\n" ]
prototype.extend(self._get_routine_opening(routine))
prototype.extend(self._declare_arguments(routine))
prototype.extend(self._get_routine_ending(routine))
prototype.append("end interface\n")
return "".join(prototype)
def _call_printer(self, routine):
declarations = []
code_lines = []
for result in routine.result_variables:
if isinstance(result, Result):
assign_to = routine.name
elif isinstance(result, (OutputArgument, InOutArgument)):
assign_to = result.result_var
constants, not_fortran, f_expr = self._printer_method_with_settings(
'doprint', dict(human=False, source_format='free', standard=95),
result.expr, assign_to=assign_to)
for obj, v in sorted(constants, key=str):
t = get_default_datatype(obj)
declarations.append(
"%s, parameter :: %s = %s\n" % (t.fname, obj, v))
for obj in sorted(not_fortran, key=str):
t = get_default_datatype(obj)
if isinstance(obj, Function):
name = obj.func
else:
name = obj
declarations.append("%s :: %s\n" % (t.fname, name))
code_lines.append("%s\n" % f_expr)
return declarations + code_lines
def _indent_code(self, codelines):
return self._printer_method_with_settings(
'indent_code', dict(human=False, source_format='free'), codelines)
def dump_f95(self, routines, f, prefix, header=True, empty=True):
# check that symbols are unique with ignorecase
for r in routines:
lowercase = {str(x).lower() for x in r.variables}
orig_case = {str(x) for x in r.variables}
if len(lowercase) < len(orig_case):
raise CodeGenError("Fortran ignores case. Got symbols: %s" %
(", ".join([str(var) for var in r.variables])))
self.dump_code(routines, f, prefix, header, empty)
dump_f95.extension = code_extension
dump_f95.__doc__ = CodeGen.dump_code.__doc__
def dump_h(self, routines, f, prefix, header=True, empty=True):
"""Writes the interface to a header file.
This file contains all the function declarations.
Parameters
==========
routines : list
A list of Routine instances.
f : file-like
Where to write the file.
prefix : string
The filename prefix.
header : bool, optional
When True, a header comment is included on top of each source
file. [default : True]
empty : bool, optional
When True, empty lines are included to structure the source
files. [default : True]
"""
if header:
print(''.join(self._get_header()), file=f)
if empty:
print(file=f)
# declaration of the function prototypes
for routine in routines:
prototype = self.get_interface(routine)
f.write(prototype)
if empty:
print(file=f)
dump_h.extension = interface_extension
# This list of dump functions is used by CodeGen.write to know which dump
# functions it has to call.
dump_fns = [dump_f95, dump_h]
class JuliaCodeGen(CodeGen):
"""Generator for Julia code.
The .write() method inherited from CodeGen will output a code file
<prefix>.jl.
"""
code_extension = "jl"
def __init__(self, project='project', printer=None):
super(JuliaCodeGen, self).__init__(project)
self.printer = printer or JuliaCodePrinter()
def routine(self, name, expr, argument_sequence, global_vars):
"""Specialized Routine creation for Julia."""
if is_sequence(expr) and not isinstance(expr, (MatrixBase, MatrixExpr)):
if not expr:
raise ValueError("No expression given")
expressions = Tuple(*expr)
else:
expressions = Tuple(expr)
# local variables
local_vars = {i.label for i in expressions.atoms(Idx)}
# global variables
global_vars = set() if global_vars is None else set(global_vars)
# symbols that should be arguments
old_symbols = expressions.free_symbols - local_vars - global_vars
symbols = set([])
for s in old_symbols:
if isinstance(s, Idx):
symbols.update(s.args[1].free_symbols)
elif not isinstance(s, Indexed):
symbols.add(s)
# Julia supports multiple return values
return_vals = []
output_args = []
for (i, expr) in enumerate(expressions):
if isinstance(expr, Equality):
out_arg = expr.lhs
expr = expr.rhs
symbol = out_arg
if isinstance(out_arg, Indexed):
dims = tuple([ (S.One, dim) for dim in out_arg.shape])
symbol = out_arg.base.label
output_args.append(InOutArgument(symbol, out_arg, expr, dimensions=dims))
if not isinstance(out_arg, (Indexed, Symbol, MatrixSymbol)):
raise CodeGenError("Only Indexed, Symbol, or MatrixSymbol "
"can define output arguments.")
return_vals.append(Result(expr, name=symbol, result_var=out_arg))
if not expr.has(symbol):
# this is a pure output: remove from the symbols list, so
# it doesn't become an input.
symbols.remove(symbol)
else:
# we have no name for this output
return_vals.append(Result(expr, name='out%d' % (i+1)))
# setup input argument list
output_args.sort(key=lambda x: str(x.name))
arg_list = list(output_args)
array_symbols = {}
for array in expressions.atoms(Indexed):
array_symbols[array.base.label] = array
for array in expressions.atoms(MatrixSymbol):
array_symbols[array] = array
for symbol in sorted(symbols, key=str):
arg_list.append(InputArgument(symbol))
if argument_sequence is not None:
# if the user has supplied IndexedBase instances, we'll accept that
new_sequence = []
for arg in argument_sequence:
if isinstance(arg, IndexedBase):
new_sequence.append(arg.label)
else:
new_sequence.append(arg)
argument_sequence = new_sequence
missing = [x for x in arg_list if x.name not in argument_sequence]
if missing:
msg = "Argument list didn't specify: {0} "
msg = msg.format(", ".join([str(m.name) for m in missing]))
raise CodeGenArgumentListError(msg, missing)
# create redundant arguments to produce the requested sequence
name_arg_dict = {x.name: x for x in arg_list}
new_args = []
for symbol in argument_sequence:
try:
new_args.append(name_arg_dict[symbol])
except KeyError:
new_args.append(InputArgument(symbol))
arg_list = new_args
return Routine(name, arg_list, return_vals, local_vars, global_vars)
def _get_header(self):
"""Writes a common header for the generated files."""
code_lines = []
tmp = header_comment % {"version": sympy_version,
"project": self.project}
for line in tmp.splitlines():
if line == '':
code_lines.append("#\n")
else:
code_lines.append("# %s\n" % line)
return code_lines
def _preprocessor_statements(self, prefix):
return []
def _get_routine_opening(self, routine):
"""Returns the opening statements of the routine."""
code_list = []
code_list.append("function ")
# Inputs
args = []
for i, arg in enumerate(routine.arguments):
if isinstance(arg, OutputArgument):
raise CodeGenError("Julia: invalid argument of type %s" %
str(type(arg)))
if isinstance(arg, (InputArgument, InOutArgument)):
args.append("%s" % self._get_symbol(arg.name))
args = ", ".join(args)
code_list.append("%s(%s)\n" % (routine.name, args))
code_list = [ "".join(code_list) ]
return code_list
def _declare_arguments(self, routine):
return []
def _declare_globals(self, routine):
return []
def _declare_locals(self, routine):
return []
def _get_routine_ending(self, routine):
outs = []
for result in routine.results:
if isinstance(result, Result):
# Note: name not result_var; want `y` not `y[i]` for Indexed
s = self._get_symbol(result.name)
else:
raise CodeGenError("unexpected object in Routine results")
outs.append(s)
return ["return " + ", ".join(outs) + "\nend\n"]
def _call_printer(self, routine):
declarations = []
code_lines = []
for i, result in enumerate(routine.results):
if isinstance(result, Result):
assign_to = result.result_var
else:
raise CodeGenError("unexpected object in Routine results")
constants, not_supported, jl_expr = self._printer_method_with_settings(
'doprint', dict(human=False), result.expr, assign_to=assign_to)
for obj, v in sorted(constants, key=str):
declarations.append(
"%s = %s\n" % (obj, v))
for obj in sorted(not_supported, key=str):
if isinstance(obj, Function):
name = obj.func
else:
name = obj
declarations.append(
"# unsupported: %s\n" % (name))
code_lines.append("%s\n" % (jl_expr))
return declarations + code_lines
def _indent_code(self, codelines):
# Note that indenting seems to happen twice, first
# statement-by-statement by JuliaPrinter then again here.
p = JuliaCodePrinter({'human': False})
return p.indent_code(codelines)
def dump_jl(self, routines, f, prefix, header=True, empty=True):
self.dump_code(routines, f, prefix, header, empty)
dump_jl.extension = code_extension
dump_jl.__doc__ = CodeGen.dump_code.__doc__
# This list of dump functions is used by CodeGen.write to know which dump
# functions it has to call.
dump_fns = [dump_jl]
class OctaveCodeGen(CodeGen):
"""Generator for Octave code.
The .write() method inherited from CodeGen will output a code file
<prefix>.m.
Octave .m files usually contain one function. That function name should
match the filename (``prefix``). If you pass multiple ``name_expr`` pairs,
the latter ones are presumed to be private functions accessed by the
primary function.
You should only pass inputs to ``argument_sequence``: outputs are ordered
according to their order in ``name_expr``.
"""
code_extension = "m"
def __init__(self, project='project', printer=None):
super(OctaveCodeGen, self).__init__(project)
self.printer = printer or OctaveCodePrinter()
def routine(self, name, expr, argument_sequence, global_vars):
"""Specialized Routine creation for Octave."""
# FIXME: this is probably general enough for other high-level
# languages, perhaps its the C/Fortran one that is specialized!
if is_sequence(expr) and not isinstance(expr, (MatrixBase, MatrixExpr)):
if not expr:
raise ValueError("No expression given")
expressions = Tuple(*expr)
else:
expressions = Tuple(expr)
# local variables
local_vars = {i.label for i in expressions.atoms(Idx)}
# global variables
global_vars = set() if global_vars is None else set(global_vars)
# symbols that should be arguments
old_symbols = expressions.free_symbols - local_vars - global_vars
symbols = set([])
for s in old_symbols:
if isinstance(s, Idx):
symbols.update(s.args[1].free_symbols)
elif not isinstance(s, Indexed):
symbols.add(s)
# Octave supports multiple return values
return_vals = []
for (i, expr) in enumerate(expressions):
if isinstance(expr, Equality):
out_arg = expr.lhs
expr = expr.rhs
symbol = out_arg
if isinstance(out_arg, Indexed):
symbol = out_arg.base.label
if not isinstance(out_arg, (Indexed, Symbol, MatrixSymbol)):
raise CodeGenError("Only Indexed, Symbol, or MatrixSymbol "
"can define output arguments.")
return_vals.append(Result(expr, name=symbol, result_var=out_arg))
if not expr.has(symbol):
# this is a pure output: remove from the symbols list, so
# it doesn't become an input.
symbols.remove(symbol)
else:
# we have no name for this output
return_vals.append(Result(expr, name='out%d' % (i+1)))
# setup input argument list
arg_list = []
array_symbols = {}
for array in expressions.atoms(Indexed):
array_symbols[array.base.label] = array
for array in expressions.atoms(MatrixSymbol):
array_symbols[array] = array
for symbol in sorted(symbols, key=str):
arg_list.append(InputArgument(symbol))
if argument_sequence is not None:
# if the user has supplied IndexedBase instances, we'll accept that
new_sequence = []
for arg in argument_sequence:
if isinstance(arg, IndexedBase):
new_sequence.append(arg.label)
else:
new_sequence.append(arg)
argument_sequence = new_sequence
missing = [x for x in arg_list if x.name not in argument_sequence]
if missing:
msg = "Argument list didn't specify: {0} "
msg = msg.format(", ".join([str(m.name) for m in missing]))
raise CodeGenArgumentListError(msg, missing)
# create redundant arguments to produce the requested sequence
name_arg_dict = {x.name: x for x in arg_list}
new_args = []
for symbol in argument_sequence:
try:
new_args.append(name_arg_dict[symbol])
except KeyError:
new_args.append(InputArgument(symbol))
arg_list = new_args
return Routine(name, arg_list, return_vals, local_vars, global_vars)
def _get_header(self):
"""Writes a common header for the generated files."""
code_lines = []
tmp = header_comment % {"version": sympy_version,
"project": self.project}
for line in tmp.splitlines():
if line == '':
code_lines.append("%\n")
else:
code_lines.append("%% %s\n" % line)
return code_lines
def _preprocessor_statements(self, prefix):
return []
def _get_routine_opening(self, routine):
"""Returns the opening statements of the routine."""
code_list = []
code_list.append("function ")
# Outputs
outs = []
for i, result in enumerate(routine.results):
if isinstance(result, Result):
# Note: name not result_var; want `y` not `y(i)` for Indexed
s = self._get_symbol(result.name)
else:
raise CodeGenError("unexpected object in Routine results")
outs.append(s)
if len(outs) > 1:
code_list.append("[" + (", ".join(outs)) + "]")
else:
code_list.append("".join(outs))
code_list.append(" = ")
# Inputs
args = []
for i, arg in enumerate(routine.arguments):
if isinstance(arg, (OutputArgument, InOutArgument)):
raise CodeGenError("Octave: invalid argument of type %s" %
str(type(arg)))
if isinstance(arg, InputArgument):
args.append("%s" % self._get_symbol(arg.name))
args = ", ".join(args)
code_list.append("%s(%s)\n" % (routine.name, args))
code_list = [ "".join(code_list) ]
return code_list
def _declare_arguments(self, routine):
return []
def _declare_globals(self, routine):
if not routine.global_vars:
return []
s = " ".join(sorted([self._get_symbol(g) for g in routine.global_vars]))
return ["global " + s + "\n"]
def _declare_locals(self, routine):
return []
def _get_routine_ending(self, routine):
return ["end\n"]
def _call_printer(self, routine):
declarations = []
code_lines = []
for i, result in enumerate(routine.results):
if isinstance(result, Result):
assign_to = result.result_var
else:
raise CodeGenError("unexpected object in Routine results")
constants, not_supported, oct_expr = self._printer_method_with_settings(
'doprint', dict(human=False), result.expr, assign_to=assign_to)
for obj, v in sorted(constants, key=str):
declarations.append(
" %s = %s; %% constant\n" % (obj, v))
for obj in sorted(not_supported, key=str):
if isinstance(obj, Function):
name = obj.func
else:
name = obj
declarations.append(
" %% unsupported: %s\n" % (name))
code_lines.append("%s\n" % (oct_expr))
return declarations + code_lines
def _indent_code(self, codelines):
return self._printer_method_with_settings(
'indent_code', dict(human=False), codelines)
def dump_m(self, routines, f, prefix, header=True, empty=True, inline=True):
# Note used to call self.dump_code() but we need more control for header
code_lines = self._preprocessor_statements(prefix)
for i, routine in enumerate(routines):
if i > 0:
if empty:
code_lines.append("\n")
code_lines.extend(self._get_routine_opening(routine))
if i == 0:
if routine.name != prefix:
raise ValueError('Octave function name should match prefix')
if header:
code_lines.append("%" + prefix.upper() +
" Autogenerated by sympy\n")
code_lines.append(''.join(self._get_header()))
code_lines.extend(self._declare_arguments(routine))
code_lines.extend(self._declare_globals(routine))
code_lines.extend(self._declare_locals(routine))
if empty:
code_lines.append("\n")
code_lines.extend(self._call_printer(routine))
if empty:
code_lines.append("\n")
code_lines.extend(self._get_routine_ending(routine))
code_lines = self._indent_code(''.join(code_lines))
if code_lines:
f.write(code_lines)
dump_m.extension = code_extension
dump_m.__doc__ = CodeGen.dump_code.__doc__
# This list of dump functions is used by CodeGen.write to know which dump
# functions it has to call.
dump_fns = [dump_m]
class RustCodeGen(CodeGen):
"""Generator for Rust code.
The .write() method inherited from CodeGen will output a code file
<prefix>.rs
"""
code_extension = "rs"
def __init__(self, project="project", printer=None):
super(RustCodeGen, self).__init__(project=project)
self.printer = printer or RustCodePrinter()
def routine(self, name, expr, argument_sequence, global_vars):
"""Specialized Routine creation for Rust."""
if is_sequence(expr) and not isinstance(expr, (MatrixBase, MatrixExpr)):
if not expr:
raise ValueError("No expression given")
expressions = Tuple(*expr)
else:
expressions = Tuple(expr)
# local variables
local_vars = set([i.label for i in expressions.atoms(Idx)])
# global variables
global_vars = set() if global_vars is None else set(global_vars)
# symbols that should be arguments
symbols = expressions.free_symbols - local_vars - global_vars - expressions.atoms(Indexed)
# Rust supports multiple return values
return_vals = []
output_args = []
for (i, expr) in enumerate(expressions):
if isinstance(expr, Equality):
out_arg = expr.lhs
expr = expr.rhs
symbol = out_arg
if isinstance(out_arg, Indexed):
dims = tuple([ (S.One, dim) for dim in out_arg.shape])
symbol = out_arg.base.label
output_args.append(InOutArgument(symbol, out_arg, expr, dimensions=dims))
if not isinstance(out_arg, (Indexed, Symbol, MatrixSymbol)):
raise CodeGenError("Only Indexed, Symbol, or MatrixSymbol "
"can define output arguments.")
return_vals.append(Result(expr, name=symbol, result_var=out_arg))
if not expr.has(symbol):
# this is a pure output: remove from the symbols list, so
# it doesn't become an input.
symbols.remove(symbol)
else:
# we have no name for this output
return_vals.append(Result(expr, name='out%d' % (i+1)))
# setup input argument list
output_args.sort(key=lambda x: str(x.name))
arg_list = list(output_args)
array_symbols = {}
for array in expressions.atoms(Indexed):
array_symbols[array.base.label] = array
for array in expressions.atoms(MatrixSymbol):
array_symbols[array] = array
for symbol in sorted(symbols, key=str):
arg_list.append(InputArgument(symbol))
if argument_sequence is not None:
# if the user has supplied IndexedBase instances, we'll accept that
new_sequence = []
for arg in argument_sequence:
if isinstance(arg, IndexedBase):
new_sequence.append(arg.label)
else:
new_sequence.append(arg)
argument_sequence = new_sequence
missing = [x for x in arg_list if x.name not in argument_sequence]
if missing:
msg = "Argument list didn't specify: {0} "
msg = msg.format(", ".join([str(m.name) for m in missing]))
raise CodeGenArgumentListError(msg, missing)
# create redundant arguments to produce the requested sequence
name_arg_dict = dict([(x.name, x) for x in arg_list])
new_args = []
for symbol in argument_sequence:
try:
new_args.append(name_arg_dict[symbol])
except KeyError:
new_args.append(InputArgument(symbol))
arg_list = new_args
return Routine(name, arg_list, return_vals, local_vars, global_vars)
def _get_header(self):
"""Writes a common header for the generated files."""
code_lines = []
code_lines.append("/*\n")
tmp = header_comment % {"version": sympy_version,
"project": self.project}
for line in tmp.splitlines():
code_lines.append((" *%s" % line.center(76)).rstrip() + "\n")
code_lines.append(" */\n")
return code_lines
def get_prototype(self, routine):
"""Returns a string for the function prototype of the routine.
If the routine has multiple result objects, an CodeGenError is
raised.
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function_prototype
"""
results = [i.get_datatype('Rust') for i in routine.results]
if len(results) == 1:
rstype = " -> " + results[0]
elif len(routine.results) > 1:
rstype = " -> (" + ", ".join(results) + ")"
else:
rstype = ""
type_args = []
for arg in routine.arguments:
name = self.printer.doprint(arg.name)
if arg.dimensions or isinstance(arg, ResultBase):
type_args.append(("*%s" % name, arg.get_datatype('Rust')))
else:
type_args.append((name, arg.get_datatype('Rust')))
arguments = ", ".join([ "%s: %s" % t for t in type_args])
return "fn %s(%s)%s" % (routine.name, arguments, rstype)
def _preprocessor_statements(self, prefix):
code_lines = []
# code_lines.append("use std::f64::consts::*;\n")
return code_lines
def _get_routine_opening(self, routine):
prototype = self.get_prototype(routine)
return ["%s {\n" % prototype]
def _declare_arguments(self, routine):
# arguments are declared in prototype
return []
def _declare_globals(self, routine):
# global variables are not explicitly declared within C functions
return []
def _declare_locals(self, routine):
# loop variables are declared in loop statement
return []
def _call_printer(self, routine):
code_lines = []
declarations = []
returns = []
# Compose a list of symbols to be dereferenced in the function
# body. These are the arguments that were passed by a reference
# pointer, excluding arrays.
dereference = []
for arg in routine.arguments:
if isinstance(arg, ResultBase) and not arg.dimensions:
dereference.append(arg.name)
for i, result in enumerate(routine.results):
if isinstance(result, Result):
assign_to = result.result_var
returns.append(str(result.result_var))
else:
raise CodeGenError("unexpected object in Routine results")
constants, not_supported, rs_expr = self._printer_method_with_settings(
'doprint', dict(human=False), result.expr, assign_to=assign_to)
for name, value in sorted(constants, key=str):
declarations.append("const %s: f64 = %s;\n" % (name, value))
for obj in sorted(not_supported, key=str):
if isinstance(obj, Function):
name = obj.func
else:
name = obj
declarations.append("// unsupported: %s\n" % (name))
code_lines.append("let %s\n" % rs_expr);
if len(returns) > 1:
returns = ['(' + ', '.join(returns) + ')']
returns.append('\n')
return declarations + code_lines + returns
def _get_routine_ending(self, routine):
return ["}\n"]
def dump_rs(self, routines, f, prefix, header=True, empty=True):
self.dump_code(routines, f, prefix, header, empty)
dump_rs.extension = code_extension
dump_rs.__doc__ = CodeGen.dump_code.__doc__
# This list of dump functions is used by CodeGen.write to know which dump
# functions it has to call.
dump_fns = [dump_rs]
def get_code_generator(language, project=None, standard=None, printer = None):
if language == 'C':
if standard is None:
pass
elif standard.lower() == 'c89':
language = 'C89'
elif standard.lower() == 'c99':
language = 'C99'
CodeGenClass = {"C": CCodeGen, "C89": C89CodeGen, "C99": C99CodeGen,
"F95": FCodeGen, "JULIA": JuliaCodeGen,
"OCTAVE": OctaveCodeGen,
"RUST": RustCodeGen}.get(language.upper())
if CodeGenClass is None:
raise ValueError("Language '%s' is not supported." % language)
return CodeGenClass(project, printer)
#
# Friendly functions
#
def codegen(name_expr, language=None, prefix=None, project="project",
to_files=False, header=True, empty=True, argument_sequence=None,
global_vars=None, standard=None, code_gen=None, printer = None):
"""Generate source code for expressions in a given language.
Parameters
==========
name_expr : tuple, or list of tuples
A single (name, expression) tuple or a list of (name, expression)
tuples. Each tuple corresponds to a routine. If the expression is
an equality (an instance of class Equality) the left hand side is
considered an output argument. If expression is an iterable, then
the routine will have multiple outputs.
language : string,
A string that indicates the source code language. This is case
insensitive. Currently, 'C', 'F95' and 'Octave' are supported.
'Octave' generates code compatible with both Octave and Matlab.
prefix : string, optional
A prefix for the names of the files that contain the source code.
Language-dependent suffixes will be appended. If omitted, the name
of the first name_expr tuple is used.
project : string, optional
A project name, used for making unique preprocessor instructions.
[default: "project"]
to_files : bool, optional
When True, the code will be written to one or more files with the
given prefix, otherwise strings with the names and contents of
these files are returned. [default: False]
header : bool, optional
When True, a header is written on top of each source file.
[default: True]
empty : bool, optional
When True, empty lines are used to structure the code.
[default: True]
argument_sequence : iterable, optional
Sequence of arguments for the routine in a preferred order. A
CodeGenError is raised if required arguments are missing.
Redundant arguments are used without warning. If omitted,
arguments will be ordered alphabetically, but with all input
arguments first, and then output or in-out arguments.
global_vars : iterable, optional
Sequence of global variables used by the routine. Variables
listed here will not show up as function arguments.
standard : string
code_gen : CodeGen instance
An instance of a CodeGen subclass. Overrides ``language``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.codegen import codegen
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> [(c_name, c_code), (h_name, c_header)] = codegen(
... ("f", x+y*z), "C89", "test", header=False, empty=False)
>>> print(c_name)
test.c
>>> print(c_code)
#include "test.h"
#include <math.h>
double f(double x, double y, double z) {
double f_result;
f_result = x + y*z;
return f_result;
}
<BLANKLINE>
>>> print(h_name)
test.h
>>> print(c_header)
#ifndef PROJECT__TEST__H
#define PROJECT__TEST__H
double f(double x, double y, double z);
#endif
<BLANKLINE>
Another example using Equality objects to give named outputs. Here the
filename (prefix) is taken from the first (name, expr) pair.
>>> from sympy.abc import f, g
>>> from sympy import Eq
>>> [(c_name, c_code), (h_name, c_header)] = codegen(
... [("myfcn", x + y), ("fcn2", [Eq(f, 2*x), Eq(g, y)])],
... "C99", header=False, empty=False)
>>> print(c_name)
myfcn.c
>>> print(c_code)
#include "myfcn.h"
#include <math.h>
double myfcn(double x, double y) {
double myfcn_result;
myfcn_result = x + y;
return myfcn_result;
}
void fcn2(double x, double y, double *f, double *g) {
(*f) = 2*x;
(*g) = y;
}
<BLANKLINE>
If the generated function(s) will be part of a larger project where various
global variables have been defined, the 'global_vars' option can be used
to remove the specified variables from the function signature
>>> from sympy.utilities.codegen import codegen
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> [(f_name, f_code), header] = codegen(
... ("f", x+y*z), "F95", header=False, empty=False,
... argument_sequence=(x, y), global_vars=(z,))
>>> print(f_code)
REAL*8 function f(x, y)
implicit none
REAL*8, intent(in) :: x
REAL*8, intent(in) :: y
f = x + y*z
end function
<BLANKLINE>
"""
# Initialize the code generator.
if language is None:
if code_gen is None:
raise ValueError("Need either language or code_gen")
else:
if code_gen is not None:
raise ValueError("You cannot specify both language and code_gen.")
code_gen = get_code_generator(language, project, standard, printer)
if isinstance(name_expr[0], string_types):
# single tuple is given, turn it into a singleton list with a tuple.
name_expr = [name_expr]
if prefix is None:
prefix = name_expr[0][0]
# Construct Routines appropriate for this code_gen from (name, expr) pairs.
routines = []
for name, expr in name_expr:
routines.append(code_gen.routine(name, expr, argument_sequence,
global_vars))
# Write the code.
return code_gen.write(routines, prefix, to_files, header, empty)
def make_routine(name, expr, argument_sequence=None,
global_vars=None, language="F95"):
"""A factory that makes an appropriate Routine from an expression.
Parameters
==========
name : string
The name of this routine in the generated code.
expr : expression or list/tuple of expressions
A SymPy expression that the Routine instance will represent. If
given a list or tuple of expressions, the routine will be
considered to have multiple return values and/or output arguments.
argument_sequence : list or tuple, optional
List arguments for the routine in a preferred order. If omitted,
the results are language dependent, for example, alphabetical order
or in the same order as the given expressions.
global_vars : iterable, optional
Sequence of global variables used by the routine. Variables
listed here will not show up as function arguments.
language : string, optional
Specify a target language. The Routine itself should be
language-agnostic but the precise way one is created, error
checking, etc depend on the language. [default: "F95"].
A decision about whether to use output arguments or return values is made
depending on both the language and the particular mathematical expressions.
For an expression of type Equality, the left hand side is typically made
into an OutputArgument (or perhaps an InOutArgument if appropriate).
Otherwise, typically, the calculated expression is made a return values of
the routine.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.codegen import make_routine
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, f, g
>>> from sympy import Eq
>>> r = make_routine('test', [Eq(f, 2*x), Eq(g, x + y)])
>>> [arg.result_var for arg in r.results]
[]
>>> [arg.name for arg in r.arguments]
[x, y, f, g]
>>> [arg.name for arg in r.result_variables]
[f, g]
>>> r.local_vars
set()
Another more complicated example with a mixture of specified and
automatically-assigned names. Also has Matrix output.
>>> from sympy import Matrix
>>> r = make_routine('fcn', [x*y, Eq(f, 1), Eq(g, x + g), Matrix([[x, 2]])])
>>> [arg.result_var for arg in r.results] # doctest: +SKIP
[result_5397460570204848505]
>>> [arg.expr for arg in r.results]
[x*y]
>>> [arg.name for arg in r.arguments] # doctest: +SKIP
[x, y, f, g, out_8598435338387848786]
We can examine the various arguments more closely:
>>> from sympy.utilities.codegen import (InputArgument, OutputArgument,
... InOutArgument)
>>> [a.name for a in r.arguments if isinstance(a, InputArgument)]
[x, y]
>>> [a.name for a in r.arguments if isinstance(a, OutputArgument)] # doctest: +SKIP
[f, out_8598435338387848786]
>>> [a.expr for a in r.arguments if isinstance(a, OutputArgument)]
[1, Matrix([[x, 2]])]
>>> [a.name for a in r.arguments if isinstance(a, InOutArgument)]
[g]
>>> [a.expr for a in r.arguments if isinstance(a, InOutArgument)]
[g + x]
"""
# initialize a new code generator
code_gen = get_code_generator(language)
return code_gen.routine(name, expr, argument_sequence, global_vars)
|
01363ea9fe7cf274c445bcd25102e8b5107ef6f613a45f17812d7f4a7987a4dc
|
"""Module for compiling codegen output, and wrap the binary for use in
python.
.. note:: To use the autowrap module it must first be imported
>>> from sympy.utilities.autowrap import autowrap
This module provides a common interface for different external backends, such
as f2py, fwrap, Cython, SWIG(?) etc. (Currently only f2py and Cython are
implemented) The goal is to provide access to compiled binaries of acceptable
performance with a one-button user interface, i.e.
>>> from sympy.abc import x,y
>>> expr = ((x - y)**(25)).expand()
>>> binary_callable = autowrap(expr)
>>> binary_callable(1, 2)
-1.0
The callable returned from autowrap() is a binary python function, not a
SymPy object. If it is desired to use the compiled function in symbolic
expressions, it is better to use binary_function() which returns a SymPy
Function object. The binary callable is attached as the _imp_ attribute and
invoked when a numerical evaluation is requested with evalf(), or with
lambdify().
>>> from sympy.utilities.autowrap import binary_function
>>> f = binary_function('f', expr)
>>> 2*f(x, y) + y
y + 2*f(x, y)
>>> (2*f(x, y) + y).evalf(2, subs={x: 1, y:2})
0.e-110
The idea is that a SymPy user will primarily be interested in working with
mathematical expressions, and should not have to learn details about wrapping
tools in order to evaluate expressions numerically, even if they are
computationally expensive.
When is this useful?
1) For computations on large arrays, Python iterations may be too slow,
and depending on the mathematical expression, it may be difficult to
exploit the advanced index operations provided by NumPy.
2) For *really* long expressions that will be called repeatedly, the
compiled binary should be significantly faster than SymPy's .evalf()
3) If you are generating code with the codegen utility in order to use
it in another project, the automatic python wrappers let you test the
binaries immediately from within SymPy.
4) To create customized ufuncs for use with numpy arrays.
See *ufuncify*.
When is this module NOT the best approach?
1) If you are really concerned about speed or memory optimizations,
you will probably get better results by working directly with the
wrapper tools and the low level code. However, the files generated
by this utility may provide a useful starting point and reference
code. Temporary files will be left intact if you supply the keyword
tempdir="path/to/files/".
2) If the array computation can be handled easily by numpy, and you
don't need the binaries for another project.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import sys
import os
import shutil
import tempfile
from subprocess import STDOUT, CalledProcessError, check_output
from string import Template
from warnings import warn
from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
from sympy.core.compatibility import range, iterable
from sympy.core.function import Lambda
from sympy.core.relational import Eq
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy, Symbol
from sympy.tensor.indexed import Idx, IndexedBase
from sympy.utilities.codegen import (make_routine, get_code_generator,
OutputArgument, InOutArgument,
InputArgument, CodeGenArgumentListError,
Result, ResultBase, C99CodeGen)
from sympy.utilities.lambdify import implemented_function
from sympy.utilities.decorator import doctest_depends_on
_doctest_depends_on = {'exe': ('f2py', 'gfortran', 'gcc'),
'modules': ('numpy',)}
class CodeWrapError(Exception):
pass
class CodeWrapper(object):
"""Base Class for code wrappers"""
_filename = "wrapped_code"
_module_basename = "wrapper_module"
_module_counter = 0
@property
def filename(self):
return "%s_%s" % (self._filename, CodeWrapper._module_counter)
@property
def module_name(self):
return "%s_%s" % (self._module_basename, CodeWrapper._module_counter)
def __init__(self, generator, filepath=None, flags=[], verbose=False):
"""
generator -- the code generator to use
"""
self.generator = generator
self.filepath = filepath
self.flags = flags
self.quiet = not verbose
@property
def include_header(self):
return bool(self.filepath)
@property
def include_empty(self):
return bool(self.filepath)
def _generate_code(self, main_routine, routines):
routines.append(main_routine)
self.generator.write(
routines, self.filename, True, self.include_header,
self.include_empty)
def wrap_code(self, routine, helpers=[]):
if self.filepath:
workdir = os.path.abspath(self.filepath)
else:
workdir = tempfile.mkdtemp("_sympy_compile")
if not os.access(workdir, os.F_OK):
os.mkdir(workdir)
oldwork = os.getcwd()
os.chdir(workdir)
try:
sys.path.append(workdir)
self._generate_code(routine, helpers)
self._prepare_files(routine)
self._process_files(routine)
mod = __import__(self.module_name)
finally:
sys.path.remove(workdir)
CodeWrapper._module_counter += 1
os.chdir(oldwork)
if not self.filepath:
try:
shutil.rmtree(workdir)
except OSError:
# Could be some issues on Windows
pass
return self._get_wrapped_function(mod, routine.name)
def _process_files(self, routine):
command = self.command
command.extend(self.flags)
try:
retoutput = check_output(command, stderr=STDOUT)
except CalledProcessError as e:
raise CodeWrapError(
"Error while executing command: %s. Command output is:\n%s" % (
" ".join(command), e.output.decode('utf-8')))
if not self.quiet:
print(retoutput)
class DummyWrapper(CodeWrapper):
"""Class used for testing independent of backends """
template = """# dummy module for testing of SymPy
def %(name)s():
return "%(expr)s"
%(name)s.args = "%(args)s"
%(name)s.returns = "%(retvals)s"
"""
def _prepare_files(self, routine):
return
def _generate_code(self, routine, helpers):
with open('%s.py' % self.module_name, 'w') as f:
printed = ", ".join(
[str(res.expr) for res in routine.result_variables])
# convert OutputArguments to return value like f2py
args = filter(lambda x: not isinstance(
x, OutputArgument), routine.arguments)
retvals = []
for val in routine.result_variables:
if isinstance(val, Result):
retvals.append('nameless')
else:
retvals.append(val.result_var)
print(DummyWrapper.template % {
'name': routine.name,
'expr': printed,
'args': ", ".join([str(a.name) for a in args]),
'retvals': ", ".join([str(val) for val in retvals])
}, end="", file=f)
def _process_files(self, routine):
return
@classmethod
def _get_wrapped_function(cls, mod, name):
return getattr(mod, name)
class CythonCodeWrapper(CodeWrapper):
"""Wrapper that uses Cython"""
setup_template = """\
try:
from setuptools import setup
from setuptools import Extension
except ImportError:
from distutils.core import setup
from distutils.extension import Extension
from Cython.Build import cythonize
cy_opts = {cythonize_options}
{np_import}
ext_mods = [Extension(
{ext_args},
include_dirs={include_dirs},
library_dirs={library_dirs},
libraries={libraries},
extra_compile_args={extra_compile_args},
extra_link_args={extra_link_args}
)]
setup(ext_modules=cythonize(ext_mods, **cy_opts))
"""
pyx_imports = (
"import numpy as np\n"
"cimport numpy as np\n\n")
pyx_header = (
"cdef extern from '{header_file}.h':\n"
" {prototype}\n\n")
pyx_func = (
"def {name}_c({arg_string}):\n"
"\n"
"{declarations}"
"{body}")
std_compile_flag = '-std=c99'
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Instantiates a Cython code wrapper.
The following optional parameters get passed to ``distutils.Extension``
for building the Python extension module. Read its documentation to
learn more.
Parameters
==========
include_dirs : [list of strings]
A list of directories to search for C/C++ header files (in Unix
form for portability).
library_dirs : [list of strings]
A list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at link time.
libraries : [list of strings]
A list of library names (not filenames or paths) to link against.
extra_compile_args : [list of strings]
Any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use when
compiling the source files in 'sources'. For platforms and
compilers where "command line" makes sense, this is typically a
list of command-line arguments, but for other platforms it could be
anything. Note that the attribute ``std_compile_flag`` will be
appended to this list.
extra_link_args : [list of strings]
Any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use when
linking object files together to create the extension (or to create
a new static Python interpreter). Similar interpretation as for
'extra_compile_args'.
cythonize_options : [dictionary]
Keyword arguments passed on to cythonize.
"""
self._include_dirs = kwargs.pop('include_dirs', [])
self._library_dirs = kwargs.pop('library_dirs', [])
self._libraries = kwargs.pop('libraries', [])
self._extra_compile_args = kwargs.pop('extra_compile_args', [])
self._extra_compile_args.append(self.std_compile_flag)
self._extra_link_args = kwargs.pop('extra_link_args', [])
self._cythonize_options = kwargs.pop('cythonize_options', {})
self._need_numpy = False
super(CythonCodeWrapper, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
@property
def command(self):
command = [sys.executable, "setup.py", "build_ext", "--inplace"]
return command
def _prepare_files(self, routine, build_dir=os.curdir):
# NOTE : build_dir is used for testing purposes.
pyxfilename = self.module_name + '.pyx'
codefilename = "%s.%s" % (self.filename, self.generator.code_extension)
# pyx
with open(os.path.join(build_dir, pyxfilename), 'w') as f:
self.dump_pyx([routine], f, self.filename)
# setup.py
ext_args = [repr(self.module_name), repr([pyxfilename, codefilename])]
if self._need_numpy:
np_import = 'import numpy as np\n'
self._include_dirs.append('np.get_include()')
else:
np_import = ''
with open(os.path.join(build_dir, 'setup.py'), 'w') as f:
includes = str(self._include_dirs).replace("'np.get_include()'",
'np.get_include()')
f.write(self.setup_template.format(
ext_args=", ".join(ext_args),
np_import=np_import,
include_dirs=includes,
library_dirs=self._library_dirs,
libraries=self._libraries,
extra_compile_args=self._extra_compile_args,
extra_link_args=self._extra_link_args,
cythonize_options=self._cythonize_options
))
@classmethod
def _get_wrapped_function(cls, mod, name):
return getattr(mod, name + '_c')
def dump_pyx(self, routines, f, prefix):
"""Write a Cython file with python wrappers
This file contains all the definitions of the routines in c code and
refers to the header file.
Arguments
---------
routines
List of Routine instances
f
File-like object to write the file to
prefix
The filename prefix, used to refer to the proper header file.
Only the basename of the prefix is used.
"""
headers = []
functions = []
for routine in routines:
prototype = self.generator.get_prototype(routine)
# C Function Header Import
headers.append(self.pyx_header.format(header_file=prefix,
prototype=prototype))
# Partition the C function arguments into categories
py_rets, py_args, py_loc, py_inf = self._partition_args(routine.arguments)
# Function prototype
name = routine.name
arg_string = ", ".join(self._prototype_arg(arg) for arg in py_args)
# Local Declarations
local_decs = []
for arg, val in py_inf.items():
proto = self._prototype_arg(arg)
mat, ind = val
local_decs.append(" cdef {0} = {1}.shape[{2}]".format(proto, mat, ind))
local_decs.extend([" cdef {0}".format(self._declare_arg(a)) for a in py_loc])
declarations = "\n".join(local_decs)
if declarations:
declarations = declarations + "\n"
# Function Body
args_c = ", ".join([self._call_arg(a) for a in routine.arguments])
rets = ", ".join([str(r.name) for r in py_rets])
if routine.results:
body = ' return %s(%s)' % (routine.name, args_c)
if rets:
body = body + ', ' + rets
else:
body = ' %s(%s)\n' % (routine.name, args_c)
body = body + ' return ' + rets
functions.append(self.pyx_func.format(name=name, arg_string=arg_string,
declarations=declarations, body=body))
# Write text to file
if self._need_numpy:
# Only import numpy if required
f.write(self.pyx_imports)
f.write('\n'.join(headers))
f.write('\n'.join(functions))
def _partition_args(self, args):
"""Group function arguments into categories."""
py_args = []
py_returns = []
py_locals = []
py_inferred = {}
for arg in args:
if isinstance(arg, OutputArgument):
py_returns.append(arg)
py_locals.append(arg)
elif isinstance(arg, InOutArgument):
py_returns.append(arg)
py_args.append(arg)
else:
py_args.append(arg)
# Find arguments that are array dimensions. These can be inferred
# locally in the Cython code.
if isinstance(arg, (InputArgument, InOutArgument)) and arg.dimensions:
dims = [d[1] + 1 for d in arg.dimensions]
sym_dims = [(i, d) for (i, d) in enumerate(dims) if
isinstance(d, Symbol)]
for (i, d) in sym_dims:
py_inferred[d] = (arg.name, i)
for arg in args:
if arg.name in py_inferred:
py_inferred[arg] = py_inferred.pop(arg.name)
# Filter inferred arguments from py_args
py_args = [a for a in py_args if a not in py_inferred]
return py_returns, py_args, py_locals, py_inferred
def _prototype_arg(self, arg):
mat_dec = "np.ndarray[{mtype}, ndim={ndim}] {name}"
np_types = {'double': 'np.double_t',
'int': 'np.int_t'}
t = arg.get_datatype('c')
if arg.dimensions:
self._need_numpy = True
ndim = len(arg.dimensions)
mtype = np_types[t]
return mat_dec.format(mtype=mtype, ndim=ndim, name=arg.name)
else:
return "%s %s" % (t, str(arg.name))
def _declare_arg(self, arg):
proto = self._prototype_arg(arg)
if arg.dimensions:
shape = '(' + ','.join(str(i[1] + 1) for i in arg.dimensions) + ')'
return proto + " = np.empty({shape})".format(shape=shape)
else:
return proto + " = 0"
def _call_arg(self, arg):
if arg.dimensions:
t = arg.get_datatype('c')
return "<{0}*> {1}.data".format(t, arg.name)
elif isinstance(arg, ResultBase):
return "&{0}".format(arg.name)
else:
return str(arg.name)
class F2PyCodeWrapper(CodeWrapper):
"""Wrapper that uses f2py"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
ext_keys = ['include_dirs', 'library_dirs', 'libraries',
'extra_compile_args', 'extra_link_args']
msg = ('The compilation option kwarg {} is not supported with the f2py '
'backend.')
for k in ext_keys:
if k in kwargs.keys():
warn(msg.format(k))
kwargs.pop(k, None)
super(F2PyCodeWrapper, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
@property
def command(self):
filename = self.filename + '.' + self.generator.code_extension
args = ['-c', '-m', self.module_name, filename]
command = [sys.executable, "-c", "import numpy.f2py as f2py2e;f2py2e.main()"]+args
return command
def _prepare_files(self, routine):
pass
@classmethod
def _get_wrapped_function(cls, mod, name):
return getattr(mod, name)
# Here we define a lookup of backends -> tuples of languages. For now, each
# tuple is of length 1, but if a backend supports more than one language,
# the most preferable language is listed first.
_lang_lookup = {'CYTHON': ('C99', 'C89', 'C'),
'F2PY': ('F95',),
'NUMPY': ('C99', 'C89', 'C'),
'DUMMY': ('F95',)} # Dummy here just for testing
def _infer_language(backend):
"""For a given backend, return the top choice of language"""
langs = _lang_lookup.get(backend.upper(), False)
if not langs:
raise ValueError("Unrecognized backend: " + backend)
return langs[0]
def _validate_backend_language(backend, language):
"""Throws error if backend and language are incompatible"""
langs = _lang_lookup.get(backend.upper(), False)
if not langs:
raise ValueError("Unrecognized backend: " + backend)
if language.upper() not in langs:
raise ValueError(("Backend {0} and language {1} are "
"incompatible").format(backend, language))
@cacheit
@doctest_depends_on(exe=('f2py', 'gfortran'), modules=('numpy',))
def autowrap(expr, language=None, backend='f2py', tempdir=None, args=None,
flags=None, verbose=False, helpers=None, code_gen=None, **kwargs):
"""Generates python callable binaries based on the math expression.
Parameters
----------
expr
The SymPy expression that should be wrapped as a binary routine.
language : string, optional
If supplied, (options: 'C' or 'F95'), specifies the language of the
generated code. If ``None`` [default], the language is inferred based
upon the specified backend.
backend : string, optional
Backend used to wrap the generated code. Either 'f2py' [default],
or 'cython'.
tempdir : string, optional
Path to directory for temporary files. If this argument is supplied,
the generated code and the wrapper input files are left intact in the
specified path.
args : iterable, optional
An ordered iterable of symbols. Specifies the argument sequence for the
function.
flags : iterable, optional
Additional option flags that will be passed to the backend.
verbose : bool, optional
If True, autowrap will not mute the command line backends. This can be
helpful for debugging.
helpers : 3-tuple or iterable of 3-tuples, optional
Used to define auxiliary expressions needed for the main expr. If the
main expression needs to call a specialized function it should be
passed in via ``helpers``. Autowrap will then make sure that the
compiled main expression can link to the helper routine. Items should
be 3-tuples with (<function_name>, <sympy_expression>,
<argument_tuple>). It is mandatory to supply an argument sequence to
helper routines.
code_gen : CodeGen instance
An instance of a CodeGen subclass. Overrides ``language``.
include_dirs : [string]
A list of directories to search for C/C++ header files (in Unix form
for portability).
library_dirs : [string]
A list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at link time.
libraries : [string]
A list of library names (not filenames or paths) to link against.
extra_compile_args : [string]
Any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use when
compiling the source files in 'sources'. For platforms and compilers
where "command line" makes sense, this is typically a list of
command-line arguments, but for other platforms it could be anything.
extra_link_args : [string]
Any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use when
linking object files together to create the extension (or to create a
new static Python interpreter). Similar interpretation as for
'extra_compile_args'.
Examples
--------
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy.utilities.autowrap import autowrap
>>> expr = ((x - y + z)**(13)).expand()
>>> binary_func = autowrap(expr)
>>> binary_func(1, 4, 2)
-1.0
"""
if language:
if not isinstance(language, type):
_validate_backend_language(backend, language)
else:
language = _infer_language(backend)
# two cases 1) helpers is an iterable of 3-tuples and 2) helpers is a
# 3-tuple
if iterable(helpers) and len(helpers) != 0 and iterable(helpers[0]):
helpers = helpers if helpers else ()
else:
helpers = [helpers] if helpers else ()
args = list(args) if iterable(args, exclude=set) else args
if code_gen is None:
code_gen = get_code_generator(language, "autowrap")
CodeWrapperClass = {
'F2PY': F2PyCodeWrapper,
'CYTHON': CythonCodeWrapper,
'DUMMY': DummyWrapper
}[backend.upper()]
code_wrapper = CodeWrapperClass(code_gen, tempdir, flags if flags else (),
verbose, **kwargs)
helps = []
for name_h, expr_h, args_h in helpers:
helps.append(code_gen.routine(name_h, expr_h, args_h))
for name_h, expr_h, args_h in helpers:
if expr.has(expr_h):
name_h = binary_function(name_h, expr_h, backend='dummy')
expr = expr.subs(expr_h, name_h(*args_h))
try:
routine = code_gen.routine('autofunc', expr, args)
except CodeGenArgumentListError as e:
# if all missing arguments are for pure output, we simply attach them
# at the end and try again, because the wrappers will silently convert
# them to return values anyway.
new_args = []
for missing in e.missing_args:
if not isinstance(missing, OutputArgument):
raise
new_args.append(missing.name)
routine = code_gen.routine('autofunc', expr, args + new_args)
return code_wrapper.wrap_code(routine, helpers=helps)
@doctest_depends_on(exe=('f2py', 'gfortran'), modules=('numpy',))
def binary_function(symfunc, expr, **kwargs):
"""Returns a sympy function with expr as binary implementation
This is a convenience function that automates the steps needed to
autowrap the SymPy expression and attaching it to a Function object
with implemented_function().
Parameters
----------
symfunc : sympy Function
The function to bind the callable to.
expr : sympy Expression
The expression used to generate the function.
kwargs : dict
Any kwargs accepted by autowrap.
Examples
--------
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy.utilities.autowrap import binary_function
>>> expr = ((x - y)**(25)).expand()
>>> f = binary_function('f', expr)
>>> type(f)
<class 'sympy.core.function.UndefinedFunction'>
>>> 2*f(x, y)
2*f(x, y)
>>> f(x, y).evalf(2, subs={x: 1, y: 2})
-1.0
"""
binary = autowrap(expr, **kwargs)
return implemented_function(symfunc, binary)
#################################################################
# UFUNCIFY #
#################################################################
_ufunc_top = Template("""\
#include "Python.h"
#include "math.h"
#include "numpy/ndarraytypes.h"
#include "numpy/ufuncobject.h"
#include "numpy/halffloat.h"
#include ${include_file}
static PyMethodDef ${module}Methods[] = {
{NULL, NULL, 0, NULL}
};""")
_ufunc_outcalls = Template("*((double *)out${outnum}) = ${funcname}(${call_args});")
_ufunc_body = Template("""\
static void ${funcname}_ufunc(char **args, npy_intp *dimensions, npy_intp* steps, void* data)
{
npy_intp i;
npy_intp n = dimensions[0];
${declare_args}
${declare_steps}
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
${outcalls}
${step_increments}
}
}
PyUFuncGenericFunction ${funcname}_funcs[1] = {&${funcname}_ufunc};
static char ${funcname}_types[${n_types}] = ${types}
static void *${funcname}_data[1] = {NULL};""")
_ufunc_bottom = Template("""\
#if PY_VERSION_HEX >= 0x03000000
static struct PyModuleDef moduledef = {
PyModuleDef_HEAD_INIT,
"${module}",
NULL,
-1,
${module}Methods,
NULL,
NULL,
NULL,
NULL
};
PyMODINIT_FUNC PyInit_${module}(void)
{
PyObject *m, *d;
${function_creation}
m = PyModule_Create(&moduledef);
if (!m) {
return NULL;
}
import_array();
import_umath();
d = PyModule_GetDict(m);
${ufunc_init}
return m;
}
#else
PyMODINIT_FUNC init${module}(void)
{
PyObject *m, *d;
${function_creation}
m = Py_InitModule("${module}", ${module}Methods);
if (m == NULL) {
return;
}
import_array();
import_umath();
d = PyModule_GetDict(m);
${ufunc_init}
}
#endif\
""")
_ufunc_init_form = Template("""\
ufunc${ind} = PyUFunc_FromFuncAndData(${funcname}_funcs, ${funcname}_data, ${funcname}_types, 1, ${n_in}, ${n_out},
PyUFunc_None, "${module}", ${docstring}, 0);
PyDict_SetItemString(d, "${funcname}", ufunc${ind});
Py_DECREF(ufunc${ind});""")
_ufunc_setup = Template("""\
def configuration(parent_package='', top_path=None):
import numpy
from numpy.distutils.misc_util import Configuration
config = Configuration('',
parent_package,
top_path)
config.add_extension('${module}', sources=['${module}.c', '${filename}.c'])
return config
if __name__ == "__main__":
from numpy.distutils.core import setup
setup(configuration=configuration)""")
class UfuncifyCodeWrapper(CodeWrapper):
"""Wrapper for Ufuncify"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
ext_keys = ['include_dirs', 'library_dirs', 'libraries',
'extra_compile_args', 'extra_link_args']
msg = ('The compilation option kwarg {} is not supported with the numpy'
' backend.')
for k in ext_keys:
if k in kwargs.keys():
warn(msg.format(k))
kwargs.pop(k, None)
super(UfuncifyCodeWrapper, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
@property
def command(self):
command = [sys.executable, "setup.py", "build_ext", "--inplace"]
return command
def wrap_code(self, routines, helpers=None):
# This routine overrides CodeWrapper because we can't assume funcname == routines[0].name
# Therefore we have to break the CodeWrapper private API.
# There isn't an obvious way to extend multi-expr support to
# the other autowrap backends, so we limit this change to ufuncify.
helpers = helpers if helpers is not None else []
# We just need a consistent name
funcname = 'wrapped_' + str(id(routines) + id(helpers))
workdir = self.filepath or tempfile.mkdtemp("_sympy_compile")
if not os.access(workdir, os.F_OK):
os.mkdir(workdir)
oldwork = os.getcwd()
os.chdir(workdir)
try:
sys.path.append(workdir)
self._generate_code(routines, helpers)
self._prepare_files(routines, funcname)
self._process_files(routines)
mod = __import__(self.module_name)
finally:
sys.path.remove(workdir)
CodeWrapper._module_counter += 1
os.chdir(oldwork)
if not self.filepath:
try:
shutil.rmtree(workdir)
except OSError:
# Could be some issues on Windows
pass
return self._get_wrapped_function(mod, funcname)
def _generate_code(self, main_routines, helper_routines):
all_routines = main_routines + helper_routines
self.generator.write(
all_routines, self.filename, True, self.include_header,
self.include_empty)
def _prepare_files(self, routines, funcname):
# C
codefilename = self.module_name + '.c'
with open(codefilename, 'w') as f:
self.dump_c(routines, f, self.filename, funcname=funcname)
# setup.py
with open('setup.py', 'w') as f:
self.dump_setup(f)
@classmethod
def _get_wrapped_function(cls, mod, name):
return getattr(mod, name)
def dump_setup(self, f):
setup = _ufunc_setup.substitute(module=self.module_name,
filename=self.filename)
f.write(setup)
def dump_c(self, routines, f, prefix, funcname=None):
"""Write a C file with python wrappers
This file contains all the definitions of the routines in c code.
Arguments
---------
routines
List of Routine instances
f
File-like object to write the file to
prefix
The filename prefix, used to name the imported module.
funcname
Name of the main function to be returned.
"""
if (funcname is None) and (len(routines) == 1):
funcname = routines[0].name
elif funcname is None:
msg = 'funcname must be specified for multiple output routines'
raise ValueError(msg)
functions = []
function_creation = []
ufunc_init = []
module = self.module_name
include_file = "\"{0}.h\"".format(prefix)
top = _ufunc_top.substitute(include_file=include_file, module=module)
name = funcname
# Partition the C function arguments into categories
# Here we assume all routines accept the same arguments
r_index = 0
py_in, _ = self._partition_args(routines[0].arguments)
n_in = len(py_in)
n_out = len(routines)
# Declare Args
form = "char *{0}{1} = args[{2}];"
arg_decs = [form.format('in', i, i) for i in range(n_in)]
arg_decs.extend([form.format('out', i, i+n_in) for i in range(n_out)])
declare_args = '\n '.join(arg_decs)
# Declare Steps
form = "npy_intp {0}{1}_step = steps[{2}];"
step_decs = [form.format('in', i, i) for i in range(n_in)]
step_decs.extend([form.format('out', i, i+n_in) for i in range(n_out)])
declare_steps = '\n '.join(step_decs)
# Call Args
form = "*(double *)in{0}"
call_args = ', '.join([form.format(a) for a in range(n_in)])
# Step Increments
form = "{0}{1} += {0}{1}_step;"
step_incs = [form.format('in', i) for i in range(n_in)]
step_incs.extend([form.format('out', i, i) for i in range(n_out)])
step_increments = '\n '.join(step_incs)
# Types
n_types = n_in + n_out
types = "{" + ', '.join(["NPY_DOUBLE"]*n_types) + "};"
# Docstring
docstring = '"Created in SymPy with Ufuncify"'
# Function Creation
function_creation.append("PyObject *ufunc{0};".format(r_index))
# Ufunc initialization
init_form = _ufunc_init_form.substitute(module=module,
funcname=name,
docstring=docstring,
n_in=n_in, n_out=n_out,
ind=r_index)
ufunc_init.append(init_form)
outcalls = [_ufunc_outcalls.substitute(
outnum=i, call_args=call_args, funcname=routines[i].name) for i in
range(n_out)]
body = _ufunc_body.substitute(module=module, funcname=name,
declare_args=declare_args,
declare_steps=declare_steps,
call_args=call_args,
step_increments=step_increments,
n_types=n_types, types=types,
outcalls='\n '.join(outcalls))
functions.append(body)
body = '\n\n'.join(functions)
ufunc_init = '\n '.join(ufunc_init)
function_creation = '\n '.join(function_creation)
bottom = _ufunc_bottom.substitute(module=module,
ufunc_init=ufunc_init,
function_creation=function_creation)
text = [top, body, bottom]
f.write('\n\n'.join(text))
def _partition_args(self, args):
"""Group function arguments into categories."""
py_in = []
py_out = []
for arg in args:
if isinstance(arg, OutputArgument):
py_out.append(arg)
elif isinstance(arg, InOutArgument):
raise ValueError("Ufuncify doesn't support InOutArguments")
else:
py_in.append(arg)
return py_in, py_out
@cacheit
@doctest_depends_on(exe=('f2py', 'gfortran', 'gcc'), modules=('numpy',))
def ufuncify(args, expr, language=None, backend='numpy', tempdir=None,
flags=None, verbose=False, helpers=None, **kwargs):
"""Generates a binary function that supports broadcasting on numpy arrays.
Parameters
----------
args : iterable
Either a Symbol or an iterable of symbols. Specifies the argument
sequence for the function.
expr
A SymPy expression that defines the element wise operation.
language : string, optional
If supplied, (options: 'C' or 'F95'), specifies the language of the
generated code. If ``None`` [default], the language is inferred based
upon the specified backend.
backend : string, optional
Backend used to wrap the generated code. Either 'numpy' [default],
'cython', or 'f2py'.
tempdir : string, optional
Path to directory for temporary files. If this argument is supplied,
the generated code and the wrapper input files are left intact in
the specified path.
flags : iterable, optional
Additional option flags that will be passed to the backend.
verbose : bool, optional
If True, autowrap will not mute the command line backends. This can
be helpful for debugging.
helpers : iterable, optional
Used to define auxiliary expressions needed for the main expr. If
the main expression needs to call a specialized function it should
be put in the ``helpers`` iterable. Autowrap will then make sure
that the compiled main expression can link to the helper routine.
Items should be tuples with (<funtion_name>, <sympy_expression>,
<arguments>). It is mandatory to supply an argument sequence to
helper routines.
kwargs : dict
These kwargs will be passed to autowrap if the `f2py` or `cython`
backend is used and ignored if the `numpy` backend is used.
Note
----
The default backend ('numpy') will create actual instances of
``numpy.ufunc``. These support ndimensional broadcasting, and implicit type
conversion. Use of the other backends will result in a "ufunc-like"
function, which requires equal length 1-dimensional arrays for all
arguments, and will not perform any type conversions.
References
----------
[1] http://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/ufuncs.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.autowrap import ufuncify
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> import numpy as np
>>> f = ufuncify((x, y), y + x**2)
>>> type(f)
<class 'numpy.ufunc'>
>>> f([1, 2, 3], 2)
array([ 3., 6., 11.])
>>> f(np.arange(5), 3)
array([ 3., 4., 7., 12., 19.])
For the 'f2py' and 'cython' backends, inputs are required to be equal length
1-dimensional arrays. The 'f2py' backend will perform type conversion, but
the Cython backend will error if the inputs are not of the expected type.
>>> f_fortran = ufuncify((x, y), y + x**2, backend='f2py')
>>> f_fortran(1, 2)
array([ 3.])
>>> f_fortran(np.array([1, 2, 3]), np.array([1.0, 2.0, 3.0]))
array([ 2., 6., 12.])
>>> f_cython = ufuncify((x, y), y + x**2, backend='Cython')
>>> f_cython(1, 2) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: Argument '_x' has incorrect type (expected numpy.ndarray, got int)
>>> f_cython(np.array([1.0]), np.array([2.0]))
array([ 3.])
"""
if isinstance(args, Symbol):
args = (args,)
else:
args = tuple(args)
if language:
_validate_backend_language(backend, language)
else:
language = _infer_language(backend)
helpers = helpers if helpers else ()
flags = flags if flags else ()
if backend.upper() == 'NUMPY':
# maxargs is set by numpy compile-time constant NPY_MAXARGS
# If a future version of numpy modifies or removes this restriction
# this variable should be changed or removed
maxargs = 32
helps = []
for name, expr, args in helpers:
helps.append(make_routine(name, expr, args))
code_wrapper = UfuncifyCodeWrapper(C99CodeGen("ufuncify"), tempdir,
flags, verbose)
if not isinstance(expr, (list, tuple)):
expr = [expr]
if len(expr) == 0:
raise ValueError('Expression iterable has zero length')
if (len(expr) + len(args)) > maxargs:
msg = ('Cannot create ufunc with more than {0} total arguments: '
'got {1} in, {2} out')
raise ValueError(msg.format(maxargs, len(args), len(expr)))
routines = [make_routine('autofunc{}'.format(idx), exprx, args) for
idx, exprx in enumerate(expr)]
return code_wrapper.wrap_code(routines, helpers=helps)
else:
# Dummies are used for all added expressions to prevent name clashes
# within the original expression.
y = IndexedBase(Dummy('y'))
m = Dummy('m', integer=True)
i = Idx(Dummy('i', integer=True), m)
f_dummy = Dummy('f')
f = implemented_function('%s_%d' % (f_dummy.name, f_dummy.dummy_index), Lambda(args, expr))
# For each of the args create an indexed version.
indexed_args = [IndexedBase(Dummy(str(a))) for a in args]
# Order the arguments (out, args, dim)
args = [y] + indexed_args + [m]
args_with_indices = [a[i] for a in indexed_args]
return autowrap(Eq(y[i], f(*args_with_indices)), language, backend,
tempdir, args, flags, verbose, helpers, **kwargs)
|
fc44f8578e9441d5bc4c30d76e06129935c3a7d8dd6da9f5da333abee630723d
|
"""py.test hacks to support XFAIL/XPASS"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import sys
import functools
import os
import contextlib
import warnings
from sympy.core.compatibility import get_function_name
from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning
try:
import py
from py.test import skip, raises, warns
USE_PYTEST = getattr(sys, '_running_pytest', False)
except ImportError:
USE_PYTEST = False
ON_TRAVIS = os.getenv('TRAVIS_BUILD_NUMBER', None)
if not USE_PYTEST:
def raises(expectedException, code=None):
"""
Tests that ``code`` raises the exception ``expectedException``.
``code`` may be a callable, such as a lambda expression or function
name.
If ``code`` is not given or None, ``raises`` will return a context
manager for use in ``with`` statements; the code to execute then
comes from the scope of the ``with``.
``raises()`` does nothing if the callable raises the expected exception,
otherwise it raises an AssertionError.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.pytest import raises
>>> raises(ZeroDivisionError, lambda: 1/0)
>>> raises(ZeroDivisionError, lambda: 1/2)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AssertionError: DID NOT RAISE
>>> with raises(ZeroDivisionError):
... n = 1/0
>>> with raises(ZeroDivisionError):
... n = 1/2
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AssertionError: DID NOT RAISE
Note that you cannot test multiple statements via
``with raises``:
>>> with raises(ZeroDivisionError):
... n = 1/0 # will execute and raise, aborting the ``with``
... n = 9999/0 # never executed
This is just what ``with`` is supposed to do: abort the
contained statement sequence at the first exception and let
the context manager deal with the exception.
To test multiple statements, you'll need a separate ``with``
for each:
>>> with raises(ZeroDivisionError):
... n = 1/0 # will execute and raise
>>> with raises(ZeroDivisionError):
... n = 9999/0 # will also execute and raise
"""
if code is None:
return RaisesContext(expectedException)
elif callable(code):
try:
code()
except expectedException:
return
raise AssertionError("DID NOT RAISE")
elif isinstance(code, str):
raise TypeError(
'\'raises(xxx, "code")\' has been phased out; '
'change \'raises(xxx, "expression")\' '
'to \'raises(xxx, lambda: expression)\', '
'\'raises(xxx, "statement")\' '
'to \'with raises(xxx): statement\'')
else:
raise TypeError(
'raises() expects a callable for the 2nd argument.')
class RaisesContext(object):
def __init__(self, expectedException):
self.expectedException = expectedException
def __enter__(self):
return None
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
if exc_type is None:
raise AssertionError("DID NOT RAISE")
return issubclass(exc_type, self.expectedException)
class XFail(Exception):
pass
class XPass(Exception):
pass
class Skipped(Exception):
pass
def XFAIL(func):
def wrapper():
try:
func()
except Exception as e:
message = str(e)
if message != "Timeout":
raise XFail(get_function_name(func))
else:
raise Skipped("Timeout")
raise XPass(get_function_name(func))
wrapper = functools.update_wrapper(wrapper, func)
return wrapper
def skip(str):
raise Skipped(str)
def SKIP(reason):
"""Similar to :func:`skip`, but this is a decorator. """
def wrapper(func):
def func_wrapper():
raise Skipped(reason)
func_wrapper = functools.update_wrapper(func_wrapper, func)
return func_wrapper
return wrapper
def slow(func):
func._slow = True
def func_wrapper():
func()
func_wrapper = functools.update_wrapper(func_wrapper, func)
func_wrapper.__wrapped__ = func
return func_wrapper
@contextlib.contextmanager
def warns(warningcls, **kwargs):
'''Like raises but tests that warnings are emitted.
>>> from sympy.utilities.pytest import warns
>>> import warnings
>>> with warns(UserWarning):
... warnings.warn('deprecated', UserWarning)
>>> with warns(UserWarning):
... pass
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AssertionError: Failed: DID NOT WARN. No warnings of type UserWarning\
was emitted. The list of emitted warnings is: [].
'''
match = kwargs.pop('match', '')
if kwargs:
raise TypeError('Invalid keyword arguments: %s' % kwargs)
# Absorbs all warnings in warnrec
with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warnrec:
# Hide all warnings but make sure that our warning is emitted
warnings.simplefilter("ignore")
warnings.filterwarnings("always", match, warningcls)
# Now run the test
yield
# Raise if expected warning not found
if not any(issubclass(w.category, warningcls) for w in warnrec):
msg = ('Failed: DID NOT WARN.'
' No warnings of type %s was emitted.'
' The list of emitted warnings is: %s.'
) % (warningcls, [w.message for w in warnrec])
raise AssertionError(msg)
else:
XFAIL = py.test.mark.xfail
slow = py.test.mark.slow
def SKIP(reason):
def skipping(func):
@functools.wraps(func)
def inner(*args, **kwargs):
skip(reason)
return inner
return skipping
@contextlib.contextmanager
def warns_deprecated_sympy():
'''Shorthand for ``warns(SymPyDeprecationWarning)``
This is the recommended way to test that ``SymPyDeprecationWarning`` is
emitted for deprecated features in SymPy. To test for other warnings use
``warns``. To suppress warnings without asserting that they are emitted
use ``ignore_warnings``.
>>> from sympy.utilities.pytest import warns_deprecated_sympy
>>> from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning
>>> import warnings
>>> with warns_deprecated_sympy():
... SymPyDeprecationWarning("Don't use", feature="old thing",
... deprecated_since_version="1.0", issue=123).warn()
>>> with warns_deprecated_sympy():
... pass
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AssertionError: Failed: DID NOT WARN. No warnings of type \
SymPyDeprecationWarning was emitted. The list of emitted warnings is: [].
'''
with warns(SymPyDeprecationWarning):
yield
@contextlib.contextmanager
def ignore_warnings(warningcls):
'''Context manager to suppress warnings during tests.
This function is useful for suppressing warnings during tests. The warns
function should be used to assert that a warning is raised. The
ignore_warnings function is useful in situation when the warning is not
guaranteed to be raised (e.g. on importing a module) or if the warning
comes from third-party code.
When the warning is coming (reliably) from SymPy the warns function should
be preferred to ignore_warnings.
>>> from sympy.utilities.pytest import ignore_warnings
>>> import warnings
Here's a warning:
>>> with warnings.catch_warnings(): # reset warnings in doctest
... warnings.simplefilter('error')
... warnings.warn('deprecated', UserWarning)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
UserWarning: deprecated
Let's suppress it with ignore_warnings:
>>> with warnings.catch_warnings(): # reset warnings in doctest
... warnings.simplefilter('error')
... with ignore_warnings(UserWarning):
... warnings.warn('deprecated', UserWarning)
(No warning emitted)
'''
# Absorbs all warnings in warnrec
with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warnrec:
# Make sure our warning doesn't get filtered
warnings.simplefilter("always", warningcls)
# Now run the test
yield
# Reissue any warnings that we aren't testing for
for w in warnrec:
if not issubclass(w.category, warningcls):
warnings.warn_explicit(w.message, w.category, w.filename, w.lineno)
|
fa2090fad1a58394df0a80e10708c4a62cce950e7eaee4224c1742cd3af2ff76
|
"""
This module provides convenient functions to transform sympy expressions to
lambda functions which can be used to calculate numerical values very fast.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from functools import wraps
import inspect
import keyword
import re
import textwrap
import linecache
from sympy.core.compatibility import (exec_, is_sequence, iterable,
NotIterable, string_types, range, builtins, integer_types, PY3)
from sympy.utilities.decorator import doctest_depends_on
# These are the namespaces the lambda functions will use.
MATH = {}
MPMATH = {}
NUMPY = {}
SCIPY = {}
TENSORFLOW = {}
SYMPY = {}
NUMEXPR = {}
# Default namespaces, letting us define translations that can't be defined
# by simple variable maps, like I => 1j
# These are separate from the names above because the above names are modified
# throughout this file, whereas these should remain unmodified.
MATH_DEFAULT = {}
MPMATH_DEFAULT = {}
NUMPY_DEFAULT = {"I": 1j}
SCIPY_DEFAULT = {"I": 1j}
TENSORFLOW_DEFAULT = {}
SYMPY_DEFAULT = {}
NUMEXPR_DEFAULT = {}
# Mappings between sympy and other modules function names.
MATH_TRANSLATIONS = {
"ceiling": "ceil",
"E": "e",
"ln": "log",
}
MPMATH_TRANSLATIONS = {
"Abs": "fabs",
"elliptic_k": "ellipk",
"elliptic_f": "ellipf",
"elliptic_e": "ellipe",
"elliptic_pi": "ellippi",
"ceiling": "ceil",
"chebyshevt": "chebyt",
"chebyshevu": "chebyu",
"E": "e",
"I": "j",
"ln": "log",
#"lowergamma":"lower_gamma",
"oo": "inf",
#"uppergamma":"upper_gamma",
"LambertW": "lambertw",
"MutableDenseMatrix": "matrix",
"ImmutableDenseMatrix": "matrix",
"conjugate": "conj",
"dirichlet_eta": "altzeta",
"Ei": "ei",
"Shi": "shi",
"Chi": "chi",
"Si": "si",
"Ci": "ci",
"RisingFactorial": "rf",
"FallingFactorial": "ff",
}
NUMPY_TRANSLATIONS = {}
SCIPY_TRANSLATIONS = {}
TENSORFLOW_TRANSLATIONS = {
"Abs": "abs",
"ceiling": "ceil",
"im": "imag",
"ln": "log",
"Mod": "mod",
"conjugate": "conj",
"re": "real",
}
NUMEXPR_TRANSLATIONS = {}
# Available modules:
MODULES = {
"math": (MATH, MATH_DEFAULT, MATH_TRANSLATIONS, ("from math import *",)),
"mpmath": (MPMATH, MPMATH_DEFAULT, MPMATH_TRANSLATIONS, ("from mpmath import *",)),
"numpy": (NUMPY, NUMPY_DEFAULT, NUMPY_TRANSLATIONS, ("import numpy; from numpy import *; from numpy.linalg import *",)),
"scipy": (SCIPY, SCIPY_DEFAULT, SCIPY_TRANSLATIONS, ("import numpy; import scipy; from scipy import *; from scipy.special import *",)),
"tensorflow": (TENSORFLOW, TENSORFLOW_DEFAULT, TENSORFLOW_TRANSLATIONS, ("import_module('tensorflow')",)),
"sympy": (SYMPY, SYMPY_DEFAULT, {}, (
"from sympy.functions import *",
"from sympy.matrices import *",
"from sympy import Integral, pi, oo, nan, zoo, E, I",)),
"numexpr" : (NUMEXPR, NUMEXPR_DEFAULT, NUMEXPR_TRANSLATIONS,
("import_module('numexpr')", )),
}
def _import(module, reload="False"):
"""
Creates a global translation dictionary for module.
The argument module has to be one of the following strings: "math",
"mpmath", "numpy", "sympy", "tensorflow".
These dictionaries map names of python functions to their equivalent in
other modules.
"""
from sympy.external import import_module
try:
namespace, namespace_default, translations, import_commands = MODULES[
module]
except KeyError:
raise NameError(
"'%s' module can't be used for lambdification" % module)
# Clear namespace or exit
if namespace != namespace_default:
# The namespace was already generated, don't do it again if not forced.
if reload:
namespace.clear()
namespace.update(namespace_default)
else:
return
for import_command in import_commands:
if import_command.startswith('import_module'):
module = eval(import_command)
if module is not None:
namespace.update(module.__dict__)
continue
else:
try:
exec_(import_command, {}, namespace)
continue
except ImportError:
pass
raise ImportError(
"can't import '%s' with '%s' command" % (module, import_command))
# Add translated names to namespace
for sympyname, translation in translations.items():
namespace[sympyname] = namespace[translation]
# For computing the modulus of a sympy expression we use the builtin abs
# function, instead of the previously used fabs function for all
# translation modules. This is because the fabs function in the math
# module does not accept complex valued arguments. (see issue 9474). The
# only exception, where we don't use the builtin abs function is the
# mpmath translation module, because mpmath.fabs returns mpf objects in
# contrast to abs().
if 'Abs' not in namespace:
namespace['Abs'] = abs
# Used for dynamically generated filenames that are inserted into the
# linecache.
_lambdify_generated_counter = 1
@doctest_depends_on(modules=('numpy'))
def lambdify(args, expr, modules=None, printer=None, use_imps=True,
dummify=False):
"""
Returns an anonymous function for fast calculation of numerical values.
If not specified differently by the user, ``modules`` defaults to
``["numpy"]`` if NumPy is installed, and ``["math", "mpmath", "sympy"]``
if it isn't, that is, SymPy functions are replaced as far as possible by
either ``numpy`` functions if available, and Python's standard library
``math``, or ``mpmath`` functions otherwise. To change this behavior, the
"modules" argument can be used. It accepts:
- the strings "math", "mpmath", "numpy", "numexpr", "sympy", "tensorflow"
- any modules (e.g. math)
- dictionaries that map names of sympy functions to arbitrary functions
- lists that contain a mix of the arguments above, with higher priority
given to entries appearing first.
.. warning::
Note that this function uses ``eval``, and thus shouldn't be used on
unsanitized input.
Arguments in the provided expression that are not valid Python identifiers
are substitued with dummy symbols. This allows for applied functions
(e.g. f(t)) to be supplied as arguments. Call the function with
dummify=True to replace all arguments with dummy symbols (if `args` is
not a string) - for example, to ensure that the arguments do not
redefine any built-in names.
For functions involving large array calculations, numexpr can provide a
significant speedup over numpy. Please note that the available functions
for numexpr are more limited than numpy but can be expanded with
implemented_function and user defined subclasses of Function. If specified,
numexpr may be the only option in modules. The official list of numexpr
functions can be found at:
https://github.com/pydata/numexpr#supported-functions
In previous releases ``lambdify`` replaced ``Matrix`` with ``numpy.matrix``
by default. As of release 1.0 ``numpy.array`` is the default.
To get the old default behavior you must pass in ``[{'ImmutableDenseMatrix':
numpy.matrix}, 'numpy']`` to the ``modules`` kwarg.
>>> from sympy import lambdify, Matrix
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> import numpy
>>> array2mat = [{'ImmutableDenseMatrix': numpy.matrix}, 'numpy']
>>> f = lambdify((x, y), Matrix([x, y]), modules=array2mat)
>>> f(1, 2)
matrix([[1],
[2]])
Usage
=====
(1) Use one of the provided modules:
>>> from sympy import sin, tan, gamma
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = lambdify(x, sin(x), "math")
Attention: Functions that are not in the math module will throw a name
error when the function definition is evaluated! So this
would be better:
>>> f = lambdify(x, sin(x)*gamma(x), ("math", "mpmath", "sympy"))
(2) Use some other module:
>>> import numpy
>>> f = lambdify((x,y), tan(x*y), numpy)
Attention: There are naming differences between numpy and sympy. So if
you simply take the numpy module, e.g. sympy.atan will not be
translated to numpy.arctan. Use the modified module instead
by passing the string "numpy":
>>> f = lambdify((x,y), tan(x*y), "numpy")
>>> f(1, 2)
-2.18503986326
>>> from numpy import array
>>> f(array([1, 2, 3]), array([2, 3, 5]))
[-2.18503986 -0.29100619 -0.8559934 ]
In the above examples, the generated functions can accept scalar
values or numpy arrays as arguments. However, in some cases
the generated function relies on the input being a numpy array:
>>> from sympy import Piecewise
>>> f = lambdify(x, Piecewise((x, x <= 1), (1/x, x > 1)), "numpy")
>>> f(array([-1, 0, 1, 2]))
[-1. 0. 1. 0.5]
>>> f(0)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
In such cases, the input should be wrapped in a numpy array:
>>> float(f(array([0])))
0.0
Or if numpy functionality is not required another module can be used:
>>> f = lambdify(x, Piecewise((x, x <= 1), (1/x, x > 1)), "math")
>>> f(0)
0
(3) Use a dictionary defining custom functions:
>>> def my_cool_function(x): return 'sin(%s) is cool' % x
>>> myfuncs = {"sin" : my_cool_function}
>>> f = lambdify(x, sin(x), myfuncs); f(1)
'sin(1) is cool'
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.lambdify import implemented_function
>>> from sympy import sqrt, sin, Matrix
>>> from sympy import Function
>>> from sympy.abc import w, x, y, z
>>> f = lambdify(x, x**2)
>>> f(2)
4
>>> f = lambdify((x, y, z), [z, y, x])
>>> f(1,2,3)
[3, 2, 1]
>>> f = lambdify(x, sqrt(x))
>>> f(4)
2.0
>>> f = lambdify((x, y), sin(x*y)**2)
>>> f(0, 5)
0.0
>>> row = lambdify((x, y), Matrix((x, x + y)).T, modules='sympy')
>>> row(1, 2)
Matrix([[1, 3]])
Tuple arguments are handled and the lambdified function should
be called with the same type of arguments as were used to create
the function.:
>>> f = lambdify((x, (y, z)), x + y)
>>> f(1, (2, 4))
3
A more robust way of handling this is to always work with flattened
arguments:
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import flatten
>>> args = w, (x, (y, z))
>>> vals = 1, (2, (3, 4))
>>> f = lambdify(flatten(args), w + x + y + z)
>>> f(*flatten(vals))
10
Functions present in `expr` can also carry their own numerical
implementations, in a callable attached to the ``_imp_``
attribute. Usually you attach this using the
``implemented_function`` factory:
>>> f = implemented_function(Function('f'), lambda x: x+1)
>>> func = lambdify(x, f(x))
>>> func(4)
5
``lambdify`` always prefers ``_imp_`` implementations to implementations
in other namespaces, unless the ``use_imps`` input parameter is False.
Usage with Tensorflow module:
>>> import tensorflow as tf
>>> f = Max(x, sin(x))
>>> func = lambdify(x, f, 'tensorflow')
>>> result = func(tf.constant(1.0))
>>> result # a tf.Tensor representing the result of the calculation
<tf.Tensor 'Maximum:0' shape=() dtype=float32>
>>> sess = tf.Session()
>>> sess.run(result) # compute result
1.0
>>> var = tf.Variable(1.0)
>>> sess.run(tf.global_variables_initializer())
>>> sess.run(func(var)) # also works for tf.Variable and tf.Placeholder
1.0
>>> tensor = tf.constant([[1.0, 2.0], [3.0, 4.0]]) # works with any shape tensor
>>> sess.run(func(tensor))
array([[ 1., 2.],
[ 3., 4.]], dtype=float32)
"""
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol
from sympy.utilities.iterables import flatten
# If the user hasn't specified any modules, use what is available.
module_provided = True
if modules is None:
module_provided = False
try:
_import("scipy")
except ImportError:
try:
_import("numpy")
except ImportError:
# Use either numpy (if available) or python.math where possible.
# XXX: This leads to different behaviour on different systems and
# might be the reason for irreproducible errors.
modules = ["math", "mpmath", "sympy"]
else:
modules = ["numpy"]
else:
modules = ["scipy", "numpy"]
# Get the needed namespaces.
namespaces = []
# First find any function implementations
if use_imps:
namespaces.append(_imp_namespace(expr))
# Check for dict before iterating
if isinstance(modules, (dict, str)) or not hasattr(modules, '__iter__'):
namespaces.append(modules)
else:
# consistency check
if _module_present('numexpr', modules) and len(modules) > 1:
raise TypeError("numexpr must be the only item in 'modules'")
namespaces += list(modules)
# fill namespace with first having highest priority
namespace = {}
for m in namespaces[::-1]:
buf = _get_namespace(m)
namespace.update(buf)
if hasattr(expr, "atoms"):
#Try if you can extract symbols from the expression.
#Move on if expr.atoms in not implemented.
syms = expr.atoms(Symbol)
for term in syms:
namespace.update({str(term): term})
if printer is None:
if _module_present('mpmath', namespaces):
from sympy.printing.pycode import MpmathPrinter as Printer
elif _module_present('scipy', namespaces):
from sympy.printing.pycode import SciPyPrinter as Printer
elif _module_present('numpy', namespaces):
from sympy.printing.pycode import NumPyPrinter as Printer
elif _module_present('numexpr', namespaces):
from sympy.printing.lambdarepr import NumExprPrinter as Printer
elif _module_present('tensorflow', namespaces):
from sympy.printing.tensorflow import TensorflowPrinter as Printer
elif _module_present('sympy', namespaces):
from sympy.printing.pycode import SymPyPrinter as Printer
else:
from sympy.printing.pycode import PythonCodePrinter as Printer
user_functions = {}
for m in namespaces[::-1]:
if isinstance(m, dict):
for k in m:
user_functions[k] = k
printer = Printer({'fully_qualified_modules': False, 'inline': True,
'allow_unknown_functions': True,
'user_functions': user_functions})
# Get the names of the args, for creating a docstring
if not iterable(args):
args = (args,)
names = []
# Grab the callers frame, for getting the names by inspection (if needed)
callers_local_vars = inspect.currentframe().f_back.f_locals.items()
for n, var in enumerate(args):
if hasattr(var, 'name'):
names.append(var.name)
else:
# It's an iterable. Try to get name by inspection of calling frame.
name_list = [var_name for var_name, var_val in callers_local_vars
if var_val is var]
if len(name_list) == 1:
names.append(name_list[0])
else:
# Cannot infer name with certainty. arg_# will have to do.
names.append('arg_' + str(n))
imp_mod_lines = []
for mod, keys in (getattr(printer, 'module_imports', None) or {}).items():
for k in keys:
if k not in namespace:
imp_mod_lines.append("from %s import %s" % (mod, k))
for ln in imp_mod_lines:
exec_(ln, {}, namespace)
# Provide lambda expression with builtins, and compatible implementation of range
namespace.update({'builtins':builtins, 'range':range})
# Create the function definition code and execute it
funcname = '_lambdifygenerated'
if _module_present('tensorflow', namespaces):
funcprinter = _TensorflowEvaluatorPrinter(printer, dummify)
else:
funcprinter = _EvaluatorPrinter(printer, dummify)
funcstr = funcprinter.doprint(funcname, args, expr)
funclocals = {}
global _lambdify_generated_counter
filename = '<lambdifygenerated-%s>' % _lambdify_generated_counter
_lambdify_generated_counter += 1
c = compile(funcstr, filename, 'exec')
exec_(c, namespace, funclocals)
# mtime has to be None or else linecache.checkcache will remove it
linecache.cache[filename] = (len(funcstr), None, funcstr.splitlines(True), filename)
func = funclocals[funcname]
# Apply the docstring
sig = "func({0})".format(", ".join(str(i) for i in names))
sig = textwrap.fill(sig, subsequent_indent=' '*8)
expr_str = str(expr)
if len(expr_str) > 78:
expr_str = textwrap.wrap(expr_str, 75)[0] + '...'
func.__doc__ = (
"Created with lambdify. Signature:\n\n"
"{sig}\n\n"
"Expression:\n\n"
"{expr}\n\n"
"Source code:\n\n"
"{src}\n\n"
"Imported modules:\n\n"
"{imp_mods}"
).format(sig=sig, expr=expr_str, src=funcstr, imp_mods='\n'.join(imp_mod_lines))
return func
def _module_present(modname, modlist):
if modname in modlist:
return True
for m in modlist:
if hasattr(m, '__name__') and m.__name__ == modname:
return True
return False
def _get_namespace(m):
"""
This is used by _lambdify to parse its arguments.
"""
if isinstance(m, string_types):
_import(m)
return MODULES[m][0]
elif isinstance(m, dict):
return m
elif hasattr(m, "__dict__"):
return m.__dict__
else:
raise TypeError("Argument must be either a string, dict or module but it is: %s" % m)
def lambdastr(args, expr, printer=None, dummify=None):
"""
Returns a string that can be evaluated to a lambda function.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy.utilities.lambdify import lambdastr
>>> lambdastr(x, x**2)
'lambda x: (x**2)'
>>> lambdastr((x,y,z), [z,y,x])
'lambda x,y,z: ([z, y, x])'
Although tuples may not appear as arguments to lambda in Python 3,
lambdastr will create a lambda function that will unpack the original
arguments so that nested arguments can be handled:
>>> lambdastr((x, (y, z)), x + y)
'lambda _0,_1: (lambda x,y,z: (x + y))(_0,_1[0],_1[1])'
"""
# Transforming everything to strings.
from sympy.matrices import DeferredVector
from sympy import Dummy, sympify, Symbol, Function, flatten, Derivative, Basic
if printer is not None:
if inspect.isfunction(printer):
lambdarepr = printer
else:
if inspect.isclass(printer):
lambdarepr = lambda expr: printer().doprint(expr)
else:
lambdarepr = lambda expr: printer.doprint(expr)
else:
#XXX: This has to be done here because of circular imports
from sympy.printing.lambdarepr import lambdarepr
def sub_args(args, dummies_dict):
if isinstance(args, str):
return args
elif isinstance(args, DeferredVector):
return str(args)
elif iterable(args):
dummies = flatten([sub_args(a, dummies_dict) for a in args])
return ",".join(str(a) for a in dummies)
else:
# replace these with Dummy symbols
if isinstance(args, (Function, Symbol, Derivative)):
dummies = Dummy()
dummies_dict.update({args : dummies})
return str(dummies)
else:
return str(args)
def sub_expr(expr, dummies_dict):
try:
expr = sympify(expr).xreplace(dummies_dict)
except Exception:
if isinstance(expr, DeferredVector):
pass
elif isinstance(expr, dict):
k = [sub_expr(sympify(a), dummies_dict) for a in expr.keys()]
v = [sub_expr(sympify(a), dummies_dict) for a in expr.values()]
expr = dict(zip(k, v))
elif isinstance(expr, tuple):
expr = tuple(sub_expr(sympify(a), dummies_dict) for a in expr)
elif isinstance(expr, list):
expr = [sub_expr(sympify(a), dummies_dict) for a in expr]
return expr
# Transform args
def isiter(l):
return iterable(l, exclude=(str, DeferredVector, NotIterable))
def flat_indexes(iterable):
n = 0
for el in iterable:
if isiter(el):
for ndeep in flat_indexes(el):
yield (n,) + ndeep
else:
yield (n,)
n += 1
if dummify is None:
dummify = any(isinstance(a, Basic) and
a.atoms(Function, Derivative) for a in (
args if isiter(args) else [args]))
if isiter(args) and any(isiter(i) for i in args):
dum_args = [str(Dummy(str(i))) for i in range(len(args))]
indexed_args = ','.join([
dum_args[ind[0]] + ''.join(["[%s]" % k for k in ind[1:]])
for ind in flat_indexes(args)])
lstr = lambdastr(flatten(args), expr, printer=printer, dummify=dummify)
return 'lambda %s: (%s)(%s)' % (','.join(dum_args), lstr, indexed_args)
dummies_dict = {}
if dummify:
args = sub_args(args, dummies_dict)
else:
if isinstance(args, str):
pass
elif iterable(args, exclude=DeferredVector):
args = ",".join(str(a) for a in args)
# Transform expr
if dummify:
if isinstance(expr, str):
pass
else:
expr = sub_expr(expr, dummies_dict)
expr = lambdarepr(expr)
return "lambda %s: (%s)" % (args, expr)
class _EvaluatorPrinter(object):
def __init__(self, printer=None, dummify=False):
self._dummify = dummify
#XXX: This has to be done here because of circular imports
from sympy.printing.lambdarepr import LambdaPrinter
if printer is None:
printer = LambdaPrinter()
if inspect.isfunction(printer):
self._exprrepr = printer
else:
if inspect.isclass(printer):
printer = printer()
self._exprrepr = printer.doprint
if hasattr(printer, '_print_Symbol'):
symbolrepr = printer._print_Symbol
if hasattr(printer, '_print_Dummy'):
dummyrepr = printer._print_Dummy
# Used to print the generated function arguments in a standard way
self._argrepr = LambdaPrinter().doprint
def doprint(self, funcname, args, expr):
"""Returns the function definition code as a string."""
from sympy import Dummy
funcbody = []
if not iterable(args):
args = [args]
argstrs, expr = self._preprocess(args, expr)
# Generate argument unpacking and final argument list
funcargs = []
unpackings = []
for argstr in argstrs:
if iterable(argstr):
funcargs.append(self._argrepr(Dummy()))
unpackings.extend(self._print_unpacking(argstr, funcargs[-1]))
else:
funcargs.append(argstr)
funcsig = 'def {}({}):'.format(funcname, ', '.join(funcargs))
# Wrap input arguments before unpacking
funcbody.extend(self._print_funcargwrapping(funcargs))
funcbody.extend(unpackings)
funcbody.append('return ({})'.format(self._exprrepr(expr)))
funclines = [funcsig]
funclines.extend(' ' + line for line in funcbody)
return '\n'.join(funclines) + '\n'
if PY3:
@classmethod
def _is_safe_ident(cls, ident):
return isinstance(ident, str) and ident.isidentifier() \
and not keyword.iskeyword(ident)
else:
_safe_ident_re = re.compile('^[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*$')
@classmethod
def _is_safe_ident(cls, ident):
return isinstance(ident, str) and cls._safe_ident_re.match(ident) \
and not (keyword.iskeyword(ident) or ident == 'None')
def _preprocess(self, args, expr):
"""Preprocess args, expr to replace arguments that do not map
to valid Python identifiers.
Returns string form of args, and updated expr.
"""
from sympy import Dummy, Function, flatten, Derivative, ordered, Basic
from sympy.matrices import DeferredVector
# Args of type Dummy can cause name collisions with args
# of type Symbol. Force dummify of everything in this
# situation.
dummify = self._dummify or any(
isinstance(arg, Dummy) for arg in flatten(args))
argstrs = [None]*len(args)
for arg, i in reversed(list(ordered(zip(args, range(len(args)))))):
if iterable(arg):
s, expr = self._preprocess(arg, expr)
elif isinstance(arg, DeferredVector):
s = str(arg)
elif isinstance(arg, Basic) and arg.is_symbol:
s = self._argrepr(arg)
if dummify or not self._is_safe_ident(s):
dummy = Dummy()
s = self._argrepr(dummy)
expr = self._subexpr(expr, {arg: dummy})
elif dummify or isinstance(arg, (Function, Derivative)):
dummy = Dummy()
s = self._argrepr(dummy)
expr = self._subexpr(expr, {arg: dummy})
else:
s = str(arg)
argstrs[i] = s
return argstrs, expr
def _subexpr(self, expr, dummies_dict):
from sympy.matrices import DeferredVector
from sympy import sympify
try:
expr = sympify(expr).xreplace(dummies_dict)
except AttributeError:
if isinstance(expr, DeferredVector):
pass
elif isinstance(expr, dict):
k = [self._subexpr(sympify(a), dummies_dict) for a in expr.keys()]
v = [self._subexpr(sympify(a), dummies_dict) for a in expr.values()]
expr = dict(zip(k, v))
elif isinstance(expr, tuple):
expr = tuple(self._subexpr(sympify(a), dummies_dict) for a in expr)
elif isinstance(expr, list):
expr = [self._subexpr(sympify(a), dummies_dict) for a in expr]
return expr
def _print_funcargwrapping(self, args):
"""Generate argument wrapping code.
args is the argument list of the generated function (strings).
Return value is a list of lines of code that will be inserted at
the beginning of the function definition.
"""
return []
def _print_unpacking(self, unpackto, arg):
"""Generate argument unpacking code.
arg is the function argument to be unpacked (a string), and
unpackto is a list or nested lists of the variable names (strings) to
unpack to.
"""
def unpack_lhs(lvalues):
return '[{}]'.format(', '.join(
unpack_lhs(val) if iterable(val) else val for val in lvalues))
return ['{} = {}'.format(unpack_lhs(unpackto), arg)]
class _TensorflowEvaluatorPrinter(_EvaluatorPrinter):
def _print_unpacking(self, lvalues, rvalue):
"""Generate argument unpacking code.
This method is used when the input value is not interable,
but can be indexed (see issue #14655).
"""
from sympy import flatten
def flat_indexes(elems):
n = 0
for el in elems:
if iterable(el):
for ndeep in flat_indexes(el):
yield (n,) + ndeep
else:
yield (n,)
n += 1
indexed = ', '.join('{}[{}]'.format(rvalue, ']['.join(map(str, ind)))
for ind in flat_indexes(lvalues))
return ['[{}] = [{}]'.format(', '.join(flatten(lvalues)), indexed)]
def _imp_namespace(expr, namespace=None):
""" Return namespace dict with function implementations
We need to search for functions in anything that can be thrown at
us - that is - anything that could be passed as `expr`. Examples
include sympy expressions, as well as tuples, lists and dicts that may
contain sympy expressions.
Parameters
----------
expr : object
Something passed to lambdify, that will generate valid code from
``str(expr)``.
namespace : None or mapping
Namespace to fill. None results in new empty dict
Returns
-------
namespace : dict
dict with keys of implemented function names within `expr` and
corresponding values being the numerical implementation of
function
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.utilities.lambdify import implemented_function, _imp_namespace
>>> from sympy import Function
>>> f = implemented_function(Function('f'), lambda x: x+1)
>>> g = implemented_function(Function('g'), lambda x: x*10)
>>> namespace = _imp_namespace(f(g(x)))
>>> sorted(namespace.keys())
['f', 'g']
"""
# Delayed import to avoid circular imports
from sympy.core.function import FunctionClass
if namespace is None:
namespace = {}
# tuples, lists, dicts are valid expressions
if is_sequence(expr):
for arg in expr:
_imp_namespace(arg, namespace)
return namespace
elif isinstance(expr, dict):
for key, val in expr.items():
# functions can be in dictionary keys
_imp_namespace(key, namespace)
_imp_namespace(val, namespace)
return namespace
# sympy expressions may be Functions themselves
func = getattr(expr, 'func', None)
if isinstance(func, FunctionClass):
imp = getattr(func, '_imp_', None)
if imp is not None:
name = expr.func.__name__
if name in namespace and namespace[name] != imp:
raise ValueError('We found more than one '
'implementation with name '
'"%s"' % name)
namespace[name] = imp
# and / or they may take Functions as arguments
if hasattr(expr, 'args'):
for arg in expr.args:
_imp_namespace(arg, namespace)
return namespace
def implemented_function(symfunc, implementation):
""" Add numerical ``implementation`` to function ``symfunc``.
``symfunc`` can be an ``UndefinedFunction`` instance, or a name string.
In the latter case we create an ``UndefinedFunction`` instance with that
name.
Be aware that this is a quick workaround, not a general method to create
special symbolic functions. If you want to create a symbolic function to be
used by all the machinery of SymPy you should subclass the ``Function``
class.
Parameters
----------
symfunc : ``str`` or ``UndefinedFunction`` instance
If ``str``, then create new ``UndefinedFunction`` with this as
name. If `symfunc` is an Undefined function, create a new function
with the same name and the implemented function attached.
implementation : callable
numerical implementation to be called by ``evalf()`` or ``lambdify``
Returns
-------
afunc : sympy.FunctionClass instance
function with attached implementation
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.utilities.lambdify import lambdify, implemented_function
>>> from sympy import Function
>>> f = implemented_function('f', lambda x: x+1)
>>> lam_f = lambdify(x, f(x))
>>> lam_f(4)
5
"""
# Delayed import to avoid circular imports
from sympy.core.function import UndefinedFunction
# if name, create function to hold implementation
_extra_kwargs = {}
if isinstance(symfunc, UndefinedFunction):
_extra_kwargs = symfunc._extra_kwargs
symfunc = symfunc.__name__
if isinstance(symfunc, string_types):
# Keyword arguments to UndefinedFunction are added as attributes to
# the created class.
symfunc = UndefinedFunction(symfunc, _imp_=staticmethod(implementation), **_extra_kwargs)
elif not isinstance(symfunc, UndefinedFunction):
raise ValueError('symfunc should be either a string or'
' an UndefinedFunction instance.')
return symfunc
|
f5a51394851453d39c596854110401f31fc0c13237082efad983b6c24a66cbf0
|
"""
General SymPy exceptions and warnings.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import warnings
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
class SymPyDeprecationWarning(DeprecationWarning):
r"""A warning for deprecated features of SymPy.
This class is expected to be used with the warnings.warn function (note
that one has to explicitly turn on deprecation warnings):
>>> import warnings
>>> from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning
>>> warnings.simplefilter(
... "always", SymPyDeprecationWarning)
>>> warnings.warn(
... SymPyDeprecationWarning(feature="Old deprecated thing",
... issue=1065, deprecated_since_version="1.0")) #doctest:+SKIP
__main__:3: SymPyDeprecationWarning:
Old deprecated thing has been deprecated since SymPy 1.0. See
https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/1065 for more info.
>>> SymPyDeprecationWarning(feature="Old deprecated thing",
... issue=1065, deprecated_since_version="1.1").warn() #doctest:+SKIP
__main__:1: SymPyDeprecationWarning:
Old deprecated thing has been deprecated since SymPy 1.1.
See https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/1065 for more info.
Three arguments to this class are required: ``feature``, ``issue`` and
``deprecated_since_version``.
The ``issue`` flag should be an integer referencing for a "Deprecation
Removal" issue in the SymPy issue tracker. See
https://github.com/sympy/sympy/wiki/Deprecating-policy.
>>> SymPyDeprecationWarning(
... feature="Old feature",
... useinstead="new feature",
... issue=5241,
... deprecated_since_version="1.1")
Old feature has been deprecated since SymPy 1.1. Use new feature
instead. See https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/5241 for more info.
Every formal deprecation should have an associated issue in the GitHub
issue tracker. All such issues should have the DeprecationRemoval
tag.
Additionally, each formal deprecation should mark the first release for
which it was deprecated. Use the ``deprecated_since_version`` flag for
this.
>>> SymPyDeprecationWarning(
... feature="Old feature",
... useinstead="new feature",
... deprecated_since_version="0.7.2",
... issue=1065)
Old feature has been deprecated since SymPy 0.7.2. Use new feature
instead. See https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/1065 for more info.
To provide additional information, create an instance of this
class in this way:
>>> SymPyDeprecationWarning(
... feature="Such and such",
... last_supported_version="1.2.3",
... useinstead="this other feature",
... issue=1065,
... deprecated_since_version="1.1")
Such and such has been deprecated since SymPy 1.1. It will be last
supported in SymPy version 1.2.3. Use this other feature instead. See
https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/1065 for more info.
Note that the text in ``feature`` begins a sentence, so if it begins with
a plain English word, the first letter of that word should be capitalized.
Either (or both) of the arguments ``last_supported_version`` and
``useinstead`` can be omitted. In this case the corresponding sentence
will not be shown:
>>> SymPyDeprecationWarning(feature="Such and such",
... useinstead="this other feature", issue=1065,
... deprecated_since_version="1.1")
Such and such has been deprecated since SymPy 1.1. Use this other
feature instead. See https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/1065 for
more info.
You can still provide the argument value. If it is a string, it
will be appended to the end of the message:
>>> SymPyDeprecationWarning(
... feature="Such and such",
... useinstead="this other feature",
... value="Contact the developers for further information.",
... issue=1065,
... deprecated_since_version="1.1")
Such and such has been deprecated since SymPy 1.1. Use this other
feature instead. See https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/1065 for
more info. Contact the developers for further information.
If, however, the argument value does not hold a string, a string
representation of the object will be appended to the message:
>>> SymPyDeprecationWarning(
... feature="Such and such",
... useinstead="this other feature",
... value=[1,2,3],
... issue=1065,
... deprecated_since_version="1.1")
Such and such has been deprecated since SymPy 1.1. Use this other
feature instead. See https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/1065 for
more info. ([1, 2, 3])
Note that it may be necessary to go back through all the deprecations
before a release to make sure that the version number is correct. So just
use what you believe will be the next release number (this usually means
bumping the minor number by one).
To mark a function as deprecated, you can use the decorator
@deprecated.
See Also
========
sympy.core.decorators.deprecated
"""
def __init__(self, value=None, feature=None, last_supported_version=None,
useinstead=None, issue=None, deprecated_since_version=None):
self.args = (value, feature, last_supported_version, useinstead,
issue, deprecated_since_version)
self.fullMessage = ""
if not feature:
raise ValueError("feature is required argument of SymPyDeprecationWarning")
if not deprecated_since_version:
raise ValueError("deprecated_since_version is a required argument of SymPyDeprecationWarning")
self.fullMessage = "%s has been deprecated since SymPy %s. " % \
(feature, deprecated_since_version)
if last_supported_version:
self.fullMessage += ("It will be last supported in SymPy "
"version %s. ") % last_supported_version
if useinstead:
self.fullMessage += "Use %s instead. " % useinstead
if not issue:
raise ValueError("""\
The issue argument of SymPyDeprecationWarning is required.
This should be a separate issue with the "Deprecation Removal" label. See
https://github.com/sympy/sympy/wiki/Deprecating-policy.\
""")
self.fullMessage += ("See "
"https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/%d for more "
"info. ") % issue
if value:
if not isinstance(value, str):
value = "(%s)" % repr(value)
value = " " + value
else:
value = ""
self.fullMessage += value
def __str__(self):
return '\n%s\n' % filldedent(self.fullMessage)
def warn(self, stacklevel=2):
# the next line is what the user would see after the error is printed
# if stacklevel was set to 1. If you are writing a wrapper around this,
# increase the stacklevel accordingly.
warnings.warn(self, stacklevel=stacklevel)
# Python by default hides DeprecationWarnings, which we do not want.
warnings.simplefilter("once", SymPyDeprecationWarning)
|
4e71ef0bf7073c994d3fbfa12a5c147cad932af6024f6c3572bcc33fd0d56eb4
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from itertools import (
combinations, combinations_with_replacement, permutations,
product, product as cartes
)
import random
from operator import gt
from sympy.core import Basic
# this is the logical location of these functions
from sympy.core.compatibility import (
as_int, default_sort_key, is_sequence, iterable, ordered, range
)
from sympy.utilities.enumerative import (
multiset_partitions_taocp, list_visitor, MultisetPartitionTraverser)
def flatten(iterable, levels=None, cls=None):
"""
Recursively denest iterable containers.
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import flatten
>>> flatten([1, 2, 3])
[1, 2, 3]
>>> flatten([1, 2, [3]])
[1, 2, 3]
>>> flatten([1, [2, 3], [4, 5]])
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
>>> flatten([1.0, 2, (1, None)])
[1.0, 2, 1, None]
If you want to denest only a specified number of levels of
nested containers, then set ``levels`` flag to the desired
number of levels::
>>> ls = [[(-2, -1), (1, 2)], [(0, 0)]]
>>> flatten(ls, levels=1)
[(-2, -1), (1, 2), (0, 0)]
If cls argument is specified, it will only flatten instances of that
class, for example:
>>> from sympy.core import Basic
>>> class MyOp(Basic):
... pass
...
>>> flatten([MyOp(1, MyOp(2, 3))], cls=MyOp)
[1, 2, 3]
adapted from https://kogs-www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/~meine/python_tricks
"""
if levels is not None:
if not levels:
return iterable
elif levels > 0:
levels -= 1
else:
raise ValueError(
"expected non-negative number of levels, got %s" % levels)
if cls is None:
reducible = lambda x: is_sequence(x, set)
else:
reducible = lambda x: isinstance(x, cls)
result = []
for el in iterable:
if reducible(el):
if hasattr(el, 'args'):
el = el.args
result.extend(flatten(el, levels=levels, cls=cls))
else:
result.append(el)
return result
def unflatten(iter, n=2):
"""Group ``iter`` into tuples of length ``n``. Raise an error if
the length of ``iter`` is not a multiple of ``n``.
"""
if n < 1 or len(iter) % n:
raise ValueError('iter length is not a multiple of %i' % n)
return list(zip(*(iter[i::n] for i in range(n))))
def reshape(seq, how):
"""Reshape the sequence according to the template in ``how``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities import reshape
>>> seq = list(range(1, 9))
>>> reshape(seq, [4]) # lists of 4
[[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8]]
>>> reshape(seq, (4,)) # tuples of 4
[(1, 2, 3, 4), (5, 6, 7, 8)]
>>> reshape(seq, (2, 2)) # tuples of 4
[(1, 2, 3, 4), (5, 6, 7, 8)]
>>> reshape(seq, (2, [2])) # (i, i, [i, i])
[(1, 2, [3, 4]), (5, 6, [7, 8])]
>>> reshape(seq, ((2,), [2])) # etc....
[((1, 2), [3, 4]), ((5, 6), [7, 8])]
>>> reshape(seq, (1, [2], 1))
[(1, [2, 3], 4), (5, [6, 7], 8)]
>>> reshape(tuple(seq), ([[1], 1, (2,)],))
(([[1], 2, (3, 4)],), ([[5], 6, (7, 8)],))
>>> reshape(tuple(seq), ([1], 1, (2,)))
(([1], 2, (3, 4)), ([5], 6, (7, 8)))
>>> reshape(list(range(12)), [2, [3], {2}, (1, (3,), 1)])
[[0, 1, [2, 3, 4], {5, 6}, (7, (8, 9, 10), 11)]]
"""
m = sum(flatten(how))
n, rem = divmod(len(seq), m)
if m < 0 or rem:
raise ValueError('template must sum to positive number '
'that divides the length of the sequence')
i = 0
container = type(how)
rv = [None]*n
for k in range(len(rv)):
rv[k] = []
for hi in how:
if type(hi) is int:
rv[k].extend(seq[i: i + hi])
i += hi
else:
n = sum(flatten(hi))
hi_type = type(hi)
rv[k].append(hi_type(reshape(seq[i: i + n], hi)[0]))
i += n
rv[k] = container(rv[k])
return type(seq)(rv)
def group(seq, multiple=True):
"""
Splits a sequence into a list of lists of equal, adjacent elements.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import group
>>> group([1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3])
[[1, 1, 1], [2, 2], [3]]
>>> group([1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3], multiple=False)
[(1, 3), (2, 2), (3, 1)]
>>> group([1, 1, 3, 2, 2, 1], multiple=False)
[(1, 2), (3, 1), (2, 2), (1, 1)]
See Also
========
multiset
"""
if not seq:
return []
current, groups = [seq[0]], []
for elem in seq[1:]:
if elem == current[-1]:
current.append(elem)
else:
groups.append(current)
current = [elem]
groups.append(current)
if multiple:
return groups
for i, current in enumerate(groups):
groups[i] = (current[0], len(current))
return groups
def multiset(seq):
"""Return the hashable sequence in multiset form with values being the
multiplicity of the item in the sequence.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import multiset
>>> multiset('mississippi')
{'i': 4, 'm': 1, 'p': 2, 's': 4}
See Also
========
group
"""
rv = defaultdict(int)
for s in seq:
rv[s] += 1
return dict(rv)
def postorder_traversal(node, keys=None):
"""
Do a postorder traversal of a tree.
This generator recursively yields nodes that it has visited in a postorder
fashion. That is, it descends through the tree depth-first to yield all of
a node's children's postorder traversal before yielding the node itself.
Parameters
==========
node : sympy expression
The expression to traverse.
keys : (default None) sort key(s)
The key(s) used to sort args of Basic objects. When None, args of Basic
objects are processed in arbitrary order. If key is defined, it will
be passed along to ordered() as the only key(s) to use to sort the
arguments; if ``key`` is simply True then the default keys of
``ordered`` will be used (node count and default_sort_key).
Yields
======
subtree : sympy expression
All of the subtrees in the tree.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import postorder_traversal
>>> from sympy.abc import w, x, y, z
The nodes are returned in the order that they are encountered unless key
is given; simply passing key=True will guarantee that the traversal is
unique.
>>> list(postorder_traversal(w + (x + y)*z)) # doctest: +SKIP
[z, y, x, x + y, z*(x + y), w, w + z*(x + y)]
>>> list(postorder_traversal(w + (x + y)*z, keys=True))
[w, z, x, y, x + y, z*(x + y), w + z*(x + y)]
"""
if isinstance(node, Basic):
args = node.args
if keys:
if keys != True:
args = ordered(args, keys, default=False)
else:
args = ordered(args)
for arg in args:
for subtree in postorder_traversal(arg, keys):
yield subtree
elif iterable(node):
for item in node:
for subtree in postorder_traversal(item, keys):
yield subtree
yield node
def interactive_traversal(expr):
"""Traverse a tree asking a user which branch to choose. """
from sympy.printing import pprint
RED, BRED = '\033[0;31m', '\033[1;31m'
GREEN, BGREEN = '\033[0;32m', '\033[1;32m'
YELLOW, BYELLOW = '\033[0;33m', '\033[1;33m'
BLUE, BBLUE = '\033[0;34m', '\033[1;34m'
MAGENTA, BMAGENTA = '\033[0;35m', '\033[1;35m'
CYAN, BCYAN = '\033[0;36m', '\033[1;36m'
END = '\033[0m'
def cprint(*args):
print("".join(map(str, args)) + END)
def _interactive_traversal(expr, stage):
if stage > 0:
print()
cprint("Current expression (stage ", BYELLOW, stage, END, "):")
print(BCYAN)
pprint(expr)
print(END)
if isinstance(expr, Basic):
if expr.is_Add:
args = expr.as_ordered_terms()
elif expr.is_Mul:
args = expr.as_ordered_factors()
else:
args = expr.args
elif hasattr(expr, "__iter__"):
args = list(expr)
else:
return expr
n_args = len(args)
if not n_args:
return expr
for i, arg in enumerate(args):
cprint(GREEN, "[", BGREEN, i, GREEN, "] ", BLUE, type(arg), END)
pprint(arg)
print
if n_args == 1:
choices = '0'
else:
choices = '0-%d' % (n_args - 1)
try:
choice = raw_input("Your choice [%s,f,l,r,d,?]: " % choices)
except EOFError:
result = expr
print()
else:
if choice == '?':
cprint(RED, "%s - select subexpression with the given index" %
choices)
cprint(RED, "f - select the first subexpression")
cprint(RED, "l - select the last subexpression")
cprint(RED, "r - select a random subexpression")
cprint(RED, "d - done\n")
result = _interactive_traversal(expr, stage)
elif choice in ['d', '']:
result = expr
elif choice == 'f':
result = _interactive_traversal(args[0], stage + 1)
elif choice == 'l':
result = _interactive_traversal(args[-1], stage + 1)
elif choice == 'r':
result = _interactive_traversal(random.choice(args), stage + 1)
else:
try:
choice = int(choice)
except ValueError:
cprint(BRED,
"Choice must be a number in %s range\n" % choices)
result = _interactive_traversal(expr, stage)
else:
if choice < 0 or choice >= n_args:
cprint(BRED, "Choice must be in %s range\n" % choices)
result = _interactive_traversal(expr, stage)
else:
result = _interactive_traversal(args[choice], stage + 1)
return result
return _interactive_traversal(expr, 0)
def ibin(n, bits=0, str=False):
"""Return a list of length ``bits`` corresponding to the binary value
of ``n`` with small bits to the right (last). If bits is omitted, the
length will be the number required to represent ``n``. If the bits are
desired in reversed order, use the [::-1] slice of the returned list.
If a sequence of all bits-length lists starting from [0, 0,..., 0]
through [1, 1, ..., 1] are desired, pass a non-integer for bits, e.g.
'all'.
If the bit *string* is desired pass ``str=True``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import ibin
>>> ibin(2)
[1, 0]
>>> ibin(2, 4)
[0, 0, 1, 0]
>>> ibin(2, 4)[::-1]
[0, 1, 0, 0]
If all lists corresponding to 0 to 2**n - 1, pass a non-integer
for bits:
>>> bits = 2
>>> for i in ibin(2, 'all'):
... print(i)
(0, 0)
(0, 1)
(1, 0)
(1, 1)
If a bit string is desired of a given length, use str=True:
>>> n = 123
>>> bits = 10
>>> ibin(n, bits, str=True)
'0001111011'
>>> ibin(n, bits, str=True)[::-1] # small bits left
'1101111000'
>>> list(ibin(3, 'all', str=True))
['000', '001', '010', '011', '100', '101', '110', '111']
"""
if not str:
try:
bits = as_int(bits)
return [1 if i == "1" else 0 for i in bin(n)[2:].rjust(bits, "0")]
except ValueError:
return variations(list(range(2)), n, repetition=True)
else:
try:
bits = as_int(bits)
return bin(n)[2:].rjust(bits, "0")
except ValueError:
return (bin(i)[2:].rjust(n, "0") for i in range(2**n))
def variations(seq, n, repetition=False):
"""Returns a generator of the n-sized variations of ``seq`` (size N).
``repetition`` controls whether items in ``seq`` can appear more than once;
Examples
========
variations(seq, n) will return N! / (N - n)! permutations without
repetition of seq's elements:
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import variations
>>> list(variations([1, 2], 2))
[(1, 2), (2, 1)]
variations(seq, n, True) will return the N**n permutations obtained
by allowing repetition of elements:
>>> list(variations([1, 2], 2, repetition=True))
[(1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 1), (2, 2)]
If you ask for more items than are in the set you get the empty set unless
you allow repetitions:
>>> list(variations([0, 1], 3, repetition=False))
[]
>>> list(variations([0, 1], 3, repetition=True))[:4]
[(0, 0, 0), (0, 0, 1), (0, 1, 0), (0, 1, 1)]
See Also
========
sympy.core.compatibility.permutations
sympy.core.compatibility.product
"""
if not repetition:
seq = tuple(seq)
if len(seq) < n:
return
for i in permutations(seq, n):
yield i
else:
if n == 0:
yield ()
else:
for i in product(seq, repeat=n):
yield i
def subsets(seq, k=None, repetition=False):
"""Generates all k-subsets (combinations) from an n-element set, seq.
A k-subset of an n-element set is any subset of length exactly k. The
number of k-subsets of an n-element set is given by binomial(n, k),
whereas there are 2**n subsets all together. If k is None then all
2**n subsets will be returned from shortest to longest.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import subsets
subsets(seq, k) will return the n!/k!/(n - k)! k-subsets (combinations)
without repetition, i.e. once an item has been removed, it can no
longer be "taken":
>>> list(subsets([1, 2], 2))
[(1, 2)]
>>> list(subsets([1, 2]))
[(), (1,), (2,), (1, 2)]
>>> list(subsets([1, 2, 3], 2))
[(1, 2), (1, 3), (2, 3)]
subsets(seq, k, repetition=True) will return the (n - 1 + k)!/k!/(n - 1)!
combinations *with* repetition:
>>> list(subsets([1, 2], 2, repetition=True))
[(1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 2)]
If you ask for more items than are in the set you get the empty set unless
you allow repetitions:
>>> list(subsets([0, 1], 3, repetition=False))
[]
>>> list(subsets([0, 1], 3, repetition=True))
[(0, 0, 0), (0, 0, 1), (0, 1, 1), (1, 1, 1)]
"""
if k is None:
for k in range(len(seq) + 1):
for i in subsets(seq, k, repetition):
yield i
else:
if not repetition:
for i in combinations(seq, k):
yield i
else:
for i in combinations_with_replacement(seq, k):
yield i
def filter_symbols(iterator, exclude):
"""
Only yield elements from `iterator` that do not occur in `exclude`.
Parameters
==========
iterator : iterable
iterator to take elements from
exclude : iterable
elements to exclude
Returns
=======
iterator : iterator
filtered iterator
"""
exclude = set(exclude)
for s in iterator:
if s not in exclude:
yield s
def numbered_symbols(prefix='x', cls=None, start=0, exclude=[], *args, **assumptions):
"""
Generate an infinite stream of Symbols consisting of a prefix and
increasing subscripts provided that they do not occur in `exclude`.
Parameters
==========
prefix : str, optional
The prefix to use. By default, this function will generate symbols of
the form "x0", "x1", etc.
cls : class, optional
The class to use. By default, it uses Symbol, but you can also use Wild or Dummy.
start : int, optional
The start number. By default, it is 0.
Returns
=======
sym : Symbol
The subscripted symbols.
"""
exclude = set(exclude or [])
if cls is None:
# We can't just make the default cls=Symbol because it isn't
# imported yet.
from sympy import Symbol
cls = Symbol
while True:
name = '%s%s' % (prefix, start)
s = cls(name, *args, **assumptions)
if s not in exclude:
yield s
start += 1
def capture(func):
"""Return the printed output of func().
`func` should be a function without arguments that produces output with
print statements.
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import capture
>>> from sympy import pprint
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> def foo():
... print('hello world!')
...
>>> 'hello' in capture(foo) # foo, not foo()
True
>>> capture(lambda: pprint(2/x))
'2\\n-\\nx\\n'
"""
from sympy.core.compatibility import StringIO
import sys
stdout = sys.stdout
sys.stdout = file = StringIO()
try:
func()
finally:
sys.stdout = stdout
return file.getvalue()
def sift(seq, keyfunc, binary=False):
"""
Sift the sequence, ``seq`` according to ``keyfunc``.
OUTPUT: When binary is False (default), the output is a dictionary
where elements of ``seq`` are stored in a list keyed to the value
of keyfunc for that element. If ``binary`` is True then a tuple
with lists ``T`` and ``F`` are returned where ``T`` is a list
containing elements of seq for which ``keyfunc`` was True and
``F`` containing those elements for which ``keyfunc`` was False;
a ValueError is raised if the ``keyfunc`` is not binary.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities import sift
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import sqrt, exp, pi, Tuple
>>> sift(range(5), lambda x: x % 2)
{0: [0, 2, 4], 1: [1, 3]}
sift() returns a defaultdict() object, so any key that has no matches will
give [].
>>> sift([x], lambda x: x.is_commutative)
{True: [x]}
>>> _[False]
[]
Sometimes you won't know how many keys you will get:
>>> sift([sqrt(x), exp(x), (y**x)**2],
... lambda x: x.as_base_exp()[0])
{E: [exp(x)], x: [sqrt(x)], y: [y**(2*x)]}
Sometimes you expect the results to be binary; the
results can be unpacked by setting ``binary`` to True:
>>> sift(range(4), lambda x: x % 2, binary=True)
([1, 3], [0, 2])
>>> sift(Tuple(1, pi), lambda x: x.is_rational, binary=True)
([1], [pi])
A ValueError is raised if the predicate was not actually binary
(which is a good test for the logic where sifting is used and
binary results were expected):
>>> unknown = exp(1) - pi # the rationality of this is unknown
>>> args = Tuple(1, pi, unknown)
>>> sift(args, lambda x: x.is_rational, binary=True)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: keyfunc gave non-binary output
The non-binary sifting shows that there were 3 keys generated:
>>> set(sift(args, lambda x: x.is_rational).keys())
{None, False, True}
If you need to sort the sifted items it might be better to use
``ordered`` which can economically apply multiple sort keys
to a squence while sorting.
See Also
========
ordered
"""
if not binary:
m = defaultdict(list)
for i in seq:
m[keyfunc(i)].append(i)
return m
sift = F, T = [], []
for i in seq:
try:
sift[keyfunc(i)].append(i)
except (IndexError, TypeError):
raise ValueError('keyfunc gave non-binary output')
return T, F
def take(iter, n):
"""Return ``n`` items from ``iter`` iterator. """
return [ value for _, value in zip(range(n), iter) ]
def dict_merge(*dicts):
"""Merge dictionaries into a single dictionary. """
merged = {}
for dict in dicts:
merged.update(dict)
return merged
def common_prefix(*seqs):
"""Return the subsequence that is a common start of sequences in ``seqs``.
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import common_prefix
>>> common_prefix(list(range(3)))
[0, 1, 2]
>>> common_prefix(list(range(3)), list(range(4)))
[0, 1, 2]
>>> common_prefix([1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 5])
[1, 2]
>>> common_prefix([1, 2, 3], [1, 3, 5])
[1]
"""
if any(not s for s in seqs):
return []
elif len(seqs) == 1:
return seqs[0]
i = 0
for i in range(min(len(s) for s in seqs)):
if not all(seqs[j][i] == seqs[0][i] for j in range(len(seqs))):
break
else:
i += 1
return seqs[0][:i]
def common_suffix(*seqs):
"""Return the subsequence that is a common ending of sequences in ``seqs``.
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import common_suffix
>>> common_suffix(list(range(3)))
[0, 1, 2]
>>> common_suffix(list(range(3)), list(range(4)))
[]
>>> common_suffix([1, 2, 3], [9, 2, 3])
[2, 3]
>>> common_suffix([1, 2, 3], [9, 7, 3])
[3]
"""
if any(not s for s in seqs):
return []
elif len(seqs) == 1:
return seqs[0]
i = 0
for i in range(-1, -min(len(s) for s in seqs) - 1, -1):
if not all(seqs[j][i] == seqs[0][i] for j in range(len(seqs))):
break
else:
i -= 1
if i == -1:
return []
else:
return seqs[0][i + 1:]
def prefixes(seq):
"""
Generate all prefixes of a sequence.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import prefixes
>>> list(prefixes([1,2,3,4]))
[[1], [1, 2], [1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 3, 4]]
"""
n = len(seq)
for i in range(n):
yield seq[:i + 1]
def postfixes(seq):
"""
Generate all postfixes of a sequence.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import postfixes
>>> list(postfixes([1,2,3,4]))
[[4], [3, 4], [2, 3, 4], [1, 2, 3, 4]]
"""
n = len(seq)
for i in range(n):
yield seq[n - i - 1:]
def topological_sort(graph, key=None):
r"""
Topological sort of graph's vertices.
Parameters
==========
``graph`` : ``tuple[list, list[tuple[T, T]]``
A tuple consisting of a list of vertices and a list of edges of
a graph to be sorted topologically.
``key`` : ``callable[T]`` (optional)
Ordering key for vertices on the same level. By default the natural
(e.g. lexicographic) ordering is used (in this case the base type
must implement ordering relations).
Examples
========
Consider a graph::
+---+ +---+ +---+
| 7 |\ | 5 | | 3 |
+---+ \ +---+ +---+
| _\___/ ____ _/ |
| / \___/ \ / |
V V V V |
+----+ +---+ |
| 11 | | 8 | |
+----+ +---+ |
| | \____ ___/ _ |
| \ \ / / \ |
V \ V V / V V
+---+ \ +---+ | +----+
| 2 | | | 9 | | | 10 |
+---+ | +---+ | +----+
\________/
where vertices are integers. This graph can be encoded using
elementary Python's data structures as follows::
>>> V = [2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]
>>> E = [(7, 11), (7, 8), (5, 11), (3, 8), (3, 10),
... (11, 2), (11, 9), (11, 10), (8, 9)]
To compute a topological sort for graph ``(V, E)`` issue::
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import topological_sort
>>> topological_sort((V, E))
[3, 5, 7, 8, 11, 2, 9, 10]
If specific tie breaking approach is needed, use ``key`` parameter::
>>> topological_sort((V, E), key=lambda v: -v)
[7, 5, 11, 3, 10, 8, 9, 2]
Only acyclic graphs can be sorted. If the input graph has a cycle,
then :py:exc:`ValueError` will be raised::
>>> topological_sort((V, E + [(10, 7)]))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: cycle detected
.. seealso:: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Topological_sorting
"""
V, E = graph
L = []
S = set(V)
E = list(E)
for v, u in E:
S.discard(u)
if key is None:
key = lambda value: value
S = sorted(S, key=key, reverse=True)
while S:
node = S.pop()
L.append(node)
for u, v in list(E):
if u == node:
E.remove((u, v))
for _u, _v in E:
if v == _v:
break
else:
kv = key(v)
for i, s in enumerate(S):
ks = key(s)
if kv > ks:
S.insert(i, v)
break
else:
S.append(v)
if E:
raise ValueError("cycle detected")
else:
return L
def rotate_left(x, y):
"""
Left rotates a list x by the number of steps specified
in y.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import rotate_left
>>> a = [0, 1, 2]
>>> rotate_left(a, 1)
[1, 2, 0]
"""
if len(x) == 0:
return []
y = y % len(x)
return x[y:] + x[:y]
def rotate_right(x, y):
"""
Right rotates a list x by the number of steps specified
in y.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import rotate_right
>>> a = [0, 1, 2]
>>> rotate_right(a, 1)
[2, 0, 1]
"""
if len(x) == 0:
return []
y = len(x) - y % len(x)
return x[y:] + x[:y]
def multiset_combinations(m, n, g=None):
"""
Return the unique combinations of size ``n`` from multiset ``m``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import multiset_combinations
>>> from itertools import combinations
>>> [''.join(i) for i in multiset_combinations('baby', 3)]
['abb', 'aby', 'bby']
>>> def count(f, s): return len(list(f(s, 3)))
The number of combinations depends on the number of letters; the
number of unique combinations depends on how the letters are
repeated.
>>> s1 = 'abracadabra'
>>> s2 = 'banana tree'
>>> count(combinations, s1), count(multiset_combinations, s1)
(165, 23)
>>> count(combinations, s2), count(multiset_combinations, s2)
(165, 54)
"""
if g is None:
if type(m) is dict:
if n > sum(m.values()):
return
g = [[k, m[k]] for k in ordered(m)]
else:
m = list(m)
if n > len(m):
return
try:
m = multiset(m)
g = [(k, m[k]) for k in ordered(m)]
except TypeError:
m = list(ordered(m))
g = [list(i) for i in group(m, multiple=False)]
del m
if sum(v for k, v in g) < n or not n:
yield []
else:
for i, (k, v) in enumerate(g):
if v >= n:
yield [k]*n
v = n - 1
for v in range(min(n, v), 0, -1):
for j in multiset_combinations(None, n - v, g[i + 1:]):
rv = [k]*v + j
if len(rv) == n:
yield rv
def multiset_permutations(m, size=None, g=None):
"""
Return the unique permutations of multiset ``m``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import multiset_permutations
>>> from sympy import factorial
>>> [''.join(i) for i in multiset_permutations('aab')]
['aab', 'aba', 'baa']
>>> factorial(len('banana'))
720
>>> len(list(multiset_permutations('banana')))
60
"""
if g is None:
if type(m) is dict:
g = [[k, m[k]] for k in ordered(m)]
else:
m = list(ordered(m))
g = [list(i) for i in group(m, multiple=False)]
del m
do = [gi for gi in g if gi[1] > 0]
SUM = sum([gi[1] for gi in do])
if not do or size is not None and (size > SUM or size < 1):
if size < 1:
yield []
return
elif size == 1:
for k, v in do:
yield [k]
elif len(do) == 1:
k, v = do[0]
v = v if size is None else (size if size <= v else 0)
yield [k for i in range(v)]
elif all(v == 1 for k, v in do):
for p in permutations([k for k, v in do], size):
yield list(p)
else:
size = size if size is not None else SUM
for i, (k, v) in enumerate(do):
do[i][1] -= 1
for j in multiset_permutations(None, size - 1, do):
if j:
yield [k] + j
do[i][1] += 1
def _partition(seq, vector, m=None):
"""
Return the partition of seq as specified by the partition vector.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import _partition
>>> _partition('abcde', [1, 0, 1, 2, 0])
[['b', 'e'], ['a', 'c'], ['d']]
Specifying the number of bins in the partition is optional:
>>> _partition('abcde', [1, 0, 1, 2, 0], 3)
[['b', 'e'], ['a', 'c'], ['d']]
The output of _set_partitions can be passed as follows:
>>> output = (3, [1, 0, 1, 2, 0])
>>> _partition('abcde', *output)
[['b', 'e'], ['a', 'c'], ['d']]
See Also
========
combinatorics.partitions.Partition.from_rgs()
"""
if m is None:
m = max(vector) + 1
elif type(vector) is int: # entered as m, vector
vector, m = m, vector
p = [[] for i in range(m)]
for i, v in enumerate(vector):
p[v].append(seq[i])
return p
def _set_partitions(n):
"""Cycle through all partions of n elements, yielding the
current number of partitions, ``m``, and a mutable list, ``q``
such that element[i] is in part q[i] of the partition.
NOTE: ``q`` is modified in place and generally should not be changed
between function calls.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import _set_partitions, _partition
>>> for m, q in _set_partitions(3):
... print('%s %s %s' % (m, q, _partition('abc', q, m)))
1 [0, 0, 0] [['a', 'b', 'c']]
2 [0, 0, 1] [['a', 'b'], ['c']]
2 [0, 1, 0] [['a', 'c'], ['b']]
2 [0, 1, 1] [['a'], ['b', 'c']]
3 [0, 1, 2] [['a'], ['b'], ['c']]
Notes
=====
This algorithm is similar to, and solves the same problem as,
Algorithm 7.2.1.5H, from volume 4A of Knuth's The Art of Computer
Programming. Knuth uses the term "restricted growth string" where
this code refers to a "partition vector". In each case, the meaning is
the same: the value in the ith element of the vector specifies to
which part the ith set element is to be assigned.
At the lowest level, this code implements an n-digit big-endian
counter (stored in the array q) which is incremented (with carries) to
get the next partition in the sequence. A special twist is that a
digit is constrained to be at most one greater than the maximum of all
the digits to the left of it. The array p maintains this maximum, so
that the code can efficiently decide when a digit can be incremented
in place or whether it needs to be reset to 0 and trigger a carry to
the next digit. The enumeration starts with all the digits 0 (which
corresponds to all the set elements being assigned to the same 0th
part), and ends with 0123...n, which corresponds to each set element
being assigned to a different, singleton, part.
This routine was rewritten to use 0-based lists while trying to
preserve the beauty and efficiency of the original algorithm.
Reference
=========
Nijenhuis, Albert and Wilf, Herbert. (1978) Combinatorial Algorithms,
2nd Ed, p 91, algorithm "nexequ". Available online from
https://www.math.upenn.edu/~wilf/website/CombAlgDownld.html (viewed
November 17, 2012).
"""
p = [0]*n
q = [0]*n
nc = 1
yield nc, q
while nc != n:
m = n
while 1:
m -= 1
i = q[m]
if p[i] != 1:
break
q[m] = 0
i += 1
q[m] = i
m += 1
nc += m - n
p[0] += n - m
if i == nc:
p[nc] = 0
nc += 1
p[i - 1] -= 1
p[i] += 1
yield nc, q
def multiset_partitions(multiset, m=None):
"""
Return unique partitions of the given multiset (in list form).
If ``m`` is None, all multisets will be returned, otherwise only
partitions with ``m`` parts will be returned.
If ``multiset`` is an integer, a range [0, 1, ..., multiset - 1]
will be supplied.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import multiset_partitions
>>> list(multiset_partitions([1, 2, 3, 4], 2))
[[[1, 2, 3], [4]], [[1, 2, 4], [3]], [[1, 2], [3, 4]],
[[1, 3, 4], [2]], [[1, 3], [2, 4]], [[1, 4], [2, 3]],
[[1], [2, 3, 4]]]
>>> list(multiset_partitions([1, 2, 3, 4], 1))
[[[1, 2, 3, 4]]]
Only unique partitions are returned and these will be returned in a
canonical order regardless of the order of the input:
>>> a = [1, 2, 2, 1]
>>> ans = list(multiset_partitions(a, 2))
>>> a.sort()
>>> list(multiset_partitions(a, 2)) == ans
True
>>> a = range(3, 1, -1)
>>> (list(multiset_partitions(a)) ==
... list(multiset_partitions(sorted(a))))
True
If m is omitted then all partitions will be returned:
>>> list(multiset_partitions([1, 1, 2]))
[[[1, 1, 2]], [[1, 1], [2]], [[1, 2], [1]], [[1], [1], [2]]]
>>> list(multiset_partitions([1]*3))
[[[1, 1, 1]], [[1], [1, 1]], [[1], [1], [1]]]
Counting
========
The number of partitions of a set is given by the bell number:
>>> from sympy import bell
>>> len(list(multiset_partitions(5))) == bell(5) == 52
True
The number of partitions of length k from a set of size n is given by the
Stirling Number of the 2nd kind:
>>> def S2(n, k):
... from sympy import Dummy, binomial, factorial, Sum
... if k > n:
... return 0
... j = Dummy()
... arg = (-1)**(k-j)*j**n*binomial(k,j)
... return 1/factorial(k)*Sum(arg,(j,0,k)).doit()
...
>>> S2(5, 2) == len(list(multiset_partitions(5, 2))) == 15
True
These comments on counting apply to *sets*, not multisets.
Notes
=====
When all the elements are the same in the multiset, the order
of the returned partitions is determined by the ``partitions``
routine. If one is counting partitions then it is better to use
the ``nT`` function.
See Also
========
partitions
sympy.combinatorics.partitions.Partition
sympy.combinatorics.partitions.IntegerPartition
sympy.functions.combinatorial.numbers.nT
"""
# This function looks at the supplied input and dispatches to
# several special-case routines as they apply.
if type(multiset) is int:
n = multiset
if m and m > n:
return
multiset = list(range(n))
if m == 1:
yield [multiset[:]]
return
# If m is not None, it can sometimes be faster to use
# MultisetPartitionTraverser.enum_range() even for inputs
# which are sets. Since the _set_partitions code is quite
# fast, this is only advantageous when the overall set
# partitions outnumber those with the desired number of parts
# by a large factor. (At least 60.) Such a switch is not
# currently implemented.
for nc, q in _set_partitions(n):
if m is None or nc == m:
rv = [[] for i in range(nc)]
for i in range(n):
rv[q[i]].append(multiset[i])
yield rv
return
if len(multiset) == 1 and type(multiset) is str:
multiset = [multiset]
if not has_variety(multiset):
# Only one component, repeated n times. The resulting
# partitions correspond to partitions of integer n.
n = len(multiset)
if m and m > n:
return
if m == 1:
yield [multiset[:]]
return
x = multiset[:1]
for size, p in partitions(n, m, size=True):
if m is None or size == m:
rv = []
for k in sorted(p):
rv.extend([x*k]*p[k])
yield rv
else:
multiset = list(ordered(multiset))
n = len(multiset)
if m and m > n:
return
if m == 1:
yield [multiset[:]]
return
# Split the information of the multiset into two lists -
# one of the elements themselves, and one (of the same length)
# giving the number of repeats for the corresponding element.
elements, multiplicities = zip(*group(multiset, False))
if len(elements) < len(multiset):
# General case - multiset with more than one distinct element
# and at least one element repeated more than once.
if m:
mpt = MultisetPartitionTraverser()
for state in mpt.enum_range(multiplicities, m-1, m):
yield list_visitor(state, elements)
else:
for state in multiset_partitions_taocp(multiplicities):
yield list_visitor(state, elements)
else:
# Set partitions case - no repeated elements. Pretty much
# same as int argument case above, with same possible, but
# currently unimplemented optimization for some cases when
# m is not None
for nc, q in _set_partitions(n):
if m is None or nc == m:
rv = [[] for i in range(nc)]
for i in range(n):
rv[q[i]].append(i)
yield [[multiset[j] for j in i] for i in rv]
def partitions(n, m=None, k=None, size=False):
"""Generate all partitions of positive integer, n.
Parameters
==========
``m`` : integer (default gives partitions of all sizes)
limits number of parts in partition (mnemonic: m, maximum parts)
``k`` : integer (default gives partitions number from 1 through n)
limits the numbers that are kept in the partition (mnemonic: k, keys)
``size`` : bool (default False, only partition is returned)
when ``True`` then (M, P) is returned where M is the sum of the
multiplicities and P is the generated partition.
Each partition is represented as a dictionary, mapping an integer
to the number of copies of that integer in the partition. For example,
the first partition of 4 returned is {4: 1}, "4: one of them".
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import partitions
The numbers appearing in the partition (the key of the returned dict)
are limited with k:
>>> for p in partitions(6, k=2): # doctest: +SKIP
... print(p)
{2: 3}
{1: 2, 2: 2}
{1: 4, 2: 1}
{1: 6}
The maximum number of parts in the partition (the sum of the values in
the returned dict) are limited with m (default value, None, gives
partitions from 1 through n):
>>> for p in partitions(6, m=2): # doctest: +SKIP
... print(p)
...
{6: 1}
{1: 1, 5: 1}
{2: 1, 4: 1}
{3: 2}
Note that the _same_ dictionary object is returned each time.
This is for speed: generating each partition goes quickly,
taking constant time, independent of n.
>>> [p for p in partitions(6, k=2)]
[{1: 6}, {1: 6}, {1: 6}, {1: 6}]
If you want to build a list of the returned dictionaries then
make a copy of them:
>>> [p.copy() for p in partitions(6, k=2)] # doctest: +SKIP
[{2: 3}, {1: 2, 2: 2}, {1: 4, 2: 1}, {1: 6}]
>>> [(M, p.copy()) for M, p in partitions(6, k=2, size=True)] # doctest: +SKIP
[(3, {2: 3}), (4, {1: 2, 2: 2}), (5, {1: 4, 2: 1}), (6, {1: 6})]
Reference:
modified from Tim Peter's version to allow for k and m values:
code.activestate.com/recipes/218332-generator-for-integer-partitions/
See Also
========
sympy.combinatorics.partitions.Partition
sympy.combinatorics.partitions.IntegerPartition
"""
if (
n <= 0 or
m is not None and m < 1 or
k is not None and k < 1 or
m and k and m*k < n):
# the empty set is the only way to handle these inputs
# and returning {} to represent it is consistent with
# the counting convention, e.g. nT(0) == 1.
if size:
yield 0, {}
else:
yield {}
return
if m is None:
m = n
else:
m = min(m, n)
if n == 0:
if size:
yield 1, {0: 1}
else:
yield {0: 1}
return
k = min(k or n, n)
n, m, k = as_int(n), as_int(m), as_int(k)
q, r = divmod(n, k)
ms = {k: q}
keys = [k] # ms.keys(), from largest to smallest
if r:
ms[r] = 1
keys.append(r)
room = m - q - bool(r)
if size:
yield sum(ms.values()), ms
else:
yield ms
while keys != [1]:
# Reuse any 1's.
if keys[-1] == 1:
del keys[-1]
reuse = ms.pop(1)
room += reuse
else:
reuse = 0
while 1:
# Let i be the smallest key larger than 1. Reuse one
# instance of i.
i = keys[-1]
newcount = ms[i] = ms[i] - 1
reuse += i
if newcount == 0:
del keys[-1], ms[i]
room += 1
# Break the remainder into pieces of size i-1.
i -= 1
q, r = divmod(reuse, i)
need = q + bool(r)
if need > room:
if not keys:
return
continue
ms[i] = q
keys.append(i)
if r:
ms[r] = 1
keys.append(r)
break
room -= need
if size:
yield sum(ms.values()), ms
else:
yield ms
def ordered_partitions(n, m=None, sort=True):
"""Generates ordered partitions of integer ``n``.
Parameters
==========
``m`` : integer (default gives partitions of all sizes) else only
those with size m. In addition, if ``m`` is not None then
partitions are generated *in place* (see examples).
``sort`` : bool (default True) controls whether partitions are
returned in sorted order when ``m`` is not None; when False,
the partitions are returned as fast as possible with elements
sorted, but when m|n the partitions will not be in
ascending lexicographical order.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import ordered_partitions
All partitions of 5 in ascending lexicographical:
>>> for p in ordered_partitions(5):
... print(p)
[1, 1, 1, 1, 1]
[1, 1, 1, 2]
[1, 1, 3]
[1, 2, 2]
[1, 4]
[2, 3]
[5]
Only partitions of 5 with two parts:
>>> for p in ordered_partitions(5, 2):
... print(p)
[1, 4]
[2, 3]
When ``m`` is given, a given list objects will be used more than
once for speed reasons so you will not see the correct partitions
unless you make a copy of each as it is generated:
>>> [p for p in ordered_partitions(7, 3)]
[[1, 1, 1], [1, 1, 1], [1, 1, 1], [2, 2, 2]]
>>> [list(p) for p in ordered_partitions(7, 3)]
[[1, 1, 5], [1, 2, 4], [1, 3, 3], [2, 2, 3]]
When ``n`` is a multiple of ``m``, the elements are still sorted
but the partitions themselves will be *unordered* if sort is False;
the default is to return them in ascending lexicographical order.
>>> for p in ordered_partitions(6, 2):
... print(p)
[1, 5]
[2, 4]
[3, 3]
But if speed is more important than ordering, sort can be set to
False:
>>> for p in ordered_partitions(6, 2, sort=False):
... print(p)
[1, 5]
[3, 3]
[2, 4]
References
==========
.. [1] Generating Integer Partitions, [online],
Available: https://jeromekelleher.net/generating-integer-partitions.html
.. [2] Jerome Kelleher and Barry O'Sullivan, "Generating All
Partitions: A Comparison Of Two Encodings", [online],
Available: https://arxiv.org/pdf/0909.2331v2.pdf
"""
if n < 1 or m is not None and m < 1:
# the empty set is the only way to handle these inputs
# and returning {} to represent it is consistent with
# the counting convention, e.g. nT(0) == 1.
yield []
return
if m is None:
# The list `a`'s leading elements contain the partition in which
# y is the biggest element and x is either the same as y or the
# 2nd largest element; v and w are adjacent element indices
# to which x and y are being assigned, respectively.
a = [1]*n
y = -1
v = n
while v > 0:
v -= 1
x = a[v] + 1
while y >= 2 * x:
a[v] = x
y -= x
v += 1
w = v + 1
while x <= y:
a[v] = x
a[w] = y
yield a[:w + 1]
x += 1
y -= 1
a[v] = x + y
y = a[v] - 1
yield a[:w]
elif m == 1:
yield [n]
elif n == m:
yield [1]*n
else:
# recursively generate partitions of size m
for b in range(1, n//m + 1):
a = [b]*m
x = n - b*m
if not x:
if sort:
yield a
elif not sort and x <= m:
for ax in ordered_partitions(x, sort=False):
mi = len(ax)
a[-mi:] = [i + b for i in ax]
yield a
a[-mi:] = [b]*mi
else:
for mi in range(1, m):
for ax in ordered_partitions(x, mi, sort=True):
a[-mi:] = [i + b for i in ax]
yield a
a[-mi:] = [b]*mi
def binary_partitions(n):
"""
Generates the binary partition of n.
A binary partition consists only of numbers that are
powers of two. Each step reduces a 2**(k+1) to 2**k and
2**k. Thus 16 is converted to 8 and 8.
Reference: TAOCP 4, section 7.2.1.5, problem 64
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import binary_partitions
>>> for i in binary_partitions(5):
... print(i)
...
[4, 1]
[2, 2, 1]
[2, 1, 1, 1]
[1, 1, 1, 1, 1]
"""
from math import ceil, log
pow = int(2**(ceil(log(n, 2))))
sum = 0
partition = []
while pow:
if sum + pow <= n:
partition.append(pow)
sum += pow
pow >>= 1
last_num = len(partition) - 1 - (n & 1)
while last_num >= 0:
yield partition
if partition[last_num] == 2:
partition[last_num] = 1
partition.append(1)
last_num -= 1
continue
partition.append(1)
partition[last_num] >>= 1
x = partition[last_num + 1] = partition[last_num]
last_num += 1
while x > 1:
if x <= len(partition) - last_num - 1:
del partition[-x + 1:]
last_num += 1
partition[last_num] = x
else:
x >>= 1
yield [1]*n
def has_dups(seq):
"""Return True if there are any duplicate elements in ``seq``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import has_dups
>>> from sympy import Dict, Set
>>> has_dups((1, 2, 1))
True
>>> has_dups(range(3))
False
>>> all(has_dups(c) is False for c in (set(), Set(), dict(), Dict()))
True
"""
from sympy.core.containers import Dict
from sympy.sets.sets import Set
if isinstance(seq, (dict, set, Dict, Set)):
return False
uniq = set()
return any(True for s in seq if s in uniq or uniq.add(s))
def has_variety(seq):
"""Return True if there are any different elements in ``seq``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import has_variety
>>> has_variety((1, 2, 1))
True
>>> has_variety((1, 1, 1))
False
"""
for i, s in enumerate(seq):
if i == 0:
sentinel = s
else:
if s != sentinel:
return True
return False
def uniq(seq, result=None):
"""
Yield unique elements from ``seq`` as an iterator. The second
parameter ``result`` is used internally; it is not necessary to pass
anything for this.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import uniq
>>> dat = [1, 4, 1, 5, 4, 2, 1, 2]
>>> type(uniq(dat)) in (list, tuple)
False
>>> list(uniq(dat))
[1, 4, 5, 2]
>>> list(uniq(x for x in dat))
[1, 4, 5, 2]
>>> list(uniq([[1], [2, 1], [1]]))
[[1], [2, 1]]
"""
try:
seen = set()
result = result or []
for i, s in enumerate(seq):
if not (s in seen or seen.add(s)):
yield s
except TypeError:
if s not in result:
yield s
result.append(s)
if hasattr(seq, '__getitem__'):
for s in uniq(seq[i + 1:], result):
yield s
else:
for s in uniq(seq, result):
yield s
def generate_bell(n):
"""Return permutations of [0, 1, ..., n - 1] such that each permutation
differs from the last by the exchange of a single pair of neighbors.
The ``n!`` permutations are returned as an iterator. In order to obtain
the next permutation from a random starting permutation, use the
``next_trotterjohnson`` method of the Permutation class (which generates
the same sequence in a different manner).
Examples
========
>>> from itertools import permutations
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import generate_bell
>>> from sympy import zeros, Matrix
This is the sort of permutation used in the ringing of physical bells,
and does not produce permutations in lexicographical order. Rather, the
permutations differ from each other by exactly one inversion, and the
position at which the swapping occurs varies periodically in a simple
fashion. Consider the first few permutations of 4 elements generated
by ``permutations`` and ``generate_bell``:
>>> list(permutations(range(4)))[:5]
[(0, 1, 2, 3), (0, 1, 3, 2), (0, 2, 1, 3), (0, 2, 3, 1), (0, 3, 1, 2)]
>>> list(generate_bell(4))[:5]
[(0, 1, 2, 3), (0, 1, 3, 2), (0, 3, 1, 2), (3, 0, 1, 2), (3, 0, 2, 1)]
Notice how the 2nd and 3rd lexicographical permutations have 3 elements
out of place whereas each "bell" permutation always has only two
elements out of place relative to the previous permutation (and so the
signature (+/-1) of a permutation is opposite of the signature of the
previous permutation).
How the position of inversion varies across the elements can be seen
by tracing out where the largest number appears in the permutations:
>>> m = zeros(4, 24)
>>> for i, p in enumerate(generate_bell(4)):
... m[:, i] = Matrix([j - 3 for j in list(p)]) # make largest zero
>>> m.print_nonzero('X')
[XXX XXXXXX XXXXXX XXX]
[XX XX XXXX XX XXXX XX XX]
[X XXXX XX XXXX XX XXXX X]
[ XXXXXX XXXXXX XXXXXX ]
See Also
========
sympy.combinatorics.Permutation.next_trotterjohnson
References
==========
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_ringing
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4856615/recursive-permutation/4857018
* http://programminggeeks.com/bell-algorithm-for-permutation/
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steinhaus%E2%80%93Johnson%E2%80%93Trotter_algorithm
* Generating involutions, derangements, and relatives by ECO
Vincent Vajnovszki, DMTCS vol 1 issue 12, 2010
"""
n = as_int(n)
if n < 1:
raise ValueError('n must be a positive integer')
if n == 1:
yield (0,)
elif n == 2:
yield (0, 1)
yield (1, 0)
elif n == 3:
for li in [(0, 1, 2), (0, 2, 1), (2, 0, 1), (2, 1, 0), (1, 2, 0), (1, 0, 2)]:
yield li
else:
m = n - 1
op = [0] + [-1]*m
l = list(range(n))
while True:
yield tuple(l)
# find biggest element with op
big = None, -1 # idx, value
for i in range(n):
if op[i] and l[i] > big[1]:
big = i, l[i]
i, _ = big
if i is None:
break # there are no ops left
# swap it with neighbor in the indicated direction
j = i + op[i]
l[i], l[j] = l[j], l[i]
op[i], op[j] = op[j], op[i]
# if it landed at the end or if the neighbor in the same
# direction is bigger then turn off op
if j == 0 or j == m or l[j + op[j]] > l[j]:
op[j] = 0
# any element bigger to the left gets +1 op
for i in range(j):
if l[i] > l[j]:
op[i] = 1
# any element bigger to the right gets -1 op
for i in range(j + 1, n):
if l[i] > l[j]:
op[i] = -1
def generate_involutions(n):
"""
Generates involutions.
An involution is a permutation that when multiplied
by itself equals the identity permutation. In this
implementation the involutions are generated using
Fixed Points.
Alternatively, an involution can be considered as
a permutation that does not contain any cycles with
a length that is greater than two.
Reference:
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PermutationInvolution.html
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import generate_involutions
>>> list(generate_involutions(3))
[(0, 1, 2), (0, 2, 1), (1, 0, 2), (2, 1, 0)]
>>> len(list(generate_involutions(4)))
10
"""
idx = list(range(n))
for p in permutations(idx):
for i in idx:
if p[p[i]] != i:
break
else:
yield p
def generate_derangements(perm):
"""
Routine to generate unique derangements.
TODO: This will be rewritten to use the
ECO operator approach once the permutations
branch is in master.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import generate_derangements
>>> list(generate_derangements([0, 1, 2]))
[[1, 2, 0], [2, 0, 1]]
>>> list(generate_derangements([0, 1, 2, 3]))
[[1, 0, 3, 2], [1, 2, 3, 0], [1, 3, 0, 2], [2, 0, 3, 1], \
[2, 3, 0, 1], [2, 3, 1, 0], [3, 0, 1, 2], [3, 2, 0, 1], \
[3, 2, 1, 0]]
>>> list(generate_derangements([0, 1, 1]))
[]
See Also
========
sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials.subfactorial
"""
p = multiset_permutations(perm)
indices = range(len(perm))
p0 = next(p)
for pi in p:
if all(pi[i] != p0[i] for i in indices):
yield pi
def necklaces(n, k, free=False):
"""
A routine to generate necklaces that may (free=True) or may not
(free=False) be turned over to be viewed. The "necklaces" returned
are comprised of ``n`` integers (beads) with ``k`` different
values (colors). Only unique necklaces are returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import necklaces, bracelets
>>> def show(s, i):
... return ''.join(s[j] for j in i)
The "unrestricted necklace" is sometimes also referred to as a
"bracelet" (an object that can be turned over, a sequence that can
be reversed) and the term "necklace" is used to imply a sequence
that cannot be reversed. So ACB == ABC for a bracelet (rotate and
reverse) while the two are different for a necklace since rotation
alone cannot make the two sequences the same.
(mnemonic: Bracelets can be viewed Backwards, but Not Necklaces.)
>>> B = [show('ABC', i) for i in bracelets(3, 3)]
>>> N = [show('ABC', i) for i in necklaces(3, 3)]
>>> set(N) - set(B)
{'ACB'}
>>> list(necklaces(4, 2))
[(0, 0, 0, 0), (0, 0, 0, 1), (0, 0, 1, 1),
(0, 1, 0, 1), (0, 1, 1, 1), (1, 1, 1, 1)]
>>> [show('.o', i) for i in bracelets(4, 2)]
['....', '...o', '..oo', '.o.o', '.ooo', 'oooo']
References
==========
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Necklace.html
"""
return uniq(minlex(i, directed=not free) for i in
variations(list(range(k)), n, repetition=True))
def bracelets(n, k):
"""Wrapper to necklaces to return a free (unrestricted) necklace."""
return necklaces(n, k, free=True)
def generate_oriented_forest(n):
"""
This algorithm generates oriented forests.
An oriented graph is a directed graph having no symmetric pair of directed
edges. A forest is an acyclic graph, i.e., it has no cycles. A forest can
also be described as a disjoint union of trees, which are graphs in which
any two vertices are connected by exactly one simple path.
Reference:
[1] T. Beyer and S.M. Hedetniemi: constant time generation of \
rooted trees, SIAM J. Computing Vol. 9, No. 4, November 1980
[2] https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1633833/oriented-forest-taocp-algorithm-in-python
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import generate_oriented_forest
>>> list(generate_oriented_forest(4))
[[0, 1, 2, 3], [0, 1, 2, 2], [0, 1, 2, 1], [0, 1, 2, 0], \
[0, 1, 1, 1], [0, 1, 1, 0], [0, 1, 0, 1], [0, 1, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0, 0]]
"""
P = list(range(-1, n))
while True:
yield P[1:]
if P[n] > 0:
P[n] = P[P[n]]
else:
for p in range(n - 1, 0, -1):
if P[p] != 0:
target = P[p] - 1
for q in range(p - 1, 0, -1):
if P[q] == target:
break
offset = p - q
for i in range(p, n + 1):
P[i] = P[i - offset]
break
else:
break
def minlex(seq, directed=True, is_set=False, small=None):
"""
Return a tuple where the smallest element appears first; if
``directed`` is True (default) then the order is preserved, otherwise
the sequence will be reversed if that gives a smaller ordering.
If every element appears only once then is_set can be set to True
for more efficient processing.
If the smallest element is known at the time of calling, it can be
passed and the calculation of the smallest element will be omitted.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.polyhedron import minlex
>>> minlex((1, 2, 0))
(0, 1, 2)
>>> minlex((1, 0, 2))
(0, 2, 1)
>>> minlex((1, 0, 2), directed=False)
(0, 1, 2)
>>> minlex('11010011000', directed=True)
'00011010011'
>>> minlex('11010011000', directed=False)
'00011001011'
"""
is_str = isinstance(seq, str)
seq = list(seq)
if small is None:
small = min(seq, key=default_sort_key)
if is_set:
i = seq.index(small)
if not directed:
n = len(seq)
p = (i + 1) % n
m = (i - 1) % n
if default_sort_key(seq[p]) > default_sort_key(seq[m]):
seq = list(reversed(seq))
i = n - i - 1
if i:
seq = rotate_left(seq, i)
best = seq
else:
count = seq.count(small)
if count == 1 and directed:
best = rotate_left(seq, seq.index(small))
else:
# if not directed, and not a set, we can't just
# pass this off to minlex with is_set True since
# peeking at the neighbor may not be sufficient to
# make the decision so we continue...
best = seq
for i in range(count):
seq = rotate_left(seq, seq.index(small, count != 1))
if seq < best:
best = seq
# it's cheaper to rotate now rather than search
# again for these in reversed order so we test
# the reverse now
if not directed:
seq = rotate_left(seq, 1)
seq = list(reversed(seq))
if seq < best:
best = seq
seq = list(reversed(seq))
seq = rotate_right(seq, 1)
# common return
if is_str:
return ''.join(best)
return tuple(best)
def runs(seq, op=gt):
"""Group the sequence into lists in which successive elements
all compare the same with the comparison operator, ``op``:
op(seq[i + 1], seq[i]) is True from all elements in a run.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import runs
>>> from operator import ge
>>> runs([0, 1, 2, 2, 1, 4, 3, 2, 2])
[[0, 1, 2], [2], [1, 4], [3], [2], [2]]
>>> runs([0, 1, 2, 2, 1, 4, 3, 2, 2], op=ge)
[[0, 1, 2, 2], [1, 4], [3], [2, 2]]
"""
cycles = []
seq = iter(seq)
try:
run = [next(seq)]
except StopIteration:
return []
while True:
try:
ei = next(seq)
except StopIteration:
break
if op(ei, run[-1]):
run.append(ei)
continue
else:
cycles.append(run)
run = [ei]
if run:
cycles.append(run)
return cycles
def kbins(l, k, ordered=None):
"""
Return sequence ``l`` partitioned into ``k`` bins.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import kbins
The default is to give the items in the same order, but grouped
into k partitions without any reordering:
>>> from __future__ import print_function
>>> for p in kbins(list(range(5)), 2):
... print(p)
...
[[0], [1, 2, 3, 4]]
[[0, 1], [2, 3, 4]]
[[0, 1, 2], [3, 4]]
[[0, 1, 2, 3], [4]]
The ``ordered`` flag is either None (to give the simple partition
of the elements) or is a 2 digit integer indicating whether the order of
the bins and the order of the items in the bins matters. Given::
A = [[0], [1, 2]]
B = [[1, 2], [0]]
C = [[2, 1], [0]]
D = [[0], [2, 1]]
the following values for ``ordered`` have the shown meanings::
00 means A == B == C == D
01 means A == B
10 means A == D
11 means A == A
>>> for ordered in [None, 0, 1, 10, 11]:
... print('ordered = %s' % ordered)
... for p in kbins(list(range(3)), 2, ordered=ordered):
... print(' %s' % p)
...
ordered = None
[[0], [1, 2]]
[[0, 1], [2]]
ordered = 0
[[0, 1], [2]]
[[0, 2], [1]]
[[0], [1, 2]]
ordered = 1
[[0], [1, 2]]
[[0], [2, 1]]
[[1], [0, 2]]
[[1], [2, 0]]
[[2], [0, 1]]
[[2], [1, 0]]
ordered = 10
[[0, 1], [2]]
[[2], [0, 1]]
[[0, 2], [1]]
[[1], [0, 2]]
[[0], [1, 2]]
[[1, 2], [0]]
ordered = 11
[[0], [1, 2]]
[[0, 1], [2]]
[[0], [2, 1]]
[[0, 2], [1]]
[[1], [0, 2]]
[[1, 0], [2]]
[[1], [2, 0]]
[[1, 2], [0]]
[[2], [0, 1]]
[[2, 0], [1]]
[[2], [1, 0]]
[[2, 1], [0]]
See Also
========
partitions, multiset_partitions
"""
def partition(lista, bins):
# EnricoGiampieri's partition generator from
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13131491/
# partition-n-items-into-k-bins-in-python-lazily
if len(lista) == 1 or bins == 1:
yield [lista]
elif len(lista) > 1 and bins > 1:
for i in range(1, len(lista)):
for part in partition(lista[i:], bins - 1):
if len([lista[:i]] + part) == bins:
yield [lista[:i]] + part
if ordered is None:
for p in partition(l, k):
yield p
elif ordered == 11:
for pl in multiset_permutations(l):
pl = list(pl)
for p in partition(pl, k):
yield p
elif ordered == 00:
for p in multiset_partitions(l, k):
yield p
elif ordered == 10:
for p in multiset_partitions(l, k):
for perm in permutations(p):
yield list(perm)
elif ordered == 1:
for kgot, p in partitions(len(l), k, size=True):
if kgot != k:
continue
for li in multiset_permutations(l):
rv = []
i = j = 0
li = list(li)
for size, multiplicity in sorted(p.items()):
for m in range(multiplicity):
j = i + size
rv.append(li[i: j])
i = j
yield rv
else:
raise ValueError(
'ordered must be one of 00, 01, 10 or 11, not %s' % ordered)
def permute_signs(t):
"""Return iterator in which the signs of non-zero elements
of t are permuted.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import permute_signs
>>> list(permute_signs((0, 1, 2)))
[(0, 1, 2), (0, -1, 2), (0, 1, -2), (0, -1, -2)]
"""
for signs in cartes(*[(1, -1)]*(len(t) - t.count(0))):
signs = list(signs)
yield type(t)([i*signs.pop() if i else i for i in t])
def signed_permutations(t):
"""Return iterator in which the signs of non-zero elements
of t and the order of the elements are permuted.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import signed_permutations
>>> list(signed_permutations((0, 1, 2)))
[(0, 1, 2), (0, -1, 2), (0, 1, -2), (0, -1, -2), (0, 2, 1),
(0, -2, 1), (0, 2, -1), (0, -2, -1), (1, 0, 2), (-1, 0, 2),
(1, 0, -2), (-1, 0, -2), (1, 2, 0), (-1, 2, 0), (1, -2, 0),
(-1, -2, 0), (2, 0, 1), (-2, 0, 1), (2, 0, -1), (-2, 0, -1),
(2, 1, 0), (-2, 1, 0), (2, -1, 0), (-2, -1, 0)]
"""
return (type(t)(i) for j in permutations(t)
for i in permute_signs(j))
|
df176844372b9178470ea605f3119f57e67d945f53041965bac15c260d89aa5d
|
"""
This is our testing framework.
Goals:
* it should be compatible with py.test and operate very similarly
(or identically)
* doesn't require any external dependencies
* preferably all the functionality should be in this file only
* no magic, just import the test file and execute the test functions, that's it
* portable
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import os
import sys
import platform
import inspect
import traceback
import pdb
import re
import linecache
import time
from fnmatch import fnmatch
from timeit import default_timer as clock
import doctest as pdoctest # avoid clashing with our doctest() function
from doctest import DocTestFinder, DocTestRunner
import random
import subprocess
import signal
import stat
import tempfile
from sympy.core.cache import clear_cache
from sympy.core.compatibility import exec_, PY3, string_types, range, unwrap
from sympy.utilities.misc import find_executable
from sympy.external import import_module
from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning
IS_WINDOWS = (os.name == 'nt')
ON_TRAVIS = os.getenv('TRAVIS_BUILD_NUMBER', None)
# emperically generated list of the proportion of time spent running
# an even split of tests. This should periodically be regenerated.
# A list of [.6, .1, .3] would mean that if the tests are evenly split
# into '1/3', '2/3', '3/3', the first split would take 60% of the time,
# the second 10% and the third 30%. These lists are normalized to sum
# to 1, so [60, 10, 30] has the same behavior as [6, 1, 3] or [.6, .1, .3].
#
# This list can be generated with the code:
# from time import time
# import sympy
#
# delays, num_splits = [], 30
# for i in range(1, num_splits + 1):
# tic = time()
# sympy.test(split='{}/{}'.format(i, num_splits), time_balance=False)
# delays.append(time() - tic)
# tot = sum(delays)
# print([round(x / tot, 4) for x in delays]))
SPLIT_DENSITY = [0.2464, 0.0507, 0.0328, 0.0113, 0.0418, 0.012, 0.0269, 0.0095, 0.091, 0.0215, 0.001, 0.0023, 0.0116, 0.0137, 0.0041, 0.0039, 0.0145, 0.0172, 0.059, 0.0017, 0.0112, 0.0128, 0.0012, 0.0293, 0.0705, 0.0284, 0.1495, 0.0073, 0.0052, 0.0115]
SPLIT_DENSITY_SLOW = [0.3616, 0.0003, 0.0004, 0.0004, 0.0255, 0.0005, 0.0674, 0.0337, 0.1057, 0.0329, 0.0002, 0.0002, 0.0184, 0.0028, 0.0046, 0.0148, 0.0046, 0.0083, 0.0004, 0.0002, 0.0069, 0.0004, 0.0004, 0.0046, 0.0205, 0.1378, 0.1451, 0.0003, 0.0006, 0.0006]
class Skipped(Exception):
pass
class TimeOutError(Exception):
pass
class DependencyError(Exception):
pass
# add more flags ??
future_flags = division.compiler_flag
def _indent(s, indent=4):
"""
Add the given number of space characters to the beginning of
every non-blank line in ``s``, and return the result.
If the string ``s`` is Unicode, it is encoded using the stdout
encoding and the ``backslashreplace`` error handler.
"""
# After a 2to3 run the below code is bogus, so wrap it with a version check
if not PY3:
if isinstance(s, unicode):
s = s.encode(pdoctest._encoding, 'backslashreplace')
# This regexp matches the start of non-blank lines:
return re.sub('(?m)^(?!$)', indent*' ', s)
pdoctest._indent = _indent
# override reporter to maintain windows and python3
def _report_failure(self, out, test, example, got):
"""
Report that the given example failed.
"""
s = self._checker.output_difference(example, got, self.optionflags)
s = s.encode('raw_unicode_escape').decode('utf8', 'ignore')
out(self._failure_header(test, example) + s)
if PY3 and IS_WINDOWS:
DocTestRunner.report_failure = _report_failure
def convert_to_native_paths(lst):
"""
Converts a list of '/' separated paths into a list of
native (os.sep separated) paths and converts to lowercase
if the system is case insensitive.
"""
newlst = []
for i, rv in enumerate(lst):
rv = os.path.join(*rv.split("/"))
# on windows the slash after the colon is dropped
if sys.platform == "win32":
pos = rv.find(':')
if pos != -1:
if rv[pos + 1] != '\\':
rv = rv[:pos + 1] + '\\' + rv[pos + 1:]
newlst.append(os.path.normcase(rv))
return newlst
def get_sympy_dir():
"""
Returns the root sympy directory and set the global value
indicating whether the system is case sensitive or not.
"""
this_file = os.path.abspath(__file__)
sympy_dir = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(this_file), "..", "..")
sympy_dir = os.path.normpath(sympy_dir)
return os.path.normcase(sympy_dir)
def setup_pprint():
from sympy import pprint_use_unicode, init_printing
import sympy.interactive.printing as interactive_printing
# force pprint to be in ascii mode in doctests
use_unicode_prev = pprint_use_unicode(False)
# hook our nice, hash-stable strprinter
init_printing(pretty_print=False)
# Prevent init_printing() in doctests from affecting other doctests
interactive_printing.NO_GLOBAL = True
return use_unicode_prev
def run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization(
function, function_args=(),
function_kwargs=None, command=sys.executable,
module='sympy.utilities.runtests', force=False):
"""
Run a function in a Python subprocess with hash randomization enabled.
If hash randomization is not supported by the version of Python given, it
returns False. Otherwise, it returns the exit value of the command. The
function is passed to sys.exit(), so the return value of the function will
be the return value.
The environment variable PYTHONHASHSEED is used to seed Python's hash
randomization. If it is set, this function will return False, because
starting a new subprocess is unnecessary in that case. If it is not set,
one is set at random, and the tests are run. Note that if this
environment variable is set when Python starts, hash randomization is
automatically enabled. To force a subprocess to be created even if
PYTHONHASHSEED is set, pass ``force=True``. This flag will not force a
subprocess in Python versions that do not support hash randomization (see
below), because those versions of Python do not support the ``-R`` flag.
``function`` should be a string name of a function that is importable from
the module ``module``, like "_test". The default for ``module`` is
"sympy.utilities.runtests". ``function_args`` and ``function_kwargs``
should be a repr-able tuple and dict, respectively. The default Python
command is sys.executable, which is the currently running Python command.
This function is necessary because the seed for hash randomization must be
set by the environment variable before Python starts. Hence, in order to
use a predetermined seed for tests, we must start Python in a separate
subprocess.
Hash randomization was added in the minor Python versions 2.6.8, 2.7.3,
3.1.5, and 3.2.3, and is enabled by default in all Python versions after
and including 3.3.0.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.runtests import (
... run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization)
>>> # run the core tests in verbose mode
>>> run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization("_test",
... function_args=("core",),
... function_kwargs={'verbose': True}) # doctest: +SKIP
# Will return 0 if sys.executable supports hash randomization and tests
# pass, 1 if they fail, and False if it does not support hash
# randomization.
"""
# Note, we must return False everywhere, not None, as subprocess.call will
# sometimes return None.
# First check if the Python version supports hash randomization
# If it doesn't have this support, it won't reconize the -R flag
p = subprocess.Popen([command, "-RV"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
p.communicate()
if p.returncode != 0:
return False
hash_seed = os.getenv("PYTHONHASHSEED")
if not hash_seed:
os.environ["PYTHONHASHSEED"] = str(random.randrange(2**32))
else:
if not force:
return False
function_kwargs = function_kwargs or {}
# Now run the command
commandstring = ("import sys; from %s import %s;sys.exit(%s(*%s, **%s))" %
(module, function, function, repr(function_args),
repr(function_kwargs)))
try:
p = subprocess.Popen([command, "-R", "-c", commandstring])
p.communicate()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
p.wait()
finally:
# Put the environment variable back, so that it reads correctly for
# the current Python process.
if hash_seed is None:
del os.environ["PYTHONHASHSEED"]
else:
os.environ["PYTHONHASHSEED"] = hash_seed
return p.returncode
def run_all_tests(test_args=(), test_kwargs=None,
doctest_args=(), doctest_kwargs=None,
examples_args=(), examples_kwargs=None):
"""
Run all tests.
Right now, this runs the regular tests (bin/test), the doctests
(bin/doctest), the examples (examples/all.py), and the sage tests (see
sympy/external/tests/test_sage.py).
This is what ``setup.py test`` uses.
You can pass arguments and keyword arguments to the test functions that
support them (for now, test, doctest, and the examples). See the
docstrings of those functions for a description of the available options.
For example, to run the solvers tests with colors turned off:
>>> from sympy.utilities.runtests import run_all_tests
>>> run_all_tests(test_args=("solvers",),
... test_kwargs={"colors:False"}) # doctest: +SKIP
"""
tests_successful = True
test_kwargs = test_kwargs or {}
doctest_kwargs = doctest_kwargs or {}
examples_kwargs = examples_kwargs or {'quiet': True}
try:
# Regular tests
if not test(*test_args, **test_kwargs):
# some regular test fails, so set the tests_successful
# flag to false and continue running the doctests
tests_successful = False
# Doctests
print()
if not doctest(*doctest_args, **doctest_kwargs):
tests_successful = False
# Examples
print()
sys.path.append("examples")
from all import run_examples # examples/all.py
if not run_examples(*examples_args, **examples_kwargs):
tests_successful = False
# Sage tests
if sys.platform != "win32" and not PY3 and os.path.exists("bin/test"):
# run Sage tests; Sage currently doesn't support Windows or Python 3
# Only run Sage tests if 'bin/test' is present (it is missing from
# our release because everything in the 'bin' directory gets
# installed).
dev_null = open(os.devnull, 'w')
if subprocess.call("sage -v", shell=True, stdout=dev_null,
stderr=dev_null) == 0:
if subprocess.call("sage -python bin/test "
"sympy/external/tests/test_sage.py",
shell=True, cwd=os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(__file__)))) != 0:
tests_successful = False
if tests_successful:
return
else:
# Return nonzero exit code
sys.exit(1)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print()
print("DO *NOT* COMMIT!")
sys.exit(1)
def test(*paths, **kwargs):
"""
Run tests in the specified test_*.py files.
Tests in a particular test_*.py file are run if any of the given strings
in ``paths`` matches a part of the test file's path. If ``paths=[]``,
tests in all test_*.py files are run.
Notes:
- If sort=False, tests are run in random order (not default).
- Paths can be entered in native system format or in unix,
forward-slash format.
- Files that are on the blacklist can be tested by providing
their path; they are only excluded if no paths are given.
**Explanation of test results**
====== ===============================================================
Output Meaning
====== ===============================================================
. passed
F failed
X XPassed (expected to fail but passed)
f XFAILed (expected to fail and indeed failed)
s skipped
w slow
T timeout (e.g., when ``--timeout`` is used)
K KeyboardInterrupt (when running the slow tests with ``--slow``,
you can interrupt one of them without killing the test runner)
====== ===============================================================
Colors have no additional meaning and are used just to facilitate
interpreting the output.
Examples
========
>>> import sympy
Run all tests:
>>> sympy.test() # doctest: +SKIP
Run one file:
>>> sympy.test("sympy/core/tests/test_basic.py") # doctest: +SKIP
>>> sympy.test("_basic") # doctest: +SKIP
Run all tests in sympy/functions/ and some particular file:
>>> sympy.test("sympy/core/tests/test_basic.py",
... "sympy/functions") # doctest: +SKIP
Run all tests in sympy/core and sympy/utilities:
>>> sympy.test("/core", "/util") # doctest: +SKIP
Run specific test from a file:
>>> sympy.test("sympy/core/tests/test_basic.py",
... kw="test_equality") # doctest: +SKIP
Run specific test from any file:
>>> sympy.test(kw="subs") # doctest: +SKIP
Run the tests with verbose mode on:
>>> sympy.test(verbose=True) # doctest: +SKIP
Don't sort the test output:
>>> sympy.test(sort=False) # doctest: +SKIP
Turn on post-mortem pdb:
>>> sympy.test(pdb=True) # doctest: +SKIP
Turn off colors:
>>> sympy.test(colors=False) # doctest: +SKIP
Force colors, even when the output is not to a terminal (this is useful,
e.g., if you are piping to ``less -r`` and you still want colors)
>>> sympy.test(force_colors=False) # doctest: +SKIP
The traceback verboseness can be set to "short" or "no" (default is
"short")
>>> sympy.test(tb='no') # doctest: +SKIP
The ``split`` option can be passed to split the test run into parts. The
split currently only splits the test files, though this may change in the
future. ``split`` should be a string of the form 'a/b', which will run
part ``a`` of ``b``. For instance, to run the first half of the test suite:
>>> sympy.test(split='1/2') # doctest: +SKIP
The ``time_balance`` option can be passed in conjunction with ``split``.
If ``time_balance=True`` (the default for ``sympy.test``), sympy will attempt
to split the tests such that each split takes equal time. This heuristic
for balancing is based on pre-recorded test data.
>>> sympy.test(split='1/2', time_balance=True) # doctest: +SKIP
You can disable running the tests in a separate subprocess using
``subprocess=False``. This is done to support seeding hash randomization,
which is enabled by default in the Python versions where it is supported.
If subprocess=False, hash randomization is enabled/disabled according to
whether it has been enabled or not in the calling Python process.
However, even if it is enabled, the seed cannot be printed unless it is
called from a new Python process.
Hash randomization was added in the minor Python versions 2.6.8, 2.7.3,
3.1.5, and 3.2.3, and is enabled by default in all Python versions after
and including 3.3.0.
If hash randomization is not supported ``subprocess=False`` is used
automatically.
>>> sympy.test(subprocess=False) # doctest: +SKIP
To set the hash randomization seed, set the environment variable
``PYTHONHASHSEED`` before running the tests. This can be done from within
Python using
>>> import os
>>> os.environ['PYTHONHASHSEED'] = '42' # doctest: +SKIP
Or from the command line using
$ PYTHONHASHSEED=42 ./bin/test
If the seed is not set, a random seed will be chosen.
Note that to reproduce the same hash values, you must use both the same seed
as well as the same architecture (32-bit vs. 64-bit).
"""
subprocess = kwargs.pop("subprocess", True)
rerun = kwargs.pop("rerun", 0)
# count up from 0, do not print 0
print_counter = lambda i : (print("rerun %d" % (rerun-i))
if rerun-i else None)
if subprocess:
# loop backwards so last i is 0
for i in range(rerun, -1, -1):
print_counter(i)
ret = run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization("_test",
function_args=paths, function_kwargs=kwargs)
if ret is False:
break
val = not bool(ret)
# exit on the first failure or if done
if not val or i == 0:
return val
# rerun even if hash randomization is not supported
for i in range(rerun, -1, -1):
print_counter(i)
val = not bool(_test(*paths, **kwargs))
if not val or i == 0:
return val
def _test(*paths, **kwargs):
"""
Internal function that actually runs the tests.
All keyword arguments from ``test()`` are passed to this function except for
``subprocess``.
Returns 0 if tests passed and 1 if they failed. See the docstring of
``test()`` for more information.
"""
verbose = kwargs.get("verbose", False)
tb = kwargs.get("tb", "short")
kw = kwargs.get("kw", None) or ()
# ensure that kw is a tuple
if isinstance(kw, str):
kw = (kw, )
post_mortem = kwargs.get("pdb", False)
colors = kwargs.get("colors", True)
force_colors = kwargs.get("force_colors", False)
sort = kwargs.get("sort", True)
seed = kwargs.get("seed", None)
if seed is None:
seed = random.randrange(100000000)
timeout = kwargs.get("timeout", False)
fail_on_timeout = kwargs.get("fail_on_timeout", False)
if ON_TRAVIS and timeout is False:
# Travis times out if no activity is seen for 10 minutes.
timeout = 595
fail_on_timeout = True
slow = kwargs.get("slow", False)
enhance_asserts = kwargs.get("enhance_asserts", False)
split = kwargs.get('split', None)
time_balance = kwargs.get('time_balance', True)
blacklist = kwargs.get('blacklist', ['sympy/integrals/rubi/rubi_tests/tests'])
blacklist = convert_to_native_paths(blacklist)
fast_threshold = kwargs.get('fast_threshold', None)
slow_threshold = kwargs.get('slow_threshold', None)
r = PyTestReporter(verbose=verbose, tb=tb, colors=colors,
force_colors=force_colors, split=split)
t = SymPyTests(r, kw, post_mortem, seed,
fast_threshold=fast_threshold,
slow_threshold=slow_threshold)
# Show deprecation warnings
import warnings
warnings.simplefilter("error", SymPyDeprecationWarning)
warnings.filterwarnings('error', '.*', DeprecationWarning, module='sympy.*')
test_files = t.get_test_files('sympy')
not_blacklisted = [f for f in test_files
if not any(b in f for b in blacklist)]
if len(paths) == 0:
matched = not_blacklisted
else:
paths = convert_to_native_paths(paths)
matched = []
for f in not_blacklisted:
basename = os.path.basename(f)
for p in paths:
if p in f or fnmatch(basename, p):
matched.append(f)
break
density = None
if time_balance:
if slow:
density = SPLIT_DENSITY_SLOW
else:
density = SPLIT_DENSITY
if split:
matched = split_list(matched, split, density=density)
t._testfiles.extend(matched)
return int(not t.test(sort=sort, timeout=timeout, slow=slow,
enhance_asserts=enhance_asserts, fail_on_timeout=fail_on_timeout))
def doctest(*paths, **kwargs):
r"""
Runs doctests in all \*.py files in the sympy directory which match
any of the given strings in ``paths`` or all tests if paths=[].
Notes:
- Paths can be entered in native system format or in unix,
forward-slash format.
- Files that are on the blacklist can be tested by providing
their path; they are only excluded if no paths are given.
Examples
========
>>> import sympy
Run all tests:
>>> sympy.doctest() # doctest: +SKIP
Run one file:
>>> sympy.doctest("sympy/core/basic.py") # doctest: +SKIP
>>> sympy.doctest("polynomial.rst") # doctest: +SKIP
Run all tests in sympy/functions/ and some particular file:
>>> sympy.doctest("/functions", "basic.py") # doctest: +SKIP
Run any file having polynomial in its name, doc/src/modules/polynomial.rst,
sympy/functions/special/polynomials.py, and sympy/polys/polynomial.py:
>>> sympy.doctest("polynomial") # doctest: +SKIP
The ``split`` option can be passed to split the test run into parts. The
split currently only splits the test files, though this may change in the
future. ``split`` should be a string of the form 'a/b', which will run
part ``a`` of ``b``. Note that the regular doctests and the Sphinx
doctests are split independently. For instance, to run the first half of
the test suite:
>>> sympy.doctest(split='1/2') # doctest: +SKIP
The ``subprocess`` and ``verbose`` options are the same as with the function
``test()``. See the docstring of that function for more information.
"""
subprocess = kwargs.pop("subprocess", True)
rerun = kwargs.pop("rerun", 0)
# count up from 0, do not print 0
print_counter = lambda i : (print("rerun %d" % (rerun-i))
if rerun-i else None)
if subprocess:
# loop backwards so last i is 0
for i in range(rerun, -1, -1):
print_counter(i)
ret = run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization("_doctest",
function_args=paths, function_kwargs=kwargs)
if ret is False:
break
val = not bool(ret)
# exit on the first failure or if done
if not val or i == 0:
return val
# rerun even if hash randomization is not supported
for i in range(rerun, -1, -1):
print_counter(i)
val = not bool(_doctest(*paths, **kwargs))
if not val or i == 0:
return val
def _doctest(*paths, **kwargs):
"""
Internal function that actually runs the doctests.
All keyword arguments from ``doctest()`` are passed to this function
except for ``subprocess``.
Returns 0 if tests passed and 1 if they failed. See the docstrings of
``doctest()`` and ``test()`` for more information.
"""
from sympy import pprint_use_unicode
normal = kwargs.get("normal", False)
verbose = kwargs.get("verbose", False)
colors = kwargs.get("colors", True)
force_colors = kwargs.get("force_colors", False)
blacklist = kwargs.get("blacklist", [])
split = kwargs.get('split', None)
blacklist.extend([
"doc/src/modules/plotting.rst", # generates live plots
"doc/src/modules/physics/mechanics/autolev_parser.rst",
"sympy/physics/gaussopt.py", # raises deprecation warning
"sympy/galgebra.py", # raises ImportError
"sympy/this.py", # Prints text to the terminal
"sympy/matrices/densearith.py", # raises deprecation warning
"sympy/matrices/densesolve.py", # raises deprecation warning
"sympy/matrices/densetools.py", # raises deprecation warning
"sympy/physics/unitsystems.py", # raises deprecation warning
"sympy/parsing/autolev/_antlr/autolevlexer.py", # generated code
"sympy/parsing/autolev/_antlr/autolevparser.py", # generated code
"sympy/parsing/autolev/_antlr/autolevlistener.py", # generated code
"sympy/parsing/latex/_antlr/latexlexer.py", # generated code
"sympy/parsing/latex/_antlr/latexparser.py", # generated code
"sympy/integrals/rubi/rubi.py"
])
# autolev parser tests
num = 12
for i in range (1, num+1):
blacklist.append("sympy/parsing/autolev/test-examples/ruletest" + str(i) + ".py")
blacklist.extend(["sympy/parsing/autolev/test-examples/pydy-example-repo/mass_spring_damper.py",
"sympy/parsing/autolev/test-examples/pydy-example-repo/chaos_pendulum.py",
"sympy/parsing/autolev/test-examples/pydy-example-repo/double_pendulum.py",
"sympy/parsing/autolev/test-examples/pydy-example-repo/non_min_pendulum.py"])
if import_module('numpy') is None:
blacklist.extend([
"sympy/plotting/experimental_lambdify.py",
"sympy/plotting/plot_implicit.py",
"examples/advanced/autowrap_integrators.py",
"examples/advanced/autowrap_ufuncify.py",
"examples/intermediate/sample.py",
"examples/intermediate/mplot2d.py",
"examples/intermediate/mplot3d.py",
"doc/src/modules/numeric-computation.rst"
])
else:
if import_module('matplotlib') is None:
blacklist.extend([
"examples/intermediate/mplot2d.py",
"examples/intermediate/mplot3d.py"
])
else:
# Use a non-windowed backend, so that the tests work on Travis
import matplotlib
matplotlib.use('Agg')
if import_module('pyglet') is None:
blacklist.extend(["sympy/plotting/pygletplot"])
if import_module('theano') is None:
blacklist.extend([
"sympy/printing/theanocode.py",
"doc/src/modules/numeric-computation.rst",
])
# disabled because of doctest failures in asmeurer's bot
blacklist.extend([
"sympy/utilities/autowrap.py",
"examples/advanced/autowrap_integrators.py",
"examples/advanced/autowrap_ufuncify.py"
])
# blacklist these modules until issue 4840 is resolved
blacklist.extend([
"sympy/conftest.py",
"sympy/utilities/benchmarking.py"
])
blacklist = convert_to_native_paths(blacklist)
# Disable warnings for external modules
import sympy.external
sympy.external.importtools.WARN_OLD_VERSION = False
sympy.external.importtools.WARN_NOT_INSTALLED = False
# Disable showing up of plots
from sympy.plotting.plot import unset_show
unset_show()
# Show deprecation warnings
import warnings
warnings.simplefilter("error", SymPyDeprecationWarning)
warnings.filterwarnings('error', '.*', DeprecationWarning, module='sympy.*')
r = PyTestReporter(verbose, split=split, colors=colors,\
force_colors=force_colors)
t = SymPyDocTests(r, normal)
test_files = t.get_test_files('sympy')
test_files.extend(t.get_test_files('examples', init_only=False))
not_blacklisted = [f for f in test_files
if not any(b in f for b in blacklist)]
if len(paths) == 0:
matched = not_blacklisted
else:
# take only what was requested...but not blacklisted items
# and allow for partial match anywhere or fnmatch of name
paths = convert_to_native_paths(paths)
matched = []
for f in not_blacklisted:
basename = os.path.basename(f)
for p in paths:
if p in f or fnmatch(basename, p):
matched.append(f)
break
if split:
matched = split_list(matched, split)
t._testfiles.extend(matched)
# run the tests and record the result for this *py portion of the tests
if t._testfiles:
failed = not t.test()
else:
failed = False
# N.B.
# --------------------------------------------------------------------
# Here we test *.rst files at or below doc/src. Code from these must
# be self supporting in terms of imports since there is no importing
# of necessary modules by doctest.testfile. If you try to pass *.py
# files through this they might fail because they will lack the needed
# imports and smarter parsing that can be done with source code.
#
test_files = t.get_test_files('doc/src', '*.rst', init_only=False)
test_files.sort()
not_blacklisted = [f for f in test_files
if not any(b in f for b in blacklist)]
if len(paths) == 0:
matched = not_blacklisted
else:
# Take only what was requested as long as it's not on the blacklist.
# Paths were already made native in *py tests so don't repeat here.
# There's no chance of having a *py file slip through since we
# only have *rst files in test_files.
matched = []
for f in not_blacklisted:
basename = os.path.basename(f)
for p in paths:
if p in f or fnmatch(basename, p):
matched.append(f)
break
if split:
matched = split_list(matched, split)
first_report = True
for rst_file in matched:
if not os.path.isfile(rst_file):
continue
old_displayhook = sys.displayhook
try:
use_unicode_prev = setup_pprint()
out = sympytestfile(
rst_file, module_relative=False, encoding='utf-8',
optionflags=pdoctest.ELLIPSIS | pdoctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE |
pdoctest.IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL)
finally:
# make sure we return to the original displayhook in case some
# doctest has changed that
sys.displayhook = old_displayhook
# The NO_GLOBAL flag overrides the no_global flag to init_printing
# if True
import sympy.interactive.printing as interactive_printing
interactive_printing.NO_GLOBAL = False
pprint_use_unicode(use_unicode_prev)
rstfailed, tested = out
if tested:
failed = rstfailed or failed
if first_report:
first_report = False
msg = 'rst doctests start'
if not t._testfiles:
r.start(msg=msg)
else:
r.write_center(msg)
print()
# use as the id, everything past the first 'sympy'
file_id = rst_file[rst_file.find('sympy') + len('sympy') + 1:]
print(file_id, end=" ")
# get at least the name out so it is know who is being tested
wid = r.terminal_width - len(file_id) - 1 # update width
test_file = '[%s]' % (tested)
report = '[%s]' % (rstfailed or 'OK')
print(''.join(
[test_file, ' '*(wid - len(test_file) - len(report)), report])
)
# the doctests for *py will have printed this message already if there was
# a failure, so now only print it if there was intervening reporting by
# testing the *rst as evidenced by first_report no longer being True.
if not first_report and failed:
print()
print("DO *NOT* COMMIT!")
return int(failed)
sp = re.compile(r'([0-9]+)/([1-9][0-9]*)')
def split_list(l, split, density=None):
"""
Splits a list into part a of b
split should be a string of the form 'a/b'. For instance, '1/3' would give
the split one of three.
If the length of the list is not divisible by the number of splits, the
last split will have more items.
`density` may be specified as a list. If specified,
tests will be balanced so that each split has as equal-as-possible
amount of mass according to `density`.
>>> from sympy.utilities.runtests import split_list
>>> a = list(range(10))
>>> split_list(a, '1/3')
[0, 1, 2]
>>> split_list(a, '2/3')
[3, 4, 5]
>>> split_list(a, '3/3')
[6, 7, 8, 9]
"""
m = sp.match(split)
if not m:
raise ValueError("split must be a string of the form a/b where a and b are ints")
i, t = map(int, m.groups())
if not density:
return l[(i - 1)*len(l)//t : i*len(l)//t]
# normalize density
tot = sum(density)
density = [x / tot for x in density]
def density_inv(x):
"""Interpolate the inverse to the cumulative
distribution function given by density"""
if x <= 0:
return 0
if x >= sum(density):
return 1
# find the first time the cumulative sum surpasses x
# and linearly interpolate
cumm = 0
for i, d in enumerate(density):
cumm += d
if cumm >= x:
break
frac = (d - (cumm - x)) / d
return (i + frac) / len(density)
lower_frac = density_inv((i - 1) / t)
higher_frac = density_inv(i / t)
return l[int(lower_frac*len(l)) : int(higher_frac*len(l))]
from collections import namedtuple
SymPyTestResults = namedtuple('TestResults', 'failed attempted')
def sympytestfile(filename, module_relative=True, name=None, package=None,
globs=None, verbose=None, report=True, optionflags=0,
extraglobs=None, raise_on_error=False,
parser=pdoctest.DocTestParser(), encoding=None):
"""
Test examples in the given file. Return (#failures, #tests).
Optional keyword arg ``module_relative`` specifies how filenames
should be interpreted:
- If ``module_relative`` is True (the default), then ``filename``
specifies a module-relative path. By default, this path is
relative to the calling module's directory; but if the
``package`` argument is specified, then it is relative to that
package. To ensure os-independence, ``filename`` should use
"/" characters to separate path segments, and should not
be an absolute path (i.e., it may not begin with "/").
- If ``module_relative`` is False, then ``filename`` specifies an
os-specific path. The path may be absolute or relative (to
the current working directory).
Optional keyword arg ``name`` gives the name of the test; by default
use the file's basename.
Optional keyword argument ``package`` is a Python package or the
name of a Python package whose directory should be used as the
base directory for a module relative filename. If no package is
specified, then the calling module's directory is used as the base
directory for module relative filenames. It is an error to
specify ``package`` if ``module_relative`` is False.
Optional keyword arg ``globs`` gives a dict to be used as the globals
when executing examples; by default, use {}. A copy of this dict
is actually used for each docstring, so that each docstring's
examples start with a clean slate.
Optional keyword arg ``extraglobs`` gives a dictionary that should be
merged into the globals that are used to execute examples. By
default, no extra globals are used.
Optional keyword arg ``verbose`` prints lots of stuff if true, prints
only failures if false; by default, it's true iff "-v" is in sys.argv.
Optional keyword arg ``report`` prints a summary at the end when true,
else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is
detailed, else very brief (in fact, empty if all tests passed).
Optional keyword arg ``optionflags`` or's together module constants,
and defaults to 0. Possible values (see the docs for details):
- DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1
- DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE
- NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
- ELLIPSIS
- SKIP
- IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
- REPORT_UDIFF
- REPORT_CDIFF
- REPORT_NDIFF
- REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE
Optional keyword arg ``raise_on_error`` raises an exception on the
first unexpected exception or failure. This allows failures to be
post-mortem debugged.
Optional keyword arg ``parser`` specifies a DocTestParser (or
subclass) that should be used to extract tests from the files.
Optional keyword arg ``encoding`` specifies an encoding that should
be used to convert the file to unicode.
Advanced tomfoolery: testmod runs methods of a local instance of
class doctest.Tester, then merges the results into (or creates)
global Tester instance doctest.master. Methods of doctest.master
can be called directly too, if you want to do something unusual.
Passing report=0 to testmod is especially useful then, to delay
displaying a summary. Invoke doctest.master.summarize(verbose)
when you're done fiddling.
"""
if package and not module_relative:
raise ValueError("Package may only be specified for module-"
"relative paths.")
# Relativize the path
if not PY3:
text, filename = pdoctest._load_testfile(
filename, package, module_relative)
if encoding is not None:
text = text.decode(encoding)
else:
text, filename = pdoctest._load_testfile(
filename, package, module_relative, encoding)
# If no name was given, then use the file's name.
if name is None:
name = os.path.basename(filename)
# Assemble the globals.
if globs is None:
globs = {}
else:
globs = globs.copy()
if extraglobs is not None:
globs.update(extraglobs)
if '__name__' not in globs:
globs['__name__'] = '__main__'
if raise_on_error:
runner = pdoctest.DebugRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags)
else:
runner = SymPyDocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags)
runner._checker = SymPyOutputChecker()
# Read the file, convert it to a test, and run it.
test = parser.get_doctest(text, globs, name, filename, 0)
runner.run(test, compileflags=future_flags)
if report:
runner.summarize()
if pdoctest.master is None:
pdoctest.master = runner
else:
pdoctest.master.merge(runner)
return SymPyTestResults(runner.failures, runner.tries)
class SymPyTests(object):
def __init__(self, reporter, kw="", post_mortem=False,
seed=None, fast_threshold=None, slow_threshold=None):
self._post_mortem = post_mortem
self._kw = kw
self._count = 0
self._root_dir = sympy_dir
self._reporter = reporter
self._reporter.root_dir(self._root_dir)
self._testfiles = []
self._seed = seed if seed is not None else random.random()
# Defaults in seconds, from human / UX design limits
# http://www.nngroup.com/articles/response-times-3-important-limits/
#
# These defaults are *NOT* set in stone as we are measuring different
# things, so others feel free to come up with a better yardstick :)
if fast_threshold:
self._fast_threshold = float(fast_threshold)
else:
self._fast_threshold = 0.1
if slow_threshold:
self._slow_threshold = float(slow_threshold)
else:
self._slow_threshold = 10
def test(self, sort=False, timeout=False, slow=False,
enhance_asserts=False, fail_on_timeout=False):
"""
Runs the tests returning True if all tests pass, otherwise False.
If sort=False run tests in random order.
"""
if sort:
self._testfiles.sort()
elif slow:
pass
else:
random.seed(self._seed)
random.shuffle(self._testfiles)
self._reporter.start(self._seed)
for f in self._testfiles:
try:
self.test_file(f, sort, timeout, slow,
enhance_asserts, fail_on_timeout)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print(" interrupted by user")
self._reporter.finish()
raise
return self._reporter.finish()
def _enhance_asserts(self, source):
from ast import (NodeTransformer, Compare, Name, Store, Load, Tuple,
Assign, BinOp, Str, Mod, Assert, parse, fix_missing_locations)
ops = {"Eq": '==', "NotEq": '!=', "Lt": '<', "LtE": '<=',
"Gt": '>', "GtE": '>=', "Is": 'is', "IsNot": 'is not',
"In": 'in', "NotIn": 'not in'}
class Transform(NodeTransformer):
def visit_Assert(self, stmt):
if isinstance(stmt.test, Compare):
compare = stmt.test
values = [compare.left] + compare.comparators
names = [ "_%s" % i for i, _ in enumerate(values) ]
names_store = [ Name(n, Store()) for n in names ]
names_load = [ Name(n, Load()) for n in names ]
target = Tuple(names_store, Store())
value = Tuple(values, Load())
assign = Assign([target], value)
new_compare = Compare(names_load[0], compare.ops, names_load[1:])
msg_format = "\n%s " + "\n%s ".join([ ops[op.__class__.__name__] for op in compare.ops ]) + "\n%s"
msg = BinOp(Str(msg_format), Mod(), Tuple(names_load, Load()))
test = Assert(new_compare, msg, lineno=stmt.lineno, col_offset=stmt.col_offset)
return [assign, test]
else:
return stmt
tree = parse(source)
new_tree = Transform().visit(tree)
return fix_missing_locations(new_tree)
def test_file(self, filename, sort=True, timeout=False, slow=False,
enhance_asserts=False, fail_on_timeout=False):
reporter = self._reporter
funcs = []
try:
gl = {'__file__': filename}
try:
if PY3:
open_file = lambda: open(filename, encoding="utf8")
else:
open_file = lambda: open(filename)
with open_file() as f:
source = f.read()
if self._kw:
for l in source.splitlines():
if l.lstrip().startswith('def '):
if any(l.find(k) != -1 for k in self._kw):
break
else:
return
if enhance_asserts:
try:
source = self._enhance_asserts(source)
except ImportError:
pass
code = compile(source, filename, "exec")
exec_(code, gl)
except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt):
raise
except ImportError:
reporter.import_error(filename, sys.exc_info())
return
except Exception:
reporter.test_exception(sys.exc_info())
clear_cache()
self._count += 1
random.seed(self._seed)
disabled = gl.get("disabled", False)
if not disabled:
# we need to filter only those functions that begin with 'test_'
# We have to be careful about decorated functions. As long as
# the decorator uses functools.wraps, we can detect it.
funcs = []
for f in gl:
if (f.startswith("test_") and (inspect.isfunction(gl[f])
or inspect.ismethod(gl[f]))):
func = gl[f]
# Handle multiple decorators
while hasattr(func, '__wrapped__'):
func = func.__wrapped__
if inspect.getsourcefile(func) == filename:
funcs.append(gl[f])
if slow:
funcs = [f for f in funcs if getattr(f, '_slow', False)]
# Sorting of XFAILed functions isn't fixed yet :-(
funcs.sort(key=lambda x: inspect.getsourcelines(x)[1])
i = 0
while i < len(funcs):
if inspect.isgeneratorfunction(funcs[i]):
# some tests can be generators, that return the actual
# test functions. We unpack it below:
f = funcs.pop(i)
for fg in f():
func = fg[0]
args = fg[1:]
fgw = lambda: func(*args)
funcs.insert(i, fgw)
i += 1
else:
i += 1
# drop functions that are not selected with the keyword expression:
funcs = [x for x in funcs if self.matches(x)]
if not funcs:
return
except Exception:
reporter.entering_filename(filename, len(funcs))
raise
reporter.entering_filename(filename, len(funcs))
if not sort:
random.shuffle(funcs)
for f in funcs:
start = time.time()
reporter.entering_test(f)
try:
if getattr(f, '_slow', False) and not slow:
raise Skipped("Slow")
if timeout:
self._timeout(f, timeout, fail_on_timeout)
else:
random.seed(self._seed)
f()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
if getattr(f, '_slow', False):
reporter.test_skip("KeyboardInterrupt")
else:
raise
except Exception:
if timeout:
signal.alarm(0) # Disable the alarm. It could not be handled before.
t, v, tr = sys.exc_info()
if t is AssertionError:
reporter.test_fail((t, v, tr))
if self._post_mortem:
pdb.post_mortem(tr)
elif t.__name__ == "Skipped":
reporter.test_skip(v)
elif t.__name__ == "XFail":
reporter.test_xfail()
elif t.__name__ == "XPass":
reporter.test_xpass(v)
else:
reporter.test_exception((t, v, tr))
if self._post_mortem:
pdb.post_mortem(tr)
else:
reporter.test_pass()
taken = time.time() - start
if taken > self._slow_threshold:
reporter.slow_test_functions.append((f.__name__, taken))
if getattr(f, '_slow', False) and slow:
if taken < self._fast_threshold:
reporter.fast_test_functions.append((f.__name__, taken))
reporter.leaving_filename()
def _timeout(self, function, timeout, fail_on_timeout):
def callback(x, y):
signal.alarm(0)
if fail_on_timeout:
raise TimeOutError("Timed out after %d seconds" % timeout)
else:
raise Skipped("Timeout")
signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, callback)
signal.alarm(timeout) # Set an alarm with a given timeout
function()
signal.alarm(0) # Disable the alarm
def matches(self, x):
"""
Does the keyword expression self._kw match "x"? Returns True/False.
Always returns True if self._kw is "".
"""
if not self._kw:
return True
for kw in self._kw:
if x.__name__.find(kw) != -1:
return True
return False
def get_test_files(self, dir, pat='test_*.py'):
"""
Returns the list of test_*.py (default) files at or below directory
``dir`` relative to the sympy home directory.
"""
dir = os.path.join(self._root_dir, convert_to_native_paths([dir])[0])
g = []
for path, folders, files in os.walk(dir):
g.extend([os.path.join(path, f) for f in files if fnmatch(f, pat)])
return sorted([os.path.normcase(gi) for gi in g])
class SymPyDocTests(object):
def __init__(self, reporter, normal):
self._count = 0
self._root_dir = sympy_dir
self._reporter = reporter
self._reporter.root_dir(self._root_dir)
self._normal = normal
self._testfiles = []
def test(self):
"""
Runs the tests and returns True if all tests pass, otherwise False.
"""
self._reporter.start()
for f in self._testfiles:
try:
self.test_file(f)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print(" interrupted by user")
self._reporter.finish()
raise
return self._reporter.finish()
def test_file(self, filename):
clear_cache()
from sympy.core.compatibility import StringIO
import sympy.interactive.printing as interactive_printing
from sympy import pprint_use_unicode
rel_name = filename[len(self._root_dir) + 1:]
dirname, file = os.path.split(filename)
module = rel_name.replace(os.sep, '.')[:-3]
if rel_name.startswith("examples"):
# Examples files do not have __init__.py files,
# So we have to temporarily extend sys.path to import them
sys.path.insert(0, dirname)
module = file[:-3] # remove ".py"
try:
module = pdoctest._normalize_module(module)
tests = SymPyDocTestFinder().find(module)
except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt):
raise
except ImportError:
self._reporter.import_error(filename, sys.exc_info())
return
finally:
if rel_name.startswith("examples"):
del sys.path[0]
tests = [test for test in tests if len(test.examples) > 0]
# By default tests are sorted by alphabetical order by function name.
# We sort by line number so one can edit the file sequentially from
# bottom to top. However, if there are decorated functions, their line
# numbers will be too large and for now one must just search for these
# by text and function name.
tests.sort(key=lambda x: -x.lineno)
if not tests:
return
self._reporter.entering_filename(filename, len(tests))
for test in tests:
assert len(test.examples) != 0
# check if there are external dependencies which need to be met
if '_doctest_depends_on' in test.globs:
try:
self._check_dependencies(**test.globs['_doctest_depends_on'])
except DependencyError as e:
self._reporter.test_skip(v="\n" + str(e))
continue
if self._reporter._verbose:
self._reporter.write("\n{} ".format(test.name))
runner = SymPyDocTestRunner(optionflags=pdoctest.ELLIPSIS |
pdoctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE |
pdoctest.IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL)
runner._checker = SymPyOutputChecker()
old = sys.stdout
new = StringIO()
sys.stdout = new
# If the testing is normal, the doctests get importing magic to
# provide the global namespace. If not normal (the default) then
# then must run on their own; all imports must be explicit within
# a function's docstring. Once imported that import will be
# available to the rest of the tests in a given function's
# docstring (unless clear_globs=True below).
if not self._normal:
test.globs = {}
# if this is uncommented then all the test would get is what
# comes by default with a "from sympy import *"
#exec('from sympy import *') in test.globs
test.globs['print_function'] = print_function
old_displayhook = sys.displayhook
use_unicode_prev = setup_pprint()
try:
f, t = runner.run(test, compileflags=future_flags,
out=new.write, clear_globs=False)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
raise
finally:
sys.stdout = old
if f > 0:
self._reporter.doctest_fail(test.name, new.getvalue())
else:
self._reporter.test_pass()
sys.displayhook = old_displayhook
interactive_printing.NO_GLOBAL = False
pprint_use_unicode(use_unicode_prev)
self._reporter.leaving_filename()
def get_test_files(self, dir, pat='*.py', init_only=True):
r"""
Returns the list of \*.py files (default) from which docstrings
will be tested which are at or below directory ``dir``. By default,
only those that have an __init__.py in their parent directory
and do not start with ``test_`` will be included.
"""
def importable(x):
"""
Checks if given pathname x is an importable module by checking for
__init__.py file.
Returns True/False.
Currently we only test if the __init__.py file exists in the
directory with the file "x" (in theory we should also test all the
parent dirs).
"""
init_py = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(x), "__init__.py")
return os.path.exists(init_py)
dir = os.path.join(self._root_dir, convert_to_native_paths([dir])[0])
g = []
for path, folders, files in os.walk(dir):
g.extend([os.path.join(path, f) for f in files
if not f.startswith('test_') and fnmatch(f, pat)])
if init_only:
# skip files that are not importable (i.e. missing __init__.py)
g = [x for x in g if importable(x)]
return [os.path.normcase(gi) for gi in g]
def _check_dependencies(self,
executables=(),
modules=(),
disable_viewers=()):
"""
Checks if the dependencies for the test are installed.
Raises ``DependencyError`` it at least one dependency is not installed.
"""
for executable in executables:
if not find_executable(executable):
raise DependencyError("Could not find %s" % executable)
for module in modules:
if module == 'matplotlib':
matplotlib = import_module(
'matplotlib',
__import__kwargs={'fromlist':
['pyplot', 'cm', 'collections']},
min_module_version='1.0.0', catch=(RuntimeError,))
if matplotlib is None:
raise DependencyError("Could not import matplotlib")
else:
if not import_module(module):
raise DependencyError("Could not import %s" % module)
if disable_viewers:
tempdir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
os.environ['PATH'] = '%s:%s' % (tempdir, os.environ['PATH'])
vw = ('#!/usr/bin/env {}\n'
'import sys\n'
'if len(sys.argv) <= 1:\n'
' exit("wrong number of args")\n').format(
'python3' if PY3 else 'python')
for viewer in disable_viewers:
with open(os.path.join(tempdir, viewer), 'w') as fh:
fh.write(vw)
# make the file executable
os.chmod(os.path.join(tempdir, viewer),
stat.S_IREAD | stat.S_IWRITE | stat.S_IXUSR)
if 'pyglet' in modules:
# monkey-patch pyglet s.t. it does not open a window during
# doctesting
import pyglet
class DummyWindow(object):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.has_exit = True
self.width = 600
self.height = 400
def set_vsync(self, x):
pass
def switch_to(self):
pass
def push_handlers(self, x):
pass
def close(self):
pass
pyglet.window.Window = DummyWindow
class SymPyDocTestFinder(DocTestFinder):
"""
A class used to extract the DocTests that are relevant to a given
object, from its docstring and the docstrings of its contained
objects. Doctests can currently be extracted from the following
object types: modules, functions, classes, methods, staticmethods,
classmethods, and properties.
Modified from doctest's version to look harder for code that
appears comes from a different module. For example, the @vectorize
decorator makes it look like functions come from multidimensional.py
even though their code exists elsewhere.
"""
def _find(self, tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, seen):
"""
Find tests for the given object and any contained objects, and
add them to ``tests``.
"""
if self._verbose:
print('Finding tests in %s' % name)
# If we've already processed this object, then ignore it.
if id(obj) in seen:
return
seen[id(obj)] = 1
# Make sure we don't run doctests for classes outside of sympy, such
# as in numpy or scipy.
if inspect.isclass(obj):
if obj.__module__.split('.')[0] != 'sympy':
return
# Find a test for this object, and add it to the list of tests.
test = self._get_test(obj, name, module, globs, source_lines)
if test is not None:
tests.append(test)
if not self._recurse:
return
# Look for tests in a module's contained objects.
if inspect.ismodule(obj):
for rawname, val in obj.__dict__.items():
# Recurse to functions & classes.
if inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val):
# Make sure we don't run doctests functions or classes
# from different modules
if val.__module__ != module.__name__:
continue
assert self._from_module(module, val), \
"%s is not in module %s (rawname %s)" % (val, module, rawname)
try:
valname = '%s.%s' % (name, rawname)
self._find(tests, val, valname, module,
source_lines, globs, seen)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
raise
# Look for tests in a module's __test__ dictionary.
for valname, val in getattr(obj, '__test__', {}).items():
if not isinstance(valname, string_types):
raise ValueError("SymPyDocTestFinder.find: __test__ keys "
"must be strings: %r" %
(type(valname),))
if not (inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or
inspect.ismethod(val) or inspect.ismodule(val) or
isinstance(val, string_types)):
raise ValueError("SymPyDocTestFinder.find: __test__ values "
"must be strings, functions, methods, "
"classes, or modules: %r" %
(type(val),))
valname = '%s.__test__.%s' % (name, valname)
self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines,
globs, seen)
# Look for tests in a class's contained objects.
if inspect.isclass(obj):
for valname, val in obj.__dict__.items():
# Special handling for staticmethod/classmethod.
if isinstance(val, staticmethod):
val = getattr(obj, valname)
if isinstance(val, classmethod):
val = getattr(obj, valname).__func__
# Recurse to methods, properties, and nested classes.
if ((inspect.isfunction(unwrap(val)) or
inspect.isclass(val) or
isinstance(val, property)) and
self._from_module(module, val)):
# Make sure we don't run doctests functions or classes
# from different modules
if isinstance(val, property):
if hasattr(val.fget, '__module__'):
if val.fget.__module__ != module.__name__:
continue
else:
if val.__module__ != module.__name__:
continue
assert self._from_module(module, val), \
"%s is not in module %s (valname %s)" % (
val, module, valname)
valname = '%s.%s' % (name, valname)
self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines,
globs, seen)
def _get_test(self, obj, name, module, globs, source_lines):
"""
Return a DocTest for the given object, if it defines a docstring;
otherwise, return None.
"""
lineno = None
# Extract the object's docstring. If it doesn't have one,
# then return None (no test for this object).
if isinstance(obj, string_types):
# obj is a string in the case for objects in the polys package.
# Note that source_lines is a binary string (compiled polys
# modules), which can't be handled by _find_lineno so determine
# the line number here.
docstring = obj
matches = re.findall(r"line \d+", name)
assert len(matches) == 1, \
"string '%s' does not contain lineno " % name
# NOTE: this is not the exact linenumber but its better than no
# lineno ;)
lineno = int(matches[0][5:])
else:
try:
if obj.__doc__ is None:
docstring = ''
else:
docstring = obj.__doc__
if not isinstance(docstring, string_types):
docstring = str(docstring)
except (TypeError, AttributeError):
docstring = ''
# Don't bother if the docstring is empty.
if self._exclude_empty and not docstring:
return None
# check that properties have a docstring because _find_lineno
# assumes it
if isinstance(obj, property):
if obj.fget.__doc__ is None:
return None
# Find the docstring's location in the file.
if lineno is None:
obj = unwrap(obj)
# handling of properties is not implemented in _find_lineno so do
# it here
if hasattr(obj, 'func_closure') and obj.func_closure is not None:
tobj = obj.func_closure[0].cell_contents
elif isinstance(obj, property):
tobj = obj.fget
else:
tobj = obj
lineno = self._find_lineno(tobj, source_lines)
if lineno is None:
return None
# Return a DocTest for this object.
if module is None:
filename = None
else:
filename = getattr(module, '__file__', module.__name__)
if filename[-4:] in (".pyc", ".pyo"):
filename = filename[:-1]
globs['_doctest_depends_on'] = getattr(obj, '_doctest_depends_on', {})
return self._parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, name,
filename, lineno)
class SymPyDocTestRunner(DocTestRunner):
"""
A class used to run DocTest test cases, and accumulate statistics.
The ``run`` method is used to process a single DocTest case. It
returns a tuple ``(f, t)``, where ``t`` is the number of test cases
tried, and ``f`` is the number of test cases that failed.
Modified from the doctest version to not reset the sys.displayhook (see
issue 5140).
See the docstring of the original DocTestRunner for more information.
"""
def run(self, test, compileflags=None, out=None, clear_globs=True):
"""
Run the examples in ``test``, and display the results using the
writer function ``out``.
The examples are run in the namespace ``test.globs``. If
``clear_globs`` is true (the default), then this namespace will
be cleared after the test runs, to help with garbage
collection. If you would like to examine the namespace after
the test completes, then use ``clear_globs=False``.
``compileflags`` gives the set of flags that should be used by
the Python compiler when running the examples. If not
specified, then it will default to the set of future-import
flags that apply to ``globs``.
The output of each example is checked using
``SymPyDocTestRunner.check_output``, and the results are
formatted by the ``SymPyDocTestRunner.report_*`` methods.
"""
self.test = test
if compileflags is None:
compileflags = pdoctest._extract_future_flags(test.globs)
save_stdout = sys.stdout
if out is None:
out = save_stdout.write
sys.stdout = self._fakeout
# Patch pdb.set_trace to restore sys.stdout during interactive
# debugging (so it's not still redirected to self._fakeout).
# Note that the interactive output will go to *our*
# save_stdout, even if that's not the real sys.stdout; this
# allows us to write test cases for the set_trace behavior.
save_set_trace = pdb.set_trace
self.debugger = pdoctest._OutputRedirectingPdb(save_stdout)
self.debugger.reset()
pdb.set_trace = self.debugger.set_trace
# Patch linecache.getlines, so we can see the example's source
# when we're inside the debugger.
self.save_linecache_getlines = pdoctest.linecache.getlines
linecache.getlines = self.__patched_linecache_getlines
try:
test.globs['print_function'] = print_function
return self.__run(test, compileflags, out)
finally:
sys.stdout = save_stdout
pdb.set_trace = save_set_trace
linecache.getlines = self.save_linecache_getlines
if clear_globs:
test.globs.clear()
# We have to override the name mangled methods.
SymPyDocTestRunner._SymPyDocTestRunner__patched_linecache_getlines = \
DocTestRunner._DocTestRunner__patched_linecache_getlines
SymPyDocTestRunner._SymPyDocTestRunner__run = DocTestRunner._DocTestRunner__run
SymPyDocTestRunner._SymPyDocTestRunner__record_outcome = \
DocTestRunner._DocTestRunner__record_outcome
class SymPyOutputChecker(pdoctest.OutputChecker):
"""
Compared to the OutputChecker from the stdlib our OutputChecker class
supports numerical comparison of floats occurring in the output of the
doctest examples
"""
def __init__(self):
# NOTE OutputChecker is an old-style class with no __init__ method,
# so we can't call the base class version of __init__ here
got_floats = r'(\d+\.\d*|\.\d+)'
# floats in the 'want' string may contain ellipses
want_floats = got_floats + r'(\.{3})?'
front_sep = r'\s|\+|\-|\*|,'
back_sep = front_sep + r'|j|e'
fbeg = r'^%s(?=%s|$)' % (got_floats, back_sep)
fmidend = r'(?<=%s)%s(?=%s|$)' % (front_sep, got_floats, back_sep)
self.num_got_rgx = re.compile(r'(%s|%s)' %(fbeg, fmidend))
fbeg = r'^%s(?=%s|$)' % (want_floats, back_sep)
fmidend = r'(?<=%s)%s(?=%s|$)' % (front_sep, want_floats, back_sep)
self.num_want_rgx = re.compile(r'(%s|%s)' %(fbeg, fmidend))
def check_output(self, want, got, optionflags):
"""
Return True iff the actual output from an example (`got`)
matches the expected output (`want`). These strings are
always considered to match if they are identical; but
depending on what option flags the test runner is using,
several non-exact match types are also possible. See the
documentation for `TestRunner` for more information about
option flags.
"""
# Handle the common case first, for efficiency:
# if they're string-identical, always return true.
if got == want:
return True
# TODO parse integers as well ?
# Parse floats and compare them. If some of the parsed floats contain
# ellipses, skip the comparison.
matches = self.num_got_rgx.finditer(got)
numbers_got = [match.group(1) for match in matches] # list of strs
matches = self.num_want_rgx.finditer(want)
numbers_want = [match.group(1) for match in matches] # list of strs
if len(numbers_got) != len(numbers_want):
return False
if len(numbers_got) > 0:
nw_ = []
for ng, nw in zip(numbers_got, numbers_want):
if '...' in nw:
nw_.append(ng)
continue
else:
nw_.append(nw)
if abs(float(ng)-float(nw)) > 1e-5:
return False
got = self.num_got_rgx.sub(r'%s', got)
got = got % tuple(nw_)
# <BLANKLINE> can be used as a special sequence to signify a
# blank line, unless the DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE flag is used.
if not (optionflags & pdoctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE):
# Replace <BLANKLINE> in want with a blank line.
want = re.sub(r'(?m)^%s\s*?$' % re.escape(pdoctest.BLANKLINE_MARKER),
'', want)
# If a line in got contains only spaces, then remove the
# spaces.
got = re.sub(r'(?m)^\s*?$', '', got)
if got == want:
return True
# This flag causes doctest to ignore any differences in the
# contents of whitespace strings. Note that this can be used
# in conjunction with the ELLIPSIS flag.
if optionflags & pdoctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE:
got = ' '.join(got.split())
want = ' '.join(want.split())
if got == want:
return True
# The ELLIPSIS flag says to let the sequence "..." in `want`
# match any substring in `got`.
if optionflags & pdoctest.ELLIPSIS:
if pdoctest._ellipsis_match(want, got):
return True
# We didn't find any match; return false.
return False
class Reporter(object):
"""
Parent class for all reporters.
"""
pass
class PyTestReporter(Reporter):
"""
Py.test like reporter. Should produce output identical to py.test.
"""
def __init__(self, verbose=False, tb="short", colors=True,
force_colors=False, split=None):
self._verbose = verbose
self._tb_style = tb
self._colors = colors
self._force_colors = force_colors
self._xfailed = 0
self._xpassed = []
self._failed = []
self._failed_doctest = []
self._passed = 0
self._skipped = 0
self._exceptions = []
self._terminal_width = None
self._default_width = 80
self._split = split
self._active_file = ''
self._active_f = None
# TODO: Should these be protected?
self.slow_test_functions = []
self.fast_test_functions = []
# this tracks the x-position of the cursor (useful for positioning
# things on the screen), without the need for any readline library:
self._write_pos = 0
self._line_wrap = False
def root_dir(self, dir):
self._root_dir = dir
@property
def terminal_width(self):
if self._terminal_width is not None:
return self._terminal_width
def findout_terminal_width():
if sys.platform == "win32":
# Windows support is based on:
#
# http://code.activestate.com/recipes/
# 440694-determine-size-of-console-window-on-windows/
from ctypes import windll, create_string_buffer
h = windll.kernel32.GetStdHandle(-12)
csbi = create_string_buffer(22)
res = windll.kernel32.GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo(h, csbi)
if res:
import struct
(_, _, _, _, _, left, _, right, _, _, _) = \
struct.unpack("hhhhHhhhhhh", csbi.raw)
return right - left
else:
return self._default_width
if hasattr(sys.stdout, 'isatty') and not sys.stdout.isatty():
return self._default_width # leave PIPEs alone
try:
process = subprocess.Popen(['stty', '-a'],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
stdout = process.stdout.read()
if PY3:
stdout = stdout.decode("utf-8")
except (OSError, IOError):
pass
else:
# We support the following output formats from stty:
#
# 1) Linux -> columns 80
# 2) OS X -> 80 columns
# 3) Solaris -> columns = 80
re_linux = r"columns\s+(?P<columns>\d+);"
re_osx = r"(?P<columns>\d+)\s*columns;"
re_solaris = r"columns\s+=\s+(?P<columns>\d+);"
for regex in (re_linux, re_osx, re_solaris):
match = re.search(regex, stdout)
if match is not None:
columns = match.group('columns')
try:
width = int(columns)
except ValueError:
pass
if width != 0:
return width
return self._default_width
width = findout_terminal_width()
self._terminal_width = width
return width
def write(self, text, color="", align="left", width=None,
force_colors=False):
"""
Prints a text on the screen.
It uses sys.stdout.write(), so no readline library is necessary.
Parameters
==========
color : choose from the colors below, "" means default color
align : "left"/"right", "left" is a normal print, "right" is aligned on
the right-hand side of the screen, filled with spaces if
necessary
width : the screen width
"""
color_templates = (
("Black", "0;30"),
("Red", "0;31"),
("Green", "0;32"),
("Brown", "0;33"),
("Blue", "0;34"),
("Purple", "0;35"),
("Cyan", "0;36"),
("LightGray", "0;37"),
("DarkGray", "1;30"),
("LightRed", "1;31"),
("LightGreen", "1;32"),
("Yellow", "1;33"),
("LightBlue", "1;34"),
("LightPurple", "1;35"),
("LightCyan", "1;36"),
("White", "1;37"),
)
colors = {}
for name, value in color_templates:
colors[name] = value
c_normal = '\033[0m'
c_color = '\033[%sm'
if width is None:
width = self.terminal_width
if align == "right":
if self._write_pos + len(text) > width:
# we don't fit on the current line, create a new line
self.write("\n")
self.write(" "*(width - self._write_pos - len(text)))
if not self._force_colors and hasattr(sys.stdout, 'isatty') and not \
sys.stdout.isatty():
# the stdout is not a terminal, this for example happens if the
# output is piped to less, e.g. "bin/test | less". In this case,
# the terminal control sequences would be printed verbatim, so
# don't use any colors.
color = ""
elif sys.platform == "win32":
# Windows consoles don't support ANSI escape sequences
color = ""
elif not self._colors:
color = ""
if self._line_wrap:
if text[0] != "\n":
sys.stdout.write("\n")
# Avoid UnicodeEncodeError when printing out test failures
if PY3 and IS_WINDOWS:
text = text.encode('raw_unicode_escape').decode('utf8', 'ignore')
elif PY3 and not sys.stdout.encoding.lower().startswith('utf'):
text = text.encode(sys.stdout.encoding, 'backslashreplace'
).decode(sys.stdout.encoding)
if color == "":
sys.stdout.write(text)
else:
sys.stdout.write("%s%s%s" %
(c_color % colors[color], text, c_normal))
sys.stdout.flush()
l = text.rfind("\n")
if l == -1:
self._write_pos += len(text)
else:
self._write_pos = len(text) - l - 1
self._line_wrap = self._write_pos >= width
self._write_pos %= width
def write_center(self, text, delim="="):
width = self.terminal_width
if text != "":
text = " %s " % text
idx = (width - len(text)) // 2
t = delim*idx + text + delim*(width - idx - len(text))
self.write(t + "\n")
def write_exception(self, e, val, tb):
# remove the first item, as that is always runtests.py
tb = tb.tb_next
t = traceback.format_exception(e, val, tb)
self.write("".join(t))
def start(self, seed=None, msg="test process starts"):
self.write_center(msg)
executable = sys.executable
v = tuple(sys.version_info)
python_version = "%s.%s.%s-%s-%s" % v
implementation = platform.python_implementation()
if implementation == 'PyPy':
implementation += " %s.%s.%s-%s-%s" % sys.pypy_version_info
self.write("executable: %s (%s) [%s]\n" %
(executable, python_version, implementation))
from .misc import ARCH
self.write("architecture: %s\n" % ARCH)
from sympy.core.cache import USE_CACHE
self.write("cache: %s\n" % USE_CACHE)
from sympy.core.compatibility import GROUND_TYPES, HAS_GMPY
version = ''
if GROUND_TYPES =='gmpy':
if HAS_GMPY == 1:
import gmpy
elif HAS_GMPY == 2:
import gmpy2 as gmpy
version = gmpy.version()
self.write("ground types: %s %s\n" % (GROUND_TYPES, version))
numpy = import_module('numpy')
self.write("numpy: %s\n" % (None if not numpy else numpy.__version__))
if seed is not None:
self.write("random seed: %d\n" % seed)
from .misc import HASH_RANDOMIZATION
self.write("hash randomization: ")
hash_seed = os.getenv("PYTHONHASHSEED") or '0'
if HASH_RANDOMIZATION and (hash_seed == "random" or int(hash_seed)):
self.write("on (PYTHONHASHSEED=%s)\n" % hash_seed)
else:
self.write("off\n")
if self._split:
self.write("split: %s\n" % self._split)
self.write('\n')
self._t_start = clock()
def finish(self):
self._t_end = clock()
self.write("\n")
global text, linelen
text = "tests finished: %d passed, " % self._passed
linelen = len(text)
def add_text(mytext):
global text, linelen
"""Break new text if too long."""
if linelen + len(mytext) > self.terminal_width:
text += '\n'
linelen = 0
text += mytext
linelen += len(mytext)
if len(self._failed) > 0:
add_text("%d failed, " % len(self._failed))
if len(self._failed_doctest) > 0:
add_text("%d failed, " % len(self._failed_doctest))
if self._skipped > 0:
add_text("%d skipped, " % self._skipped)
if self._xfailed > 0:
add_text("%d expected to fail, " % self._xfailed)
if len(self._xpassed) > 0:
add_text("%d expected to fail but passed, " % len(self._xpassed))
if len(self._exceptions) > 0:
add_text("%d exceptions, " % len(self._exceptions))
add_text("in %.2f seconds" % (self._t_end - self._t_start))
if self.slow_test_functions:
self.write_center('slowest tests', '_')
sorted_slow = sorted(self.slow_test_functions, key=lambda r: r[1])
for slow_func_name, taken in sorted_slow:
print('%s - Took %.3f seconds' % (slow_func_name, taken))
if self.fast_test_functions:
self.write_center('unexpectedly fast tests', '_')
sorted_fast = sorted(self.fast_test_functions,
key=lambda r: r[1])
for fast_func_name, taken in sorted_fast:
print('%s - Took %.3f seconds' % (fast_func_name, taken))
if len(self._xpassed) > 0:
self.write_center("xpassed tests", "_")
for e in self._xpassed:
self.write("%s: %s\n" % (e[0], e[1]))
self.write("\n")
if self._tb_style != "no" and len(self._exceptions) > 0:
for e in self._exceptions:
filename, f, (t, val, tb) = e
self.write_center("", "_")
if f is None:
s = "%s" % filename
else:
s = "%s:%s" % (filename, f.__name__)
self.write_center(s, "_")
self.write_exception(t, val, tb)
self.write("\n")
if self._tb_style != "no" and len(self._failed) > 0:
for e in self._failed:
filename, f, (t, val, tb) = e
self.write_center("", "_")
self.write_center("%s:%s" % (filename, f.__name__), "_")
self.write_exception(t, val, tb)
self.write("\n")
if self._tb_style != "no" and len(self._failed_doctest) > 0:
for e in self._failed_doctest:
filename, msg = e
self.write_center("", "_")
self.write_center("%s" % filename, "_")
self.write(msg)
self.write("\n")
self.write_center(text)
ok = len(self._failed) == 0 and len(self._exceptions) == 0 and \
len(self._failed_doctest) == 0
if not ok:
self.write("DO *NOT* COMMIT!\n")
return ok
def entering_filename(self, filename, n):
rel_name = filename[len(self._root_dir) + 1:]
self._active_file = rel_name
self._active_file_error = False
self.write(rel_name)
self.write("[%d] " % n)
def leaving_filename(self):
self.write(" ")
if self._active_file_error:
self.write("[FAIL]", "Red", align="right")
else:
self.write("[OK]", "Green", align="right")
self.write("\n")
if self._verbose:
self.write("\n")
def entering_test(self, f):
self._active_f = f
if self._verbose:
self.write("\n" + f.__name__ + " ")
def test_xfail(self):
self._xfailed += 1
self.write("f", "Green")
def test_xpass(self, v):
message = str(v)
self._xpassed.append((self._active_file, message))
self.write("X", "Green")
def test_fail(self, exc_info):
self._failed.append((self._active_file, self._active_f, exc_info))
self.write("F", "Red")
self._active_file_error = True
def doctest_fail(self, name, error_msg):
# the first line contains "******", remove it:
error_msg = "\n".join(error_msg.split("\n")[1:])
self._failed_doctest.append((name, error_msg))
self.write("F", "Red")
self._active_file_error = True
def test_pass(self, char="."):
self._passed += 1
if self._verbose:
self.write("ok", "Green")
else:
self.write(char, "Green")
def test_skip(self, v=None):
char = "s"
self._skipped += 1
if v is not None:
message = str(v)
if message == "KeyboardInterrupt":
char = "K"
elif message == "Timeout":
char = "T"
elif message == "Slow":
char = "w"
if self._verbose:
if v is not None:
self.write(message + ' ', "Blue")
else:
self.write(" - ", "Blue")
self.write(char, "Blue")
def test_exception(self, exc_info):
self._exceptions.append((self._active_file, self._active_f, exc_info))
if exc_info[0] is TimeOutError:
self.write("T", "Red")
else:
self.write("E", "Red")
self._active_file_error = True
def import_error(self, filename, exc_info):
self._exceptions.append((filename, None, exc_info))
rel_name = filename[len(self._root_dir) + 1:]
self.write(rel_name)
self.write("[?] Failed to import", "Red")
self.write(" ")
self.write("[FAIL]", "Red", align="right")
self.write("\n")
sympy_dir = get_sympy_dir()
|
654626139ba447122dcd6d18ed219b4c0be81c17d502cfc3b5d4dd2db2f5f970
|
"""Miscellaneous stuff that doesn't really fit anywhere else."""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import sys
import os
import re as _re
import struct
from textwrap import fill, dedent
from sympy.core.compatibility import get_function_name, range, as_int
class Undecidable(ValueError):
# an error to be raised when a decision cannot be made definitively
# where a definitive answer is needed
pass
def filldedent(s, w=70):
"""
Strips leading and trailing empty lines from a copy of `s`, then dedents,
fills and returns it.
Empty line stripping serves to deal with docstrings like this one that
start with a newline after the initial triple quote, inserting an empty
line at the beginning of the string."""
return '\n' + fill(dedent(str(s)).strip('\n'), width=w)
def rawlines(s):
"""Return a cut-and-pastable string that, when printed, is equivalent
to the input. The string returned is formatted so it can be indented
nicely within tests; in some cases it is wrapped in the dedent
function which has to be imported from textwrap.
Examples
========
Note: because there are characters in the examples below that need
to be escaped because they are themselves within a triple quoted
docstring, expressions below look more complicated than they would
be if they were printed in an interpreter window.
>>> from sympy.utilities.misc import rawlines
>>> from sympy import TableForm
>>> s = str(TableForm([[1, 10]], headings=(None, ['a', 'bee'])))
>>> print(rawlines(s))
(
'a bee\\n'
'-----\\n'
'1 10 '
)
>>> print(rawlines('''this
... that'''))
dedent('''\\
this
that''')
>>> print(rawlines('''this
... that
... '''))
dedent('''\\
this
that
''')
>>> s = \"\"\"this
... is a triple '''
... \"\"\"
>>> print(rawlines(s))
dedent(\"\"\"\\
this
is a triple '''
\"\"\")
>>> print(rawlines('''this
... that
... '''))
(
'this\\n'
'that\\n'
' '
)
"""
lines = s.split('\n')
if len(lines) == 1:
return repr(lines[0])
triple = ["'''" in s, '"""' in s]
if any(li.endswith(' ') for li in lines) or '\\' in s or all(triple):
rv = ["("]
# add on the newlines
trailing = s.endswith('\n')
last = len(lines) - 1
for i, li in enumerate(lines):
if i != last or trailing:
rv.append(repr(li)[:-1] + '\\n\'')
else:
rv.append(repr(li))
return '\n '.join(rv) + '\n)'
else:
rv = '\n '.join(lines)
if triple[0]:
return 'dedent("""\\\n %s""")' % rv
else:
return "dedent('''\\\n %s''')" % rv
ARCH = str(struct.calcsize('P') * 8) + "-bit"
# XXX: PyPy doesn't support hash randomization
HASH_RANDOMIZATION = getattr(sys.flags, 'hash_randomization', False)
_debug_tmp = []
_debug_iter = 0
def debug_decorator(func):
"""If SYMPY_DEBUG is True, it will print a nice execution tree with
arguments and results of all decorated functions, else do nothing.
"""
from sympy import SYMPY_DEBUG
if not SYMPY_DEBUG:
return func
def maketree(f, *args, **kw):
global _debug_tmp
global _debug_iter
oldtmp = _debug_tmp
_debug_tmp = []
_debug_iter += 1
def tree(subtrees):
def indent(s, type=1):
x = s.split("\n")
r = "+-%s\n" % x[0]
for a in x[1:]:
if a == "":
continue
if type == 1:
r += "| %s\n" % a
else:
r += " %s\n" % a
return r
if len(subtrees) == 0:
return ""
f = []
for a in subtrees[:-1]:
f.append(indent(a))
f.append(indent(subtrees[-1], 2))
return ''.join(f)
# If there is a bug and the algorithm enters an infinite loop, enable the
# following lines. It will print the names and parameters of all major functions
# that are called, *before* they are called
#from sympy.core.compatibility import reduce
#print("%s%s %s%s" % (_debug_iter, reduce(lambda x, y: x + y, \
# map(lambda x: '-', range(1, 2 + _debug_iter))), get_function_name(f), args))
r = f(*args, **kw)
_debug_iter -= 1
s = "%s%s = %s\n" % (get_function_name(f), args, r)
if _debug_tmp != []:
s += tree(_debug_tmp)
_debug_tmp = oldtmp
_debug_tmp.append(s)
if _debug_iter == 0:
print((_debug_tmp[0]))
_debug_tmp = []
return r
def decorated(*args, **kwargs):
return maketree(func, *args, **kwargs)
return decorated
def debug(*args):
"""
Print ``*args`` if SYMPY_DEBUG is True, else do nothing.
"""
from sympy import SYMPY_DEBUG
if SYMPY_DEBUG:
print(*args, file=sys.stderr)
def find_executable(executable, path=None):
"""Try to find 'executable' in the directories listed in 'path' (a
string listing directories separated by 'os.pathsep'; defaults to
os.environ['PATH']). Returns the complete filename or None if not
found
"""
if path is None:
path = os.environ['PATH']
paths = path.split(os.pathsep)
extlist = ['']
if os.name == 'os2':
(base, ext) = os.path.splitext(executable)
# executable files on OS/2 can have an arbitrary extension, but
# .exe is automatically appended if no dot is present in the name
if not ext:
executable = executable + ".exe"
elif sys.platform == 'win32':
pathext = os.environ['PATHEXT'].lower().split(os.pathsep)
(base, ext) = os.path.splitext(executable)
if ext.lower() not in pathext:
extlist = pathext
for ext in extlist:
execname = executable + ext
if os.path.isfile(execname):
return execname
else:
for p in paths:
f = os.path.join(p, execname)
if os.path.isfile(f):
return f
else:
return None
def func_name(x, short=False):
'''Return function name of `x` (if defined) else the `type(x)`.
If short is True and there is a shorter alias for the result,
return the alias.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.misc import func_name
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> func_name(x < 1)
'StrictLessThan'
>>> func_name(x < 1, short=True)
'Lt'
See Also
========
sympy.core.compatibility get_function_name
'''
alias = {
'GreaterThan': 'Ge',
'StrictGreaterThan': 'Gt',
'LessThan': 'Le',
'StrictLessThan': 'Lt',
'Equality': 'Eq',
'Unequality': 'Ne',
}
typ = type(x)
if str(typ).startswith("<type '"):
typ = str(typ).split("'")[1].split("'")[0]
elif str(typ).startswith("<class '"):
typ = str(typ).split("'")[1].split("'")[0]
rv = getattr(getattr(x, 'func', x), '__name__', typ)
if short:
rv = alias.get(rv, rv)
return rv
def _replace(reps):
"""Return a function that can make the replacements, given in
``reps``, on a string. The replacements should be given as mapping.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.misc import _replace
>>> f = _replace(dict(foo='bar', d='t'))
>>> f('food')
'bart'
>>> f = _replace({})
>>> f('food')
'food'
"""
if not reps:
return lambda x: x
D = lambda match: reps[match.group(0)]
pattern = _re.compile("|".join(
[_re.escape(k) for k, v in reps.items()]), _re.M)
return lambda string: pattern.sub(D, string)
def replace(string, *reps):
"""Return ``string`` with all keys in ``reps`` replaced with
their corresponding values, longer strings first, irrespective
of the order they are given. ``reps`` may be passed as tuples
or a single mapping.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.misc import replace
>>> replace('foo', {'oo': 'ar', 'f': 'b'})
'bar'
>>> replace("spamham sha", ("spam", "eggs"), ("sha","md5"))
'eggsham md5'
There is no guarantee that a unique answer will be
obtained if keys in a mapping overlap (i.e. are the same
length and have some identical sequence at the
beginning/end):
>>> reps = [
... ('ab', 'x'),
... ('bc', 'y')]
>>> replace('abc', *reps) in ('xc', 'ay')
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6116978/python-replace-multiple-strings
"""
if len(reps) == 1:
kv = reps[0]
if type(kv) is dict:
reps = kv
else:
return string.replace(*kv)
else:
reps = dict(reps)
return _replace(reps)(string)
def translate(s, a, b=None, c=None):
"""Return ``s`` where characters have been replaced or deleted.
SYNTAX
======
translate(s, None, deletechars):
all characters in ``deletechars`` are deleted
translate(s, map [,deletechars]):
all characters in ``deletechars`` (if provided) are deleted
then the replacements defined by map are made; if the keys
of map are strings then the longer ones are handled first.
Multicharacter deletions should have a value of ''.
translate(s, oldchars, newchars, deletechars)
all characters in ``deletechars`` are deleted
then each character in ``oldchars`` is replaced with the
corresponding character in ``newchars``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.misc import translate
>>> from sympy.core.compatibility import unichr
>>> abc = 'abc'
>>> translate(abc, None, 'a')
'bc'
>>> translate(abc, {'a': 'x'}, 'c')
'xb'
>>> translate(abc, {'abc': 'x', 'a': 'y'})
'x'
>>> translate('abcd', 'ac', 'AC', 'd')
'AbC'
There is no guarantee that a unique answer will be
obtained if keys in a mapping overlap are the same
length and have some identical sequences at the
beginning/end:
>>> translate(abc, {'ab': 'x', 'bc': 'y'}) in ('xc', 'ay')
True
"""
from sympy.core.compatibility import maketrans, PY3
mr = {}
if a is None:
assert c is None
if not b:
return s
c = b
a = b = ''
else:
if type(a) is dict:
short = {}
for k in list(a.keys()):
if (len(k) == 1 and len(a[k]) == 1):
short[k] = a.pop(k)
mr = a
c = b
if short:
a, b = [''.join(i) for i in list(zip(*short.items()))]
else:
a = b = ''
else:
assert len(a) == len(b)
if PY3:
if c:
s = s.translate(maketrans('', '', c))
s = replace(s, mr)
return s.translate(maketrans(a, b))
else:
# when support for Python 2 is dropped, this if-else-block
# can be replaced with the if-clause
if c:
c = list(c)
rem = {}
for i in range(-1, -1 - len(c), -1):
if ord(c[i]) > 255:
rem[c[i]] = ''
c.pop(i)
s = s.translate(None, ''.join(c))
s = replace(s, rem)
if a:
a = list(a)
b = list(b)
for i in range(-1, -1 - len(a), -1):
if ord(a[i]) > 255 or ord(b[i]) > 255:
mr[a.pop(i)] = b.pop(i)
a = ''.join(a)
b = ''.join(b)
s = replace(s, mr)
table = maketrans(a, b)
# s may have become unicode which uses the py3 syntax for translate
if type(table) is str and type(s) is str:
s = s.translate(table)
else:
s = s.translate(dict(
[(i, ord(c)) for i, c in enumerate(table)]))
return s
def ordinal(num):
"""Return ordinal number string of num, e.g. 1 becomes 1st.
"""
# modified from https://codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/41298/producing-ordinal-numbers
n = as_int(num)
if n < 0:
return '-%s' % ordinal(-n)
if n == 0 or 4 <= n <= 20:
suffix = 'th'
elif n == 1 or (n % 10) == 1:
suffix = 'st'
elif n == 2 or (n % 10) == 2:
suffix = 'nd'
elif n == 3 or (n % 10) == 3:
suffix = 'rd'
elif n < 101:
suffix = 'th'
else:
suffix = ordinal(n % 100)
if len(suffix) == 3:
# e.g. 103 -> 3rd
# so add other 0 back
suffix = '0' + suffix
n = str(n)[:-2]
return str(n) + suffix
|
16709cf97fcfdbad8fe78366a7d0c58dee3257f7c2c3a7ef10df20a28b613cd9
|
"""
This module adds context manager for temporary files generated by the tests.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
class TmpFileManager:
"""
A class to track record of every temporary files created by the tests.
"""
tmp_files = set('')
tmp_folders = set('')
@classmethod
def tmp_file(cls, name=''):
cls.tmp_files.add(name)
return name
@classmethod
def tmp_folder(cls, name=''):
cls.tmp_folders.add(name)
return name
@classmethod
def cleanup(cls):
while cls.tmp_files:
file = cls.tmp_files.pop()
if os.path.isfile(file):
os.remove(file)
while cls.tmp_folders:
folder = cls.tmp_folders.pop()
shutil.rmtree(folder)
def cleanup_tmp_files(test_func):
"""
A decorator to help test codes remove temporary files after the tests.
"""
def wrapper_function():
try:
test_func()
finally:
TmpFileManager.cleanup()
return wrapper_function
|
047f3b3c0966f9ab828b90dcc539e265c6a228f811b4a8594464e3b7ed3558fc
|
"""A module providing information about the necessity of brackets"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.function import _coeff_isneg
# Default precedence values for some basic types
PRECEDENCE = {
"Lambda": 1,
"Xor": 10,
"Or": 20,
"And": 30,
"Relational": 35,
"Add": 40,
"Mul": 50,
"Pow": 60,
"Func": 70,
"Not": 100,
"Atom": 1000,
"BitwiseOr": 36,
"BitwiseAnd": 38
}
# A dictionary assigning precedence values to certain classes. These values are
# treated like they were inherited, so not every single class has to be named
# here.
PRECEDENCE_VALUES = {
"Equivalent": PRECEDENCE["Xor"],
"Xor": PRECEDENCE["Xor"],
"Implies": PRECEDENCE["Xor"],
"Or": PRECEDENCE["Or"],
"And": PRECEDENCE["And"],
"Add": PRECEDENCE["Add"],
"Pow": PRECEDENCE["Pow"],
"Relational": PRECEDENCE["Relational"],
"Sub": PRECEDENCE["Add"],
"Not": PRECEDENCE["Not"],
"Function" : PRECEDENCE["Func"],
"NegativeInfinity": PRECEDENCE["Add"],
"MatAdd": PRECEDENCE["Add"],
"MatPow": PRECEDENCE["Pow"],
"TensAdd": PRECEDENCE["Add"],
# As soon as `TensMul` is a subclass of `Mul`, remove this:
"TensMul": PRECEDENCE["Mul"],
"HadamardProduct": PRECEDENCE["Mul"],
"KroneckerProduct": PRECEDENCE["Mul"],
"Equality": PRECEDENCE["Mul"],
"Unequality": PRECEDENCE["Mul"],
}
# Sometimes it's not enough to assign a fixed precedence value to a
# class. Then a function can be inserted in this dictionary that takes
# an instance of this class as argument and returns the appropriate
# precedence value.
# Precedence functions
def precedence_Mul(item):
if _coeff_isneg(item):
return PRECEDENCE["Add"]
return PRECEDENCE["Mul"]
def precedence_Rational(item):
if item.p < 0:
return PRECEDENCE["Add"]
return PRECEDENCE["Mul"]
def precedence_Integer(item):
if item.p < 0:
return PRECEDENCE["Add"]
return PRECEDENCE["Atom"]
def precedence_Float(item):
if item < 0:
return PRECEDENCE["Add"]
return PRECEDENCE["Atom"]
def precedence_PolyElement(item):
if item.is_generator:
return PRECEDENCE["Atom"]
elif item.is_ground:
return precedence(item.coeff(1))
elif item.is_term:
return PRECEDENCE["Mul"]
else:
return PRECEDENCE["Add"]
def precedence_FracElement(item):
if item.denom == 1:
return precedence_PolyElement(item.numer)
else:
return PRECEDENCE["Mul"]
def precedence_UnevaluatedExpr(item):
return precedence(item.args[0])
PRECEDENCE_FUNCTIONS = {
"Integer": precedence_Integer,
"Mul": precedence_Mul,
"Rational": precedence_Rational,
"Float": precedence_Float,
"PolyElement": precedence_PolyElement,
"FracElement": precedence_FracElement,
"UnevaluatedExpr": precedence_UnevaluatedExpr,
}
def precedence(item):
"""
Returns the precedence of a given object.
"""
if hasattr(item, "precedence"):
return item.precedence
try:
mro = item.__class__.__mro__
except AttributeError:
return PRECEDENCE["Atom"]
for i in mro:
n = i.__name__
if n in PRECEDENCE_FUNCTIONS:
return PRECEDENCE_FUNCTIONS[n](item)
elif n in PRECEDENCE_VALUES:
return PRECEDENCE_VALUES[n]
return PRECEDENCE["Atom"]
def precedence_traditional(item):
"""
Returns the precedence of a given object according to the traditional rules
of mathematics. This is the precedence for the LaTeX and pretty printer.
"""
# Integral, Sum, Product, Limit have the precedence of Mul in LaTeX,
# the precedence of Atom for other printers:
from sympy import Integral, Sum, Product, Limit, Derivative
from sympy.core.expr import UnevaluatedExpr
from sympy.tensor.functions import TensorProduct
if isinstance(item, (Integral, Sum, Product, Limit, Derivative, TensorProduct)):
return PRECEDENCE["Mul"]
if (item.__class__.__name__ in ("Dot", "Cross", "Gradient", "Divergence", "Curl")):
return PRECEDENCE["Mul"]-1
elif isinstance(item, UnevaluatedExpr):
return precedence_traditional(item.args[0])
else:
return precedence(item)
|
efa99de848cc910b04135ea395342e249c304c7e3c022b4a541ce87fca8337e4
|
"""
Python code printers
This module contains python code printers for plain python as well as NumPy & SciPy enabled code.
"""
from collections import defaultdict
from functools import wraps
from itertools import chain
from sympy.core import sympify, S
from .precedence import precedence
from .codeprinter import CodePrinter
_kw_py2and3 = {
'and', 'as', 'assert', 'break', 'class', 'continue', 'def', 'del', 'elif',
'else', 'except', 'finally', 'for', 'from', 'global', 'if', 'import', 'in',
'is', 'lambda', 'not', 'or', 'pass', 'raise', 'return', 'try', 'while',
'with', 'yield', 'None' # 'None' is actually not in Python 2's keyword.kwlist
}
_kw_only_py2 = {'exec', 'print'}
_kw_only_py3 = {'False', 'nonlocal', 'True'}
_known_functions = {
'Abs': 'abs',
}
_known_functions_math = {
'acos': 'acos',
'acosh': 'acosh',
'asin': 'asin',
'asinh': 'asinh',
'atan': 'atan',
'atan2': 'atan2',
'atanh': 'atanh',
'ceiling': 'ceil',
'cos': 'cos',
'cosh': 'cosh',
'erf': 'erf',
'erfc': 'erfc',
'exp': 'exp',
'expm1': 'expm1',
'factorial': 'factorial',
'floor': 'floor',
'gamma': 'gamma',
'hypot': 'hypot',
'loggamma': 'lgamma',
'log': 'log',
'ln': 'log',
'log10': 'log10',
'log1p': 'log1p',
'log2': 'log2',
'sin': 'sin',
'sinh': 'sinh',
'Sqrt': 'sqrt',
'tan': 'tan',
'tanh': 'tanh'
} # Not used from ``math``: [copysign isclose isfinite isinf isnan ldexp frexp pow modf
# radians trunc fmod fsum gcd degrees fabs]
_known_constants_math = {
'Exp1': 'e',
'Pi': 'pi',
'E': 'e'
# Only in python >= 3.5:
# 'Infinity': 'inf',
# 'NaN': 'nan'
}
def _print_known_func(self, expr):
known = self.known_functions[expr.__class__.__name__]
return '{name}({args})'.format(name=self._module_format(known),
args=', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), expr.args)))
def _print_known_const(self, expr):
known = self.known_constants[expr.__class__.__name__]
return self._module_format(known)
class AbstractPythonCodePrinter(CodePrinter):
printmethod = "_pythoncode"
language = "Python"
standard = "python3"
reserved_words = _kw_py2and3.union(_kw_only_py3)
modules = None # initialized to a set in __init__
tab = ' '
_kf = dict(chain(
_known_functions.items(),
[(k, 'math.' + v) for k, v in _known_functions_math.items()]
))
_kc = {k: 'math.'+v for k, v in _known_constants_math.items()}
_operators = {'and': 'and', 'or': 'or', 'not': 'not'}
_default_settings = dict(
CodePrinter._default_settings,
user_functions={},
precision=17,
inline=True,
fully_qualified_modules=True,
contract=False
)
def __init__(self, settings=None):
super(AbstractPythonCodePrinter, self).__init__(settings)
self.module_imports = defaultdict(set)
self.known_functions = dict(self._kf, **(settings or {}).get(
'user_functions', {}))
self.known_constants = dict(self._kc, **(settings or {}).get(
'user_constants', {}))
def _get_statement(self, codestring):
return codestring
def _declare_number_const(self, name, value):
return "%s = %s" % (name, value)
def _module_format(self, fqn, register=True):
parts = fqn.split('.')
if register and len(parts) > 1:
self.module_imports['.'.join(parts[:-1])].add(parts[-1])
if self._settings['fully_qualified_modules']:
return fqn
else:
return fqn.split('(')[0].split('[')[0].split('.')[-1]
def _format_code(self, lines):
return lines
def _get_statement(self, codestring):
return "%s" % codestring
def _get_comment(self, text):
return " # {0}".format(text)
def _expand_fold_binary_op(self, op, args):
"""
This method expands a fold on binary operations.
``functools.reduce`` is an example of a folded operation.
For example, the expression
`A + B + C + D`
is folded into
`((A + B) + C) + D`
"""
if len(args) == 1:
return self._print(args[0])
else:
return "%s(%s, %s)" % (
self._module_format(op),
self._expand_fold_binary_op(op, args[:-1]),
self._print(args[-1]),
)
def _expand_reduce_binary_op(self, op, args):
"""
This method expands a reductin on binary operations.
Notice: this is NOT the same as ``functools.reduce``.
For example, the expression
`A + B + C + D`
is reduced into:
`(A + B) + (C + D)`
"""
if len(args) == 1:
return self._print(args[0])
else:
N = len(args)
Nhalf = N // 2
return "%s(%s, %s)" % (
self._module_format(op),
self._expand_reduce_binary_op(args[:Nhalf]),
self._expand_reduce_binary_op(args[Nhalf:]),
)
def _get_einsum_string(self, subranks, contraction_indices):
letters = self._get_letter_generator_for_einsum()
contraction_string = ""
counter = 0
d = {j: min(i) for i in contraction_indices for j in i}
indices = []
for rank_arg in subranks:
lindices = []
for i in range(rank_arg):
if counter in d:
lindices.append(d[counter])
else:
lindices.append(counter)
counter += 1
indices.append(lindices)
mapping = {}
letters_free = []
letters_dum = []
for i in indices:
for j in i:
if j not in mapping:
l = next(letters)
mapping[j] = l
else:
l = mapping[j]
contraction_string += l
if j in d:
if l not in letters_dum:
letters_dum.append(l)
else:
letters_free.append(l)
contraction_string += ","
contraction_string = contraction_string[:-1]
return contraction_string, letters_free, letters_dum
def _print_NaN(self, expr):
return "float('nan')"
def _print_Infinity(self, expr):
return "float('inf')"
def _print_NegativeInfinity(self, expr):
return "float('-inf')"
def _print_ComplexInfinity(self, expr):
return self._print_NaN(expr)
def _print_Mod(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
return ('{0} % {1}'.format(*map(lambda x: self.parenthesize(x, PREC), expr.args)))
def _print_Piecewise(self, expr):
result = []
i = 0
for arg in expr.args:
e = arg.expr
c = arg.cond
if i == 0:
result.append('(')
result.append('(')
result.append(self._print(e))
result.append(')')
result.append(' if ')
result.append(self._print(c))
result.append(' else ')
i += 1
result = result[:-1]
if result[-1] == 'True':
result = result[:-2]
result.append(')')
else:
result.append(' else None)')
return ''.join(result)
def _print_Relational(self, expr):
"Relational printer for Equality and Unequality"
op = {
'==' :'equal',
'!=' :'not_equal',
'<' :'less',
'<=' :'less_equal',
'>' :'greater',
'>=' :'greater_equal',
}
if expr.rel_op in op:
lhs = self._print(expr.lhs)
rhs = self._print(expr.rhs)
return '({lhs} {op} {rhs})'.format(op=expr.rel_op, lhs=lhs, rhs=rhs)
return super(AbstractPythonCodePrinter, self)._print_Relational(expr)
def _print_ITE(self, expr):
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise
return self._print(expr.rewrite(Piecewise))
def _print_Sum(self, expr):
loops = (
'for {i} in range({a}, {b}+1)'.format(
i=self._print(i),
a=self._print(a),
b=self._print(b))
for i, a, b in expr.limits)
return '(builtins.sum({function} {loops}))'.format(
function=self._print(expr.function),
loops=' '.join(loops))
def _print_ImaginaryUnit(self, expr):
return '1j'
def _print_MatrixBase(self, expr):
name = expr.__class__.__name__
func = self.known_functions.get(name, name)
return "%s(%s)" % (func, self._print(expr.tolist()))
_print_SparseMatrix = \
_print_MutableSparseMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableSparseMatrix = \
_print_Matrix = \
_print_DenseMatrix = \
_print_MutableDenseMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableDenseMatrix = \
lambda self, expr: self._print_MatrixBase(expr)
def _indent_codestring(self, codestring):
return '\n'.join([self.tab + line for line in codestring.split('\n')])
def _print_FunctionDefinition(self, fd):
body = '\n'.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), fd.body))
return "def {name}({parameters}):\n{body}".format(
name=self._print(fd.name),
parameters=', '.join([self._print(var.symbol) for var in fd.parameters]),
body=self._indent_codestring(body)
)
def _print_While(self, whl):
body = '\n'.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), whl.body))
return "while {cond}:\n{body}".format(
cond=self._print(whl.condition),
body=self._indent_codestring(body)
)
def _print_Declaration(self, decl):
return '%s = %s' % (
self._print(decl.variable.symbol),
self._print(decl.variable.value)
)
def _print_Return(self, ret):
arg, = ret.args
return 'return %s' % self._print(arg)
def _print_Print(self, prnt):
print_args = ', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), prnt.print_args))
if prnt.format_string != None:
print_args = '{0} % ({1})'.format(
self._print(prnt.format_string), print_args)
if prnt.file != None:
print_args += ', file=%s' % self._print(prnt.file)
return 'print(%s)' % print_args
def _print_Stream(self, strm):
if str(strm.name) == 'stdout':
return self._module_format('sys.stdout')
elif str(strm.name) == 'stderr':
return self._module_format('sys.stderr')
else:
return self._print(strm.name)
def _print_NoneToken(self, arg):
return 'None'
class PythonCodePrinter(AbstractPythonCodePrinter):
def _print_sign(self, e):
return '(0.0 if {e} == 0 else {f}(1, {e}))'.format(
f=self._module_format('math.copysign'), e=self._print(e.args[0]))
def _print_Not(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
return self._operators['not'] + self.parenthesize(expr.args[0], PREC)
for k in PythonCodePrinter._kf:
setattr(PythonCodePrinter, '_print_%s' % k, _print_known_func)
for k in _known_constants_math:
setattr(PythonCodePrinter, '_print_%s' % k, _print_known_const)
def pycode(expr, **settings):
""" Converts an expr to a string of Python code
Parameters
==========
expr : Expr
A SymPy expression.
fully_qualified_modules : bool
Whether or not to write out full module names of functions
(``math.sin`` vs. ``sin``). default: ``True``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import tan, Symbol
>>> from sympy.printing.pycode import pycode
>>> pycode(tan(Symbol('x')) + 1)
'math.tan(x) + 1'
"""
return PythonCodePrinter(settings).doprint(expr)
_not_in_mpmath = 'log1p log2'.split()
_in_mpmath = [(k, v) for k, v in _known_functions_math.items() if k not in _not_in_mpmath]
_known_functions_mpmath = dict(_in_mpmath, **{
'sign': 'sign',
})
_known_constants_mpmath = {
'Pi': 'pi'
}
class MpmathPrinter(PythonCodePrinter):
"""
Lambda printer for mpmath which maintains precision for floats
"""
printmethod = "_mpmathcode"
_kf = dict(chain(
_known_functions.items(),
[(k, 'mpmath.' + v) for k, v in _known_functions_mpmath.items()]
))
def _print_Float(self, e):
# XXX: This does not handle setting mpmath.mp.dps. It is assumed that
# the caller of the lambdified function will have set it to sufficient
# precision to match the Floats in the expression.
# Remove 'mpz' if gmpy is installed.
args = str(tuple(map(int, e._mpf_)))
return '{func}({args})'.format(func=self._module_format('mpmath.mpf'), args=args)
def _print_Rational(self, e):
return '{0}({1})/{0}({2})'.format(
self._module_format('mpmath.mpf'),
e.p,
e.q,
)
def _print_uppergamma(self, e):
return "{0}({1}, {2}, {3})".format(
self._module_format('mpmath.gammainc'),
self._print(e.args[0]),
self._print(e.args[1]),
self._module_format('mpmath.inf'))
def _print_lowergamma(self, e):
return "{0}({1}, 0, {2})".format(
self._module_format('mpmath.gammainc'),
self._print(e.args[0]),
self._print(e.args[1]))
def _print_log2(self, e):
return '{0}({1})/{0}(2)'.format(
self._module_format('mpmath.log'), self._print(e.args[0]))
def _print_log1p(self, e):
return '{0}({1}+1)'.format(
self._module_format('mpmath.log'), self._print(e.args[0]))
for k in MpmathPrinter._kf:
setattr(MpmathPrinter, '_print_%s' % k, _print_known_func)
for k in _known_constants_mpmath:
setattr(MpmathPrinter, '_print_%s' % k, _print_known_const)
_not_in_numpy = 'erf erfc factorial gamma loggamma'.split()
_in_numpy = [(k, v) for k, v in _known_functions_math.items() if k not in _not_in_numpy]
_known_functions_numpy = dict(_in_numpy, **{
'acos': 'arccos',
'acosh': 'arccosh',
'asin': 'arcsin',
'asinh': 'arcsinh',
'atan': 'arctan',
'atan2': 'arctan2',
'atanh': 'arctanh',
'exp2': 'exp2',
'sign': 'sign',
})
class NumPyPrinter(PythonCodePrinter):
"""
Numpy printer which handles vectorized piecewise functions,
logical operators, etc.
"""
printmethod = "_numpycode"
_kf = dict(chain(
PythonCodePrinter._kf.items(),
[(k, 'numpy.' + v) for k, v in _known_functions_numpy.items()]
))
_kc = {k: 'numpy.'+v for k, v in _known_constants_math.items()}
def _print_seq(self, seq):
"General sequence printer: converts to tuple"
# Print tuples here instead of lists because numba supports
# tuples in nopython mode.
delimite.get('delimiter', ', ')
return '({},)'.format(delimiter.join(self._print(item) for item in seq))
def _print_MatMul(self, expr):
"Matrix multiplication printer"
return '({0})'.format(').dot('.join(self._print(i) for i in expr.args))
def _print_MatPow(self, expr):
"Matrix power printer"
return '{0}({1}, {2})'.format(self._module_format('numpy.linalg.matrix_power'),
self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[1]))
def _print_Inverse(self, expr):
"Matrix inverse printer"
return '{0}({1})'.format(self._module_format('numpy.linalg.inv'),
self._print(expr.args[0]))
def _print_DotProduct(self, expr):
# DotProduct allows any shape order, but numpy.dot does matrix
# multiplication, so we have to make sure it gets 1 x n by n x 1.
arg1, arg2 = expr.args
if arg1.shape[0] != 1:
arg1 = arg1.T
if arg2.shape[1] != 1:
arg2 = arg2.T
return "%s(%s, %s)" % (self._module_format('numpy.dot'),
self._print(arg1),
self._print(arg2))
def _print_Piecewise(self, expr):
"Piecewise function printer"
exprs = '[{0}]'.format(','.join(self._print(arg.expr) for arg in expr.args))
conds = '[{0}]'.format(','.join(self._print(arg.cond) for arg in expr.args))
# If [default_value, True] is a (expr, cond) sequence in a Piecewise object
# it will behave the same as passing the 'default' kwarg to select()
# *as long as* it is the last element in expr.args.
# If this is not the case, it may be triggered prematurely.
return '{0}({1}, {2}, default=numpy.nan)'.format(self._module_format('numpy.select'), conds, exprs)
def _print_Relational(self, expr):
"Relational printer for Equality and Unequality"
op = {
'==' :'equal',
'!=' :'not_equal',
'<' :'less',
'<=' :'less_equal',
'>' :'greater',
'>=' :'greater_equal',
}
if expr.rel_op in op:
lhs = self._print(expr.lhs)
rhs = self._print(expr.rhs)
return '{op}({lhs}, {rhs})'.format(op=self._module_format('numpy.'+op[expr.rel_op]),
lhs=lhs, rhs=rhs)
return super(NumPyPrinter, self)._print_Relational(expr)
def _print_And(self, expr):
"Logical And printer"
# We have to override LambdaPrinter because it uses Python 'and' keyword.
# If LambdaPrinter didn't define it, we could use StrPrinter's
# version of the function and add 'logical_and' to NUMPY_TRANSLATIONS.
return '{0}.reduce(({1}))'.format(self._module_format('numpy.logical_and'), ','.join(self._print(i) for i in expr.args))
def _print_Or(self, expr):
"Logical Or printer"
# We have to override LambdaPrinter because it uses Python 'or' keyword.
# If LambdaPrinter didn't define it, we could use StrPrinter's
# version of the function and add 'logical_or' to NUMPY_TRANSLATIONS.
return '{0}.reduce(({1}))'.format(self._module_format('numpy.logical_or'), ','.join(self._print(i) for i in expr.args))
def _print_Not(self, expr):
"Logical Not printer"
# We have to override LambdaPrinter because it uses Python 'not' keyword.
# If LambdaPrinter didn't define it, we would still have to define our
# own because StrPrinter doesn't define it.
return '{0}({1})'.format(self._module_format('numpy.logical_not'), ','.join(self._print(i) for i in expr.args))
def _print_Min(self, expr):
return '{0}(({1}))'.format(self._module_format('numpy.amin'), ','.join(self._print(i) for i in expr.args))
def _print_Max(self, expr):
return '{0}(({1}))'.format(self._module_format('numpy.amax'), ','.join(self._print(i) for i in expr.args))
def _print_Pow(self, expr):
if expr.exp == 0.5:
return '{0}({1})'.format(self._module_format('numpy.sqrt'), self._print(expr.base))
else:
return super(NumPyPrinter, self)._print_Pow(expr)
def _print_arg(self, expr):
return "%s(%s)" % (self._module_format('numpy.angle'), self._print(expr.args[0]))
def _print_im(self, expr):
return "%s(%s)" % (self._module_format('numpy.imag'), self._print(expr.args[0]))
def _print_Mod(self, expr):
return "%s(%s)" % (self._module_format('numpy.mod'), ', '.join(
map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), expr.args)))
def _print_re(self, expr):
return "%s(%s)" % (self._module_format('numpy.real'), self._print(expr.args[0]))
def _print_sinc(self, expr):
return "%s(%s)" % (self._module_format('numpy.sinc'), self._print(expr.args[0]/S.Pi))
def _print_MatrixBase(self, expr):
func = self.known_functions.get(expr.__class__.__name__, None)
if func is None:
func = self._module_format('numpy.array')
return "%s(%s)" % (func, self._print(expr.tolist()))
def _print_CodegenArrayTensorProduct(self, expr):
array_list = [j for i, arg in enumerate(expr.args) for j in
(self._print(arg), "[%i, %i]" % (2*i, 2*i+1))]
return "%s(%s)" % (self._module_format('numpy.einsum'), ", ".join(array_list))
def _print_CodegenArrayContraction(self, expr):
from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayTensorProduct
base = expr.expr
contraction_indices = expr.contraction_indices
if len(contraction_indices) == 0:
return self._print(base)
if isinstance(base, CodegenArrayTensorProduct):
counter = 0
d = {j: min(i) for i in contraction_indices for j in i}
indices = []
for rank_arg in base.subranks:
lindices = []
for i in range(rank_arg):
if counter in d:
lindices.append(d[counter])
else:
lindices.append(counter)
counter += 1
indices.append(lindices)
elems = ["%s, %s" % (self._print(arg), ind) for arg, ind in zip(base.args, indices)]
return "%s(%s)" % (
self._module_format('numpy.einsum'),
", ".join(elems)
)
raise NotImplementedError()
def _print_CodegenArrayDiagonal(self, expr):
diagonal_indices = list(expr.diagonal_indices)
if len(diagonal_indices) > 1:
# TODO: this should be handled in sympy.codegen.array_utils,
# possibly by creating the possibility of unfolding the
# CodegenArrayDiagonal object into nested ones. Same reasoning for
# the array contraction.
raise NotImplementedError
if len(diagonal_indices[0]) != 2:
raise NotImplementedError
return "%s(%s, 0, axis1=%s, axis2=%s)" % (
self._module_format("numpy.diagonal"),
self._print(expr.expr),
diagonal_indices[0][0],
diagonal_indices[0][1],
)
def _print_CodegenArrayPermuteDims(self, expr):
return "%s(%s, %s)" % (
self._module_format("numpy.transpose"),
self._print(expr.expr),
self._print(expr.permutation.args[0]),
)
def _print_CodegenArrayElementwiseAdd(self, expr):
return self._expand_fold_binary_op('numpy.add', expr.args)
for k in NumPyPrinter._kf:
setattr(NumPyPrinter, '_print_%s' % k, _print_known_func)
for k in NumPyPrinter._kc:
setattr(NumPyPrinter, '_print_%s' % k, _print_known_const)
_known_functions_scipy_special = {
'erf': 'erf',
'erfc': 'erfc',
'besselj': 'jn',
'bessely': 'yn',
'besseli': 'iv',
'besselk': 'kn',
'factorial': 'factorial',
'gamma': 'gamma',
'loggamma': 'gammaln',
'digamma': 'psi',
'RisingFactorial': 'poch'
}
_known_constants_scipy_constants = {
'GoldenRatio': 'golden_ratio',
'Pi': 'pi',
'E': 'e'
}
class SciPyPrinter(NumPyPrinter):
_kf = dict(chain(
NumPyPrinter._kf.items(),
[(k, 'scipy.special.' + v) for k, v in _known_functions_scipy_special.items()]
))
_kc = {k: 'scipy.constants.' + v for k, v in _known_constants_scipy_constants.items()}
def _print_SparseMatrix(self, expr):
i, j, data = [], [], []
for (r, c), v in expr._smat.items():
i.append(r)
j.append(c)
data.append(v)
return "{name}({data}, ({i}, {j}), shape={shape})".format(
name=self._module_format('scipy.sparse.coo_matrix'),
data=data, i=i, j=j, shape=expr.shape
)
_print_ImmutableSparseMatrix = _print_SparseMatrix
for k in SciPyPrinter._kf:
setattr(SciPyPrinter, '_print_%s' % k, _print_known_func)
for k in SciPyPrinter._kc:
setattr(SciPyPrinter, '_print_%s' % k, _print_known_const)
class SymPyPrinter(PythonCodePrinter):
_kf = dict([(k, 'sympy.' + v) for k, v in chain(
_known_functions.items(),
_known_functions_math.items()
)])
def _print_Function(self, expr):
mod = expr.func.__module__ or ''
return '%s(%s)' % (self._module_format(mod + ('.' if mod else '') + expr.func.__name__),
', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), expr.args)))
|
ffbdd96d7cef105a943653671959ed72c947eb3b0104ca752c06f1c521d8bbb2
|
"""
A Printer for generating readable representation of most sympy classes.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import S, Rational, Pow, Basic, Mul
from sympy.core.mul import _keep_coeff
from .printer import Printer
from sympy.printing.precedence import precedence, PRECEDENCE
import mpmath.libmp as mlib
from mpmath.libmp import prec_to_dps
from sympy.utilities import default_sort_key
class StrPrinter(Printer):
printmethod = "_sympystr"
_default_settings = {
"order": None,
"full_prec": "auto",
"sympy_integers": False,
"abbrev": False,
}
_relationals = dict()
def parenthesize(self, item, level, strict=False):
if (precedence(item) < level) or ((not strict) and precedence(item) <= level):
return "(%s)" % self._print(item)
else:
return self._print(item)
def stringify(self, args, sep, level=0):
return sep.join([self.parenthesize(item, level) for item in args])
def emptyPrinter(self, expr):
if isinstance(expr, str):
return expr
elif isinstance(expr, Basic):
if hasattr(expr, "args"):
return repr(expr)
else:
raise
else:
return str(expr)
def _print_Add(self, expr, order=None):
if self.order == 'none':
terms = list(expr.args)
else:
terms = self._as_ordered_terms(expr, order=order)
PREC = precedence(expr)
l = []
for term in terms:
t = self._print(term)
if t.startswith('-'):
sign = "-"
t = t[1:]
else:
sign = "+"
if precedence(term) < PREC:
l.extend([sign, "(%s)" % t])
else:
l.extend([sign, t])
sign = l.pop(0)
if sign == '+':
sign = ""
return sign + ' '.join(l)
def _print_BooleanTrue(self, expr):
return "True"
def _print_BooleanFalse(self, expr):
return "False"
def _print_Not(self, expr):
return '~%s' %(self.parenthesize(expr.args[0],PRECEDENCE["Not"]))
def _print_And(self, expr):
return self.stringify(expr.args, " & ", PRECEDENCE["BitwiseAnd"])
def _print_Or(self, expr):
return self.stringify(expr.args, " | ", PRECEDENCE["BitwiseOr"])
def _print_AppliedPredicate(self, expr):
return '%s(%s)' % (self._print(expr.func), self._print(expr.arg))
def _print_Basic(self, expr):
l = [self._print(o) for o in expr.args]
return expr.__class__.__name__ + "(%s)" % ", ".join(l)
def _print_BlockMatrix(self, B):
if B.blocks.shape == (1, 1):
self._print(B.blocks[0, 0])
return self._print(B.blocks)
def _print_Catalan(self, expr):
return 'Catalan'
def _print_ComplexInfinity(self, expr):
return 'zoo'
def _print_ConditionSet(self, s):
args = tuple([self._print(i) for i in (s.sym, s.condition)])
if s.base_set is S.UniversalSet:
return 'ConditionSet(%s, %s)' % args
args += (self._print(s.base_set),)
return 'ConditionSet(%s, %s, %s)' % args
def _print_Derivative(self, expr):
dexpr = expr.expr
dvars = [i[0] if i[1] == 1 else i for i in expr.variable_count]
return 'Derivative(%s)' % ", ".join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), [dexpr] + dvars))
def _print_dict(self, d):
keys = sorted(d.keys(), key=default_sort_key)
items = []
for key in keys:
item = "%s: %s" % (self._print(key), self._print(d[key]))
items.append(item)
return "{%s}" % ", ".join(items)
def _print_Dict(self, expr):
return self._print_dict(expr)
def _print_RandomDomain(self, d):
if hasattr(d, 'as_boolean'):
return 'Domain: ' + self._print(d.as_boolean())
elif hasattr(d, 'set'):
return ('Domain: ' + self._print(d.symbols) + ' in ' +
self._print(d.set))
else:
return 'Domain on ' + self._print(d.symbols)
def _print_Dummy(self, expr):
return '_' + expr.name
def _print_EulerGamma(self, expr):
return 'EulerGamma'
def _print_Exp1(self, expr):
return 'E'
def _print_ExprCondPair(self, expr):
return '(%s, %s)' % (self._print(expr.expr), self._print(expr.cond))
def _print_FiniteSet(self, s):
s = sorted(s, key=default_sort_key)
if len(s) > 10:
printset = s[:3] + ['...'] + s[-3:]
else:
printset = s
return '{' + ', '.join(self._print(el) for el in printset) + '}'
def _print_Function(self, expr):
return expr.func.__name__ + "(%s)" % self.stringify(expr.args, ", ")
def _print_GeometryEntity(self, expr):
# GeometryEntity is special -- it's base is tuple
return str(expr)
def _print_GoldenRatio(self, expr):
return 'GoldenRatio'
def _print_TribonacciConstant(self, expr):
return 'TribonacciConstant'
def _print_ImaginaryUnit(self, expr):
return 'I'
def _print_Infinity(self, expr):
return 'oo'
def _print_Integral(self, expr):
def _xab_tostr(xab):
if len(xab) == 1:
return self._print(xab[0])
else:
return self._print((xab[0],) + tuple(xab[1:]))
L = ', '.join([_xab_tostr(l) for l in expr.limits])
return 'Integral(%s, %s)' % (self._print(expr.function), L)
def _print_Interval(self, i):
fin = 'Interval{m}({a}, {b})'
a, b, l, r = i.args
if a.is_infinite and b.is_infinite:
m = ''
elif a.is_infinite and not r:
m = ''
elif b.is_infinite and not l:
m = ''
elif not l and not r:
m = ''
elif l and r:
m = '.open'
elif l:
m = '.Lopen'
else:
m = '.Ropen'
return fin.format(**{'a': a, 'b': b, 'm': m})
def _print_AccumulationBounds(self, i):
return "AccumBounds(%s, %s)" % (self._print(i.min),
self._print(i.max))
def _print_Inverse(self, I):
return "%s**(-1)" % self.parenthesize(I.arg, PRECEDENCE["Pow"])
def _print_Lambda(self, obj):
args, expr = obj.args
if len(args) == 1:
return "Lambda(%s, %s)" % (self._print(args.args[0]), self._print(expr))
else:
arg_string = ", ".join(self._print(arg) for arg in args)
return "Lambda((%s), %s)" % (arg_string, self._print(expr))
def _print_LatticeOp(self, expr):
args = sorted(expr.args, key=default_sort_key)
return expr.func.__name__ + "(%s)" % ", ".join(self._print(arg) for arg in args)
def _print_Limit(self, expr):
e, z, z0, dir = expr.args
if str(dir) == "+":
return "Limit(%s, %s, %s)" % tuple(map(self._print, (e, z, z0)))
else:
return "Limit(%s, %s, %s, dir='%s')" % tuple(map(self._print,
(e, z, z0, dir)))
def _print_list(self, expr):
return "[%s]" % self.stringify(expr, ", ")
def _print_MatrixBase(self, expr):
return expr._format_str(self)
_print_SparseMatrix = \
_print_MutableSparseMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableSparseMatrix = \
_print_Matrix = \
_print_DenseMatrix = \
_print_MutableDenseMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableDenseMatrix = \
_print_MatrixBase
def _print_MatrixElement(self, expr):
return self.parenthesize(expr.parent, PRECEDENCE["Atom"], strict=True) \
+ '[%s, %s]' % (self._print(expr.i), self._print(expr.j))
def _print_MatrixSlice(self, expr):
def strslice(x):
x = list(x)
if x[2] == 1:
del x[2]
if x[1] == x[0] + 1:
del x[1]
if x[0] == 0:
x[0] = ''
return ':'.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), x))
return (self._print(expr.parent) + '[' +
strslice(expr.rowslice) + ', ' +
strslice(expr.colslice) + ']')
def _print_DeferredVector(self, expr):
return expr.name
def _print_Mul(self, expr):
prec = precedence(expr)
c, e = expr.as_coeff_Mul()
if c < 0:
expr = _keep_coeff(-c, e)
sign = "-"
else:
sign = ""
a = [] # items in the numerator
b = [] # items that are in the denominator (if any)
pow_paren = [] # Will collect all pow with more than one base element and exp = -1
if self.order not in ('old', 'none'):
args = expr.as_ordered_factors()
else:
# use make_args in case expr was something like -x -> x
args = Mul.make_args(expr)
# Gather args for numerator/denominator
for item in args:
if item.is_commutative and item.is_Pow and item.exp.is_Rational and item.exp.is_negative:
if item.exp != -1:
b.append(Pow(item.base, -item.exp, evaluate=False))
else:
if len(item.args[0].args) != 1 and isinstance(item.base, Mul): # To avoid situations like #14160
pow_paren.append(item)
b.append(Pow(item.base, -item.exp))
elif item.is_Rational and item is not S.Infinity:
if item.p != 1:
a.append(Rational(item.p))
if item.q != 1:
b.append(Rational(item.q))
else:
a.append(item)
a = a or [S.One]
a_str = [self.parenthesize(x, prec, strict=False) for x in a]
b_str = [self.parenthesize(x, prec, strict=False) for x in b]
# To parenthesize Pow with exp = -1 and having more than one Symbol
for item in pow_paren:
if item.base in b:
b_str[b.index(item.base)] = "(%s)" % b_str[b.index(item.base)]
if len(b) == 0:
return sign + '*'.join(a_str)
elif len(b) == 1:
return sign + '*'.join(a_str) + "/" + b_str[0]
else:
return sign + '*'.join(a_str) + "/(%s)" % '*'.join(b_str)
def _print_MatMul(self, expr):
c, m = expr.as_coeff_mmul()
if c.is_number and c < 0:
expr = _keep_coeff(-c, m)
sign = "-"
else:
sign = ""
return sign + '*'.join(
[self.parenthesize(arg, precedence(expr)) for arg in expr.args]
)
def _print_HadamardProduct(self, expr):
return '.*'.join([self.parenthesize(arg, precedence(expr))
for arg in expr.args])
def _print_NaN(self, expr):
return 'nan'
def _print_NegativeInfinity(self, expr):
return '-oo'
def _print_Normal(self, expr):
return "Normal(%s, %s)" % (self._print(expr.mu), self._print(expr.sigma))
def _print_Order(self, expr):
if all(p is S.Zero for p in expr.point) or not len(expr.variables):
if len(expr.variables) <= 1:
return 'O(%s)' % self._print(expr.expr)
else:
return 'O(%s)' % self.stringify((expr.expr,) + expr.variables, ', ', 0)
else:
return 'O(%s)' % self.stringify(expr.args, ', ', 0)
def _print_Ordinal(self, expr):
return expr.__str__()
def _print_Cycle(self, expr):
return expr.__str__()
def _print_Permutation(self, expr):
from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation, Cycle
if Permutation.print_cyclic:
if not expr.size:
return '()'
# before taking Cycle notation, see if the last element is
# a singleton and move it to the head of the string
s = Cycle(expr)(expr.size - 1).__repr__()[len('Cycle'):]
last = s.rfind('(')
if not last == 0 and ',' not in s[last:]:
s = s[last:] + s[:last]
s = s.replace(',', '')
return s
else:
s = expr.support()
if not s:
if expr.size < 5:
return 'Permutation(%s)' % self._print(expr.array_form)
return 'Permutation([], size=%s)' % self._print(expr.size)
trim = self._print(expr.array_form[:s[-1] + 1]) + ', size=%s' % self._print(expr.size)
use = full = self._print(expr.array_form)
if len(trim) < len(full):
use = trim
return 'Permutation(%s)' % use
def _print_Subs(self, obj):
expr, old, new = obj.args
if len(obj.point) == 1:
old = old[0]
new = new[0]
return "Subs(%s, %s, %s)" % (
self._print(expr), self._print(old), self._print(new))
def _print_TensorIndex(self, expr):
return expr._print()
def _print_TensorHead(self, expr):
return expr._print()
def _print_Tensor(self, expr):
return expr._print()
def _print_TensMul(self, expr):
# prints expressions like "A(a)", "3*A(a)", "(1+x)*A(a)"
sign, args = expr._get_args_for_traditional_printer()
return sign + "*".join(
[self.parenthesize(arg, precedence(expr)) for arg in args]
)
def _print_TensAdd(self, expr):
return expr._print()
def _print_PermutationGroup(self, expr):
p = [' %s' % self._print(a) for a in expr.args]
return 'PermutationGroup([\n%s])' % ',\n'.join(p)
def _print_PDF(self, expr):
return 'PDF(%s, (%s, %s, %s))' % \
(self._print(expr.pdf.args[1]), self._print(expr.pdf.args[0]),
self._print(expr.domain[0]), self._print(expr.domain[1]))
def _print_Pi(self, expr):
return 'pi'
def _print_PolyRing(self, ring):
return "Polynomial ring in %s over %s with %s order" % \
(", ".join(map(lambda rs: self._print(rs), ring.symbols)),
self._print(ring.domain), self._print(ring.order))
def _print_FracField(self, field):
return "Rational function field in %s over %s with %s order" % \
(", ".join(map(lambda fs: self._print(fs), field.symbols)),
self._print(field.domain), self._print(field.order))
def _print_FreeGroupElement(self, elm):
return elm.__str__()
def _print_PolyElement(self, poly):
return poly.str(self, PRECEDENCE, "%s**%s", "*")
def _print_FracElement(self, frac):
if frac.denom == 1:
return self._print(frac.numer)
else:
numer = self.parenthesize(frac.numer, PRECEDENCE["Mul"], strict=True)
denom = self.parenthesize(frac.denom, PRECEDENCE["Atom"], strict=True)
return numer + "/" + denom
def _print_Poly(self, expr):
ATOM_PREC = PRECEDENCE["Atom"] - 1
terms, gens = [], [ self.parenthesize(s, ATOM_PREC) for s in expr.gens ]
for monom, coeff in expr.terms():
s_monom = []
for i, exp in enumerate(monom):
if exp > 0:
if exp == 1:
s_monom.append(gens[i])
else:
s_monom.append(gens[i] + "**%d" % exp)
s_monom = "*".join(s_monom)
if coeff.is_Add:
if s_monom:
s_coeff = "(" + self._print(coeff) + ")"
else:
s_coeff = self._print(coeff)
else:
if s_monom:
if coeff is S.One:
terms.extend(['+', s_monom])
continue
if coeff is S.NegativeOne:
terms.extend(['-', s_monom])
continue
s_coeff = self._print(coeff)
if not s_monom:
s_term = s_coeff
else:
s_term = s_coeff + "*" + s_monom
if s_term.startswith('-'):
terms.extend(['-', s_term[1:]])
else:
terms.extend(['+', s_term])
if terms[0] in ['-', '+']:
modifier = terms.pop(0)
if modifier == '-':
terms[0] = '-' + terms[0]
format = expr.__class__.__name__ + "(%s, %s"
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import PolynomialError
try:
format += ", modulus=%s" % expr.get_modulus()
except PolynomialError:
format += ", domain='%s'" % expr.get_domain()
format += ")"
for index, item in enumerate(gens):
if len(item) > 2 and (item[:1] == "(" and item[len(item) - 1:] == ")"):
gens[index] = item[1:len(item) - 1]
return format % (' '.join(terms), ', '.join(gens))
def _print_ProductSet(self, p):
return ' x '.join(self._print(set) for set in p.sets)
def _print_AlgebraicNumber(self, expr):
if expr.is_aliased:
return self._print(expr.as_poly().as_expr())
else:
return self._print(expr.as_expr())
def _print_Pow(self, expr, rational=False):
PREC = precedence(expr)
if expr.exp is S.Half and not rational:
return "sqrt(%s)" % self._print(expr.base)
if expr.is_commutative:
if -expr.exp is S.Half and not rational:
# Note: Don't test "expr.exp == -S.Half" here, because that will
# match -0.5, which we don't want.
return "%s/sqrt(%s)" % tuple(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), (S.One, expr.base)))
if expr.exp is -S.One:
# Similarly to the S.Half case, don't test with "==" here.
return '%s/%s' % (self._print(S.One),
self.parenthesize(expr.base, PREC, strict=False))
e = self.parenthesize(expr.exp, PREC, strict=False)
if self.printmethod == '_sympyrepr' and expr.exp.is_Rational and expr.exp.q != 1:
# the parenthesized exp should be '(Rational(a, b))' so strip parens,
# but just check to be sure.
if e.startswith('(Rational'):
return '%s**%s' % (self.parenthesize(expr.base, PREC, strict=False), e[1:-1])
return '%s**%s' % (self.parenthesize(expr.base, PREC, strict=False), e)
def _print_UnevaluatedExpr(self, expr):
return self._print(expr.args[0])
def _print_MatPow(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
return '%s**%s' % (self.parenthesize(expr.base, PREC, strict=False),
self.parenthesize(expr.exp, PREC, strict=False))
def _print_ImmutableDenseNDimArray(self, expr):
return str(expr)
def _print_ImmutableSparseNDimArray(self, expr):
return str(expr)
def _print_Integer(self, expr):
if self._settings.get("sympy_integers", False):
return "S(%s)" % (expr)
return str(expr.p)
def _print_Integers(self, expr):
return 'Integers'
def _print_Naturals(self, expr):
return 'Naturals'
def _print_Naturals0(self, expr):
return 'Naturals0'
def _print_Reals(self, expr):
return 'Reals'
def _print_int(self, expr):
return str(expr)
def _print_mpz(self, expr):
return str(expr)
def _print_Rational(self, expr):
if expr.q == 1:
return str(expr.p)
else:
if self._settings.get("sympy_integers", False):
return "S(%s)/%s" % (expr.p, expr.q)
return "%s/%s" % (expr.p, expr.q)
def _print_PythonRational(self, expr):
if expr.q == 1:
return str(expr.p)
else:
return "%d/%d" % (expr.p, expr.q)
def _print_Fraction(self, expr):
if expr.denominator == 1:
return str(expr.numerator)
else:
return "%s/%s" % (expr.numerator, expr.denominator)
def _print_mpq(self, expr):
if expr.denominator == 1:
return str(expr.numerator)
else:
return "%s/%s" % (expr.numerator, expr.denominator)
def _print_Float(self, expr):
prec = expr._prec
if prec < 5:
dps = 0
else:
dps = prec_to_dps(expr._prec)
if self._settings["full_prec"] is True:
strip = False
elif self._settings["full_prec"] is False:
strip = True
elif self._settings["full_prec"] == "auto":
strip = self._print_level > 1
rv = mlib.to_str(expr._mpf_, dps, strip_zeros=strip)
if rv.startswith('-.0'):
rv = '-0.' + rv[3:]
elif rv.startswith('.0'):
rv = '0.' + rv[2:]
if rv.startswith('+'):
# e.g., +inf -> inf
rv = rv[1:]
return rv
def _print_Relational(self, expr):
charmap = {
"==": "Eq",
"!=": "Ne",
":=": "Assignment",
'+=': "AddAugmentedAssignment",
"-=": "SubAugmentedAssignment",
"*=": "MulAugmentedAssignment",
"/=": "DivAugmentedAssignment",
"%=": "ModAugmentedAssignment",
}
if expr.rel_op in charmap:
return '%s(%s, %s)' % (charmap[expr.rel_op], self._print(expr.lhs),
self._print(expr.rhs))
return '%s %s %s' % (self.parenthesize(expr.lhs, precedence(expr)),
self._relationals.get(expr.rel_op) or expr.rel_op,
self.parenthesize(expr.rhs, precedence(expr)))
def _print_ComplexRootOf(self, expr):
return "CRootOf(%s, %d)" % (self._print_Add(expr.expr, order='lex'),
expr.index)
def _print_RootSum(self, expr):
args = [self._print_Add(expr.expr, order='lex')]
if expr.fun is not S.IdentityFunction:
args.append(self._print(expr.fun))
return "RootSum(%s)" % ", ".join(args)
def _print_GroebnerBasis(self, basis):
cls = basis.__class__.__name__
exprs = [self._print_Add(arg, order=basis.order) for arg in basis.exprs]
exprs = "[%s]" % ", ".join(exprs)
gens = [ self._print(gen) for gen in basis.gens ]
domain = "domain='%s'" % self._print(basis.domain)
order = "order='%s'" % self._print(basis.order)
args = [exprs] + gens + [domain, order]
return "%s(%s)" % (cls, ", ".join(args))
def _print_Sample(self, expr):
return "Sample([%s])" % self.stringify(expr, ", ", 0)
def _print_set(self, s):
items = sorted(s, key=default_sort_key)
args = ', '.join(self._print(item) for item in items)
if not args:
return "set()"
return '{%s}' % args
def _print_frozenset(self, s):
if not s:
return "frozenset()"
return "frozenset(%s)" % self._print_set(s)
def _print_SparseMatrix(self, expr):
from sympy.matrices import Matrix
return self._print(Matrix(expr))
def _print_Sum(self, expr):
def _xab_tostr(xab):
if len(xab) == 1:
return self._print(xab[0])
else:
return self._print((xab[0],) + tuple(xab[1:]))
L = ', '.join([_xab_tostr(l) for l in expr.limits])
return 'Sum(%s, %s)' % (self._print(expr.function), L)
def _print_Symbol(self, expr):
return expr.name
_print_MatrixSymbol = _print_Symbol
_print_RandomSymbol = _print_Symbol
def _print_Identity(self, expr):
return "I"
def _print_ZeroMatrix(self, expr):
return "0"
def _print_Predicate(self, expr):
return "Q.%s" % expr.name
def _print_str(self, expr):
return str(expr)
def _print_tuple(self, expr):
if len(expr) == 1:
return "(%s,)" % self._print(expr[0])
else:
return "(%s)" % self.stringify(expr, ", ")
def _print_Tuple(self, expr):
return self._print_tuple(expr)
def _print_Transpose(self, T):
return "%s.T" % self.parenthesize(T.arg, PRECEDENCE["Pow"])
def _print_Uniform(self, expr):
return "Uniform(%s, %s)" % (self._print(expr.a), self._print(expr.b))
def _print_Union(self, expr):
return 'Union(%s)' %(', '.join([self._print(a) for a in expr.args]))
def _print_Complement(self, expr):
return r' \ '.join(self._print(set_) for set_ in expr.args)
def _print_Quantity(self, expr):
if self._settings.get("abbrev", False):
return "%s" % expr.abbrev
return "%s" % expr.name
def _print_Quaternion(self, expr):
s = [self.parenthesize(i, PRECEDENCE["Mul"], strict=True) for i in expr.args]
a = [s[0]] + [i+"*"+j for i, j in zip(s[1:], "ijk")]
return " + ".join(a)
def _print_Dimension(self, expr):
return str(expr)
def _print_Wild(self, expr):
return expr.name + '_'
def _print_WildFunction(self, expr):
return expr.name + '_'
def _print_Zero(self, expr):
if self._settings.get("sympy_integers", False):
return "S(0)"
return "0"
def _print_DMP(self, p):
from sympy.core.sympify import SympifyError
try:
if p.ring is not None:
# TODO incorporate order
return self._print(p.ring.to_sympy(p))
except SympifyError:
pass
cls = p.__class__.__name__
rep = self._print(p.rep)
dom = self._print(p.dom)
ring = self._print(p.ring)
return "%s(%s, %s, %s)" % (cls, rep, dom, ring)
def _print_DMF(self, expr):
return self._print_DMP(expr)
def _print_Object(self, obj):
return 'Object("%s")' % obj.name
def _print_IdentityMorphism(self, morphism):
return 'IdentityMorphism(%s)' % morphism.domain
def _print_NamedMorphism(self, morphism):
return 'NamedMorphism(%s, %s, "%s")' % \
(morphism.domain, morphism.codomain, morphism.name)
def _print_Category(self, category):
return 'Category("%s")' % category.name
def _print_BaseScalarField(self, field):
return field._coord_sys._names[field._index]
def _print_BaseVectorField(self, field):
return 'e_%s' % field._coord_sys._names[field._index]
def _print_Differential(self, diff):
field = diff._form_field
if hasattr(field, '_coord_sys'):
return 'd%s' % field._coord_sys._names[field._index]
else:
return 'd(%s)' % self._print(field)
def _print_Tr(self, expr):
#TODO : Handle indices
return "%s(%s)" % ("Tr", self._print(expr.args[0]))
def sstr(expr, **settings):
"""Returns the expression as a string.
For large expressions where speed is a concern, use the setting
order='none'. If abbrev=True setting is used then units are printed in
abbreviated form.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, Eq, sstr
>>> a, b = symbols('a b')
>>> sstr(Eq(a + b, 0))
'Eq(a + b, 0)'
"""
p = StrPrinter(settings)
s = p.doprint(expr)
return s
class StrReprPrinter(StrPrinter):
"""(internal) -- see sstrrepr"""
def _print_str(self, s):
return repr(s)
def sstrrepr(expr, **settings):
"""return expr in mixed str/repr form
i.e. strings are returned in repr form with quotes, and everything else
is returned in str form.
This function could be useful for hooking into sys.displayhook
"""
p = StrReprPrinter(settings)
s = p.doprint(expr)
return s
|
ee30112a6f22980e9ba15857b9f6589c04afba3a11d456c0ceb25192d076bc3c
|
"""
A Printer which converts an expression into its LaTeX equivalent.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import itertools
from sympy.core import S, Add, Symbol, Mod
from sympy.core.sympify import SympifyError
from sympy.core.alphabets import greeks
from sympy.core.operations import AssocOp
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
from sympy.logic.boolalg import true
from sympy.core.function import (_coeff_isneg,
UndefinedFunction, AppliedUndef, Derivative)
## sympy.printing imports
from sympy.printing.precedence import precedence_traditional
from .printer import Printer
from .conventions import split_super_sub, requires_partial
from .precedence import precedence, PRECEDENCE
import mpmath.libmp as mlib
from mpmath.libmp import prec_to_dps
from sympy.core.compatibility import default_sort_key, range
from sympy.utilities.iterables import has_variety
import re
# Hand-picked functions which can be used directly in both LaTeX and MathJax
# Complete list at http://www.mathjax.org/docs/1.1/tex.html#supported-latex-commands
# This variable only contains those functions which sympy uses.
accepted_latex_functions = ['arcsin', 'arccos', 'arctan', 'sin', 'cos', 'tan',
'sinh', 'cosh', 'tanh', 'sqrt', 'ln', 'log', 'sec', 'csc',
'cot', 'coth', 're', 'im', 'frac', 'root', 'arg',
]
tex_greek_dictionary = {
'Alpha': 'A',
'Beta': 'B',
'Gamma': r'\Gamma',
'Delta': r'\Delta',
'Epsilon': 'E',
'Zeta': 'Z',
'Eta': 'H',
'Theta': r'\Theta',
'Iota': 'I',
'Kappa': 'K',
'Lambda': r'\Lambda',
'Mu': 'M',
'Nu': 'N',
'Xi': r'\Xi',
'omicron': 'o',
'Omicron': 'O',
'Pi': r'\Pi',
'Rho': 'P',
'Sigma': r'\Sigma',
'Tau': 'T',
'Upsilon': r'\Upsilon',
'Phi': r'\Phi',
'Chi': 'X',
'Psi': r'\Psi',
'Omega': r'\Omega',
'lamda': r'\lambda',
'Lamda': r'\Lambda',
'khi': r'\chi',
'Khi': r'X',
'varepsilon': r'\varepsilon',
'varkappa': r'\varkappa',
'varphi': r'\varphi',
'varpi': r'\varpi',
'varrho': r'\varrho',
'varsigma': r'\varsigma',
'vartheta': r'\vartheta',
}
other_symbols = set(['aleph', 'beth', 'daleth', 'gimel', 'ell', 'eth', 'hbar',
'hslash', 'mho', 'wp', ])
# Variable name modifiers
modifier_dict = {
# Accents
'mathring': lambda s: r'\mathring{'+s+r'}',
'ddddot': lambda s: r'\ddddot{'+s+r'}',
'dddot': lambda s: r'\dddot{'+s+r'}',
'ddot': lambda s: r'\ddot{'+s+r'}',
'dot': lambda s: r'\dot{'+s+r'}',
'check': lambda s: r'\check{'+s+r'}',
'breve': lambda s: r'\breve{'+s+r'}',
'acute': lambda s: r'\acute{'+s+r'}',
'grave': lambda s: r'\grave{'+s+r'}',
'tilde': lambda s: r'\tilde{'+s+r'}',
'hat': lambda s: r'\hat{'+s+r'}',
'bar': lambda s: r'\bar{'+s+r'}',
'vec': lambda s: r'\vec{'+s+r'}',
'prime': lambda s: "{"+s+"}'",
'prm': lambda s: "{"+s+"}'",
# Faces
'bold': lambda s: r'\boldsymbol{'+s+r'}',
'bm': lambda s: r'\boldsymbol{'+s+r'}',
'cal': lambda s: r'\mathcal{'+s+r'}',
'scr': lambda s: r'\mathscr{'+s+r'}',
'frak': lambda s: r'\mathfrak{'+s+r'}',
# Brackets
'norm': lambda s: r'\left\|{'+s+r'}\right\|',
'avg': lambda s: r'\left\langle{'+s+r'}\right\rangle',
'abs': lambda s: r'\left|{'+s+r'}\right|',
'mag': lambda s: r'\left|{'+s+r'}\right|',
}
greek_letters_set = frozenset(greeks)
_between_two_numbers_p = (
re.compile(r'[0-9][} ]*$'), # search
re.compile(r'[{ ]*[-+0-9]'), # match
)
class LatexPrinter(Printer):
printmethod = "_latex"
_default_settings = {
"order": None,
"mode": "plain",
"itex": False,
"fold_frac_powers": False,
"fold_func_brackets": False,
"fold_short_frac": None,
"long_frac_ratio": None,
"mul_symbol": None,
"inv_trig_style": "abbreviated",
"mat_str": None,
"mat_delim": "[",
"symbol_names": {},
"ln_notation": False,
}
def __init__(self, settings=None):
Printer.__init__(self, settings)
if 'mode' in self._settings:
valid_modes = ['inline', 'plain', 'equation',
'equation*']
if self._settings['mode'] not in valid_modes:
raise ValueError("'mode' must be one of 'inline', 'plain', "
"'equation' or 'equation*'")
if self._settings['fold_short_frac'] is None and \
self._settings['mode'] == 'inline':
self._settings['fold_short_frac'] = True
mul_symbol_table = {
None: r" ",
"ldot": r" \,.\, ",
"dot": r" \cdot ",
"times": r" \times "
}
try:
self._settings['mul_symbol_latex'] = \
mul_symbol_table[self._settings['mul_symbol']]
except KeyError:
self._settings['mul_symbol_latex'] = \
self._settings['mul_symbol']
try:
self._settings['mul_symbol_latex_numbers'] = \
mul_symbol_table[self._settings['mul_symbol'] or 'dot']
except KeyError:
if (self._settings['mul_symbol'].strip() in
['', ' ', '\\', '\\,', '\\:', '\\;', '\\quad']):
self._settings['mul_symbol_latex_numbers'] = \
mul_symbol_table['dot']
else:
self._settings['mul_symbol_latex_numbers'] = \
self._settings['mul_symbol']
self._delim_dict = {'(': ')', '[': ']'}
def parenthesize(self, item, level, strict=False):
prec_val = precedence_traditional(item)
if (prec_val < level) or ((not strict) and prec_val <= level):
return r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(item)
else:
return self._print(item)
def doprint(self, expr):
tex = Printer.doprint(self, expr)
if self._settings['mode'] == 'plain':
return tex
elif self._settings['mode'] == 'inline':
return r"$%s$" % tex
elif self._settings['itex']:
return r"$$%s$$" % tex
else:
env_str = self._settings['mode']
return r"\begin{%s}%s\end{%s}" % (env_str, tex, env_str)
def _needs_brackets(self, expr):
"""
Returns True if the expression needs to be wrapped in brackets when
printed, False otherwise. For example: a + b => True; a => False;
10 => False; -10 => True.
"""
return not ((expr.is_Integer and expr.is_nonnegative)
or (expr.is_Atom and (expr is not S.NegativeOne
and expr.is_Rational is False)))
def _needs_function_brackets(self, expr):
"""
Returns True if the expression needs to be wrapped in brackets when
passed as an argument to a function, False otherwise. This is a more
liberal version of _needs_brackets, in that many expressions which need
to be wrapped in brackets when added/subtracted/raised to a power do
not need them when passed to a function. Such an example is a*b.
"""
if not self._needs_brackets(expr):
return False
else:
# Muls of the form a*b*c... can be folded
if expr.is_Mul and not self._mul_is_clean(expr):
return True
# Pows which don't need brackets can be folded
elif expr.is_Pow and not self._pow_is_clean(expr):
return True
# Add and Function always need brackets
elif expr.is_Add or expr.is_Function:
return True
else:
return False
def _needs_mul_brackets(self, expr, first=False, last=False):
"""
Returns True if the expression needs to be wrapped in brackets when
printed as part of a Mul, False otherwise. This is True for Add,
but also for some container objects that would not need brackets
when appearing last in a Mul, e.g. an Integral. ``last=True``
specifies that this expr is the last to appear in a Mul.
``first=True`` specifies that this expr is the first to appear in a Mul.
"""
from sympy import Integral, Piecewise, Product, Sum
if expr.is_Mul:
if not first and _coeff_isneg(expr):
return True
elif precedence_traditional(expr) < PRECEDENCE["Mul"]:
return True
elif expr.is_Relational:
return True
if expr.is_Piecewise:
return True
if any([expr.has(x) for x in (Mod,)]):
return True
if (not last and
any([expr.has(x) for x in (Integral, Product, Sum)])):
return True
return False
def _needs_add_brackets(self, expr):
"""
Returns True if the expression needs to be wrapped in brackets when
printed as part of an Add, False otherwise. This is False for most
things.
"""
if expr.is_Relational:
return True
if any([expr.has(x) for x in (Mod,)]):
return True
if expr.is_Add:
return True
return False
def _mul_is_clean(self, expr):
for arg in expr.args:
if arg.is_Function:
return False
return True
def _pow_is_clean(self, expr):
return not self._needs_brackets(expr.base)
def _do_exponent(self, expr, exp):
if exp is not None:
return r"\left(%s\right)^{%s}" % (expr, exp)
else:
return expr
def _print_Basic(self, expr):
l = [self._print(o) for o in expr.args]
return self._deal_with_super_sub(expr.__class__.__name__) + r"\left(%s\right)" % ", ".join(l)
def _print_bool(self, e):
return r"\mathrm{%s}" % e
_print_BooleanTrue = _print_bool
_print_BooleanFalse = _print_bool
def _print_NoneType(self, e):
return r"\mathrm{%s}" % e
def _print_Add(self, expr, order=None):
if self.order == 'none':
terms = list(expr.args)
else:
terms = self._as_ordered_terms(expr, order=order)
tex = ""
for i, term in enumerate(terms):
if i == 0:
pass
elif _coeff_isneg(term):
tex += " - "
term = -term
else:
tex += " + "
term_tex = self._print(term)
if self._needs_add_brackets(term):
term_tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % term_tex
tex += term_tex
return tex
def _print_Cycle(self, expr):
from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
if expr.size == 0:
return r"\left( \right)"
expr = Permutation(expr)
expr_perm = expr.cyclic_form
siz = expr.size
if expr.array_form[-1] == siz - 1:
expr_perm = expr_perm + [[siz - 1]]
term_tex = ''
for i in expr_perm:
term_tex += str(i).replace(',', r"\;")
term_tex = term_tex.replace('[', r"\left( ")
term_tex = term_tex.replace(']', r"\right)")
return term_tex
_print_Permutation = _print_Cycle
def _print_Float(self, expr):
# Based off of that in StrPrinter
dps = prec_to_dps(expr._prec)
str_real = mlib.to_str(expr._mpf_, dps, strip_zeros=True)
# Must always have a mul symbol (as 2.5 10^{20} just looks odd)
# thus we use the number separator
separator = self._settings['mul_symbol_latex_numbers']
if 'e' in str_real:
(mant, exp) = str_real.split('e')
if exp[0] == '+':
exp = exp[1:]
return r"%s%s10^{%s}" % (mant, separator, exp)
elif str_real == "+inf":
return r"\infty"
elif str_real == "-inf":
return r"- \infty"
else:
return str_real
def _print_Cross(self, expr):
vec1 = expr._expr1
vec2 = expr._expr2
return r"%s \times %s" % (self.parenthesize(vec1, PRECEDENCE['Mul']),
self.parenthesize(vec2, PRECEDENCE['Mul']))
def _print_Curl(self, expr):
vec = expr._expr
return r"\nabla\times %s" % self.parenthesize(vec, PRECEDENCE['Mul'])
def _print_Divergence(self, expr):
vec = expr._expr
return r"\nabla\cdot %s" % self.parenthesize(vec, PRECEDENCE['Mul'])
def _print_Dot(self, expr):
vec1 = expr._expr1
vec2 = expr._expr2
return r"%s \cdot %s" % (self.parenthesize(vec1, PRECEDENCE['Mul']),
self.parenthesize(vec2, PRECEDENCE['Mul']))
def _print_Gradient(self, expr):
func = expr._expr
return r"\nabla\cdot %s" % self.parenthesize(func, PRECEDENCE['Mul'])
def _print_Mul(self, expr):
from sympy.core.power import Pow
from sympy.physics.units import Quantity
include_parens = False
if _coeff_isneg(expr):
expr = -expr
tex = "- "
if expr.is_Add:
tex += "("
include_parens = True
else:
tex = ""
from sympy.simplify import fraction
numer, denom = fraction(expr, exact=True)
separator = self._settings['mul_symbol_latex']
numbersep = self._settings['mul_symbol_latex_numbers']
def convert(expr):
if not expr.is_Mul:
return str(self._print(expr))
else:
_tex = last_term_tex = ""
if self.order not in ('old', 'none'):
args = expr.as_ordered_factors()
else:
args = list(expr.args)
# If quantities are present append them at the back
args = sorted(args, key=lambda x: isinstance(x, Quantity) or
(isinstance(x, Pow) and isinstance(x.base, Quantity)))
for i, term in enumerate(args):
term_tex = self._print(term)
if self._needs_mul_brackets(term, first=(i == 0),
last=(i == len(args) - 1)):
term_tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % term_tex
if _between_two_numbers_p[0].search(last_term_tex) and \
_between_two_numbers_p[1].match(term_tex):
# between two numbers
_tex += numbersep
elif _tex:
_tex += separator
_tex += term_tex
last_term_tex = term_tex
return _tex
if denom is S.One and Pow(1, -1, evaluate=False) not in expr.args:
# use the original expression here, since fraction() may have
# altered it when producing numer and denom
tex += convert(expr)
else:
snumer = convert(numer)
sdenom = convert(denom)
ldenom = len(sdenom.split())
ratio = self._settings['long_frac_ratio']
if self._settings['fold_short_frac'] \
and ldenom <= 2 and not "^" in sdenom:
# handle short fractions
if self._needs_mul_brackets(numer, last=False):
tex += r"\left(%s\right) / %s" % (snumer, sdenom)
else:
tex += r"%s / %s" % (snumer, sdenom)
elif ratio is not None and \
len(snumer.split()) > ratio*ldenom:
# handle long fractions
if self._needs_mul_brackets(numer, last=True):
tex += r"\frac{1}{%s}%s\left(%s\right)" \
% (sdenom, separator, snumer)
elif numer.is_Mul:
# split a long numerator
a = S.One
b = S.One
for x in numer.args:
if self._needs_mul_brackets(x, last=False) or \
len(convert(a*x).split()) > ratio*ldenom or \
(b.is_commutative is x.is_commutative is False):
b *= x
else:
a *= x
if self._needs_mul_brackets(b, last=True):
tex += r"\frac{%s}{%s}%s\left(%s\right)" \
% (convert(a), sdenom, separator, convert(b))
else:
tex += r"\frac{%s}{%s}%s%s" \
% (convert(a), sdenom, separator, convert(b))
else:
tex += r"\frac{1}{%s}%s%s" % (sdenom, separator, snumer)
else:
tex += r"\frac{%s}{%s}" % (snumer, sdenom)
if include_parens:
tex += ")"
return tex
def _print_Pow(self, expr):
# Treat x**Rational(1,n) as special case
if expr.exp.is_Rational and abs(expr.exp.p) == 1 and expr.exp.q != 1:
base = self._print(expr.base)
expq = expr.exp.q
if expq == 2:
tex = r"\sqrt{%s}" % base
elif self._settings['itex']:
tex = r"\root{%d}{%s}" % (expq, base)
else:
tex = r"\sqrt[%d]{%s}" % (expq, base)
if expr.exp.is_negative:
return r"\frac{1}{%s}" % tex
else:
return tex
elif self._settings['fold_frac_powers'] \
and expr.exp.is_Rational \
and expr.exp.q != 1:
base, p, q = self.parenthesize(expr.base, PRECEDENCE['Pow']), expr.exp.p, expr.exp.q
# issue #12886: add parentheses for superscripts raised to powers
if '^' in base and expr.base.is_Symbol:
base = r"\left(%s\right)" % base
if expr.base.is_Function:
return self._print(expr.base, exp="%s/%s" % (p, q))
return r"%s^{%s/%s}" % (base, p, q)
elif expr.exp.is_Rational and expr.exp.is_negative and expr.base.is_commutative:
# special case for 1^(-x), issue 9216
if expr.base == 1:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (expr.base, expr.exp)
# things like 1/x
return self._print_Mul(expr)
else:
if expr.base.is_Function:
return self._print(expr.base, exp=self._print(expr.exp))
else:
tex = r"%s^{%s}"
exp = self._print(expr.exp)
# issue #12886: add parentheses around superscripts raised to powers
base = self.parenthesize(expr.base, PRECEDENCE['Pow'])
if '^' in base and expr.base.is_Symbol:
base = r"\left(%s\right)" % base
elif isinstance(expr.base, Derivative
) and base.startswith(r'\left('
) and re.match(r'\\left\(\\d?d?dot', base
) and base.endswith(r'\right)'):
# don't use parentheses around dotted derivative
base = base[6: -7] # remove outermost added parens
return tex % (base, exp)
def _print_UnevaluatedExpr(self, expr):
return self._print(expr.args[0])
def _print_Sum(self, expr):
if len(expr.limits) == 1:
tex = r"\sum_{%s=%s}^{%s} " % \
tuple([ self._print(i) for i in expr.limits[0] ])
else:
def _format_ineq(l):
return r"%s \leq %s \leq %s" % \
tuple([self._print(s) for s in (l[1], l[0], l[2])])
tex = r"\sum_{\substack{%s}} " % \
str.join('\\\\', [ _format_ineq(l) for l in expr.limits ])
if isinstance(expr.function, Add):
tex += r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.function)
else:
tex += self._print(expr.function)
return tex
def _print_Product(self, expr):
if len(expr.limits) == 1:
tex = r"\prod_{%s=%s}^{%s} " % \
tuple([ self._print(i) for i in expr.limits[0] ])
else:
def _format_ineq(l):
return r"%s \leq %s \leq %s" % \
tuple([self._print(s) for s in (l[1], l[0], l[2])])
tex = r"\prod_{\substack{%s}} " % \
str.join('\\\\', [ _format_ineq(l) for l in expr.limits ])
if isinstance(expr.function, Add):
tex += r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.function)
else:
tex += self._print(expr.function)
return tex
def _print_BasisDependent(self, expr):
from sympy.vector import Vector
o1 = []
if expr == expr.zero:
return expr.zero._latex_form
if isinstance(expr, Vector):
items = expr.separate().items()
else:
items = [(0, expr)]
for system, vect in items:
inneritems = list(vect.components.items())
inneritems.sort(key = lambda x:x[0].__str__())
for k, v in inneritems:
if v == 1:
o1.append(' + ' + k._latex_form)
elif v == -1:
o1.append(' - ' + k._latex_form)
else:
arg_str = '(' + LatexPrinter().doprint(v) + ')'
o1.append(' + ' + arg_str + k._latex_form)
outstr = (''.join(o1))
if outstr[1] != '-':
outstr = outstr[3:]
else:
outstr = outstr[1:]
return outstr
def _print_Indexed(self, expr):
tex_base = self._print(expr.base)
tex = '{'+tex_base+'}'+'_{%s}' % ','.join(
map(self._print, expr.indices))
return tex
def _print_IndexedBase(self, expr):
return self._print(expr.label)
def _print_Derivative(self, expr):
if requires_partial(expr):
diff_symbol = r'\partial'
else:
diff_symbol = r'd'
tex = ""
dim = 0
for x, num in reversed(expr.variable_count):
dim += num
if num == 1:
tex += r"%s %s" % (diff_symbol, self._print(x))
else:
tex += r"%s %s^{%s}" % (diff_symbol, self._print(x), num)
if dim == 1:
tex = r"\frac{%s}{%s}" % (diff_symbol, tex)
else:
tex = r"\frac{%s^{%s}}{%s}" % (diff_symbol, dim, tex)
return r"%s %s" % (tex, self.parenthesize(expr.expr, PRECEDENCE["Mul"], strict=True))
def _print_Subs(self, subs):
expr, old, new = subs.args
latex_expr = self._print(expr)
latex_old = (self._print(e) for e in old)
latex_new = (self._print(e) for e in new)
latex_subs = r'\\ '.join(
e[0] + '=' + e[1] for e in zip(latex_old, latex_new))
return r'\left. %s \right|_{\substack{ %s }}' % (latex_expr, latex_subs)
def _print_Integral(self, expr):
tex, symbols = "", []
# Only up to \iiiint exists
if len(expr.limits) <= 4 and all(len(lim) == 1 for lim in expr.limits):
# Use len(expr.limits)-1 so that syntax highlighters don't think
# \" is an escaped quote
tex = r"\i" + "i"*(len(expr.limits) - 1) + "nt"
symbols = [r"\, d%s" % self._print(symbol[0])
for symbol in expr.limits]
else:
for lim in reversed(expr.limits):
symbol = lim[0]
tex += r"\int"
if len(lim) > 1:
if self._settings['mode'] in ['equation', 'equation*'] \
and not self._settings['itex']:
tex += r"\limits"
if len(lim) == 3:
tex += "_{%s}^{%s}" % (self._print(lim[1]),
self._print(lim[2]))
if len(lim) == 2:
tex += "^{%s}" % (self._print(lim[1]))
symbols.insert(0, r"\, d%s" % self._print(symbol))
return r"%s %s%s" % (tex,
self.parenthesize(expr.function, PRECEDENCE["Mul"], strict=True), "".join(symbols))
def _print_Limit(self, expr):
e, z, z0, dir = expr.args
tex = r"\lim_{%s \to " % self._print(z)
if str(dir) == '+-' or z0 in (S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity):
tex += r"%s}" % self._print(z0)
else:
tex += r"%s^%s}" % (self._print(z0), self._print(dir))
if isinstance(e, AssocOp):
return r"%s\left(%s\right)" % (tex, self._print(e))
else:
return r"%s %s" % (tex, self._print(e))
def _hprint_Function(self, func):
r'''
Logic to decide how to render a function to latex
- if it is a recognized latex name, use the appropriate latex command
- if it is a single letter, just use that letter
- if it is a longer name, then put \operatorname{} around it and be
mindful of undercores in the name
'''
func = self._deal_with_super_sub(func)
if func in accepted_latex_functions:
name = r"\%s" % func
elif len(func) == 1 or func.startswith('\\'):
name = func
else:
name = r"\operatorname{%s}" % func
return name
def _print_Function(self, expr, exp=None):
r'''
Render functions to LaTeX, handling functions that LaTeX knows about
e.g., sin, cos, ... by using the proper LaTeX command (\sin, \cos, ...).
For single-letter function names, render them as regular LaTeX math
symbols. For multi-letter function names that LaTeX does not know
about, (e.g., Li, sech) use \operatorname{} so that the function name
is rendered in Roman font and LaTeX handles spacing properly.
expr is the expression involving the function
exp is an exponent
'''
func = expr.func.__name__
if hasattr(self, '_print_' + func) and \
not isinstance(expr, AppliedUndef):
return getattr(self, '_print_' + func)(expr, exp)
else:
args = [ str(self._print(arg)) for arg in expr.args ]
# How inverse trig functions should be displayed, formats are:
# abbreviated: asin, full: arcsin, power: sin^-1
inv_trig_style = self._settings['inv_trig_style']
# If we are dealing with a power-style inverse trig function
inv_trig_power_case = False
# If it is applicable to fold the argument brackets
can_fold_brackets = self._settings['fold_func_brackets'] and \
len(args) == 1 and \
not self._needs_function_brackets(expr.args[0])
inv_trig_table = ["asin", "acos", "atan", "acsc", "asec", "acot"]
# If the function is an inverse trig function, handle the style
if func in inv_trig_table:
if inv_trig_style == "abbreviated":
func = func
elif inv_trig_style == "full":
func = "arc" + func[1:]
elif inv_trig_style == "power":
func = func[1:]
inv_trig_power_case = True
# Can never fold brackets if we're raised to a power
if exp is not None:
can_fold_brackets = False
if inv_trig_power_case:
if func in accepted_latex_functions:
name = r"\%s^{-1}" % func
else:
name = r"\operatorname{%s}^{-1}" % func
elif exp is not None:
name = r'%s^{%s}' % (self._hprint_Function(func), exp)
else:
name = self._hprint_Function(func)
if can_fold_brackets:
if func in accepted_latex_functions:
# Wrap argument safely to avoid parse-time conflicts
# with the function name itself
name += r" {%s}"
else:
name += r"%s"
else:
name += r"{\left (%s \right )}"
if inv_trig_power_case and exp is not None:
name += r"^{%s}" % exp
return name % ",".join(args)
def _print_UndefinedFunction(self, expr):
return self._hprint_Function(str(expr))
@property
def _special_function_classes(self):
from sympy.functions.special.tensor_functions import KroneckerDelta
from sympy.functions.special.gamma_functions import gamma, lowergamma
from sympy.functions.special.beta_functions import beta
from sympy.functions.special.delta_functions import DiracDelta
from sympy.functions.special.error_functions import Chi
return {KroneckerDelta: r'\delta',
gamma: r'\Gamma',
lowergamma: r'\gamma',
beta: r'\operatorname{B}',
DiracDelta: r'\delta',
Chi: r'\operatorname{Chi}'}
def _print_FunctionClass(self, expr):
for cls in self._special_function_classes:
if issubclass(expr, cls) and expr.__name__ == cls.__name__:
return self._special_function_classes[cls]
return self._hprint_Function(str(expr))
def _print_Lambda(self, expr):
symbols, expr = expr.args
if len(symbols) == 1:
symbols = self._print(symbols[0])
else:
symbols = self._print(tuple(symbols))
args = (symbols, self._print(expr))
tex = r"\left( %s \mapsto %s \right)" % (symbols, self._print(expr))
return tex
def _hprint_variadic_function(self, expr, exp=None):
args = sorted(expr.args, key=default_sort_key)
texargs = [r"%s" % self._print(symbol) for symbol in args]
tex = r"\%s\left(%s\right)" % (self._print((str(expr.func)).lower()), ", ".join(texargs))
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
_print_Min = _print_Max = _hprint_variadic_function
def _print_floor(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\lfloor{%s}\rfloor" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
def _print_ceiling(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\lceil{%s}\rceil" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
def _print_log(self, expr, exp=None):
if not self._settings["ln_notation"]:
tex = r"\log{\left (%s \right )}" % self._print(expr.args[0])
else:
tex = r"\ln{\left (%s \right )}" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
def _print_Abs(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left|{%s}\right|" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
_print_Determinant = _print_Abs
def _print_re(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\Re{%s}" % self.parenthesize(expr.args[0], PRECEDENCE['Atom'])
return self._do_exponent(tex, exp)
def _print_im(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\Im{%s}" % self.parenthesize(expr.args[0], PRECEDENCE['Func'])
return self._do_exponent(tex, exp)
def _print_Not(self, e):
from sympy import Equivalent, Implies
if isinstance(e.args[0], Equivalent):
return self._print_Equivalent(e.args[0], r"\not\Leftrightarrow")
if isinstance(e.args[0], Implies):
return self._print_Implies(e.args[0], r"\not\Rightarrow")
if (e.args[0].is_Boolean):
return r"\neg (%s)" % self._print(e.args[0])
else:
return r"\neg %s" % self._print(e.args[0])
def _print_LogOp(self, args, char):
arg = args[0]
if arg.is_Boolean and not arg.is_Not:
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(arg)
else:
tex = r"%s" % self._print(arg)
for arg in args[1:]:
if arg.is_Boolean and not arg.is_Not:
tex += r" %s \left(%s\right)" % (char, self._print(arg))
else:
tex += r" %s %s" % (char, self._print(arg))
return tex
def _print_And(self, e):
args = sorted(e.args, key=default_sort_key)
return self._print_LogOp(args, r"\wedge")
def _print_Or(self, e):
args = sorted(e.args, key=default_sort_key)
return self._print_LogOp(args, r"\vee")
def _print_Xor(self, e):
args = sorted(e.args, key=default_sort_key)
return self._print_LogOp(args, r"\veebar")
def _print_Implies(self, e, altchar=None):
return self._print_LogOp(e.args, altchar or r"\Rightarrow")
def _print_Equivalent(self, e, altchar=None):
args = sorted(e.args, key=default_sort_key)
return self._print_LogOp(args, altchar or r"\Leftrightarrow")
def _print_conjugate(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\overline{%s}" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
def _print_polar_lift(self, expr, exp=None):
func = r"\operatorname{polar\_lift}"
arg = r"{\left (%s \right )}" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}%s" % (func, exp, arg)
else:
return r"%s%s" % (func, arg)
def _print_ExpBase(self, expr, exp=None):
# TODO should exp_polar be printed differently?
# what about exp_polar(0), exp_polar(1)?
tex = r"e^{%s}" % self._print(expr.args[0])
return self._do_exponent(tex, exp)
def _print_elliptic_k(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"K^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"K%s" % tex
def _print_elliptic_f(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s\middle| %s\right)" % \
(self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[1]))
if exp is not None:
return r"F^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"F%s" % tex
def _print_elliptic_e(self, expr, exp=None):
if len(expr.args) == 2:
tex = r"\left(%s\middle| %s\right)" % \
(self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[1]))
else:
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"E^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"E%s" % tex
def _print_elliptic_pi(self, expr, exp=None):
if len(expr.args) == 3:
tex = r"\left(%s; %s\middle| %s\right)" % \
(self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[1]), \
self._print(expr.args[2]))
else:
tex = r"\left(%s\middle| %s\right)" % \
(self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[1]))
if exp is not None:
return r"\Pi^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"\Pi%s" % tex
def _print_beta(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s, %s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[0]),
self._print(expr.args[1]))
if exp is not None:
return r"\operatorname{B}^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"\operatorname{B}%s" % tex
def _print_uppergamma(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s, %s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[0]),
self._print(expr.args[1]))
if exp is not None:
return r"\Gamma^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"\Gamma%s" % tex
def _print_lowergamma(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s, %s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[0]),
self._print(expr.args[1]))
if exp is not None:
return r"\gamma^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"\gamma%s" % tex
def _hprint_one_arg_func(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}%s" % (self._print(expr.func), exp, tex)
else:
return r"%s%s" % (self._print(expr.func), tex)
_print_gamma = _hprint_one_arg_func
def _print_Chi(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"\operatorname{Chi}^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"\operatorname{Chi}%s" % tex
def _print_expint(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[1])
nu = self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"\operatorname{E}_{%s}^{%s}%s" % (nu, exp, tex)
else:
return r"\operatorname{E}_{%s}%s" % (nu, tex)
def _print_fresnels(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"S^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"S%s" % tex
def _print_fresnelc(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"C^{%s}%s" % (exp, tex)
else:
return r"C%s" % tex
def _print_subfactorial(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"!%s" % self.parenthesize(expr.args[0], PRECEDENCE["Func"])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
def _print_factorial(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"%s!" % self.parenthesize(expr.args[0], PRECEDENCE["Func"])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
def _print_factorial2(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"%s!!" % self.parenthesize(expr.args[0], PRECEDENCE["Func"])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
def _print_binomial(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"{\binom{%s}{%s}}" % (self._print(expr.args[0]),
self._print(expr.args[1]))
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
else:
return tex
def _print_RisingFactorial(self, expr, exp=None):
n, k = expr.args
base = r"%s" % self.parenthesize(n, PRECEDENCE['Func'])
tex = r"{%s}^{\left(%s\right)}" % (base, self._print(k))
return self._do_exponent(tex, exp)
def _print_FallingFactorial(self, expr, exp=None):
n, k = expr.args
sub = r"%s" % self.parenthesize(k, PRECEDENCE['Func'])
tex = r"{\left(%s\right)}_{%s}" % (self._print(n), sub)
return self._do_exponent(tex, exp)
def _hprint_BesselBase(self, expr, exp, sym):
tex = r"%s" % (sym)
need_exp = False
if exp is not None:
if tex.find('^') == -1:
tex = r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, self._print(exp))
else:
need_exp = True
tex = r"%s_{%s}\left(%s\right)" % (tex, self._print(expr.order),
self._print(expr.argument))
if need_exp:
tex = self._do_exponent(tex, exp)
return tex
def _hprint_vec(self, vec):
if len(vec) == 0:
return ""
s = ""
for i in vec[:-1]:
s += "%s, " % self._print(i)
s += self._print(vec[-1])
return s
def _print_besselj(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'J')
def _print_besseli(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'I')
def _print_besselk(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'K')
def _print_bessely(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'Y')
def _print_yn(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'y')
def _print_jn(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'j')
def _print_hankel1(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'H^{(1)}')
def _print_hankel2(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'H^{(2)}')
def _print_hn1(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'h^{(1)}')
def _print_hn2(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_BesselBase(expr, exp, 'h^{(2)}')
def _hprint_airy(self, expr, exp=None, notation=""):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"%s^{%s}%s" % (notation, exp, tex)
else:
return r"%s%s" % (notation, tex)
def _hprint_airy_prime(self, expr, exp=None, notation=""):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"{%s^\prime}^{%s}%s" % (notation, exp, tex)
else:
return r"%s^\prime%s" % (notation, tex)
def _print_airyai(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_airy(expr, exp, 'Ai')
def _print_airybi(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_airy(expr, exp, 'Bi')
def _print_airyaiprime(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_airy_prime(expr, exp, 'Ai')
def _print_airybiprime(self, expr, exp=None):
return self._hprint_airy_prime(expr, exp, 'Bi')
def _print_hyper(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"{{}_{%s}F_{%s}\left(\begin{matrix} %s \\ %s \end{matrix}" \
r"\middle| {%s} \right)}" % \
(self._print(len(expr.ap)), self._print(len(expr.bq)),
self._hprint_vec(expr.ap), self._hprint_vec(expr.bq),
self._print(expr.argument))
if exp is not None:
tex = r"{%s}^{%s}" % (tex, self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_meijerg(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"{G_{%s, %s}^{%s, %s}\left(\begin{matrix} %s & %s \\" \
r"%s & %s \end{matrix} \middle| {%s} \right)}" % \
(self._print(len(expr.ap)), self._print(len(expr.bq)),
self._print(len(expr.bm)), self._print(len(expr.an)),
self._hprint_vec(expr.an), self._hprint_vec(expr.aother),
self._hprint_vec(expr.bm), self._hprint_vec(expr.bother),
self._print(expr.argument))
if exp is not None:
tex = r"{%s}^{%s}" % (tex, self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_dirichlet_eta(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"\eta^{%s}%s" % (self._print(exp), tex)
return r"\eta%s" % tex
def _print_zeta(self, expr, exp=None):
if len(expr.args) == 2:
tex = r"\left(%s, %s\right)" % tuple(map(self._print, expr.args))
else:
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"\zeta^{%s}%s" % (self._print(exp), tex)
return r"\zeta%s" % tex
def _print_lerchphi(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\left(%s, %s, %s\right)" % tuple(map(self._print, expr.args))
if exp is None:
return r"\Phi%s" % tex
return r"\Phi^{%s}%s" % (self._print(exp), tex)
def _print_polylog(self, expr, exp=None):
s, z = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % z
if exp is None:
return r"\operatorname{Li}_{%s}%s" % (s, tex)
return r"\operatorname{Li}_{%s}^{%s}%s" % (s, self._print(exp), tex)
def _print_jacobi(self, expr, exp=None):
n, a, b, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"P_{%s}^{\left(%s,%s\right)}\left(%s\right)" % (n, a, b, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_gegenbauer(self, expr, exp=None):
n, a, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"C_{%s}^{\left(%s\right)}\left(%s\right)" % (n, a, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_chebyshevt(self, expr, exp=None):
n, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"T_{%s}\left(%s\right)" % (n, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_chebyshevu(self, expr, exp=None):
n, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"U_{%s}\left(%s\right)" % (n, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_legendre(self, expr, exp=None):
n, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"P_{%s}\left(%s\right)" % (n, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_assoc_legendre(self, expr, exp=None):
n, a, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"P_{%s}^{\left(%s\right)}\left(%s\right)" % (n, a, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_hermite(self, expr, exp=None):
n, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"H_{%s}\left(%s\right)" % (n, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_laguerre(self, expr, exp=None):
n, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"L_{%s}\left(%s\right)" % (n, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_assoc_laguerre(self, expr, exp=None):
n, a, x = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"L_{%s}^{\left(%s\right)}\left(%s\right)" % (n, a, x)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_Ynm(self, expr, exp=None):
n, m, theta, phi = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"Y_{%s}^{%s}\left(%s,%s\right)" % (n, m, theta, phi)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_Znm(self, expr, exp=None):
n, m, theta, phi = map(self._print, expr.args)
tex = r"Z_{%s}^{%s}\left(%s,%s\right)" % (n, m, theta, phi)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"\left(" + tex + r"\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_Rational(self, expr):
if expr.q != 1:
sign = ""
p = expr.p
if expr.p < 0:
sign = "- "
p = -p
if self._settings['fold_short_frac']:
return r"%s%d / %d" % (sign, p, expr.q)
return r"%s\frac{%d}{%d}" % (sign, p, expr.q)
else:
return self._print(expr.p)
def _print_Order(self, expr):
s = self._print(expr.expr)
if expr.point and any(p != S.Zero for p in expr.point) or \
len(expr.variables) > 1:
s += '; '
if len(expr.variables) > 1:
s += self._print(expr.variables)
elif len(expr.variables):
s += self._print(expr.variables[0])
s += r'\rightarrow '
if len(expr.point) > 1:
s += self._print(expr.point)
else:
s += self._print(expr.point[0])
return r"O\left(%s\right)" % s
def _print_Symbol(self, expr):
if expr in self._settings['symbol_names']:
return self._settings['symbol_names'][expr]
return self._deal_with_super_sub(expr.name) if \
'\\' not in expr.name else expr.name
_print_RandomSymbol = _print_Symbol
_print_MatrixSymbol = _print_Symbol
def _deal_with_super_sub(self, string):
if '{' in string:
return string
name, supers, subs = split_super_sub(string)
name = translate(name)
supers = [translate(sup) for sup in supers]
subs = [translate(sub) for sub in subs]
# glue all items together:
if len(supers) > 0:
name += "^{%s}" % " ".join(supers)
if len(subs) > 0:
name += "_{%s}" % " ".join(subs)
return name
def _print_Relational(self, expr):
if self._settings['itex']:
gt = r"\gt"
lt = r"\lt"
else:
gt = ">"
lt = "<"
charmap = {
"==": "=",
">": gt,
"<": lt,
">=": r"\geq",
"<=": r"\leq",
"!=": r"\neq",
}
return "%s %s %s" % (self._print(expr.lhs),
charmap[expr.rel_op], self._print(expr.rhs))
def _print_Piecewise(self, expr):
ecpairs = [r"%s & \text{for}\: %s" % (self._print(e), self._print(c))
for e, c in expr.args[:-1]]
if expr.args[-1].cond == true:
ecpairs.append(r"%s & \text{otherwise}" %
self._print(expr.args[-1].expr))
else:
ecpairs.append(r"%s & \text{for}\: %s" %
(self._print(expr.args[-1].expr),
self._print(expr.args[-1].cond)))
tex = r"\begin{cases} %s \end{cases}"
return tex % r" \\".join(ecpairs)
def _print_MatrixBase(self, expr):
lines = []
for line in range(expr.rows): # horrible, should be 'rows'
lines.append(" & ".join([ self._print(i) for i in expr[line, :] ]))
mat_str = self._settings['mat_str']
if mat_str is None:
if self._settings['mode'] == 'inline':
mat_str = 'smallmatrix'
else:
if (expr.cols <= 10) is True:
mat_str = 'matrix'
else:
mat_str = 'array'
out_str = r'\begin{%MATSTR%}%s\end{%MATSTR%}'
out_str = out_str.replace('%MATSTR%', mat_str)
if mat_str == 'array':
out_str = out_str.replace('%s', '{' + 'c'*expr.cols + '}%s')
if self._settings['mat_delim']:
left_delim = self._settings['mat_delim']
right_delim = self._delim_dict[left_delim]
out_str = r'\left' + left_delim + out_str + \
r'\right' + right_delim
return out_str % r"\\".join(lines)
_print_ImmutableMatrix = _print_ImmutableDenseMatrix \
= _print_Matrix \
= _print_MatrixBase
def _print_MatrixElement(self, expr):
return self.parenthesize(expr.parent, PRECEDENCE["Atom"], strict=True) \
+ '_{%s, %s}' % (expr.i, expr.j)
def _print_MatrixSlice(self, expr):
def latexslice(x):
x = list(x)
if x[2] == 1:
del x[2]
if x[1] == x[0] + 1:
del x[1]
if x[0] == 0:
x[0] = ''
return ':'.join(map(self._print, x))
return (self._print(expr.parent) + r'\left[' +
latexslice(expr.rowslice) + ', ' +
latexslice(expr.colslice) + r'\right]')
def _print_BlockMatrix(self, expr):
return self._print(expr.blocks)
def _print_Transpose(self, expr):
mat = expr.arg
from sympy.matrices import MatrixSymbol
if not isinstance(mat, MatrixSymbol):
return r"\left(%s\right)^T" % self._print(mat)
else:
return "%s^T" % self._print(mat)
def _print_Trace(self, expr):
mat = expr.arg
return r"\mathrm{tr}\left (%s \right )" % self._print(mat)
def _print_Adjoint(self, expr):
mat = expr.arg
from sympy.matrices import MatrixSymbol
if not isinstance(mat, MatrixSymbol):
return r"\left(%s\right)^\dagger" % self._print(mat)
else:
return r"%s^\dagger" % self._print(mat)
def _print_MatMul(self, expr):
from sympy import Add, MatAdd, HadamardProduct, MatMul, Mul
parens = lambda x: self.parenthesize(x, precedence_traditional(expr), False)
args = expr.args
if isinstance(args[0], Mul):
args = args[0].as_ordered_factors() + list(args[1:])
else:
args = list(args)
if isinstance(expr, MatMul) and _coeff_isneg(expr):
if args[0] == -1:
args = args[1:]
else:
args[0] = -args[0]
return '- ' + ' '.join(map(parens, args))
else:
return ' '.join(map(parens, args))
def _print_Mod(self, expr, exp=None):
if exp is not None:
return r'\left(%s\bmod{%s}\right)^{%s}' % (self.parenthesize(expr.args[0],
PRECEDENCE['Mul'], strict=True), self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(exp))
return r'%s\bmod{%s}' % (self.parenthesize(expr.args[0],
PRECEDENCE['Mul'], strict=True), self._print(expr.args[1]))
def _print_HadamardProduct(self, expr):
from sympy import Add, MatAdd, MatMul
def parens(x):
if isinstance(x, (Add, MatAdd, MatMul)):
return r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(x)
return self._print(x)
return r' \circ '.join(map(parens, expr.args))
def _print_KroneckerProduct(self, expr):
from sympy import Add, MatAdd, MatMul
def parens(x):
if isinstance(x, (Add, MatAdd, MatMul)):
return r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(x)
return self._print(x)
return r' \otimes '.join(map(parens, expr.args))
def _print_MatPow(self, expr):
base, exp = expr.base, expr.exp
from sympy.matrices import MatrixSymbol
if not isinstance(base, MatrixSymbol):
return r"\left(%s\right)^{%s}" % (self._print(base), self._print(exp))
else:
return "%s^{%s}" % (self._print(base), self._print(exp))
def _print_ZeroMatrix(self, Z):
return r"\mathbb{0}"
def _print_Identity(self, I):
return r"\mathbb{I}"
def _print_NDimArray(self, expr):
if expr.rank() == 0:
return self._print(expr[()])
mat_str = self._settings['mat_str']
if mat_str is None:
if self._settings['mode'] == 'inline':
mat_str = 'smallmatrix'
else:
if (expr.rank() == 0) or (expr.shape[-1] <= 10):
mat_str = 'matrix'
else:
mat_str = 'array'
block_str = r'\begin{%MATSTR%}%s\end{%MATSTR%}'
block_str = block_str.replace('%MATSTR%', mat_str)
if self._settings['mat_delim']:
left_delim = self._settings['mat_delim']
right_delim = self._delim_dict[left_delim]
block_str = r'\left' + left_delim + block_str + \
r'\right' + right_delim
if expr.rank() == 0:
return block_str % ""
level_str = [[]] + [[] for i in range(expr.rank())]
shape_ranges = [list(range(i)) for i in expr.shape]
for outer_i in itertools.product(*shape_ranges):
level_str[-1].append(self._print(expr[outer_i]))
even = True
for back_outer_i in range(expr.rank()-1, -1, -1):
if len(level_str[back_outer_i+1]) < expr.shape[back_outer_i]:
break
if even:
level_str[back_outer_i].append(r" & ".join(level_str[back_outer_i+1]))
else:
level_str[back_outer_i].append(block_str % (r"\\".join(level_str[back_outer_i+1])))
if len(level_str[back_outer_i+1]) == 1:
level_str[back_outer_i][-1] = r"\left[" + level_str[back_outer_i][-1] + r"\right]"
even = not even
level_str[back_outer_i+1] = []
out_str = level_str[0][0]
if expr.rank() % 2 == 1:
out_str = block_str % out_str
return out_str
_print_ImmutableDenseNDimArray = _print_NDimArray
_print_ImmutableSparseNDimArray = _print_NDimArray
_print_MutableDenseNDimArray = _print_NDimArray
_print_MutableSparseNDimArray = _print_NDimArray
def _printer_tensor_indices(self, name, indices, index_map={}):
out_str = self._print(name)
last_valence = None
prev_map = None
for index in indices:
new_valence = index.is_up
if ((index in index_map) or prev_map) and last_valence == new_valence:
out_str += ","
if last_valence != new_valence:
if last_valence is not None:
out_str += "}"
if index.is_up:
out_str += "{}^{"
else:
out_str += "{}_{"
out_str += self._print(index.args[0])
if index in index_map:
out_str += "="
out_str += self._print(index_map[index])
prev_map = True
else:
prev_map = False
last_valence = new_valence
if last_valence is not None:
out_str += "}"
return out_str
def _print_Tensor(self, expr):
name = expr.args[0].args[0]
indices = expr.get_indices()
return self._printer_tensor_indices(name, indices)
def _print_TensorElement(self, expr):
name = expr.expr.args[0].args[0]
indices = expr.expr.get_indices()
index_map = expr.index_map
return self._printer_tensor_indices(name, indices, index_map)
def _print_TensMul(self, expr):
# prints expressions like "A(a)", "3*A(a)", "(1+x)*A(a)"
sign, args = expr._get_args_for_traditional_printer()
return sign + "".join(
[self.parenthesize(arg, precedence(expr)) for arg in args]
)
def _print_TensAdd(self, expr):
a = []
args = expr.args
for x in args:
a.append(self.parenthesize(x, precedence(expr)))
a.sort()
s = ' + '.join(a)
s = s.replace('+ -', '- ')
return s
def _print_TensorIndex(self, expr):
return "{}%s{%s}" % (
"^" if expr.is_up else "_",
self._print(expr.args[0])
)
return self._print(expr.args[0])
def _print_tuple(self, expr):
return r"\left ( %s\right )" % \
r", \quad ".join([ self._print(i) for i in expr ])
def _print_TensorProduct(self, expr):
elements = [self._print(a) for a in expr.args]
return r' \otimes '.join(elements)
def _print_WedgeProduct(self, expr):
elements = [self._print(a) for a in expr.args]
return r' \wedge '.join(elements)
def _print_Tuple(self, expr):
return self._print_tuple(expr)
def _print_list(self, expr):
return r"\left [ %s\right ]" % \
r", \quad ".join([ self._print(i) for i in expr ])
def _print_dict(self, d):
keys = sorted(d.keys(), key=default_sort_key)
items = []
for key in keys:
val = d[key]
items.append("%s : %s" % (self._print(key), self._print(val)))
return r"\left \{ %s\right \}" % r", \quad ".join(items)
def _print_Dict(self, expr):
return self._print_dict(expr)
def _print_DiracDelta(self, expr, exp=None):
if len(expr.args) == 1 or expr.args[1] == 0:
tex = r"\delta\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
else:
tex = r"\delta^{\left( %s \right)}\left( %s \right)" % (
self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]))
if exp:
tex = r"\left(%s\right)^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
return tex
def _print_SingularityFunction(self, expr):
shift = self._print(expr.args[0] - expr.args[1])
power = self._print(expr.args[2])
tex = r"{\langle %s \rangle}^{%s}" % (shift, power)
return tex
def _print_Heaviside(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"\theta\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp:
tex = r"\left(%s\right)^{%s}" % (tex, exp)
return tex
def _print_KroneckerDelta(self, expr, exp=None):
i = self._print(expr.args[0])
j = self._print(expr.args[1])
if expr.args[0].is_Atom and expr.args[1].is_Atom:
tex = r'\delta_{%s %s}' % (i, j)
else:
tex = r'\delta_{%s, %s}' % (i, j)
if exp:
tex = r'\left(%s\right)^{%s}' % (tex, exp)
return tex
def _print_LeviCivita(self, expr, exp=None):
indices = map(self._print, expr.args)
if all(x.is_Atom for x in expr.args):
tex = r'\varepsilon_{%s}' % " ".join(indices)
else:
tex = r'\varepsilon_{%s}' % ", ".join(indices)
if exp:
tex = r'\left(%s\right)^{%s}' % (tex, exp)
return tex
def _print_ProductSet(self, p):
if len(p.sets) > 1 and not has_variety(p.sets):
return self._print(p.sets[0]) + "^{%d}" % len(p.sets)
else:
return r" \times ".join(self._print(set) for set in p.sets)
def _print_RandomDomain(self, d):
if hasattr(d, 'as_boolean'):
return 'Domain: ' + self._print(d.as_boolean())
elif hasattr(d, 'set'):
return ('Domain: ' + self._print(d.symbols) + ' in ' +
self._print(d.set))
elif hasattr(d, 'symbols'):
return 'Domain on ' + self._print(d.symbols)
else:
return self._print(None)
def _print_FiniteSet(self, s):
items = sorted(s.args, key=default_sort_key)
return self._print_set(items)
def _print_set(self, s):
items = sorted(s, key=default_sort_key)
items = ", ".join(map(self._print, items))
return r"\left\{%s\right\}" % items
_print_frozenset = _print_set
def _print_Range(self, s):
dots = r'\ldots'
if s.start.is_infinite:
printset = s.start, dots, s[-1] - s.step, s[-1]
elif s.stop.is_infinite or len(s) > 4:
it = iter(s)
printset = next(it), next(it), dots, s[-1]
else:
printset = tuple(s)
return (r"\left\{"
+ r", ".join(self._print(el) for el in printset)
+ r"\right\}")
def _print_SeqFormula(self, s):
if s.start is S.NegativeInfinity:
stop = s.stop
printset = (r'\ldots', s.coeff(stop - 3), s.coeff(stop - 2),
s.coeff(stop - 1), s.coeff(stop))
elif s.stop is S.Infinity or s.length > 4:
printset = s[:4]
printset.append(r'\ldots')
else:
printset = tuple(s)
return (r"\left["
+ r", ".join(self._print(el) for el in printset)
+ r"\right]")
_print_SeqPer = _print_SeqFormula
_print_SeqAdd = _print_SeqFormula
_print_SeqMul = _print_SeqFormula
def _print_Interval(self, i):
if i.start == i.end:
return r"\left\{%s\right\}" % self._print(i.start)
else:
if i.left_open:
left = '('
else:
left = '['
if i.right_open:
right = ')'
else:
right = ']'
return r"\left%s%s, %s\right%s" % \
(left, self._print(i.start), self._print(i.end), right)
def _print_AccumulationBounds(self, i):
return r"\langle %s, %s\rangle" % \
(self._print(i.min), self._print(i.max))
def _print_Union(self, u):
return r" \cup ".join([self._print(i) for i in u.args])
def _print_Complement(self, u):
return r" \setminus ".join([self._print(i) for i in u.args])
def _print_Intersection(self, u):
return r" \cap ".join([self._print(i) for i in u.args])
def _print_SymmetricDifference(self, u):
return r" \triangle ".join([self._print(i) for i in u.args])
def _print_EmptySet(self, e):
return r"\emptyset"
def _print_Naturals(self, n):
return r"\mathbb{N}"
def _print_Naturals0(self, n):
return r"\mathbb{N}_0"
def _print_Integers(self, i):
return r"\mathbb{Z}"
def _print_Reals(self, i):
return r"\mathbb{R}"
def _print_Complexes(self, i):
return r"\mathbb{C}"
def _print_ImageSet(self, s):
sets = s.args[1:]
varsets = [r"%s \in %s" % (self._print(var), self._print(setv))
for var, setv in zip(s.lamda.variables, sets)]
return r"\left\{%s\; |\; %s\right\}" % (
self._print(s.lamda.expr),
', '.join(varsets))
def _print_ConditionSet(self, s):
vars_print = ', '.join([self._print(var) for var in Tuple(s.sym)])
if s.base_set is S.UniversalSet:
return r"\left\{%s \mid %s \right\}" % (
vars_print,
self._print(s.condition.as_expr()))
return r"\left\{%s \mid %s \in %s \wedge %s \right\}" % (
vars_print,
vars_print,
self._print(s.base_set),
self._print(s.condition.as_expr()))
def _print_ComplexRegion(self, s):
vars_print = ', '.join([self._print(var) for var in s.variables])
return r"\left\{%s\; |\; %s \in %s \right\}" % (
self._print(s.expr),
vars_print,
self._print(s.sets))
def _print_Contains(self, e):
return r"%s \in %s" % tuple(self._print(a) for a in e.args)
def _print_FourierSeries(self, s):
return self._print_Add(s.truncate()) + self._print(r' + \ldots')
def _print_FormalPowerSeries(self, s):
return self._print_Add(s.infinite)
def _print_FiniteField(self, expr):
return r"\mathbb{F}_{%s}" % expr.mod
def _print_IntegerRing(self, expr):
return r"\mathbb{Z}"
def _print_RationalField(self, expr):
return r"\mathbb{Q}"
def _print_RealField(self, expr):
return r"\mathbb{R}"
def _print_ComplexField(self, expr):
return r"\mathbb{C}"
def _print_PolynomialRing(self, expr):
domain = self._print(expr.domain)
symbols = ", ".join(map(self._print, expr.symbols))
return r"%s\left[%s\right]" % (domain, symbols)
def _print_FractionField(self, expr):
domain = self._print(expr.domain)
symbols = ", ".join(map(self._print, expr.symbols))
return r"%s\left(%s\right)" % (domain, symbols)
def _print_PolynomialRingBase(self, expr):
domain = self._print(expr.domain)
symbols = ", ".join(map(self._print, expr.symbols))
inv = ""
if not expr.is_Poly:
inv = r"S_<^{-1}"
return r"%s%s\left[%s\right]" % (inv, domain, symbols)
def _print_Poly(self, poly):
cls = poly.__class__.__name__
terms = []
for monom, coeff in poly.terms():
s_monom = ''
for i, exp in enumerate(monom):
if exp > 0:
if exp == 1:
s_monom += self._print(poly.gens[i])
else:
s_monom += self._print(pow(poly.gens[i], exp))
if coeff.is_Add:
if s_monom:
s_coeff = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(coeff)
else:
s_coeff = self._print(coeff)
else:
if s_monom:
if coeff is S.One:
terms.extend(['+', s_monom])
continue
if coeff is S.NegativeOne:
terms.extend(['-', s_monom])
continue
s_coeff = self._print(coeff)
if not s_monom:
s_term = s_coeff
else:
s_term = s_coeff + " " + s_monom
if s_term.startswith('-'):
terms.extend(['-', s_term[1:]])
else:
terms.extend(['+', s_term])
if terms[0] in ['-', '+']:
modifier = terms.pop(0)
if modifier == '-':
terms[0] = '-' + terms[0]
expr = ' '.join(terms)
gens = list(map(self._print, poly.gens))
domain = "domain=%s" % self._print(poly.get_domain())
args = ", ".join([expr] + gens + [domain])
if cls in accepted_latex_functions:
tex = r"\%s {\left (%s \right )}" % (cls, args)
else:
tex = r"\operatorname{%s}{\left( %s \right)}" % (cls, args)
return tex
def _print_ComplexRootOf(self, root):
cls = root.__class__.__name__
if cls == "ComplexRootOf":
cls = "CRootOf"
expr = self._print(root.expr)
index = root.index
if cls in accepted_latex_functions:
return r"\%s {\left(%s, %d\right)}" % (cls, expr, index)
else:
return r"\operatorname{%s} {\left(%s, %d\right)}" % (cls, expr, index)
def _print_RootSum(self, expr):
cls = expr.__class__.__name__
args = [self._print(expr.expr)]
if expr.fun is not S.IdentityFunction:
args.append(self._print(expr.fun))
if cls in accepted_latex_functions:
return r"\%s {\left(%s\right)}" % (cls, ", ".join(args))
else:
return r"\operatorname{%s} {\left(%s\right)}" % (cls, ", ".join(args))
def _print_PolyElement(self, poly):
mul_symbol = self._settings['mul_symbol_latex']
return poly.str(self, PRECEDENCE, "{%s}^{%d}", mul_symbol)
def _print_FracElement(self, frac):
if frac.denom == 1:
return self._print(frac.numer)
else:
numer = self._print(frac.numer)
denom = self._print(frac.denom)
return r"\frac{%s}{%s}" % (numer, denom)
def _print_euler(self, expr, exp=None):
m, x = (expr.args[0], None) if len(expr.args) == 1 else expr.args
tex = r"E_{%s}" % self._print(m)
if exp is not None:
tex = r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, self._print(exp))
if x is not None:
tex = r"%s\left(%s\right)" % (tex, self._print(x))
return tex
def _print_catalan(self, expr, exp=None):
tex = r"C_{%s}" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
tex = r"%s^{%s}" % (tex, self._print(exp))
return tex
def _print_MellinTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{M}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_InverseMellinTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{M}^{-1}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_LaplaceTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{L}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_InverseLaplaceTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{L}^{-1}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_FourierTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{F}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_InverseFourierTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{F}^{-1}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_SineTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{SIN}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_InverseSineTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{SIN}^{-1}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_CosineTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{COS}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_InverseCosineTransform(self, expr):
return r"\mathcal{COS}^{-1}_{%s}\left[%s\right]\left(%s\right)" % (self._print(expr.args[1]), self._print(expr.args[0]), self._print(expr.args[2]))
def _print_DMP(self, p):
try:
if p.ring is not None:
# TODO incorporate order
return self._print(p.ring.to_sympy(p))
except SympifyError:
pass
return self._print(repr(p))
def _print_DMF(self, p):
return self._print_DMP(p)
def _print_Object(self, object):
return self._print(Symbol(object.name))
def _print_Morphism(self, morphism):
domain = self._print(morphism.domain)
codomain = self._print(morphism.codomain)
return "%s\\rightarrow %s" % (domain, codomain)
def _print_NamedMorphism(self, morphism):
pretty_name = self._print(Symbol(morphism.name))
pretty_morphism = self._print_Morphism(morphism)
return "%s:%s" % (pretty_name, pretty_morphism)
def _print_IdentityMorphism(self, morphism):
from sympy.categories import NamedMorphism
return self._print_NamedMorphism(NamedMorphism(
morphism.domain, morphism.codomain, "id"))
def _print_CompositeMorphism(self, morphism):
# All components of the morphism have names and it is thus
# possible to build the name of the composite.
component_names_list = [self._print(Symbol(component.name)) for
component in morphism.components]
component_names_list.reverse()
component_names = "\\circ ".join(component_names_list) + ":"
pretty_morphism = self._print_Morphism(morphism)
return component_names + pretty_morphism
def _print_Category(self, morphism):
return "\\mathbf{%s}" % self._print(Symbol(morphism.name))
def _print_Diagram(self, diagram):
if not diagram.premises:
# This is an empty diagram.
return self._print(S.EmptySet)
latex_result = self._print(diagram.premises)
if diagram.conclusions:
latex_result += "\\Longrightarrow %s" % \
self._print(diagram.conclusions)
return latex_result
def _print_DiagramGrid(self, grid):
latex_result = "\\begin{array}{%s}\n" % ("c" * grid.width)
for i in range(grid.height):
for j in range(grid.width):
if grid[i, j]:
latex_result += latex(grid[i, j])
latex_result += " "
if j != grid.width - 1:
latex_result += "& "
if i != grid.height - 1:
latex_result += "\\\\"
latex_result += "\n"
latex_result += "\\end{array}\n"
return latex_result
def _print_FreeModule(self, M):
return '{%s}^{%s}' % (self._print(M.ring), self._print(M.rank))
def _print_FreeModuleElement(self, m):
# Print as row vector for convenience, for now.
return r"\left[ %s \right]" % ",".join(
'{' + self._print(x) + '}' for x in m)
def _print_SubModule(self, m):
return r"\left< %s \right>" % ",".join(
'{' + self._print(x) + '}' for x in m.gens)
def _print_ModuleImplementedIdeal(self, m):
return r"\left< %s \right>" % ",".join(
'{' + self._print(x) + '}' for [x] in m._module.gens)
def _print_Quaternion(self, expr):
# TODO: This expression is potentially confusing,
# shall we print it as `Quaternion( ... )`?
s = [self.parenthesize(i, PRECEDENCE["Mul"], strict=True) for i in expr.args]
a = [s[0]] + [i+" "+j for i, j in zip(s[1:], "ijk")]
return " + ".join(a)
def _print_QuotientRing(self, R):
# TODO nicer fractions for few generators...
return r"\frac{%s}{%s}" % (self._print(R.ring), self._print(R.base_ideal))
def _print_QuotientRingElement(self, x):
return r"{%s} + {%s}" % (self._print(x.data), self._print(x.ring.base_ideal))
def _print_QuotientModuleElement(self, m):
return r"{%s} + {%s}" % (self._print(m.data),
self._print(m.module.killed_module))
def _print_QuotientModule(self, M):
# TODO nicer fractions for few generators...
return r"\frac{%s}{%s}" % (self._print(M.base),
self._print(M.killed_module))
def _print_MatrixHomomorphism(self, h):
return r"{%s} : {%s} \to {%s}" % (self._print(h._sympy_matrix()),
self._print(h.domain), self._print(h.codomain))
def _print_BaseScalarField(self, field):
string = field._coord_sys._names[field._index]
return r'\boldsymbol{\mathrm{%s}}' % self._print(Symbol(string))
def _print_BaseVectorField(self, field):
string = field._coord_sys._names[field._index]
return r'\partial_{%s}' % self._print(Symbol(string))
def _print_Differential(self, diff):
field = diff._form_field
if hasattr(field, '_coord_sys'):
string = field._coord_sys._names[field._index]
return r'\mathrm{d}%s' % self._print(Symbol(string))
else:
return 'd(%s)' % self._print(field)
string = self._print(field)
return r'\mathrm{d}\left(%s\right)' % string
def _print_Tr(self, p):
#Todo: Handle indices
contents = self._print(p.args[0])
return r'\mbox{Tr}\left(%s\right)' % (contents)
def _print_totient(self, expr, exp=None):
if exp is not None:
return r'\left(\phi\left(%s\right)\right)^{%s}' % (self._print(expr.args[0]),
self._print(exp))
return r'\phi\left(%s\right)' % self._print(expr.args[0])
def _print_reduced_totient(self, expr, exp=None):
if exp is not None:
return r'\left(\lambda\left(%s\right)\right)^{%s}' % (self._print(expr.args[0]),
self._print(exp))
return r'\lambda\left(%s\right)' % self._print(expr.args[0])
def _print_divisor_sigma(self, expr, exp=None):
if len(expr.args) == 2:
tex = r"_%s\left(%s\right)" % tuple(map(self._print,
(expr.args[1], expr.args[0])))
else:
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"\sigma^{%s}%s" % (self._print(exp), tex)
return r"\sigma%s" % tex
def _print_udivisor_sigma(self, expr, exp=None):
if len(expr.args) == 2:
tex = r"_%s\left(%s\right)" % tuple(map(self._print,
(expr.args[1], expr.args[0])))
else:
tex = r"\left(%s\right)" % self._print(expr.args[0])
if exp is not None:
return r"\sigma^*^{%s}%s" % (self._print(exp), tex)
return r"\sigma^*%s" % tex
def _print_primenu(self, expr, exp=None):
if exp is not None:
return r'\left(\nu\left(%s\right)\right)^{%s}' % (self._print(expr.args[0]),
self._print(exp))
return r'\nu\left(%s\right)' % self._print(expr.args[0])
def _print_primeomega(self, expr, exp=None):
if exp is not None:
return r'\left(\Omega\left(%s\right)\right)^{%s}' % (self._print(expr.args[0]),
self._print(exp))
return r'\Omega\left(%s\right)' % self._print(expr.args[0])
def translate(s):
r'''
Check for a modifier ending the string. If present, convert the
modifier to latex and translate the rest recursively.
Given a description of a Greek letter or other special character,
return the appropriate latex.
Let everything else pass as given.
>>> from sympy.printing.latex import translate
>>> translate('alphahatdotprime')
"{\\dot{\\hat{\\alpha}}}'"
'''
# Process the rest
tex = tex_greek_dictionary.get(s)
if tex:
return tex
elif s.lower() in greek_letters_set:
return "\\" + s.lower()
elif s in other_symbols:
return "\\" + s
else:
# Process modifiers, if any, and recurse
for key in sorted(modifier_dict.keys(), key=lambda k:len(k), reverse=True):
if s.lower().endswith(key) and len(s)>len(key):
return modifier_dict[key](translate(s[:-len(key)]))
return s
def latex(expr, fold_frac_powers=False, fold_func_brackets=False,
fold_short_frac=None, inv_trig_style="abbreviated",
itex=False, ln_notation=False, long_frac_ratio=None,
mat_delim="[", mat_str=None, mode="plain", mul_symbol=None,
order=None, symbol_names=None):
r"""Convert the given expression to LaTeX string representation.
Parameters
==========
fold_frac_powers : boolean, optional
Emit ``^{p/q}`` instead of ``^{\frac{p}{q}}`` for fractional powers.
fold_func_brackets : boolean, optional
Fold function brackets where applicable.
fold_short_frac : boolean, optional
Emit ``p / q`` instead of ``\frac{p}{q}`` when the denominator is
simple enough (at most two terms and no powers). The default value is
``True`` for inline mode, ``False`` otherwise.
inv_trig_style : string, optional
How inverse trig functions should be displayed. Can be one of
``abbreviated``, ``full``, or ``power``. Defaults to ``abbreviated``.
itex : boolean, optional
Specifies if itex-specific syntax is used, including emitting
``$$...$$``.
ln_notation : boolean, optional
If set to ``True``, ``\ln`` is used instead of default ``\log``.
long_frac_ratio : float or None, optional
The allowed ratio of the width of the numerator to the width of the
denominator before the printer breaks off long fractions. If ``None``
(the default value), long fractions are not broken up.
mat_delim : string, optional
The delimiter to wrap around matrices. Can be one of ``[``, ``(``, or
the empty string. Defaults to ``[``.
mat_str : string, optional
Which matrix environment string to emit. ``smallmatrix``, ``matrix``,
``array``, etc. Defaults to ``smallmatrix`` for inline mode, ``matrix``
for matrices of no more than 10 columns, and ``array`` otherwise.
mode: string, optional
Specifies how the generated code will be delimited. ``mode`` can be one
of ``plain``, ``inline``, ``equation`` or ``equation*``. If ``mode``
is set to ``plain``, then the resulting code will not be delimited at
all (this is the default). If ``mode`` is set to ``inline`` then inline
LaTeX ``$...$`` will be used. If ``mode`` is set to ``equation`` or
``equation*``, the resulting code will be enclosed in the ``equation``
or ``equation*`` environment (remember to import ``amsmath`` for
``equation*``), unless the ``itex`` option is set. In the latter case,
the ``$$...$$`` syntax is used.
mul_symbol : string or None, optional
The symbol to use for multiplication. Can be one of ``None``, ``ldot``,
``dot``, or ``times``.
order: string, optional
Any of the supported monomial orderings (currently ``lex``, ``grlex``,
or ``grevlex``), ``old``, and ``none``. This parameter does nothing for
Mul objects. Setting order to ``old`` uses the compatibility ordering
for Add defined in Printer. For very large expressions, set the
``order`` keyword to ``none`` if speed is a concern.
symbol_names : dictionary of strings mapped to symbols, optional
Dictionary of symbols and the custom strings they should be emitted as.
Notes
=====
Not using a print statement for printing, results in double backslashes for
latex commands since that's the way Python escapes backslashes in strings.
>>> from sympy import latex, Rational
>>> from sympy.abc import tau
>>> latex((2*tau)**Rational(7,2))
'8 \\sqrt{2} \\tau^{\\frac{7}{2}}'
>>> print(latex((2*tau)**Rational(7,2)))
8 \sqrt{2} \tau^{\frac{7}{2}}
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import latex, pi, sin, asin, Integral, Matrix, Rational, log
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, mu, r, tau
Basic usage:
>>> print(latex((2*tau)**Rational(7,2)))
8 \sqrt{2} \tau^{\frac{7}{2}}
``mode`` and ``itex`` options:
>>> print(latex((2*mu)**Rational(7,2), mode='plain'))
8 \sqrt{2} \mu^{\frac{7}{2}}
>>> print(latex((2*tau)**Rational(7,2), mode='inline'))
$8 \sqrt{2} \tau^{7 / 2}$
>>> print(latex((2*mu)**Rational(7,2), mode='equation*'))
\begin{equation*}8 \sqrt{2} \mu^{\frac{7}{2}}\end{equation*}
>>> print(latex((2*mu)**Rational(7,2), mode='equation'))
\begin{equation}8 \sqrt{2} \mu^{\frac{7}{2}}\end{equation}
>>> print(latex((2*mu)**Rational(7,2), mode='equation', itex=True))
$$8 \sqrt{2} \mu^{\frac{7}{2}}$$
>>> print(latex((2*mu)**Rational(7,2), mode='plain'))
8 \sqrt{2} \mu^{\frac{7}{2}}
>>> print(latex((2*tau)**Rational(7,2), mode='inline'))
$8 \sqrt{2} \tau^{7 / 2}$
>>> print(latex((2*mu)**Rational(7,2), mode='equation*'))
\begin{equation*}8 \sqrt{2} \mu^{\frac{7}{2}}\end{equation*}
>>> print(latex((2*mu)**Rational(7,2), mode='equation'))
\begin{equation}8 \sqrt{2} \mu^{\frac{7}{2}}\end{equation}
>>> print(latex((2*mu)**Rational(7,2), mode='equation', itex=True))
$$8 \sqrt{2} \mu^{\frac{7}{2}}$$
Fraction options:
>>> print(latex((2*tau)**Rational(7,2), fold_frac_powers=True))
8 \sqrt{2} \tau^{7/2}
>>> print(latex((2*tau)**sin(Rational(7,2))))
\left(2 \tau\right)^{\sin{\left (\frac{7}{2} \right )}}
>>> print(latex((2*tau)**sin(Rational(7,2)), fold_func_brackets=True))
\left(2 \tau\right)^{\sin {\frac{7}{2}}}
>>> print(latex(3*x**2/y))
\frac{3 x^{2}}{y}
>>> print(latex(3*x**2/y, fold_short_frac=True))
3 x^{2} / y
>>> print(latex(Integral(r, r)/2/pi, long_frac_ratio=2))
\frac{\int r\, dr}{2 \pi}
>>> print(latex(Integral(r, r)/2/pi, long_frac_ratio=0))
\frac{1}{2 \pi} \int r\, dr
Multiplication options:
>>> print(latex((2*tau)**sin(Rational(7,2)), mul_symbol="times"))
\left(2 \times \tau\right)^{\sin{\left (\frac{7}{2} \right )}}
Trig options:
>>> print(latex(asin(Rational(7,2))))
\operatorname{asin}{\left (\frac{7}{2} \right )}
>>> print(latex(asin(Rational(7,2)), inv_trig_style="full"))
\arcsin{\left (\frac{7}{2} \right )}
>>> print(latex(asin(Rational(7,2)), inv_trig_style="power"))
\sin^{-1}{\left (\frac{7}{2} \right )}
Matrix options:
>>> print(latex(Matrix(2, 1, [x, y])))
\left[\begin{matrix}x\\y\end{matrix}\right]
>>> print(latex(Matrix(2, 1, [x, y]), mat_str = "array"))
\left[\begin{array}{c}x\\y\end{array}\right]
>>> print(latex(Matrix(2, 1, [x, y]), mat_delim="("))
\left(\begin{matrix}x\\y\end{matrix}\right)
Custom printing of symbols:
>>> print(latex(x**2, symbol_names={x: 'x_i'}))
x_i^{2}
Logarithms:
>>> print(latex(log(10)))
\log{\left (10 \right )}
>>> print(latex(log(10), ln_notation=True))
\ln{\left (10 \right )}
``latex()`` also supports the builtin container types list, tuple, and
dictionary.
>>> print(latex([2/x, y], mode='inline'))
$\left [ 2 / x, \quad y\right ]$
"""
if symbol_names is None:
symbol_names = {}
settings = {
'fold_frac_powers' : fold_frac_powers,
'fold_func_brackets' : fold_func_brackets,
'fold_short_frac' : fold_short_frac,
'inv_trig_style' : inv_trig_style,
'itex' : itex,
'ln_notation' : ln_notation,
'long_frac_ratio' : long_frac_ratio,
'mat_delim' : mat_delim,
'mat_str' : mat_str,
'mode' : mode,
'mul_symbol' : mul_symbol,
'order' : order,
'symbol_names' : symbol_names,
}
return LatexPrinter(settings).doprint(expr)
def print_latex(expr, **settings):
"""Prints LaTeX representation of the given expression. Takes the same
settings as ``latex()``."""
print(latex(expr, **settings))
|
2c23d869b2478e9f03d2ad949c7de1f35f38caa329c0d238db0faaad7d78bd84
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from distutils.version import LooseVersion as V
from .str import StrPrinter
from .pycode import (
PythonCodePrinter,
MpmathPrinter, # MpmathPrinter is imported for backward compatibility
NumPyPrinter # NumPyPrinter is imported for backward compatibility
)
from sympy.core.basic import Basic
from sympy.external import import_module
from sympy.utilities import default_sort_key
class LambdaPrinter(PythonCodePrinter):
"""
This printer converts expressions into strings that can be used by
lambdify.
"""
printmethod = "_lambdacode"
def _print_And(self, expr):
result = ['(']
for arg in sorted(expr.args, key=default_sort_key):
result.extend(['(', self._print(arg), ')'])
result.append(' and ')
result = result[:-1]
result.append(')')
return ''.join(result)
def _print_Or(self, expr):
result = ['(']
for arg in sorted(expr.args, key=default_sort_key):
result.extend(['(', self._print(arg), ')'])
result.append(' or ')
result = result[:-1]
result.append(')')
return ''.join(result)
def _print_Not(self, expr):
result = ['(', 'not (', self._print(expr.args[0]), '))']
return ''.join(result)
def _print_BooleanTrue(self, expr):
return "True"
def _print_BooleanFalse(self, expr):
return "False"
def _print_ITE(self, expr):
result = [
'((', self._print(expr.args[1]),
') if (', self._print(expr.args[0]),
') else (', self._print(expr.args[2]), '))'
]
return ''.join(result)
def _print_NumberSymbol(self, expr):
return str(expr)
# numexpr works by altering the string passed to numexpr.evaluate
# rather than by populating a namespace. Thus a special printer...
class NumExprPrinter(LambdaPrinter):
# key, value pairs correspond to sympy name and numexpr name
# functions not appearing in this dict will raise a TypeError
printmethod = "_numexprcode"
_numexpr_functions = {
'sin' : 'sin',
'cos' : 'cos',
'tan' : 'tan',
'asin': 'arcsin',
'acos': 'arccos',
'atan': 'arctan',
'atan2' : 'arctan2',
'sinh' : 'sinh',
'cosh' : 'cosh',
'tanh' : 'tanh',
'asinh': 'arcsinh',
'acosh': 'arccosh',
'atanh': 'arctanh',
'ln' : 'log',
'log': 'log',
'exp': 'exp',
'sqrt' : 'sqrt',
'Abs' : 'abs',
'conjugate' : 'conj',
'im' : 'imag',
're' : 'real',
'where' : 'where',
'complex' : 'complex',
'contains' : 'contains',
}
def _print_ImaginaryUnit(self, expr):
return '1j'
def _print_seq(self, seq, delimiter=', '):
# simplified _print_seq taken from pretty.py
s = [self._print(item) for item in seq]
if s:
return delimiter.join(s)
else:
return ""
def _print_Function(self, e):
func_name = e.func.__name__
nstr = self._numexpr_functions.get(func_name, None)
if nstr is None:
# check for implemented_function
if hasattr(e, '_imp_'):
return "(%s)" % self._print(e._imp_(*e.args))
else:
raise TypeError("numexpr does not support function '%s'" %
func_name)
return "%s(%s)" % (nstr, self._print_seq(e.args))
def blacklisted(self, expr):
raise TypeError("numexpr cannot be used with %s" %
expr.__class__.__name__)
# blacklist all Matrix printing
_print_SparseMatrix = \
_print_MutableSparseMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableSparseMatrix = \
_print_Matrix = \
_print_DenseMatrix = \
_print_MutableDenseMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableMatrix = \
_print_ImmutableDenseMatrix = \
blacklisted
# blacklist some python expressions
_print_list = \
_print_tuple = \
_print_Tuple = \
_print_dict = \
_print_Dict = \
blacklisted
def doprint(self, expr):
lstr = super(NumExprPrinter, self).doprint(expr)
return "evaluate('%s', truediv=True)" % lstr
for k in NumExprPrinter._numexpr_functions:
setattr(NumExprPrinter, '_print_%s' % k, NumExprPrinter._print_Function)
def lambdarepr(expr, **settings):
"""
Returns a string usable for lambdifying.
"""
return LambdaPrinter(settings).doprint(expr)
|
213860b24981819b7a362e86fafd078e51806f36ae747208ecaac6ab88b89f36
|
"""
Mathematica code printer
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.printing.codeprinter import CodePrinter
from sympy.printing.str import StrPrinter
from sympy.printing.precedence import precedence
# Used in MCodePrinter._print_Function(self)
known_functions = {
"exp": [(lambda x: True, "Exp")],
"log": [(lambda x: True, "Log")],
"sin": [(lambda x: True, "Sin")],
"cos": [(lambda x: True, "Cos")],
"tan": [(lambda x: True, "Tan")],
"cot": [(lambda x: True, "Cot")],
"asin": [(lambda x: True, "ArcSin")],
"acos": [(lambda x: True, "ArcCos")],
"atan": [(lambda x: True, "ArcTan")],
"sinh": [(lambda x: True, "Sinh")],
"cosh": [(lambda x: True, "Cosh")],
"tanh": [(lambda x: True, "Tanh")],
"coth": [(lambda x: True, "Coth")],
"sech": [(lambda x: True, "Sech")],
"csch": [(lambda x: True, "Csch")],
"asinh": [(lambda x: True, "ArcSinh")],
"acosh": [(lambda x: True, "ArcCosh")],
"atanh": [(lambda x: True, "ArcTanh")],
"acoth": [(lambda x: True, "ArcCoth")],
"asech": [(lambda x: True, "ArcSech")],
"acsch": [(lambda x: True, "ArcCsch")],
"conjugate": [(lambda x: True, "Conjugate")],
"Max": [(lambda *x: True, "Max")],
"Min": [(lambda *x: True, "Min")],
}
class MCodePrinter(CodePrinter):
"""A printer to convert python expressions to
strings of the Wolfram's Mathematica code
"""
printmethod = "_mcode"
_default_settings = {
'order': None,
'full_prec': 'auto',
'precision': 15,
'user_functions': {},
'human': True,
'allow_unknown_functions': False,
}
_number_symbols = set()
_not_supported = set()
def __init__(self, settings={}):
"""Register function mappings supplied by user"""
CodePrinter.__init__(self, settings)
self.known_functions = dict(known_functions)
userfuncs = settings.get('user_functions', {})
for k, v in userfuncs.items():
if not isinstance(v, list):
userfuncs[k] = [(lambda *x: True, v)]
self.known_functions.update(userfuncs)
doprint = StrPrinter.doprint
def _print_Pow(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
return '%s^%s' % (self.parenthesize(expr.base, PREC),
self.parenthesize(expr.exp, PREC))
def _print_Mul(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
c, nc = expr.args_cnc()
res = super(MCodePrinter, self)._print_Mul(expr.func(*c))
if nc:
res += '*'
res += '**'.join(self.parenthesize(a, PREC) for a in nc)
return res
def _print_Pi(self, expr):
return 'Pi'
def _print_Infinity(self, expr):
return 'Infinity'
def _print_NegativeInfinity(self, expr):
return '-Infinity'
def _print_list(self, expr):
return '{' + ', '.join(self.doprint(a) for a in expr) + '}'
_print_tuple = _print_list
_print_Tuple = _print_list
def _print_Function(self, expr):
if expr.func.__name__ in self.known_functions:
cond_mfunc = self.known_functions[expr.func.__name__]
for cond, mfunc in cond_mfunc:
if cond(*expr.args):
return "%s[%s]" % (mfunc, self.stringify(expr.args, ", "))
return expr.func.__name__ + "[%s]" % self.stringify(expr.args, ", ")
_print_MinMaxBase = _print_Function
def _print_Integral(self, expr):
if len(expr.variables) == 1 and not expr.limits[0][1:]:
args = [expr.args[0], expr.variables[0]]
else:
args = expr.args
return "Hold[Integrate[" + ', '.join(self.doprint(a) for a in args) + "]]"
def _print_Sum(self, expr):
return "Hold[Sum[" + ', '.join(self.doprint(a) for a in expr.args) + "]]"
def _print_Derivative(self, expr):
dexpr = expr.expr
dvars = [i[0] if i[1] == 1 else i for i in expr.variable_count]
return "Hold[D[" + ', '.join(self.doprint(a) for a in [dexpr] + dvars) + "]]"
def mathematica_code(expr, **settings):
r"""Converts an expr to a string of the Wolfram Mathematica code
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import mathematica_code as mcode, symbols, sin
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> mcode(sin(x).series(x).removeO())
'(1/120)*x^5 - 1/6*x^3 + x'
"""
return MCodePrinter(settings).doprint(expr)
|
4d5a99ba16f923fa2d26709089df0a9c0b632bfb0c1aee5ac21aaa921b8ca886
|
"""
C code printer
The C89CodePrinter & C99CodePrinter converts single sympy expressions into
single C expressions, using the functions defined in math.h where possible.
A complete code generator, which uses ccode extensively, can be found in
sympy.utilities.codegen. The codegen module can be used to generate complete
source code files that are compilable without further modifications.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from functools import wraps
from itertools import chain
from sympy.core import S
from sympy.core.compatibility import string_types, range
from sympy.core.decorators import deprecated
from sympy.codegen.ast import (
Assignment, Pointer, Type, Variable, Declaration,
real, complex_, integer, bool_, float32, float64, float80,
complex64, complex128, intc, value_const, pointer_const,
int8, int16, int32, int64, uint8, uint16, uint32, uint64, untyped
)
from sympy.printing.codeprinter import CodePrinter, requires
from sympy.printing.precedence import precedence, PRECEDENCE
from sympy.sets.fancysets import Range
# dictionary mapping sympy function to (argument_conditions, C_function).
# Used in C89CodePrinter._print_Function(self)
known_functions_C89 = {
"Abs": [(lambda x: not x.is_integer, "fabs"), (lambda x: x.is_integer, "abs")],
"sin": "sin",
"cos": "cos",
"tan": "tan",
"asin": "asin",
"acos": "acos",
"atan": "atan",
"atan2": "atan2",
"exp": "exp",
"log": "log",
"sinh": "sinh",
"cosh": "cosh",
"tanh": "tanh",
"floor": "floor",
"ceiling": "ceil",
}
# move to C99 once CCodePrinter is removed:
_known_functions_C9X = dict(known_functions_C89, **{
"asinh": "asinh",
"acosh": "acosh",
"atanh": "atanh",
"erf": "erf",
"gamma": "tgamma",
})
known_functions = _known_functions_C9X
known_functions_C99 = dict(_known_functions_C9X, **{
'exp2': 'exp2',
'expm1': 'expm1',
'expm1': 'expm1',
'log10': 'log10',
'log2': 'log2',
'log1p': 'log1p',
'Cbrt': 'cbrt',
'hypot': 'hypot',
'fma': 'fma',
'loggamma': 'lgamma',
'erfc': 'erfc',
'Max': 'fmax',
'Min': 'fmin'
})
# These are the core reserved words in the C language. Taken from:
# http://en.cppreference.com/w/c/keyword
reserved_words = [
'auto', 'break', 'case', 'char', 'const', 'continue', 'default', 'do',
'double', 'else', 'enum', 'extern', 'float', 'for', 'goto', 'if', 'int',
'long', 'register', 'return', 'short', 'signed', 'sizeof', 'static',
'struct', 'entry', # never standardized, we'll leave it here anyway
'switch', 'typedef', 'union', 'unsigned', 'void', 'volatile', 'while'
]
reserved_words_c99 = ['inline', 'restrict']
def get_math_macros():
""" Returns a dictionary with math-related macros from math.h/cmath
Note that these macros are not strictly required by the C/C++-standard.
For MSVC they are enabled by defining "_USE_MATH_DEFINES" (preferably
via a compilation flag).
Returns
=======
Dictionary mapping sympy expressions to strings (macro names)
"""
from sympy.codegen.cfunctions import log2, Sqrt
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import log
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import sqrt
return {
S.Exp1: 'M_E',
log2(S.Exp1): 'M_LOG2E',
1/log(2): 'M_LOG2E',
log(2): 'M_LN2',
log(10): 'M_LN10',
S.Pi: 'M_PI',
S.Pi/2: 'M_PI_2',
S.Pi/4: 'M_PI_4',
1/S.Pi: 'M_1_PI',
2/S.Pi: 'M_2_PI',
2/sqrt(S.Pi): 'M_2_SQRTPI',
2/Sqrt(S.Pi): 'M_2_SQRTPI',
sqrt(2): 'M_SQRT2',
Sqrt(2): 'M_SQRT2',
1/sqrt(2): 'M_SQRT1_2',
1/Sqrt(2): 'M_SQRT1_2'
}
def _as_macro_if_defined(meth):
""" Decorator for printer methods
When a Printer's method is decorated using this decorator the expressions printed
will first be looked for in the attribute ``math_macros``, and if present it will
print the macro name in ``math_macros`` followed by a type suffix for the type
``real``. e.g. printing ``sympy.pi`` would print ``M_PIl`` if real is mapped to float80.
"""
@wraps(meth)
def _meth_wrapper(self, expr, **kwargs):
if expr in self.math_macros:
return '%s%s' % (self.math_macros[expr], self._get_math_macro_suffix(real))
else:
return meth(self, expr, **kwargs)
return _meth_wrapper
class C89CodePrinter(CodePrinter):
"""A printer to convert python expressions to strings of c code"""
printmethod = "_ccode"
language = "C"
standard = "C89"
reserved_words = set(reserved_words)
_default_settings = {
'order': None,
'full_prec': 'auto',
'precision': 17,
'user_functions': {},
'human': True,
'allow_unknown_functions': False,
'contract': True,
'dereference': set(),
'error_on_reserved': False,
'reserved_word_suffix': '_',
}
type_aliases = {
real: float64,
complex_: complex128,
integer: intc
}
type_mappings = {
real: 'double',
intc: 'int',
float32: 'float',
float64: 'double',
integer: 'int',
bool_: 'bool',
int8: 'int8_t',
int16: 'int16_t',
int32: 'int32_t',
int64: 'int64_t',
uint8: 'int8_t',
uint16: 'int16_t',
uint32: 'int32_t',
uint64: 'int64_t',
}
type_headers = {
bool_: {'stdbool.h'},
int8: {'stdint.h'},
int16: {'stdint.h'},
int32: {'stdint.h'},
int64: {'stdint.h'},
uint8: {'stdint.h'},
uint16: {'stdint.h'},
uint32: {'stdint.h'},
uint64: {'stdint.h'},
}
type_macros = {} # Macros needed to be defined when using a Type
type_func_suffixes = {
float32: 'f',
float64: '',
float80: 'l'
}
type_literal_suffixes = {
float32: 'F',
float64: '',
float80: 'L'
}
type_math_macro_suffixes = {
float80: 'l'
}
math_macros = None
_ns = '' # namespace, C++ uses 'std::'
_kf = known_functions_C89 # known_functions-dict to copy
def __init__(self, settings={}):
if self.math_macros is None:
self.math_macros = settings.pop('math_macros', get_math_macros())
self.type_aliases = dict(chain(self.type_aliases.items(),
settings.pop('type_aliases', {}).items()))
self.type_mappings = dict(chain(self.type_mappings.items(),
settings.pop('type_mappings', {}).items()))
self.type_headers = dict(chain(self.type_headers.items(),
settings.pop('type_headers', {}).items()))
self.type_macros = dict(chain(self.type_macros.items(),
settings.pop('type_macros', {}).items()))
self.type_func_suffixes = dict(chain(self.type_func_suffixes.items(),
settings.pop('type_func_suffixes', {}).items()))
self.type_literal_suffixes = dict(chain(self.type_literal_suffixes.items(),
settings.pop('type_literal_suffixes', {}).items()))
self.type_math_macro_suffixes = dict(chain(self.type_math_macro_suffixes.items(),
settings.pop('type_math_macro_suffixes', {}).items()))
super(C89CodePrinter, self).__init__(settings)
self.known_functions = dict(self._kf, **settings.get('user_functions', {}))
self._dereference = set(settings.get('dereference', []))
self.headers = set()
self.libraries = set()
self.macros = set()
def _rate_index_position(self, p):
return p*5
def _get_statement(self, codestring):
""" Get code string as a statement - i.e. ending with a semicolon. """
return codestring if codestring.endswith(';') else codestring + ';'
def _get_comment(self, text):
return "// {0}".format(text)
def _declare_number_const(self, name, value):
type_ = self.type_aliases[real]
var = Variable(name, type=type_, value=value.evalf(type_.decimal_dig), attrs={value_const})
decl = Declaration(var)
return self._get_statement(self._print(decl))
def _format_code(self, lines):
return self.indent_code(lines)
def _traverse_matrix_indices(self, mat):
rows, cols = mat.shape
return ((i, j) for i in range(rows) for j in range(cols))
@_as_macro_if_defined
def _print_Mul(self, expr, **kwargs):
return super(C89CodePrinter, self)._print_Mul(expr, **kwargs)
@_as_macro_if_defined
def _print_Pow(self, expr):
if "Pow" in self.known_functions:
return self._print_Function(expr)
PREC = precedence(expr)
suffix = self._get_func_suffix(real)
if expr.exp == -1:
return '1.0%s/%s' % (suffix.upper(), self.parenthesize(expr.base, PREC))
elif expr.exp == 0.5:
return '%ssqrt%s(%s)' % (self._ns, suffix, self._print(expr.base))
elif expr.exp == S.One/3 and self.standard != 'C89':
return '%scbrt%s(%s)' % (self._ns, suffix, self._print(expr.base))
else:
return '%spow%s(%s, %s)' % (self._ns, suffix, self._print(expr.base),
self._print(expr.exp))
def _print_Mod(self, expr):
num, den = expr.args
if num.is_integer and den.is_integer:
return "(({}) % ({}))".format(self._print(num), self._print(den))
else:
return self._print_math_func(expr, known='fmod')
def _print_Rational(self, expr):
p, q = int(expr.p), int(expr.q)
suffix = self._get_literal_suffix(real)
return '%d.0%s/%d.0%s' % (p, suffix, q, suffix)
def _print_Indexed(self, expr):
# calculate index for 1d array
offset = getattr(expr.base, 'offset', S.Zero)
strides = getattr(expr.base, 'strides', None)
indices = expr.indices
if strides is None or isinstance(strides, string_types):
dims = expr.shape
shift = S.One
temp = tuple()
if strides == 'C' or strides is None:
traversal = reversed(range(expr.rank))
indices = indices[::-1]
elif strides == 'F':
traversal = range(expr.rank)
for i in traversal:
temp += (shift,)
shift *= dims[i]
strides = temp
flat_index = sum([x[0]*x[1] for x in zip(indices, strides)]) + offset
return "%s[%s]" % (self._print(expr.base.label),
self._print(flat_index))
def _print_Idx(self, expr):
return self._print(expr.label)
@_as_macro_if_defined
def _print_NumberSymbol(self, expr):
return super(C89CodePrinter, self)._print_NumberSymbol(expr)
def _print_Infinity(self, expr):
return 'HUGE_VAL'
def _print_NegativeInfinity(self, expr):
return '-HUGE_VAL'
def _print_Piecewise(self, expr):
if expr.args[-1].cond != True:
# We need the last conditional to be a True, otherwise the resulting
# function may not return a result.
raise ValueError("All Piecewise expressions must contain an "
"(expr, True) statement to be used as a default "
"condition. Without one, the generated "
"expression may not evaluate to anything under "
"some condition.")
lines = []
if expr.has(Assignment):
for i, (e, c) in enumerate(expr.args):
if i == 0:
lines.append("if (%s) {" % self._print(c))
elif i == len(expr.args) - 1 and c == True:
lines.append("else {")
else:
lines.append("else if (%s) {" % self._print(c))
code0 = self._print(e)
lines.append(code0)
lines.append("}")
return "\n".join(lines)
else:
# The piecewise was used in an expression, need to do inline
# operators. This has the downside that inline operators will
# not work for statements that span multiple lines (Matrix or
# Indexed expressions).
ecpairs = ["((%s) ? (\n%s\n)\n" % (self._print(c),
self._print(e))
for e, c in expr.args[:-1]]
last_line = ": (\n%s\n)" % self._print(expr.args[-1].expr)
return ": ".join(ecpairs) + last_line + " ".join([")"*len(ecpairs)])
def _print_ITE(self, expr):
from sympy.functions import Piecewise
_piecewise = Piecewise((expr.args[1], expr.args[0]), (expr.args[2], True))
return self._print(_piecewise)
def _print_MatrixElement(self, expr):
return "{0}[{1}]".format(self.parenthesize(expr.parent, PRECEDENCE["Atom"],
strict=True), expr.j + expr.i*expr.parent.shape[1])
def _print_Symbol(self, expr):
name = super(C89CodePrinter, self)._print_Symbol(expr)
if expr in self._settings['dereference']:
return '(*{0})'.format(name)
else:
return name
def _print_Relational(self, expr):
lhs_code = self._print(expr.lhs)
rhs_code = self._print(expr.rhs)
op = expr.rel_op
return ("{0} {1} {2}").format(lhs_code, op, rhs_code)
def _print_sinc(self, expr):
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import sin
from sympy.core.relational import Ne
from sympy.functions import Piecewise
_piecewise = Piecewise(
(sin(expr.args[0]) / expr.args[0], Ne(expr.args[0], 0)), (1, True))
return self._print(_piecewise)
def _print_For(self, expr):
target = self._print(expr.target)
if isinstance(expr.iterable, Range):
start, stop, step = expr.iterable.args
else:
raise NotImplementedError("Only iterable currently supported is Range")
body = self._print(expr.body)
return ('for ({target} = {start}; {target} < {stop}; {target} += '
'{step}) {{\n{body}\n}}').format(target=target, start=start,
stop=stop, step=step, body=body)
def _print_sign(self, func):
return '((({0}) > 0) - (({0}) < 0))'.format(self._print(func.args[0]))
def _print_Max(self, expr):
if "Max" in self.known_functions:
return self._print_Function(expr)
from sympy import Max
if len(expr.args) == 1:
return self._print(expr.args[0])
return "((%(a)s > %(b)s) ? %(a)s : %(b)s)" % {
'a': expr.args[0], 'b': self._print(Max(*expr.args[1:]))}
def _print_Min(self, expr):
if "Min" in self.known_functions:
return self._print_Function(expr)
from sympy import Min
if len(expr.args) == 1:
return self._print(expr.args[0])
return "((%(a)s < %(b)s) ? %(a)s : %(b)s)" % {
'a': expr.args[0], 'b': self._print(Min(*expr.args[1:]))}
def indent_code(self, code):
"""Accepts a string of code or a list of code lines"""
if isinstance(code, string_types):
code_lines = self.indent_code(code.splitlines(True))
return ''.join(code_lines)
tab = " "
inc_token = ('{', '(', '{\n', '(\n')
dec_token = ('}', ')')
code = [line.lstrip(' \t') for line in code]
increase = [int(any(map(line.endswith, inc_token))) for line in code]
decrease = [int(any(map(line.startswith, dec_token))) for line in code]
pretty = []
level = 0
for n, line in enumerate(code):
if line == '' or line == '\n':
pretty.append(line)
continue
level -= decrease[n]
pretty.append("%s%s" % (tab*level, line))
level += increase[n]
return pretty
def _get_func_suffix(self, type_):
return self.type_func_suffixes[self.type_aliases.get(type_, type_)]
def _get_literal_suffix(self, type_):
return self.type_literal_suffixes[self.type_aliases.get(type_, type_)]
def _get_math_macro_suffix(self, type_):
alias = self.type_aliases.get(type_, type_)
dflt = self.type_math_macro_suffixes.get(alias, '')
return self.type_math_macro_suffixes.get(type_, dflt)
def _print_Type(self, type_):
self.headers.update(self.type_headers.get(type_, set()))
self.macros.update(self.type_macros.get(type_, set()))
return self._print(self.type_mappings.get(type_, type_.name))
def _print_Declaration(self, decl):
from sympy.codegen.cnodes import restrict
var = decl.variable
val = var.value
if var.type == untyped:
raise ValueError("C does not support untyped variables")
if isinstance(var, Pointer):
result = '{vc}{t} *{pc} {r}{s}'.format(
vc='const ' if value_const in var.attrs else '',
t=self._print(var.type),
pc=' const' if pointer_const in var.attrs else '',
r='restrict ' if restrict in var.attrs else '',
s=self._print(var.symbol)
)
elif isinstance(var, Variable):
result = '{vc}{t} {s}'.format(
vc='const ' if value_const in var.attrs else '',
t=self._print(var.type),
s=self._print(var.symbol)
)
else:
raise NotImplementedError("Unknown type of var: %s" % type(var))
if val != None:
result += ' = %s' % self._print(val)
return result
def _print_Float(self, flt):
type_ = self.type_aliases.get(real, real)
self.macros.update(self.type_macros.get(type_, set()))
suffix = self._get_literal_suffix(type_)
num = str(flt.evalf(type_.decimal_dig))
if 'e' not in num and '.' not in num:
num += '.0'
num_parts = num.split('e')
num_parts[0] = num_parts[0].rstrip('0')
if num_parts[0].endswith('.'):
num_parts[0] += '0'
return 'e'.join(num_parts) + suffix
@requires(headers={'stdbool.h'})
def _print_BooleanTrue(self, expr):
return 'true'
@requires(headers={'stdbool.h'})
def _print_BooleanFalse(self, expr):
return 'false'
def _print_Element(self, elem):
if elem.strides == None:
if elem.offset != None:
raise ValueError("Expected strides when offset is given")
idxs = ']['.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg),
elem.indices))
else:
global_idx = sum([i*s for i, s in zip(elem.indices, elem.strides)])
if elem.offset != None:
global_idx += elem.offset
idxs = self._print(global_idx)
return "{symb}[{idxs}]".format(
symb=self._print(elem.symbol),
idxs=idxs
)
def _print_CodeBlock(self, expr):
""" Elements of code blocks printed as statements. """
return '\n'.join([self._get_statement(self._print(i)) for i in expr.args])
def _print_While(self, expr):
return 'while ({condition}) {{\n{body}\n}}'.format(**expr.kwargs(
apply=lambda arg: self._print(arg)))
def _print_Scope(self, expr):
return '{\n%s\n}' % self._print_CodeBlock(expr.body)
@requires(headers={'stdio.h'})
def _print_Print(self, expr):
return 'printf({fmt}, {pargs})'.format(
fmt=self._print(expr.format_string),
pargs=', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), expr.print_args))
)
def _print_FunctionPrototype(self, expr):
pars = ', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(Declaration(arg)),
expr.parameters))
return "%s %s(%s)" % (
tuple(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg),
(expr.return_type, expr.name))) + (pars,)
)
def _print_FunctionDefinition(self, expr):
return "%s%s" % (self._print_FunctionPrototype(expr),
self._print_Scope(expr))
def _print_Return(self, expr):
arg, = expr.args
return 'return %s' % self._print(arg)
def _print_CommaOperator(self, expr):
return '(%s)' % ', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), expr.args))
def _print_Label(self, expr):
return '%s:' % str(expr)
def _print_goto(self, expr):
return 'goto %s' % expr.label
def _print_PreIncrement(self, expr):
arg, = expr.args
return '++(%s)' % self._print(arg)
def _print_PostIncrement(self, expr):
arg, = expr.args
return '(%s)++' % self._print(arg)
def _print_PreDecrement(self, expr):
arg, = expr.args
return '--(%s)' % self._print(arg)
def _print_PostDecrement(self, expr):
arg, = expr.args
return '(%s)--' % self._print(arg)
def _print_struct(self, expr):
return "%(keyword)s %(name)s {\n%(lines)s}" % dict(
keyword=expr.__class__.__name__, name=expr.name, lines=';\n'.join(
[self._print(decl) for decl in expr.declarations] + [''])
)
def _print_BreakToken(self, _):
return 'break'
def _print_ContinueToken(self, _):
return 'continue'
_print_union = _print_struct
class _C9XCodePrinter(object):
# Move these methods to C99CodePrinter when removing CCodePrinter
def _get_loop_opening_ending(self, indices):
open_lines = []
close_lines = []
loopstart = "for (int %(var)s=%(start)s; %(var)s<%(end)s; %(var)s++){" # C99
for i in indices:
# C arrays start at 0 and end at dimension-1
open_lines.append(loopstart % {
'var': self._print(i.label),
'start': self._print(i.lower),
'end': self._print(i.upper + 1)})
close_lines.append("}")
return open_lines, close_lines
@deprecated(
last_supported_version='1.0',
useinstead="C89CodePrinter or C99CodePrinter, e.g. ccode(..., standard='C99')",
issue=12220,
deprecated_since_version='1.1')
class CCodePrinter(_C9XCodePrinter, C89CodePrinter):
"""
Deprecated.
Alias for C89CodePrinter, for backwards compatibility.
"""
_kf = _known_functions_C9X # known_functions-dict to copy
class C99CodePrinter(_C9XCodePrinter, C89CodePrinter):
standard = 'C99'
reserved_words = set(reserved_words + reserved_words_c99)
type_mappings=dict(chain(C89CodePrinter.type_mappings.items(), {
complex64: 'float complex',
complex128: 'double complex',
}.items()))
type_headers = dict(chain(C89CodePrinter.type_headers.items(), {
complex64: {'complex.h'},
complex128: {'complex.h'}
}.items()))
_kf = known_functions_C99 # known_functions-dict to copy
# functions with versions with 'f' and 'l' suffixes:
_prec_funcs = ('fabs fmod remainder remquo fma fmax fmin fdim nan exp exp2'
' expm1 log log10 log2 log1p pow sqrt cbrt hypot sin cos tan'
' asin acos atan atan2 sinh cosh tanh asinh acosh atanh erf'
' erfc tgamma lgamma ceil floor trunc round nearbyint rint'
' frexp ldexp modf scalbn ilogb logb nextafter copysign').split()
def _print_Infinity(self, expr):
return 'INFINITY'
def _print_NegativeInfinity(self, expr):
return '-INFINITY'
def _print_NaN(self, expr):
return 'NAN'
# tgamma was already covered by 'known_functions' dict
@requires(headers={'math.h'}, libraries={'m'})
@_as_macro_if_defined
def _print_math_func(self, expr, nest=False, known=None):
if known is None:
known = self.known_functions[expr.__class__.__name__]
if not isinstance(known, string_types):
for cb, name in known:
if cb(*expr.args):
known = name
break
else:
raise ValueError("No matching printer")
try:
return known(self, *expr.args)
except TypeError:
suffix = self._get_func_suffix(real) if self._ns + known in self._prec_funcs else ''
if nest:
args = self._print(expr.args[0])
if len(expr.args) > 1:
args += ', %s' % self._print(expr.func(*expr.args[1:]))
else:
args = ', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), expr.args))
return '{ns}{name}{suffix}({args})'.format(
ns=self._ns,
name=known,
suffix=suffix,
args=args
)
def _print_Max(self, expr):
return self._print_math_func(expr, nest=True)
def _print_Min(self, expr):
return self._print_math_func(expr, nest=True)
for k in ('Abs Sqrt exp exp2 expm1 log log10 log2 log1p Cbrt hypot fma'
' loggamma sin cos tan asin acos atan atan2 sinh cosh tanh asinh acosh '
'atanh erf erfc loggamma gamma ceiling floor').split():
setattr(C99CodePrinter, '_print_%s' % k, C99CodePrinter._print_math_func)
class C11CodePrinter(C99CodePrinter):
@requires(headers={'stdalign.h'})
def _print_alignof(self, expr):
arg, = expr.args
return 'alignof(%s)' % self._print(arg)
c_code_printers = {
'c89': C89CodePrinter,
'c99': C99CodePrinter,
'c11': C11CodePrinter
}
def ccode(expr, assign_to=None, standard='c99', **settings):
"""Converts an expr to a string of c code
Parameters
==========
expr : Expr
A sympy expression to be converted.
assign_to : optional
When given, the argument is used as the name of the variable to which
the expression is assigned. Can be a string, ``Symbol``,
``MatrixSymbol``, or ``Indexed`` type. This is helpful in case of
line-wrapping, or for expressions that generate multi-line statements.
standard : str, optional
String specifying the standard. If your compiler supports a more modern
standard you may set this to 'c99' to allow the printer to use more math
functions. [default='c89'].
precision : integer, optional
The precision for numbers such as pi [default=17].
user_functions : dict, optional
A dictionary where the keys are string representations of either
``FunctionClass`` or ``UndefinedFunction`` instances and the values
are their desired C string representations. Alternatively, the
dictionary value can be a list of tuples i.e. [(argument_test,
cfunction_string)] or [(argument_test, cfunction_formater)]. See below
for examples.
dereference : iterable, optional
An iterable of symbols that should be dereferenced in the printed code
expression. These would be values passed by address to the function.
For example, if ``dereference=[a]``, the resulting code would print
``(*a)`` instead of ``a``.
human : bool, optional
If True, the result is a single string that may contain some constant
declarations for the number symbols. If False, the same information is
returned in a tuple of (symbols_to_declare, not_supported_functions,
code_text). [default=True].
contract: bool, optional
If True, ``Indexed`` instances are assumed to obey tensor contraction
rules and the corresponding nested loops over indices are generated.
Setting contract=False will not generate loops, instead the user is
responsible to provide values for the indices in the code.
[default=True].
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ccode, symbols, Rational, sin, ceiling, Abs, Function
>>> x, tau = symbols("x, tau")
>>> expr = (2*tau)**Rational(7, 2)
>>> ccode(expr)
'8*M_SQRT2*pow(tau, 7.0/2.0)'
>>> ccode(expr, math_macros={})
'8*sqrt(2)*pow(tau, 7.0/2.0)'
>>> ccode(sin(x), assign_to="s")
's = sin(x);'
>>> from sympy.codegen.ast import real, float80
>>> ccode(expr, type_aliases={real: float80})
'8*M_SQRT2l*powl(tau, 7.0L/2.0L)'
Simple custom printing can be defined for certain types by passing a
dictionary of {"type" : "function"} to the ``user_functions`` kwarg.
Alternatively, the dictionary value can be a list of tuples i.e.
[(argument_test, cfunction_string)].
>>> custom_functions = {
... "ceiling": "CEIL",
... "Abs": [(lambda x: not x.is_integer, "fabs"),
... (lambda x: x.is_integer, "ABS")],
... "func": "f"
... }
>>> func = Function('func')
>>> ccode(func(Abs(x) + ceiling(x)), standard='C89', user_functions=custom_functions)
'f(fabs(x) + CEIL(x))'
or if the C-function takes a subset of the original arguments:
>>> ccode(2**x + 3**x, standard='C99', user_functions={'Pow': [
... (lambda b, e: b == 2, lambda b, e: 'exp2(%s)' % e),
... (lambda b, e: b != 2, 'pow')]})
'exp2(x) + pow(3, x)'
``Piecewise`` expressions are converted into conditionals. If an
``assign_to`` variable is provided an if statement is created, otherwise
the ternary operator is used. Note that if the ``Piecewise`` lacks a
default term, represented by ``(expr, True)`` then an error will be thrown.
This is to prevent generating an expression that may not evaluate to
anything.
>>> from sympy import Piecewise
>>> expr = Piecewise((x + 1, x > 0), (x, True))
>>> print(ccode(expr, tau, standard='C89'))
if (x > 0) {
tau = x + 1;
}
else {
tau = x;
}
Support for loops is provided through ``Indexed`` types. With
``contract=True`` these expressions will be turned into loops, whereas
``contract=False`` will just print the assignment expression that should be
looped over:
>>> from sympy import Eq, IndexedBase, Idx
>>> len_y = 5
>>> y = IndexedBase('y', shape=(len_y,))
>>> t = IndexedBase('t', shape=(len_y,))
>>> Dy = IndexedBase('Dy', shape=(len_y-1,))
>>> i = Idx('i', len_y-1)
>>> e=Eq(Dy[i], (y[i+1]-y[i])/(t[i+1]-t[i]))
>>> ccode(e.rhs, assign_to=e.lhs, contract=False, standard='C89')
'Dy[i] = (y[i + 1] - y[i])/(t[i + 1] - t[i]);'
Matrices are also supported, but a ``MatrixSymbol`` of the same dimensions
must be provided to ``assign_to``. Note that any expression that can be
generated normally can also exist inside a Matrix:
>>> from sympy import Matrix, MatrixSymbol
>>> mat = Matrix([x**2, Piecewise((x + 1, x > 0), (x, True)), sin(x)])
>>> A = MatrixSymbol('A', 3, 1)
>>> print(ccode(mat, A, standard='C89'))
A[0] = pow(x, 2);
if (x > 0) {
A[1] = x + 1;
}
else {
A[1] = x;
}
A[2] = sin(x);
"""
return c_code_printers[standard.lower()](settings).doprint(expr, assign_to)
def print_ccode(expr, **settings):
"""Prints C representation of the given expression."""
print(ccode(expr, **settings))
|
6a5463e960a368eca9534fd38463138f783fbaf2ac9641baa91187f26bb703e0
|
"""
Fortran code printer
The FCodePrinter converts single sympy expressions into single Fortran
expressions, using the functions defined in the Fortran 77 standard where
possible. Some useful pointers to Fortran can be found on wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortran
Most of the code below is based on the "Professional Programmer\'s Guide to
Fortran77" by Clive G. Page:
http://www.star.le.ac.uk/~cgp/prof77.html
Fortran is a case-insensitive language. This might cause trouble because
SymPy is case sensitive. So, fcode adds underscores to variable names when
it is necessary to make them different for Fortran.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from itertools import chain
import string
from sympy.core import S, Add, N, Float, Symbol
from sympy.core.compatibility import string_types, range
from sympy.core.function import Function
from sympy.core.relational import Eq
from sympy.sets import Range
from sympy.codegen.ast import (
Assignment, Attribute, Declaration, Pointer, Type, value_const,
float32, float64, float80, complex64, complex128, int8, int16, int32,
int64, intc, real, integer, bool_, complex_
)
from sympy.codegen.fnodes import (
allocatable, isign, dsign, cmplx, merge, literal_dp, elemental, pure,
intent_in, intent_out, intent_inout
)
from sympy.printing.printer import printer_context
from sympy.printing.codeprinter import CodePrinter, requires
from sympy.printing.precedence import precedence, PRECEDENCE
known_functions = {
"sin": "sin",
"cos": "cos",
"tan": "tan",
"asin": "asin",
"acos": "acos",
"atan": "atan",
"atan2": "atan2",
"sinh": "sinh",
"cosh": "cosh",
"tanh": "tanh",
"log": "log",
"exp": "exp",
"erf": "erf",
"Abs": "abs",
"conjugate": "conjg",
"Max": "max",
"Min": "min",
}
class FCodePrinter(CodePrinter):
"""A printer to convert sympy expressions to strings of Fortran code"""
printmethod = "_fcode"
language = "Fortran"
type_aliases = {
integer: int32,
real: float64,
complex_: complex128,
}
type_mappings = {
intc: 'integer(c_int)',
float32: 'real*4', # real(kind(0.e0))
float64: 'real*8', # real(kind(0.d0))
float80: 'real*10', # real(kind(????))
complex64: 'complex*8',
complex128: 'complex*16',
int8: 'integer*1',
int16: 'integer*2',
int32: 'integer*4',
int64: 'integer*8',
bool_: 'logical'
}
type_modules = {
intc: {'iso_c_binding': 'c_int'}
}
_default_settings = {
'order': None,
'full_prec': 'auto',
'precision': 17,
'user_functions': {},
'human': True,
'allow_unknown_functions': False,
'source_format': 'fixed',
'contract': True,
'standard': 77,
'name_mangling' : True,
}
_operators = {
'and': '.and.',
'or': '.or.',
'xor': '.neqv.',
'equivalent': '.eqv.',
'not': '.not. ',
}
_relationals = {
'!=': '/=',
}
def __init__(self, settings={}):
self.mangled_symbols = {} ## Dict showing mapping of all words
self.used_name= []
self.type_aliases = dict(chain(self.type_aliases.items(),
settings.pop('type_aliases', {}).items()))
self.type_mappings = dict(chain(self.type_mappings.items(),
settings.pop('type_mappings', {}).items()))
super(FCodePrinter, self).__init__(settings)
self.known_functions = dict(known_functions)
userfuncs = settings.get('user_functions', {})
self.known_functions.update(userfuncs)
# leading columns depend on fixed or free format
standards = {66, 77, 90, 95, 2003, 2008}
if self._settings['standard'] not in standards:
raise ValueError("Unknown Fortran standard: %s" % self._settings[
'standard'])
self.module_uses = defaultdict(set) # e.g.: use iso_c_binding, only: c_int
@property
def _lead(self):
if self._settings['source_format'] == 'fixed':
return {'code': " ", 'cont': " @ ", 'comment': "C "}
elif self._settings['source_format'] == 'free':
return {'code': "", 'cont': " ", 'comment': "! "}
else:
raise ValueError("Unknown source format: %s" % self._settings['source_format'])
def _print_Symbol(self, expr):
if self._settings['name_mangling'] == True:
if expr not in self.mangled_symbols:
name = expr.name
while name.lower() in self.used_name:
name += '_'
self.used_name.append(name.lower())
if name == expr.name:
self.mangled_symbols[expr] = expr
else:
self.mangled_symbols[expr] = Symbol(name)
expr = expr.xreplace(self.mangled_symbols)
name = super(FCodePrinter, self)._print_Symbol(expr)
return name
def _rate_index_position(self, p):
return -p*5
def _get_statement(self, codestring):
return codestring
def _get_comment(self, text):
return "! {0}".format(text)
def _declare_number_const(self, name, value):
return "parameter ({0} = {1})".format(name, self._print(value))
def _print_NumberSymbol(self, expr):
# A Number symbol that is not implemented here or with _printmethod
# is registered and evaluated
self._number_symbols.add((expr, Float(expr.evalf(self._settings['precision']))))
return str(expr)
def _format_code(self, lines):
return self._wrap_fortran(self.indent_code(lines))
def _traverse_matrix_indices(self, mat):
rows, cols = mat.shape
return ((i, j) for j in range(cols) for i in range(rows))
def _get_loop_opening_ending(self, indices):
open_lines = []
close_lines = []
for i in indices:
# fortran arrays start at 1 and end at dimension
var, start, stop = map(self._print,
[i.label, i.lower + 1, i.upper + 1])
open_lines.append("do %s = %s, %s" % (var, start, stop))
close_lines.append("end do")
return open_lines, close_lines
def _print_sign(self, expr):
from sympy import Abs
arg, = expr.args
if arg.is_integer:
new_expr = merge(0, isign(1, arg), Eq(arg, 0))
elif arg.is_complex:
new_expr = merge(cmplx(literal_dp(0), literal_dp(0)), arg/Abs(arg), Eq(Abs(arg), literal_dp(0)))
else:
new_expr = merge(literal_dp(0), dsign(literal_dp(1), arg), Eq(arg, literal_dp(0)))
return self._print(new_expr)
def _print_Piecewise(self, expr):
if expr.args[-1].cond != True:
# We need the last conditional to be a True, otherwise the resulting
# function may not return a result.
raise ValueError("All Piecewise expressions must contain an "
"(expr, True) statement to be used as a default "
"condition. Without one, the generated "
"expression may not evaluate to anything under "
"some condition.")
lines = []
if expr.has(Assignment):
for i, (e, c) in enumerate(expr.args):
if i == 0:
lines.append("if (%s) then" % self._print(c))
elif i == len(expr.args) - 1 and c == True:
lines.append("else")
else:
lines.append("else if (%s) then" % self._print(c))
lines.append(self._print(e))
lines.append("end if")
return "\n".join(lines)
elif self._settings["standard"] >= 95:
# Only supported in F95 and newer:
# The piecewise was used in an expression, need to do inline
# operators. This has the downside that inline operators will
# not work for statements that span multiple lines (Matrix or
# Indexed expressions).
pattern = "merge({T}, {F}, {COND})"
code = self._print(expr.args[-1].expr)
terms = list(expr.args[:-1])
while terms:
e, c = terms.pop()
expr = self._print(e)
cond = self._print(c)
code = pattern.format(T=expr, F=code, COND=cond)
return code
else:
# `merge` is not supported prior to F95
raise NotImplementedError("Using Piecewise as an expression using "
"inline operators is not supported in "
"standards earlier than Fortran95.")
def _print_MatrixElement(self, expr):
return "{0}({1}, {2})".format(self.parenthesize(expr.parent,
PRECEDENCE["Atom"], strict=True), expr.i + 1, expr.j + 1)
def _print_Add(self, expr):
# purpose: print complex numbers nicely in Fortran.
# collect the purely real and purely imaginary parts:
pure_real = []
pure_imaginary = []
mixed = []
for arg in expr.args:
if arg.is_number and arg.is_real:
pure_real.append(arg)
elif arg.is_number and arg.is_imaginary:
pure_imaginary.append(arg)
else:
mixed.append(arg)
if len(pure_imaginary) > 0:
if len(mixed) > 0:
PREC = precedence(expr)
term = Add(*mixed)
t = self._print(term)
if t.startswith('-'):
sign = "-"
t = t[1:]
else:
sign = "+"
if precedence(term) < PREC:
t = "(%s)" % t
return "cmplx(%s,%s) %s %s" % (
self._print(Add(*pure_real)),
self._print(-S.ImaginaryUnit*Add(*pure_imaginary)),
sign, t,
)
else:
return "cmplx(%s,%s)" % (
self._print(Add(*pure_real)),
self._print(-S.ImaginaryUnit*Add(*pure_imaginary)),
)
else:
return CodePrinter._print_Add(self, expr)
def _print_Function(self, expr):
# All constant function args are evaluated as floats
prec = self._settings['precision']
args = [N(a, prec) for a in expr.args]
eval_expr = expr.func(*args)
if not isinstance(eval_expr, Function):
return self._print(eval_expr)
else:
return CodePrinter._print_Function(self, expr.func(*args))
def _print_Mod(self, expr):
# NOTE : Fortran has the functions mod() and modulo(). modulo() behaves
# the same wrt to the sign of the arguments as Python and SymPy's
# modulus computations (% and Mod()) but is not available in Fortran 66
# or Fortran 77, thus we raise an error.
if self._settings['standard'] in [66, 77]:
msg = ("Python % operator and SymPy's Mod() function are not "
"supported by Fortran 66 or 77 standards.")
raise NotImplementedError(msg)
else:
x, y = expr.args
return " modulo({}, {})".format(self._print(x), self._print(y))
def _print_ImaginaryUnit(self, expr):
# purpose: print complex numbers nicely in Fortran.
return "cmplx(0,1)"
def _print_int(self, expr):
return str(expr)
def _print_Mul(self, expr):
# purpose: print complex numbers nicely in Fortran.
if expr.is_number and expr.is_imaginary:
return "cmplx(0,%s)" % (
self._print(-S.ImaginaryUnit*expr)
)
else:
return CodePrinter._print_Mul(self, expr)
def _print_Pow(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
if expr.exp == -1:
return '%s/%s' % (
self._print(literal_dp(1)),
self.parenthesize(expr.base, PREC)
)
elif expr.exp == 0.5:
if expr.base.is_integer:
# Fortran intrinsic sqrt() does not accept integer argument
if expr.base.is_Number:
return 'sqrt(%s.0d0)' % self._print(expr.base)
else:
return 'sqrt(dble(%s))' % self._print(expr.base)
else:
return 'sqrt(%s)' % self._print(expr.base)
else:
return CodePrinter._print_Pow(self, expr)
def _print_Rational(self, expr):
p, q = int(expr.p), int(expr.q)
return "%d.0d0/%d.0d0" % (p, q)
def _print_Float(self, expr):
printed = CodePrinter._print_Float(self, expr)
e = printed.find('e')
if e > -1:
return "%sd%s" % (printed[:e], printed[e + 1:])
return "%sd0" % printed
def _print_Indexed(self, expr):
inds = [ self._print(i) for i in expr.indices ]
return "%s(%s)" % (self._print(expr.base.label), ", ".join(inds))
def _print_Idx(self, expr):
return self._print(expr.label)
def _print_AugmentedAssignment(self, expr):
lhs_code = self._print(expr.lhs)
rhs_code = self._print(expr.rhs)
return self._get_statement("{0} = {0} {1} {2}".format(
*map(lambda arg: self._print(arg),
[lhs_code, expr.binop, rhs_code])))
def _print_sum_(self, sm):
params = self._print(sm.array)
if sm.dim != None:
params += ', ' + self._print(sm.dim)
if sm.mask != None:
params += ', mask=' + self._print(sm.mask)
return '%s(%s)' % (sm.__class__.__name__.rstrip('_'), params)
def _print_product_(self, prod):
return self._print_sum_(prod)
def _print_Do(self, do):
excl = ['concurrent']
if do.step == 1:
excl.append('step')
step = ''
else:
step = ', {step}'
return (
'do {concurrent}{counter} = {first}, {last}'+step+'\n'
'{body}\n'
'end do\n'
).format(
concurrent='concurrent ' if do.concurrent else '',
**do.kwargs(apply=lambda arg: self._print(arg), exclude=excl)
)
def _print_ImpliedDoLoop(self, idl):
step = '' if idl.step == 1 else ', {step}'
return ('({expr}, {counter} = {first}, {last}'+step+')').format(
**idl.kwargs(apply=lambda arg: self._print(arg))
)
def _print_For(self, expr):
target = self._print(expr.target)
if isinstance(expr.iterable, Range):
start, stop, step = expr.iterable.args
else:
raise NotImplementedError("Only iterable currently supported is Range")
body = self._print(expr.body)
return ('do {target} = {start}, {stop}, {step}\n'
'{body}\n'
'end do').format(target=target, start=start, stop=stop,
step=step, body=body)
def _print_Equality(self, expr):
lhs, rhs = expr.args
return ' == '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), (lhs, rhs)))
def _print_Unequality(self, expr):
lhs, rhs = expr.args
return ' /= '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), (lhs, rhs)))
def _print_Type(self, type_):
type_ = self.type_aliases.get(type_, type_)
type_str = self.type_mappings.get(type_, type_.name)
module_uses = self.type_modules.get(type_)
if module_uses:
for k, v in module_uses:
self.module_uses[k].add(v)
return type_str
def _print_Element(self, elem):
return '{symbol}({idxs})'.format(
symbol=self._print(elem.symbol),
idxs=', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), elem.indices))
)
def _print_Extent(self, ext):
return str(ext)
def _print_Declaration(self, expr):
var = expr.variable
val = var.value
dim = var.attr_params('dimension')
intents = [intent in var.attrs for intent in (intent_in, intent_out, intent_inout)]
if intents.count(True) == 0:
intent = ''
elif intents.count(True) == 1:
intent = ', intent(%s)' % ['in', 'out', 'inout'][intents.index(True)]
else:
raise ValueError("Multiple intents specified for %s" % self)
if isinstance(var, Pointer):
raise NotImplementedError("Pointers are not available by default in Fortran.")
if self._settings["standard"] >= 90:
result = '{t}{vc}{dim}{intent}{alloc} :: {s}'.format(
t=self._print(var.type),
vc=', parameter' if value_const in var.attrs else '',
dim=', dimension(%s)' % ', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), dim)) if dim else '',
intent=intent,
alloc=', allocatable' if allocatable in var.attrs else '',
s=self._print(var.symbol)
)
if val != None:
result += ' = %s' % self._print(val)
else:
if value_const in var.attrs or val:
raise NotImplementedError("F77 init./parameter statem. req. multiple lines.")
result = ' '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), [var.type, var.symbol]))
return result
def _print_Infinity(self, expr):
return '(huge(%s) + 1)' % self._print(literal_dp(0))
def _print_While(self, expr):
return 'do while ({condition})\n{body}\nend do'.format(**expr.kwargs(
apply=lambda arg: self._print(arg)))
def _print_BooleanTrue(self, expr):
return '.true.'
def _print_BooleanFalse(self, expr):
return '.false.'
def _pad_leading_columns(self, lines):
result = []
for line in lines:
if line.startswith('!'):
result.append(self._lead['comment'] + line[1:].lstrip())
else:
result.append(self._lead['code'] + line)
return result
def _wrap_fortran(self, lines):
"""Wrap long Fortran lines
Argument:
lines -- a list of lines (without \\n character)
A comment line is split at white space. Code lines are split with a more
complex rule to give nice results.
"""
# routine to find split point in a code line
my_alnum = set("_+-." + string.digits + string.ascii_letters)
my_white = set(" \t()")
def split_pos_code(line, endpos):
if len(line) <= endpos:
return len(line)
pos = endpos
split = lambda pos: \
(line[pos] in my_alnum and line[pos - 1] not in my_alnum) or \
(line[pos] not in my_alnum and line[pos - 1] in my_alnum) or \
(line[pos] in my_white and line[pos - 1] not in my_white) or \
(line[pos] not in my_white and line[pos - 1] in my_white)
while not split(pos):
pos -= 1
if pos == 0:
return endpos
return pos
# split line by line and add the split lines to result
result = []
if self._settings['source_format'] == 'free':
trailing = ' &'
else:
trailing = ''
for line in lines:
if line.startswith(self._lead['comment']):
# comment line
if len(line) > 72:
pos = line.rfind(" ", 6, 72)
if pos == -1:
pos = 72
hunk = line[:pos]
line = line[pos:].lstrip()
result.append(hunk)
while len(line) > 0:
pos = line.rfind(" ", 0, 66)
if pos == -1 or len(line) < 66:
pos = 66
hunk = line[:pos]
line = line[pos:].lstrip()
result.append("%s%s" % (self._lead['comment'], hunk))
else:
result.append(line)
elif line.startswith(self._lead['code']):
# code line
pos = split_pos_code(line, 72)
hunk = line[:pos].rstrip()
line = line[pos:].lstrip()
if line:
hunk += trailing
result.append(hunk)
while len(line) > 0:
pos = split_pos_code(line, 65)
hunk = line[:pos].rstrip()
line = line[pos:].lstrip()
if line:
hunk += trailing
result.append("%s%s" % (self._lead['cont'], hunk))
else:
result.append(line)
return result
def indent_code(self, code):
"""Accepts a string of code or a list of code lines"""
if isinstance(code, string_types):
code_lines = self.indent_code(code.splitlines(True))
return ''.join(code_lines)
free = self._settings['source_format'] == 'free'
code = [ line.lstrip(' \t') for line in code ]
inc_keyword = ('do ', 'if(', 'if ', 'do\n', 'else', 'program', 'interface')
dec_keyword = ('end do', 'enddo', 'end if', 'endif', 'else', 'end program', 'end interface')
increase = [ int(any(map(line.startswith, inc_keyword)))
for line in code ]
decrease = [ int(any(map(line.startswith, dec_keyword)))
for line in code ]
continuation = [ int(any(map(line.endswith, ['&', '&\n'])))
for line in code ]
level = 0
cont_padding = 0
tabwidth = 3
new_code = []
for i, line in enumerate(code):
if line == '' or line == '\n':
new_code.append(line)
continue
level -= decrease[i]
if free:
padding = " "*(level*tabwidth + cont_padding)
else:
padding = " "*level*tabwidth
line = "%s%s" % (padding, line)
if not free:
line = self._pad_leading_columns([line])[0]
new_code.append(line)
if continuation[i]:
cont_padding = 2*tabwidth
else:
cont_padding = 0
level += increase[i]
if not free:
return self._wrap_fortran(new_code)
return new_code
def _print_GoTo(self, goto):
if goto.expr: # computed goto
return "go to ({labels}), {expr}".format(
labels=', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), goto.labels)),
expr=self._print(goto.expr)
)
else:
lbl, = goto.labels
return "go to %s" % self._print(lbl)
def _print_Program(self, prog):
return (
"program {name}\n"
"{body}\n"
"end program\n"
).format(**prog.kwargs(apply=lambda arg: self._print(arg)))
def _print_Module(self, mod):
return (
"module {name}\n"
"{declarations}\n"
"\ncontains\n\n"
"{definitions}\n"
"end module\n"
).format(**mod.kwargs(apply=lambda arg: self._print(arg)))
def _print_Stream(self, strm):
if strm.name == 'stdout' and self._settings["standard"] >= 2003:
self.module_uses['iso_c_binding'].add('stdint=>input_unit')
return 'input_unit'
elif strm.name == 'stderr' and self._settings["standard"] >= 2003:
self.module_uses['iso_c_binding'].add('stdint=>error_unit')
return 'error_unit'
else:
if strm.name == 'stdout':
return '*'
else:
return strm.name
def _print_Print(self, ps):
if ps.format_string != None:
fmt = self._print(ps.format_string)
else:
fmt = "*"
return "print {fmt}, {iolist}".format(fmt=fmt, iolist=', '.join(
map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), ps.print_args)))
def _print_Return(self, rs):
arg, = rs.args
return "{result_name} = {arg}".format(
result_name=self._context.get('result_name', 'sympy_result'),
arg=self._print(arg)
)
def _print_FortranReturn(self, frs):
arg, = frs.args
if arg:
return 'return %s' % self._print(arg)
else:
return 'return'
def _head(self, entity, fp, **kwargs):
bind_C_params = fp.attr_params('bind_C')
if bind_C_params is None:
bind = ''
else:
bind = ' bind(C, name="%s")' % bind_C_params[0] if bind_C_params else ' bind(C)'
result_name = self._settings.get('result_name', None)
return (
"{entity}{name}({arg_names}){result}{bind}\n"
"{arg_declarations}"
).format(
entity=entity,
name=self._print(fp.name),
arg_names=', '.join([self._print(arg.symbol) for arg in fp.parameters]),
result=(' result(%s)' % result_name) if result_name else '',
bind=bind,
arg_declarations='\n'.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(Declaration(arg)), fp.parameters))
)
def _print_FunctionPrototype(self, fp):
entity = "{0} function ".format(self._print(fp.return_type))
return (
"interface\n"
"{function_head}\n"
"end function\n"
"end interface"
).format(function_head=self._head(entity, fp, *args))
def _print_FunctionDefinition(self, fd):
if elemental in fd.attrs:
prefix = 'elemental '
elif pure in fd.attrs:
prefix = 'pure '
else:
prefix = ''
entity = "{0} function ".format(self._print(fd.return_type))
with printer_context(self, result_name=fd.name):
return (
"{prefix}{function_head}\n"
"{body}\n"
"end function\n"
).format(
prefix=prefix,
function_head=self._head(entity, fd),
body=self._print(fd.body)
)
def _print_Subroutine(self, sub):
return (
'{subroutine_head}\n'
'{body}\n'
'end subroutine\n'
).format(
subroutine_head=self._head('subroutine ', sub),
body=self._print(sub.body)
)
def _print_SubroutineCall(self, scall):
return 'call {name}({args})'.format(
name=self._print(scall.name),
args=', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), scall.subroutine_args))
)
def _print_use_rename(self, rnm):
return "%s => %s" % tuple(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), rnm.args))
def _print_use(self, use):
result = 'use %s' % self._print(use.namespace)
if use.rename != None:
result += ', ' + ', '.join([self._print(rnm) for rnm in use.rename])
if use.only != None:
result += ', only: ' + ', '.join([self._print(nly) for nly in use.only])
return result
def _print_BreakToken(self, _):
return 'exit'
def _print_ContinueToken(self, _):
return 'cycle'
def _print_ArrayConstructor(self, ac):
fmtstr = "[%s]" if self._settings["standard"] >= 2003 else '(/%s/)'
return fmtstr % ', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg), ac.elements))
def fcode(expr, assign_to=None, **settings):
"""Converts an expr to a string of fortran code
Parameters
==========
expr : Expr
A sympy expression to be converted.
assign_to : optional
When given, the argument is used as the name of the variable to which
the expression is assigned. Can be a string, ``Symbol``,
``MatrixSymbol``, or ``Indexed`` type. This is helpful in case of
line-wrapping, or for expressions that generate multi-line statements.
precision : integer, optional
DEPRECATED. Use type_mappings instead. The precision for numbers such
as pi [default=17].
user_functions : dict, optional
A dictionary where keys are ``FunctionClass`` instances and values are
their string representations. Alternatively, the dictionary value can
be a list of tuples i.e. [(argument_test, cfunction_string)]. See below
for examples.
human : bool, optional
If True, the result is a single string that may contain some constant
declarations for the number symbols. If False, the same information is
returned in a tuple of (symbols_to_declare, not_supported_functions,
code_text). [default=True].
contract: bool, optional
If True, ``Indexed`` instances are assumed to obey tensor contraction
rules and the corresponding nested loops over indices are generated.
Setting contract=False will not generate loops, instead the user is
responsible to provide values for the indices in the code.
[default=True].
source_format : optional
The source format can be either 'fixed' or 'free'. [default='fixed']
standard : integer, optional
The Fortran standard to be followed. This is specified as an integer.
Acceptable standards are 66, 77, 90, 95, 2003, and 2008. Default is 77.
Note that currently the only distinction internally is between
standards before 95, and those 95 and after. This may change later as
more features are added.
name_mangling : bool, optional
If True, then the variables that would become identical in
case-insensitive Fortran are mangled by appending different number
of ``_`` at the end. If False, SymPy won't interfere with naming of
variables. [default=True]
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import fcode, symbols, Rational, sin, ceiling, floor
>>> x, tau = symbols("x, tau")
>>> fcode((2*tau)**Rational(7, 2))
' 8*sqrt(2.0d0)*tau**(7.0d0/2.0d0)'
>>> fcode(sin(x), assign_to="s")
' s = sin(x)'
Custom printing can be defined for certain types by passing a dictionary of
"type" : "function" to the ``user_functions`` kwarg. Alternatively, the
dictionary value can be a list of tuples i.e. [(argument_test,
cfunction_string)].
>>> custom_functions = {
... "ceiling": "CEIL",
... "floor": [(lambda x: not x.is_integer, "FLOOR1"),
... (lambda x: x.is_integer, "FLOOR2")]
... }
>>> fcode(floor(x) + ceiling(x), user_functions=custom_functions)
' CEIL(x) + FLOOR1(x)'
``Piecewise`` expressions are converted into conditionals. If an
``assign_to`` variable is provided an if statement is created, otherwise
the ternary operator is used. Note that if the ``Piecewise`` lacks a
default term, represented by ``(expr, True)`` then an error will be thrown.
This is to prevent generating an expression that may not evaluate to
anything.
>>> from sympy import Piecewise
>>> expr = Piecewise((x + 1, x > 0), (x, True))
>>> print(fcode(expr, tau))
if (x > 0) then
tau = x + 1
else
tau = x
end if
Support for loops is provided through ``Indexed`` types. With
``contract=True`` these expressions will be turned into loops, whereas
``contract=False`` will just print the assignment expression that should be
looped over:
>>> from sympy import Eq, IndexedBase, Idx
>>> len_y = 5
>>> y = IndexedBase('y', shape=(len_y,))
>>> t = IndexedBase('t', shape=(len_y,))
>>> Dy = IndexedBase('Dy', shape=(len_y-1,))
>>> i = Idx('i', len_y-1)
>>> e=Eq(Dy[i], (y[i+1]-y[i])/(t[i+1]-t[i]))
>>> fcode(e.rhs, assign_to=e.lhs, contract=False)
' Dy(i) = (y(i + 1) - y(i))/(t(i + 1) - t(i))'
Matrices are also supported, but a ``MatrixSymbol`` of the same dimensions
must be provided to ``assign_to``. Note that any expression that can be
generated normally can also exist inside a Matrix:
>>> from sympy import Matrix, MatrixSymbol
>>> mat = Matrix([x**2, Piecewise((x + 1, x > 0), (x, True)), sin(x)])
>>> A = MatrixSymbol('A', 3, 1)
>>> print(fcode(mat, A))
A(1, 1) = x**2
if (x > 0) then
A(2, 1) = x + 1
else
A(2, 1) = x
end if
A(3, 1) = sin(x)
"""
return FCodePrinter(settings).doprint(expr, assign_to)
def print_fcode(expr, **settings):
"""Prints the Fortran representation of the given expression.
See fcode for the meaning of the optional arguments.
"""
print(fcode(expr, **settings))
|
fffdbb8185c91d5303b3bf1de014587c149df087a9c20641cdb1095bbd74af26
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from functools import wraps
from sympy.core import Add, Mul, Pow, S, sympify, Float
from sympy.core.basic import Basic
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
from sympy.core.compatibility import default_sort_key, string_types
from sympy.core.function import Lambda
from sympy.core.mul import _keep_coeff
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol
from sympy.printing.str import StrPrinter
from sympy.printing.precedence import precedence
# Backwards compatibility
from sympy.codegen.ast import Assignment
class requires(object):
""" Decorator for registering requirements on print methods. """
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
self._req = kwargs
def __call__(self, method):
def _method_wrapper(self_, *args, **kwargs):
for k, v in self._req.items():
getattr(self_, k).update(v)
return method(self_, *args, **kwargs)
return wraps(method)(_method_wrapper)
class AssignmentError(Exception):
"""
Raised if an assignment variable for a loop is missing.
"""
pass
class CodePrinter(StrPrinter):
"""
The base class for code-printing subclasses.
"""
_operators = {
'and': '&&',
'or': '||',
'not': '!',
}
_default_settings = {
'order': None,
'full_prec': 'auto',
'error_on_reserved': False,
'reserved_word_suffix': '_',
'human': True,
'inline': False,
'allow_unknown_functions': False,
}
def __init__(self, settings=None):
super(CodePrinter, self).__init__(settings=settings)
if not hasattr(self, 'reserved_words'):
self.reserved_words = set()
def doprint(self, expr, assign_to=None):
"""
Print the expression as code.
Parameters
----------
expr : Expression
The expression to be printed.
assign_to : Symbol, MatrixSymbol, or string (optional)
If provided, the printed code will set the expression to a
variable with name ``assign_to``.
"""
from sympy.matrices.expressions.matexpr import MatrixSymbol
if isinstance(assign_to, string_types):
if expr.is_Matrix:
assign_to = MatrixSymbol(assign_to, *expr.shape)
else:
assign_to = Symbol(assign_to)
elif not isinstance(assign_to, (Basic, type(None))):
raise TypeError("{0} cannot assign to object of type {1}".format(
type(self).__name__, type(assign_to)))
if assign_to:
expr = Assignment(assign_to, expr)
else:
# _sympify is not enough b/c it errors on iterables
expr = sympify(expr)
# keep a set of expressions that are not strictly translatable to Code
# and number constants that must be declared and initialized
self._not_supported = set()
self._number_symbols = set()
lines = self._print(expr).splitlines()
# format the output
if self._settings["human"]:
frontlines = []
if len(self._not_supported) > 0:
frontlines.append(self._get_comment(
"Not supported in {0}:".format(self.language)))
for expr in sorted(self._not_supported, key=str):
frontlines.append(self._get_comment(type(expr).__name__))
for name, value in sorted(self._number_symbols, key=str):
frontlines.append(self._declare_number_const(name, value))
lines = frontlines + lines
lines = self._format_code(lines)
result = "\n".join(lines)
else:
lines = self._format_code(lines)
num_syms = set([(k, self._print(v)) for k, v in self._number_symbols])
result = (num_syms, self._not_supported, "\n".join(lines))
self._not_supported = set()
self._number_symbols = set()
return result
def _doprint_loops(self, expr, assign_to=None):
# Here we print an expression that contains Indexed objects, they
# correspond to arrays in the generated code. The low-level implementation
# involves looping over array elements and possibly storing results in temporary
# variables or accumulate it in the assign_to object.
if self._settings.get('contract', True):
from sympy.tensor import get_contraction_structure
# Setup loops over non-dummy indices -- all terms need these
indices = self._get_expression_indices(expr, assign_to)
# Setup loops over dummy indices -- each term needs separate treatment
dummies = get_contraction_structure(expr)
else:
indices = []
dummies = {None: (expr,)}
openloop, closeloop = self._get_loop_opening_ending(indices)
# terms with no summations first
if None in dummies:
text = StrPrinter.doprint(self, Add(*dummies[None]))
else:
# If all terms have summations we must initialize array to Zero
text = StrPrinter.doprint(self, 0)
# skip redundant assignments (where lhs == rhs)
lhs_printed = self._print(assign_to)
lines = []
if text != lhs_printed:
lines.extend(openloop)
if assign_to is not None:
text = self._get_statement("%s = %s" % (lhs_printed, text))
lines.append(text)
lines.extend(closeloop)
# then terms with summations
for d in dummies:
if isinstance(d, tuple):
indices = self._sort_optimized(d, expr)
openloop_d, closeloop_d = self._get_loop_opening_ending(
indices)
for term in dummies[d]:
if term in dummies and not ([list(f.keys()) for f in dummies[term]]
== [[None] for f in dummies[term]]):
# If one factor in the term has it's own internal
# contractions, those must be computed first.
# (temporary variables?)
raise NotImplementedError(
"FIXME: no support for contractions in factor yet")
else:
# We need the lhs expression as an accumulator for
# the loops, i.e
#
# for (int d=0; d < dim; d++){
# lhs[] = lhs[] + term[][d]
# } ^.................. the accumulator
#
# We check if the expression already contains the
# lhs, and raise an exception if it does, as that
# syntax is currently undefined. FIXME: What would be
# a good interpretation?
if assign_to is None:
raise AssignmentError(
"need assignment variable for loops")
if term.has(assign_to):
raise ValueError("FIXME: lhs present in rhs,\
this is undefined in CodePrinter")
lines.extend(openloop)
lines.extend(openloop_d)
text = "%s = %s" % (lhs_printed, StrPrinter.doprint(
self, assign_to + term))
lines.append(self._get_statement(text))
lines.extend(closeloop_d)
lines.extend(closeloop)
return "\n".join(lines)
def _get_expression_indices(self, expr, assign_to):
from sympy.tensor import get_indices
rinds, junk = get_indices(expr)
linds, junk = get_indices(assign_to)
# support broadcast of scalar
if linds and not rinds:
rinds = linds
if rinds != linds:
raise ValueError("lhs indices must match non-dummy"
" rhs indices in %s" % expr)
return self._sort_optimized(rinds, assign_to)
def _sort_optimized(self, indices, expr):
from sympy.tensor.indexed import Indexed
if not indices:
return []
# determine optimized loop order by giving a score to each index
# the index with the highest score are put in the innermost loop.
score_table = {}
for i in indices:
score_table[i] = 0
arrays = expr.atoms(Indexed)
for arr in arrays:
for p, ind in enumerate(arr.indices):
try:
score_table[ind] += self._rate_index_position(p)
except KeyError:
pass
return sorted(indices, key=lambda x: score_table[x])
def _rate_index_position(self, p):
"""function to calculate score based on position among indices
This method is used to sort loops in an optimized order, see
CodePrinter._sort_optimized()
"""
raise NotImplementedError("This function must be implemented by "
"subclass of CodePrinter.")
def _get_statement(self, codestring):
"""Formats a codestring with the proper line ending."""
raise NotImplementedError("This function must be implemented by "
"subclass of CodePrinter.")
def _get_comment(self, text):
"""Formats a text string as a comment."""
raise NotImplementedError("This function must be implemented by "
"subclass of CodePrinter.")
def _declare_number_const(self, name, value):
"""Declare a numeric constant at the top of a function"""
raise NotImplementedError("This function must be implemented by "
"subclass of CodePrinter.")
def _format_code(self, lines):
"""Take in a list of lines of code, and format them accordingly.
This may include indenting, wrapping long lines, etc..."""
raise NotImplementedError("This function must be implemented by "
"subclass of CodePrinter.")
def _get_loop_opening_ending(self, indices):
"""Returns a tuple (open_lines, close_lines) containing lists
of codelines"""
raise NotImplementedError("This function must be implemented by "
"subclass of CodePrinter.")
def _print_Dummy(self, expr):
if expr.name.startswith('Dummy_'):
return '_' + expr.name
else:
return '%s_%d' % (expr.name, expr.dummy_index)
def _print_CodeBlock(self, expr):
return '\n'.join([self._print(i) for i in expr.args])
def _print_String(self, string):
return str(string)
def _print_QuotedString(self, arg):
return '"%s"' % arg.text
def _print_Comment(self, string):
return self._get_comment(str(string))
def _print_Assignment(self, expr):
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise
from sympy.matrices.expressions.matexpr import MatrixSymbol
from sympy.tensor.indexed import IndexedBase
lhs = expr.lhs
rhs = expr.rhs
# We special case assignments that take multiple lines
if isinstance(expr.rhs, Piecewise):
# Here we modify Piecewise so each expression is now
# an Assignment, and then continue on the print.
expressions = []
conditions = []
for (e, c) in rhs.args:
expressions.append(Assignment(lhs, e))
conditions.append(c)
temp = Piecewise(*zip(expressions, conditions))
return self._print(temp)
elif isinstance(lhs, MatrixSymbol):
# Here we form an Assignment for each element in the array,
# printing each one.
lines = []
for (i, j) in self._traverse_matrix_indices(lhs):
temp = Assignment(lhs[i, j], rhs[i, j])
code0 = self._print(temp)
lines.append(code0)
return "\n".join(lines)
elif self._settings.get("contract", False) and (lhs.has(IndexedBase) or
rhs.has(IndexedBase)):
# Here we check if there is looping to be done, and if so
# print the required loops.
return self._doprint_loops(rhs, lhs)
else:
lhs_code = self._print(lhs)
rhs_code = self._print(rhs)
return self._get_statement("%s = %s" % (lhs_code, rhs_code))
def _print_AugmentedAssignment(self, expr):
lhs_code = self._print(expr.lhs)
rhs_code = self._print(expr.rhs)
return self._get_statement("{0} {1} {2}".format(
*map(lambda arg: self._print(arg),
[lhs_code, expr.op, rhs_code])))
def _print_FunctionCall(self, expr):
return '%s(%s)' % (
expr.name,
', '.join(map(lambda arg: self._print(arg),
expr.function_args)))
def _print_Variable(self, expr):
return self._print(expr.symbol)
def _print_Statement(self, expr):
arg, = expr.args
return self._get_statement(self._print(arg))
def _print_Symbol(self, expr):
name = super(CodePrinter, self)._print_Symbol(expr)
if name in self.reserved_words:
if self._settings['error_on_reserved']:
msg = ('This expression includes the symbol "{}" which is a '
'reserved keyword in this language.')
raise ValueError(msg.format(name))
return name + self._settings['reserved_word_suffix']
else:
return name
def _print_Function(self, expr):
if expr.func.__name__ in self.known_functions:
cond_func = self.known_functions[expr.func.__name__]
func = None
if isinstance(cond_func, str):
func = cond_func
else:
for cond, func in cond_func:
if cond(*expr.args):
break
if func is not None:
try:
return func(*[self.parenthesize(item, 0) for item in expr.args])
except TypeError:
return "%s(%s)" % (func, self.stringify(expr.args, ", "))
elif hasattr(expr, '_imp_') and isinstance(expr._imp_, Lambda):
# inlined function
return self._print(expr._imp_(*expr.args))
elif expr.is_Function and self._settings.get('allow_unknown_functions', False):
return '%s(%s)' % (self._print(expr.func), ', '.join(map(self._print, expr.args)))
else:
return self._print_not_supported(expr)
_print_Expr = _print_Function
def _print_NumberSymbol(self, expr):
if self._settings.get("inline", False):
return self._print(Float(expr.evalf(self._settings["precision"])))
else:
# A Number symbol that is not implemented here or with _printmethod
# is registered and evaluated
self._number_symbols.add((expr,
Float(expr.evalf(self._settings["precision"]))))
return str(expr)
def _print_Catalan(self, expr):
return self._print_NumberSymbol(expr)
def _print_EulerGamma(self, expr):
return self._print_NumberSymbol(expr)
def _print_GoldenRatio(self, expr):
return self._print_NumberSymbol(expr)
def _print_TribonacciConstant(self, expr):
return self._print_NumberSymbol(expr)
def _print_Exp1(self, expr):
return self._print_NumberSymbol(expr)
def _print_Pi(self, expr):
return self._print_NumberSymbol(expr)
def _print_And(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
return (" %s " % self._operators['and']).join(self.parenthesize(a, PREC)
for a in sorted(expr.args, key=default_sort_key))
def _print_Or(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
return (" %s " % self._operators['or']).join(self.parenthesize(a, PREC)
for a in sorted(expr.args, key=default_sort_key))
def _print_Xor(self, expr):
if self._operators.get('xor') is None:
return self._print_not_supported(expr)
PREC = precedence(expr)
return (" %s " % self._operators['xor']).join(self.parenthesize(a, PREC)
for a in expr.args)
def _print_Equivalent(self, expr):
if self._operators.get('equivalent') is None:
return self._print_not_supported(expr)
PREC = precedence(expr)
return (" %s " % self._operators['equivalent']).join(self.parenthesize(a, PREC)
for a in expr.args)
def _print_Not(self, expr):
PREC = precedence(expr)
return self._operators['not'] + self.parenthesize(expr.args[0], PREC)
def _print_Mul(self, expr):
prec = precedence(expr)
c, e = expr.as_coeff_Mul()
if c < 0:
expr = _keep_coeff(-c, e)
sign = "-"
else:
sign = ""
a = [] # items in the numerator
b = [] # items that are in the denominator (if any)
pow_paren = [] # Will collect all pow with more than one base element and exp = -1
if self.order not in ('old', 'none'):
args = expr.as_ordered_factors()
else:
# use make_args in case expr was something like -x -> x
args = Mul.make_args(expr)
# Gather args for numerator/denominator
for item in args:
if item.is_commutative and item.is_Pow and item.exp.is_Rational and item.exp.is_negative:
if item.exp != -1:
b.append(Pow(item.base, -item.exp, evaluate=False))
else:
if len(item.args[0].args) != 1 and isinstance(item.base, Mul): # To avoid situations like #14160
pow_paren.append(item)
b.append(Pow(item.base, -item.exp))
else:
a.append(item)
a = a or [S.One]
a_str = [self.parenthesize(x, prec) for x in a]
b_str = [self.parenthesize(x, prec) for x in b]
# To parenthesize Pow with exp = -1 and having more than one Symbol
for item in pow_paren:
if item.base in b:
b_str[b.index(item.base)] = "(%s)" % b_str[b.index(item.base)]
if len(b) == 0:
return sign + '*'.join(a_str)
elif len(b) == 1:
return sign + '*'.join(a_str) + "/" + b_str[0]
else:
return sign + '*'.join(a_str) + "/(%s)" % '*'.join(b_str)
def _print_not_supported(self, expr):
self._not_supported.add(expr)
return self.emptyPrinter(expr)
# The following can not be simply translated into C or Fortran
_print_Basic = _print_not_supported
_print_ComplexInfinity = _print_not_supported
_print_Derivative = _print_not_supported
_print_ExprCondPair = _print_not_supported
_print_GeometryEntity = _print_not_supported
_print_Infinity = _print_not_supported
_print_Integral = _print_not_supported
_print_Interval = _print_not_supported
_print_AccumulationBounds = _print_not_supported
_print_Limit = _print_not_supported
_print_Matrix = _print_not_supported
_print_ImmutableMatrix = _print_not_supported
_print_ImmutableDenseMatrix = _print_not_supported
_print_MutableDenseMatrix = _print_not_supported
_print_MatrixBase = _print_not_supported
_print_DeferredVector = _print_not_supported
_print_NaN = _print_not_supported
_print_NegativeInfinity = _print_not_supported
_print_Normal = _print_not_supported
_print_Order = _print_not_supported
_print_PDF = _print_not_supported
_print_RootOf = _print_not_supported
_print_RootsOf = _print_not_supported
_print_RootSum = _print_not_supported
_print_Sample = _print_not_supported
_print_SparseMatrix = _print_not_supported
_print_Uniform = _print_not_supported
_print_Unit = _print_not_supported
_print_Wild = _print_not_supported
_print_WildFunction = _print_not_supported
|
cc26f9ab5a796850b0fc1a9a7a5b2b5c5ed6f93c2ddef43bc83a9f4e6d5e7d96
|
from distutils.version import LooseVersion as V
import collections
from sympy.core.compatibility import Iterable
from sympy.printing.printer import Printer
from sympy.printing.precedence import PRECEDENCE
from sympy.printing.pycode import AbstractPythonCodePrinter
from sympy import Mul
from sympy.external import import_module
import sympy
class TensorflowPrinter(AbstractPythonCodePrinter):
"""
Tensorflow printer which handles vectorized piecewise functions,
logical operators, max/min, and relational operators.
"""
printmethod = "_tensorflowcode"
mapping = {
sympy.Abs: "tensorflow.abs",
sympy.sign: "tensorflow.sign",
sympy.ceiling: "tensorflow.ceil",
sympy.floor: "tensorflow.floor",
sympy.log: "tensorflow.log",
sympy.exp: "tensorflow.exp",
sympy.sqrt: "tensorflow.sqrt",
sympy.cos: "tensorflow.cos",
sympy.acos: "tensorflow.acos",
sympy.sin: "tensorflow.sin",
sympy.asin: "tensorflow.asin",
sympy.tan: "tensorflow.tan",
sympy.atan: "tensorflow.atan",
sympy.atan2: "tensorflow.atan2",
sympy.cosh: "tensorflow.cosh",
sympy.acosh: "tensorflow.acosh",
sympy.sinh: "tensorflow.sinh",
sympy.asinh: "tensorflow.asinh",
sympy.tanh: "tensorflow.tanh",
sympy.atanh: "tensorflow.atanh",
sympy.re: "tensorflow.real",
sympy.im: "tensorflow.imag",
sympy.arg: "tensorflow.angle",
sympy.erf: "tensorflow.erf",
sympy.loggamma: "tensorflow.gammaln",
sympy.Pow: "tensorflow.pow",
sympy.Eq: "tensorflow.equal",
sympy.Ne: "tensorflow.not_equal",
sympy.StrictGreaterThan: "tensorflow.greater",
sympy.StrictLessThan: "tensorflow.less",
sympy.LessThan: "tensorflow.less_equal",
sympy.GreaterThan: "tensorflow.greater_equal",
sympy.And: "tensorflow.logical_and",
sympy.Or: "tensorflow.logical_or",
sympy.Not: "tensorflow.logical_not",
sympy.Max: "tensorflow.maximum",
sympy.Min: "tensorflow.minimum",
# Matrices
sympy.MatAdd: "tensorflow.add",
sympy.HadamardProduct: "tensorflow.multiply",
sympy.Trace: "tensorflow.trace",
sympy.Determinant : "tensorflow.matrix_determinant",
sympy.Inverse: "tensorflow.matrix_inverse",
sympy.Transpose: "tensorflow.matrix_transpose",
}
def _print_Function(self, expr):
op = self.mapping.get(type(expr), None)
if op is None:
return super(TensorflowPrinter, self)._print_Basic(expr)
children = [self._print(arg) for arg in expr.args]
if len(children) == 1:
return "%s(%s)" % (
self._module_format(op),
children[0]
)
else:
return self._expand_fold_binary_op(op, children)
_print_Expr = _print_Function
_print_Application = _print_Function
_print_MatrixExpr = _print_Function
# TODO: a better class structure would avoid this mess:
_print_Not = _print_Function
_print_And = _print_Function
_print_Or = _print_Function
_print_Transpose = _print_Function
_print_Trace = _print_Function
def _print_Derivative(self, expr):
variables = expr.variables
if any(isinstance(i, Iterable) for i in variables):
raise NotImplementedError("derivation by multiple variables is not supported")
def unfold(expr, args):
if len(args) == 0:
return self._print(expr)
return "%s(%s, %s)[0]" % (
self._module_format("tensorflow.gradients"),
unfold(expr, args[:-1]),
self._print(args[-1]),
)
return unfold(expr.expr, variables)
def _print_Piecewise(self, expr):
tensorflow = import_module('tensorflow')
if tensorflow and V(tensorflow.__version__) < '1.0':
tensorflow_piecewise = "select"
else:
tensorflow_piecewise = "where"
from sympy import Piecewise
e, cond = expr.args[0].args
if len(expr.args) == 1:
return '{0}({1}, {2}, {3})'.format(
tensorflow_piecewise,
self._print(cond),
self._print(e),
0)
return '{0}({1}, {2}, {3})'.format(
tensorflow_piecewise,
self._print(cond),
self._print(e),
self._print(Piecewise(*expr.args[1:])))
def _print_MatrixBase(self, expr):
tensorflow_f = "tensorflow.Variable" if expr.free_symbols else "tensorflow.constant"
data = "["+", ".join(["["+", ".join([self._print(j) for j in i])+"]" for i in expr.tolist()])+"]"
return "%s(%s)" % (
self._module_format(tensorflow_f),
data,
)
def _print_MatMul(self, expr):
from sympy.matrices.expressions import MatrixExpr
mat_args = [arg for arg in expr.args if isinstance(arg, MatrixExpr)]
args = [arg for arg in expr.args if arg not in mat_args]
if args:
return "%s*%s" % (
self.parenthesize(Mul.fromiter(args), PRECEDENCE["Mul"]),
self._expand_fold_binary_op("tensorflow.matmul", mat_args)
)
else:
return self._expand_fold_binary_op("tensorflow.matmul", mat_args)
def _print_MatPow(self, expr):
return self._expand_fold_binary_op("tensorflow.matmul", [expr.base]*expr.exp)
def _print_Assignment(self, expr):
# TODO: is this necessary?
return "%s = %s" % (
self._print(expr.lhs),
self._print(expr.rhs),
)
def _print_CodeBlock(self, expr):
# TODO: is this necessary?
ret = []
for subexpr in expr.args:
ret.append(self._print(subexpr))
return "\n".join(ret)
def _get_letter_generator_for_einsum(self):
for i in range(97, 123):
yield chr(i)
for i in range(65, 91):
yield chr(i)
raise ValueError("out of letters")
def _print_CodegenArrayTensorProduct(self, expr):
array_list = [j for i, arg in enumerate(expr.args) for j in
(self._print(arg), "[%i, %i]" % (2*i, 2*i+1))]
letters = self._get_letter_generator_for_einsum()
contraction_string = ",".join(["".join([next(letters) for j in range(i)]) for i in expr.subranks])
return '%s("%s", %s)' % (
self._module_format('tensorflow.einsum'),
contraction_string,
", ".join([self._print(arg) for arg in expr.args])
)
def _print_CodegenArrayContraction(self, expr):
from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayTensorProduct
base = expr.expr
contraction_indices = expr.contraction_indices
contraction_string, letters_free, letters_dum = self._get_einsum_string(base.subranks, contraction_indices)
if len(contraction_indices) == 0:
return self._print(base)
if isinstance(base, CodegenArrayTensorProduct):
elems = ["%s" % (self._print(arg)) for arg in base.args]
return "%s(\"%s\", %s)" % (
self._module_format("tensorflow.einsum"),
contraction_string,
", ".join(elems)
)
raise NotImplementedError()
def _print_CodegenArrayDiagonal(self, expr):
from sympy.codegen.array_utils import CodegenArrayTensorProduct
diagonal_indices = list(expr.diagonal_indices)
if len(diagonal_indices) > 1:
# TODO: this should be handled in sympy.codegen.array_utils,
# possibly by creating the possibility of unfolding the
# CodegenArrayDiagonal object into nested ones. Same reasoning for
# the array contraction.
raise NotImplementedError
if len(diagonal_indices[0]) != 2:
raise NotImplementedError
if isinstance(expr.expr, CodegenArrayTensorProduct):
subranks = expr.expr.subranks
elems = expr.expr.args
else:
subranks = expr.subranks
elems = [expr.expr]
diagonal_string, letters_free, letters_dum = self._get_einsum_string(subranks, diagonal_indices)
elems = [self._print(i) for i in elems]
return '%s("%s", %s)' % (
self._module_format("tensorflow.einsum"),
"{0}->{1}{2}".format(diagonal_string, "".join(letters_free), "".join(letters_dum)),
", ".join(elems)
)
def _print_CodegenArrayPermuteDims(self, expr):
return "%s(%s, %s)" % (
self._module_format("tensorflow.transpose"),
self._print(expr.expr),
self._print(expr.permutation.args[0]),
)
def _print_CodegenArrayElementwiseAdd(self, expr):
return self._expand_fold_binary_op('tensorflow.add', expr.args)
def tensorflow_code(expr):
printer = TensorflowPrinter()
return printer.doprint(expr)
|
17fd2a2a7f4be1e56616ef6f903798653e1bd357defb15f4cabdcdff61ef24fd
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.external import import_module
from sympy.printing.printer import Printer
from sympy.core.compatibility import range, is_sequence
import sympy
from functools import partial
theano = import_module('theano')
if theano:
ts = theano.scalar
tt = theano.tensor
from theano.sandbox import linalg as tlinalg
mapping = {
sympy.Add: tt.add,
sympy.Mul: tt.mul,
sympy.Abs: tt.abs_,
sympy.sign: tt.sgn,
sympy.ceiling: tt.ceil,
sympy.floor: tt.floor,
sympy.log: tt.log,
sympy.exp: tt.exp,
sympy.sqrt: tt.sqrt,
sympy.cos: tt.cos,
sympy.acos: tt.arccos,
sympy.sin: tt.sin,
sympy.asin: tt.arcsin,
sympy.tan: tt.tan,
sympy.atan: tt.arctan,
sympy.atan2: tt.arctan2,
sympy.cosh: tt.cosh,
sympy.acosh: tt.arccosh,
sympy.sinh: tt.sinh,
sympy.asinh: tt.arcsinh,
sympy.tanh: tt.tanh,
sympy.atanh: tt.arctanh,
sympy.re: tt.real,
sympy.im: tt.imag,
sympy.arg: tt.angle,
sympy.erf: tt.erf,
sympy.gamma: tt.gamma,
sympy.loggamma: tt.gammaln,
sympy.Pow: tt.pow,
sympy.Eq: tt.eq,
sympy.StrictGreaterThan: tt.gt,
sympy.StrictLessThan: tt.lt,
sympy.LessThan: tt.le,
sympy.GreaterThan: tt.ge,
sympy.And: tt.and_,
sympy.Or: tt.or_,
sympy.Max: tt.maximum, # Sympy accept >2 inputs, Theano only 2
sympy.Min: tt.minimum, # Sympy accept >2 inputs, Theano only 2
# Matrices
sympy.MatAdd: tt.Elemwise(ts.add),
sympy.HadamardProduct: tt.Elemwise(ts.mul),
sympy.Trace: tlinalg.trace,
sympy.Determinant : tlinalg.det,
sympy.Inverse: tlinalg.matrix_inverse,
sympy.Transpose: tt.DimShuffle((False, False), [1, 0]),
}
class TheanoPrinter(Printer):
""" Code printer which creates Theano symbolic expression graphs.
Parameters
==========
cache : dict
Cache dictionary to use (see :attr:`cache`). If None (default) will use
the global cache. To create a printer which does not depend on or alter
global state pass an empty dictionary. Note: the dictionary is not
copied on initialization of the printer and will be updated in-place,
so using the same dict object when creating multiple printers or making
multiple calls to :func:`.theano_code` or :func:`.theano_function` means
the cache is shared between all these applications.
Attributes
==========
cache : dict
A cache of Theano variables which have been created for Sympy
symbol-like objects (e.g. :class:`sympy.core.symbol.Symbol` or
:class:`sympy.matrices.expressions.MatrixSymbol`). This is used to
ensure that all references to a given symbol in an expression (or
multiple expressions) are printed as the same Theano variable, which is
created only once. Symbols are differentiated only by name and type. The
format of the cache's contents should be considered opaque to the user.
"""
printmethod = "_theano"
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.cache = kwargs.pop('cache', dict())
super(TheanoPrinter, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def _get_key(self, s, name=None, dtype=None, broadcastable=None):
""" Get the cache key for a Sympy object.
Parameters
==========
s : sympy.core.basic.Basic
Sympy object to get key for.
name : str
Name of object, if it does not have a ``name`` attribute.
"""
if name is None:
name = s.name
return (name, type(s), s.args, dtype, broadcastable)
def _get_or_create(self, s, name=None, dtype=None, broadcastable=None):
"""
Get the Theano variable for a Sympy symbol from the cache, or create it
if it does not exist.
"""
# Defaults
if name is None:
name = s.name
if dtype is None:
dtype = 'floatX'
if broadcastable is None:
broadcastable = ()
key = self._get_key(s, name, dtype=dtype, broadcastable=broadcastable)
if key in self.cache:
return self.cache[key]
value = tt.tensor(name=name, dtype=dtype, broadcastable=broadcastable)
self.cache[key] = value
return value
def _print_Symbol(self, s, **kwargs):
dtype = kwargs.get('dtypes', {}).get(s)
bc = kwargs.get('broadcastables', {}).get(s)
return self._get_or_create(s, dtype=dtype, broadcastable=bc)
def _print_AppliedUndef(self, s, **kwargs):
name = str(type(s)) + '_' + str(s.args[0])
dtype = kwargs.get('dtypes', {}).get(s)
bc = kwargs.get('broadcastables', {}).get(s)
return self._get_or_create(s, name=name, dtype=dtype, broadcastable=bc)
def _print_Basic(self, expr, **kwargs):
op = mapping[type(expr)]
children = [self._print(arg, **kwargs) for arg in expr.args]
return op(*children)
def _print_Number(self, n, **kwargs):
# Integers already taken care of below, interpret as float
return float(n.evalf())
def _print_MatrixSymbol(self, X, **kwargs):
dtype = kwargs.get('dtypes', {}).get(X)
return self._get_or_create(X, dtype=dtype, broadcastable=(None, None))
def _print_DenseMatrix(self, X, **kwargs):
try:
tt.stacklists
except AttributeError:
raise NotImplementedError(
"Matrix translation not yet supported in this version of Theano")
return tt.stacklists([
[self._print(arg, **kwargs) for arg in L]
for L in X.tolist()
])
_print_ImmutableMatrix = _print_ImmutableDenseMatrix = _print_DenseMatrix
def _print_MatMul(self, expr, **kwargs):
children = [self._print(arg, **kwargs) for arg in expr.args]
result = children[0]
for child in children[1:]:
result = tt.dot(result, child)
return result
def _print_MatPow(self, expr, **kwargs):
children = [self._print(arg, **kwargs) for arg in expr.args]
result = 1
if isinstance(children[1], int) and children[1] > 0:
for i in range(children[1]):
result = tt.dot(result, children[0])
else:
raise NotImplementedError('''Only non-negative integer
powers of matrices can be handled by Theano at the moment''')
return result
def _print_MatrixSlice(self, expr, **kwargs):
parent = self._print(expr.parent, **kwargs)
rowslice = self._print(slice(*expr.rowslice), **kwargs)
colslice = self._print(slice(*expr.colslice), **kwargs)
return parent[rowslice, colslice]
def _print_BlockMatrix(self, expr, **kwargs):
nrows, ncols = expr.blocks.shape
blocks = [[self._print(expr.blocks[r, c], **kwargs)
for c in range(ncols)]
for r in range(nrows)]
return tt.join(0, *[tt.join(1, *row) for row in blocks])
def _print_slice(self, expr, **kwargs):
return slice(*[self._print(i, **kwargs)
if isinstance(i, sympy.Basic) else i
for i in (expr.start, expr.stop, expr.step)])
def _print_Pi(self, expr, **kwargs):
return 3.141592653589793
def _print_Piecewise(self, expr, **kwargs):
import numpy as np
e, cond = expr.args[0].args # First condition and corresponding value
# Print conditional expression and value for first condition
p_cond = self._print(cond, **kwargs)
p_e = self._print(e, **kwargs)
# One condition only
if len(expr.args) == 1:
# Return value if condition else NaN
return tt.switch(p_cond, p_e, np.nan)
# Return value_1 if condition_1 else evaluate remaining conditions
p_remaining = self._print(sympy.Piecewise(*expr.args[1:]), **kwargs)
return tt.switch(p_cond, p_e, p_remaining)
def _print_Rational(self, expr, **kwargs):
return tt.true_div(self._print(expr.p, **kwargs),
self._print(expr.q, **kwargs))
def _print_Integer(self, expr, **kwargs):
return expr.p
def _print_factorial(self, expr, **kwargs):
return self._print(sympy.gamma(expr.args[0] + 1), **kwargs)
def _print_Derivative(self, deriv, **kwargs):
rv = self._print(deriv.expr, **kwargs)
for var in deriv.variables:
var = self._print(var, **kwargs)
rv = tt.Rop(rv, var, tt.ones_like(var))
return rv
def emptyPrinter(self, expr):
return expr
def doprint(self, expr, dtypes=None, broadcastables=None):
""" Convert a Sympy expression to a Theano graph variable.
The ``dtypes`` and ``broadcastables`` arguments are used to specify the
data type, dimension, and broadcasting behavior of the Theano variables
corresponding to the free symbols in ``expr``. Each is a mapping from
Sympy symbols to the value of the corresponding argument to
:func:`theano.tensor.Tensor`.
See the corresponding `documentation page`__ for more information on
broadcasting in Theano.
.. __: http://deeplearning.net/software/theano/tutorial/broadcasting.html
Parameters
==========
expr : sympy.core.expr.Expr
Sympy expression to print.
dtypes : dict
Mapping from Sympy symbols to Theano datatypes to use when creating
new Theano variables for those symbols. Corresponds to the ``dtype``
argument to :func:`theano.tensor.Tensor`. Defaults to ``'floatX'``
for symbols not included in the mapping.
broadcastables : dict
Mapping from Sympy symbols to the value of the ``broadcastable``
argument to :func:`theano.tensor.Tensor` to use when creating Theano
variables for those symbols. Defaults to the empty tuple for symbols
not included in the mapping (resulting in a scalar).
Returns
=======
theano.gof.graph.Variable
A variable corresponding to the expression's value in a Theano
symbolic expression graph.
See Also
========
theano.tensor.Tensor
"""
if dtypes is None:
dtypes = {}
if broadcastables is None:
broadcastables = {}
return self._print(expr, dtypes=dtypes, broadcastables=broadcastables)
global_cache = {}
def theano_code(expr, cache=None, **kwargs):
""" Convert a Sympy expression into a Theano graph variable.
Parameters
==========
expr : sympy.core.expr.Expr
Sympy expression object to convert.
cache : dict
Cached Theano variables (see :attr:`.TheanoPrinter.cache`). Defaults to
the module-level global cache.
dtypes : dict
Passed to :meth:`.TheanoPrinter.doprint`.
broadcastables : dict
Passed to :meth:`.TheanoPrinter.doprint`.
Returns
=======
theano.gof.graph.Variable
A variable corresponding to the expression's value in a Theano symbolic
expression graph.
"""
if not theano:
raise ImportError("theano is required for theano_code")
if cache is None:
cache = global_cache
return TheanoPrinter(cache=cache, settings={}).doprint(expr, **kwargs)
def dim_handling(inputs, dim=None, dims=None, broadcastables=None):
"""
Get value of ``broadcastables`` argument to :func:`.theano_code` from
keyword arguments to :func:`.theano_function`.
Included for backwards compatibility.
Parameters
==========
inputs
Sequence of input symbols.
dim : int
Common number of dimensions for all inputs. Overrides other arguments
if given.
dims : dict
Mapping from input symbols to number of dimensions. Overrides
``broadcastables`` argument if given.
broadcastables : dict
Explicit value of ``broadcastables`` argument to
:meth:`.TheanoPrinter.doprint`. If not None function will return this value unchanged.
Returns
=======
dict
Dictionary mapping elements of ``inputs`` to their "broadcastable"
values (tuple of ``bool``s).
"""
if dim is not None:
return {s: (False,) * dim for s in inputs}
if dims is not None:
maxdim = max(dims.values())
return {
s: (False,) * d + (True,) * (maxdim - d)
for s, d in dims.items()
}
if broadcastables != None:
return broadcastables
return {}
def theano_function(inputs, outputs, scalar=False, **kwargs):
""" Create a Theano function from SymPy expressions.
The inputs and outputs are converted to Theano variables using
:func:`.theano_code` and then passed to :func:`theano.function`.
Parameters
==========
inputs
Sequence of symbols which constitute the inputs of the function.
outputs
Sequence of expressions which constitute the outputs(s) of the
function. The free symbols of each expression must be a subset of
``inputs``.
scalar : bool
Convert 0-dimensional arrays in output to scalars. This will return a
Python wrapper function around the Theano function object.
cache : dict
Cached Theano variables (see :attr:`.TheanoPrinter.cache`). Defaults to
the module-level global cache.
dtypes : dict
Passed to :meth:`.TheanoPrinter.doprint`.
broadcastables : dict
Passed to :meth:`.TheanoPrinter.doprint`.
dims : dict
Alternative to ``broadcastables`` argument. Mapping from elements of
``inputs`` to integers indicating the dimension of their associated
arrays/tensors. Overrides ``broadcastables`` argument if given.
dim : int
Another alternative to the ``broadcastables`` argument. Common number of
dimensions to use for all arrays/tensors.
``theano_function([x, y], [...], dim=2)`` is equivalent to using
``broadcastables={x: (False, False), y: (False, False)}``.
Returns
=======
callable
A callable object which takes values of ``inputs`` as positional
arguments and returns an output array for each of the expressions
in ``outputs``. If ``outputs`` is a single expression the function will
return a Numpy array, if it is a list of multiple expressions the
function will return a list of arrays. See description of the ``squeeze``
argument above for the behavior when a single output is passed in a list.
The returned object will either be an instance of
:class:`theano.compile.function_module.Function` or a Python wrapper
function around one. In both cases, the returned value will have a
``theano_function`` attribute which points to the return value of
:func:`theano.function`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy.printing.theanocode import theano_function
A simple function with one input and one output:
>>> f1 = theano_function([x], [x**2 - 1], scalar=True)
>>> f1(3)
8.0
A function with multiple inputs and one output:
>>> f2 = theano_function([x, y, z], [(x**z + y**z)**(1/z)], scalar=True)
>>> f2(3, 4, 2)
5.0
A function with multiple inputs and multiple outputs:
>>> f3 = theano_function([x, y], [x**2 + y**2, x**2 - y**2], scalar=True)
>>> f3(2, 3)
[13.0, -5.0]
See also
========
theano.function
dim_handling
"""
if not theano:
raise ImportError("theano is required for theano_function")
# Pop off non-theano keyword args
cache = kwargs.pop('cache', {})
dtypes = kwargs.pop('dtypes', {})
broadcastables = dim_handling(
inputs,
dim=kwargs.pop('dim', None),
dims=kwargs.pop('dims', None),
broadcastables=kwargs.pop('broadcastables', None),
)
# Print inputs/outputs
code = partial(theano_code, cache=cache, dtypes=dtypes,
broadcastables=broadcastables)
tinputs = list(map(code, inputs))
toutputs = list(map(code, outputs))
if len(toutputs) == 1:
toutputs = toutputs[0]
# Compile theano func
func = theano.function(tinputs, toutputs, **kwargs)
is_0d = [len(o.variable.broadcastable) == 0 for o in func.outputs]
# No wrapper required
if not scalar or not any(is_0d):
func.theano_function = func
return func
# Create wrapper to convert 0-dimensional outputs to scalars
def wrapper(*args):
out = func(*args)
# out can be array(1.0) or [array(1.0), array(2.0)]
if is_sequence(out):
return [o[()] if is_0d[i] else o for i, o in enumerate(out)]
else:
return out[()]
wrapper.__wrapped__ = func
wrapper.__doc__ = func.__doc__
wrapper.theano_function = func
return wrapper
|
8a7d5f0c09afb328065d787d889816c589c7278dc0a7cadcf0a24e631415e4c1
|
"""Integration method that emulates by-hand techniques.
This module also provides functionality to get the steps used to evaluate a
particular integral, in the ``integral_steps`` function. This will return
nested namedtuples representing the integration rules used. The
``manualintegrate`` function computes the integral using those steps given
an integrand; given the steps, ``_manualintegrate`` will evaluate them.
The integrator can be extended with new heuristics and evaluation
techniques. To do so, write a function that accepts an ``IntegralInfo``
object and returns either a namedtuple representing a rule or
``None``. Then, write another function that accepts the namedtuple's fields
and returns the antiderivative, and decorate it with
``@evaluates(namedtuple_type)``. If the new technique requires a new
match, add the key and call to the antiderivative function to integral_steps.
To enable simple substitutions, add the match to find_substitutions.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import namedtuple, defaultdict
import sympy
from sympy.core.compatibility import reduce
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_not
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import TrigonometricFunction
from sympy.functions.special.polynomials import OrthogonalPolynomial
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise
from sympy.strategies.core import switch, do_one, null_safe, condition
from sympy.core.relational import Eq, Ne
from sympy.polys.polytools import degree
ZERO = sympy.S.Zero
def Rule(name, props=""):
# GOTCHA: namedtuple class name not considered!
def __eq__(self, other):
return self.__class__ == other.__class__ and tuple.__eq__(self, other)
__neq__ = lambda self, other: not __eq__(self, other)
cls = namedtuple(name, props + " context symbol")
cls.__eq__ = __eq__
cls.__ne__ = __neq__
return cls
ConstantRule = Rule("ConstantRule", "constant")
ConstantTimesRule = Rule("ConstantTimesRule", "constant other substep")
PowerRule = Rule("PowerRule", "base exp")
AddRule = Rule("AddRule", "substeps")
URule = Rule("URule", "u_var u_func constant substep")
PartsRule = Rule("PartsRule", "u dv v_step second_step")
CyclicPartsRule = Rule("CyclicPartsRule", "parts_rules coefficient")
TrigRule = Rule("TrigRule", "func arg")
ExpRule = Rule("ExpRule", "base exp")
ReciprocalRule = Rule("ReciprocalRule", "func")
ArcsinRule = Rule("ArcsinRule")
InverseHyperbolicRule = Rule("InverseHyperbolicRule", "func")
AlternativeRule = Rule("AlternativeRule", "alternatives")
DontKnowRule = Rule("DontKnowRule")
DerivativeRule = Rule("DerivativeRule")
RewriteRule = Rule("RewriteRule", "rewritten substep")
PiecewiseRule = Rule("PiecewiseRule", "subfunctions")
HeavisideRule = Rule("HeavisideRule", "harg ibnd substep")
TrigSubstitutionRule = Rule("TrigSubstitutionRule",
"theta func rewritten substep restriction")
ArctanRule = Rule("ArctanRule", "a b c")
ArccothRule = Rule("ArccothRule", "a b c")
ArctanhRule = Rule("ArctanhRule", "a b c")
JacobiRule = Rule("JacobiRule", "n a b")
GegenbauerRule = Rule("GegenbauerRule", "n a")
ChebyshevTRule = Rule("ChebyshevTRule", "n")
ChebyshevURule = Rule("ChebyshevURule", "n")
LegendreRule = Rule("LegendreRule", "n")
HermiteRule = Rule("HermiteRule", "n")
LaguerreRule = Rule("LaguerreRule", "n")
AssocLaguerreRule = Rule("AssocLaguerreRule", "n a")
IntegralInfo = namedtuple('IntegralInfo', 'integrand symbol')
evaluators = {}
def evaluates(rule):
def _evaluates(func):
func.rule = rule
evaluators[rule] = func
return func
return _evaluates
def contains_dont_know(rule):
if isinstance(rule, DontKnowRule):
return True
else:
for val in rule:
if isinstance(val, tuple):
if contains_dont_know(val):
return True
elif isinstance(val, list):
if any(contains_dont_know(i) for i in val):
return True
return False
def manual_diff(f, symbol):
"""Derivative of f in form expected by find_substitutions
SymPy's derivatives for some trig functions (like cot) aren't in a form
that works well with finding substitutions; this replaces the
derivatives for those particular forms with something that works better.
"""
if f.args:
arg = f.args[0]
if isinstance(f, sympy.tan):
return arg.diff(symbol) * sympy.sec(arg)**2
elif isinstance(f, sympy.cot):
return -arg.diff(symbol) * sympy.csc(arg)**2
elif isinstance(f, sympy.sec):
return arg.diff(symbol) * sympy.sec(arg) * sympy.tan(arg)
elif isinstance(f, sympy.csc):
return -arg.diff(symbol) * sympy.csc(arg) * sympy.cot(arg)
elif isinstance(f, sympy.Add):
return sum([manual_diff(arg, symbol) for arg in f.args])
elif isinstance(f, sympy.Mul):
if len(f.args) == 2 and isinstance(f.args[0], sympy.Number):
return f.args[0] * manual_diff(f.args[1], symbol)
return f.diff(symbol)
# Method based on that on SIN, described in "Symbolic Integration: The
# Stormy Decade"
def find_substitutions(integrand, symbol, u_var):
results = []
def test_subterm(u, u_diff):
substituted = integrand / u_diff
if symbol not in substituted.free_symbols:
# replaced everything already
return False
substituted = substituted.subs(u, u_var).cancel()
if symbol not in substituted.free_symbols:
# avoid increasing the degree of a rational function
if integrand.is_rational_function(symbol) and substituted.is_rational_function(u_var):
deg_before = max([degree(t, symbol) for t in integrand.as_numer_denom()])
deg_after = max([degree(t, u_var) for t in substituted.as_numer_denom()])
if deg_after > deg_before:
return False
return substituted.as_independent(u_var, as_Add=False)
# special treatment for substitutions u = (a*x+b)**(1/n)
if (isinstance(u, sympy.Pow) and (1/u.exp).is_Integer and
sympy.Abs(u.exp) < 1):
a = sympy.Wild('a', exclude=[symbol])
b = sympy.Wild('b', exclude=[symbol])
match = u.base.match(a*symbol + b)
if match:
a, b = [match.get(i, ZERO) for i in (a, b)]
if a != 0 and b != 0:
substituted = substituted.subs(symbol,
(u_var**(1/u.exp) - b)/a)
return substituted.as_independent(u_var, as_Add=False)
return False
def possible_subterms(term):
if isinstance(term, (TrigonometricFunction,
sympy.asin, sympy.acos, sympy.atan,
sympy.exp, sympy.log, sympy.Heaviside)):
return [term.args[0]]
elif isinstance(term, (sympy.chebyshevt, sympy.chebyshevu,
sympy.legendre, sympy.hermite, sympy.laguerre)):
return [term.args[1]]
elif isinstance(term, (sympy.gegenbauer, sympy.assoc_laguerre)):
return [term.args[2]]
elif isinstance(term, sympy.jacobi):
return [term.args[3]]
elif isinstance(term, sympy.Mul):
r = []
for u in term.args:
r.append(u)
r.extend(possible_subterms(u))
return r
elif isinstance(term, sympy.Pow):
if term.args[1].is_constant(symbol):
return [term.args[0]]
elif term.args[0].is_constant(symbol):
return [term.args[1]]
elif isinstance(term, sympy.Add):
r = []
for arg in term.args:
r.append(arg)
r.extend(possible_subterms(arg))
return r
return []
for u in possible_subterms(integrand):
if u == symbol:
continue
u_diff = manual_diff(u, symbol)
new_integrand = test_subterm(u, u_diff)
if new_integrand is not False:
constant, new_integrand = new_integrand
if new_integrand == integrand.subs(symbol, u_var):
continue
substitution = (u, constant, new_integrand)
if substitution not in results:
results.append(substitution)
return results
def rewriter(condition, rewrite):
"""Strategy that rewrites an integrand."""
def _rewriter(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
if condition(*integral):
rewritten = rewrite(*integral)
if rewritten != integrand:
substep = integral_steps(rewritten, symbol)
if not isinstance(substep, DontKnowRule) and substep:
return RewriteRule(
rewritten,
substep,
integrand, symbol)
return _rewriter
def proxy_rewriter(condition, rewrite):
"""Strategy that rewrites an integrand based on some other criteria."""
def _proxy_rewriter(criteria):
criteria, integral = criteria
integrand, symbol = integral
args = criteria + list(integral)
if condition(*args):
rewritten = rewrite(*args)
if rewritten != integrand:
return RewriteRule(
rewritten,
integral_steps(rewritten, symbol),
integrand, symbol)
return _proxy_rewriter
def multiplexer(conditions):
"""Apply the rule that matches the condition, else None"""
def multiplexer_rl(expr):
for key, rule in conditions.items():
if key(expr):
return rule(expr)
return multiplexer_rl
def alternatives(*rules):
"""Strategy that makes an AlternativeRule out of multiple possible results."""
def _alternatives(integral):
alts = []
for rule in rules:
result = rule(integral)
if (result and not isinstance(result, DontKnowRule) and
result != integral and result not in alts):
alts.append(result)
if len(alts) == 1:
return alts[0]
elif alts:
doable = [rule for rule in alts if not contains_dont_know(rule)]
if doable:
return AlternativeRule(doable, *integral)
else:
return AlternativeRule(alts, *integral)
return _alternatives
def constant_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
return ConstantRule(integral.integrand, *integral)
def power_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
base, exp = integrand.as_base_exp()
if symbol not in exp.free_symbols and isinstance(base, sympy.Symbol):
if sympy.simplify(exp + 1) == 0:
return ReciprocalRule(base, integrand, symbol)
return PowerRule(base, exp, integrand, symbol)
elif symbol not in base.free_symbols and isinstance(exp, sympy.Symbol):
rule = ExpRule(base, exp, integrand, symbol)
if fuzzy_not(sympy.log(base).is_zero):
return rule
elif sympy.log(base).is_zero:
return ConstantRule(1, 1, symbol)
return PiecewiseRule([
(rule, sympy.Ne(sympy.log(base), 0)),
(ConstantRule(1, 1, symbol), True)
], integrand, symbol)
def exp_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
if isinstance(integrand.args[0], sympy.Symbol):
return ExpRule(sympy.E, integrand.args[0], integrand, symbol)
def orthogonal_poly_rule(integral):
orthogonal_poly_classes = {
sympy.jacobi: JacobiRule,
sympy.gegenbauer: GegenbauerRule,
sympy.chebyshevt: ChebyshevTRule,
sympy.chebyshevu: ChebyshevURule,
sympy.legendre: LegendreRule,
sympy.hermite: HermiteRule,
sympy.laguerre: LaguerreRule,
sympy.assoc_laguerre: AssocLaguerreRule
}
orthogonal_poly_var_index = {
sympy.jacobi: 3,
sympy.gegenbauer: 2,
sympy.assoc_laguerre: 2
}
integrand, symbol = integral
for klass in orthogonal_poly_classes:
if isinstance(integrand, klass):
var_index = orthogonal_poly_var_index.get(klass, 1)
if (integrand.args[var_index] is symbol and not
any(v.has(symbol) for v in integrand.args[:var_index])):
args = integrand.args[:var_index] + (integrand, symbol)
return orthogonal_poly_classes[klass](*args)
def inverse_trig_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
base, exp = integrand.as_base_exp()
a = sympy.Wild('a', exclude=[symbol])
b = sympy.Wild('b', exclude=[symbol])
match = base.match(a + b*symbol**2)
if not match:
return
def negative(x):
return x.is_negative or x.could_extract_minus_sign()
def ArcsinhRule(integrand, symbol):
return InverseHyperbolicRule(sympy.asinh, integrand, symbol)
def ArccoshRule(integrand, symbol):
return InverseHyperbolicRule(sympy.acosh, integrand, symbol)
def make_inverse_trig(RuleClass, base_exp, a, sign_a, b, sign_b):
u_var = sympy.Dummy("u")
current_base = base
current_symbol = symbol
constant = u_func = u_constant = substep = None
factored = integrand
if a != 1:
constant = a**base_exp
current_base = sign_a + sign_b * (b/a) * current_symbol**2
factored = current_base ** base_exp
if (b/a) != 1:
u_func = sympy.sqrt(b/a) * symbol
u_constant = sympy.sqrt(a/b)
current_symbol = u_var
current_base = sign_a + sign_b * current_symbol**2
substep = RuleClass(current_base ** base_exp, current_symbol)
if u_func is not None:
if u_constant != 1 and substep is not None:
substep = ConstantTimesRule(
u_constant, current_base ** base_exp, substep,
u_constant * current_base ** base_exp, symbol)
substep = URule(u_var, u_func, u_constant, substep, factored, symbol)
if constant is not None and substep is not None:
substep = ConstantTimesRule(constant, factored, substep, integrand, symbol)
return substep
a, b = [match.get(i, ZERO) for i in (a, b)]
# list of (rule, base_exp, a, sign_a, b, sign_b, condition)
possibilities = []
if sympy.simplify(2*exp + 1) == 0:
possibilities.append((ArcsinRule, exp, a, 1, -b, -1, sympy.And(a > 0, b < 0)))
possibilities.append((ArcsinhRule, exp, a, 1, b, 1, sympy.And(a > 0, b > 0)))
possibilities.append((ArccoshRule, exp, -a, -1, b, 1, sympy.And(a < 0, b > 0)))
possibilities = [p for p in possibilities if p[-1] is not sympy.false]
if a.is_number and b.is_number:
possibility = [p for p in possibilities if p[-1] is sympy.true]
if len(possibility) == 1:
return make_inverse_trig(*possibility[0][:-1])
elif possibilities:
return PiecewiseRule(
[(make_inverse_trig(*p[:-1]), p[-1]) for p in possibilities],
integrand, symbol)
def add_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
results = [integral_steps(g, symbol)
for g in integrand.as_ordered_terms()]
return None if None in results else AddRule(results, integrand, symbol)
def mul_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
args = integrand.args
# Constant times function case
coeff, f = integrand.as_independent(symbol)
next_step = integral_steps(f, symbol)
if coeff != 1 and next_step is not None:
return ConstantTimesRule(
coeff, f,
next_step,
integrand, symbol)
def _parts_rule(integrand, symbol):
# LIATE rule:
# log, inverse trig, algebraic, trigonometric, exponential
def pull_out_algebraic(integrand):
integrand = integrand.cancel().together()
algebraic = [arg for arg in integrand.args if arg.is_algebraic_expr(symbol)]
if algebraic:
u = sympy.Mul(*algebraic)
dv = (integrand / u).cancel()
return u, dv
def pull_out_u(*functions):
def pull_out_u_rl(integrand):
if any([integrand.has(f) for f in functions]):
args = [arg for arg in integrand.args
if any(isinstance(arg, cls) for cls in functions)]
if args:
u = reduce(lambda a,b: a*b, args)
dv = integrand / u
return u, dv
return pull_out_u_rl
liate_rules = [pull_out_u(sympy.log), pull_out_u(sympy.atan, sympy.asin, sympy.acos),
pull_out_algebraic, pull_out_u(sympy.sin, sympy.cos),
pull_out_u(sympy.exp)]
dummy = sympy.Dummy("temporary")
# we can integrate log(x) and atan(x) by setting dv = 1
if isinstance(integrand, (sympy.log, sympy.atan, sympy.asin, sympy.acos)):
integrand = dummy * integrand
for index, rule in enumerate(liate_rules):
result = rule(integrand)
if result:
u, dv = result
# Don't pick u to be a constant if possible
if symbol not in u.free_symbols and not u.has(dummy):
return
u = u.subs(dummy, 1)
dv = dv.subs(dummy, 1)
# Don't pick a non-polynomial algebraic to be differentiated
if rule == pull_out_algebraic and not u.is_polynomial(symbol):
return
# Don't trade one logarithm for another
if isinstance(u, sympy.log):
rec_dv = 1/dv
if (rec_dv.is_polynomial(symbol) and
degree(rec_dv, symbol) == 1):
return
# Can integrate a polynomial times OrthogonalPolynomial
if rule == pull_out_algebraic and isinstance(dv, OrthogonalPolynomial):
v_step = integral_steps(dv, symbol)
if isinstance(v_step, DontKnowRule):
return
else:
du = u.diff(symbol)
v = _manualintegrate(v_step)
return u, dv, v, du, v_step
for rule in liate_rules[index + 1:]:
r = rule(integrand)
# make sure dv is amenable to integration
if r and r[0].subs(dummy, 1).equals(dv):
du = u.diff(symbol)
v_step = integral_steps(sympy.simplify(dv), symbol)
v = _manualintegrate(v_step)
return u, dv, v, du, v_step
def parts_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
constant, integrand = integrand.as_coeff_Mul()
result = _parts_rule(integrand, symbol)
steps = []
if result:
u, dv, v, du, v_step = result
steps.append(result)
if isinstance(v, sympy.Integral):
return
# Set a limit on the number of times u can be used
if isinstance(u, (sympy.sin, sympy.cos, sympy.exp, sympy.sinh, sympy.cosh)):
cachekey = u.xreplace({symbol: _cache_dummy})
if _parts_u_cache[cachekey] > 2:
return
_parts_u_cache[cachekey] += 1
while True:
if (integrand / (v * du)).cancel() == 1:
break
if symbol not in (integrand / (v * du)).cancel().free_symbols:
coefficient = ((v * du) / integrand).cancel()
rule = CyclicPartsRule(
[PartsRule(u, dv, v_step, None, None, None)
for (u, dv, v, du, v_step) in steps],
(-1) ** len(steps) * coefficient,
integrand, symbol
)
if (constant != 1) and rule:
rule = ConstantTimesRule(constant, integrand, rule,
constant * integrand, symbol)
return rule
result = _parts_rule(v * du, symbol)
if result:
u, dv, v, du, v_step = result
steps.append(result)
else:
break
def make_second_step(steps, integrand):
if steps:
u, dv, v, du, v_step = steps[0]
return PartsRule(u, dv, v_step,
make_second_step(steps[1:], v * du),
integrand, symbol)
else:
steps = integral_steps(integrand, symbol)
if steps:
return steps
else:
return DontKnowRule(integrand, symbol)
if steps:
u, dv, v, du, v_step = steps[0]
rule = PartsRule(u, dv, v_step,
make_second_step(steps[1:], v * du),
integrand, symbol)
if (constant != 1) and rule:
rule = ConstantTimesRule(constant, integrand, rule,
constant * integrand, symbol)
return rule
def trig_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
if isinstance(integrand, sympy.sin) or isinstance(integrand, sympy.cos):
arg = integrand.args[0]
if not isinstance(arg, sympy.Symbol):
return # perhaps a substitution can deal with it
if isinstance(integrand, sympy.sin):
func = 'sin'
else:
func = 'cos'
return TrigRule(func, arg, integrand, symbol)
if integrand == sympy.sec(symbol)**2:
return TrigRule('sec**2', symbol, integrand, symbol)
elif integrand == sympy.csc(symbol)**2:
return TrigRule('csc**2', symbol, integrand, symbol)
if isinstance(integrand, sympy.tan):
rewritten = sympy.sin(*integrand.args) / sympy.cos(*integrand.args)
elif isinstance(integrand, sympy.cot):
rewritten = sympy.cos(*integrand.args) / sympy.sin(*integrand.args)
elif isinstance(integrand, sympy.sec):
arg = integrand.args[0]
rewritten = ((sympy.sec(arg)**2 + sympy.tan(arg) * sympy.sec(arg)) /
(sympy.sec(arg) + sympy.tan(arg)))
elif isinstance(integrand, sympy.csc):
arg = integrand.args[0]
rewritten = ((sympy.csc(arg)**2 + sympy.cot(arg) * sympy.csc(arg)) /
(sympy.csc(arg) + sympy.cot(arg)))
else:
return
return RewriteRule(
rewritten,
integral_steps(rewritten, symbol),
integrand, symbol
)
def trig_product_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
sectan = sympy.sec(symbol) * sympy.tan(symbol)
q = integrand / sectan
if symbol not in q.free_symbols:
rule = TrigRule('sec*tan', symbol, sectan, symbol)
if q != 1 and rule:
rule = ConstantTimesRule(q, sectan, rule, integrand, symbol)
return rule
csccot = -sympy.csc(symbol) * sympy.cot(symbol)
q = integrand / csccot
if symbol not in q.free_symbols:
rule = TrigRule('csc*cot', symbol, csccot, symbol)
if q != 1 and rule:
rule = ConstantTimesRule(q, csccot, rule, integrand, symbol)
return rule
def quadratic_denom_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
a = sympy.Wild('a', exclude=[symbol])
b = sympy.Wild('b', exclude=[symbol])
c = sympy.Wild('c', exclude=[symbol])
match = integrand.match(a / (b * symbol ** 2 + c))
if not match:
return
a, b, c = match[a], match[b], match[c]
return PiecewiseRule([(ArctanRule(a, b, c, integrand, symbol), sympy.Gt(c / b, 0)),
(ArccothRule(a, b, c, integrand, symbol), sympy.And(sympy.Gt(symbol ** 2, -c / b), sympy.Lt(c / b, 0))),
(ArctanhRule(a, b, c, integrand, symbol), sympy.And(sympy.Lt(symbol ** 2, -c / b), sympy.Lt(c / b, 0))),
], integrand, symbol)
def root_mul_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
a = sympy.Wild('a', exclude=[symbol])
b = sympy.Wild('b', exclude=[symbol])
c = sympy.Wild('c')
match = integrand.match(sympy.sqrt(a * symbol + b) * c)
if not match:
return
a, b, c = match[a], match[b], match[c]
d = sympy.Wild('d', exclude=[symbol])
e = sympy.Wild('e', exclude=[symbol])
f = sympy.Wild('f')
recursion_test = c.match(sympy.sqrt(d * symbol + e) * f)
if recursion_test:
return
u = sympy.Dummy('u')
u_func = sympy.sqrt(a * symbol + b)
integrand = integrand.subs(u_func, u)
integrand = integrand.subs(symbol, (u**2 - b) / a)
integrand = integrand * 2 * u / a
next_step = integral_steps(integrand, u)
if next_step:
return URule(u, u_func, None, next_step, integrand, symbol)
@sympy.cacheit
def make_wilds(symbol):
a = sympy.Wild('a', exclude=[symbol])
b = sympy.Wild('b', exclude=[symbol])
m = sympy.Wild('m', exclude=[symbol], properties=[lambda n: isinstance(n, sympy.Integer)])
n = sympy.Wild('n', exclude=[symbol], properties=[lambda n: isinstance(n, sympy.Integer)])
return a, b, m, n
@sympy.cacheit
def sincos_pattern(symbol):
a, b, m, n = make_wilds(symbol)
pattern = sympy.sin(a*symbol)**m * sympy.cos(b*symbol)**n
return pattern, a, b, m, n
@sympy.cacheit
def tansec_pattern(symbol):
a, b, m, n = make_wilds(symbol)
pattern = sympy.tan(a*symbol)**m * sympy.sec(b*symbol)**n
return pattern, a, b, m, n
@sympy.cacheit
def cotcsc_pattern(symbol):
a, b, m, n = make_wilds(symbol)
pattern = sympy.cot(a*symbol)**m * sympy.csc(b*symbol)**n
return pattern, a, b, m, n
@sympy.cacheit
def heaviside_pattern(symbol):
m = sympy.Wild('m', exclude=[symbol])
b = sympy.Wild('b', exclude=[symbol])
g = sympy.Wild('g')
pattern = sympy.Heaviside(m*symbol + b) * g
return pattern, m, b, g
def uncurry(func):
def uncurry_rl(args):
return func(*args)
return uncurry_rl
def trig_rewriter(rewrite):
def trig_rewriter_rl(args):
a, b, m, n, integrand, symbol = args
rewritten = rewrite(a, b, m, n, integrand, symbol)
if rewritten != integrand:
return RewriteRule(
rewritten,
integral_steps(rewritten, symbol),
integrand, symbol)
return trig_rewriter_rl
sincos_botheven_condition = uncurry(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, s: m.is_even and n.is_even and
m.is_nonnegative and n.is_nonnegative)
sincos_botheven = trig_rewriter(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, symbol: ( (((1 - sympy.cos(2*a*symbol)) / 2) ** (m / 2)) *
(((1 + sympy.cos(2*b*symbol)) / 2) ** (n / 2)) ))
sincos_sinodd_condition = uncurry(lambda a, b, m, n, i, s: m.is_odd and m >= 3)
sincos_sinodd = trig_rewriter(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, symbol: ( (1 - sympy.cos(a*symbol)**2)**((m - 1) / 2) *
sympy.sin(a*symbol) *
sympy.cos(b*symbol) ** n))
sincos_cosodd_condition = uncurry(lambda a, b, m, n, i, s: n.is_odd and n >= 3)
sincos_cosodd = trig_rewriter(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, symbol: ( (1 - sympy.sin(b*symbol)**2)**((n - 1) / 2) *
sympy.cos(b*symbol) *
sympy.sin(a*symbol) ** m))
tansec_seceven_condition = uncurry(lambda a, b, m, n, i, s: n.is_even and n >= 4)
tansec_seceven = trig_rewriter(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, symbol: ( (1 + sympy.tan(b*symbol)**2) ** (n/2 - 1) *
sympy.sec(b*symbol)**2 *
sympy.tan(a*symbol) ** m ))
tansec_tanodd_condition = uncurry(lambda a, b, m, n, i, s: m.is_odd)
tansec_tanodd = trig_rewriter(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, symbol: ( (sympy.sec(a*symbol)**2 - 1) ** ((m - 1) / 2) *
sympy.tan(a*symbol) *
sympy.sec(b*symbol) ** n ))
tan_tansquared_condition = uncurry(lambda a, b, m, n, i, s: m == 2 and n == 0)
tan_tansquared = trig_rewriter(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, symbol: ( sympy.sec(a*symbol)**2 - 1))
cotcsc_csceven_condition = uncurry(lambda a, b, m, n, i, s: n.is_even and n >= 4)
cotcsc_csceven = trig_rewriter(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, symbol: ( (1 + sympy.cot(b*symbol)**2) ** (n/2 - 1) *
sympy.csc(b*symbol)**2 *
sympy.cot(a*symbol) ** m ))
cotcsc_cotodd_condition = uncurry(lambda a, b, m, n, i, s: m.is_odd)
cotcsc_cotodd = trig_rewriter(
lambda a, b, m, n, i, symbol: ( (sympy.csc(a*symbol)**2 - 1) ** ((m - 1) / 2) *
sympy.cot(a*symbol) *
sympy.csc(b*symbol) ** n ))
def trig_sincos_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
if any(integrand.has(f) for f in (sympy.sin, sympy.cos)):
pattern, a, b, m, n = sincos_pattern(symbol)
match = integrand.match(pattern)
if not match:
return
return multiplexer({
sincos_botheven_condition: sincos_botheven,
sincos_sinodd_condition: sincos_sinodd,
sincos_cosodd_condition: sincos_cosodd
})(tuple(
[match.get(i, ZERO) for i in (a, b, m, n)] +
[integrand, symbol]))
def trig_tansec_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
integrand = integrand.subs({
1 / sympy.cos(symbol): sympy.sec(symbol)
})
if any(integrand.has(f) for f in (sympy.tan, sympy.sec)):
pattern, a, b, m, n = tansec_pattern(symbol)
match = integrand.match(pattern)
if not match:
return
return multiplexer({
tansec_tanodd_condition: tansec_tanodd,
tansec_seceven_condition: tansec_seceven,
tan_tansquared_condition: tan_tansquared
})(tuple(
[match.get(i, ZERO) for i in (a, b, m, n)] +
[integrand, symbol]))
def trig_cotcsc_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
integrand = integrand.subs({
1 / sympy.sin(symbol): sympy.csc(symbol),
1 / sympy.tan(symbol): sympy.cot(symbol),
sympy.cos(symbol) / sympy.tan(symbol): sympy.cot(symbol)
})
if any(integrand.has(f) for f in (sympy.cot, sympy.csc)):
pattern, a, b, m, n = cotcsc_pattern(symbol)
match = integrand.match(pattern)
if not match:
return
return multiplexer({
cotcsc_cotodd_condition: cotcsc_cotodd,
cotcsc_csceven_condition: cotcsc_csceven
})(tuple(
[match.get(i, ZERO) for i in (a, b, m, n)] +
[integrand, symbol]))
def trig_sindouble_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
a = sympy.Wild('a', exclude=[sympy.sin(2*symbol)])
match = integrand.match(sympy.sin(2*symbol)*a)
if match:
sin_double = 2*sympy.sin(symbol)*sympy.cos(symbol)/sympy.sin(2*symbol)
return integral_steps(integrand * sin_double, symbol)
def trig_powers_products_rule(integral):
return do_one(null_safe(trig_sincos_rule),
null_safe(trig_tansec_rule),
null_safe(trig_cotcsc_rule),
null_safe(trig_sindouble_rule))(integral)
def trig_substitution_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
A = sympy.Wild('a', exclude=[0, symbol])
B = sympy.Wild('b', exclude=[0, symbol])
theta = sympy.Dummy("theta")
target_pattern = A + B*symbol**2
matches = integrand.find(target_pattern)
for expr in matches:
match = expr.match(target_pattern)
a = match.get(A, ZERO)
b = match.get(B, ZERO)
a_positive = ((a.is_number and a > 0) or a.is_positive)
b_positive = ((b.is_number and b > 0) or b.is_positive)
a_negative = ((a.is_number and a < 0) or a.is_negative)
b_negative = ((b.is_number and b < 0) or b.is_negative)
x_func = None
if a_positive and b_positive:
# a**2 + b*x**2. Assume sec(theta) > 0, -pi/2 < theta < pi/2
x_func = (sympy.sqrt(a)/sympy.sqrt(b)) * sympy.tan(theta)
# Do not restrict the domain: tan(theta) takes on any real
# value on the interval -pi/2 < theta < pi/2 so x takes on
# any value
restriction = True
elif a_positive and b_negative:
# a**2 - b*x**2. Assume cos(theta) > 0, -pi/2 < theta < pi/2
constant = sympy.sqrt(a)/sympy.sqrt(-b)
x_func = constant * sympy.sin(theta)
restriction = sympy.And(symbol > -constant, symbol < constant)
elif a_negative and b_positive:
# b*x**2 - a**2. Assume sin(theta) > 0, 0 < theta < pi
constant = sympy.sqrt(-a)/sympy.sqrt(b)
x_func = constant * sympy.sec(theta)
restriction = sympy.And(symbol > -constant, symbol < constant)
if x_func:
# Manually simplify sqrt(trig(theta)**2) to trig(theta)
# Valid due to assumed domain restriction
substitutions = {}
for f in [sympy.sin, sympy.cos, sympy.tan,
sympy.sec, sympy.csc, sympy.cot]:
substitutions[sympy.sqrt(f(theta)**2)] = f(theta)
substitutions[sympy.sqrt(f(theta)**(-2))] = 1/f(theta)
replaced = integrand.subs(symbol, x_func).trigsimp()
replaced = replaced.subs(substitutions)
if not replaced.has(symbol):
replaced *= manual_diff(x_func, theta)
replaced = replaced.trigsimp()
secants = replaced.find(1/sympy.cos(theta))
if secants:
replaced = replaced.xreplace({
1/sympy.cos(theta): sympy.sec(theta)
})
substep = integral_steps(replaced, theta)
if not contains_dont_know(substep):
return TrigSubstitutionRule(
theta, x_func, replaced, substep, restriction,
integrand, symbol)
def heaviside_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
pattern, m, b, g = heaviside_pattern(symbol)
match = integrand.match(pattern)
if match and 0 != match[g]:
# f = Heaviside(m*x + b)*g
v_step = integral_steps(match[g], symbol)
result = _manualintegrate(v_step)
m, b = match[m], match[b]
return HeavisideRule(m*symbol + b, -b/m, result, integrand, symbol)
def substitution_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
u_var = sympy.Dummy("u")
substitutions = find_substitutions(integrand, symbol, u_var)
if substitutions:
ways = []
for u_func, c, substituted in substitutions:
subrule = integral_steps(substituted, u_var)
if contains_dont_know(subrule):
continue
if sympy.simplify(c - 1) != 0:
_, denom = c.as_numer_denom()
if subrule:
subrule = ConstantTimesRule(c, substituted, subrule, substituted, u_var)
if denom.free_symbols:
piecewise = []
could_be_zero = []
if isinstance(denom, sympy.Mul):
could_be_zero = denom.args
else:
could_be_zero.append(denom)
for expr in could_be_zero:
if not fuzzy_not(expr.is_zero):
substep = integral_steps(integrand.subs(expr, 0), symbol)
if substep:
piecewise.append((
substep,
sympy.Eq(expr, 0)
))
piecewise.append((subrule, True))
subrule = PiecewiseRule(piecewise, substituted, symbol)
ways.append(URule(u_var, u_func, c,
subrule,
integrand, symbol))
if len(ways) > 1:
return AlternativeRule(ways, integrand, symbol)
elif ways:
return ways[0]
elif integrand.has(sympy.exp):
u_func = sympy.exp(symbol)
c = 1
substituted = integrand / u_func.diff(symbol)
substituted = substituted.subs(u_func, u_var)
if symbol not in substituted.free_symbols:
return URule(u_var, u_func, c,
integral_steps(substituted, u_var),
integrand, symbol)
partial_fractions_rule = rewriter(
lambda integrand, symbol: integrand.is_rational_function(),
lambda integrand, symbol: integrand.apart(symbol))
cancel_rule = rewriter(
# lambda integrand, symbol: integrand.is_algebraic_expr(),
# lambda integrand, symbol: isinstance(integrand, sympy.Mul),
lambda integrand, symbol: True,
lambda integrand, symbol: integrand.cancel())
distribute_expand_rule = rewriter(
lambda integrand, symbol: (
all(arg.is_Pow or arg.is_polynomial(symbol) for arg in integrand.args)
or isinstance(integrand, sympy.Pow)
or isinstance(integrand, sympy.Mul)),
lambda integrand, symbol: integrand.expand())
trig_expand_rule = rewriter(
# If there are trig functions with different arguments, expand them
lambda integrand, symbol: (
len(set(a.args[0] for a in integrand.atoms(TrigonometricFunction))) > 1),
lambda integrand, symbol: integrand.expand(trig=True))
def derivative_rule(integral):
integrand = integral[0]
diff_variables = integrand.variables
undifferentiated_function = integrand.expr
integrand_variables = undifferentiated_function.free_symbols
if integral.symbol in integrand_variables:
if integral.symbol in diff_variables:
return DerivativeRule(*integral)
else:
return DontKnowRule(integrand, integral.symbol)
else:
return ConstantRule(integral.integrand, *integral)
def rewrites_rule(integral):
integrand, symbol = integral
if integrand.match(1/sympy.cos(symbol)):
rewritten = integrand.subs(1/sympy.cos(symbol), sympy.sec(symbol))
return RewriteRule(rewritten, integral_steps(rewritten, symbol), integrand, symbol)
def fallback_rule(integral):
return DontKnowRule(*integral)
# Cache is used to break cyclic integrals.
# Need to use the same dummy variable in cached expressions for them to match.
# Also record "u" of integration by parts, to avoid infinite repetition.
_integral_cache = {}
_parts_u_cache = defaultdict(int)
_cache_dummy = sympy.Dummy("z")
def integral_steps(integrand, symbol, **options):
"""Returns the steps needed to compute an integral.
This function attempts to mirror what a student would do by hand as
closely as possible.
SymPy Gamma uses this to provide a step-by-step explanation of an
integral. The code it uses to format the results of this function can be
found at
https://github.com/sympy/sympy_gamma/blob/master/app/logic/intsteps.py.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp, sin, cos
>>> from sympy.integrals.manualintegrate import integral_steps
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> print(repr(integral_steps(exp(x) / (1 + exp(2 * x)), x))) \
# doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
URule(u_var=_u, u_func=exp(x), constant=1,
substep=PiecewiseRule(subfunctions=[(ArctanRule(a=1, b=1, c=1, context=1/(_u**2 + 1), symbol=_u), True),
(ArccothRule(a=1, b=1, c=1, context=1/(_u**2 + 1), symbol=_u), False),
(ArctanhRule(a=1, b=1, c=1, context=1/(_u**2 + 1), symbol=_u), False)],
context=1/(_u**2 + 1), symbol=_u), context=exp(x)/(exp(2*x) + 1), symbol=x)
>>> print(repr(integral_steps(sin(x), x))) \
# doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
TrigRule(func='sin', arg=x, context=sin(x), symbol=x)
>>> print(repr(integral_steps((x**2 + 3)**2 , x))) \
# doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
RewriteRule(rewritten=x**4 + 6*x**2 + 9,
substep=AddRule(substeps=[PowerRule(base=x, exp=4, context=x**4, symbol=x),
ConstantTimesRule(constant=6, other=x**2,
substep=PowerRule(base=x, exp=2, context=x**2, symbol=x),
context=6*x**2, symbol=x),
ConstantRule(constant=9, context=9, symbol=x)],
context=x**4 + 6*x**2 + 9, symbol=x), context=(x**2 + 3)**2, symbol=x)
Returns
=======
rule : namedtuple
The first step; most rules have substeps that must also be
considered. These substeps can be evaluated using ``manualintegrate``
to obtain a result.
"""
cachekey = integrand.xreplace({symbol: _cache_dummy})
if cachekey in _integral_cache:
if _integral_cache[cachekey] is None:
# Stop this attempt, because it leads around in a loop
return DontKnowRule(integrand, symbol)
else:
# TODO: This is for future development, as currently
# _integral_cache gets no values other than None
return (_integral_cache[cachekey].xreplace(_cache_dummy, symbol),
symbol)
else:
_integral_cache[cachekey] = None
integral = IntegralInfo(integrand, symbol)
def key(integral):
integrand = integral.integrand
if isinstance(integrand, TrigonometricFunction):
return TrigonometricFunction
elif isinstance(integrand, sympy.Derivative):
return sympy.Derivative
elif symbol not in integrand.free_symbols:
return sympy.Number
else:
for cls in (sympy.Pow, sympy.Symbol, sympy.exp, sympy.log,
sympy.Add, sympy.Mul, sympy.atan, sympy.asin,
sympy.acos, sympy.Heaviside, OrthogonalPolynomial):
if isinstance(integrand, cls):
return cls
def integral_is_subclass(*klasses):
def _integral_is_subclass(integral):
k = key(integral)
return k and issubclass(k, klasses)
return _integral_is_subclass
result = do_one(
null_safe(switch(key, {
sympy.Pow: do_one(null_safe(power_rule), null_safe(inverse_trig_rule), \
null_safe(quadratic_denom_rule)),
sympy.Symbol: power_rule,
sympy.exp: exp_rule,
sympy.Add: add_rule,
sympy.Mul: do_one(null_safe(mul_rule), null_safe(trig_product_rule), \
null_safe(heaviside_rule), null_safe(quadratic_denom_rule), \
null_safe(root_mul_rule)),
sympy.Derivative: derivative_rule,
TrigonometricFunction: trig_rule,
sympy.Heaviside: heaviside_rule,
OrthogonalPolynomial: orthogonal_poly_rule,
sympy.Number: constant_rule
})),
do_one(
null_safe(trig_rule),
null_safe(alternatives(
rewrites_rule,
substitution_rule,
condition(
integral_is_subclass(sympy.Mul, sympy.Pow),
partial_fractions_rule),
condition(
integral_is_subclass(sympy.Mul, sympy.Pow),
cancel_rule),
condition(
integral_is_subclass(sympy.Mul, sympy.log, sympy.atan, sympy.asin, sympy.acos),
parts_rule),
condition(
integral_is_subclass(sympy.Mul, sympy.Pow),
distribute_expand_rule),
trig_powers_products_rule,
trig_expand_rule
)),
null_safe(trig_substitution_rule)
),
fallback_rule)(integral)
del _integral_cache[cachekey]
return result
@evaluates(ConstantRule)
def eval_constant(constant, integrand, symbol):
return constant * symbol
@evaluates(ConstantTimesRule)
def eval_constanttimes(constant, other, substep, integrand, symbol):
return constant * _manualintegrate(substep)
@evaluates(PowerRule)
def eval_power(base, exp, integrand, symbol):
return sympy.Piecewise(
((base**(exp + 1))/(exp + 1), sympy.Ne(exp, -1)),
(sympy.log(base), True),
)
@evaluates(ExpRule)
def eval_exp(base, exp, integrand, symbol):
return integrand / sympy.ln(base)
@evaluates(AddRule)
def eval_add(substeps, integrand, symbol):
return sum(map(_manualintegrate, substeps))
@evaluates(URule)
def eval_u(u_var, u_func, constant, substep, integrand, symbol):
result = _manualintegrate(substep)
return result.subs(u_var, u_func)
@evaluates(PartsRule)
def eval_parts(u, dv, v_step, second_step, integrand, symbol):
v = _manualintegrate(v_step)
return u * v - _manualintegrate(second_step)
@evaluates(CyclicPartsRule)
def eval_cyclicparts(parts_rules, coefficient, integrand, symbol):
coefficient = 1 - coefficient
result = []
sign = 1
for rule in parts_rules:
result.append(sign * rule.u * _manualintegrate(rule.v_step))
sign *= -1
return sympy.Add(*result) / coefficient
@evaluates(TrigRule)
def eval_trig(func, arg, integrand, symbol):
if func == 'sin':
return -sympy.cos(arg)
elif func == 'cos':
return sympy.sin(arg)
elif func == 'sec*tan':
return sympy.sec(arg)
elif func == 'csc*cot':
return sympy.csc(arg)
elif func == 'sec**2':
return sympy.tan(arg)
elif func == 'csc**2':
return -sympy.cot(arg)
@evaluates(ArctanRule)
def eval_arctan(a, b, c, integrand, symbol):
return a / b * 1 / sympy.sqrt(c / b) * sympy.atan(symbol / sympy.sqrt(c / b))
@evaluates(ArccothRule)
def eval_arccoth(a, b, c, integrand, symbol):
return - a / b * 1 / sympy.sqrt(-c / b) * sympy.acoth(symbol / sympy.sqrt(-c / b))
@evaluates(ArctanhRule)
def eval_arctanh(a, b, c, integrand, symbol):
return - a / b * 1 / sympy.sqrt(-c / b) * sympy.atanh(symbol / sympy.sqrt(-c / b))
@evaluates(ReciprocalRule)
def eval_reciprocal(func, integrand, symbol):
return sympy.ln(func)
@evaluates(ArcsinRule)
def eval_arcsin(integrand, symbol):
return sympy.asin(symbol)
@evaluates(InverseHyperbolicRule)
def eval_inversehyperbolic(func, integrand, symbol):
return func(symbol)
@evaluates(AlternativeRule)
def eval_alternative(alternatives, integrand, symbol):
return _manualintegrate(alternatives[0])
@evaluates(RewriteRule)
def eval_rewrite(rewritten, substep, integrand, symbol):
return _manualintegrate(substep)
@evaluates(PiecewiseRule)
def eval_piecewise(substeps, integrand, symbol):
return sympy.Piecewise(*[(_manualintegrate(substep), cond)
for substep, cond in substeps])
@evaluates(TrigSubstitutionRule)
def eval_trigsubstitution(theta, func, rewritten, substep, restriction, integrand, symbol):
func = func.subs(sympy.sec(theta), 1/sympy.cos(theta))
trig_function = list(func.find(TrigonometricFunction))
assert len(trig_function) == 1
trig_function = trig_function[0]
relation = sympy.solve(symbol - func, trig_function)
assert len(relation) == 1
numer, denom = sympy.fraction(relation[0])
if isinstance(trig_function, sympy.sin):
opposite = numer
hypotenuse = denom
adjacent = sympy.sqrt(denom**2 - numer**2)
inverse = sympy.asin(relation[0])
elif isinstance(trig_function, sympy.cos):
adjacent = numer
hypotenuse = denom
opposite = sympy.sqrt(denom**2 - numer**2)
inverse = sympy.acos(relation[0])
elif isinstance(trig_function, sympy.tan):
opposite = numer
adjacent = denom
hypotenuse = sympy.sqrt(denom**2 + numer**2)
inverse = sympy.atan(relation[0])
substitution = [
(sympy.sin(theta), opposite/hypotenuse),
(sympy.cos(theta), adjacent/hypotenuse),
(sympy.tan(theta), opposite/adjacent),
(theta, inverse)
]
return sympy.Piecewise(
(_manualintegrate(substep).subs(substitution).trigsimp(), restriction)
)
@evaluates(DerivativeRule)
def eval_derivativerule(integrand, symbol):
# isinstance(integrand, Derivative) should be True
variable_count = list(integrand.variable_count)
for i, (var, count) in enumerate(variable_count):
if var == symbol:
variable_count[i] = (var, count-1)
break
return sympy.Derivative(integrand.expr, *variable_count)
@evaluates(HeavisideRule)
def eval_heaviside(harg, ibnd, substep, integrand, symbol):
# If we are integrating over x and the integrand has the form
# Heaviside(m*x+b)*g(x) == Heaviside(harg)*g(symbol)
# then there needs to be continuity at -b/m == ibnd,
# so we subtract the appropriate term.
return sympy.Heaviside(harg)*(substep - substep.subs(symbol, ibnd))
@evaluates(JacobiRule)
def eval_jacobi(n, a, b, integrand, symbol):
return Piecewise(
(2*sympy.jacobi(n + 1, a - 1, b - 1, symbol)/(n + a + b), Ne(n + a + b, 0)),
(symbol, Eq(n, 0)),
((a + b + 2)*symbol**2/4 + (a - b)*symbol/2, Eq(n, 1)))
@evaluates(GegenbauerRule)
def eval_gegenbauer(n, a, integrand, symbol):
return Piecewise(
(sympy.gegenbauer(n + 1, a - 1, symbol)/(2*(a - 1)), Ne(a, 1)),
(sympy.chebyshevt(n + 1, symbol)/(n + 1), Ne(n, -1)),
(sympy.S.Zero, True))
@evaluates(ChebyshevTRule)
def eval_chebyshevt(n, integrand, symbol):
return Piecewise(((sympy.chebyshevt(n + 1, symbol)/(n + 1) -
sympy.chebyshevt(n - 1, symbol)/(n - 1))/2, Ne(sympy.Abs(n), 1)),
(symbol**2/2, True))
@evaluates(ChebyshevURule)
def eval_chebyshevu(n, integrand, symbol):
return Piecewise(
(sympy.chebyshevt(n + 1, symbol)/(n + 1), Ne(n, -1)),
(sympy.S.Zero, True))
@evaluates(LegendreRule)
def eval_legendre(n, integrand, symbol):
return (sympy.legendre(n + 1, symbol) - sympy.legendre(n - 1, symbol))/(2*n + 1)
@evaluates(HermiteRule)
def eval_hermite(n, integrand, symbol):
return sympy.hermite(n + 1, symbol)/(2*(n + 1))
@evaluates(LaguerreRule)
def eval_laguerre(n, integrand, symbol):
return sympy.laguerre(n, symbol) - sympy.laguerre(n + 1, symbol)
@evaluates(AssocLaguerreRule)
def eval_assoclaguerre(n, a, integrand, symbol):
return -sympy.assoc_laguerre(n + 1, a - 1, symbol)
@evaluates(DontKnowRule)
def eval_dontknowrule(integrand, symbol):
return sympy.Integral(integrand, symbol)
def _manualintegrate(rule):
evaluator = evaluators.get(rule.__class__)
if not evaluator:
raise ValueError("Cannot evaluate rule %s" % repr(rule))
return evaluator(*rule)
def manualintegrate(f, var):
"""manualintegrate(f, var)
Compute indefinite integral of a single variable using an algorithm that
resembles what a student would do by hand.
Unlike ``integrate``, var can only be a single symbol.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, cos, tan, exp, log, integrate
>>> from sympy.integrals.manualintegrate import manualintegrate
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> manualintegrate(1 / x, x)
log(x)
>>> integrate(1/x)
log(x)
>>> manualintegrate(log(x), x)
x*log(x) - x
>>> integrate(log(x))
x*log(x) - x
>>> manualintegrate(exp(x) / (1 + exp(2 * x)), x)
atan(exp(x))
>>> integrate(exp(x) / (1 + exp(2 * x)))
RootSum(4*_z**2 + 1, Lambda(_i, _i*log(2*_i + exp(x))))
>>> manualintegrate(cos(x)**4 * sin(x), x)
-cos(x)**5/5
>>> integrate(cos(x)**4 * sin(x), x)
-cos(x)**5/5
>>> manualintegrate(cos(x)**4 * sin(x)**3, x)
cos(x)**7/7 - cos(x)**5/5
>>> integrate(cos(x)**4 * sin(x)**3, x)
cos(x)**7/7 - cos(x)**5/5
>>> manualintegrate(tan(x), x)
-log(cos(x))
>>> integrate(tan(x), x)
-log(cos(x))
See Also
========
sympy.integrals.integrals.integrate
sympy.integrals.integrals.Integral.doit
sympy.integrals.integrals.Integral
"""
result = _manualintegrate(integral_steps(f, var))
# Clear the cache of u-parts
_parts_u_cache.clear()
# If we got Piecewise with two parts, put generic first
if isinstance(result, Piecewise) and len(result.args) == 2:
cond = result.args[0][1]
if isinstance(cond, Eq) and result.args[1][1] == True:
result = result.func(
(result.args[1][0], sympy.Ne(*cond.args)),
(result.args[0][0], True))
return result
|
0072227aa0da06a4ff9661ff3f995d0cbc0ca0a065728c408838677a3762caf9
|
""" Integral Transforms """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import S
from sympy.core.compatibility import reduce, range, iterable
from sympy.core.function import Function
from sympy.core.numbers import oo
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy
from sympy.integrals import integrate, Integral
from sympy.integrals.meijerint import _dummy
from sympy.logic.boolalg import to_cnf, conjuncts, disjuncts, Or, And
from sympy.simplify import simplify
from sympy.utilities import default_sort_key
from sympy.matrices.matrices import MatrixBase
##########################################################################
# Helpers / Utilities
##########################################################################
class IntegralTransformError(NotImplementedError):
"""
Exception raised in relation to problems computing transforms.
This class is mostly used internally; if integrals cannot be computed
objects representing unevaluated transforms are usually returned.
The hint ``needeval=True`` can be used to disable returning transform
objects, and instead raise this exception if an integral cannot be
computed.
"""
def __init__(self, transform, function, msg):
super(IntegralTransformError, self).__init__(
"%s Transform could not be computed: %s." % (transform, msg))
self.function = function
class IntegralTransform(Function):
"""
Base class for integral transforms.
This class represents unevaluated transforms.
To implement a concrete transform, derive from this class and implement
the _compute_transform(f, x, s, **hints) and _as_integral(f, x, s)
functions. If the transform cannot be computed, raise IntegralTransformError.
Also set cls._name.
Implement self._collapse_extra if your function returns more than just a
number and possibly a convergence condition.
"""
@property
def function(self):
""" The function to be transformed. """
return self.args[0]
@property
def function_variable(self):
""" The dependent variable of the function to be transformed. """
return self.args[1]
@property
def transform_variable(self):
""" The independent transform variable. """
return self.args[2]
@property
def free_symbols(self):
"""
This method returns the symbols that will exist when the transform
is evaluated.
"""
return self.function.free_symbols.union({self.transform_variable}) \
- {self.function_variable}
def _compute_transform(self, f, x, s, **hints):
raise NotImplementedError
def _as_integral(self, f, x, s):
raise NotImplementedError
def _collapse_extra(self, extra):
cond = And(*extra)
if cond == False:
raise IntegralTransformError(self.__class__.name, None, '')
return cond
def doit(self, **hints):
"""
Try to evaluate the transform in closed form.
This general function handles linearity, but apart from that leaves
pretty much everything to _compute_transform.
Standard hints are the following:
- ``simplify``: whether or not to simplify the result
- ``noconds``: if True, don't return convergence conditions
- ``needeval``: if True, raise IntegralTransformError instead of
returning IntegralTransform objects
The default values of these hints depend on the concrete transform,
usually the default is
``(simplify, noconds, needeval) = (True, False, False)``.
"""
from sympy import Add, expand_mul, Mul
from sympy.core.function import AppliedUndef
needeval = hints.pop('needeval', False)
try_directly = not any(func.has(self.function_variable)
for func in self.function.atoms(AppliedUndef))
if try_directly:
try:
return self._compute_transform(self.function,
self.function_variable, self.transform_variable, **hints)
except IntegralTransformError:
pass
fn = self.function
if not fn.is_Add:
fn = expand_mul(fn)
if fn.is_Add:
hints['needeval'] = needeval
res = [self.__class__(*([x] + list(self.args[1:]))).doit(**hints)
for x in fn.args]
extra = []
ress = []
for x in res:
if not isinstance(x, tuple):
x = [x]
ress.append(x[0])
if len(x) == 2:
# only a condition
extra.append(x[1])
elif len(x) > 2:
# some region parameters and a condition (Mellin, Laplace)
extra += [x[1:]]
res = Add(*ress)
if not extra:
return res
try:
extra = self._collapse_extra(extra)
if iterable(extra):
return tuple([res]) + tuple(extra)
else:
return (res, extra)
except IntegralTransformError:
pass
if needeval:
raise IntegralTransformError(
self.__class__._name, self.function, 'needeval')
# TODO handle derivatives etc
# pull out constant coefficients
coeff, rest = fn.as_coeff_mul(self.function_variable)
return coeff*self.__class__(*([Mul(*rest)] + list(self.args[1:])))
@property
def as_integral(self):
return self._as_integral(self.function, self.function_variable,
self.transform_variable)
def _eval_rewrite_as_Integral(self, *args, **kwargs):
return self.as_integral
from sympy.solvers.inequalities import _solve_inequality
def _simplify(expr, doit):
from sympy import powdenest, piecewise_fold
if doit:
return simplify(powdenest(piecewise_fold(expr), polar=True))
return expr
def _noconds_(default):
"""
This is a decorator generator for dropping convergence conditions.
Suppose you define a function ``transform(*args)`` which returns a tuple of
the form ``(result, cond1, cond2, ...)``.
Decorating it ``@_noconds_(default)`` will add a new keyword argument
``noconds`` to it. If ``noconds=True``, the return value will be altered to
be only ``result``, whereas if ``noconds=False`` the return value will not
be altered.
The default value of the ``noconds`` keyword will be ``default`` (i.e. the
argument of this function).
"""
def make_wrapper(func):
from sympy.core.decorators import wraps
@wraps(func)
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
noconds = kwargs.pop('noconds', default)
res = func(*args, **kwargs)
if noconds:
return res[0]
return res
return wrapper
return make_wrapper
_noconds = _noconds_(False)
##########################################################################
# Mellin Transform
##########################################################################
def _default_integrator(f, x):
return integrate(f, (x, 0, oo))
@_noconds
def _mellin_transform(f, x, s_, integrator=_default_integrator, simplify=True):
""" Backend function to compute Mellin transforms. """
from sympy import re, Max, Min, count_ops
# We use a fresh dummy, because assumptions on s might drop conditions on
# convergence of the integral.
s = _dummy('s', 'mellin-transform', f)
F = integrator(x**(s - 1) * f, x)
if not F.has(Integral):
return _simplify(F.subs(s, s_), simplify), (-oo, oo), S.true
if not F.is_Piecewise: # XXX can this work if integration gives continuous result now?
raise IntegralTransformError('Mellin', f, 'could not compute integral')
F, cond = F.args[0]
if F.has(Integral):
raise IntegralTransformError(
'Mellin', f, 'integral in unexpected form')
def process_conds(cond):
"""
Turn ``cond`` into a strip (a, b), and auxiliary conditions.
"""
a = -oo
b = oo
aux = S.true
conds = conjuncts(to_cnf(cond))
t = Dummy('t', real=True)
for c in conds:
a_ = oo
b_ = -oo
aux_ = []
for d in disjuncts(c):
d_ = d.replace(
re, lambda x: x.as_real_imag()[0]).subs(re(s), t)
if not d.is_Relational or \
d.rel_op in ('==', '!=') \
or d_.has(s) or not d_.has(t):
aux_ += [d]
continue
soln = _solve_inequality(d_, t)
if not soln.is_Relational or \
soln.rel_op in ('==', '!='):
aux_ += [d]
continue
if soln.lts == t:
b_ = Max(soln.gts, b_)
else:
a_ = Min(soln.lts, a_)
if a_ != oo and a_ != b:
a = Max(a_, a)
elif b_ != -oo and b_ != a:
b = Min(b_, b)
else:
aux = And(aux, Or(*aux_))
return a, b, aux
conds = [process_conds(c) for c in disjuncts(cond)]
conds = [x for x in conds if x[2] != False]
conds.sort(key=lambda x: (x[0] - x[1], count_ops(x[2])))
if not conds:
raise IntegralTransformError('Mellin', f, 'no convergence found')
a, b, aux = conds[0]
return _simplify(F.subs(s, s_), simplify), (a, b), aux
class MellinTransform(IntegralTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated Mellin transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute Mellin transforms, see the :func:`mellin_transform`
docstring.
"""
_name = 'Mellin'
def _compute_transform(self, f, x, s, **hints):
return _mellin_transform(f, x, s, **hints)
def _as_integral(self, f, x, s):
return Integral(f*x**(s - 1), (x, 0, oo))
def _collapse_extra(self, extra):
from sympy import Max, Min
a = []
b = []
cond = []
for (sa, sb), c in extra:
a += [sa]
b += [sb]
cond += [c]
res = (Max(*a), Min(*b)), And(*cond)
if (res[0][0] >= res[0][1]) == True or res[1] == False:
raise IntegralTransformError(
'Mellin', None, 'no combined convergence.')
return res
def mellin_transform(f, x, s, **hints):
r"""
Compute the Mellin transform `F(s)` of `f(x)`,
.. math :: F(s) = \int_0^\infty x^{s-1} f(x) \mathrm{d}x.
For all "sensible" functions, this converges absolutely in a strip
`a < \operatorname{Re}(s) < b`.
The Mellin transform is related via change of variables to the Fourier
transform, and also to the (bilateral) Laplace transform.
This function returns ``(F, (a, b), cond)``
where ``F`` is the Mellin transform of ``f``, ``(a, b)`` is the fundamental strip
(as above), and ``cond`` are auxiliary convergence conditions.
If the integral cannot be computed in closed form, this function returns
an unevaluated :class:`MellinTransform` object.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`. If ``noconds=False``,
then only `F` will be returned (i.e. not ``cond``, and also not the strip
``(a, b)``).
>>> from sympy.integrals.transforms import mellin_transform
>>> from sympy import exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, s
>>> mellin_transform(exp(-x), x, s)
(gamma(s), (0, oo), True)
See Also
========
inverse_mellin_transform, laplace_transform, fourier_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
"""
return MellinTransform(f, x, s).doit(**hints)
def _rewrite_sin(m_n, s, a, b):
"""
Re-write the sine function ``sin(m*s + n)`` as gamma functions, compatible
with the strip (a, b).
Return ``(gamma1, gamma2, fac)`` so that ``f == fac/(gamma1 * gamma2)``.
>>> from sympy.integrals.transforms import _rewrite_sin
>>> from sympy import pi, S
>>> from sympy.abc import s
>>> _rewrite_sin((pi, 0), s, 0, 1)
(gamma(s), gamma(-s + 1), pi)
>>> _rewrite_sin((pi, 0), s, 1, 0)
(gamma(s - 1), gamma(-s + 2), -pi)
>>> _rewrite_sin((pi, 0), s, -1, 0)
(gamma(s + 1), gamma(-s), -pi)
>>> _rewrite_sin((pi, pi/2), s, S(1)/2, S(3)/2)
(gamma(s - 1/2), gamma(-s + 3/2), -pi)
>>> _rewrite_sin((pi, pi), s, 0, 1)
(gamma(s), gamma(-s + 1), -pi)
>>> _rewrite_sin((2*pi, 0), s, 0, S(1)/2)
(gamma(2*s), gamma(-2*s + 1), pi)
>>> _rewrite_sin((2*pi, 0), s, S(1)/2, 1)
(gamma(2*s - 1), gamma(-2*s + 2), -pi)
"""
# (This is a separate function because it is moderately complicated,
# and I want to doctest it.)
# We want to use pi/sin(pi*x) = gamma(x)*gamma(1-x).
# But there is one comlication: the gamma functions determine the
# inegration contour in the definition of the G-function. Usually
# it would not matter if this is slightly shifted, unless this way
# we create an undefined function!
# So we try to write this in such a way that the gammas are
# eminently on the right side of the strip.
from sympy import expand_mul, pi, ceiling, gamma
m, n = m_n
m = expand_mul(m/pi)
n = expand_mul(n/pi)
r = ceiling(-m*a - n.as_real_imag()[0]) # Don't use re(n), does not expand
return gamma(m*s + n + r), gamma(1 - n - r - m*s), (-1)**r*pi
class MellinTransformStripError(ValueError):
"""
Exception raised by _rewrite_gamma. Mainly for internal use.
"""
pass
def _rewrite_gamma(f, s, a, b):
"""
Try to rewrite the product f(s) as a product of gamma functions,
so that the inverse Mellin transform of f can be expressed as a meijer
G function.
Return (an, ap), (bm, bq), arg, exp, fac such that
G((an, ap), (bm, bq), arg/z**exp)*fac is the inverse Mellin transform of f(s).
Raises IntegralTransformError or MellinTransformStripError on failure.
It is asserted that f has no poles in the fundamental strip designated by
(a, b). One of a and b is allowed to be None. The fundamental strip is
important, because it determines the inversion contour.
This function can handle exponentials, linear factors, trigonometric
functions.
This is a helper function for inverse_mellin_transform that will not
attempt any transformations on f.
>>> from sympy.integrals.transforms import _rewrite_gamma
>>> from sympy.abc import s
>>> from sympy import oo
>>> _rewrite_gamma(s*(s+3)*(s-1), s, -oo, oo)
(([], [-3, 0, 1]), ([-2, 1, 2], []), 1, 1, -1)
>>> _rewrite_gamma((s-1)**2, s, -oo, oo)
(([], [1, 1]), ([2, 2], []), 1, 1, 1)
Importance of the fundamental strip:
>>> _rewrite_gamma(1/s, s, 0, oo)
(([1], []), ([], [0]), 1, 1, 1)
>>> _rewrite_gamma(1/s, s, None, oo)
(([1], []), ([], [0]), 1, 1, 1)
>>> _rewrite_gamma(1/s, s, 0, None)
(([1], []), ([], [0]), 1, 1, 1)
>>> _rewrite_gamma(1/s, s, -oo, 0)
(([], [1]), ([0], []), 1, 1, -1)
>>> _rewrite_gamma(1/s, s, None, 0)
(([], [1]), ([0], []), 1, 1, -1)
>>> _rewrite_gamma(1/s, s, -oo, None)
(([], [1]), ([0], []), 1, 1, -1)
>>> _rewrite_gamma(2**(-s+3), s, -oo, oo)
(([], []), ([], []), 1/2, 1, 8)
"""
from itertools import repeat
from sympy import (Poly, gamma, Mul, re, CRootOf, exp as exp_, expand,
roots, ilcm, pi, sin, cos, tan, cot, igcd, exp_polar)
# Our strategy will be as follows:
# 1) Guess a constant c such that the inversion integral should be
# performed wrt s'=c*s (instead of plain s). Write s for s'.
# 2) Process all factors, rewrite them independently as gamma functions in
# argument s, or exponentials of s.
# 3) Try to transform all gamma functions s.t. they have argument
# a+s or a-s.
# 4) Check that the resulting G function parameters are valid.
# 5) Combine all the exponentials.
a_, b_ = S([a, b])
def left(c, is_numer):
"""
Decide whether pole at c lies to the left of the fundamental strip.
"""
# heuristically, this is the best chance for us to solve the inequalities
c = expand(re(c))
if a_ is None and b_ is oo:
return True
if a_ is None:
return c < b_
if b_ is None:
return c <= a_
if (c >= b_) == True:
return False
if (c <= a_) == True:
return True
if is_numer:
return None
if a_.free_symbols or b_.free_symbols or c.free_symbols:
return None # XXX
#raise IntegralTransformError('Inverse Mellin', f,
# 'Could not determine position of singularity %s'
# ' relative to fundamental strip' % c)
raise MellinTransformStripError('Pole inside critical strip?')
# 1)
s_multipliers = []
for g in f.atoms(gamma):
if not g.has(s):
continue
arg = g.args[0]
if arg.is_Add:
arg = arg.as_independent(s)[1]
coeff, _ = arg.as_coeff_mul(s)
s_multipliers += [coeff]
for g in f.atoms(sin, cos, tan, cot):
if not g.has(s):
continue
arg = g.args[0]
if arg.is_Add:
arg = arg.as_independent(s)[1]
coeff, _ = arg.as_coeff_mul(s)
s_multipliers += [coeff/pi]
s_multipliers = [abs(x) if x.is_real else x for x in s_multipliers]
common_coefficient = S(1)
for x in s_multipliers:
if not x.is_Rational:
common_coefficient = x
break
s_multipliers = [x/common_coefficient for x in s_multipliers]
if (any(not x.is_Rational for x in s_multipliers) or
not common_coefficient.is_real):
raise IntegralTransformError("Gamma", None, "Nonrational multiplier")
s_multiplier = common_coefficient/reduce(ilcm, [S(x.q)
for x in s_multipliers], S(1))
if s_multiplier == common_coefficient:
if len(s_multipliers) == 0:
s_multiplier = common_coefficient
else:
s_multiplier = common_coefficient \
*reduce(igcd, [S(x.p) for x in s_multipliers])
exponent = S(1)
fac = S(1)
f = f.subs(s, s/s_multiplier)
fac /= s_multiplier
exponent = 1/s_multiplier
if a_ is not None:
a_ *= s_multiplier
if b_ is not None:
b_ *= s_multiplier
# 2)
numer, denom = f.as_numer_denom()
numer = Mul.make_args(numer)
denom = Mul.make_args(denom)
args = list(zip(numer, repeat(True))) + list(zip(denom, repeat(False)))
facs = []
dfacs = []
# *_gammas will contain pairs (a, c) representing Gamma(a*s + c)
numer_gammas = []
denom_gammas = []
# exponentials will contain bases for exponentials of s
exponentials = []
def exception(fact):
return IntegralTransformError("Inverse Mellin", f, "Unrecognised form '%s'." % fact)
while args:
fact, is_numer = args.pop()
if is_numer:
ugammas, lgammas = numer_gammas, denom_gammas
ufacs, lfacs = facs, dfacs
else:
ugammas, lgammas = denom_gammas, numer_gammas
ufacs, lfacs = dfacs, facs
def linear_arg(arg):
""" Test if arg is of form a*s+b, raise exception if not. """
if not arg.is_polynomial(s):
raise exception(fact)
p = Poly(arg, s)
if p.degree() != 1:
raise exception(fact)
return p.all_coeffs()
# constants
if not fact.has(s):
ufacs += [fact]
# exponentials
elif fact.is_Pow or isinstance(fact, exp_):
if fact.is_Pow:
base = fact.base
exp = fact.exp
else:
base = exp_polar(1)
exp = fact.args[0]
if exp.is_Integer:
cond = is_numer
if exp < 0:
cond = not cond
args += [(base, cond)]*abs(exp)
continue
elif not base.has(s):
a, b = linear_arg(exp)
if not is_numer:
base = 1/base
exponentials += [base**a]
facs += [base**b]
else:
raise exception(fact)
# linear factors
elif fact.is_polynomial(s):
p = Poly(fact, s)
if p.degree() != 1:
# We completely factor the poly. For this we need the roots.
# Now roots() only works in some cases (low degree), and CRootOf
# only works without parameters. So try both...
coeff = p.LT()[1]
rs = roots(p, s)
if len(rs) != p.degree():
rs = CRootOf.all_roots(p)
ufacs += [coeff]
args += [(s - c, is_numer) for c in rs]
continue
a, c = p.all_coeffs()
ufacs += [a]
c /= -a
# Now need to convert s - c
if left(c, is_numer):
ugammas += [(S(1), -c + 1)]
lgammas += [(S(1), -c)]
else:
ufacs += [-1]
ugammas += [(S(-1), c + 1)]
lgammas += [(S(-1), c)]
elif isinstance(fact, gamma):
a, b = linear_arg(fact.args[0])
if is_numer:
if (a > 0 and (left(-b/a, is_numer) == False)) or \
(a < 0 and (left(-b/a, is_numer) == True)):
raise NotImplementedError(
'Gammas partially over the strip.')
ugammas += [(a, b)]
elif isinstance(fact, sin):
# We try to re-write all trigs as gammas. This is not in
# general the best strategy, since sometimes this is impossible,
# but rewriting as exponentials would work. However trig functions
# in inverse mellin transforms usually all come from simplifying
# gamma terms, so this should work.
a = fact.args[0]
if is_numer:
# No problem with the poles.
gamma1, gamma2, fac_ = gamma(a/pi), gamma(1 - a/pi), pi
else:
gamma1, gamma2, fac_ = _rewrite_sin(linear_arg(a), s, a_, b_)
args += [(gamma1, not is_numer), (gamma2, not is_numer)]
ufacs += [fac_]
elif isinstance(fact, tan):
a = fact.args[0]
args += [(sin(a, evaluate=False), is_numer),
(sin(pi/2 - a, evaluate=False), not is_numer)]
elif isinstance(fact, cos):
a = fact.args[0]
args += [(sin(pi/2 - a, evaluate=False), is_numer)]
elif isinstance(fact, cot):
a = fact.args[0]
args += [(sin(pi/2 - a, evaluate=False), is_numer),
(sin(a, evaluate=False), not is_numer)]
else:
raise exception(fact)
fac *= Mul(*facs)/Mul(*dfacs)
# 3)
an, ap, bm, bq = [], [], [], []
for gammas, plus, minus, is_numer in [(numer_gammas, an, bm, True),
(denom_gammas, bq, ap, False)]:
while gammas:
a, c = gammas.pop()
if a != -1 and a != +1:
# We use the gamma function multiplication theorem.
p = abs(S(a))
newa = a/p
newc = c/p
if not a.is_Integer:
raise TypeError("a is not an integer")
for k in range(p):
gammas += [(newa, newc + k/p)]
if is_numer:
fac *= (2*pi)**((1 - p)/2) * p**(c - S(1)/2)
exponentials += [p**a]
else:
fac /= (2*pi)**((1 - p)/2) * p**(c - S(1)/2)
exponentials += [p**(-a)]
continue
if a == +1:
plus.append(1 - c)
else:
minus.append(c)
# 4)
# TODO
# 5)
arg = Mul(*exponentials)
# for testability, sort the arguments
an.sort(key=default_sort_key)
ap.sort(key=default_sort_key)
bm.sort(key=default_sort_key)
bq.sort(key=default_sort_key)
return (an, ap), (bm, bq), arg, exponent, fac
@_noconds_(True)
def _inverse_mellin_transform(F, s, x_, strip, as_meijerg=False):
""" A helper for the real inverse_mellin_transform function, this one here
assumes x to be real and positive. """
from sympy import (expand, expand_mul, hyperexpand, meijerg,
arg, pi, re, factor, Heaviside, gamma, Add)
x = _dummy('t', 'inverse-mellin-transform', F, positive=True)
# Actually, we won't try integration at all. Instead we use the definition
# of the Meijer G function as a fairly general inverse mellin transform.
F = F.rewrite(gamma)
for g in [factor(F), expand_mul(F), expand(F)]:
if g.is_Add:
# do all terms separately
ress = [_inverse_mellin_transform(G, s, x, strip, as_meijerg,
noconds=False)
for G in g.args]
conds = [p[1] for p in ress]
ress = [p[0] for p in ress]
res = Add(*ress)
if not as_meijerg:
res = factor(res, gens=res.atoms(Heaviside))
return res.subs(x, x_), And(*conds)
try:
a, b, C, e, fac = _rewrite_gamma(g, s, strip[0], strip[1])
except IntegralTransformError:
continue
G = meijerg(a, b, C/x**e)
if as_meijerg:
h = G
else:
try:
h = hyperexpand(G)
except NotImplementedError as detail:
raise IntegralTransformError(
'Inverse Mellin', F, 'Could not calculate integral')
if h.is_Piecewise and len(h.args) == 3:
# XXX we break modularity here!
h = Heaviside(x - abs(C))*h.args[0].args[0] \
+ Heaviside(abs(C) - x)*h.args[1].args[0]
# We must ensure that the integral along the line we want converges,
# and return that value.
# See [L], 5.2
cond = [abs(arg(G.argument)) < G.delta*pi]
# Note: we allow ">=" here, this corresponds to convergence if we let
# limits go to oo symmetrically. ">" corresponds to absolute convergence.
cond += [And(Or(len(G.ap) != len(G.bq), 0 >= re(G.nu) + 1),
abs(arg(G.argument)) == G.delta*pi)]
cond = Or(*cond)
if cond == False:
raise IntegralTransformError(
'Inverse Mellin', F, 'does not converge')
return (h*fac).subs(x, x_), cond
raise IntegralTransformError('Inverse Mellin', F, '')
_allowed = None
class InverseMellinTransform(IntegralTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated inverse Mellin transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute inverse Mellin transforms, see the
:func:`inverse_mellin_transform` docstring.
"""
_name = 'Inverse Mellin'
_none_sentinel = Dummy('None')
_c = Dummy('c')
def __new__(cls, F, s, x, a, b, **opts):
if a is None:
a = InverseMellinTransform._none_sentinel
if b is None:
b = InverseMellinTransform._none_sentinel
return IntegralTransform.__new__(cls, F, s, x, a, b, **opts)
@property
def fundamental_strip(self):
a, b = self.args[3], self.args[4]
if a is InverseMellinTransform._none_sentinel:
a = None
if b is InverseMellinTransform._none_sentinel:
b = None
return a, b
def _compute_transform(self, F, s, x, **hints):
from sympy import postorder_traversal
global _allowed
if _allowed is None:
from sympy import (
exp, gamma, sin, cos, tan, cot, cosh, sinh, tanh,
coth, factorial, rf)
_allowed = set(
[exp, gamma, sin, cos, tan, cot, cosh, sinh, tanh, coth,
factorial, rf])
for f in postorder_traversal(F):
if f.is_Function and f.has(s) and f.func not in _allowed:
raise IntegralTransformError('Inverse Mellin', F,
'Component %s not recognised.' % f)
strip = self.fundamental_strip
return _inverse_mellin_transform(F, s, x, strip, **hints)
def _as_integral(self, F, s, x):
from sympy import I
c = self.__class__._c
return Integral(F*x**(-s), (s, c - I*oo, c + I*oo))/(2*S.Pi*S.ImaginaryUnit)
def inverse_mellin_transform(F, s, x, strip, **hints):
r"""
Compute the inverse Mellin transform of `F(s)` over the fundamental
strip given by ``strip=(a, b)``.
This can be defined as
.. math:: f(x) = \frac{1}{2\pi i} \int_{c - i\infty}^{c + i\infty} x^{-s} F(s) \mathrm{d}s,
for any `c` in the fundamental strip. Under certain regularity
conditions on `F` and/or `f`,
this recovers `f` from its Mellin transform `F`
(and vice versa), for positive real `x`.
One of `a` or `b` may be passed as ``None``; a suitable `c` will be
inferred.
If the integral cannot be computed in closed form, this function returns
an unevaluated :class:`InverseMellinTransform` object.
Note that this function will assume x to be positive and real, regardless
of the sympy assumptions!
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
>>> from sympy.integrals.transforms import inverse_mellin_transform
>>> from sympy import oo, gamma
>>> from sympy.abc import x, s
>>> inverse_mellin_transform(gamma(s), s, x, (0, oo))
exp(-x)
The fundamental strip matters:
>>> f = 1/(s**2 - 1)
>>> inverse_mellin_transform(f, s, x, (-oo, -1))
(x/2 - 1/(2*x))*Heaviside(x - 1)
>>> inverse_mellin_transform(f, s, x, (-1, 1))
-x*Heaviside(-x + 1)/2 - Heaviside(x - 1)/(2*x)
>>> inverse_mellin_transform(f, s, x, (1, oo))
(-x/2 + 1/(2*x))*Heaviside(-x + 1)
See Also
========
mellin_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
"""
return InverseMellinTransform(F, s, x, strip[0], strip[1]).doit(**hints)
##########################################################################
# Laplace Transform
##########################################################################
def _simplifyconds(expr, s, a):
r"""
Naively simplify some conditions occurring in ``expr``, given that `\operatorname{Re}(s) > a`.
>>> from sympy.integrals.transforms import _simplifyconds as simp
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import sympify as S
>>> simp(abs(x**2) < 1, x, 1)
False
>>> simp(abs(x**2) < 1, x, 2)
False
>>> simp(abs(x**2) < 1, x, 0)
Abs(x**2) < 1
>>> simp(abs(1/x**2) < 1, x, 1)
True
>>> simp(S(1) < abs(x), x, 1)
True
>>> simp(S(1) < abs(1/x), x, 1)
False
>>> from sympy import Ne
>>> simp(Ne(1, x**3), x, 1)
True
>>> simp(Ne(1, x**3), x, 2)
True
>>> simp(Ne(1, x**3), x, 0)
Ne(1, x**3)
"""
from sympy.core.relational import ( StrictGreaterThan, StrictLessThan,
Unequality )
from sympy import Abs
def power(ex):
if ex == s:
return 1
if ex.is_Pow and ex.base == s:
return ex.exp
return None
def bigger(ex1, ex2):
""" Return True only if |ex1| > |ex2|, False only if |ex1| < |ex2|.
Else return None. """
if ex1.has(s) and ex2.has(s):
return None
if isinstance(ex1, Abs):
ex1 = ex1.args[0]
if isinstance(ex2, Abs):
ex2 = ex2.args[0]
if ex1.has(s):
return bigger(1/ex2, 1/ex1)
n = power(ex2)
if n is None:
return None
try:
if n > 0 and (abs(ex1) <= abs(a)**n) == True:
return False
if n < 0 and (abs(ex1) >= abs(a)**n) == True:
return True
except TypeError:
pass
def replie(x, y):
""" simplify x < y """
if not (x.is_positive or isinstance(x, Abs)) \
or not (y.is_positive or isinstance(y, Abs)):
return (x < y)
r = bigger(x, y)
if r is not None:
return not r
return (x < y)
def replue(x, y):
b = bigger(x, y)
if b == True or b == False:
return True
return Unequality(x, y)
def repl(ex, *args):
if ex == True or ex == False:
return bool(ex)
return ex.replace(*args)
expr = repl(expr, StrictLessThan, replie)
expr = repl(expr, StrictGreaterThan, lambda x, y: replie(y, x))
expr = repl(expr, Unequality, replue)
return S(expr)
@_noconds
def _laplace_transform(f, t, s_, simplify=True):
""" The backend function for Laplace transforms. """
from sympy import (re, Max, exp, pi, Min, periodic_argument as arg_,
arg, cos, Wild, symbols, polar_lift)
s = Dummy('s')
F = integrate(exp(-s*t) * f, (t, 0, oo))
if not F.has(Integral):
return _simplify(F.subs(s, s_), simplify), -oo, S.true
if not F.is_Piecewise:
raise IntegralTransformError(
'Laplace', f, 'could not compute integral')
F, cond = F.args[0]
if F.has(Integral):
raise IntegralTransformError(
'Laplace', f, 'integral in unexpected form')
def process_conds(conds):
""" Turn ``conds`` into a strip and auxiliary conditions. """
a = -oo
aux = S.true
conds = conjuncts(to_cnf(conds))
u = Dummy('u', real=True)
p, q, w1, w2, w3, w4, w5 = symbols(
'p q w1 w2 w3 w4 w5', cls=Wild, exclude=[s])
patterns = (
p*abs(arg((s + w3)*q)) < w2,
p*abs(arg((s + w3)*q)) <= w2,
abs(arg_((s + w3)**p*q, w1)) < w2,
abs(arg_((s + w3)**p*q, w1)) <= w2,
abs(arg_((polar_lift(s + w3))**p*q, w1)) < w2,
abs(arg_((polar_lift(s + w3))**p*q, w1)) <= w2)
for c in conds:
a_ = oo
aux_ = []
for d in disjuncts(c):
if d.is_Relational and s in d.rhs.free_symbols:
d = d.reversed
for pat in patterns:
m = d.match(pat)
if m:
break
if m:
if m[q].is_positive and m[w2]/m[p] == pi/2:
d = re(s + m[w3]) > 0
m = d.match(cos(w1*abs(arg(s*w5))*w2)*abs(s**w3)**w4 - p > 0)
if not m:
m = d.match(
cos(abs(arg_(s**w1*w5, q))*w2)*abs(s**w3)**w4 - p > 0)
if not m:
m = d.match(
cos(abs(arg_(polar_lift(s)**w1*w5, q))*w2
)*abs(s**w3)**w4 - p > 0)
if m and all(m[wild].is_positive for wild in [w1, w2, w3, w4, w5]):
d = re(s) > m[p]
d_ = d.replace(
re, lambda x: x.expand().as_real_imag()[0]).subs(re(s), t)
if not d.is_Relational or \
d.rel_op in ('==', '!=') \
or d_.has(s) or not d_.has(t):
aux_ += [d]
continue
soln = _solve_inequality(d_, t)
if not soln.is_Relational or \
soln.rel_op in ('==', '!='):
aux_ += [d]
continue
if soln.lts == t:
raise IntegralTransformError('Laplace', f,
'convergence not in half-plane?')
else:
a_ = Min(soln.lts, a_)
if a_ != oo:
a = Max(a_, a)
else:
aux = And(aux, Or(*aux_))
return a, aux
conds = [process_conds(c) for c in disjuncts(cond)]
conds2 = [x for x in conds if x[1] != False and x[0] != -oo]
if not conds2:
conds2 = [x for x in conds if x[1] != False]
conds = conds2
def cnt(expr):
if expr == True or expr == False:
return 0
return expr.count_ops()
conds.sort(key=lambda x: (-x[0], cnt(x[1])))
if not conds:
raise IntegralTransformError('Laplace', f, 'no convergence found')
a, aux = conds[0]
def sbs(expr):
return expr.subs(s, s_)
if simplify:
F = _simplifyconds(F, s, a)
aux = _simplifyconds(aux, s, a)
return _simplify(F.subs(s, s_), simplify), sbs(a), sbs(aux)
class LaplaceTransform(IntegralTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated Laplace transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute Laplace transforms, see the :func:`laplace_transform`
docstring.
"""
_name = 'Laplace'
def _compute_transform(self, f, t, s, **hints):
return _laplace_transform(f, t, s, **hints)
def _as_integral(self, f, t, s):
from sympy import exp
return Integral(f*exp(-s*t), (t, 0, oo))
def _collapse_extra(self, extra):
from sympy import Max
conds = []
planes = []
for plane, cond in extra:
conds.append(cond)
planes.append(plane)
cond = And(*conds)
plane = Max(*planes)
if cond == False:
raise IntegralTransformError(
'Laplace', None, 'No combined convergence.')
return plane, cond
def laplace_transform(f, t, s, **hints):
r"""
Compute the Laplace Transform `F(s)` of `f(t)`,
.. math :: F(s) = \int_0^\infty e^{-st} f(t) \mathrm{d}t.
For all "sensible" functions, this converges absolutely in a
half plane `a < \operatorname{Re}(s)`.
This function returns ``(F, a, cond)``
where ``F`` is the Laplace transform of ``f``, `\operatorname{Re}(s) > a` is the half-plane
of convergence, and ``cond`` are auxiliary convergence conditions.
If the integral cannot be computed in closed form, this function returns
an unevaluated :class:`LaplaceTransform` object.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`. If ``noconds=True``,
only `F` will be returned (i.e. not ``cond``, and also not the plane ``a``).
>>> from sympy.integrals import laplace_transform
>>> from sympy.abc import t, s, a
>>> laplace_transform(t**a, t, s)
(s**(-a)*gamma(a + 1)/s, 0, -re(a) < 1)
See Also
========
inverse_laplace_transform, mellin_transform, fourier_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
"""
if isinstance(f, MatrixBase) and hasattr(f, 'applyfunc'):
return f.applyfunc(lambda fij: laplace_transform(fij, t, s, **hints))
return LaplaceTransform(f, t, s).doit(**hints)
@_noconds_(True)
def _inverse_laplace_transform(F, s, t_, plane, simplify=True):
""" The backend function for inverse Laplace transforms. """
from sympy import exp, Heaviside, log, expand_complex, Integral, Piecewise
from sympy.integrals.meijerint import meijerint_inversion, _get_coeff_exp
# There are two strategies we can try:
# 1) Use inverse mellin transforms - related by a simple change of variables.
# 2) Use the inversion integral.
t = Dummy('t', real=True)
def pw_simp(*args):
""" Simplify a piecewise expression from hyperexpand. """
# XXX we break modularity here!
if len(args) != 3:
return Piecewise(*args)
arg = args[2].args[0].argument
coeff, exponent = _get_coeff_exp(arg, t)
e1 = args[0].args[0]
e2 = args[1].args[0]
return Heaviside(1/abs(coeff) - t**exponent)*e1 \
+ Heaviside(t**exponent - 1/abs(coeff))*e2
try:
f, cond = inverse_mellin_transform(F, s, exp(-t), (None, oo),
needeval=True, noconds=False)
except IntegralTransformError:
f = None
if f is None:
f = meijerint_inversion(F, s, t)
if f is None:
raise IntegralTransformError('Inverse Laplace', f, '')
if f.is_Piecewise:
f, cond = f.args[0]
if f.has(Integral):
raise IntegralTransformError('Inverse Laplace', f,
'inversion integral of unrecognised form.')
else:
cond = S.true
f = f.replace(Piecewise, pw_simp)
if f.is_Piecewise:
# many of the functions called below can't work with piecewise
# (b/c it has a bool in args)
return f.subs(t, t_), cond
u = Dummy('u')
def simp_heaviside(arg):
a = arg.subs(exp(-t), u)
if a.has(t):
return Heaviside(arg)
rel = _solve_inequality(a > 0, u)
if rel.lts == u:
k = log(rel.gts)
return Heaviside(t + k)
else:
k = log(rel.lts)
return Heaviside(-(t + k))
f = f.replace(Heaviside, simp_heaviside)
def simp_exp(arg):
return expand_complex(exp(arg))
f = f.replace(exp, simp_exp)
# TODO it would be nice to fix cosh and sinh ... simplify messes these
# exponentials up
return _simplify(f.subs(t, t_), simplify), cond
class InverseLaplaceTransform(IntegralTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated inverse Laplace transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute inverse Laplace transforms, see the
:func:`inverse_laplace_transform` docstring.
"""
_name = 'Inverse Laplace'
_none_sentinel = Dummy('None')
_c = Dummy('c')
def __new__(cls, F, s, x, plane, **opts):
if plane is None:
plane = InverseLaplaceTransform._none_sentinel
return IntegralTransform.__new__(cls, F, s, x, plane, **opts)
@property
def fundamental_plane(self):
plane = self.args[3]
if plane is InverseLaplaceTransform._none_sentinel:
plane = None
return plane
def _compute_transform(self, F, s, t, **hints):
return _inverse_laplace_transform(F, s, t, self.fundamental_plane, **hints)
def _as_integral(self, F, s, t):
from sympy import I, exp
c = self.__class__._c
return Integral(exp(s*t)*F, (s, c - I*oo, c + I*oo))/(2*S.Pi*S.ImaginaryUnit)
def inverse_laplace_transform(F, s, t, plane=None, **hints):
r"""
Compute the inverse Laplace transform of `F(s)`, defined as
.. math :: f(t) = \frac{1}{2\pi i} \int_{c-i\infty}^{c+i\infty} e^{st} F(s) \mathrm{d}s,
for `c` so large that `F(s)` has no singularites in the
half-plane `\operatorname{Re}(s) > c-\epsilon`.
The plane can be specified by
argument ``plane``, but will be inferred if passed as None.
Under certain regularity conditions, this recovers `f(t)` from its
Laplace Transform `F(s)`, for non-negative `t`, and vice
versa.
If the integral cannot be computed in closed form, this function returns
an unevaluated :class:`InverseLaplaceTransform` object.
Note that this function will always assume `t` to be real,
regardless of the sympy assumption on `t`.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
>>> from sympy.integrals.transforms import inverse_laplace_transform
>>> from sympy import exp, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import s, t
>>> a = Symbol('a', positive=True)
>>> inverse_laplace_transform(exp(-a*s)/s, s, t)
Heaviside(-a + t)
See Also
========
laplace_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
"""
if isinstance(F, MatrixBase) and hasattr(F, 'applyfunc'):
return F.applyfunc(lambda Fij: inverse_laplace_transform(Fij, s, t, plane, **hints))
return InverseLaplaceTransform(F, s, t, plane).doit(**hints)
##########################################################################
# Fourier Transform
##########################################################################
@_noconds_(True)
def _fourier_transform(f, x, k, a, b, name, simplify=True):
"""
Compute a general Fourier-type transform
F(k) = a int_-oo^oo exp(b*I*x*k) f(x) dx.
For suitable choice of a and b, this reduces to the standard Fourier
and inverse Fourier transforms.
"""
from sympy import exp, I
F = integrate(a*f*exp(b*I*x*k), (x, -oo, oo))
if not F.has(Integral):
return _simplify(F, simplify), S.true
integral_f = integrate(f, (x, -oo, oo))
if integral_f in (-oo, oo, S.NaN) or integral_f.has(Integral):
raise IntegralTransformError(name, f, 'function not integrable on real axis')
if not F.is_Piecewise:
raise IntegralTransformError(name, f, 'could not compute integral')
F, cond = F.args[0]
if F.has(Integral):
raise IntegralTransformError(name, f, 'integral in unexpected form')
return _simplify(F, simplify), cond
class FourierTypeTransform(IntegralTransform):
""" Base class for Fourier transforms."""
def a(self):
raise NotImplementedError(
"Class %s must implement a(self) but does not" % self.__class__)
def b(self):
raise NotImplementedError(
"Class %s must implement b(self) but does not" % self.__class__)
def _compute_transform(self, f, x, k, **hints):
return _fourier_transform(f, x, k,
self.a(), self.b(),
self.__class__._name, **hints)
def _as_integral(self, f, x, k):
from sympy import exp, I
a = self.a()
b = self.b()
return Integral(a*f*exp(b*I*x*k), (x, -oo, oo))
class FourierTransform(FourierTypeTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated Fourier transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute Fourier transforms, see the :func:`fourier_transform`
docstring.
"""
_name = 'Fourier'
def a(self):
return 1
def b(self):
return -2*S.Pi
def fourier_transform(f, x, k, **hints):
r"""
Compute the unitary, ordinary-frequency Fourier transform of `f`, defined
as
.. math:: F(k) = \int_{-\infty}^\infty f(x) e^{-2\pi i x k} \mathrm{d} x.
If the transform cannot be computed in closed form, this
function returns an unevaluated :class:`FourierTransform` object.
For other Fourier transform conventions, see the function
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms._fourier_transform`.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
Note that for this transform, by default ``noconds=True``.
>>> from sympy import fourier_transform, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k
>>> fourier_transform(exp(-x**2), x, k)
sqrt(pi)*exp(-pi**2*k**2)
>>> fourier_transform(exp(-x**2), x, k, noconds=False)
(sqrt(pi)*exp(-pi**2*k**2), True)
See Also
========
inverse_fourier_transform
sine_transform, inverse_sine_transform
cosine_transform, inverse_cosine_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
mellin_transform, laplace_transform
"""
return FourierTransform(f, x, k).doit(**hints)
class InverseFourierTransform(FourierTypeTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated inverse Fourier transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute inverse Fourier transforms, see the
:func:`inverse_fourier_transform` docstring.
"""
_name = 'Inverse Fourier'
def a(self):
return 1
def b(self):
return 2*S.Pi
def inverse_fourier_transform(F, k, x, **hints):
r"""
Compute the unitary, ordinary-frequency inverse Fourier transform of `F`,
defined as
.. math:: f(x) = \int_{-\infty}^\infty F(k) e^{2\pi i x k} \mathrm{d} k.
If the transform cannot be computed in closed form, this
function returns an unevaluated :class:`InverseFourierTransform` object.
For other Fourier transform conventions, see the function
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms._fourier_transform`.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
Note that for this transform, by default ``noconds=True``.
>>> from sympy import inverse_fourier_transform, exp, sqrt, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k
>>> inverse_fourier_transform(sqrt(pi)*exp(-(pi*k)**2), k, x)
exp(-x**2)
>>> inverse_fourier_transform(sqrt(pi)*exp(-(pi*k)**2), k, x, noconds=False)
(exp(-x**2), True)
See Also
========
fourier_transform
sine_transform, inverse_sine_transform
cosine_transform, inverse_cosine_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
mellin_transform, laplace_transform
"""
return InverseFourierTransform(F, k, x).doit(**hints)
##########################################################################
# Fourier Sine and Cosine Transform
##########################################################################
from sympy import sin, cos, sqrt, pi
@_noconds_(True)
def _sine_cosine_transform(f, x, k, a, b, K, name, simplify=True):
"""
Compute a general sine or cosine-type transform
F(k) = a int_0^oo b*sin(x*k) f(x) dx.
F(k) = a int_0^oo b*cos(x*k) f(x) dx.
For suitable choice of a and b, this reduces to the standard sine/cosine
and inverse sine/cosine transforms.
"""
F = integrate(a*f*K(b*x*k), (x, 0, oo))
if not F.has(Integral):
return _simplify(F, simplify), S.true
if not F.is_Piecewise:
raise IntegralTransformError(name, f, 'could not compute integral')
F, cond = F.args[0]
if F.has(Integral):
raise IntegralTransformError(name, f, 'integral in unexpected form')
return _simplify(F, simplify), cond
class SineCosineTypeTransform(IntegralTransform):
"""
Base class for sine and cosine transforms.
Specify cls._kern.
"""
def a(self):
raise NotImplementedError(
"Class %s must implement a(self) but does not" % self.__class__)
def b(self):
raise NotImplementedError(
"Class %s must implement b(self) but does not" % self.__class__)
def _compute_transform(self, f, x, k, **hints):
return _sine_cosine_transform(f, x, k,
self.a(), self.b(),
self.__class__._kern,
self.__class__._name, **hints)
def _as_integral(self, f, x, k):
a = self.a()
b = self.b()
K = self.__class__._kern
return Integral(a*f*K(b*x*k), (x, 0, oo))
class SineTransform(SineCosineTypeTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated sine transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute sine transforms, see the :func:`sine_transform`
docstring.
"""
_name = 'Sine'
_kern = sin
def a(self):
return sqrt(2)/sqrt(pi)
def b(self):
return 1
def sine_transform(f, x, k, **hints):
r"""
Compute the unitary, ordinary-frequency sine transform of `f`, defined
as
.. math:: F(k) = \sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi}} \int_{0}^\infty f(x) \sin(2\pi x k) \mathrm{d} x.
If the transform cannot be computed in closed form, this
function returns an unevaluated :class:`SineTransform` object.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
Note that for this transform, by default ``noconds=True``.
>>> from sympy import sine_transform, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k, a
>>> sine_transform(x*exp(-a*x**2), x, k)
sqrt(2)*k*exp(-k**2/(4*a))/(4*a**(3/2))
>>> sine_transform(x**(-a), x, k)
2**(-a + 1/2)*k**(a - 1)*gamma(-a/2 + 1)/gamma(a/2 + 1/2)
See Also
========
fourier_transform, inverse_fourier_transform
inverse_sine_transform
cosine_transform, inverse_cosine_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
mellin_transform, laplace_transform
"""
return SineTransform(f, x, k).doit(**hints)
class InverseSineTransform(SineCosineTypeTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated inverse sine transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute inverse sine transforms, see the
:func:`inverse_sine_transform` docstring.
"""
_name = 'Inverse Sine'
_kern = sin
def a(self):
return sqrt(2)/sqrt(pi)
def b(self):
return 1
def inverse_sine_transform(F, k, x, **hints):
r"""
Compute the unitary, ordinary-frequency inverse sine transform of `F`,
defined as
.. math:: f(x) = \sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi}} \int_{0}^\infty F(k) \sin(2\pi x k) \mathrm{d} k.
If the transform cannot be computed in closed form, this
function returns an unevaluated :class:`InverseSineTransform` object.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
Note that for this transform, by default ``noconds=True``.
>>> from sympy import inverse_sine_transform, exp, sqrt, gamma, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k, a
>>> inverse_sine_transform(2**((1-2*a)/2)*k**(a - 1)*
... gamma(-a/2 + 1)/gamma((a+1)/2), k, x)
x**(-a)
>>> inverse_sine_transform(sqrt(2)*k*exp(-k**2/(4*a))/(4*sqrt(a)**3), k, x)
x*exp(-a*x**2)
See Also
========
fourier_transform, inverse_fourier_transform
sine_transform
cosine_transform, inverse_cosine_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
mellin_transform, laplace_transform
"""
return InverseSineTransform(F, k, x).doit(**hints)
class CosineTransform(SineCosineTypeTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated cosine transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute cosine transforms, see the :func:`cosine_transform`
docstring.
"""
_name = 'Cosine'
_kern = cos
def a(self):
return sqrt(2)/sqrt(pi)
def b(self):
return 1
def cosine_transform(f, x, k, **hints):
r"""
Compute the unitary, ordinary-frequency cosine transform of `f`, defined
as
.. math:: F(k) = \sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi}} \int_{0}^\infty f(x) \cos(2\pi x k) \mathrm{d} x.
If the transform cannot be computed in closed form, this
function returns an unevaluated :class:`CosineTransform` object.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
Note that for this transform, by default ``noconds=True``.
>>> from sympy import cosine_transform, exp, sqrt, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k, a
>>> cosine_transform(exp(-a*x), x, k)
sqrt(2)*a/(sqrt(pi)*(a**2 + k**2))
>>> cosine_transform(exp(-a*sqrt(x))*cos(a*sqrt(x)), x, k)
a*exp(-a**2/(2*k))/(2*k**(3/2))
See Also
========
fourier_transform, inverse_fourier_transform,
sine_transform, inverse_sine_transform
inverse_cosine_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
mellin_transform, laplace_transform
"""
return CosineTransform(f, x, k).doit(**hints)
class InverseCosineTransform(SineCosineTypeTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated inverse cosine transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute inverse cosine transforms, see the
:func:`inverse_cosine_transform` docstring.
"""
_name = 'Inverse Cosine'
_kern = cos
def a(self):
return sqrt(2)/sqrt(pi)
def b(self):
return 1
def inverse_cosine_transform(F, k, x, **hints):
r"""
Compute the unitary, ordinary-frequency inverse cosine transform of `F`,
defined as
.. math:: f(x) = \sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi}} \int_{0}^\infty F(k) \cos(2\pi x k) \mathrm{d} k.
If the transform cannot be computed in closed form, this
function returns an unevaluated :class:`InverseCosineTransform` object.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
Note that for this transform, by default ``noconds=True``.
>>> from sympy import inverse_cosine_transform, exp, sqrt, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import x, k, a
>>> inverse_cosine_transform(sqrt(2)*a/(sqrt(pi)*(a**2 + k**2)), k, x)
exp(-a*x)
>>> inverse_cosine_transform(1/sqrt(k), k, x)
1/sqrt(x)
See Also
========
fourier_transform, inverse_fourier_transform,
sine_transform, inverse_sine_transform
cosine_transform
hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
mellin_transform, laplace_transform
"""
return InverseCosineTransform(F, k, x).doit(**hints)
##########################################################################
# Hankel Transform
##########################################################################
@_noconds_(True)
def _hankel_transform(f, r, k, nu, name, simplify=True):
r"""
Compute a general Hankel transform
.. math:: F_\nu(k) = \int_{0}^\infty f(r) J_\nu(k r) r \mathrm{d} r.
"""
from sympy import besselj
F = integrate(f*besselj(nu, k*r)*r, (r, 0, oo))
if not F.has(Integral):
return _simplify(F, simplify), S.true
if not F.is_Piecewise:
raise IntegralTransformError(name, f, 'could not compute integral')
F, cond = F.args[0]
if F.has(Integral):
raise IntegralTransformError(name, f, 'integral in unexpected form')
return _simplify(F, simplify), cond
class HankelTypeTransform(IntegralTransform):
"""
Base class for Hankel transforms.
"""
def doit(self, **hints):
return self._compute_transform(self.function,
self.function_variable,
self.transform_variable,
self.args[3],
**hints)
def _compute_transform(self, f, r, k, nu, **hints):
return _hankel_transform(f, r, k, nu, self._name, **hints)
def _as_integral(self, f, r, k, nu):
from sympy import besselj
return Integral(f*besselj(nu, k*r)*r, (r, 0, oo))
@property
def as_integral(self):
return self._as_integral(self.function,
self.function_variable,
self.transform_variable,
self.args[3])
class HankelTransform(HankelTypeTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated Hankel transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute Hankel transforms, see the :func:`hankel_transform`
docstring.
"""
_name = 'Hankel'
def hankel_transform(f, r, k, nu, **hints):
r"""
Compute the Hankel transform of `f`, defined as
.. math:: F_\nu(k) = \int_{0}^\infty f(r) J_\nu(k r) r \mathrm{d} r.
If the transform cannot be computed in closed form, this
function returns an unevaluated :class:`HankelTransform` object.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
Note that for this transform, by default ``noconds=True``.
>>> from sympy import hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform
>>> from sympy import gamma, exp, sinh, cosh
>>> from sympy.abc import r, k, m, nu, a
>>> ht = hankel_transform(1/r**m, r, k, nu)
>>> ht
2*2**(-m)*k**(m - 2)*gamma(-m/2 + nu/2 + 1)/gamma(m/2 + nu/2)
>>> inverse_hankel_transform(ht, k, r, nu)
r**(-m)
>>> ht = hankel_transform(exp(-a*r), r, k, 0)
>>> ht
a/(k**3*(a**2/k**2 + 1)**(3/2))
>>> inverse_hankel_transform(ht, k, r, 0)
exp(-a*r)
See Also
========
fourier_transform, inverse_fourier_transform
sine_transform, inverse_sine_transform
cosine_transform, inverse_cosine_transform
inverse_hankel_transform
mellin_transform, laplace_transform
"""
return HankelTransform(f, r, k, nu).doit(**hints)
class InverseHankelTransform(HankelTypeTransform):
"""
Class representing unevaluated inverse Hankel transforms.
For usage of this class, see the :class:`IntegralTransform` docstring.
For how to compute inverse Hankel transforms, see the
:func:`inverse_hankel_transform` docstring.
"""
_name = 'Inverse Hankel'
def inverse_hankel_transform(F, k, r, nu, **hints):
r"""
Compute the inverse Hankel transform of `F` defined as
.. math:: f(r) = \int_{0}^\infty F_\nu(k) J_\nu(k r) k \mathrm{d} k.
If the transform cannot be computed in closed form, this
function returns an unevaluated :class:`InverseHankelTransform` object.
For a description of possible hints, refer to the docstring of
:func:`sympy.integrals.transforms.IntegralTransform.doit`.
Note that for this transform, by default ``noconds=True``.
>>> from sympy import hankel_transform, inverse_hankel_transform, gamma
>>> from sympy import gamma, exp, sinh, cosh
>>> from sympy.abc import r, k, m, nu, a
>>> ht = hankel_transform(1/r**m, r, k, nu)
>>> ht
2*2**(-m)*k**(m - 2)*gamma(-m/2 + nu/2 + 1)/gamma(m/2 + nu/2)
>>> inverse_hankel_transform(ht, k, r, nu)
r**(-m)
>>> ht = hankel_transform(exp(-a*r), r, k, 0)
>>> ht
a/(k**3*(a**2/k**2 + 1)**(3/2))
>>> inverse_hankel_transform(ht, k, r, 0)
exp(-a*r)
See Also
========
fourier_transform, inverse_fourier_transform
sine_transform, inverse_sine_transform
cosine_transform, inverse_cosine_transform
hankel_transform
mellin_transform, laplace_transform
"""
return InverseHankelTransform(F, k, r, nu).doit(**hints)
|
9a6236a1d61bee7a18ed37e0358005f695c29ba9dadb8bbb66a3d97b7afd3824
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import S, Dummy, pi
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import factorial
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import sin, cos
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import sqrt
from sympy.functions.special.gamma_functions import gamma
from sympy.polys.orthopolys import (legendre_poly, laguerre_poly,
hermite_poly, jacobi_poly)
from sympy.polys.rootoftools import RootOf
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
def gauss_legendre(n, n_digits):
r"""
Computes the Gauss-Legendre quadrature [1]_ points and weights.
The Gauss-Legendre quadrature approximates the integral:
.. math::
\int_{-1}^1 f(x)\,dx \approx \sum_{i=1}^n w_i f(x_i)
The nodes `x_i` of an order `n` quadrature rule are the roots of `P_n`
and the weights `w_i` are given by:
.. math::
w_i = \frac{2}{\left(1-x_i^2\right) \left(P'_n(x_i)\right)^2}
Parameters
==========
n : the order of quadrature
n_digits : number of significant digits of the points and weights to return
Returns
=======
(x, w) : the ``x`` and ``w`` are lists of points and weights as Floats.
The points `x_i` and weights `w_i` are returned as ``(x, w)``
tuple of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.integrals.quadrature import gauss_legendre
>>> x, w = gauss_legendre(3, 5)
>>> x
[-0.7746, 0, 0.7746]
>>> w
[0.55556, 0.88889, 0.55556]
>>> x, w = gauss_legendre(4, 5)
>>> x
[-0.86114, -0.33998, 0.33998, 0.86114]
>>> w
[0.34785, 0.65215, 0.65215, 0.34785]
See Also
========
gauss_laguerre, gauss_gen_laguerre, gauss_hermite, gauss_chebyshev_t, gauss_chebyshev_u, gauss_jacobi, gauss_lobatto
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_quadrature
.. [2] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/legendre_rule/legendre_rule.html
"""
x = Dummy("x")
p = legendre_poly(n, x, polys=True)
pd = p.diff(x)
xi = []
w = []
for r in p.real_roots():
if isinstance(r, RootOf):
r = r.eval_rational(S(1)/10**(n_digits+2))
xi.append(r.n(n_digits))
w.append((2/((1-r**2) * pd.subs(x, r)**2)).n(n_digits))
return xi, w
def gauss_laguerre(n, n_digits):
r"""
Computes the Gauss-Laguerre quadrature [1]_ points and weights.
The Gauss-Laguerre quadrature approximates the integral:
.. math::
\int_0^{\infty} e^{-x} f(x)\,dx \approx \sum_{i=1}^n w_i f(x_i)
The nodes `x_i` of an order `n` quadrature rule are the roots of `L_n`
and the weights `w_i` are given by:
.. math::
w_i = \frac{x_i}{(n+1)^2 \left(L_{n+1}(x_i)\right)^2}
Parameters
==========
n : the order of quadrature
n_digits : number of significant digits of the points and weights to return
Returns
=======
(x, w) : the ``x`` and ``w`` are lists of points and weights as Floats.
The points `x_i` and weights `w_i` are returned as ``(x, w)``
tuple of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.integrals.quadrature import gauss_laguerre
>>> x, w = gauss_laguerre(3, 5)
>>> x
[0.41577, 2.2943, 6.2899]
>>> w
[0.71109, 0.27852, 0.010389]
>>> x, w = gauss_laguerre(6, 5)
>>> x
[0.22285, 1.1889, 2.9927, 5.7751, 9.8375, 15.983]
>>> w
[0.45896, 0.417, 0.11337, 0.010399, 0.00026102, 8.9855e-7]
See Also
========
gauss_legendre, gauss_gen_laguerre, gauss_hermite, gauss_chebyshev_t, gauss_chebyshev_u, gauss_jacobi, gauss_lobatto
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauss%E2%80%93Laguerre_quadrature
.. [2] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/laguerre_rule/laguerre_rule.html
"""
x = Dummy("x")
p = laguerre_poly(n, x, polys=True)
p1 = laguerre_poly(n+1, x, polys=True)
xi = []
w = []
for r in p.real_roots():
if isinstance(r, RootOf):
r = r.eval_rational(S(1)/10**(n_digits+2))
xi.append(r.n(n_digits))
w.append((r/((n+1)**2 * p1.subs(x, r)**2)).n(n_digits))
return xi, w
def gauss_hermite(n, n_digits):
r"""
Computes the Gauss-Hermite quadrature [1]_ points and weights.
The Gauss-Hermite quadrature approximates the integral:
.. math::
\int_{-\infty}^{\infty} e^{-x^2} f(x)\,dx \approx
\sum_{i=1}^n w_i f(x_i)
The nodes `x_i` of an order `n` quadrature rule are the roots of `H_n`
and the weights `w_i` are given by:
.. math::
w_i = \frac{2^{n-1} n! \sqrt{\pi}}{n^2 \left(H_{n-1}(x_i)\right)^2}
Parameters
==========
n : the order of quadrature
n_digits : number of significant digits of the points and weights to return
Returns
=======
(x, w) : the ``x`` and ``w`` are lists of points and weights as Floats.
The points `x_i` and weights `w_i` are returned as ``(x, w)``
tuple of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.integrals.quadrature import gauss_hermite
>>> x, w = gauss_hermite(3, 5)
>>> x
[-1.2247, 0, 1.2247]
>>> w
[0.29541, 1.1816, 0.29541]
>>> x, w = gauss_hermite(6, 5)
>>> x
[-2.3506, -1.3358, -0.43608, 0.43608, 1.3358, 2.3506]
>>> w
[0.00453, 0.15707, 0.72463, 0.72463, 0.15707, 0.00453]
See Also
========
gauss_legendre, gauss_laguerre, gauss_gen_laguerre, gauss_chebyshev_t, gauss_chebyshev_u, gauss_jacobi, gauss_lobatto
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauss-Hermite_Quadrature
.. [2] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/hermite_rule/hermite_rule.html
.. [3] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/gen_hermite_rule/gen_hermite_rule.html
"""
x = Dummy("x")
p = hermite_poly(n, x, polys=True)
p1 = hermite_poly(n-1, x, polys=True)
xi = []
w = []
for r in p.real_roots():
if isinstance(r, RootOf):
r = r.eval_rational(S(1)/10**(n_digits+2))
xi.append(r.n(n_digits))
w.append(((2**(n-1) * factorial(n) * sqrt(pi)) /
(n**2 * p1.subs(x, r)**2)).n(n_digits))
return xi, w
def gauss_gen_laguerre(n, alpha, n_digits):
r"""
Computes the generalized Gauss-Laguerre quadrature [1]_ points and weights.
The generalized Gauss-Laguerre quadrature approximates the integral:
.. math::
\int_{0}^\infty x^{\alpha} e^{-x} f(x)\,dx \approx
\sum_{i=1}^n w_i f(x_i)
The nodes `x_i` of an order `n` quadrature rule are the roots of
`L^{\alpha}_n` and the weights `w_i` are given by:
.. math::
w_i = \frac{\Gamma(\alpha+n)}
{n \Gamma(n) L^{\alpha}_{n-1}(x_i) L^{\alpha+1}_{n-1}(x_i)}
Parameters
==========
n : the order of quadrature
alpha : the exponent of the singularity, `\alpha > -1`
n_digits : number of significant digits of the points and weights to return
Returns
=======
(x, w) : the ``x`` and ``w`` are lists of points and weights as Floats.
The points `x_i` and weights `w_i` are returned as ``(x, w)``
tuple of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.integrals.quadrature import gauss_gen_laguerre
>>> x, w = gauss_gen_laguerre(3, -S.Half, 5)
>>> x
[0.19016, 1.7845, 5.5253]
>>> w
[1.4493, 0.31413, 0.00906]
>>> x, w = gauss_gen_laguerre(4, 3*S.Half, 5)
>>> x
[0.97851, 2.9904, 6.3193, 11.712]
>>> w
[0.53087, 0.67721, 0.11895, 0.0023152]
See Also
========
gauss_legendre, gauss_laguerre, gauss_hermite, gauss_chebyshev_t, gauss_chebyshev_u, gauss_jacobi, gauss_lobatto
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauss%E2%80%93Laguerre_quadrature
.. [2] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/gen_laguerre_rule/gen_laguerre_rule.html
"""
x = Dummy("x")
p = laguerre_poly(n, x, alpha=alpha, polys=True)
p1 = laguerre_poly(n-1, x, alpha=alpha, polys=True)
p2 = laguerre_poly(n-1, x, alpha=alpha+1, polys=True)
xi = []
w = []
for r in p.real_roots():
if isinstance(r, RootOf):
r = r.eval_rational(S(1)/10**(n_digits+2))
xi.append(r.n(n_digits))
w.append((gamma(alpha+n) /
(n*gamma(n)*p1.subs(x, r)*p2.subs(x, r))).n(n_digits))
return xi, w
def gauss_chebyshev_t(n, n_digits):
r"""
Computes the Gauss-Chebyshev quadrature [1]_ points and weights of
the first kind.
The Gauss-Chebyshev quadrature of the first kind approximates the integral:
.. math::
\int_{-1}^{1} \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-x^2}} f(x)\,dx \approx
\sum_{i=1}^n w_i f(x_i)
The nodes `x_i` of an order `n` quadrature rule are the roots of `T_n`
and the weights `w_i` are given by:
.. math::
w_i = \frac{\pi}{n}
Parameters
==========
n : the order of quadrature
n_digits : number of significant digits of the points and weights to return
Returns
=======
(x, w) : the ``x`` and ``w`` are lists of points and weights as Floats.
The points `x_i` and weights `w_i` are returned as ``(x, w)``
tuple of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.integrals.quadrature import gauss_chebyshev_t
>>> x, w = gauss_chebyshev_t(3, 5)
>>> x
[0.86602, 0, -0.86602]
>>> w
[1.0472, 1.0472, 1.0472]
>>> x, w = gauss_chebyshev_t(6, 5)
>>> x
[0.96593, 0.70711, 0.25882, -0.25882, -0.70711, -0.96593]
>>> w
[0.5236, 0.5236, 0.5236, 0.5236, 0.5236, 0.5236]
See Also
========
gauss_legendre, gauss_laguerre, gauss_hermite, gauss_gen_laguerre, gauss_chebyshev_u, gauss_jacobi, gauss_lobatto
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chebyshev%E2%80%93Gauss_quadrature
.. [2] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/chebyshev1_rule/chebyshev1_rule.html
"""
xi = []
w = []
for i in range(1, n+1):
xi.append((cos((2*i-S.One)/(2*n)*S.Pi)).n(n_digits))
w.append((S.Pi/n).n(n_digits))
return xi, w
def gauss_chebyshev_u(n, n_digits):
r"""
Computes the Gauss-Chebyshev quadrature [1]_ points and weights of
the second kind.
The Gauss-Chebyshev quadrature of the second kind approximates the
integral:
.. math::
\int_{-1}^{1} \sqrt{1-x^2} f(x)\,dx \approx \sum_{i=1}^n w_i f(x_i)
The nodes `x_i` of an order `n` quadrature rule are the roots of `U_n`
and the weights `w_i` are given by:
.. math::
w_i = \frac{\pi}{n+1} \sin^2 \left(\frac{i}{n+1}\pi\right)
Parameters
==========
n : the order of quadrature
n_digits : number of significant digits of the points and weights to return
Returns
=======
(x, w) : the ``x`` and ``w`` are lists of points and weights as Floats.
The points `x_i` and weights `w_i` are returned as ``(x, w)``
tuple of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.integrals.quadrature import gauss_chebyshev_u
>>> x, w = gauss_chebyshev_u(3, 5)
>>> x
[0.70711, 0, -0.70711]
>>> w
[0.3927, 0.7854, 0.3927]
>>> x, w = gauss_chebyshev_u(6, 5)
>>> x
[0.90097, 0.62349, 0.22252, -0.22252, -0.62349, -0.90097]
>>> w
[0.084489, 0.27433, 0.42658, 0.42658, 0.27433, 0.084489]
See Also
========
gauss_legendre, gauss_laguerre, gauss_hermite, gauss_gen_laguerre, gauss_chebyshev_t, gauss_jacobi, gauss_lobatto
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chebyshev%E2%80%93Gauss_quadrature
.. [2] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/chebyshev2_rule/chebyshev2_rule.html
"""
xi = []
w = []
for i in range(1, n+1):
xi.append((cos(i/(n+S.One)*S.Pi)).n(n_digits))
w.append((S.Pi/(n+S.One)*sin(i*S.Pi/(n+S.One))**2).n(n_digits))
return xi, w
def gauss_jacobi(n, alpha, beta, n_digits):
r"""
Computes the Gauss-Jacobi quadrature [1]_ points and weights.
The Gauss-Jacobi quadrature of the first kind approximates the integral:
.. math::
\int_{-1}^1 (1-x)^\alpha (1+x)^\beta f(x)\,dx \approx
\sum_{i=1}^n w_i f(x_i)
The nodes `x_i` of an order `n` quadrature rule are the roots of
`P^{(\alpha,\beta)}_n` and the weights `w_i` are given by:
.. math::
w_i = -\frac{2n+\alpha+\beta+2}{n+\alpha+\beta+1}
\frac{\Gamma(n+\alpha+1)\Gamma(n+\beta+1)}
{\Gamma(n+\alpha+\beta+1)(n+1)!}
\frac{2^{\alpha+\beta}}{P'_n(x_i)
P^{(\alpha,\beta)}_{n+1}(x_i)}
Parameters
==========
n : the order of quadrature
alpha : the first parameter of the Jacobi Polynomial, `\alpha > -1`
beta : the second parameter of the Jacobi Polynomial, `\beta > -1`
n_digits : number of significant digits of the points and weights to return
Returns
=======
(x, w) : the ``x`` and ``w`` are lists of points and weights as Floats.
The points `x_i` and weights `w_i` are returned as ``(x, w)``
tuple of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.integrals.quadrature import gauss_jacobi
>>> x, w = gauss_jacobi(3, S.Half, -S.Half, 5)
>>> x
[-0.90097, -0.22252, 0.62349]
>>> w
[1.7063, 1.0973, 0.33795]
>>> x, w = gauss_jacobi(6, 1, 1, 5)
>>> x
[-0.87174, -0.5917, -0.2093, 0.2093, 0.5917, 0.87174]
>>> w
[0.050584, 0.22169, 0.39439, 0.39439, 0.22169, 0.050584]
See Also
========
gauss_legendre, gauss_laguerre, gauss_hermite, gauss_gen_laguerre, gauss_chebyshev_t, gauss_chebyshev_u, gauss_lobatto
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauss%E2%80%93Jacobi_quadrature
.. [2] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/jacobi_rule/jacobi_rule.html
.. [3] http://people.sc.fsu.edu/~jburkardt/cpp_src/gegenbauer_rule/gegenbauer_rule.html
"""
x = Dummy("x")
p = jacobi_poly(n, alpha, beta, x, polys=True)
pd = p.diff(x)
pn = jacobi_poly(n+1, alpha, beta, x, polys=True)
xi = []
w = []
for r in p.real_roots():
if isinstance(r, RootOf):
r = r.eval_rational(S(1)/10**(n_digits+2))
xi.append(r.n(n_digits))
w.append((
- (2*n+alpha+beta+2) / (n+alpha+beta+S.One) *
(gamma(n+alpha+1)*gamma(n+beta+1)) /
(gamma(n+alpha+beta+S.One)*gamma(n+2)) *
2**(alpha+beta) / (pd.subs(x, r) * pn.subs(x, r))).n(n_digits))
return xi, w
def gauss_lobatto(n, n_digits):
r"""
Computes the Gauss-Lobatto quadrature [1]_ points and weights.
The Gauss-Lobatto quadrature approximates the integral:
.. math::
\int_{-1}^1 f(x)\,dx \approx \sum_{i=1}^n w_i f(x_i)
The nodes `x_i` of an order `n` quadrature rule are the roots of `P'_(n-1)`
and the weights `w_i` are given by:
.. math::
&w_i = \frac{2}{n(n-1) \left[P_{n-1}(x_i)\right]^2},\quad x\neq\pm 1\\
&w_i = \frac{2}{n(n-1)},\quad x=\pm 1
Parameters
==========
n : the order of quadrature
n_digits : number of significant digits of the points and weights to return
Returns
=======
(x, w) : the ``x`` and ``w`` are lists of points and weights as Floats.
The points `x_i` and weights `w_i` are returned as ``(x, w)``
tuple of lists.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.integrals.quadrature import gauss_lobatto
>>> x, w = gauss_lobatto(3, 5)
>>> x
[-1, 0, 1]
>>> w
[0.33333, 1.3333, 0.33333]
>>> x, w = gauss_lobatto(4, 5)
>>> x
[-1, -0.44721, 0.44721, 1]
>>> w
[0.16667, 0.83333, 0.83333, 0.16667]
See Also
========
gauss_legendre,gauss_laguerre, gauss_gen_laguerre, gauss_hermite, gauss_chebyshev_t, gauss_chebyshev_u, gauss_jacobi
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_quadrature#Gauss.E2.80.93Lobatto_rules
.. [2] http://people.math.sfu.ca/~cbm/aands/page_888.htm
"""
x = Dummy("x")
p = legendre_poly(n-1, x, polys=True)
pd = p.diff(x)
xi = []
w = []
for r in pd.real_roots():
if isinstance(r, RootOf):
r = r.eval_rational(S(1)/10**(n_digits+2))
xi.append(r.n(n_digits))
w.append((2/(n*(n-1) * p.subs(x, r)**2)).n(n_digits))
xi.insert(0, -1)
xi.append(1)
w.insert(0, (S(2)/(n*(n-1))).n(n_digits))
w.append((S(2)/(n*(n-1))).n(n_digits))
return xi, w
|
7742e21e398048d333122af3c62ae7e7e13314fb193674086561198986ee4c60
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.concrete.expr_with_limits import AddWithLimits
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.basic import Basic
from sympy.core.compatibility import is_sequence, range
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
from sympy.core.expr import Expr
from sympy.core.function import diff
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.numbers import oo, pi
from sympy.core.relational import Eq, Ne
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.symbol import (Dummy, Symbol, Wild)
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.integrals.manualintegrate import manualintegrate
from sympy.integrals.trigonometry import trigintegrate
from sympy.integrals.meijerint import meijerint_definite, meijerint_indefinite
from sympy.matrices import MatrixBase
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
from sympy.polys import Poly, PolynomialError
from sympy.functions import Piecewise, sqrt, sign, piecewise_fold, tan, cot, atan
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import log
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import floor
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import Abs, sign
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import Min, Max
from sympy.series import limit
from sympy.series.order import Order
from sympy.series.formal import FormalPowerSeries
from sympy.simplify.fu import sincos_to_sum
class Integral(AddWithLimits):
"""Represents unevaluated integral."""
__slots__ = ['is_commutative']
def __new__(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions):
"""Create an unevaluated integral.
Arguments are an integrand followed by one or more limits.
If no limits are given and there is only one free symbol in the
expression, that symbol will be used, otherwise an error will be
raised.
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Integral(x)
Integral(x, x)
>>> Integral(y)
Integral(y, y)
When limits are provided, they are interpreted as follows (using
``x`` as though it were the variable of integration):
(x,) or x - indefinite integral
(x, a) - "evaluate at" integral is an abstract antiderivative
(x, a, b) - definite integral
The ``as_dummy`` method can be used to see which symbols cannot be
targeted by subs: those with a preppended underscore cannot be
changed with ``subs``. (Also, the integration variables themselves --
the first element of a limit -- can never be changed by subs.)
>>> i = Integral(x, x)
>>> at = Integral(x, (x, x))
>>> i.as_dummy()
Integral(x, x)
>>> at.as_dummy()
Integral(_0, (_0, x))
"""
#This will help other classes define their own definitions
#of behaviour with Integral.
if hasattr(function, '_eval_Integral'):
return function._eval_Integral(*symbols, **assumptions)
obj = AddWithLimits.__new__(cls, function, *symbols, **assumptions)
return obj
def __getnewargs__(self):
return (self.function,) + tuple([tuple(xab) for xab in self.limits])
@property
def free_symbols(self):
"""
This method returns the symbols that will exist when the
integral is evaluated. This is useful if one is trying to
determine whether an integral depends on a certain
symbol or not.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Integral(x, (x, y, 1)).free_symbols
{y}
See Also
========
function, limits, variables
"""
return AddWithLimits.free_symbols.fget(self)
def _eval_is_zero(self):
# This is a very naive and quick test, not intended to do the integral to
# answer whether it is zero or not, e.g. Integral(sin(x), (x, 0, 2*pi))
# is zero but this routine should return None for that case. But, like
# Mul, there are trivial situations for which the integral will be
# zero so we check for those.
if self.function.is_zero:
return True
got_none = False
for l in self.limits:
if len(l) == 3:
z = (l[1] == l[2]) or (l[1] - l[2]).is_zero
if z:
return True
elif z is None:
got_none = True
free = self.function.free_symbols
for xab in self.limits:
if len(xab) == 1:
free.add(xab[0])
continue
if len(xab) == 2 and xab[0] not in free:
if xab[1].is_zero:
return True
elif xab[1].is_zero is None:
got_none = True
# take integration symbol out of free since it will be replaced
# with the free symbols in the limits
free.discard(xab[0])
# add in the new symbols
for i in xab[1:]:
free.update(i.free_symbols)
if self.function.is_zero is False and got_none is False:
return False
def transform(self, x, u):
r"""
Performs a change of variables from `x` to `u` using the relationship
given by `x` and `u` which will define the transformations `f` and `F`
(which are inverses of each other) as follows:
1) If `x` is a Symbol (which is a variable of integration) then `u`
will be interpreted as some function, f(u), with inverse F(u).
This, in effect, just makes the substitution of x with f(x).
2) If `u` is a Symbol then `x` will be interpreted as some function,
F(x), with inverse f(u). This is commonly referred to as
u-substitution.
Once f and F have been identified, the transformation is made as
follows:
.. math:: \int_a^b x \mathrm{d}x \rightarrow \int_{F(a)}^{F(b)} f(x)
\frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}x}
where `F(x)` is the inverse of `f(x)` and the limits and integrand have
been corrected so as to retain the same value after integration.
Notes
=====
The mappings, F(x) or f(u), must lead to a unique integral. Linear
or rational linear expression, `2*x`, `1/x` and `sqrt(x)`, will
always work; quadratic expressions like `x**2 - 1` are acceptable
as long as the resulting integrand does not depend on the sign of
the solutions (see examples).
The integral will be returned unchanged if `x` is not a variable of
integration.
`x` must be (or contain) only one of of the integration variables. If
`u` has more than one free symbol then it should be sent as a tuple
(`u`, `uvar`) where `uvar` identifies which variable is replacing
the integration variable.
XXX can it contain another integration variable?
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c, d, x, u, y
>>> from sympy import Integral, S, cos, sqrt
>>> i = Integral(x*cos(x**2 - 1), (x, 0, 1))
transform can change the variable of integration
>>> i.transform(x, u)
Integral(u*cos(u**2 - 1), (u, 0, 1))
transform can perform u-substitution as long as a unique
integrand is obtained:
>>> i.transform(x**2 - 1, u)
Integral(cos(u)/2, (u, -1, 0))
This attempt fails because x = +/-sqrt(u + 1) and the
sign does not cancel out of the integrand:
>>> Integral(cos(x**2 - 1), (x, 0, 1)).transform(x**2 - 1, u)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError:
The mapping between F(x) and f(u) did not give a unique integrand.
transform can do a substitution. Here, the previous
result is transformed back into the original expression
using "u-substitution":
>>> ui = _
>>> _.transform(sqrt(u + 1), x) == i
True
We can accomplish the same with a regular substitution:
>>> ui.transform(u, x**2 - 1) == i
True
If the `x` does not contain a symbol of integration then
the integral will be returned unchanged. Integral `i` does
not have an integration variable `a` so no change is made:
>>> i.transform(a, x) == i
True
When `u` has more than one free symbol the symbol that is
replacing `x` must be identified by passing `u` as a tuple:
>>> Integral(x, (x, 0, 1)).transform(x, (u + a, u))
Integral(a + u, (u, -a, -a + 1))
>>> Integral(x, (x, 0, 1)).transform(x, (u + a, a))
Integral(a + u, (a, -u, -u + 1))
See Also
========
variables : Lists the integration variables
as_dummy : Replace integration variables with dummy ones
"""
from sympy.solvers.solvers import solve, posify
d = Dummy('d')
xfree = x.free_symbols.intersection(self.variables)
if len(xfree) > 1:
raise ValueError(
'F(x) can only contain one of: %s' % self.variables)
xvar = xfree.pop() if xfree else d
if xvar not in self.variables:
return self
u = sympify(u)
if isinstance(u, Expr):
ufree = u.free_symbols
if len(ufree) != 1:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
When f(u) has more than one free symbol, the one replacing x
must be identified: pass f(u) as (f(u), u)'''))
uvar = ufree.pop()
else:
u, uvar = u
if uvar not in u.free_symbols:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Expecting a tuple (expr, symbol) where symbol identified
a free symbol in expr, but symbol is not in expr's free
symbols.'''))
if not isinstance(uvar, Symbol):
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Expecting a tuple (expr, symbol) but didn't get
a symbol; got %s''' % uvar))
if x.is_Symbol and u.is_Symbol:
return self.xreplace({x: u})
if not x.is_Symbol and not u.is_Symbol:
raise ValueError('either x or u must be a symbol')
if uvar == xvar:
return self.transform(x, (u.subs(uvar, d), d)).xreplace({d: uvar})
if uvar in self.limits:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
u must contain the same variable as in x
or a variable that is not already an integration variable'''))
if not x.is_Symbol:
F = [x.subs(xvar, d)]
soln = solve(u - x, xvar, check=False)
if not soln:
raise ValueError('no solution for solve(F(x) - f(u), x)')
f = [fi.subs(uvar, d) for fi in soln]
else:
f = [u.subs(uvar, d)]
pdiff, reps = posify(u - x)
puvar = uvar.subs([(v, k) for k, v in reps.items()])
soln = [s.subs(reps) for s in solve(pdiff, puvar)]
if not soln:
raise ValueError('no solution for solve(F(x) - f(u), u)')
F = [fi.subs(xvar, d) for fi in soln]
newfuncs = set([(self.function.subs(xvar, fi)*fi.diff(d)
).subs(d, uvar) for fi in f])
if len(newfuncs) > 1:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
The mapping between F(x) and f(u) did not give
a unique integrand.'''))
newfunc = newfuncs.pop()
def _calc_limit_1(F, a, b):
"""
replace d with a, using subs if possible, otherwise limit
where sign of b is considered
"""
wok = F.subs(d, a)
if wok is S.NaN or wok.is_finite is False and a.is_finite:
return limit(sign(b)*F, d, a)
return wok
def _calc_limit(a, b):
"""
replace d with a, using subs if possible, otherwise limit
where sign of b is considered
"""
avals = list({_calc_limit_1(Fi, a, b) for Fi in F})
if len(avals) > 1:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
The mapping between F(x) and f(u) did not
give a unique limit.'''))
return avals[0]
newlimits = []
for xab in self.limits:
sym = xab[0]
if sym == xvar:
if len(xab) == 3:
a, b = xab[1:]
a, b = _calc_limit(a, b), _calc_limit(b, a)
if a - b > 0:
a, b = b, a
newfunc = -newfunc
newlimits.append((uvar, a, b))
elif len(xab) == 2:
a = _calc_limit(xab[1], 1)
newlimits.append((uvar, a))
else:
newlimits.append(uvar)
else:
newlimits.append(xab)
return self.func(newfunc, *newlimits)
def doit(self, **hints):
"""
Perform the integration using any hints given.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x, i
>>> Integral(x**i, (i, 1, 3)).doit()
Piecewise((x**3/log(x) - x/log(x),
(x > 1) | ((x >= 0) & (x < 1))), (2, True))
See Also
========
sympy.integrals.trigonometry.trigintegrate
sympy.integrals.risch.heurisch
sympy.integrals.rationaltools.ratint
as_sum : Approximate the integral using a sum
"""
if not hints.get('integrals', True):
return self
deep = hints.get('deep', True)
meijerg = hints.get('meijerg', None)
conds = hints.get('conds', 'piecewise')
risch = hints.get('risch', None)
manual = hints.get('manual', None)
if len(list(filter(None, (manual, meijerg, risch)))) > 1:
raise ValueError("At most one of manual, meijerg, risch can be True")
elif manual:
meijerg = risch = False
elif meijerg:
manual = risch = False
elif risch:
manual = meijerg = False
eval_kwargs = dict(meijerg=meijerg, risch=risch, manual=manual,
conds=conds)
if conds not in ['separate', 'piecewise', 'none']:
raise ValueError('conds must be one of "separate", "piecewise", '
'"none", got: %s' % conds)
if risch and any(len(xab) > 1 for xab in self.limits):
raise ValueError('risch=True is only allowed for indefinite integrals.')
# check for the trivial zero
if self.is_zero:
return S.Zero
# now compute and check the function
function = self.function
if deep:
function = function.doit(**hints)
if function.is_zero:
return S.Zero
# hacks to handle special cases
if isinstance(function, MatrixBase):
return function.applyfunc(
lambda f: self.func(f, self.limits).doit(**hints))
if isinstance(function, FormalPowerSeries):
if len(self.limits) > 1:
raise NotImplementedError
xab = self.limits[0]
if len(xab) > 1:
return function.integrate(xab, **eval_kwargs)
else:
return function.integrate(xab[0], **eval_kwargs)
# There is no trivial answer and special handling
# is done so continue
undone_limits = []
# ulj = free symbols of any undone limits' upper and lower limits
ulj = set()
for xab in self.limits:
# compute uli, the free symbols in the
# Upper and Lower limits of limit I
if len(xab) == 1:
uli = set(xab[:1])
elif len(xab) == 2:
uli = xab[1].free_symbols
elif len(xab) == 3:
uli = xab[1].free_symbols.union(xab[2].free_symbols)
# this integral can be done as long as there is no blocking
# limit that has been undone. An undone limit is blocking if
# it contains an integration variable that is in this limit's
# upper or lower free symbols or vice versa
if xab[0] in ulj or any(v[0] in uli for v in undone_limits):
undone_limits.append(xab)
ulj.update(uli)
function = self.func(*([function] + [xab]))
factored_function = function.factor()
if not isinstance(factored_function, Integral):
function = factored_function
continue
if function.has(Abs, sign) and (
(len(xab) < 3 and all(x.is_real for x in xab)) or
(len(xab) == 3 and all(x.is_real and x.is_finite for
x in xab[1:]))):
# some improper integrals are better off with Abs
xr = Dummy("xr", real=True)
function = (function.xreplace({xab[0]: xr})
.rewrite(Piecewise).xreplace({xr: xab[0]}))
elif function.has(Min, Max):
function = function.rewrite(Piecewise)
if (function.has(Piecewise) and
not isinstance(function, Piecewise)):
function = piecewise_fold(function)
if isinstance(function, Piecewise):
if len(xab) == 1:
antideriv = function._eval_integral(xab[0],
**eval_kwargs)
else:
antideriv = self._eval_integral(
function, xab[0], **eval_kwargs)
else:
# There are a number of tradeoffs in using the
# Meijer G method. It can sometimes be a lot faster
# than other methods, and sometimes slower. And
# there are certain types of integrals for which it
# is more likely to work than others. These
# heuristics are incorporated in deciding what
# integration methods to try, in what order. See the
# integrate() docstring for details.
def try_meijerg(function, xab):
ret = None
if len(xab) == 3 and meijerg is not False:
x, a, b = xab
try:
res = meijerint_definite(function, x, a, b)
except NotImplementedError:
from sympy.integrals.meijerint import _debug
_debug('NotImplementedError '
'from meijerint_definite')
res = None
if res is not None:
f, cond = res
if conds == 'piecewise':
ret = Piecewise(
(f, cond),
(self.func(
function, (x, a, b)), True))
elif conds == 'separate':
if len(self.limits) != 1:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
conds=separate not supported in
multiple integrals'''))
ret = f, cond
else:
ret = f
return ret
meijerg1 = meijerg
if (meijerg is not False and
len(xab) == 3 and xab[1].is_real and xab[2].is_real
and not function.is_Poly and
(xab[1].has(oo, -oo) or xab[2].has(oo, -oo))):
ret = try_meijerg(function, xab)
if ret is not None:
function = ret
continue
meijerg1 = False
# If the special meijerg code did not succeed in
# finding a definite integral, then the code using
# meijerint_indefinite will not either (it might
# find an antiderivative, but the answer is likely
# to be nonsensical). Thus if we are requested to
# only use Meijer G-function methods, we give up at
# this stage. Otherwise we just disable G-function
# methods.
if meijerg1 is False and meijerg is True:
antideriv = None
else:
antideriv = self._eval_integral(
function, xab[0], **eval_kwargs)
if antideriv is None and meijerg is True:
ret = try_meijerg(function, xab)
if ret is not None:
function = ret
continue
if not isinstance(antideriv, Integral) and antideriv is not None:
sym = xab[0]
for atan_term in antideriv.atoms(atan):
atan_arg = atan_term.args[0]
# Checking `atan_arg` to be linear combination of `tan` or `cot`
for tan_part in atan_arg.atoms(tan):
x1 = Dummy('x1')
tan_exp1 = atan_arg.subs(tan_part, x1)
# The coefficient of `tan` should be constant
coeff = tan_exp1.diff(x1)
if x1 not in coeff.free_symbols:
a = tan_part.args[0]
antideriv = antideriv.subs(atan_term, Add(atan_term,
sign(coeff)*pi*floor((a-pi/2)/pi)))
for cot_part in atan_arg.atoms(cot):
x1 = Dummy('x1')
cot_exp1 = atan_arg.subs(cot_part, x1)
# The coefficient of `cot` should be constant
coeff = cot_exp1.diff(x1)
if x1 not in coeff.free_symbols:
a = cot_part.args[0]
antideriv = antideriv.subs(atan_term, Add(atan_term,
sign(coeff)*pi*floor((a)/pi)))
if antideriv is None:
undone_limits.append(xab)
function = self.func(*([function] + [xab])).factor()
factored_function = function.factor()
if not isinstance(factored_function, Integral):
function = factored_function
continue
else:
if len(xab) == 1:
function = antideriv
else:
if len(xab) == 3:
x, a, b = xab
elif len(xab) == 2:
x, b = xab
a = None
else:
raise NotImplementedError
if deep:
if isinstance(a, Basic):
a = a.doit(**hints)
if isinstance(b, Basic):
b = b.doit(**hints)
if antideriv.is_Poly:
gens = list(antideriv.gens)
gens.remove(x)
antideriv = antideriv.as_expr()
function = antideriv._eval_interval(x, a, b)
function = Poly(function, *gens)
else:
def is_indef_int(g, x):
return (isinstance(g, Integral) and
any(i == (x,) for i in g.limits))
def eval_factored(f, x, a, b):
# _eval_interval for integrals with
# (constant) factors
# a single indefinite integral is assumed
args = []
for g in Mul.make_args(f):
if is_indef_int(g, x):
args.append(g._eval_interval(x, a, b))
else:
args.append(g)
return Mul(*args)
integrals, others, piecewises = [], [], []
for f in Add.make_args(antideriv):
if any(is_indef_int(g, x)
for g in Mul.make_args(f)):
integrals.append(f)
elif any(isinstance(g, Piecewise)
for g in Mul.make_args(f)):
piecewises.append(piecewise_fold(f))
else:
others.append(f)
uneval = Add(*[eval_factored(f, x, a, b)
for f in integrals])
try:
evalued = Add(*others)._eval_interval(x, a, b)
evalued_pw = piecewise_fold(Add(*piecewises))._eval_interval(x, a, b)
function = uneval + evalued + evalued_pw
except NotImplementedError:
# This can happen if _eval_interval depends in a
# complicated way on limits that cannot be computed
undone_limits.append(xab)
function = self.func(*([function] + [xab]))
factored_function = function.factor()
if not isinstance(factored_function, Integral):
function = factored_function
return function
def _eval_derivative(self, sym):
"""Evaluate the derivative of the current Integral object by
differentiating under the integral sign [1], using the Fundamental
Theorem of Calculus [2] when possible.
Whenever an Integral is encountered that is equivalent to zero or
has an integrand that is independent of the variable of integration
those integrals are performed. All others are returned as Integral
instances which can be resolved with doit() (provided they are integrable).
References:
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differentiation_under_the_integral_sign
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_theorem_of_calculus
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> i = Integral(x + y, y, (y, 1, x))
>>> i.diff(x)
Integral(x + y, (y, x)) + Integral(1, y, (y, 1, x))
>>> i.doit().diff(x) == i.diff(x).doit()
True
>>> i.diff(y)
0
The previous must be true since there is no y in the evaluated integral:
>>> i.free_symbols
{x}
>>> i.doit()
2*x**3/3 - x/2 - 1/6
"""
# differentiate under the integral sign; we do not
# check for regularity conditions (TODO), see issue 4215
# get limits and the function
f, limits = self.function, list(self.limits)
# the order matters if variables of integration appear in the limits
# so work our way in from the outside to the inside.
limit = limits.pop(-1)
if len(limit) == 3:
x, a, b = limit
elif len(limit) == 2:
x, b = limit
a = None
else:
a = b = None
x = limit[0]
if limits: # f is the argument to an integral
f = self.func(f, *tuple(limits))
# assemble the pieces
def _do(f, ab):
dab_dsym = diff(ab, sym)
if not dab_dsym:
return S.Zero
if isinstance(f, Integral):
limits = [(x, x) if (len(l) == 1 and l[0] == x) else l
for l in f.limits]
f = self.func(f.function, *limits)
return f.subs(x, ab)*dab_dsym
rv = S.Zero
if b is not None:
rv += _do(f, b)
if a is not None:
rv -= _do(f, a)
if len(limit) == 1 and sym == x:
# the dummy variable *is* also the real-world variable
arg = f
rv += arg
else:
# the dummy variable might match sym but it's
# only a dummy and the actual variable is determined
# by the limits, so mask off the variable of integration
# while differentiating
u = Dummy('u')
arg = f.subs(x, u).diff(sym).subs(u, x)
if arg:
rv += self.func(arg, Tuple(x, a, b))
return rv
def _eval_integral(self, f, x, meijerg=None, risch=None, manual=None,
conds='piecewise'):
"""
Calculate the anti-derivative to the function f(x).
The following algorithms are applied (roughly in this order):
1. Simple heuristics (based on pattern matching and integral table):
- most frequently used functions (e.g. polynomials, products of
trig functions)
2. Integration of rational functions:
- A complete algorithm for integrating rational functions is
implemented (the Lazard-Rioboo-Trager algorithm). The algorithm
also uses the partial fraction decomposition algorithm
implemented in apart() as a preprocessor to make this process
faster. Note that the integral of a rational function is always
elementary, but in general, it may include a RootSum.
3. Full Risch algorithm:
- The Risch algorithm is a complete decision
procedure for integrating elementary functions, which means that
given any elementary function, it will either compute an
elementary antiderivative, or else prove that none exists.
Currently, part of transcendental case is implemented, meaning
elementary integrals containing exponentials, logarithms, and
(soon!) trigonometric functions can be computed. The algebraic
case, e.g., functions containing roots, is much more difficult
and is not implemented yet.
- If the routine fails (because the integrand is not elementary, or
because a case is not implemented yet), it continues on to the
next algorithms below. If the routine proves that the integrals
is nonelementary, it still moves on to the algorithms below,
because we might be able to find a closed-form solution in terms
of special functions. If risch=True, however, it will stop here.
4. The Meijer G-Function algorithm:
- This algorithm works by first rewriting the integrand in terms of
very general Meijer G-Function (meijerg in SymPy), integrating
it, and then rewriting the result back, if possible. This
algorithm is particularly powerful for definite integrals (which
is actually part of a different method of Integral), since it can
compute closed-form solutions of definite integrals even when no
closed-form indefinite integral exists. But it also is capable
of computing many indefinite integrals as well.
- Another advantage of this method is that it can use some results
about the Meijer G-Function to give a result in terms of a
Piecewise expression, which allows to express conditionally
convergent integrals.
- Setting meijerg=True will cause integrate() to use only this
method.
5. The "manual integration" algorithm:
- This algorithm tries to mimic how a person would find an
antiderivative by hand, for example by looking for a
substitution or applying integration by parts. This algorithm
does not handle as many integrands but can return results in a
more familiar form.
- Sometimes this algorithm can evaluate parts of an integral; in
this case integrate() will try to evaluate the rest of the
integrand using the other methods here.
- Setting manual=True will cause integrate() to use only this
method.
6. The Heuristic Risch algorithm:
- This is a heuristic version of the Risch algorithm, meaning that
it is not deterministic. This is tried as a last resort because
it can be very slow. It is still used because not enough of the
full Risch algorithm is implemented, so that there are still some
integrals that can only be computed using this method. The goal
is to implement enough of the Risch and Meijer G-function methods
so that this can be deleted.
"""
from sympy.integrals.deltafunctions import deltaintegrate
from sympy.integrals.singularityfunctions import singularityintegrate
from sympy.integrals.heurisch import heurisch, heurisch_wrapper
from sympy.integrals.rationaltools import ratint
from sympy.integrals.risch import risch_integrate
if risch:
try:
return risch_integrate(f, x, conds=conds)
except NotImplementedError:
return None
if manual:
try:
result = manualintegrate(f, x)
if result is not None and result.func != Integral:
return result
except (ValueError, PolynomialError):
pass
eval_kwargs = dict(meijerg=meijerg, risch=risch, manual=manual,
conds=conds)
# if it is a poly(x) then let the polynomial integrate itself (fast)
#
# It is important to make this check first, otherwise the other code
# will return a sympy expression instead of a Polynomial.
#
# see Polynomial for details.
if isinstance(f, Poly) and not (manual or meijerg or risch):
return f.integrate(x)
# Piecewise antiderivatives need to call special integrate.
if isinstance(f, Piecewise):
return f.piecewise_integrate(x, **eval_kwargs)
# let's cut it short if `f` does not depend on `x`; if
# x is only a dummy, that will be handled below
if not f.has(x):
return f*x
# try to convert to poly(x) and then integrate if successful (fast)
poly = f.as_poly(x)
if poly is not None and not (manual or meijerg or risch):
return poly.integrate().as_expr()
if risch is not False:
try:
result, i = risch_integrate(f, x, separate_integral=True,
conds=conds)
except NotImplementedError:
pass
else:
if i:
# There was a nonelementary integral. Try integrating it.
# if no part of the NonElementaryIntegral is integrated by
# the Risch algorithm, then use the original function to
# integrate, instead of re-written one
if result == 0:
from sympy.integrals.risch import NonElementaryIntegral
return NonElementaryIntegral(f, x).doit(risch=False)
else:
return result + i.doit(risch=False)
else:
return result
# since Integral(f=g1+g2+...) == Integral(g1) + Integral(g2) + ...
# we are going to handle Add terms separately,
# if `f` is not Add -- we only have one term
# Note that in general, this is a bad idea, because Integral(g1) +
# Integral(g2) might not be computable, even if Integral(g1 + g2) is.
# For example, Integral(x**x + x**x*log(x)). But many heuristics only
# work term-wise. So we compute this step last, after trying
# risch_integrate. We also try risch_integrate again in this loop,
# because maybe the integral is a sum of an elementary part and a
# nonelementary part (like erf(x) + exp(x)). risch_integrate() is
# quite fast, so this is acceptable.
parts = []
args = Add.make_args(f)
for g in args:
coeff, g = g.as_independent(x)
# g(x) = const
if g is S.One and not meijerg:
parts.append(coeff*x)
continue
# g(x) = expr + O(x**n)
order_term = g.getO()
if order_term is not None:
h = self._eval_integral(g.removeO(), x, **eval_kwargs)
if h is not None:
h_order_expr = self._eval_integral(order_term.expr, x, **eval_kwargs)
if h_order_expr is not None:
h_order_term = order_term.func(
h_order_expr, *order_term.variables)
parts.append(coeff*(h + h_order_term))
continue
# NOTE: if there is O(x**n) and we fail to integrate then
# there is no point in trying other methods because they
# will fail, too.
return None
# c
# g(x) = (a*x+b)
if g.is_Pow and not g.exp.has(x) and not meijerg:
a = Wild('a', exclude=[x])
b = Wild('b', exclude=[x])
M = g.base.match(a*x + b)
if M is not None:
if g.exp == -1:
h = log(g.base)
elif conds != 'piecewise':
h = g.base**(g.exp + 1) / (g.exp + 1)
else:
h1 = log(g.base)
h2 = g.base**(g.exp + 1) / (g.exp + 1)
h = Piecewise((h2, Ne(g.exp, -1)), (h1, True))
parts.append(coeff * h / M[a])
continue
# poly(x)
# g(x) = -------
# poly(x)
if g.is_rational_function(x) and not (manual or meijerg or risch):
parts.append(coeff * ratint(g, x))
continue
if not (manual or meijerg or risch):
# g(x) = Mul(trig)
h = trigintegrate(g, x, conds=conds)
if h is not None:
parts.append(coeff * h)
continue
# g(x) has at least a DiracDelta term
h = deltaintegrate(g, x)
if h is not None:
parts.append(coeff * h)
continue
# g(x) has at least a Singularity Function term
h = singularityintegrate(g, x)
if h is not None:
parts.append(coeff * h)
continue
# Try risch again.
if risch is not False:
try:
h, i = risch_integrate(g, x,
separate_integral=True, conds=conds)
except NotImplementedError:
h = None
else:
if i:
h = h + i.doit(risch=False)
parts.append(coeff*h)
continue
# fall back to heurisch
try:
if conds == 'piecewise':
h = heurisch_wrapper(g, x, hints=[])
else:
h = heurisch(g, x, hints=[])
except PolynomialError:
# XXX: this exception means there is a bug in the
# implementation of heuristic Risch integration
# algorithm.
h = None
else:
h = None
if meijerg is not False and h is None:
# rewrite using G functions
try:
h = meijerint_indefinite(g, x)
except NotImplementedError:
from sympy.integrals.meijerint import _debug
_debug('NotImplementedError from meijerint_definite')
res = None
if h is not None:
parts.append(coeff * h)
continue
if h is None and manual is not False:
try:
result = manualintegrate(g, x)
if result is not None and not isinstance(result, Integral):
if result.has(Integral) and not manual:
# Try to have other algorithms do the integrals
# manualintegrate can't handle,
# unless we were asked to use manual only.
# Keep the rest of eval_kwargs in case another
# method was set to False already
new_eval_kwargs = eval_kwargs
new_eval_kwargs["manual"] = False
result = result.func(*[
arg.doit(**new_eval_kwargs) if
arg.has(Integral) else arg
for arg in result.args
]).expand(multinomial=False,
log=False,
power_exp=False,
power_base=False)
if not result.has(Integral):
parts.append(coeff * result)
continue
except (ValueError, PolynomialError):
# can't handle some SymPy expressions
pass
# if we failed maybe it was because we had
# a product that could have been expanded,
# so let's try an expansion of the whole
# thing before giving up; we don't try this
# at the outset because there are things
# that cannot be solved unless they are
# NOT expanded e.g., x**x*(1+log(x)). There
# should probably be a checker somewhere in this
# routine to look for such cases and try to do
# collection on the expressions if they are already
# in an expanded form
if not h and len(args) == 1:
f = sincos_to_sum(f).expand(mul=True, deep=False)
if f.is_Add:
# Note: risch will be identical on the expanded
# expression, but maybe it will be able to pick out parts,
# like x*(exp(x) + erf(x)).
return self._eval_integral(f, x, **eval_kwargs)
if h is not None:
parts.append(coeff * h)
else:
return None
return Add(*parts)
def _eval_lseries(self, x, logx):
expr = self.as_dummy()
symb = x
for l in expr.limits:
if x in l[1:]:
symb = l[0]
break
for term in expr.function.lseries(symb, logx):
yield integrate(term, *expr.limits)
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
expr = self.as_dummy()
symb = x
for l in expr.limits:
if x in l[1:]:
symb = l[0]
break
terms, order = expr.function.nseries(
x=symb, n=n, logx=logx).as_coeff_add(Order)
order = [o.subs(symb, x) for o in order]
return integrate(terms, *expr.limits) + Add(*order)*x
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
series_gen = self.args[0].lseries(x)
for leading_term in series_gen:
if leading_term != 0:
break
return integrate(leading_term, *self.args[1:])
def as_sum(self, n=None, method="midpoint", evaluate=True):
"""
Approximates a definite integral by a sum.
Arguments
---------
n
The number of subintervals to use, optional.
method
One of: 'left', 'right', 'midpoint', 'trapezoid'.
evaluate
If False, returns an unevaluated Sum expression. The default
is True, evaluate the sum.
These methods of approximate integration are described in [1].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riemann_sum#Methods
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, n
>>> from sympy.integrals import Integral
>>> e = Integral(sin(x), (x, 3, 7))
>>> e
Integral(sin(x), (x, 3, 7))
For demonstration purposes, this interval will only be split into 2
regions, bounded by [3, 5] and [5, 7].
The left-hand rule uses function evaluations at the left of each
interval:
>>> e.as_sum(2, 'left')
2*sin(5) + 2*sin(3)
The midpoint rule uses evaluations at the center of each interval:
>>> e.as_sum(2, 'midpoint')
2*sin(4) + 2*sin(6)
The right-hand rule uses function evaluations at the right of each
interval:
>>> e.as_sum(2, 'right')
2*sin(5) + 2*sin(7)
The trapezoid rule uses function evaluations on both sides of the
intervals. This is equivalent to taking the average of the left and
right hand rule results:
>>> e.as_sum(2, 'trapezoid')
2*sin(5) + sin(3) + sin(7)
>>> (e.as_sum(2, 'left') + e.as_sum(2, 'right'))/2 == _
True
Here, the discontinuity at x = 0 can be avoided by using the
midpoint or right-hand method:
>>> e = Integral(1/sqrt(x), (x, 0, 1))
>>> e.as_sum(5).n(4)
1.730
>>> e.as_sum(10).n(4)
1.809
>>> e.doit().n(4) # the actual value is 2
2.000
The left- or trapezoid method will encounter the discontinuity and
return infinity:
>>> e.as_sum(5, 'left')
zoo
The number of intervals can be symbolic. If omitted, a dummy symbol
will be used for it.
>>> e = Integral(x**2, (x, 0, 2))
>>> e.as_sum(n, 'right').expand()
8/3 + 4/n + 4/(3*n**2)
This shows that the midpoint rule is more accurate, as its error
term decays as the square of n:
>>> e.as_sum(method='midpoint').expand()
8/3 - 2/(3*_n**2)
A symbolic sum is returned with evaluate=False:
>>> e.as_sum(n, 'midpoint', evaluate=False)
2*Sum((2*_k/n - 1/n)**2, (_k, 1, n))/n
See Also
========
Integral.doit : Perform the integration using any hints
"""
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
limits = self.limits
if len(limits) > 1:
raise NotImplementedError(
"Multidimensional midpoint rule not implemented yet")
else:
limit = limits[0]
if (len(limit) != 3 or limit[1].is_finite is False or
limit[2].is_finite is False):
raise ValueError("Expecting a definite integral over "
"a finite interval.")
if n is None:
n = Dummy('n', integer=True, positive=True)
else:
n = sympify(n)
if (n.is_positive is False or n.is_integer is False or
n.is_finite is False):
raise ValueError("n must be a positive integer, got %s" % n)
x, a, b = limit
dx = (b - a)/n
k = Dummy('k', integer=True, positive=True)
f = self.function
if method == "left":
result = dx*Sum(f.subs(x, a + (k-1)*dx), (k, 1, n))
elif method == "right":
result = dx*Sum(f.subs(x, a + k*dx), (k, 1, n))
elif method == "midpoint":
result = dx*Sum(f.subs(x, a + k*dx - dx/2), (k, 1, n))
elif method == "trapezoid":
result = dx*((f.subs(x, a) + f.subs(x, b))/2 +
Sum(f.subs(x, a + k*dx), (k, 1, n - 1)))
else:
raise ValueError("Unknown method %s" % method)
return result.doit() if evaluate else result
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
f, limits = self.function._sage_(), list(self.limits)
for limit in limits:
if len(limit) == 1:
x = limit[0]
f = sage.integral(f,
x._sage_(),
hold=True)
elif len(limit) == 2:
x, b = limit
f = sage.integral(f,
x._sage_(),
b._sage_(),
hold=True)
else:
x, a, b = limit
f = sage.integral(f,
(x._sage_(),
a._sage_(),
b._sage_()),
hold=True)
return f
def principal_value(self, **kwargs):
"""
Compute the Cauchy Principal Value of the definite integral of a real function in the given interval
on the real axis.
In mathematics, the Cauchy principal value, is a method for assigning values to certain improper
integrals which would otherwise be undefined.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Dummy, symbols, integrate, limit, oo
>>> from sympy.integrals.integrals import Integral
>>> from sympy.calculus.singularities import singularities
>>> x = symbols('x')
>>> Integral(x+1, (x, -oo, oo)).principal_value()
oo
>>> f = 1 / (x**3)
>>> Integral(f, (x, -oo, oo)).principal_value()
0
>>> Integral(f, (x, -10, 10)).principal_value()
0
>>> Integral(f, (x, -10, oo)).principal_value() + Integral(f, (x, -oo, 10)).principal_value()
0
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cauchy_principal_value
.. [2] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CauchyPrincipalValue.html
"""
from sympy.calculus import singularities
if len(self.limits) != 1 or len(list(self.limits[0])) != 3:
raise ValueError("You need to insert a variable, lower_limit, and upper_limit correctly to calculate "
"cauchy's principal value")
x, a, b = self.limits[0]
if not (a.is_comparable and b.is_comparable and a <= b):
raise ValueError("The lower_limit must be smaller than or equal to the upper_limit to calculate "
"cauchy's principal value. Also, a and b need to be comparable.")
if a == b:
return 0
r = Dummy('r')
f = self.function
singularities_list = [s for s in singularities(f, x) if s.is_comparable and a <= s <= b]
for i in singularities_list:
if (i == b) or (i == a):
raise ValueError(
'The principal value is not defined in the given interval due to singularity at %d.' % (i))
F = integrate(f, x, **kwargs)
if F.has(Integral):
return self
if a is -oo and b is oo:
I = limit(F - F.subs(x, -x), x, oo)
else:
I = limit(F, x, b, '-') - limit(F, x, a, '+')
for s in singularities_list:
I += limit(((F.subs(x, s - r)) - F.subs(x, s + r)), r, 0, '+')
return I
def integrate(*args, **kwargs):
"""integrate(f, var, ...)
Compute definite or indefinite integral of one or more variables
using Risch-Norman algorithm and table lookup. This procedure is
able to handle elementary algebraic and transcendental functions
and also a huge class of special functions, including Airy,
Bessel, Whittaker and Lambert.
var can be:
- a symbol -- indefinite integration
- a tuple (symbol, a) -- indefinite integration with result
given with `a` replacing `symbol`
- a tuple (symbol, a, b) -- definite integration
Several variables can be specified, in which case the result is
multiple integration. (If var is omitted and the integrand is
univariate, the indefinite integral in that variable will be performed.)
Indefinite integrals are returned without terms that are independent
of the integration variables. (see examples)
Definite improper integrals often entail delicate convergence
conditions. Pass conds='piecewise', 'separate' or 'none' to have
these returned, respectively, as a Piecewise function, as a separate
result (i.e. result will be a tuple), or not at all (default is
'piecewise').
**Strategy**
SymPy uses various approaches to definite integration. One method is to
find an antiderivative for the integrand, and then use the fundamental
theorem of calculus. Various functions are implemented to integrate
polynomial, rational and trigonometric functions, and integrands
containing DiracDelta terms.
SymPy also implements the part of the Risch algorithm, which is a decision
procedure for integrating elementary functions, i.e., the algorithm can
either find an elementary antiderivative, or prove that one does not
exist. There is also a (very successful, albeit somewhat slow) general
implementation of the heuristic Risch algorithm. This algorithm will
eventually be phased out as more of the full Risch algorithm is
implemented. See the docstring of Integral._eval_integral() for more
details on computing the antiderivative using algebraic methods.
The option risch=True can be used to use only the (full) Risch algorithm.
This is useful if you want to know if an elementary function has an
elementary antiderivative. If the indefinite Integral returned by this
function is an instance of NonElementaryIntegral, that means that the
Risch algorithm has proven that integral to be non-elementary. Note that
by default, additional methods (such as the Meijer G method outlined
below) are tried on these integrals, as they may be expressible in terms
of special functions, so if you only care about elementary answers, use
risch=True. Also note that an unevaluated Integral returned by this
function is not necessarily a NonElementaryIntegral, even with risch=True,
as it may just be an indication that the particular part of the Risch
algorithm needed to integrate that function is not yet implemented.
Another family of strategies comes from re-writing the integrand in
terms of so-called Meijer G-functions. Indefinite integrals of a
single G-function can always be computed, and the definite integral
of a product of two G-functions can be computed from zero to
infinity. Various strategies are implemented to rewrite integrands
as G-functions, and use this information to compute integrals (see
the ``meijerint`` module).
The option manual=True can be used to use only an algorithm that tries
to mimic integration by hand. This algorithm does not handle as many
integrands as the other algorithms implemented but may return results in
a more familiar form. The ``manualintegrate`` module has functions that
return the steps used (see the module docstring for more information).
In general, the algebraic methods work best for computing
antiderivatives of (possibly complicated) combinations of elementary
functions. The G-function methods work best for computing definite
integrals from zero to infinity of moderately complicated
combinations of special functions, or indefinite integrals of very
simple combinations of special functions.
The strategy employed by the integration code is as follows:
- If computing a definite integral, and both limits are real,
and at least one limit is +- oo, try the G-function method of
definite integration first.
- Try to find an antiderivative, using all available methods, ordered
by performance (that is try fastest method first, slowest last; in
particular polynomial integration is tried first, Meijer
G-functions second to last, and heuristic Risch last).
- If still not successful, try G-functions irrespective of the
limits.
The option meijerg=True, False, None can be used to, respectively:
always use G-function methods and no others, never use G-function
methods, or use all available methods (in order as described above).
It defaults to None.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import integrate, log, exp, oo
>>> from sympy.abc import a, x, y
>>> integrate(x*y, x)
x**2*y/2
>>> integrate(log(x), x)
x*log(x) - x
>>> integrate(log(x), (x, 1, a))
a*log(a) - a + 1
>>> integrate(x)
x**2/2
Terms that are independent of x are dropped by indefinite integration:
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> integrate(sqrt(1 + x), (x, 0, x))
2*(x + 1)**(3/2)/3 - 2/3
>>> integrate(sqrt(1 + x), x)
2*(x + 1)**(3/2)/3
>>> integrate(x*y)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: specify integration variables to integrate x*y
Note that ``integrate(x)`` syntax is meant only for convenience
in interactive sessions and should be avoided in library code.
>>> integrate(x**a*exp(-x), (x, 0, oo)) # same as conds='piecewise'
Piecewise((gamma(a + 1), -re(a) < 1),
(Integral(x**a*exp(-x), (x, 0, oo)), True))
>>> integrate(x**a*exp(-x), (x, 0, oo), conds='none')
gamma(a + 1)
>>> integrate(x**a*exp(-x), (x, 0, oo), conds='separate')
(gamma(a + 1), -re(a) < 1)
See Also
========
Integral, Integral.doit
"""
doit_flags = {
'deep': False,
'meijerg': kwargs.pop('meijerg', None),
'conds': kwargs.pop('conds', 'piecewise'),
'risch': kwargs.pop('risch', None),
'manual': kwargs.pop('manual', None)
}
integral = Integral(*args, **kwargs)
if isinstance(integral, Integral):
return integral.doit(**doit_flags)
else:
new_args = [a.doit(**doit_flags) if isinstance(a, Integral) else a
for a in integral.args]
return integral.func(*new_args)
def line_integrate(field, curve, vars):
"""line_integrate(field, Curve, variables)
Compute the line integral.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Curve, line_integrate, E, ln
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, t
>>> C = Curve([E**t + 1, E**t - 1], (t, 0, ln(2)))
>>> line_integrate(x + y, C, [x, y])
3*sqrt(2)
See Also
========
integrate, Integral
"""
from sympy.geometry import Curve
F = sympify(field)
if not F:
raise ValueError(
"Expecting function specifying field as first argument.")
if not isinstance(curve, Curve):
raise ValueError("Expecting Curve entity as second argument.")
if not is_sequence(vars):
raise ValueError("Expecting ordered iterable for variables.")
if len(curve.functions) != len(vars):
raise ValueError("Field variable size does not match curve dimension.")
if curve.parameter in vars:
raise ValueError("Curve parameter clashes with field parameters.")
# Calculate derivatives for line parameter functions
# F(r) -> F(r(t)) and finally F(r(t)*r'(t))
Ft = F
dldt = 0
for i, var in enumerate(vars):
_f = curve.functions[i]
_dn = diff(_f, curve.parameter)
# ...arc length
dldt = dldt + (_dn * _dn)
Ft = Ft.subs(var, _f)
Ft = Ft * sqrt(dldt)
integral = Integral(Ft, curve.limits).doit(deep=False)
return integral
|
5e34c093038db5f0fbbee1f3cdc153c8e6f199592c0f542d1a46827f25b22de4
|
"""Base class for all the objects in SymPy"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from itertools import chain
from .assumptions import BasicMeta, ManagedProperties
from .cache import cacheit
from .sympify import _sympify, sympify, SympifyError
from .compatibility import (iterable, Iterator, ordered,
string_types, with_metaclass, zip_longest, range, PY3, Mapping)
from .singleton import S
from inspect import getmro
def as_Basic(expr):
"""Return expr as a Basic instance using strict sympify
or raise a TypeError; this is just a wrapper to _sympify,
raising a TypeError instead of a SympifyError."""
from sympy.utilities.misc import func_name
try:
return _sympify(expr)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError(
'Argument must be a Basic object, not `%s`' % func_name(
expr))
class Basic(with_metaclass(ManagedProperties)):
"""
Base class for all objects in SymPy.
Conventions:
1) Always use ``.args``, when accessing parameters of some instance:
>>> from sympy import cot
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> cot(x).args
(x,)
>>> cot(x).args[0]
x
>>> (x*y).args
(x, y)
>>> (x*y).args[1]
y
2) Never use internal methods or variables (the ones prefixed with ``_``):
>>> cot(x)._args # do not use this, use cot(x).args instead
(x,)
"""
__slots__ = ['_mhash', # hash value
'_args', # arguments
'_assumptions'
]
# To be overridden with True in the appropriate subclasses
is_number = False
is_Atom = False
is_Symbol = False
is_symbol = False
is_Indexed = False
is_Dummy = False
is_Wild = False
is_Function = False
is_Add = False
is_Mul = False
is_Pow = False
is_Number = False
is_Float = False
is_Rational = False
is_Integer = False
is_NumberSymbol = False
is_Order = False
is_Derivative = False
is_Piecewise = False
is_Poly = False
is_AlgebraicNumber = False
is_Relational = False
is_Equality = False
is_Boolean = False
is_Not = False
is_Matrix = False
is_Vector = False
is_Point = False
is_MatAdd = False
is_MatMul = False
def __new__(cls, *args):
obj = object.__new__(cls)
obj._assumptions = cls.default_assumptions
obj._mhash = None # will be set by __hash__ method.
obj._args = args # all items in args must be Basic objects
return obj
def copy(self):
return self.func(*self.args)
def __reduce_ex__(self, proto):
""" Pickling support."""
return type(self), self.__getnewargs__(), self.__getstate__()
def __getnewargs__(self):
return self.args
def __getstate__(self):
return {}
def __setstate__(self, state):
for k, v in state.items():
setattr(self, k, v)
def __hash__(self):
# hash cannot be cached using cache_it because infinite recurrence
# occurs as hash is needed for setting cache dictionary keys
h = self._mhash
if h is None:
h = hash((type(self).__name__,) + self._hashable_content())
self._mhash = h
return h
def _hashable_content(self):
"""Return a tuple of information about self that can be used to
compute the hash. If a class defines additional attributes,
like ``name`` in Symbol, then this method should be updated
accordingly to return such relevant attributes.
Defining more than _hashable_content is necessary if __eq__ has
been defined by a class. See note about this in Basic.__eq__."""
return self._args
@property
def assumptions0(self):
"""
Return object `type` assumptions.
For example:
Symbol('x', real=True)
Symbol('x', integer=True)
are different objects. In other words, besides Python type (Symbol in
this case), the initial assumptions are also forming their typeinfo.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> x.assumptions0
{'commutative': True}
>>> x = Symbol("x", positive=True)
>>> x.assumptions0
{'commutative': True, 'complex': True, 'hermitian': True,
'imaginary': False, 'negative': False, 'nonnegative': True,
'nonpositive': False, 'nonzero': True, 'positive': True, 'real': True,
'zero': False}
"""
return {}
def compare(self, other):
"""
Return -1, 0, 1 if the object is smaller, equal, or greater than other.
Not in the mathematical sense. If the object is of a different type
from the "other" then their classes are ordered according to
the sorted_classes list.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> x.compare(y)
-1
>>> x.compare(x)
0
>>> y.compare(x)
1
"""
# all redefinitions of __cmp__ method should start with the
# following lines:
if self is other:
return 0
n1 = self.__class__
n2 = other.__class__
c = (n1 > n2) - (n1 < n2)
if c:
return c
#
st = self._hashable_content()
ot = other._hashable_content()
c = (len(st) > len(ot)) - (len(st) < len(ot))
if c:
return c
for l, r in zip(st, ot):
l = Basic(*l) if isinstance(l, frozenset) else l
r = Basic(*r) if isinstance(r, frozenset) else r
if isinstance(l, Basic):
c = l.compare(r)
else:
c = (l > r) - (l < r)
if c:
return c
return 0
@staticmethod
def _compare_pretty(a, b):
from sympy.series.order import Order
if isinstance(a, Order) and not isinstance(b, Order):
return 1
if not isinstance(a, Order) and isinstance(b, Order):
return -1
if a.is_Rational and b.is_Rational:
l = a.p * b.q
r = b.p * a.q
return (l > r) - (l < r)
else:
from sympy.core.symbol import Wild
p1, p2, p3 = Wild("p1"), Wild("p2"), Wild("p3")
r_a = a.match(p1 * p2**p3)
if r_a and p3 in r_a:
a3 = r_a[p3]
r_b = b.match(p1 * p2**p3)
if r_b and p3 in r_b:
b3 = r_b[p3]
c = Basic.compare(a3, b3)
if c != 0:
return c
return Basic.compare(a, b)
@classmethod
def fromiter(cls, args, **assumptions):
"""
Create a new object from an iterable.
This is a convenience function that allows one to create objects from
any iterable, without having to convert to a list or tuple first.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Tuple
>>> Tuple.fromiter(i for i in range(5))
(0, 1, 2, 3, 4)
"""
return cls(*tuple(args), **assumptions)
@classmethod
def class_key(cls):
"""Nice order of classes. """
return 5, 0, cls.__name__
@cacheit
def sort_key(self, order=None):
"""
Return a sort key.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core import S, I
>>> sorted([S(1)/2, I, -I], key=lambda x: x.sort_key())
[1/2, -I, I]
>>> S("[x, 1/x, 1/x**2, x**2, x**(1/2), x**(1/4), x**(3/2)]")
[x, 1/x, x**(-2), x**2, sqrt(x), x**(1/4), x**(3/2)]
>>> sorted(_, key=lambda x: x.sort_key())
[x**(-2), 1/x, x**(1/4), sqrt(x), x, x**(3/2), x**2]
"""
# XXX: remove this when issue 5169 is fixed
def inner_key(arg):
if isinstance(arg, Basic):
return arg.sort_key(order)
else:
return arg
args = self._sorted_args
args = len(args), tuple([inner_key(arg) for arg in args])
return self.class_key(), args, S.One.sort_key(), S.One
def __eq__(self, other):
"""Return a boolean indicating whether a == b on the basis of
their symbolic trees.
This is the same as a.compare(b) == 0 but faster.
Notes
=====
If a class that overrides __eq__() needs to retain the
implementation of __hash__() from a parent class, the
interpreter must be told this explicitly by setting __hash__ =
<ParentClass>.__hash__. Otherwise the inheritance of __hash__()
will be blocked, just as if __hash__ had been explicitly set to
None.
References
==========
from http://docs.python.org/dev/reference/datamodel.html#object.__hash__
"""
if self is other:
return True
tself = type(self)
tother = type(other)
if type(self) is not type(other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
tother = type(other)
except SympifyError:
return NotImplemented
# As long as we have the ordering of classes (sympy.core),
# comparing types will be slow in Python 2, because it uses
# __cmp__. Until we can remove it
# (https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/4269), we only compare
# types in Python 2 directly if they actually have __ne__.
if PY3 or type(tself).__ne__ is not type.__ne__:
if tself != tother:
return False
elif tself is not tother:
return False
return self._hashable_content() == other._hashable_content()
def __ne__(self, other):
"""a != b -> Compare two symbolic trees and see whether they are different
this is the same as:
a.compare(b) != 0
but faster
"""
return not self == other
def dummy_eq(self, other, symbol=None):
"""
Compare two expressions and handle dummy symbols.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Dummy
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> u = Dummy('u')
>>> (u**2 + 1).dummy_eq(x**2 + 1)
True
>>> (u**2 + 1) == (x**2 + 1)
False
>>> (u**2 + y).dummy_eq(x**2 + y, x)
True
>>> (u**2 + y).dummy_eq(x**2 + y, y)
False
"""
s = self.as_dummy()
o = _sympify(other)
o = o.as_dummy()
dummy_symbols = [i for i in s.free_symbols if i.is_Dummy]
if len(dummy_symbols) == 1:
dummy = dummy_symbols.pop()
else:
return s == o
if symbol is None:
symbols = o.free_symbols
if len(symbols) == 1:
symbol = symbols.pop()
else:
return s == o
tmp = dummy.__class__()
return s.subs(dummy, tmp) == o.subs(symbol, tmp)
# Note, we always use the default ordering (lex) in __str__ and __repr__,
# regardless of the global setting. See issue 5487.
def __repr__(self):
"""Method to return the string representation.
Return the expression as a string.
"""
from sympy.printing import sstr
return sstr(self, order=None)
def __str__(self):
from sympy.printing import sstr
return sstr(self, order=None)
# We don't define _repr_png_ here because it would add a large amount of
# data to any notebook containing SymPy expressions, without adding
# anything useful to the notebook. It can still enabled manually, e.g.,
# for the qtconsole, with init_printing().
def _repr_latex_(self):
"""
IPython/Jupyter LaTeX printing
To change the behavior of this (e.g., pass in some settings to LaTeX),
use init_printing(). init_printing() will also enable LaTeX printing
for built in numeric types like ints and container types that contain
SymPy objects, like lists and dictionaries of expressions.
"""
from sympy.printing.latex import latex
s = latex(self, mode='equation*')
s = s.strip('$')
return "$$%s$$" % s
_repr_latex_orig = _repr_latex_
def atoms(self, *types):
"""Returns the atoms that form the current object.
By default, only objects that are truly atomic and can't
be divided into smaller pieces are returned: symbols, numbers,
and number symbols like I and pi. It is possible to request
atoms of any type, however, as demonstrated below.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import I, pi, sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms()
{1, 2, I, pi, x, y}
If one or more types are given, the results will contain only
those types of atoms.
>>> from sympy import Number, NumberSymbol, Symbol
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(Symbol)
{x, y}
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(Number)
{1, 2}
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(Number, NumberSymbol)
{1, 2, pi}
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(Number, NumberSymbol, I)
{1, 2, I, pi}
Note that I (imaginary unit) and zoo (complex infinity) are special
types of number symbols and are not part of the NumberSymbol class.
The type can be given implicitly, too:
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(x) # x is a Symbol
{x, y}
Be careful to check your assumptions when using the implicit option
since ``S(1).is_Integer = True`` but ``type(S(1))`` is ``One``, a special type
of sympy atom, while ``type(S(2))`` is type ``Integer`` and will find all
integers in an expression:
>>> from sympy import S
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(S(1))
{1}
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(S(2))
{1, 2}
Finally, arguments to atoms() can select more than atomic atoms: any
sympy type (loaded in core/__init__.py) can be listed as an argument
and those types of "atoms" as found in scanning the arguments of the
expression recursively:
>>> from sympy import Function, Mul
>>> from sympy.core.function import AppliedUndef
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> (1 + f(x) + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(Function)
{f(x), sin(y + I*pi)}
>>> (1 + f(x) + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(AppliedUndef)
{f(x)}
>>> (1 + x + 2*sin(y + I*pi)).atoms(Mul)
{I*pi, 2*sin(y + I*pi)}
"""
if types:
types = tuple(
[t if isinstance(t, type) else type(t) for t in types])
else:
types = (Atom,)
result = set()
for expr in preorder_traversal(self):
if isinstance(expr, types):
result.add(expr)
return result
@property
def free_symbols(self):
"""Return from the atoms of self those which are free symbols.
For most expressions, all symbols are free symbols. For some classes
this is not true. e.g. Integrals use Symbols for the dummy variables
which are bound variables, so Integral has a method to return all
symbols except those. Derivative keeps track of symbols with respect
to which it will perform a derivative; those are
bound variables, too, so it has its own free_symbols method.
Any other method that uses bound variables should implement a
free_symbols method."""
return set().union(*[a.free_symbols for a in self.args])
@property
def expr_free_symbols(self):
return set([])
def as_dummy(self):
"""Return the expression with any objects having structurally
bound symbols replaced with unique, canonical symbols within
the object in which they appear and having only the default
assumption for commutativity being True.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Integral, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> r = Symbol('r', real=True)
>>> Integral(r, (r, x)).as_dummy()
Integral(_0, (_0, x))
>>> _.variables[0].is_real is None
True
Notes
=====
Any object that has structural dummy variables should have
a property, `bound_symbols` that returns a list of structural
dummy symbols of the object itself.
Lambda and Subs have bound symbols, but because of how they
are cached, they already compare the same regardless of their
bound symbols:
>>> from sympy import Lambda
>>> Lambda(x, x + 1) == Lambda(y, y + 1)
True
"""
def can(x):
d = dict([(i, i.as_dummy()) for i in x.bound_symbols])
# mask free that shadow bound
x = x.subs(d)
c = x.canonical_variables
# replace bound
x = x.xreplace(c)
# undo masking
x = x.xreplace(dict((v, k) for k, v in d.items()))
return x
return self.replace(
lambda x: hasattr(x, 'bound_symbols'),
lambda x: can(x))
@property
def canonical_variables(self):
"""Return a dictionary mapping any variable defined in
``self.bound_symbols`` to Symbols that do not clash
with any existing symbol in the expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Lambda
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Lambda(x, 2*x).canonical_variables
{x: _0}
"""
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol
from sympy.utilities.iterables import numbered_symbols
if not hasattr(self, 'bound_symbols'):
return {}
dums = numbered_symbols('_')
reps = {}
v = self.bound_symbols
# this free will include bound symbols that are not part of
# self's bound symbols
free = set([i.name for i in self.atoms(Symbol) - set(v)])
for v in v:
d = next(dums)
if v.is_Symbol:
while v.name == d.name or d.name in free:
d = next(dums)
reps[v] = d
return reps
def rcall(self, *args):
"""Apply on the argument recursively through the expression tree.
This method is used to simulate a common abuse of notation for
operators. For instance in SymPy the the following will not work:
``(x+Lambda(y, 2*y))(z) == x+2*z``,
however you can use
>>> from sympy import Lambda
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> (x + Lambda(y, 2*y)).rcall(z)
x + 2*z
"""
return Basic._recursive_call(self, args)
@staticmethod
def _recursive_call(expr_to_call, on_args):
"""Helper for rcall method.
"""
from sympy import Symbol
def the_call_method_is_overridden(expr):
for cls in getmro(type(expr)):
if '__call__' in cls.__dict__:
return cls != Basic
if callable(expr_to_call) and the_call_method_is_overridden(expr_to_call):
if isinstance(expr_to_call, Symbol): # XXX When you call a Symbol it is
return expr_to_call # transformed into an UndefFunction
else:
return expr_to_call(*on_args)
elif expr_to_call.args:
args = [Basic._recursive_call(
sub, on_args) for sub in expr_to_call.args]
return type(expr_to_call)(*args)
else:
return expr_to_call
def is_hypergeometric(self, k):
from sympy.simplify import hypersimp
return hypersimp(self, k) is not None
@property
def is_comparable(self):
"""Return True if self can be computed to a real number
(or already is a real number) with precision, else False.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp_polar, pi, I
>>> (I*exp_polar(I*pi/2)).is_comparable
True
>>> (I*exp_polar(I*pi*2)).is_comparable
False
A False result does not mean that `self` cannot be rewritten
into a form that would be comparable. For example, the
difference computed below is zero but without simplification
it does not evaluate to a zero with precision:
>>> e = 2**pi*(1 + 2**pi)
>>> dif = e - e.expand()
>>> dif.is_comparable
False
>>> dif.n(2)._prec
1
"""
is_real = self.is_real
if is_real is False:
return False
if not self.is_number:
return False
# don't re-eval numbers that are already evaluated since
# this will create spurious precision
n, i = [p.evalf(2) if not p.is_Number else p
for p in self.as_real_imag()]
if not (i.is_Number and n.is_Number):
return False
if i:
# if _prec = 1 we can't decide and if not,
# the answer is False because numbers with
# imaginary parts can't be compared
# so return False
return False
else:
return n._prec != 1
@property
def func(self):
"""
The top-level function in an expression.
The following should hold for all objects::
>> x == x.func(*x.args)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> a = 2*x
>>> a.func
<class 'sympy.core.mul.Mul'>
>>> a.args
(2, x)
>>> a.func(*a.args)
2*x
>>> a == a.func(*a.args)
True
"""
return self.__class__
@property
def args(self):
"""Returns a tuple of arguments of 'self'.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import cot
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> cot(x).args
(x,)
>>> cot(x).args[0]
x
>>> (x*y).args
(x, y)
>>> (x*y).args[1]
y
Notes
=====
Never use self._args, always use self.args.
Only use _args in __new__ when creating a new function.
Don't override .args() from Basic (so that it's easy to
change the interface in the future if needed).
"""
return self._args
@property
def _sorted_args(self):
"""
The same as ``args``. Derived classes which don't fix an
order on their arguments should override this method to
produce the sorted representation.
"""
return self.args
def as_poly(self, *gens, **args):
"""Converts ``self`` to a polynomial or returns ``None``.
>>> from sympy import sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> print((x**2 + x*y).as_poly())
Poly(x**2 + x*y, x, y, domain='ZZ')
>>> print((x**2 + x*y).as_poly(x, y))
Poly(x**2 + x*y, x, y, domain='ZZ')
>>> print((x**2 + sin(y)).as_poly(x, y))
None
"""
from sympy.polys import Poly, PolynomialError
try:
poly = Poly(self, *gens, **args)
if not poly.is_Poly:
return None
else:
return poly
except PolynomialError:
return None
def as_content_primitive(self, radical=False, clear=True):
"""A stub to allow Basic args (like Tuple) to be skipped when computing
the content and primitive components of an expression.
See Also
========
sympy.core.expr.Expr.as_content_primitive
"""
return S.One, self
def subs(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Substitutes old for new in an expression after sympifying args.
`args` is either:
- two arguments, e.g. foo.subs(old, new)
- one iterable argument, e.g. foo.subs(iterable). The iterable may be
o an iterable container with (old, new) pairs. In this case the
replacements are processed in the order given with successive
patterns possibly affecting replacements already made.
o a dict or set whose key/value items correspond to old/new pairs.
In this case the old/new pairs will be sorted by op count and in
case of a tie, by number of args and the default_sort_key. The
resulting sorted list is then processed as an iterable container
(see previous).
If the keyword ``simultaneous`` is True, the subexpressions will not be
evaluated until all the substitutions have been made.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import pi, exp, limit, oo
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> (1 + x*y).subs(x, pi)
pi*y + 1
>>> (1 + x*y).subs({x:pi, y:2})
1 + 2*pi
>>> (1 + x*y).subs([(x, pi), (y, 2)])
1 + 2*pi
>>> reps = [(y, x**2), (x, 2)]
>>> (x + y).subs(reps)
6
>>> (x + y).subs(reversed(reps))
x**2 + 2
>>> (x**2 + x**4).subs(x**2, y)
y**2 + y
To replace only the x**2 but not the x**4, use xreplace:
>>> (x**2 + x**4).xreplace({x**2: y})
x**4 + y
To delay evaluation until all substitutions have been made,
set the keyword ``simultaneous`` to True:
>>> (x/y).subs([(x, 0), (y, 0)])
0
>>> (x/y).subs([(x, 0), (y, 0)], simultaneous=True)
nan
This has the added feature of not allowing subsequent substitutions
to affect those already made:
>>> ((x + y)/y).subs({x + y: y, y: x + y})
1
>>> ((x + y)/y).subs({x + y: y, y: x + y}, simultaneous=True)
y/(x + y)
In order to obtain a canonical result, unordered iterables are
sorted by count_op length, number of arguments and by the
default_sort_key to break any ties. All other iterables are left
unsorted.
>>> from sympy import sqrt, sin, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c, d, e
>>> A = (sqrt(sin(2*x)), a)
>>> B = (sin(2*x), b)
>>> C = (cos(2*x), c)
>>> D = (x, d)
>>> E = (exp(x), e)
>>> expr = sqrt(sin(2*x))*sin(exp(x)*x)*cos(2*x) + sin(2*x)
>>> expr.subs(dict([A, B, C, D, E]))
a*c*sin(d*e) + b
The resulting expression represents a literal replacement of the
old arguments with the new arguments. This may not reflect the
limiting behavior of the expression:
>>> (x**3 - 3*x).subs({x: oo})
nan
>>> limit(x**3 - 3*x, x, oo)
oo
If the substitution will be followed by numerical
evaluation, it is better to pass the substitution to
evalf as
>>> (1/x).evalf(subs={x: 3.0}, n=21)
0.333333333333333333333
rather than
>>> (1/x).subs({x: 3.0}).evalf(21)
0.333333333333333314830
as the former will ensure that the desired level of precision is
obtained.
See Also
========
replace: replacement capable of doing wildcard-like matching,
parsing of match, and conditional replacements
xreplace: exact node replacement in expr tree; also capable of
using matching rules
evalf: calculates the given formula to a desired level of precision
"""
from sympy.core.containers import Dict
from sympy.utilities import default_sort_key
from sympy import Dummy, Symbol
unordered = False
if len(args) == 1:
sequence = args[0]
if isinstance(sequence, set):
unordered = True
elif isinstance(sequence, (Dict, Mapping)):
unordered = True
sequence = sequence.items()
elif not iterable(sequence):
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
raise ValueError(filldedent("""
When a single argument is passed to subs
it should be a dictionary of old: new pairs or an iterable
of (old, new) tuples."""))
elif len(args) == 2:
sequence = [args]
else:
raise ValueError("subs accepts either 1 or 2 arguments")
sequence = list(sequence)
for i, s in enumerate(sequence):
if type(s[0]) is str:
# when old is a string we prefer Symbol
s = Symbol(s[0]), s[1]
try:
s = [sympify(_, strict=type(_) is not str) for _ in s]
except SympifyError:
# if it can't be sympified, skip it
sequence[i] = None
continue
# skip if there is no change
sequence[i] = None if _aresame(*s) else tuple(s)
sequence = list(filter(None, sequence))
if unordered:
sequence = dict(sequence)
if not all(k.is_Atom for k in sequence):
d = {}
for o, n in sequence.items():
try:
ops = o.count_ops(), len(o.args)
except TypeError:
ops = (0, 0)
d.setdefault(ops, []).append((o, n))
newseq = []
for k in sorted(d.keys(), reverse=True):
newseq.extend(
sorted([v[0] for v in d[k]], key=default_sort_key))
sequence = [(k, sequence[k]) for k in newseq]
del newseq, d
else:
sequence = sorted([(k, v) for (k, v) in sequence.items()],
key=default_sort_key)
if kwargs.pop('simultaneous', False): # XXX should this be the default for dict subs?
reps = {}
rv = self
kwargs['hack2'] = True
m = Dummy()
for old, new in sequence:
d = Dummy(commutative=new.is_commutative)
# using d*m so Subs will be used on dummy variables
# in things like Derivative(f(x, y), x) in which x
# is both free and bound
rv = rv._subs(old, d*m, **kwargs)
if not isinstance(rv, Basic):
break
reps[d] = new
reps[m] = S.One # get rid of m
return rv.xreplace(reps)
else:
rv = self
for old, new in sequence:
rv = rv._subs(old, new, **kwargs)
if not isinstance(rv, Basic):
break
return rv
@cacheit
def _subs(self, old, new, **hints):
"""Substitutes an expression old -> new.
If self is not equal to old then _eval_subs is called.
If _eval_subs doesn't want to make any special replacement
then a None is received which indicates that the fallback
should be applied wherein a search for replacements is made
amongst the arguments of self.
>>> from sympy import Add
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
Examples
========
Add's _eval_subs knows how to target x + y in the following
so it makes the change:
>>> (x + y + z).subs(x + y, 1)
z + 1
Add's _eval_subs doesn't need to know how to find x + y in
the following:
>>> Add._eval_subs(z*(x + y) + 3, x + y, 1) is None
True
The returned None will cause the fallback routine to traverse the args and
pass the z*(x + y) arg to Mul where the change will take place and the
substitution will succeed:
>>> (z*(x + y) + 3).subs(x + y, 1)
z + 3
** Developers Notes **
An _eval_subs routine for a class should be written if:
1) any arguments are not instances of Basic (e.g. bool, tuple);
2) some arguments should not be targeted (as in integration
variables);
3) if there is something other than a literal replacement
that should be attempted (as in Piecewise where the condition
may be updated without doing a replacement).
If it is overridden, here are some special cases that might arise:
1) If it turns out that no special change was made and all
the original sub-arguments should be checked for
replacements then None should be returned.
2) If it is necessary to do substitutions on a portion of
the expression then _subs should be called. _subs will
handle the case of any sub-expression being equal to old
(which usually would not be the case) while its fallback
will handle the recursion into the sub-arguments. For
example, after Add's _eval_subs removes some matching terms
it must process the remaining terms so it calls _subs
on each of the un-matched terms and then adds them
onto the terms previously obtained.
3) If the initial expression should remain unchanged then
the original expression should be returned. (Whenever an
expression is returned, modified or not, no further
substitution of old -> new is attempted.) Sum's _eval_subs
routine uses this strategy when a substitution is attempted
on any of its summation variables.
"""
def fallback(self, old, new):
"""
Try to replace old with new in any of self's arguments.
"""
hit = False
args = list(self.args)
for i, arg in enumerate(args):
if not hasattr(arg, '_eval_subs'):
continue
arg = arg._subs(old, new, **hints)
if not _aresame(arg, args[i]):
hit = True
args[i] = arg
if hit:
rv = self.func(*args)
hack2 = hints.get('hack2', False)
if hack2 and self.is_Mul and not rv.is_Mul: # 2-arg hack
coeff = S.One
nonnumber = []
for i in args:
if i.is_Number:
coeff *= i
else:
nonnumber.append(i)
nonnumber = self.func(*nonnumber)
if coeff is S.One:
return nonnumber
else:
return self.func(coeff, nonnumber, evaluate=False)
return rv
return self
if _aresame(self, old):
return new
rv = self._eval_subs(old, new)
if rv is None:
rv = fallback(self, old, new)
return rv
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
"""Override this stub if you want to do anything more than
attempt a replacement of old with new in the arguments of self.
See also: _subs
"""
return None
def xreplace(self, rule):
"""
Replace occurrences of objects within the expression.
Parameters
==========
rule : dict-like
Expresses a replacement rule
Returns
=======
xreplace : the result of the replacement
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, pi, exp
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x y z')
>>> (1 + x*y).xreplace({x: pi})
pi*y + 1
>>> (1 + x*y).xreplace({x: pi, y: 2})
1 + 2*pi
Replacements occur only if an entire node in the expression tree is
matched:
>>> (x*y + z).xreplace({x*y: pi})
z + pi
>>> (x*y*z).xreplace({x*y: pi})
x*y*z
>>> (2*x).xreplace({2*x: y, x: z})
y
>>> (2*2*x).xreplace({2*x: y, x: z})
4*z
>>> (x + y + 2).xreplace({x + y: 2})
x + y + 2
>>> (x + 2 + exp(x + 2)).xreplace({x + 2: y})
x + exp(y) + 2
xreplace doesn't differentiate between free and bound symbols. In the
following, subs(x, y) would not change x since it is a bound symbol,
but xreplace does:
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> Integral(x, (x, 1, 2*x)).xreplace({x: y})
Integral(y, (y, 1, 2*y))
Trying to replace x with an expression raises an error:
>>> Integral(x, (x, 1, 2*x)).xreplace({x: 2*y}) # doctest: +SKIP
ValueError: Invalid limits given: ((2*y, 1, 4*y),)
See Also
========
replace: replacement capable of doing wildcard-like matching,
parsing of match, and conditional replacements
subs: substitution of subexpressions as defined by the objects
themselves.
"""
value, _ = self._xreplace(rule)
return value
def _xreplace(self, rule):
"""
Helper for xreplace. Tracks whether a replacement actually occurred.
"""
if self in rule:
return rule[self], True
elif rule:
args = []
changed = False
for a in self.args:
try:
a_xr = a._xreplace(rule)
args.append(a_xr[0])
changed |= a_xr[1]
except AttributeError:
args.append(a)
args = tuple(args)
if changed:
return self.func(*args), True
return self, False
@cacheit
def has(self, *patterns):
"""
Test whether any subexpression matches any of the patterns.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> (x**2 + sin(x*y)).has(z)
False
>>> (x**2 + sin(x*y)).has(x, y, z)
True
>>> x.has(x)
True
Note ``has`` is a structural algorithm with no knowledge of
mathematics. Consider the following half-open interval:
>>> from sympy.sets import Interval
>>> i = Interval.Lopen(0, 5); i
Interval.Lopen(0, 5)
>>> i.args
(0, 5, True, False)
>>> i.has(4) # there is no "4" in the arguments
False
>>> i.has(0) # there *is* a "0" in the arguments
True
Instead, use ``contains`` to determine whether a number is in the
interval or not:
>>> i.contains(4)
True
>>> i.contains(0)
False
Note that ``expr.has(*patterns)`` is exactly equivalent to
``any(expr.has(p) for p in patterns)``. In particular, ``False`` is
returned when the list of patterns is empty.
>>> x.has()
False
"""
return any(self._has(pattern) for pattern in patterns)
def _has(self, pattern):
"""Helper for .has()"""
from sympy.core.function import UndefinedFunction, Function
if isinstance(pattern, UndefinedFunction):
return any(f.func == pattern or f == pattern
for f in self.atoms(Function, UndefinedFunction))
pattern = sympify(pattern)
if isinstance(pattern, BasicMeta):
return any(isinstance(arg, pattern)
for arg in preorder_traversal(self))
try:
match = pattern._has_matcher()
return any(match(arg) for arg in preorder_traversal(self))
except AttributeError:
return any(arg == pattern for arg in preorder_traversal(self))
def _has_matcher(self):
"""Helper for .has()"""
return lambda other: self == other
def replace(self, query, value, map=False, simultaneous=True, exact=False):
"""
Replace matching subexpressions of ``self`` with ``value``.
If ``map = True`` then also return the mapping {old: new} where ``old``
was a sub-expression found with query and ``new`` is the replacement
value for it. If the expression itself doesn't match the query, then
the returned value will be ``self.xreplace(map)`` otherwise it should
be ``self.subs(ordered(map.items()))``.
Traverses an expression tree and performs replacement of matching
subexpressions from the bottom to the top of the tree. The default
approach is to do the replacement in a simultaneous fashion so
changes made are targeted only once. If this is not desired or causes
problems, ``simultaneous`` can be set to False. In addition, if an
expression containing more than one Wild symbol is being used to match
subexpressions and the ``exact`` flag is True, then the match will only
succeed if non-zero values are received for each Wild that appears in
the match pattern.
The list of possible combinations of queries and replacement values
is listed below:
Examples
========
Initial setup
>>> from sympy import log, sin, cos, tan, Wild, Mul, Add
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = log(sin(x)) + tan(sin(x**2))
1.1. type -> type
obj.replace(type, newtype)
When object of type ``type`` is found, replace it with the
result of passing its argument(s) to ``newtype``.
>>> f.replace(sin, cos)
log(cos(x)) + tan(cos(x**2))
>>> sin(x).replace(sin, cos, map=True)
(cos(x), {sin(x): cos(x)})
>>> (x*y).replace(Mul, Add)
x + y
1.2. type -> func
obj.replace(type, func)
When object of type ``type`` is found, apply ``func`` to its
argument(s). ``func`` must be written to handle the number
of arguments of ``type``.
>>> f.replace(sin, lambda arg: sin(2*arg))
log(sin(2*x)) + tan(sin(2*x**2))
>>> (x*y).replace(Mul, lambda *args: sin(2*Mul(*args)))
sin(2*x*y)
2.1. pattern -> expr
obj.replace(pattern(wild), expr(wild))
Replace subexpressions matching ``pattern`` with the expression
written in terms of the Wild symbols in ``pattern``.
>>> a = Wild('a')
>>> f.replace(sin(a), tan(a))
log(tan(x)) + tan(tan(x**2))
>>> f.replace(sin(a), tan(a/2))
log(tan(x/2)) + tan(tan(x**2/2))
>>> f.replace(sin(a), a)
log(x) + tan(x**2)
>>> (x*y).replace(a*x, a)
y
When the default value of False is used with patterns that have
more than one Wild symbol, non-intuitive results may be obtained:
>>> b = Wild('b')
>>> (2*x).replace(a*x + b, b - a)
2/x
For this reason, the ``exact`` option can be used to make the
replacement only when the match gives non-zero values for all
Wild symbols:
>>> (2*x + y).replace(a*x + b, b - a, exact=True)
y - 2
>>> (2*x).replace(a*x + b, b - a, exact=True)
2*x
2.2. pattern -> func
obj.replace(pattern(wild), lambda wild: expr(wild))
All behavior is the same as in 2.1 but now a function in terms of
pattern variables is used rather than an expression:
>>> f.replace(sin(a), lambda a: sin(2*a))
log(sin(2*x)) + tan(sin(2*x**2))
3.1. func -> func
obj.replace(filter, func)
Replace subexpression ``e`` with ``func(e)`` if ``filter(e)``
is True.
>>> g = 2*sin(x**3)
>>> g.replace(lambda expr: expr.is_Number, lambda expr: expr**2)
4*sin(x**9)
The expression itself is also targeted by the query but is done in
such a fashion that changes are not made twice.
>>> e = x*(x*y + 1)
>>> e.replace(lambda x: x.is_Mul, lambda x: 2*x)
2*x*(2*x*y + 1)
See Also
========
subs: substitution of subexpressions as defined by the objects
themselves.
xreplace: exact node replacement in expr tree; also capable of
using matching rules
"""
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy
from sympy.simplify.simplify import bottom_up
try:
query = sympify(query)
except SympifyError:
pass
try:
value = sympify(value)
except SympifyError:
pass
if isinstance(query, type):
_query = lambda expr: isinstance(expr, query)
if isinstance(value, type):
_value = lambda expr, result: value(*expr.args)
elif callable(value):
_value = lambda expr, result: value(*expr.args)
else:
raise TypeError(
"given a type, replace() expects another "
"type or a callable")
elif isinstance(query, Basic):
_query = lambda expr: expr.match(query)
# XXX remove the exact flag and make multi-symbol
# patterns use exact=True semantics; to do this the query must
# be tested to find out how many Wild symbols are present.
# See https://groups.google.com/forum/
# ?fromgroups=#!topic/sympy/zPzo5FtRiqI
# for a method of inspecting a function to know how many
# parameters it has.
if isinstance(value, Basic):
if exact:
_value = lambda expr, result: (value.subs(result)
if all(val for val in result.values()) else expr)
else:
_value = lambda expr, result: value.subs(result)
elif callable(value):
# match dictionary keys get the trailing underscore stripped
# from them and are then passed as keywords to the callable;
# if ``exact`` is True, only accept match if there are no null
# values amongst those matched.
if exact:
_value = lambda expr, result: (value(**dict([(
str(key)[:-1], val) for key, val in result.items()]))
if all(val for val in result.values()) else expr)
else:
_value = lambda expr, result: value(**dict([(
str(key)[:-1], val) for key, val in result.items()]))
else:
raise TypeError(
"given an expression, replace() expects "
"another expression or a callable")
elif callable(query):
_query = query
if callable(value):
_value = lambda expr, result: value(expr)
else:
raise TypeError(
"given a callable, replace() expects "
"another callable")
else:
raise TypeError(
"first argument to replace() must be a "
"type, an expression or a callable")
mapping = {} # changes that took place
mask = [] # the dummies that were used as change placeholders
def rec_replace(expr):
result = _query(expr)
if result or result == {}:
new = _value(expr, result)
if new is not None and new != expr:
mapping[expr] = new
if simultaneous:
# don't let this expression be changed during rebuilding
com = getattr(new, 'is_commutative', True)
if com is None:
com = True
d = Dummy(commutative=com)
mask.append((d, new))
expr = d
else:
expr = new
return expr
rv = bottom_up(self, rec_replace, atoms=True)
# restore original expressions for Dummy symbols
if simultaneous:
mask = list(reversed(mask))
for o, n in mask:
r = {o: n}
rv = rv.xreplace(r)
if not map:
return rv
else:
if simultaneous:
# restore subexpressions in mapping
for o, n in mask:
r = {o: n}
mapping = {k.xreplace(r): v.xreplace(r)
for k, v in mapping.items()}
return rv, mapping
def find(self, query, group=False):
"""Find all subexpressions matching a query. """
query = _make_find_query(query)
results = list(filter(query, preorder_traversal(self)))
if not group:
return set(results)
else:
groups = {}
for result in results:
if result in groups:
groups[result] += 1
else:
groups[result] = 1
return groups
def count(self, query):
"""Count the number of matching subexpressions. """
query = _make_find_query(query)
return sum(bool(query(sub)) for sub in preorder_traversal(self))
def matches(self, expr, repl_dict={}, old=False):
"""
Helper method for match() that looks for a match between Wild symbols
in self and expressions in expr.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, Wild, Basic
>>> a, b, c = symbols('a b c')
>>> x = Wild('x')
>>> Basic(a + x, x).matches(Basic(a + b, c)) is None
True
>>> Basic(a + x, x).matches(Basic(a + b + c, b + c))
{x_: b + c}
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
if not isinstance(expr, self.__class__):
return None
if self == expr:
return repl_dict
if len(self.args) != len(expr.args):
return None
d = repl_dict.copy()
for arg, other_arg in zip(self.args, expr.args):
if arg == other_arg:
continue
d = arg.xreplace(d).matches(other_arg, d, old=old)
if d is None:
return None
return d
def match(self, pattern, old=False):
"""
Pattern matching.
Wild symbols match all.
Return ``None`` when expression (self) does not match
with pattern. Otherwise return a dictionary such that::
pattern.xreplace(self.match(pattern)) == self
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Wild
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> p = Wild("p")
>>> q = Wild("q")
>>> r = Wild("r")
>>> e = (x+y)**(x+y)
>>> e.match(p**p)
{p_: x + y}
>>> e.match(p**q)
{p_: x + y, q_: x + y}
>>> e = (2*x)**2
>>> e.match(p*q**r)
{p_: 4, q_: x, r_: 2}
>>> (p*q**r).xreplace(e.match(p*q**r))
4*x**2
The ``old`` flag will give the old-style pattern matching where
expressions and patterns are essentially solved to give the
match. Both of the following give None unless ``old=True``:
>>> (x - 2).match(p - x, old=True)
{p_: 2*x - 2}
>>> (2/x).match(p*x, old=True)
{p_: 2/x**2}
"""
pattern = sympify(pattern)
return pattern.matches(self, old=old)
def count_ops(self, visual=None):
"""wrapper for count_ops that returns the operation count."""
from sympy import count_ops
return count_ops(self, visual)
def doit(self, **hints):
"""Evaluate objects that are not evaluated by default like limits,
integrals, sums and products. All objects of this kind will be
evaluated recursively, unless some species were excluded via 'hints'
or unless the 'deep' hint was set to 'False'.
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> 2*Integral(x, x)
2*Integral(x, x)
>>> (2*Integral(x, x)).doit()
x**2
>>> (2*Integral(x, x)).doit(deep=False)
2*Integral(x, x)
"""
if hints.get('deep', True):
terms = [term.doit(**hints) if isinstance(term, Basic) else term
for term in self.args]
return self.func(*terms)
else:
return self
def _eval_rewrite(self, pattern, rule, **hints):
if self.is_Atom:
if hasattr(self, rule):
return getattr(self, rule)()
return self
if hints.get('deep', True):
args = [a._eval_rewrite(pattern, rule, **hints)
if isinstance(a, Basic) else a
for a in self.args]
else:
args = self.args
if pattern is None or isinstance(self, pattern):
if hasattr(self, rule):
rewritten = getattr(self, rule)(*args, **hints)
if rewritten is not None:
return rewritten
return self.func(*args) if hints.get('evaluate', True) else self
def _accept_eval_derivative(self, s):
# This method needs to be overridden by array-like objects
return s._visit_eval_derivative_scalar(self)
def _visit_eval_derivative_scalar(self, base):
# Base is a scalar
# Types are (base: scalar, self: scalar)
return base._eval_derivative(self)
def _visit_eval_derivative_array(self, base):
# Types are (base: array/matrix, self: scalar)
# Base is some kind of array/matrix,
# it should have `.applyfunc(lambda x: x.diff(self)` implemented:
return base._eval_derivative(self)
def _eval_derivative_n_times(self, s, n):
# This is the default evaluator for derivatives (as called by `diff`
# and `Derivative`), it will attempt a loop to derive the expression
# `n` times by calling the corresponding `_eval_derivative` method,
# while leaving the derivative unevaluated if `n` is symbolic. This
# method should be overridden if the object has a closed form for its
# symbolic n-th derivative.
from sympy import Integer
if isinstance(n, (int, Integer)):
obj = self
for i in range(n):
obj2 = obj._accept_eval_derivative(s)
if obj == obj2 or obj2 is None:
break
obj = obj2
return obj2
else:
return None
def rewrite(self, *args, **hints):
""" Rewrite functions in terms of other functions.
Rewrites expression containing applications of functions
of one kind in terms of functions of different kind. For
example you can rewrite trigonometric functions as complex
exponentials or combinatorial functions as gamma function.
As a pattern this function accepts a list of functions to
to rewrite (instances of DefinedFunction class). As rule
you can use string or a destination function instance (in
this case rewrite() will use the str() function).
There is also the possibility to pass hints on how to rewrite
the given expressions. For now there is only one such hint
defined called 'deep'. When 'deep' is set to False it will
forbid functions to rewrite their contents.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x
Unspecified pattern:
>>> sin(x).rewrite(exp)
-I*(exp(I*x) - exp(-I*x))/2
Pattern as a single function:
>>> sin(x).rewrite(sin, exp)
-I*(exp(I*x) - exp(-I*x))/2
Pattern as a list of functions:
>>> sin(x).rewrite([sin, ], exp)
-I*(exp(I*x) - exp(-I*x))/2
"""
if not args:
return self
else:
pattern = args[:-1]
if isinstance(args[-1], string_types):
rule = '_eval_rewrite_as_' + args[-1]
else:
try:
rule = '_eval_rewrite_as_' + args[-1].__name__
except:
rule = '_eval_rewrite_as_' + args[-1].__class__.__name__
if not pattern:
return self._eval_rewrite(None, rule, **hints)
else:
if iterable(pattern[0]):
pattern = pattern[0]
pattern = [p for p in pattern if self.has(p)]
if pattern:
return self._eval_rewrite(tuple(pattern), rule, **hints)
else:
return self
_constructor_postprocessor_mapping = {}
@classmethod
def _exec_constructor_postprocessors(cls, obj):
# WARNING: This API is experimental.
# This is an experimental API that introduces constructor
# postprosessors for SymPy Core elements. If an argument of a SymPy
# expression has a `_constructor_postprocessor_mapping` attribute, it will
# be interpreted as a dictionary containing lists of postprocessing
# functions for matching expression node names.
clsname = obj.__class__.__name__
postprocessors = defaultdict(list)
for i in obj.args:
try:
if i in Basic._constructor_postprocessor_mapping:
for k, v in Basic._constructor_postprocessor_mapping[i].items():
postprocessors[k].extend([j for j in v if j not in postprocessors[k]])
else:
postprocessor_mappings = (
Basic._constructor_postprocessor_mapping[cls].items()
for cls in type(i).mro()
if cls in Basic._constructor_postprocessor_mapping
)
for k, v in chain.from_iterable(postprocessor_mappings):
postprocessors[k].extend([j for j in v if j not in postprocessors[k]])
except TypeError:
pass
for f in postprocessors.get(clsname, []):
obj = f(obj)
if len(postprocessors) > 0 and obj not in Basic._constructor_postprocessor_mapping:
Basic._constructor_postprocessor_mapping[obj] = postprocessors
return obj
class Atom(Basic):
"""
A parent class for atomic things. An atom is an expression with no subexpressions.
Examples
========
Symbol, Number, Rational, Integer, ...
But not: Add, Mul, Pow, ...
"""
is_Atom = True
__slots__ = []
def matches(self, expr, repl_dict={}, old=False):
if self == expr:
return repl_dict
def xreplace(self, rule, hack2=False):
return rule.get(self, self)
def doit(self, **hints):
return self
@classmethod
def class_key(cls):
return 2, 0, cls.__name__
@cacheit
def sort_key(self, order=None):
return self.class_key(), (1, (str(self),)), S.One.sort_key(), S.One
def _eval_simplify(self, ratio, measure, rational, inverse):
return self
@property
def _sorted_args(self):
# this is here as a safeguard against accidentally using _sorted_args
# on Atoms -- they cannot be rebuilt as atom.func(*atom._sorted_args)
# since there are no args. So the calling routine should be checking
# to see that this property is not called for Atoms.
raise AttributeError('Atoms have no args. It might be necessary'
' to make a check for Atoms in the calling code.')
def _aresame(a, b):
"""Return True if a and b are structurally the same, else False.
Examples
========
To SymPy, 2.0 == 2:
>>> from sympy import S
>>> 2.0 == S(2)
True
Since a simple 'same or not' result is sometimes useful, this routine was
written to provide that query:
>>> from sympy.core.basic import _aresame
>>> _aresame(S(2.0), S(2))
False
"""
from .function import AppliedUndef, UndefinedFunction as UndefFunc
for i, j in zip_longest(preorder_traversal(a), preorder_traversal(b)):
if i != j or type(i) != type(j):
if ((isinstance(i, UndefFunc) and isinstance(j, UndefFunc)) or
(isinstance(i, AppliedUndef) and isinstance(j, AppliedUndef))):
if i.class_key() != j.class_key():
return False
else:
return False
else:
return True
def _atomic(e, recursive=False):
"""Return atom-like quantities as far as substitution is
concerned: Derivatives, Functions and Symbols. Don't
return any 'atoms' that are inside such quantities unless
they also appear outside, too, unless `recursive` is True.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Derivative, Function, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy.core.basic import _atomic
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> _atomic(x + y)
{x, y}
>>> _atomic(x + f(y))
{x, f(y)}
>>> _atomic(Derivative(f(x), x) + cos(x) + y)
{y, cos(x), Derivative(f(x), x)}
"""
from sympy import Derivative, Function, Symbol
pot = preorder_traversal(e)
seen = set()
if isinstance(e, Basic):
try:
free = e.free_symbols
except AttributeError:
return {e}
else:
return set()
atoms = set()
for p in pot:
if p in seen:
pot.skip()
continue
seen.add(p)
if isinstance(p, Symbol) and p in free:
atoms.add(p)
elif isinstance(p, (Derivative, Function)):
if not recursive:
pot.skip()
atoms.add(p)
return atoms
class preorder_traversal(Iterator):
"""
Do a pre-order traversal of a tree.
This iterator recursively yields nodes that it has visited in a pre-order
fashion. That is, it yields the current node then descends through the
tree breadth-first to yield all of a node's children's pre-order
traversal.
For an expression, the order of the traversal depends on the order of
.args, which in many cases can be arbitrary.
Parameters
==========
node : sympy expression
The expression to traverse.
keys : (default None) sort key(s)
The key(s) used to sort args of Basic objects. When None, args of Basic
objects are processed in arbitrary order. If key is defined, it will
be passed along to ordered() as the only key(s) to use to sort the
arguments; if ``key`` is simply True then the default keys of ordered
will be used.
Yields
======
subtree : sympy expression
All of the subtrees in the tree.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> from sympy.core.basic import preorder_traversal
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x y z')
The nodes are returned in the order that they are encountered unless key
is given; simply passing key=True will guarantee that the traversal is
unique.
>>> list(preorder_traversal((x + y)*z, keys=None)) # doctest: +SKIP
[z*(x + y), z, x + y, y, x]
>>> list(preorder_traversal((x + y)*z, keys=True))
[z*(x + y), z, x + y, x, y]
"""
def __init__(self, node, keys=None):
self._skip_flag = False
self._pt = self._preorder_traversal(node, keys)
def _preorder_traversal(self, node, keys):
yield node
if self._skip_flag:
self._skip_flag = False
return
if isinstance(node, Basic):
if not keys and hasattr(node, '_argset'):
# LatticeOp keeps args as a set. We should use this if we
# don't care about the order, to prevent unnecessary sorting.
args = node._argset
else:
args = node.args
if keys:
if keys != True:
args = ordered(args, keys, default=False)
else:
args = ordered(args)
for arg in args:
for subtree in self._preorder_traversal(arg, keys):
yield subtree
elif iterable(node):
for item in node:
for subtree in self._preorder_traversal(item, keys):
yield subtree
def skip(self):
"""
Skip yielding current node's (last yielded node's) subtrees.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core import symbols
>>> from sympy.core.basic import preorder_traversal
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x y z')
>>> pt = preorder_traversal((x+y*z)*z)
>>> for i in pt:
... print(i)
... if i == x+y*z:
... pt.skip()
z*(x + y*z)
z
x + y*z
"""
self._skip_flag = True
def __next__(self):
return next(self._pt)
def __iter__(self):
return self
def _make_find_query(query):
"""Convert the argument of Basic.find() into a callable"""
try:
query = sympify(query)
except SympifyError:
pass
if isinstance(query, type):
return lambda expr: isinstance(expr, query)
elif isinstance(query, Basic):
return lambda expr: expr.match(query) is not None
return query
|
c2337d7b9161cd9726709f2bd997a63ba540a7529dc8788a915a36820b2b87b6
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from math import log as _log
from .sympify import _sympify
from .cache import cacheit
from .singleton import S
from .expr import Expr
from .evalf import PrecisionExhausted
from .function import (_coeff_isneg, expand_complex, expand_multinomial,
expand_mul)
from .logic import fuzzy_bool, fuzzy_not
from .compatibility import as_int, range
from .evaluate import global_evaluate
from sympy.utilities.iterables import sift
from mpmath.libmp import sqrtrem as mpmath_sqrtrem
from math import sqrt as _sqrt
def isqrt(n):
"""Return the largest integer less than or equal to sqrt(n)."""
if n < 17984395633462800708566937239552:
return int(_sqrt(n))
return integer_nthroot(int(n), 2)[0]
def integer_nthroot(y, n):
"""
Return a tuple containing x = floor(y**(1/n))
and a boolean indicating whether the result is exact (that is,
whether x**n == y).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import integer_nthroot
>>> integer_nthroot(16, 2)
(4, True)
>>> integer_nthroot(26, 2)
(5, False)
To simply determine if a number is a perfect square, the is_square
function should be used:
>>> from sympy.ntheory.primetest import is_square
>>> is_square(26)
False
See Also
========
sympy.ntheory.primetest.is_square
integer_log
"""
y, n = as_int(y), as_int(n)
if y < 0:
raise ValueError("y must be nonnegative")
if n < 1:
raise ValueError("n must be positive")
if y in (0, 1):
return y, True
if n == 1:
return y, True
if n == 2:
x, rem = mpmath_sqrtrem(y)
return int(x), not rem
if n > y:
return 1, False
# Get initial estimate for Newton's method. Care must be taken to
# avoid overflow
try:
guess = int(y**(1./n) + 0.5)
except OverflowError:
exp = _log(y, 2)/n
if exp > 53:
shift = int(exp - 53)
guess = int(2.0**(exp - shift) + 1) << shift
else:
guess = int(2.0**exp)
if guess > 2**50:
# Newton iteration
xprev, x = -1, guess
while 1:
t = x**(n - 1)
xprev, x = x, ((n - 1)*x + y//t)//n
if abs(x - xprev) < 2:
break
else:
x = guess
# Compensate
t = x**n
while t < y:
x += 1
t = x**n
while t > y:
x -= 1
t = x**n
return int(x), t == y # int converts long to int if possible
def integer_log(y, x):
"""Returns (e, bool) where e is the largest nonnegative integer
such that |y| >= |x**e| and bool is True if y == x**e
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import integer_log
>>> integer_log(125, 5)
(3, True)
>>> integer_log(17, 9)
(1, False)
>>> integer_log(4, -2)
(2, True)
>>> integer_log(-125,-5)
(3, True)
See Also
========
integer_nthroot
sympy.ntheory.primetest.is_square
sympy.ntheory.factor_.multiplicity
sympy.ntheory.factor_.perfect_power
"""
if x == 1:
raise ValueError('x cannot take value as 1')
if y == 0:
raise ValueError('y cannot take value as 0')
if x in (-2, 2):
x = int(x)
y = as_int(y)
e = y.bit_length() - 1
return e, x**e == y
if x < 0:
n, b = integer_log(y if y > 0 else -y, -x)
return n, b and bool(n % 2 if y < 0 else not n % 2)
x = as_int(x)
y = as_int(y)
r = e = 0
while y >= x:
d = x
m = 1
while y >= d:
y, rem = divmod(y, d)
r = r or rem
e += m
if y > d:
d *= d
m *= 2
return e, r == 0 and y == 1
class Pow(Expr):
"""
Defines the expression x**y as "x raised to a power y"
Singleton definitions involving (0, 1, -1, oo, -oo, I, -I):
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| expr | value | reason |
+==============+=========+===============================================+
| z**0 | 1 | Although arguments over 0**0 exist, see [2]. |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| z**1 | z | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| (-oo)**(-1) | 0 | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| (-1)**-1 | -1 | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| S.Zero**-1 | zoo | This is not strictly true, as 0**-1 may be |
| | | undefined, but is convenient in some contexts |
| | | where the base is assumed to be positive. |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| 1**-1 | 1 | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| oo**-1 | 0 | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| 0**oo | 0 | Because for all complex numbers z near |
| | | 0, z**oo -> 0. |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| 0**-oo | zoo | This is not strictly true, as 0**oo may be |
| | | oscillating between positive and negative |
| | | values or rotating in the complex plane. |
| | | It is convenient, however, when the base |
| | | is positive. |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| 1**oo | nan | Because there are various cases where |
| 1**-oo | | lim(x(t),t)=1, lim(y(t),t)=oo (or -oo), |
| | | but lim( x(t)**y(t), t) != 1. See [3]. |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| b**zoo | nan | Because b**z has no limit as z -> zoo |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| (-1)**oo | nan | Because of oscillations in the limit. |
| (-1)**(-oo) | | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| oo**oo | oo | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| oo**-oo | 0 | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| (-oo)**oo | nan | |
| (-oo)**-oo | | |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| oo**I | nan | oo**e could probably be best thought of as |
| (-oo)**I | | the limit of x**e for real x as x tends to |
| | | oo. If e is I, then the limit does not exist |
| | | and nan is used to indicate that. |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| oo**(1+I) | zoo | If the real part of e is positive, then the |
| (-oo)**(1+I) | | limit of abs(x**e) is oo. So the limit value |
| | | is zoo. |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
| oo**(-1+I) | 0 | If the real part of e is negative, then the |
| -oo**(-1+I) | | limit is 0. |
+--------------+---------+-----------------------------------------------+
Because symbolic computations are more flexible that floating point
calculations and we prefer to never return an incorrect answer,
we choose not to conform to all IEEE 754 conventions. This helps
us avoid extra test-case code in the calculation of limits.
See Also
========
sympy.core.numbers.Infinity
sympy.core.numbers.NegativeInfinity
sympy.core.numbers.NaN
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponentiation
.. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponentiation#Zero_to_the_power_of_zero
.. [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indeterminate_forms
"""
is_Pow = True
__slots__ = ['is_commutative']
@cacheit
def __new__(cls, b, e, evaluate=None):
if evaluate is None:
evaluate = global_evaluate[0]
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import exp_polar
b = _sympify(b)
e = _sympify(e)
if evaluate:
if e is S.ComplexInfinity:
return S.NaN
if e is S.Zero:
return S.One
elif e is S.One:
return b
# Only perform autosimplification if exponent or base is a Symbol or number
elif (b.is_Symbol or b.is_number) and (e.is_Symbol or e.is_number) and\
e.is_integer and _coeff_isneg(b):
if e.is_even:
b = -b
elif e.is_odd:
return -Pow(-b, e)
if S.NaN in (b, e): # XXX S.NaN**x -> S.NaN under assumption that x != 0
return S.NaN
elif b is S.One:
if abs(e).is_infinite:
return S.NaN
return S.One
else:
# recognize base as E
if not e.is_Atom and b is not S.Exp1 and not isinstance(b, exp_polar):
from sympy import numer, denom, log, sign, im, factor_terms
c, ex = factor_terms(e, sign=False).as_coeff_Mul()
den = denom(ex)
if isinstance(den, log) and den.args[0] == b:
return S.Exp1**(c*numer(ex))
elif den.is_Add:
s = sign(im(b))
if s.is_Number and s and den == \
log(-factor_terms(b, sign=False)) + s*S.ImaginaryUnit*S.Pi:
return S.Exp1**(c*numer(ex))
obj = b._eval_power(e)
if obj is not None:
return obj
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, b, e)
obj = cls._exec_constructor_postprocessors(obj)
if not isinstance(obj, Pow):
return obj
obj.is_commutative = (b.is_commutative and e.is_commutative)
return obj
@property
def base(self):
return self._args[0]
@property
def exp(self):
return self._args[1]
@classmethod
def class_key(cls):
return 3, 2, cls.__name__
def _eval_refine(self, assumptions):
from sympy.assumptions.ask import ask, Q
b, e = self.as_base_exp()
if ask(Q.integer(e), assumptions) and _coeff_isneg(b):
if ask(Q.even(e), assumptions):
return Pow(-b, e)
elif ask(Q.odd(e), assumptions):
return -Pow(-b, e)
def _eval_power(self, other):
from sympy import Abs, arg, exp, floor, im, log, re, sign
b, e = self.as_base_exp()
if b is S.NaN:
return (b**e)**other # let __new__ handle it
s = None
if other.is_integer:
s = 1
elif b.is_polar: # e.g. exp_polar, besselj, var('p', polar=True)...
s = 1
elif e.is_real is not None:
# helper functions ===========================
def _half(e):
"""Return True if the exponent has a literal 2 as the
denominator, else None."""
if getattr(e, 'q', None) == 2:
return True
n, d = e.as_numer_denom()
if n.is_integer and d == 2:
return True
def _n2(e):
"""Return ``e`` evaluated to a Number with 2 significant
digits, else None."""
try:
rv = e.evalf(2, strict=True)
if rv.is_Number:
return rv
except PrecisionExhausted:
pass
# ===================================================
if e.is_real:
# we need _half(other) with constant floor or
# floor(S.Half - e*arg(b)/2/pi) == 0
# handle -1 as special case
if e == -1:
# floor arg. is 1/2 + arg(b)/2/pi
if _half(other):
if b.is_negative is True:
return S.NegativeOne**other*Pow(-b, e*other)
if b.is_real is False:
return Pow(b.conjugate()/Abs(b)**2, other)
elif e.is_even:
if b.is_real:
b = abs(b)
if b.is_imaginary:
b = abs(im(b))*S.ImaginaryUnit
if (abs(e) < 1) == True or e == 1:
s = 1 # floor = 0
elif b.is_nonnegative:
s = 1 # floor = 0
elif re(b).is_nonnegative and (abs(e) < 2) == True:
s = 1 # floor = 0
elif fuzzy_not(im(b).is_zero) and abs(e) == 2:
s = 1 # floor = 0
elif _half(other):
s = exp(2*S.Pi*S.ImaginaryUnit*other*floor(
S.Half - e*arg(b)/(2*S.Pi)))
if s.is_real and _n2(sign(s) - s) == 0:
s = sign(s)
else:
s = None
else:
# e.is_real is False requires:
# _half(other) with constant floor or
# floor(S.Half - im(e*log(b))/2/pi) == 0
try:
s = exp(2*S.ImaginaryUnit*S.Pi*other*
floor(S.Half - im(e*log(b))/2/S.Pi))
# be careful to test that s is -1 or 1 b/c sign(I) == I:
# so check that s is real
if s.is_real and _n2(sign(s) - s) == 0:
s = sign(s)
else:
s = None
except PrecisionExhausted:
s = None
if s is not None:
return s*Pow(b, e*other)
def _eval_Mod(self, q):
if self.exp.is_integer and self.exp.is_positive:
if q.is_integer and self.base % q == 0:
return S.Zero
'''
For unevaluated Integer power, use built-in pow modular
exponentiation, if powers are not too large wrt base.
'''
if self.base.is_Integer and self.exp.is_Integer and q.is_Integer:
b, e, m = int(self.base), int(self.exp), int(q)
# For very large powers, use totient reduction if e >= lg(m).
# Bound on m, is for safe factorization memory wise ie m^(1/4).
# For pollard-rho to be faster than built-in pow lg(e) > m^(1/4)
# check is added.
mb = m.bit_length()
if mb <= 80 and e >= mb and e.bit_length()**4 >= m:
from sympy.ntheory import totient
phi = totient(m)
return pow(b, phi + e%phi, m)
else:
return pow(b, e, m)
def _eval_is_even(self):
if self.exp.is_integer and self.exp.is_positive:
return self.base.is_even
def _eval_is_positive(self):
from sympy import log
if self.base == self.exp:
if self.base.is_nonnegative:
return True
elif self.base.is_positive:
if self.exp.is_real:
return True
elif self.base.is_negative:
if self.exp.is_even:
return True
if self.exp.is_odd:
return False
elif self.base.is_nonpositive:
if self.exp.is_odd:
return False
elif self.base.is_imaginary:
if self.exp.is_integer:
m = self.exp % 4
if m.is_zero:
return True
if m.is_integer and m.is_zero is False:
return False
if self.exp.is_imaginary:
return log(self.base).is_imaginary
def _eval_is_negative(self):
if self.base.is_negative:
if self.exp.is_odd:
return True
if self.exp.is_even:
return False
elif self.base.is_positive:
if self.exp.is_real:
return False
elif self.base.is_nonnegative:
if self.exp.is_nonnegative:
return False
elif self.base.is_nonpositive:
if self.exp.is_even:
return False
elif self.base.is_real:
if self.exp.is_even:
return False
def _eval_is_zero(self):
if self.base.is_zero:
if self.exp.is_positive:
return True
elif self.exp.is_nonpositive:
return False
elif self.base.is_zero is False:
if self.exp.is_finite:
return False
elif self.exp.is_infinite:
if (1 - abs(self.base)).is_positive:
return self.exp.is_positive
elif (1 - abs(self.base)).is_negative:
return self.exp.is_negative
else:
# when self.base.is_zero is None
return None
def _eval_is_integer(self):
b, e = self.args
if b.is_rational:
if b.is_integer is False and e.is_positive:
return False # rat**nonneg
if b.is_integer and e.is_integer:
if b is S.NegativeOne:
return True
if e.is_nonnegative or e.is_positive:
return True
if b.is_integer and e.is_negative and (e.is_finite or e.is_integer):
if fuzzy_not((b - 1).is_zero) and fuzzy_not((b + 1).is_zero):
return False
if b.is_Number and e.is_Number:
check = self.func(*self.args)
return check.is_Integer
def _eval_is_real(self):
from sympy import arg, exp, log, Mul
real_b = self.base.is_real
if real_b is None:
if self.base.func == exp and self.base.args[0].is_imaginary:
return self.exp.is_imaginary
return
real_e = self.exp.is_real
if real_e is None:
return
if real_b and real_e:
if self.base.is_positive:
return True
elif self.base.is_nonnegative:
if self.exp.is_nonnegative:
return True
else:
if self.exp.is_integer:
return True
elif self.base.is_negative:
if self.exp.is_Rational:
return False
if real_e and self.exp.is_negative:
return Pow(self.base, -self.exp).is_real
im_b = self.base.is_imaginary
im_e = self.exp.is_imaginary
if im_b:
if self.exp.is_integer:
if self.exp.is_even:
return True
elif self.exp.is_odd:
return False
elif im_e and log(self.base).is_imaginary:
return True
elif self.exp.is_Add:
c, a = self.exp.as_coeff_Add()
if c and c.is_Integer:
return Mul(
self.base**c, self.base**a, evaluate=False).is_real
elif self.base in (-S.ImaginaryUnit, S.ImaginaryUnit):
if (self.exp/2).is_integer is False:
return False
if real_b and im_e:
if self.base is S.NegativeOne:
return True
c = self.exp.coeff(S.ImaginaryUnit)
if c:
ok = (c*log(self.base)/S.Pi).is_Integer
if ok is not None:
return ok
if real_b is False: # we already know it's not imag
i = arg(self.base)*self.exp/S.Pi
return i.is_integer
def _eval_is_complex(self):
if all(a.is_complex for a in self.args):
return True
def _eval_is_imaginary(self):
from sympy import arg, log
if self.base.is_imaginary:
if self.exp.is_integer:
odd = self.exp.is_odd
if odd is not None:
return odd
return
if self.exp.is_imaginary:
imlog = log(self.base).is_imaginary
if imlog is not None:
return False # I**i -> real; (2*I)**i -> complex ==> not imaginary
if self.base.is_real and self.exp.is_real:
if self.base.is_positive:
return False
else:
rat = self.exp.is_rational
if not rat:
return rat
if self.exp.is_integer:
return False
else:
half = (2*self.exp).is_integer
if half:
return self.base.is_negative
return half
if self.base.is_real is False: # we already know it's not imag
i = arg(self.base)*self.exp/S.Pi
isodd = (2*i).is_odd
if isodd is not None:
return isodd
if self.exp.is_negative:
return (1/self).is_imaginary
def _eval_is_odd(self):
if self.exp.is_integer:
if self.exp.is_positive:
return self.base.is_odd
elif self.exp.is_nonnegative and self.base.is_odd:
return True
elif self.base is S.NegativeOne:
return True
def _eval_is_finite(self):
if self.exp.is_negative:
if self.base.is_zero:
return False
if self.base.is_infinite:
return True
c1 = self.base.is_finite
if c1 is None:
return
c2 = self.exp.is_finite
if c2 is None:
return
if c1 and c2:
if self.exp.is_nonnegative or fuzzy_not(self.base.is_zero):
return True
def _eval_is_prime(self):
'''
An integer raised to the n(>=2)-th power cannot be a prime.
'''
if self.base.is_integer and self.exp.is_integer and (self.exp - 1).is_positive:
return False
def _eval_is_composite(self):
"""
A power is composite if both base and exponent are greater than 1
"""
if (self.base.is_integer and self.exp.is_integer and
((self.base - 1).is_positive and (self.exp - 1).is_positive or
(self.base + 1).is_negative and self.exp.is_positive and self.exp.is_even)):
return True
def _eval_is_polar(self):
return self.base.is_polar
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
from sympy import exp, log, Symbol
def _check(ct1, ct2, old):
"""Return (bool, pow, remainder_pow) where, if bool is True, then the
exponent of Pow `old` will combine with `pow` so the substitution
is valid, otherwise bool will be False.
For noncommutative objects, `pow` will be an integer, and a factor
`Pow(old.base, remainder_pow)` needs to be included. If there is
no such factor, None is returned. For commutative objects,
remainder_pow is always None.
cti are the coefficient and terms of an exponent of self or old
In this _eval_subs routine a change like (b**(2*x)).subs(b**x, y)
will give y**2 since (b**x)**2 == b**(2*x); if that equality does
not hold then the substitution should not occur so `bool` will be
False.
"""
coeff1, terms1 = ct1
coeff2, terms2 = ct2
if terms1 == terms2:
if old.is_commutative:
# Allow fractional powers for commutative objects
pow = coeff1/coeff2
try:
pow = as_int(pow)
combines = True
except ValueError:
combines = isinstance(Pow._eval_power(
Pow(*old.as_base_exp(), evaluate=False),
pow), (Pow, exp, Symbol))
return combines, pow, None
else:
# With noncommutative symbols, substitute only integer powers
if not isinstance(terms1, tuple):
terms1 = (terms1,)
if not all(term.is_integer for term in terms1):
return False, None, None
try:
# Round pow toward zero
pow, remainder = divmod(as_int(coeff1), as_int(coeff2))
if pow < 0 and remainder != 0:
pow += 1
remainder -= as_int(coeff2)
if remainder == 0:
remainder_pow = None
else:
remainder_pow = Mul(remainder, *terms1)
return True, pow, remainder_pow
except ValueError:
# Can't substitute
pass
return False, None, None
if old == self.base:
return new**self.exp._subs(old, new)
# issue 10829: (4**x - 3*y + 2).subs(2**x, y) -> y**2 - 3*y + 2
if isinstance(old, self.func) and self.exp == old.exp:
l = log(self.base, old.base)
if l.is_Number:
return Pow(new, l)
if isinstance(old, self.func) and self.base == old.base:
if self.exp.is_Add is False:
ct1 = self.exp.as_independent(Symbol, as_Add=False)
ct2 = old.exp.as_independent(Symbol, as_Add=False)
ok, pow, remainder_pow = _check(ct1, ct2, old)
if ok:
# issue 5180: (x**(6*y)).subs(x**(3*y),z)->z**2
result = self.func(new, pow)
if remainder_pow is not None:
result = Mul(result, Pow(old.base, remainder_pow))
return result
else: # b**(6*x + a).subs(b**(3*x), y) -> y**2 * b**a
# exp(exp(x) + exp(x**2)).subs(exp(exp(x)), w) -> w * exp(exp(x**2))
oarg = old.exp
new_l = []
o_al = []
ct2 = oarg.as_coeff_mul()
for a in self.exp.args:
newa = a._subs(old, new)
ct1 = newa.as_coeff_mul()
ok, pow, remainder_pow = _check(ct1, ct2, old)
if ok:
new_l.append(new**pow)
if remainder_pow is not None:
o_al.append(remainder_pow)
continue
elif not old.is_commutative and not newa.is_integer:
# If any term in the exponent is non-integer,
# we do not do any substitutions in the noncommutative case
return
o_al.append(newa)
if new_l:
expo = Add(*o_al)
new_l.append(Pow(self.base, expo, evaluate=False) if expo != 1 else self.base)
return Mul(*new_l)
if isinstance(old, exp) and self.exp.is_real and self.base.is_positive:
ct1 = old.args[0].as_independent(Symbol, as_Add=False)
ct2 = (self.exp*log(self.base)).as_independent(
Symbol, as_Add=False)
ok, pow, remainder_pow = _check(ct1, ct2, old)
if ok:
result = self.func(new, pow) # (2**x).subs(exp(x*log(2)), z) -> z
if remainder_pow is not None:
result = Mul(result, Pow(old.base, remainder_pow))
return result
def as_base_exp(self):
"""Return base and exp of self.
If base is 1/Integer, then return Integer, -exp. If this extra
processing is not needed, the base and exp properties will
give the raw arguments
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Pow, S
>>> p = Pow(S.Half, 2, evaluate=False)
>>> p.as_base_exp()
(2, -2)
>>> p.args
(1/2, 2)
"""
b, e = self.args
if b.is_Rational and b.p == 1 and b.q != 1:
return Integer(b.q), -e
return b, e
def _eval_adjoint(self):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import adjoint
i, p = self.exp.is_integer, self.base.is_positive
if i:
return adjoint(self.base)**self.exp
if p:
return self.base**adjoint(self.exp)
if i is False and p is False:
expanded = expand_complex(self)
if expanded != self:
return adjoint(expanded)
def _eval_conjugate(self):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import conjugate as c
i, p = self.exp.is_integer, self.base.is_positive
if i:
return c(self.base)**self.exp
if p:
return self.base**c(self.exp)
if i is False and p is False:
expanded = expand_complex(self)
if expanded != self:
return c(expanded)
if self.is_real:
return self
def _eval_transpose(self):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import transpose
i, p = self.exp.is_integer, self.base.is_complex
if p:
return self.base**self.exp
if i:
return transpose(self.base)**self.exp
if i is False and p is False:
expanded = expand_complex(self)
if expanded != self:
return transpose(expanded)
def _eval_expand_power_exp(self, **hints):
"""a**(n + m) -> a**n*a**m"""
b = self.base
e = self.exp
if e.is_Add and e.is_commutative:
expr = []
for x in e.args:
expr.append(self.func(self.base, x))
return Mul(*expr)
return self.func(b, e)
def _eval_expand_power_base(self, **hints):
"""(a*b)**n -> a**n * b**n"""
force = hints.get('force', False)
b = self.base
e = self.exp
if not b.is_Mul:
return self
cargs, nc = b.args_cnc(split_1=False)
# expand each term - this is top-level-only
# expansion but we have to watch out for things
# that don't have an _eval_expand method
if nc:
nc = [i._eval_expand_power_base(**hints)
if hasattr(i, '_eval_expand_power_base') else i
for i in nc]
if e.is_Integer:
if e.is_positive:
rv = Mul(*nc*e)
else:
rv = Mul(*[i**-1 for i in nc[::-1]]*-e)
if cargs:
rv *= Mul(*cargs)**e
return rv
if not cargs:
return self.func(Mul(*nc), e, evaluate=False)
nc = [Mul(*nc)]
# sift the commutative bases
other, maybe_real = sift(cargs, lambda x: x.is_real is False,
binary=True)
def pred(x):
if x is S.ImaginaryUnit:
return S.ImaginaryUnit
polar = x.is_polar
if polar:
return True
if polar is None:
return fuzzy_bool(x.is_nonnegative)
sifted = sift(maybe_real, pred)
nonneg = sifted[True]
other += sifted[None]
neg = sifted[False]
imag = sifted[S.ImaginaryUnit]
if imag:
I = S.ImaginaryUnit
i = len(imag) % 4
if i == 0:
pass
elif i == 1:
other.append(I)
elif i == 2:
if neg:
nonn = -neg.pop()
if nonn is not S.One:
nonneg.append(nonn)
else:
neg.append(S.NegativeOne)
else:
if neg:
nonn = -neg.pop()
if nonn is not S.One:
nonneg.append(nonn)
else:
neg.append(S.NegativeOne)
other.append(I)
del imag
# bring out the bases that can be separated from the base
if force or e.is_integer:
# treat all commutatives the same and put nc in other
cargs = nonneg + neg + other
other = nc
else:
# this is just like what is happening automatically, except
# that now we are doing it for an arbitrary exponent for which
# no automatic expansion is done
assert not e.is_Integer
# handle negatives by making them all positive and putting
# the residual -1 in other
if len(neg) > 1:
o = S.One
if not other and neg[0].is_Number:
o *= neg.pop(0)
if len(neg) % 2:
o = -o
for n in neg:
nonneg.append(-n)
if o is not S.One:
other.append(o)
elif neg and other:
if neg[0].is_Number and neg[0] is not S.NegativeOne:
other.append(S.NegativeOne)
nonneg.append(-neg[0])
else:
other.extend(neg)
else:
other.extend(neg)
del neg
cargs = nonneg
other += nc
rv = S.One
if cargs:
rv *= Mul(*[self.func(b, e, evaluate=False) for b in cargs])
if other:
rv *= self.func(Mul(*other), e, evaluate=False)
return rv
def _eval_expand_multinomial(self, **hints):
"""(a + b + ..)**n -> a**n + n*a**(n-1)*b + .., n is nonzero integer"""
base, exp = self.args
result = self
if exp.is_Rational and exp.p > 0 and base.is_Add:
if not exp.is_Integer:
n = Integer(exp.p // exp.q)
if not n:
return result
else:
radical, result = self.func(base, exp - n), []
expanded_base_n = self.func(base, n)
if expanded_base_n.is_Pow:
expanded_base_n = \
expanded_base_n._eval_expand_multinomial()
for term in Add.make_args(expanded_base_n):
result.append(term*radical)
return Add(*result)
n = int(exp)
if base.is_commutative:
order_terms, other_terms = [], []
for b in base.args:
if b.is_Order:
order_terms.append(b)
else:
other_terms.append(b)
if order_terms:
# (f(x) + O(x^n))^m -> f(x)^m + m*f(x)^{m-1} *O(x^n)
f = Add(*other_terms)
o = Add(*order_terms)
if n == 2:
return expand_multinomial(f**n, deep=False) + n*f*o
else:
g = expand_multinomial(f**(n - 1), deep=False)
return expand_mul(f*g, deep=False) + n*g*o
if base.is_number:
# Efficiently expand expressions of the form (a + b*I)**n
# where 'a' and 'b' are real numbers and 'n' is integer.
a, b = base.as_real_imag()
if a.is_Rational and b.is_Rational:
if not a.is_Integer:
if not b.is_Integer:
k = self.func(a.q * b.q, n)
a, b = a.p*b.q, a.q*b.p
else:
k = self.func(a.q, n)
a, b = a.p, a.q*b
elif not b.is_Integer:
k = self.func(b.q, n)
a, b = a*b.q, b.p
else:
k = 1
a, b, c, d = int(a), int(b), 1, 0
while n:
if n & 1:
c, d = a*c - b*d, b*c + a*d
n -= 1
a, b = a*a - b*b, 2*a*b
n //= 2
I = S.ImaginaryUnit
if k == 1:
return c + I*d
else:
return Integer(c)/k + I*d/k
p = other_terms
# (x + y)**3 -> x**3 + 3*x**2*y + 3*x*y**2 + y**3
# in this particular example:
# p = [x,y]; n = 3
# so now it's easy to get the correct result -- we get the
# coefficients first:
from sympy import multinomial_coefficients
from sympy.polys.polyutils import basic_from_dict
expansion_dict = multinomial_coefficients(len(p), n)
# in our example: {(3, 0): 1, (1, 2): 3, (0, 3): 1, (2, 1): 3}
# and now construct the expression.
return basic_from_dict(expansion_dict, *p)
else:
if n == 2:
return Add(*[f*g for f in base.args for g in base.args])
else:
multi = (base**(n - 1))._eval_expand_multinomial()
if multi.is_Add:
return Add(*[f*g for f in base.args
for g in multi.args])
else:
# XXX can this ever happen if base was an Add?
return Add(*[f*multi for f in base.args])
elif (exp.is_Rational and exp.p < 0 and base.is_Add and
abs(exp.p) > exp.q):
return 1 / self.func(base, -exp)._eval_expand_multinomial()
elif exp.is_Add and base.is_Number:
# a + b a b
# n --> n n , where n, a, b are Numbers
coeff, tail = S.One, S.Zero
for term in exp.args:
if term.is_Number:
coeff *= self.func(base, term)
else:
tail += term
return coeff * self.func(base, tail)
else:
return result
def as_real_imag(self, deep=True, **hints):
from sympy import atan2, cos, im, re, sin
from sympy.polys.polytools import poly
if self.exp.is_Integer:
exp = self.exp
re, im = self.base.as_real_imag(deep=deep)
if not im:
return self, S.Zero
a, b = symbols('a b', cls=Dummy)
if exp >= 0:
if re.is_Number and im.is_Number:
# We can be more efficient in this case
expr = expand_multinomial(self.base**exp)
if expr != self:
return expr.as_real_imag()
expr = poly(
(a + b)**exp) # a = re, b = im; expr = (a + b*I)**exp
else:
mag = re**2 + im**2
re, im = re/mag, -im/mag
if re.is_Number and im.is_Number:
# We can be more efficient in this case
expr = expand_multinomial((re + im*S.ImaginaryUnit)**-exp)
if expr != self:
return expr.as_real_imag()
expr = poly((a + b)**-exp)
# Terms with even b powers will be real
r = [i for i in expr.terms() if not i[0][1] % 2]
re_part = Add(*[cc*a**aa*b**bb for (aa, bb), cc in r])
# Terms with odd b powers will be imaginary
r = [i for i in expr.terms() if i[0][1] % 4 == 1]
im_part1 = Add(*[cc*a**aa*b**bb for (aa, bb), cc in r])
r = [i for i in expr.terms() if i[0][1] % 4 == 3]
im_part3 = Add(*[cc*a**aa*b**bb for (aa, bb), cc in r])
return (re_part.subs({a: re, b: S.ImaginaryUnit*im}),
im_part1.subs({a: re, b: im}) + im_part3.subs({a: re, b: -im}))
elif self.exp.is_Rational:
re, im = self.base.as_real_imag(deep=deep)
if im.is_zero and self.exp is S.Half:
if re.is_nonnegative:
return self, S.Zero
if re.is_nonpositive:
return S.Zero, (-self.base)**self.exp
# XXX: This is not totally correct since for x**(p/q) with
# x being imaginary there are actually q roots, but
# only a single one is returned from here.
r = self.func(self.func(re, 2) + self.func(im, 2), S.Half)
t = atan2(im, re)
rp, tp = self.func(r, self.exp), t*self.exp
return (rp*cos(tp), rp*sin(tp))
else:
if deep:
hints['complex'] = False
expanded = self.expand(deep, **hints)
if hints.get('ignore') == expanded:
return None
else:
return (re(expanded), im(expanded))
else:
return (re(self), im(self))
def _eval_derivative(self, s):
from sympy import log
dbase = self.base.diff(s)
dexp = self.exp.diff(s)
return self * (dexp * log(self.base) + dbase * self.exp/self.base)
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
base, exp = self.as_base_exp()
base = base._evalf(prec)
if not exp.is_Integer:
exp = exp._evalf(prec)
if exp.is_negative and base.is_number and base.is_real is False:
base = base.conjugate() / (base * base.conjugate())._evalf(prec)
exp = -exp
return self.func(base, exp).expand()
return self.func(base, exp)
def _eval_is_polynomial(self, syms):
if self.exp.has(*syms):
return False
if self.base.has(*syms):
return bool(self.base._eval_is_polynomial(syms) and
self.exp.is_Integer and (self.exp >= 0))
else:
return True
def _eval_is_rational(self):
p = self.func(*self.as_base_exp()) # in case it's unevaluated
if not p.is_Pow:
return p.is_rational
b, e = p.as_base_exp()
if e.is_Rational and b.is_Rational:
# we didn't check that e is not an Integer
# because Rational**Integer autosimplifies
return False
if e.is_integer:
if b.is_rational:
if fuzzy_not(b.is_zero) or e.is_nonnegative:
return True
if b == e: # always rational, even for 0**0
return True
elif b.is_irrational:
return e.is_zero
def _eval_is_algebraic(self):
def _is_one(expr):
try:
return (expr - 1).is_zero
except ValueError:
# when the operation is not allowed
return False
if self.base.is_zero or _is_one(self.base):
return True
elif self.exp.is_rational:
if self.base.is_algebraic is False:
return self.exp.is_zero
return self.base.is_algebraic
elif self.base.is_algebraic and self.exp.is_algebraic:
if ((fuzzy_not(self.base.is_zero)
and fuzzy_not(_is_one(self.base)))
or self.base.is_integer is False
or self.base.is_irrational):
return self.exp.is_rational
def _eval_is_rational_function(self, syms):
if self.exp.has(*syms):
return False
if self.base.has(*syms):
return self.base._eval_is_rational_function(syms) and \
self.exp.is_Integer
else:
return True
def _eval_is_algebraic_expr(self, syms):
if self.exp.has(*syms):
return False
if self.base.has(*syms):
return self.base._eval_is_algebraic_expr(syms) and \
self.exp.is_Rational
else:
return True
def _eval_rewrite_as_exp(self, base, expo, **kwargs):
from sympy import exp, log, I, arg
if base.is_zero or base.has(exp) or expo.has(exp):
return base**expo
if base.has(Symbol):
# delay evaluation if expo is non symbolic
# (as exp(x*log(5)) automatically reduces to x**5)
return exp(log(base)*expo, evaluate=expo.has(Symbol))
else:
return exp((log(abs(base)) + I*arg(base))*expo)
def as_numer_denom(self):
if not self.is_commutative:
return self, S.One
base, exp = self.as_base_exp()
n, d = base.as_numer_denom()
# this should be the same as ExpBase.as_numer_denom wrt
# exponent handling
neg_exp = exp.is_negative
if not neg_exp and not (-exp).is_negative:
neg_exp = _coeff_isneg(exp)
int_exp = exp.is_integer
# the denominator cannot be separated from the numerator if
# its sign is unknown unless the exponent is an integer, e.g.
# sqrt(a/b) != sqrt(a)/sqrt(b) when a=1 and b=-1. But if the
# denominator is negative the numerator and denominator can
# be negated and the denominator (now positive) separated.
if not (d.is_real or int_exp):
n = base
d = S.One
dnonpos = d.is_nonpositive
if dnonpos:
n, d = -n, -d
elif dnonpos is None and not int_exp:
n = base
d = S.One
if neg_exp:
n, d = d, n
exp = -exp
if exp.is_infinite:
if n is S.One and d is not S.One:
return n, self.func(d, exp)
if n is not S.One and d is S.One:
return self.func(n, exp), d
return self.func(n, exp), self.func(d, exp)
def matches(self, expr, repl_dict={}, old=False):
expr = _sympify(expr)
# special case, pattern = 1 and expr.exp can match to 0
if expr is S.One:
d = repl_dict.copy()
d = self.exp.matches(S.Zero, d)
if d is not None:
return d
# make sure the expression to be matched is an Expr
if not isinstance(expr, Expr):
return None
b, e = expr.as_base_exp()
# special case number
sb, se = self.as_base_exp()
if sb.is_Symbol and se.is_Integer and expr:
if e.is_rational:
return sb.matches(b**(e/se), repl_dict)
return sb.matches(expr**(1/se), repl_dict)
d = repl_dict.copy()
d = self.base.matches(b, d)
if d is None:
return None
d = self.exp.xreplace(d).matches(e, d)
if d is None:
return Expr.matches(self, expr, repl_dict)
return d
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
# NOTE! This function is an important part of the gruntz algorithm
# for computing limits. It has to return a generalized power
# series with coefficients in C(log, log(x)). In more detail:
# It has to return an expression
# c_0*x**e_0 + c_1*x**e_1 + ... (finitely many terms)
# where e_i are numbers (not necessarily integers) and c_i are
# expressions involving only numbers, the log function, and log(x).
from sympy import ceiling, collect, exp, log, O, Order, powsimp
b, e = self.args
if e.is_Integer:
if e > 0:
# positive integer powers are easy to expand, e.g.:
# sin(x)**4 = (x - x**3/3 + ...)**4 = ...
return expand_multinomial(self.func(b._eval_nseries(x, n=n,
logx=logx), e), deep=False)
elif e is S.NegativeOne:
# this is also easy to expand using the formula:
# 1/(1 + x) = 1 - x + x**2 - x**3 ...
# so we need to rewrite base to the form "1 + x"
nuse = n
cf = 1
try:
ord = b.as_leading_term(x)
cf = Order(ord, x).getn()
if cf and cf.is_Number:
nuse = n + 2*ceiling(cf)
else:
cf = 1
except NotImplementedError:
pass
b_orig, prefactor = b, O(1, x)
while prefactor.is_Order:
nuse += 1
b = b_orig._eval_nseries(x, n=nuse, logx=logx)
prefactor = b.as_leading_term(x)
# express "rest" as: rest = 1 + k*x**l + ... + O(x**n)
rest = expand_mul((b - prefactor)/prefactor)
if rest.is_Order:
return 1/prefactor + rest/prefactor + O(x**n, x)
k, l = rest.leadterm(x)
if l.is_Rational and l > 0:
pass
elif l.is_number and l > 0:
l = l.evalf()
elif l == 0:
k = k.simplify()
if k == 0:
# if prefactor == w**4 + x**2*w**4 + 2*x*w**4, we need to
# factor the w**4 out using collect:
return 1/collect(prefactor, x)
else:
raise NotImplementedError()
else:
raise NotImplementedError()
if cf < 0:
cf = S.One/abs(cf)
try:
dn = Order(1/prefactor, x).getn()
if dn and dn < 0:
pass
else:
dn = 0
except NotImplementedError:
dn = 0
terms = [1/prefactor]
for m in range(1, ceiling((n - dn + 1)/l*cf)):
new_term = terms[-1]*(-rest)
if new_term.is_Pow:
new_term = new_term._eval_expand_multinomial(
deep=False)
else:
new_term = expand_mul(new_term, deep=False)
terms.append(new_term)
terms.append(O(x**n, x))
return powsimp(Add(*terms), deep=True, combine='exp')
else:
# negative powers are rewritten to the cases above, for
# example:
# sin(x)**(-4) = 1/(sin(x)**4) = ...
# and expand the denominator:
nuse, denominator = n, O(1, x)
while denominator.is_Order:
denominator = (b**(-e))._eval_nseries(x, n=nuse, logx=logx)
nuse += 1
if 1/denominator == self:
return self
# now we have a type 1/f(x), that we know how to expand
return (1/denominator)._eval_nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
if e.has(Symbol):
return exp(e*log(b))._eval_nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
# see if the base is as simple as possible
bx = b
while bx.is_Pow and bx.exp.is_Rational:
bx = bx.base
if bx == x:
return self
# work for b(x)**e where e is not an Integer and does not contain x
# and hopefully has no other symbols
def e2int(e):
"""return the integer value (if possible) of e and a
flag indicating whether it is bounded or not."""
n = e.limit(x, 0)
infinite = n.is_infinite
if not infinite:
# XXX was int or floor intended? int used to behave like floor
# so int(-Rational(1, 2)) returned -1 rather than int's 0
try:
n = int(n)
except TypeError:
# well, the n is something more complicated (like 1 + log(2))
try:
n = int(n.evalf()) + 1 # XXX why is 1 being added?
except TypeError:
pass # hope that base allows this to be resolved
n = _sympify(n)
return n, infinite
order = O(x**n, x)
ei, infinite = e2int(e)
b0 = b.limit(x, 0)
if infinite and (b0 is S.One or b0.has(Symbol)):
# XXX what order
if b0 is S.One:
resid = (b - 1)
if resid.is_positive:
return S.Infinity
elif resid.is_negative:
return S.Zero
raise ValueError('cannot determine sign of %s' % resid)
return b0**ei
if (b0 is S.Zero or b0.is_infinite):
if infinite is not False:
return b0**e # XXX what order
if not ei.is_number: # if not, how will we proceed?
raise ValueError(
'expecting numerical exponent but got %s' % ei)
nuse = n - ei
if e.is_real and e.is_positive:
lt = b.as_leading_term(x)
# Try to correct nuse (= m) guess from:
# (lt + rest + O(x**m))**e =
# lt**e*(1 + rest/lt + O(x**m)/lt)**e =
# lt**e + ... + O(x**m)*lt**(e - 1) = ... + O(x**n)
try:
cf = Order(lt, x).getn()
nuse = ceiling(n - cf*(e - 1))
except NotImplementedError:
pass
bs = b._eval_nseries(x, n=nuse, logx=logx)
terms = bs.removeO()
if terms.is_Add:
bs = terms
lt = terms.as_leading_term(x)
# bs -> lt + rest -> lt*(1 + (bs/lt - 1))
return ((self.func(lt, e) * self.func((bs/lt).expand(), e).nseries(
x, n=nuse, logx=logx)).expand() + order)
if bs.is_Add:
from sympy import O
# So, bs + O() == terms
c = Dummy('c')
res = []
for arg in bs.args:
if arg.is_Order:
arg = c*arg.expr
res.append(arg)
bs = Add(*res)
rv = (bs**e).series(x).subs(c, O(1, x))
rv += order
return rv
rv = bs**e
if terms != bs:
rv += order
return rv
# either b0 is bounded but neither 1 nor 0 or e is infinite
# b -> b0 + (b - b0) -> b0 * (1 + (b/b0 - 1))
o2 = order*(b0**-e)
z = (b/b0 - 1)
o = O(z, x)
if o is S.Zero or o2 is S.Zero:
infinite = True
else:
if o.expr.is_number:
e2 = log(o2.expr*x)/log(x)
else:
e2 = log(o2.expr)/log(o.expr)
n, infinite = e2int(e2)
if infinite:
# requested accuracy gives infinite series,
# order is probably non-polynomial e.g. O(exp(-1/x), x).
r = 1 + z
else:
l = []
g = None
for i in range(n + 2):
g = self._taylor_term(i, z, g)
g = g.nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
l.append(g)
r = Add(*l)
return expand_mul(r*b0**e) + order
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
from sympy import exp, log
if not self.exp.has(x):
return self.func(self.base.as_leading_term(x), self.exp)
return exp(self.exp * log(self.base)).as_leading_term(x)
@cacheit
def _taylor_term(self, n, x, *previous_terms): # of (1 + x)**e
from sympy import binomial
return binomial(self.exp, n) * self.func(x, n)
def _sage_(self):
return self.args[0]._sage_()**self.args[1]._sage_()
def as_content_primitive(self, radical=False, clear=True):
"""Return the tuple (R, self/R) where R is the positive Rational
extracted from self.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> sqrt(4 + 4*sqrt(2)).as_content_primitive()
(2, sqrt(1 + sqrt(2)))
>>> sqrt(3 + 3*sqrt(2)).as_content_primitive()
(1, sqrt(3)*sqrt(1 + sqrt(2)))
>>> from sympy import expand_power_base, powsimp, Mul
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> ((2*x + 2)**2).as_content_primitive()
(4, (x + 1)**2)
>>> (4**((1 + y)/2)).as_content_primitive()
(2, 4**(y/2))
>>> (3**((1 + y)/2)).as_content_primitive()
(1, 3**((y + 1)/2))
>>> (3**((5 + y)/2)).as_content_primitive()
(9, 3**((y + 1)/2))
>>> eq = 3**(2 + 2*x)
>>> powsimp(eq) == eq
True
>>> eq.as_content_primitive()
(9, 3**(2*x))
>>> powsimp(Mul(*_))
3**(2*x + 2)
>>> eq = (2 + 2*x)**y
>>> s = expand_power_base(eq); s.is_Mul, s
(False, (2*x + 2)**y)
>>> eq.as_content_primitive()
(1, (2*(x + 1))**y)
>>> s = expand_power_base(_[1]); s.is_Mul, s
(True, 2**y*(x + 1)**y)
See docstring of Expr.as_content_primitive for more examples.
"""
b, e = self.as_base_exp()
b = _keep_coeff(*b.as_content_primitive(radical=radical, clear=clear))
ce, pe = e.as_content_primitive(radical=radical, clear=clear)
if b.is_Rational:
#e
#= ce*pe
#= ce*(h + t)
#= ce*h + ce*t
#=> self
#= b**(ce*h)*b**(ce*t)
#= b**(cehp/cehq)*b**(ce*t)
#= b**(iceh + r/cehq)*b**(ce*t)
#= b**(iceh)*b**(r/cehq)*b**(ce*t)
#= b**(iceh)*b**(ce*t + r/cehq)
h, t = pe.as_coeff_Add()
if h.is_Rational:
ceh = ce*h
c = self.func(b, ceh)
r = S.Zero
if not c.is_Rational:
iceh, r = divmod(ceh.p, ceh.q)
c = self.func(b, iceh)
return c, self.func(b, _keep_coeff(ce, t + r/ce/ceh.q))
e = _keep_coeff(ce, pe)
# b**e = (h*t)**e = h**e*t**e = c*m*t**e
if e.is_Rational and b.is_Mul:
h, t = b.as_content_primitive(radical=radical, clear=clear) # h is positive
c, m = self.func(h, e).as_coeff_Mul() # so c is positive
m, me = m.as_base_exp()
if m is S.One or me == e: # probably always true
# return the following, not return c, m*Pow(t, e)
# which would change Pow into Mul; we let sympy
# decide what to do by using the unevaluated Mul, e.g
# should it stay as sqrt(2 + 2*sqrt(5)) or become
# sqrt(2)*sqrt(1 + sqrt(5))
return c, self.func(_keep_coeff(m, t), e)
return S.One, self.func(b, e)
def is_constant(self, *wrt, **flags):
expr = self
if flags.get('simplify', True):
expr = expr.simplify()
b, e = expr.as_base_exp()
bz = b.equals(0)
if bz: # recalculate with assumptions in case it's unevaluated
new = b**e
if new != expr:
return new.is_constant()
econ = e.is_constant(*wrt)
bcon = b.is_constant(*wrt)
if bcon:
if econ:
return True
bz = b.equals(0)
if bz is False:
return False
elif bcon is None:
return None
return e.equals(0)
def _eval_difference_delta(self, n, step):
b, e = self.args
if e.has(n) and not b.has(n):
new_e = e.subs(n, n + step)
return (b**(new_e - e) - 1) * self
from .add import Add
from .numbers import Integer
from .mul import Mul, _keep_coeff
from .symbol import Symbol, Dummy, symbols
|
5611799bd763ffb152ea909d669de6703cd56975290c8757c604e1df0c538a2d
|
"""Tools for manipulating of large commutative expressions. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable, is_sequence, SYMPY_INTS, range
from sympy.core.mul import Mul, _keep_coeff
from sympy.core.power import Pow
from sympy.core.basic import Basic, preorder_traversal
from sympy.core.expr import Expr
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.core.numbers import Rational, Integer, Number, I
from sympy.core.singleton import S
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy
from sympy.core.coreerrors import NonCommutativeExpression
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple, Dict
from sympy.utilities import default_sort_key
from sympy.utilities.iterables import (common_prefix, common_suffix,
variations, ordered)
from collections import defaultdict
_eps = Dummy(positive=True)
def _isnumber(i):
return isinstance(i, (SYMPY_INTS, float)) or i.is_Number
def _monotonic_sign(self):
"""Return the value closest to 0 that ``self`` may have if all symbols
are signed and the result is uniformly the same sign for all values of symbols.
If a symbol is only signed but not known to be an
integer or the result is 0 then a symbol representative of the sign of self
will be returned. Otherwise, None is returned if a) the sign could be positive
or negative or b) self is not in one of the following forms:
- L(x, y, ...) + A: a function linear in all symbols x, y, ... with an
additive constant; if A is zero then the function can be a monomial whose
sign is monotonic over the range of the variables, e.g. (x + 1)**3 if x is
nonnegative.
- A/L(x, y, ...) + B: the inverse of a function linear in all symbols x, y, ...
that does not have a sign change from positive to negative for any set
of values for the variables.
- M(x, y, ...) + A: a monomial M whose factors are all signed and a constant, A.
- A/M(x, y, ...) + B: the inverse of a monomial and constants A and B.
- P(x): a univariate polynomial
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import _monotonic_sign as F
>>> from sympy import Dummy, S
>>> nn = Dummy(integer=True, nonnegative=True)
>>> p = Dummy(integer=True, positive=True)
>>> p2 = Dummy(integer=True, positive=True)
>>> F(nn + 1)
1
>>> F(p - 1)
_nneg
>>> F(nn*p + 1)
1
>>> F(p2*p + 1)
2
>>> F(nn - 1) # could be negative, zero or positive
"""
if not self.is_real:
return
if (-self).is_Symbol:
rv = _monotonic_sign(-self)
return rv if rv is None else -rv
if not self.is_Add and self.as_numer_denom()[1].is_number:
s = self
if s.is_prime:
if s.is_odd:
return S(3)
else:
return S(2)
elif s.is_composite:
if s.is_odd:
return S(9)
else:
return S(4)
elif s.is_positive:
if s.is_even:
if s.is_prime is False:
return S(4)
else:
return S(2)
elif s.is_integer:
return S.One
else:
return _eps
elif s.is_negative:
if s.is_even:
return S(-2)
elif s.is_integer:
return S.NegativeOne
else:
return -_eps
if s.is_zero or s.is_nonpositive or s.is_nonnegative:
return S.Zero
return None
# univariate polynomial
free = self.free_symbols
if len(free) == 1:
if self.is_polynomial():
from sympy.polys.polytools import real_roots
from sympy.polys.polyroots import roots
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import PolynomialError
x = free.pop()
x0 = _monotonic_sign(x)
if x0 == _eps or x0 == -_eps:
x0 = S.Zero
if x0 is not None:
d = self.diff(x)
if d.is_number:
roots = []
else:
try:
roots = real_roots(d)
except (PolynomialError, NotImplementedError):
roots = [r for r in roots(d, x) if r.is_real]
y = self.subs(x, x0)
if x.is_nonnegative and all(r <= x0 for r in roots):
if y.is_nonnegative and d.is_positive:
if y:
return y if y.is_positive else Dummy('pos', positive=True)
else:
return Dummy('nneg', nonnegative=True)
if y.is_nonpositive and d.is_negative:
if y:
return y if y.is_negative else Dummy('neg', negative=True)
else:
return Dummy('npos', nonpositive=True)
elif x.is_nonpositive and all(r >= x0 for r in roots):
if y.is_nonnegative and d.is_negative:
if y:
return Dummy('pos', positive=True)
else:
return Dummy('nneg', nonnegative=True)
if y.is_nonpositive and d.is_positive:
if y:
return Dummy('neg', negative=True)
else:
return Dummy('npos', nonpositive=True)
else:
n, d = self.as_numer_denom()
den = None
if n.is_number:
den = _monotonic_sign(d)
elif not d.is_number:
if _monotonic_sign(n) is not None:
den = _monotonic_sign(d)
if den is not None and (den.is_positive or den.is_negative):
v = n*den
if v.is_positive:
return Dummy('pos', positive=True)
elif v.is_nonnegative:
return Dummy('nneg', nonnegative=True)
elif v.is_negative:
return Dummy('neg', negative=True)
elif v.is_nonpositive:
return Dummy('npos', nonpositive=True)
return None
# multivariate
c, a = self.as_coeff_Add()
v = None
if not a.is_polynomial():
# F/A or A/F where A is a number and F is a signed, rational monomial
n, d = a.as_numer_denom()
if not (n.is_number or d.is_number):
return
if (
a.is_Mul or a.is_Pow) and \
a.is_rational and \
all(p.exp.is_Integer for p in a.atoms(Pow) if p.is_Pow) and \
(a.is_positive or a.is_negative):
v = S(1)
for ai in Mul.make_args(a):
if ai.is_number:
v *= ai
continue
reps = {}
for x in ai.free_symbols:
reps[x] = _monotonic_sign(x)
if reps[x] is None:
return
v *= ai.subs(reps)
elif c:
# signed linear expression
if not any(p for p in a.atoms(Pow) if not p.is_number) and (a.is_nonpositive or a.is_nonnegative):
free = list(a.free_symbols)
p = {}
for i in free:
v = _monotonic_sign(i)
if v is None:
return
p[i] = v or (_eps if i.is_nonnegative else -_eps)
v = a.xreplace(p)
if v is not None:
rv = v + c
if v.is_nonnegative and rv.is_positive:
return rv.subs(_eps, 0)
if v.is_nonpositive and rv.is_negative:
return rv.subs(_eps, 0)
def decompose_power(expr):
"""
Decompose power into symbolic base and integer exponent.
This is strictly only valid if the exponent from which
the integer is extracted is itself an integer or the
base is positive. These conditions are assumed and not
checked here.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import decompose_power
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> decompose_power(x)
(x, 1)
>>> decompose_power(x**2)
(x, 2)
>>> decompose_power(x**(2*y))
(x**y, 2)
>>> decompose_power(x**(2*y/3))
(x**(y/3), 2)
"""
base, exp = expr.as_base_exp()
if exp.is_Number:
if exp.is_Rational:
if not exp.is_Integer:
base = Pow(base, Rational(1, exp.q))
exp = exp.p
else:
base, exp = expr, 1
else:
exp, tail = exp.as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
if exp is S.NegativeOne:
base, exp = Pow(base, tail), -1
elif exp is not S.One:
tail = _keep_coeff(Rational(1, exp.q), tail)
base, exp = Pow(base, tail), exp.p
else:
base, exp = expr, 1
return base, exp
def decompose_power_rat(expr):
"""
Decompose power into symbolic base and rational exponent.
"""
base, exp = expr.as_base_exp()
if exp.is_Number:
if not exp.is_Rational:
base, exp = expr, 1
else:
exp, tail = exp.as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
if exp is S.NegativeOne:
base, exp = Pow(base, tail), -1
elif exp is not S.One:
tail = _keep_coeff(Rational(1, exp.q), tail)
base, exp = Pow(base, tail), exp.p
else:
base, exp = expr, 1
return base, exp
class Factors(object):
"""Efficient representation of ``f_1*f_2*...*f_n``."""
__slots__ = ['factors', 'gens']
def __init__(self, factors=None): # Factors
"""Initialize Factors from dict or expr.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import I
>>> e = 2*x**3
>>> Factors(e)
Factors({2: 1, x: 3})
>>> Factors(e.as_powers_dict())
Factors({2: 1, x: 3})
>>> f = _
>>> f.factors # underlying dictionary
{2: 1, x: 3}
>>> f.gens # base of each factor
frozenset({2, x})
>>> Factors(0)
Factors({0: 1})
>>> Factors(I)
Factors({I: 1})
Notes
=====
Although a dictionary can be passed, only minimal checking is
performed: powers of -1 and I are made canonical.
"""
if isinstance(factors, (SYMPY_INTS, float)):
factors = S(factors)
if isinstance(factors, Factors):
factors = factors.factors.copy()
elif factors is None or factors is S.One:
factors = {}
elif factors is S.Zero or factors == 0:
factors = {S.Zero: S.One}
elif isinstance(factors, Number):
n = factors
factors = {}
if n < 0:
factors[S.NegativeOne] = S.One
n = -n
if n is not S.One:
if n.is_Float or n.is_Integer or n is S.Infinity:
factors[n] = S.One
elif n.is_Rational:
# since we're processing Numbers, the denominator is
# stored with a negative exponent; all other factors
# are left .
if n.p != 1:
factors[Integer(n.p)] = S.One
factors[Integer(n.q)] = S.NegativeOne
else:
raise ValueError('Expected Float|Rational|Integer, not %s' % n)
elif isinstance(factors, Basic) and not factors.args:
factors = {factors: S.One}
elif isinstance(factors, Expr):
c, nc = factors.args_cnc()
i = c.count(I)
for _ in range(i):
c.remove(I)
factors = dict(Mul._from_args(c).as_powers_dict())
if i:
factors[I] = S.One*i
if nc:
factors[Mul(*nc, evaluate=False)] = S.One
else:
factors = factors.copy() # /!\ should be dict-like
# tidy up -/+1 and I exponents if Rational
handle = []
for k in factors:
if k is I or k in (-1, 1):
handle.append(k)
if handle:
i1 = S.One
for k in handle:
if not _isnumber(factors[k]):
continue
i1 *= k**factors.pop(k)
if i1 is not S.One:
for a in i1.args if i1.is_Mul else [i1]: # at worst, -1.0*I*(-1)**e
if a is S.NegativeOne:
factors[a] = S.One
elif a is I:
factors[I] = S.One
elif a.is_Pow:
if S.NegativeOne not in factors:
factors[S.NegativeOne] = S.Zero
factors[S.NegativeOne] += a.exp
elif a == 1:
factors[a] = S.One
elif a == -1:
factors[-a] = S.One
factors[S.NegativeOne] = S.One
else:
raise ValueError('unexpected factor in i1: %s' % a)
self.factors = factors
try:
self.gens = frozenset(factors.keys())
except AttributeError:
raise TypeError('expecting Expr or dictionary')
def __hash__(self): # Factors
keys = tuple(ordered(self.factors.keys()))
values = [self.factors[k] for k in keys]
return hash((keys, values))
def __repr__(self): # Factors
return "Factors({%s})" % ', '.join(
['%s: %s' % (k, v) for k, v in ordered(self.factors.items())])
@property
def is_zero(self): # Factors
"""
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> Factors(0).is_zero
True
"""
f = self.factors
return len(f) == 1 and S.Zero in f
@property
def is_one(self): # Factors
"""
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> Factors(1).is_one
True
"""
return not self.factors
def as_expr(self): # Factors
"""Return the underlying expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Factors((x*y**2).as_powers_dict()).as_expr()
x*y**2
"""
args = []
for factor, exp in self.factors.items():
if exp != 1:
b, e = factor.as_base_exp()
if isinstance(exp, int):
e = _keep_coeff(Integer(exp), e)
elif isinstance(exp, Rational):
e = _keep_coeff(exp, e)
else:
e *= exp
args.append(b**e)
else:
args.append(factor)
return Mul(*args)
def mul(self, other): # Factors
"""Return Factors of ``self * other``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> a = Factors((x*y**2).as_powers_dict())
>>> b = Factors((x*y/z).as_powers_dict())
>>> a.mul(b)
Factors({x: 2, y: 3, z: -1})
>>> a*b
Factors({x: 2, y: 3, z: -1})
"""
if not isinstance(other, Factors):
other = Factors(other)
if any(f.is_zero for f in (self, other)):
return Factors(S.Zero)
factors = dict(self.factors)
for factor, exp in other.factors.items():
if factor in factors:
exp = factors[factor] + exp
if not exp:
del factors[factor]
continue
factors[factor] = exp
return Factors(factors)
def normal(self, other):
"""Return ``self`` and ``other`` with ``gcd`` removed from each.
The only differences between this and method ``div`` is that this
is 1) optimized for the case when there are few factors in common and
2) this does not raise an error if ``other`` is zero.
See Also
========
div
"""
if not isinstance(other, Factors):
other = Factors(other)
if other.is_zero:
return (Factors(), Factors(S.Zero))
if self.is_zero:
return (Factors(S.Zero), Factors())
self_factors = dict(self.factors)
other_factors = dict(other.factors)
for factor, self_exp in self.factors.items():
try:
other_exp = other.factors[factor]
except KeyError:
continue
exp = self_exp - other_exp
if not exp:
del self_factors[factor]
del other_factors[factor]
elif _isnumber(exp):
if exp > 0:
self_factors[factor] = exp
del other_factors[factor]
else:
del self_factors[factor]
other_factors[factor] = -exp
else:
r = self_exp.extract_additively(other_exp)
if r is not None:
if r:
self_factors[factor] = r
del other_factors[factor]
else: # should be handled already
del self_factors[factor]
del other_factors[factor]
else:
sc, sa = self_exp.as_coeff_Add()
if sc:
oc, oa = other_exp.as_coeff_Add()
diff = sc - oc
if diff > 0:
self_factors[factor] -= oc
other_exp = oa
elif diff < 0:
self_factors[factor] -= sc
other_factors[factor] -= sc
other_exp = oa - diff
else:
self_factors[factor] = sa
other_exp = oa
if other_exp:
other_factors[factor] = other_exp
else:
del other_factors[factor]
return Factors(self_factors), Factors(other_factors)
def div(self, other): # Factors
"""Return ``self`` and ``other`` with ``gcd`` removed from each.
This is optimized for the case when there are many factors in common.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy import S
>>> a = Factors((x*y**2).as_powers_dict())
>>> a.div(a)
(Factors({}), Factors({}))
>>> a.div(x*z)
(Factors({y: 2}), Factors({z: 1}))
The ``/`` operator only gives ``quo``:
>>> a/x
Factors({y: 2})
Factors treats its factors as though they are all in the numerator, so
if you violate this assumption the results will be correct but will
not strictly correspond to the numerator and denominator of the ratio:
>>> a.div(x/z)
(Factors({y: 2}), Factors({z: -1}))
Factors is also naive about bases: it does not attempt any denesting
of Rational-base terms, for example the following does not become
2**(2*x)/2.
>>> Factors(2**(2*x + 2)).div(S(8))
(Factors({2: 2*x + 2}), Factors({8: 1}))
factor_terms can clean up such Rational-bases powers:
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
>>> n, d = Factors(2**(2*x + 2)).div(S(8))
>>> n.as_expr()/d.as_expr()
2**(2*x + 2)/8
>>> factor_terms(_)
2**(2*x)/2
"""
quo, rem = dict(self.factors), {}
if not isinstance(other, Factors):
other = Factors(other)
if other.is_zero:
raise ZeroDivisionError
if self.is_zero:
return (Factors(S.Zero), Factors())
for factor, exp in other.factors.items():
if factor in quo:
d = quo[factor] - exp
if _isnumber(d):
if d <= 0:
del quo[factor]
if d >= 0:
if d:
quo[factor] = d
continue
exp = -d
else:
r = quo[factor].extract_additively(exp)
if r is not None:
if r:
quo[factor] = r
else: # should be handled already
del quo[factor]
else:
other_exp = exp
sc, sa = quo[factor].as_coeff_Add()
if sc:
oc, oa = other_exp.as_coeff_Add()
diff = sc - oc
if diff > 0:
quo[factor] -= oc
other_exp = oa
elif diff < 0:
quo[factor] -= sc
other_exp = oa - diff
else:
quo[factor] = sa
other_exp = oa
if other_exp:
rem[factor] = other_exp
else:
assert factor not in rem
continue
rem[factor] = exp
return Factors(quo), Factors(rem)
def quo(self, other): # Factors
"""Return numerator Factor of ``self / other``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> a = Factors((x*y**2).as_powers_dict())
>>> b = Factors((x*y/z).as_powers_dict())
>>> a.quo(b) # same as a/b
Factors({y: 1})
"""
return self.div(other)[0]
def rem(self, other): # Factors
"""Return denominator Factors of ``self / other``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> a = Factors((x*y**2).as_powers_dict())
>>> b = Factors((x*y/z).as_powers_dict())
>>> a.rem(b)
Factors({z: -1})
>>> a.rem(a)
Factors({})
"""
return self.div(other)[1]
def pow(self, other): # Factors
"""Return self raised to a non-negative integer power.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> a = Factors((x*y**2).as_powers_dict())
>>> a**2
Factors({x: 2, y: 4})
"""
if isinstance(other, Factors):
other = other.as_expr()
if other.is_Integer:
other = int(other)
if isinstance(other, SYMPY_INTS) and other >= 0:
factors = {}
if other:
for factor, exp in self.factors.items():
factors[factor] = exp*other
return Factors(factors)
else:
raise ValueError("expected non-negative integer, got %s" % other)
def gcd(self, other): # Factors
"""Return Factors of ``gcd(self, other)``. The keys are
the intersection of factors with the minimum exponent for
each factor.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> a = Factors((x*y**2).as_powers_dict())
>>> b = Factors((x*y/z).as_powers_dict())
>>> a.gcd(b)
Factors({x: 1, y: 1})
"""
if not isinstance(other, Factors):
other = Factors(other)
if other.is_zero:
return Factors(self.factors)
factors = {}
for factor, exp in self.factors.items():
factor, exp = sympify(factor), sympify(exp)
if factor in other.factors:
lt = (exp - other.factors[factor]).is_negative
if lt == True:
factors[factor] = exp
elif lt == False:
factors[factor] = other.factors[factor]
return Factors(factors)
def lcm(self, other): # Factors
"""Return Factors of ``lcm(self, other)`` which are
the union of factors with the maximum exponent for
each factor.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> a = Factors((x*y**2).as_powers_dict())
>>> b = Factors((x*y/z).as_powers_dict())
>>> a.lcm(b)
Factors({x: 1, y: 2, z: -1})
"""
if not isinstance(other, Factors):
other = Factors(other)
if any(f.is_zero for f in (self, other)):
return Factors(S.Zero)
factors = dict(self.factors)
for factor, exp in other.factors.items():
if factor in factors:
exp = max(exp, factors[factor])
factors[factor] = exp
return Factors(factors)
def __mul__(self, other): # Factors
return self.mul(other)
def __divmod__(self, other): # Factors
return self.div(other)
def __div__(self, other): # Factors
return self.quo(other)
__truediv__ = __div__
def __mod__(self, other): # Factors
return self.rem(other)
def __pow__(self, other): # Factors
return self.pow(other)
def __eq__(self, other): # Factors
if not isinstance(other, Factors):
other = Factors(other)
return self.factors == other.factors
def __ne__(self, other): # Factors
return not self == other
class Term(object):
"""Efficient representation of ``coeff*(numer/denom)``. """
__slots__ = ['coeff', 'numer', 'denom']
def __init__(self, term, numer=None, denom=None): # Term
if numer is None and denom is None:
if not term.is_commutative:
raise NonCommutativeExpression(
'commutative expression expected')
coeff, factors = term.as_coeff_mul()
numer, denom = defaultdict(int), defaultdict(int)
for factor in factors:
base, exp = decompose_power(factor)
if base.is_Add:
cont, base = base.primitive()
coeff *= cont**exp
if exp > 0:
numer[base] += exp
else:
denom[base] += -exp
numer = Factors(numer)
denom = Factors(denom)
else:
coeff = term
if numer is None:
numer = Factors()
if denom is None:
denom = Factors()
self.coeff = coeff
self.numer = numer
self.denom = denom
def __hash__(self): # Term
return hash((self.coeff, self.numer, self.denom))
def __repr__(self): # Term
return "Term(%s, %s, %s)" % (self.coeff, self.numer, self.denom)
def as_expr(self): # Term
return self.coeff*(self.numer.as_expr()/self.denom.as_expr())
def mul(self, other): # Term
coeff = self.coeff*other.coeff
numer = self.numer.mul(other.numer)
denom = self.denom.mul(other.denom)
numer, denom = numer.normal(denom)
return Term(coeff, numer, denom)
def inv(self): # Term
return Term(1/self.coeff, self.denom, self.numer)
def quo(self, other): # Term
return self.mul(other.inv())
def pow(self, other): # Term
if other < 0:
return self.inv().pow(-other)
else:
return Term(self.coeff ** other,
self.numer.pow(other),
self.denom.pow(other))
def gcd(self, other): # Term
return Term(self.coeff.gcd(other.coeff),
self.numer.gcd(other.numer),
self.denom.gcd(other.denom))
def lcm(self, other): # Term
return Term(self.coeff.lcm(other.coeff),
self.numer.lcm(other.numer),
self.denom.lcm(other.denom))
def __mul__(self, other): # Term
if isinstance(other, Term):
return self.mul(other)
else:
return NotImplemented
def __div__(self, other): # Term
if isinstance(other, Term):
return self.quo(other)
else:
return NotImplemented
__truediv__ = __div__
def __pow__(self, other): # Term
if isinstance(other, SYMPY_INTS):
return self.pow(other)
else:
return NotImplemented
def __eq__(self, other): # Term
return (self.coeff == other.coeff and
self.numer == other.numer and
self.denom == other.denom)
def __ne__(self, other): # Term
return not self == other
def _gcd_terms(terms, isprimitive=False, fraction=True):
"""Helper function for :func:`gcd_terms`.
If ``isprimitive`` is True then the call to primitive
for an Add will be skipped. This is useful when the
content has already been extrated.
If ``fraction`` is True then the expression will appear over a common
denominator, the lcm of all term denominators.
"""
if isinstance(terms, Basic) and not isinstance(terms, Tuple):
terms = Add.make_args(terms)
terms = list(map(Term, [t for t in terms if t]))
# there is some simplification that may happen if we leave this
# here rather than duplicate it before the mapping of Term onto
# the terms
if len(terms) == 0:
return S.Zero, S.Zero, S.One
if len(terms) == 1:
cont = terms[0].coeff
numer = terms[0].numer.as_expr()
denom = terms[0].denom.as_expr()
else:
cont = terms[0]
for term in terms[1:]:
cont = cont.gcd(term)
for i, term in enumerate(terms):
terms[i] = term.quo(cont)
if fraction:
denom = terms[0].denom
for term in terms[1:]:
denom = denom.lcm(term.denom)
numers = []
for term in terms:
numer = term.numer.mul(denom.quo(term.denom))
numers.append(term.coeff*numer.as_expr())
else:
numers = [t.as_expr() for t in terms]
denom = Term(S(1)).numer
cont = cont.as_expr()
numer = Add(*numers)
denom = denom.as_expr()
if not isprimitive and numer.is_Add:
_cont, numer = numer.primitive()
cont *= _cont
return cont, numer, denom
def gcd_terms(terms, isprimitive=False, clear=True, fraction=True):
"""Compute the GCD of ``terms`` and put them together.
``terms`` can be an expression or a non-Basic sequence of expressions
which will be handled as though they are terms from a sum.
If ``isprimitive`` is True the _gcd_terms will not run the primitive
method on the terms.
``clear`` controls the removal of integers from the denominator of an Add
expression. When True (default), all numerical denominator will be cleared;
when False the denominators will be cleared only if all terms had numerical
denominators other than 1.
``fraction``, when True (default), will put the expression over a common
denominator.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core import gcd_terms
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> gcd_terms((x + 1)**2*y + (x + 1)*y**2)
y*(x + 1)*(x + y + 1)
>>> gcd_terms(x/2 + 1)
(x + 2)/2
>>> gcd_terms(x/2 + 1, clear=False)
x/2 + 1
>>> gcd_terms(x/2 + y/2, clear=False)
(x + y)/2
>>> gcd_terms(x/2 + 1/x)
(x**2 + 2)/(2*x)
>>> gcd_terms(x/2 + 1/x, fraction=False)
(x + 2/x)/2
>>> gcd_terms(x/2 + 1/x, fraction=False, clear=False)
x/2 + 1/x
>>> gcd_terms(x/2/y + 1/x/y)
(x**2 + 2)/(2*x*y)
>>> gcd_terms(x/2/y + 1/x/y, clear=False)
(x**2/2 + 1)/(x*y)
>>> gcd_terms(x/2/y + 1/x/y, clear=False, fraction=False)
(x/2 + 1/x)/y
The ``clear`` flag was ignored in this case because the returned
expression was a rational expression, not a simple sum.
See Also
========
factor_terms, sympy.polys.polytools.terms_gcd
"""
def mask(terms):
"""replace nc portions of each term with a unique Dummy symbols
and return the replacements to restore them"""
args = [(a, []) if a.is_commutative else a.args_cnc() for a in terms]
reps = []
for i, (c, nc) in enumerate(args):
if nc:
nc = Mul._from_args(nc)
d = Dummy()
reps.append((d, nc))
c.append(d)
args[i] = Mul._from_args(c)
else:
args[i] = c
return args, dict(reps)
isadd = isinstance(terms, Add)
addlike = isadd or not isinstance(terms, Basic) and \
is_sequence(terms, include=set) and \
not isinstance(terms, Dict)
if addlike:
if isadd: # i.e. an Add
terms = list(terms.args)
else:
terms = sympify(terms)
terms, reps = mask(terms)
cont, numer, denom = _gcd_terms(terms, isprimitive, fraction)
numer = numer.xreplace(reps)
coeff, factors = cont.as_coeff_Mul()
if not clear:
c, _coeff = coeff.as_coeff_Mul()
if not c.is_Integer and not clear and numer.is_Add:
n, d = c.as_numer_denom()
_numer = numer/d
if any(a.as_coeff_Mul()[0].is_Integer
for a in _numer.args):
numer = _numer
coeff = n*_coeff
return _keep_coeff(coeff, factors*numer/denom, clear=clear)
if not isinstance(terms, Basic):
return terms
if terms.is_Atom:
return terms
if terms.is_Mul:
c, args = terms.as_coeff_mul()
return _keep_coeff(c, Mul(*[gcd_terms(i, isprimitive, clear, fraction)
for i in args]), clear=clear)
def handle(a):
# don't treat internal args like terms of an Add
if not isinstance(a, Expr):
if isinstance(a, Basic):
return a.func(*[handle(i) for i in a.args])
return type(a)([handle(i) for i in a])
return gcd_terms(a, isprimitive, clear, fraction)
if isinstance(terms, Dict):
return Dict(*[(k, handle(v)) for k, v in terms.args])
return terms.func(*[handle(i) for i in terms.args])
def factor_terms(expr, radical=False, clear=False, fraction=False, sign=True):
"""Remove common factors from terms in all arguments without
changing the underlying structure of the expr. No expansion or
simplification (and no processing of non-commutatives) is performed.
If radical=True then a radical common to all terms will be factored
out of any Add sub-expressions of the expr.
If clear=False (default) then coefficients will not be separated
from a single Add if they can be distributed to leave one or more
terms with integer coefficients.
If fraction=True (default is False) then a common denominator will be
constructed for the expression.
If sign=True (default) then even if the only factor in common is a -1,
it will be factored out of the expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import factor_terms, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> factor_terms(x + x*(2 + 4*y)**3)
x*(8*(2*y + 1)**3 + 1)
>>> A = Symbol('A', commutative=False)
>>> factor_terms(x*A + x*A + x*y*A)
x*(y*A + 2*A)
When ``clear`` is False, a rational will only be factored out of an
Add expression if all terms of the Add have coefficients that are
fractions:
>>> factor_terms(x/2 + 1, clear=False)
x/2 + 1
>>> factor_terms(x/2 + 1, clear=True)
(x + 2)/2
If a -1 is all that can be factored out, to *not* factor it out, the
flag ``sign`` must be False:
>>> factor_terms(-x - y)
-(x + y)
>>> factor_terms(-x - y, sign=False)
-x - y
>>> factor_terms(-2*x - 2*y, sign=False)
-2*(x + y)
See Also
========
gcd_terms, sympy.polys.polytools.terms_gcd
"""
def do(expr):
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
from sympy.simplify.simplify import factor_sum
is_iterable = iterable(expr)
if not isinstance(expr, Basic) or expr.is_Atom:
if is_iterable:
return type(expr)([do(i) for i in expr])
return expr
if expr.is_Pow or expr.is_Function or \
is_iterable or not hasattr(expr, 'args_cnc'):
args = expr.args
newargs = tuple([do(i) for i in args])
if newargs == args:
return expr
return expr.func(*newargs)
if isinstance(expr, Sum):
return factor_sum(expr, radical=radical, clear=clear, fraction=fraction, sign=sign)
cont, p = expr.as_content_primitive(radical=radical, clear=clear)
if p.is_Add:
list_args = [do(a) for a in Add.make_args(p)]
# get a common negative (if there) which gcd_terms does not remove
if all(a.as_coeff_Mul()[0].extract_multiplicatively(-1) is not None
for a in list_args):
cont = -cont
list_args = [-a for a in list_args]
# watch out for exp(-(x+2)) which gcd_terms will change to exp(-x-2)
special = {}
for i, a in enumerate(list_args):
b, e = a.as_base_exp()
if e.is_Mul and e != Mul(*e.args):
list_args[i] = Dummy()
special[list_args[i]] = a
# rebuild p not worrying about the order which gcd_terms will fix
p = Add._from_args(list_args)
p = gcd_terms(p,
isprimitive=True,
clear=clear,
fraction=fraction).xreplace(special)
elif p.args:
p = p.func(
*[do(a) for a in p.args])
rv = _keep_coeff(cont, p, clear=clear, sign=sign)
return rv
expr = sympify(expr)
return do(expr)
def _mask_nc(eq, name=None):
"""
Return ``eq`` with non-commutative objects replaced with Dummy
symbols. A dictionary that can be used to restore the original
values is returned: if it is None, the expression is noncommutative
and cannot be made commutative. The third value returned is a list
of any non-commutative symbols that appear in the returned equation.
``name``, if given, is the name that will be used with numered Dummy
variables that will replace the non-commutative objects and is mainly
used for doctesting purposes.
Notes
=====
All non-commutative objects other than Symbols are replaced with
a non-commutative Symbol. Identical objects will be identified
by identical symbols.
If there is only 1 non-commutative object in an expression it will
be replaced with a commutative symbol. Otherwise, the non-commutative
entities are retained and the calling routine should handle
replacements in this case since some care must be taken to keep
track of the ordering of symbols when they occur within Muls.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.physics.secondquant import Commutator, NO, F, Fd
>>> from sympy import symbols, Mul
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import _mask_nc
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> A, B, C = symbols('A,B,C', commutative=False)
One nc-symbol:
>>> _mask_nc(A**2 - x**2, 'd')
(_d0**2 - x**2, {_d0: A}, [])
Multiple nc-symbols:
>>> _mask_nc(A**2 - B**2, 'd')
(A**2 - B**2, {}, [A, B])
An nc-object with nc-symbols but no others outside of it:
>>> _mask_nc(1 + x*Commutator(A, B), 'd')
(_d0*x + 1, {_d0: Commutator(A, B)}, [])
>>> _mask_nc(NO(Fd(x)*F(y)), 'd')
(_d0, {_d0: NO(CreateFermion(x)*AnnihilateFermion(y))}, [])
Multiple nc-objects:
>>> eq = x*Commutator(A, B) + x*Commutator(A, C)*Commutator(A, B)
>>> _mask_nc(eq, 'd')
(x*_d0 + x*_d1*_d0, {_d0: Commutator(A, B), _d1: Commutator(A, C)}, [_d0, _d1])
Multiple nc-objects and nc-symbols:
>>> eq = A*Commutator(A, B) + B*Commutator(A, C)
>>> _mask_nc(eq, 'd')
(A*_d0 + B*_d1, {_d0: Commutator(A, B), _d1: Commutator(A, C)}, [_d0, _d1, A, B])
If there is an object that:
- doesn't contain nc-symbols
- but has arguments which derive from Basic, not Expr
- and doesn't define an _eval_is_commutative routine
then it will give False (or None?) for the is_commutative test. Such
objects are also removed by this routine:
>>> from sympy import Basic
>>> eq = (1 + Mul(Basic(), Basic(), evaluate=False))
>>> eq.is_commutative
False
>>> _mask_nc(eq, 'd')
(_d0**2 + 1, {_d0: Basic()}, [])
"""
name = name or 'mask'
# Make Dummy() append sequential numbers to the name
def numbered_names():
i = 0
while True:
yield name + str(i)
i += 1
names = numbered_names()
def Dummy(*args, **kwargs):
from sympy import Dummy
return Dummy(next(names), *args, **kwargs)
expr = eq
if expr.is_commutative:
return eq, {}, []
# identify nc-objects; symbols and other
rep = []
nc_obj = set()
nc_syms = set()
pot = preorder_traversal(expr, keys=default_sort_key)
for i, a in enumerate(pot):
if any(a == r[0] for r in rep):
pot.skip()
elif not a.is_commutative:
if a.is_symbol:
nc_syms.add(a)
pot.skip()
elif not (a.is_Add or a.is_Mul or a.is_Pow):
nc_obj.add(a)
pot.skip()
# If there is only one nc symbol or object, it can be factored regularly
# but polys is going to complain, so replace it with a Dummy.
if len(nc_obj) == 1 and not nc_syms:
rep.append((nc_obj.pop(), Dummy()))
elif len(nc_syms) == 1 and not nc_obj:
rep.append((nc_syms.pop(), Dummy()))
# Any remaining nc-objects will be replaced with an nc-Dummy and
# identified as an nc-Symbol to watch out for
nc_obj = sorted(nc_obj, key=default_sort_key)
for n in nc_obj:
nc = Dummy(commutative=False)
rep.append((n, nc))
nc_syms.add(nc)
expr = expr.subs(rep)
nc_syms = list(nc_syms)
nc_syms.sort(key=default_sort_key)
return expr, {v: k for k, v in rep}, nc_syms
def factor_nc(expr):
"""Return the factored form of ``expr`` while handling non-commutative
expressions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_nc
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> A = Symbol('A', commutative=False)
>>> B = Symbol('B', commutative=False)
>>> factor_nc((x**2 + 2*A*x + A**2).expand())
(x + A)**2
>>> factor_nc(((x + A)*(x + B)).expand())
(x + A)*(x + B)
"""
from sympy.simplify.simplify import powsimp
from sympy.polys import gcd, factor
def _pemexpand(expr):
"Expand with the minimal set of hints necessary to check the result."
return expr.expand(deep=True, mul=True, power_exp=True,
power_base=False, basic=False, multinomial=True, log=False)
expr = sympify(expr)
if not isinstance(expr, Expr) or not expr.args:
return expr
if not expr.is_Add:
return expr.func(*[factor_nc(a) for a in expr.args])
expr, rep, nc_symbols = _mask_nc(expr)
if rep:
return factor(expr).subs(rep)
else:
args = [a.args_cnc() for a in Add.make_args(expr)]
c = g = l = r = S.One
hit = False
# find any commutative gcd term
for i, a in enumerate(args):
if i == 0:
c = Mul._from_args(a[0])
elif a[0]:
c = gcd(c, Mul._from_args(a[0]))
else:
c = S.One
if c is not S.One:
hit = True
c, g = c.as_coeff_Mul()
if g is not S.One:
for i, (cc, _) in enumerate(args):
cc = list(Mul.make_args(Mul._from_args(list(cc))/g))
args[i][0] = cc
for i, (cc, _) in enumerate(args):
cc[0] = cc[0]/c
args[i][0] = cc
# find any noncommutative common prefix
for i, a in enumerate(args):
if i == 0:
n = a[1][:]
else:
n = common_prefix(n, a[1])
if not n:
# is there a power that can be extracted?
if not args[0][1]:
break
b, e = args[0][1][0].as_base_exp()
ok = False
if e.is_Integer:
for t in args:
if not t[1]:
break
bt, et = t[1][0].as_base_exp()
if et.is_Integer and bt == b:
e = min(e, et)
else:
break
else:
ok = hit = True
l = b**e
il = b**-e
for i, a in enumerate(args):
args[i][1][0] = il*args[i][1][0]
break
if not ok:
break
else:
hit = True
lenn = len(n)
l = Mul(*n)
for i, a in enumerate(args):
args[i][1] = args[i][1][lenn:]
# find any noncommutative common suffix
for i, a in enumerate(args):
if i == 0:
n = a[1][:]
else:
n = common_suffix(n, a[1])
if not n:
# is there a power that can be extracted?
if not args[0][1]:
break
b, e = args[0][1][-1].as_base_exp()
ok = False
if e.is_Integer:
for t in args:
if not t[1]:
break
bt, et = t[1][-1].as_base_exp()
if et.is_Integer and bt == b:
e = min(e, et)
else:
break
else:
ok = hit = True
r = b**e
il = b**-e
for i, a in enumerate(args):
args[i][1][-1] = args[i][1][-1]*il
break
if not ok:
break
else:
hit = True
lenn = len(n)
r = Mul(*n)
for i, a in enumerate(args):
args[i][1] = a[1][:len(a[1]) - lenn]
if hit:
mid = Add(*[Mul(*cc)*Mul(*nc) for cc, nc in args])
else:
mid = expr
# sort the symbols so the Dummys would appear in the same
# order as the original symbols, otherwise you may introduce
# a factor of -1, e.g. A**2 - B**2) -- {A:y, B:x} --> y**2 - x**2
# and the former factors into two terms, (A - B)*(A + B) while the
# latter factors into 3 terms, (-1)*(x - y)*(x + y)
rep1 = [(n, Dummy()) for n in sorted(nc_symbols, key=default_sort_key)]
unrep1 = [(v, k) for k, v in rep1]
unrep1.reverse()
new_mid, r2, _ = _mask_nc(mid.subs(rep1))
new_mid = powsimp(factor(new_mid))
new_mid = new_mid.subs(r2).subs(unrep1)
if new_mid.is_Pow:
return _keep_coeff(c, g*l*new_mid*r)
if new_mid.is_Mul:
# XXX TODO there should be a way to inspect what order the terms
# must be in and just select the plausible ordering without
# checking permutations
cfac = []
ncfac = []
for f in new_mid.args:
if f.is_commutative:
cfac.append(f)
else:
b, e = f.as_base_exp()
if e.is_Integer:
ncfac.extend([b]*e)
else:
ncfac.append(f)
pre_mid = g*Mul(*cfac)*l
target = _pemexpand(expr/c)
for s in variations(ncfac, len(ncfac)):
ok = pre_mid*Mul(*s)*r
if _pemexpand(ok) == target:
return _keep_coeff(c, ok)
# mid was an Add that didn't factor successfully
return _keep_coeff(c, g*l*mid*r)
|
fb6d1bce9888b8fb7f7f526cdd55f20017cd5f29211e93b78c27674f80f0b487
|
"""
This module contains the machinery handling assumptions.
All symbolic objects have assumption attributes that can be accessed via
.is_<assumption name> attribute.
Assumptions determine certain properties of symbolic objects and can
have 3 possible values: True, False, None. True is returned if the
object has the property and False is returned if it doesn't or can't
(i.e. doesn't make sense):
>>> from sympy import I
>>> I.is_algebraic
True
>>> I.is_real
False
>>> I.is_prime
False
When the property cannot be determined (or when a method is not
implemented) None will be returned, e.g. a generic symbol, x, may or
may not be positive so a value of None is returned for x.is_positive.
By default, all symbolic values are in the largest set in the given context
without specifying the property. For example, a symbol that has a property
being integer, is also real, complex, etc.
Here follows a list of possible assumption names:
.. glossary::
commutative
object commutes with any other object with
respect to multiplication operation.
complex
object can have only values from the set
of complex numbers.
imaginary
object value is a number that can be written as a real
number multiplied by the imaginary unit ``I``. See
[3]_. Please note, that ``0`` is not considered to be an
imaginary number, see
`issue #7649 <https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/7649>`_.
real
object can have only values from the set
of real numbers.
integer
object can have only values from the set
of integers.
odd
even
object can have only values from the set of
odd (even) integers [2]_.
prime
object is a natural number greater than ``1`` that has
no positive divisors other than ``1`` and itself. See [6]_.
composite
object is a positive integer that has at least one positive
divisor other than ``1`` or the number itself. See [4]_.
zero
object has the value of ``0``.
nonzero
object is a real number that is not zero.
rational
object can have only values from the set
of rationals.
algebraic
object can have only values from the set
of algebraic numbers [11]_.
transcendental
object can have only values from the set
of transcendental numbers [10]_.
irrational
object value cannot be represented exactly by Rational, see [5]_.
finite
infinite
object absolute value is bounded (arbitrarily large).
See [7]_, [8]_, [9]_.
negative
nonnegative
object can have only negative (nonnegative)
values [1]_.
positive
nonpositive
object can have only positive (only
nonpositive) values.
hermitian
antihermitian
object belongs to the field of hermitian
(antihermitian) operators.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True); x
x
>>> x.is_real
True
>>> x.is_complex
True
See Also
========
.. seealso::
:py:class:`sympy.core.numbers.ImaginaryUnit`
:py:class:`sympy.core.numbers.Zero`
:py:class:`sympy.core.numbers.One`
Notes
=====
Assumption values are stored in obj._assumptions dictionary or
are returned by getter methods (with property decorators) or are
attributes of objects/classes.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_number
.. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parity_%28mathematics%29
.. [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imaginary_number
.. [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composite_number
.. [5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrational_number
.. [6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime_number
.. [7] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite
.. [8] https://docs.python.org/3/library/math.html#math.isfinite
.. [9] http://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/generated/numpy.isfinite.html
.. [10] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcendental_number
.. [11] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algebraic_number
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.facts import FactRules, FactKB
from sympy.core.core import BasicMeta
from sympy.core.compatibility import integer_types
from random import shuffle
_assume_rules = FactRules([
'integer -> rational',
'rational -> real',
'rational -> algebraic',
'algebraic -> complex',
'real -> complex',
'real -> hermitian',
'imaginary -> complex',
'imaginary -> antihermitian',
'complex -> commutative',
'odd == integer & !even',
'even == integer & !odd',
'real == negative | zero | positive',
'transcendental == complex & !algebraic',
'negative == nonpositive & nonzero',
'positive == nonnegative & nonzero',
'zero == nonnegative & nonpositive',
'nonpositive == real & !positive',
'nonnegative == real & !negative',
'zero -> even & finite',
'prime -> integer & positive',
'composite -> integer & positive & !prime',
'!composite -> !positive | !even | prime',
'irrational == real & !rational',
'imaginary -> !real',
'infinite -> !finite',
'noninteger == real & !integer',
'nonzero == real & !zero',
])
_assume_defined = _assume_rules.defined_facts.copy()
_assume_defined.add('polar')
_assume_defined = frozenset(_assume_defined)
class StdFactKB(FactKB):
"""A FactKB specialised for the built-in rules
This is the only kind of FactKB that Basic objects should use.
"""
rules = _assume_rules
def __init__(self, facts=None):
# save a copy of the facts dict
if not facts:
self._generator = {}
elif not isinstance(facts, FactKB):
self._generator = facts.copy()
else:
self._generator = facts.generator
if facts:
self.deduce_all_facts(facts)
def copy(self):
return self.__class__(self)
@property
def generator(self):
return self._generator.copy()
def as_property(fact):
"""Convert a fact name to the name of the corresponding property"""
return 'is_%s' % fact
def make_property(fact):
"""Create the automagic property corresponding to a fact."""
def getit(self):
try:
return self._assumptions[fact]
except KeyError:
if self._assumptions is self.default_assumptions:
self._assumptions = self.default_assumptions.copy()
return _ask(fact, self)
getit.func_name = as_property(fact)
return property(getit)
def _ask(fact, obj):
"""
Find the truth value for a property of an object.
This function is called when a request is made to see what a fact
value is.
For this we use several techniques:
First, the fact-evaluation function is tried, if it exists (for
example _eval_is_integer). Then we try related facts. For example
rational --> integer
another example is joined rule:
integer & !odd --> even
so in the latter case if we are looking at what 'even' value is,
'integer' and 'odd' facts will be asked.
In all cases, when we settle on some fact value, its implications are
deduced, and the result is cached in ._assumptions.
"""
assumptions = obj._assumptions
handler_map = obj._prop_handler
# Store None into the assumptions so that recursive attempts at
# evaluating the same fact don't trigger infinite recursion.
assumptions._tell(fact, None)
# First try the assumption evaluation function if it exists
try:
evaluate = handler_map[fact]
except KeyError:
pass
else:
a = evaluate(obj)
if a is not None:
assumptions.deduce_all_facts(((fact, a),))
return a
# Try assumption's prerequisites
prereq = list(_assume_rules.prereq[fact])
shuffle(prereq)
for pk in prereq:
if pk in assumptions:
continue
if pk in handler_map:
_ask(pk, obj)
# we might have found the value of fact
ret_val = assumptions.get(fact)
if ret_val is not None:
return ret_val
# Note: the result has already been cached
return None
class ManagedProperties(BasicMeta):
"""Metaclass for classes with old-style assumptions"""
def __init__(cls, *args, **kws):
BasicMeta.__init__(cls, *args, **kws)
local_defs = {}
for k in _assume_defined:
attrname = as_property(k)
v = cls.__dict__.get(attrname, '')
if isinstance(v, (bool, integer_types, type(None))):
if v is not None:
v = bool(v)
local_defs[k] = v
defs = {}
for base in reversed(cls.__bases__):
try:
defs.update(base._explicit_class_assumptions)
except AttributeError:
pass
defs.update(local_defs)
cls._explicit_class_assumptions = defs
cls.default_assumptions = StdFactKB(defs)
cls._prop_handler = {}
for k in _assume_defined:
try:
cls._prop_handler[k] = getattr(cls, '_eval_is_%s' % k)
except AttributeError:
pass
# Put definite results directly into the class dict, for speed
for k, v in cls.default_assumptions.items():
setattr(cls, as_property(k), v)
# protection e.g. for Integer.is_even=F <- (Rational.is_integer=F)
derived_from_bases = set()
for base in cls.__bases__:
try:
derived_from_bases |= set(base.default_assumptions)
except AttributeError:
continue # not an assumption-aware class
for fact in derived_from_bases - set(cls.default_assumptions):
pname = as_property(fact)
if pname not in cls.__dict__:
setattr(cls, pname, make_property(fact))
# Finally, add any missing automagic property (e.g. for Basic)
for fact in _assume_defined:
pname = as_property(fact)
if not hasattr(cls, pname):
setattr(cls, pname, make_property(fact))
|
1c7740b02eb29776c8e60b97539212dac61887114dea8c8f2d7c2051b322dda0
|
"""
There are three types of functions implemented in SymPy:
1) defined functions (in the sense that they can be evaluated) like
exp or sin; they have a name and a body:
f = exp
2) undefined function which have a name but no body. Undefined
functions can be defined using a Function class as follows:
f = Function('f')
(the result will be a Function instance)
3) anonymous function (or lambda function) which have a body (defined
with dummy variables) but have no name:
f = Lambda(x, exp(x)*x)
f = Lambda((x, y), exp(x)*y)
The fourth type of functions are composites, like (sin + cos)(x); these work in
SymPy core, but are not yet part of SymPy.
Examples
========
>>> import sympy
>>> f = sympy.Function("f")
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f(x)
f(x)
>>> print(sympy.srepr(f(x).func))
Function('f')
>>> f(x).args
(x,)
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from .add import Add
from .assumptions import ManagedProperties, _assume_defined
from .basic import Basic, _atomic
from .cache import cacheit
from .compatibility import iterable, is_sequence, as_int, ordered, Iterable
from .decorators import _sympifyit
from .expr import Expr, AtomicExpr
from .numbers import Rational, Float
from .operations import LatticeOp
from .rules import Transform
from .singleton import S
from .sympify import sympify
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple, Dict
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_and
from sympy.core.compatibility import string_types, with_metaclass, range
from sympy.utilities import default_sort_key
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
from sympy.utilities.iterables import has_dups
from sympy.core.evaluate import global_evaluate
import sys
import mpmath
import mpmath.libmp as mlib
import inspect
from collections import Counter
def _coeff_isneg(a):
"""Return True if the leading Number is negative.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.function import _coeff_isneg
>>> from sympy import S, Symbol, oo, pi
>>> _coeff_isneg(-3*pi)
True
>>> _coeff_isneg(S(3))
False
>>> _coeff_isneg(-oo)
True
>>> _coeff_isneg(Symbol('n', negative=True)) # coeff is 1
False
For matrix expressions:
>>> from sympy import MatrixSymbol, sqrt
>>> A = MatrixSymbol("A", 3, 3)
>>> _coeff_isneg(-sqrt(2)*A)
True
>>> _coeff_isneg(sqrt(2)*A)
False
"""
if a.is_MatMul:
a = a.args[0]
if a.is_Mul:
a = a.args[0]
return a.is_Number and a.is_negative
class PoleError(Exception):
pass
class ArgumentIndexError(ValueError):
def __str__(self):
return ("Invalid operation with argument number %s for Function %s" %
(self.args[1], self.args[0]))
def _getnargs(cls):
if hasattr(cls, 'eval'):
if sys.version_info < (3, ):
return _getnargs_old(cls.eval)
else:
return _getnargs_new(cls.eval)
else:
return None
def _getnargs_old(eval_):
evalargspec = inspect.getargspec(eval_)
if evalargspec.varargs:
return None
else:
evalargs = len(evalargspec.args) - 1 # subtract 1 for cls
if evalargspec.defaults:
# if there are default args then they are optional; the
# fewest args will occur when all defaults are used and
# the most when none are used (i.e. all args are given)
return tuple(range(
evalargs - len(evalargspec.defaults), evalargs + 1))
return evalargs
def _getnargs_new(eval_):
parameters = inspect.signature(eval_).parameters.items()
if [p for n,p in parameters if p.kind == p.VAR_POSITIONAL]:
return None
else:
p_or_k = [p for n,p in parameters if p.kind == p.POSITIONAL_OR_KEYWORD]
num_no_default = len(list(filter(lambda p:p.default == p.empty, p_or_k)))
num_with_default = len(list(filter(lambda p:p.default != p.empty, p_or_k)))
if not num_with_default:
return num_no_default
return tuple(range(num_no_default, num_no_default+num_with_default+1))
class FunctionClass(ManagedProperties):
"""
Base class for function classes. FunctionClass is a subclass of type.
Use Function('<function name>' [ , signature ]) to create
undefined function classes.
"""
_new = type.__new__
def __init__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
# honor kwarg value or class-defined value before using
# the number of arguments in the eval function (if present)
nargs = kwargs.pop('nargs', cls.__dict__.get('nargs', _getnargs(cls)))
# Canonicalize nargs here; change to set in nargs.
if is_sequence(nargs):
if not nargs:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Incorrectly specified nargs as %s:
if there are no arguments, it should be
`nargs = 0`;
if there are any number of arguments,
it should be
`nargs = None`''' % str(nargs)))
nargs = tuple(ordered(set(nargs)))
elif nargs is not None:
nargs = (as_int(nargs),)
cls._nargs = nargs
super(FunctionClass, cls).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
@property
def __signature__(self):
"""
Allow Python 3's inspect.signature to give a useful signature for
Function subclasses.
"""
# Python 3 only, but backports (like the one in IPython) still might
# call this.
try:
from inspect import signature
except ImportError:
return None
# TODO: Look at nargs
return signature(self.eval)
@property
def free_symbols(self):
return set()
@property
def xreplace(self):
# Function needs args so we define a property that returns
# a function that takes args...and then use that function
# to return the right value
return lambda rule, **_: rule.get(self, self)
@property
def nargs(self):
"""Return a set of the allowed number of arguments for the function.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.function import Function
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Function('f')
If the function can take any number of arguments, the set of whole
numbers is returned:
>>> Function('f').nargs
Naturals0
If the function was initialized to accept one or more arguments, a
corresponding set will be returned:
>>> Function('f', nargs=1).nargs
{1}
>>> Function('f', nargs=(2, 1)).nargs
{1, 2}
The undefined function, after application, also has the nargs
attribute; the actual number of arguments is always available by
checking the ``args`` attribute:
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> f(1).nargs
Naturals0
>>> len(f(1).args)
1
"""
from sympy.sets.sets import FiniteSet
# XXX it would be nice to handle this in __init__ but there are import
# problems with trying to import FiniteSet there
return FiniteSet(*self._nargs) if self._nargs else S.Naturals0
def __repr__(cls):
return cls.__name__
class Application(with_metaclass(FunctionClass, Basic)):
"""
Base class for applied functions.
Instances of Application represent the result of applying an application of
any type to any object.
"""
is_Function = True
@cacheit
def __new__(cls, *args, **options):
from sympy.sets.fancysets import Naturals0
from sympy.sets.sets import FiniteSet
args = list(map(sympify, args))
evaluate = options.pop('evaluate', global_evaluate[0])
# WildFunction (and anything else like it) may have nargs defined
# and we throw that value away here
options.pop('nargs', None)
if options:
raise ValueError("Unknown options: %s" % options)
if evaluate:
evaluated = cls.eval(*args)
if evaluated is not None:
return evaluated
obj = super(Application, cls).__new__(cls, *args, **options)
# make nargs uniform here
try:
# things passing through here:
# - functions subclassed from Function (e.g. myfunc(1).nargs)
# - functions like cos(1).nargs
# - AppliedUndef with given nargs like Function('f', nargs=1)(1).nargs
# Canonicalize nargs here
if is_sequence(obj.nargs):
nargs = tuple(ordered(set(obj.nargs)))
elif obj.nargs is not None:
nargs = (as_int(obj.nargs),)
else:
nargs = None
except AttributeError:
# things passing through here:
# - WildFunction('f').nargs
# - AppliedUndef with no nargs like Function('f')(1).nargs
nargs = obj._nargs # note the underscore here
# convert to FiniteSet
obj.nargs = FiniteSet(*nargs) if nargs else Naturals0()
return obj
@classmethod
def eval(cls, *args):
"""
Returns a canonical form of cls applied to arguments args.
The eval() method is called when the class cls is about to be
instantiated and it should return either some simplified instance
(possible of some other class), or if the class cls should be
unmodified, return None.
Examples of eval() for the function "sign"
---------------------------------------------
.. code-block:: python
@classmethod
def eval(cls, arg):
if arg is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
if arg is S.Zero: return S.Zero
if arg.is_positive: return S.One
if arg.is_negative: return S.NegativeOne
if isinstance(arg, Mul):
coeff, terms = arg.as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
if coeff is not S.One:
return cls(coeff) * cls(terms)
"""
return
@property
def func(self):
return self.__class__
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
if (old.is_Function and new.is_Function and
callable(old) and callable(new) and
old == self.func and len(self.args) in new.nargs):
return new(*[i._subs(old, new) for i in self.args])
class Function(Application, Expr):
"""
Base class for applied mathematical functions.
It also serves as a constructor for undefined function classes.
Examples
========
First example shows how to use Function as a constructor for undefined
function classes:
>>> from sympy import Function, Symbol
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> g = Function('g')(x)
>>> f
f
>>> f(x)
f(x)
>>> g
g(x)
>>> f(x).diff(x)
Derivative(f(x), x)
>>> g.diff(x)
Derivative(g(x), x)
Assumptions can be passed to Function.
>>> f_real = Function('f', real=True)
>>> f_real(x).is_real
True
Note that assumptions on a function are unrelated to the assumptions on
the variable it is called on. If you want to add a relationship, subclass
Function and define the appropriate ``_eval_is_assumption`` methods.
In the following example Function is used as a base class for
``my_func`` that represents a mathematical function *my_func*. Suppose
that it is well known, that *my_func(0)* is *1* and *my_func* at infinity
goes to *0*, so we want those two simplifications to occur automatically.
Suppose also that *my_func(x)* is real exactly when *x* is real. Here is
an implementation that honours those requirements:
>>> from sympy import Function, S, oo, I, sin
>>> class my_func(Function):
...
... @classmethod
... def eval(cls, x):
... if x.is_Number:
... if x is S.Zero:
... return S.One
... elif x is S.Infinity:
... return S.Zero
...
... def _eval_is_real(self):
... return self.args[0].is_real
...
>>> x = S('x')
>>> my_func(0) + sin(0)
1
>>> my_func(oo)
0
>>> my_func(3.54).n() # Not yet implemented for my_func.
my_func(3.54)
>>> my_func(I).is_real
False
In order for ``my_func`` to become useful, several other methods would
need to be implemented. See source code of some of the already
implemented functions for more complete examples.
Also, if the function can take more than one argument, then ``nargs``
must be defined, e.g. if ``my_func`` can take one or two arguments
then,
>>> class my_func(Function):
... nargs = (1, 2)
...
>>>
"""
@property
def _diff_wrt(self):
return False
@cacheit
def __new__(cls, *args, **options):
# Handle calls like Function('f')
if cls is Function:
return UndefinedFunction(*args, **options)
n = len(args)
if n not in cls.nargs:
# XXX: exception message must be in exactly this format to
# make it work with NumPy's functions like vectorize(). See,
# for example, https://github.com/numpy/numpy/issues/1697.
# The ideal solution would be just to attach metadata to
# the exception and change NumPy to take advantage of this.
temp = ('%(name)s takes %(qual)s %(args)s '
'argument%(plural)s (%(given)s given)')
raise TypeError(temp % {
'name': cls,
'qual': 'exactly' if len(cls.nargs) == 1 else 'at least',
'args': min(cls.nargs),
'plural': 's'*(min(cls.nargs) != 1),
'given': n})
evaluate = options.get('evaluate', global_evaluate[0])
result = super(Function, cls).__new__(cls, *args, **options)
if evaluate and isinstance(result, cls) and result.args:
pr2 = min(cls._should_evalf(a) for a in result.args)
if pr2 > 0:
pr = max(cls._should_evalf(a) for a in result.args)
result = result.evalf(mlib.libmpf.prec_to_dps(pr))
return result
@classmethod
def _should_evalf(cls, arg):
"""
Decide if the function should automatically evalf().
By default (in this implementation), this happens if (and only if) the
ARG is a floating point number.
This function is used by __new__.
Returns the precision to evalf to, or -1 if it shouldn't evalf.
"""
from sympy.core.evalf import pure_complex
if arg.is_Float:
return arg._prec
if not arg.is_Add:
return -1
m = pure_complex(arg)
if m is None or not (m[0].is_Float or m[1].is_Float):
return -1
l = [i._prec for i in m if i.is_Float]
l.append(-1)
return max(l)
@classmethod
def class_key(cls):
from sympy.sets.fancysets import Naturals0
funcs = {
'exp': 10,
'log': 11,
'sin': 20,
'cos': 21,
'tan': 22,
'cot': 23,
'sinh': 30,
'cosh': 31,
'tanh': 32,
'coth': 33,
'conjugate': 40,
're': 41,
'im': 42,
'arg': 43,
}
name = cls.__name__
try:
i = funcs[name]
except KeyError:
i = 0 if isinstance(cls.nargs, Naturals0) else 10000
return 4, i, name
@property
def is_commutative(self):
"""
Returns whether the function is commutative.
"""
if all(getattr(t, 'is_commutative') for t in self.args):
return True
else:
return False
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
# Lookup mpmath function based on name
try:
if isinstance(self, AppliedUndef):
# Shouldn't lookup in mpmath but might have ._imp_
raise AttributeError
fname = self.func.__name__
if not hasattr(mpmath, fname):
from sympy.utilities.lambdify import MPMATH_TRANSLATIONS
fname = MPMATH_TRANSLATIONS[fname]
func = getattr(mpmath, fname)
except (AttributeError, KeyError):
try:
return Float(self._imp_(*[i.evalf(prec) for i in self.args]), prec)
except (AttributeError, TypeError, ValueError):
return
# Convert all args to mpf or mpc
# Convert the arguments to *higher* precision than requested for the
# final result.
# XXX + 5 is a guess, it is similar to what is used in evalf.py. Should
# we be more intelligent about it?
try:
args = [arg._to_mpmath(prec + 5) for arg in self.args]
def bad(m):
from mpmath import mpf, mpc
# the precision of an mpf value is the last element
# if that is 1 (and m[1] is not 1 which would indicate a
# power of 2), then the eval failed; so check that none of
# the arguments failed to compute to a finite precision.
# Note: An mpc value has two parts, the re and imag tuple;
# check each of those parts, too. Anything else is allowed to
# pass
if isinstance(m, mpf):
m = m._mpf_
return m[1] !=1 and m[-1] == 1
elif isinstance(m, mpc):
m, n = m._mpc_
return m[1] !=1 and m[-1] == 1 and \
n[1] !=1 and n[-1] == 1
else:
return False
if any(bad(a) for a in args):
raise ValueError # one or more args failed to compute with significance
except ValueError:
return
with mpmath.workprec(prec):
v = func(*args)
return Expr._from_mpmath(v, prec)
def _eval_derivative(self, s):
# f(x).diff(s) -> x.diff(s) * f.fdiff(1)(s)
i = 0
l = []
for a in self.args:
i += 1
da = a.diff(s)
if da is S.Zero:
continue
try:
df = self.fdiff(i)
except ArgumentIndexError:
df = Function.fdiff(self, i)
l.append(df * da)
return Add(*l)
def _eval_is_commutative(self):
return fuzzy_and(a.is_commutative for a in self.args)
def _eval_is_complex(self):
return fuzzy_and(a.is_complex for a in self.args)
def as_base_exp(self):
"""
Returns the method as the 2-tuple (base, exponent).
"""
return self, S.One
def _eval_aseries(self, n, args0, x, logx):
"""
Compute an asymptotic expansion around args0, in terms of self.args.
This function is only used internally by _eval_nseries and should not
be called directly; derived classes can overwrite this to implement
asymptotic expansions.
"""
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
raise PoleError(filldedent('''
Asymptotic expansion of %s around %s is
not implemented.''' % (type(self), args0)))
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
"""
This function does compute series for multivariate functions,
but the expansion is always in terms of *one* variable.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import atan2
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> atan2(x, y).series(x, n=2)
atan2(0, y) + x/y + O(x**2)
>>> atan2(x, y).series(y, n=2)
-y/x + atan2(x, 0) + O(y**2)
This function also computes asymptotic expansions, if necessary
and possible:
>>> from sympy import loggamma
>>> loggamma(1/x)._eval_nseries(x,0,None)
-1/x - log(x)/x + log(x)/2 + O(1)
"""
from sympy import Order
from sympy.sets.sets import FiniteSet
args = self.args
args0 = [t.limit(x, 0) for t in args]
if any(t.is_finite is False for t in args0):
from sympy import oo, zoo, nan
# XXX could use t.as_leading_term(x) here but it's a little
# slower
a = [t.compute_leading_term(x, logx=logx) for t in args]
a0 = [t.limit(x, 0) for t in a]
if any([t.has(oo, -oo, zoo, nan) for t in a0]):
return self._eval_aseries(n, args0, x, logx)
# Careful: the argument goes to oo, but only logarithmically so. We
# are supposed to do a power series expansion "around the
# logarithmic term". e.g.
# f(1+x+log(x))
# -> f(1+logx) + x*f'(1+logx) + O(x**2)
# where 'logx' is given in the argument
a = [t._eval_nseries(x, n, logx) for t in args]
z = [r - r0 for (r, r0) in zip(a, a0)]
p = [Dummy() for t in z]
q = []
v = None
for ai, zi, pi in zip(a0, z, p):
if zi.has(x):
if v is not None:
raise NotImplementedError
q.append(ai + pi)
v = pi
else:
q.append(ai)
e1 = self.func(*q)
if v is None:
return e1
s = e1._eval_nseries(v, n, logx)
o = s.getO()
s = s.removeO()
s = s.subs(v, zi).expand() + Order(o.expr.subs(v, zi), x)
return s
if (self.func.nargs is S.Naturals0
or (self.func.nargs == FiniteSet(1) and args0[0])
or any(c > 1 for c in self.func.nargs)):
e = self
e1 = e.expand()
if e == e1:
#for example when e = sin(x+1) or e = sin(cos(x))
#let's try the general algorithm
term = e.subs(x, S.Zero)
if term.is_finite is False or term is S.NaN:
raise PoleError("Cannot expand %s around 0" % (self))
series = term
fact = S.One
_x = Dummy('x')
e = e.subs(x, _x)
for i in range(n - 1):
i += 1
fact *= Rational(i)
e = e.diff(_x)
subs = e.subs(_x, S.Zero)
if subs is S.NaN:
# try to evaluate a limit if we have to
subs = e.limit(_x, S.Zero)
if subs.is_finite is False:
raise PoleError("Cannot expand %s around 0" % (self))
term = subs*(x**i)/fact
term = term.expand()
series += term
return series + Order(x**n, x)
return e1.nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
arg = self.args[0]
l = []
g = None
# try to predict a number of terms needed
nterms = n + 2
cf = Order(arg.as_leading_term(x), x).getn()
if cf != 0:
nterms = int(nterms / cf)
for i in range(nterms):
g = self.taylor_term(i, arg, g)
g = g.nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
l.append(g)
return Add(*l) + Order(x**n, x)
def fdiff(self, argindex=1):
"""
Returns the first derivative of the function.
"""
if not (1 <= argindex <= len(self.args)):
raise ArgumentIndexError(self, argindex)
ix = argindex - 1
A = self.args[ix]
if A._diff_wrt:
if len(self.args) == 1:
return Derivative(self, A)
if A.is_Symbol:
for i, v in enumerate(self.args):
if i != ix and A in v.free_symbols:
# it can't be in any other argument's free symbols
# issue 8510
break
else:
return Derivative(self, A)
else:
free = A.free_symbols
for i, a in enumerate(self.args):
if ix != i and a.free_symbols & free:
break
else:
# there is no possible interaction bewtween args
return Derivative(self, A)
# See issue 4624 and issue 4719, 5600 and 8510
D = Dummy('xi_%i' % argindex, dummy_index=hash(A))
args = self.args[:ix] + (D,) + self.args[ix + 1:]
return Subs(Derivative(self.func(*args), D), D, A)
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
"""Stub that should be overridden by new Functions to return
the first non-zero term in a series if ever an x-dependent
argument whose leading term vanishes as x -> 0 might be encountered.
See, for example, cos._eval_as_leading_term.
"""
from sympy import Order
args = [a.as_leading_term(x) for a in self.args]
o = Order(1, x)
if any(x in a.free_symbols and o.contains(a) for a in args):
# Whereas x and any finite number are contained in O(1, x),
# expressions like 1/x are not. If any arg simplified to a
# vanishing expression as x -> 0 (like x or x**2, but not
# 3, 1/x, etc...) then the _eval_as_leading_term is needed
# to supply the first non-zero term of the series,
#
# e.g. expression leading term
# ---------- ------------
# cos(1/x) cos(1/x)
# cos(cos(x)) cos(1)
# cos(x) 1 <- _eval_as_leading_term needed
# sin(x) x <- _eval_as_leading_term needed
#
raise NotImplementedError(
'%s has no _eval_as_leading_term routine' % self.func)
else:
return self.func(*args)
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
fname = self.func.__name__
func = getattr(sage, fname,None)
args = [arg._sage_() for arg in self.args]
# In the case the function is not known in sage:
if func is None:
import sympy
if getattr(sympy, fname,None) is None:
# abstract function
return sage.function(fname)(*args)
else:
# the function defined in sympy is not known in sage
# this exception is caught in sage
raise AttributeError
return func(*args)
class AppliedUndef(Function):
"""
Base class for expressions resulting from the application of an undefined
function.
"""
is_number = False
def __new__(cls, *args, **options):
args = list(map(sympify, args))
obj = super(AppliedUndef, cls).__new__(cls, *args, **options)
return obj
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
return self
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
fname = str(self.func)
args = [arg._sage_() for arg in self.args]
func = sage.function(fname)(*args)
return func
@property
def _diff_wrt(self):
"""
Allow derivatives wrt to undefined functions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Symbol
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> f(x)._diff_wrt
True
>>> f(x).diff(x)
Derivative(f(x), x)
"""
return True
class UndefinedFunction(FunctionClass):
"""
The (meta)class of undefined functions.
"""
def __new__(mcl, name, bases=(AppliedUndef,), __dict__=None, **kwargs):
__dict__ = __dict__ or {}
# Allow Function('f', real=True)
__dict__.update({'is_' + arg: val for arg, val in kwargs.items() if arg in _assume_defined})
# You can add other attributes, although they do have to be hashable
# (but seriously, if you want to add anything other than assumptions,
# just subclass Function)
__dict__.update(kwargs)
# Save these for __eq__
__dict__.update({'_extra_kwargs': kwargs})
__dict__['__module__'] = None # For pickling
ret = super(UndefinedFunction, mcl).__new__(mcl, name, bases, __dict__)
return ret
def __instancecheck__(cls, instance):
return cls in type(instance).__mro__
_extra_kwargs = {}
def __hash__(self):
return hash((self.class_key(), frozenset(self._extra_kwargs.items())))
def __eq__(self, other):
return (isinstance(other, self.__class__) and
self.class_key() == other.class_key() and
self._extra_kwargs == other._extra_kwargs)
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
class WildFunction(Function, AtomicExpr):
"""
A WildFunction function matches any function (with its arguments).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import WildFunction, Function, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> F = WildFunction('F')
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> F.nargs
Naturals0
>>> x.match(F)
>>> F.match(F)
{F_: F_}
>>> f(x).match(F)
{F_: f(x)}
>>> cos(x).match(F)
{F_: cos(x)}
>>> f(x, y).match(F)
{F_: f(x, y)}
To match functions with a given number of arguments, set ``nargs`` to the
desired value at instantiation:
>>> F = WildFunction('F', nargs=2)
>>> F.nargs
{2}
>>> f(x).match(F)
>>> f(x, y).match(F)
{F_: f(x, y)}
To match functions with a range of arguments, set ``nargs`` to a tuple
containing the desired number of arguments, e.g. if ``nargs = (1, 2)``
then functions with 1 or 2 arguments will be matched.
>>> F = WildFunction('F', nargs=(1, 2))
>>> F.nargs
{1, 2}
>>> f(x).match(F)
{F_: f(x)}
>>> f(x, y).match(F)
{F_: f(x, y)}
>>> f(x, y, 1).match(F)
"""
include = set()
def __init__(cls, name, **assumptions):
from sympy.sets.sets import Set, FiniteSet
cls.name = name
nargs = assumptions.pop('nargs', S.Naturals0)
if not isinstance(nargs, Set):
# Canonicalize nargs here. See also FunctionClass.
if is_sequence(nargs):
nargs = tuple(ordered(set(nargs)))
elif nargs is not None:
nargs = (as_int(nargs),)
nargs = FiniteSet(*nargs)
cls.nargs = nargs
def matches(self, expr, repl_dict={}, old=False):
if not isinstance(expr, (AppliedUndef, Function)):
return None
if len(expr.args) not in self.nargs:
return None
repl_dict = repl_dict.copy()
repl_dict[self] = expr
return repl_dict
class Derivative(Expr):
"""
Carries out differentiation of the given expression with respect to symbols.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Derivative, Function, symbols, Subs
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f, g = symbols('f g', cls=Function)
>>> Derivative(x**2, x, evaluate=True)
2*x
Denesting of derivatives retains the ordering of variables:
>>> Derivative(Derivative(f(x, y), y), x)
Derivative(f(x, y), y, x)
Contiguously identical symbols are merged into a tuple giving
the symbol and the count:
>>> Derivative(f(x), x, x, y, x)
Derivative(f(x), (x, 2), y, x)
If the derivative cannot be performed, and evaluate is True, the
order of the variables of differentiation will be made canonical:
>>> Derivative(f(x, y), y, x, evaluate=True)
Derivative(f(x, y), x, y)
Derivatives with respect to undefined functions can be calculated:
>>> Derivative(f(x)**2, f(x), evaluate=True)
2*f(x)
Such derivatives will show up when the chain rule is used to
evalulate a derivative:
>>> f(g(x)).diff(x)
Derivative(f(g(x)), g(x))*Derivative(g(x), x)
Substitution is used to represent derivatives of functions with
arguments that are not symbols or functions:
>>> f(2*x + 3).diff(x) == 2*Subs(f(y).diff(y), y, 2*x + 3)
True
Notes
=====
Simplification of high-order derivatives:
Because there can be a significant amount of simplification that can be
done when multiple differentiations are performed, results will be
automatically simplified in a fairly conservative fashion unless the
keyword ``simplify`` is set to False.
>>> from sympy import cos, sin, sqrt, diff, Function, symbols
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> f, g = symbols('f,g', cls=Function)
>>> e = sqrt((x + 1)**2 + x)
>>> diff(e, (x, 5), simplify=False).count_ops()
136
>>> diff(e, (x, 5)).count_ops()
30
Ordering of variables:
If evaluate is set to True and the expression cannot be evaluated, the
list of differentiation symbols will be sorted, that is, the expression is
assumed to have continuous derivatives up to the order asked.
Derivative wrt non-Symbols:
For the most part, one may not differentiate wrt non-symbols.
For example, we do not allow differentiation wrt `x*y` because
there are multiple ways of structurally defining where x*y appears
in an expression: a very strict definition would make
(x*y*z).diff(x*y) == 0. Derivatives wrt defined functions (like
cos(x)) are not allowed, either:
>>> (x*y*z).diff(x*y)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: Can't calculate derivative wrt x*y.
To make it easier to work with variational calculus, however,
derivatives wrt AppliedUndef and Derivatives are allowed.
For example, in the Euler-Lagrange method one may write
F(t, u, v) where u = f(t) and v = f'(t). These variables can be
written explicity as functions of time::
>>> from sympy.abc import t
>>> F = Function('F')
>>> U = f(t)
>>> V = U.diff(t)
The derivative wrt f(t) can be obtained directly:
>>> direct = F(t, U, V).diff(U)
When differentiation wrt a non-Symbol is attempted, the non-Symbol
is temporarily converted to a Symbol while the differentiation
is performed and the same answer is obtained:
>>> indirect = F(t, U, V).subs(U, x).diff(x).subs(x, U)
>>> assert direct == indirect
The implication of this non-symbol replacement is that all
functions are treated as independent of other functions and the
symbols are independent of the functions that contain them::
>>> x.diff(f(x))
0
>>> g(x).diff(f(x))
0
It also means that derivatives are assumed to depend only
on the variables of differentiation, not on anything contained
within the expression being differentiated::
>>> F = f(x)
>>> Fx = F.diff(x)
>>> Fx.diff(F) # derivative depends on x, not F
0
>>> Fxx = Fx.diff(x)
>>> Fxx.diff(Fx) # derivative depends on x, not Fx
0
The last example can be made explicit by showing the replacement
of Fx in Fxx with y:
>>> Fxx.subs(Fx, y)
Derivative(y, x)
Since that in itself will evaluate to zero, differentiating
wrt Fx will also be zero:
>>> _.doit()
0
Replacing undefined functions with concrete expressions
One must be careful to replace undefined functions with expressions
that contain variables consistent with the function definition and
the variables of differentiation or else insconsistent result will
be obtained. Consider the following example:
>>> eq = f(x)*g(y)
>>> eq.subs(f(x), x*y).diff(x, y).doit()
y*Derivative(g(y), y) + g(y)
>>> eq.diff(x, y).subs(f(x), x*y).doit()
y*Derivative(g(y), y)
The results differ because `f(x)` was replaced with an expression
that involved both variables of differentiation. In the abstract
case, differentiation of `f(x)` by `y` is 0; in the concrete case,
the presence of `y` made that derivative nonvanishing and produced
the extra `g(y)` term.
Defining differentiation for an object
An object must define ._eval_derivative(symbol) method that returns
the differentiation result. This function only needs to consider the
non-trivial case where expr contains symbol and it should call the diff()
method internally (not _eval_derivative); Derivative should be the only
one to call _eval_derivative.
Any class can allow derivatives to be taken with respect to
itself (while indicating its scalar nature). See the
docstring of Expr._diff_wrt.
See Also
========
_sort_variable_count
"""
is_Derivative = True
@property
def _diff_wrt(self):
"""An expression may be differentiated wrt a Derivative if
it is in elementary form.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Function, Derivative, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> Derivative(f(x), x)._diff_wrt
True
>>> Derivative(cos(x), x)._diff_wrt
False
>>> Derivative(x + 1, x)._diff_wrt
False
A Derivative might be an unevaluated form of what will not be
a valid variable of differentiation if evaluated. For example,
>>> Derivative(f(f(x)), x).doit()
Derivative(f(x), x)*Derivative(f(f(x)), f(x))
Such an expression will present the same ambiguities as arise
when dealing with any other product, like `2*x`, so `_diff_wrt`
is False:
>>> Derivative(f(f(x)), x)._diff_wrt
False
"""
return self.expr._diff_wrt and isinstance(self.doit(), Derivative)
def __new__(cls, expr, *variables, **kwargs):
from sympy.matrices.common import MatrixCommon
from sympy import Integer
from sympy.tensor.array import Array, NDimArray, derive_by_array
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
expr = sympify(expr)
try:
has_symbol_set = isinstance(expr.free_symbols, set)
except AttributeError:
has_symbol_set = False
if not has_symbol_set:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Since there are no variables in the expression %s,
it cannot be differentiated.''' % expr))
# determine value for variables if it wasn't given
if not variables:
variables = expr.free_symbols
if len(variables) != 1:
if expr.is_number:
return S.Zero
if len(variables) == 0:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Since there are no variables in the expression,
the variable(s) of differentiation must be supplied
to differentiate %s''' % expr))
else:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Since there is more than one variable in the
expression, the variable(s) of differentiation
must be supplied to differentiate %s''' % expr))
# Standardize the variables by sympifying them:
variables = list(sympify(variables))
# Split the list of variables into a list of the variables we are diff
# wrt, where each element of the list has the form (s, count) where
# s is the entity to diff wrt and count is the order of the
# derivative.
variable_count = []
array_likes = (tuple, list, Tuple)
for i, v in enumerate(variables):
if isinstance(v, Integer):
if i == 0:
raise ValueError("First variable cannot be a number: %i" % v)
count = v
prev, prevcount = variable_count[-1]
if prevcount != 1:
raise TypeError("tuple {0} followed by number {1}".format((prev, prevcount), v))
if count == 0:
variable_count.pop()
else:
variable_count[-1] = Tuple(prev, count)
else:
if isinstance(v, array_likes):
if len(v) == 0:
# Ignore empty tuples: Derivative(expr, ... , (), ... )
continue
if isinstance(v[0], array_likes):
# Derive by array: Derivative(expr, ... , [[x, y, z]], ... )
if len(v) == 1:
v = Array(v[0])
count = 1
else:
v, count = v
v = Array(v)
else:
v, count = v
if count == 0:
continue
else:
count = 1
variable_count.append(Tuple(v, count))
# light evaluation of contiguous, identical
# items: (x, 1), (x, 1) -> (x, 2)
merged = []
for t in variable_count:
v, c = t
if c.is_negative:
raise ValueError(
'order of differentiation must be nonnegative')
if merged and merged[-1][0] == v:
c += merged[-1][1]
if not c:
merged.pop()
else:
merged[-1] = Tuple(v, c)
else:
merged.append(t)
variable_count = merged
# sanity check of variables of differentation; we waited
# until the counts were computed since some variables may
# have been removed because the count was 0
for v, c in variable_count:
# v must have _diff_wrt True
if not v._diff_wrt:
__ = '' # filler to make error message neater
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Can't calculate derivative wrt %s.%s''' % (v,
__)))
# We make a special case for 0th derivative, because there is no
# good way to unambiguously print this.
if len(variable_count) == 0:
return expr
evaluate = kwargs.get('evaluate', False)
if evaluate:
if isinstance(expr, Derivative):
expr = expr.canonical
variable_count = [
(v.canonical if isinstance(v, Derivative) else v, c)
for v, c in variable_count]
# Look for a quick exit if there are symbols that don't appear in
# expression at all. Note, this cannot check non-symbols like
# Derivatives as those can be created by intermediate
# derivatives.
zero = False
free = expr.free_symbols
for v, c in variable_count:
vfree = v.free_symbols
if c.is_positive and vfree:
if isinstance(v, AppliedUndef):
# these match exactly since
# x.diff(f(x)) == g(x).diff(f(x)) == 0
# and are not created by differentiation
D = Dummy()
if not expr.xreplace({v: D}).has(D):
zero = True
break
elif isinstance(v, Symbol) and v not in free:
zero = True
break
else:
if not free & vfree:
# e.g. v is IndexedBase or Matrix
zero = True
break
if zero:
if isinstance(expr, (MatrixCommon, NDimArray)):
return expr.zeros(*expr.shape)
else:
return S.Zero
# make the order of symbols canonical
#TODO: check if assumption of discontinuous derivatives exist
variable_count = cls._sort_variable_count(variable_count)
# denest
if isinstance(expr, Derivative):
variable_count = list(expr.variable_count) + variable_count
expr = expr.expr
return Derivative(expr, *variable_count, **kwargs)
# we return here if evaluate is False or if there is no
# _eval_derivative method
if not evaluate or not hasattr(expr, '_eval_derivative'):
# return an unevaluated Derivative
if evaluate and variable_count == [(expr, 1)] and expr.is_scalar:
# special hack providing evaluation for classes
# that have defined is_scalar=True but have no
# _eval_derivative defined
return S.One
return Expr.__new__(cls, expr, *variable_count)
# evaluate the derivative by calling _eval_derivative method
# of expr for each variable
# -------------------------------------------------------------
nderivs = 0 # how many derivatives were performed
unhandled = []
for i, (v, count) in enumerate(variable_count):
old_expr = expr
old_v = None
is_symbol = v.is_symbol or isinstance(v,
(Iterable, Tuple, MatrixCommon, NDimArray))
if not is_symbol:
old_v = v
v = Dummy('xi')
expr = expr.xreplace({old_v: v})
# Derivatives and UndefinedFunctions are independent
# of all others
clashing = not (isinstance(old_v, Derivative) or \
isinstance(old_v, AppliedUndef))
if not v in expr.free_symbols and not clashing:
return expr.diff(v) # expr's version of 0
if not old_v.is_scalar and not hasattr(
old_v, '_eval_derivative'):
# special hack providing evaluation for classes
# that have defined is_scalar=True but have no
# _eval_derivative defined
expr *= old_v.diff(old_v)
# Evaluate the derivative `n` times. If
# `_eval_derivative_n_times` is not overridden by the current
# object, the default in `Basic` will call a loop over
# `_eval_derivative`:
obj = expr._eval_derivative_n_times(v, count)
if obj is not None and obj.is_zero:
return obj
nderivs += count
if old_v is not None:
if obj is not None:
# remove the dummy that was used
obj = obj.subs(v, old_v)
# restore expr and v
expr = old_expr
v = old_v
if obj is None:
# we've already checked for quick-exit conditions
# that give 0 so the remaining variables
# are contained in the expression but the expression
# did not compute a derivative so we stop taking
# derivatives
unhandled = variable_count[i:]
break
expr = obj
# what we have so far can be made canonical
expr = expr.replace(
lambda x: isinstance(x, Derivative),
lambda x: x.canonical)
if unhandled:
if isinstance(expr, Derivative):
unhandled = list(expr.variable_count) + unhandled
expr = expr.expr
expr = Expr.__new__(cls, expr, *unhandled)
if (nderivs > 1) == True and kwargs.get('simplify', True):
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
from sympy.simplify.simplify import signsimp
expr = factor_terms(signsimp(expr))
return expr
@property
def canonical(cls):
return cls.func(cls.expr,
*Derivative._sort_variable_count(cls.variable_count))
@classmethod
def _sort_variable_count(cls, vc):
"""
Sort (variable, count) pairs into canonical order while
retaining order of variables that do not commute during
differentiation:
* symbols and functions commute with each other
* derivatives commute with each other
* a derivative doesn't commute with anything it contains
* any other object is not allowed to commute if it has
free symbols in common with another object
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Derivative, Function, symbols, cos
>>> vsort = Derivative._sort_variable_count
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x y z')
>>> f, g, h = symbols('f g h', cls=Function)
Contiguous items are collapsed into one pair:
>>> vsort([(x, 1), (x, 1)])
[(x, 2)]
>>> vsort([(y, 1), (f(x), 1), (y, 1), (f(x), 1)])
[(y, 2), (f(x), 2)]
Ordering is canonical.
>>> def vsort0(*v):
... # docstring helper to
... # change vi -> (vi, 0), sort, and return vi vals
... return [i[0] for i in vsort([(i, 0) for i in v])]
>>> vsort0(y, x)
[x, y]
>>> vsort0(g(y), g(x), f(y))
[f(y), g(x), g(y)]
Symbols are sorted as far to the left as possible but never
move to the left of a derivative having the same symbol in
its variables; the same applies to AppliedUndef which are
always sorted after Symbols:
>>> dfx = f(x).diff(x)
>>> assert vsort0(dfx, y) == [y, dfx]
>>> assert vsort0(dfx, x) == [dfx, x]
"""
from sympy.utilities.iterables import uniq, topological_sort
if not vc:
return []
vc = list(vc)
if len(vc) == 1:
return [Tuple(*vc[0])]
V = list(range(len(vc)))
E = []
v = lambda i: vc[i][0]
D = Dummy()
def _block(d, v, wrt=False):
# return True if v should not come before d else False
if d == v:
return wrt
if d.is_Symbol:
return False
if isinstance(d, Derivative):
# a derivative blocks if any of it's variables contain
# v; the wrt flag will return True for an exact match
# and will cause an AppliedUndef to block if v is in
# the arguments
if any(_block(k, v, wrt=True)
for k in d._wrt_variables):
return True
return False
if not wrt and isinstance(d, AppliedUndef):
return False
if v.is_Symbol:
return v in d.free_symbols
if isinstance(v, AppliedUndef):
return _block(d.xreplace({v: D}), D)
return d.free_symbols & v.free_symbols
for i in range(len(vc)):
for j in range(i):
if _block(v(j), v(i)):
E.append((j,i))
# this is the default ordering to use in case of ties
O = dict(zip(ordered(uniq([i for i, c in vc])), range(len(vc))))
ix = topological_sort((V, E), key=lambda i: O[v(i)])
# merge counts of contiguously identical items
merged = []
for v, c in [vc[i] for i in ix]:
if merged and merged[-1][0] == v:
merged[-1][1] += c
else:
merged.append([v, c])
return [Tuple(*i) for i in merged]
def _eval_is_commutative(self):
return self.expr.is_commutative
def _eval_derivative(self, v):
# If v (the variable of differentiation) is not in
# self.variables, we might be able to take the derivative.
if v not in self._wrt_variables:
dedv = self.expr.diff(v)
if isinstance(dedv, Derivative):
return dedv.func(dedv.expr, *(self.variable_count + dedv.variable_count))
# dedv (d(self.expr)/dv) could have simplified things such that the
# derivative wrt things in self.variables can now be done. Thus,
# we set evaluate=True to see if there are any other derivatives
# that can be done. The most common case is when dedv is a simple
# number so that the derivative wrt anything else will vanish.
return self.func(dedv, *self.variables, evaluate=True)
# In this case v was in self.variables so the derivative wrt v has
# already been attempted and was not computed, either because it
# couldn't be or evaluate=False originally.
variable_count = list(self.variable_count)
variable_count.append((v, 1))
return self.func(self.expr, *variable_count, evaluate=False)
def doit(self, **hints):
expr = self.expr
if hints.get('deep', True):
expr = expr.doit(**hints)
hints['evaluate'] = True
return self.func(expr, *self.variable_count, **hints)
@_sympifyit('z0', NotImplementedError)
def doit_numerically(self, z0):
"""
Evaluate the derivative at z numerically.
When we can represent derivatives at a point, this should be folded
into the normal evalf. For now, we need a special method.
"""
import mpmath
from sympy.core.expr import Expr
if len(self.free_symbols) != 1 or len(self.variables) != 1:
raise NotImplementedError('partials and higher order derivatives')
z = list(self.free_symbols)[0]
def eval(x):
f0 = self.expr.subs(z, Expr._from_mpmath(x, prec=mpmath.mp.prec))
f0 = f0.evalf(mlib.libmpf.prec_to_dps(mpmath.mp.prec))
return f0._to_mpmath(mpmath.mp.prec)
return Expr._from_mpmath(mpmath.diff(eval,
z0._to_mpmath(mpmath.mp.prec)),
mpmath.mp.prec)
@property
def expr(self):
return self._args[0]
@property
def _wrt_variables(self):
# return the variables of differentiation without
# respect to the type of count (int or symbolic)
return [i[0] for i in self.variable_count]
@property
def variables(self):
# TODO: deprecate? YES, make this 'enumerated_variables' and
# name _wrt_variables as variables
# TODO: support for `d^n`?
rv = []
for v, count in self.variable_count:
if not count.is_Integer:
raise TypeError(filldedent('''
Cannot give expansion for symbolic count. If you just
want a list of all variables of differentiation, use
_wrt_variables.'''))
rv.extend([v]*count)
return tuple(rv)
@property
def variable_count(self):
return self._args[1:]
@property
def derivative_count(self):
return sum([count for var, count in self.variable_count], 0)
@property
def free_symbols(self):
return self.expr.free_symbols
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
# The substitution (old, new) cannot be done inside
# Derivative(expr, vars) for a variety of reasons
# as handled below.
if old in self._wrt_variables:
# quick exit case
if not getattr(new, '_diff_wrt', False):
# case (0): new is not a valid variable of
# differentiation
if isinstance(old, Symbol):
# don't introduce a new symbol if the old will do
return Subs(self, old, new)
else:
xi = Dummy('xi')
return Subs(self.xreplace({old: xi}), xi, new)
# If both are Derivatives with the same expr, check if old is
# equivalent to self or if old is a subderivative of self.
if old.is_Derivative and old.expr == self.expr:
if self.canonical == old.canonical:
return new
# collections.Counter doesn't have __le__
def _subset(a, b):
return all((a[i] <= b[i]) == True for i in a)
old_vars = Counter(dict(reversed(old.variable_count)))
self_vars = Counter(dict(reversed(self.variable_count)))
if _subset(old_vars, self_vars):
return Derivative(new, *(self_vars - old_vars).items()).canonical
args = list(self.args)
newargs = list(x._subs(old, new) for x in args)
if args[0] == old:
# complete replacement of self.expr
# we already checked that the new is valid so we know
# it won't be a problem should it appear in variables
return Derivative(*newargs)
if newargs[0] != args[0]:
# case (1) can't change expr by introducing something that is in
# the _wrt_variables if it was already in the expr
# e.g.
# for Derivative(f(x, g(y)), y), x cannot be replaced with
# anything that has y in it; for f(g(x), g(y)).diff(g(y))
# g(x) cannot be replaced with anything that has g(y)
syms = {vi: Dummy() for vi in self._wrt_variables
if not vi.is_Symbol}
wrt = set(syms.get(vi, vi) for vi in self._wrt_variables)
forbidden = args[0].xreplace(syms).free_symbols & wrt
nfree = new.xreplace(syms).free_symbols
ofree = old.xreplace(syms).free_symbols
if (nfree - ofree) & forbidden:
return Subs(self, old, new)
viter = ((i, j) for ((i,_), (j,_)) in zip(newargs[1:], args[1:]))
if any(i != j for i, j in viter): # a wrt-variable change
# case (2) can't change vars by introducing a variable
# that is contained in expr, e.g.
# for Derivative(f(z, g(h(x), y)), y), y cannot be changed to
# x, h(x), or g(h(x), y)
for a in _atomic(self.expr, recursive=True):
for i in range(1, len(newargs)):
vi, _ = newargs[i]
if a == vi and vi != args[i][0]:
return Subs(self, old, new)
# more arg-wise checks
vc = newargs[1:]
oldv = self._wrt_variables
newe = self.expr
subs = []
for i, (vi, ci) in enumerate(vc):
if not vi._diff_wrt:
# case (3) invalid differentiation expression so
# create a replacement dummy
xi = Dummy('xi_%i' % i)
# replace the old valid variable with the dummy
# in the expression
newe = newe.xreplace({oldv[i]: xi})
# and replace the bad variable with the dummy
vc[i] = (xi, ci)
# and record the dummy with the new (invalid)
# differentiation expression
subs.append((xi, vi))
if subs:
# handle any residual substitution in the expression
newe = newe._subs(old, new)
# return the Subs-wrapped derivative
return Subs(Derivative(newe, *vc), *zip(*subs))
# everything was ok
return Derivative(*newargs)
def _eval_lseries(self, x, logx):
dx = self.variables
for term in self.expr.lseries(x, logx=logx):
yield self.func(term, *dx)
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
arg = self.expr.nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
o = arg.getO()
dx = self.variables
rv = [self.func(a, *dx) for a in Add.make_args(arg.removeO())]
if o:
rv.append(o/x)
return Add(*rv)
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
series_gen = self.expr.lseries(x)
d = S.Zero
for leading_term in series_gen:
d = diff(leading_term, *self.variables)
if d != 0:
break
return d
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
args = [arg._sage_() for arg in self.args]
return sage.derivative(*args)
def as_finite_difference(self, points=1, x0=None, wrt=None):
""" Expresses a Derivative instance as a finite difference.
Parameters
==========
points : sequence or coefficient, optional
If sequence: discrete values (length >= order+1) of the
independent variable used for generating the finite
difference weights.
If it is a coefficient, it will be used as the step-size
for generating an equidistant sequence of length order+1
centered around ``x0``. Default: 1 (step-size 1)
x0 : number or Symbol, optional
the value of the independent variable (``wrt``) at which the
derivative is to be approximated. Default: same as ``wrt``.
wrt : Symbol, optional
"with respect to" the variable for which the (partial)
derivative is to be approximated for. If not provided it
is required that the derivative is ordinary. Default: ``None``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, Function, exp, sqrt, Symbol
>>> x, h = symbols('x h')
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> f(x).diff(x).as_finite_difference()
-f(x - 1/2) + f(x + 1/2)
The default step size and number of points are 1 and
``order + 1`` respectively. We can change the step size by
passing a symbol as a parameter:
>>> f(x).diff(x).as_finite_difference(h)
-f(-h/2 + x)/h + f(h/2 + x)/h
We can also specify the discretized values to be used in a
sequence:
>>> f(x).diff(x).as_finite_difference([x, x+h, x+2*h])
-3*f(x)/(2*h) + 2*f(h + x)/h - f(2*h + x)/(2*h)
The algorithm is not restricted to use equidistant spacing, nor
do we need to make the approximation around ``x0``, but we can get
an expression estimating the derivative at an offset:
>>> e, sq2 = exp(1), sqrt(2)
>>> xl = [x-h, x+h, x+e*h]
>>> f(x).diff(x, 1).as_finite_difference(xl, x+h*sq2) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2*h*((h + sqrt(2)*h)/(2*h) - (-sqrt(2)*h + h)/(2*h))*f(E*h + x)/...
Partial derivatives are also supported:
>>> y = Symbol('y')
>>> d2fdxdy=f(x,y).diff(x,y)
>>> d2fdxdy.as_finite_difference(wrt=x)
-Derivative(f(x - 1/2, y), y) + Derivative(f(x + 1/2, y), y)
We can apply ``as_finite_difference`` to ``Derivative`` instances in
compound expressions using ``replace``:
>>> (1 + 42**f(x).diff(x)).replace(lambda arg: arg.is_Derivative,
... lambda arg: arg.as_finite_difference())
42**(-f(x - 1/2) + f(x + 1/2)) + 1
See also
========
sympy.calculus.finite_diff.apply_finite_diff
sympy.calculus.finite_diff.differentiate_finite
sympy.calculus.finite_diff.finite_diff_weights
"""
from ..calculus.finite_diff import _as_finite_diff
return _as_finite_diff(self, points, x0, wrt)
class Lambda(Expr):
"""
Lambda(x, expr) represents a lambda function similar to Python's
'lambda x: expr'. A function of several variables is written as
Lambda((x, y, ...), expr).
A simple example:
>>> from sympy import Lambda
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Lambda(x, x**2)
>>> f(4)
16
For multivariate functions, use:
>>> from sympy.abc import y, z, t
>>> f2 = Lambda((x, y, z, t), x + y**z + t**z)
>>> f2(1, 2, 3, 4)
73
A handy shortcut for lots of arguments:
>>> p = x, y, z
>>> f = Lambda(p, x + y*z)
>>> f(*p)
x + y*z
"""
is_Function = True
def __new__(cls, variables, expr):
from sympy.sets.sets import FiniteSet
v = list(variables) if iterable(variables) else [variables]
for i in v:
if not getattr(i, 'is_symbol', False):
raise TypeError('variable is not a symbol: %s' % i)
if len(v) == 1 and v[0] == expr:
return S.IdentityFunction
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, Tuple(*v), sympify(expr))
obj.nargs = FiniteSet(len(v))
return obj
@property
def variables(self):
"""The variables used in the internal representation of the function"""
return self._args[0]
bound_symbols = variables
@property
def expr(self):
"""The return value of the function"""
return self._args[1]
@property
def free_symbols(self):
return self.expr.free_symbols - set(self.variables)
def __call__(self, *args):
n = len(args)
if n not in self.nargs: # Lambda only ever has 1 value in nargs
# XXX: exception message must be in exactly this format to
# make it work with NumPy's functions like vectorize(). See,
# for example, https://github.com/numpy/numpy/issues/1697.
# The ideal solution would be just to attach metadata to
# the exception and change NumPy to take advantage of this.
## XXX does this apply to Lambda? If not, remove this comment.
temp = ('%(name)s takes exactly %(args)s '
'argument%(plural)s (%(given)s given)')
raise TypeError(temp % {
'name': self,
'args': list(self.nargs)[0],
'plural': 's'*(list(self.nargs)[0] != 1),
'given': n})
return self.expr.xreplace(dict(list(zip(self.variables, args))))
def __eq__(self, other):
if not isinstance(other, Lambda):
return False
if self.nargs != other.nargs:
return False
selfexpr = self.args[1]
otherexpr = other.args[1]
otherexpr = otherexpr.xreplace(dict(list(zip(other.args[0], self.args[0]))))
return selfexpr == otherexpr
def __ne__(self, other):
return not(self == other)
def __hash__(self):
return super(Lambda, self).__hash__()
def _hashable_content(self):
return (self.expr.xreplace(self.canonical_variables),)
@property
def is_identity(self):
"""Return ``True`` if this ``Lambda`` is an identity function. """
if len(self.args) == 2:
return self.args[0] == self.args[1]
else:
return None
class Subs(Expr):
"""
Represents unevaluated substitutions of an expression.
``Subs(expr, x, x0)`` receives 3 arguments: an expression, a variable or
list of distinct variables and a point or list of evaluation points
corresponding to those variables.
``Subs`` objects are generally useful to represent unevaluated derivatives
calculated at a point.
The variables may be expressions, but they are subjected to the limitations
of subs(), so it is usually a good practice to use only symbols for
variables, since in that case there can be no ambiguity.
There's no automatic expansion - use the method .doit() to effect all
possible substitutions of the object and also of objects inside the
expression.
When evaluating derivatives at a point that is not a symbol, a Subs object
is returned. One is also able to calculate derivatives of Subs objects - in
this case the expression is always expanded (for the unevaluated form, use
Derivative()).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Subs, Function, sin, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> f = Function('f')
Subs are created when a particular substitution cannot be made. The
x in the derivative cannot be replaced with 0 because 0 is not a
valid variables of differentiation:
>>> f(x).diff(x).subs(x, 0)
Subs(Derivative(f(x), x), x, 0)
Once f is known, the derivative and evaluation at 0 can be done:
>>> _.subs(f, sin).doit() == sin(x).diff(x).subs(x, 0) == cos(0)
True
Subs can also be created directly with one or more variables:
>>> Subs(f(x)*sin(y) + z, (x, y), (0, 1))
Subs(z + f(x)*sin(y), (x, y), (0, 1))
>>> _.doit()
z + f(0)*sin(1)
Notes
=====
In order to allow expressions to combine before doit is done, a
representation of the Subs expression is used internally to make
expressions that are superficially different compare the same:
>>> a, b = Subs(x, x, 0), Subs(y, y, 0)
>>> a + b
2*Subs(x, x, 0)
This can lead to unexpected consequences when using methods
like `has` that are cached:
>>> s = Subs(x, x, 0)
>>> s.has(x), s.has(y)
(True, False)
>>> ss = s.subs(x, y)
>>> ss.has(x), ss.has(y)
(True, False)
>>> s, ss
(Subs(x, x, 0), Subs(y, y, 0))
"""
def __new__(cls, expr, variables, point, **assumptions):
from sympy import Symbol
if not is_sequence(variables, Tuple):
variables = [variables]
variables = Tuple(*variables)
if has_dups(variables):
repeated = [str(v) for v, i in Counter(variables).items() if i > 1]
__ = ', '.join(repeated)
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
The following expressions appear more than once: %s
''' % __))
point = Tuple(*(point if is_sequence(point, Tuple) else [point]))
if len(point) != len(variables):
raise ValueError('Number of point values must be the same as '
'the number of variables.')
if not point:
return sympify(expr)
# denest
if isinstance(expr, Subs):
variables = expr.variables + variables
point = expr.point + point
expr = expr.expr
else:
expr = sympify(expr)
# use symbols with names equal to the point value (with preppended _)
# to give a variable-independent expression
pre = "_"
pts = sorted(set(point), key=default_sort_key)
from sympy.printing import StrPrinter
class CustomStrPrinter(StrPrinter):
def _print_Dummy(self, expr):
return str(expr) + str(expr.dummy_index)
def mystr(expr, **settings):
p = CustomStrPrinter(settings)
return p.doprint(expr)
while 1:
s_pts = {p: Symbol(pre + mystr(p)) for p in pts}
reps = [(v, s_pts[p])
for v, p in zip(variables, point)]
# if any underscore-preppended symbol is already a free symbol
# and is a variable with a different point value, then there
# is a clash, e.g. _0 clashes in Subs(_0 + _1, (_0, _1), (1, 0))
# because the new symbol that would be created is _1 but _1
# is already mapped to 0 so __0 and __1 are used for the new
# symbols
if any(r in expr.free_symbols and
r in variables and
Symbol(pre + mystr(point[variables.index(r)])) != r
for _, r in reps):
pre += "_"
continue
break
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, expr, Tuple(*variables), point)
obj._expr = expr.xreplace(dict(reps))
return obj
def _eval_is_commutative(self):
return self.expr.is_commutative
def doit(self, **hints):
e, v, p = self.args
# remove self mappings
for i, (vi, pi) in enumerate(zip(v, p)):
if vi == pi:
v = v[:i] + v[i + 1:]
p = p[:i] + p[i + 1:]
if not v:
return self.expr
if isinstance(e, Derivative):
# apply functions first, e.g. f -> cos
undone = []
for i, vi in enumerate(v):
if isinstance(vi, FunctionClass):
e = e.subs(vi, p[i])
else:
undone.append((vi, p[i]))
if not isinstance(e, Derivative):
e = e.doit()
if isinstance(e, Derivative):
# do Subs that aren't related to differentiation
undone2 = []
D = Dummy()
for vi, pi in undone:
if D not in e.xreplace({vi: D}).free_symbols:
e = e.subs(vi, pi)
else:
undone2.append((vi, pi))
undone = undone2
# differentiate wrt variables that are present
wrt = []
D = Dummy()
expr = e.expr
free = expr.free_symbols
for vi, ci in e.variable_count:
if isinstance(vi, Symbol) and vi in free:
expr = expr.diff((vi, ci))
elif D in expr.subs(vi, D).free_symbols:
expr = expr.diff((vi, ci))
else:
wrt.append((vi, ci))
# inject remaining subs
rv = expr.subs(undone)
# do remaining differentiation *in order given*
for vc in wrt:
rv = rv.diff(vc)
else:
# inject remaining subs
rv = e.subs(undone)
else:
rv = e.doit(**hints).subs(list(zip(v, p)))
if hints.get('deep', True) and rv != self:
rv = rv.doit(**hints)
return rv
def evalf(self, prec=None, **options):
return self.doit().evalf(prec, **options)
n = evalf
@property
def variables(self):
"""The variables to be evaluated"""
return self._args[1]
bound_symbols = variables
@property
def expr(self):
"""The expression on which the substitution operates"""
return self._args[0]
@property
def point(self):
"""The values for which the variables are to be substituted"""
return self._args[2]
@property
def free_symbols(self):
return (self.expr.free_symbols - set(self.variables) |
set(self.point.free_symbols))
@property
def expr_free_symbols(self):
return (self.expr.expr_free_symbols - set(self.variables) |
set(self.point.expr_free_symbols))
def __eq__(self, other):
if not isinstance(other, Subs):
return False
return self._hashable_content() == other._hashable_content()
def __ne__(self, other):
return not(self == other)
def __hash__(self):
return super(Subs, self).__hash__()
def _hashable_content(self):
return (self._expr.xreplace(self.canonical_variables),
) + tuple(ordered([(v, p) for v, p in
zip(self.variables, self.point) if not self.expr.has(v)]))
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
# Subs doit will do the variables in order; the semantics
# of subs for Subs is have the following invariant for
# Subs object foo:
# foo.doit().subs(reps) == foo.subs(reps).doit()
pt = list(self.point)
if old in self.variables:
if _atomic(new) == set([new]) and not any(
i.has(new) for i in self.args):
# the substitution is neutral
return self.xreplace({old: new})
# any occurance of old before this point will get
# handled by replacements from here on
i = self.variables.index(old)
for j in range(i, len(self.variables)):
pt[j] = pt[j]._subs(old, new)
return self.func(self.expr, self.variables, pt)
v = [i._subs(old, new) for i in self.variables]
if v != list(self.variables):
return self.func(self.expr, self.variables + (old,), pt + [new])
expr = self.expr._subs(old, new)
pt = [i._subs(old, new) for i in self.point]
return self.func(expr, v, pt)
def _eval_derivative(self, s):
# Apply the chain rule of the derivative on the substitution variables:
val = Add.fromiter(p.diff(s) * Subs(self.expr.diff(v), self.variables, self.point).doit() for v, p in zip(self.variables, self.point))
# Check if there are free symbols in `self.expr`:
# First get the `expr_free_symbols`, which returns the free symbols
# that are directly contained in an expression node (i.e. stop
# searching if the node isn't an expression). At this point turn the
# expressions into `free_symbols` and check if there are common free
# symbols in `self.expr` and the deriving factor.
fs1 = {j for i in self.expr_free_symbols for j in i.free_symbols}
if len(fs1 & s.free_symbols) > 0:
val += Subs(self.expr.diff(s), self.variables, self.point).doit()
return val
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
if x in self.point:
# x is the variable being substituted into
apos = self.point.index(x)
other = self.variables[apos]
else:
other = x
arg = self.expr.nseries(other, n=n, logx=logx)
o = arg.getO()
terms = Add.make_args(arg.removeO())
rv = Add(*[self.func(a, *self.args[1:]) for a in terms])
if o:
rv += o.subs(other, x)
return rv
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
if x in self.point:
ipos = self.point.index(x)
xvar = self.variables[ipos]
return self.expr.as_leading_term(xvar)
if x in self.variables:
# if `x` is a dummy variable, it means it won't exist after the
# substitution has been performed:
return self
# The variable is independent of the substitution:
return self.expr.as_leading_term(x)
def diff(f, *symbols, **kwargs):
"""
Differentiate f with respect to symbols.
This is just a wrapper to unify .diff() and the Derivative class; its
interface is similar to that of integrate(). You can use the same
shortcuts for multiple variables as with Derivative. For example,
diff(f(x), x, x, x) and diff(f(x), x, 3) both return the third derivative
of f(x).
You can pass evaluate=False to get an unevaluated Derivative class. Note
that if there are 0 symbols (such as diff(f(x), x, 0), then the result will
be the function (the zeroth derivative), even if evaluate=False.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, cos, Function, diff
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> diff(sin(x), x)
cos(x)
>>> diff(f(x), x, x, x)
Derivative(f(x), (x, 3))
>>> diff(f(x), x, 3)
Derivative(f(x), (x, 3))
>>> diff(sin(x)*cos(y), x, 2, y, 2)
sin(x)*cos(y)
>>> type(diff(sin(x), x))
cos
>>> type(diff(sin(x), x, evaluate=False))
<class 'sympy.core.function.Derivative'>
>>> type(diff(sin(x), x, 0))
sin
>>> type(diff(sin(x), x, 0, evaluate=False))
sin
>>> diff(sin(x))
cos(x)
>>> diff(sin(x*y))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: specify differentiation variables to differentiate sin(x*y)
Note that ``diff(sin(x))`` syntax is meant only for convenience
in interactive sessions and should be avoided in library code.
References
==========
http://reference.wolfram.com/legacy/v5_2/Built-inFunctions/AlgebraicComputation/Calculus/D.html
See Also
========
Derivative
sympy.geometry.util.idiff: computes the derivative implicitly
"""
if hasattr(f, 'diff'):
return f.diff(*symbols, **kwargs)
kwargs.setdefault('evaluate', True)
return Derivative(f, *symbols, **kwargs)
def expand(e, deep=True, modulus=None, power_base=True, power_exp=True,
mul=True, log=True, multinomial=True, basic=True, **hints):
r"""
Expand an expression using methods given as hints.
Hints evaluated unless explicitly set to False are: ``basic``, ``log``,
``multinomial``, ``mul``, ``power_base``, and ``power_exp`` The following
hints are supported but not applied unless set to True: ``complex``,
``func``, and ``trig``. In addition, the following meta-hints are
supported by some or all of the other hints: ``frac``, ``numer``,
``denom``, ``modulus``, and ``force``. ``deep`` is supported by all
hints. Additionally, subclasses of Expr may define their own hints or
meta-hints.
The ``basic`` hint is used for any special rewriting of an object that
should be done automatically (along with the other hints like ``mul``)
when expand is called. This is a catch-all hint to handle any sort of
expansion that may not be described by the existing hint names. To use
this hint an object should override the ``_eval_expand_basic`` method.
Objects may also define their own expand methods, which are not run by
default. See the API section below.
If ``deep`` is set to ``True`` (the default), things like arguments of
functions are recursively expanded. Use ``deep=False`` to only expand on
the top level.
If the ``force`` hint is used, assumptions about variables will be ignored
in making the expansion.
Hints
=====
These hints are run by default
mul
---
Distributes multiplication over addition:
>>> from sympy import cos, exp, sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> (y*(x + z)).expand(mul=True)
x*y + y*z
multinomial
-----------
Expand (x + y + ...)**n where n is a positive integer.
>>> ((x + y + z)**2).expand(multinomial=True)
x**2 + 2*x*y + 2*x*z + y**2 + 2*y*z + z**2
power_exp
---------
Expand addition in exponents into multiplied bases.
>>> exp(x + y).expand(power_exp=True)
exp(x)*exp(y)
>>> (2**(x + y)).expand(power_exp=True)
2**x*2**y
power_base
----------
Split powers of multiplied bases.
This only happens by default if assumptions allow, or if the
``force`` meta-hint is used:
>>> ((x*y)**z).expand(power_base=True)
(x*y)**z
>>> ((x*y)**z).expand(power_base=True, force=True)
x**z*y**z
>>> ((2*y)**z).expand(power_base=True)
2**z*y**z
Note that in some cases where this expansion always holds, SymPy performs
it automatically:
>>> (x*y)**2
x**2*y**2
log
---
Pull out power of an argument as a coefficient and split logs products
into sums of logs.
Note that these only work if the arguments of the log function have the
proper assumptions--the arguments must be positive and the exponents must
be real--or else the ``force`` hint must be True:
>>> from sympy import log, symbols
>>> log(x**2*y).expand(log=True)
log(x**2*y)
>>> log(x**2*y).expand(log=True, force=True)
2*log(x) + log(y)
>>> x, y = symbols('x,y', positive=True)
>>> log(x**2*y).expand(log=True)
2*log(x) + log(y)
basic
-----
This hint is intended primarily as a way for custom subclasses to enable
expansion by default.
These hints are not run by default:
complex
-------
Split an expression into real and imaginary parts.
>>> x, y = symbols('x,y')
>>> (x + y).expand(complex=True)
re(x) + re(y) + I*im(x) + I*im(y)
>>> cos(x).expand(complex=True)
-I*sin(re(x))*sinh(im(x)) + cos(re(x))*cosh(im(x))
Note that this is just a wrapper around ``as_real_imag()``. Most objects
that wish to redefine ``_eval_expand_complex()`` should consider
redefining ``as_real_imag()`` instead.
func
----
Expand other functions.
>>> from sympy import gamma
>>> gamma(x + 1).expand(func=True)
x*gamma(x)
trig
----
Do trigonometric expansions.
>>> cos(x + y).expand(trig=True)
-sin(x)*sin(y) + cos(x)*cos(y)
>>> sin(2*x).expand(trig=True)
2*sin(x)*cos(x)
Note that the forms of ``sin(n*x)`` and ``cos(n*x)`` in terms of ``sin(x)``
and ``cos(x)`` are not unique, due to the identity `\sin^2(x) + \cos^2(x)
= 1`. The current implementation uses the form obtained from Chebyshev
polynomials, but this may change. See `this MathWorld article
<http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Multiple-AngleFormulas.html>`_ for more
information.
Notes
=====
- You can shut off unwanted methods::
>>> (exp(x + y)*(x + y)).expand()
x*exp(x)*exp(y) + y*exp(x)*exp(y)
>>> (exp(x + y)*(x + y)).expand(power_exp=False)
x*exp(x + y) + y*exp(x + y)
>>> (exp(x + y)*(x + y)).expand(mul=False)
(x + y)*exp(x)*exp(y)
- Use deep=False to only expand on the top level::
>>> exp(x + exp(x + y)).expand()
exp(x)*exp(exp(x)*exp(y))
>>> exp(x + exp(x + y)).expand(deep=False)
exp(x)*exp(exp(x + y))
- Hints are applied in an arbitrary, but consistent order (in the current
implementation, they are applied in alphabetical order, except
multinomial comes before mul, but this may change). Because of this,
some hints may prevent expansion by other hints if they are applied
first. For example, ``mul`` may distribute multiplications and prevent
``log`` and ``power_base`` from expanding them. Also, if ``mul`` is
applied before ``multinomial`, the expression might not be fully
distributed. The solution is to use the various ``expand_hint`` helper
functions or to use ``hint=False`` to this function to finely control
which hints are applied. Here are some examples::
>>> from sympy import expand, expand_mul, expand_power_base
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x,y,z', positive=True)
>>> expand(log(x*(y + z)))
log(x) + log(y + z)
Here, we see that ``log`` was applied before ``mul``. To get the mul
expanded form, either of the following will work::
>>> expand_mul(log(x*(y + z)))
log(x*y + x*z)
>>> expand(log(x*(y + z)), log=False)
log(x*y + x*z)
A similar thing can happen with the ``power_base`` hint::
>>> expand((x*(y + z))**x)
(x*y + x*z)**x
To get the ``power_base`` expanded form, either of the following will
work::
>>> expand((x*(y + z))**x, mul=False)
x**x*(y + z)**x
>>> expand_power_base((x*(y + z))**x)
x**x*(y + z)**x
>>> expand((x + y)*y/x)
y + y**2/x
The parts of a rational expression can be targeted::
>>> expand((x + y)*y/x/(x + 1), frac=True)
(x*y + y**2)/(x**2 + x)
>>> expand((x + y)*y/x/(x + 1), numer=True)
(x*y + y**2)/(x*(x + 1))
>>> expand((x + y)*y/x/(x + 1), denom=True)
y*(x + y)/(x**2 + x)
- The ``modulus`` meta-hint can be used to reduce the coefficients of an
expression post-expansion::
>>> expand((3*x + 1)**2)
9*x**2 + 6*x + 1
>>> expand((3*x + 1)**2, modulus=5)
4*x**2 + x + 1
- Either ``expand()`` the function or ``.expand()`` the method can be
used. Both are equivalent::
>>> expand((x + 1)**2)
x**2 + 2*x + 1
>>> ((x + 1)**2).expand()
x**2 + 2*x + 1
API
===
Objects can define their own expand hints by defining
``_eval_expand_hint()``. The function should take the form::
def _eval_expand_hint(self, **hints):
# Only apply the method to the top-level expression
...
See also the example below. Objects should define ``_eval_expand_hint()``
methods only if ``hint`` applies to that specific object. The generic
``_eval_expand_hint()`` method defined in Expr will handle the no-op case.
Each hint should be responsible for expanding that hint only.
Furthermore, the expansion should be applied to the top-level expression
only. ``expand()`` takes care of the recursion that happens when
``deep=True``.
You should only call ``_eval_expand_hint()`` methods directly if you are
100% sure that the object has the method, as otherwise you are liable to
get unexpected ``AttributeError``s. Note, again, that you do not need to
recursively apply the hint to args of your object: this is handled
automatically by ``expand()``. ``_eval_expand_hint()`` should
generally not be used at all outside of an ``_eval_expand_hint()`` method.
If you want to apply a specific expansion from within another method, use
the public ``expand()`` function, method, or ``expand_hint()`` functions.
In order for expand to work, objects must be rebuildable by their args,
i.e., ``obj.func(*obj.args) == obj`` must hold.
Expand methods are passed ``**hints`` so that expand hints may use
'metahints'--hints that control how different expand methods are applied.
For example, the ``force=True`` hint described above that causes
``expand(log=True)`` to ignore assumptions is such a metahint. The
``deep`` meta-hint is handled exclusively by ``expand()`` and is not
passed to ``_eval_expand_hint()`` methods.
Note that expansion hints should generally be methods that perform some
kind of 'expansion'. For hints that simply rewrite an expression, use the
.rewrite() API.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Expr, sympify
>>> class MyClass(Expr):
... def __new__(cls, *args):
... args = sympify(args)
... return Expr.__new__(cls, *args)
...
... def _eval_expand_double(self, **hints):
... '''
... Doubles the args of MyClass.
...
... If there more than four args, doubling is not performed,
... unless force=True is also used (False by default).
... '''
... force = hints.pop('force', False)
... if not force and len(self.args) > 4:
... return self
... return self.func(*(self.args + self.args))
...
>>> a = MyClass(1, 2, MyClass(3, 4))
>>> a
MyClass(1, 2, MyClass(3, 4))
>>> a.expand(double=True)
MyClass(1, 2, MyClass(3, 4, 3, 4), 1, 2, MyClass(3, 4, 3, 4))
>>> a.expand(double=True, deep=False)
MyClass(1, 2, MyClass(3, 4), 1, 2, MyClass(3, 4))
>>> b = MyClass(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
>>> b.expand(double=True)
MyClass(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
>>> b.expand(double=True, force=True)
MyClass(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
See Also
========
expand_log, expand_mul, expand_multinomial, expand_complex, expand_trig,
expand_power_base, expand_power_exp, expand_func, hyperexpand
"""
# don't modify this; modify the Expr.expand method
hints['power_base'] = power_base
hints['power_exp'] = power_exp
hints['mul'] = mul
hints['log'] = log
hints['multinomial'] = multinomial
hints['basic'] = basic
return sympify(e).expand(deep=deep, modulus=modulus, **hints)
# This is a special application of two hints
def _mexpand(expr, recursive=False):
# expand multinomials and then expand products; this may not always
# be sufficient to give a fully expanded expression (see
# test_issue_8247_8354 in test_arit)
if expr is None:
return
was = None
while was != expr:
was, expr = expr, expand_mul(expand_multinomial(expr))
if not recursive:
break
return expr
# These are simple wrappers around single hints.
def expand_mul(expr, deep=True):
"""
Wrapper around expand that only uses the mul hint. See the expand
docstring for more information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, expand_mul, exp, log
>>> x, y = symbols('x,y', positive=True)
>>> expand_mul(exp(x+y)*(x+y)*log(x*y**2))
x*exp(x + y)*log(x*y**2) + y*exp(x + y)*log(x*y**2)
"""
return sympify(expr).expand(deep=deep, mul=True, power_exp=False,
power_base=False, basic=False, multinomial=False, log=False)
def expand_multinomial(expr, deep=True):
"""
Wrapper around expand that only uses the multinomial hint. See the expand
docstring for more information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, expand_multinomial, exp
>>> x, y = symbols('x y', positive=True)
>>> expand_multinomial((x + exp(x + 1))**2)
x**2 + 2*x*exp(x + 1) + exp(2*x + 2)
"""
return sympify(expr).expand(deep=deep, mul=False, power_exp=False,
power_base=False, basic=False, multinomial=True, log=False)
def expand_log(expr, deep=True, force=False):
"""
Wrapper around expand that only uses the log hint. See the expand
docstring for more information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols, expand_log, exp, log
>>> x, y = symbols('x,y', positive=True)
>>> expand_log(exp(x+y)*(x+y)*log(x*y**2))
(x + y)*(log(x) + 2*log(y))*exp(x + y)
"""
return sympify(expr).expand(deep=deep, log=True, mul=False,
power_exp=False, power_base=False, multinomial=False,
basic=False, force=force)
def expand_func(expr, deep=True):
"""
Wrapper around expand that only uses the func hint. See the expand
docstring for more information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import expand_func, gamma
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> expand_func(gamma(x + 2))
x*(x + 1)*gamma(x)
"""
return sympify(expr).expand(deep=deep, func=True, basic=False,
log=False, mul=False, power_exp=False, power_base=False, multinomial=False)
def expand_trig(expr, deep=True):
"""
Wrapper around expand that only uses the trig hint. See the expand
docstring for more information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import expand_trig, sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> expand_trig(sin(x+y)*(x+y))
(x + y)*(sin(x)*cos(y) + sin(y)*cos(x))
"""
return sympify(expr).expand(deep=deep, trig=True, basic=False,
log=False, mul=False, power_exp=False, power_base=False, multinomial=False)
def expand_complex(expr, deep=True):
"""
Wrapper around expand that only uses the complex hint. See the expand
docstring for more information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import expand_complex, exp, sqrt, I
>>> from sympy.abc import z
>>> expand_complex(exp(z))
I*exp(re(z))*sin(im(z)) + exp(re(z))*cos(im(z))
>>> expand_complex(sqrt(I))
sqrt(2)/2 + sqrt(2)*I/2
See Also
========
Expr.as_real_imag
"""
return sympify(expr).expand(deep=deep, complex=True, basic=False,
log=False, mul=False, power_exp=False, power_base=False, multinomial=False)
def expand_power_base(expr, deep=True, force=False):
"""
Wrapper around expand that only uses the power_base hint.
See the expand docstring for more information.
A wrapper to expand(power_base=True) which separates a power with a base
that is a Mul into a product of powers, without performing any other
expansions, provided that assumptions about the power's base and exponent
allow.
deep=False (default is True) will only apply to the top-level expression.
force=True (default is False) will cause the expansion to ignore
assumptions about the base and exponent. When False, the expansion will
only happen if the base is non-negative or the exponent is an integer.
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy import expand_power_base, sin, cos, exp
>>> (x*y)**2
x**2*y**2
>>> (2*x)**y
(2*x)**y
>>> expand_power_base(_)
2**y*x**y
>>> expand_power_base((x*y)**z)
(x*y)**z
>>> expand_power_base((x*y)**z, force=True)
x**z*y**z
>>> expand_power_base(sin((x*y)**z), deep=False)
sin((x*y)**z)
>>> expand_power_base(sin((x*y)**z), force=True)
sin(x**z*y**z)
>>> expand_power_base((2*sin(x))**y + (2*cos(x))**y)
2**y*sin(x)**y + 2**y*cos(x)**y
>>> expand_power_base((2*exp(y))**x)
2**x*exp(y)**x
>>> expand_power_base((2*cos(x))**y)
2**y*cos(x)**y
Notice that sums are left untouched. If this is not the desired behavior,
apply full ``expand()`` to the expression:
>>> expand_power_base(((x+y)*z)**2)
z**2*(x + y)**2
>>> (((x+y)*z)**2).expand()
x**2*z**2 + 2*x*y*z**2 + y**2*z**2
>>> expand_power_base((2*y)**(1+z))
2**(z + 1)*y**(z + 1)
>>> ((2*y)**(1+z)).expand()
2*2**z*y*y**z
"""
return sympify(expr).expand(deep=deep, log=False, mul=False,
power_exp=False, power_base=True, multinomial=False,
basic=False, force=force)
def expand_power_exp(expr, deep=True):
"""
Wrapper around expand that only uses the power_exp hint.
See the expand docstring for more information.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import expand_power_exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> expand_power_exp(x**(y + 2))
x**2*x**y
"""
return sympify(expr).expand(deep=deep, complex=False, basic=False,
log=False, mul=False, power_exp=True, power_base=False, multinomial=False)
def count_ops(expr, visual=False):
"""
Return a representation (integer or expression) of the operations in expr.
If ``visual`` is ``False`` (default) then the sum of the coefficients of the
visual expression will be returned.
If ``visual`` is ``True`` then the number of each type of operation is shown
with the core class types (or their virtual equivalent) multiplied by the
number of times they occur.
If expr is an iterable, the sum of the op counts of the
items will be returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, x, y
>>> from sympy import sin, count_ops
Although there isn't a SUB object, minus signs are interpreted as
either negations or subtractions:
>>> (x - y).count_ops(visual=True)
SUB
>>> (-x).count_ops(visual=True)
NEG
Here, there are two Adds and a Pow:
>>> (1 + a + b**2).count_ops(visual=True)
2*ADD + POW
In the following, an Add, Mul, Pow and two functions:
>>> (sin(x)*x + sin(x)**2).count_ops(visual=True)
ADD + MUL + POW + 2*SIN
for a total of 5:
>>> (sin(x)*x + sin(x)**2).count_ops(visual=False)
5
Note that "what you type" is not always what you get. The expression
1/x/y is translated by sympy into 1/(x*y) so it gives a DIV and MUL rather
than two DIVs:
>>> (1/x/y).count_ops(visual=True)
DIV + MUL
The visual option can be used to demonstrate the difference in
operations for expressions in different forms. Here, the Horner
representation is compared with the expanded form of a polynomial:
>>> eq=x*(1 + x*(2 + x*(3 + x)))
>>> count_ops(eq.expand(), visual=True) - count_ops(eq, visual=True)
-MUL + 3*POW
The count_ops function also handles iterables:
>>> count_ops([x, sin(x), None, True, x + 2], visual=False)
2
>>> count_ops([x, sin(x), None, True, x + 2], visual=True)
ADD + SIN
>>> count_ops({x: sin(x), x + 2: y + 1}, visual=True)
2*ADD + SIN
"""
from sympy import Integral, Symbol
from sympy.core.relational import Relational
from sympy.simplify.radsimp import fraction
from sympy.logic.boolalg import BooleanFunction
from sympy.utilities.misc import func_name
expr = sympify(expr)
if isinstance(expr, Expr) and not expr.is_Relational:
ops = []
args = [expr]
NEG = Symbol('NEG')
DIV = Symbol('DIV')
SUB = Symbol('SUB')
ADD = Symbol('ADD')
while args:
a = args.pop()
# XXX: This is a hack to support non-Basic args
if isinstance(a, string_types):
continue
if a.is_Rational:
#-1/3 = NEG + DIV
if a is not S.One:
if a.p < 0:
ops.append(NEG)
if a.q != 1:
ops.append(DIV)
continue
elif a.is_Mul or a.is_MatMul:
if _coeff_isneg(a):
ops.append(NEG)
if a.args[0] is S.NegativeOne:
a = a.as_two_terms()[1]
else:
a = -a
n, d = fraction(a)
if n.is_Integer:
ops.append(DIV)
if n < 0:
ops.append(NEG)
args.append(d)
continue # won't be -Mul but could be Add
elif d is not S.One:
if not d.is_Integer:
args.append(d)
ops.append(DIV)
args.append(n)
continue # could be -Mul
elif a.is_Add or a.is_MatAdd:
aargs = list(a.args)
negs = 0
for i, ai in enumerate(aargs):
if _coeff_isneg(ai):
negs += 1
args.append(-ai)
if i > 0:
ops.append(SUB)
else:
args.append(ai)
if i > 0:
ops.append(ADD)
if negs == len(aargs): # -x - y = NEG + SUB
ops.append(NEG)
elif _coeff_isneg(aargs[0]): # -x + y = SUB, but already recorded ADD
ops.append(SUB - ADD)
continue
if a.is_Pow and a.exp is S.NegativeOne:
ops.append(DIV)
args.append(a.base) # won't be -Mul but could be Add
continue
if (a.is_Mul or
a.is_Pow or
a.is_Function or
isinstance(a, Derivative) or
isinstance(a, Integral)):
o = Symbol(a.func.__name__.upper())
# count the args
if (a.is_Mul or isinstance(a, LatticeOp)):
ops.append(o*(len(a.args) - 1))
else:
ops.append(o)
if not a.is_Symbol:
args.extend(a.args)
elif type(expr) is dict:
ops = [count_ops(k, visual=visual) +
count_ops(v, visual=visual) for k, v in expr.items()]
elif iterable(expr):
ops = [count_ops(i, visual=visual) for i in expr]
elif isinstance(expr, (Relational, BooleanFunction)):
ops = []
for arg in expr.args:
ops.append(count_ops(arg, visual=True))
o = Symbol(func_name(expr, short=True).upper())
ops.append(o)
elif not isinstance(expr, Basic):
ops = []
else: # it's Basic not isinstance(expr, Expr):
if not isinstance(expr, Basic):
raise TypeError("Invalid type of expr")
else:
ops = []
args = [expr]
while args:
a = args.pop()
# XXX: This is a hack to support non-Basic args
if isinstance(a, string_types):
continue
if a.args:
o = Symbol(a.func.__name__.upper())
if a.is_Boolean:
ops.append(o*(len(a.args)-1))
else:
ops.append(o)
args.extend(a.args)
if not ops:
if visual:
return S.Zero
return 0
ops = Add(*ops)
if visual:
return ops
if ops.is_Number:
return int(ops)
return sum(int((a.args or [1])[0]) for a in Add.make_args(ops))
def nfloat(expr, n=15, exponent=False):
"""Make all Rationals in expr Floats except those in exponents
(unless the exponents flag is set to True).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.function import nfloat
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import cos, pi, sqrt
>>> nfloat(x**4 + x/2 + cos(pi/3) + 1 + sqrt(y))
x**4 + 0.5*x + sqrt(y) + 1.5
>>> nfloat(x**4 + sqrt(y), exponent=True)
x**4.0 + y**0.5
"""
from sympy.core.power import Pow
from sympy.polys.rootoftools import RootOf
if iterable(expr, exclude=string_types):
if isinstance(expr, (dict, Dict)):
return type(expr)([(k, nfloat(v, n, exponent)) for k, v in
list(expr.items())])
return type(expr)([nfloat(a, n, exponent) for a in expr])
rv = sympify(expr)
if rv.is_Number:
return Float(rv, n)
elif rv.is_number:
# evalf doesn't always set the precision
rv = rv.n(n)
if rv.is_Number:
rv = Float(rv.n(n), n)
else:
pass # pure_complex(rv) is likely True
return rv
# watch out for RootOf instances that don't like to have
# their exponents replaced with Dummies and also sometimes have
# problems with evaluating at low precision (issue 6393)
rv = rv.xreplace({ro: ro.n(n) for ro in rv.atoms(RootOf)})
if not exponent:
reps = [(p, Pow(p.base, Dummy())) for p in rv.atoms(Pow)]
rv = rv.xreplace(dict(reps))
rv = rv.n(n)
if not exponent:
rv = rv.xreplace({d.exp: p.exp for p, d in reps})
else:
# Pow._eval_evalf special cases Integer exponents so if
# exponent is suppose to be handled we have to do so here
rv = rv.xreplace(Transform(
lambda x: Pow(x.base, Float(x.exp, n)),
lambda x: x.is_Pow and x.exp.is_Integer))
return rv.xreplace(Transform(
lambda x: x.func(*nfloat(x.args, n, exponent)),
lambda x: isinstance(x, Function)))
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy, Symbol
|
83941c3c850ef8db3b7d4653e680b4892f4429f1c5868b5eefd13b6432422df5
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from .sympify import sympify, _sympify, SympifyError
from .basic import Basic, Atom
from .singleton import S
from .evalf import EvalfMixin, pure_complex
from .decorators import _sympifyit, call_highest_priority
from .cache import cacheit
from .compatibility import reduce, as_int, default_sort_key, range, Iterable
from mpmath.libmp import mpf_log, prec_to_dps
from collections import defaultdict
class Expr(Basic, EvalfMixin):
"""
Base class for algebraic expressions.
Everything that requires arithmetic operations to be defined
should subclass this class, instead of Basic (which should be
used only for argument storage and expression manipulation, i.e.
pattern matching, substitutions, etc).
See Also
========
sympy.core.basic.Basic
"""
__slots__ = []
is_scalar = True # self derivative is 1
@property
def _diff_wrt(self):
"""Return True if one can differentiate with respect to this
object, else False.
Subclasses such as Symbol, Function and Derivative return True
to enable derivatives wrt them. The implementation in Derivative
separates the Symbol and non-Symbol (_diff_wrt=True) variables and
temporarily converts the non-Symbols into Symbols when performing
the differentiation. By default, any object deriving from Expr
will behave like a scalar with self.diff(self) == 1. If this is
not desired then the object must also set `is_scalar = False` or
else define an _eval_derivative routine.
Note, see the docstring of Derivative for how this should work
mathematically. In particular, note that expr.subs(yourclass, Symbol)
should be well-defined on a structural level, or this will lead to
inconsistent results.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Expr
>>> e = Expr()
>>> e._diff_wrt
False
>>> class MyScalar(Expr):
... _diff_wrt = True
...
>>> MyScalar().diff(MyScalar())
1
>>> class MySymbol(Expr):
... _diff_wrt = True
... is_scalar = False
...
>>> MySymbol().diff(MySymbol())
Derivative(MySymbol(), MySymbol())
"""
return False
@cacheit
def sort_key(self, order=None):
coeff, expr = self.as_coeff_Mul()
if expr.is_Pow:
expr, exp = expr.args
else:
expr, exp = expr, S.One
if expr.is_Dummy:
args = (expr.sort_key(),)
elif expr.is_Atom:
args = (str(expr),)
else:
if expr.is_Add:
args = expr.as_ordered_terms(order=order)
elif expr.is_Mul:
args = expr.as_ordered_factors(order=order)
else:
args = expr.args
args = tuple(
[ default_sort_key(arg, order=order) for arg in args ])
args = (len(args), tuple(args))
exp = exp.sort_key(order=order)
return expr.class_key(), args, exp, coeff
# ***************
# * Arithmetics *
# ***************
# Expr and its sublcasses use _op_priority to determine which object
# passed to a binary special method (__mul__, etc.) will handle the
# operation. In general, the 'call_highest_priority' decorator will choose
# the object with the highest _op_priority to handle the call.
# Custom subclasses that want to define their own binary special methods
# should set an _op_priority value that is higher than the default.
#
# **NOTE**:
# This is a temporary fix, and will eventually be replaced with
# something better and more powerful. See issue 5510.
_op_priority = 10.0
def __pos__(self):
return self
def __neg__(self):
return Mul(S.NegativeOne, self)
def __abs__(self):
from sympy import Abs
return Abs(self)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__radd__')
def __add__(self, other):
return Add(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__add__')
def __radd__(self, other):
return Add(other, self)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__rsub__')
def __sub__(self, other):
return Add(self, -other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__sub__')
def __rsub__(self, other):
return Add(other, -self)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__rmul__')
def __mul__(self, other):
return Mul(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__mul__')
def __rmul__(self, other):
return Mul(other, self)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__rpow__')
def _pow(self, other):
return Pow(self, other)
def __pow__(self, other, mod=None):
if mod is None:
return self._pow(other)
try:
_self, other, mod = as_int(self), as_int(other), as_int(mod)
if other >= 0:
return pow(_self, other, mod)
else:
from sympy.core.numbers import mod_inverse
return mod_inverse(pow(_self, -other, mod), mod)
except ValueError:
power = self._pow(other)
try:
return power%mod
except TypeError:
return NotImplemented
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__pow__')
def __rpow__(self, other):
return Pow(other, self)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__rdiv__')
def __div__(self, other):
return Mul(self, Pow(other, S.NegativeOne))
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__div__')
def __rdiv__(self, other):
return Mul(other, Pow(self, S.NegativeOne))
__truediv__ = __div__
__rtruediv__ = __rdiv__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__rmod__')
def __mod__(self, other):
return Mod(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__mod__')
def __rmod__(self, other):
return Mod(other, self)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__rfloordiv__')
def __floordiv__(self, other):
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import floor
return floor(self / other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__floordiv__')
def __rfloordiv__(self, other):
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import floor
return floor(other / self)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__rdivmod__')
def __divmod__(self, other):
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import floor
return floor(self / other), Mod(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
@call_highest_priority('__divmod__')
def __rdivmod__(self, other):
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import floor
return floor(other / self), Mod(other, self)
def __int__(self):
# Although we only need to round to the units position, we'll
# get one more digit so the extra testing below can be avoided
# unless the rounded value rounded to an integer, e.g. if an
# expression were equal to 1.9 and we rounded to the unit position
# we would get a 2 and would not know if this rounded up or not
# without doing a test (as done below). But if we keep an extra
# digit we know that 1.9 is not the same as 1 and there is no
# need for further testing: our int value is correct. If the value
# were 1.99, however, this would round to 2.0 and our int value is
# off by one. So...if our round value is the same as the int value
# (regardless of how much extra work we do to calculate extra decimal
# places) we need to test whether we are off by one.
from sympy import Dummy
if not self.is_number:
raise TypeError("can't convert symbols to int")
r = self.round(2)
if not r.is_Number:
raise TypeError("can't convert complex to int")
if r in (S.NaN, S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity):
raise TypeError("can't convert %s to int" % r)
i = int(r)
if not i:
return 0
# off-by-one check
if i == r and not (self - i).equals(0):
isign = 1 if i > 0 else -1
x = Dummy()
# in the following (self - i).evalf(2) will not always work while
# (self - r).evalf(2) and the use of subs does; if the test that
# was added when this comment was added passes, it might be safe
# to simply use sign to compute this rather than doing this by hand:
diff_sign = 1 if (self - x).evalf(2, subs={x: i}) > 0 else -1
if diff_sign != isign:
i -= isign
return i
__long__ = __int__
def __float__(self):
# Don't bother testing if it's a number; if it's not this is going
# to fail, and if it is we still need to check that it evalf'ed to
# a number.
result = self.evalf()
if result.is_Number:
return float(result)
if result.is_number and result.as_real_imag()[1]:
raise TypeError("can't convert complex to float")
raise TypeError("can't convert expression to float")
def __complex__(self):
result = self.evalf()
re, im = result.as_real_imag()
return complex(float(re), float(im))
def __ge__(self, other):
from sympy import GreaterThan
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s >= %s" % (self, other))
for me in (self, other):
if me.is_complex and me.is_real is False:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison of complex %s" % me)
if me is S.NaN:
raise TypeError("Invalid NaN comparison")
n2 = _n2(self, other)
if n2 is not None:
return _sympify(n2 >= 0)
if self.is_real or other.is_real:
dif = self - other
if dif.is_nonnegative is not None and \
dif.is_nonnegative is not dif.is_negative:
return sympify(dif.is_nonnegative)
return GreaterThan(self, other, evaluate=False)
def __le__(self, other):
from sympy import LessThan
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s <= %s" % (self, other))
for me in (self, other):
if me.is_complex and me.is_real is False:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison of complex %s" % me)
if me is S.NaN:
raise TypeError("Invalid NaN comparison")
n2 = _n2(self, other)
if n2 is not None:
return _sympify(n2 <= 0)
if self.is_real or other.is_real:
dif = self - other
if dif.is_nonpositive is not None and \
dif.is_nonpositive is not dif.is_positive:
return sympify(dif.is_nonpositive)
return LessThan(self, other, evaluate=False)
def __gt__(self, other):
from sympy import StrictGreaterThan
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s > %s" % (self, other))
for me in (self, other):
if me.is_complex and me.is_real is False:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison of complex %s" % me)
if me is S.NaN:
raise TypeError("Invalid NaN comparison")
n2 = _n2(self, other)
if n2 is not None:
return _sympify(n2 > 0)
if self.is_real or other.is_real:
dif = self - other
if dif.is_positive is not None and \
dif.is_positive is not dif.is_nonpositive:
return sympify(dif.is_positive)
return StrictGreaterThan(self, other, evaluate=False)
def __lt__(self, other):
from sympy import StrictLessThan
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s < %s" % (self, other))
for me in (self, other):
if me.is_complex and me.is_real is False:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison of complex %s" % me)
if me is S.NaN:
raise TypeError("Invalid NaN comparison")
n2 = _n2(self, other)
if n2 is not None:
return _sympify(n2 < 0)
if self.is_real or other.is_real:
dif = self - other
if dif.is_negative is not None and \
dif.is_negative is not dif.is_nonnegative:
return sympify(dif.is_negative)
return StrictLessThan(self, other, evaluate=False)
def __trunc__(self):
if not self.is_number:
raise TypeError("can't truncate symbols and expressions")
else:
return Integer(self)
@staticmethod
def _from_mpmath(x, prec):
from sympy import Float
if hasattr(x, "_mpf_"):
return Float._new(x._mpf_, prec)
elif hasattr(x, "_mpc_"):
re, im = x._mpc_
re = Float._new(re, prec)
im = Float._new(im, prec)*S.ImaginaryUnit
return re + im
else:
raise TypeError("expected mpmath number (mpf or mpc)")
@property
def is_number(self):
"""Returns True if ``self`` has no free symbols and no
undefined functions (AppliedUndef, to be precise). It will be
faster than ``if not self.free_symbols``, however, since
``is_number`` will fail as soon as it hits a free symbol
or undefined function.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import log, Integral, cos, sin, pi
>>> from sympy.core.function import Function
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Function('f')
>>> x.is_number
False
>>> f(1).is_number
False
>>> (2*x).is_number
False
>>> (2 + Integral(2, x)).is_number
False
>>> (2 + Integral(2, (x, 1, 2))).is_number
True
Not all numbers are Numbers in the SymPy sense:
>>> pi.is_number, pi.is_Number
(True, False)
If something is a number it should evaluate to a number with
real and imaginary parts that are Numbers; the result may not
be comparable, however, since the real and/or imaginary part
of the result may not have precision.
>>> cos(1).is_number and cos(1).is_comparable
True
>>> z = cos(1)**2 + sin(1)**2 - 1
>>> z.is_number
True
>>> z.is_comparable
False
See Also
========
sympy.core.basic.is_comparable
"""
return all(obj.is_number for obj in self.args)
def _random(self, n=None, re_min=-1, im_min=-1, re_max=1, im_max=1):
"""Return self evaluated, if possible, replacing free symbols with
random complex values, if necessary.
The random complex value for each free symbol is generated
by the random_complex_number routine giving real and imaginary
parts in the range given by the re_min, re_max, im_min, and im_max
values. The returned value is evaluated to a precision of n
(if given) else the maximum of 15 and the precision needed
to get more than 1 digit of precision. If the expression
could not be evaluated to a number, or could not be evaluated
to more than 1 digit of precision, then None is returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> x._random() # doctest: +SKIP
0.0392918155679172 + 0.916050214307199*I
>>> x._random(2) # doctest: +SKIP
-0.77 - 0.87*I
>>> (x + y/2)._random(2) # doctest: +SKIP
-0.57 + 0.16*I
>>> sqrt(2)._random(2)
1.4
See Also
========
sympy.utilities.randtest.random_complex_number
"""
free = self.free_symbols
prec = 1
if free:
from sympy.utilities.randtest import random_complex_number
a, c, b, d = re_min, re_max, im_min, im_max
reps = dict(list(zip(free, [random_complex_number(a, b, c, d, rational=True)
for zi in free])))
try:
nmag = abs(self.evalf(2, subs=reps))
except (ValueError, TypeError):
# if an out of range value resulted in evalf problems
# then return None -- XXX is there a way to know how to
# select a good random number for a given expression?
# e.g. when calculating n! negative values for n should not
# be used
return None
else:
reps = {}
nmag = abs(self.evalf(2))
if not hasattr(nmag, '_prec'):
# e.g. exp_polar(2*I*pi) doesn't evaluate but is_number is True
return None
if nmag._prec == 1:
# increase the precision up to the default maximum
# precision to see if we can get any significance
from mpmath.libmp.libintmath import giant_steps
from sympy.core.evalf import DEFAULT_MAXPREC as target
# evaluate
for prec in giant_steps(2, target):
nmag = abs(self.evalf(prec, subs=reps))
if nmag._prec != 1:
break
if nmag._prec != 1:
if n is None:
n = max(prec, 15)
return self.evalf(n, subs=reps)
# never got any significance
return None
def is_constant(self, *wrt, **flags):
"""Return True if self is constant, False if not, or None if
the constancy could not be determined conclusively.
If an expression has no free symbols then it is a constant. If
there are free symbols it is possible that the expression is a
constant, perhaps (but not necessarily) zero. To test such
expressions, two strategies are tried:
1) numerical evaluation at two random points. If two such evaluations
give two different values and the values have a precision greater than
1 then self is not constant. If the evaluations agree or could not be
obtained with any precision, no decision is made. The numerical testing
is done only if ``wrt`` is different than the free symbols.
2) differentiation with respect to variables in 'wrt' (or all free
symbols if omitted) to see if the expression is constant or not. This
will not always lead to an expression that is zero even though an
expression is constant (see added test in test_expr.py). If
all derivatives are zero then self is constant with respect to the
given symbols.
If neither evaluation nor differentiation can prove the expression is
constant, None is returned unless two numerical values happened to be
the same and the flag ``failing_number`` is True -- in that case the
numerical value will be returned.
If flag simplify=False is passed, self will not be simplified;
the default is True since self should be simplified before testing.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import cos, sin, Sum, S, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import a, n, x, y
>>> x.is_constant()
False
>>> S(2).is_constant()
True
>>> Sum(x, (x, 1, 10)).is_constant()
True
>>> Sum(x, (x, 1, n)).is_constant()
False
>>> Sum(x, (x, 1, n)).is_constant(y)
True
>>> Sum(x, (x, 1, n)).is_constant(n)
False
>>> Sum(x, (x, 1, n)).is_constant(x)
True
>>> eq = a*cos(x)**2 + a*sin(x)**2 - a
>>> eq.is_constant()
True
>>> eq.subs({x: pi, a: 2}) == eq.subs({x: pi, a: 3}) == 0
True
>>> (0**x).is_constant()
False
>>> x.is_constant()
False
>>> (x**x).is_constant()
False
>>> one = cos(x)**2 + sin(x)**2
>>> one.is_constant()
True
>>> ((one - 1)**(x + 1)).is_constant() in (True, False) # could be 0 or 1
True
"""
simplify = flags.get('simplify', True)
if self.is_number:
return True
free = self.free_symbols
if not free:
return True # assume f(1) is some constant
# if we are only interested in some symbols and they are not in the
# free symbols then this expression is constant wrt those symbols
wrt = set(wrt)
if wrt and not wrt & free:
return True
wrt = wrt or free
# simplify unless this has already been done
expr = self
if simplify:
expr = expr.simplify()
# is_zero should be a quick assumptions check; it can be wrong for
# numbers (see test_is_not_constant test), giving False when it
# shouldn't, but hopefully it will never give True unless it is sure.
if expr.is_zero:
return True
# try numerical evaluation to see if we get two different values
failing_number = None
if wrt == free:
# try 0 (for a) and 1 (for b)
try:
a = expr.subs(list(zip(free, [0]*len(free))),
simultaneous=True)
if a is S.NaN:
# evaluation may succeed when substitution fails
a = expr._random(None, 0, 0, 0, 0)
except ZeroDivisionError:
a = None
if a is not None and a is not S.NaN:
try:
b = expr.subs(list(zip(free, [1]*len(free))),
simultaneous=True)
if b is S.NaN:
# evaluation may succeed when substitution fails
b = expr._random(None, 1, 0, 1, 0)
except ZeroDivisionError:
b = None
if b is not None and b is not S.NaN and b.equals(a) is False:
return False
# try random real
b = expr._random(None, -1, 0, 1, 0)
if b is not None and b is not S.NaN and b.equals(a) is False:
return False
# try random complex
b = expr._random()
if b is not None and b is not S.NaN:
if b.equals(a) is False:
return False
failing_number = a if a.is_number else b
# now we will test each wrt symbol (or all free symbols) to see if the
# expression depends on them or not using differentiation. This is
# not sufficient for all expressions, however, so we don't return
# False if we get a derivative other than 0 with free symbols.
for w in wrt:
deriv = expr.diff(w)
if simplify:
deriv = deriv.simplify()
if deriv != 0:
if not (pure_complex(deriv, or_real=True)):
if flags.get('failing_number', False):
return failing_number
elif deriv.free_symbols:
# dead line provided _random returns None in such cases
return None
return False
return True
def equals(self, other, failing_expression=False):
"""Return True if self == other, False if it doesn't, or None. If
failing_expression is True then the expression which did not simplify
to a 0 will be returned instead of None.
If ``self`` is a Number (or complex number) that is not zero, then
the result is False.
If ``self`` is a number and has not evaluated to zero, evalf will be
used to test whether the expression evaluates to zero. If it does so
and the result has significance (i.e. the precision is either -1, for
a Rational result, or is greater than 1) then the evalf value will be
used to return True or False.
"""
from sympy.simplify.simplify import nsimplify, simplify
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import NotAlgebraic
from sympy.polys.numberfields import minimal_polynomial
other = sympify(other)
if self == other:
return True
# they aren't the same so see if we can make the difference 0;
# don't worry about doing simplification steps one at a time
# because if the expression ever goes to 0 then the subsequent
# simplification steps that are done will be very fast.
diff = factor_terms(simplify(self - other), radical=True)
if not diff:
return True
if not diff.has(Add, Mod):
# if there is no expanding to be done after simplifying
# then this can't be a zero
return False
constant = diff.is_constant(simplify=False, failing_number=True)
if constant is False:
return False
if constant is None and (diff.free_symbols or not diff.is_number):
# e.g. unless the right simplification is done, a symbolic
# zero is possible (see expression of issue 6829: without
# simplification constant will be None).
return
if constant is True:
ndiff = diff._random()
if ndiff:
return False
# sometimes we can use a simplified result to give a clue as to
# what the expression should be; if the expression is *not* zero
# then we should have been able to compute that and so now
# we can just consider the cases where the approximation appears
# to be zero -- we try to prove it via minimal_polynomial.
if diff.is_number:
approx = diff.nsimplify()
if not approx:
# try to prove via self-consistency
surds = [s for s in diff.atoms(Pow) if s.args[0].is_Integer]
# it seems to work better to try big ones first
surds.sort(key=lambda x: -x.args[0])
for s in surds:
try:
# simplify is False here -- this expression has already
# been identified as being hard to identify as zero;
# we will handle the checking ourselves using nsimplify
# to see if we are in the right ballpark or not and if so
# *then* the simplification will be attempted.
if s.is_Symbol:
sol = list(solveset(diff, s))
else:
sol = [s]
if sol:
if s in sol:
return True
if s.is_real:
if any(nsimplify(si, [s]) == s and simplify(si) == s
for si in sol):
return True
except NotImplementedError:
pass
# try to prove with minimal_polynomial but know when
# *not* to use this or else it can take a long time. e.g. issue 8354
if True: # change True to condition that assures non-hang
try:
mp = minimal_polynomial(diff)
if mp.is_Symbol:
return True
return False
except (NotAlgebraic, NotImplementedError):
pass
# diff has not simplified to zero; constant is either None, True
# or the number with significance (prec != 1) that was randomly
# calculated twice as the same value.
if constant not in (True, None) and constant != 0:
return False
if failing_expression:
return diff
return None
def _eval_is_positive(self):
from sympy.polys.numberfields import minimal_polynomial
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import NotAlgebraic
if self.is_number:
if self.is_real is False:
return False
try:
# check to see that we can get a value
n2 = self._eval_evalf(2)
if n2 is None:
raise AttributeError
if n2._prec == 1: # no significance
raise AttributeError
if n2 == S.NaN:
raise AttributeError
except (AttributeError, ValueError):
return None
n, i = self.evalf(2).as_real_imag()
if not i.is_Number or not n.is_Number:
return False
if n._prec != 1 and i._prec != 1:
return bool(not i and n > 0)
elif n._prec == 1 and (not i or i._prec == 1) and \
self.is_algebraic and not self.has(Function):
try:
if minimal_polynomial(self).is_Symbol:
return False
except (NotAlgebraic, NotImplementedError):
pass
def _eval_is_negative(self):
from sympy.polys.numberfields import minimal_polynomial
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import NotAlgebraic
if self.is_number:
if self.is_real is False:
return False
try:
# check to see that we can get a value
n2 = self._eval_evalf(2)
if n2 is None:
raise AttributeError
if n2._prec == 1: # no significance
raise AttributeError
if n2 == S.NaN:
raise AttributeError
except (AttributeError, ValueError):
return None
n, i = self.evalf(2).as_real_imag()
if not i.is_Number or not n.is_Number:
return False
if n._prec != 1 and i._prec != 1:
return bool(not i and n < 0)
elif n._prec == 1 and (not i or i._prec == 1) and \
self.is_algebraic and not self.has(Function):
try:
if minimal_polynomial(self).is_Symbol:
return False
except (NotAlgebraic, NotImplementedError):
pass
def _eval_interval(self, x, a, b):
"""
Returns evaluation over an interval. For most functions this is:
self.subs(x, b) - self.subs(x, a),
possibly using limit() if NaN is returned from subs, or if
singularities are found between a and b.
If b or a is None, it only evaluates -self.subs(x, a) or self.subs(b, x),
respectively.
"""
from sympy.series import limit, Limit
from sympy.solvers.solveset import solveset
from sympy.sets.sets import Interval
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import log
from sympy.calculus.util import AccumBounds
if (a is None and b is None):
raise ValueError('Both interval ends cannot be None.')
if a == b:
return 0
if a is None:
A = 0
else:
A = self.subs(x, a)
if A.has(S.NaN, S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity, S.ComplexInfinity, AccumBounds):
if (a < b) != False:
A = limit(self, x, a,"+")
else:
A = limit(self, x, a,"-")
if A is S.NaN:
return A
if isinstance(A, Limit):
raise NotImplementedError("Could not compute limit")
if b is None:
B = 0
else:
B = self.subs(x, b)
if B.has(S.NaN, S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity, S.ComplexInfinity, AccumBounds):
if (a < b) != False:
B = limit(self, x, b,"-")
else:
B = limit(self, x, b,"+")
if isinstance(B, Limit):
raise NotImplementedError("Could not compute limit")
if (a and b) is None:
return B - A
value = B - A
if a.is_comparable and b.is_comparable:
if a < b:
domain = Interval(a, b)
else:
domain = Interval(b, a)
# check the singularities of self within the interval
# if singularities is a ConditionSet (not iterable), catch the exception and pass
singularities = solveset(self.cancel().as_numer_denom()[1], x,
domain=domain)
for logterm in self.atoms(log):
singularities = singularities | solveset(logterm.args[0], x,
domain=domain)
try:
for s in singularities:
if value is S.NaN:
# no need to keep adding, it will stay NaN
break
if not s.is_comparable:
continue
if (a < s) == (s < b) == True:
value += -limit(self, x, s, "+") + limit(self, x, s, "-")
elif (b < s) == (s < a) == True:
value += limit(self, x, s, "+") - limit(self, x, s, "-")
except TypeError:
pass
return value
def _eval_power(self, other):
# subclass to compute self**other for cases when
# other is not NaN, 0, or 1
return None
def _eval_conjugate(self):
if self.is_real:
return self
elif self.is_imaginary:
return -self
def conjugate(self):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import conjugate as c
return c(self)
def _eval_transpose(self):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import conjugate
if self.is_complex:
return self
elif self.is_hermitian:
return conjugate(self)
elif self.is_antihermitian:
return -conjugate(self)
def transpose(self):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import transpose
return transpose(self)
def _eval_adjoint(self):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import conjugate, transpose
if self.is_hermitian:
return self
elif self.is_antihermitian:
return -self
obj = self._eval_conjugate()
if obj is not None:
return transpose(obj)
obj = self._eval_transpose()
if obj is not None:
return conjugate(obj)
def adjoint(self):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import adjoint
return adjoint(self)
@classmethod
def _parse_order(cls, order):
"""Parse and configure the ordering of terms. """
from sympy.polys.orderings import monomial_key
try:
reverse = order.startswith('rev-')
except AttributeError:
reverse = False
else:
if reverse:
order = order[4:]
monom_key = monomial_key(order)
def neg(monom):
result = []
for m in monom:
if isinstance(m, tuple):
result.append(neg(m))
else:
result.append(-m)
return tuple(result)
def key(term):
_, ((re, im), monom, ncpart) = term
monom = neg(monom_key(monom))
ncpart = tuple([e.sort_key(order=order) for e in ncpart])
coeff = ((bool(im), im), (re, im))
return monom, ncpart, coeff
return key, reverse
def as_ordered_factors(self, order=None):
"""Return list of ordered factors (if Mul) else [self]."""
return [self]
def as_ordered_terms(self, order=None, data=False):
"""
Transform an expression to an ordered list of terms.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> (sin(x)**2*cos(x) + sin(x)**2 + 1).as_ordered_terms()
[sin(x)**2*cos(x), sin(x)**2, 1]
"""
key, reverse = self._parse_order(order)
terms, gens = self.as_terms()
if not any(term.is_Order for term, _ in terms):
ordered = sorted(terms, key=key, reverse=reverse)
else:
_terms, _order = [], []
for term, repr in terms:
if not term.is_Order:
_terms.append((term, repr))
else:
_order.append((term, repr))
ordered = sorted(_terms, key=key, reverse=True) \
+ sorted(_order, key=key, reverse=True)
if data:
return ordered, gens
else:
return [term for term, _ in ordered]
def as_terms(self):
"""Transform an expression to a list of terms. """
from .add import Add
from .mul import Mul
from .exprtools import decompose_power
gens, terms = set([]), []
for term in Add.make_args(self):
coeff, _term = term.as_coeff_Mul()
coeff = complex(coeff)
cpart, ncpart = {}, []
if _term is not S.One:
for factor in Mul.make_args(_term):
if factor.is_number:
try:
coeff *= complex(factor)
except TypeError:
pass
else:
continue
if factor.is_commutative:
base, exp = decompose_power(factor)
cpart[base] = exp
gens.add(base)
else:
ncpart.append(factor)
coeff = coeff.real, coeff.imag
ncpart = tuple(ncpart)
terms.append((term, (coeff, cpart, ncpart)))
gens = sorted(gens, key=default_sort_key)
k, indices = len(gens), {}
for i, g in enumerate(gens):
indices[g] = i
result = []
for term, (coeff, cpart, ncpart) in terms:
monom = [0]*k
for base, exp in cpart.items():
monom[indices[base]] = exp
result.append((term, (coeff, tuple(monom), ncpart)))
return result, gens
def removeO(self):
"""Removes the additive O(..) symbol if there is one"""
return self
def getO(self):
"""Returns the additive O(..) symbol if there is one, else None."""
return None
def getn(self):
"""
Returns the order of the expression.
The order is determined either from the O(...) term. If there
is no O(...) term, it returns None.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import O
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> (1 + x + O(x**2)).getn()
2
>>> (1 + x).getn()
"""
from sympy import Dummy, Symbol
o = self.getO()
if o is None:
return None
elif o.is_Order:
o = o.expr
if o is S.One:
return S.Zero
if o.is_Symbol:
return S.One
if o.is_Pow:
return o.args[1]
if o.is_Mul: # x**n*log(x)**n or x**n/log(x)**n
for oi in o.args:
if oi.is_Symbol:
return S.One
if oi.is_Pow:
syms = oi.atoms(Symbol)
if len(syms) == 1:
x = syms.pop()
oi = oi.subs(x, Dummy('x', positive=True))
if oi.base.is_Symbol and oi.exp.is_Rational:
return abs(oi.exp)
raise NotImplementedError('not sure of order of %s' % o)
def count_ops(self, visual=None):
"""wrapper for count_ops that returns the operation count."""
from .function import count_ops
return count_ops(self, visual)
def args_cnc(self, cset=False, warn=True, split_1=True):
"""Return [commutative factors, non-commutative factors] of self.
self is treated as a Mul and the ordering of the factors is maintained.
If ``cset`` is True the commutative factors will be returned in a set.
If there were repeated factors (as may happen with an unevaluated Mul)
then an error will be raised unless it is explicitly suppressed by
setting ``warn`` to False.
Note: -1 is always separated from a Number unless split_1 is False.
>>> from sympy import symbols, oo
>>> A, B = symbols('A B', commutative=0)
>>> x, y = symbols('x y')
>>> (-2*x*y).args_cnc()
[[-1, 2, x, y], []]
>>> (-2.5*x).args_cnc()
[[-1, 2.5, x], []]
>>> (-2*x*A*B*y).args_cnc()
[[-1, 2, x, y], [A, B]]
>>> (-2*x*A*B*y).args_cnc(split_1=False)
[[-2, x, y], [A, B]]
>>> (-2*x*y).args_cnc(cset=True)
[{-1, 2, x, y}, []]
The arg is always treated as a Mul:
>>> (-2 + x + A).args_cnc()
[[], [x - 2 + A]]
>>> (-oo).args_cnc() # -oo is a singleton
[[-1, oo], []]
"""
if self.is_Mul:
args = list(self.args)
else:
args = [self]
for i, mi in enumerate(args):
if not mi.is_commutative:
c = args[:i]
nc = args[i:]
break
else:
c = args
nc = []
if c and split_1 and (
c[0].is_Number and
c[0].is_negative and
c[0] is not S.NegativeOne):
c[:1] = [S.NegativeOne, -c[0]]
if cset:
clen = len(c)
c = set(c)
if clen and warn and len(c) != clen:
raise ValueError('repeated commutative arguments: %s' %
[ci for ci in c if list(self.args).count(ci) > 1])
return [c, nc]
def coeff(self, x, n=1, right=False):
"""
Returns the coefficient from the term(s) containing ``x**n``. If ``n``
is zero then all terms independent of ``x`` will be returned.
When ``x`` is noncommutative, the coefficient to the left (default) or
right of ``x`` can be returned. The keyword 'right' is ignored when
``x`` is commutative.
See Also
========
as_coefficient: separate the expression into a coefficient and factor
as_coeff_Add: separate the additive constant from an expression
as_coeff_Mul: separate the multiplicative constant from an expression
as_independent: separate x-dependent terms/factors from others
sympy.polys.polytools.coeff_monomial: efficiently find the single coefficient of a monomial in Poly
sympy.polys.polytools.nth: like coeff_monomial but powers of monomial terms are used
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
You can select terms that have an explicit negative in front of them:
>>> (-x + 2*y).coeff(-1)
x
>>> (x - 2*y).coeff(-1)
2*y
You can select terms with no Rational coefficient:
>>> (x + 2*y).coeff(1)
x
>>> (3 + 2*x + 4*x**2).coeff(1)
0
You can select terms independent of x by making n=0; in this case
expr.as_independent(x)[0] is returned (and 0 will be returned instead
of None):
>>> (3 + 2*x + 4*x**2).coeff(x, 0)
3
>>> eq = ((x + 1)**3).expand() + 1
>>> eq
x**3 + 3*x**2 + 3*x + 2
>>> [eq.coeff(x, i) for i in reversed(range(4))]
[1, 3, 3, 2]
>>> eq -= 2
>>> [eq.coeff(x, i) for i in reversed(range(4))]
[1, 3, 3, 0]
You can select terms that have a numerical term in front of them:
>>> (-x - 2*y).coeff(2)
-y
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> (x + sqrt(2)*x).coeff(sqrt(2))
x
The matching is exact:
>>> (3 + 2*x + 4*x**2).coeff(x)
2
>>> (3 + 2*x + 4*x**2).coeff(x**2)
4
>>> (3 + 2*x + 4*x**2).coeff(x**3)
0
>>> (z*(x + y)**2).coeff((x + y)**2)
z
>>> (z*(x + y)**2).coeff(x + y)
0
In addition, no factoring is done, so 1 + z*(1 + y) is not obtained
from the following:
>>> (x + z*(x + x*y)).coeff(x)
1
If such factoring is desired, factor_terms can be used first:
>>> from sympy import factor_terms
>>> factor_terms(x + z*(x + x*y)).coeff(x)
z*(y + 1) + 1
>>> n, m, o = symbols('n m o', commutative=False)
>>> n.coeff(n)
1
>>> (3*n).coeff(n)
3
>>> (n*m + m*n*m).coeff(n) # = (1 + m)*n*m
1 + m
>>> (n*m + m*n*m).coeff(n, right=True) # = (1 + m)*n*m
m
If there is more than one possible coefficient 0 is returned:
>>> (n*m + m*n).coeff(n)
0
If there is only one possible coefficient, it is returned:
>>> (n*m + x*m*n).coeff(m*n)
x
>>> (n*m + x*m*n).coeff(m*n, right=1)
1
"""
x = sympify(x)
if not isinstance(x, Basic):
return S.Zero
n = as_int(n)
if not x:
return S.Zero
if x == self:
if n == 1:
return S.One
return S.Zero
if x is S.One:
co = [a for a in Add.make_args(self)
if a.as_coeff_Mul()[0] is S.One]
if not co:
return S.Zero
return Add(*co)
if n == 0:
if x.is_Add and self.is_Add:
c = self.coeff(x, right=right)
if not c:
return S.Zero
if not right:
return self - Add(*[a*x for a in Add.make_args(c)])
return self - Add(*[x*a for a in Add.make_args(c)])
return self.as_independent(x, as_Add=True)[0]
# continue with the full method, looking for this power of x:
x = x**n
def incommon(l1, l2):
if not l1 or not l2:
return []
n = min(len(l1), len(l2))
for i in range(n):
if l1[i] != l2[i]:
return l1[:i]
return l1[:]
def find(l, sub, first=True):
""" Find where list sub appears in list l. When ``first`` is True
the first occurrence from the left is returned, else the last
occurrence is returned. Return None if sub is not in l.
>> l = range(5)*2
>> find(l, [2, 3])
2
>> find(l, [2, 3], first=0)
7
>> find(l, [2, 4])
None
"""
if not sub or not l or len(sub) > len(l):
return None
n = len(sub)
if not first:
l.reverse()
sub.reverse()
for i in range(0, len(l) - n + 1):
if all(l[i + j] == sub[j] for j in range(n)):
break
else:
i = None
if not first:
l.reverse()
sub.reverse()
if i is not None and not first:
i = len(l) - (i + n)
return i
co = []
args = Add.make_args(self)
self_c = self.is_commutative
x_c = x.is_commutative
if self_c and not x_c:
return S.Zero
if self_c:
xargs = x.args_cnc(cset=True, warn=False)[0]
for a in args:
margs = a.args_cnc(cset=True, warn=False)[0]
if len(xargs) > len(margs):
continue
resid = margs.difference(xargs)
if len(resid) + len(xargs) == len(margs):
co.append(Mul(*resid))
if co == []:
return S.Zero
elif co:
return Add(*co)
elif x_c:
xargs = x.args_cnc(cset=True, warn=False)[0]
for a in args:
margs, nc = a.args_cnc(cset=True)
if len(xargs) > len(margs):
continue
resid = margs.difference(xargs)
if len(resid) + len(xargs) == len(margs):
co.append(Mul(*(list(resid) + nc)))
if co == []:
return S.Zero
elif co:
return Add(*co)
else: # both nc
xargs, nx = x.args_cnc(cset=True)
# find the parts that pass the commutative terms
for a in args:
margs, nc = a.args_cnc(cset=True)
if len(xargs) > len(margs):
continue
resid = margs.difference(xargs)
if len(resid) + len(xargs) == len(margs):
co.append((resid, nc))
# now check the non-comm parts
if not co:
return S.Zero
if all(n == co[0][1] for r, n in co):
ii = find(co[0][1], nx, right)
if ii is not None:
if not right:
return Mul(Add(*[Mul(*r) for r, c in co]), Mul(*co[0][1][:ii]))
else:
return Mul(*co[0][1][ii + len(nx):])
beg = reduce(incommon, (n[1] for n in co))
if beg:
ii = find(beg, nx, right)
if ii is not None:
if not right:
gcdc = co[0][0]
for i in range(1, len(co)):
gcdc = gcdc.intersection(co[i][0])
if not gcdc:
break
return Mul(*(list(gcdc) + beg[:ii]))
else:
m = ii + len(nx)
return Add(*[Mul(*(list(r) + n[m:])) for r, n in co])
end = list(reversed(
reduce(incommon, (list(reversed(n[1])) for n in co))))
if end:
ii = find(end, nx, right)
if ii is not None:
if not right:
return Add(*[Mul(*(list(r) + n[:-len(end) + ii])) for r, n in co])
else:
return Mul(*end[ii + len(nx):])
# look for single match
hit = None
for i, (r, n) in enumerate(co):
ii = find(n, nx, right)
if ii is not None:
if not hit:
hit = ii, r, n
else:
break
else:
if hit:
ii, r, n = hit
if not right:
return Mul(*(list(r) + n[:ii]))
else:
return Mul(*n[ii + len(nx):])
return S.Zero
def as_expr(self, *gens):
"""
Convert a polynomial to a SymPy expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = (x**2 + x*y).as_poly(x, y)
>>> f.as_expr()
x**2 + x*y
>>> sin(x).as_expr()
sin(x)
"""
return self
def as_coefficient(self, expr):
"""
Extracts symbolic coefficient at the given expression. In
other words, this functions separates 'self' into the product
of 'expr' and 'expr'-free coefficient. If such separation
is not possible it will return None.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import E, pi, sin, I, Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> E.as_coefficient(E)
1
>>> (2*E).as_coefficient(E)
2
>>> (2*sin(E)*E).as_coefficient(E)
Two terms have E in them so a sum is returned. (If one were
desiring the coefficient of the term exactly matching E then
the constant from the returned expression could be selected.
Or, for greater precision, a method of Poly can be used to
indicate the desired term from which the coefficient is
desired.)
>>> (2*E + x*E).as_coefficient(E)
x + 2
>>> _.args[0] # just want the exact match
2
>>> p = Poly(2*E + x*E); p
Poly(x*E + 2*E, x, E, domain='ZZ')
>>> p.coeff_monomial(E)
2
>>> p.nth(0, 1)
2
Since the following cannot be written as a product containing
E as a factor, None is returned. (If the coefficient ``2*x`` is
desired then the ``coeff`` method should be used.)
>>> (2*E*x + x).as_coefficient(E)
>>> (2*E*x + x).coeff(E)
2*x
>>> (E*(x + 1) + x).as_coefficient(E)
>>> (2*pi*I).as_coefficient(pi*I)
2
>>> (2*I).as_coefficient(pi*I)
See Also
========
coeff: return sum of terms have a given factor
as_coeff_Add: separate the additive constant from an expression
as_coeff_Mul: separate the multiplicative constant from an expression
as_independent: separate x-dependent terms/factors from others
sympy.polys.polytools.coeff_monomial: efficiently find the single coefficient of a monomial in Poly
sympy.polys.polytools.nth: like coeff_monomial but powers of monomial terms are used
"""
r = self.extract_multiplicatively(expr)
if r and not r.has(expr):
return r
def as_independent(self, *deps, **hint):
"""
A mostly naive separation of a Mul or Add into arguments that are not
are dependent on deps. To obtain as complete a separation of variables
as possible, use a separation method first, e.g.:
* separatevars() to change Mul, Add and Pow (including exp) into Mul
* .expand(mul=True) to change Add or Mul into Add
* .expand(log=True) to change log expr into an Add
The only non-naive thing that is done here is to respect noncommutative
ordering of variables and to always return (0, 0) for `self` of zero
regardless of hints.
For nonzero `self`, the returned tuple (i, d) has the
following interpretation:
* i will has no variable that appears in deps
* d will either have terms that contain variables that are in deps, or
be equal to 0 (when self is an Add) or 1 (when self is a Mul)
* if self is an Add then self = i + d
* if self is a Mul then self = i*d
* otherwise (self, S.One) or (S.One, self) is returned.
To force the expression to be treated as an Add, use the hint as_Add=True
Examples
========
-- self is an Add
>>> from sympy import sin, cos, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> (x + x*y).as_independent(x)
(0, x*y + x)
>>> (x + x*y).as_independent(y)
(x, x*y)
>>> (2*x*sin(x) + y + x + z).as_independent(x)
(y + z, 2*x*sin(x) + x)
>>> (2*x*sin(x) + y + x + z).as_independent(x, y)
(z, 2*x*sin(x) + x + y)
-- self is a Mul
>>> (x*sin(x)*cos(y)).as_independent(x)
(cos(y), x*sin(x))
non-commutative terms cannot always be separated out when self is a Mul
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> n1, n2, n3 = symbols('n1 n2 n3', commutative=False)
>>> (n1 + n1*n2).as_independent(n2)
(n1, n1*n2)
>>> (n2*n1 + n1*n2).as_independent(n2)
(0, n1*n2 + n2*n1)
>>> (n1*n2*n3).as_independent(n1)
(1, n1*n2*n3)
>>> (n1*n2*n3).as_independent(n2)
(n1, n2*n3)
>>> ((x-n1)*(x-y)).as_independent(x)
(1, (x - y)*(x - n1))
-- self is anything else:
>>> (sin(x)).as_independent(x)
(1, sin(x))
>>> (sin(x)).as_independent(y)
(sin(x), 1)
>>> exp(x+y).as_independent(x)
(1, exp(x + y))
-- force self to be treated as an Add:
>>> (3*x).as_independent(x, as_Add=True)
(0, 3*x)
-- force self to be treated as a Mul:
>>> (3+x).as_independent(x, as_Add=False)
(1, x + 3)
>>> (-3+x).as_independent(x, as_Add=False)
(1, x - 3)
Note how the below differs from the above in making the
constant on the dep term positive.
>>> (y*(-3+x)).as_independent(x)
(y, x - 3)
-- use .as_independent() for true independence testing instead
of .has(). The former considers only symbols in the free
symbols while the latter considers all symbols
>>> from sympy import Integral
>>> I = Integral(x, (x, 1, 2))
>>> I.has(x)
True
>>> x in I.free_symbols
False
>>> I.as_independent(x) == (I, 1)
True
>>> (I + x).as_independent(x) == (I, x)
True
Note: when trying to get independent terms, a separation method
might need to be used first. In this case, it is important to keep
track of what you send to this routine so you know how to interpret
the returned values
>>> from sympy import separatevars, log
>>> separatevars(exp(x+y)).as_independent(x)
(exp(y), exp(x))
>>> (x + x*y).as_independent(y)
(x, x*y)
>>> separatevars(x + x*y).as_independent(y)
(x, y + 1)
>>> (x*(1 + y)).as_independent(y)
(x, y + 1)
>>> (x*(1 + y)).expand(mul=True).as_independent(y)
(x, x*y)
>>> a, b=symbols('a b', positive=True)
>>> (log(a*b).expand(log=True)).as_independent(b)
(log(a), log(b))
See Also
========
.separatevars(), .expand(log=True), Add.as_two_terms(),
Mul.as_two_terms(), .as_coeff_add(), .as_coeff_mul()
"""
from .symbol import Symbol
from .add import _unevaluated_Add
from .mul import _unevaluated_Mul
from sympy.utilities.iterables import sift
if self.is_zero:
return S.Zero, S.Zero
func = self.func
if hint.get('as_Add', isinstance(self, Add) ):
want = Add
else:
want = Mul
# sift out deps into symbolic and other and ignore
# all symbols but those that are in the free symbols
sym = set()
other = []
for d in deps:
if isinstance(d, Symbol): # Symbol.is_Symbol is True
sym.add(d)
else:
other.append(d)
def has(e):
"""return the standard has() if there are no literal symbols, else
check to see that symbol-deps are in the free symbols."""
has_other = e.has(*other)
if not sym:
return has_other
return has_other or e.has(*(e.free_symbols & sym))
if (want is not func or
func is not Add and func is not Mul):
if has(self):
return (want.identity, self)
else:
return (self, want.identity)
else:
if func is Add:
args = list(self.args)
else:
args, nc = self.args_cnc()
d = sift(args, lambda x: has(x))
depend = d[True]
indep = d[False]
if func is Add: # all terms were treated as commutative
return (Add(*indep), _unevaluated_Add(*depend))
else: # handle noncommutative by stopping at first dependent term
for i, n in enumerate(nc):
if has(n):
depend.extend(nc[i:])
break
indep.append(n)
return Mul(*indep), (
Mul(*depend, evaluate=False) if nc else
_unevaluated_Mul(*depend))
def as_real_imag(self, deep=True, **hints):
"""Performs complex expansion on 'self' and returns a tuple
containing collected both real and imaginary parts. This
method can't be confused with re() and im() functions,
which does not perform complex expansion at evaluation.
However it is possible to expand both re() and im()
functions and get exactly the same results as with
a single call to this function.
>>> from sympy import symbols, I
>>> x, y = symbols('x,y', real=True)
>>> (x + y*I).as_real_imag()
(x, y)
>>> from sympy.abc import z, w
>>> (z + w*I).as_real_imag()
(re(z) - im(w), re(w) + im(z))
"""
from sympy import im, re
if hints.get('ignore') == self:
return None
else:
return (re(self), im(self))
def as_powers_dict(self):
"""Return self as a dictionary of factors with each factor being
treated as a power. The keys are the bases of the factors and the
values, the corresponding exponents. The resulting dictionary should
be used with caution if the expression is a Mul and contains non-
commutative factors since the order that they appeared will be lost in
the dictionary."""
d = defaultdict(int)
d.update(dict([self.as_base_exp()]))
return d
def as_coefficients_dict(self):
"""Return a dictionary mapping terms to their Rational coefficient.
Since the dictionary is a defaultdict, inquiries about terms which
were not present will return a coefficient of 0. If an expression is
not an Add it is considered to have a single term.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import a, x
>>> (3*x + a*x + 4).as_coefficients_dict()
{1: 4, x: 3, a*x: 1}
>>> _[a]
0
>>> (3*a*x).as_coefficients_dict()
{a*x: 3}
"""
c, m = self.as_coeff_Mul()
if not c.is_Rational:
c = S.One
m = self
d = defaultdict(int)
d.update({m: c})
return d
def as_base_exp(self):
# a -> b ** e
return self, S.One
def as_coeff_mul(self, *deps, **kwargs):
"""Return the tuple (c, args) where self is written as a Mul, ``m``.
c should be a Rational multiplied by any factors of the Mul that are
independent of deps.
args should be a tuple of all other factors of m; args is empty
if self is a Number or if self is independent of deps (when given).
This should be used when you don't know if self is a Mul or not but
you want to treat self as a Mul or if you want to process the
individual arguments of the tail of self as a Mul.
- if you know self is a Mul and want only the head, use self.args[0];
- if you don't want to process the arguments of the tail but need the
tail then use self.as_two_terms() which gives the head and tail;
- if you want to split self into an independent and dependent parts
use ``self.as_independent(*deps)``
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> (S(3)).as_coeff_mul()
(3, ())
>>> (3*x*y).as_coeff_mul()
(3, (x, y))
>>> (3*x*y).as_coeff_mul(x)
(3*y, (x,))
>>> (3*y).as_coeff_mul(x)
(3*y, ())
"""
if deps:
if not self.has(*deps):
return self, tuple()
return S.One, (self,)
def as_coeff_add(self, *deps):
"""Return the tuple (c, args) where self is written as an Add, ``a``.
c should be a Rational added to any terms of the Add that are
independent of deps.
args should be a tuple of all other terms of ``a``; args is empty
if self is a Number or if self is independent of deps (when given).
This should be used when you don't know if self is an Add or not but
you want to treat self as an Add or if you want to process the
individual arguments of the tail of self as an Add.
- if you know self is an Add and want only the head, use self.args[0];
- if you don't want to process the arguments of the tail but need the
tail then use self.as_two_terms() which gives the head and tail.
- if you want to split self into an independent and dependent parts
use ``self.as_independent(*deps)``
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> (S(3)).as_coeff_add()
(3, ())
>>> (3 + x).as_coeff_add()
(3, (x,))
>>> (3 + x + y).as_coeff_add(x)
(y + 3, (x,))
>>> (3 + y).as_coeff_add(x)
(y + 3, ())
"""
if deps:
if not self.has(*deps):
return self, tuple()
return S.Zero, (self,)
def primitive(self):
"""Return the positive Rational that can be extracted non-recursively
from every term of self (i.e., self is treated like an Add). This is
like the as_coeff_Mul() method but primitive always extracts a positive
Rational (never a negative or a Float).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> (3*(x + 1)**2).primitive()
(3, (x + 1)**2)
>>> a = (6*x + 2); a.primitive()
(2, 3*x + 1)
>>> b = (x/2 + 3); b.primitive()
(1/2, x + 6)
>>> (a*b).primitive() == (1, a*b)
True
"""
if not self:
return S.One, S.Zero
c, r = self.as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
if c.is_negative:
c, r = -c, -r
return c, r
def as_content_primitive(self, radical=False, clear=True):
"""This method should recursively remove a Rational from all arguments
and return that (content) and the new self (primitive). The content
should always be positive and ``Mul(*foo.as_content_primitive()) == foo``.
The primitive need not be in canonical form and should try to preserve
the underlying structure if possible (i.e. expand_mul should not be
applied to self).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> eq = 2 + 2*x + 2*y*(3 + 3*y)
The as_content_primitive function is recursive and retains structure:
>>> eq.as_content_primitive()
(2, x + 3*y*(y + 1) + 1)
Integer powers will have Rationals extracted from the base:
>>> ((2 + 6*x)**2).as_content_primitive()
(4, (3*x + 1)**2)
>>> ((2 + 6*x)**(2*y)).as_content_primitive()
(1, (2*(3*x + 1))**(2*y))
Terms may end up joining once their as_content_primitives are added:
>>> ((5*(x*(1 + y)) + 2*x*(3 + 3*y))).as_content_primitive()
(11, x*(y + 1))
>>> ((3*(x*(1 + y)) + 2*x*(3 + 3*y))).as_content_primitive()
(9, x*(y + 1))
>>> ((3*(z*(1 + y)) + 2.0*x*(3 + 3*y))).as_content_primitive()
(1, 6.0*x*(y + 1) + 3*z*(y + 1))
>>> ((5*(x*(1 + y)) + 2*x*(3 + 3*y))**2).as_content_primitive()
(121, x**2*(y + 1)**2)
>>> ((5*(x*(1 + y)) + 2.0*x*(3 + 3*y))**2).as_content_primitive()
(1, 121.0*x**2*(y + 1)**2)
Radical content can also be factored out of the primitive:
>>> (2*sqrt(2) + 4*sqrt(10)).as_content_primitive(radical=True)
(2, sqrt(2)*(1 + 2*sqrt(5)))
If clear=False (default is True) then content will not be removed
from an Add if it can be distributed to leave one or more
terms with integer coefficients.
>>> (x/2 + y).as_content_primitive()
(1/2, x + 2*y)
>>> (x/2 + y).as_content_primitive(clear=False)
(1, x/2 + y)
"""
return S.One, self
def as_numer_denom(self):
""" expression -> a/b -> a, b
This is just a stub that should be defined by
an object's class methods to get anything else.
See Also
========
normal: return a/b instead of a, b
"""
return self, S.One
def normal(self):
from .mul import _unevaluated_Mul
n, d = self.as_numer_denom()
if d is S.One:
return n
if d.is_Number:
if d is S.One:
return n
else:
return _unevaluated_Mul(n, 1/d)
else:
return n/d
def extract_multiplicatively(self, c):
"""Return None if it's not possible to make self in the form
c * something in a nice way, i.e. preserving the properties
of arguments of self.
>>> from sympy import symbols, Rational
>>> x, y = symbols('x,y', real=True)
>>> ((x*y)**3).extract_multiplicatively(x**2 * y)
x*y**2
>>> ((x*y)**3).extract_multiplicatively(x**4 * y)
>>> (2*x).extract_multiplicatively(2)
x
>>> (2*x).extract_multiplicatively(3)
>>> (Rational(1, 2)*x).extract_multiplicatively(3)
x/6
"""
from .function import _coeff_isneg
c = sympify(c)
if self is S.NaN:
return None
if c is S.One:
return self
elif c == self:
return S.One
if c.is_Add:
cc, pc = c.primitive()
if cc is not S.One:
c = Mul(cc, pc, evaluate=False)
if c.is_Mul:
a, b = c.as_two_terms()
x = self.extract_multiplicatively(a)
if x is not None:
return x.extract_multiplicatively(b)
quotient = self / c
if self.is_Number:
if self is S.Infinity:
if c.is_positive:
return S.Infinity
elif self is S.NegativeInfinity:
if c.is_negative:
return S.Infinity
elif c.is_positive:
return S.NegativeInfinity
elif self is S.ComplexInfinity:
if not c.is_zero:
return S.ComplexInfinity
elif self.is_Integer:
if not quotient.is_Integer:
return None
elif self.is_positive and quotient.is_negative:
return None
else:
return quotient
elif self.is_Rational:
if not quotient.is_Rational:
return None
elif self.is_positive and quotient.is_negative:
return None
else:
return quotient
elif self.is_Float:
if not quotient.is_Float:
return None
elif self.is_positive and quotient.is_negative:
return None
else:
return quotient
elif self.is_NumberSymbol or self.is_Symbol or self is S.ImaginaryUnit:
if quotient.is_Mul and len(quotient.args) == 2:
if quotient.args[0].is_Integer and quotient.args[0].is_positive and quotient.args[1] == self:
return quotient
elif quotient.is_Integer and c.is_Number:
return quotient
elif self.is_Add:
cs, ps = self.primitive()
# assert cs >= 1
if c.is_Number and c is not S.NegativeOne:
# assert c != 1 (handled at top)
if cs is not S.One:
if c.is_negative:
xc = -(cs.extract_multiplicatively(-c))
else:
xc = cs.extract_multiplicatively(c)
if xc is not None:
return xc*ps # rely on 2-arg Mul to restore Add
return # |c| != 1 can only be extracted from cs
if c == ps:
return cs
# check args of ps
newargs = []
for arg in ps.args:
newarg = arg.extract_multiplicatively(c)
if newarg is None:
return # all or nothing
newargs.append(newarg)
# args should be in same order so use unevaluated return
if cs is not S.One:
return Add._from_args([cs*t for t in newargs])
else:
return Add._from_args(newargs)
elif self.is_Mul:
args = list(self.args)
for i, arg in enumerate(args):
newarg = arg.extract_multiplicatively(c)
if newarg is not None:
args[i] = newarg
return Mul(*args)
elif self.is_Pow:
if c.is_Pow and c.base == self.base:
new_exp = self.exp.extract_additively(c.exp)
if new_exp is not None:
return self.base ** (new_exp)
elif c == self.base:
new_exp = self.exp.extract_additively(1)
if new_exp is not None:
return self.base ** (new_exp)
def extract_additively(self, c):
"""Return self - c if it's possible to subtract c from self and
make all matching coefficients move towards zero, else return None.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> e = 2*x + 3
>>> e.extract_additively(x + 1)
x + 2
>>> e.extract_additively(3*x)
>>> e.extract_additively(4)
>>> (y*(x + 1)).extract_additively(x + 1)
>>> ((x + 1)*(x + 2*y + 1) + 3).extract_additively(x + 1)
(x + 1)*(x + 2*y) + 3
Sometimes auto-expansion will return a less simplified result
than desired; gcd_terms might be used in such cases:
>>> from sympy import gcd_terms
>>> (4*x*(y + 1) + y).extract_additively(x)
4*x*(y + 1) + x*(4*y + 3) - x*(4*y + 4) + y
>>> gcd_terms(_)
x*(4*y + 3) + y
See Also
========
extract_multiplicatively
coeff
as_coefficient
"""
c = sympify(c)
if self is S.NaN:
return None
if c is S.Zero:
return self
elif c == self:
return S.Zero
elif self is S.Zero:
return None
if self.is_Number:
if not c.is_Number:
return None
co = self
diff = co - c
# XXX should we match types? i.e should 3 - .1 succeed?
if (co > 0 and diff > 0 and diff < co or
co < 0 and diff < 0 and diff > co):
return diff
return None
if c.is_Number:
co, t = self.as_coeff_Add()
xa = co.extract_additively(c)
if xa is None:
return None
return xa + t
# handle the args[0].is_Number case separately
# since we will have trouble looking for the coeff of
# a number.
if c.is_Add and c.args[0].is_Number:
# whole term as a term factor
co = self.coeff(c)
xa0 = (co.extract_additively(1) or 0)*c
if xa0:
diff = self - co*c
return (xa0 + (diff.extract_additively(c) or diff)) or None
# term-wise
h, t = c.as_coeff_Add()
sh, st = self.as_coeff_Add()
xa = sh.extract_additively(h)
if xa is None:
return None
xa2 = st.extract_additively(t)
if xa2 is None:
return None
return xa + xa2
# whole term as a term factor
co = self.coeff(c)
xa0 = (co.extract_additively(1) or 0)*c
if xa0:
diff = self - co*c
return (xa0 + (diff.extract_additively(c) or diff)) or None
# term-wise
coeffs = []
for a in Add.make_args(c):
ac, at = a.as_coeff_Mul()
co = self.coeff(at)
if not co:
return None
coc, cot = co.as_coeff_Add()
xa = coc.extract_additively(ac)
if xa is None:
return None
self -= co*at
coeffs.append((cot + xa)*at)
coeffs.append(self)
return Add(*coeffs)
@property
def expr_free_symbols(self):
"""
Like ``free_symbols``, but returns the free symbols only if they are contained in an expression node.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> (x + y).expr_free_symbols
{x, y}
If the expression is contained in a non-expression object, don't return
the free symbols. Compare:
>>> from sympy import Tuple
>>> t = Tuple(x + y)
>>> t.expr_free_symbols
set()
>>> t.free_symbols
{x, y}
"""
return {j for i in self.args for j in i.expr_free_symbols}
def could_extract_minus_sign(self):
"""Return True if self is not in a canonical form with respect
to its sign.
For most expressions, e, there will be a difference in e and -e.
When there is, True will be returned for one and False for the
other; False will be returned if there is no difference.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> e = x - y
>>> {i.could_extract_minus_sign() for i in (e, -e)}
{False, True}
"""
negative_self = -self
if self == negative_self:
return False # e.g. zoo*x == -zoo*x
self_has_minus = (self.extract_multiplicatively(-1) is not None)
negative_self_has_minus = (
(negative_self).extract_multiplicatively(-1) is not None)
if self_has_minus != negative_self_has_minus:
return self_has_minus
else:
if self.is_Add:
# We choose the one with less arguments with minus signs
all_args = len(self.args)
negative_args = len([False for arg in self.args if arg.could_extract_minus_sign()])
positive_args = all_args - negative_args
if positive_args > negative_args:
return False
elif positive_args < negative_args:
return True
elif self.is_Mul:
# We choose the one with an odd number of minus signs
num, den = self.as_numer_denom()
args = Mul.make_args(num) + Mul.make_args(den)
arg_signs = [arg.could_extract_minus_sign() for arg in args]
negative_args = list(filter(None, arg_signs))
return len(negative_args) % 2 == 1
# As a last resort, we choose the one with greater value of .sort_key()
return bool(self.sort_key() < negative_self.sort_key())
def extract_branch_factor(self, allow_half=False):
"""
Try to write self as ``exp_polar(2*pi*I*n)*z`` in a nice way.
Return (z, n).
>>> from sympy import exp_polar, I, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> exp_polar(I*pi).extract_branch_factor()
(exp_polar(I*pi), 0)
>>> exp_polar(2*I*pi).extract_branch_factor()
(1, 1)
>>> exp_polar(-pi*I).extract_branch_factor()
(exp_polar(I*pi), -1)
>>> exp_polar(3*pi*I + x).extract_branch_factor()
(exp_polar(x + I*pi), 1)
>>> (y*exp_polar(-5*pi*I)*exp_polar(3*pi*I + 2*pi*x)).extract_branch_factor()
(y*exp_polar(2*pi*x), -1)
>>> exp_polar(-I*pi/2).extract_branch_factor()
(exp_polar(-I*pi/2), 0)
If allow_half is True, also extract exp_polar(I*pi):
>>> exp_polar(I*pi).extract_branch_factor(allow_half=True)
(1, 1/2)
>>> exp_polar(2*I*pi).extract_branch_factor(allow_half=True)
(1, 1)
>>> exp_polar(3*I*pi).extract_branch_factor(allow_half=True)
(1, 3/2)
>>> exp_polar(-I*pi).extract_branch_factor(allow_half=True)
(1, -1/2)
"""
from sympy import exp_polar, pi, I, ceiling, Add
n = S(0)
res = S(1)
args = Mul.make_args(self)
exps = []
for arg in args:
if isinstance(arg, exp_polar):
exps += [arg.exp]
else:
res *= arg
piimult = S(0)
extras = []
while exps:
exp = exps.pop()
if exp.is_Add:
exps += exp.args
continue
if exp.is_Mul:
coeff = exp.as_coefficient(pi*I)
if coeff is not None:
piimult += coeff
continue
extras += [exp]
if not piimult.free_symbols:
coeff = piimult
tail = ()
else:
coeff, tail = piimult.as_coeff_add(*piimult.free_symbols)
# round down to nearest multiple of 2
branchfact = ceiling(coeff/2 - S(1)/2)*2
n += branchfact/2
c = coeff - branchfact
if allow_half:
nc = c.extract_additively(1)
if nc is not None:
n += S(1)/2
c = nc
newexp = pi*I*Add(*((c, ) + tail)) + Add(*extras)
if newexp != 0:
res *= exp_polar(newexp)
return res, n
def _eval_is_polynomial(self, syms):
if self.free_symbols.intersection(syms) == set([]):
return True
return False
def is_polynomial(self, *syms):
r"""
Return True if self is a polynomial in syms and False otherwise.
This checks if self is an exact polynomial in syms. This function
returns False for expressions that are "polynomials" with symbolic
exponents. Thus, you should be able to apply polynomial algorithms to
expressions for which this returns True, and Poly(expr, \*syms) should
work if and only if expr.is_polynomial(\*syms) returns True. The
polynomial does not have to be in expanded form. If no symbols are
given, all free symbols in the expression will be used.
This is not part of the assumptions system. You cannot do
Symbol('z', polynomial=True).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> ((x**2 + 1)**4).is_polynomial(x)
True
>>> ((x**2 + 1)**4).is_polynomial()
True
>>> (2**x + 1).is_polynomial(x)
False
>>> n = Symbol('n', nonnegative=True, integer=True)
>>> (x**n + 1).is_polynomial(x)
False
This function does not attempt any nontrivial simplifications that may
result in an expression that does not appear to be a polynomial to
become one.
>>> from sympy import sqrt, factor, cancel
>>> y = Symbol('y', positive=True)
>>> a = sqrt(y**2 + 2*y + 1)
>>> a.is_polynomial(y)
False
>>> factor(a)
y + 1
>>> factor(a).is_polynomial(y)
True
>>> b = (y**2 + 2*y + 1)/(y + 1)
>>> b.is_polynomial(y)
False
>>> cancel(b)
y + 1
>>> cancel(b).is_polynomial(y)
True
See also .is_rational_function()
"""
if syms:
syms = set(map(sympify, syms))
else:
syms = self.free_symbols
if syms.intersection(self.free_symbols) == set([]):
# constant polynomial
return True
else:
return self._eval_is_polynomial(syms)
def _eval_is_rational_function(self, syms):
if self.free_symbols.intersection(syms) == set([]):
return True
return False
def is_rational_function(self, *syms):
"""
Test whether function is a ratio of two polynomials in the given
symbols, syms. When syms is not given, all free symbols will be used.
The rational function does not have to be in expanded or in any kind of
canonical form.
This function returns False for expressions that are "rational
functions" with symbolic exponents. Thus, you should be able to call
.as_numer_denom() and apply polynomial algorithms to the result for
expressions for which this returns True.
This is not part of the assumptions system. You cannot do
Symbol('z', rational_function=True).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> (x/y).is_rational_function()
True
>>> (x**2).is_rational_function()
True
>>> (x/sin(y)).is_rational_function(y)
False
>>> n = Symbol('n', integer=True)
>>> (x**n + 1).is_rational_function(x)
False
This function does not attempt any nontrivial simplifications that may
result in an expression that does not appear to be a rational function
to become one.
>>> from sympy import sqrt, factor
>>> y = Symbol('y', positive=True)
>>> a = sqrt(y**2 + 2*y + 1)/y
>>> a.is_rational_function(y)
False
>>> factor(a)
(y + 1)/y
>>> factor(a).is_rational_function(y)
True
See also is_algebraic_expr().
"""
if self in [S.NaN, S.Infinity, -S.Infinity, S.ComplexInfinity]:
return False
if syms:
syms = set(map(sympify, syms))
else:
syms = self.free_symbols
if syms.intersection(self.free_symbols) == set([]):
# constant rational function
return True
else:
return self._eval_is_rational_function(syms)
def _eval_is_algebraic_expr(self, syms):
if self.free_symbols.intersection(syms) == set([]):
return True
return False
def is_algebraic_expr(self, *syms):
"""
This tests whether a given expression is algebraic or not, in the
given symbols, syms. When syms is not given, all free symbols
will be used. The rational function does not have to be in expanded
or in any kind of canonical form.
This function returns False for expressions that are "algebraic
expressions" with symbolic exponents. This is a simple extension to the
is_rational_function, including rational exponentiation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, sqrt
>>> x = Symbol('x', real=True)
>>> sqrt(1 + x).is_rational_function()
False
>>> sqrt(1 + x).is_algebraic_expr()
True
This function does not attempt any nontrivial simplifications that may
result in an expression that does not appear to be an algebraic
expression to become one.
>>> from sympy import exp, factor
>>> a = sqrt(exp(x)**2 + 2*exp(x) + 1)/(exp(x) + 1)
>>> a.is_algebraic_expr(x)
False
>>> factor(a).is_algebraic_expr()
True
See Also
========
is_rational_function()
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algebraic_expression
"""
if syms:
syms = set(map(sympify, syms))
else:
syms = self.free_symbols
if syms.intersection(self.free_symbols) == set([]):
# constant algebraic expression
return True
else:
return self._eval_is_algebraic_expr(syms)
###################################################################################
##################### SERIES, LEADING TERM, LIMIT, ORDER METHODS ##################
###################################################################################
def series(self, x=None, x0=0, n=6, dir="+", logx=None):
"""
Series expansion of "self" around ``x = x0`` yielding either terms of
the series one by one (the lazy series given when n=None), else
all the terms at once when n != None.
Returns the series expansion of "self" around the point ``x = x0``
with respect to ``x`` up to ``O((x - x0)**n, x, x0)`` (default n is 6).
If ``x=None`` and ``self`` is univariate, the univariate symbol will
be supplied, otherwise an error will be raised.
>>> from sympy import cos, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> cos(x).series()
1 - x**2/2 + x**4/24 + O(x**6)
>>> cos(x).series(n=4)
1 - x**2/2 + O(x**4)
>>> cos(x).series(x, x0=1, n=2)
cos(1) - (x - 1)*sin(1) + O((x - 1)**2, (x, 1))
>>> e = cos(x + exp(y))
>>> e.series(y, n=2)
cos(x + 1) - y*sin(x + 1) + O(y**2)
>>> e.series(x, n=2)
cos(exp(y)) - x*sin(exp(y)) + O(x**2)
If ``n=None`` then a generator of the series terms will be returned.
>>> term=cos(x).series(n=None)
>>> [next(term) for i in range(2)]
[1, -x**2/2]
For ``dir=+`` (default) the series is calculated from the right and
for ``dir=-`` the series from the left. For smooth functions this
flag will not alter the results.
>>> abs(x).series(dir="+")
x
>>> abs(x).series(dir="-")
-x
"""
from sympy import collect, Dummy, Order, Rational, Symbol, ceiling
if x is None:
syms = self.free_symbols
if not syms:
return self
elif len(syms) > 1:
raise ValueError('x must be given for multivariate functions.')
x = syms.pop()
if isinstance(x, Symbol):
dep = x in self.free_symbols
else:
d = Dummy()
dep = d in self.xreplace({x: d}).free_symbols
if not dep:
if n is None:
return (s for s in [self])
else:
return self
if len(dir) != 1 or dir not in '+-':
raise ValueError("Dir must be '+' or '-'")
if x0 in [S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity]:
sgn = 1 if x0 is S.Infinity else -1
s = self.subs(x, sgn/x).series(x, n=n, dir='+')
if n is None:
return (si.subs(x, sgn/x) for si in s)
return s.subs(x, sgn/x)
# use rep to shift origin to x0 and change sign (if dir is negative)
# and undo the process with rep2
if x0 or dir == '-':
if dir == '-':
rep = -x + x0
rep2 = -x
rep2b = x0
else:
rep = x + x0
rep2 = x
rep2b = -x0
s = self.subs(x, rep).series(x, x0=0, n=n, dir='+', logx=logx)
if n is None: # lseries...
return (si.subs(x, rep2 + rep2b) for si in s)
return s.subs(x, rep2 + rep2b)
# from here on it's x0=0 and dir='+' handling
if x.is_positive is x.is_negative is None or x.is_Symbol is not True:
# replace x with an x that has a positive assumption
xpos = Dummy('x', positive=True, finite=True)
rv = self.subs(x, xpos).series(xpos, x0, n, dir, logx=logx)
if n is None:
return (s.subs(xpos, x) for s in rv)
else:
return rv.subs(xpos, x)
if n is not None: # nseries handling
s1 = self._eval_nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
o = s1.getO() or S.Zero
if o:
# make sure the requested order is returned
ngot = o.getn()
if ngot > n:
# leave o in its current form (e.g. with x*log(x)) so
# it eats terms properly, then replace it below
if n != 0:
s1 += o.subs(x, x**Rational(n, ngot))
else:
s1 += Order(1, x)
elif ngot < n:
# increase the requested number of terms to get the desired
# number keep increasing (up to 9) until the received order
# is different than the original order and then predict how
# many additional terms are needed
for more in range(1, 9):
s1 = self._eval_nseries(x, n=n + more, logx=logx)
newn = s1.getn()
if newn != ngot:
ndo = n + ceiling((n - ngot)*more/(newn - ngot))
s1 = self._eval_nseries(x, n=ndo, logx=logx)
while s1.getn() < n:
s1 = self._eval_nseries(x, n=ndo, logx=logx)
ndo += 1
break
else:
raise ValueError('Could not calculate %s terms for %s'
% (str(n), self))
s1 += Order(x**n, x)
o = s1.getO()
s1 = s1.removeO()
else:
o = Order(x**n, x)
s1done = s1.doit()
if (s1done + o).removeO() == s1done:
o = S.Zero
try:
return collect(s1, x) + o
except NotImplementedError:
return s1 + o
else: # lseries handling
def yield_lseries(s):
"""Return terms of lseries one at a time."""
for si in s:
if not si.is_Add:
yield si
continue
# yield terms 1 at a time if possible
# by increasing order until all the
# terms have been returned
yielded = 0
o = Order(si, x)*x
ndid = 0
ndo = len(si.args)
while 1:
do = (si - yielded + o).removeO()
o *= x
if not do or do.is_Order:
continue
if do.is_Add:
ndid += len(do.args)
else:
ndid += 1
yield do
if ndid == ndo:
break
yielded += do
return yield_lseries(self.removeO()._eval_lseries(x, logx=logx))
def taylor_term(self, n, x, *previous_terms):
"""General method for the taylor term.
This method is slow, because it differentiates n-times. Subclasses can
redefine it to make it faster by using the "previous_terms".
"""
from sympy import Dummy, factorial
x = sympify(x)
_x = Dummy('x')
return self.subs(x, _x).diff(_x, n).subs(_x, x).subs(x, 0) * x**n / factorial(n)
def lseries(self, x=None, x0=0, dir='+', logx=None):
"""
Wrapper for series yielding an iterator of the terms of the series.
Note: an infinite series will yield an infinite iterator. The following,
for exaxmple, will never terminate. It will just keep printing terms
of the sin(x) series::
for term in sin(x).lseries(x):
print term
The advantage of lseries() over nseries() is that many times you are
just interested in the next term in the series (i.e. the first term for
example), but you don't know how many you should ask for in nseries()
using the "n" parameter.
See also nseries().
"""
return self.series(x, x0, n=None, dir=dir, logx=logx)
def _eval_lseries(self, x, logx=None):
# default implementation of lseries is using nseries(), and adaptively
# increasing the "n". As you can see, it is not very efficient, because
# we are calculating the series over and over again. Subclasses should
# override this method and implement much more efficient yielding of
# terms.
n = 0
series = self._eval_nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
if not series.is_Order:
if series.is_Add:
yield series.removeO()
else:
yield series
return
while series.is_Order:
n += 1
series = self._eval_nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
e = series.removeO()
yield e
while 1:
while 1:
n += 1
series = self._eval_nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx).removeO()
if e != series:
break
yield series - e
e = series
def nseries(self, x=None, x0=0, n=6, dir='+', logx=None):
"""
Wrapper to _eval_nseries if assumptions allow, else to series.
If x is given, x0 is 0, dir='+', and self has x, then _eval_nseries is
called. This calculates "n" terms in the innermost expressions and
then builds up the final series just by "cross-multiplying" everything
out.
The optional ``logx`` parameter can be used to replace any log(x) in the
returned series with a symbolic value to avoid evaluating log(x) at 0. A
symbol to use in place of log(x) should be provided.
Advantage -- it's fast, because we don't have to determine how many
terms we need to calculate in advance.
Disadvantage -- you may end up with less terms than you may have
expected, but the O(x**n) term appended will always be correct and
so the result, though perhaps shorter, will also be correct.
If any of those assumptions is not met, this is treated like a
wrapper to series which will try harder to return the correct
number of terms.
See also lseries().
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, log, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> sin(x).nseries(x, 0, 6)
x - x**3/6 + x**5/120 + O(x**6)
>>> log(x+1).nseries(x, 0, 5)
x - x**2/2 + x**3/3 - x**4/4 + O(x**5)
Handling of the ``logx`` parameter --- in the following example the
expansion fails since ``sin`` does not have an asymptotic expansion
at -oo (the limit of log(x) as x approaches 0):
>>> e = sin(log(x))
>>> e.nseries(x, 0, 6)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
PoleError: ...
...
>>> logx = Symbol('logx')
>>> e.nseries(x, 0, 6, logx=logx)
sin(logx)
In the following example, the expansion works but gives only an Order term
unless the ``logx`` parameter is used:
>>> e = x**y
>>> e.nseries(x, 0, 2)
O(log(x)**2)
>>> e.nseries(x, 0, 2, logx=logx)
exp(logx*y)
"""
if x and not x in self.free_symbols:
return self
if x is None or x0 or dir != '+': # {see XPOS above} or (x.is_positive == x.is_negative == None):
return self.series(x, x0, n, dir)
else:
return self._eval_nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx)
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
"""
Return terms of series for self up to O(x**n) at x=0
from the positive direction.
This is a method that should be overridden in subclasses. Users should
never call this method directly (use .nseries() instead), so you don't
have to write docstrings for _eval_nseries().
"""
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
raise NotImplementedError(filldedent("""
The _eval_nseries method should be added to
%s to give terms up to O(x**n) at x=0
from the positive direction so it is available when
nseries calls it.""" % self.func)
)
def limit(self, x, xlim, dir='+'):
""" Compute limit x->xlim.
"""
from sympy.series.limits import limit
return limit(self, x, xlim, dir)
def compute_leading_term(self, x, logx=None):
"""
as_leading_term is only allowed for results of .series()
This is a wrapper to compute a series first.
"""
from sympy import Dummy, log
from sympy.series.gruntz import calculate_series
if self.removeO() == 0:
return self
if logx is None:
d = Dummy('logx')
s = calculate_series(self, x, d).subs(d, log(x))
else:
s = calculate_series(self, x, logx)
return s.as_leading_term(x)
@cacheit
def as_leading_term(self, *symbols):
"""
Returns the leading (nonzero) term of the series expansion of self.
The _eval_as_leading_term routines are used to do this, and they must
always return a non-zero value.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> (1 + x + x**2).as_leading_term(x)
1
>>> (1/x**2 + x + x**2).as_leading_term(x)
x**(-2)
"""
from sympy import powsimp
if len(symbols) > 1:
c = self
for x in symbols:
c = c.as_leading_term(x)
return c
elif not symbols:
return self
x = sympify(symbols[0])
if not x.is_symbol:
raise ValueError('expecting a Symbol but got %s' % x)
if x not in self.free_symbols:
return self
obj = self._eval_as_leading_term(x)
if obj is not None:
return powsimp(obj, deep=True, combine='exp')
raise NotImplementedError('as_leading_term(%s, %s)' % (self, x))
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
return self
def as_coeff_exponent(self, x):
""" ``c*x**e -> c,e`` where x can be any symbolic expression.
"""
from sympy import collect
s = collect(self, x)
c, p = s.as_coeff_mul(x)
if len(p) == 1:
b, e = p[0].as_base_exp()
if b == x:
return c, e
return s, S.Zero
def leadterm(self, x):
"""
Returns the leading term a*x**b as a tuple (a, b).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> (1+x+x**2).leadterm(x)
(1, 0)
>>> (1/x**2+x+x**2).leadterm(x)
(1, -2)
"""
from sympy import Dummy, log
l = self.as_leading_term(x)
d = Dummy('logx')
if l.has(log(x)):
l = l.subs(log(x), d)
c, e = l.as_coeff_exponent(x)
if x in c.free_symbols:
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
raise ValueError(filldedent("""
cannot compute leadterm(%s, %s). The coefficient
should have been free of x but got %s""" % (self, x, c)))
c = c.subs(d, log(x))
return c, e
def as_coeff_Mul(self, rational=False):
"""Efficiently extract the coefficient of a product. """
return S.One, self
def as_coeff_Add(self, rational=False):
"""Efficiently extract the coefficient of a summation. """
return S.Zero, self
def fps(self, x=None, x0=0, dir=1, hyper=True, order=4, rational=True,
full=False):
"""
Compute formal power power series of self.
See the docstring of the :func:`fps` function in sympy.series.formal for
more information.
"""
from sympy.series.formal import fps
return fps(self, x, x0, dir, hyper, order, rational, full)
def fourier_series(self, limits=None):
"""Compute fourier sine/cosine series of self.
See the docstring of the :func:`fourier_series` in sympy.series.fourier
for more information.
"""
from sympy.series.fourier import fourier_series
return fourier_series(self, limits)
###################################################################################
##################### DERIVATIVE, INTEGRAL, FUNCTIONAL METHODS ####################
###################################################################################
def diff(self, *symbols, **assumptions):
assumptions.setdefault("evaluate", True)
return Derivative(self, *symbols, **assumptions)
###########################################################################
###################### EXPRESSION EXPANSION METHODS #######################
###########################################################################
# Relevant subclasses should override _eval_expand_hint() methods. See
# the docstring of expand() for more info.
def _eval_expand_complex(self, **hints):
real, imag = self.as_real_imag(**hints)
return real + S.ImaginaryUnit*imag
@staticmethod
def _expand_hint(expr, hint, deep=True, **hints):
"""
Helper for ``expand()``. Recursively calls ``expr._eval_expand_hint()``.
Returns ``(expr, hit)``, where expr is the (possibly) expanded
``expr`` and ``hit`` is ``True`` if ``expr`` was truly expanded and
``False`` otherwise.
"""
hit = False
# XXX: Hack to support non-Basic args
# |
# V
if deep and getattr(expr, 'args', ()) and not expr.is_Atom:
sargs = []
for arg in expr.args:
arg, arghit = Expr._expand_hint(arg, hint, **hints)
hit |= arghit
sargs.append(arg)
if hit:
expr = expr.func(*sargs)
if hasattr(expr, hint):
newexpr = getattr(expr, hint)(**hints)
if newexpr != expr:
return (newexpr, True)
return (expr, hit)
@cacheit
def expand(self, deep=True, modulus=None, power_base=True, power_exp=True,
mul=True, log=True, multinomial=True, basic=True, **hints):
"""
Expand an expression using hints.
See the docstring of the expand() function in sympy.core.function for
more information.
"""
from sympy.simplify.radsimp import fraction
hints.update(power_base=power_base, power_exp=power_exp, mul=mul,
log=log, multinomial=multinomial, basic=basic)
expr = self
if hints.pop('frac', False):
n, d = [a.expand(deep=deep, modulus=modulus, **hints)
for a in fraction(self)]
return n/d
elif hints.pop('denom', False):
n, d = fraction(self)
return n/d.expand(deep=deep, modulus=modulus, **hints)
elif hints.pop('numer', False):
n, d = fraction(self)
return n.expand(deep=deep, modulus=modulus, **hints)/d
# Although the hints are sorted here, an earlier hint may get applied
# at a given node in the expression tree before another because of how
# the hints are applied. e.g. expand(log(x*(y + z))) -> log(x*y +
# x*z) because while applying log at the top level, log and mul are
# applied at the deeper level in the tree so that when the log at the
# upper level gets applied, the mul has already been applied at the
# lower level.
# Additionally, because hints are only applied once, the expression
# may not be expanded all the way. For example, if mul is applied
# before multinomial, x*(x + 1)**2 won't be expanded all the way. For
# now, we just use a special case to make multinomial run before mul,
# so that at least polynomials will be expanded all the way. In the
# future, smarter heuristics should be applied.
# TODO: Smarter heuristics
def _expand_hint_key(hint):
"""Make multinomial come before mul"""
if hint == 'mul':
return 'mulz'
return hint
for hint in sorted(hints.keys(), key=_expand_hint_key):
use_hint = hints[hint]
if use_hint:
hint = '_eval_expand_' + hint
expr, hit = Expr._expand_hint(expr, hint, deep=deep, **hints)
while True:
was = expr
if hints.get('multinomial', False):
expr, _ = Expr._expand_hint(
expr, '_eval_expand_multinomial', deep=deep, **hints)
if hints.get('mul', False):
expr, _ = Expr._expand_hint(
expr, '_eval_expand_mul', deep=deep, **hints)
if hints.get('log', False):
expr, _ = Expr._expand_hint(
expr, '_eval_expand_log', deep=deep, **hints)
if expr == was:
break
if modulus is not None:
modulus = sympify(modulus)
if not modulus.is_Integer or modulus <= 0:
raise ValueError(
"modulus must be a positive integer, got %s" % modulus)
terms = []
for term in Add.make_args(expr):
coeff, tail = term.as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
coeff %= modulus
if coeff:
terms.append(coeff*tail)
expr = Add(*terms)
return expr
###########################################################################
################### GLOBAL ACTION VERB WRAPPER METHODS ####################
###########################################################################
def integrate(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""See the integrate function in sympy.integrals"""
from sympy.integrals import integrate
return integrate(self, *args, **kwargs)
def simplify(self, ratio=1.7, measure=None, rational=False, inverse=False):
"""See the simplify function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import simplify
from sympy.core.function import count_ops
measure = measure or count_ops
return simplify(self, ratio, measure)
def nsimplify(self, constants=[], tolerance=None, full=False):
"""See the nsimplify function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import nsimplify
return nsimplify(self, constants, tolerance, full)
def separate(self, deep=False, force=False):
"""See the separate function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.core.function import expand_power_base
return expand_power_base(self, deep=deep, force=force)
def collect(self, syms, func=None, evaluate=True, exact=False, distribute_order_term=True):
"""See the collect function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import collect
return collect(self, syms, func, evaluate, exact, distribute_order_term)
def together(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""See the together function in sympy.polys"""
from sympy.polys import together
return together(self, *args, **kwargs)
def apart(self, x=None, **args):
"""See the apart function in sympy.polys"""
from sympy.polys import apart
return apart(self, x, **args)
def ratsimp(self):
"""See the ratsimp function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import ratsimp
return ratsimp(self)
def trigsimp(self, **args):
"""See the trigsimp function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import trigsimp
return trigsimp(self, **args)
def radsimp(self, **kwargs):
"""See the radsimp function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import radsimp
return radsimp(self, **kwargs)
def powsimp(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""See the powsimp function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import powsimp
return powsimp(self, *args, **kwargs)
def combsimp(self):
"""See the combsimp function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import combsimp
return combsimp(self)
def gammasimp(self):
"""See the gammasimp function in sympy.simplify"""
from sympy.simplify import gammasimp
return gammasimp(self)
def factor(self, *gens, **args):
"""See the factor() function in sympy.polys.polytools"""
from sympy.polys import factor
return factor(self, *gens, **args)
def refine(self, assumption=True):
"""See the refine function in sympy.assumptions"""
from sympy.assumptions import refine
return refine(self, assumption)
def cancel(self, *gens, **args):
"""See the cancel function in sympy.polys"""
from sympy.polys import cancel
return cancel(self, *gens, **args)
def invert(self, g, *gens, **args):
"""Return the multiplicative inverse of ``self`` mod ``g``
where ``self`` (and ``g``) may be symbolic expressions).
See Also
========
sympy.core.numbers.mod_inverse, sympy.polys.polytools.invert
"""
from sympy.polys.polytools import invert
from sympy.core.numbers import mod_inverse
if self.is_number and getattr(g, 'is_number', True):
return mod_inverse(self, g)
return invert(self, g, *gens, **args)
def round(self, p=0):
"""Return x rounded to the given decimal place.
If a complex number would results, apply round to the real
and imaginary components of the number.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import pi, E, I, S, Add, Mul, Number
>>> S(10.5).round()
11.
>>> pi.round()
3.
>>> pi.round(2)
3.14
>>> (2*pi + E*I).round()
6. + 3.*I
The round method has a chopping effect:
>>> (2*pi + I/10).round()
6.
>>> (pi/10 + 2*I).round()
2.*I
>>> (pi/10 + E*I).round(2)
0.31 + 2.72*I
Notes
=====
Do not confuse the Python builtin function, round, with the
SymPy method of the same name. The former always returns a float
(or raises an error if applied to a complex value) while the
latter returns either a Number or a complex number:
>>> isinstance(round(S(123), -2), Number)
False
>>> isinstance(S(123).round(-2), Number)
True
>>> isinstance((3*I).round(), Mul)
True
>>> isinstance((1 + 3*I).round(), Add)
True
"""
from sympy import Float
x = self
if not x.is_number:
raise TypeError("can't round symbolic expression")
if not x.is_Atom:
xn = x.n(2)
if not pure_complex(xn, or_real=True):
raise TypeError('Expected a number but got %s:' %
getattr(getattr(x,'func', x), '__name__', type(x)))
elif x in (S.NaN, S.Infinity, S.NegativeInfinity, S.ComplexInfinity):
return x
if not x.is_real:
i, r = x.as_real_imag()
return i.round(p) + S.ImaginaryUnit*r.round(p)
if not x:
return x
p = int(p)
precs = [f._prec for f in x.atoms(Float)]
dps = prec_to_dps(max(precs)) if precs else None
mag_first_dig = _mag(x)
allow = digits_needed = mag_first_dig + p
if dps is not None and allow > dps:
allow = dps
mag = Pow(10, p) # magnitude needed to bring digit p to units place
xwas = x
x += 1/(2*mag) # add the half for rounding
i10 = 10*mag*x.n((dps if dps is not None else digits_needed) + 1)
if i10.is_negative:
x = xwas - 1/(2*mag) # should have gone the other way
i10 = 10*mag*x.n((dps if dps is not None else digits_needed) + 1)
rv = -(Integer(-i10)//10)
else:
rv = Integer(i10)//10
q = 1
if p > 0:
q = mag
elif p < 0:
rv /= mag
rv = Rational(rv, q)
if rv.is_Integer:
# use str or else it won't be a float
return Float(str(rv), digits_needed)
else:
if not allow and rv > self:
allow += 1
return Float(rv, allow)
class AtomicExpr(Atom, Expr):
"""
A parent class for object which are both atoms and Exprs.
For example: Symbol, Number, Rational, Integer, ...
But not: Add, Mul, Pow, ...
"""
is_number = False
is_Atom = True
__slots__ = []
def _eval_derivative(self, s):
if self == s:
return S.One
return S.Zero
def _eval_derivative_n_times(self, s, n):
from sympy import Piecewise, Eq
from sympy import Tuple
from sympy.matrices.common import MatrixCommon
if isinstance(s, (MatrixCommon, Tuple, Iterable)):
return super(AtomicExpr, self)._eval_derivative_n_times(s, n)
if self == s:
return Piecewise((self, Eq(n, 0)), (1, Eq(n, 1)), (0, True))
else:
return Piecewise((self, Eq(n, 0)), (0, True))
def _eval_is_polynomial(self, syms):
return True
def _eval_is_rational_function(self, syms):
return True
def _eval_is_algebraic_expr(self, syms):
return True
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
return self
@property
def expr_free_symbols(self):
return {self}
def _mag(x):
"""Return integer ``i`` such that .1 <= x/10**i < 1
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.expr import _mag
>>> from sympy import Float
>>> _mag(Float(.1))
0
>>> _mag(Float(.01))
-1
>>> _mag(Float(1234))
4
"""
from math import log10, ceil, log
from sympy import Float
xpos = abs(x.n())
if not xpos:
return S.Zero
try:
mag_first_dig = int(ceil(log10(xpos)))
except (ValueError, OverflowError):
mag_first_dig = int(ceil(Float(mpf_log(xpos._mpf_, 53))/log(10)))
# check that we aren't off by 1
if (xpos/10**mag_first_dig) >= 1:
assert 1 <= (xpos/10**mag_first_dig) < 10
mag_first_dig += 1
return mag_first_dig
class UnevaluatedExpr(Expr):
"""
Expression that is not evaluated unless released.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import UnevaluatedExpr
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, x, y
>>> x*(1/x)
1
>>> x*UnevaluatedExpr(1/x)
x*1/x
"""
def __new__(cls, arg, **kwargs):
arg = _sympify(arg)
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, arg, **kwargs)
return obj
def doit(self, **kwargs):
if kwargs.get("deep", True):
return self.args[0].doit(**kwargs)
else:
return self.args[0]
def _n2(a, b):
"""Return (a - b).evalf(2) if a and b are comparable, else None.
This should only be used when a and b are already sympified.
"""
# /!\ it is very important (see issue 8245) not to
# use a re-evaluated number in the calculation of dif
if a.is_comparable and b.is_comparable:
dif = (a - b).evalf(2)
if dif.is_comparable:
return dif
from .mul import Mul
from .add import Add
from .power import Pow
from .function import Derivative, Function
from .mod import Mod
from .exprtools import factor_terms
from .numbers import Integer, Rational
|
1a3a3d596a8beebe1fd94233ec35370ccc0407624bc627aacbade63fc1983c7b
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from .add import _unevaluated_Add, Add
from .basic import S
from .compatibility import ordered
from .expr import Expr
from .evalf import EvalfMixin
from .function import _coeff_isneg
from .sympify import _sympify
from .evaluate import global_evaluate
from sympy.logic.boolalg import Boolean, BooleanAtom
__all__ = (
'Rel', 'Eq', 'Ne', 'Lt', 'Le', 'Gt', 'Ge',
'Relational', 'Equality', 'Unequality', 'StrictLessThan', 'LessThan',
'StrictGreaterThan', 'GreaterThan',
)
# Note, see issue 4986. Ideally, we wouldn't want to subclass both Boolean
# and Expr.
def _canonical(cond):
# return a condition in which all relationals are canonical
try:
reps = dict([(r, r.canonical)
for r in cond.atoms(Relational)])
return cond.xreplace(reps)
except AttributeError:
return cond
class Relational(Boolean, Expr, EvalfMixin):
"""Base class for all relation types.
Subclasses of Relational should generally be instantiated directly, but
Relational can be instantiated with a valid `rop` value to dispatch to
the appropriate subclass.
Parameters
==========
rop : str or None
Indicates what subclass to instantiate. Valid values can be found
in the keys of Relational.ValidRelationalOperator.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Rel
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Rel(y, x + x**2, '==')
Eq(y, x**2 + x)
"""
__slots__ = []
is_Relational = True
# ValidRelationOperator - Defined below, because the necessary classes
# have not yet been defined
def __new__(cls, lhs, rhs, rop=None, **assumptions):
# If called by a subclass, do nothing special and pass on to Expr.
if cls is not Relational:
return Expr.__new__(cls, lhs, rhs, **assumptions)
# If called directly with an operator, look up the subclass
# corresponding to that operator and delegate to it
try:
cls = cls.ValidRelationOperator[rop]
rv = cls(lhs, rhs, **assumptions)
# /// drop when Py2 is no longer supported
# validate that Booleans are not being used in a relational
# other than Eq/Ne;
if isinstance(rv, (Eq, Ne)):
pass
elif isinstance(rv, Relational): # could it be otherwise?
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol
from sympy.logic.boolalg import Boolean
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
for a in rv.args:
if isinstance(a, Symbol):
continue
if isinstance(a, Boolean):
from sympy.utilities.misc import filldedent
raise TypeError(filldedent('''
A Boolean argument can only be used in
Eq and Ne; all other relationals expect
real expressions.
'''))
# \\\
return rv
except KeyError:
raise ValueError(
"Invalid relational operator symbol: %r" % rop)
@property
def lhs(self):
"""The left-hand side of the relation."""
return self._args[0]
@property
def rhs(self):
"""The right-hand side of the relation."""
return self._args[1]
@property
def reversed(self):
"""Return the relationship with sides (and sign) reversed.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Eq
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Eq(x, 1)
Eq(x, 1)
>>> _.reversed
Eq(1, x)
>>> x < 1
x < 1
>>> _.reversed
1 > x
"""
ops = {Gt: Lt, Ge: Le, Lt: Gt, Le: Ge}
a, b = self.args
return ops.get(self.func, self.func)(b, a, evaluate=False)
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
return self.func(*[s._evalf(prec) for s in self.args])
@property
def canonical(self):
"""Return a canonical form of the relational by putting a
Number on the rhs else ordering the args. No other
simplification is attempted.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> x < 2
x < 2
>>> _.reversed.canonical
x < 2
>>> (-y < x).canonical
x > -y
>>> (-y > x).canonical
x < -y
"""
args = self.args
r = self
if r.rhs.is_Number:
if r.lhs.is_Number and r.lhs > r.rhs:
r = r.reversed
elif r.lhs.is_Number:
r = r.reversed
elif tuple(ordered(args)) != args:
r = r.reversed
return r
def equals(self, other, failing_expression=False):
"""Return True if the sides of the relationship are mathematically
identical and the type of relationship is the same.
If failing_expression is True, return the expression whose truth value
was unknown."""
if isinstance(other, Relational):
if self == other or self.reversed == other:
return True
a, b = self, other
if a.func in (Eq, Ne) or b.func in (Eq, Ne):
if a.func != b.func:
return False
l, r = [i.equals(j, failing_expression=failing_expression)
for i, j in zip(a.args, b.args)]
if l is True:
return r
if r is True:
return l
lr, rl = [i.equals(j, failing_expression=failing_expression)
for i, j in zip(a.args, b.reversed.args)]
if lr is True:
return rl
if rl is True:
return lr
e = (l, r, lr, rl)
if all(i is False for i in e):
return False
for i in e:
if i not in (True, False):
return i
else:
if b.func != a.func:
b = b.reversed
if a.func != b.func:
return False
l = a.lhs.equals(b.lhs, failing_expression=failing_expression)
if l is False:
return False
r = a.rhs.equals(b.rhs, failing_expression=failing_expression)
if r is False:
return False
if l is True:
return r
return l
def _eval_simplify(self, ratio, measure, rational, inverse):
r = self
r = r.func(*[i.simplify(ratio=ratio, measure=measure, rational=rational, inverse=inverse)
for i in r.args])
if r.is_Relational:
dif = r.lhs - r.rhs
# replace dif with a valid Number that will
# allow a definitive comparison with 0
v = None
if dif.is_comparable:
v = dif.n(2)
elif dif.equals(0): # XXX this is expensive
v = S.Zero
if v is not None:
r = r.func._eval_relation(v, S.Zero)
r = r.canonical
if measure(r) < ratio*measure(self):
return r
else:
return self
def __nonzero__(self):
raise TypeError("cannot determine truth value of Relational")
__bool__ = __nonzero__
def _eval_as_set(self):
# self is univariate and periodicity(self, x) in (0, None)
from sympy.solvers.inequalities import solve_univariate_inequality
syms = self.free_symbols
assert len(syms) == 1
x = syms.pop()
return solve_univariate_inequality(self, x, relational=False)
@property
def binary_symbols(self):
# override where necessary
return set()
Rel = Relational
class Equality(Relational):
"""An equal relation between two objects.
Represents that two objects are equal. If they can be easily shown
to be definitively equal (or unequal), this will reduce to True (or
False). Otherwise, the relation is maintained as an unevaluated
Equality object. Use the ``simplify`` function on this object for
more nontrivial evaluation of the equality relation.
As usual, the keyword argument ``evaluate=False`` can be used to
prevent any evaluation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Eq, simplify, exp, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Eq(y, x + x**2)
Eq(y, x**2 + x)
>>> Eq(2, 5)
False
>>> Eq(2, 5, evaluate=False)
Eq(2, 5)
>>> _.doit()
False
>>> Eq(exp(x), exp(x).rewrite(cos))
Eq(exp(x), sinh(x) + cosh(x))
>>> simplify(_)
True
See Also
========
sympy.logic.boolalg.Equivalent : for representing equality between two
boolean expressions
Notes
=====
This class is not the same as the == operator. The == operator tests
for exact structural equality between two expressions; this class
compares expressions mathematically.
If either object defines an `_eval_Eq` method, it can be used in place of
the default algorithm. If `lhs._eval_Eq(rhs)` or `rhs._eval_Eq(lhs)`
returns anything other than None, that return value will be substituted for
the Equality. If None is returned by `_eval_Eq`, an Equality object will
be created as usual.
Since this object is already an expression, it does not respond to
the method `as_expr` if one tries to create `x - y` from Eq(x, y).
This can be done with the `rewrite(Add)` method.
"""
rel_op = '=='
__slots__ = []
is_Equality = True
def __new__(cls, lhs, rhs=0, **options):
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_bool
from sympy.core.expr import _n2
from sympy.simplify.simplify import clear_coefficients
lhs = _sympify(lhs)
rhs = _sympify(rhs)
evaluate = options.pop('evaluate', global_evaluate[0])
if evaluate:
# If one expression has an _eval_Eq, return its results.
if hasattr(lhs, '_eval_Eq'):
r = lhs._eval_Eq(rhs)
if r is not None:
return r
if hasattr(rhs, '_eval_Eq'):
r = rhs._eval_Eq(lhs)
if r is not None:
return r
# If expressions have the same structure, they must be equal.
if lhs == rhs:
return S.true # e.g. True == True
elif all(isinstance(i, BooleanAtom) for i in (rhs, lhs)):
return S.false # True != False
elif not (lhs.is_Symbol or rhs.is_Symbol) and (
isinstance(lhs, Boolean) !=
isinstance(rhs, Boolean)):
return S.false # only Booleans can equal Booleans
# check finiteness
fin = L, R = [i.is_finite for i in (lhs, rhs)]
if None not in fin:
if L != R:
return S.false
if L is False:
if lhs == -rhs: # Eq(oo, -oo)
return S.false
return S.true
elif None in fin and False in fin:
return Relational.__new__(cls, lhs, rhs, **options)
if all(isinstance(i, Expr) for i in (lhs, rhs)):
# see if the difference evaluates
dif = lhs - rhs
z = dif.is_zero
if z is not None:
if z is False and dif.is_commutative: # issue 10728
return S.false
if z:
return S.true
# evaluate numerically if possible
n2 = _n2(lhs, rhs)
if n2 is not None:
return _sympify(n2 == 0)
# see if the ratio evaluates
n, d = dif.as_numer_denom()
rv = None
if n.is_zero:
rv = d.is_nonzero
elif n.is_finite:
if d.is_infinite:
rv = S.true
elif n.is_zero is False:
rv = d.is_infinite
if rv is None:
# if the condition that makes the denominator infinite does not
# make the original expression True then False can be returned
l, r = clear_coefficients(d, S.Infinity)
args = [_.subs(l, r) for _ in (lhs, rhs)]
if args != [lhs, rhs]:
rv = fuzzy_bool(Eq(*args))
if rv is True:
rv = None
elif any(a.is_infinite for a in Add.make_args(n)): # (inf or nan)/x != 0
rv = S.false
if rv is not None:
return _sympify(rv)
return Relational.__new__(cls, lhs, rhs, **options)
@classmethod
def _eval_relation(cls, lhs, rhs):
return _sympify(lhs == rhs)
def _eval_rewrite_as_Add(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""return Eq(L, R) as L - R. To control the evaluation of
the result set pass `evaluate=True` to give L - R;
if `evaluate=None` then terms in L and R will not cancel
but they will be listed in canonical order; otherwise
non-canonical args will be returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Eq, Add
>>> from sympy.abc import b, x
>>> eq = Eq(x + b, x - b)
>>> eq.rewrite(Add)
2*b
>>> eq.rewrite(Add, evaluate=None).args
(b, b, x, -x)
>>> eq.rewrite(Add, evaluate=False).args
(b, x, b, -x)
"""
L, R = args
evaluate = kwargs.get('evaluate', True)
if evaluate:
# allow cancellation of args
return L - R
args = Add.make_args(L) + Add.make_args(-R)
if evaluate is None:
# no cancellation, but canonical
return _unevaluated_Add(*args)
# no cancellation, not canonical
return Add._from_args(args)
@property
def binary_symbols(self):
if S.true in self.args or S.false in self.args:
if self.lhs.is_Symbol:
return set([self.lhs])
elif self.rhs.is_Symbol:
return set([self.rhs])
return set()
def _eval_simplify(self, ratio, measure, rational, inverse):
from sympy.solvers.solveset import linear_coeffs
# standard simplify
e = super(Equality, self)._eval_simplify(
ratio, measure, rational, inverse)
if not isinstance(e, Equality):
return e
free = self.free_symbols
if len(free) == 1:
try:
x = free.pop()
m, b = linear_coeffs(
e.rewrite(Add, evaluate=False), x)
if m.is_zero is False:
enew = e.func(x, -b/m)
else:
enew = e.func(m*x, -b)
if measure(enew) <= ratio*measure(e):
e = enew
except ValueError:
pass
return e.canonical
Eq = Equality
class Unequality(Relational):
"""An unequal relation between two objects.
Represents that two objects are not equal. If they can be shown to be
definitively equal, this will reduce to False; if definitively unequal,
this will reduce to True. Otherwise, the relation is maintained as an
Unequality object.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Ne
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Ne(y, x+x**2)
Ne(y, x**2 + x)
See Also
========
Equality
Notes
=====
This class is not the same as the != operator. The != operator tests
for exact structural equality between two expressions; this class
compares expressions mathematically.
This class is effectively the inverse of Equality. As such, it uses the
same algorithms, including any available `_eval_Eq` methods.
"""
rel_op = '!='
__slots__ = []
def __new__(cls, lhs, rhs, **options):
lhs = _sympify(lhs)
rhs = _sympify(rhs)
evaluate = options.pop('evaluate', global_evaluate[0])
if evaluate:
is_equal = Equality(lhs, rhs)
if isinstance(is_equal, BooleanAtom):
return ~is_equal
return Relational.__new__(cls, lhs, rhs, **options)
@classmethod
def _eval_relation(cls, lhs, rhs):
return _sympify(lhs != rhs)
@property
def binary_symbols(self):
if S.true in self.args or S.false in self.args:
if self.lhs.is_Symbol:
return set([self.lhs])
elif self.rhs.is_Symbol:
return set([self.rhs])
return set()
def _eval_simplify(self, ratio, measure, rational, inverse):
eq = Equality(*self.args)._eval_simplify(
ratio, measure, rational, inverse)
if isinstance(eq, Equality):
eq = self.func(*eq.args)
return eq
Ne = Unequality
class _Inequality(Relational):
"""Internal base class for all *Than types.
Each subclass must implement _eval_relation to provide the method for
comparing two real numbers.
"""
__slots__ = []
def __new__(cls, lhs, rhs, **options):
lhs = _sympify(lhs)
rhs = _sympify(rhs)
evaluate = options.pop('evaluate', global_evaluate[0])
if evaluate:
# First we invoke the appropriate inequality method of `lhs`
# (e.g., `lhs.__lt__`). That method will try to reduce to
# boolean or raise an exception. It may keep calling
# superclasses until it reaches `Expr` (e.g., `Expr.__lt__`).
# In some cases, `Expr` will just invoke us again (if neither it
# nor a subclass was able to reduce to boolean or raise an
# exception). In that case, it must call us with
# `evaluate=False` to prevent infinite recursion.
r = cls._eval_relation(lhs, rhs)
if r is not None:
return r
# Note: not sure r could be None, perhaps we never take this
# path? In principle, could use this to shortcut out if a
# class realizes the inequality cannot be evaluated further.
# make a "non-evaluated" Expr for the inequality
return Relational.__new__(cls, lhs, rhs, **options)
class _Greater(_Inequality):
"""Not intended for general use
_Greater is only used so that GreaterThan and StrictGreaterThan may subclass
it for the .gts and .lts properties.
"""
__slots__ = ()
@property
def gts(self):
return self._args[0]
@property
def lts(self):
return self._args[1]
class _Less(_Inequality):
"""Not intended for general use.
_Less is only used so that LessThan and StrictLessThan may subclass it for
the .gts and .lts properties.
"""
__slots__ = ()
@property
def gts(self):
return self._args[1]
@property
def lts(self):
return self._args[0]
class GreaterThan(_Greater):
"""Class representations of inequalities.
Extended Summary
================
The ``*Than`` classes represent inequal relationships, where the left-hand
side is generally bigger or smaller than the right-hand side. For example,
the GreaterThan class represents an inequal relationship where the
left-hand side is at least as big as the right side, if not bigger. In
mathematical notation:
lhs >= rhs
In total, there are four ``*Than`` classes, to represent the four
inequalities:
+-----------------+--------+
|Class Name | Symbol |
+=================+========+
|GreaterThan | (>=) |
+-----------------+--------+
|LessThan | (<=) |
+-----------------+--------+
|StrictGreaterThan| (>) |
+-----------------+--------+
|StrictLessThan | (<) |
+-----------------+--------+
All classes take two arguments, lhs and rhs.
+----------------------------+-----------------+
|Signature Example | Math equivalent |
+============================+=================+
|GreaterThan(lhs, rhs) | lhs >= rhs |
+----------------------------+-----------------+
|LessThan(lhs, rhs) | lhs <= rhs |
+----------------------------+-----------------+
|StrictGreaterThan(lhs, rhs) | lhs > rhs |
+----------------------------+-----------------+
|StrictLessThan(lhs, rhs) | lhs < rhs |
+----------------------------+-----------------+
In addition to the normal .lhs and .rhs of Relations, ``*Than`` inequality
objects also have the .lts and .gts properties, which represent the "less
than side" and "greater than side" of the operator. Use of .lts and .gts
in an algorithm rather than .lhs and .rhs as an assumption of inequality
direction will make more explicit the intent of a certain section of code,
and will make it similarly more robust to client code changes:
>>> from sympy import GreaterThan, StrictGreaterThan
>>> from sympy import LessThan, StrictLessThan
>>> from sympy import And, Ge, Gt, Le, Lt, Rel, S
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> from sympy.core.relational import Relational
>>> e = GreaterThan(x, 1)
>>> e
x >= 1
>>> '%s >= %s is the same as %s <= %s' % (e.gts, e.lts, e.lts, e.gts)
'x >= 1 is the same as 1 <= x'
Examples
========
One generally does not instantiate these classes directly, but uses various
convenience methods:
>>> for f in [Ge, Gt, Le, Lt]: # convenience wrappers
... print(f(x, 2))
x >= 2
x > 2
x <= 2
x < 2
Another option is to use the Python inequality operators (>=, >, <=, <)
directly. Their main advantage over the Ge, Gt, Le, and Lt counterparts, is
that one can write a more "mathematical looking" statement rather than
littering the math with oddball function calls. However there are certain
(minor) caveats of which to be aware (search for 'gotcha', below).
>>> x >= 2
x >= 2
>>> _ == Ge(x, 2)
True
However, it is also perfectly valid to instantiate a ``*Than`` class less
succinctly and less conveniently:
>>> Rel(x, 1, ">")
x > 1
>>> Relational(x, 1, ">")
x > 1
>>> StrictGreaterThan(x, 1)
x > 1
>>> GreaterThan(x, 1)
x >= 1
>>> LessThan(x, 1)
x <= 1
>>> StrictLessThan(x, 1)
x < 1
Notes
=====
There are a couple of "gotchas" to be aware of when using Python's
operators.
The first is that what your write is not always what you get:
>>> 1 < x
x > 1
Due to the order that Python parses a statement, it may
not immediately find two objects comparable. When "1 < x"
is evaluated, Python recognizes that the number 1 is a native
number and that x is *not*. Because a native Python number does
not know how to compare itself with a SymPy object
Python will try the reflective operation, "x > 1" and that is the
form that gets evaluated, hence returned.
If the order of the statement is important (for visual output to
the console, perhaps), one can work around this annoyance in a
couple ways:
(1) "sympify" the literal before comparison
>>> S(1) < x
1 < x
(2) use one of the wrappers or less succinct methods described
above
>>> Lt(1, x)
1 < x
>>> Relational(1, x, "<")
1 < x
The second gotcha involves writing equality tests between relationals
when one or both sides of the test involve a literal relational:
>>> e = x < 1; e
x < 1
>>> e == e # neither side is a literal
True
>>> e == x < 1 # expecting True, too
False
>>> e != x < 1 # expecting False
x < 1
>>> x < 1 != x < 1 # expecting False or the same thing as before
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: cannot determine truth value of Relational
The solution for this case is to wrap literal relationals in
parentheses:
>>> e == (x < 1)
True
>>> e != (x < 1)
False
>>> (x < 1) != (x < 1)
False
The third gotcha involves chained inequalities not involving
'==' or '!='. Occasionally, one may be tempted to write:
>>> e = x < y < z
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: symbolic boolean expression has no truth value.
Due to an implementation detail or decision of Python [1]_,
there is no way for SymPy to create a chained inequality with
that syntax so one must use And:
>>> e = And(x < y, y < z)
>>> type( e )
And
>>> e
(x < y) & (y < z)
Although this can also be done with the '&' operator, it cannot
be done with the 'and' operarator:
>>> (x < y) & (y < z)
(x < y) & (y < z)
>>> (x < y) and (y < z)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: cannot determine truth value of Relational
.. [1] This implementation detail is that Python provides no reliable
method to determine that a chained inequality is being built.
Chained comparison operators are evaluated pairwise, using "and"
logic (see
http://docs.python.org/2/reference/expressions.html#notin). This
is done in an efficient way, so that each object being compared
is only evaluated once and the comparison can short-circuit. For
example, ``1 > 2 > 3`` is evaluated by Python as ``(1 > 2) and (2
> 3)``. The ``and`` operator coerces each side into a bool,
returning the object itself when it short-circuits. The bool of
the --Than operators will raise TypeError on purpose, because
SymPy cannot determine the mathematical ordering of symbolic
expressions. Thus, if we were to compute ``x > y > z``, with
``x``, ``y``, and ``z`` being Symbols, Python converts the
statement (roughly) into these steps:
(1) x > y > z
(2) (x > y) and (y > z)
(3) (GreaterThanObject) and (y > z)
(4) (GreaterThanObject.__nonzero__()) and (y > z)
(5) TypeError
Because of the "and" added at step 2, the statement gets turned into a
weak ternary statement, and the first object's __nonzero__ method will
raise TypeError. Thus, creating a chained inequality is not possible.
In Python, there is no way to override the ``and`` operator, or to
control how it short circuits, so it is impossible to make something
like ``x > y > z`` work. There was a PEP to change this,
:pep:`335`, but it was officially closed in March, 2012.
"""
__slots__ = ()
rel_op = '>='
@classmethod
def _eval_relation(cls, lhs, rhs):
# We don't use the op symbol here: workaround issue #7951
return _sympify(lhs.__ge__(rhs))
Ge = GreaterThan
class LessThan(_Less):
__doc__ = GreaterThan.__doc__
__slots__ = ()
rel_op = '<='
@classmethod
def _eval_relation(cls, lhs, rhs):
# We don't use the op symbol here: workaround issue #7951
return _sympify(lhs.__le__(rhs))
Le = LessThan
class StrictGreaterThan(_Greater):
__doc__ = GreaterThan.__doc__
__slots__ = ()
rel_op = '>'
@classmethod
def _eval_relation(cls, lhs, rhs):
# We don't use the op symbol here: workaround issue #7951
return _sympify(lhs.__gt__(rhs))
Gt = StrictGreaterThan
class StrictLessThan(_Less):
__doc__ = GreaterThan.__doc__
__slots__ = ()
rel_op = '<'
@classmethod
def _eval_relation(cls, lhs, rhs):
# We don't use the op symbol here: workaround issue #7951
return _sympify(lhs.__lt__(rhs))
Lt = StrictLessThan
# A class-specific (not object-specific) data item used for a minor speedup. It
# is defined here, rather than directly in the class, because the classes that
# it references have not been defined until now (e.g. StrictLessThan).
Relational.ValidRelationOperator = {
None: Equality,
'==': Equality,
'eq': Equality,
'!=': Unequality,
'<>': Unequality,
'ne': Unequality,
'>=': GreaterThan,
'ge': GreaterThan,
'<=': LessThan,
'le': LessThan,
'>': StrictGreaterThan,
'gt': StrictGreaterThan,
'<': StrictLessThan,
'lt': StrictLessThan,
}
|
6a2e2e44b637ca3bb5feab3e8a5d283953796cfc8ae13533c0b7d8bf08ee9f73
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
import decimal
import fractions
import math
import re as regex
from collections import defaultdict
from .containers import Tuple
from .sympify import converter, sympify, _sympify, SympifyError, _convert_numpy_types
from .singleton import S, Singleton
from .expr import Expr, AtomicExpr
from .decorators import _sympifyit
from .cache import cacheit, clear_cache
from .logic import fuzzy_not
from sympy.core.compatibility import (
as_int, integer_types, long, string_types, with_metaclass, HAS_GMPY,
SYMPY_INTS, int_info)
from sympy.core.cache import lru_cache
import mpmath
import mpmath.libmp as mlib
from mpmath.libmp.backend import MPZ
from mpmath.libmp import mpf_pow, mpf_pi, mpf_e, phi_fixed
from mpmath.ctx_mp import mpnumeric
from mpmath.libmp.libmpf import (
finf as _mpf_inf, fninf as _mpf_ninf,
fnan as _mpf_nan, fzero as _mpf_zero, _normalize as mpf_normalize,
prec_to_dps)
from sympy.utilities.misc import debug, filldedent
from .evaluate import global_evaluate
from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning
rnd = mlib.round_nearest
_LOG2 = math.log(2)
def comp(z1, z2, tol=None):
"""Return a bool indicating whether the error between z1 and z2 is <= tol.
If ``tol`` is None then True will be returned if there is a significant
difference between the numbers: ``abs(z1 - z2)*10**p <= 1/2`` where ``p``
is the lower of the precisions of the values. A comparison of strings will
be made if ``z1`` is a Number and a) ``z2`` is a string or b) ``tol`` is ''
and ``z2`` is a Number.
When ``tol`` is a nonzero value, if z2 is non-zero and ``|z1| > 1``
the error is normalized by ``|z1|``, so if you want to see if the
absolute error between ``z1`` and ``z2`` is <= ``tol`` then call this
as ``comp(z1 - z2, 0, tol)``.
"""
if type(z2) is str:
if not isinstance(z1, Number):
raise ValueError('when z2 is a str z1 must be a Number')
return str(z1) == z2
if not z1:
z1, z2 = z2, z1
if not z1:
return True
if not tol:
if tol is None:
if type(z2) is str and getattr(z1, 'is_Number', False):
return str(z1) == z2
a, b = Float(z1), Float(z2)
return int(abs(a - b)*10**prec_to_dps(
min(a._prec, b._prec)))*2 <= 1
elif all(getattr(i, 'is_Number', False) for i in (z1, z2)):
return z1._prec == z2._prec and str(z1) == str(z2)
raise ValueError('exact comparison requires two Numbers')
diff = abs(z1 - z2)
az1 = abs(z1)
if z2 and az1 > 1:
return diff/az1 <= tol
else:
return diff <= tol
def mpf_norm(mpf, prec):
"""Return the mpf tuple normalized appropriately for the indicated
precision after doing a check to see if zero should be returned or
not when the mantissa is 0. ``mpf_normlize`` always assumes that this
is zero, but it may not be since the mantissa for mpf's values "+inf",
"-inf" and "nan" have a mantissa of zero, too.
Note: this is not intended to validate a given mpf tuple, so sending
mpf tuples that were not created by mpmath may produce bad results. This
is only a wrapper to ``mpf_normalize`` which provides the check for non-
zero mpfs that have a 0 for the mantissa.
"""
sign, man, expt, bc = mpf
if not man:
# hack for mpf_normalize which does not do this;
# it assumes that if man is zero the result is 0
# (see issue 6639)
if not bc:
return _mpf_zero
else:
# don't change anything; this should already
# be a well formed mpf tuple
return mpf
# Necessary if mpmath is using the gmpy backend
from mpmath.libmp.backend import MPZ
rv = mpf_normalize(sign, MPZ(man), expt, bc, prec, rnd)
return rv
# TODO: we should use the warnings module
_errdict = {"divide": False}
def seterr(divide=False):
"""
Should sympy raise an exception on 0/0 or return a nan?
divide == True .... raise an exception
divide == False ... return nan
"""
if _errdict["divide"] != divide:
clear_cache()
_errdict["divide"] = divide
def _as_integer_ratio(p):
neg_pow, man, expt, bc = getattr(p, '_mpf_', mpmath.mpf(p)._mpf_)
p = [1, -1][neg_pow % 2]*man
if expt < 0:
q = 2**-expt
else:
q = 1
p *= 2**expt
return int(p), int(q)
def _decimal_to_Rational_prec(dec):
"""Convert an ordinary decimal instance to a Rational."""
if not dec.is_finite():
raise TypeError("dec must be finite, got %s." % dec)
s, d, e = dec.as_tuple()
prec = len(d)
if e >= 0: # it's an integer
rv = Integer(int(dec))
else:
s = (-1)**s
d = sum([di*10**i for i, di in enumerate(reversed(d))])
rv = Rational(s*d, 10**-e)
return rv, prec
def _literal_float(f):
"""Return True if n can be interpreted as a floating point number."""
pat = r"[-+]?((\d*\.\d+)|(\d+\.?))(eE[-+]?\d+)?"
return bool(regex.match(pat, f))
# (a,b) -> gcd(a,b)
# TODO caching with decorator, but not to degrade performance
@lru_cache(1024)
def igcd(*args):
"""Computes nonnegative integer greatest common divisor.
The algorithm is based on the well known Euclid's algorithm. To
improve speed, igcd() has its own caching mechanism implemented.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.numbers import igcd
>>> igcd(2, 4)
2
>>> igcd(5, 10, 15)
5
"""
if len(args) < 2:
raise TypeError(
'igcd() takes at least 2 arguments (%s given)' % len(args))
if 1 in args:
a = 1
k = 0
else:
a = abs(as_int(args[0]))
k = 1
if a != 1:
while k < len(args):
b = args[k]
k += 1
b = as_int(b)
if not b:
continue
if b == 1:
a = 1
break
if b < 0:
b = -b
a = igcd2(a, b)
while k < len(args):
ok = as_int(args[k])
k += 1
return a
try:
from math import gcd as igcd2
except ImportError:
def igcd2(a, b):
"""Compute gcd of two Python integers a and b."""
if (a.bit_length() > BIGBITS and
b.bit_length() > BIGBITS):
return igcd_lehmer(a, b)
a, b = abs(a), abs(b)
while b:
a, b = b, a % b
return a
# Use Lehmer's algorithm only for very large numbers.
# The limit could be different on Python 2.7 and 3.x.
# If so, then this could be defined in compatibility.py.
BIGBITS = 5000
def igcd_lehmer(a, b):
"""Computes greatest common divisor of two integers.
Euclid's algorithm for the computation of the greatest
common divisor gcd(a, b) of two (positive) integers
a and b is based on the division identity
a = q*b + r,
where the quotient q and the remainder r are integers
and 0 <= r < b. Then each common divisor of a and b
divides r, and it follows that gcd(a, b) == gcd(b, r).
The algorithm works by constructing the sequence
r0, r1, r2, ..., where r0 = a, r1 = b, and each rn
is the remainder from the division of the two preceding
elements.
In Python, q = a // b and r = a % b are obtained by the
floor division and the remainder operations, respectively.
These are the most expensive arithmetic operations, especially
for large a and b.
Lehmer's algorithm is based on the observation that the quotients
qn = r(n-1) // rn are in general small integers even
when a and b are very large. Hence the quotients can be
usually determined from a relatively small number of most
significant bits.
The efficiency of the algorithm is further enhanced by not
computing each long remainder in Euclid's sequence. The remainders
are linear combinations of a and b with integer coefficients
derived from the quotients. The coefficients can be computed
as far as the quotients can be determined from the chosen
most significant parts of a and b. Only then a new pair of
consecutive remainders is computed and the algorithm starts
anew with this pair.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehmer%27s_GCD_algorithm
"""
a, b = abs(as_int(a)), abs(as_int(b))
if a < b:
a, b = b, a
# The algorithm works by using one or two digit division
# whenever possible. The outer loop will replace the
# pair (a, b) with a pair of shorter consecutive elements
# of the Euclidean gcd sequence until a and b
# fit into two Python (long) int digits.
nbits = 2*int_info.bits_per_digit
while a.bit_length() > nbits and b != 0:
# Quotients are mostly small integers that can
# be determined from most significant bits.
n = a.bit_length() - nbits
x, y = int(a >> n), int(b >> n) # most significant bits
# Elements of the Euclidean gcd sequence are linear
# combinations of a and b with integer coefficients.
# Compute the coefficients of consecutive pairs
# a' = A*a + B*b, b' = C*a + D*b
# using small integer arithmetic as far as possible.
A, B, C, D = 1, 0, 0, 1 # initial values
while True:
# The coefficients alternate in sign while looping.
# The inner loop combines two steps to keep track
# of the signs.
# At this point we have
# A > 0, B <= 0, C <= 0, D > 0,
# x' = x + B <= x < x" = x + A,
# y' = y + C <= y < y" = y + D,
# and
# x'*N <= a' < x"*N, y'*N <= b' < y"*N,
# where N = 2**n.
# Now, if y' > 0, and x"//y' and x'//y" agree,
# then their common value is equal to q = a'//b'.
# In addition,
# x'%y" = x' - q*y" < x" - q*y' = x"%y',
# and
# (x'%y")*N < a'%b' < (x"%y')*N.
# On the other hand, we also have x//y == q,
# and therefore
# x'%y" = x + B - q*(y + D) = x%y + B',
# x"%y' = x + A - q*(y + C) = x%y + A',
# where
# B' = B - q*D < 0, A' = A - q*C > 0.
if y + C <= 0:
break
q = (x + A) // (y + C)
# Now x'//y" <= q, and equality holds if
# x' - q*y" = (x - q*y) + (B - q*D) >= 0.
# This is a minor optimization to avoid division.
x_qy, B_qD = x - q*y, B - q*D
if x_qy + B_qD < 0:
break
# Next step in the Euclidean sequence.
x, y = y, x_qy
A, B, C, D = C, D, A - q*C, B_qD
# At this point the signs of the coefficients
# change and their roles are interchanged.
# A <= 0, B > 0, C > 0, D < 0,
# x' = x + A <= x < x" = x + B,
# y' = y + D < y < y" = y + C.
if y + D <= 0:
break
q = (x + B) // (y + D)
x_qy, A_qC = x - q*y, A - q*C
if x_qy + A_qC < 0:
break
x, y = y, x_qy
A, B, C, D = C, D, A_qC, B - q*D
# Now the conditions on top of the loop
# are again satisfied.
# A > 0, B < 0, C < 0, D > 0.
if B == 0:
# This can only happen when y == 0 in the beginning
# and the inner loop does nothing.
# Long division is forced.
a, b = b, a % b
continue
# Compute new long arguments using the coefficients.
a, b = A*a + B*b, C*a + D*b
# Small divisors. Finish with the standard algorithm.
while b:
a, b = b, a % b
return a
def ilcm(*args):
"""Computes integer least common multiple.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.numbers import ilcm
>>> ilcm(5, 10)
10
>>> ilcm(7, 3)
21
>>> ilcm(5, 10, 15)
30
"""
if len(args) < 2:
raise TypeError(
'ilcm() takes at least 2 arguments (%s given)' % len(args))
if 0 in args:
return 0
a = args[0]
for b in args[1:]:
a = a // igcd(a, b) * b # since gcd(a,b) | a
return a
def igcdex(a, b):
"""Returns x, y, g such that g = x*a + y*b = gcd(a, b).
>>> from sympy.core.numbers import igcdex
>>> igcdex(2, 3)
(-1, 1, 1)
>>> igcdex(10, 12)
(-1, 1, 2)
>>> x, y, g = igcdex(100, 2004)
>>> x, y, g
(-20, 1, 4)
>>> x*100 + y*2004
4
"""
if (not a) and (not b):
return (0, 1, 0)
if not a:
return (0, b//abs(b), abs(b))
if not b:
return (a//abs(a), 0, abs(a))
if a < 0:
a, x_sign = -a, -1
else:
x_sign = 1
if b < 0:
b, y_sign = -b, -1
else:
y_sign = 1
x, y, r, s = 1, 0, 0, 1
while b:
(c, q) = (a % b, a // b)
(a, b, r, s, x, y) = (b, c, x - q*r, y - q*s, r, s)
return (x*x_sign, y*y_sign, a)
def mod_inverse(a, m):
"""
Return the number c such that, (a * c) = 1 (mod m)
where c has the same sign as m. If no such value exists,
a ValueError is raised.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.core.numbers import mod_inverse
Suppose we wish to find multiplicative inverse x of
3 modulo 11. This is the same as finding x such
that 3 * x = 1 (mod 11). One value of x that satisfies
this congruence is 4. Because 3 * 4 = 12 and 12 = 1 (mod 11).
This is the value return by mod_inverse:
>>> mod_inverse(3, 11)
4
>>> mod_inverse(-3, 11)
7
When there is a common factor between the numerators of
``a`` and ``m`` the inverse does not exist:
>>> mod_inverse(2, 4)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: inverse of 2 mod 4 does not exist
>>> mod_inverse(S(2)/7, S(5)/2)
7/2
References
==========
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_multiplicative_inverse
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Euclidean_algorithm
"""
c = None
try:
a, m = as_int(a), as_int(m)
if m != 1 and m != -1:
x, y, g = igcdex(a, m)
if g == 1:
c = x % m
except ValueError:
a, m = sympify(a), sympify(m)
if not (a.is_number and m.is_number):
raise TypeError(filldedent('''
Expected numbers for arguments; symbolic `mod_inverse`
is not implemented
but symbolic expressions can be handled with the
similar function,
sympy.polys.polytools.invert'''))
big = (m > 1)
if not (big is S.true or big is S.false):
raise ValueError('m > 1 did not evaluate; try to simplify %s' % m)
elif big:
c = 1/a
if c is None:
raise ValueError('inverse of %s (mod %s) does not exist' % (a, m))
return c
class Number(AtomicExpr):
"""Represents atomic numbers in SymPy.
Floating point numbers are represented by the Float class.
Rational numbers (of any size) are represented by the Rational class.
Integer numbers (of any size) are represented by the Integer class.
Float and Rational are subclasses of Number; Integer is a subclass
of Rational.
For example, ``2/3`` is represented as ``Rational(2, 3)`` which is
a different object from the floating point number obtained with
Python division ``2/3``. Even for numbers that are exactly
represented in binary, there is a difference between how two forms,
such as ``Rational(1, 2)`` and ``Float(0.5)``, are used in SymPy.
The rational form is to be preferred in symbolic computations.
Other kinds of numbers, such as algebraic numbers ``sqrt(2)`` or
complex numbers ``3 + 4*I``, are not instances of Number class as
they are not atomic.
See Also
========
Float, Integer, Rational
"""
is_commutative = True
is_number = True
is_Number = True
__slots__ = []
# Used to make max(x._prec, y._prec) return x._prec when only x is a float
_prec = -1
def __new__(cls, *obj):
if len(obj) == 1:
obj = obj[0]
if isinstance(obj, Number):
return obj
if isinstance(obj, SYMPY_INTS):
return Integer(obj)
if isinstance(obj, tuple) and len(obj) == 2:
return Rational(*obj)
if isinstance(obj, (float, mpmath.mpf, decimal.Decimal)):
return Float(obj)
if isinstance(obj, string_types):
val = sympify(obj)
if isinstance(val, Number):
return val
else:
raise ValueError('String "%s" does not denote a Number' % obj)
msg = "expected str|int|long|float|Decimal|Number object but got %r"
raise TypeError(msg % type(obj).__name__)
def invert(self, other, *gens, **args):
from sympy.polys.polytools import invert
if getattr(other, 'is_number', True):
return mod_inverse(self, other)
return invert(self, other, *gens, **args)
def __divmod__(self, other):
from .containers import Tuple
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import sign
try:
other = Number(other)
except TypeError:
msg = "unsupported operand type(s) for divmod(): '%s' and '%s'"
raise TypeError(msg % (type(self).__name__, type(other).__name__))
if not other:
raise ZeroDivisionError('modulo by zero')
if self.is_Integer and other.is_Integer:
return Tuple(*divmod(self.p, other.p))
else:
rat = self/other
w = int(rat) if rat > 0 else int(rat) - 1
r = self - other*w
return Tuple(w, r)
def __rdivmod__(self, other):
try:
other = Number(other)
except TypeError:
msg = "unsupported operand type(s) for divmod(): '%s' and '%s'"
raise TypeError(msg % (type(other).__name__, type(self).__name__))
return divmod(other, self)
def __round__(self, *args):
return round(float(self), *args)
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
"""Evaluation of mpf tuple accurate to at least prec bits."""
raise NotImplementedError('%s needs ._as_mpf_val() method' %
(self.__class__.__name__))
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
return Float._new(self._as_mpf_val(prec), prec)
def _as_mpf_op(self, prec):
prec = max(prec, self._prec)
return self._as_mpf_val(prec), prec
def __float__(self):
return mlib.to_float(self._as_mpf_val(53))
def floor(self):
raise NotImplementedError('%s needs .floor() method' %
(self.__class__.__name__))
def ceiling(self):
raise NotImplementedError('%s needs .ceiling() method' %
(self.__class__.__name__))
def _eval_conjugate(self):
return self
def _eval_order(self, *symbols):
from sympy import Order
# Order(5, x, y) -> Order(1,x,y)
return Order(S.One, *symbols)
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
if old == -self:
return -new
return self # there is no other possibility
def _eval_is_finite(self):
return True
@classmethod
def class_key(cls):
return 1, 0, 'Number'
@cacheit
def sort_key(self, order=None):
return self.class_key(), (0, ()), (), self
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __add__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
if other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other is S.Infinity:
return S.Infinity
elif other is S.NegativeInfinity:
return S.NegativeInfinity
return AtomicExpr.__add__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __sub__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
if other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other is S.Infinity:
return S.NegativeInfinity
elif other is S.NegativeInfinity:
return S.Infinity
return AtomicExpr.__sub__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mul__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
if other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other is S.Infinity:
if self.is_zero:
return S.NaN
elif self.is_positive:
return S.Infinity
else:
return S.NegativeInfinity
elif other is S.NegativeInfinity:
if self.is_zero:
return S.NaN
elif self.is_positive:
return S.NegativeInfinity
else:
return S.Infinity
elif isinstance(other, Tuple):
return NotImplemented
return AtomicExpr.__mul__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __div__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
if other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other is S.Infinity or other is S.NegativeInfinity:
return S.Zero
return AtomicExpr.__div__(self, other)
__truediv__ = __div__
def __eq__(self, other):
raise NotImplementedError('%s needs .__eq__() method' %
(self.__class__.__name__))
def __ne__(self, other):
raise NotImplementedError('%s needs .__ne__() method' %
(self.__class__.__name__))
def __lt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s < %s" % (self, other))
raise NotImplementedError('%s needs .__lt__() method' %
(self.__class__.__name__))
def __le__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s <= %s" % (self, other))
raise NotImplementedError('%s needs .__le__() method' %
(self.__class__.__name__))
def __gt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s > %s" % (self, other))
return _sympify(other).__lt__(self)
def __ge__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s >= %s" % (self, other))
return _sympify(other).__le__(self)
def __hash__(self):
return super(Number, self).__hash__()
def is_constant(self, *wrt, **flags):
return True
def as_coeff_mul(self, *deps, **kwargs):
# a -> c*t
if self.is_Rational or not kwargs.pop('rational', True):
return self, tuple()
elif self.is_negative:
return S.NegativeOne, (-self,)
return S.One, (self,)
def as_coeff_add(self, *deps):
# a -> c + t
if self.is_Rational:
return self, tuple()
return S.Zero, (self,)
def as_coeff_Mul(self, rational=False):
"""Efficiently extract the coefficient of a product. """
if rational and not self.is_Rational:
return S.One, self
return (self, S.One) if self else (S.One, self)
def as_coeff_Add(self, rational=False):
"""Efficiently extract the coefficient of a summation. """
if not rational:
return self, S.Zero
return S.Zero, self
def gcd(self, other):
"""Compute GCD of `self` and `other`. """
from sympy.polys import gcd
return gcd(self, other)
def lcm(self, other):
"""Compute LCM of `self` and `other`. """
from sympy.polys import lcm
return lcm(self, other)
def cofactors(self, other):
"""Compute GCD and cofactors of `self` and `other`. """
from sympy.polys import cofactors
return cofactors(self, other)
class Float(Number):
"""Represent a floating-point number of arbitrary precision.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Float
>>> Float(3.5)
3.50000000000000
>>> Float(3)
3.00000000000000
Creating Floats from strings (and Python ``int`` and ``long``
types) will give a minimum precision of 15 digits, but the
precision will automatically increase to capture all digits
entered.
>>> Float(1)
1.00000000000000
>>> Float(10**20)
100000000000000000000.
>>> Float('1e20')
100000000000000000000.
However, *floating-point* numbers (Python ``float`` types) retain
only 15 digits of precision:
>>> Float(1e20)
1.00000000000000e+20
>>> Float(1.23456789123456789)
1.23456789123457
It may be preferable to enter high-precision decimal numbers
as strings:
Float('1.23456789123456789')
1.23456789123456789
The desired number of digits can also be specified:
>>> Float('1e-3', 3)
0.00100
>>> Float(100, 4)
100.0
Float can automatically count significant figures if a null string
is sent for the precision; space are also allowed in the string. (Auto-
counting is only allowed for strings, ints and longs).
>>> Float('123 456 789 . 123 456', '')
123456789.123456
>>> Float('12e-3', '')
0.012
>>> Float(3, '')
3.
If a number is written in scientific notation, only the digits before the
exponent are considered significant if a decimal appears, otherwise the
"e" signifies only how to move the decimal:
>>> Float('60.e2', '') # 2 digits significant
6.0e+3
>>> Float('60e2', '') # 4 digits significant
6000.
>>> Float('600e-2', '') # 3 digits significant
6.00
Notes
=====
Floats are inexact by their nature unless their value is a binary-exact
value.
>>> approx, exact = Float(.1, 1), Float(.125, 1)
For calculation purposes, evalf needs to be able to change the precision
but this will not increase the accuracy of the inexact value. The
following is the most accurate 5-digit approximation of a value of 0.1
that had only 1 digit of precision:
>>> approx.evalf(5)
0.099609
By contrast, 0.125 is exact in binary (as it is in base 10) and so it
can be passed to Float or evalf to obtain an arbitrary precision with
matching accuracy:
>>> Float(exact, 5)
0.12500
>>> exact.evalf(20)
0.12500000000000000000
Trying to make a high-precision Float from a float is not disallowed,
but one must keep in mind that the *underlying float* (not the apparent
decimal value) is being obtained with high precision. For example, 0.3
does not have a finite binary representation. The closest rational is
the fraction 5404319552844595/2**54. So if you try to obtain a Float of
0.3 to 20 digits of precision you will not see the same thing as 0.3
followed by 19 zeros:
>>> Float(0.3, 20)
0.29999999999999998890
If you want a 20-digit value of the decimal 0.3 (not the floating point
approximation of 0.3) you should send the 0.3 as a string. The underlying
representation is still binary but a higher precision than Python's float
is used:
>>> Float('0.3', 20)
0.30000000000000000000
Although you can increase the precision of an existing Float using Float
it will not increase the accuracy -- the underlying value is not changed:
>>> def show(f): # binary rep of Float
... from sympy import Mul, Pow
... s, m, e, b = f._mpf_
... v = Mul(int(m), Pow(2, int(e), evaluate=False), evaluate=False)
... print('%s at prec=%s' % (v, f._prec))
...
>>> t = Float('0.3', 3)
>>> show(t)
4915/2**14 at prec=13
>>> show(Float(t, 20)) # higher prec, not higher accuracy
4915/2**14 at prec=70
>>> show(Float(t, 2)) # lower prec
307/2**10 at prec=10
The same thing happens when evalf is used on a Float:
>>> show(t.evalf(20))
4915/2**14 at prec=70
>>> show(t.evalf(2))
307/2**10 at prec=10
Finally, Floats can be instantiated with an mpf tuple (n, c, p) to
produce the number (-1)**n*c*2**p:
>>> n, c, p = 1, 5, 0
>>> (-1)**n*c*2**p
-5
>>> Float((1, 5, 0))
-5.00000000000000
An actual mpf tuple also contains the number of bits in c as the last
element of the tuple:
>>> _._mpf_
(1, 5, 0, 3)
This is not needed for instantiation and is not the same thing as the
precision. The mpf tuple and the precision are two separate quantities
that Float tracks.
"""
__slots__ = ['_mpf_', '_prec']
# A Float represents many real numbers,
# both rational and irrational.
is_rational = None
is_irrational = None
is_number = True
is_real = True
is_Float = True
def __new__(cls, num, dps=None, prec=None, precision=None):
if prec is not None:
SymPyDeprecationWarning(
feature="Using 'prec=XX' to denote decimal precision",
useinstead="'dps=XX' for decimal precision and 'precision=XX' "\
"for binary precision",
issue=12820,
deprecated_since_version="1.1").warn()
dps = prec
del prec # avoid using this deprecated kwarg
if dps is not None and precision is not None:
raise ValueError('Both decimal and binary precision supplied. '
'Supply only one. ')
if isinstance(num, string_types):
num = num.replace(' ', '')
if num.startswith('.') and len(num) > 1:
num = '0' + num
elif num.startswith('-.') and len(num) > 2:
num = '-0.' + num[2:]
elif isinstance(num, float) and num == 0:
num = '0'
elif isinstance(num, (SYMPY_INTS, Integer)):
num = str(num) # faster than mlib.from_int
elif num is S.Infinity:
num = '+inf'
elif num is S.NegativeInfinity:
num = '-inf'
elif type(num).__module__ == 'numpy': # support for numpy datatypes
num = _convert_numpy_types(num)
elif isinstance(num, mpmath.mpf):
if precision is None:
if dps is None:
precision = num.context.prec
num = num._mpf_
if dps is None and precision is None:
dps = 15
if isinstance(num, Float):
return num
if isinstance(num, string_types) and _literal_float(num):
try:
Num = decimal.Decimal(num)
except decimal.InvalidOperation:
pass
else:
isint = '.' not in num
num, dps = _decimal_to_Rational_prec(Num)
if num.is_Integer and isint:
dps = max(dps, len(str(num).lstrip('-')))
dps = max(15, dps)
precision = mlib.libmpf.dps_to_prec(dps)
elif precision == '' and dps is None or precision is None and dps == '':
if not isinstance(num, string_types):
raise ValueError('The null string can only be used when '
'the number to Float is passed as a string or an integer.')
ok = None
if _literal_float(num):
try:
Num = decimal.Decimal(num)
except decimal.InvalidOperation:
pass
else:
isint = '.' not in num
num, dps = _decimal_to_Rational_prec(Num)
if num.is_Integer and isint:
dps = max(dps, len(str(num).lstrip('-')))
precision = mlib.libmpf.dps_to_prec(dps)
ok = True
if ok is None:
raise ValueError('string-float not recognized: %s' % num)
# decimal precision(dps) is set and maybe binary precision(precision)
# as well.From here on binary precision is used to compute the Float.
# Hence, if supplied use binary precision else translate from decimal
# precision.
if precision is None or precision == '':
precision = mlib.libmpf.dps_to_prec(dps)
precision = int(precision)
if isinstance(num, float):
_mpf_ = mlib.from_float(num, precision, rnd)
elif isinstance(num, string_types):
_mpf_ = mlib.from_str(num, precision, rnd)
elif isinstance(num, decimal.Decimal):
if num.is_finite():
_mpf_ = mlib.from_str(str(num), precision, rnd)
elif num.is_nan():
_mpf_ = _mpf_nan
elif num.is_infinite():
if num > 0:
_mpf_ = _mpf_inf
else:
_mpf_ = _mpf_ninf
else:
raise ValueError("unexpected decimal value %s" % str(num))
elif isinstance(num, tuple) and len(num) in (3, 4):
if type(num[1]) is str:
# it's a hexadecimal (coming from a pickled object)
# assume that it is in standard form
num = list(num)
# If we're loading an object pickled in Python 2 into
# Python 3, we may need to strip a tailing 'L' because
# of a shim for int on Python 3, see issue #13470.
if num[1].endswith('L'):
num[1] = num[1][:-1]
num[1] = MPZ(num[1], 16)
_mpf_ = tuple(num)
else:
if len(num) == 4:
# handle normalization hack
return Float._new(num, precision)
else:
return (S.NegativeOne**num[0]*num[1]*S(2)**num[2]).evalf(precision)
else:
try:
_mpf_ = num._as_mpf_val(precision)
except (NotImplementedError, AttributeError):
_mpf_ = mpmath.mpf(num, prec=precision)._mpf_
# special cases
if _mpf_ == _mpf_zero:
pass # we want a Float
elif _mpf_ == _mpf_nan:
return S.NaN
obj = Expr.__new__(cls)
obj._mpf_ = _mpf_
obj._prec = precision
return obj
@classmethod
def _new(cls, _mpf_, _prec):
# special cases
if _mpf_ == _mpf_zero:
return S.Zero # XXX this is different from Float which gives 0.0
elif _mpf_ == _mpf_nan:
return S.NaN
obj = Expr.__new__(cls)
obj._mpf_ = mpf_norm(_mpf_, _prec)
# XXX: Should this be obj._prec = obj._mpf_[3]?
obj._prec = _prec
return obj
# mpz can't be pickled
def __getnewargs__(self):
return (mlib.to_pickable(self._mpf_),)
def __getstate__(self):
return {'_prec': self._prec}
def _hashable_content(self):
return (self._mpf_, self._prec)
def floor(self):
return Integer(int(mlib.to_int(
mlib.mpf_floor(self._mpf_, self._prec))))
def ceiling(self):
return Integer(int(mlib.to_int(
mlib.mpf_ceil(self._mpf_, self._prec))))
@property
def num(self):
return mpmath.mpf(self._mpf_)
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
rv = mpf_norm(self._mpf_, prec)
if rv != self._mpf_ and self._prec == prec:
debug(self._mpf_, rv)
return rv
def _as_mpf_op(self, prec):
return self._mpf_, max(prec, self._prec)
def _eval_is_finite(self):
if self._mpf_ in (_mpf_inf, _mpf_ninf):
return False
return True
def _eval_is_infinite(self):
if self._mpf_ in (_mpf_inf, _mpf_ninf):
return True
return False
def _eval_is_integer(self):
return self._mpf_ == _mpf_zero
def _eval_is_negative(self):
if self._mpf_ == _mpf_ninf:
return True
if self._mpf_ == _mpf_inf:
return False
return self.num < 0
def _eval_is_positive(self):
if self._mpf_ == _mpf_inf:
return True
if self._mpf_ == _mpf_ninf:
return False
return self.num > 0
def _eval_is_zero(self):
return self._mpf_ == _mpf_zero
def __nonzero__(self):
return self._mpf_ != _mpf_zero
__bool__ = __nonzero__
def __neg__(self):
return Float._new(mlib.mpf_neg(self._mpf_), self._prec)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __add__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
rhs, prec = other._as_mpf_op(self._prec)
return Float._new(mlib.mpf_add(self._mpf_, rhs, prec, rnd), prec)
return Number.__add__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __sub__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
rhs, prec = other._as_mpf_op(self._prec)
return Float._new(mlib.mpf_sub(self._mpf_, rhs, prec, rnd), prec)
return Number.__sub__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mul__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
rhs, prec = other._as_mpf_op(self._prec)
return Float._new(mlib.mpf_mul(self._mpf_, rhs, prec, rnd), prec)
return Number.__mul__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __div__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number) and other != 0 and global_evaluate[0]:
rhs, prec = other._as_mpf_op(self._prec)
return Float._new(mlib.mpf_div(self._mpf_, rhs, prec, rnd), prec)
return Number.__div__(self, other)
__truediv__ = __div__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mod__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Rational) and other.q != 1 and global_evaluate[0]:
# calculate mod with Rationals, *then* round the result
return Float(Rational.__mod__(Rational(self), other),
precision=self._prec)
if isinstance(other, Float) and global_evaluate[0]:
r = self/other
if r == int(r):
return Float(0, precision=max(self._prec, other._prec))
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
rhs, prec = other._as_mpf_op(self._prec)
return Float._new(mlib.mpf_mod(self._mpf_, rhs, prec, rnd), prec)
return Number.__mod__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __rmod__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Float) and global_evaluate[0]:
return other.__mod__(self)
if isinstance(other, Number) and global_evaluate[0]:
rhs, prec = other._as_mpf_op(self._prec)
return Float._new(mlib.mpf_mod(rhs, self._mpf_, prec, rnd), prec)
return Number.__rmod__(self, other)
def _eval_power(self, expt):
"""
expt is symbolic object but not equal to 0, 1
(-p)**r -> exp(r*log(-p)) -> exp(r*(log(p) + I*Pi)) ->
-> p**r*(sin(Pi*r) + cos(Pi*r)*I)
"""
if self == 0:
if expt.is_positive:
return S.Zero
if expt.is_negative:
return Float('inf')
if isinstance(expt, Number):
if isinstance(expt, Integer):
prec = self._prec
return Float._new(
mlib.mpf_pow_int(self._mpf_, expt.p, prec, rnd), prec)
elif isinstance(expt, Rational) and \
expt.p == 1 and expt.q % 2 and self.is_negative:
return Pow(S.NegativeOne, expt, evaluate=False)*(
-self)._eval_power(expt)
expt, prec = expt._as_mpf_op(self._prec)
mpfself = self._mpf_
try:
y = mpf_pow(mpfself, expt, prec, rnd)
return Float._new(y, prec)
except mlib.ComplexResult:
re, im = mlib.mpc_pow(
(mpfself, _mpf_zero), (expt, _mpf_zero), prec, rnd)
return Float._new(re, prec) + \
Float._new(im, prec)*S.ImaginaryUnit
def __abs__(self):
return Float._new(mlib.mpf_abs(self._mpf_), self._prec)
def __int__(self):
if self._mpf_ == _mpf_zero:
return 0
return int(mlib.to_int(self._mpf_)) # uses round_fast = round_down
__long__ = __int__
def __eq__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, float):
# coerce to Float at same precision
o = Float(other)
try:
ompf = o._as_mpf_val(self._prec)
except ValueError:
return False
return bool(mlib.mpf_eq(self._mpf_, ompf))
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
return NotImplemented
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
if other.is_irrational:
return False
return other.__eq__(self)
if other.is_Float:
return bool(mlib.mpf_eq(self._mpf_, other._mpf_))
if other.is_Number:
# numbers should compare at the same precision;
# all _as_mpf_val routines should be sure to abide
# by the request to change the prec if necessary; if
# they don't, the equality test will fail since it compares
# the mpf tuples
ompf = other._as_mpf_val(self._prec)
return bool(mlib.mpf_eq(self._mpf_, ompf))
return False # Float != non-Number
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
def __gt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s > %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
return other.__lt__(self)
if other.is_Rational and not other.is_Integer:
self *= other.q
other = _sympify(other.p)
elif other.is_comparable:
other = other.evalf()
if other.is_Number and other is not S.NaN:
return _sympify(bool(
mlib.mpf_gt(self._mpf_, other._as_mpf_val(self._prec))))
return Expr.__gt__(self, other)
def __ge__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s >= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
return other.__le__(self)
if other.is_Rational and not other.is_Integer:
self *= other.q
other = _sympify(other.p)
elif other.is_comparable:
other = other.evalf()
if other.is_Number and other is not S.NaN:
return _sympify(bool(
mlib.mpf_ge(self._mpf_, other._as_mpf_val(self._prec))))
return Expr.__ge__(self, other)
def __lt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s < %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
return other.__gt__(self)
if other.is_Rational and not other.is_Integer:
self *= other.q
other = _sympify(other.p)
elif other.is_comparable:
other = other.evalf()
if other.is_Number and other is not S.NaN:
return _sympify(bool(
mlib.mpf_lt(self._mpf_, other._as_mpf_val(self._prec))))
return Expr.__lt__(self, other)
def __le__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s <= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
return other.__ge__(self)
if other.is_Rational and not other.is_Integer:
self *= other.q
other = _sympify(other.p)
elif other.is_comparable:
other = other.evalf()
if other.is_Number and other is not S.NaN:
return _sympify(bool(
mlib.mpf_le(self._mpf_, other._as_mpf_val(self._prec))))
return Expr.__le__(self, other)
def __hash__(self):
return super(Float, self).__hash__()
def epsilon_eq(self, other, epsilon="1e-15"):
return abs(self - other) < Float(epsilon)
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.RealNumber(str(self))
def __format__(self, format_spec):
return format(decimal.Decimal(str(self)), format_spec)
# Add sympify converters
converter[float] = converter[decimal.Decimal] = Float
# this is here to work nicely in Sage
RealNumber = Float
class Rational(Number):
"""Represents rational numbers (p/q) of any size.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Rational, nsimplify, S, pi
>>> Rational(1, 2)
1/2
Rational is unprejudiced in accepting input. If a float is passed, the
underlying value of the binary representation will be returned:
>>> Rational(.5)
1/2
>>> Rational(.2)
3602879701896397/18014398509481984
If the simpler representation of the float is desired then consider
limiting the denominator to the desired value or convert the float to
a string (which is roughly equivalent to limiting the denominator to
10**12):
>>> Rational(str(.2))
1/5
>>> Rational(.2).limit_denominator(10**12)
1/5
An arbitrarily precise Rational is obtained when a string literal is
passed:
>>> Rational("1.23")
123/100
>>> Rational('1e-2')
1/100
>>> Rational(".1")
1/10
>>> Rational('1e-2/3.2')
1/320
The conversion of other types of strings can be handled by
the sympify() function, and conversion of floats to expressions
or simple fractions can be handled with nsimplify:
>>> S('.[3]') # repeating digits in brackets
1/3
>>> S('3**2/10') # general expressions
9/10
>>> nsimplify(.3) # numbers that have a simple form
3/10
But if the input does not reduce to a literal Rational, an error will
be raised:
>>> Rational(pi)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: invalid input: pi
Low-level
---------
Access numerator and denominator as .p and .q:
>>> r = Rational(3, 4)
>>> r
3/4
>>> r.p
3
>>> r.q
4
Note that p and q return integers (not SymPy Integers) so some care
is needed when using them in expressions:
>>> r.p/r.q
0.75
See Also
========
sympify, sympy.simplify.simplify.nsimplify
"""
is_real = True
is_integer = False
is_rational = True
is_number = True
__slots__ = ['p', 'q']
is_Rational = True
@cacheit
def __new__(cls, p, q=None, gcd=None):
if q is None:
if isinstance(p, Rational):
return p
if isinstance(p, SYMPY_INTS):
pass
else:
if isinstance(p, (float, Float)):
return Rational(*_as_integer_ratio(p))
if not isinstance(p, string_types):
try:
p = sympify(p)
except (SympifyError, SyntaxError):
pass # error will raise below
else:
if p.count('/') > 1:
raise TypeError('invalid input: %s' % p)
p = p.replace(' ', '')
pq = p.rsplit('/', 1)
if len(pq) == 2:
p, q = pq
fp = fractions.Fraction(p)
fq = fractions.Fraction(q)
p = fp/fq
try:
p = fractions.Fraction(p)
except ValueError:
pass # error will raise below
else:
return Rational(p.numerator, p.denominator, 1)
if not isinstance(p, Rational):
raise TypeError('invalid input: %s' % p)
q = 1
gcd = 1
else:
p = Rational(p)
q = Rational(q)
if isinstance(q, Rational):
p *= q.q
q = q.p
if isinstance(p, Rational):
q *= p.q
p = p.p
# p and q are now integers
if q == 0:
if p == 0:
if _errdict["divide"]:
raise ValueError("Indeterminate 0/0")
else:
return S.NaN
return S.ComplexInfinity
if q < 0:
q = -q
p = -p
if not gcd:
gcd = igcd(abs(p), q)
if gcd > 1:
p //= gcd
q //= gcd
if q == 1:
return Integer(p)
if p == 1 and q == 2:
return S.Half
obj = Expr.__new__(cls)
obj.p = p
obj.q = q
return obj
def limit_denominator(self, max_denominator=1000000):
"""Closest Rational to self with denominator at most max_denominator.
>>> from sympy import Rational
>>> Rational('3.141592653589793').limit_denominator(10)
22/7
>>> Rational('3.141592653589793').limit_denominator(100)
311/99
"""
f = fractions.Fraction(self.p, self.q)
return Rational(f.limit_denominator(fractions.Fraction(int(max_denominator))))
def __getnewargs__(self):
return (self.p, self.q)
def _hashable_content(self):
return (self.p, self.q)
def _eval_is_positive(self):
return self.p > 0
def _eval_is_zero(self):
return self.p == 0
def __neg__(self):
return Rational(-self.p, self.q)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __add__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, Integer):
return Rational(self.p + self.q*other.p, self.q, 1)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
#TODO: this can probably be optimized more
return Rational(self.p*other.q + self.q*other.p, self.q*other.q)
elif isinstance(other, Float):
return other + self
else:
return Number.__add__(self, other)
return Number.__add__(self, other)
__radd__ = __add__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __sub__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, Integer):
return Rational(self.p - self.q*other.p, self.q, 1)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(self.p*other.q - self.q*other.p, self.q*other.q)
elif isinstance(other, Float):
return -other + self
else:
return Number.__sub__(self, other)
return Number.__sub__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __rsub__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, Integer):
return Rational(self.q*other.p - self.p, self.q, 1)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(self.q*other.p - self.p*other.q, self.q*other.q)
elif isinstance(other, Float):
return -self + other
else:
return Number.__rsub__(self, other)
return Number.__rsub__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mul__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, Integer):
return Rational(self.p*other.p, self.q, igcd(other.p, self.q))
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(self.p*other.p, self.q*other.q, igcd(self.p, other.q)*igcd(self.q, other.p))
elif isinstance(other, Float):
return other*self
else:
return Number.__mul__(self, other)
return Number.__mul__(self, other)
__rmul__ = __mul__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __div__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, Integer):
if self.p and other.p == S.Zero:
return S.ComplexInfinity
else:
return Rational(self.p, self.q*other.p, igcd(self.p, other.p))
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(self.p*other.q, self.q*other.p, igcd(self.p, other.p)*igcd(self.q, other.q))
elif isinstance(other, Float):
return self*(1/other)
else:
return Number.__div__(self, other)
return Number.__div__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __rdiv__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, Integer):
return Rational(other.p*self.q, self.p, igcd(self.p, other.p))
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(other.p*self.q, other.q*self.p, igcd(self.p, other.p)*igcd(self.q, other.q))
elif isinstance(other, Float):
return other*(1/self)
else:
return Number.__rdiv__(self, other)
return Number.__rdiv__(self, other)
__truediv__ = __div__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mod__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, Rational):
n = (self.p*other.q) // (other.p*self.q)
return Rational(self.p*other.q - n*other.p*self.q, self.q*other.q)
if isinstance(other, Float):
# calculate mod with Rationals, *then* round the answer
return Float(self.__mod__(Rational(other)),
precision=other._prec)
return Number.__mod__(self, other)
return Number.__mod__(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __rmod__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational.__mod__(other, self)
return Number.__rmod__(self, other)
def _eval_power(self, expt):
if isinstance(expt, Number):
if isinstance(expt, Float):
return self._eval_evalf(expt._prec)**expt
if expt.is_negative:
# (3/4)**-2 -> (4/3)**2
ne = -expt
if (ne is S.One):
return Rational(self.q, self.p)
if self.is_negative:
return S.NegativeOne**expt*Rational(self.q, -self.p)**ne
else:
return Rational(self.q, self.p)**ne
if expt is S.Infinity: # -oo already caught by test for negative
if self.p > self.q:
# (3/2)**oo -> oo
return S.Infinity
if self.p < -self.q:
# (-3/2)**oo -> oo + I*oo
return S.Infinity + S.Infinity*S.ImaginaryUnit
return S.Zero
if isinstance(expt, Integer):
# (4/3)**2 -> 4**2 / 3**2
return Rational(self.p**expt.p, self.q**expt.p, 1)
if isinstance(expt, Rational):
if self.p != 1:
# (4/3)**(5/6) -> 4**(5/6)*3**(-5/6)
return Integer(self.p)**expt*Integer(self.q)**(-expt)
# as the above caught negative self.p, now self is positive
return Integer(self.q)**Rational(
expt.p*(expt.q - 1), expt.q) / \
Integer(self.q)**Integer(expt.p)
if self.is_negative and expt.is_even:
return (-self)**expt
return
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
return mlib.from_rational(self.p, self.q, prec, rnd)
def _mpmath_(self, prec, rnd):
return mpmath.make_mpf(mlib.from_rational(self.p, self.q, prec, rnd))
def __abs__(self):
return Rational(abs(self.p), self.q)
def __int__(self):
p, q = self.p, self.q
if p < 0:
return -int(-p//q)
return int(p//q)
__long__ = __int__
def floor(self):
return Integer(self.p // self.q)
def ceiling(self):
return -Integer(-self.p // self.q)
def __eq__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
return NotImplemented
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
if other.is_irrational:
return False
return other.__eq__(self)
if other.is_Number:
if other.is_Rational:
# a Rational is always in reduced form so will never be 2/4
# so we can just check equivalence of args
return self.p == other.p and self.q == other.q
if other.is_Float:
return mlib.mpf_eq(self._as_mpf_val(other._prec), other._mpf_)
return False
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
def __gt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s > %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
return other.__lt__(self)
expr = self
if other.is_Number:
if other.is_Rational:
return _sympify(bool(self.p*other.q > self.q*other.p))
if other.is_Float:
return _sympify(bool(mlib.mpf_gt(
self._as_mpf_val(other._prec), other._mpf_)))
elif other.is_number and other.is_real:
expr, other = Integer(self.p), self.q*other
return Expr.__gt__(expr, other)
def __ge__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s >= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
return other.__le__(self)
expr = self
if other.is_Number:
if other.is_Rational:
return _sympify(bool(self.p*other.q >= self.q*other.p))
if other.is_Float:
return _sympify(bool(mlib.mpf_ge(
self._as_mpf_val(other._prec), other._mpf_)))
elif other.is_number and other.is_real:
expr, other = Integer(self.p), self.q*other
return Expr.__ge__(expr, other)
def __lt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s < %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
return other.__gt__(self)
expr = self
if other.is_Number:
if other.is_Rational:
return _sympify(bool(self.p*other.q < self.q*other.p))
if other.is_Float:
return _sympify(bool(mlib.mpf_lt(
self._as_mpf_val(other._prec), other._mpf_)))
elif other.is_number and other.is_real:
expr, other = Integer(self.p), self.q*other
return Expr.__lt__(expr, other)
def __le__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s <= %s" % (self, other))
expr = self
if other.is_NumberSymbol:
return other.__ge__(self)
elif other.is_Number:
if other.is_Rational:
return _sympify(bool(self.p*other.q <= self.q*other.p))
if other.is_Float:
return _sympify(bool(mlib.mpf_le(
self._as_mpf_val(other._prec), other._mpf_)))
elif other.is_number and other.is_real:
expr, other = Integer(self.p), self.q*other
return Expr.__le__(expr, other)
def __hash__(self):
return super(Rational, self).__hash__()
def factors(self, limit=None, use_trial=True, use_rho=False,
use_pm1=False, verbose=False, visual=False):
"""A wrapper to factorint which return factors of self that are
smaller than limit (or cheap to compute). Special methods of
factoring are disabled by default so that only trial division is used.
"""
from sympy.ntheory import factorrat
return factorrat(self, limit=limit, use_trial=use_trial,
use_rho=use_rho, use_pm1=use_pm1,
verbose=verbose).copy()
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def gcd(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Rational):
if other is S.Zero:
return other
return Rational(
Integer(igcd(self.p, other.p)),
Integer(ilcm(self.q, other.q)))
return Number.gcd(self, other)
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def lcm(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(
self.p // igcd(self.p, other.p) * other.p,
igcd(self.q, other.q))
return Number.lcm(self, other)
def as_numer_denom(self):
return Integer(self.p), Integer(self.q)
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.Integer(self.p)/sage.Integer(self.q)
def as_content_primitive(self, radical=False, clear=True):
"""Return the tuple (R, self/R) where R is the positive Rational
extracted from self.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> (S(-3)/2).as_content_primitive()
(3/2, -1)
See docstring of Expr.as_content_primitive for more examples.
"""
if self:
if self.is_positive:
return self, S.One
return -self, S.NegativeOne
return S.One, self
def as_coeff_Mul(self, rational=False):
"""Efficiently extract the coefficient of a product. """
return self, S.One
def as_coeff_Add(self, rational=False):
"""Efficiently extract the coefficient of a summation. """
return self, S.Zero
# int -> Integer
_intcache = {}
# TODO move this tracing facility to sympy/core/trace.py ?
def _intcache_printinfo():
ints = sorted(_intcache.keys())
nhit = _intcache_hits
nmiss = _intcache_misses
if nhit == 0 and nmiss == 0:
print()
print('Integer cache statistic was not collected')
return
miss_ratio = float(nmiss) / (nhit + nmiss)
print()
print('Integer cache statistic')
print('-----------------------')
print()
print('#items: %i' % len(ints))
print()
print(' #hit #miss #total')
print()
print('%5i %5i (%7.5f %%) %5i' % (
nhit, nmiss, miss_ratio*100, nhit + nmiss)
)
print()
print(ints)
_intcache_hits = 0
_intcache_misses = 0
def int_trace(f):
import os
if os.getenv('SYMPY_TRACE_INT', 'no').lower() != 'yes':
return f
def Integer_tracer(cls, i):
global _intcache_hits, _intcache_misses
try:
_intcache_hits += 1
return _intcache[i]
except KeyError:
_intcache_hits -= 1
_intcache_misses += 1
return f(cls, i)
# also we want to hook our _intcache_printinfo into sys.atexit
import atexit
atexit.register(_intcache_printinfo)
return Integer_tracer
class Integer(Rational):
"""Represents integer numbers of any size.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Integer
>>> Integer(3)
3
If a float or a rational is passed to Integer, the fractional part
will be discarded; the effect is of rounding toward zero.
>>> Integer(3.8)
3
>>> Integer(-3.8)
-3
A string is acceptable input if it can be parsed as an integer:
>>> Integer("9" * 20)
99999999999999999999
It is rarely needed to explicitly instantiate an Integer, because
Python integers are automatically converted to Integer when they
are used in SymPy expressions.
"""
q = 1
is_integer = True
is_number = True
is_Integer = True
__slots__ = ['p']
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
return mlib.from_int(self.p, prec, rnd)
def _mpmath_(self, prec, rnd):
return mpmath.make_mpf(self._as_mpf_val(prec))
# TODO caching with decorator, but not to degrade performance
@int_trace
def __new__(cls, i):
if isinstance(i, string_types):
i = i.replace(' ', '')
# whereas we cannot, in general, make a Rational from an
# arbitrary expression, we can make an Integer unambiguously
# (except when a non-integer expression happens to round to
# an integer). So we proceed by taking int() of the input and
# let the int routines determine whether the expression can
# be made into an int or whether an error should be raised.
try:
ival = int(i)
except TypeError:
raise TypeError(
"Argument of Integer should be of numeric type, got %s." % i)
try:
return _intcache[ival]
except KeyError:
# We only work with well-behaved integer types. This converts, for
# example, numpy.int32 instances.
obj = Expr.__new__(cls)
obj.p = ival
_intcache[ival] = obj
return obj
def __getnewargs__(self):
return (self.p,)
# Arithmetic operations are here for efficiency
def __int__(self):
return self.p
__long__ = __int__
def floor(self):
return Integer(self.p)
def ceiling(self):
return Integer(self.p)
def __neg__(self):
return Integer(-self.p)
def __abs__(self):
if self.p >= 0:
return self
else:
return Integer(-self.p)
def __divmod__(self, other):
from .containers import Tuple
if isinstance(other, Integer) and global_evaluate[0]:
return Tuple(*(divmod(self.p, other.p)))
else:
return Number.__divmod__(self, other)
def __rdivmod__(self, other):
from .containers import Tuple
if isinstance(other, integer_types) and global_evaluate[0]:
return Tuple(*(divmod(other, self.p)))
else:
try:
other = Number(other)
except TypeError:
msg = "unsupported operand type(s) for divmod(): '%s' and '%s'"
oname = type(other).__name__
sname = type(self).__name__
raise TypeError(msg % (oname, sname))
return Number.__divmod__(other, self)
# TODO make it decorator + bytecodehacks?
def __add__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return Integer(self.p + other)
elif isinstance(other, Integer):
return Integer(self.p + other.p)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(self.p*other.q + other.p, other.q, 1)
return Rational.__add__(self, other)
else:
return Add(self, other)
def __radd__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return Integer(other + self.p)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(other.p + self.p*other.q, other.q, 1)
return Rational.__radd__(self, other)
return Rational.__radd__(self, other)
def __sub__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return Integer(self.p - other)
elif isinstance(other, Integer):
return Integer(self.p - other.p)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(self.p*other.q - other.p, other.q, 1)
return Rational.__sub__(self, other)
return Rational.__sub__(self, other)
def __rsub__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return Integer(other - self.p)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(other.p - self.p*other.q, other.q, 1)
return Rational.__rsub__(self, other)
return Rational.__rsub__(self, other)
def __mul__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return Integer(self.p*other)
elif isinstance(other, Integer):
return Integer(self.p*other.p)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(self.p*other.p, other.q, igcd(self.p, other.q))
return Rational.__mul__(self, other)
return Rational.__mul__(self, other)
def __rmul__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return Integer(other*self.p)
elif isinstance(other, Rational):
return Rational(other.p*self.p, other.q, igcd(self.p, other.q))
return Rational.__rmul__(self, other)
return Rational.__rmul__(self, other)
def __mod__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return Integer(self.p % other)
elif isinstance(other, Integer):
return Integer(self.p % other.p)
return Rational.__mod__(self, other)
return Rational.__mod__(self, other)
def __rmod__(self, other):
if global_evaluate[0]:
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return Integer(other % self.p)
elif isinstance(other, Integer):
return Integer(other.p % self.p)
return Rational.__rmod__(self, other)
return Rational.__rmod__(self, other)
def __eq__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, integer_types):
return (self.p == other)
elif isinstance(other, Integer):
return (self.p == other.p)
return Rational.__eq__(self, other)
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
def __gt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s > %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_Integer:
return _sympify(self.p > other.p)
return Rational.__gt__(self, other)
def __lt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s < %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_Integer:
return _sympify(self.p < other.p)
return Rational.__lt__(self, other)
def __ge__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s >= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_Integer:
return _sympify(self.p >= other.p)
return Rational.__ge__(self, other)
def __le__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s <= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_Integer:
return _sympify(self.p <= other.p)
return Rational.__le__(self, other)
def __hash__(self):
return hash(self.p)
def __index__(self):
return self.p
########################################
def _eval_is_odd(self):
return bool(self.p % 2)
def _eval_power(self, expt):
"""
Tries to do some simplifications on self**expt
Returns None if no further simplifications can be done
When exponent is a fraction (so we have for example a square root),
we try to find a simpler representation by factoring the argument
up to factors of 2**15, e.g.
- sqrt(4) becomes 2
- sqrt(-4) becomes 2*I
- (2**(3+7)*3**(6+7))**Rational(1,7) becomes 6*18**(3/7)
Further simplification would require a special call to factorint on
the argument which is not done here for sake of speed.
"""
from sympy import perfect_power
if expt is S.Infinity:
if self.p > S.One:
return S.Infinity
# cases -1, 0, 1 are done in their respective classes
return S.Infinity + S.ImaginaryUnit*S.Infinity
if expt is S.NegativeInfinity:
return Rational(1, self)**S.Infinity
if not isinstance(expt, Number):
# simplify when expt is even
# (-2)**k --> 2**k
if self.is_negative and expt.is_even:
return (-self)**expt
if isinstance(expt, Float):
# Rational knows how to exponentiate by a Float
return super(Integer, self)._eval_power(expt)
if not isinstance(expt, Rational):
return
if expt is S.Half and self.is_negative:
# we extract I for this special case since everyone is doing so
return S.ImaginaryUnit*Pow(-self, expt)
if expt.is_negative:
# invert base and change sign on exponent
ne = -expt
if self.is_negative:
return S.NegativeOne**expt*Rational(1, -self)**ne
else:
return Rational(1, self.p)**ne
# see if base is a perfect root, sqrt(4) --> 2
x, xexact = integer_nthroot(abs(self.p), expt.q)
if xexact:
# if it's a perfect root we've finished
result = Integer(x**abs(expt.p))
if self.is_negative:
result *= S.NegativeOne**expt
return result
# The following is an algorithm where we collect perfect roots
# from the factors of base.
# if it's not an nth root, it still might be a perfect power
b_pos = int(abs(self.p))
p = perfect_power(b_pos)
if p is not False:
dict = {p[0]: p[1]}
else:
dict = Integer(b_pos).factors(limit=2**15)
# now process the dict of factors
out_int = 1 # integer part
out_rad = 1 # extracted radicals
sqr_int = 1
sqr_gcd = 0
sqr_dict = {}
for prime, exponent in dict.items():
exponent *= expt.p
# remove multiples of expt.q: (2**12)**(1/10) -> 2*(2**2)**(1/10)
div_e, div_m = divmod(exponent, expt.q)
if div_e > 0:
out_int *= prime**div_e
if div_m > 0:
# see if the reduced exponent shares a gcd with e.q
# (2**2)**(1/10) -> 2**(1/5)
g = igcd(div_m, expt.q)
if g != 1:
out_rad *= Pow(prime, Rational(div_m//g, expt.q//g))
else:
sqr_dict[prime] = div_m
# identify gcd of remaining powers
for p, ex in sqr_dict.items():
if sqr_gcd == 0:
sqr_gcd = ex
else:
sqr_gcd = igcd(sqr_gcd, ex)
if sqr_gcd == 1:
break
for k, v in sqr_dict.items():
sqr_int *= k**(v//sqr_gcd)
if sqr_int == b_pos and out_int == 1 and out_rad == 1:
result = None
else:
result = out_int*out_rad*Pow(sqr_int, Rational(sqr_gcd, expt.q))
if self.is_negative:
result *= Pow(S.NegativeOne, expt)
return result
def _eval_is_prime(self):
from sympy.ntheory import isprime
return isprime(self)
def _eval_is_composite(self):
if self > 1:
return fuzzy_not(self.is_prime)
else:
return False
def as_numer_denom(self):
return self, S.One
def __floordiv__(self, other):
return Integer(self.p // Integer(other).p)
def __rfloordiv__(self, other):
return Integer(Integer(other).p // self.p)
# Add sympify converters
for i_type in integer_types:
converter[i_type] = Integer
class AlgebraicNumber(Expr):
"""Class for representing algebraic numbers in SymPy. """
__slots__ = ['rep', 'root', 'alias', 'minpoly']
is_AlgebraicNumber = True
is_algebraic = True
is_number = True
def __new__(cls, expr, coeffs=None, alias=None, **args):
"""Construct a new algebraic number. """
from sympy import Poly
from sympy.polys.polyclasses import ANP, DMP
from sympy.polys.numberfields import minimal_polynomial
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol
expr = sympify(expr)
if isinstance(expr, (tuple, Tuple)):
minpoly, root = expr
if not minpoly.is_Poly:
minpoly = Poly(minpoly)
elif expr.is_AlgebraicNumber:
minpoly, root = expr.minpoly, expr.root
else:
minpoly, root = minimal_polynomial(
expr, args.get('gen'), polys=True), expr
dom = minpoly.get_domain()
if coeffs is not None:
if not isinstance(coeffs, ANP):
rep = DMP.from_sympy_list(sympify(coeffs), 0, dom)
scoeffs = Tuple(*coeffs)
else:
rep = DMP.from_list(coeffs.to_list(), 0, dom)
scoeffs = Tuple(*coeffs.to_list())
if rep.degree() >= minpoly.degree():
rep = rep.rem(minpoly.rep)
else:
rep = DMP.from_list([1, 0], 0, dom)
scoeffs = Tuple(1, 0)
sargs = (root, scoeffs)
if alias is not None:
if not isinstance(alias, Symbol):
alias = Symbol(alias)
sargs = sargs + (alias,)
obj = Expr.__new__(cls, *sargs)
obj.rep = rep
obj.root = root
obj.alias = alias
obj.minpoly = minpoly
return obj
def __hash__(self):
return super(AlgebraicNumber, self).__hash__()
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
return self.as_expr()._evalf(prec)
@property
def is_aliased(self):
"""Returns ``True`` if ``alias`` was set. """
return self.alias is not None
def as_poly(self, x=None):
"""Create a Poly instance from ``self``. """
from sympy import Dummy, Poly, PurePoly
if x is not None:
return Poly.new(self.rep, x)
else:
if self.alias is not None:
return Poly.new(self.rep, self.alias)
else:
return PurePoly.new(self.rep, Dummy('x'))
def as_expr(self, x=None):
"""Create a Basic expression from ``self``. """
return self.as_poly(x or self.root).as_expr().expand()
def coeffs(self):
"""Returns all SymPy coefficients of an algebraic number. """
return [ self.rep.dom.to_sympy(c) for c in self.rep.all_coeffs() ]
def native_coeffs(self):
"""Returns all native coefficients of an algebraic number. """
return self.rep.all_coeffs()
def to_algebraic_integer(self):
"""Convert ``self`` to an algebraic integer. """
from sympy import Poly
f = self.minpoly
if f.LC() == 1:
return self
coeff = f.LC()**(f.degree() - 1)
poly = f.compose(Poly(f.gen/f.LC()))
minpoly = poly*coeff
root = f.LC()*self.root
return AlgebraicNumber((minpoly, root), self.coeffs())
def _eval_simplify(self, ratio, measure, rational, inverse):
from sympy.polys import CRootOf, minpoly
for r in [r for r in self.minpoly.all_roots() if r.func != CRootOf]:
if minpoly(self.root - r).is_Symbol:
# use the matching root if it's simpler
if measure(r) < ratio*measure(self.root):
return AlgebraicNumber(r)
return self
class RationalConstant(Rational):
"""
Abstract base class for rationals with specific behaviors
Derived classes must define class attributes p and q and should probably all
be singletons.
"""
__slots__ = []
def __new__(cls):
return AtomicExpr.__new__(cls)
class IntegerConstant(Integer):
__slots__ = []
def __new__(cls):
return AtomicExpr.__new__(cls)
class Zero(with_metaclass(Singleton, IntegerConstant)):
"""The number zero.
Zero is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.Zero``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S, Integer, zoo
>>> Integer(0) is S.Zero
True
>>> 1/S.Zero
zoo
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero
"""
p = 0
q = 1
is_positive = False
is_negative = False
is_zero = True
is_number = True
__slots__ = []
@staticmethod
def __abs__():
return S.Zero
@staticmethod
def __neg__():
return S.Zero
def _eval_power(self, expt):
if expt.is_positive:
return self
if expt.is_negative:
return S.ComplexInfinity
if expt.is_real is False:
return S.NaN
# infinities are already handled with pos and neg
# tests above; now throw away leading numbers on Mul
# exponent
coeff, terms = expt.as_coeff_Mul()
if coeff.is_negative:
return S.ComplexInfinity**terms
if coeff is not S.One: # there is a Number to discard
return self**terms
def _eval_order(self, *symbols):
# Order(0,x) -> 0
return self
def __nonzero__(self):
return False
__bool__ = __nonzero__
def as_coeff_Mul(self, rational=False): # XXX this routine should be deleted
"""Efficiently extract the coefficient of a summation. """
return S.One, self
class One(with_metaclass(Singleton, IntegerConstant)):
"""The number one.
One is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.One``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S, Integer
>>> Integer(1) is S.One
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1_%28number%29
"""
is_number = True
p = 1
q = 1
__slots__ = []
@staticmethod
def __abs__():
return S.One
@staticmethod
def __neg__():
return S.NegativeOne
def _eval_power(self, expt):
return self
def _eval_order(self, *symbols):
return
@staticmethod
def factors(limit=None, use_trial=True, use_rho=False, use_pm1=False,
verbose=False, visual=False):
if visual:
return S.One
else:
return {}
class NegativeOne(with_metaclass(Singleton, IntegerConstant)):
"""The number negative one.
NegativeOne is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.NegativeOne``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S, Integer
>>> Integer(-1) is S.NegativeOne
True
See Also
========
One
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E2%88%921_%28number%29
"""
is_number = True
p = -1
q = 1
__slots__ = []
@staticmethod
def __abs__():
return S.One
@staticmethod
def __neg__():
return S.One
def _eval_power(self, expt):
if expt.is_odd:
return S.NegativeOne
if expt.is_even:
return S.One
if isinstance(expt, Number):
if isinstance(expt, Float):
return Float(-1.0)**expt
if expt is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
if expt is S.Infinity or expt is S.NegativeInfinity:
return S.NaN
if expt is S.Half:
return S.ImaginaryUnit
if isinstance(expt, Rational):
if expt.q == 2:
return S.ImaginaryUnit**Integer(expt.p)
i, r = divmod(expt.p, expt.q)
if i:
return self**i*self**Rational(r, expt.q)
return
class Half(with_metaclass(Singleton, RationalConstant)):
"""The rational number 1/2.
Half is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.Half``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S, Rational
>>> Rational(1, 2) is S.Half
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_half
"""
is_number = True
p = 1
q = 2
__slots__ = []
@staticmethod
def __abs__():
return S.Half
class Infinity(with_metaclass(Singleton, Number)):
r"""Positive infinite quantity.
In real analysis the symbol `\infty` denotes an unbounded
limit: `x\to\infty` means that `x` grows without bound.
Infinity is often used not only to define a limit but as a value
in the affinely extended real number system. Points labeled `+\infty`
and `-\infty` can be added to the topological space of the real numbers,
producing the two-point compactification of the real numbers. Adding
algebraic properties to this gives us the extended real numbers.
Infinity is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.Infinity``,
or can be imported as ``oo``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import oo, exp, limit, Symbol
>>> 1 + oo
oo
>>> 42/oo
0
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> limit(exp(x), x, oo)
oo
See Also
========
NegativeInfinity, NaN
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinity
"""
is_commutative = True
is_positive = True
is_infinite = True
is_number = True
is_prime = False
__slots__ = []
def __new__(cls):
return AtomicExpr.__new__(cls)
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"\infty"
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
if self == old:
return new
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __add__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number):
if other is S.NegativeInfinity or other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_Float:
if other == Float('-inf'):
return S.NaN
else:
return Float('inf')
else:
return S.Infinity
return NotImplemented
__radd__ = __add__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __sub__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number):
if other is S.Infinity or other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_Float:
if other == Float('inf'):
return S.NaN
else:
return Float('inf')
else:
return S.Infinity
return NotImplemented
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mul__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number):
if other is S.Zero or other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_Float:
if other == 0:
return S.NaN
if other > 0:
return Float('inf')
else:
return Float('-inf')
else:
if other > 0:
return S.Infinity
else:
return S.NegativeInfinity
return NotImplemented
__rmul__ = __mul__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __div__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number):
if other is S.Infinity or \
other is S.NegativeInfinity or \
other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_Float:
if other == Float('-inf') or \
other == Float('inf'):
return S.NaN
elif other.is_nonnegative:
return Float('inf')
else:
return Float('-inf')
else:
if other >= 0:
return S.Infinity
else:
return S.NegativeInfinity
return NotImplemented
__truediv__ = __div__
def __abs__(self):
return S.Infinity
def __neg__(self):
return S.NegativeInfinity
def _eval_power(self, expt):
"""
``expt`` is symbolic object but not equal to 0 or 1.
================ ======= ==============================
Expression Result Notes
================ ======= ==============================
``oo ** nan`` ``nan``
``oo ** -p`` ``0`` ``p`` is number, ``oo``
================ ======= ==============================
See Also
========
Pow
NaN
NegativeInfinity
"""
from sympy.functions import re
if expt.is_positive:
return S.Infinity
if expt.is_negative:
return S.Zero
if expt is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
if expt is S.ComplexInfinity:
return S.NaN
if expt.is_real is False and expt.is_number:
expt_real = re(expt)
if expt_real.is_positive:
return S.ComplexInfinity
if expt_real.is_negative:
return S.Zero
if expt_real.is_zero:
return S.NaN
return self**expt.evalf()
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
return mlib.finf
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.oo
def __hash__(self):
return super(Infinity, self).__hash__()
def __eq__(self, other):
return other is S.Infinity
def __ne__(self, other):
return other is not S.Infinity
def __lt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s < %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_real:
return S.false
return Expr.__lt__(self, other)
def __le__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s <= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_real:
if other.is_finite or other is S.NegativeInfinity:
return S.false
elif other.is_nonpositive:
return S.false
elif other.is_infinite and other.is_positive:
return S.true
return Expr.__le__(self, other)
def __gt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s > %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_real:
if other.is_finite or other is S.NegativeInfinity:
return S.true
elif other.is_nonpositive:
return S.true
elif other.is_infinite and other.is_positive:
return S.false
return Expr.__gt__(self, other)
def __ge__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s >= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_real:
return S.true
return Expr.__ge__(self, other)
def __mod__(self, other):
return S.NaN
__rmod__ = __mod__
def floor(self):
return self
def ceiling(self):
return self
oo = S.Infinity
class NegativeInfinity(with_metaclass(Singleton, Number)):
"""Negative infinite quantity.
NegativeInfinity is a singleton, and can be accessed
by ``S.NegativeInfinity``.
See Also
========
Infinity
"""
is_commutative = True
is_negative = True
is_infinite = True
is_number = True
__slots__ = []
def __new__(cls):
return AtomicExpr.__new__(cls)
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"-\infty"
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
if self == old:
return new
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __add__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number):
if other is S.Infinity or other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_Float:
if other == Float('inf'):
return Float('nan')
else:
return Float('-inf')
else:
return S.NegativeInfinity
return NotImplemented
__radd__ = __add__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __sub__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number):
if other is S.NegativeInfinity or other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_Float:
if other == Float('-inf'):
return Float('nan')
else:
return Float('-inf')
else:
return S.NegativeInfinity
return NotImplemented
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mul__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number):
if other is S.Zero or other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_Float:
if other is S.NaN or other.is_zero:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_positive:
return Float('-inf')
else:
return Float('inf')
else:
if other.is_positive:
return S.NegativeInfinity
else:
return S.Infinity
return NotImplemented
__rmul__ = __mul__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __div__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Number):
if other is S.Infinity or \
other is S.NegativeInfinity or \
other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_Float:
if other == Float('-inf') or \
other == Float('inf') or \
other is S.NaN:
return S.NaN
elif other.is_nonnegative:
return Float('-inf')
else:
return Float('inf')
else:
if other >= 0:
return S.NegativeInfinity
else:
return S.Infinity
return NotImplemented
__truediv__ = __div__
def __abs__(self):
return S.Infinity
def __neg__(self):
return S.Infinity
def _eval_power(self, expt):
"""
``expt`` is symbolic object but not equal to 0 or 1.
================ ======= ==============================
Expression Result Notes
================ ======= ==============================
``(-oo) ** nan`` ``nan``
``(-oo) ** oo`` ``nan``
``(-oo) ** -oo`` ``nan``
``(-oo) ** e`` ``oo`` ``e`` is positive even integer
``(-oo) ** o`` ``-oo`` ``o`` is positive odd integer
================ ======= ==============================
See Also
========
Infinity
Pow
NaN
"""
if expt.is_number:
if expt is S.NaN or \
expt is S.Infinity or \
expt is S.NegativeInfinity:
return S.NaN
if isinstance(expt, Integer) and expt.is_positive:
if expt.is_odd:
return S.NegativeInfinity
else:
return S.Infinity
return S.NegativeOne**expt*S.Infinity**expt
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
return mlib.fninf
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return -(sage.oo)
def __hash__(self):
return super(NegativeInfinity, self).__hash__()
def __eq__(self, other):
return other is S.NegativeInfinity
def __ne__(self, other):
return other is not S.NegativeInfinity
def __lt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s < %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_real:
if other.is_finite or other is S.Infinity:
return S.true
elif other.is_nonnegative:
return S.true
elif other.is_infinite and other.is_negative:
return S.false
return Expr.__lt__(self, other)
def __le__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s <= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_real:
return S.true
return Expr.__le__(self, other)
def __gt__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s > %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_real:
return S.false
return Expr.__gt__(self, other)
def __ge__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
raise TypeError("Invalid comparison %s >= %s" % (self, other))
if other.is_real:
if other.is_finite or other is S.Infinity:
return S.false
elif other.is_nonnegative:
return S.false
elif other.is_infinite and other.is_negative:
return S.true
return Expr.__ge__(self, other)
def __mod__(self, other):
return S.NaN
__rmod__ = __mod__
def floor(self):
return self
def ceiling(self):
return self
class NaN(with_metaclass(Singleton, Number)):
"""
Not a Number.
This serves as a place holder for numeric values that are indeterminate.
Most operations on NaN, produce another NaN. Most indeterminate forms,
such as ``0/0`` or ``oo - oo` produce NaN. Two exceptions are ``0**0``
and ``oo**0``, which all produce ``1`` (this is consistent with Python's
float).
NaN is loosely related to floating point nan, which is defined in the
IEEE 754 floating point standard, and corresponds to the Python
``float('nan')``. Differences are noted below.
NaN is mathematically not equal to anything else, even NaN itself. This
explains the initially counter-intuitive results with ``Eq`` and ``==`` in
the examples below.
NaN is not comparable so inequalities raise a TypeError. This is in
constrast with floating point nan where all inequalities are false.
NaN is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.NaN``, or can be imported
as ``nan``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import nan, S, oo, Eq
>>> nan is S.NaN
True
>>> oo - oo
nan
>>> nan + 1
nan
>>> Eq(nan, nan) # mathematical equality
False
>>> nan == nan # structural equality
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NaN
"""
is_commutative = True
is_real = None
is_rational = None
is_algebraic = None
is_transcendental = None
is_integer = None
is_comparable = False
is_finite = None
is_zero = None
is_prime = None
is_positive = None
is_negative = None
is_number = True
__slots__ = []
def __new__(cls):
return AtomicExpr.__new__(cls)
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"\mathrm{NaN}"
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __add__(self, other):
return self
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __sub__(self, other):
return self
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __mul__(self, other):
return self
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __div__(self, other):
return self
__truediv__ = __div__
def floor(self):
return self
def ceiling(self):
return self
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
return _mpf_nan
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.NaN
def __hash__(self):
return super(NaN, self).__hash__()
def __eq__(self, other):
# NaN is structurally equal to another NaN
return other is S.NaN
def __ne__(self, other):
return other is not S.NaN
def _eval_Eq(self, other):
# NaN is not mathematically equal to anything, even NaN
return S.false
# Expr will _sympify and raise TypeError
__gt__ = Expr.__gt__
__ge__ = Expr.__ge__
__lt__ = Expr.__lt__
__le__ = Expr.__le__
nan = S.NaN
class ComplexInfinity(with_metaclass(Singleton, AtomicExpr)):
r"""Complex infinity.
In complex analysis the symbol `\tilde\infty`, called "complex
infinity", represents a quantity with infinite magnitude, but
undetermined complex phase.
ComplexInfinity is a singleton, and can be accessed by
``S.ComplexInfinity``, or can be imported as ``zoo``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import zoo, oo
>>> zoo + 42
zoo
>>> 42/zoo
0
>>> zoo + zoo
nan
>>> zoo*zoo
zoo
See Also
========
Infinity
"""
is_commutative = True
is_infinite = True
is_number = True
is_prime = False
is_complex = True
is_real = False
__slots__ = []
def __new__(cls):
return AtomicExpr.__new__(cls)
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"\tilde{\infty}"
@staticmethod
def __abs__():
return S.Infinity
def floor(self):
return self
def ceiling(self):
return self
@staticmethod
def __neg__():
return S.ComplexInfinity
def _eval_power(self, expt):
if expt is S.ComplexInfinity:
return S.NaN
if isinstance(expt, Number):
if expt is S.Zero:
return S.NaN
else:
if expt.is_positive:
return S.ComplexInfinity
else:
return S.Zero
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.UnsignedInfinityRing.gen()
zoo = S.ComplexInfinity
class NumberSymbol(AtomicExpr):
is_commutative = True
is_finite = True
is_number = True
__slots__ = []
is_NumberSymbol = True
def __new__(cls):
return AtomicExpr.__new__(cls)
def approximation(self, number_cls):
""" Return an interval with number_cls endpoints
that contains the value of NumberSymbol.
If not implemented, then return None.
"""
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
return Float._new(self._as_mpf_val(prec), prec)
def __eq__(self, other):
try:
other = _sympify(other)
except SympifyError:
return NotImplemented
if self is other:
return True
if other.is_Number and self.is_irrational:
return False
return False # NumberSymbol != non-(Number|self)
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
def __le__(self, other):
if self is other:
return S.true
return Expr.__le__(self, other)
def __ge__(self, other):
if self is other:
return S.true
return Expr.__ge__(self, other)
def __int__(self):
# subclass with appropriate return value
raise NotImplementedError
def __long__(self):
return self.__int__()
def __hash__(self):
return super(NumberSymbol, self).__hash__()
class Exp1(with_metaclass(Singleton, NumberSymbol)):
r"""The `e` constant.
The transcendental number `e = 2.718281828\ldots` is the base of the
natural logarithm and of the exponential function, `e = \exp(1)`.
Sometimes called Euler's number or Napier's constant.
Exp1 is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.Exp1``,
or can be imported as ``E``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exp, log, E
>>> E is exp(1)
True
>>> log(E)
1
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E_%28mathematical_constant%29
"""
is_real = True
is_positive = True
is_negative = False # XXX Forces is_negative/is_nonnegative
is_irrational = True
is_number = True
is_algebraic = False
is_transcendental = True
__slots__ = []
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"e"
@staticmethod
def __abs__():
return S.Exp1
def __int__(self):
return 2
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
return mpf_e(prec)
def approximation_interval(self, number_cls):
if issubclass(number_cls, Integer):
return (Integer(2), Integer(3))
elif issubclass(number_cls, Rational):
pass
def _eval_power(self, expt):
from sympy import exp
return exp(expt)
def _eval_rewrite_as_sin(self, **kwargs):
from sympy import sin
I = S.ImaginaryUnit
return sin(I + S.Pi/2) - I*sin(I)
def _eval_rewrite_as_cos(self, **kwargs):
from sympy import cos
I = S.ImaginaryUnit
return cos(I) + I*cos(I + S.Pi/2)
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.e
E = S.Exp1
class Pi(with_metaclass(Singleton, NumberSymbol)):
r"""The `\pi` constant.
The transcendental number `\pi = 3.141592654\ldots` represents the ratio
of a circle's circumference to its diameter, the area of the unit circle,
the half-period of trigonometric functions, and many other things
in mathematics.
Pi is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.Pi``, or can
be imported as ``pi``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S, pi, oo, sin, exp, integrate, Symbol
>>> S.Pi
pi
>>> pi > 3
True
>>> pi.is_irrational
True
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> sin(x + 2*pi)
sin(x)
>>> integrate(exp(-x**2), (x, -oo, oo))
sqrt(pi)
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi
"""
is_real = True
is_positive = True
is_negative = False
is_irrational = True
is_number = True
is_algebraic = False
is_transcendental = True
__slots__ = []
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"\pi"
@staticmethod
def __abs__():
return S.Pi
def __int__(self):
return 3
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
return mpf_pi(prec)
def approximation_interval(self, number_cls):
if issubclass(number_cls, Integer):
return (Integer(3), Integer(4))
elif issubclass(number_cls, Rational):
return (Rational(223, 71), Rational(22, 7))
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.pi
pi = S.Pi
class GoldenRatio(with_metaclass(Singleton, NumberSymbol)):
r"""The golden ratio, `\phi`.
`\phi = \frac{1 + \sqrt{5}}{2}` is algebraic number. Two quantities
are in the golden ratio if their ratio is the same as the ratio of
their sum to the larger of the two quantities, i.e. their maximum.
GoldenRatio is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.GoldenRatio``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> S.GoldenRatio > 1
True
>>> S.GoldenRatio.expand(func=True)
1/2 + sqrt(5)/2
>>> S.GoldenRatio.is_irrational
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_ratio
"""
is_real = True
is_positive = True
is_negative = False
is_irrational = True
is_number = True
is_algebraic = True
is_transcendental = False
__slots__ = []
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"\phi"
def __int__(self):
return 1
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
# XXX track down why this has to be increased
rv = mlib.from_man_exp(phi_fixed(prec + 10), -prec - 10)
return mpf_norm(rv, prec)
def _eval_expand_func(self, **hints):
from sympy import sqrt
return S.Half + S.Half*sqrt(5)
def approximation_interval(self, number_cls):
if issubclass(number_cls, Integer):
return (S.One, Rational(2))
elif issubclass(number_cls, Rational):
pass
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.golden_ratio
_eval_rewrite_as_sqrt = _eval_expand_func
class TribonacciConstant(with_metaclass(Singleton, NumberSymbol)):
r"""The tribonacci constant.
The tribonacci numbers are like the Fibonacci numbers, but instead
of starting with two predetermined terms, the sequence starts with
three predetermined terms and each term afterwards is the sum of the
preceding three terms.
The tribonacci constant is the ratio toward which adjacent tribonacci
numbers tend. It is a root of the polynomial `x^3 - x^2 - x - 1 = 0`,
and also satisfies the equation `x + x^{-3} = 2`.
TribonacciConstant is a singleton, and can be accessed
by ``S.TribonacciConstant``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> S.TribonacciConstant > 1
True
>>> S.TribonacciConstant.expand(func=True)
1/3 + (-3*sqrt(33) + 19)**(1/3)/3 + (3*sqrt(33) + 19)**(1/3)/3
>>> S.TribonacciConstant.is_irrational
True
>>> S.TribonacciConstant.n(20)
1.8392867552141611326
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalizations_of_Fibonacci_numbers#Tribonacci_numbers
"""
is_real = True
is_positive = True
is_negative = False
is_irrational = True
is_number = True
is_algebraic = True
is_transcendental = False
__slots__ = []
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"\mathrm{TribonacciConstant}"
def __int__(self):
return 2
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
rv = self._eval_expand_func(function=True)._eval_evalf(prec + 4)
return Float(rv, precision=prec)
def _eval_expand_func(self, **hints):
from sympy import sqrt, cbrt
return (1 + cbrt(19 - 3*sqrt(33)) + cbrt(19 + 3*sqrt(33))) / 3
def approximation_interval(self, number_cls):
if issubclass(number_cls, Integer):
return (S.One, Rational(2))
elif issubclass(number_cls, Rational):
pass
_eval_rewrite_as_sqrt = _eval_expand_func
class EulerGamma(with_metaclass(Singleton, NumberSymbol)):
r"""The Euler-Mascheroni constant.
`\gamma = 0.5772157\ldots` (also called Euler's constant) is a mathematical
constant recurring in analysis and number theory. It is defined as the
limiting difference between the harmonic series and the
natural logarithm:
.. math:: \gamma = \lim\limits_{n\to\infty}
\left(\sum\limits_{k=1}^n\frac{1}{k} - \ln n\right)
EulerGamma is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.EulerGamma``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> S.EulerGamma.is_irrational
>>> S.EulerGamma > 0
True
>>> S.EulerGamma > 1
False
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%E2%80%93Mascheroni_constant
"""
is_real = True
is_positive = True
is_negative = False
is_irrational = None
is_number = True
__slots__ = []
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"\gamma"
def __int__(self):
return 0
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
# XXX track down why this has to be increased
v = mlib.libhyper.euler_fixed(prec + 10)
rv = mlib.from_man_exp(v, -prec - 10)
return mpf_norm(rv, prec)
def approximation_interval(self, number_cls):
if issubclass(number_cls, Integer):
return (S.Zero, S.One)
elif issubclass(number_cls, Rational):
return (S.Half, Rational(3, 5))
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.euler_gamma
class Catalan(with_metaclass(Singleton, NumberSymbol)):
r"""Catalan's constant.
`K = 0.91596559\ldots` is given by the infinite series
.. math:: K = \sum_{k=0}^{\infty} \frac{(-1)^k}{(2k+1)^2}
Catalan is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.Catalan``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> S.Catalan.is_irrational
>>> S.Catalan > 0
True
>>> S.Catalan > 1
False
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalan%27s_constant
"""
is_real = True
is_positive = True
is_negative = False
is_irrational = None
is_number = True
__slots__ = []
def __int__(self):
return 0
def _as_mpf_val(self, prec):
# XXX track down why this has to be increased
v = mlib.catalan_fixed(prec + 10)
rv = mlib.from_man_exp(v, -prec - 10)
return mpf_norm(rv, prec)
def approximation_interval(self, number_cls):
if issubclass(number_cls, Integer):
return (S.Zero, S.One)
elif issubclass(number_cls, Rational):
return (Rational(9, 10), S.One)
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.catalan
class ImaginaryUnit(with_metaclass(Singleton, AtomicExpr)):
r"""The imaginary unit, `i = \sqrt{-1}`.
I is a singleton, and can be accessed by ``S.I``, or can be
imported as ``I``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import I, sqrt
>>> sqrt(-1)
I
>>> I*I
-1
>>> 1/I
-I
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imaginary_unit
"""
is_commutative = True
is_imaginary = True
is_finite = True
is_number = True
is_algebraic = True
is_transcendental = False
__slots__ = []
def _latex(self, printer):
return r"i"
@staticmethod
def __abs__():
return S.One
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
return self
def _eval_conjugate(self):
return -S.ImaginaryUnit
def _eval_power(self, expt):
"""
b is I = sqrt(-1)
e is symbolic object but not equal to 0, 1
I**r -> (-1)**(r/2) -> exp(r/2*Pi*I) -> sin(Pi*r/2) + cos(Pi*r/2)*I, r is decimal
I**0 mod 4 -> 1
I**1 mod 4 -> I
I**2 mod 4 -> -1
I**3 mod 4 -> -I
"""
if isinstance(expt, Number):
if isinstance(expt, Integer):
expt = expt.p % 4
if expt == 0:
return S.One
if expt == 1:
return S.ImaginaryUnit
if expt == 2:
return -S.One
return -S.ImaginaryUnit
return (S.NegativeOne)**(expt*S.Half)
return
def as_base_exp(self):
return S.NegativeOne, S.Half
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.I
@property
def _mpc_(self):
return (Float(0)._mpf_, Float(1)._mpf_)
I = S.ImaginaryUnit
def sympify_fractions(f):
return Rational(f.numerator, f.denominator, 1)
converter[fractions.Fraction] = sympify_fractions
try:
if HAS_GMPY == 2:
import gmpy2 as gmpy
elif HAS_GMPY == 1:
import gmpy
else:
raise ImportError
def sympify_mpz(x):
return Integer(long(x))
def sympify_mpq(x):
return Rational(long(x.numerator), long(x.denominator))
converter[type(gmpy.mpz(1))] = sympify_mpz
converter[type(gmpy.mpq(1, 2))] = sympify_mpq
except ImportError:
pass
def sympify_mpmath(x):
return Expr._from_mpmath(x, x.context.prec)
converter[mpnumeric] = sympify_mpmath
def sympify_mpq(x):
p, q = x._mpq_
return Rational(p, q, 1)
converter[type(mpmath.rational.mpq(1, 2))] = sympify_mpq
def sympify_complex(a):
real, imag = list(map(sympify, (a.real, a.imag)))
return real + S.ImaginaryUnit*imag
converter[complex] = sympify_complex
_intcache[0] = S.Zero
_intcache[1] = S.One
_intcache[-1] = S.NegativeOne
from .power import Pow, integer_nthroot
from .mul import Mul
Mul.identity = One()
from .add import Add
Add.identity = Zero()
|
be8b8ab1516a3b2b2fc01fdb207d25c15ca107af88bcf989c5e7ce5fd960eebe
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.sympify import _sympify, sympify
from sympy.core.basic import Basic, _aresame
from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
from sympy.core.compatibility import ordered, range
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_and
from sympy.core.evaluate import global_evaluate
from sympy.utilities.iterables import sift
class AssocOp(Basic):
""" Associative operations, can separate noncommutative and
commutative parts.
(a op b) op c == a op (b op c) == a op b op c.
Base class for Add and Mul.
This is an abstract base class, concrete derived classes must define
the attribute `identity`.
"""
# for performance reason, we don't let is_commutative go to assumptions,
# and keep it right here
__slots__ = ['is_commutative']
@cacheit
def __new__(cls, *args, **options):
from sympy import Order
args = list(map(_sympify, args))
args = [a for a in args if a is not cls.identity]
evaluate = options.get('evaluate')
if evaluate is None:
evaluate = global_evaluate[0]
if not evaluate:
return cls._from_args(args)
if len(args) == 0:
return cls.identity
if len(args) == 1:
return args[0]
c_part, nc_part, order_symbols = cls.flatten(args)
is_commutative = not nc_part
obj = cls._from_args(c_part + nc_part, is_commutative)
obj = cls._exec_constructor_postprocessors(obj)
if order_symbols is not None:
return Order(obj, *order_symbols)
return obj
@classmethod
def _from_args(cls, args, is_commutative=None):
"""Create new instance with already-processed args"""
if len(args) == 0:
return cls.identity
elif len(args) == 1:
return args[0]
obj = super(AssocOp, cls).__new__(cls, *args)
if is_commutative is None:
is_commutative = fuzzy_and(a.is_commutative for a in args)
obj.is_commutative = is_commutative
return obj
def _new_rawargs(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Create new instance of own class with args exactly as provided by
caller but returning the self class identity if args is empty.
This is handy when we want to optimize things, e.g.
>>> from sympy import Mul, S
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> e = Mul(3, x, y)
>>> e.args
(3, x, y)
>>> Mul(*e.args[1:])
x*y
>>> e._new_rawargs(*e.args[1:]) # the same as above, but faster
x*y
Note: use this with caution. There is no checking of arguments at
all. This is best used when you are rebuilding an Add or Mul after
simply removing one or more args. If, for example, modifications,
result in extra 1s being inserted (as when collecting an
expression's numerators and denominators) they will not show up in
the result but a Mul will be returned nonetheless:
>>> m = (x*y)._new_rawargs(S.One, x); m
x
>>> m == x
False
>>> m.is_Mul
True
Another issue to be aware of is that the commutativity of the result
is based on the commutativity of self. If you are rebuilding the
terms that came from a commutative object then there will be no
problem, but if self was non-commutative then what you are
rebuilding may now be commutative.
Although this routine tries to do as little as possible with the
input, getting the commutativity right is important, so this level
of safety is enforced: commutativity will always be recomputed if
self is non-commutative and kwarg `reeval=False` has not been
passed.
"""
if kwargs.pop('reeval', True) and self.is_commutative is False:
is_commutative = None
else:
is_commutative = self.is_commutative
return self._from_args(args, is_commutative)
@classmethod
def flatten(cls, seq):
"""Return seq so that none of the elements are of type `cls`. This is
the vanilla routine that will be used if a class derived from AssocOp
does not define its own flatten routine."""
# apply associativity, no commutativity property is used
new_seq = []
while seq:
o = seq.pop()
if o.__class__ is cls: # classes must match exactly
seq.extend(o.args)
else:
new_seq.append(o)
# c_part, nc_part, order_symbols
return [], new_seq, None
def _matches_commutative(self, expr, repl_dict={}, old=False):
"""
Matches Add/Mul "pattern" to an expression "expr".
repl_dict ... a dictionary of (wild: expression) pairs, that get
returned with the results
This function is the main workhorse for Add/Mul.
For instance:
>>> from sympy import symbols, Wild, sin
>>> a = Wild("a")
>>> b = Wild("b")
>>> c = Wild("c")
>>> x, y, z = symbols("x y z")
>>> (a+sin(b)*c)._matches_commutative(x+sin(y)*z)
{a_: x, b_: y, c_: z}
In the example above, "a+sin(b)*c" is the pattern, and "x+sin(y)*z" is
the expression.
The repl_dict contains parts that were already matched. For example
here:
>>> (x+sin(b)*c)._matches_commutative(x+sin(y)*z, repl_dict={a: x})
{a_: x, b_: y, c_: z}
the only function of the repl_dict is to return it in the
result, e.g. if you omit it:
>>> (x+sin(b)*c)._matches_commutative(x+sin(y)*z)
{b_: y, c_: z}
the "a: x" is not returned in the result, but otherwise it is
equivalent.
"""
# make sure expr is Expr if pattern is Expr
from .expr import Add, Expr
from sympy import Mul
if isinstance(self, Expr) and not isinstance(expr, Expr):
return None
# handle simple patterns
if self == expr:
return repl_dict
d = self._matches_simple(expr, repl_dict)
if d is not None:
return d
# eliminate exact part from pattern: (2+a+w1+w2).matches(expr) -> (w1+w2).matches(expr-a-2)
from .function import WildFunction
from .symbol import Wild
wild_part, exact_part = sift(self.args, lambda p:
p.has(Wild, WildFunction) and not expr.has(p),
binary=True)
if not exact_part:
wild_part = list(ordered(wild_part))
else:
exact = self._new_rawargs(*exact_part)
free = expr.free_symbols
if free and (exact.free_symbols - free):
# there are symbols in the exact part that are not
# in the expr; but if there are no free symbols, let
# the matching continue
return None
newexpr = self._combine_inverse(expr, exact)
if not old and (expr.is_Add or expr.is_Mul):
if newexpr.count_ops() > expr.count_ops():
return None
newpattern = self._new_rawargs(*wild_part)
return newpattern.matches(newexpr, repl_dict)
# now to real work ;)
i = 0
saw = set()
while expr not in saw:
saw.add(expr)
expr_list = (self.identity,) + tuple(ordered(self.make_args(expr)))
for last_op in reversed(expr_list):
for w in reversed(wild_part):
d1 = w.matches(last_op, repl_dict)
if d1 is not None:
d2 = self.xreplace(d1).matches(expr, d1)
if d2 is not None:
return d2
if i == 0:
if self.is_Mul:
# make e**i look like Mul
if expr.is_Pow and expr.exp.is_Integer:
if expr.exp > 0:
expr = Mul(*[expr.base, expr.base**(expr.exp - 1)], evaluate=False)
else:
expr = Mul(*[1/expr.base, expr.base**(expr.exp + 1)], evaluate=False)
i += 1
continue
elif self.is_Add:
# make i*e look like Add
c, e = expr.as_coeff_Mul()
if abs(c) > 1:
if c > 0:
expr = Add(*[e, (c - 1)*e], evaluate=False)
else:
expr = Add(*[-e, (c + 1)*e], evaluate=False)
i += 1
continue
# try collection on non-Wild symbols
from sympy.simplify.radsimp import collect
was = expr
did = set()
for w in reversed(wild_part):
c, w = w.as_coeff_mul(Wild)
free = c.free_symbols - did
if free:
did.update(free)
expr = collect(expr, free)
if expr != was:
i += 0
continue
break # if we didn't continue, there is nothing more to do
return
def _has_matcher(self):
"""Helper for .has()"""
def _ncsplit(expr):
# this is not the same as args_cnc because here
# we don't assume expr is a Mul -- hence deal with args --
# and always return a set.
cpart, ncpart = sift(expr.args,
lambda arg: arg.is_commutative is True, binary=True)
return set(cpart), ncpart
c, nc = _ncsplit(self)
cls = self.__class__
def is_in(expr):
if expr == self:
return True
elif not isinstance(expr, Basic):
return False
elif isinstance(expr, cls):
_c, _nc = _ncsplit(expr)
if (c & _c) == c:
if not nc:
return True
elif len(nc) <= len(_nc):
for i in range(len(_nc) - len(nc) + 1):
if _nc[i:i + len(nc)] == nc:
return True
return False
return is_in
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
"""
Evaluate the parts of self that are numbers; if the whole thing
was a number with no functions it would have been evaluated, but
it wasn't so we must judiciously extract the numbers and reconstruct
the object. This is *not* simply replacing numbers with evaluated
numbers. Nunmbers should be handled in the largest pure-number
expression as possible. So the code below separates ``self`` into
number and non-number parts and evaluates the number parts and
walks the args of the non-number part recursively (doing the same
thing).
"""
from .add import Add
from .mul import Mul
from .symbol import Symbol
from .function import AppliedUndef
if isinstance(self, (Mul, Add)):
x, tail = self.as_independent(Symbol, AppliedUndef)
# if x is an AssocOp Function then the _evalf below will
# call _eval_evalf (here) so we must break the recursion
if not (tail is self.identity or
isinstance(x, AssocOp) and x.is_Function or
x is self.identity and isinstance(tail, AssocOp)):
# here, we have a number so we just call to _evalf with prec;
# prec is not the same as n, it is the binary precision so
# that's why we don't call to evalf.
x = x._evalf(prec) if x is not self.identity else self.identity
args = []
tail_args = tuple(self.func.make_args(tail))
for a in tail_args:
# here we call to _eval_evalf since we don't know what we
# are dealing with and all other _eval_evalf routines should
# be doing the same thing (i.e. taking binary prec and
# finding the evalf-able args)
newa = a._eval_evalf(prec)
if newa is None:
args.append(a)
else:
args.append(newa)
return self.func(x, *args)
# this is the same as above, but there were no pure-number args to
# deal with
args = []
for a in self.args:
newa = a._eval_evalf(prec)
if newa is None:
args.append(a)
else:
args.append(newa)
return self.func(*args)
@classmethod
def make_args(cls, expr):
"""
Return a sequence of elements `args` such that cls(*args) == expr
>>> from sympy import Symbol, Mul, Add
>>> x, y = map(Symbol, 'xy')
>>> Mul.make_args(x*y)
(x, y)
>>> Add.make_args(x*y)
(x*y,)
>>> set(Add.make_args(x*y + y)) == set([y, x*y])
True
"""
if isinstance(expr, cls):
return expr.args
else:
return (sympify(expr),)
class ShortCircuit(Exception):
pass
class LatticeOp(AssocOp):
"""
Join/meet operations of an algebraic lattice[1].
These binary operations are associative (op(op(a, b), c) = op(a, op(b, c))),
commutative (op(a, b) = op(b, a)) and idempotent (op(a, a) = op(a) = a).
Common examples are AND, OR, Union, Intersection, max or min. They have an
identity element (op(identity, a) = a) and an absorbing element
conventionally called zero (op(zero, a) = zero).
This is an abstract base class, concrete derived classes must declare
attributes zero and identity. All defining properties are then respected.
>>> from sympy import Integer
>>> from sympy.core.operations import LatticeOp
>>> class my_join(LatticeOp):
... zero = Integer(0)
... identity = Integer(1)
>>> my_join(2, 3) == my_join(3, 2)
True
>>> my_join(2, my_join(3, 4)) == my_join(2, 3, 4)
True
>>> my_join(0, 1, 4, 2, 3, 4)
0
>>> my_join(1, 2)
2
References:
[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_%28order%29
"""
is_commutative = True
def __new__(cls, *args, **options):
args = (_sympify(arg) for arg in args)
try:
# /!\ args is a generator and _new_args_filter
# must be careful to handle as such; this
# is done so short-circuiting can be done
# without having to sympify all values
_args = frozenset(cls._new_args_filter(args))
except ShortCircuit:
return sympify(cls.zero)
if not _args:
return sympify(cls.identity)
elif len(_args) == 1:
return set(_args).pop()
else:
# XXX in almost every other case for __new__, *_args is
# passed along, but the expectation here is for _args
obj = super(AssocOp, cls).__new__(cls, _args)
obj._argset = _args
return obj
@classmethod
def _new_args_filter(cls, arg_sequence, call_cls=None):
"""Generator filtering args"""
ncls = call_cls or cls
for arg in arg_sequence:
if arg == ncls.zero:
raise ShortCircuit(arg)
elif arg == ncls.identity:
continue
elif arg.func == ncls:
for x in arg.args:
yield x
else:
yield arg
@classmethod
def make_args(cls, expr):
"""
Return a set of args such that cls(*arg_set) == expr.
"""
if isinstance(expr, cls):
return expr._argset
else:
return frozenset([sympify(expr)])
@property
@cacheit
def args(self):
return tuple(ordered(self._argset))
@staticmethod
def _compare_pretty(a, b):
return (str(a) > str(b)) - (str(a) < str(b))
|
5df9280fa909f6071bfbc8126205c5065f1f5b2bd6df5ace5c811b3a77d8c898
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core.assumptions import StdFactKB
from sympy.core.compatibility import (string_types, range, is_sequence,
ordered)
from .basic import Basic
from .sympify import sympify
from .singleton import S
from .expr import Expr, AtomicExpr
from .cache import cacheit
from .function import FunctionClass
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_bool
from sympy.logic.boolalg import Boolean
from sympy.utilities.iterables import cartes
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
import string
import re as _re
import random
def _symbol(s, matching_symbol=None, **assumptions):
"""Return s if s is a Symbol, else if s is a string, return either
the matching_symbol if the names are the same or else a new symbol
with the same assumptions as the matching symbol (or the
assumptions as provided).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, Dummy
>>> from sympy.core.symbol import _symbol
>>> _symbol('y')
y
>>> _.is_real is None
True
>>> _symbol('y', real=True).is_real
True
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> _symbol(x, real=True)
x
>>> _.is_real is None # ignore attribute if s is a Symbol
True
Below, the variable sym has the name 'foo':
>>> sym = Symbol('foo', real=True)
Since 'x' is not the same as sym's name, a new symbol is created:
>>> _symbol('x', sym).name
'x'
It will acquire any assumptions give:
>>> _symbol('x', sym, real=False).is_real
False
Since 'foo' is the same as sym's name, sym is returned
>>> _symbol('foo', sym)
foo
Any assumptions given are ignored:
>>> _symbol('foo', sym, real=False).is_real
True
NB: the symbol here may not be the same as a symbol with the same
name defined elsewhere as a result of different assumptions.
See Also
========
sympy.core.symbol.Symbol
"""
if isinstance(s, string_types):
if matching_symbol and matching_symbol.name == s:
return matching_symbol
return Symbol(s, **assumptions)
elif isinstance(s, Symbol):
return s
else:
raise ValueError('symbol must be string for symbol name or Symbol')
def _uniquely_named_symbol(xname, exprs=(), compare=str, modify=None, **assumptions):
"""Return a symbol which, when printed, will have a name unique
from any other already in the expressions given. The name is made
unique by prepending underscores (default) but this can be
customized with the keyword 'modify'.
Parameters
==========
xname : a string or a Symbol (when symbol xname <- str(xname))
compare : a single arg function that takes a symbol and returns
a string to be compared with xname (the default is the str
function which indicates how the name will look when it
is printed, e.g. this includes underscores that appear on
Dummy symbols)
modify : a single arg function that changes its string argument
in some way (the default is to preppend underscores)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.symbol import _uniquely_named_symbol as usym, Dummy
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> usym('x', x)
_x
"""
default = None
if is_sequence(xname):
xname, default = xname
x = str(xname)
if not exprs:
return _symbol(x, default, **assumptions)
if not is_sequence(exprs):
exprs = [exprs]
syms = set().union(*[e.free_symbols for e in exprs])
if modify is None:
modify = lambda s: '_' + s
while any(x == compare(s) for s in syms):
x = modify(x)
return _symbol(x, default, **assumptions)
class Symbol(AtomicExpr, Boolean):
"""
Assumptions:
commutative = True
You can override the default assumptions in the constructor:
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> A,B = symbols('A,B', commutative = False)
>>> bool(A*B != B*A)
True
>>> bool(A*B*2 == 2*A*B) == True # multiplication by scalars is commutative
True
"""
is_comparable = False
__slots__ = ['name']
is_Symbol = True
is_symbol = True
@property
def _diff_wrt(self):
"""Allow derivatives wrt Symbols.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> x._diff_wrt
True
"""
return True
@staticmethod
def _sanitize(assumptions, obj=None):
"""Remove None, covert values to bool, check commutativity *in place*.
"""
# be strict about commutativity: cannot be None
is_commutative = fuzzy_bool(assumptions.get('commutative', True))
if is_commutative is None:
whose = '%s ' % obj.__name__ if obj else ''
raise ValueError(
'%scommutativity must be True or False.' % whose)
# sanitize other assumptions so 1 -> True and 0 -> False
for key in list(assumptions.keys()):
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning
keymap = defaultdict(lambda: None)
keymap.update({'bounded': 'finite', 'unbounded': 'infinite', 'infinitesimal': 'zero'})
if keymap[key]:
SymPyDeprecationWarning(
feature="%s assumption" % key,
useinstead="%s" % keymap[key],
issue=8071,
deprecated_since_version="0.7.6").warn()
assumptions[keymap[key]] = assumptions[key]
assumptions.pop(key)
key = keymap[key]
v = assumptions[key]
if v is None:
assumptions.pop(key)
continue
assumptions[key] = bool(v)
def __new__(cls, name, **assumptions):
"""Symbols are identified by name and assumptions::
>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> Symbol("x") == Symbol("x")
True
>>> Symbol("x", real=True) == Symbol("x", real=False)
False
"""
cls._sanitize(assumptions, cls)
return Symbol.__xnew_cached_(cls, name, **assumptions)
def __new_stage2__(cls, name, **assumptions):
if not isinstance(name, string_types):
raise TypeError("name should be a string, not %s" % repr(type(name)))
obj = Expr.__new__(cls)
obj.name = name
# TODO: Issue #8873: Forcing the commutative assumption here means
# later code such as ``srepr()`` cannot tell whether the user
# specified ``commutative=True`` or omitted it. To workaround this,
# we keep a copy of the assumptions dict, then create the StdFactKB,
# and finally overwrite its ``._generator`` with the dict copy. This
# is a bit of a hack because we assume StdFactKB merely copies the
# given dict as ``._generator``, but future modification might, e.g.,
# compute a minimal equivalent assumption set.
tmp_asm_copy = assumptions.copy()
# be strict about commutativity
is_commutative = fuzzy_bool(assumptions.get('commutative', True))
assumptions['commutative'] = is_commutative
obj._assumptions = StdFactKB(assumptions)
obj._assumptions._generator = tmp_asm_copy # Issue #8873
return obj
__xnew__ = staticmethod(
__new_stage2__) # never cached (e.g. dummy)
__xnew_cached_ = staticmethod(
cacheit(__new_stage2__)) # symbols are always cached
def __getnewargs__(self):
return (self.name,)
def __getstate__(self):
return {'_assumptions': self._assumptions}
def _hashable_content(self):
# Note: user-specified assumptions not hashed, just derived ones
return (self.name,) + tuple(sorted(self.assumptions0.items()))
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
from sympy.core.power import Pow
if old.is_Pow:
return Pow(self, S.One, evaluate=False)._eval_subs(old, new)
@property
def assumptions0(self):
return dict((key, value) for key, value
in self._assumptions.items() if value is not None)
@cacheit
def sort_key(self, order=None):
return self.class_key(), (1, (str(self),)), S.One.sort_key(), S.One
def as_dummy(self):
return Dummy(self.name)
def as_real_imag(self, deep=True, **hints):
from sympy import im, re
if hints.get('ignore') == self:
return None
else:
return (re(self), im(self))
def _sage_(self):
import sage.all as sage
return sage.var(self.name)
def is_constant(self, *wrt, **flags):
if not wrt:
return False
return not self in wrt
@property
def free_symbols(self):
return {self}
binary_symbols = free_symbols # in this case, not always
def as_set(self):
return S.UniversalSet
class Dummy(Symbol):
"""Dummy symbols are each unique, even if they have the same name:
>>> from sympy import Dummy
>>> Dummy("x") == Dummy("x")
False
If a name is not supplied then a string value of an internal count will be
used. This is useful when a temporary variable is needed and the name
of the variable used in the expression is not important.
>>> Dummy() #doctest: +SKIP
_Dummy_10
"""
# In the rare event that a Dummy object needs to be recreated, both the
# `name` and `dummy_index` should be passed. This is used by `srepr` for
# example:
# >>> d1 = Dummy()
# >>> d2 = eval(srepr(d1))
# >>> d2 == d1
# True
#
# If a new session is started between `srepr` and `eval`, there is a very
# small chance that `d2` will be equal to a previously-created Dummy.
_count = 0
_prng = random.Random()
_base_dummy_index = _prng.randint(10**6, 9*10**6)
__slots__ = ['dummy_index']
is_Dummy = True
def __new__(cls, name=None, dummy_index=None, **assumptions):
if dummy_index is not None:
assert name is not None, "If you specify a dummy_index, you must also provide a name"
if name is None:
name = "Dummy_" + str(Dummy._count)
if dummy_index is None:
dummy_index = Dummy._base_dummy_index + Dummy._count
Dummy._count += 1
cls._sanitize(assumptions, cls)
obj = Symbol.__xnew__(cls, name, **assumptions)
obj.dummy_index = dummy_index
return obj
def __getstate__(self):
return {'_assumptions': self._assumptions, 'dummy_index': self.dummy_index}
@cacheit
def sort_key(self, order=None):
return self.class_key(), (
2, (str(self), self.dummy_index)), S.One.sort_key(), S.One
def _hashable_content(self):
return Symbol._hashable_content(self) + (self.dummy_index,)
class Wild(Symbol):
"""
A Wild symbol matches anything, or anything
without whatever is explicitly excluded.
Parameters
==========
name : str
Name of the Wild instance.
exclude : iterable, optional
Instances in ``exclude`` will not be matched.
properties : iterable of functions, optional
Functions, each taking an expressions as input
and returns a ``bool``. All functions in ``properties``
need to return ``True`` in order for the Wild instance
to match the expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Wild, WildFunction, cos, pi
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> a = Wild('a')
>>> x.match(a)
{a_: x}
>>> pi.match(a)
{a_: pi}
>>> (3*x**2).match(a*x)
{a_: 3*x}
>>> cos(x).match(a)
{a_: cos(x)}
>>> b = Wild('b', exclude=[x])
>>> (3*x**2).match(b*x)
>>> b.match(a)
{a_: b_}
>>> A = WildFunction('A')
>>> A.match(a)
{a_: A_}
Tips
====
When using Wild, be sure to use the exclude
keyword to make the pattern more precise.
Without the exclude pattern, you may get matches
that are technically correct, but not what you
wanted. For example, using the above without
exclude:
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> a, b = symbols('a b', cls=Wild)
>>> (2 + 3*y).match(a*x + b*y)
{a_: 2/x, b_: 3}
This is technically correct, because
(2/x)*x + 3*y == 2 + 3*y, but you probably
wanted it to not match at all. The issue is that
you really didn't want a and b to include x and y,
and the exclude parameter lets you specify exactly
this. With the exclude parameter, the pattern will
not match.
>>> a = Wild('a', exclude=[x, y])
>>> b = Wild('b', exclude=[x, y])
>>> (2 + 3*y).match(a*x + b*y)
Exclude also helps remove ambiguity from matches.
>>> E = 2*x**3*y*z
>>> a, b = symbols('a b', cls=Wild)
>>> E.match(a*b)
{a_: 2*y*z, b_: x**3}
>>> a = Wild('a', exclude=[x, y])
>>> E.match(a*b)
{a_: z, b_: 2*x**3*y}
>>> a = Wild('a', exclude=[x, y, z])
>>> E.match(a*b)
{a_: 2, b_: x**3*y*z}
Wild also accepts a ``properties`` parameter:
>>> a = Wild('a', properties=[lambda k: k.is_Integer])
>>> E.match(a*b)
{a_: 2, b_: x**3*y*z}
"""
is_Wild = True
__slots__ = ['exclude', 'properties']
def __new__(cls, name, exclude=(), properties=(), **assumptions):
exclude = tuple([sympify(x) for x in exclude])
properties = tuple(properties)
cls._sanitize(assumptions, cls)
return Wild.__xnew__(cls, name, exclude, properties, **assumptions)
def __getnewargs__(self):
return (self.name, self.exclude, self.properties)
@staticmethod
@cacheit
def __xnew__(cls, name, exclude, properties, **assumptions):
obj = Symbol.__xnew__(cls, name, **assumptions)
obj.exclude = exclude
obj.properties = properties
return obj
def _hashable_content(self):
return super(Wild, self)._hashable_content() + (self.exclude, self.properties)
# TODO add check against another Wild
def matches(self, expr, repl_dict={}, old=False):
if any(expr.has(x) for x in self.exclude):
return None
if any(not f(expr) for f in self.properties):
return None
repl_dict = repl_dict.copy()
repl_dict[self] = expr
return repl_dict
_range = _re.compile('([0-9]*:[0-9]+|[a-zA-Z]?:[a-zA-Z])')
def symbols(names, **args):
r"""
Transform strings into instances of :class:`Symbol` class.
:func:`symbols` function returns a sequence of symbols with names taken
from ``names`` argument, which can be a comma or whitespace delimited
string, or a sequence of strings::
>>> from sympy import symbols, Function
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x,y,z')
>>> a, b, c = symbols('a b c')
The type of output is dependent on the properties of input arguments::
>>> symbols('x')
x
>>> symbols('x,')
(x,)
>>> symbols('x,y')
(x, y)
>>> symbols(('a', 'b', 'c'))
(a, b, c)
>>> symbols(['a', 'b', 'c'])
[a, b, c]
>>> symbols({'a', 'b', 'c'})
{a, b, c}
If an iterable container is needed for a single symbol, set the ``seq``
argument to ``True`` or terminate the symbol name with a comma::
>>> symbols('x', seq=True)
(x,)
To reduce typing, range syntax is supported to create indexed symbols.
Ranges are indicated by a colon and the type of range is determined by
the character to the right of the colon. If the character is a digit
then all contiguous digits to the left are taken as the nonnegative
starting value (or 0 if there is no digit left of the colon) and all
contiguous digits to the right are taken as 1 greater than the ending
value::
>>> symbols('x:10')
(x0, x1, x2, x3, x4, x5, x6, x7, x8, x9)
>>> symbols('x5:10')
(x5, x6, x7, x8, x9)
>>> symbols('x5(:2)')
(x50, x51)
>>> symbols('x5:10,y:5')
(x5, x6, x7, x8, x9, y0, y1, y2, y3, y4)
>>> symbols(('x5:10', 'y:5'))
((x5, x6, x7, x8, x9), (y0, y1, y2, y3, y4))
If the character to the right of the colon is a letter, then the single
letter to the left (or 'a' if there is none) is taken as the start
and all characters in the lexicographic range *through* the letter to
the right are used as the range::
>>> symbols('x:z')
(x, y, z)
>>> symbols('x:c') # null range
()
>>> symbols('x(:c)')
(xa, xb, xc)
>>> symbols(':c')
(a, b, c)
>>> symbols('a:d, x:z')
(a, b, c, d, x, y, z)
>>> symbols(('a:d', 'x:z'))
((a, b, c, d), (x, y, z))
Multiple ranges are supported; contiguous numerical ranges should be
separated by parentheses to disambiguate the ending number of one
range from the starting number of the next::
>>> symbols('x:2(1:3)')
(x01, x02, x11, x12)
>>> symbols(':3:2') # parsing is from left to right
(00, 01, 10, 11, 20, 21)
Only one pair of parentheses surrounding ranges are removed, so to
include parentheses around ranges, double them. And to include spaces,
commas, or colons, escape them with a backslash::
>>> symbols('x((a:b))')
(x(a), x(b))
>>> symbols(r'x(:1\,:2)') # or r'x((:1)\,(:2))'
(x(0,0), x(0,1))
All newly created symbols have assumptions set according to ``args``::
>>> a = symbols('a', integer=True)
>>> a.is_integer
True
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x,y,z', real=True)
>>> x.is_real and y.is_real and z.is_real
True
Despite its name, :func:`symbols` can create symbol-like objects like
instances of Function or Wild classes. To achieve this, set ``cls``
keyword argument to the desired type::
>>> symbols('f,g,h', cls=Function)
(f, g, h)
>>> type(_[0])
<class 'sympy.core.function.UndefinedFunction'>
"""
result = []
if isinstance(names, string_types):
marker = 0
literals = [r'\,', r'\:', r'\ ']
for i in range(len(literals)):
lit = literals.pop(0)
if lit in names:
while chr(marker) in names:
marker += 1
lit_char = chr(marker)
marker += 1
names = names.replace(lit, lit_char)
literals.append((lit_char, lit[1:]))
def literal(s):
if literals:
for c, l in literals:
s = s.replace(c, l)
return s
names = names.strip()
as_seq = names.endswith(',')
if as_seq:
names = names[:-1].rstrip()
if not names:
raise ValueError('no symbols given')
# split on commas
names = [n.strip() for n in names.split(',')]
if not all(n for n in names):
raise ValueError('missing symbol between commas')
# split on spaces
for i in range(len(names) - 1, -1, -1):
names[i: i + 1] = names[i].split()
cls = args.pop('cls', Symbol)
seq = args.pop('seq', as_seq)
for name in names:
if not name:
raise ValueError('missing symbol')
if ':' not in name:
symbol = cls(literal(name), **args)
result.append(symbol)
continue
split = _range.split(name)
# remove 1 layer of bounding parentheses around ranges
for i in range(len(split) - 1):
if i and ':' in split[i] and split[i] != ':' and \
split[i - 1].endswith('(') and \
split[i + 1].startswith(')'):
split[i - 1] = split[i - 1][:-1]
split[i + 1] = split[i + 1][1:]
for i, s in enumerate(split):
if ':' in s:
if s[-1].endswith(':'):
raise ValueError('missing end range')
a, b = s.split(':')
if b[-1] in string.digits:
a = 0 if not a else int(a)
b = int(b)
split[i] = [str(c) for c in range(a, b)]
else:
a = a or 'a'
split[i] = [string.ascii_letters[c] for c in range(
string.ascii_letters.index(a),
string.ascii_letters.index(b) + 1)] # inclusive
if not split[i]:
break
else:
split[i] = [s]
else:
seq = True
if len(split) == 1:
names = split[0]
else:
names = [''.join(s) for s in cartes(*split)]
if literals:
result.extend([cls(literal(s), **args) for s in names])
else:
result.extend([cls(s, **args) for s in names])
if not seq and len(result) <= 1:
if not result:
return ()
return result[0]
return tuple(result)
else:
for name in names:
result.append(symbols(name, **args))
return type(names)(result)
def var(names, **args):
"""
Create symbols and inject them into the global namespace.
This calls :func:`symbols` with the same arguments and puts the results
into the *global* namespace. It's recommended not to use :func:`var` in
library code, where :func:`symbols` has to be used::
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import var
>>> var('x')
x
>>> x
x
>>> var('a,ab,abc')
(a, ab, abc)
>>> abc
abc
>>> var('x,y', real=True)
(x, y)
>>> x.is_real and y.is_real
True
See :func:`symbol` documentation for more details on what kinds of
arguments can be passed to :func:`var`.
"""
def traverse(symbols, frame):
"""Recursively inject symbols to the global namespace. """
for symbol in symbols:
if isinstance(symbol, Basic):
frame.f_globals[symbol.name] = symbol
elif isinstance(symbol, FunctionClass):
frame.f_globals[symbol.__name__] = symbol
else:
traverse(symbol, frame)
from inspect import currentframe
frame = currentframe().f_back
try:
syms = symbols(names, **args)
if syms is not None:
if isinstance(syms, Basic):
frame.f_globals[syms.name] = syms
elif isinstance(syms, FunctionClass):
frame.f_globals[syms.__name__] = syms
else:
traverse(syms, frame)
finally:
del frame # break cyclic dependencies as stated in inspect docs
return syms
def disambiguate(*iter):
"""
Return a Tuple containing the passed expressions with symbols
that appear the same when printed replaced with numerically
subscripted symbols, and all Dummy symbols replaced with Symbols.
Parameters
==========
iter: list of symbols or expressions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.symbol import disambiguate
>>> from sympy import Dummy, Symbol, Tuple
>>> from sympy.abc import y
>>> tup = Symbol('_x'), Dummy('x'), Dummy('x')
>>> disambiguate(*tup)
(x_2, x, x_1)
>>> eqs = Tuple(Symbol('x')/y, Dummy('x')/y)
>>> disambiguate(*eqs)
(x_1/y, x/y)
>>> ix = Symbol('x', integer=True)
>>> vx = Symbol('x')
>>> disambiguate(vx + ix)
(x + x_1,)
To make your own mapping of symbols to use, pass only the free symbols
of the expressions and create a dictionary:
>>> free = eqs.free_symbols
>>> mapping = dict(zip(free, disambiguate(*free)))
>>> eqs.xreplace(mapping)
(x_1/y, x/y)
"""
new_iter = Tuple(*iter)
key = lambda x:tuple(sorted(x.assumptions0.items()))
syms = ordered(new_iter.free_symbols, keys=key)
mapping = {}
for s in syms:
mapping.setdefault(str(s).lstrip('_'), []).append(s)
reps = {}
for k in mapping:
# the first or only symbol doesn't get subscripted but make
# sure that it's a Symbol, not a Dummy
k0 = Symbol("%s" % (k), **mapping[k][0].assumptions0)
if k != k0:
reps[mapping[k][0]] = k0
# the others get subscripts (and are made into Symbols)
skip = 0
for i in range(1, len(mapping[k])):
while True:
name = "%s_%i" % (k, i + skip)
if name not in mapping:
break
skip += 1
ki = mapping[k][i]
reps[ki] = Symbol(name, **ki.assumptions0)
return new_iter.xreplace(reps)
|
68b93109e5ff3ac86e01c8a07edfab8f9fe537ec53a0a9b21dc4559e4311448c
|
"""
Reimplementations of constructs introduced in later versions of Python than
we support. Also some functions that are needed SymPy-wide and are located
here for easy import.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import operator
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy.external import import_module
"""
Python 2 and Python 3 compatible imports
String and Unicode compatible changes:
* `unicode()` removed in Python 3, import `unicode` for Python 2/3
compatible function
* `unichr()` removed in Python 3, import `unichr` for Python 2/3 compatible
function
* Use `u()` for escaped unicode sequences (e.g. u'\u2020' -> u('\u2020'))
* Use `u_decode()` to decode utf-8 formatted unicode strings
* `string_types` gives str in Python 3, unicode and str in Python 2,
equivalent to basestring
Integer related changes:
* `long()` removed in Python 3, import `long` for Python 2/3 compatible
function
* `integer_types` gives int in Python 3, int and long in Python 2
Types related changes:
* `class_types` gives type in Python 3, type and ClassType in Python 2
Renamed function attributes:
* Python 2 `.func_code`, Python 3 `.__func__`, access with
`get_function_code()`
* Python 2 `.func_globals`, Python 3 `.__globals__`, access with
`get_function_globals()`
* Python 2 `.func_name`, Python 3 `.__name__`, access with
`get_function_name()`
Moved modules:
* `reduce()`
* `StringIO()`
* `cStringIO()` (same as `StingIO()` in Python 3)
* Python 2 `__builtins__`, access with Python 3 name, `builtins`
Iterator/list changes:
* `xrange` renamed as `range` in Python 3, import `range` for Python 2/3
compatible iterator version of range.
exec:
* Use `exec_()`, with parameters `exec_(code, globs=None, locs=None)`
Metaclasses:
* Use `with_metaclass()`, examples below
* Define class `Foo` with metaclass `Meta`, and no parent:
class Foo(with_metaclass(Meta)):
pass
* Define class `Foo` with metaclass `Meta` and parent class `Bar`:
class Foo(with_metaclass(Meta, Bar)):
pass
"""
import sys
PY3 = sys.version_info[0] > 2
if PY3:
class_types = type,
integer_types = (int,)
string_types = (str,)
long = int
int_info = sys.int_info
# String / unicode compatibility
unicode = str
unichr = chr
def u_decode(x):
return x
Iterator = object
# Moved definitions
get_function_code = operator.attrgetter("__code__")
get_function_globals = operator.attrgetter("__globals__")
get_function_name = operator.attrgetter("__name__")
import builtins
from functools import reduce
from io import StringIO
cStringIO = StringIO
exec_=getattr(builtins, "exec")
range=range
from collections.abc import (Mapping, Callable, MutableMapping,
MutableSet, Iterable, Hashable)
from inspect import unwrap
from itertools import accumulate
else:
import codecs
import types
class_types = (type, types.ClassType)
integer_types = (int, long)
string_types = (str, unicode)
long = long
int_info = sys.long_info
# String / unicode compatibility
unicode = unicode
unichr = unichr
def u_decode(x):
return x.decode('utf-8')
class Iterator(object):
def next(self):
return type(self).__next__(self)
# Moved definitions
get_function_code = operator.attrgetter("func_code")
get_function_globals = operator.attrgetter("func_globals")
get_function_name = operator.attrgetter("func_name")
import __builtin__ as builtins
reduce = reduce
from StringIO import StringIO
from cStringIO import StringIO as cStringIO
def exec_(_code_, _globs_=None, _locs_=None):
"""Execute code in a namespace."""
if _globs_ is None:
frame = sys._getframe(1)
_globs_ = frame.f_globals
if _locs_ is None:
_locs_ = frame.f_locals
del frame
elif _locs_ is None:
_locs_ = _globs_
exec("exec _code_ in _globs_, _locs_")
range=xrange
from collections import (Mapping, Callable, MutableMapping,
MutableSet, Iterable, Hashable)
def unwrap(func, stop=None):
"""Get the object wrapped by *func*.
Follows the chain of :attr:`__wrapped__` attributes returning the last
object in the chain.
*stop* is an optional callback accepting an object in the wrapper chain
as its sole argument that allows the unwrapping to be terminated early if
the callback returns a true value. If the callback never returns a true
value, the last object in the chain is returned as usual. For example,
:func:`signature` uses this to stop unwrapping if any object in the
chain has a ``__signature__`` attribute defined.
:exc:`ValueError` is raised if a cycle is encountered.
"""
if stop is None:
def _is_wrapper(f):
return hasattr(f, '__wrapped__')
else:
def _is_wrapper(f):
return hasattr(f, '__wrapped__') and not stop(f)
f = func # remember the original func for error reporting
memo = {id(f)} # Memoise by id to tolerate non-hashable objects
while _is_wrapper(func):
func = func.__wrapped__
id_func = id(func)
if id_func in memo:
raise ValueError('wrapper loop when unwrapping {!r}'.format(f))
memo.add(id_func)
return func
def accumulate(iterable, func=operator.add):
state = iterable[0]
yield state
for i in iterable[1:]:
state = func(state, i)
yield state
def with_metaclass(meta, *bases):
"""
Create a base class with a metaclass.
For example, if you have the metaclass
>>> class Meta(type):
... pass
Use this as the metaclass by doing
>>> from sympy.core.compatibility import with_metaclass
>>> class MyClass(with_metaclass(Meta, object)):
... pass
This is equivalent to the Python 2::
class MyClass(object):
__metaclass__ = Meta
or Python 3::
class MyClass(object, metaclass=Meta):
pass
That is, the first argument is the metaclass, and the remaining arguments
are the base classes. Note that if the base class is just ``object``, you
may omit it.
>>> MyClass.__mro__
(<class 'MyClass'>, <... 'object'>)
>>> type(MyClass)
<class 'Meta'>
"""
# This requires a bit of explanation: the basic idea is to make a dummy
# metaclass for one level of class instantiation that replaces itself with
# the actual metaclass.
# Code copied from the 'six' library.
class metaclass(meta):
def __new__(cls, name, this_bases, d):
return meta(name, bases, d)
return type.__new__(metaclass, "NewBase", (), {})
# These are in here because telling if something is an iterable just by calling
# hasattr(obj, "__iter__") behaves differently in Python 2 and Python 3. In
# particular, hasattr(str, "__iter__") is False in Python 2 and True in Python 3.
# I think putting them here also makes it easier to use them in the core.
class NotIterable:
"""
Use this as mixin when creating a class which is not supposed to return
true when iterable() is called on its instances. I.e. avoid infinite loop
when calling e.g. list() on the instance
"""
pass
def iterable(i, exclude=(string_types, dict, NotIterable)):
"""
Return a boolean indicating whether ``i`` is SymPy iterable.
True also indicates that the iterator is finite, i.e. you e.g.
call list(...) on the instance.
When SymPy is working with iterables, it is almost always assuming
that the iterable is not a string or a mapping, so those are excluded
by default. If you want a pure Python definition, make exclude=None. To
exclude multiple items, pass them as a tuple.
You can also set the _iterable attribute to True or False on your class,
which will override the checks here, including the exclude test.
As a rule of thumb, some SymPy functions use this to check if they should
recursively map over an object. If an object is technically iterable in
the Python sense but does not desire this behavior (e.g., because its
iteration is not finite, or because iteration might induce an unwanted
computation), it should disable it by setting the _iterable attribute to False.
See also: is_sequence
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import iterable
>>> from sympy import Tuple
>>> things = [[1], (1,), set([1]), Tuple(1), (j for j in [1, 2]), {1:2}, '1', 1]
>>> for i in things:
... print('%s %s' % (iterable(i), type(i)))
True <... 'list'>
True <... 'tuple'>
True <... 'set'>
True <class 'sympy.core.containers.Tuple'>
True <... 'generator'>
False <... 'dict'>
False <... 'str'>
False <... 'int'>
>>> iterable({}, exclude=None)
True
>>> iterable({}, exclude=str)
True
>>> iterable("no", exclude=str)
False
"""
if hasattr(i, '_iterable'):
return i._iterable
try:
iter(i)
except TypeError:
return False
if exclude:
return not isinstance(i, exclude)
return True
def is_sequence(i, include=None):
"""
Return a boolean indicating whether ``i`` is a sequence in the SymPy
sense. If anything that fails the test below should be included as
being a sequence for your application, set 'include' to that object's
type; multiple types should be passed as a tuple of types.
Note: although generators can generate a sequence, they often need special
handling to make sure their elements are captured before the generator is
exhausted, so these are not included by default in the definition of a
sequence.
See also: iterable
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import is_sequence
>>> from types import GeneratorType
>>> is_sequence([])
True
>>> is_sequence(set())
False
>>> is_sequence('abc')
False
>>> is_sequence('abc', include=str)
True
>>> generator = (c for c in 'abc')
>>> is_sequence(generator)
False
>>> is_sequence(generator, include=(str, GeneratorType))
True
"""
return (hasattr(i, '__getitem__') and
iterable(i) or
bool(include) and
isinstance(i, include))
try:
from itertools import zip_longest
except ImportError: # Python 2.7
from itertools import izip_longest as zip_longest
try:
# Python 2.7
from string import maketrans
except ImportError:
maketrans = str.maketrans
def as_int(n):
"""
Convert the argument to a builtin integer.
The return value is guaranteed to be equal to the input. ValueError is
raised if the input has a non-integral value.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> 3.0
3.0
>>> as_int(3.0) # convert to int and test for equality
3
>>> int(sqrt(10))
3
>>> as_int(sqrt(10))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: ... is not an integer
"""
try:
result = int(n)
if result != n:
raise TypeError
except TypeError:
raise ValueError('%s is not an integer' % (n,))
return result
def default_sort_key(item, order=None):
"""Return a key that can be used for sorting.
The key has the structure:
(class_key, (len(args), args), exponent.sort_key(), coefficient)
This key is supplied by the sort_key routine of Basic objects when
``item`` is a Basic object or an object (other than a string) that
sympifies to a Basic object. Otherwise, this function produces the
key.
The ``order`` argument is passed along to the sort_key routine and is
used to determine how the terms *within* an expression are ordered.
(See examples below) ``order`` options are: 'lex', 'grlex', 'grevlex',
and reversed values of the same (e.g. 'rev-lex'). The default order
value is None (which translates to 'lex').
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S, I, default_sort_key, sin, cos, sqrt
>>> from sympy.core.function import UndefinedFunction
>>> from sympy.abc import x
The following are equivalent ways of getting the key for an object:
>>> x.sort_key() == default_sort_key(x)
True
Here are some examples of the key that is produced:
>>> default_sort_key(UndefinedFunction('f'))
((0, 0, 'UndefinedFunction'), (1, ('f',)), ((1, 0, 'Number'),
(0, ()), (), 1), 1)
>>> default_sort_key('1')
((0, 0, 'str'), (1, ('1',)), ((1, 0, 'Number'), (0, ()), (), 1), 1)
>>> default_sort_key(S.One)
((1, 0, 'Number'), (0, ()), (), 1)
>>> default_sort_key(2)
((1, 0, 'Number'), (0, ()), (), 2)
While sort_key is a method only defined for SymPy objects,
default_sort_key will accept anything as an argument so it is
more robust as a sorting key. For the following, using key=
lambda i: i.sort_key() would fail because 2 doesn't have a sort_key
method; that's why default_sort_key is used. Note, that it also
handles sympification of non-string items likes ints:
>>> a = [2, I, -I]
>>> sorted(a, key=default_sort_key)
[2, -I, I]
The returned key can be used anywhere that a key can be specified for
a function, e.g. sort, min, max, etc...:
>>> a.sort(key=default_sort_key); a[0]
2
>>> min(a, key=default_sort_key)
2
Note
----
The key returned is useful for getting items into a canonical order
that will be the same across platforms. It is not directly useful for
sorting lists of expressions:
>>> a, b = x, 1/x
Since ``a`` has only 1 term, its value of sort_key is unaffected by
``order``:
>>> a.sort_key() == a.sort_key('rev-lex')
True
If ``a`` and ``b`` are combined then the key will differ because there
are terms that can be ordered:
>>> eq = a + b
>>> eq.sort_key() == eq.sort_key('rev-lex')
False
>>> eq.as_ordered_terms()
[x, 1/x]
>>> eq.as_ordered_terms('rev-lex')
[1/x, x]
But since the keys for each of these terms are independent of ``order``'s
value, they don't sort differently when they appear separately in a list:
>>> sorted(eq.args, key=default_sort_key)
[1/x, x]
>>> sorted(eq.args, key=lambda i: default_sort_key(i, order='rev-lex'))
[1/x, x]
The order of terms obtained when using these keys is the order that would
be obtained if those terms were *factors* in a product.
Although it is useful for quickly putting expressions in canonical order,
it does not sort expressions based on their complexity defined by the
number of operations, power of variables and others:
>>> sorted([sin(x)*cos(x), sin(x)], key=default_sort_key)
[sin(x)*cos(x), sin(x)]
>>> sorted([x, x**2, sqrt(x), x**3], key=default_sort_key)
[sqrt(x), x, x**2, x**3]
See Also
========
ordered, sympy.core.expr.as_ordered_factors, sympy.core.expr.as_ordered_terms
"""
from .singleton import S
from .basic import Basic
from .sympify import sympify, SympifyError
from .compatibility import iterable
if isinstance(item, Basic):
return item.sort_key(order=order)
if iterable(item, exclude=string_types):
if isinstance(item, dict):
args = item.items()
unordered = True
elif isinstance(item, set):
args = item
unordered = True
else:
# e.g. tuple, list
args = list(item)
unordered = False
args = [default_sort_key(arg, order=order) for arg in args]
if unordered:
# e.g. dict, set
args = sorted(args)
cls_index, args = 10, (len(args), tuple(args))
else:
if not isinstance(item, string_types):
try:
item = sympify(item)
except SympifyError:
# e.g. lambda x: x
pass
else:
if isinstance(item, Basic):
# e.g int -> Integer
return default_sort_key(item)
# e.g. UndefinedFunction
# e.g. str
cls_index, args = 0, (1, (str(item),))
return (cls_index, 0, item.__class__.__name__
), args, S.One.sort_key(), S.One
def _nodes(e):
"""
A helper for ordered() which returns the node count of ``e`` which
for Basic objects is the number of Basic nodes in the expression tree
but for other objects is 1 (unless the object is an iterable or dict
for which the sum of nodes is returned).
"""
from .basic import Basic
if isinstance(e, Basic):
return e.count(Basic)
elif iterable(e):
return 1 + sum(_nodes(ei) for ei in e)
elif isinstance(e, dict):
return 1 + sum(_nodes(k) + _nodes(v) for k, v in e.items())
else:
return 1
def ordered(seq, keys=None, default=True, warn=False):
"""Return an iterator of the seq where keys are used to break ties in
a conservative fashion: if, after applying a key, there are no ties
then no other keys will be computed.
Two default keys will be applied if 1) keys are not provided or 2) the
given keys don't resolve all ties (but only if `default` is True). The
two keys are `_nodes` (which places smaller expressions before large) and
`default_sort_key` which (if the `sort_key` for an object is defined
properly) should resolve any ties.
If ``warn`` is True then an error will be raised if there were no
keys remaining to break ties. This can be used if it was expected that
there should be no ties between items that are not identical.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.utilities.iterables import ordered
>>> from sympy import count_ops
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
The count_ops is not sufficient to break ties in this list and the first
two items appear in their original order (i.e. the sorting is stable):
>>> list(ordered([y + 2, x + 2, x**2 + y + 3],
... count_ops, default=False, warn=False))
...
[y + 2, x + 2, x**2 + y + 3]
The default_sort_key allows the tie to be broken:
>>> list(ordered([y + 2, x + 2, x**2 + y + 3]))
...
[x + 2, y + 2, x**2 + y + 3]
Here, sequences are sorted by length, then sum:
>>> seq, keys = [[[1, 2, 1], [0, 3, 1], [1, 1, 3], [2], [1]], [
... lambda x: len(x),
... lambda x: sum(x)]]
...
>>> list(ordered(seq, keys, default=False, warn=False))
[[1], [2], [1, 2, 1], [0, 3, 1], [1, 1, 3]]
If ``warn`` is True, an error will be raised if there were not
enough keys to break ties:
>>> list(ordered(seq, keys, default=False, warn=True))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: not enough keys to break ties
Notes
=====
The decorated sort is one of the fastest ways to sort a sequence for
which special item comparison is desired: the sequence is decorated,
sorted on the basis of the decoration (e.g. making all letters lower
case) and then undecorated. If one wants to break ties for items that
have the same decorated value, a second key can be used. But if the
second key is expensive to compute then it is inefficient to decorate
all items with both keys: only those items having identical first key
values need to be decorated. This function applies keys successively
only when needed to break ties. By yielding an iterator, use of the
tie-breaker is delayed as long as possible.
This function is best used in cases when use of the first key is
expected to be a good hashing function; if there are no unique hashes
from application of a key then that key should not have been used. The
exception, however, is that even if there are many collisions, if the
first group is small and one does not need to process all items in the
list then time will not be wasted sorting what one was not interested
in. For example, if one were looking for the minimum in a list and
there were several criteria used to define the sort order, then this
function would be good at returning that quickly if the first group
of candidates is small relative to the number of items being processed.
"""
d = defaultdict(list)
if keys:
if not isinstance(keys, (list, tuple)):
keys = [keys]
keys = list(keys)
f = keys.pop(0)
for a in seq:
d[f(a)].append(a)
else:
if not default:
raise ValueError('if default=False then keys must be provided')
d[None].extend(seq)
for k in sorted(d.keys()):
if len(d[k]) > 1:
if keys:
d[k] = ordered(d[k], keys, default, warn)
elif default:
d[k] = ordered(d[k], (_nodes, default_sort_key,),
default=False, warn=warn)
elif warn:
from sympy.utilities.iterables import uniq
u = list(uniq(d[k]))
if len(u) > 1:
raise ValueError(
'not enough keys to break ties: %s' % u)
for v in d[k]:
yield v
d.pop(k)
# If HAS_GMPY is 0, no supported version of gmpy is available. Otherwise,
# HAS_GMPY contains the major version number of gmpy; i.e. 1 for gmpy, and
# 2 for gmpy2.
# Versions of gmpy prior to 1.03 do not work correctly with int(largempz)
# For example, int(gmpy.mpz(2**256)) would raise OverflowError.
# See issue 4980.
# Minimum version of gmpy changed to 1.13 to allow a single code base to also
# work with gmpy2.
def _getenv(key, default=None):
from os import getenv
return getenv(key, default)
GROUND_TYPES = _getenv('SYMPY_GROUND_TYPES', 'auto').lower()
HAS_GMPY = 0
if GROUND_TYPES != 'python':
# Don't try to import gmpy2 if ground types is set to gmpy1. This is
# primarily intended for testing.
if GROUND_TYPES != 'gmpy1':
gmpy = import_module('gmpy2', min_module_version='2.0.0',
module_version_attr='version', module_version_attr_call_args=())
if gmpy:
HAS_GMPY = 2
else:
GROUND_TYPES = 'gmpy'
if not HAS_GMPY:
gmpy = import_module('gmpy', min_module_version='1.13',
module_version_attr='version', module_version_attr_call_args=())
if gmpy:
HAS_GMPY = 1
if GROUND_TYPES == 'auto':
if HAS_GMPY:
GROUND_TYPES = 'gmpy'
else:
GROUND_TYPES = 'python'
if GROUND_TYPES == 'gmpy' and not HAS_GMPY:
from warnings import warn
warn("gmpy library is not installed, switching to 'python' ground types")
GROUND_TYPES = 'python'
# SYMPY_INTS is a tuple containing the base types for valid integer types.
SYMPY_INTS = integer_types
if GROUND_TYPES == 'gmpy':
SYMPY_INTS += (type(gmpy.mpz(0)),)
# lru_cache compatible with py2.7 copied directly from
# http://code.activestate.com/
# recipes/578078-py26-and-py30-backport-of-python-33s-lru-cache/
from collections import namedtuple
from functools import update_wrapper
from threading import RLock
_CacheInfo = namedtuple("CacheInfo", ["hits", "misses", "maxsize", "currsize"])
class _HashedSeq(list):
__slots__ = 'hashvalue'
def __init__(self, tup, hash=hash):
self[:] = tup
self.hashvalue = hash(tup)
def __hash__(self):
return self.hashvalue
def _make_key(args, kwds, typed,
kwd_mark = (object(),),
fasttypes = set((int, str, frozenset, type(None))),
sorted=sorted, tuple=tuple, type=type, len=len):
'Make a cache key from optionally typed positional and keyword arguments'
key = args
if kwds:
sorted_items = sorted(kwds.items())
key += kwd_mark
for item in sorted_items:
key += item
if typed:
key += tuple(type(v) for v in args)
if kwds:
key += tuple(type(v) for k, v in sorted_items)
elif len(key) == 1 and type(key[0]) in fasttypes:
return key[0]
return _HashedSeq(key)
def lru_cache(maxsize=100, typed=False):
"""Least-recently-used cache decorator.
If *maxsize* is set to None, the LRU features are disabled and the cache
can grow without bound.
If *typed* is True, arguments of different types will be cached separately.
For example, f(3.0) and f(3) will be treated as distinct calls with
distinct results.
Arguments to the cached function must be hashable.
View the cache statistics named tuple (hits, misses, maxsize, currsize) with
f.cache_info(). Clear the cache and statistics with f.cache_clear().
Access the underlying function with f.__wrapped__.
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cache_algorithms#Least_Recently_Used
"""
# Users should only access the lru_cache through its public API:
# cache_info, cache_clear, and f.__wrapped__
# The internals of the lru_cache are encapsulated for thread safety and
# to allow the implementation to change (including a possible C version).
def decorating_function(user_function):
cache = dict()
stats = [0, 0] # make statistics updateable non-locally
HITS, MISSES = 0, 1 # names for the stats fields
make_key = _make_key
cache_get = cache.get # bound method to lookup key or return None
_len = len # localize the global len() function
lock = RLock() # because linkedlist updates aren't threadsafe
root = [] # root of the circular doubly linked list
root[:] = [root, root, None, None] # initialize by pointing to self
nonlocal_root = [root] # make updateable non-locally
PREV, NEXT, KEY, RESULT = 0, 1, 2, 3 # names for the link fields
if maxsize == 0:
def wrapper(*args, **kwds):
# no caching, just do a statistics update after a successful call
result = user_function(*args, **kwds)
stats[MISSES] += 1
return result
elif maxsize is None:
def wrapper(*args, **kwds):
# simple caching without ordering or size limit
key = make_key(args, kwds, typed)
result = cache_get(key, root) # root used here as a unique not-found sentinel
if result is not root:
stats[HITS] += 1
return result
result = user_function(*args, **kwds)
cache[key] = result
stats[MISSES] += 1
return result
else:
def wrapper(*args, **kwds):
# size limited caching that tracks accesses by recency
try:
key = make_key(args, kwds, typed) if kwds or typed else args
except TypeError:
stats[MISSES] += 1
return user_function(*args, **kwds)
with lock:
link = cache_get(key)
if link is not None:
# record recent use of the key by moving it to the front of the list
root, = nonlocal_root
link_prev, link_next, key, result = link
link_prev[NEXT] = link_next
link_next[PREV] = link_prev
last = root[PREV]
last[NEXT] = root[PREV] = link
link[PREV] = last
link[NEXT] = root
stats[HITS] += 1
return result
result = user_function(*args, **kwds)
with lock:
root, = nonlocal_root
if key in cache:
# getting here means that this same key was added to the
# cache while the lock was released. since the link
# update is already done, we need only return the
# computed result and update the count of misses.
pass
elif _len(cache) >= maxsize:
# use the old root to store the new key and result
oldroot = root
oldroot[KEY] = key
oldroot[RESULT] = result
# empty the oldest link and make it the new root
root = nonlocal_root[0] = oldroot[NEXT]
oldkey = root[KEY]
oldvalue = root[RESULT]
root[KEY] = root[RESULT] = None
# now update the cache dictionary for the new links
del cache[oldkey]
cache[key] = oldroot
else:
# put result in a new link at the front of the list
last = root[PREV]
link = [last, root, key, result]
last[NEXT] = root[PREV] = cache[key] = link
stats[MISSES] += 1
return result
def cache_info():
"""Report cache statistics"""
with lock:
return _CacheInfo(stats[HITS], stats[MISSES], maxsize, len(cache))
def cache_clear():
"""Clear the cache and cache statistics"""
with lock:
cache.clear()
root = nonlocal_root[0]
root[:] = [root, root, None, None]
stats[:] = [0, 0]
wrapper.__wrapped__ = user_function
wrapper.cache_info = cache_info
wrapper.cache_clear = cache_clear
return update_wrapper(wrapper, user_function)
return decorating_function
### End of backported lru_cache
if sys.version_info[:2] >= (3, 3):
# 3.2 has an lru_cache with an incompatible API
from functools import lru_cache
try:
from itertools import filterfalse
except ImportError: # Python 2.7
def filterfalse(pred, itr):
return filter(lambda x: not pred(x), itr)
|
58cb77b0feaffafe7c1a0354e5c3e4e19bcdb9dafca2ff4329f3768eccd4335a
|
"""
Adaptive numerical evaluation of SymPy expressions, using mpmath
for mathematical functions.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
import math
import mpmath.libmp as libmp
from mpmath import (
make_mpc, make_mpf, mp, mpc, mpf, nsum, quadts, quadosc, workprec)
from mpmath import inf as mpmath_inf
from mpmath.libmp import (from_int, from_man_exp, from_rational, fhalf,
fnan, fnone, fone, fzero, mpf_abs, mpf_add,
mpf_atan, mpf_atan2, mpf_cmp, mpf_cos, mpf_e, mpf_exp, mpf_log, mpf_lt,
mpf_mul, mpf_neg, mpf_pi, mpf_pow, mpf_pow_int, mpf_shift, mpf_sin,
mpf_sqrt, normalize, round_nearest, to_int, to_str)
from mpmath.libmp import bitcount as mpmath_bitcount
from mpmath.libmp.backend import MPZ
from mpmath.libmp.libmpc import _infs_nan
from mpmath.libmp.libmpf import dps_to_prec, prec_to_dps
from mpmath.libmp.gammazeta import mpf_bernoulli
from .compatibility import SYMPY_INTS, range
from .sympify import sympify
from .singleton import S
from sympy.utilities.iterables import is_sequence
LG10 = math.log(10, 2)
rnd = round_nearest
def bitcount(n):
"""Return smallest integer, b, such that |n|/2**b < 1.
"""
return mpmath_bitcount(abs(int(n)))
# Used in a few places as placeholder values to denote exponents and
# precision levels, e.g. of exact numbers. Must be careful to avoid
# passing these to mpmath functions or returning them in final results.
INF = float(mpmath_inf)
MINUS_INF = float(-mpmath_inf)
# ~= 100 digits. Real men set this to INF.
DEFAULT_MAXPREC = 333
class PrecisionExhausted(ArithmeticError):
pass
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
# #
# Helper functions for arithmetic and complex parts #
# #
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
"""
An mpf value tuple is a tuple of integers (sign, man, exp, bc)
representing a floating-point number: [1, -1][sign]*man*2**exp where
sign is 0 or 1 and bc should correspond to the number of bits used to
represent the mantissa (man) in binary notation, e.g.
>>> from sympy.core.evalf import bitcount
>>> sign, man, exp, bc = 0, 5, 1, 3
>>> n = [1, -1][sign]*man*2**exp
>>> n, bitcount(man)
(10, 3)
A temporary result is a tuple (re, im, re_acc, im_acc) where
re and im are nonzero mpf value tuples representing approximate
numbers, or None to denote exact zeros.
re_acc, im_acc are integers denoting log2(e) where e is the estimated
relative accuracy of the respective complex part, but may be anything
if the corresponding complex part is None.
"""
def fastlog(x):
"""Fast approximation of log2(x) for an mpf value tuple x.
Notes: Calculated as exponent + width of mantissa. This is an
approximation for two reasons: 1) it gives the ceil(log2(abs(x)))
value and 2) it is too high by 1 in the case that x is an exact
power of 2. Although this is easy to remedy by testing to see if
the odd mpf mantissa is 1 (indicating that one was dealing with
an exact power of 2) that would decrease the speed and is not
necessary as this is only being used as an approximation for the
number of bits in x. The correct return value could be written as
"x[2] + (x[3] if x[1] != 1 else 0)".
Since mpf tuples always have an odd mantissa, no check is done
to see if the mantissa is a multiple of 2 (in which case the
result would be too large by 1).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import log
>>> from sympy.core.evalf import fastlog, bitcount
>>> s, m, e = 0, 5, 1
>>> bc = bitcount(m)
>>> n = [1, -1][s]*m*2**e
>>> n, (log(n)/log(2)).evalf(2), fastlog((s, m, e, bc))
(10, 3.3, 4)
"""
if not x or x == fzero:
return MINUS_INF
return x[2] + x[3]
def pure_complex(v, or_real=False):
"""Return a and b if v matches a + I*b where b is not zero and
a and b are Numbers, else None. If `or_real` is True then 0 will
be returned for `b` if `v` is a real number.
>>> from sympy.core.evalf import pure_complex
>>> from sympy import sqrt, I, S
>>> a, b, surd = S(2), S(3), sqrt(2)
>>> pure_complex(a)
>>> pure_complex(a, or_real=True)
(2, 0)
>>> pure_complex(surd)
>>> pure_complex(a + b*I)
(2, 3)
>>> pure_complex(I)
(0, 1)
"""
h, t = v.as_coeff_Add()
if not t:
if or_real:
return h, t
return
c, i = t.as_coeff_Mul()
if i is S.ImaginaryUnit:
return h, c
def scaled_zero(mag, sign=1):
"""Return an mpf representing a power of two with magnitude ``mag``
and -1 for precision. Or, if ``mag`` is a scaled_zero tuple, then just
remove the sign from within the list that it was initially wrapped
in.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.evalf import scaled_zero
>>> from sympy import Float
>>> z, p = scaled_zero(100)
>>> z, p
(([0], 1, 100, 1), -1)
>>> ok = scaled_zero(z)
>>> ok
(0, 1, 100, 1)
>>> Float(ok)
1.26765060022823e+30
>>> Float(ok, p)
0.e+30
>>> ok, p = scaled_zero(100, -1)
>>> Float(scaled_zero(ok), p)
-0.e+30
"""
if type(mag) is tuple and len(mag) == 4 and iszero(mag, scaled=True):
return (mag[0][0],) + mag[1:]
elif isinstance(mag, SYMPY_INTS):
if sign not in [-1, 1]:
raise ValueError('sign must be +/-1')
rv, p = mpf_shift(fone, mag), -1
s = 0 if sign == 1 else 1
rv = ([s],) + rv[1:]
return rv, p
else:
raise ValueError('scaled zero expects int or scaled_zero tuple.')
def iszero(mpf, scaled=False):
if not scaled:
return not mpf or not mpf[1] and not mpf[-1]
return mpf and type(mpf[0]) is list and mpf[1] == mpf[-1] == 1
def complex_accuracy(result):
"""
Returns relative accuracy of a complex number with given accuracies
for the real and imaginary parts. The relative accuracy is defined
in the complex norm sense as ||z|+|error|| / |z| where error
is equal to (real absolute error) + (imag absolute error)*i.
The full expression for the (logarithmic) error can be approximated
easily by using the max norm to approximate the complex norm.
In the worst case (re and im equal), this is wrong by a factor
sqrt(2), or by log2(sqrt(2)) = 0.5 bit.
"""
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = result
if not im:
if not re:
return INF
return re_acc
if not re:
return im_acc
re_size = fastlog(re)
im_size = fastlog(im)
absolute_error = max(re_size - re_acc, im_size - im_acc)
relative_error = absolute_error - max(re_size, im_size)
return -relative_error
def get_abs(expr, prec, options):
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(expr, prec + 2, options)
if not re:
re, re_acc, im, im_acc = im, im_acc, re, re_acc
if im:
if expr.is_number:
abs_expr, _, acc, _ = evalf(abs(N(expr, prec + 2)),
prec + 2, options)
return abs_expr, None, acc, None
else:
if 'subs' in options:
return libmp.mpc_abs((re, im), prec), None, re_acc, None
return abs(expr), None, prec, None
elif re:
return mpf_abs(re), None, re_acc, None
else:
return None, None, None, None
def get_complex_part(expr, no, prec, options):
"""no = 0 for real part, no = 1 for imaginary part"""
workprec = prec
i = 0
while 1:
res = evalf(expr, workprec, options)
value, accuracy = res[no::2]
# XXX is the last one correct? Consider re((1+I)**2).n()
if (not value) or accuracy >= prec or -value[2] > prec:
return value, None, accuracy, None
workprec += max(30, 2**i)
i += 1
def evalf_abs(expr, prec, options):
return get_abs(expr.args[0], prec, options)
def evalf_re(expr, prec, options):
return get_complex_part(expr.args[0], 0, prec, options)
def evalf_im(expr, prec, options):
return get_complex_part(expr.args[0], 1, prec, options)
def finalize_complex(re, im, prec):
if re == fzero and im == fzero:
raise ValueError("got complex zero with unknown accuracy")
elif re == fzero:
return None, im, None, prec
elif im == fzero:
return re, None, prec, None
size_re = fastlog(re)
size_im = fastlog(im)
if size_re > size_im:
re_acc = prec
im_acc = prec + min(-(size_re - size_im), 0)
else:
im_acc = prec
re_acc = prec + min(-(size_im - size_re), 0)
return re, im, re_acc, im_acc
def chop_parts(value, prec):
"""
Chop off tiny real or complex parts.
"""
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = value
# Method 1: chop based on absolute value
if re and re not in _infs_nan and (fastlog(re) < -prec + 4):
re, re_acc = None, None
if im and im not in _infs_nan and (fastlog(im) < -prec + 4):
im, im_acc = None, None
# Method 2: chop if inaccurate and relatively small
if re and im:
delta = fastlog(re) - fastlog(im)
if re_acc < 2 and (delta - re_acc <= -prec + 4):
re, re_acc = None, None
if im_acc < 2 and (delta - im_acc >= prec - 4):
im, im_acc = None, None
return re, im, re_acc, im_acc
def check_target(expr, result, prec):
a = complex_accuracy(result)
if a < prec:
raise PrecisionExhausted("Failed to distinguish the expression: \n\n%s\n\n"
"from zero. Try simplifying the input, using chop=True, or providing "
"a higher maxn for evalf" % (expr))
def get_integer_part(expr, no, options, return_ints=False):
"""
With no = 1, computes ceiling(expr)
With no = -1, computes floor(expr)
Note: this function either gives the exact result or signals failure.
"""
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import re, im
# The expression is likely less than 2^30 or so
assumed_size = 30
ire, iim, ire_acc, iim_acc = evalf(expr, assumed_size, options)
# We now know the size, so we can calculate how much extra precision
# (if any) is needed to get within the nearest integer
if ire and iim:
gap = max(fastlog(ire) - ire_acc, fastlog(iim) - iim_acc)
elif ire:
gap = fastlog(ire) - ire_acc
elif iim:
gap = fastlog(iim) - iim_acc
else:
# ... or maybe the expression was exactly zero
return None, None, None, None
margin = 10
if gap >= -margin:
prec = margin + assumed_size + gap
ire, iim, ire_acc, iim_acc = evalf(
expr, prec, options)
else:
prec = assumed_size
# We can now easily find the nearest integer, but to find floor/ceil, we
# must also calculate whether the difference to the nearest integer is
# positive or negative (which may fail if very close).
def calc_part(re_im, nexpr):
from sympy.core.add import Add
n, c, p, b = nexpr
is_int = (p == 0)
nint = int(to_int(nexpr, rnd))
if is_int:
# make sure that we had enough precision to distinguish
# between nint and the re or im part (re_im) of expr that
# was passed to calc_part
ire, iim, ire_acc, iim_acc = evalf(
re_im - nint, 10, options) # don't need much precision
assert not iim
size = -fastlog(ire) + 2 # -ve b/c ire is less than 1
if size > prec:
ire, iim, ire_acc, iim_acc = evalf(
re_im, size, options)
assert not iim
nexpr = ire
n, c, p, b = nexpr
is_int = (p == 0)
nint = int(to_int(nexpr, rnd))
if not is_int:
# if there are subs and they all contain integer re/im parts
# then we can (hopefully) safely substitute them into the
# expression
s = options.get('subs', False)
if s:
doit = True
from sympy.core.compatibility import as_int
for v in s.values():
try:
as_int(v)
except ValueError:
try:
[as_int(i) for i in v.as_real_imag()]
continue
except (ValueError, AttributeError):
doit = False
break
if doit:
re_im = re_im.subs(s)
re_im = Add(re_im, -nint, evaluate=False)
x, _, x_acc, _ = evalf(re_im, 10, options)
try:
check_target(re_im, (x, None, x_acc, None), 3)
except PrecisionExhausted:
if not re_im.equals(0):
raise PrecisionExhausted
x = fzero
nint += int(no*(mpf_cmp(x or fzero, fzero) == no))
nint = from_int(nint)
return nint, INF
re_, im_, re_acc, im_acc = None, None, None, None
if ire:
re_, re_acc = calc_part(re(expr, evaluate=False), ire)
if iim:
im_, im_acc = calc_part(im(expr, evaluate=False), iim)
if return_ints:
return int(to_int(re_ or fzero)), int(to_int(im_ or fzero))
return re_, im_, re_acc, im_acc
def evalf_ceiling(expr, prec, options):
return get_integer_part(expr.args[0], 1, options)
def evalf_floor(expr, prec, options):
return get_integer_part(expr.args[0], -1, options)
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
# #
# Arithmetic operations #
# #
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
def add_terms(terms, prec, target_prec):
"""
Helper for evalf_add. Adds a list of (mpfval, accuracy) terms.
Returns
-------
- None, None if there are no non-zero terms;
- terms[0] if there is only 1 term;
- scaled_zero if the sum of the terms produces a zero by cancellation
e.g. mpfs representing 1 and -1 would produce a scaled zero which need
special handling since they are not actually zero and they are purposely
malformed to ensure that they can't be used in anything but accuracy
calculations;
- a tuple that is scaled to target_prec that corresponds to the
sum of the terms.
The returned mpf tuple will be normalized to target_prec; the input
prec is used to define the working precision.
XXX explain why this is needed and why one can't just loop using mpf_add
"""
terms = [t for t in terms if not iszero(t[0])]
if not terms:
return None, None
elif len(terms) == 1:
return terms[0]
# see if any argument is NaN or oo and thus warrants a special return
special = []
from sympy.core.numbers import Float
for t in terms:
arg = Float._new(t[0], 1)
if arg is S.NaN or arg.is_infinite:
special.append(arg)
if special:
from sympy.core.add import Add
rv = evalf(Add(*special), prec + 4, {})
return rv[0], rv[2]
working_prec = 2*prec
sum_man, sum_exp, absolute_error = 0, 0, MINUS_INF
for x, accuracy in terms:
sign, man, exp, bc = x
if sign:
man = -man
absolute_error = max(absolute_error, bc + exp - accuracy)
delta = exp - sum_exp
if exp >= sum_exp:
# x much larger than existing sum?
# first: quick test
if ((delta > working_prec) and
((not sum_man) or
delta - bitcount(abs(sum_man)) > working_prec)):
sum_man = man
sum_exp = exp
else:
sum_man += (man << delta)
else:
delta = -delta
# x much smaller than existing sum?
if delta - bc > working_prec:
if not sum_man:
sum_man, sum_exp = man, exp
else:
sum_man = (sum_man << delta) + man
sum_exp = exp
if not sum_man:
return scaled_zero(absolute_error)
if sum_man < 0:
sum_sign = 1
sum_man = -sum_man
else:
sum_sign = 0
sum_bc = bitcount(sum_man)
sum_accuracy = sum_exp + sum_bc - absolute_error
r = normalize(sum_sign, sum_man, sum_exp, sum_bc, target_prec,
rnd), sum_accuracy
return r
def evalf_add(v, prec, options):
res = pure_complex(v)
if res:
h, c = res
re, _, re_acc, _ = evalf(h, prec, options)
im, _, im_acc, _ = evalf(c, prec, options)
return re, im, re_acc, im_acc
oldmaxprec = options.get('maxprec', DEFAULT_MAXPREC)
i = 0
target_prec = prec
while 1:
options['maxprec'] = min(oldmaxprec, 2*prec)
terms = [evalf(arg, prec + 10, options) for arg in v.args]
re, re_acc = add_terms(
[a[0::2] for a in terms if a[0]], prec, target_prec)
im, im_acc = add_terms(
[a[1::2] for a in terms if a[1]], prec, target_prec)
acc = complex_accuracy((re, im, re_acc, im_acc))
if acc >= target_prec:
if options.get('verbose'):
print("ADD: wanted", target_prec, "accurate bits, got", re_acc, im_acc)
break
else:
if (prec - target_prec) > options['maxprec']:
break
prec = prec + max(10 + 2**i, target_prec - acc)
i += 1
if options.get('verbose'):
print("ADD: restarting with prec", prec)
options['maxprec'] = oldmaxprec
if iszero(re, scaled=True):
re = scaled_zero(re)
if iszero(im, scaled=True):
im = scaled_zero(im)
return re, im, re_acc, im_acc
def evalf_mul(v, prec, options):
res = pure_complex(v)
if res:
# the only pure complex that is a mul is h*I
_, h = res
im, _, im_acc, _ = evalf(h, prec, options)
return None, im, None, im_acc
args = list(v.args)
# see if any argument is NaN or oo and thus warrants a special return
special = []
from sympy.core.numbers import Float
for arg in args:
arg = evalf(arg, prec, options)
if arg[0] is None:
continue
arg = Float._new(arg[0], 1)
if arg is S.NaN or arg.is_infinite:
special.append(arg)
if special:
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
special = Mul(*special)
return evalf(special, prec + 4, {})
# With guard digits, multiplication in the real case does not destroy
# accuracy. This is also true in the complex case when considering the
# total accuracy; however accuracy for the real or imaginary parts
# separately may be lower.
acc = prec
# XXX: big overestimate
working_prec = prec + len(args) + 5
# Empty product is 1
start = man, exp, bc = MPZ(1), 0, 1
# First, we multiply all pure real or pure imaginary numbers.
# direction tells us that the result should be multiplied by
# I**direction; all other numbers get put into complex_factors
# to be multiplied out after the first phase.
last = len(args)
direction = 0
args.append(S.One)
complex_factors = []
for i, arg in enumerate(args):
if i != last and pure_complex(arg):
args[-1] = (args[-1]*arg).expand()
continue
elif i == last and arg is S.One:
continue
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(arg, working_prec, options)
if re and im:
complex_factors.append((re, im, re_acc, im_acc))
continue
elif re:
(s, m, e, b), w_acc = re, re_acc
elif im:
(s, m, e, b), w_acc = im, im_acc
direction += 1
else:
return None, None, None, None
direction += 2*s
man *= m
exp += e
bc += b
if bc > 3*working_prec:
man >>= working_prec
exp += working_prec
acc = min(acc, w_acc)
sign = (direction & 2) >> 1
if not complex_factors:
v = normalize(sign, man, exp, bitcount(man), prec, rnd)
# multiply by i
if direction & 1:
return None, v, None, acc
else:
return v, None, acc, None
else:
# initialize with the first term
if (man, exp, bc) != start:
# there was a real part; give it an imaginary part
re, im = (sign, man, exp, bitcount(man)), (0, MPZ(0), 0, 0)
i0 = 0
else:
# there is no real part to start (other than the starting 1)
wre, wim, wre_acc, wim_acc = complex_factors[0]
acc = min(acc,
complex_accuracy((wre, wim, wre_acc, wim_acc)))
re = wre
im = wim
i0 = 1
for wre, wim, wre_acc, wim_acc in complex_factors[i0:]:
# acc is the overall accuracy of the product; we aren't
# computing exact accuracies of the product.
acc = min(acc,
complex_accuracy((wre, wim, wre_acc, wim_acc)))
use_prec = working_prec
A = mpf_mul(re, wre, use_prec)
B = mpf_mul(mpf_neg(im), wim, use_prec)
C = mpf_mul(re, wim, use_prec)
D = mpf_mul(im, wre, use_prec)
re = mpf_add(A, B, use_prec)
im = mpf_add(C, D, use_prec)
if options.get('verbose'):
print("MUL: wanted", prec, "accurate bits, got", acc)
# multiply by I
if direction & 1:
re, im = mpf_neg(im), re
return re, im, acc, acc
def evalf_pow(v, prec, options):
target_prec = prec
base, exp = v.args
# We handle x**n separately. This has two purposes: 1) it is much
# faster, because we avoid calling evalf on the exponent, and 2) it
# allows better handling of real/imaginary parts that are exactly zero
if exp.is_Integer:
p = exp.p
# Exact
if not p:
return fone, None, prec, None
# Exponentiation by p magnifies relative error by |p|, so the
# base must be evaluated with increased precision if p is large
prec += int(math.log(abs(p), 2))
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(base, prec + 5, options)
# Real to integer power
if re and not im:
return mpf_pow_int(re, p, target_prec), None, target_prec, None
# (x*I)**n = I**n * x**n
if im and not re:
z = mpf_pow_int(im, p, target_prec)
case = p % 4
if case == 0:
return z, None, target_prec, None
if case == 1:
return None, z, None, target_prec
if case == 2:
return mpf_neg(z), None, target_prec, None
if case == 3:
return None, mpf_neg(z), None, target_prec
# Zero raised to an integer power
if not re:
return None, None, None, None
# General complex number to arbitrary integer power
re, im = libmp.mpc_pow_int((re, im), p, prec)
# Assumes full accuracy in input
return finalize_complex(re, im, target_prec)
# Pure square root
if exp is S.Half:
xre, xim, _, _ = evalf(base, prec + 5, options)
# General complex square root
if xim:
re, im = libmp.mpc_sqrt((xre or fzero, xim), prec)
return finalize_complex(re, im, prec)
if not xre:
return None, None, None, None
# Square root of a negative real number
if mpf_lt(xre, fzero):
return None, mpf_sqrt(mpf_neg(xre), prec), None, prec
# Positive square root
return mpf_sqrt(xre, prec), None, prec, None
# We first evaluate the exponent to find its magnitude
# This determines the working precision that must be used
prec += 10
yre, yim, _, _ = evalf(exp, prec, options)
# Special cases: x**0
if not (yre or yim):
return fone, None, prec, None
ysize = fastlog(yre)
# Restart if too big
# XXX: prec + ysize might exceed maxprec
if ysize > 5:
prec += ysize
yre, yim, _, _ = evalf(exp, prec, options)
# Pure exponential function; no need to evalf the base
if base is S.Exp1:
if yim:
re, im = libmp.mpc_exp((yre or fzero, yim), prec)
return finalize_complex(re, im, target_prec)
return mpf_exp(yre, target_prec), None, target_prec, None
xre, xim, _, _ = evalf(base, prec + 5, options)
# 0**y
if not (xre or xim):
return None, None, None, None
# (real ** complex) or (complex ** complex)
if yim:
re, im = libmp.mpc_pow(
(xre or fzero, xim or fzero), (yre or fzero, yim),
target_prec)
return finalize_complex(re, im, target_prec)
# complex ** real
if xim:
re, im = libmp.mpc_pow_mpf((xre or fzero, xim), yre, target_prec)
return finalize_complex(re, im, target_prec)
# negative ** real
elif mpf_lt(xre, fzero):
re, im = libmp.mpc_pow_mpf((xre, fzero), yre, target_prec)
return finalize_complex(re, im, target_prec)
# positive ** real
else:
return mpf_pow(xre, yre, target_prec), None, target_prec, None
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
# #
# Special functions #
# #
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
def evalf_trig(v, prec, options):
"""
This function handles sin and cos of complex arguments.
TODO: should also handle tan of complex arguments.
"""
from sympy import cos, sin
if isinstance(v, cos):
func = mpf_cos
elif isinstance(v, sin):
func = mpf_sin
else:
raise NotImplementedError
arg = v.args[0]
# 20 extra bits is possibly overkill. It does make the need
# to restart very unlikely
xprec = prec + 20
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(arg, xprec, options)
if im:
if 'subs' in options:
v = v.subs(options['subs'])
return evalf(v._eval_evalf(prec), prec, options)
if not re:
if isinstance(v, cos):
return fone, None, prec, None
elif isinstance(v, sin):
return None, None, None, None
else:
raise NotImplementedError
# For trigonometric functions, we are interested in the
# fixed-point (absolute) accuracy of the argument.
xsize = fastlog(re)
# Magnitude <= 1.0. OK to compute directly, because there is no
# danger of hitting the first root of cos (with sin, magnitude
# <= 2.0 would actually be ok)
if xsize < 1:
return func(re, prec, rnd), None, prec, None
# Very large
if xsize >= 10:
xprec = prec + xsize
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(arg, xprec, options)
# Need to repeat in case the argument is very close to a
# multiple of pi (or pi/2), hitting close to a root
while 1:
y = func(re, prec, rnd)
ysize = fastlog(y)
gap = -ysize
accuracy = (xprec - xsize) - gap
if accuracy < prec:
if options.get('verbose'):
print("SIN/COS", accuracy, "wanted", prec, "gap", gap)
print(to_str(y, 10))
if xprec > options.get('maxprec', DEFAULT_MAXPREC):
return y, None, accuracy, None
xprec += gap
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(arg, xprec, options)
continue
else:
return y, None, prec, None
def evalf_log(expr, prec, options):
from sympy import Abs, Add, log
if len(expr.args)>1:
expr = expr.doit()
return evalf(expr, prec, options)
arg = expr.args[0]
workprec = prec + 10
xre, xim, xacc, _ = evalf(arg, workprec, options)
if xim:
# XXX: use get_abs etc instead
re = evalf_log(
log(Abs(arg, evaluate=False), evaluate=False), prec, options)
im = mpf_atan2(xim, xre or fzero, prec)
return re[0], im, re[2], prec
imaginary_term = (mpf_cmp(xre, fzero) < 0)
re = mpf_log(mpf_abs(xre), prec, rnd)
size = fastlog(re)
if prec - size > workprec and re != fzero:
# We actually need to compute 1+x accurately, not x
arg = Add(S.NegativeOne, arg, evaluate=False)
xre, xim, _, _ = evalf_add(arg, prec, options)
prec2 = workprec - fastlog(xre)
# xre is now x - 1 so we add 1 back here to calculate x
re = mpf_log(mpf_abs(mpf_add(xre, fone, prec2)), prec, rnd)
re_acc = prec
if imaginary_term:
return re, mpf_pi(prec), re_acc, prec
else:
return re, None, re_acc, None
def evalf_atan(v, prec, options):
arg = v.args[0]
xre, xim, reacc, imacc = evalf(arg, prec + 5, options)
if xre is xim is None:
return (None,)*4
if xim:
raise NotImplementedError
return mpf_atan(xre, prec, rnd), None, prec, None
def evalf_subs(prec, subs):
""" Change all Float entries in `subs` to have precision prec. """
newsubs = {}
for a, b in subs.items():
b = S(b)
if b.is_Float:
b = b._eval_evalf(prec)
newsubs[a] = b
return newsubs
def evalf_piecewise(expr, prec, options):
from sympy import Float, Integer
if 'subs' in options:
expr = expr.subs(evalf_subs(prec, options['subs']))
newopts = options.copy()
del newopts['subs']
if hasattr(expr, 'func'):
return evalf(expr, prec, newopts)
if type(expr) == float:
return evalf(Float(expr), prec, newopts)
if type(expr) == int:
return evalf(Integer(expr), prec, newopts)
# We still have undefined symbols
raise NotImplementedError
def evalf_bernoulli(expr, prec, options):
arg = expr.args[0]
if not arg.is_Integer:
raise ValueError("Bernoulli number index must be an integer")
n = int(arg)
b = mpf_bernoulli(n, prec, rnd)
if b == fzero:
return None, None, None, None
return b, None, prec, None
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
# #
# High-level operations #
# #
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
def as_mpmath(x, prec, options):
from sympy.core.numbers import Infinity, NegativeInfinity, Zero
x = sympify(x)
if isinstance(x, Zero) or x == 0:
return mpf(0)
if isinstance(x, Infinity):
return mpf('inf')
if isinstance(x, NegativeInfinity):
return mpf('-inf')
# XXX
re, im, _, _ = evalf(x, prec, options)
if im:
return mpc(re or fzero, im)
return mpf(re)
def do_integral(expr, prec, options):
func = expr.args[0]
x, xlow, xhigh = expr.args[1]
if xlow == xhigh:
xlow = xhigh = 0
elif x not in func.free_symbols:
# only the difference in limits matters in this case
# so if there is a symbol in common that will cancel
# out when taking the difference, then use that
# difference
if xhigh.free_symbols & xlow.free_symbols:
diff = xhigh - xlow
if not diff.free_symbols:
xlow, xhigh = 0, diff
oldmaxprec = options.get('maxprec', DEFAULT_MAXPREC)
options['maxprec'] = min(oldmaxprec, 2*prec)
with workprec(prec + 5):
xlow = as_mpmath(xlow, prec + 15, options)
xhigh = as_mpmath(xhigh, prec + 15, options)
# Integration is like summation, and we can phone home from
# the integrand function to update accuracy summation style
# Note that this accuracy is inaccurate, since it fails
# to account for the variable quadrature weights,
# but it is better than nothing
from sympy import cos, sin, Wild
have_part = [False, False]
max_real_term = [MINUS_INF]
max_imag_term = [MINUS_INF]
def f(t):
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(func, mp.prec, {'subs': {x: t}})
have_part[0] = re or have_part[0]
have_part[1] = im or have_part[1]
max_real_term[0] = max(max_real_term[0], fastlog(re))
max_imag_term[0] = max(max_imag_term[0], fastlog(im))
if im:
return mpc(re or fzero, im)
return mpf(re or fzero)
if options.get('quad') == 'osc':
A = Wild('A', exclude=[x])
B = Wild('B', exclude=[x])
D = Wild('D')
m = func.match(cos(A*x + B)*D)
if not m:
m = func.match(sin(A*x + B)*D)
if not m:
raise ValueError("An integrand of the form sin(A*x+B)*f(x) "
"or cos(A*x+B)*f(x) is required for oscillatory quadrature")
period = as_mpmath(2*S.Pi/m[A], prec + 15, options)
result = quadosc(f, [xlow, xhigh], period=period)
# XXX: quadosc does not do error detection yet
quadrature_error = MINUS_INF
else:
result, quadrature_error = quadts(f, [xlow, xhigh], error=1)
quadrature_error = fastlog(quadrature_error._mpf_)
options['maxprec'] = oldmaxprec
if have_part[0]:
re = result.real._mpf_
if re == fzero:
re, re_acc = scaled_zero(
min(-prec, -max_real_term[0], -quadrature_error))
re = scaled_zero(re) # handled ok in evalf_integral
else:
re_acc = -max(max_real_term[0] - fastlog(re) -
prec, quadrature_error)
else:
re, re_acc = None, None
if have_part[1]:
im = result.imag._mpf_
if im == fzero:
im, im_acc = scaled_zero(
min(-prec, -max_imag_term[0], -quadrature_error))
im = scaled_zero(im) # handled ok in evalf_integral
else:
im_acc = -max(max_imag_term[0] - fastlog(im) -
prec, quadrature_error)
else:
im, im_acc = None, None
result = re, im, re_acc, im_acc
return result
def evalf_integral(expr, prec, options):
limits = expr.limits
if len(limits) != 1 or len(limits[0]) != 3:
raise NotImplementedError
workprec = prec
i = 0
maxprec = options.get('maxprec', INF)
while 1:
result = do_integral(expr, workprec, options)
accuracy = complex_accuracy(result)
if accuracy >= prec: # achieved desired precision
break
if workprec >= maxprec: # can't increase accuracy any more
break
if accuracy == -1:
# maybe the answer really is zero and maybe we just haven't increased
# the precision enough. So increase by doubling to not take too long
# to get to maxprec.
workprec *= 2
else:
workprec += max(prec, 2**i)
workprec = min(workprec, maxprec)
i += 1
return result
def check_convergence(numer, denom, n):
"""
Returns (h, g, p) where
-- h is:
> 0 for convergence of rate 1/factorial(n)**h
< 0 for divergence of rate factorial(n)**(-h)
= 0 for geometric or polynomial convergence or divergence
-- abs(g) is:
> 1 for geometric convergence of rate 1/h**n
< 1 for geometric divergence of rate h**n
= 1 for polynomial convergence or divergence
(g < 0 indicates an alternating series)
-- p is:
> 1 for polynomial convergence of rate 1/n**h
<= 1 for polynomial divergence of rate n**(-h)
"""
from sympy import Poly
npol = Poly(numer, n)
dpol = Poly(denom, n)
p = npol.degree()
q = dpol.degree()
rate = q - p
if rate:
return rate, None, None
constant = dpol.LC() / npol.LC()
if abs(constant) != 1:
return rate, constant, None
if npol.degree() == dpol.degree() == 0:
return rate, constant, 0
pc = npol.all_coeffs()[1]
qc = dpol.all_coeffs()[1]
return rate, constant, (qc - pc)/dpol.LC()
def hypsum(expr, n, start, prec):
"""
Sum a rapidly convergent infinite hypergeometric series with
given general term, e.g. e = hypsum(1/factorial(n), n). The
quotient between successive terms must be a quotient of integer
polynomials.
"""
from sympy import Float, hypersimp, lambdify
if prec == float('inf'):
raise NotImplementedError('does not support inf prec')
if start:
expr = expr.subs(n, n + start)
hs = hypersimp(expr, n)
if hs is None:
raise NotImplementedError("a hypergeometric series is required")
num, den = hs.as_numer_denom()
func1 = lambdify(n, num)
func2 = lambdify(n, den)
h, g, p = check_convergence(num, den, n)
if h < 0:
raise ValueError("Sum diverges like (n!)^%i" % (-h))
term = expr.subs(n, 0)
if not term.is_Rational:
raise NotImplementedError("Non rational term functionality is not implemented.")
# Direct summation if geometric or faster
if h > 0 or (h == 0 and abs(g) > 1):
term = (MPZ(term.p) << prec) // term.q
s = term
k = 1
while abs(term) > 5:
term *= MPZ(func1(k - 1))
term //= MPZ(func2(k - 1))
s += term
k += 1
return from_man_exp(s, -prec)
else:
alt = g < 0
if abs(g) < 1:
raise ValueError("Sum diverges like (%i)^n" % abs(1/g))
if p < 1 or (p == 1 and not alt):
raise ValueError("Sum diverges like n^%i" % (-p))
# We have polynomial convergence: use Richardson extrapolation
vold = None
ndig = prec_to_dps(prec)
while True:
# Need to use at least quad precision because a lot of cancellation
# might occur in the extrapolation process; we check the answer to
# make sure that the desired precision has been reached, too.
prec2 = 4*prec
term0 = (MPZ(term.p) << prec2) // term.q
def summand(k, _term=[term0]):
if k:
k = int(k)
_term[0] *= MPZ(func1(k - 1))
_term[0] //= MPZ(func2(k - 1))
return make_mpf(from_man_exp(_term[0], -prec2))
with workprec(prec):
v = nsum(summand, [0, mpmath_inf], method='richardson')
vf = Float(v, ndig)
if vold is not None and vold == vf:
break
prec += prec # double precision each time
vold = vf
return v._mpf_
def evalf_prod(expr, prec, options):
from sympy import Sum
if all((l[1] - l[2]).is_Integer for l in expr.limits):
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(expr.doit(), prec=prec, options=options)
else:
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(expr.rewrite(Sum), prec=prec, options=options)
return re, im, re_acc, im_acc
def evalf_sum(expr, prec, options):
from sympy import Float
if 'subs' in options:
expr = expr.subs(options['subs'])
func = expr.function
limits = expr.limits
if len(limits) != 1 or len(limits[0]) != 3:
raise NotImplementedError
if func is S.Zero:
return mpf(0), None, None, None
prec2 = prec + 10
try:
n, a, b = limits[0]
if b != S.Infinity or a != int(a):
raise NotImplementedError
# Use fast hypergeometric summation if possible
v = hypsum(func, n, int(a), prec2)
delta = prec - fastlog(v)
if fastlog(v) < -10:
v = hypsum(func, n, int(a), delta)
return v, None, min(prec, delta), None
except NotImplementedError:
# Euler-Maclaurin summation for general series
eps = Float(2.0)**(-prec)
for i in range(1, 5):
m = n = 2**i * prec
s, err = expr.euler_maclaurin(m=m, n=n, eps=eps,
eval_integral=False)
err = err.evalf()
if err <= eps:
break
err = fastlog(evalf(abs(err), 20, options)[0])
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = evalf(s, prec2, options)
if re_acc is None:
re_acc = -err
if im_acc is None:
im_acc = -err
return re, im, re_acc, im_acc
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
# #
# Symbolic interface #
# #
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------#
def evalf_symbol(x, prec, options):
val = options['subs'][x]
if isinstance(val, mpf):
if not val:
return None, None, None, None
return val._mpf_, None, prec, None
else:
if not '_cache' in options:
options['_cache'] = {}
cache = options['_cache']
cached, cached_prec = cache.get(x, (None, MINUS_INF))
if cached_prec >= prec:
return cached
v = evalf(sympify(val), prec, options)
cache[x] = (v, prec)
return v
evalf_table = None
def _create_evalf_table():
global evalf_table
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.numbers import bernoulli
from sympy.concrete.products import Product
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
from sympy.core.add import Add
from sympy.core.mul import Mul
from sympy.core.numbers import Exp1, Float, Half, ImaginaryUnit, Integer, NaN, NegativeOne, One, Pi, Rational, Zero
from sympy.core.power import Pow
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy, Symbol
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import Abs, im, re
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import exp, log
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import ceiling, floor
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import atan, cos, sin
from sympy.integrals.integrals import Integral
evalf_table = {
Symbol: evalf_symbol,
Dummy: evalf_symbol,
Float: lambda x, prec, options: (x._mpf_, None, prec, None),
Rational: lambda x, prec, options: (from_rational(x.p, x.q, prec), None, prec, None),
Integer: lambda x, prec, options: (from_int(x.p, prec), None, prec, None),
Zero: lambda x, prec, options: (None, None, prec, None),
One: lambda x, prec, options: (fone, None, prec, None),
Half: lambda x, prec, options: (fhalf, None, prec, None),
Pi: lambda x, prec, options: (mpf_pi(prec), None, prec, None),
Exp1: lambda x, prec, options: (mpf_e(prec), None, prec, None),
ImaginaryUnit: lambda x, prec, options: (None, fone, None, prec),
NegativeOne: lambda x, prec, options: (fnone, None, prec, None),
NaN: lambda x, prec, options: (fnan, None, prec, None),
exp: lambda x, prec, options: evalf_pow(
Pow(S.Exp1, x.args[0], evaluate=False), prec, options),
cos: evalf_trig,
sin: evalf_trig,
Add: evalf_add,
Mul: evalf_mul,
Pow: evalf_pow,
log: evalf_log,
atan: evalf_atan,
Abs: evalf_abs,
re: evalf_re,
im: evalf_im,
floor: evalf_floor,
ceiling: evalf_ceiling,
Integral: evalf_integral,
Sum: evalf_sum,
Product: evalf_prod,
Piecewise: evalf_piecewise,
bernoulli: evalf_bernoulli,
}
def evalf(x, prec, options):
from sympy import re as re_, im as im_
try:
rf = evalf_table[x.func]
r = rf(x, prec, options)
except KeyError:
try:
# Fall back to ordinary evalf if possible
if 'subs' in options:
x = x.subs(evalf_subs(prec, options['subs']))
xe = x._eval_evalf(prec)
re, im = xe.as_real_imag()
if re.has(re_) or im.has(im_):
raise NotImplementedError
if re == 0:
re = None
reprec = None
elif re.is_number:
re = re._to_mpmath(prec, allow_ints=False)._mpf_
reprec = prec
else:
raise NotImplementedError
if im == 0:
im = None
imprec = None
elif im.is_number:
im = im._to_mpmath(prec, allow_ints=False)._mpf_
imprec = prec
else:
raise NotImplementedError
r = re, im, reprec, imprec
except AttributeError:
raise NotImplementedError
if options.get("verbose"):
print("### input", x)
print("### output", to_str(r[0] or fzero, 50))
print("### raw", r) # r[0], r[2]
print()
chop = options.get('chop', False)
if chop:
if chop is True:
chop_prec = prec
else:
# convert (approximately) from given tolerance;
# the formula here will will make 1e-i rounds to 0 for
# i in the range +/-27 while 2e-i will not be chopped
chop_prec = int(round(-3.321*math.log10(chop) + 2.5))
if chop_prec == 3:
chop_prec -= 1
r = chop_parts(r, chop_prec)
if options.get("strict"):
check_target(x, r, prec)
return r
class EvalfMixin(object):
"""Mixin class adding evalf capabililty."""
__slots__ = []
def evalf(self, n=15, subs=None, maxn=100, chop=False, strict=False, quad=None, verbose=False):
"""
Evaluate the given formula to an accuracy of n digits.
Optional keyword arguments:
subs=<dict>
Substitute numerical values for symbols, e.g.
subs={x:3, y:1+pi}. The substitutions must be given as a
dictionary.
maxn=<integer>
Allow a maximum temporary working precision of maxn digits
(default=100)
chop=<bool>
Replace tiny real or imaginary parts in subresults
by exact zeros (default=False)
strict=<bool>
Raise PrecisionExhausted if any subresult fails to evaluate
to full accuracy, given the available maxprec
(default=False)
quad=<str>
Choose algorithm for numerical quadrature. By default,
tanh-sinh quadrature is used. For oscillatory
integrals on an infinite interval, try quad='osc'.
verbose=<bool>
Print debug information (default=False)
Notes
=====
When Floats are naively substituted into an expression, precision errors
may adversely affect the result. For example, adding 1e16 (a Float) to 1
will truncate to 1e16; if 1e16 is then subtracted, the result will be 0.
That is exactly what happens in the following:
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> values = {x: 1e16, y: 1, z: 1e16}
>>> (x + y - z).subs(values)
0
Using the subs argument for evalf is the accurate way to evaluate such an
expression:
>>> (x + y - z).evalf(subs=values)
1.00000000000000
"""
from sympy import Float, Number
n = n if n is not None else 15
if subs and is_sequence(subs):
raise TypeError('subs must be given as a dictionary')
# for sake of sage that doesn't like evalf(1)
if n == 1 and isinstance(self, Number):
from sympy.core.expr import _mag
rv = self.evalf(2, subs, maxn, chop, strict, quad, verbose)
m = _mag(rv)
rv = rv.round(1 - m)
return rv
if not evalf_table:
_create_evalf_table()
prec = dps_to_prec(n)
options = {'maxprec': max(prec, int(maxn*LG10)), 'chop': chop,
'strict': strict, 'verbose': verbose}
if subs is not None:
options['subs'] = subs
if quad is not None:
options['quad'] = quad
try:
result = evalf(self, prec + 4, options)
except NotImplementedError:
# Fall back to the ordinary evalf
v = self._eval_evalf(prec)
if v is None:
return self
try:
# If the result is numerical, normalize it
result = evalf(v, prec, options)
except NotImplementedError:
# Probably contains symbols or unknown functions
return v
re, im, re_acc, im_acc = result
if re:
p = max(min(prec, re_acc), 1)
re = Float._new(re, p)
else:
re = S.Zero
if im:
p = max(min(prec, im_acc), 1)
im = Float._new(im, p)
return re + im*S.ImaginaryUnit
else:
return re
n = evalf
def _evalf(self, prec):
"""Helper for evalf. Does the same thing but takes binary precision"""
r = self._eval_evalf(prec)
if r is None:
r = self
return r
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
return
def _to_mpmath(self, prec, allow_ints=True):
# mpmath functions accept ints as input
errmsg = "cannot convert to mpmath number"
if allow_ints and self.is_Integer:
return self.p
if hasattr(self, '_as_mpf_val'):
return make_mpf(self._as_mpf_val(prec))
try:
re, im, _, _ = evalf(self, prec, {})
if im:
if not re:
re = fzero
return make_mpc((re, im))
elif re:
return make_mpf(re)
else:
return make_mpf(fzero)
except NotImplementedError:
v = self._eval_evalf(prec)
if v is None:
raise ValueError(errmsg)
if v.is_Float:
return make_mpf(v._mpf_)
# Number + Number*I is also fine
re, im = v.as_real_imag()
if allow_ints and re.is_Integer:
re = from_int(re.p)
elif re.is_Float:
re = re._mpf_
else:
raise ValueError(errmsg)
if allow_ints and im.is_Integer:
im = from_int(im.p)
elif im.is_Float:
im = im._mpf_
else:
raise ValueError(errmsg)
return make_mpc((re, im))
def N(x, n=15, **options):
r"""
Calls x.evalf(n, \*\*options).
Both .n() and N() are equivalent to .evalf(); use the one that you like better.
See also the docstring of .evalf() for information on the options.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Sum, oo, N
>>> from sympy.abc import k
>>> Sum(1/k**k, (k, 1, oo))
Sum(k**(-k), (k, 1, oo))
>>> N(_, 4)
1.291
"""
return sympify(x).evalf(n, **options)
|
73830e44e1511f7d7c36d5616cbd62775b76397c385246f6a32a13f36a67a185
|
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
r"""This is rule-based deduction system for SymPy
The whole thing is split into two parts
- rules compilation and preparation of tables
- runtime inference
For rule-based inference engines, the classical work is RETE algorithm [1],
[2] Although we are not implementing it in full (or even significantly)
it's still still worth a read to understand the underlying ideas.
In short, every rule in a system of rules is one of two forms:
- atom -> ... (alpha rule)
- And(atom1, atom2, ...) -> ... (beta rule)
The major complexity is in efficient beta-rules processing and usually for an
expert system a lot of effort goes into code that operates on beta-rules.
Here we take minimalistic approach to get something usable first.
- (preparation) of alpha- and beta- networks, everything except
- (runtime) FactRules.deduce_all_facts
_____________________________________
( Kirr: I've never thought that doing )
( logic stuff is that difficult... )
-------------------------------------
o ^__^
o (oo)\_______
(__)\ )\/\
||----w |
|| ||
Some references on the topic
----------------------------
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rete_algorithm
[2] http://reports-archive.adm.cs.cmu.edu/anon/1995/CMU-CS-95-113.pdf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propositional_formula
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inference_rule
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rules_of_inference
"""
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from .logic import Logic, And, Or, Not
from sympy.core.compatibility import string_types, range
def _base_fact(atom):
"""Return the literal fact of an atom.
Effectively, this merely strips the Not around a fact.
"""
if isinstance(atom, Not):
return atom.arg
else:
return atom
def _as_pair(atom):
if isinstance(atom, Not):
return (atom.arg, False)
else:
return (atom, True)
# XXX this prepares forward-chaining rules for alpha-network
def transitive_closure(implications):
"""
Computes the transitive closure of a list of implications
Uses Warshall's algorithm, as described at
http://www.cs.hope.edu/~cusack/Notes/Notes/DiscreteMath/Warshall.pdf.
"""
full_implications = set(implications)
literals = set().union(*map(set, full_implications))
for k in literals:
for i in literals:
if (i, k) in full_implications:
for j in literals:
if (k, j) in full_implications:
full_implications.add((i, j))
return full_implications
def deduce_alpha_implications(implications):
"""deduce all implications
Description by example
----------------------
given set of logic rules:
a -> b
b -> c
we deduce all possible rules:
a -> b, c
b -> c
implications: [] of (a,b)
return: {} of a -> set([b, c, ...])
"""
implications = implications + [(Not(j), Not(i)) for (i, j) in implications]
res = defaultdict(set)
full_implications = transitive_closure(implications)
for a, b in full_implications:
if a == b:
continue # skip a->a cyclic input
res[a].add(b)
# Clean up tautologies and check consistency
for a, impl in res.items():
impl.discard(a)
na = Not(a)
if na in impl:
raise ValueError(
'implications are inconsistent: %s -> %s %s' % (a, na, impl))
return res
def apply_beta_to_alpha_route(alpha_implications, beta_rules):
"""apply additional beta-rules (And conditions) to already-built
alpha implication tables
TODO: write about
- static extension of alpha-chains
- attaching refs to beta-nodes to alpha chains
e.g.
alpha_implications:
a -> [b, !c, d]
b -> [d]
...
beta_rules:
&(b,d) -> e
then we'll extend a's rule to the following
a -> [b, !c, d, e]
"""
x_impl = {}
for x in alpha_implications.keys():
x_impl[x] = (set(alpha_implications[x]), [])
for bcond, bimpl in beta_rules:
for bk in bcond.args:
if bk in x_impl:
continue
x_impl[bk] = (set(), [])
# static extensions to alpha rules:
# A: x -> a,b B: &(a,b) -> c ==> A: x -> a,b,c
seen_static_extension = True
while seen_static_extension:
seen_static_extension = False
for bcond, bimpl in beta_rules:
if not isinstance(bcond, And):
raise TypeError("Cond is not And")
bargs = set(bcond.args)
for x, (ximpls, bb) in x_impl.items():
x_all = ximpls | {x}
# A: ... -> a B: &(...) -> a is non-informative
if bimpl not in x_all and bargs.issubset(x_all):
ximpls.add(bimpl)
# we introduced new implication - now we have to restore
# completeness of the whole set.
bimpl_impl = x_impl.get(bimpl)
if bimpl_impl is not None:
ximpls |= bimpl_impl[0]
seen_static_extension = True
# attach beta-nodes which can be possibly triggered by an alpha-chain
for bidx, (bcond, bimpl) in enumerate(beta_rules):
bargs = set(bcond.args)
for x, (ximpls, bb) in x_impl.items():
x_all = ximpls | {x}
# A: ... -> a B: &(...) -> a (non-informative)
if bimpl in x_all:
continue
# A: x -> a... B: &(!a,...) -> ... (will never trigger)
# A: x -> a... B: &(...) -> !a (will never trigger)
if any(Not(xi) in bargs or Not(xi) == bimpl for xi in x_all):
continue
if bargs & x_all:
bb.append(bidx)
return x_impl
def rules_2prereq(rules):
"""build prerequisites table from rules
Description by example
----------------------
given set of logic rules:
a -> b, c
b -> c
we build prerequisites (from what points something can be deduced):
b <- a
c <- a, b
rules: {} of a -> [b, c, ...]
return: {} of c <- [a, b, ...]
Note however, that this prerequisites may be *not* enough to prove a
fact. An example is 'a -> b' rule, where prereq(a) is b, and prereq(b)
is a. That's because a=T -> b=T, and b=F -> a=F, but a=F -> b=?
"""
prereq = defaultdict(set)
for (a, _), impl in rules.items():
if isinstance(a, Not):
a = a.args[0]
for (i, _) in impl:
if isinstance(i, Not):
i = i.args[0]
prereq[i].add(a)
return prereq
################
# RULES PROVER #
################
class TautologyDetected(Exception):
"""(internal) Prover uses it for reporting detected tautology"""
pass
class Prover(object):
"""ai - prover of logic rules
given a set of initial rules, Prover tries to prove all possible rules
which follow from given premises.
As a result proved_rules are always either in one of two forms: alpha or
beta:
Alpha rules
-----------
This are rules of the form::
a -> b & c & d & ...
Beta rules
----------
This are rules of the form::
&(a,b,...) -> c & d & ...
i.e. beta rules are join conditions that say that something follows when
*several* facts are true at the same time.
"""
def __init__(self):
self.proved_rules = []
self._rules_seen = set()
def split_alpha_beta(self):
"""split proved rules into alpha and beta chains"""
rules_alpha = [] # a -> b
rules_beta = [] # &(...) -> b
for a, b in self.proved_rules:
if isinstance(a, And):
rules_beta.append((a, b))
else:
rules_alpha.append((a, b))
return rules_alpha, rules_beta
@property
def rules_alpha(self):
return self.split_alpha_beta()[0]
@property
def rules_beta(self):
return self.split_alpha_beta()[1]
def process_rule(self, a, b):
"""process a -> b rule""" # TODO write more?
if (not a) or isinstance(b, bool):
return
if isinstance(a, bool):
return
if (a, b) in self._rules_seen:
return
else:
self._rules_seen.add((a, b))
# this is the core of processing
try:
self._process_rule(a, b)
except TautologyDetected:
pass
def _process_rule(self, a, b):
# right part first
# a -> b & c --> a -> b ; a -> c
# (?) FIXME this is only correct when b & c != null !
if isinstance(b, And):
for barg in b.args:
self.process_rule(a, barg)
# a -> b | c --> !b & !c -> !a
# --> a & !b -> c
# --> a & !c -> b
elif isinstance(b, Or):
# detect tautology first
if not isinstance(a, Logic): # Atom
# tautology: a -> a|c|...
if a in b.args:
raise TautologyDetected(a, b, 'a -> a|c|...')
self.process_rule(And(*[Not(barg) for barg in b.args]), Not(a))
for bidx in range(len(b.args)):
barg = b.args[bidx]
brest = b.args[:bidx] + b.args[bidx + 1:]
self.process_rule(And(a, Not(barg)), Or(*brest))
# left part
# a & b -> c --> IRREDUCIBLE CASE -- WE STORE IT AS IS
# (this will be the basis of beta-network)
elif isinstance(a, And):
if b in a.args:
raise TautologyDetected(a, b, 'a & b -> a')
self.proved_rules.append((a, b))
# XXX NOTE at present we ignore !c -> !a | !b
elif isinstance(a, Or):
if b in a.args:
raise TautologyDetected(a, b, 'a | b -> a')
for aarg in a.args:
self.process_rule(aarg, b)
else:
# both `a` and `b` are atoms
self.proved_rules.append((a, b)) # a -> b
self.proved_rules.append((Not(b), Not(a))) # !b -> !a
########################################
class FactRules(object):
"""Rules that describe how to deduce facts in logic space
When defined, these rules allow implications to quickly be determined
for a set of facts. For this precomputed deduction tables are used.
see `deduce_all_facts` (forward-chaining)
Also it is possible to gather prerequisites for a fact, which is tried
to be proven. (backward-chaining)
Definition Syntax
-----------------
a -> b -- a=T -> b=T (and automatically b=F -> a=F)
a -> !b -- a=T -> b=F
a == b -- a -> b & b -> a
a -> b & c -- a=T -> b=T & c=T
# TODO b | c
Internals
---------
.full_implications[k, v]: all the implications of fact k=v
.beta_triggers[k, v]: beta rules that might be triggered when k=v
.prereq -- {} k <- [] of k's prerequisites
.defined_facts -- set of defined fact names
"""
def __init__(self, rules):
"""Compile rules into internal lookup tables"""
if isinstance(rules, string_types):
rules = rules.splitlines()
# --- parse and process rules ---
P = Prover()
for rule in rules:
# XXX `a` is hardcoded to be always atom
a, op, b = rule.split(None, 2)
a = Logic.fromstring(a)
b = Logic.fromstring(b)
if op == '->':
P.process_rule(a, b)
elif op == '==':
P.process_rule(a, b)
P.process_rule(b, a)
else:
raise ValueError('unknown op %r' % op)
# --- build deduction networks ---
self.beta_rules = []
for bcond, bimpl in P.rules_beta:
self.beta_rules.append(
(set(_as_pair(a) for a in bcond.args), _as_pair(bimpl)))
# deduce alpha implications
impl_a = deduce_alpha_implications(P.rules_alpha)
# now:
# - apply beta rules to alpha chains (static extension), and
# - further associate beta rules to alpha chain (for inference
# at runtime)
impl_ab = apply_beta_to_alpha_route(impl_a, P.rules_beta)
# extract defined fact names
self.defined_facts = set(_base_fact(k) for k in impl_ab.keys())
# build rels (forward chains)
full_implications = defaultdict(set)
beta_triggers = defaultdict(set)
for k, (impl, betaidxs) in impl_ab.items():
full_implications[_as_pair(k)] = set(_as_pair(i) for i in impl)
beta_triggers[_as_pair(k)] = betaidxs
self.full_implications = full_implications
self.beta_triggers = beta_triggers
# build prereq (backward chains)
prereq = defaultdict(set)
rel_prereq = rules_2prereq(full_implications)
for k, pitems in rel_prereq.items():
prereq[k] |= pitems
self.prereq = prereq
class InconsistentAssumptions(ValueError):
def __str__(self):
kb, fact, value = self.args
return "%s, %s=%s" % (kb, fact, value)
class FactKB(dict):
"""
A simple propositional knowledge base relying on compiled inference rules.
"""
def __str__(self):
return '{\n%s}' % ',\n'.join(
["\t%s: %s" % i for i in sorted(self.items())])
def __init__(self, rules):
self.rules = rules
def _tell(self, k, v):
"""Add fact k=v to the knowledge base.
Returns True if the KB has actually been updated, False otherwise.
"""
if k in self and self[k] is not None:
if self[k] == v:
return False
else:
raise InconsistentAssumptions(self, k, v)
else:
self[k] = v
return True
# *********************************************
# * This is the workhorse, so keep it *fast*. *
# *********************************************
def deduce_all_facts(self, facts):
"""
Update the KB with all the implications of a list of facts.
Facts can be specified as a dictionary or as a list of (key, value)
pairs.
"""
# keep frequently used attributes locally, so we'll avoid extra
# attribute access overhead
full_implications = self.rules.full_implications
beta_triggers = self.rules.beta_triggers
beta_rules = self.rules.beta_rules
if isinstance(facts, dict):
facts = facts.items()
while facts:
beta_maytrigger = set()
# --- alpha chains ---
for k, v in facts:
if not self._tell(k, v) or v is None:
continue
# lookup routing tables
for key, value in full_implications[k, v]:
self._tell(key, value)
beta_maytrigger.update(beta_triggers[k, v])
# --- beta chains ---
facts = []
for bidx in beta_maytrigger:
bcond, bimpl = beta_rules[bidx]
if all(self.get(k) is v for k, v in bcond):
facts.append(bimpl)
|
0f644a77581cadd8d532a7007715aeadb3052d23f068f5bc8d836f54877c7ff8
|
""" Caching facility for SymPy """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from distutils.version import LooseVersion as V
class _cache(list):
""" List of cached functions """
def print_cache(self):
"""print cache info"""
for item in self:
name = item.__name__
myfunc = item
while hasattr(myfunc, '__wrapped__'):
if hasattr(myfunc, 'cache_info'):
info = myfunc.cache_info()
break
else:
myfunc = myfunc.__wrapped__
else:
info = None
print(name, info)
def clear_cache(self):
"""clear cache content"""
for item in self:
myfunc = item
while hasattr(myfunc, '__wrapped__'):
if hasattr(myfunc, 'cache_clear'):
myfunc.cache_clear()
break
else:
myfunc = myfunc.__wrapped__
# global cache registry:
CACHE = _cache()
# make clear and print methods available
print_cache = CACHE.print_cache
clear_cache = CACHE.clear_cache
from sympy.core.compatibility import lru_cache
from functools import update_wrapper
try:
import fastcache
from warnings import warn
# the version attribute __version__ is not present for all versions
if not hasattr(fastcache, '__version__'):
warn("fastcache version >= 0.4.0 required", UserWarning)
raise ImportError
# ensure minimum required version of fastcache is present
if V(fastcache.__version__) < '0.4.0':
warn("fastcache version >= 0.4.0 required, detected {}"\
.format(fastcache.__version__), UserWarning)
raise ImportError
# Do not use fastcache if running under pypy
import platform
if platform.python_implementation() == 'PyPy':
raise ImportError
lru_cache = fastcache.clru_cache
except ImportError:
def __cacheit(maxsize):
"""caching decorator.
important: the result of cached function must be *immutable*
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
>>> @cacheit
... def f(a, b):
... return a+b
>>> @cacheit
... def f(a, b):
... return [a, b] # <-- WRONG, returns mutable object
to force cacheit to check returned results mutability and consistency,
set environment variable SYMPY_USE_CACHE to 'debug'
"""
def func_wrapper(func):
cfunc = lru_cache(maxsize, typed=True)(func)
# wraps here does not propagate all the necessary info
# for py2.7, use update_wrapper below
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
try:
retval = cfunc(*args, **kwargs)
except TypeError:
retval = func(*args, **kwargs)
return retval
wrapper.cache_info = cfunc.cache_info
wrapper.cache_clear = cfunc.cache_clear
# Some versions of update_wrapper erroneously assign the final
# function of the wrapper chain to __wrapped__, see
# https://bugs.python.org/issue17482 .
# To work around this, we need to call update_wrapper first, then
# assign to wrapper.__wrapped__.
update_wrapper(wrapper, func)
wrapper.__wrapped__ = cfunc.__wrapped__
CACHE.append(wrapper)
return wrapper
return func_wrapper
else:
def __cacheit(maxsize):
"""caching decorator.
important: the result of cached function must be *immutable*
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
>>> @cacheit
... def f(a, b):
... return a+b
>>> @cacheit
... def f(a, b):
... return [a, b] # <-- WRONG, returns mutable object
to force cacheit to check returned results mutability and consistency,
set environment variable SYMPY_USE_CACHE to 'debug'
"""
def func_wrapper(func):
cfunc = fastcache.clru_cache(maxsize, typed=True, unhashable='ignore')(func)
CACHE.append(cfunc)
return cfunc
return func_wrapper
########################################
def __cacheit_nocache(func):
return func
def __cacheit_debug(maxsize):
"""cacheit + code to check cache consistency"""
def func_wrapper(func):
from .decorators import wraps
cfunc = __cacheit(maxsize)(func)
@wraps(func)
def wrapper(*args, **kw_args):
# always call function itself and compare it with cached version
r1 = func(*args, **kw_args)
r2 = cfunc(*args, **kw_args)
# try to see if the result is immutable
#
# this works because:
#
# hash([1,2,3]) -> raise TypeError
# hash({'a':1, 'b':2}) -> raise TypeError
# hash((1,[2,3])) -> raise TypeError
#
# hash((1,2,3)) -> just computes the hash
hash(r1), hash(r2)
# also see if returned values are the same
if r1 != r2:
raise RuntimeError("Returned values are not the same")
return r1
return wrapper
return func_wrapper
def _getenv(key, default=None):
from os import getenv
return getenv(key, default)
# SYMPY_USE_CACHE=yes/no/debug
USE_CACHE = _getenv('SYMPY_USE_CACHE', 'yes').lower()
# SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE=some_integer/None
# special cases :
# SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE=0 -> No caching
# SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE=None -> Unbounded caching
scs = _getenv('SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE', '1000')
if scs.lower() == 'none':
SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE = None
else:
try:
SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE = int(scs)
except ValueError:
raise RuntimeError(
'SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE must be a valid integer or None. ' + \
'Got: %s' % SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE)
if USE_CACHE == 'no':
cacheit = __cacheit_nocache
elif USE_CACHE == 'yes':
cacheit = __cacheit(SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE)
elif USE_CACHE == 'debug':
cacheit = __cacheit_debug(SYMPY_CACHE_SIZE) # a lot slower
else:
raise RuntimeError(
'unrecognized value for SYMPY_USE_CACHE: %s' % USE_CACHE)
|
af5ad93d48cb8ad6f51061e629a561626ac8866e41e6e8abed4f25cfc7849c3a
|
from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from functools import cmp_to_key
import operator
from .sympify import sympify
from .basic import Basic
from .singleton import S
from .operations import AssocOp
from .cache import cacheit
from .logic import fuzzy_not, _fuzzy_group
from .compatibility import reduce, range
from .expr import Expr
from .evaluate import global_distribute
# internal marker to indicate:
# "there are still non-commutative objects -- don't forget to process them"
class NC_Marker:
is_Order = False
is_Mul = False
is_Number = False
is_Poly = False
is_commutative = False
# Key for sorting commutative args in canonical order
_args_sortkey = cmp_to_key(Basic.compare)
def _mulsort(args):
# in-place sorting of args
args.sort(key=_args_sortkey)
def _unevaluated_Mul(*args):
"""Return a well-formed unevaluated Mul: Numbers are collected and
put in slot 0, any arguments that are Muls will be flattened, and args
are sorted. Use this when args have changed but you still want to return
an unevaluated Mul.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.mul import _unevaluated_Mul as uMul
>>> from sympy import S, sqrt, Mul
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> a = uMul(*[S(3.0), x, S(2)])
>>> a.args[0]
6.00000000000000
>>> a.args[1]
x
Two unevaluated Muls with the same arguments will
always compare as equal during testing:
>>> m = uMul(sqrt(2), sqrt(3))
>>> m == uMul(sqrt(3), sqrt(2))
True
>>> u = Mul(sqrt(3), sqrt(2), evaluate=False)
>>> m == uMul(u)
True
>>> m == Mul(*m.args)
False
"""
args = list(args)
newargs = []
ncargs = []
co = S.One
while args:
a = args.pop()
if a.is_Mul:
c, nc = a.args_cnc()
args.extend(c)
if nc:
ncargs.append(Mul._from_args(nc))
elif a.is_Number:
co *= a
else:
newargs.append(a)
_mulsort(newargs)
if co is not S.One:
newargs.insert(0, co)
if ncargs:
newargs.append(Mul._from_args(ncargs))
return Mul._from_args(newargs)
class Mul(Expr, AssocOp):
__slots__ = []
is_Mul = True
@classmethod
def flatten(cls, seq):
"""Return commutative, noncommutative and order arguments by
combining related terms.
Notes
=====
* In an expression like ``a*b*c``, python process this through sympy
as ``Mul(Mul(a, b), c)``. This can have undesirable consequences.
- Sometimes terms are not combined as one would like:
{c.f. https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/4596}
>>> from sympy import Mul, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> 2*(x + 1) # this is the 2-arg Mul behavior
2*x + 2
>>> y*(x + 1)*2
2*y*(x + 1)
>>> 2*(x + 1)*y # 2-arg result will be obtained first
y*(2*x + 2)
>>> Mul(2, x + 1, y) # all 3 args simultaneously processed
2*y*(x + 1)
>>> 2*((x + 1)*y) # parentheses can control this behavior
2*y*(x + 1)
Powers with compound bases may not find a single base to
combine with unless all arguments are processed at once.
Post-processing may be necessary in such cases.
{c.f. https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/5728}
>>> a = sqrt(x*sqrt(y))
>>> a**3
(x*sqrt(y))**(3/2)
>>> Mul(a,a,a)
(x*sqrt(y))**(3/2)
>>> a*a*a
x*sqrt(y)*sqrt(x*sqrt(y))
>>> _.subs(a.base, z).subs(z, a.base)
(x*sqrt(y))**(3/2)
- If more than two terms are being multiplied then all the
previous terms will be re-processed for each new argument.
So if each of ``a``, ``b`` and ``c`` were :class:`Mul`
expression, then ``a*b*c`` (or building up the product
with ``*=``) will process all the arguments of ``a`` and
``b`` twice: once when ``a*b`` is computed and again when
``c`` is multiplied.
Using ``Mul(a, b, c)`` will process all arguments once.
* The results of Mul are cached according to arguments, so flatten
will only be called once for ``Mul(a, b, c)``. If you can
structure a calculation so the arguments are most likely to be
repeats then this can save time in computing the answer. For
example, say you had a Mul, M, that you wished to divide by ``d[i]``
and multiply by ``n[i]`` and you suspect there are many repeats
in ``n``. It would be better to compute ``M*n[i]/d[i]`` rather
than ``M/d[i]*n[i]`` since every time n[i] is a repeat, the
product, ``M*n[i]`` will be returned without flattening -- the
cached value will be returned. If you divide by the ``d[i]``
first (and those are more unique than the ``n[i]``) then that will
create a new Mul, ``M/d[i]`` the args of which will be traversed
again when it is multiplied by ``n[i]``.
{c.f. https://github.com/sympy/sympy/issues/5706}
This consideration is moot if the cache is turned off.
NB
--
The validity of the above notes depends on the implementation
details of Mul and flatten which may change at any time. Therefore,
you should only consider them when your code is highly performance
sensitive.
Removal of 1 from the sequence is already handled by AssocOp.__new__.
"""
from sympy.calculus.util import AccumBounds
from sympy.matrices.expressions import MatrixExpr
rv = None
if len(seq) == 2:
a, b = seq
if b.is_Rational:
a, b = b, a
seq = [a, b]
assert not a is S.One
if not a.is_zero and a.is_Rational:
r, b = b.as_coeff_Mul()
if b.is_Add:
if r is not S.One: # 2-arg hack
# leave the Mul as a Mul
rv = [cls(a*r, b, evaluate=False)], [], None
elif global_distribute[0] and b.is_commutative:
r, b = b.as_coeff_Add()
bargs = [_keep_coeff(a, bi) for bi in Add.make_args(b)]
_addsort(bargs)
ar = a*r
if ar:
bargs.insert(0, ar)
bargs = [Add._from_args(bargs)]
rv = bargs, [], None
if rv:
return rv
# apply associativity, separate commutative part of seq
c_part = [] # out: commutative factors
nc_part = [] # out: non-commutative factors
nc_seq = []
coeff = S.One # standalone term
# e.g. 3 * ...
c_powers = [] # (base,exp) n
# e.g. (x,n) for x
num_exp = [] # (num-base, exp) y
# e.g. (3, y) for ... * 3 * ...
neg1e = S.Zero # exponent on -1 extracted from Number-based Pow and I
pnum_rat = {} # (num-base, Rat-exp) 1/2
# e.g. (3, 1/2) for ... * 3 * ...
order_symbols = None
# --- PART 1 ---
#
# "collect powers and coeff":
#
# o coeff
# o c_powers
# o num_exp
# o neg1e
# o pnum_rat
#
# NOTE: this is optimized for all-objects-are-commutative case
for o in seq:
# O(x)
if o.is_Order:
o, order_symbols = o.as_expr_variables(order_symbols)
# Mul([...])
if o.is_Mul:
if o.is_commutative:
seq.extend(o.args) # XXX zerocopy?
else:
# NCMul can have commutative parts as well
for q in o.args:
if q.is_commutative:
seq.append(q)
else:
nc_seq.append(q)
# append non-commutative marker, so we don't forget to
# process scheduled non-commutative objects
seq.append(NC_Marker)
continue
# 3
elif o.is_Number:
if o is S.NaN or coeff is S.ComplexInfinity and o is S.Zero:
# we know for sure the result will be nan
return [S.NaN], [], None
elif coeff.is_Number or isinstance(coeff, AccumBounds): # it could be zoo
coeff *= o
if coeff is S.NaN:
# we know for sure the result will be nan
return [S.NaN], [], None
continue
elif isinstance(o, AccumBounds):
coeff = o.__mul__(coeff)
continue
elif isinstance(o, MatrixExpr):
if isinstance(coeff, MatrixExpr):
coeff *= o
else:
coeff = o.__mul__(coeff)
continue
elif o is S.ComplexInfinity:
if not coeff:
# 0 * zoo = NaN
return [S.NaN], [], None
if coeff is S.ComplexInfinity:
# zoo * zoo = zoo
return [S.ComplexInfinity], [], None
coeff = S.ComplexInfinity
continue
elif o is S.ImaginaryUnit:
neg1e += S.Half
continue
elif o.is_commutative:
# e
# o = b
b, e = o.as_base_exp()
# y
# 3
if o.is_Pow:
if b.is_Number:
# get all the factors with numeric base so they can be
# combined below, but don't combine negatives unless
# the exponent is an integer
if e.is_Rational:
if e.is_Integer:
coeff *= Pow(b, e) # it is an unevaluated power
continue
elif e.is_negative: # also a sign of an unevaluated power
seq.append(Pow(b, e))
continue
elif b.is_negative:
neg1e += e
b = -b
if b is not S.One:
pnum_rat.setdefault(b, []).append(e)
continue
elif b.is_positive or e.is_integer:
num_exp.append((b, e))
continue
elif b is S.ImaginaryUnit and e.is_Rational:
neg1e += e/2
continue
c_powers.append((b, e))
# NON-COMMUTATIVE
# TODO: Make non-commutative exponents not combine automatically
else:
if o is not NC_Marker:
nc_seq.append(o)
# process nc_seq (if any)
while nc_seq:
o = nc_seq.pop(0)
if not nc_part:
nc_part.append(o)
continue
# b c b+c
# try to combine last terms: a * a -> a
o1 = nc_part.pop()
b1, e1 = o1.as_base_exp()
b2, e2 = o.as_base_exp()
new_exp = e1 + e2
# Only allow powers to combine if the new exponent is
# not an Add. This allow things like a**2*b**3 == a**5
# if a.is_commutative == False, but prohibits
# a**x*a**y and x**a*x**b from combining (x,y commute).
if b1 == b2 and (not new_exp.is_Add):
o12 = b1 ** new_exp
# now o12 could be a commutative object
if o12.is_commutative:
seq.append(o12)
continue
else:
nc_seq.insert(0, o12)
else:
nc_part.append(o1)
nc_part.append(o)
# We do want a combined exponent if it would not be an Add, such as
# y 2y 3y
# x * x -> x
# We determine if two exponents have the same term by using
# as_coeff_Mul.
#
# Unfortunately, this isn't smart enough to consider combining into
# exponents that might already be adds, so things like:
# z - y y
# x * x will be left alone. This is because checking every possible
# combination can slow things down.
# gather exponents of common bases...
def _gather(c_powers):
common_b = {} # b:e
for b, e in c_powers:
co = e.as_coeff_Mul()
common_b.setdefault(b, {}).setdefault(
co[1], []).append(co[0])
for b, d in common_b.items():
for di, li in d.items():
d[di] = Add(*li)
new_c_powers = []
for b, e in common_b.items():
new_c_powers.extend([(b, c*t) for t, c in e.items()])
return new_c_powers
# in c_powers
c_powers = _gather(c_powers)
# and in num_exp
num_exp = _gather(num_exp)
# --- PART 2 ---
#
# o process collected powers (x**0 -> 1; x**1 -> x; otherwise Pow)
# o combine collected powers (2**x * 3**x -> 6**x)
# with numeric base
# ................................
# now we have:
# - coeff:
# - c_powers: (b, e)
# - num_exp: (2, e)
# - pnum_rat: {(1/3, [1/3, 2/3, 1/4])}
# 0 1
# x -> 1 x -> x
# this should only need to run twice; if it fails because
# it needs to be run more times, perhaps this should be
# changed to a "while True" loop -- the only reason it
# isn't such now is to allow a less-than-perfect result to
# be obtained rather than raising an error or entering an
# infinite loop
for i in range(2):
new_c_powers = []
changed = False
for b, e in c_powers:
if e.is_zero:
# canceling out infinities yields NaN
if (b.is_Add or b.is_Mul) and any(infty in b.args
for infty in (S.ComplexInfinity, S.Infinity,
S.NegativeInfinity)):
return [S.NaN], [], None
continue
if e is S.One:
if b.is_Number:
coeff *= b
continue
p = b
if e is not S.One:
p = Pow(b, e)
# check to make sure that the base doesn't change
# after exponentiation; to allow for unevaluated
# Pow, we only do so if b is not already a Pow
if p.is_Pow and not b.is_Pow:
bi = b
b, e = p.as_base_exp()
if b != bi:
changed = True
c_part.append(p)
new_c_powers.append((b, e))
# there might have been a change, but unless the base
# matches some other base, there is nothing to do
if changed and len(set(
b for b, e in new_c_powers)) != len(new_c_powers):
# start over again
c_part = []
c_powers = _gather(new_c_powers)
else:
break
# x x x
# 2 * 3 -> 6
inv_exp_dict = {} # exp:Mul(num-bases) x x
# e.g. x:6 for ... * 2 * 3 * ...
for b, e in num_exp:
inv_exp_dict.setdefault(e, []).append(b)
for e, b in inv_exp_dict.items():
inv_exp_dict[e] = cls(*b)
c_part.extend([Pow(b, e) for e, b in inv_exp_dict.items() if e])
# b, e -> e' = sum(e), b
# {(1/5, [1/3]), (1/2, [1/12, 1/4]} -> {(1/3, [1/5, 1/2])}
comb_e = {}
for b, e in pnum_rat.items():
comb_e.setdefault(Add(*e), []).append(b)
del pnum_rat
# process them, reducing exponents to values less than 1
# and updating coeff if necessary else adding them to
# num_rat for further processing
num_rat = []
for e, b in comb_e.items():
b = cls(*b)
if e.q == 1:
coeff *= Pow(b, e)
continue
if e.p > e.q:
e_i, ep = divmod(e.p, e.q)
coeff *= Pow(b, e_i)
e = Rational(ep, e.q)
num_rat.append((b, e))
del comb_e
# extract gcd of bases in num_rat
# 2**(1/3)*6**(1/4) -> 2**(1/3+1/4)*3**(1/4)
pnew = defaultdict(list)
i = 0 # steps through num_rat which may grow
while i < len(num_rat):
bi, ei = num_rat[i]
grow = []
for j in range(i + 1, len(num_rat)):
bj, ej = num_rat[j]
g = bi.gcd(bj)
if g is not S.One:
# 4**r1*6**r2 -> 2**(r1+r2) * 2**r1 * 3**r2
# this might have a gcd with something else
e = ei + ej
if e.q == 1:
coeff *= Pow(g, e)
else:
if e.p > e.q:
e_i, ep = divmod(e.p, e.q) # change e in place
coeff *= Pow(g, e_i)
e = Rational(ep, e.q)
grow.append((g, e))
# update the jth item
num_rat[j] = (bj/g, ej)
# update bi that we are checking with
bi = bi/g
if bi is S.One:
break
if bi is not S.One:
obj = Pow(bi, ei)
if obj.is_Number:
coeff *= obj
else:
# changes like sqrt(12) -> 2*sqrt(3)
for obj in Mul.make_args(obj):
if obj.is_Number:
coeff *= obj
else:
assert obj.is_Pow
bi, ei = obj.args
pnew[ei].append(bi)
num_rat.extend(grow)
i += 1
# combine bases of the new powers
for e, b in pnew.items():
pnew[e] = cls(*b)
# handle -1 and I
if neg1e:
# treat I as (-1)**(1/2) and compute -1's total exponent
p, q = neg1e.as_numer_denom()
# if the integer part is odd, extract -1
n, p = divmod(p, q)
if n % 2:
coeff = -coeff
# if it's a multiple of 1/2 extract I
if q == 2:
c_part.append(S.ImaginaryUnit)
elif p:
# see if there is any positive base this power of
# -1 can join
neg1e = Rational(p, q)
for e, b in pnew.items():
if e == neg1e and b.is_positive:
pnew[e] = -b
break
else:
# keep it separate; we've already evaluated it as
# much as possible so evaluate=False
c_part.append(Pow(S.NegativeOne, neg1e, evaluate=False))
# add all the pnew powers
c_part.extend([Pow(b, e) for e, b in pnew.items()])
# oo, -oo
if (coeff is S.Infinity) or (coeff is S.NegativeInfinity):
def _handle_for_oo(c_part, coeff_sign):
new_c_part = []
for t in c_part:
if t.is_positive:
continue
if t.is_negative:
coeff_sign *= -1
continue
new_c_part.append(t)
return new_c_part, coeff_sign
c_part, coeff_sign = _handle_for_oo(c_part, 1)
nc_part, coeff_sign = _handle_for_oo(nc_part, coeff_sign)
coeff *= coeff_sign
# zoo
if coeff is S.ComplexInfinity:
# zoo might be
# infinite_real + bounded_im
# bounded_real + infinite_im
# infinite_real + infinite_im
# and non-zero real or imaginary will not change that status.
c_part = [c for c in c_part if not (fuzzy_not(c.is_zero) and
c.is_real is not None)]
nc_part = [c for c in nc_part if not (fuzzy_not(c.is_zero) and
c.is_real is not None)]
# 0
elif coeff is S.Zero:
# we know for sure the result will be 0 except the multiplicand
# is infinity
if any(c.is_finite == False for c in c_part):
return [S.NaN], [], order_symbols
return [coeff], [], order_symbols
# check for straggling Numbers that were produced
_new = []
for i in c_part:
if i.is_Number:
coeff *= i
else:
_new.append(i)
c_part = _new
# order commutative part canonically
_mulsort(c_part)
# current code expects coeff to be always in slot-0
if coeff is not S.One:
c_part.insert(0, coeff)
# we are done
if (global_distribute[0] and not nc_part and len(c_part) == 2 and
c_part[0].is_Number and c_part[0].is_finite and c_part[1].is_Add):
# 2*(1+a) -> 2 + 2 * a
coeff = c_part[0]
c_part = [Add(*[coeff*f for f in c_part[1].args])]
return c_part, nc_part, order_symbols
def _eval_power(b, e):
# don't break up NC terms: (A*B)**3 != A**3*B**3, it is A*B*A*B*A*B
cargs, nc = b.args_cnc(split_1=False)
if e.is_Integer:
return Mul(*[Pow(b, e, evaluate=False) for b in cargs]) * \
Pow(Mul._from_args(nc), e, evaluate=False)
if e.is_Rational and e.q == 2:
from sympy.core.power import integer_nthroot
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import sign
if b.is_imaginary:
a = b.as_real_imag()[1]
if a.is_Rational:
n, d = abs(a/2).as_numer_denom()
n, t = integer_nthroot(n, 2)
if t:
d, t = integer_nthroot(d, 2)
if t:
r = sympify(n)/d
return _unevaluated_Mul(r**e.p, (1 + sign(a)*S.ImaginaryUnit)**e.p)
p = Pow(b, e, evaluate=False)
if e.is_Rational or e.is_Float:
return p._eval_expand_power_base()
return p
@classmethod
def class_key(cls):
return 3, 0, cls.__name__
def _eval_evalf(self, prec):
c, m = self.as_coeff_Mul()
if c is S.NegativeOne:
if m.is_Mul:
rv = -AssocOp._eval_evalf(m, prec)
else:
mnew = m._eval_evalf(prec)
if mnew is not None:
m = mnew
rv = -m
else:
rv = AssocOp._eval_evalf(self, prec)
if rv.is_number:
return rv.expand()
return rv
@property
def _mpc_(self):
"""
Convert self to an mpmath mpc if possible
"""
from sympy.core.numbers import I, Float
im_part, imag_unit = self.as_coeff_Mul()
if not imag_unit == I:
# ValueError may seem more reasonable but since it's a @property,
# we need to use AttributeError to keep from confusing things like
# hasattr.
raise AttributeError("Cannot convert Mul to mpc. Must be of the form Number*I")
return (Float(0)._mpf_, Float(im_part)._mpf_)
@cacheit
def as_two_terms(self):
"""Return head and tail of self.
This is the most efficient way to get the head and tail of an
expression.
- if you want only the head, use self.args[0];
- if you want to process the arguments of the tail then use
self.as_coef_mul() which gives the head and a tuple containing
the arguments of the tail when treated as a Mul.
- if you want the coefficient when self is treated as an Add
then use self.as_coeff_add()[0]
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> (3*x*y).as_two_terms()
(3, x*y)
"""
args = self.args
if len(args) == 1:
return S.One, self
elif len(args) == 2:
return args
else:
return args[0], self._new_rawargs(*args[1:])
@cacheit
def as_coefficients_dict(self):
"""Return a dictionary mapping terms to their coefficient.
Since the dictionary is a defaultdict, inquiries about terms which
were not present will return a coefficient of 0. The dictionary
is considered to have a single term.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import a, x
>>> (3*a*x).as_coefficients_dict()
{a*x: 3}
>>> _[a]
0
"""
d = defaultdict(int)
args = self.args
if len(args) == 1 or not args[0].is_Number:
d[self] = S.One
else:
d[self._new_rawargs(*args[1:])] = args[0]
return d
@cacheit
def as_coeff_mul(self, *deps, **kwargs):
rational = kwargs.pop('rational', True)
if deps:
l1 = []
l2 = []
for f in self.args:
if f.has(*deps):
l2.append(f)
else:
l1.append(f)
return self._new_rawargs(*l1), tuple(l2)
args = self.args
if args[0].is_Number:
if not rational or args[0].is_Rational:
return args[0], args[1:]
elif args[0].is_negative:
return S.NegativeOne, (-args[0],) + args[1:]
return S.One, args
def as_coeff_Mul(self, rational=False):
"""Efficiently extract the coefficient of a product. """
coeff, args = self.args[0], self.args[1:]
if coeff.is_Number:
if not rational or coeff.is_Rational:
if len(args) == 1:
return coeff, args[0]
else:
return coeff, self._new_rawargs(*args)
elif coeff.is_negative:
return S.NegativeOne, self._new_rawargs(*((-coeff,) + args))
return S.One, self
def as_real_imag(self, deep=True, **hints):
from sympy import Abs, expand_mul, im, re
other = []
coeffr = []
coeffi = []
addterms = S.One
for a in self.args:
r, i = a.as_real_imag()
if i.is_zero:
coeffr.append(r)
elif r.is_zero:
coeffi.append(i*S.ImaginaryUnit)
elif a.is_commutative:
# search for complex conjugate pairs:
for i, x in enumerate(other):
if x == a.conjugate():
coeffr.append(Abs(x)**2)
del other[i]
break
else:
if a.is_Add:
addterms *= a
else:
other.append(a)
else:
other.append(a)
m = self.func(*other)
if hints.get('ignore') == m:
return
if len(coeffi) % 2:
imco = im(coeffi.pop(0))
# all other pairs make a real factor; they will be
# put into reco below
else:
imco = S.Zero
reco = self.func(*(coeffr + coeffi))
r, i = (reco*re(m), reco*im(m))
if addterms == 1:
if m == 1:
if imco is S.Zero:
return (reco, S.Zero)
else:
return (S.Zero, reco*imco)
if imco is S.Zero:
return (r, i)
return (-imco*i, imco*r)
addre, addim = expand_mul(addterms, deep=False).as_real_imag()
if imco is S.Zero:
return (r*addre - i*addim, i*addre + r*addim)
else:
r, i = -imco*i, imco*r
return (r*addre - i*addim, r*addim + i*addre)
@staticmethod
def _expandsums(sums):
"""
Helper function for _eval_expand_mul.
sums must be a list of instances of Basic.
"""
L = len(sums)
if L == 1:
return sums[0].args
terms = []
left = Mul._expandsums(sums[:L//2])
right = Mul._expandsums(sums[L//2:])
terms = [Mul(a, b) for a in left for b in right]
added = Add(*terms)
return Add.make_args(added) # it may have collapsed down to one term
def _eval_expand_mul(self, **hints):
from sympy import fraction
# Handle things like 1/(x*(x + 1)), which are automatically converted
# to 1/x*1/(x + 1)
expr = self
n, d = fraction(expr)
if d.is_Mul:
n, d = [i._eval_expand_mul(**hints) if i.is_Mul else i
for i in (n, d)]
expr = n/d
if not expr.is_Mul:
return expr
plain, sums, rewrite = [], [], False
for factor in expr.args:
if factor.is_Add:
sums.append(factor)
rewrite = True
else:
if factor.is_commutative:
plain.append(factor)
else:
sums.append(Basic(factor)) # Wrapper
if not rewrite:
return expr
else:
plain = self.func(*plain)
if sums:
deep = hints.get("deep", False)
terms = self.func._expandsums(sums)
args = []
for term in terms:
t = self.func(plain, term)
if t.is_Mul and any(a.is_Add for a in t.args) and deep:
t = t._eval_expand_mul()
args.append(t)
return Add(*args)
else:
return plain
@cacheit
def _eval_derivative(self, s):
args = list(self.args)
terms = []
for i in range(len(args)):
d = args[i].diff(s)
if d:
# Note: reduce is used in step of Mul as Mul is unable to
# handle subtypes and operation priority:
terms.append(reduce(lambda x, y: x*y, (args[:i] + [d] + args[i + 1:]), S.One))
return reduce(lambda x, y: x+y, terms, S.Zero)
@cacheit
def _eval_derivative_n_times(self, s, n):
from sympy import Integer, factorial, prod, Sum, Max
from sympy.ntheory.multinomial import multinomial_coefficients_iterator
from .function import AppliedUndef
from .symbol import Symbol, symbols, Dummy
if not isinstance(s, AppliedUndef) and not isinstance(s, Symbol):
# other types of s may not be well behaved, e.g.
# (cos(x)*sin(y)).diff([[x, y, z]])
return super(Mul, self)._eval_derivative_n_times(s, n)
args = self.args
m = len(args)
if isinstance(n, (int, Integer)):
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Leibniz_rule#More_than_two_factors
terms = []
for kvals, c in multinomial_coefficients_iterator(m, n):
p = prod([arg.diff((s, k)) for k, arg in zip(kvals, args)])
terms.append(c * p)
return Add(*terms)
kvals = symbols("k1:%i" % m, cls=Dummy)
klast = n - sum(kvals)
nfact = factorial(n)
e, l = (# better to use the multinomial?
nfact/prod(map(factorial, kvals))/factorial(klast)*\
prod([args[t].diff((s, kvals[t])) for t in range(m-1)])*\
args[-1].diff((s, Max(0, klast))),
[(k, 0, n) for k in kvals])
return Sum(e, *l)
def _eval_difference_delta(self, n, step):
from sympy.series.limitseq import difference_delta as dd
arg0 = self.args[0]
rest = Mul(*self.args[1:])
return (arg0.subs(n, n + step) * dd(rest, n, step) + dd(arg0, n, step) *
rest)
def _matches_simple(self, expr, repl_dict):
# handle (w*3).matches('x*5') -> {w: x*5/3}
coeff, terms = self.as_coeff_Mul()
terms = Mul.make_args(terms)
if len(terms) == 1:
newexpr = self.__class__._combine_inverse(expr, coeff)
return terms[0].matches(newexpr, repl_dict)
return
def matches(self, expr, repl_dict={}, old=False):
expr = sympify(expr)
if self.is_commutative and expr.is_commutative:
return AssocOp._matches_commutative(self, expr, repl_dict, old)
elif self.is_commutative is not expr.is_commutative:
return None
c1, nc1 = self.args_cnc()
c2, nc2 = expr.args_cnc()
repl_dict = repl_dict.copy()
if c1:
if not c2:
c2 = [1]
a = self.func(*c1)
if isinstance(a, AssocOp):
repl_dict = a._matches_commutative(self.func(*c2), repl_dict, old)
else:
repl_dict = a.matches(self.func(*c2), repl_dict)
if repl_dict:
a = self.func(*nc1)
if isinstance(a, self.func):
repl_dict = a._matches(self.func(*nc2), repl_dict)
else:
repl_dict = a.matches(self.func(*nc2), repl_dict)
return repl_dict or None
def _matches(self, expr, repl_dict={}):
# weed out negative one prefixes#
from sympy import Wild
sign = 1
a, b = self.as_two_terms()
if a is S.NegativeOne:
if b.is_Mul:
sign = -sign
else:
# the remainder, b, is not a Mul anymore
return b.matches(-expr, repl_dict)
expr = sympify(expr)
if expr.is_Mul and expr.args[0] is S.NegativeOne:
expr = -expr
sign = -sign
if not expr.is_Mul:
# expr can only match if it matches b and a matches +/- 1
if len(self.args) == 2:
# quickly test for equality
if b == expr:
return a.matches(Rational(sign), repl_dict)
# do more expensive match
dd = b.matches(expr, repl_dict)
if dd is None:
return None
dd = a.matches(Rational(sign), dd)
return dd
return None
d = repl_dict.copy()
# weed out identical terms
pp = list(self.args)
ee = list(expr.args)
for p in self.args:
if p in expr.args:
ee.remove(p)
pp.remove(p)
# only one symbol left in pattern -> match the remaining expression
if len(pp) == 1 and isinstance(pp[0], Wild):
if len(ee) == 1:
d[pp[0]] = sign * ee[0]
else:
d[pp[0]] = sign * expr.func(*ee)
return d
if len(ee) != len(pp):
return None
for p, e in zip(pp, ee):
d = p.xreplace(d).matches(e, d)
if d is None:
return None
return d
@staticmethod
def _combine_inverse(lhs, rhs):
"""
Returns lhs/rhs, but treats arguments like symbols, so things like
oo/oo return 1, instead of a nan.
"""
if lhs == rhs:
return S.One
def check(l, r):
if l.is_Float and r.is_comparable:
# if both objects are added to 0 they will share the same "normalization"
# and are more likely to compare the same. Since Add(foo, 0) will not allow
# the 0 to pass, we use __add__ directly.
return l.__add__(0) == r.evalf().__add__(0)
return False
if check(lhs, rhs) or check(rhs, lhs):
return S.One
if lhs.is_Mul and rhs.is_Mul:
a = list(lhs.args)
b = [1]
for x in rhs.args:
if x in a:
a.remove(x)
elif -x in a:
a.remove(-x)
b.append(-1)
else:
b.append(x)
return lhs.func(*a)/rhs.func(*b)
return lhs/rhs
def as_powers_dict(self):
d = defaultdict(int)
for term in self.args:
b, e = term.as_base_exp()
d[b] += e
return d
def as_numer_denom(self):
# don't use _from_args to rebuild the numerators and denominators
# as the order is not guaranteed to be the same once they have
# been separated from each other
numers, denoms = list(zip(*[f.as_numer_denom() for f in self.args]))
return self.func(*numers), self.func(*denoms)
def as_base_exp(self):
e1 = None
bases = []
nc = 0
for m in self.args:
b, e = m.as_base_exp()
if not b.is_commutative:
nc += 1
if e1 is None:
e1 = e
elif e != e1 or nc > 1:
return self, S.One
bases.append(b)
return self.func(*bases), e1
def _eval_is_polynomial(self, syms):
return all(term._eval_is_polynomial(syms) for term in self.args)
def _eval_is_rational_function(self, syms):
return all(term._eval_is_rational_function(syms) for term in self.args)
def _eval_is_algebraic_expr(self, syms):
return all(term._eval_is_algebraic_expr(syms) for term in self.args)
_eval_is_finite = lambda self: _fuzzy_group(
a.is_finite for a in self.args)
_eval_is_commutative = lambda self: _fuzzy_group(
a.is_commutative for a in self.args)
_eval_is_complex = lambda self: _fuzzy_group(
(a.is_complex for a in self.args), quick_exit=True)
def _eval_is_infinite(self):
if any(a.is_infinite for a in self.args):
if any(a.is_zero for a in self.args):
return S.NaN.is_infinite
if any(a.is_zero is None for a in self.args):
return None
return True
def _eval_is_rational(self):
r = _fuzzy_group((a.is_rational for a in self.args), quick_exit=True)
if r:
return r
elif r is False:
return self.is_zero
def _eval_is_algebraic(self):
r = _fuzzy_group((a.is_algebraic for a in self.args), quick_exit=True)
if r:
return r
elif r is False:
return self.is_zero
def _eval_is_zero(self):
zero = infinite = False
for a in self.args:
z = a.is_zero
if z:
if infinite:
return # 0*oo is nan and nan.is_zero is None
zero = True
else:
if not a.is_finite:
if zero:
return # 0*oo is nan and nan.is_zero is None
infinite = True
if zero is False and z is None: # trap None
zero = None
return zero
def _eval_is_integer(self):
is_rational = self.is_rational
if is_rational:
n, d = self.as_numer_denom()
if d is S.One:
return True
elif d is S(2):
return n.is_even
elif is_rational is False:
return False
def _eval_is_polar(self):
has_polar = any(arg.is_polar for arg in self.args)
return has_polar and \
all(arg.is_polar or arg.is_positive for arg in self.args)
def _eval_is_real(self):
return self._eval_real_imag(True)
def _eval_real_imag(self, real):
zero = False
t_not_re_im = None
for t in self.args:
if not t.is_complex:
return t.is_complex
elif t.is_imaginary: # I
real = not real
elif t.is_real: # 2
if not zero:
z = t.is_zero
if not z and zero is False:
zero = z
elif z:
if all(a.is_finite for a in self.args):
return True
return
elif t.is_real is False:
# symbolic or literal like `2 + I` or symbolic imaginary
if t_not_re_im:
return # complex terms might cancel
t_not_re_im = t
elif t.is_imaginary is False: # symbolic like `2` or `2 + I`
if t_not_re_im:
return # complex terms might cancel
t_not_re_im = t
else:
return
if t_not_re_im:
if t_not_re_im.is_real is False:
if real: # like 3
return zero # 3*(smthng like 2 + I or i) is not real
if t_not_re_im.is_imaginary is False: # symbolic 2 or 2 + I
if not real: # like I
return zero # I*(smthng like 2 or 2 + I) is not real
elif zero is False:
return real # can't be trumped by 0
elif real:
return real # doesn't matter what zero is
def _eval_is_imaginary(self):
z = self.is_zero
if z:
return False
elif z is False:
return self._eval_real_imag(False)
def _eval_is_hermitian(self):
return self._eval_herm_antiherm(True)
def _eval_herm_antiherm(self, real):
one_nc = zero = one_neither = False
for t in self.args:
if not t.is_commutative:
if one_nc:
return
one_nc = True
if t.is_antihermitian:
real = not real
elif t.is_hermitian:
if not zero:
z = t.is_zero
if not z and zero is False:
zero = z
elif z:
if all(a.is_finite for a in self.args):
return True
return
elif t.is_hermitian is False:
if one_neither:
return
one_neither = True
else:
return
if one_neither:
if real:
return zero
elif zero is False or real:
return real
def _eval_is_antihermitian(self):
z = self.is_zero
if z:
return False
elif z is False:
return self._eval_herm_antiherm(False)
def _eval_is_irrational(self):
for t in self.args:
a = t.is_irrational
if a:
others = list(self.args)
others.remove(t)
if all((x.is_rational and fuzzy_not(x.is_zero)) is True for x in others):
return True
return
if a is None:
return
return False
def _eval_is_positive(self):
"""Return True if self is positive, False if not, and None if it
cannot be determined.
This algorithm is non-recursive and works by keeping track of the
sign which changes when a negative or nonpositive is encountered.
Whether a nonpositive or nonnegative is seen is also tracked since
the presence of these makes it impossible to return True, but
possible to return False if the end result is nonpositive. e.g.
pos * neg * nonpositive -> pos or zero -> None is returned
pos * neg * nonnegative -> neg or zero -> False is returned
"""
return self._eval_pos_neg(1)
def _eval_pos_neg(self, sign):
saw_NON = saw_NOT = False
for t in self.args:
if t.is_positive:
continue
elif t.is_negative:
sign = -sign
elif t.is_zero:
if all(a.is_finite for a in self.args):
return False
return
elif t.is_nonpositive:
sign = -sign
saw_NON = True
elif t.is_nonnegative:
saw_NON = True
elif t.is_positive is False:
sign = -sign
if saw_NOT:
return
saw_NOT = True
elif t.is_negative is False:
if saw_NOT:
return
saw_NOT = True
else:
return
if sign == 1 and saw_NON is False and saw_NOT is False:
return True
if sign < 0:
return False
def _eval_is_negative(self):
if self.args[0] == -1:
return (-self).is_positive # remove -1
return self._eval_pos_neg(-1)
def _eval_is_odd(self):
is_integer = self.is_integer
if is_integer:
r, acc = True, 1
for t in self.args:
if not t.is_integer:
return None
elif t.is_even:
r = False
elif t.is_integer:
if r is False:
pass
elif acc != 1 and (acc + t).is_odd:
r = False
elif t.is_odd is None:
r = None
acc = t
return r
# !integer -> !odd
elif is_integer is False:
return False
def _eval_is_even(self):
is_integer = self.is_integer
if is_integer:
return fuzzy_not(self.is_odd)
elif is_integer is False:
return False
def _eval_is_composite(self):
if self.is_integer and self.is_positive:
"""
Here we count the number of arguments that have a minimum value
greater than two.
If there are more than one of such a symbol then the result is composite.
Else, the result cannot be determined.
"""
number_of_args = 0 # count of symbols with minimum value greater than one
for arg in self.args:
if (arg-1).is_positive:
number_of_args += 1
if number_of_args > 1:
return True
def _eval_subs(self, old, new):
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import sign
from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import multiplicity
from sympy.simplify.powsimp import powdenest
from sympy.simplify.radsimp import fraction
if not old.is_Mul:
return None
# try keep replacement literal so -2*x doesn't replace 4*x
if old.args[0].is_Number and old.args[0] < 0:
if self.args[0].is_Number:
if self.args[0] < 0:
return self._subs(-old, -new)
return None
def base_exp(a):
# if I and -1 are in a Mul, they get both end up with
# a -1 base (see issue 6421); all we want here are the
# true Pow or exp separated into base and exponent
from sympy import exp
if a.is_Pow or isinstance(a, exp):
return a.as_base_exp()
return a, S.One
def breakup(eq):
"""break up powers of eq when treated as a Mul:
b**(Rational*e) -> b**e, Rational
commutatives come back as a dictionary {b**e: Rational}
noncommutatives come back as a list [(b**e, Rational)]
"""
(c, nc) = (defaultdict(int), list())
for a in Mul.make_args(eq):
a = powdenest(a)
(b, e) = base_exp(a)
if e is not S.One:
(co, _) = e.as_coeff_mul()
b = Pow(b, e/co)
e = co
if a.is_commutative:
c[b] += e
else:
nc.append([b, e])
return (c, nc)
def rejoin(b, co):
"""
Put rational back with exponent; in general this is not ok, but
since we took it from the exponent for analysis, it's ok to put
it back.
"""
(b, e) = base_exp(b)
return Pow(b, e*co)
def ndiv(a, b):
"""if b divides a in an extractive way (like 1/4 divides 1/2
but not vice versa, and 2/5 does not divide 1/3) then return
the integer number of times it divides, else return 0.
"""
if not b.q % a.q or not a.q % b.q:
return int(a/b)
return 0
# give Muls in the denominator a chance to be changed (see issue 5651)
# rv will be the default return value
rv = None
n, d = fraction(self)
self2 = self
if d is not S.One:
self2 = n._subs(old, new)/d._subs(old, new)
if not self2.is_Mul:
return self2._subs(old, new)
if self2 != self:
rv = self2
# Now continue with regular substitution.
# handle the leading coefficient and use it to decide if anything
# should even be started; we always know where to find the Rational
# so it's a quick test
co_self = self2.args[0]
co_old = old.args[0]
co_xmul = None
if co_old.is_Rational and co_self.is_Rational:
# if coeffs are the same there will be no updating to do
# below after breakup() step; so skip (and keep co_xmul=None)
if co_old != co_self:
co_xmul = co_self.extract_multiplicatively(co_old)
elif co_old.is_Rational:
return rv
# break self and old into factors
(c, nc) = breakup(self2)
(old_c, old_nc) = breakup(old)
# update the coefficients if we had an extraction
# e.g. if co_self were 2*(3/35*x)**2 and co_old = 3/5
# then co_self in c is replaced by (3/5)**2 and co_residual
# is 2*(1/7)**2
if co_xmul and co_xmul.is_Rational and abs(co_old) != 1:
mult = S(multiplicity(abs(co_old), co_self))
c.pop(co_self)
if co_old in c:
c[co_old] += mult
else:
c[co_old] = mult
co_residual = co_self/co_old**mult
else:
co_residual = 1
# do quick tests to see if we can't succeed
ok = True
if len(old_nc) > len(nc):
# more non-commutative terms
ok = False
elif len(old_c) > len(c):
# more commutative terms
ok = False
elif set(i[0] for i in old_nc).difference(set(i[0] for i in nc)):
# unmatched non-commutative bases
ok = False
elif set(old_c).difference(set(c)):
# unmatched commutative terms
ok = False
elif any(sign(c[b]) != sign(old_c[b]) for b in old_c):
# differences in sign
ok = False
if not ok:
return rv
if not old_c:
cdid = None
else:
rat = []
for (b, old_e) in old_c.items():
c_e = c[b]
rat.append(ndiv(c_e, old_e))
if not rat[-1]:
return rv
cdid = min(rat)
if not old_nc:
ncdid = None
for i in range(len(nc)):
nc[i] = rejoin(*nc[i])
else:
ncdid = 0 # number of nc replacements we did
take = len(old_nc) # how much to look at each time
limit = cdid or S.Infinity # max number that we can take
failed = [] # failed terms will need subs if other terms pass
i = 0
while limit and i + take <= len(nc):
hit = False
# the bases must be equivalent in succession, and
# the powers must be extractively compatible on the
# first and last factor but equal in between.
rat = []
for j in range(take):
if nc[i + j][0] != old_nc[j][0]:
break
elif j == 0:
rat.append(ndiv(nc[i + j][1], old_nc[j][1]))
elif j == take - 1:
rat.append(ndiv(nc[i + j][1], old_nc[j][1]))
elif nc[i + j][1] != old_nc[j][1]:
break
else:
rat.append(1)
j += 1
else:
ndo = min(rat)
if ndo:
if take == 1:
if cdid:
ndo = min(cdid, ndo)
nc[i] = Pow(new, ndo)*rejoin(nc[i][0],
nc[i][1] - ndo*old_nc[0][1])
else:
ndo = 1
# the left residual
l = rejoin(nc[i][0], nc[i][1] - ndo*
old_nc[0][1])
# eliminate all middle terms
mid = new
# the right residual (which may be the same as the middle if take == 2)
ir = i + take - 1
r = (nc[ir][0], nc[ir][1] - ndo*
old_nc[-1][1])
if r[1]:
if i + take < len(nc):
nc[i:i + take] = [l*mid, r]
else:
r = rejoin(*r)
nc[i:i + take] = [l*mid*r]
else:
# there was nothing left on the right
nc[i:i + take] = [l*mid]
limit -= ndo
ncdid += ndo
hit = True
if not hit:
# do the subs on this failing factor
failed.append(i)
i += 1
else:
if not ncdid:
return rv
# although we didn't fail, certain nc terms may have
# failed so we rebuild them after attempting a partial
# subs on them
failed.extend(range(i, len(nc)))
for i in failed:
nc[i] = rejoin(*nc[i]).subs(old, new)
# rebuild the expression
if cdid is None:
do = ncdid
elif ncdid is None:
do = cdid
else:
do = min(ncdid, cdid)
margs = []
for b in c:
if b in old_c:
# calculate the new exponent
e = c[b] - old_c[b]*do
margs.append(rejoin(b, e))
else:
margs.append(rejoin(b.subs(old, new), c[b]))
if cdid and not ncdid:
# in case we are replacing commutative with non-commutative,
# we want the new term to come at the front just like the
# rest of this routine
margs = [Pow(new, cdid)] + margs
return co_residual*self2.func(*margs)*self2.func(*nc)
def _eval_nseries(self, x, n, logx):
from sympy import Order, powsimp
terms = [t.nseries(x, n=n, logx=logx) for t in self.args]
res = powsimp(self.func(*terms).expand(), combine='exp', deep=True)
if res.has(Order):
res += Order(x**n, x)
return res
def _eval_as_leading_term(self, x):
return self.func(*[t.as_leading_term(x) for t in self.args])
def _eval_conjugate(self):
return self.func(*[t.conjugate() for t in self.args])
def _eval_transpose(self):
return self.func(*[t.transpose() for t in self.args[::-1]])
def _eval_adjoint(self):
return self.func(*[t.adjoint() for t in self.args[::-1]])
def _sage_(self):
s = 1
for x in self.args:
s *= x._sage_()
return s
def as_content_primitive(self, radical=False, clear=True):
"""Return the tuple (R, self/R) where R is the positive Rational
extracted from self.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> (-3*sqrt(2)*(2 - 2*sqrt(2))).as_content_primitive()
(6, -sqrt(2)*(-sqrt(2) + 1))
See docstring of Expr.as_content_primitive for more examples.
"""
coef = S.One
args = []
for i, a in enumerate(self.args):
c, p = a.as_content_primitive(radical=radical, clear=clear)
coef *= c
if p is not S.One:
args.append(p)
# don't use self._from_args here to reconstruct args
# since there may be identical args now that should be combined
# e.g. (2+2*x)*(3+3*x) should be (6, (1 + x)**2) not (6, (1+x)*(1+x))
return coef, self.func(*args)
def as_ordered_factors(self, order=None):
"""Transform an expression into an ordered list of factors.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sin, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> (2*x*y*sin(x)*cos(x)).as_ordered_factors()
[2, x, y, sin(x), cos(x)]
"""
cpart, ncpart = self.args_cnc()
cpart.sort(key=lambda expr: expr.sort_key(order=order))
return cpart + ncpart
@property
def _sorted_args(self):
return tuple(self.as_ordered_factors())
def prod(a, start=1):
"""Return product of elements of a. Start with int 1 so if only
ints are included then an int result is returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import prod, S
>>> prod(range(3))
0
>>> type(_) is int
True
>>> prod([S(2), 3])
6
>>> _.is_Integer
True
You can start the product at something other than 1:
>>> prod([1, 2], 3)
6
"""
return reduce(operator.mul, a, start)
def _keep_coeff(coeff, factors, clear=True, sign=False):
"""Return ``coeff*factors`` unevaluated if necessary.
If ``clear`` is False, do not keep the coefficient as a factor
if it can be distributed on a single factor such that one or
more terms will still have integer coefficients.
If ``sign`` is True, allow a coefficient of -1 to remain factored out.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.core.mul import _keep_coeff
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import S
>>> _keep_coeff(S.Half, x + 2)
(x + 2)/2
>>> _keep_coeff(S.Half, x + 2, clear=False)
x/2 + 1
>>> _keep_coeff(S.Half, (x + 2)*y, clear=False)
y*(x + 2)/2
>>> _keep_coeff(S(-1), x + y)
-x - y
>>> _keep_coeff(S(-1), x + y, sign=True)
-(x + y)
"""
if not coeff.is_Number:
if factors.is_Number:
factors, coeff = coeff, factors
else:
return coeff*factors
if coeff is S.One:
return factors
elif coeff is S.NegativeOne and not sign:
return -factors
elif factors.is_Add:
if not clear and coeff.is_Rational and coeff.q != 1:
q = S(coeff.q)
for i in factors.args:
c, t = i.as_coeff_Mul()
r = c/q
if r == int(r):
return coeff*factors
return Mul._from_args((coeff, factors))
elif factors.is_Mul:
margs = list(factors.args)
if margs[0].is_Number:
margs[0] *= coeff
if margs[0] == 1:
margs.pop(0)
else:
margs.insert(0, coeff)
return Mul._from_args(margs)
else:
return coeff*factors
def expand_2arg(e):
from sympy.simplify.simplify import bottom_up
def do(e):
if e.is_Mul:
c, r = e.as_coeff_Mul()
if c.is_Number and r.is_Add:
return _unevaluated_Add(*[c*ri for ri in r.args])
return e
return bottom_up(e, do)
from .numbers import Rational
from .power import Pow
from .add import Add, _addsort, _unevaluated_Add
|
d3d3e1250b390675e96fc7660a51e7af6918f399967692925c586c235e874073
|
"""Tools for setting up printing in interactive sessions. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
import sys
from distutils.version import LooseVersion as V
from io import BytesIO
from sympy import latex as default_latex
from sympy import preview
from sympy.core.compatibility import integer_types
from sympy.utilities.misc import debug
def _init_python_printing(stringify_func, **settings):
"""Setup printing in Python interactive session. """
import sys
from sympy.core.compatibility import builtins
def _displayhook(arg):
"""Python's pretty-printer display hook.
This function was adapted from:
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0217/
"""
if arg is not None:
builtins._ = None
print(stringify_func(arg, **settings))
builtins._ = arg
sys.displayhook = _displayhook
def _init_ipython_printing(ip, stringify_func, use_latex, euler, forecolor,
backcolor, fontsize, latex_mode, print_builtin,
latex_printer, **settings):
"""Setup printing in IPython interactive session. """
try:
from IPython.lib.latextools import latex_to_png
except ImportError:
pass
preamble = "\\documentclass[%s]{article}\n" \
"\\pagestyle{empty}\n" \
"\\usepackage{amsmath,amsfonts}%s\\begin{document}"
if euler:
addpackages = '\\usepackage{euler}'
else:
addpackages = ''
preamble = preamble % (fontsize, addpackages)
imagesize = 'tight'
offset = "0cm,0cm"
resolution = 150
dvi = r"-T %s -D %d -bg %s -fg %s -O %s" % (
imagesize, resolution, backcolor, forecolor, offset)
dvioptions = dvi.split()
debug("init_printing: DVIOPTIONS:", dvioptions)
debug("init_printing: PREAMBLE:", preamble)
latex = latex_printer or default_latex
def _print_plain(arg, p, cycle):
"""caller for pretty, for use in IPython 0.11"""
if _can_print_latex(arg):
p.text(stringify_func(arg))
else:
p.text(IPython.lib.pretty.pretty(arg))
def _preview_wrapper(o):
exprbuffer = BytesIO()
try:
preview(o, output='png', viewer='BytesIO',
outputbuffer=exprbuffer, preamble=preamble,
dvioptions=dvioptions)
except Exception as e:
# IPython swallows exceptions
debug("png printing:", "_preview_wrapper exception raised:",
repr(e))
raise
return exprbuffer.getvalue()
def _matplotlib_wrapper(o):
# mathtext does not understand certain latex flags, so we try to
# replace them with suitable subs
o = o.replace(r'\operatorname', '')
o = o.replace(r'\overline', r'\bar')
# mathtext can't render some LaTeX commands. For example, it can't
# render any LaTeX environments such as array or matrix. So here we
# ensure that if mathtext fails to render, we return None.
try:
return latex_to_png(o)
except ValueError as e:
debug('matplotlib exception caught:', repr(e))
return None
from sympy import Basic
from sympy.matrices import MatrixBase
from sympy.physics.vector import Vector, Dyadic
from sympy.tensor.array import NDimArray
# These should all have _repr_latex_ and _repr_latex_orig. If you update
# this also update printable_types below.
sympy_latex_types = (Basic, MatrixBase, Vector, Dyadic, NDimArray)
def _can_print_latex(o):
"""Return True if type o can be printed with LaTeX.
If o is a container type, this is True if and only if every element of
o can be printed with LaTeX.
"""
try:
# If you're adding another type, make sure you add it to printable_types
# later in this file as well
builtin_types = (list, tuple, set, frozenset)
if isinstance(o, builtin_types):
# If the object is a custom subclass with a custom str or
# repr, use that instead.
if (type(o).__str__ not in (i.__str__ for i in builtin_types) or
type(o).__repr__ not in (i.__repr__ for i in builtin_types)):
return False
return all(_can_print_latex(i) for i in o)
elif isinstance(o, dict):
return all(_can_print_latex(i) and _can_print_latex(o[i]) for i in o)
elif isinstance(o, bool):
return False
# TODO : Investigate if "elif hasattr(o, '_latex')" is more useful
# to use here, than these explicit imports.
elif isinstance(o, sympy_latex_types):
return True
elif isinstance(o, (float, integer_types)) and print_builtin:
return True
return False
except RuntimeError:
return False
# This is in case maximum recursion depth is reached.
# Since RecursionError is for versions of Python 3.5+
# so this is to guard against RecursionError for older versions.
def _print_latex_png(o):
"""
A function that returns a png rendered by an external latex
distribution, falling back to matplotlib rendering
"""
if _can_print_latex(o):
s = latex(o, mode=latex_mode, **settings)
try:
return _preview_wrapper(s)
except RuntimeError as e:
debug('preview failed with:', repr(e),
' Falling back to matplotlib backend')
if latex_mode != 'inline':
s = latex(o, mode='inline', **settings)
return _matplotlib_wrapper(s)
def _print_latex_matplotlib(o):
"""
A function that returns a png rendered by mathtext
"""
if _can_print_latex(o):
s = latex(o, mode='inline', **settings)
return _matplotlib_wrapper(s)
def _print_latex_text(o):
"""
A function to generate the latex representation of sympy expressions.
"""
if _can_print_latex(o):
s = latex(o, mode=latex_mode, **settings)
s = s.strip('$')
return '$$%s$$' % s
def _result_display(self, arg):
"""IPython's pretty-printer display hook, for use in IPython 0.10
This function was adapted from:
ipython/IPython/hooks.py:155
"""
if self.rc.pprint:
out = stringify_func(arg)
if '\n' in out:
print
print(out)
else:
print(repr(arg))
import IPython
if V(IPython.__version__) >= '0.11':
from sympy.core.basic import Basic
from sympy.matrices.matrices import MatrixBase
from sympy.physics.vector import Vector, Dyadic
from sympy.tensor.array import NDimArray
printable_types = [Basic, MatrixBase, float, tuple, list, set,
frozenset, dict, Vector, Dyadic, NDimArray] + list(integer_types)
plaintext_formatter = ip.display_formatter.formatters['text/plain']
for cls in printable_types:
plaintext_formatter.for_type(cls, _print_plain)
png_formatter = ip.display_formatter.formatters['image/png']
if use_latex in (True, 'png'):
debug("init_printing: using png formatter")
for cls in printable_types:
png_formatter.for_type(cls, _print_latex_png)
elif use_latex == 'matplotlib':
debug("init_printing: using matplotlib formatter")
for cls in printable_types:
png_formatter.for_type(cls, _print_latex_matplotlib)
else:
debug("init_printing: not using any png formatter")
for cls in printable_types:
# Better way to set this, but currently does not work in IPython
#png_formatter.for_type(cls, None)
if cls in png_formatter.type_printers:
png_formatter.type_printers.pop(cls)
latex_formatter = ip.display_formatter.formatters['text/latex']
if use_latex in (True, 'mathjax'):
debug("init_printing: using mathjax formatter")
for cls in printable_types:
latex_formatter.for_type(cls, _print_latex_text)
for typ in sympy_latex_types:
typ._repr_latex_ = typ._repr_latex_orig
else:
debug("init_printing: not using text/latex formatter")
for cls in printable_types:
# Better way to set this, but currently does not work in IPython
#latex_formatter.for_type(cls, None)
if cls in latex_formatter.type_printers:
latex_formatter.type_printers.pop(cls)
for typ in sympy_latex_types:
typ._repr_latex_ = None
else:
ip.set_hook('result_display', _result_display)
def _is_ipython(shell):
"""Is a shell instance an IPython shell?"""
# shortcut, so we don't import IPython if we don't have to
if 'IPython' not in sys.modules:
return False
try:
from IPython.core.interactiveshell import InteractiveShell
except ImportError:
# IPython < 0.11
try:
from IPython.iplib import InteractiveShell
except ImportError:
# Reaching this points means IPython has changed in a backward-incompatible way
# that we don't know about. Warn?
return False
return isinstance(shell, InteractiveShell)
# Used by the doctester to override the default for no_global
NO_GLOBAL = False
def init_printing(pretty_print=True, order=None, use_unicode=None,
use_latex=None, wrap_line=None, num_columns=None,
no_global=False, ip=None, euler=False, forecolor='Black',
backcolor='Transparent', fontsize='10pt',
latex_mode='equation*', print_builtin=True,
str_printer=None, pretty_printer=None,
latex_printer=None, **settings):
r"""
Initializes pretty-printer depending on the environment.
Parameters
==========
pretty_print: boolean
If True, use pretty_print to stringify or the provided pretty
printer; if False, use sstrrepr to stringify or the provided string
printer.
order: string or None
There are a few different settings for this parameter:
lex (default), which is lexographic order;
grlex, which is graded lexographic order;
grevlex, which is reversed graded lexographic order;
old, which is used for compatibility reasons and for long expressions;
None, which sets it to lex.
use_unicode: boolean or None
If True, use unicode characters;
if False, do not use unicode characters.
use_latex: string, boolean, or None
If True, use default latex rendering in GUI interfaces (png and
mathjax);
if False, do not use latex rendering;
if 'png', enable latex rendering with an external latex compiler,
falling back to matplotlib if external compilation fails;
if 'matplotlib', enable latex rendering with matplotlib;
if 'mathjax', enable latex text generation, for example MathJax
rendering in IPython notebook or text rendering in LaTeX documents
wrap_line: boolean
If True, lines will wrap at the end; if False, they will not wrap
but continue as one line. This is only relevant if `pretty_print` is
True.
num_columns: int or None
If int, number of columns before wrapping is set to num_columns; if
None, number of columns before wrapping is set to terminal width.
This is only relevant if `pretty_print` is True.
no_global: boolean
If True, the settings become system wide;
if False, use just for this console/session.
ip: An interactive console
This can either be an instance of IPython,
or a class that derives from code.InteractiveConsole.
euler: boolean, optional, default=False
Loads the euler package in the LaTeX preamble for handwritten style
fonts (http://www.ctan.org/pkg/euler).
forecolor: string, optional, default='Black'
DVI setting for foreground color.
backcolor: string, optional, default='Transparent'
DVI setting for background color.
fontsize: string, optional, default='10pt'
A font size to pass to the LaTeX documentclass function in the
preamble.
latex_mode: string, optional, default='equation*'
The mode used in the LaTeX printer. Can be one of:
{'inline'|'plain'|'equation'|'equation*'}.
print_builtin: boolean, optional, default=True
If true then floats and integers will be printed. If false the
printer will only print SymPy types.
str_printer: function, optional, default=None
A custom string printer function. This should mimic
sympy.printing.sstrrepr().
pretty_printer: function, optional, default=None
A custom pretty printer. This should mimic sympy.printing.pretty().
latex_printer: function, optional, default=None
A custom LaTeX printer. This should mimic sympy.printing.latex().
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.interactive import init_printing
>>> from sympy import Symbol, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> sqrt(5)
sqrt(5)
>>> init_printing(pretty_print=True) # doctest: +SKIP
>>> sqrt(5) # doctest: +SKIP
___
\/ 5
>>> theta = Symbol('theta') # doctest: +SKIP
>>> init_printing(use_unicode=True) # doctest: +SKIP
>>> theta # doctest: +SKIP
\u03b8
>>> init_printing(use_unicode=False) # doctest: +SKIP
>>> theta # doctest: +SKIP
theta
>>> init_printing(order='lex') # doctest: +SKIP
>>> str(y + x + y**2 + x**2) # doctest: +SKIP
x**2 + x + y**2 + y
>>> init_printing(order='grlex') # doctest: +SKIP
>>> str(y + x + y**2 + x**2) # doctest: +SKIP
x**2 + x + y**2 + y
>>> init_printing(order='grevlex') # doctest: +SKIP
>>> str(y * x**2 + x * y**2) # doctest: +SKIP
x**2*y + x*y**2
>>> init_printing(order='old') # doctest: +SKIP
>>> str(x**2 + y**2 + x + y) # doctest: +SKIP
x**2 + x + y**2 + y
>>> init_printing(num_columns=10) # doctest: +SKIP
>>> x**2 + x + y**2 + y # doctest: +SKIP
x + y +
x**2 + y**2
"""
import sys
from sympy.printing.printer import Printer
if pretty_print:
if pretty_printer is not None:
stringify_func = pretty_printer
else:
from sympy.printing import pretty as stringify_func
else:
if str_printer is not None:
stringify_func = str_printer
else:
from sympy.printing import sstrrepr as stringify_func
# Even if ip is not passed, double check that not in IPython shell
in_ipython = False
if ip is None:
try:
ip = get_ipython()
except NameError:
pass
else:
in_ipython = (ip is not None)
if ip and not in_ipython:
in_ipython = _is_ipython(ip)
if in_ipython and pretty_print:
try:
import IPython
# IPython 1.0 deprecates the frontend module, so we import directly
# from the terminal module to prevent a deprecation message from being
# shown.
if V(IPython.__version__) >= '1.0':
from IPython.terminal.interactiveshell import TerminalInteractiveShell
else:
from IPython.frontend.terminal.interactiveshell import TerminalInteractiveShell
from code import InteractiveConsole
except ImportError:
pass
else:
# This will be True if we are in the qtconsole or notebook
if not isinstance(ip, (InteractiveConsole, TerminalInteractiveShell)) \
and 'ipython-console' not in ''.join(sys.argv):
if use_unicode is None:
debug("init_printing: Setting use_unicode to True")
use_unicode = True
if use_latex is None:
debug("init_printing: Setting use_latex to True")
use_latex = True
if not NO_GLOBAL and not no_global:
Printer.set_global_settings(order=order, use_unicode=use_unicode,
wrap_line=wrap_line, num_columns=num_columns)
else:
_stringify_func = stringify_func
if pretty_print:
stringify_func = lambda expr: \
_stringify_func(expr, order=order,
use_unicode=use_unicode,
wrap_line=wrap_line,
num_columns=num_columns)
else:
stringify_func = lambda expr: _stringify_func(expr, order=order)
if in_ipython:
mode_in_settings = settings.pop("mode", None)
if mode_in_settings:
debug("init_printing: Mode is not able to be set due to internals"
"of IPython printing")
_init_ipython_printing(ip, stringify_func, use_latex, euler,
forecolor, backcolor, fontsize, latex_mode,
print_builtin, latex_printer, **settings)
else:
_init_python_printing(stringify_func, **settings)
|
a2fb53ddcfb3f25eb839ad2b925fe2eddc8696eb79885ef7be39dafd9a4b8ec4
|
"""Tools for setting up interactive sessions. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from distutils.version import LooseVersion as V
from sympy.external import import_module
from sympy.interactive.printing import init_printing
preexec_source = """\
from __future__ import division
from sympy import *
x, y, z, t = symbols('x y z t')
k, m, n = symbols('k m n', integer=True)
f, g, h = symbols('f g h', cls=Function)
init_printing()
"""
verbose_message = """\
These commands were executed:
%(source)s
Documentation can be found at https://docs.sympy.org/%(version)s
"""
no_ipython = """\
Couldn't locate IPython. Having IPython installed is greatly recommended.
See http://ipython.scipy.org for more details. If you use Debian/Ubuntu,
just install the 'ipython' package and start isympy again.
"""
def _make_message(ipython=True, quiet=False, source=None):
"""Create a banner for an interactive session. """
from sympy import __version__ as sympy_version
from sympy.polys.domains import GROUND_TYPES
from sympy.utilities.misc import ARCH
from sympy import SYMPY_DEBUG
import sys
import os
if quiet:
return ""
python_version = "%d.%d.%d" % sys.version_info[:3]
if ipython:
shell_name = "IPython"
else:
shell_name = "Python"
info = ['ground types: %s' % GROUND_TYPES]
cache = os.getenv('SYMPY_USE_CACHE')
if cache is not None and cache.lower() == 'no':
info.append('cache: off')
if SYMPY_DEBUG:
info.append('debugging: on')
args = shell_name, sympy_version, python_version, ARCH, ', '.join(info)
message = "%s console for SymPy %s (Python %s-%s) (%s)\n" % args
if source is None:
source = preexec_source
_source = ""
for line in source.split('\n')[:-1]:
if not line:
_source += '\n'
else:
_source += '>>> ' + line + '\n'
doc_version = sympy_version
if 'dev' in doc_version:
doc_version = "dev"
else:
doc_version = "%s/" % doc_version
message += '\n' + verbose_message % {'source': _source,
'version': doc_version}
return message
def int_to_Integer(s):
"""
Wrap integer literals with Integer.
This is based on the decistmt example from
http://docs.python.org/library/tokenize.html.
Only integer literals are converted. Float literals are left alone.
Examples
========
>>> from __future__ import division
>>> from sympy.interactive.session import int_to_Integer
>>> from sympy import Integer
>>> s = '1.2 + 1/2 - 0x12 + a1'
>>> int_to_Integer(s)
'1.2 +Integer (1 )/Integer (2 )-Integer (0x12 )+a1 '
>>> s = 'print (1/2)'
>>> int_to_Integer(s)
'print (Integer (1 )/Integer (2 ))'
>>> exec(s)
0.5
>>> exec(int_to_Integer(s))
1/2
"""
from tokenize import generate_tokens, untokenize, NUMBER, NAME, OP
from sympy.core.compatibility import StringIO
def _is_int(num):
"""
Returns true if string value num (with token NUMBER) represents an integer.
"""
# XXX: Is there something in the standard library that will do this?
if '.' in num or 'j' in num.lower() or 'e' in num.lower():
return False
return True
result = []
g = generate_tokens(StringIO(s).readline) # tokenize the string
for toknum, tokval, _, _, _ in g:
if toknum == NUMBER and _is_int(tokval): # replace NUMBER tokens
result.extend([
(NAME, 'Integer'),
(OP, '('),
(NUMBER, tokval),
(OP, ')')
])
else:
result.append((toknum, tokval))
return untokenize(result)
def enable_automatic_int_sympification(shell):
"""
Allow IPython to automatically convert integer literals to Integer.
"""
import ast
old_run_cell = shell.run_cell
def my_run_cell(cell, *args, **kwargs):
try:
# Check the cell for syntax errors. This way, the syntax error
# will show the original input, not the transformed input. The
# downside here is that IPython magic like %timeit will not work
# with transformed input (but on the other hand, IPython magic
# that doesn't expect transformed input will continue to work).
ast.parse(cell)
except SyntaxError:
pass
else:
cell = int_to_Integer(cell)
old_run_cell(cell, *args, **kwargs)
shell.run_cell = my_run_cell
def enable_automatic_symbols(shell):
"""Allow IPython to automatially create symbols (``isympy -a``). """
# XXX: This should perhaps use tokenize, like int_to_Integer() above.
# This would avoid re-executing the code, which can lead to subtle
# issues. For example:
#
# In [1]: a = 1
#
# In [2]: for i in range(10):
# ...: a += 1
# ...:
#
# In [3]: a
# Out[3]: 11
#
# In [4]: a = 1
#
# In [5]: for i in range(10):
# ...: a += 1
# ...: print b
# ...:
# b
# b
# b
# b
# b
# b
# b
# b
# b
# b
#
# In [6]: a
# Out[6]: 12
#
# Note how the for loop is executed again because `b` was not defined, but `a`
# was already incremented once, so the result is that it is incremented
# multiple times.
import re
re_nameerror = re.compile(
"name '(?P<symbol>[A-Za-z_][A-Za-z0-9_]*)' is not defined")
def _handler(self, etype, value, tb, tb_offset=None):
"""Handle :exc:`NameError` exception and allow injection of missing symbols. """
if etype is NameError and tb.tb_next and not tb.tb_next.tb_next:
match = re_nameerror.match(str(value))
if match is not None:
# XXX: Make sure Symbol is in scope. Otherwise you'll get infinite recursion.
self.run_cell("%(symbol)s = Symbol('%(symbol)s')" %
{'symbol': match.group("symbol")}, store_history=False)
try:
code = self.user_ns['In'][-1]
except (KeyError, IndexError):
pass
else:
self.run_cell(code, store_history=False)
return None
finally:
self.run_cell("del %s" % match.group("symbol"),
store_history=False)
stb = self.InteractiveTB.structured_traceback(
etype, value, tb, tb_offset=tb_offset)
self._showtraceback(etype, value, stb)
shell.set_custom_exc((NameError,), _handler)
def init_ipython_session(shell=None, argv=[], auto_symbols=False, auto_int_to_Integer=False):
"""Construct new IPython session. """
import IPython
if V(IPython.__version__) >= '0.11':
if not shell:
# use an app to parse the command line, and init config
# IPython 1.0 deprecates the frontend module, so we import directly
# from the terminal module to prevent a deprecation message from being
# shown.
if V(IPython.__version__) >= '1.0':
from IPython.terminal import ipapp
else:
from IPython.frontend.terminal import ipapp
app = ipapp.TerminalIPythonApp()
# don't draw IPython banner during initialization:
app.display_banner = False
app.initialize(argv)
shell = app.shell
if auto_symbols:
enable_automatic_symbols(shell)
if auto_int_to_Integer:
enable_automatic_int_sympification(shell)
return shell
else:
from IPython.Shell import make_IPython
return make_IPython(argv)
def init_python_session():
"""Construct new Python session. """
from code import InteractiveConsole
class SymPyConsole(InteractiveConsole):
"""An interactive console with readline support. """
def __init__(self):
InteractiveConsole.__init__(self)
try:
import readline
except ImportError:
pass
else:
import os
import atexit
readline.parse_and_bind('tab: complete')
if hasattr(readline, 'read_history_file'):
history = os.path.expanduser('~/.sympy-history')
try:
readline.read_history_file(history)
except IOError:
pass
atexit.register(readline.write_history_file, history)
return SymPyConsole()
def init_session(ipython=None, pretty_print=True, order=None,
use_unicode=None, use_latex=None, quiet=False, auto_symbols=False,
auto_int_to_Integer=False, str_printer=None, pretty_printer=None,
latex_printer=None, argv=[]):
"""
Initialize an embedded IPython or Python session. The IPython session is
initiated with the --pylab option, without the numpy imports, so that
matplotlib plotting can be interactive.
Parameters
==========
pretty_print: boolean
If True, use pretty_print to stringify;
if False, use sstrrepr to stringify.
order: string or None
There are a few different settings for this parameter:
lex (default), which is lexographic order;
grlex, which is graded lexographic order;
grevlex, which is reversed graded lexographic order;
old, which is used for compatibility reasons and for long expressions;
None, which sets it to lex.
use_unicode: boolean or None
If True, use unicode characters;
if False, do not use unicode characters.
use_latex: boolean or None
If True, use latex rendering if IPython GUI's;
if False, do not use latex rendering.
quiet: boolean
If True, init_session will not print messages regarding its status;
if False, init_session will print messages regarding its status.
auto_symbols: boolean
If True, IPython will automatically create symbols for you.
If False, it will not.
The default is False.
auto_int_to_Integer: boolean
If True, IPython will automatically wrap int literals with Integer, so
that things like 1/2 give Rational(1, 2).
If False, it will not.
The default is False.
ipython: boolean or None
If True, printing will initialize for an IPython console;
if False, printing will initialize for a normal console;
The default is None, which automatically determines whether we are in
an ipython instance or not.
str_printer: function, optional, default=None
A custom string printer function. This should mimic
sympy.printing.sstrrepr().
pretty_printer: function, optional, default=None
A custom pretty printer. This should mimic sympy.printing.pretty().
latex_printer: function, optional, default=None
A custom LaTeX printer. This should mimic sympy.printing.latex()
This should mimic sympy.printing.latex().
argv: list of arguments for IPython
See sympy.bin.isympy for options that can be used to initialize IPython.
See Also
========
sympy.interactive.printing.init_printing: for examples and the rest of the parameters.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import init_session, Symbol, sin, sqrt
>>> sin(x) #doctest: +SKIP
NameError: name 'x' is not defined
>>> init_session() #doctest: +SKIP
>>> sin(x) #doctest: +SKIP
sin(x)
>>> sqrt(5) #doctest: +SKIP
___
\\/ 5
>>> init_session(pretty_print=False) #doctest: +SKIP
>>> sqrt(5) #doctest: +SKIP
sqrt(5)
>>> y + x + y**2 + x**2 #doctest: +SKIP
x**2 + x + y**2 + y
>>> init_session(order='grlex') #doctest: +SKIP
>>> y + x + y**2 + x**2 #doctest: +SKIP
x**2 + y**2 + x + y
>>> init_session(order='grevlex') #doctest: +SKIP
>>> y * x**2 + x * y**2 #doctest: +SKIP
x**2*y + x*y**2
>>> init_session(order='old') #doctest: +SKIP
>>> x**2 + y**2 + x + y #doctest: +SKIP
x + y + x**2 + y**2
>>> theta = Symbol('theta') #doctest: +SKIP
>>> theta #doctest: +SKIP
theta
>>> init_session(use_unicode=True) #doctest: +SKIP
>>> theta # doctest: +SKIP
\u03b8
"""
import sys
in_ipython = False
if ipython is not False:
try:
import IPython
except ImportError:
if ipython is True:
raise RuntimeError("IPython is not available on this system")
ip = None
else:
try:
from IPython import get_ipython
ip = get_ipython()
except ImportError:
ip = None
in_ipython = bool(ip)
if ipython is None:
ipython = in_ipython
if ipython is False:
ip = init_python_session()
mainloop = ip.interact
else:
ip = init_ipython_session(ip, argv=argv, auto_symbols=auto_symbols,
auto_int_to_Integer=auto_int_to_Integer)
if V(IPython.__version__) >= '0.11':
# runsource is gone, use run_cell instead, which doesn't
# take a symbol arg. The second arg is `store_history`,
# and False means don't add the line to IPython's history.
ip.runsource = lambda src, symbol='exec': ip.run_cell(src, False)
#Enable interactive plotting using pylab.
try:
ip.enable_pylab(import_all=False)
except Exception:
# Causes an import error if matplotlib is not installed.
# Causes other errors (depending on the backend) if there
# is no display, or if there is some problem in the
# backend, so we have a bare "except Exception" here
pass
if not in_ipython:
mainloop = ip.mainloop
if auto_symbols and (not ipython or V(IPython.__version__) < '0.11'):
raise RuntimeError("automatic construction of symbols is possible only in IPython 0.11 or above")
if auto_int_to_Integer and (not ipython or V(IPython.__version__) < '0.11'):
raise RuntimeError("automatic int to Integer transformation is possible only in IPython 0.11 or above")
_preexec_source = preexec_source
ip.runsource(_preexec_source, symbol='exec')
init_printing(pretty_print=pretty_print, order=order,
use_unicode=use_unicode, use_latex=use_latex, ip=ip,
str_printer=str_printer, pretty_printer=pretty_printer,
latex_printer=latex_printer)
message = _make_message(ipython, quiet, _preexec_source)
if not in_ipython:
print(message)
mainloop()
sys.exit('Exiting ...')
else:
print(message)
import atexit
atexit.register(lambda: print("Exiting ...\n"))
|
fa8fbdfbbceeff917d26c60021be1b70fc8f2349eeee35d335e1b84a84ae020b
|
"""User-friendly public interface to polynomial functions. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.core import (
S, Basic, Expr, I, Integer, Add, Mul, Dummy, Tuple
)
from sympy.core.mul import _keep_coeff
from sympy.core.symbol import Symbol
from sympy.core.basic import preorder_traversal
from sympy.core.relational import Relational
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.core.decorators import _sympifyit
from sympy.core.function import Derivative
from sympy.logic.boolalg import BooleanAtom
from sympy.polys.polyclasses import DMP
from sympy.polys.polyutils import (
basic_from_dict,
_sort_gens,
_unify_gens,
_dict_reorder,
_dict_from_expr,
_parallel_dict_from_expr,
)
from sympy.polys.rationaltools import together
from sympy.polys.rootisolation import dup_isolate_real_roots_list
from sympy.polys.groebnertools import groebner as _groebner
from sympy.polys.fglmtools import matrix_fglm
from sympy.polys.monomials import Monomial
from sympy.polys.orderings import monomial_key
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import (
OperationNotSupported, DomainError,
CoercionFailed, UnificationFailed,
GeneratorsNeeded, PolynomialError,
MultivariatePolynomialError,
ExactQuotientFailed,
PolificationFailed,
ComputationFailed,
GeneratorsError,
)
from sympy.utilities import group, sift, public, filldedent
import sympy.polys
import mpmath
from mpmath.libmp.libhyper import NoConvergence
from sympy.polys.domains import FF, QQ, ZZ
from sympy.polys.constructor import construct_domain
from sympy.polys import polyoptions as options
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable, range, ordered
@public
class Poly(Expr):
"""
Generic class for representing and operating on polynomial expressions.
Subclasses Expr class.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
Create a univariate polynomial:
>>> Poly(x*(x**2 + x - 1)**2)
Poly(x**5 + 2*x**4 - x**3 - 2*x**2 + x, x, domain='ZZ')
Create a univariate polynomial with specific domain:
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x + sqrt(3), domain='R')
Poly(1.0*x**2 + 2.0*x + 1.73205080756888, x, domain='RR')
Create a multivariate polynomial:
>>> Poly(y*x**2 + x*y + 1)
Poly(x**2*y + x*y + 1, x, y, domain='ZZ')
Create a univariate polynomial, where y is a constant:
>>> Poly(y*x**2 + x*y + 1,x)
Poly(y*x**2 + y*x + 1, x, domain='ZZ[y]')
You can evaluate the above polynomial as a function of y:
>>> Poly(y*x**2 + x*y + 1,x).eval(2)
6*y + 1
See Also
========
sympy.core.expr.Expr
"""
__slots__ = ['rep', 'gens']
is_commutative = True
is_Poly = True
_op_priority = 10.001
def __new__(cls, rep, *gens, **args):
"""Create a new polynomial instance out of something useful. """
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
if 'order' in opt:
raise NotImplementedError("'order' keyword is not implemented yet")
if iterable(rep, exclude=str):
if isinstance(rep, dict):
return cls._from_dict(rep, opt)
else:
return cls._from_list(list(rep), opt)
else:
rep = sympify(rep)
if rep.is_Poly:
return cls._from_poly(rep, opt)
else:
return cls._from_expr(rep, opt)
@classmethod
def new(cls, rep, *gens):
"""Construct :class:`Poly` instance from raw representation. """
if not isinstance(rep, DMP):
raise PolynomialError(
"invalid polynomial representation: %s" % rep)
elif rep.lev != len(gens) - 1:
raise PolynomialError("invalid arguments: %s, %s" % (rep, gens))
obj = Basic.__new__(cls)
obj.rep = rep
obj.gens = gens
return obj
@classmethod
def from_dict(cls, rep, *gens, **args):
"""Construct a polynomial from a ``dict``. """
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
return cls._from_dict(rep, opt)
@classmethod
def from_list(cls, rep, *gens, **args):
"""Construct a polynomial from a ``list``. """
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
return cls._from_list(rep, opt)
@classmethod
def from_poly(cls, rep, *gens, **args):
"""Construct a polynomial from a polynomial. """
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
return cls._from_poly(rep, opt)
@classmethod
def from_expr(cls, rep, *gens, **args):
"""Construct a polynomial from an expression. """
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
return cls._from_expr(rep, opt)
@classmethod
def _from_dict(cls, rep, opt):
"""Construct a polynomial from a ``dict``. """
gens = opt.gens
if not gens:
raise GeneratorsNeeded(
"can't initialize from 'dict' without generators")
level = len(gens) - 1
domain = opt.domain
if domain is None:
domain, rep = construct_domain(rep, opt=opt)
else:
for monom, coeff in rep.items():
rep[monom] = domain.convert(coeff)
return cls.new(DMP.from_dict(rep, level, domain), *gens)
@classmethod
def _from_list(cls, rep, opt):
"""Construct a polynomial from a ``list``. """
gens = opt.gens
if not gens:
raise GeneratorsNeeded(
"can't initialize from 'list' without generators")
elif len(gens) != 1:
raise MultivariatePolynomialError(
"'list' representation not supported")
level = len(gens) - 1
domain = opt.domain
if domain is None:
domain, rep = construct_domain(rep, opt=opt)
else:
rep = list(map(domain.convert, rep))
return cls.new(DMP.from_list(rep, level, domain), *gens)
@classmethod
def _from_poly(cls, rep, opt):
"""Construct a polynomial from a polynomial. """
if cls != rep.__class__:
rep = cls.new(rep.rep, *rep.gens)
gens = opt.gens
field = opt.field
domain = opt.domain
if gens and rep.gens != gens:
if set(rep.gens) != set(gens):
return cls._from_expr(rep.as_expr(), opt)
else:
rep = rep.reorder(*gens)
if 'domain' in opt and domain:
rep = rep.set_domain(domain)
elif field is True:
rep = rep.to_field()
return rep
@classmethod
def _from_expr(cls, rep, opt):
"""Construct a polynomial from an expression. """
rep, opt = _dict_from_expr(rep, opt)
return cls._from_dict(rep, opt)
def _hashable_content(self):
"""Allow SymPy to hash Poly instances. """
return (self.rep, self.gens)
def __hash__(self):
return super(Poly, self).__hash__()
@property
def free_symbols(self):
"""
Free symbols of a polynomial expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1).free_symbols
{x}
>>> Poly(x**2 + y).free_symbols
{x, y}
>>> Poly(x**2 + y, x).free_symbols
{x, y}
>>> Poly(x**2 + y, x, z).free_symbols
{x, y}
"""
symbols = set()
gens = self.gens
for i in range(len(gens)):
for monom in self.monoms():
if monom[i]:
symbols |= gens[i].free_symbols
break
return symbols | self.free_symbols_in_domain
@property
def free_symbols_in_domain(self):
"""
Free symbols of the domain of ``self``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1).free_symbols_in_domain
set()
>>> Poly(x**2 + y).free_symbols_in_domain
set()
>>> Poly(x**2 + y, x).free_symbols_in_domain
{y}
"""
domain, symbols = self.rep.dom, set()
if domain.is_Composite:
for gen in domain.symbols:
symbols |= gen.free_symbols
elif domain.is_EX:
for coeff in self.coeffs():
symbols |= coeff.free_symbols
return symbols
@property
def args(self):
"""
Don't mess up with the core.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).args
(x**2 + 1,)
"""
return (self.as_expr(),)
@property
def gen(self):
"""
Return the principal generator.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).gen
x
"""
return self.gens[0]
@property
def domain(self):
"""Get the ground domain of ``self``. """
return self.get_domain()
@property
def zero(self):
"""Return zero polynomial with ``self``'s properties. """
return self.new(self.rep.zero(self.rep.lev, self.rep.dom), *self.gens)
@property
def one(self):
"""Return one polynomial with ``self``'s properties. """
return self.new(self.rep.one(self.rep.lev, self.rep.dom), *self.gens)
@property
def unit(self):
"""Return unit polynomial with ``self``'s properties. """
return self.new(self.rep.unit(self.rep.lev, self.rep.dom), *self.gens)
def unify(f, g):
"""
Make ``f`` and ``g`` belong to the same domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f, g = Poly(x/2 + 1), Poly(2*x + 1)
>>> f
Poly(1/2*x + 1, x, domain='QQ')
>>> g
Poly(2*x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> F, G = f.unify(g)
>>> F
Poly(1/2*x + 1, x, domain='QQ')
>>> G
Poly(2*x + 1, x, domain='QQ')
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
return per(F), per(G)
def _unify(f, g):
g = sympify(g)
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
return f.rep.dom, f.per, f.rep, f.rep.per(f.rep.dom.from_sympy(g))
except CoercionFailed:
raise UnificationFailed("can't unify %s with %s" % (f, g))
if isinstance(f.rep, DMP) and isinstance(g.rep, DMP):
gens = _unify_gens(f.gens, g.gens)
dom, lev = f.rep.dom.unify(g.rep.dom, gens), len(gens) - 1
if f.gens != gens:
f_monoms, f_coeffs = _dict_reorder(
f.rep.to_dict(), f.gens, gens)
if f.rep.dom != dom:
f_coeffs = [dom.convert(c, f.rep.dom) for c in f_coeffs]
F = DMP(dict(list(zip(f_monoms, f_coeffs))), dom, lev)
else:
F = f.rep.convert(dom)
if g.gens != gens:
g_monoms, g_coeffs = _dict_reorder(
g.rep.to_dict(), g.gens, gens)
if g.rep.dom != dom:
g_coeffs = [dom.convert(c, g.rep.dom) for c in g_coeffs]
G = DMP(dict(list(zip(g_monoms, g_coeffs))), dom, lev)
else:
G = g.rep.convert(dom)
else:
raise UnificationFailed("can't unify %s with %s" % (f, g))
cls = f.__class__
def per(rep, dom=dom, gens=gens, remove=None):
if remove is not None:
gens = gens[:remove] + gens[remove + 1:]
if not gens:
return dom.to_sympy(rep)
return cls.new(rep, *gens)
return dom, per, F, G
def per(f, rep, gens=None, remove=None):
"""
Create a Poly out of the given representation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, ZZ
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy.polys.polyclasses import DMP
>>> a = Poly(x**2 + 1)
>>> a.per(DMP([ZZ(1), ZZ(1)], ZZ), gens=[y])
Poly(y + 1, y, domain='ZZ')
"""
if gens is None:
gens = f.gens
if remove is not None:
gens = gens[:remove] + gens[remove + 1:]
if not gens:
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(rep)
return f.__class__.new(rep, *gens)
def set_domain(f, domain):
"""Set the ground domain of ``f``. """
opt = options.build_options(f.gens, {'domain': domain})
return f.per(f.rep.convert(opt.domain))
def get_domain(f):
"""Get the ground domain of ``f``. """
return f.rep.dom
def set_modulus(f, modulus):
"""
Set the modulus of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(5*x**2 + 2*x - 1, x).set_modulus(2)
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, modulus=2)
"""
modulus = options.Modulus.preprocess(modulus)
return f.set_domain(FF(modulus))
def get_modulus(f):
"""
Get the modulus of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, modulus=2).get_modulus()
2
"""
domain = f.get_domain()
if domain.is_FiniteField:
return Integer(domain.characteristic())
else:
raise PolynomialError("not a polynomial over a Galois field")
def _eval_subs(f, old, new):
"""Internal implementation of :func:`subs`. """
if old in f.gens:
if new.is_number:
return f.eval(old, new)
else:
try:
return f.replace(old, new)
except PolynomialError:
pass
return f.as_expr().subs(old, new)
def exclude(f):
"""
Remove unnecessary generators from ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c, d, x
>>> Poly(a + x, a, b, c, d, x).exclude()
Poly(a + x, a, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
J, new = f.rep.exclude()
gens = []
for j in range(len(f.gens)):
if j not in J:
gens.append(f.gens[j])
return f.per(new, gens=gens)
def replace(f, x, y=None, *_ignore):
# XXX this does not match Basic's signature
"""
Replace ``x`` with ``y`` in generators list.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).replace(x, y)
Poly(y**2 + 1, y, domain='ZZ')
"""
if y is None:
if f.is_univariate:
x, y = f.gen, x
else:
raise PolynomialError(
"syntax supported only in univariate case")
if x == y or x not in f.gens:
return f
if x in f.gens and y not in f.gens:
dom = f.get_domain()
if not dom.is_Composite or y not in dom.symbols:
gens = list(f.gens)
gens[gens.index(x)] = y
return f.per(f.rep, gens=gens)
raise PolynomialError("can't replace %s with %s in %s" % (x, y, f))
def reorder(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Efficiently apply new order of generators.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + x*y**2, x, y).reorder(y, x)
Poly(y**2*x + x**2, y, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
opt = options.Options((), args)
if not gens:
gens = _sort_gens(f.gens, opt=opt)
elif set(f.gens) != set(gens):
raise PolynomialError(
"generators list can differ only up to order of elements")
rep = dict(list(zip(*_dict_reorder(f.rep.to_dict(), f.gens, gens))))
return f.per(DMP(rep, f.rep.dom, len(gens) - 1), gens=gens)
def ltrim(f, gen):
"""
Remove dummy generators from ``f`` that are to the left of
specified ``gen`` in the generators as ordered. When ``gen``
is an integer, it refers to the generator located at that
position within the tuple of generators of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> Poly(y**2 + y*z**2, x, y, z).ltrim(y)
Poly(y**2 + y*z**2, y, z, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(z, x, y, z).ltrim(-1)
Poly(z, z, domain='ZZ')
"""
rep = f.as_dict(native=True)
j = f._gen_to_level(gen)
terms = {}
for monom, coeff in rep.items():
if any(i for i in monom[:j]):
# some generator is used in the portion to be trimmed
raise PolynomialError("can't left trim %s" % f)
terms[monom[j:]] = coeff
gens = f.gens[j:]
return f.new(DMP.from_dict(terms, len(gens) - 1, f.rep.dom), *gens)
def has_only_gens(f, *gens):
"""
Return ``True`` if ``Poly(f, *gens)`` retains ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> Poly(x*y + 1, x, y, z).has_only_gens(x, y)
True
>>> Poly(x*y + z, x, y, z).has_only_gens(x, y)
False
"""
indices = set()
for gen in gens:
try:
index = f.gens.index(gen)
except ValueError:
raise GeneratorsError(
"%s doesn't have %s as generator" % (f, gen))
else:
indices.add(index)
for monom in f.monoms():
for i, elt in enumerate(monom):
if i not in indices and elt:
return False
return True
def to_ring(f):
"""
Make the ground domain a ring.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, QQ
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, domain=QQ).to_ring()
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'to_ring'):
result = f.rep.to_ring()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'to_ring')
return f.per(result)
def to_field(f):
"""
Make the ground domain a field.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, ZZ
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain=ZZ).to_field()
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='QQ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'to_field'):
result = f.rep.to_field()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'to_field')
return f.per(result)
def to_exact(f):
"""
Make the ground domain exact.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, RR
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1.0, x, domain=RR).to_exact()
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='QQ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'to_exact'):
result = f.rep.to_exact()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'to_exact')
return f.per(result)
def retract(f, field=None):
"""
Recalculate the ground domain of a polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='QQ[y]')
>>> f
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='QQ[y]')
>>> f.retract()
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> f.retract(field=True)
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='QQ')
"""
dom, rep = construct_domain(f.as_dict(zero=True),
field=field, composite=f.domain.is_Composite or None)
return f.from_dict(rep, f.gens, domain=dom)
def slice(f, x, m, n=None):
"""Take a continuous subsequence of terms of ``f``. """
if n is None:
j, m, n = 0, x, m
else:
j = f._gen_to_level(x)
m, n = int(m), int(n)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'slice'):
result = f.rep.slice(m, n, j)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'slice')
return f.per(result)
def coeffs(f, order=None):
"""
Returns all non-zero coefficients from ``f`` in lex order.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**3 + 2*x + 3, x).coeffs()
[1, 2, 3]
See Also
========
all_coeffs
coeff_monomial
nth
"""
return [f.rep.dom.to_sympy(c) for c in f.rep.coeffs(order=order)]
def monoms(f, order=None):
"""
Returns all non-zero monomials from ``f`` in lex order.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y, x, y).monoms()
[(2, 0), (1, 2), (1, 1), (0, 1)]
See Also
========
all_monoms
"""
return f.rep.monoms(order=order)
def terms(f, order=None):
"""
Returns all non-zero terms from ``f`` in lex order.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y, x, y).terms()
[((2, 0), 1), ((1, 2), 2), ((1, 1), 1), ((0, 1), 3)]
See Also
========
all_terms
"""
return [(m, f.rep.dom.to_sympy(c)) for m, c in f.rep.terms(order=order)]
def all_coeffs(f):
"""
Returns all coefficients from a univariate polynomial ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**3 + 2*x - 1, x).all_coeffs()
[1, 0, 2, -1]
"""
return [f.rep.dom.to_sympy(c) for c in f.rep.all_coeffs()]
def all_monoms(f):
"""
Returns all monomials from a univariate polynomial ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**3 + 2*x - 1, x).all_monoms()
[(3,), (2,), (1,), (0,)]
See Also
========
all_terms
"""
return f.rep.all_monoms()
def all_terms(f):
"""
Returns all terms from a univariate polynomial ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**3 + 2*x - 1, x).all_terms()
[((3,), 1), ((2,), 0), ((1,), 2), ((0,), -1)]
"""
return [(m, f.rep.dom.to_sympy(c)) for m, c in f.rep.all_terms()]
def termwise(f, func, *gens, **args):
"""
Apply a function to all terms of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> def func(k, coeff):
... k = k[0]
... return coeff//10**(2-k)
>>> Poly(x**2 + 20*x + 400).termwise(func)
Poly(x**2 + 2*x + 4, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
terms = {}
for monom, coeff in f.terms():
result = func(monom, coeff)
if isinstance(result, tuple):
monom, coeff = result
else:
coeff = result
if coeff:
if monom not in terms:
terms[monom] = coeff
else:
raise PolynomialError(
"%s monomial was generated twice" % monom)
return f.from_dict(terms, *(gens or f.gens), **args)
def length(f):
"""
Returns the number of non-zero terms in ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x - 1).length()
3
"""
return len(f.as_dict())
def as_dict(f, native=False, zero=False):
"""
Switch to a ``dict`` representation.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x*y**2 - y, x, y).as_dict()
{(0, 1): -1, (1, 2): 2, (2, 0): 1}
"""
if native:
return f.rep.to_dict(zero=zero)
else:
return f.rep.to_sympy_dict(zero=zero)
def as_list(f, native=False):
"""Switch to a ``list`` representation. """
if native:
return f.rep.to_list()
else:
return f.rep.to_sympy_list()
def as_expr(f, *gens):
"""
Convert a Poly instance to an Expr instance.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Poly(x**2 + 2*x*y**2 - y, x, y)
>>> f.as_expr()
x**2 + 2*x*y**2 - y
>>> f.as_expr({x: 5})
10*y**2 - y + 25
>>> f.as_expr(5, 6)
379
"""
if not gens:
gens = f.gens
elif len(gens) == 1 and isinstance(gens[0], dict):
mapping = gens[0]
gens = list(f.gens)
for gen, value in mapping.items():
try:
index = gens.index(gen)
except ValueError:
raise GeneratorsError(
"%s doesn't have %s as generator" % (f, gen))
else:
gens[index] = value
return basic_from_dict(f.rep.to_sympy_dict(), *gens)
def lift(f):
"""
Convert algebraic coefficients to rationals.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, I
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + I*x + 1, x, extension=I).lift()
Poly(x**4 + 3*x**2 + 1, x, domain='QQ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'lift'):
result = f.rep.lift()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'lift')
return f.per(result)
def deflate(f):
"""
Reduce degree of ``f`` by mapping ``x_i**m`` to ``y_i``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**6*y**2 + x**3 + 1, x, y).deflate()
((3, 2), Poly(x**2*y + x + 1, x, y, domain='ZZ'))
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'deflate'):
J, result = f.rep.deflate()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'deflate')
return J, f.per(result)
def inject(f, front=False):
"""
Inject ground domain generators into ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Poly(x**2*y + x*y**3 + x*y + 1, x)
>>> f.inject()
Poly(x**2*y + x*y**3 + x*y + 1, x, y, domain='ZZ')
>>> f.inject(front=True)
Poly(y**3*x + y*x**2 + y*x + 1, y, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
dom = f.rep.dom
if dom.is_Numerical:
return f
elif not dom.is_Poly:
raise DomainError("can't inject generators over %s" % dom)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'inject'):
result = f.rep.inject(front=front)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'inject')
if front:
gens = dom.symbols + f.gens
else:
gens = f.gens + dom.symbols
return f.new(result, *gens)
def eject(f, *gens):
"""
Eject selected generators into the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Poly(x**2*y + x*y**3 + x*y + 1, x, y)
>>> f.eject(x)
Poly(x*y**3 + (x**2 + x)*y + 1, y, domain='ZZ[x]')
>>> f.eject(y)
Poly(y*x**2 + (y**3 + y)*x + 1, x, domain='ZZ[y]')
"""
dom = f.rep.dom
if not dom.is_Numerical:
raise DomainError("can't eject generators over %s" % dom)
n, k = len(f.gens), len(gens)
if f.gens[:k] == gens:
_gens, front = f.gens[k:], True
elif f.gens[-k:] == gens:
_gens, front = f.gens[:-k], False
else:
raise NotImplementedError(
"can only eject front or back generators")
dom = dom.inject(*gens)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'eject'):
result = f.rep.eject(dom, front=front)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'eject')
return f.new(result, *_gens)
def terms_gcd(f):
"""
Remove GCD of terms from the polynomial ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**6*y**2 + x**3*y, x, y).terms_gcd()
((3, 1), Poly(x**3*y + 1, x, y, domain='ZZ'))
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'terms_gcd'):
J, result = f.rep.terms_gcd()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'terms_gcd')
return J, f.per(result)
def add_ground(f, coeff):
"""
Add an element of the ground domain to ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x + 1).add_ground(2)
Poly(x + 3, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'add_ground'):
result = f.rep.add_ground(coeff)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'add_ground')
return f.per(result)
def sub_ground(f, coeff):
"""
Subtract an element of the ground domain from ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x + 1).sub_ground(2)
Poly(x - 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'sub_ground'):
result = f.rep.sub_ground(coeff)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'sub_ground')
return f.per(result)
def mul_ground(f, coeff):
"""
Multiply ``f`` by a an element of the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x + 1).mul_ground(2)
Poly(2*x + 2, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'mul_ground'):
result = f.rep.mul_ground(coeff)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'mul_ground')
return f.per(result)
def quo_ground(f, coeff):
"""
Quotient of ``f`` by a an element of the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(2*x + 4).quo_ground(2)
Poly(x + 2, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(2*x + 3).quo_ground(2)
Poly(x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'quo_ground'):
result = f.rep.quo_ground(coeff)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'quo_ground')
return f.per(result)
def exquo_ground(f, coeff):
"""
Exact quotient of ``f`` by a an element of the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(2*x + 4).exquo_ground(2)
Poly(x + 2, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(2*x + 3).exquo_ground(2)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ExactQuotientFailed: 2 does not divide 3 in ZZ
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'exquo_ground'):
result = f.rep.exquo_ground(coeff)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'exquo_ground')
return f.per(result)
def abs(f):
"""
Make all coefficients in ``f`` positive.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).abs()
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'abs'):
result = f.rep.abs()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'abs')
return f.per(result)
def neg(f):
"""
Negate all coefficients in ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).neg()
Poly(-x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> -Poly(x**2 - 1, x)
Poly(-x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'neg'):
result = f.rep.neg()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'neg')
return f.per(result)
def add(f, g):
"""
Add two polynomials ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).add(Poly(x - 2, x))
Poly(x**2 + x - 1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x) + Poly(x - 2, x)
Poly(x**2 + x - 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
g = sympify(g)
if not g.is_Poly:
return f.add_ground(g)
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'add'):
result = F.add(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'add')
return per(result)
def sub(f, g):
"""
Subtract two polynomials ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).sub(Poly(x - 2, x))
Poly(x**2 - x + 3, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x) - Poly(x - 2, x)
Poly(x**2 - x + 3, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
g = sympify(g)
if not g.is_Poly:
return f.sub_ground(g)
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'sub'):
result = F.sub(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'sub')
return per(result)
def mul(f, g):
"""
Multiply two polynomials ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).mul(Poly(x - 2, x))
Poly(x**3 - 2*x**2 + x - 2, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x)*Poly(x - 2, x)
Poly(x**3 - 2*x**2 + x - 2, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
g = sympify(g)
if not g.is_Poly:
return f.mul_ground(g)
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'mul'):
result = F.mul(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'mul')
return per(result)
def sqr(f):
"""
Square a polynomial ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x - 2, x).sqr()
Poly(x**2 - 4*x + 4, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x - 2, x)**2
Poly(x**2 - 4*x + 4, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'sqr'):
result = f.rep.sqr()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'sqr')
return f.per(result)
def pow(f, n):
"""
Raise ``f`` to a non-negative power ``n``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x - 2, x).pow(3)
Poly(x**3 - 6*x**2 + 12*x - 8, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x - 2, x)**3
Poly(x**3 - 6*x**2 + 12*x - 8, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
n = int(n)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'pow'):
result = f.rep.pow(n)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'pow')
return f.per(result)
def pdiv(f, g):
"""
Polynomial pseudo-division of ``f`` by ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).pdiv(Poly(2*x - 4, x))
(Poly(2*x + 4, x, domain='ZZ'), Poly(20, x, domain='ZZ'))
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'pdiv'):
q, r = F.pdiv(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'pdiv')
return per(q), per(r)
def prem(f, g):
"""
Polynomial pseudo-remainder of ``f`` by ``g``.
Caveat: The function prem(f, g, x) can be safely used to compute
in Z[x] _only_ subresultant polynomial remainder sequences (prs's).
To safely compute Euclidean and Sturmian prs's in Z[x]
employ anyone of the corresponding functions found in
the module sympy.polys.subresultants_qq_zz. The functions
in the module with suffix _pg compute prs's in Z[x] employing
rem(f, g, x), whereas the functions with suffix _amv
compute prs's in Z[x] employing rem_z(f, g, x).
The function rem_z(f, g, x) differs from prem(f, g, x) in that
to compute the remainder polynomials in Z[x] it premultiplies
the divident times the absolute value of the leading coefficient
of the divisor raised to the power degree(f, x) - degree(g, x) + 1.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).prem(Poly(2*x - 4, x))
Poly(20, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'prem'):
result = F.prem(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'prem')
return per(result)
def pquo(f, g):
"""
Polynomial pseudo-quotient of ``f`` by ``g``.
See the Caveat note in the function prem(f, g).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).pquo(Poly(2*x - 4, x))
Poly(2*x + 4, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).pquo(Poly(2*x - 2, x))
Poly(2*x + 2, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'pquo'):
result = F.pquo(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'pquo')
return per(result)
def pexquo(f, g):
"""
Polynomial exact pseudo-quotient of ``f`` by ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).pexquo(Poly(2*x - 2, x))
Poly(2*x + 2, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).pexquo(Poly(2*x - 4, x))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ExactQuotientFailed: 2*x - 4 does not divide x**2 + 1
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'pexquo'):
try:
result = F.pexquo(G)
except ExactQuotientFailed as exc:
raise exc.new(f.as_expr(), g.as_expr())
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'pexquo')
return per(result)
def div(f, g, auto=True):
"""
Polynomial division with remainder of ``f`` by ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).div(Poly(2*x - 4, x))
(Poly(1/2*x + 1, x, domain='QQ'), Poly(5, x, domain='QQ'))
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).div(Poly(2*x - 4, x), auto=False)
(Poly(0, x, domain='ZZ'), Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ'))
"""
dom, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
retract = False
if auto and dom.is_Ring and not dom.is_Field:
F, G = F.to_field(), G.to_field()
retract = True
if hasattr(f.rep, 'div'):
q, r = F.div(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'div')
if retract:
try:
Q, R = q.to_ring(), r.to_ring()
except CoercionFailed:
pass
else:
q, r = Q, R
return per(q), per(r)
def rem(f, g, auto=True):
"""
Computes the polynomial remainder of ``f`` by ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).rem(Poly(2*x - 4, x))
Poly(5, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).rem(Poly(2*x - 4, x), auto=False)
Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
dom, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
retract = False
if auto and dom.is_Ring and not dom.is_Field:
F, G = F.to_field(), G.to_field()
retract = True
if hasattr(f.rep, 'rem'):
r = F.rem(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'rem')
if retract:
try:
r = r.to_ring()
except CoercionFailed:
pass
return per(r)
def quo(f, g, auto=True):
"""
Computes polynomial quotient of ``f`` by ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).quo(Poly(2*x - 4, x))
Poly(1/2*x + 1, x, domain='QQ')
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).quo(Poly(x - 1, x))
Poly(x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
dom, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
retract = False
if auto and dom.is_Ring and not dom.is_Field:
F, G = F.to_field(), G.to_field()
retract = True
if hasattr(f.rep, 'quo'):
q = F.quo(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'quo')
if retract:
try:
q = q.to_ring()
except CoercionFailed:
pass
return per(q)
def exquo(f, g, auto=True):
"""
Computes polynomial exact quotient of ``f`` by ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).exquo(Poly(x - 1, x))
Poly(x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).exquo(Poly(2*x - 4, x))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ExactQuotientFailed: 2*x - 4 does not divide x**2 + 1
"""
dom, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
retract = False
if auto and dom.is_Ring and not dom.is_Field:
F, G = F.to_field(), G.to_field()
retract = True
if hasattr(f.rep, 'exquo'):
try:
q = F.exquo(G)
except ExactQuotientFailed as exc:
raise exc.new(f.as_expr(), g.as_expr())
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'exquo')
if retract:
try:
q = q.to_ring()
except CoercionFailed:
pass
return per(q)
def _gen_to_level(f, gen):
"""Returns level associated with the given generator. """
if isinstance(gen, int):
length = len(f.gens)
if -length <= gen < length:
if gen < 0:
return length + gen
else:
return gen
else:
raise PolynomialError("-%s <= gen < %s expected, got %s" %
(length, length, gen))
else:
try:
return f.gens.index(sympify(gen))
except ValueError:
raise PolynomialError(
"a valid generator expected, got %s" % gen)
def degree(f, gen=0):
"""
Returns degree of ``f`` in ``x_j``.
The degree of 0 is negative infinity.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + y*x + 1, x, y).degree()
2
>>> Poly(x**2 + y*x + y, x, y).degree(y)
1
>>> Poly(0, x).degree()
-oo
"""
j = f._gen_to_level(gen)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'degree'):
return f.rep.degree(j)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'degree')
def degree_list(f):
"""
Returns a list of degrees of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + y*x + 1, x, y).degree_list()
(2, 1)
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'degree_list'):
return f.rep.degree_list()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'degree_list')
def total_degree(f):
"""
Returns the total degree of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + y*x + 1, x, y).total_degree()
2
>>> Poly(x + y**5, x, y).total_degree()
5
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'total_degree'):
return f.rep.total_degree()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'total_degree')
def homogenize(f, s):
"""
Returns the homogeneous polynomial of ``f``.
A homogeneous polynomial is a polynomial whose all monomials with
non-zero coefficients have the same total degree. If you only
want to check if a polynomial is homogeneous, then use
:func:`Poly.is_homogeneous`. If you want not only to check if a
polynomial is homogeneous but also compute its homogeneous order,
then use :func:`Poly.homogeneous_order`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> f = Poly(x**5 + 2*x**2*y**2 + 9*x*y**3)
>>> f.homogenize(z)
Poly(x**5 + 2*x**2*y**2*z + 9*x*y**3*z, x, y, z, domain='ZZ')
"""
if not isinstance(s, Symbol):
raise TypeError("``Symbol`` expected, got %s" % type(s))
if s in f.gens:
i = f.gens.index(s)
gens = f.gens
else:
i = len(f.gens)
gens = f.gens + (s,)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'homogenize'):
return f.per(f.rep.homogenize(i), gens=gens)
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'homogeneous_order')
def homogeneous_order(f):
"""
Returns the homogeneous order of ``f``.
A homogeneous polynomial is a polynomial whose all monomials with
non-zero coefficients have the same total degree. This degree is
the homogeneous order of ``f``. If you only want to check if a
polynomial is homogeneous, then use :func:`Poly.is_homogeneous`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Poly(x**5 + 2*x**3*y**2 + 9*x*y**4)
>>> f.homogeneous_order()
5
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'homogeneous_order'):
return f.rep.homogeneous_order()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'homogeneous_order')
def LC(f, order=None):
"""
Returns the leading coefficient of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(4*x**3 + 2*x**2 + 3*x, x).LC()
4
"""
if order is not None:
return f.coeffs(order)[0]
if hasattr(f.rep, 'LC'):
result = f.rep.LC()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'LC')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(result)
def TC(f):
"""
Returns the trailing coefficient of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**3 + 2*x**2 + 3*x, x).TC()
0
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'TC'):
result = f.rep.TC()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'TC')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(result)
def EC(f, order=None):
"""
Returns the last non-zero coefficient of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**3 + 2*x**2 + 3*x, x).EC()
3
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'coeffs'):
return f.coeffs(order)[-1]
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'EC')
def coeff_monomial(f, monom):
"""
Returns the coefficient of ``monom`` in ``f`` if there, else None.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> p = Poly(24*x*y*exp(8) + 23*x, x, y)
>>> p.coeff_monomial(x)
23
>>> p.coeff_monomial(y)
0
>>> p.coeff_monomial(x*y)
24*exp(8)
Note that ``Expr.coeff()`` behaves differently, collecting terms
if possible; the Poly must be converted to an Expr to use that
method, however:
>>> p.as_expr().coeff(x)
24*y*exp(8) + 23
>>> p.as_expr().coeff(y)
24*x*exp(8)
>>> p.as_expr().coeff(x*y)
24*exp(8)
See Also
========
nth: more efficient query using exponents of the monomial's generators
"""
return f.nth(*Monomial(monom, f.gens).exponents)
def nth(f, *N):
"""
Returns the ``n``-th coefficient of ``f`` where ``N`` are the
exponents of the generators in the term of interest.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**3 + 2*x**2 + 3*x, x).nth(2)
2
>>> Poly(x**3 + 2*x*y**2 + y**2, x, y).nth(1, 2)
2
>>> Poly(4*sqrt(x)*y)
Poly(4*y*(sqrt(x)), y, sqrt(x), domain='ZZ')
>>> _.nth(1, 1)
4
See Also
========
coeff_monomial
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'nth'):
if len(N) != len(f.gens):
raise ValueError('exponent of each generator must be specified')
result = f.rep.nth(*list(map(int, N)))
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'nth')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(result)
def coeff(f, x, n=1, right=False):
# the semantics of coeff_monomial and Expr.coeff are different;
# if someone is working with a Poly, they should be aware of the
# differences and chose the method best suited for the query.
# Alternatively, a pure-polys method could be written here but
# at this time the ``right`` keyword would be ignored because Poly
# doesn't work with non-commutatives.
raise NotImplementedError(
'Either convert to Expr with `as_expr` method '
'to use Expr\'s coeff method or else use the '
'`coeff_monomial` method of Polys.')
def LM(f, order=None):
"""
Returns the leading monomial of ``f``.
The Leading monomial signifies the monomial having
the highest power of the principal generator in the
expression f.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(4*x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y, x, y).LM()
x**2*y**0
"""
return Monomial(f.monoms(order)[0], f.gens)
def EM(f, order=None):
"""
Returns the last non-zero monomial of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(4*x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y, x, y).EM()
x**0*y**1
"""
return Monomial(f.monoms(order)[-1], f.gens)
def LT(f, order=None):
"""
Returns the leading term of ``f``.
The Leading term signifies the term having
the highest power of the principal generator in the
expression f along with its coefficient.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(4*x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y, x, y).LT()
(x**2*y**0, 4)
"""
monom, coeff = f.terms(order)[0]
return Monomial(monom, f.gens), coeff
def ET(f, order=None):
"""
Returns the last non-zero term of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(4*x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y, x, y).ET()
(x**0*y**1, 3)
"""
monom, coeff = f.terms(order)[-1]
return Monomial(monom, f.gens), coeff
def max_norm(f):
"""
Returns maximum norm of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(-x**2 + 2*x - 3, x).max_norm()
3
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'max_norm'):
result = f.rep.max_norm()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'max_norm')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(result)
def l1_norm(f):
"""
Returns l1 norm of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(-x**2 + 2*x - 3, x).l1_norm()
6
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'l1_norm'):
result = f.rep.l1_norm()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'l1_norm')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(result)
def clear_denoms(self, convert=False):
"""
Clear denominators, but keep the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, S, QQ
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Poly(x/2 + S(1)/3, x, domain=QQ)
>>> f.clear_denoms()
(6, Poly(3*x + 2, x, domain='QQ'))
>>> f.clear_denoms(convert=True)
(6, Poly(3*x + 2, x, domain='ZZ'))
"""
f = self
if not f.rep.dom.is_Field:
return S.One, f
dom = f.get_domain()
if dom.has_assoc_Ring:
dom = f.rep.dom.get_ring()
if hasattr(f.rep, 'clear_denoms'):
coeff, result = f.rep.clear_denoms()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'clear_denoms')
coeff, f = dom.to_sympy(coeff), f.per(result)
if not convert or not dom.has_assoc_Ring:
return coeff, f
else:
return coeff, f.to_ring()
def rat_clear_denoms(self, g):
"""
Clear denominators in a rational function ``f/g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = Poly(x**2/y + 1, x)
>>> g = Poly(x**3 + y, x)
>>> p, q = f.rat_clear_denoms(g)
>>> p
Poly(x**2 + y, x, domain='ZZ[y]')
>>> q
Poly(y*x**3 + y**2, x, domain='ZZ[y]')
"""
f = self
dom, per, f, g = f._unify(g)
f = per(f)
g = per(g)
if not (dom.is_Field and dom.has_assoc_Ring):
return f, g
a, f = f.clear_denoms(convert=True)
b, g = g.clear_denoms(convert=True)
f = f.mul_ground(b)
g = g.mul_ground(a)
return f, g
def integrate(self, *specs, **args):
"""
Computes indefinite integral of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x + 1, x).integrate()
Poly(1/3*x**3 + x**2 + x, x, domain='QQ')
>>> Poly(x*y**2 + x, x, y).integrate((0, 1), (1, 0))
Poly(1/2*x**2*y**2 + 1/2*x**2, x, y, domain='QQ')
"""
f = self
if args.get('auto', True) and f.rep.dom.is_Ring:
f = f.to_field()
if hasattr(f.rep, 'integrate'):
if not specs:
return f.per(f.rep.integrate(m=1))
rep = f.rep
for spec in specs:
if type(spec) is tuple:
gen, m = spec
else:
gen, m = spec, 1
rep = rep.integrate(int(m), f._gen_to_level(gen))
return f.per(rep)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'integrate')
def diff(f, *specs, **kwargs):
"""
Computes partial derivative of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x + 1, x).diff()
Poly(2*x + 2, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x*y**2 + x, x, y).diff((0, 0), (1, 1))
Poly(2*x*y, x, y, domain='ZZ')
"""
if not kwargs.get('evaluate', True):
return Derivative(f, *specs, **kwargs)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'diff'):
if not specs:
return f.per(f.rep.diff(m=1))
rep = f.rep
for spec in specs:
if type(spec) is tuple:
gen, m = spec
else:
gen, m = spec, 1
rep = rep.diff(int(m), f._gen_to_level(gen))
return f.per(rep)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'diff')
_eval_derivative = diff
def eval(self, x, a=None, auto=True):
"""
Evaluate ``f`` at ``a`` in the given variable.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x + 3, x).eval(2)
11
>>> Poly(2*x*y + 3*x + y + 2, x, y).eval(x, 2)
Poly(5*y + 8, y, domain='ZZ')
>>> f = Poly(2*x*y + 3*x + y + 2*z, x, y, z)
>>> f.eval({x: 2})
Poly(5*y + 2*z + 6, y, z, domain='ZZ')
>>> f.eval({x: 2, y: 5})
Poly(2*z + 31, z, domain='ZZ')
>>> f.eval({x: 2, y: 5, z: 7})
45
>>> f.eval((2, 5))
Poly(2*z + 31, z, domain='ZZ')
>>> f(2, 5)
Poly(2*z + 31, z, domain='ZZ')
"""
f = self
if a is None:
if isinstance(x, dict):
mapping = x
for gen, value in mapping.items():
f = f.eval(gen, value)
return f
elif isinstance(x, (tuple, list)):
values = x
if len(values) > len(f.gens):
raise ValueError("too many values provided")
for gen, value in zip(f.gens, values):
f = f.eval(gen, value)
return f
else:
j, a = 0, x
else:
j = f._gen_to_level(x)
if not hasattr(f.rep, 'eval'): # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'eval')
try:
result = f.rep.eval(a, j)
except CoercionFailed:
if not auto:
raise DomainError("can't evaluate at %s in %s" % (a, f.rep.dom))
else:
a_domain, [a] = construct_domain([a])
new_domain = f.get_domain().unify_with_symbols(a_domain, f.gens)
f = f.set_domain(new_domain)
a = new_domain.convert(a, a_domain)
result = f.rep.eval(a, j)
return f.per(result, remove=j)
def __call__(f, *values):
"""
Evaluate ``f`` at the give values.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> f = Poly(2*x*y + 3*x + y + 2*z, x, y, z)
>>> f(2)
Poly(5*y + 2*z + 6, y, z, domain='ZZ')
>>> f(2, 5)
Poly(2*z + 31, z, domain='ZZ')
>>> f(2, 5, 7)
45
"""
return f.eval(values)
def half_gcdex(f, g, auto=True):
"""
Half extended Euclidean algorithm of ``f`` and ``g``.
Returns ``(s, h)`` such that ``h = gcd(f, g)`` and ``s*f = h (mod g)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = x**4 - 2*x**3 - 6*x**2 + 12*x + 15
>>> g = x**3 + x**2 - 4*x - 4
>>> Poly(f).half_gcdex(Poly(g))
(Poly(-1/5*x + 3/5, x, domain='QQ'), Poly(x + 1, x, domain='QQ'))
"""
dom, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if auto and dom.is_Ring:
F, G = F.to_field(), G.to_field()
if hasattr(f.rep, 'half_gcdex'):
s, h = F.half_gcdex(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'half_gcdex')
return per(s), per(h)
def gcdex(f, g, auto=True):
"""
Extended Euclidean algorithm of ``f`` and ``g``.
Returns ``(s, t, h)`` such that ``h = gcd(f, g)`` and ``s*f + t*g = h``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = x**4 - 2*x**3 - 6*x**2 + 12*x + 15
>>> g = x**3 + x**2 - 4*x - 4
>>> Poly(f).gcdex(Poly(g))
(Poly(-1/5*x + 3/5, x, domain='QQ'),
Poly(1/5*x**2 - 6/5*x + 2, x, domain='QQ'),
Poly(x + 1, x, domain='QQ'))
"""
dom, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if auto and dom.is_Ring:
F, G = F.to_field(), G.to_field()
if hasattr(f.rep, 'gcdex'):
s, t, h = F.gcdex(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'gcdex')
return per(s), per(t), per(h)
def invert(f, g, auto=True):
"""
Invert ``f`` modulo ``g`` when possible.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).invert(Poly(2*x - 1, x))
Poly(-4/3, x, domain='QQ')
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).invert(Poly(x - 1, x))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
NotInvertible: zero divisor
"""
dom, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if auto and dom.is_Ring:
F, G = F.to_field(), G.to_field()
if hasattr(f.rep, 'invert'):
result = F.invert(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'invert')
return per(result)
def revert(f, n):
"""
Compute ``f**(-1)`` mod ``x**n``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(1, x).revert(2)
Poly(1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(1 + x, x).revert(1)
Poly(1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).revert(1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
NotReversible: only unity is reversible in a ring
>>> Poly(1/x, x).revert(1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
PolynomialError: 1/x contains an element of the generators set
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'revert'):
result = f.rep.revert(int(n))
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'revert')
return f.per(result)
def subresultants(f, g):
"""
Computes the subresultant PRS of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x).subresultants(Poly(x**2 - 1, x))
[Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ'),
Poly(x**2 - 1, x, domain='ZZ'),
Poly(-2, x, domain='ZZ')]
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'subresultants'):
result = F.subresultants(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'subresultants')
return list(map(per, result))
def resultant(f, g, includePRS=False):
"""
Computes the resultant of ``f`` and ``g`` via PRS.
If includePRS=True, it includes the subresultant PRS in the result.
Because the PRS is used to calculate the resultant, this is more
efficient than calling :func:`subresultants` separately.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Poly(x**2 + 1, x)
>>> f.resultant(Poly(x**2 - 1, x))
4
>>> f.resultant(Poly(x**2 - 1, x), includePRS=True)
(4, [Poly(x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ'), Poly(x**2 - 1, x, domain='ZZ'),
Poly(-2, x, domain='ZZ')])
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'resultant'):
if includePRS:
result, R = F.resultant(G, includePRS=includePRS)
else:
result = F.resultant(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'resultant')
if includePRS:
return (per(result, remove=0), list(map(per, R)))
return per(result, remove=0)
def discriminant(f):
"""
Computes the discriminant of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + 2*x + 3, x).discriminant()
-8
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'discriminant'):
result = f.rep.discriminant()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'discriminant')
return f.per(result, remove=0)
def dispersionset(f, g=None):
r"""Compute the *dispersion set* of two polynomials.
For two polynomials `f(x)` and `g(x)` with `\deg f > 0`
and `\deg g > 0` the dispersion set `\operatorname{J}(f, g)` is defined as:
.. math::
\operatorname{J}(f, g)
& := \{a \in \mathbb{N}_0 | \gcd(f(x), g(x+a)) \neq 1\} \\
& = \{a \in \mathbb{N}_0 | \deg \gcd(f(x), g(x+a)) \geq 1\}
For a single polynomial one defines `\operatorname{J}(f) := \operatorname{J}(f, f)`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import poly
>>> from sympy.polys.dispersion import dispersion, dispersionset
>>> from sympy.abc import x
Dispersion set and dispersion of a simple polynomial:
>>> fp = poly((x - 3)*(x + 3), x)
>>> sorted(dispersionset(fp))
[0, 6]
>>> dispersion(fp)
6
Note that the definition of the dispersion is not symmetric:
>>> fp = poly(x**4 - 3*x**2 + 1, x)
>>> gp = fp.shift(-3)
>>> sorted(dispersionset(fp, gp))
[2, 3, 4]
>>> dispersion(fp, gp)
4
>>> sorted(dispersionset(gp, fp))
[]
>>> dispersion(gp, fp)
-oo
Computing the dispersion also works over field extensions:
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> fp = poly(x**2 + sqrt(5)*x - 1, x, domain='QQ<sqrt(5)>')
>>> gp = poly(x**2 + (2 + sqrt(5))*x + sqrt(5), x, domain='QQ<sqrt(5)>')
>>> sorted(dispersionset(fp, gp))
[2]
>>> sorted(dispersionset(gp, fp))
[1, 4]
We can even perform the computations for polynomials
having symbolic coefficients:
>>> from sympy.abc import a
>>> fp = poly(4*x**4 + (4*a + 8)*x**3 + (a**2 + 6*a + 4)*x**2 + (a**2 + 2*a)*x, x)
>>> sorted(dispersionset(fp))
[0, 1]
See Also
========
dispersion
References
==========
1. [ManWright94]_
2. [Koepf98]_
3. [Abramov71]_
4. [Man93]_
"""
from sympy.polys.dispersion import dispersionset
return dispersionset(f, g)
def dispersion(f, g=None):
r"""Compute the *dispersion* of polynomials.
For two polynomials `f(x)` and `g(x)` with `\deg f > 0`
and `\deg g > 0` the dispersion `\operatorname{dis}(f, g)` is defined as:
.. math::
\operatorname{dis}(f, g)
& := \max\{ J(f,g) \cup \{0\} \} \\
& = \max\{ \{a \in \mathbb{N} | \gcd(f(x), g(x+a)) \neq 1\} \cup \{0\} \}
and for a single polynomial `\operatorname{dis}(f) := \operatorname{dis}(f, f)`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import poly
>>> from sympy.polys.dispersion import dispersion, dispersionset
>>> from sympy.abc import x
Dispersion set and dispersion of a simple polynomial:
>>> fp = poly((x - 3)*(x + 3), x)
>>> sorted(dispersionset(fp))
[0, 6]
>>> dispersion(fp)
6
Note that the definition of the dispersion is not symmetric:
>>> fp = poly(x**4 - 3*x**2 + 1, x)
>>> gp = fp.shift(-3)
>>> sorted(dispersionset(fp, gp))
[2, 3, 4]
>>> dispersion(fp, gp)
4
>>> sorted(dispersionset(gp, fp))
[]
>>> dispersion(gp, fp)
-oo
Computing the dispersion also works over field extensions:
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> fp = poly(x**2 + sqrt(5)*x - 1, x, domain='QQ<sqrt(5)>')
>>> gp = poly(x**2 + (2 + sqrt(5))*x + sqrt(5), x, domain='QQ<sqrt(5)>')
>>> sorted(dispersionset(fp, gp))
[2]
>>> sorted(dispersionset(gp, fp))
[1, 4]
We can even perform the computations for polynomials
having symbolic coefficients:
>>> from sympy.abc import a
>>> fp = poly(4*x**4 + (4*a + 8)*x**3 + (a**2 + 6*a + 4)*x**2 + (a**2 + 2*a)*x, x)
>>> sorted(dispersionset(fp))
[0, 1]
See Also
========
dispersionset
References
==========
1. [ManWright94]_
2. [Koepf98]_
3. [Abramov71]_
4. [Man93]_
"""
from sympy.polys.dispersion import dispersion
return dispersion(f, g)
def cofactors(f, g):
"""
Returns the GCD of ``f`` and ``g`` and their cofactors.
Returns polynomials ``(h, cff, cfg)`` such that ``h = gcd(f, g)``, and
``cff = quo(f, h)`` and ``cfg = quo(g, h)`` are, so called, cofactors
of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).cofactors(Poly(x**2 - 3*x + 2, x))
(Poly(x - 1, x, domain='ZZ'),
Poly(x + 1, x, domain='ZZ'),
Poly(x - 2, x, domain='ZZ'))
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'cofactors'):
h, cff, cfg = F.cofactors(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'cofactors')
return per(h), per(cff), per(cfg)
def gcd(f, g):
"""
Returns the polynomial GCD of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).gcd(Poly(x**2 - 3*x + 2, x))
Poly(x - 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'gcd'):
result = F.gcd(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'gcd')
return per(result)
def lcm(f, g):
"""
Returns polynomial LCM of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).lcm(Poly(x**2 - 3*x + 2, x))
Poly(x**3 - 2*x**2 - x + 2, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'lcm'):
result = F.lcm(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'lcm')
return per(result)
def trunc(f, p):
"""
Reduce ``f`` modulo a constant ``p``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(2*x**3 + 3*x**2 + 5*x + 7, x).trunc(3)
Poly(-x**3 - x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
p = f.rep.dom.convert(p)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'trunc'):
result = f.rep.trunc(p)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'trunc')
return f.per(result)
def monic(self, auto=True):
"""
Divides all coefficients by ``LC(f)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, ZZ
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(3*x**2 + 6*x + 9, x, domain=ZZ).monic()
Poly(x**2 + 2*x + 3, x, domain='QQ')
>>> Poly(3*x**2 + 4*x + 2, x, domain=ZZ).monic()
Poly(x**2 + 4/3*x + 2/3, x, domain='QQ')
"""
f = self
if auto and f.rep.dom.is_Ring:
f = f.to_field()
if hasattr(f.rep, 'monic'):
result = f.rep.monic()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'monic')
return f.per(result)
def content(f):
"""
Returns the GCD of polynomial coefficients.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(6*x**2 + 8*x + 12, x).content()
2
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'content'):
result = f.rep.content()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'content')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(result)
def primitive(f):
"""
Returns the content and a primitive form of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(2*x**2 + 8*x + 12, x).primitive()
(2, Poly(x**2 + 4*x + 6, x, domain='ZZ'))
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'primitive'):
cont, result = f.rep.primitive()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'primitive')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(cont), f.per(result)
def compose(f, g):
"""
Computes the functional composition of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + x, x).compose(Poly(x - 1, x))
Poly(x**2 - x, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
_, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'compose'):
result = F.compose(G)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'compose')
return per(result)
def decompose(f):
"""
Computes a functional decomposition of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**4 + 2*x**3 - x - 1, x, domain='ZZ').decompose()
[Poly(x**2 - x - 1, x, domain='ZZ'), Poly(x**2 + x, x, domain='ZZ')]
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'decompose'):
result = f.rep.decompose()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'decompose')
return list(map(f.per, result))
def shift(f, a):
"""
Efficiently compute Taylor shift ``f(x + a)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 2*x + 1, x).shift(2)
Poly(x**2 + 2*x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'shift'):
result = f.rep.shift(a)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'shift')
return f.per(result)
def transform(f, p, q):
"""
Efficiently evaluate the functional transformation ``q**n * f(p/q)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 2*x + 1, x).transform(Poly(x + 1, x), Poly(x - 1, x))
Poly(4, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
P, Q = p.unify(q)
F, P = f.unify(P)
F, Q = F.unify(Q)
if hasattr(F.rep, 'transform'):
result = F.rep.transform(P.rep, Q.rep)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(F, 'transform')
return F.per(result)
def sturm(self, auto=True):
"""
Computes the Sturm sequence of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**3 - 2*x**2 + x - 3, x).sturm()
[Poly(x**3 - 2*x**2 + x - 3, x, domain='QQ'),
Poly(3*x**2 - 4*x + 1, x, domain='QQ'),
Poly(2/9*x + 25/9, x, domain='QQ'),
Poly(-2079/4, x, domain='QQ')]
"""
f = self
if auto and f.rep.dom.is_Ring:
f = f.to_field()
if hasattr(f.rep, 'sturm'):
result = f.rep.sturm()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'sturm')
return list(map(f.per, result))
def gff_list(f):
"""
Computes greatest factorial factorization of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = x**5 + 2*x**4 - x**3 - 2*x**2
>>> Poly(f).gff_list()
[(Poly(x, x, domain='ZZ'), 1), (Poly(x + 2, x, domain='ZZ'), 4)]
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'gff_list'):
result = f.rep.gff_list()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'gff_list')
return [(f.per(g), k) for g, k in result]
def norm(f):
"""
Computes the product, ``Norm(f)``, of the conjugates of
a polynomial ``f`` defined over a number field ``K``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> a, b = sqrt(2), sqrt(3)
A polynomial over a quadratic extension.
Two conjugates x - a and x + a.
>>> f = Poly(x - a, x, extension=a)
>>> f.norm()
Poly(x**2 - 2, x, domain='QQ')
A polynomial over a quartic extension.
Four conjugates x - a, x - a, x + a and x + a.
>>> f = Poly(x - a, x, extension=(a, b))
>>> f.norm()
Poly(x**4 - 4*x**2 + 4, x, domain='QQ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'norm'):
r = f.rep.norm()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'norm')
return f.per(r)
def sqf_norm(f):
"""
Computes square-free norm of ``f``.
Returns ``s``, ``f``, ``r``, such that ``g(x) = f(x-sa)`` and
``r(x) = Norm(g(x))`` is a square-free polynomial over ``K``,
where ``a`` is the algebraic extension of the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> s, f, r = Poly(x**2 + 1, x, extension=[sqrt(3)]).sqf_norm()
>>> s
1
>>> f
Poly(x**2 - 2*sqrt(3)*x + 4, x, domain='QQ<sqrt(3)>')
>>> r
Poly(x**4 - 4*x**2 + 16, x, domain='QQ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'sqf_norm'):
s, g, r = f.rep.sqf_norm()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'sqf_norm')
return s, f.per(g), f.per(r)
def sqf_part(f):
"""
Computes square-free part of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**3 - 3*x - 2, x).sqf_part()
Poly(x**2 - x - 2, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'sqf_part'):
result = f.rep.sqf_part()
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'sqf_part')
return f.per(result)
def sqf_list(f, all=False):
"""
Returns a list of square-free factors of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = 2*x**5 + 16*x**4 + 50*x**3 + 76*x**2 + 56*x + 16
>>> Poly(f).sqf_list()
(2, [(Poly(x + 1, x, domain='ZZ'), 2),
(Poly(x + 2, x, domain='ZZ'), 3)])
>>> Poly(f).sqf_list(all=True)
(2, [(Poly(1, x, domain='ZZ'), 1),
(Poly(x + 1, x, domain='ZZ'), 2),
(Poly(x + 2, x, domain='ZZ'), 3)])
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'sqf_list'):
coeff, factors = f.rep.sqf_list(all)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'sqf_list')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(coeff), [(f.per(g), k) for g, k in factors]
def sqf_list_include(f, all=False):
"""
Returns a list of square-free factors of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, expand
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = expand(2*(x + 1)**3*x**4)
>>> f
2*x**7 + 6*x**6 + 6*x**5 + 2*x**4
>>> Poly(f).sqf_list_include()
[(Poly(2, x, domain='ZZ'), 1),
(Poly(x + 1, x, domain='ZZ'), 3),
(Poly(x, x, domain='ZZ'), 4)]
>>> Poly(f).sqf_list_include(all=True)
[(Poly(2, x, domain='ZZ'), 1),
(Poly(1, x, domain='ZZ'), 2),
(Poly(x + 1, x, domain='ZZ'), 3),
(Poly(x, x, domain='ZZ'), 4)]
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'sqf_list_include'):
factors = f.rep.sqf_list_include(all)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'sqf_list_include')
return [(f.per(g), k) for g, k in factors]
def factor_list(f):
"""
Returns a list of irreducible factors of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = 2*x**5 + 2*x**4*y + 4*x**3 + 4*x**2*y + 2*x + 2*y
>>> Poly(f).factor_list()
(2, [(Poly(x + y, x, y, domain='ZZ'), 1),
(Poly(x**2 + 1, x, y, domain='ZZ'), 2)])
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'factor_list'):
try:
coeff, factors = f.rep.factor_list()
except DomainError:
return S.One, [(f, 1)]
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'factor_list')
return f.rep.dom.to_sympy(coeff), [(f.per(g), k) for g, k in factors]
def factor_list_include(f):
"""
Returns a list of irreducible factors of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = 2*x**5 + 2*x**4*y + 4*x**3 + 4*x**2*y + 2*x + 2*y
>>> Poly(f).factor_list_include()
[(Poly(2*x + 2*y, x, y, domain='ZZ'), 1),
(Poly(x**2 + 1, x, y, domain='ZZ'), 2)]
"""
if hasattr(f.rep, 'factor_list_include'):
try:
factors = f.rep.factor_list_include()
except DomainError:
return [(f, 1)]
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'factor_list_include')
return [(f.per(g), k) for g, k in factors]
def intervals(f, all=False, eps=None, inf=None, sup=None, fast=False, sqf=False):
"""
Compute isolating intervals for roots of ``f``.
For real roots the Vincent-Akritas-Strzebonski (VAS) continued fractions method is used.
References
==========
.. [#] Alkiviadis G. Akritas and Adam W. Strzebonski: A Comparative Study of Two Real Root
Isolation Methods . Nonlinear Analysis: Modelling and Control, Vol. 10, No. 4, 297-304, 2005.
.. [#] Alkiviadis G. Akritas, Adam W. Strzebonski and Panagiotis S. Vigklas: Improving the
Performance of the Continued Fractions Method Using new Bounds of Positive Roots. Nonlinear
Analysis: Modelling and Control, Vol. 13, No. 3, 265-279, 2008.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 3, x).intervals()
[((-2, -1), 1), ((1, 2), 1)]
>>> Poly(x**2 - 3, x).intervals(eps=1e-2)
[((-26/15, -19/11), 1), ((19/11, 26/15), 1)]
"""
if eps is not None:
eps = QQ.convert(eps)
if eps <= 0:
raise ValueError("'eps' must be a positive rational")
if inf is not None:
inf = QQ.convert(inf)
if sup is not None:
sup = QQ.convert(sup)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'intervals'):
result = f.rep.intervals(
all=all, eps=eps, inf=inf, sup=sup, fast=fast, sqf=sqf)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'intervals')
if sqf:
def _real(interval):
s, t = interval
return (QQ.to_sympy(s), QQ.to_sympy(t))
if not all:
return list(map(_real, result))
def _complex(rectangle):
(u, v), (s, t) = rectangle
return (QQ.to_sympy(u) + I*QQ.to_sympy(v),
QQ.to_sympy(s) + I*QQ.to_sympy(t))
real_part, complex_part = result
return list(map(_real, real_part)), list(map(_complex, complex_part))
else:
def _real(interval):
(s, t), k = interval
return ((QQ.to_sympy(s), QQ.to_sympy(t)), k)
if not all:
return list(map(_real, result))
def _complex(rectangle):
((u, v), (s, t)), k = rectangle
return ((QQ.to_sympy(u) + I*QQ.to_sympy(v),
QQ.to_sympy(s) + I*QQ.to_sympy(t)), k)
real_part, complex_part = result
return list(map(_real, real_part)), list(map(_complex, complex_part))
def refine_root(f, s, t, eps=None, steps=None, fast=False, check_sqf=False):
"""
Refine an isolating interval of a root to the given precision.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 3, x).refine_root(1, 2, eps=1e-2)
(19/11, 26/15)
"""
if check_sqf and not f.is_sqf:
raise PolynomialError("only square-free polynomials supported")
s, t = QQ.convert(s), QQ.convert(t)
if eps is not None:
eps = QQ.convert(eps)
if eps <= 0:
raise ValueError("'eps' must be a positive rational")
if steps is not None:
steps = int(steps)
elif eps is None:
steps = 1
if hasattr(f.rep, 'refine_root'):
S, T = f.rep.refine_root(s, t, eps=eps, steps=steps, fast=fast)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'refine_root')
return QQ.to_sympy(S), QQ.to_sympy(T)
def count_roots(f, inf=None, sup=None):
"""
Return the number of roots of ``f`` in ``[inf, sup]`` interval.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, I
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**4 - 4, x).count_roots(-3, 3)
2
>>> Poly(x**4 - 4, x).count_roots(0, 1 + 3*I)
1
"""
inf_real, sup_real = True, True
if inf is not None:
inf = sympify(inf)
if inf is S.NegativeInfinity:
inf = None
else:
re, im = inf.as_real_imag()
if not im:
inf = QQ.convert(inf)
else:
inf, inf_real = list(map(QQ.convert, (re, im))), False
if sup is not None:
sup = sympify(sup)
if sup is S.Infinity:
sup = None
else:
re, im = sup.as_real_imag()
if not im:
sup = QQ.convert(sup)
else:
sup, sup_real = list(map(QQ.convert, (re, im))), False
if inf_real and sup_real:
if hasattr(f.rep, 'count_real_roots'):
count = f.rep.count_real_roots(inf=inf, sup=sup)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'count_real_roots')
else:
if inf_real and inf is not None:
inf = (inf, QQ.zero)
if sup_real and sup is not None:
sup = (sup, QQ.zero)
if hasattr(f.rep, 'count_complex_roots'):
count = f.rep.count_complex_roots(inf=inf, sup=sup)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'count_complex_roots')
return Integer(count)
def root(f, index, radicals=True):
"""
Get an indexed root of a polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Poly(2*x**3 - 7*x**2 + 4*x + 4)
>>> f.root(0)
-1/2
>>> f.root(1)
2
>>> f.root(2)
2
>>> f.root(3)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
IndexError: root index out of [-3, 2] range, got 3
>>> Poly(x**5 + x + 1).root(0)
CRootOf(x**3 - x**2 + 1, 0)
"""
return sympy.polys.rootoftools.rootof(f, index, radicals=radicals)
def real_roots(f, multiple=True, radicals=True):
"""
Return a list of real roots with multiplicities.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(2*x**3 - 7*x**2 + 4*x + 4).real_roots()
[-1/2, 2, 2]
>>> Poly(x**3 + x + 1).real_roots()
[CRootOf(x**3 + x + 1, 0)]
"""
reals = sympy.polys.rootoftools.CRootOf.real_roots(f, radicals=radicals)
if multiple:
return reals
else:
return group(reals, multiple=False)
def all_roots(f, multiple=True, radicals=True):
"""
Return a list of real and complex roots with multiplicities.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(2*x**3 - 7*x**2 + 4*x + 4).all_roots()
[-1/2, 2, 2]
>>> Poly(x**3 + x + 1).all_roots()
[CRootOf(x**3 + x + 1, 0),
CRootOf(x**3 + x + 1, 1),
CRootOf(x**3 + x + 1, 2)]
"""
roots = sympy.polys.rootoftools.CRootOf.all_roots(f, radicals=radicals)
if multiple:
return roots
else:
return group(roots, multiple=False)
def nroots(f, n=15, maxsteps=50, cleanup=True):
"""
Compute numerical approximations of roots of ``f``.
Parameters
==========
n ... the number of digits to calculate
maxsteps ... the maximum number of iterations to do
If the accuracy `n` cannot be reached in `maxsteps`, it will raise an
exception. You need to rerun with higher maxsteps.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 3).nroots(n=15)
[-1.73205080756888, 1.73205080756888]
>>> Poly(x**2 - 3).nroots(n=30)
[-1.73205080756887729352744634151, 1.73205080756887729352744634151]
"""
from sympy.functions.elementary.complexes import sign
if f.is_multivariate:
raise MultivariatePolynomialError(
"can't compute numerical roots of %s" % f)
if f.degree() <= 0:
return []
# For integer and rational coefficients, convert them to integers only
# (for accuracy). Otherwise just try to convert the coefficients to
# mpmath.mpc and raise an exception if the conversion fails.
if f.rep.dom is ZZ:
coeffs = [int(coeff) for coeff in f.all_coeffs()]
elif f.rep.dom is QQ:
denoms = [coeff.q for coeff in f.all_coeffs()]
from sympy.core.numbers import ilcm
fac = ilcm(*denoms)
coeffs = [int(coeff*fac) for coeff in f.all_coeffs()]
else:
coeffs = [coeff.evalf(n=n).as_real_imag()
for coeff in f.all_coeffs()]
try:
coeffs = [mpmath.mpc(*coeff) for coeff in coeffs]
except TypeError:
raise DomainError("Numerical domain expected, got %s" % \
f.rep.dom)
dps = mpmath.mp.dps
mpmath.mp.dps = n
try:
# We need to add extra precision to guard against losing accuracy.
# 10 times the degree of the polynomial seems to work well.
roots = mpmath.polyroots(coeffs, maxsteps=maxsteps,
cleanup=cleanup, error=False, extraprec=f.degree()*10)
# Mpmath puts real roots first, then complex ones (as does all_roots)
# so we make sure this convention holds here, too.
roots = list(map(sympify,
sorted(roots, key=lambda r: (1 if r.imag else 0, r.real, abs(r.imag), sign(r.imag)))))
except NoConvergence:
raise NoConvergence(
'convergence to root failed; try n < %s or maxsteps > %s' % (
n, maxsteps))
finally:
mpmath.mp.dps = dps
return roots
def ground_roots(f):
"""
Compute roots of ``f`` by factorization in the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**6 - 4*x**4 + 4*x**3 - x**2).ground_roots()
{0: 2, 1: 2}
"""
if f.is_multivariate:
raise MultivariatePolynomialError(
"can't compute ground roots of %s" % f)
roots = {}
for factor, k in f.factor_list()[1]:
if factor.is_linear:
a, b = factor.all_coeffs()
roots[-b/a] = k
return roots
def nth_power_roots_poly(f, n):
"""
Construct a polynomial with n-th powers of roots of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Poly(x**4 - x**2 + 1)
>>> f.nth_power_roots_poly(2)
Poly(x**4 - 2*x**3 + 3*x**2 - 2*x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> f.nth_power_roots_poly(3)
Poly(x**4 + 2*x**2 + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> f.nth_power_roots_poly(4)
Poly(x**4 + 2*x**3 + 3*x**2 + 2*x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> f.nth_power_roots_poly(12)
Poly(x**4 - 4*x**3 + 6*x**2 - 4*x + 1, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
if f.is_multivariate:
raise MultivariatePolynomialError(
"must be a univariate polynomial")
N = sympify(n)
if N.is_Integer and N >= 1:
n = int(N)
else:
raise ValueError("'n' must an integer and n >= 1, got %s" % n)
x = f.gen
t = Dummy('t')
r = f.resultant(f.__class__.from_expr(x**n - t, x, t))
return r.replace(t, x)
def cancel(f, g, include=False):
"""
Cancel common factors in a rational function ``f/g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(2*x**2 - 2, x).cancel(Poly(x**2 - 2*x + 1, x))
(1, Poly(2*x + 2, x, domain='ZZ'), Poly(x - 1, x, domain='ZZ'))
>>> Poly(2*x**2 - 2, x).cancel(Poly(x**2 - 2*x + 1, x), include=True)
(Poly(2*x + 2, x, domain='ZZ'), Poly(x - 1, x, domain='ZZ'))
"""
dom, per, F, G = f._unify(g)
if hasattr(F, 'cancel'):
result = F.cancel(G, include=include)
else: # pragma: no cover
raise OperationNotSupported(f, 'cancel')
if not include:
if dom.has_assoc_Ring:
dom = dom.get_ring()
cp, cq, p, q = result
cp = dom.to_sympy(cp)
cq = dom.to_sympy(cq)
return cp/cq, per(p), per(q)
else:
return tuple(map(per, result))
@property
def is_zero(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is a zero polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(0, x).is_zero
True
>>> Poly(1, x).is_zero
False
"""
return f.rep.is_zero
@property
def is_one(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is a unit polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(0, x).is_one
False
>>> Poly(1, x).is_one
True
"""
return f.rep.is_one
@property
def is_sqf(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is a square-free polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 - 2*x + 1, x).is_sqf
False
>>> Poly(x**2 - 1, x).is_sqf
True
"""
return f.rep.is_sqf
@property
def is_monic(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if the leading coefficient of ``f`` is one.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x + 2, x).is_monic
True
>>> Poly(2*x + 2, x).is_monic
False
"""
return f.rep.is_monic
@property
def is_primitive(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if GCD of the coefficients of ``f`` is one.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(2*x**2 + 6*x + 12, x).is_primitive
False
>>> Poly(x**2 + 3*x + 6, x).is_primitive
True
"""
return f.rep.is_primitive
@property
def is_ground(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is an element of the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x, x).is_ground
False
>>> Poly(2, x).is_ground
True
>>> Poly(y, x).is_ground
True
"""
return f.rep.is_ground
@property
def is_linear(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is linear in all its variables.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x + y + 2, x, y).is_linear
True
>>> Poly(x*y + 2, x, y).is_linear
False
"""
return f.rep.is_linear
@property
def is_quadratic(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is quadratic in all its variables.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x*y + 2, x, y).is_quadratic
True
>>> Poly(x*y**2 + 2, x, y).is_quadratic
False
"""
return f.rep.is_quadratic
@property
def is_monomial(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is zero or has only one term.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(3*x**2, x).is_monomial
True
>>> Poly(3*x**2 + 1, x).is_monomial
False
"""
return f.rep.is_monomial
@property
def is_homogeneous(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is a homogeneous polynomial.
A homogeneous polynomial is a polynomial whose all monomials with
non-zero coefficients have the same total degree. If you want not
only to check if a polynomial is homogeneous but also compute its
homogeneous order, then use :func:`Poly.homogeneous_order`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + x*y, x, y).is_homogeneous
True
>>> Poly(x**3 + x*y, x, y).is_homogeneous
False
"""
return f.rep.is_homogeneous
@property
def is_irreducible(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` has no factors over its domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> Poly(x**2 + x + 1, x, modulus=2).is_irreducible
True
>>> Poly(x**2 + 1, x, modulus=2).is_irreducible
False
"""
return f.rep.is_irreducible
@property
def is_univariate(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is a univariate polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + x + 1, x).is_univariate
True
>>> Poly(x*y**2 + x*y + 1, x, y).is_univariate
False
>>> Poly(x*y**2 + x*y + 1, x).is_univariate
True
>>> Poly(x**2 + x + 1, x, y).is_univariate
False
"""
return len(f.gens) == 1
@property
def is_multivariate(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is a multivariate polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> Poly(x**2 + x + 1, x).is_multivariate
False
>>> Poly(x*y**2 + x*y + 1, x, y).is_multivariate
True
>>> Poly(x*y**2 + x*y + 1, x).is_multivariate
False
>>> Poly(x**2 + x + 1, x, y).is_multivariate
True
"""
return len(f.gens) != 1
@property
def is_cyclotomic(f):
"""
Returns ``True`` if ``f`` is a cyclotomic polnomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = x**16 + x**14 - x**10 + x**8 - x**6 + x**2 + 1
>>> Poly(f).is_cyclotomic
False
>>> g = x**16 + x**14 - x**10 - x**8 - x**6 + x**2 + 1
>>> Poly(g).is_cyclotomic
True
"""
return f.rep.is_cyclotomic
def __abs__(f):
return f.abs()
def __neg__(f):
return f.neg()
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __add__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
except PolynomialError:
return f.as_expr() + g
return f.add(g)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __radd__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
except PolynomialError:
return g + f.as_expr()
return g.add(f)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __sub__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
except PolynomialError:
return f.as_expr() - g
return f.sub(g)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __rsub__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
except PolynomialError:
return g - f.as_expr()
return g.sub(f)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __mul__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
except PolynomialError:
return f.as_expr()*g
return f.mul(g)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __rmul__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
except PolynomialError:
return g*f.as_expr()
return g.mul(f)
@_sympifyit('n', NotImplemented)
def __pow__(f, n):
if n.is_Integer and n >= 0:
return f.pow(n)
else:
return f.as_expr()**n
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __divmod__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
return f.div(g)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __rdivmod__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
return g.div(f)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __mod__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
return f.rem(g)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __rmod__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
return g.rem(f)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __floordiv__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
return f.quo(g)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __rfloordiv__(f, g):
if not g.is_Poly:
g = f.__class__(g, *f.gens)
return g.quo(f)
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __div__(f, g):
return f.as_expr()/g.as_expr()
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __rdiv__(f, g):
return g.as_expr()/f.as_expr()
__truediv__ = __div__
__rtruediv__ = __rdiv__
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __eq__(self, other):
f, g = self, other
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
g = f.__class__(g, f.gens, domain=f.get_domain())
except (PolynomialError, DomainError, CoercionFailed):
return False
if f.gens != g.gens:
return False
if f.rep.dom != g.rep.dom:
try:
dom = f.rep.dom.unify(g.rep.dom, f.gens)
except UnificationFailed:
return False
f = f.set_domain(dom)
g = g.set_domain(dom)
return f.rep == g.rep
@_sympifyit('g', NotImplemented)
def __ne__(f, g):
return not f == g
def __nonzero__(f):
return not f.is_zero
__bool__ = __nonzero__
def eq(f, g, strict=False):
if not strict:
return f == g
else:
return f._strict_eq(sympify(g))
def ne(f, g, strict=False):
return not f.eq(g, strict=strict)
def _strict_eq(f, g):
return isinstance(g, f.__class__) and f.gens == g.gens and f.rep.eq(g.rep, strict=True)
@public
class PurePoly(Poly):
"""Class for representing pure polynomials. """
def _hashable_content(self):
"""Allow SymPy to hash Poly instances. """
return (self.rep,)
def __hash__(self):
return super(PurePoly, self).__hash__()
@property
def free_symbols(self):
"""
Free symbols of a polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import PurePoly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> PurePoly(x**2 + 1).free_symbols
set()
>>> PurePoly(x**2 + y).free_symbols
set()
>>> PurePoly(x**2 + y, x).free_symbols
{y}
"""
return self.free_symbols_in_domain
@_sympifyit('other', NotImplemented)
def __eq__(self, other):
f, g = self, other
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
g = f.__class__(g, f.gens, domain=f.get_domain())
except (PolynomialError, DomainError, CoercionFailed):
return False
if len(f.gens) != len(g.gens):
return False
if f.rep.dom != g.rep.dom:
try:
dom = f.rep.dom.unify(g.rep.dom, f.gens)
except UnificationFailed:
return False
f = f.set_domain(dom)
g = g.set_domain(dom)
return f.rep == g.rep
def _strict_eq(f, g):
return isinstance(g, f.__class__) and f.rep.eq(g.rep, strict=True)
def _unify(f, g):
g = sympify(g)
if not g.is_Poly:
try:
return f.rep.dom, f.per, f.rep, f.rep.per(f.rep.dom.from_sympy(g))
except CoercionFailed:
raise UnificationFailed("can't unify %s with %s" % (f, g))
if len(f.gens) != len(g.gens):
raise UnificationFailed("can't unify %s with %s" % (f, g))
if not (isinstance(f.rep, DMP) and isinstance(g.rep, DMP)):
raise UnificationFailed("can't unify %s with %s" % (f, g))
cls = f.__class__
gens = f.gens
dom = f.rep.dom.unify(g.rep.dom, gens)
F = f.rep.convert(dom)
G = g.rep.convert(dom)
def per(rep, dom=dom, gens=gens, remove=None):
if remove is not None:
gens = gens[:remove] + gens[remove + 1:]
if not gens:
return dom.to_sympy(rep)
return cls.new(rep, *gens)
return dom, per, F, G
@public
def poly_from_expr(expr, *gens, **args):
"""Construct a polynomial from an expression. """
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
return _poly_from_expr(expr, opt)
def _poly_from_expr(expr, opt):
"""Construct a polynomial from an expression. """
orig, expr = expr, sympify(expr)
if not isinstance(expr, Basic):
raise PolificationFailed(opt, orig, expr)
elif expr.is_Poly:
poly = expr.__class__._from_poly(expr, opt)
opt.gens = poly.gens
opt.domain = poly.domain
if opt.polys is None:
opt.polys = True
return poly, opt
elif opt.expand:
expr = expr.expand()
rep, opt = _dict_from_expr(expr, opt)
if not opt.gens:
raise PolificationFailed(opt, orig, expr)
monoms, coeffs = list(zip(*list(rep.items())))
domain = opt.domain
if domain is None:
opt.domain, coeffs = construct_domain(coeffs, opt=opt)
else:
coeffs = list(map(domain.from_sympy, coeffs))
rep = dict(list(zip(monoms, coeffs)))
poly = Poly._from_dict(rep, opt)
if opt.polys is None:
opt.polys = False
return poly, opt
@public
def parallel_poly_from_expr(exprs, *gens, **args):
"""Construct polynomials from expressions. """
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
return _parallel_poly_from_expr(exprs, opt)
def _parallel_poly_from_expr(exprs, opt):
"""Construct polynomials from expressions. """
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise
if len(exprs) == 2:
f, g = exprs
if isinstance(f, Poly) and isinstance(g, Poly):
f = f.__class__._from_poly(f, opt)
g = g.__class__._from_poly(g, opt)
f, g = f.unify(g)
opt.gens = f.gens
opt.domain = f.domain
if opt.polys is None:
opt.polys = True
return [f, g], opt
origs, exprs = list(exprs), []
_exprs, _polys = [], []
failed = False
for i, expr in enumerate(origs):
expr = sympify(expr)
if isinstance(expr, Basic):
if expr.is_Poly:
_polys.append(i)
else:
_exprs.append(i)
if opt.expand:
expr = expr.expand()
else:
failed = True
exprs.append(expr)
if failed:
raise PolificationFailed(opt, origs, exprs, True)
if _polys:
# XXX: this is a temporary solution
for i in _polys:
exprs[i] = exprs[i].as_expr()
reps, opt = _parallel_dict_from_expr(exprs, opt)
if not opt.gens:
raise PolificationFailed(opt, origs, exprs, True)
for k in opt.gens:
if isinstance(k, Piecewise):
raise PolynomialError("Piecewise generators do not make sense")
coeffs_list, lengths = [], []
all_monoms = []
all_coeffs = []
for rep in reps:
monoms, coeffs = list(zip(*list(rep.items())))
coeffs_list.extend(coeffs)
all_monoms.append(monoms)
lengths.append(len(coeffs))
domain = opt.domain
if domain is None:
opt.domain, coeffs_list = construct_domain(coeffs_list, opt=opt)
else:
coeffs_list = list(map(domain.from_sympy, coeffs_list))
for k in lengths:
all_coeffs.append(coeffs_list[:k])
coeffs_list = coeffs_list[k:]
polys = []
for monoms, coeffs in zip(all_monoms, all_coeffs):
rep = dict(list(zip(monoms, coeffs)))
poly = Poly._from_dict(rep, opt)
polys.append(poly)
if opt.polys is None:
opt.polys = bool(_polys)
return polys, opt
def _update_args(args, key, value):
"""Add a new ``(key, value)`` pair to arguments ``dict``. """
args = dict(args)
if key not in args:
args[key] = value
return args
@public
def degree(f, gen=0):
"""
Return the degree of ``f`` in the given variable.
The degree of 0 is negative infinity.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import degree
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> degree(x**2 + y*x + 1, gen=x)
2
>>> degree(x**2 + y*x + 1, gen=y)
1
>>> degree(0, x)
-oo
See also
========
total_degree
degree_list
"""
f = sympify(f, strict=True)
gen_is_Num = sympify(gen, strict=True).is_Number
if f.is_Poly:
p = f
isNum = p.as_expr().is_Number
else:
isNum = f.is_Number
if not isNum:
if gen_is_Num:
p, _ = poly_from_expr(f)
else:
p, _ = poly_from_expr(f, gen)
if isNum:
return S.Zero if f else S.NegativeInfinity
if not gen_is_Num:
if f.is_Poly and gen not in p.gens:
# try recast without explicit gens
p, _ = poly_from_expr(f.as_expr())
if gen not in p.gens:
return S.Zero
elif not f.is_Poly and len(f.free_symbols) > 1:
raise TypeError(filldedent('''
A symbolic generator of interest is required for a multivariate
expression like func = %s, e.g. degree(func, gen = %s) instead of
degree(func, gen = %s).
''' % (f, next(ordered(f.free_symbols)), gen)))
return Integer(p.degree(gen))
@public
def total_degree(f, *gens):
"""
Return the total_degree of ``f`` in the given variables.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import total_degree, Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z
>>> total_degree(1)
0
>>> total_degree(x + x*y)
2
>>> total_degree(x + x*y, x)
1
If the expression is a Poly and no variables are given
then the generators of the Poly will be used:
>>> p = Poly(x + x*y, y)
>>> total_degree(p)
1
To deal with the underlying expression of the Poly, convert
it to an Expr:
>>> total_degree(p.as_expr())
2
This is done automatically if any variables are given:
>>> total_degree(p, x)
1
See also
========
degree
"""
p = sympify(f)
if p.is_Poly:
p = p.as_expr()
if p.is_Number:
rv = 0
else:
if f.is_Poly:
gens = gens or f.gens
rv = Poly(p, gens).total_degree()
return Integer(rv)
@public
def degree_list(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Return a list of degrees of ``f`` in all variables.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import degree_list
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> degree_list(x**2 + y*x + 1)
(2, 1)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('degree_list', 1, exc)
degrees = F.degree_list()
return tuple(map(Integer, degrees))
@public
def LC(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Return the leading coefficient of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import LC
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> LC(4*x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y)
4
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('LC', 1, exc)
return F.LC(order=opt.order)
@public
def LM(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Return the leading monomial of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import LM
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> LM(4*x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y)
x**2
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('LM', 1, exc)
monom = F.LM(order=opt.order)
return monom.as_expr()
@public
def LT(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Return the leading term of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import LT
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> LT(4*x**2 + 2*x*y**2 + x*y + 3*y)
4*x**2
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('LT', 1, exc)
monom, coeff = F.LT(order=opt.order)
return coeff*monom.as_expr()
@public
def pdiv(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute polynomial pseudo-division of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import pdiv
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> pdiv(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4)
(2*x + 4, 20)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('pdiv', 2, exc)
q, r = F.pdiv(G)
if not opt.polys:
return q.as_expr(), r.as_expr()
else:
return q, r
@public
def prem(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute polynomial pseudo-remainder of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import prem
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> prem(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4)
20
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('prem', 2, exc)
r = F.prem(G)
if not opt.polys:
return r.as_expr()
else:
return r
@public
def pquo(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute polynomial pseudo-quotient of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import pquo
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> pquo(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4)
2*x + 4
>>> pquo(x**2 - 1, 2*x - 1)
2*x + 1
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('pquo', 2, exc)
try:
q = F.pquo(G)
except ExactQuotientFailed:
raise ExactQuotientFailed(f, g)
if not opt.polys:
return q.as_expr()
else:
return q
@public
def pexquo(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute polynomial exact pseudo-quotient of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import pexquo
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> pexquo(x**2 - 1, 2*x - 2)
2*x + 2
>>> pexquo(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ExactQuotientFailed: 2*x - 4 does not divide x**2 + 1
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('pexquo', 2, exc)
q = F.pexquo(G)
if not opt.polys:
return q.as_expr()
else:
return q
@public
def div(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute polynomial division of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import div, ZZ, QQ
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> div(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4, domain=ZZ)
(0, x**2 + 1)
>>> div(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4, domain=QQ)
(x/2 + 1, 5)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('div', 2, exc)
q, r = F.div(G, auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return q.as_expr(), r.as_expr()
else:
return q, r
@public
def rem(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute polynomial remainder of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import rem, ZZ, QQ
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> rem(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4, domain=ZZ)
x**2 + 1
>>> rem(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4, domain=QQ)
5
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('rem', 2, exc)
r = F.rem(G, auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return r.as_expr()
else:
return r
@public
def quo(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute polynomial quotient of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import quo
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> quo(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4)
x/2 + 1
>>> quo(x**2 - 1, x - 1)
x + 1
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('quo', 2, exc)
q = F.quo(G, auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return q.as_expr()
else:
return q
@public
def exquo(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute polynomial exact quotient of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import exquo
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> exquo(x**2 - 1, x - 1)
x + 1
>>> exquo(x**2 + 1, 2*x - 4)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ExactQuotientFailed: 2*x - 4 does not divide x**2 + 1
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('exquo', 2, exc)
q = F.exquo(G, auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return q.as_expr()
else:
return q
@public
def half_gcdex(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Half extended Euclidean algorithm of ``f`` and ``g``.
Returns ``(s, h)`` such that ``h = gcd(f, g)`` and ``s*f = h (mod g)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import half_gcdex
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> half_gcdex(x**4 - 2*x**3 - 6*x**2 + 12*x + 15, x**3 + x**2 - 4*x - 4)
(-x/5 + 3/5, x + 1)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
domain, (a, b) = construct_domain(exc.exprs)
try:
s, h = domain.half_gcdex(a, b)
except NotImplementedError:
raise ComputationFailed('half_gcdex', 2, exc)
else:
return domain.to_sympy(s), domain.to_sympy(h)
s, h = F.half_gcdex(G, auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return s.as_expr(), h.as_expr()
else:
return s, h
@public
def gcdex(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Extended Euclidean algorithm of ``f`` and ``g``.
Returns ``(s, t, h)`` such that ``h = gcd(f, g)`` and ``s*f + t*g = h``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import gcdex
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> gcdex(x**4 - 2*x**3 - 6*x**2 + 12*x + 15, x**3 + x**2 - 4*x - 4)
(-x/5 + 3/5, x**2/5 - 6*x/5 + 2, x + 1)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
domain, (a, b) = construct_domain(exc.exprs)
try:
s, t, h = domain.gcdex(a, b)
except NotImplementedError:
raise ComputationFailed('gcdex', 2, exc)
else:
return domain.to_sympy(s), domain.to_sympy(t), domain.to_sympy(h)
s, t, h = F.gcdex(G, auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return s.as_expr(), t.as_expr(), h.as_expr()
else:
return s, t, h
@public
def invert(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Invert ``f`` modulo ``g`` when possible.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import invert, S
>>> from sympy.core.numbers import mod_inverse
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> invert(x**2 - 1, 2*x - 1)
-4/3
>>> invert(x**2 - 1, x - 1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
NotInvertible: zero divisor
For more efficient inversion of Rationals,
use the ``mod_inverse`` function:
>>> mod_inverse(3, 5)
2
>>> (S(2)/5).invert(S(7)/3)
5/2
See Also
========
sympy.core.numbers.mod_inverse
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
domain, (a, b) = construct_domain(exc.exprs)
try:
return domain.to_sympy(domain.invert(a, b))
except NotImplementedError:
raise ComputationFailed('invert', 2, exc)
h = F.invert(G, auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return h.as_expr()
else:
return h
@public
def subresultants(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute subresultant PRS of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import subresultants
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> subresultants(x**2 + 1, x**2 - 1)
[x**2 + 1, x**2 - 1, -2]
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('subresultants', 2, exc)
result = F.subresultants(G)
if not opt.polys:
return [r.as_expr() for r in result]
else:
return result
@public
def resultant(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute resultant of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import resultant
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> resultant(x**2 + 1, x**2 - 1)
4
"""
includePRS = args.pop('includePRS', False)
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('resultant', 2, exc)
if includePRS:
result, R = F.resultant(G, includePRS=includePRS)
else:
result = F.resultant(G)
if not opt.polys:
if includePRS:
return result.as_expr(), [r.as_expr() for r in R]
return result.as_expr()
else:
if includePRS:
return result, R
return result
@public
def discriminant(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute discriminant of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import discriminant
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> discriminant(x**2 + 2*x + 3)
-8
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('discriminant', 1, exc)
result = F.discriminant()
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def cofactors(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute GCD and cofactors of ``f`` and ``g``.
Returns polynomials ``(h, cff, cfg)`` such that ``h = gcd(f, g)``, and
``cff = quo(f, h)`` and ``cfg = quo(g, h)`` are, so called, cofactors
of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import cofactors
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> cofactors(x**2 - 1, x**2 - 3*x + 2)
(x - 1, x + 1, x - 2)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
domain, (a, b) = construct_domain(exc.exprs)
try:
h, cff, cfg = domain.cofactors(a, b)
except NotImplementedError:
raise ComputationFailed('cofactors', 2, exc)
else:
return domain.to_sympy(h), domain.to_sympy(cff), domain.to_sympy(cfg)
h, cff, cfg = F.cofactors(G)
if not opt.polys:
return h.as_expr(), cff.as_expr(), cfg.as_expr()
else:
return h, cff, cfg
@public
def gcd_list(seq, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute GCD of a list of polynomials.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import gcd_list
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> gcd_list([x**3 - 1, x**2 - 1, x**2 - 3*x + 2])
x - 1
"""
seq = sympify(seq)
def try_non_polynomial_gcd(seq):
if not gens and not args:
domain, numbers = construct_domain(seq)
if not numbers:
return domain.zero
elif domain.is_Numerical:
result, numbers = numbers[0], numbers[1:]
for number in numbers:
result = domain.gcd(result, number)
if domain.is_one(result):
break
return domain.to_sympy(result)
return None
result = try_non_polynomial_gcd(seq)
if result is not None:
return result
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
polys, opt = parallel_poly_from_expr(seq, *gens, **args)
# gcd for domain Q[irrational] (purely algebraic irrational)
if len(seq) > 1 and all(elt.is_algebraic and elt.is_irrational for elt in seq):
a = seq[-1]
lst = [ (a/elt).ratsimp() for elt in seq[:-1] ]
if all(frc.is_rational for frc in lst):
lc = 1
for frc in lst:
lc = lcm(lc, frc.as_numer_denom()[0])
return a/lc
except PolificationFailed as exc:
result = try_non_polynomial_gcd(exc.exprs)
if result is not None:
return result
else:
raise ComputationFailed('gcd_list', len(seq), exc)
if not polys:
if not opt.polys:
return S.Zero
else:
return Poly(0, opt=opt)
result, polys = polys[0], polys[1:]
for poly in polys:
result = result.gcd(poly)
if result.is_one:
break
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def gcd(f, g=None, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute GCD of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import gcd
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> gcd(x**2 - 1, x**2 - 3*x + 2)
x - 1
"""
if hasattr(f, '__iter__'):
if g is not None:
gens = (g,) + gens
return gcd_list(f, *gens, **args)
elif g is None:
raise TypeError("gcd() takes 2 arguments or a sequence of arguments")
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
# gcd for domain Q[irrational] (purely algebraic irrational)
a, b = map(sympify, (f, g))
if a.is_algebraic and a.is_irrational and b.is_algebraic and b.is_irrational:
frc = (a/b).ratsimp()
if frc.is_rational:
return a/frc.as_numer_denom()[0]
except PolificationFailed as exc:
domain, (a, b) = construct_domain(exc.exprs)
try:
return domain.to_sympy(domain.gcd(a, b))
except NotImplementedError:
raise ComputationFailed('gcd', 2, exc)
result = F.gcd(G)
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def lcm_list(seq, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute LCM of a list of polynomials.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import lcm_list
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> lcm_list([x**3 - 1, x**2 - 1, x**2 - 3*x + 2])
x**5 - x**4 - 2*x**3 - x**2 + x + 2
"""
seq = sympify(seq)
def try_non_polynomial_lcm(seq):
if not gens and not args:
domain, numbers = construct_domain(seq)
if not numbers:
return domain.one
elif domain.is_Numerical:
result, numbers = numbers[0], numbers[1:]
for number in numbers:
result = domain.lcm(result, number)
return domain.to_sympy(result)
return None
result = try_non_polynomial_lcm(seq)
if result is not None:
return result
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
polys, opt = parallel_poly_from_expr(seq, *gens, **args)
# lcm for domain Q[irrational] (purely algebraic irrational)
if len(seq) > 1 and all(elt.is_algebraic and elt.is_irrational for elt in seq):
a = seq[-1]
lst = [ (a/elt).ratsimp() for elt in seq[:-1] ]
if all(frc.is_rational for frc in lst):
lc = 1
for frc in lst:
lc = lcm(lc, frc.as_numer_denom()[1])
return a*lc
except PolificationFailed as exc:
result = try_non_polynomial_lcm(exc.exprs)
if result is not None:
return result
else:
raise ComputationFailed('lcm_list', len(seq), exc)
if not polys:
if not opt.polys:
return S.One
else:
return Poly(1, opt=opt)
result, polys = polys[0], polys[1:]
for poly in polys:
result = result.lcm(poly)
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def lcm(f, g=None, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute LCM of ``f`` and ``g``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import lcm
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> lcm(x**2 - 1, x**2 - 3*x + 2)
x**3 - 2*x**2 - x + 2
"""
if hasattr(f, '__iter__'):
if g is not None:
gens = (g,) + gens
return lcm_list(f, *gens, **args)
elif g is None:
raise TypeError("lcm() takes 2 arguments or a sequence of arguments")
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
# lcm for domain Q[irrational] (purely algebraic irrational)
a, b = map(sympify, (f, g))
if a.is_algebraic and a.is_irrational and b.is_algebraic and b.is_irrational:
frc = (a/b).ratsimp()
if frc.is_rational:
return a*frc.as_numer_denom()[1]
except PolificationFailed as exc:
domain, (a, b) = construct_domain(exc.exprs)
try:
return domain.to_sympy(domain.lcm(a, b))
except NotImplementedError:
raise ComputationFailed('lcm', 2, exc)
result = F.lcm(G)
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def terms_gcd(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Remove GCD of terms from ``f``.
If the ``deep`` flag is True, then the arguments of ``f`` will have
terms_gcd applied to them.
If a fraction is factored out of ``f`` and ``f`` is an Add, then
an unevaluated Mul will be returned so that automatic simplification
does not redistribute it. The hint ``clear``, when set to False, can be
used to prevent such factoring when all coefficients are not fractions.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import terms_gcd, cos
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> terms_gcd(x**6*y**2 + x**3*y, x, y)
x**3*y*(x**3*y + 1)
The default action of polys routines is to expand the expression
given to them. terms_gcd follows this behavior:
>>> terms_gcd((3+3*x)*(x+x*y))
3*x*(x*y + x + y + 1)
If this is not desired then the hint ``expand`` can be set to False.
In this case the expression will be treated as though it were comprised
of one or more terms:
>>> terms_gcd((3+3*x)*(x+x*y), expand=False)
(3*x + 3)*(x*y + x)
In order to traverse factors of a Mul or the arguments of other
functions, the ``deep`` hint can be used:
>>> terms_gcd((3 + 3*x)*(x + x*y), expand=False, deep=True)
3*x*(x + 1)*(y + 1)
>>> terms_gcd(cos(x + x*y), deep=True)
cos(x*(y + 1))
Rationals are factored out by default:
>>> terms_gcd(x + y/2)
(2*x + y)/2
Only the y-term had a coefficient that was a fraction; if one
does not want to factor out the 1/2 in cases like this, the
flag ``clear`` can be set to False:
>>> terms_gcd(x + y/2, clear=False)
x + y/2
>>> terms_gcd(x*y/2 + y**2, clear=False)
y*(x/2 + y)
The ``clear`` flag is ignored if all coefficients are fractions:
>>> terms_gcd(x/3 + y/2, clear=False)
(2*x + 3*y)/6
See Also
========
sympy.core.exprtools.gcd_terms, sympy.core.exprtools.factor_terms
"""
from sympy.core.relational import Equality
orig = sympify(f)
if not isinstance(f, Expr) or f.is_Atom:
return orig
if args.get('deep', False):
new = f.func(*[terms_gcd(a, *gens, **args) for a in f.args])
args.pop('deep')
args['expand'] = False
return terms_gcd(new, *gens, **args)
if isinstance(f, Equality):
return f
clear = args.pop('clear', True)
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
return exc.expr
J, f = F.terms_gcd()
if opt.domain.is_Ring:
if opt.domain.is_Field:
denom, f = f.clear_denoms(convert=True)
coeff, f = f.primitive()
if opt.domain.is_Field:
coeff /= denom
else:
coeff = S.One
term = Mul(*[x**j for x, j in zip(f.gens, J)])
if coeff == 1:
coeff = S.One
if term == 1:
return orig
if clear:
return _keep_coeff(coeff, term*f.as_expr())
# base the clearing on the form of the original expression, not
# the (perhaps) Mul that we have now
coeff, f = _keep_coeff(coeff, f.as_expr(), clear=False).as_coeff_Mul()
return _keep_coeff(coeff, term*f, clear=False)
@public
def trunc(f, p, *gens, **args):
"""
Reduce ``f`` modulo a constant ``p``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import trunc
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> trunc(2*x**3 + 3*x**2 + 5*x + 7, 3)
-x**3 - x + 1
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('trunc', 1, exc)
result = F.trunc(sympify(p))
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def monic(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Divide all coefficients of ``f`` by ``LC(f)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import monic
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> monic(3*x**2 + 4*x + 2)
x**2 + 4*x/3 + 2/3
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('monic', 1, exc)
result = F.monic(auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def content(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute GCD of coefficients of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import content
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> content(6*x**2 + 8*x + 12)
2
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('content', 1, exc)
return F.content()
@public
def primitive(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute content and the primitive form of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.polytools import primitive
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> primitive(6*x**2 + 8*x + 12)
(2, 3*x**2 + 4*x + 6)
>>> eq = (2 + 2*x)*x + 2
Expansion is performed by default:
>>> primitive(eq)
(2, x**2 + x + 1)
Set ``expand`` to False to shut this off. Note that the
extraction will not be recursive; use the as_content_primitive method
for recursive, non-destructive Rational extraction.
>>> primitive(eq, expand=False)
(1, x*(2*x + 2) + 2)
>>> eq.as_content_primitive()
(2, x*(x + 1) + 1)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('primitive', 1, exc)
cont, result = F.primitive()
if not opt.polys:
return cont, result.as_expr()
else:
return cont, result
@public
def compose(f, g, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute functional composition ``f(g)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import compose
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> compose(x**2 + x, x - 1)
x**2 - x
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((f, g), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('compose', 2, exc)
result = F.compose(G)
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def decompose(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute functional decomposition of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import decompose
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> decompose(x**4 + 2*x**3 - x - 1)
[x**2 - x - 1, x**2 + x]
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('decompose', 1, exc)
result = F.decompose()
if not opt.polys:
return [r.as_expr() for r in result]
else:
return result
@public
def sturm(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute Sturm sequence of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sturm
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> sturm(x**3 - 2*x**2 + x - 3)
[x**3 - 2*x**2 + x - 3, 3*x**2 - 4*x + 1, 2*x/9 + 25/9, -2079/4]
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['auto', 'polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('sturm', 1, exc)
result = F.sturm(auto=opt.auto)
if not opt.polys:
return [r.as_expr() for r in result]
else:
return result
@public
def gff_list(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute a list of greatest factorial factors of ``f``.
Note that the input to ff() and rf() should be Poly instances to use the
definitions here.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import gff_list, ff, Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = Poly(x**5 + 2*x**4 - x**3 - 2*x**2, x)
>>> gff_list(f)
[(Poly(x, x, domain='ZZ'), 1), (Poly(x + 2, x, domain='ZZ'), 4)]
>>> (ff(Poly(x), 1)*ff(Poly(x + 2), 4)).expand() == f
True
>>> f = Poly(x**12 + 6*x**11 - 11*x**10 - 56*x**9 + 220*x**8 + 208*x**7 - \
1401*x**6 + 1090*x**5 + 2715*x**4 - 6720*x**3 - 1092*x**2 + 5040*x, x)
>>> gff_list(f)
[(Poly(x**3 + 7, x, domain='ZZ'), 2), (Poly(x**2 + 5*x, x, domain='ZZ'), 3)]
>>> ff(Poly(x**3 + 7, x), 2)*ff(Poly(x**2 + 5*x, x), 3) == f
True
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('gff_list', 1, exc)
factors = F.gff_list()
if not opt.polys:
return [(g.as_expr(), k) for g, k in factors]
else:
return factors
@public
def gff(f, *gens, **args):
"""Compute greatest factorial factorization of ``f``. """
raise NotImplementedError('symbolic falling factorial')
@public
def sqf_norm(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute square-free norm of ``f``.
Returns ``s``, ``f``, ``r``, such that ``g(x) = f(x-sa)`` and
``r(x) = Norm(g(x))`` is a square-free polynomial over ``K``,
where ``a`` is the algebraic extension of the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqf_norm, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> sqf_norm(x**2 + 1, extension=[sqrt(3)])
(1, x**2 - 2*sqrt(3)*x + 4, x**4 - 4*x**2 + 16)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('sqf_norm', 1, exc)
s, g, r = F.sqf_norm()
if not opt.polys:
return Integer(s), g.as_expr(), r.as_expr()
else:
return Integer(s), g, r
@public
def sqf_part(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute square-free part of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqf_part
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> sqf_part(x**3 - 3*x - 2)
x**2 - x - 2
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('sqf_part', 1, exc)
result = F.sqf_part()
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
def _sorted_factors(factors, method):
"""Sort a list of ``(expr, exp)`` pairs. """
if method == 'sqf':
def key(obj):
poly, exp = obj
rep = poly.rep.rep
return (exp, len(rep), len(poly.gens), rep)
else:
def key(obj):
poly, exp = obj
rep = poly.rep.rep
return (len(rep), len(poly.gens), exp, rep)
return sorted(factors, key=key)
def _factors_product(factors):
"""Multiply a list of ``(expr, exp)`` pairs. """
return Mul(*[f.as_expr()**k for f, k in factors])
def _symbolic_factor_list(expr, opt, method):
"""Helper function for :func:`_symbolic_factor`. """
coeff, factors = S.One, []
args = [i._eval_factor() if hasattr(i, '_eval_factor') else i
for i in Mul.make_args(expr)]
for arg in args:
if arg.is_Number:
coeff *= arg
continue
if arg.is_Mul:
args.extend(arg.args)
continue
if arg.is_Pow:
base, exp = arg.args
if base.is_Number and exp.is_Number:
coeff *= arg
continue
if base.is_Number:
factors.append((base, exp))
continue
else:
base, exp = arg, S.One
try:
poly, _ = _poly_from_expr(base, opt)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
factors.append((exc.expr, exp))
else:
func = getattr(poly, method + '_list')
_coeff, _factors = func()
if _coeff is not S.One:
if exp.is_Integer:
coeff *= _coeff**exp
elif _coeff.is_positive:
factors.append((_coeff, exp))
else:
_factors.append((_coeff, S.One))
if exp is S.One:
factors.extend(_factors)
elif exp.is_integer:
factors.extend([(f, k*exp) for f, k in _factors])
else:
other = []
for f, k in _factors:
if f.as_expr().is_positive:
factors.append((f, k*exp))
else:
other.append((f, k))
factors.append((_factors_product(other), exp))
return coeff, factors
def _symbolic_factor(expr, opt, method):
"""Helper function for :func:`_factor`. """
if isinstance(expr, Expr) and not expr.is_Relational:
if hasattr(expr,'_eval_factor'):
return expr._eval_factor()
coeff, factors = _symbolic_factor_list(together(expr), opt, method)
return _keep_coeff(coeff, _factors_product(factors))
elif hasattr(expr, 'args'):
return expr.func(*[_symbolic_factor(arg, opt, method) for arg in expr.args])
elif hasattr(expr, '__iter__'):
return expr.__class__([_symbolic_factor(arg, opt, method) for arg in expr])
else:
return expr
def _generic_factor_list(expr, gens, args, method):
"""Helper function for :func:`sqf_list` and :func:`factor_list`. """
options.allowed_flags(args, ['frac', 'polys'])
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
expr = sympify(expr)
if isinstance(expr, Expr) and not expr.is_Relational:
numer, denom = together(expr).as_numer_denom()
cp, fp = _symbolic_factor_list(numer, opt, method)
cq, fq = _symbolic_factor_list(denom, opt, method)
if fq and not opt.frac:
raise PolynomialError("a polynomial expected, got %s" % expr)
_opt = opt.clone(dict(expand=True))
for factors in (fp, fq):
for i, (f, k) in enumerate(factors):
if not f.is_Poly:
f, _ = _poly_from_expr(f, _opt)
factors[i] = (f, k)
fp = _sorted_factors(fp, method)
fq = _sorted_factors(fq, method)
if not opt.polys:
fp = [(f.as_expr(), k) for f, k in fp]
fq = [(f.as_expr(), k) for f, k in fq]
coeff = cp/cq
if not opt.frac:
return coeff, fp
else:
return coeff, fp, fq
else:
raise PolynomialError("a polynomial expected, got %s" % expr)
def _generic_factor(expr, gens, args, method):
"""Helper function for :func:`sqf` and :func:`factor`. """
options.allowed_flags(args, [])
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
return _symbolic_factor(sympify(expr), opt, method)
def to_rational_coeffs(f):
"""
try to transform a polynomial to have rational coefficients
try to find a transformation ``x = alpha*y``
``f(x) = lc*alpha**n * g(y)`` where ``g`` is a polynomial with
rational coefficients, ``lc`` the leading coefficient.
If this fails, try ``x = y + beta``
``f(x) = g(y)``
Returns ``None`` if ``g`` not found;
``(lc, alpha, None, g)`` in case of rescaling
``(None, None, beta, g)`` in case of translation
Notes
=====
Currently it transforms only polynomials without roots larger than 2.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt, Poly, simplify
>>> from sympy.polys.polytools import to_rational_coeffs
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> p = Poly(((x**2-1)*(x-2)).subs({x:x*(1 + sqrt(2))}), x, domain='EX')
>>> lc, r, _, g = to_rational_coeffs(p)
>>> lc, r
(7 + 5*sqrt(2), -2*sqrt(2) + 2)
>>> g
Poly(x**3 + x**2 - 1/4*x - 1/4, x, domain='QQ')
>>> r1 = simplify(1/r)
>>> Poly(lc*r**3*(g.as_expr()).subs({x:x*r1}), x, domain='EX') == p
True
"""
from sympy.simplify.simplify import simplify
def _try_rescale(f, f1=None):
"""
try rescaling ``x -> alpha*x`` to convert f to a polynomial
with rational coefficients.
Returns ``alpha, f``; if the rescaling is successful,
``alpha`` is the rescaling factor, and ``f`` is the rescaled
polynomial; else ``alpha`` is ``None``.
"""
from sympy.core.add import Add
if not len(f.gens) == 1 or not (f.gens[0]).is_Atom:
return None, f
n = f.degree()
lc = f.LC()
f1 = f1 or f1.monic()
coeffs = f1.all_coeffs()[1:]
coeffs = [simplify(coeffx) for coeffx in coeffs]
if coeffs[-2]:
rescale1_x = simplify(coeffs[-2]/coeffs[-1])
coeffs1 = []
for i in range(len(coeffs)):
coeffx = simplify(coeffs[i]*rescale1_x**(i + 1))
if not coeffx.is_rational:
break
coeffs1.append(coeffx)
else:
rescale_x = simplify(1/rescale1_x)
x = f.gens[0]
v = [x**n]
for i in range(1, n + 1):
v.append(coeffs1[i - 1]*x**(n - i))
f = Add(*v)
f = Poly(f)
return lc, rescale_x, f
return None
def _try_translate(f, f1=None):
"""
try translating ``x -> x + alpha`` to convert f to a polynomial
with rational coefficients.
Returns ``alpha, f``; if the translating is successful,
``alpha`` is the translating factor, and ``f`` is the shifted
polynomial; else ``alpha`` is ``None``.
"""
from sympy.core.add import Add
if not len(f.gens) == 1 or not (f.gens[0]).is_Atom:
return None, f
n = f.degree()
f1 = f1 or f1.monic()
coeffs = f1.all_coeffs()[1:]
c = simplify(coeffs[0])
if c and not c.is_rational:
func = Add
if c.is_Add:
args = c.args
func = c.func
else:
args = [c]
c1, c2 = sift(args, lambda z: z.is_rational, binary=True)
alpha = -func(*c2)/n
f2 = f1.shift(alpha)
return alpha, f2
return None
def _has_square_roots(p):
"""
Return True if ``f`` is a sum with square roots but no other root
"""
from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
coeffs = p.coeffs()
has_sq = False
for y in coeffs:
for x in Add.make_args(y):
f = Factors(x).factors
r = [wx.q for b, wx in f.items() if
b.is_number and wx.is_Rational and wx.q >= 2]
if not r:
continue
if min(r) == 2:
has_sq = True
if max(r) > 2:
return False
return has_sq
if f.get_domain().is_EX and _has_square_roots(f):
f1 = f.monic()
r = _try_rescale(f, f1)
if r:
return r[0], r[1], None, r[2]
else:
r = _try_translate(f, f1)
if r:
return None, None, r[0], r[1]
return None
def _torational_factor_list(p, x):
"""
helper function to factor polynomial using to_rational_coeffs
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.polytools import _torational_factor_list
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy import sqrt, expand, Mul
>>> p = expand(((x**2-1)*(x-2)).subs({x:x*(1 + sqrt(2))}))
>>> factors = _torational_factor_list(p, x); factors
(-2, [(-x*(1 + sqrt(2))/2 + 1, 1), (-x*(1 + sqrt(2)) - 1, 1), (-x*(1 + sqrt(2)) + 1, 1)])
>>> expand(factors[0]*Mul(*[z[0] for z in factors[1]])) == p
True
>>> p = expand(((x**2-1)*(x-2)).subs({x:x + sqrt(2)}))
>>> factors = _torational_factor_list(p, x); factors
(1, [(x - 2 + sqrt(2), 1), (x - 1 + sqrt(2), 1), (x + 1 + sqrt(2), 1)])
>>> expand(factors[0]*Mul(*[z[0] for z in factors[1]])) == p
True
"""
from sympy.simplify.simplify import simplify
p1 = Poly(p, x, domain='EX')
n = p1.degree()
res = to_rational_coeffs(p1)
if not res:
return None
lc, r, t, g = res
factors = factor_list(g.as_expr())
if lc:
c = simplify(factors[0]*lc*r**n)
r1 = simplify(1/r)
a = []
for z in factors[1:][0]:
a.append((simplify(z[0].subs({x: x*r1})), z[1]))
else:
c = factors[0]
a = []
for z in factors[1:][0]:
a.append((z[0].subs({x: x - t}), z[1]))
return (c, a)
@public
def sqf_list(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute a list of square-free factors of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqf_list
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> sqf_list(2*x**5 + 16*x**4 + 50*x**3 + 76*x**2 + 56*x + 16)
(2, [(x + 1, 2), (x + 2, 3)])
"""
return _generic_factor_list(f, gens, args, method='sqf')
@public
def sqf(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute square-free factorization of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqf
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> sqf(2*x**5 + 16*x**4 + 50*x**3 + 76*x**2 + 56*x + 16)
2*(x + 1)**2*(x + 2)**3
"""
return _generic_factor(f, gens, args, method='sqf')
@public
def factor_list(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute a list of irreducible factors of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import factor_list
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> factor_list(2*x**5 + 2*x**4*y + 4*x**3 + 4*x**2*y + 2*x + 2*y)
(2, [(x + y, 1), (x**2 + 1, 2)])
"""
return _generic_factor_list(f, gens, args, method='factor')
@public
def factor(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute the factorization of expression, ``f``, into irreducibles. (To
factor an integer into primes, use ``factorint``.)
There two modes implemented: symbolic and formal. If ``f`` is not an
instance of :class:`Poly` and generators are not specified, then the
former mode is used. Otherwise, the formal mode is used.
In symbolic mode, :func:`factor` will traverse the expression tree and
factor its components without any prior expansion, unless an instance
of :class:`Add` is encountered (in this case formal factorization is
used). This way :func:`factor` can handle large or symbolic exponents.
By default, the factorization is computed over the rationals. To factor
over other domain, e.g. an algebraic or finite field, use appropriate
options: ``extension``, ``modulus`` or ``domain``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import factor, sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> factor(2*x**5 + 2*x**4*y + 4*x**3 + 4*x**2*y + 2*x + 2*y)
2*(x + y)*(x**2 + 1)**2
>>> factor(x**2 + 1)
x**2 + 1
>>> factor(x**2 + 1, modulus=2)
(x + 1)**2
>>> factor(x**2 + 1, gaussian=True)
(x - I)*(x + I)
>>> factor(x**2 - 2, extension=sqrt(2))
(x - sqrt(2))*(x + sqrt(2))
>>> factor((x**2 - 1)/(x**2 + 4*x + 4))
(x - 1)*(x + 1)/(x + 2)**2
>>> factor((x**2 + 4*x + 4)**10000000*(x**2 + 1))
(x + 2)**20000000*(x**2 + 1)
By default, factor deals with an expression as a whole:
>>> eq = 2**(x**2 + 2*x + 1)
>>> factor(eq)
2**(x**2 + 2*x + 1)
If the ``deep`` flag is True then subexpressions will
be factored:
>>> factor(eq, deep=True)
2**((x + 1)**2)
See Also
========
sympy.ntheory.factor_.factorint
"""
f = sympify(f)
if args.pop('deep', False):
partials = {}
muladd = f.atoms(Mul, Add)
for p in muladd:
fac = factor(p, *gens, **args)
if (fac.is_Mul or fac.is_Pow) and fac != p:
partials[p] = fac
return f.xreplace(partials)
try:
return _generic_factor(f, gens, args, method='factor')
except PolynomialError as msg:
if not f.is_commutative:
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_nc
return factor_nc(f)
else:
raise PolynomialError(msg)
@public
def intervals(F, all=False, eps=None, inf=None, sup=None, strict=False, fast=False, sqf=False):
"""
Compute isolating intervals for roots of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import intervals
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> intervals(x**2 - 3)
[((-2, -1), 1), ((1, 2), 1)]
>>> intervals(x**2 - 3, eps=1e-2)
[((-26/15, -19/11), 1), ((19/11, 26/15), 1)]
"""
if not hasattr(F, '__iter__'):
try:
F = Poly(F)
except GeneratorsNeeded:
return []
return F.intervals(all=all, eps=eps, inf=inf, sup=sup, fast=fast, sqf=sqf)
else:
polys, opt = parallel_poly_from_expr(F, domain='QQ')
if len(opt.gens) > 1:
raise MultivariatePolynomialError
for i, poly in enumerate(polys):
polys[i] = poly.rep.rep
if eps is not None:
eps = opt.domain.convert(eps)
if eps <= 0:
raise ValueError("'eps' must be a positive rational")
if inf is not None:
inf = opt.domain.convert(inf)
if sup is not None:
sup = opt.domain.convert(sup)
intervals = dup_isolate_real_roots_list(polys, opt.domain,
eps=eps, inf=inf, sup=sup, strict=strict, fast=fast)
result = []
for (s, t), indices in intervals:
s, t = opt.domain.to_sympy(s), opt.domain.to_sympy(t)
result.append(((s, t), indices))
return result
@public
def refine_root(f, s, t, eps=None, steps=None, fast=False, check_sqf=False):
"""
Refine an isolating interval of a root to the given precision.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import refine_root
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> refine_root(x**2 - 3, 1, 2, eps=1e-2)
(19/11, 26/15)
"""
try:
F = Poly(f)
except GeneratorsNeeded:
raise PolynomialError(
"can't refine a root of %s, not a polynomial" % f)
return F.refine_root(s, t, eps=eps, steps=steps, fast=fast, check_sqf=check_sqf)
@public
def count_roots(f, inf=None, sup=None):
"""
Return the number of roots of ``f`` in ``[inf, sup]`` interval.
If one of ``inf`` or ``sup`` is complex, it will return the number of roots
in the complex rectangle with corners at ``inf`` and ``sup``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import count_roots, I
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> count_roots(x**4 - 4, -3, 3)
2
>>> count_roots(x**4 - 4, 0, 1 + 3*I)
1
"""
try:
F = Poly(f, greedy=False)
except GeneratorsNeeded:
raise PolynomialError("can't count roots of %s, not a polynomial" % f)
return F.count_roots(inf=inf, sup=sup)
@public
def real_roots(f, multiple=True):
"""
Return a list of real roots with multiplicities of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import real_roots
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> real_roots(2*x**3 - 7*x**2 + 4*x + 4)
[-1/2, 2, 2]
"""
try:
F = Poly(f, greedy=False)
except GeneratorsNeeded:
raise PolynomialError(
"can't compute real roots of %s, not a polynomial" % f)
return F.real_roots(multiple=multiple)
@public
def nroots(f, n=15, maxsteps=50, cleanup=True):
"""
Compute numerical approximations of roots of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import nroots
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> nroots(x**2 - 3, n=15)
[-1.73205080756888, 1.73205080756888]
>>> nroots(x**2 - 3, n=30)
[-1.73205080756887729352744634151, 1.73205080756887729352744634151]
"""
try:
F = Poly(f, greedy=False)
except GeneratorsNeeded:
raise PolynomialError(
"can't compute numerical roots of %s, not a polynomial" % f)
return F.nroots(n=n, maxsteps=maxsteps, cleanup=cleanup)
@public
def ground_roots(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Compute roots of ``f`` by factorization in the ground domain.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ground_roots
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> ground_roots(x**6 - 4*x**4 + 4*x**3 - x**2)
{0: 2, 1: 2}
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, [])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('ground_roots', 1, exc)
return F.ground_roots()
@public
def nth_power_roots_poly(f, n, *gens, **args):
"""
Construct a polynomial with n-th powers of roots of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import nth_power_roots_poly, factor, roots
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> f = x**4 - x**2 + 1
>>> g = factor(nth_power_roots_poly(f, 2))
>>> g
(x**2 - x + 1)**2
>>> R_f = [ (r**2).expand() for r in roots(f) ]
>>> R_g = roots(g).keys()
>>> set(R_f) == set(R_g)
True
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, [])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('nth_power_roots_poly', 1, exc)
result = F.nth_power_roots_poly(n)
if not opt.polys:
return result.as_expr()
else:
return result
@public
def cancel(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Cancel common factors in a rational function ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import cancel, sqrt, Symbol
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> A = Symbol('A', commutative=False)
>>> cancel((2*x**2 - 2)/(x**2 - 2*x + 1))
(2*x + 2)/(x - 1)
>>> cancel((sqrt(3) + sqrt(15)*A)/(sqrt(2) + sqrt(10)*A))
sqrt(6)/2
"""
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
from sympy.functions.elementary.piecewise import Piecewise
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys'])
f = sympify(f)
if not isinstance(f, (tuple, Tuple)):
if f.is_Number or isinstance(f, Relational) or not isinstance(f, Expr):
return f
f = factor_terms(f, radical=True)
p, q = f.as_numer_denom()
elif len(f) == 2:
p, q = f
elif isinstance(f, Tuple):
return factor_terms(f)
else:
raise ValueError('unexpected argument: %s' % f)
try:
(F, G), opt = parallel_poly_from_expr((p, q), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed:
if not isinstance(f, (tuple, Tuple)):
return f
else:
return S.One, p, q
except PolynomialError as msg:
if f.is_commutative and not f.has(Piecewise):
raise PolynomialError(msg)
# Handling of noncommutative and/or piecewise expressions
if f.is_Add or f.is_Mul:
c, nc = sift(f.args, lambda x:
x.is_commutative is True and not x.has(Piecewise),
binary=True)
nc = [cancel(i) for i in nc]
return f.func(cancel(f.func._from_args(c)), *nc)
else:
reps = []
pot = preorder_traversal(f)
next(pot)
for e in pot:
# XXX: This should really skip anything that's not Expr.
if isinstance(e, (tuple, Tuple, BooleanAtom)):
continue
try:
reps.append((e, cancel(e)))
pot.skip() # this was handled successfully
except NotImplementedError:
pass
return f.xreplace(dict(reps))
c, P, Q = F.cancel(G)
if not isinstance(f, (tuple, Tuple)):
return c*(P.as_expr()/Q.as_expr())
else:
if not opt.polys:
return c, P.as_expr(), Q.as_expr()
else:
return c, P, Q
@public
def reduced(f, G, *gens, **args):
"""
Reduces a polynomial ``f`` modulo a set of polynomials ``G``.
Given a polynomial ``f`` and a set of polynomials ``G = (g_1, ..., g_n)``,
computes a set of quotients ``q = (q_1, ..., q_n)`` and the remainder ``r``
such that ``f = q_1*g_1 + ... + q_n*g_n + r``, where ``r`` vanishes or ``r``
is a completely reduced polynomial with respect to ``G``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import reduced
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> reduced(2*x**4 + y**2 - x**2 + y**3, [x**3 - x, y**3 - y])
([2*x, 1], x**2 + y**2 + y)
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys', 'auto'])
try:
polys, opt = parallel_poly_from_expr([f] + list(G), *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('reduced', 0, exc)
domain = opt.domain
retract = False
if opt.auto and domain.is_Ring and not domain.is_Field:
opt = opt.clone(dict(domain=domain.get_field()))
retract = True
from sympy.polys.rings import xring
_ring, _ = xring(opt.gens, opt.domain, opt.order)
for i, poly in enumerate(polys):
poly = poly.set_domain(opt.domain).rep.to_dict()
polys[i] = _ring.from_dict(poly)
Q, r = polys[0].div(polys[1:])
Q = [Poly._from_dict(dict(q), opt) for q in Q]
r = Poly._from_dict(dict(r), opt)
if retract:
try:
_Q, _r = [q.to_ring() for q in Q], r.to_ring()
except CoercionFailed:
pass
else:
Q, r = _Q, _r
if not opt.polys:
return [q.as_expr() for q in Q], r.as_expr()
else:
return Q, r
@public
def groebner(F, *gens, **args):
"""
Computes the reduced Groebner basis for a set of polynomials.
Use the ``order`` argument to set the monomial ordering that will be
used to compute the basis. Allowed orders are ``lex``, ``grlex`` and
``grevlex``. If no order is specified, it defaults to ``lex``.
For more information on Groebner bases, see the references and the docstring
of `solve_poly_system()`.
Examples
========
Example taken from [1].
>>> from sympy import groebner
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> F = [x*y - 2*y, 2*y**2 - x**2]
>>> groebner(F, x, y, order='lex')
GroebnerBasis([x**2 - 2*y**2, x*y - 2*y, y**3 - 2*y], x, y,
domain='ZZ', order='lex')
>>> groebner(F, x, y, order='grlex')
GroebnerBasis([y**3 - 2*y, x**2 - 2*y**2, x*y - 2*y], x, y,
domain='ZZ', order='grlex')
>>> groebner(F, x, y, order='grevlex')
GroebnerBasis([y**3 - 2*y, x**2 - 2*y**2, x*y - 2*y], x, y,
domain='ZZ', order='grevlex')
By default, an improved implementation of the Buchberger algorithm is
used. Optionally, an implementation of the F5B algorithm can be used.
The algorithm can be set using ``method`` flag or with the :func:`setup`
function from :mod:`sympy.polys.polyconfig`:
>>> F = [x**2 - x - 1, (2*x - 1) * y - (x**10 - (1 - x)**10)]
>>> groebner(F, x, y, method='buchberger')
GroebnerBasis([x**2 - x - 1, y - 55], x, y, domain='ZZ', order='lex')
>>> groebner(F, x, y, method='f5b')
GroebnerBasis([x**2 - x - 1, y - 55], x, y, domain='ZZ', order='lex')
References
==========
1. [Buchberger01]_
2. [Cox97]_
"""
return GroebnerBasis(F, *gens, **args)
@public
def is_zero_dimensional(F, *gens, **args):
"""
Checks if the ideal generated by a Groebner basis is zero-dimensional.
The algorithm checks if the set of monomials not divisible by the
leading monomial of any element of ``F`` is bounded.
References
==========
David A. Cox, John B. Little, Donal O'Shea. Ideals, Varieties and
Algorithms, 3rd edition, p. 230
"""
return GroebnerBasis(F, *gens, **args).is_zero_dimensional
@public
class GroebnerBasis(Basic):
"""Represents a reduced Groebner basis. """
def __new__(cls, F, *gens, **args):
"""Compute a reduced Groebner basis for a system of polynomials. """
options.allowed_flags(args, ['polys', 'method'])
try:
polys, opt = parallel_poly_from_expr(F, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('groebner', len(F), exc)
from sympy.polys.rings import PolyRing
ring = PolyRing(opt.gens, opt.domain, opt.order)
polys = [ring.from_dict(poly.rep.to_dict()) for poly in polys if poly]
G = _groebner(polys, ring, method=opt.method)
G = [Poly._from_dict(g, opt) for g in G]
return cls._new(G, opt)
@classmethod
def _new(cls, basis, options):
obj = Basic.__new__(cls)
obj._basis = tuple(basis)
obj._options = options
return obj
@property
def args(self):
return (Tuple(*self._basis), Tuple(*self._options.gens))
@property
def exprs(self):
return [poly.as_expr() for poly in self._basis]
@property
def polys(self):
return list(self._basis)
@property
def gens(self):
return self._options.gens
@property
def domain(self):
return self._options.domain
@property
def order(self):
return self._options.order
def __len__(self):
return len(self._basis)
def __iter__(self):
if self._options.polys:
return iter(self.polys)
else:
return iter(self.exprs)
def __getitem__(self, item):
if self._options.polys:
basis = self.polys
else:
basis = self.exprs
return basis[item]
def __hash__(self):
return hash((self._basis, tuple(self._options.items())))
def __eq__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, self.__class__):
return self._basis == other._basis and self._options == other._options
elif iterable(other):
return self.polys == list(other) or self.exprs == list(other)
else:
return False
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
@property
def is_zero_dimensional(self):
"""
Checks if the ideal generated by a Groebner basis is zero-dimensional.
The algorithm checks if the set of monomials not divisible by the
leading monomial of any element of ``F`` is bounded.
References
==========
David A. Cox, John B. Little, Donal O'Shea. Ideals, Varieties and
Algorithms, 3rd edition, p. 230
"""
def single_var(monomial):
return sum(map(bool, monomial)) == 1
exponents = Monomial([0]*len(self.gens))
order = self._options.order
for poly in self.polys:
monomial = poly.LM(order=order)
if single_var(monomial):
exponents *= monomial
# If any element of the exponents vector is zero, then there's
# a variable for which there's no degree bound and the ideal
# generated by this Groebner basis isn't zero-dimensional.
return all(exponents)
def fglm(self, order):
"""
Convert a Groebner basis from one ordering to another.
The FGLM algorithm converts reduced Groebner bases of zero-dimensional
ideals from one ordering to another. This method is often used when it
is infeasible to compute a Groebner basis with respect to a particular
ordering directly.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy import groebner
>>> F = [x**2 - 3*y - x + 1, y**2 - 2*x + y - 1]
>>> G = groebner(F, x, y, order='grlex')
>>> list(G.fglm('lex'))
[2*x - y**2 - y + 1, y**4 + 2*y**3 - 3*y**2 - 16*y + 7]
>>> list(groebner(F, x, y, order='lex'))
[2*x - y**2 - y + 1, y**4 + 2*y**3 - 3*y**2 - 16*y + 7]
References
==========
J.C. Faugere, P. Gianni, D. Lazard, T. Mora (1994). Efficient
Computation of Zero-dimensional Groebner Bases by Change of
Ordering
"""
opt = self._options
src_order = opt.order
dst_order = monomial_key(order)
if src_order == dst_order:
return self
if not self.is_zero_dimensional:
raise NotImplementedError("can't convert Groebner bases of ideals with positive dimension")
polys = list(self._basis)
domain = opt.domain
opt = opt.clone(dict(
domain=domain.get_field(),
order=dst_order,
))
from sympy.polys.rings import xring
_ring, _ = xring(opt.gens, opt.domain, src_order)
for i, poly in enumerate(polys):
poly = poly.set_domain(opt.domain).rep.to_dict()
polys[i] = _ring.from_dict(poly)
G = matrix_fglm(polys, _ring, dst_order)
G = [Poly._from_dict(dict(g), opt) for g in G]
if not domain.is_Field:
G = [g.clear_denoms(convert=True)[1] for g in G]
opt.domain = domain
return self._new(G, opt)
def reduce(self, expr, auto=True):
"""
Reduces a polynomial modulo a Groebner basis.
Given a polynomial ``f`` and a set of polynomials ``G = (g_1, ..., g_n)``,
computes a set of quotients ``q = (q_1, ..., q_n)`` and the remainder ``r``
such that ``f = q_1*f_1 + ... + q_n*f_n + r``, where ``r`` vanishes or ``r``
is a completely reduced polynomial with respect to ``G``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import groebner, expand
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = 2*x**4 - x**2 + y**3 + y**2
>>> G = groebner([x**3 - x, y**3 - y])
>>> G.reduce(f)
([2*x, 1], x**2 + y**2 + y)
>>> Q, r = _
>>> expand(sum(q*g for q, g in zip(Q, G)) + r)
2*x**4 - x**2 + y**3 + y**2
>>> _ == f
True
"""
poly = Poly._from_expr(expr, self._options)
polys = [poly] + list(self._basis)
opt = self._options
domain = opt.domain
retract = False
if auto and domain.is_Ring and not domain.is_Field:
opt = opt.clone(dict(domain=domain.get_field()))
retract = True
from sympy.polys.rings import xring
_ring, _ = xring(opt.gens, opt.domain, opt.order)
for i, poly in enumerate(polys):
poly = poly.set_domain(opt.domain).rep.to_dict()
polys[i] = _ring.from_dict(poly)
Q, r = polys[0].div(polys[1:])
Q = [Poly._from_dict(dict(q), opt) for q in Q]
r = Poly._from_dict(dict(r), opt)
if retract:
try:
_Q, _r = [q.to_ring() for q in Q], r.to_ring()
except CoercionFailed:
pass
else:
Q, r = _Q, _r
if not opt.polys:
return [q.as_expr() for q in Q], r.as_expr()
else:
return Q, r
def contains(self, poly):
"""
Check if ``poly`` belongs the ideal generated by ``self``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import groebner
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> f = 2*x**3 + y**3 + 3*y
>>> G = groebner([x**2 + y**2 - 1, x*y - 2])
>>> G.contains(f)
True
>>> G.contains(f + 1)
False
"""
return self.reduce(poly)[1] == 0
@public
def poly(expr, *gens, **args):
"""
Efficiently transform an expression into a polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> poly(x*(x**2 + x - 1)**2)
Poly(x**5 + 2*x**4 - x**3 - 2*x**2 + x, x, domain='ZZ')
"""
options.allowed_flags(args, [])
def _poly(expr, opt):
terms, poly_terms = [], []
for term in Add.make_args(expr):
factors, poly_factors = [], []
for factor in Mul.make_args(term):
if factor.is_Add:
poly_factors.append(_poly(factor, opt))
elif factor.is_Pow and factor.base.is_Add and \
factor.exp.is_Integer and factor.exp >= 0:
poly_factors.append(
_poly(factor.base, opt).pow(factor.exp))
else:
factors.append(factor)
if not poly_factors:
terms.append(term)
else:
product = poly_factors[0]
for factor in poly_factors[1:]:
product = product.mul(factor)
if factors:
factor = Mul(*factors)
if factor.is_Number:
product = product.mul(factor)
else:
product = product.mul(Poly._from_expr(factor, opt))
poly_terms.append(product)
if not poly_terms:
result = Poly._from_expr(expr, opt)
else:
result = poly_terms[0]
for term in poly_terms[1:]:
result = result.add(term)
if terms:
term = Add(*terms)
if term.is_Number:
result = result.add(term)
else:
result = result.add(Poly._from_expr(term, opt))
return result.reorder(*opt.get('gens', ()), **args)
expr = sympify(expr)
if expr.is_Poly:
return Poly(expr, *gens, **args)
if 'expand' not in args:
args['expand'] = False
opt = options.build_options(gens, args)
return _poly(expr, opt)
|
b2a76a9afd562495aaee9f4f881a059f9b82147ed7b72e35a88bc3ca061eb567
|
"""Algorithms for computing symbolic roots of polynomials. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
import math
from sympy.core.symbol import Dummy, Symbol, symbols
from sympy.core import S, I, pi
from sympy.core.compatibility import ordered, range, reduce
from sympy.core.mul import expand_2arg, Mul
from sympy.core.power import Pow
from sympy.core.relational import Eq
from sympy.core.sympify import sympify
from sympy.core.numbers import Rational, igcd, comp
from sympy.core.exprtools import factor_terms
from sympy.core.logic import fuzzy_not
from sympy.core.function import _mexpand
from sympy.ntheory import divisors, isprime, nextprime
from sympy.functions import exp, sqrt, im, cos, acos, Piecewise
from sympy.functions.elementary.miscellaneous import root
from sympy.polys.polytools import Poly, cancel, factor, gcd_list, discriminant
from sympy.polys.specialpolys import cyclotomic_poly
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import (PolynomialError, GeneratorsNeeded,
DomainError)
from sympy.polys.polyquinticconst import PolyQuintic
from sympy.polys.rationaltools import together
from sympy.simplify import simplify, powsimp
from sympy.utilities import public
def roots_linear(f):
"""Returns a list of roots of a linear polynomial."""
r = -f.nth(0)/f.nth(1)
dom = f.get_domain()
if not dom.is_Numerical:
if dom.is_Composite:
r = factor(r)
else:
r = simplify(r)
return [r]
def roots_quadratic(f):
"""Returns a list of roots of a quadratic polynomial. If the domain is ZZ
then the roots will be sorted with negatives coming before positives.
The ordering will be the same for any numerical coefficients as long as
the assumptions tested are correct, otherwise the ordering will not be
sorted (but will be canonical).
"""
a, b, c = f.all_coeffs()
dom = f.get_domain()
def _sqrt(d):
# remove squares from square root since both will be represented
# in the results; a similar thing is happening in roots() but
# must be duplicated here because not all quadratics are binomials
co = []
other = []
for di in Mul.make_args(d):
if di.is_Pow and di.exp.is_Integer and di.exp % 2 == 0:
co.append(Pow(di.base, di.exp//2))
else:
other.append(di)
if co:
d = Mul(*other)
co = Mul(*co)
return co*sqrt(d)
return sqrt(d)
def _simplify(expr):
if dom.is_Composite:
return factor(expr)
else:
return simplify(expr)
if c is S.Zero:
r0, r1 = S.Zero, -b/a
if not dom.is_Numerical:
r1 = _simplify(r1)
elif r1.is_negative:
r0, r1 = r1, r0
elif b is S.Zero:
r = -c/a
if not dom.is_Numerical:
r = _simplify(r)
R = _sqrt(r)
r0 = -R
r1 = R
else:
d = b**2 - 4*a*c
A = 2*a
B = -b/A
if not dom.is_Numerical:
d = _simplify(d)
B = _simplify(B)
D = factor_terms(_sqrt(d)/A)
r0 = B - D
r1 = B + D
if a.is_negative:
r0, r1 = r1, r0
elif not dom.is_Numerical:
r0, r1 = [expand_2arg(i) for i in (r0, r1)]
return [r0, r1]
def roots_cubic(f, trig=False):
"""Returns a list of roots of a cubic polynomial.
References
==========
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_function, General formula for roots,
(accessed November 17, 2014).
"""
if trig:
a, b, c, d = f.all_coeffs()
p = (3*a*c - b**2)/3/a**2
q = (2*b**3 - 9*a*b*c + 27*a**2*d)/(27*a**3)
D = 18*a*b*c*d - 4*b**3*d + b**2*c**2 - 4*a*c**3 - 27*a**2*d**2
if (D > 0) == True:
rv = []
for k in range(3):
rv.append(2*sqrt(-p/3)*cos(acos(3*q/2/p*sqrt(-3/p))/3 - k*2*pi/3))
return [i - b/3/a for i in rv]
_, a, b, c = f.monic().all_coeffs()
if c is S.Zero:
x1, x2 = roots([1, a, b], multiple=True)
return [x1, S.Zero, x2]
p = b - a**2/3
q = c - a*b/3 + 2*a**3/27
pon3 = p/3
aon3 = a/3
u1 = None
if p is S.Zero:
if q is S.Zero:
return [-aon3]*3
if q.is_real:
if q.is_positive:
u1 = -root(q, 3)
elif q.is_negative:
u1 = root(-q, 3)
elif q is S.Zero:
y1, y2 = roots([1, 0, p], multiple=True)
return [tmp - aon3 for tmp in [y1, S.Zero, y2]]
elif q.is_real and q.is_negative:
u1 = -root(-q/2 + sqrt(q**2/4 + pon3**3), 3)
coeff = I*sqrt(3)/2
if u1 is None:
u1 = S(1)
u2 = -S.Half + coeff
u3 = -S.Half - coeff
a, b, c, d = S(1), a, b, c
D0 = b**2 - 3*a*c
D1 = 2*b**3 - 9*a*b*c + 27*a**2*d
C = root((D1 + sqrt(D1**2 - 4*D0**3))/2, 3)
return [-(b + uk*C + D0/C/uk)/3/a for uk in [u1, u2, u3]]
u2 = u1*(-S.Half + coeff)
u3 = u1*(-S.Half - coeff)
if p is S.Zero:
return [u1 - aon3, u2 - aon3, u3 - aon3]
soln = [
-u1 + pon3/u1 - aon3,
-u2 + pon3/u2 - aon3,
-u3 + pon3/u3 - aon3
]
return soln
def _roots_quartic_euler(p, q, r, a):
"""
Descartes-Euler solution of the quartic equation
Parameters
==========
p, q, r: coefficients of ``x**4 + p*x**2 + q*x + r``
a: shift of the roots
Notes
=====
This is a helper function for ``roots_quartic``.
Look for solutions of the form ::
``x1 = sqrt(R) - sqrt(A + B*sqrt(R))``
``x2 = -sqrt(R) - sqrt(A - B*sqrt(R))``
``x3 = -sqrt(R) + sqrt(A - B*sqrt(R))``
``x4 = sqrt(R) + sqrt(A + B*sqrt(R))``
To satisfy the quartic equation one must have
``p = -2*(R + A); q = -4*B*R; r = (R - A)**2 - B**2*R``
so that ``R`` must satisfy the Descartes-Euler resolvent equation
``64*R**3 + 32*p*R**2 + (4*p**2 - 16*r)*R - q**2 = 0``
If the resolvent does not have a rational solution, return None;
in that case it is likely that the Ferrari method gives a simpler
solution.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import S
>>> from sympy.polys.polyroots import _roots_quartic_euler
>>> p, q, r = -S(64)/5, -S(512)/125, -S(1024)/3125
>>> _roots_quartic_euler(p, q, r, S(0))[0]
-sqrt(32*sqrt(5)/125 + 16/5) + 4*sqrt(5)/5
"""
# solve the resolvent equation
x = Dummy('x')
eq = 64*x**3 + 32*p*x**2 + (4*p**2 - 16*r)*x - q**2
xsols = list(roots(Poly(eq, x), cubics=False).keys())
xsols = [sol for sol in xsols if sol.is_rational and sol.is_nonzero]
if not xsols:
return None
R = max(xsols)
c1 = sqrt(R)
B = -q*c1/(4*R)
A = -R - p/2
c2 = sqrt(A + B)
c3 = sqrt(A - B)
return [c1 - c2 - a, -c1 - c3 - a, -c1 + c3 - a, c1 + c2 - a]
def roots_quartic(f):
r"""
Returns a list of roots of a quartic polynomial.
There are many references for solving quartic expressions available [1-5].
This reviewer has found that many of them require one to select from among
2 or more possible sets of solutions and that some solutions work when one
is searching for real roots but don't work when searching for complex roots
(though this is not always stated clearly). The following routine has been
tested and found to be correct for 0, 2 or 4 complex roots.
The quasisymmetric case solution [6] looks for quartics that have the form
`x**4 + A*x**3 + B*x**2 + C*x + D = 0` where `(C/A)**2 = D`.
Although no general solution that is always applicable for all
coefficients is known to this reviewer, certain conditions are tested
to determine the simplest 4 expressions that can be returned:
1) `f = c + a*(a**2/8 - b/2) == 0`
2) `g = d - a*(a*(3*a**2/256 - b/16) + c/4) = 0`
3) if `f != 0` and `g != 0` and `p = -d + a*c/4 - b**2/12` then
a) `p == 0`
b) `p != 0`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, symbols, I
>>> from sympy.polys.polyroots import roots_quartic
>>> r = roots_quartic(Poly('x**4-6*x**3+17*x**2-26*x+20'))
>>> # 4 complex roots: 1+-I*sqrt(3), 2+-I
>>> sorted(str(tmp.evalf(n=2)) for tmp in r)
['1.0 + 1.7*I', '1.0 - 1.7*I', '2.0 + 1.0*I', '2.0 - 1.0*I']
References
==========
1. http://mathforum.org/dr.math/faq/faq.cubic.equations.html
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quartic_function#Summary_of_Ferrari.27s_method
3. http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/GaloisTheoreticDerivationOfTheQuarticFormula.html
4. http://staff.bath.ac.uk/masjhd/JHD-CA.pdf
5. http://www.albmath.org/files/Math_5713.pdf
6. http://www.statemaster.com/encyclopedia/Quartic-equation
7. eqworld.ipmnet.ru/en/solutions/ae/ae0108.pdf
"""
_, a, b, c, d = f.monic().all_coeffs()
if not d:
return [S.Zero] + roots([1, a, b, c], multiple=True)
elif (c/a)**2 == d:
x, m = f.gen, c/a
g = Poly(x**2 + a*x + b - 2*m, x)
z1, z2 = roots_quadratic(g)
h1 = Poly(x**2 - z1*x + m, x)
h2 = Poly(x**2 - z2*x + m, x)
r1 = roots_quadratic(h1)
r2 = roots_quadratic(h2)
return r1 + r2
else:
a2 = a**2
e = b - 3*a2/8
f = _mexpand(c + a*(a2/8 - b/2))
g = _mexpand(d - a*(a*(3*a2/256 - b/16) + c/4))
aon4 = a/4
if f is S.Zero:
y1, y2 = [sqrt(tmp) for tmp in
roots([1, e, g], multiple=True)]
return [tmp - aon4 for tmp in [-y1, -y2, y1, y2]]
if g is S.Zero:
y = [S.Zero] + roots([1, 0, e, f], multiple=True)
return [tmp - aon4 for tmp in y]
else:
# Descartes-Euler method, see [7]
sols = _roots_quartic_euler(e, f, g, aon4)
if sols:
return sols
# Ferrari method, see [1, 2]
a2 = a**2
e = b - 3*a2/8
f = c + a*(a2/8 - b/2)
g = d - a*(a*(3*a2/256 - b/16) + c/4)
p = -e**2/12 - g
q = -e**3/108 + e*g/3 - f**2/8
TH = Rational(1, 3)
def _ans(y):
w = sqrt(e + 2*y)
arg1 = 3*e + 2*y
arg2 = 2*f/w
ans = []
for s in [-1, 1]:
root = sqrt(-(arg1 + s*arg2))
for t in [-1, 1]:
ans.append((s*w - t*root)/2 - aon4)
return ans
# p == 0 case
y1 = -5*e/6 - q**TH
if p.is_zero:
return _ans(y1)
# if p != 0 then u below is not 0
root = sqrt(q**2/4 + p**3/27)
r = -q/2 + root # or -q/2 - root
u = r**TH # primary root of solve(x**3 - r, x)
y2 = -5*e/6 + u - p/u/3
if fuzzy_not(p.is_zero):
return _ans(y2)
# sort it out once they know the values of the coefficients
return [Piecewise((a1, Eq(p, 0)), (a2, True))
for a1, a2 in zip(_ans(y1), _ans(y2))]
def roots_binomial(f):
"""Returns a list of roots of a binomial polynomial. If the domain is ZZ
then the roots will be sorted with negatives coming before positives.
The ordering will be the same for any numerical coefficients as long as
the assumptions tested are correct, otherwise the ordering will not be
sorted (but will be canonical).
"""
n = f.degree()
a, b = f.nth(n), f.nth(0)
base = -cancel(b/a)
alpha = root(base, n)
if alpha.is_number:
alpha = alpha.expand(complex=True)
# define some parameters that will allow us to order the roots.
# If the domain is ZZ this is guaranteed to return roots sorted
# with reals before non-real roots and non-real sorted according
# to real part and imaginary part, e.g. -1, 1, -1 + I, 2 - I
neg = base.is_negative
even = n % 2 == 0
if neg:
if even == True and (base + 1).is_positive:
big = True
else:
big = False
# get the indices in the right order so the computed
# roots will be sorted when the domain is ZZ
ks = []
imax = n//2
if even:
ks.append(imax)
imax -= 1
if not neg:
ks.append(0)
for i in range(imax, 0, -1):
if neg:
ks.extend([i, -i])
else:
ks.extend([-i, i])
if neg:
ks.append(0)
if big:
for i in range(0, len(ks), 2):
pair = ks[i: i + 2]
pair = list(reversed(pair))
# compute the roots
roots, d = [], 2*I*pi/n
for k in ks:
zeta = exp(k*d).expand(complex=True)
roots.append((alpha*zeta).expand(power_base=False))
return roots
def _inv_totient_estimate(m):
"""
Find ``(L, U)`` such that ``L <= phi^-1(m) <= U``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.polyroots import _inv_totient_estimate
>>> _inv_totient_estimate(192)
(192, 840)
>>> _inv_totient_estimate(400)
(400, 1750)
"""
primes = [ d + 1 for d in divisors(m) if isprime(d + 1) ]
a, b = 1, 1
for p in primes:
a *= p
b *= p - 1
L = m
U = int(math.ceil(m*(float(a)/b)))
P = p = 2
primes = []
while P <= U:
p = nextprime(p)
primes.append(p)
P *= p
P //= p
b = 1
for p in primes[:-1]:
b *= p - 1
U = int(math.ceil(m*(float(P)/b)))
return L, U
def roots_cyclotomic(f, factor=False):
"""Compute roots of cyclotomic polynomials. """
L, U = _inv_totient_estimate(f.degree())
for n in range(L, U + 1):
g = cyclotomic_poly(n, f.gen, polys=True)
if f == g:
break
else: # pragma: no cover
raise RuntimeError("failed to find index of a cyclotomic polynomial")
roots = []
if not factor:
# get the indices in the right order so the computed
# roots will be sorted
h = n//2
ks = [i for i in range(1, n + 1) if igcd(i, n) == 1]
ks.sort(key=lambda x: (x, -1) if x <= h else (abs(x - n), 1))
d = 2*I*pi/n
for k in reversed(ks):
roots.append(exp(k*d).expand(complex=True))
else:
g = Poly(f, extension=root(-1, n))
for h, _ in ordered(g.factor_list()[1]):
roots.append(-h.TC())
return roots
def roots_quintic(f):
"""
Calculate exact roots of a solvable quintic
"""
result = []
coeff_5, coeff_4, p, q, r, s = f.all_coeffs()
# Eqn must be of the form x^5 + px^3 + qx^2 + rx + s
if coeff_4:
return result
if coeff_5 != 1:
l = [p/coeff_5, q/coeff_5, r/coeff_5, s/coeff_5]
if not all(coeff.is_Rational for coeff in l):
return result
f = Poly(f/coeff_5)
quintic = PolyQuintic(f)
# Eqn standardized. Algo for solving starts here
if not f.is_irreducible:
return result
f20 = quintic.f20
# Check if f20 has linear factors over domain Z
if f20.is_irreducible:
return result
# Now, we know that f is solvable
for _factor in f20.factor_list()[1]:
if _factor[0].is_linear:
theta = _factor[0].root(0)
break
d = discriminant(f)
delta = sqrt(d)
# zeta = a fifth root of unity
zeta1, zeta2, zeta3, zeta4 = quintic.zeta
T = quintic.T(theta, d)
tol = S(1e-10)
alpha = T[1] + T[2]*delta
alpha_bar = T[1] - T[2]*delta
beta = T[3] + T[4]*delta
beta_bar = T[3] - T[4]*delta
disc = alpha**2 - 4*beta
disc_bar = alpha_bar**2 - 4*beta_bar
l0 = quintic.l0(theta)
l1 = _quintic_simplify((-alpha + sqrt(disc)) / S(2))
l4 = _quintic_simplify((-alpha - sqrt(disc)) / S(2))
l2 = _quintic_simplify((-alpha_bar + sqrt(disc_bar)) / S(2))
l3 = _quintic_simplify((-alpha_bar - sqrt(disc_bar)) / S(2))
order = quintic.order(theta, d)
test = (order*delta.n()) - ( (l1.n() - l4.n())*(l2.n() - l3.n()) )
# Comparing floats
if not comp(test, 0, tol):
l2, l3 = l3, l2
# Now we have correct order of l's
R1 = l0 + l1*zeta1 + l2*zeta2 + l3*zeta3 + l4*zeta4
R2 = l0 + l3*zeta1 + l1*zeta2 + l4*zeta3 + l2*zeta4
R3 = l0 + l2*zeta1 + l4*zeta2 + l1*zeta3 + l3*zeta4
R4 = l0 + l4*zeta1 + l3*zeta2 + l2*zeta3 + l1*zeta4
Res = [None, [None]*5, [None]*5, [None]*5, [None]*5]
Res_n = [None, [None]*5, [None]*5, [None]*5, [None]*5]
sol = Symbol('sol')
# Simplifying improves performance a lot for exact expressions
R1 = _quintic_simplify(R1)
R2 = _quintic_simplify(R2)
R3 = _quintic_simplify(R3)
R4 = _quintic_simplify(R4)
# Solve imported here. Causing problems if imported as 'solve'
# and hence the changed name
from sympy.solvers.solvers import solve as _solve
a, b = symbols('a b', cls=Dummy)
_sol = _solve( sol**5 - a - I*b, sol)
for i in range(5):
_sol[i] = factor(_sol[i])
R1 = R1.as_real_imag()
R2 = R2.as_real_imag()
R3 = R3.as_real_imag()
R4 = R4.as_real_imag()
for i, root in enumerate(_sol):
Res[1][i] = _quintic_simplify(root.subs({ a: R1[0], b: R1[1] }))
Res[2][i] = _quintic_simplify(root.subs({ a: R2[0], b: R2[1] }))
Res[3][i] = _quintic_simplify(root.subs({ a: R3[0], b: R3[1] }))
Res[4][i] = _quintic_simplify(root.subs({ a: R4[0], b: R4[1] }))
for i in range(1, 5):
for j in range(5):
Res_n[i][j] = Res[i][j].n()
Res[i][j] = _quintic_simplify(Res[i][j])
r1 = Res[1][0]
r1_n = Res_n[1][0]
for i in range(5):
if comp(im(r1_n*Res_n[4][i]), 0, tol):
r4 = Res[4][i]
break
u, v = quintic.uv(theta, d)
sqrt5 = math.sqrt(5)
# Now we have various Res values. Each will be a list of five
# values. We have to pick one r value from those five for each Res
u, v = quintic.uv(theta, d)
testplus = (u + v*delta*sqrt(5)).n()
testminus = (u - v*delta*sqrt(5)).n()
# Evaluated numbers suffixed with _n
# We will use evaluated numbers for calculation. Much faster.
r4_n = r4.n()
r2 = r3 = None
for i in range(5):
r2temp_n = Res_n[2][i]
for j in range(5):
# Again storing away the exact number and using
# evaluated numbers in computations
r3temp_n = Res_n[3][j]
if (comp((r1_n*r2temp_n**2 + r4_n*r3temp_n**2 - testplus).n(), 0, tol) and
comp((r3temp_n*r1_n**2 + r2temp_n*r4_n**2 - testminus).n(), 0, tol)):
r2 = Res[2][i]
r3 = Res[3][j]
break
if r2:
break
# Now, we have r's so we can get roots
x1 = (r1 + r2 + r3 + r4)/5
x2 = (r1*zeta4 + r2*zeta3 + r3*zeta2 + r4*zeta1)/5
x3 = (r1*zeta3 + r2*zeta1 + r3*zeta4 + r4*zeta2)/5
x4 = (r1*zeta2 + r2*zeta4 + r3*zeta1 + r4*zeta3)/5
x5 = (r1*zeta1 + r2*zeta2 + r3*zeta3 + r4*zeta4)/5
result = [x1, x2, x3, x4, x5]
# Now check if solutions are distinct
saw = set()
for r in result:
r = r.n(2)
if r in saw:
# Roots were identical. Abort, return []
# and fall back to usual solve
return []
saw.add(r)
return result
def _quintic_simplify(expr):
expr = powsimp(expr)
expr = cancel(expr)
return together(expr)
def _integer_basis(poly):
"""Compute coefficient basis for a polynomial over integers.
Returns the integer ``div`` such that substituting ``x = div*y``
``p(x) = m*q(y)`` where the coefficients of ``q`` are smaller
than those of ``p``.
For example ``x**5 + 512*x + 1024 = 0``
with ``div = 4`` becomes ``y**5 + 2*y + 1 = 0``
Returns the integer ``div`` or ``None`` if there is no possible scaling.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys import Poly
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.polys.polyroots import _integer_basis
>>> p = Poly(x**5 + 512*x + 1024, x, domain='ZZ')
>>> _integer_basis(p)
4
"""
monoms, coeffs = list(zip(*poly.terms()))
monoms, = list(zip(*monoms))
coeffs = list(map(abs, coeffs))
if coeffs[0] < coeffs[-1]:
coeffs = list(reversed(coeffs))
n = monoms[0]
monoms = [n - i for i in reversed(monoms)]
else:
return None
monoms = monoms[:-1]
coeffs = coeffs[:-1]
divs = reversed(divisors(gcd_list(coeffs))[1:])
try:
div = next(divs)
except StopIteration:
return None
while True:
for monom, coeff in zip(monoms, coeffs):
if coeff % div**monom != 0:
try:
div = next(divs)
except StopIteration:
return None
else:
break
else:
return div
def preprocess_roots(poly):
"""Try to get rid of symbolic coefficients from ``poly``. """
coeff = S.One
poly_func = poly.func
try:
_, poly = poly.clear_denoms(convert=True)
except DomainError:
return coeff, poly
poly = poly.primitive()[1]
poly = poly.retract()
# TODO: This is fragile. Figure out how to make this independent of construct_domain().
if poly.get_domain().is_Poly and all(c.is_term for c in poly.rep.coeffs()):
poly = poly.inject()
strips = list(zip(*poly.monoms()))
gens = list(poly.gens[1:])
base, strips = strips[0], strips[1:]
for gen, strip in zip(list(gens), strips):
reverse = False
if strip[0] < strip[-1]:
strip = reversed(strip)
reverse = True
ratio = None
for a, b in zip(base, strip):
if not a and not b:
continue
elif not a or not b:
break
elif b % a != 0:
break
else:
_ratio = b // a
if ratio is None:
ratio = _ratio
elif ratio != _ratio:
break
else:
if reverse:
ratio = -ratio
poly = poly.eval(gen, 1)
coeff *= gen**(-ratio)
gens.remove(gen)
if gens:
poly = poly.eject(*gens)
if poly.is_univariate and poly.get_domain().is_ZZ:
basis = _integer_basis(poly)
if basis is not None:
n = poly.degree()
def func(k, coeff):
return coeff//basis**(n - k[0])
poly = poly.termwise(func)
coeff *= basis
if not isinstance(poly, poly_func):
poly = poly_func(poly)
return coeff, poly
@public
def roots(f, *gens, **flags):
"""
Computes symbolic roots of a univariate polynomial.
Given a univariate polynomial f with symbolic coefficients (or
a list of the polynomial's coefficients), returns a dictionary
with its roots and their multiplicities.
Only roots expressible via radicals will be returned. To get
a complete set of roots use RootOf class or numerical methods
instead. By default cubic and quartic formulas are used in
the algorithm. To disable them because of unreadable output
set ``cubics=False`` or ``quartics=False`` respectively. If cubic
roots are real but are expressed in terms of complex numbers
(casus irreducibilis [1]) the ``trig`` flag can be set to True to
have the solutions returned in terms of cosine and inverse cosine
functions.
To get roots from a specific domain set the ``filter`` flag with
one of the following specifiers: Z, Q, R, I, C. By default all
roots are returned (this is equivalent to setting ``filter='C'``).
By default a dictionary is returned giving a compact result in
case of multiple roots. However to get a list containing all
those roots set the ``multiple`` flag to True; the list will
have identical roots appearing next to each other in the result.
(For a given Poly, the all_roots method will give the roots in
sorted numerical order.)
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Poly, roots
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> roots(x**2 - 1, x)
{-1: 1, 1: 1}
>>> p = Poly(x**2-1, x)
>>> roots(p)
{-1: 1, 1: 1}
>>> p = Poly(x**2-y, x, y)
>>> roots(Poly(p, x))
{-sqrt(y): 1, sqrt(y): 1}
>>> roots(x**2 - y, x)
{-sqrt(y): 1, sqrt(y): 1}
>>> roots([1, 0, -1])
{-1: 1, 1: 1}
References
==========
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_function#Trigonometric_.28and_hyperbolic.29_method
"""
from sympy.polys.polytools import to_rational_coeffs
flags = dict(flags)
auto = flags.pop('auto', True)
cubics = flags.pop('cubics', True)
trig = flags.pop('trig', False)
quartics = flags.pop('quartics', True)
quintics = flags.pop('quintics', False)
multiple = flags.pop('multiple', False)
filter = flags.pop('filter', None)
predicate = flags.pop('predicate', None)
if isinstance(f, list):
if gens:
raise ValueError('redundant generators given')
x = Dummy('x')
poly, i = {}, len(f) - 1
for coeff in f:
poly[i], i = sympify(coeff), i - 1
f = Poly(poly, x, field=True)
else:
try:
f = Poly(f, *gens, **flags)
if f.length == 2 and f.degree() != 1:
# check for foo**n factors in the constant
n = f.degree()
npow_bases = []
expr = f.as_expr()
con = expr.as_independent(*gens)[0]
for p in Mul.make_args(con):
if p.is_Pow and not p.exp % n:
npow_bases.append(p.base**(p.exp/n))
else:
other.append(p)
if npow_bases:
b = Mul(*npow_bases)
B = Dummy()
d = roots(Poly(expr - con + B**n*Mul(*others), *gens,
**flags), *gens, **flags)
rv = {}
for k, v in d.items():
rv[k.subs(B, b)] = v
return rv
except GeneratorsNeeded:
if multiple:
return []
else:
return {}
if f.is_multivariate:
raise PolynomialError('multivariate polynomials are not supported')
def _update_dict(result, root, k):
if root in result:
result[root] += k
else:
result[root] = k
def _try_decompose(f):
"""Find roots using functional decomposition. """
factors, roots = f.decompose(), []
for root in _try_heuristics(factors[0]):
roots.append(root)
for factor in factors[1:]:
previous, roots = list(roots), []
for root in previous:
g = factor - Poly(root, f.gen)
for root in _try_heuristics(g):
roots.append(root)
return roots
def _try_heuristics(f):
"""Find roots using formulas and some tricks. """
if f.is_ground:
return []
if f.is_monomial:
return [S(0)]*f.degree()
if f.length() == 2:
if f.degree() == 1:
return list(map(cancel, roots_linear(f)))
else:
return roots_binomial(f)
result = []
for i in [-1, 1]:
if not f.eval(i):
f = f.quo(Poly(f.gen - i, f.gen))
result.append(i)
break
n = f.degree()
if n == 1:
result += list(map(cancel, roots_linear(f)))
elif n == 2:
result += list(map(cancel, roots_quadratic(f)))
elif f.is_cyclotomic:
result += roots_cyclotomic(f)
elif n == 3 and cubics:
result += roots_cubic(f, trig=trig)
elif n == 4 and quartics:
result += roots_quartic(f)
elif n == 5 and quintics:
result += roots_quintic(f)
return result
(k,), f = f.terms_gcd()
if not k:
zeros = {}
else:
zeros = {S(0): k}
coeff, f = preprocess_roots(f)
if auto and f.get_domain().is_Ring:
f = f.to_field()
rescale_x = None
translate_x = None
result = {}
if not f.is_ground:
if not f.get_domain().is_Exact:
for r in f.nroots():
_update_dict(result, r, 1)
elif f.degree() == 1:
result[roots_linear(f)[0]] = 1
elif f.length() == 2:
roots_fun = roots_quadratic if f.degree() == 2 else roots_binomial
for r in roots_fun(f):
_update_dict(result, r, 1)
else:
_, factors = Poly(f.as_expr()).factor_list()
if len(factors) == 1 and f.degree() == 2:
for r in roots_quadratic(f):
_update_dict(result, r, 1)
else:
if len(factors) == 1 and factors[0][1] == 1:
if f.get_domain().is_EX:
res = to_rational_coeffs(f)
if res:
if res[0] is None:
translate_x, f = res[2:]
else:
rescale_x, f = res[1], res[-1]
result = roots(f)
if not result:
for root in _try_decompose(f):
_update_dict(result, root, 1)
else:
for r in _try_heuristics(f):
_update_dict(result, r, 1)
else:
for root in _try_decompose(f):
_update_dict(result, root, 1)
else:
for factor, k in factors:
for r in _try_heuristics(Poly(factor, f.gen, field=True)):
_update_dict(result, r, k)
if coeff is not S.One:
_result, result, = result, {}
for root, k in _result.items():
result[coeff*root] = k
result.update(zeros)
if filter not in [None, 'C']:
handlers = {
'Z': lambda r: r.is_Integer,
'Q': lambda r: r.is_Rational,
'R': lambda r: r.is_real,
'I': lambda r: r.is_imaginary,
}
try:
query = handlers[filter]
except KeyError:
raise ValueError("Invalid filter: %s" % filter)
for zero in dict(result).keys():
if not query(zero):
del result[zero]
if predicate is not None:
for zero in dict(result).keys():
if not predicate(zero):
del result[zero]
if rescale_x:
result1 = {}
for k, v in result.items():
result1[k*rescale_x] = v
result = result1
if translate_x:
result1 = {}
for k, v in result.items():
result1[k + translate_x] = v
result = result1
if not multiple:
return result
else:
zeros = []
for zero in ordered(result):
zeros.extend([zero]*result[zero])
return zeros
def root_factors(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Returns all factors of a univariate polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> from sympy.polys.polyroots import root_factors
>>> root_factors(x**2 - y, x)
[x - sqrt(y), x + sqrt(y)]
"""
args = dict(args)
filter = args.pop('filter', None)
F = Poly(f, *gens, **args)
if not F.is_Poly:
return [f]
if F.is_multivariate:
raise ValueError('multivariate polynomials are not supported')
x = F.gens[0]
zeros = roots(F, filter=filter)
if not zeros:
factors = [F]
else:
factors, N = [], 0
for r, n in ordered(zeros.items()):
factors, N = factors + [Poly(x - r, x)]*n, N + n
if N < F.degree():
G = reduce(lambda p, q: p*q, factors)
factors.append(F.quo(G))
if not isinstance(f, Poly):
factors = [ f.as_expr() for f in factors ]
return factors
|
ca1a6a1cd4cbe90fb0c0201c7b32e19a3f3ec47242d7f242ca8ed726e3416dc6
|
"""Dense univariate polynomials with coefficients in Galois fields. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from random import uniform
from math import ceil as _ceil, sqrt as _sqrt
from sympy.core.compatibility import SYMPY_INTS, range
from sympy.core.mul import prod
from sympy.polys.polyutils import _sort_factors
from sympy.polys.polyconfig import query
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import ExactQuotientFailed
from sympy.ntheory import factorint
def gf_crt(U, M, K=None):
"""
Chinese Remainder Theorem.
Given a set of integer residues ``u_0,...,u_n`` and a set of
co-prime integer moduli ``m_0,...,m_n``, returns an integer
``u``, such that ``u = u_i mod m_i`` for ``i = ``0,...,n``.
As an example consider a set of residues ``U = [49, 76, 65]``
and a set of moduli ``M = [99, 97, 95]``. Then we have::
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_crt
>>> from sympy.ntheory.modular import solve_congruence
>>> gf_crt([49, 76, 65], [99, 97, 95], ZZ)
639985
This is the correct result because::
>>> [639985 % m for m in [99, 97, 95]]
[49, 76, 65]
Note: this is a low-level routine with no error checking.
See Also
========
sympy.ntheory.modular.crt : a higher level crt routine
sympy.ntheory.modular.solve_congruence
"""
p = prod(M, start=K.one)
v = K.zero
for u, m in zip(U, M):
e = p // m
s, _, _ = K.gcdex(e, m)
v += e*(u*s % m)
return v % p
def gf_crt1(M, K):
"""
First part of the Chinese Remainder Theorem.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_crt1
>>> gf_crt1([99, 97, 95], ZZ)
(912285, [9215, 9405, 9603], [62, 24, 12])
"""
E, S = [], []
p = prod(M, start=K.one)
for m in M:
E.append(p // m)
S.append(K.gcdex(E[-1], m)[0] % m)
return p, E, S
def gf_crt2(U, M, p, E, S, K):
"""
Second part of the Chinese Remainder Theorem.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_crt2
>>> U = [49, 76, 65]
>>> M = [99, 97, 95]
>>> p = 912285
>>> E = [9215, 9405, 9603]
>>> S = [62, 24, 12]
>>> gf_crt2(U, M, p, E, S, ZZ)
639985
"""
v = K.zero
for u, m, e, s in zip(U, M, E, S):
v += e*(u*s % m)
return v % p
def gf_int(a, p):
"""
Coerce ``a mod p`` to an integer in the range ``[-p/2, p/2]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_int
>>> gf_int(2, 7)
2
>>> gf_int(5, 7)
-2
"""
if a <= p // 2:
return a
else:
return a - p
def gf_degree(f):
"""
Return the leading degree of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_degree
>>> gf_degree([1, 1, 2, 0])
3
>>> gf_degree([])
-1
"""
return len(f) - 1
def gf_LC(f, K):
"""
Return the leading coefficient of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_LC
>>> gf_LC([3, 0, 1], ZZ)
3
"""
if not f:
return K.zero
else:
return f[0]
def gf_TC(f, K):
"""
Return the trailing coefficient of ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_TC
>>> gf_TC([3, 0, 1], ZZ)
1
"""
if not f:
return K.zero
else:
return f[-1]
def gf_strip(f):
"""
Remove leading zeros from ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_strip
>>> gf_strip([0, 0, 0, 3, 0, 1])
[3, 0, 1]
"""
if not f or f[0]:
return f
k = 0
for coeff in f:
if coeff:
break
else:
k += 1
return f[k:]
def gf_trunc(f, p):
"""
Reduce all coefficients modulo ``p``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_trunc
>>> gf_trunc([7, -2, 3], 5)
[2, 3, 3]
"""
return gf_strip([ a % p for a in f ])
def gf_normal(f, p, K):
"""
Normalize all coefficients in ``K``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_normal
>>> gf_normal([5, 10, 21, -3], 5, ZZ)
[1, 2]
"""
return gf_trunc(list(map(K, f)), p)
def gf_from_dict(f, p, K):
"""
Create a ``GF(p)[x]`` polynomial from a dict.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_from_dict
>>> gf_from_dict({10: ZZ(4), 4: ZZ(33), 0: ZZ(-1)}, 5, ZZ)
[4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3, 0, 0, 0, 4]
"""
n, h = max(f.keys()), []
if isinstance(n, SYMPY_INTS):
for k in range(n, -1, -1):
h.append(f.get(k, K.zero) % p)
else:
(n,) = n
for k in range(n, -1, -1):
h.append(f.get((k,), K.zero) % p)
return gf_trunc(h, p)
def gf_to_dict(f, p, symmetric=True):
"""
Convert a ``GF(p)[x]`` polynomial to a dict.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_to_dict
>>> gf_to_dict([4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3, 0, 0, 0, 4], 5)
{0: -1, 4: -2, 10: -1}
>>> gf_to_dict([4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3, 0, 0, 0, 4], 5, symmetric=False)
{0: 4, 4: 3, 10: 4}
"""
n, result = gf_degree(f), {}
for k in range(0, n + 1):
if symmetric:
a = gf_int(f[n - k], p)
else:
a = f[n - k]
if a:
result[k] = a
return result
def gf_from_int_poly(f, p):
"""
Create a ``GF(p)[x]`` polynomial from ``Z[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_from_int_poly
>>> gf_from_int_poly([7, -2, 3], 5)
[2, 3, 3]
"""
return gf_trunc(f, p)
def gf_to_int_poly(f, p, symmetric=True):
"""
Convert a ``GF(p)[x]`` polynomial to ``Z[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_to_int_poly
>>> gf_to_int_poly([2, 3, 3], 5)
[2, -2, -2]
>>> gf_to_int_poly([2, 3, 3], 5, symmetric=False)
[2, 3, 3]
"""
if symmetric:
return [ gf_int(c, p) for c in f ]
else:
return f
def gf_neg(f, p, K):
"""
Negate a polynomial in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_neg
>>> gf_neg([3, 2, 1, 0], 5, ZZ)
[2, 3, 4, 0]
"""
return [ -coeff % p for coeff in f ]
def gf_add_ground(f, a, p, K):
"""
Compute ``f + a`` where ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` and ``a`` in ``GF(p)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_add_ground
>>> gf_add_ground([3, 2, 4], 2, 5, ZZ)
[3, 2, 1]
"""
if not f:
a = a % p
else:
a = (f[-1] + a) % p
if len(f) > 1:
return f[:-1] + [a]
if not a:
return []
else:
return [a]
def gf_sub_ground(f, a, p, K):
"""
Compute ``f - a`` where ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` and ``a`` in ``GF(p)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_sub_ground
>>> gf_sub_ground([3, 2, 4], 2, 5, ZZ)
[3, 2, 2]
"""
if not f:
a = -a % p
else:
a = (f[-1] - a) % p
if len(f) > 1:
return f[:-1] + [a]
if not a:
return []
else:
return [a]
def gf_mul_ground(f, a, p, K):
"""
Compute ``f * a`` where ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` and ``a`` in ``GF(p)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_mul_ground
>>> gf_mul_ground([3, 2, 4], 2, 5, ZZ)
[1, 4, 3]
"""
if not a:
return []
else:
return [ (a*b) % p for b in f ]
def gf_quo_ground(f, a, p, K):
"""
Compute ``f/a`` where ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` and ``a`` in ``GF(p)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_quo_ground
>>> gf_quo_ground(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), ZZ(2), 5, ZZ)
[4, 1, 2]
"""
return gf_mul_ground(f, K.invert(a, p), p, K)
def gf_add(f, g, p, K):
"""
Add polynomials in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_add
>>> gf_add([3, 2, 4], [2, 2, 2], 5, ZZ)
[4, 1]
"""
if not f:
return g
if not g:
return f
df = gf_degree(f)
dg = gf_degree(g)
if df == dg:
return gf_strip([ (a + b) % p for a, b in zip(f, g) ])
else:
k = abs(df - dg)
if df > dg:
h, f = f[:k], f[k:]
else:
h, g = g[:k], g[k:]
return h + [ (a + b) % p for a, b in zip(f, g) ]
def gf_sub(f, g, p, K):
"""
Subtract polynomials in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_sub
>>> gf_sub([3, 2, 4], [2, 2, 2], 5, ZZ)
[1, 0, 2]
"""
if not g:
return f
if not f:
return gf_neg(g, p, K)
df = gf_degree(f)
dg = gf_degree(g)
if df == dg:
return gf_strip([ (a - b) % p for a, b in zip(f, g) ])
else:
k = abs(df - dg)
if df > dg:
h, f = f[:k], f[k:]
else:
h, g = gf_neg(g[:k], p, K), g[k:]
return h + [ (a - b) % p for a, b in zip(f, g) ]
def gf_mul(f, g, p, K):
"""
Multiply polynomials in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_mul
>>> gf_mul([3, 2, 4], [2, 2, 2], 5, ZZ)
[1, 0, 3, 2, 3]
"""
df = gf_degree(f)
dg = gf_degree(g)
dh = df + dg
h = [0]*(dh + 1)
for i in range(0, dh + 1):
coeff = K.zero
for j in range(max(0, i - dg), min(i, df) + 1):
coeff += f[j]*g[i - j]
h[i] = coeff % p
return gf_strip(h)
def gf_sqr(f, p, K):
"""
Square polynomials in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_sqr
>>> gf_sqr([3, 2, 4], 5, ZZ)
[4, 2, 3, 1, 1]
"""
df = gf_degree(f)
dh = 2*df
h = [0]*(dh + 1)
for i in range(0, dh + 1):
coeff = K.zero
jmin = max(0, i - df)
jmax = min(i, df)
n = jmax - jmin + 1
jmax = jmin + n // 2 - 1
for j in range(jmin, jmax + 1):
coeff += f[j]*f[i - j]
coeff += coeff
if n & 1:
elem = f[jmax + 1]
coeff += elem**2
h[i] = coeff % p
return gf_strip(h)
def gf_add_mul(f, g, h, p, K):
"""
Returns ``f + g*h`` where ``f``, ``g``, ``h`` in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_add_mul
>>> gf_add_mul([3, 2, 4], [2, 2, 2], [1, 4], 5, ZZ)
[2, 3, 2, 2]
"""
return gf_add(f, gf_mul(g, h, p, K), p, K)
def gf_sub_mul(f, g, h, p, K):
"""
Compute ``f - g*h`` where ``f``, ``g``, ``h`` in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_sub_mul
>>> gf_sub_mul([3, 2, 4], [2, 2, 2], [1, 4], 5, ZZ)
[3, 3, 2, 1]
"""
return gf_sub(f, gf_mul(g, h, p, K), p, K)
def gf_expand(F, p, K):
"""
Expand results of :func:`factor` in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_expand
>>> gf_expand([([3, 2, 4], 1), ([2, 2], 2), ([3, 1], 3)], 5, ZZ)
[4, 3, 0, 3, 0, 1, 4, 1]
"""
if type(F) is tuple:
lc, F = F
else:
lc = K.one
g = [lc]
for f, k in F:
f = gf_pow(f, k, p, K)
g = gf_mul(g, f, p, K)
return g
def gf_div(f, g, p, K):
"""
Division with remainder in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Given univariate polynomials ``f`` and ``g`` with coefficients in a
finite field with ``p`` elements, returns polynomials ``q`` and ``r``
(quotient and remainder) such that ``f = q*g + r``.
Consider polynomials ``x**3 + x + 1`` and ``x**2 + x`` in GF(2)::
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_div, gf_add_mul
>>> gf_div(ZZ.map([1, 0, 1, 1]), ZZ.map([1, 1, 0]), 2, ZZ)
([1, 1], [1])
As result we obtained quotient ``x + 1`` and remainder ``1``, thus::
>>> gf_add_mul(ZZ.map([1]), ZZ.map([1, 1]), ZZ.map([1, 1, 0]), 2, ZZ)
[1, 0, 1, 1]
References
==========
1. [Monagan93]_
2. [Gathen99]_
"""
df = gf_degree(f)
dg = gf_degree(g)
if not g:
raise ZeroDivisionError("polynomial division")
elif df < dg:
return [], f
inv = K.invert(g[0], p)
h, dq, dr = list(f), df - dg, dg - 1
for i in range(0, df + 1):
coeff = h[i]
for j in range(max(0, dg - i), min(df - i, dr) + 1):
coeff -= h[i + j - dg] * g[dg - j]
if i <= dq:
coeff *= inv
h[i] = coeff % p
return h[:dq + 1], gf_strip(h[dq + 1:])
def gf_rem(f, g, p, K):
"""
Compute polynomial remainder in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_rem
>>> gf_rem(ZZ.map([1, 0, 1, 1]), ZZ.map([1, 1, 0]), 2, ZZ)
[1]
"""
return gf_div(f, g, p, K)[1]
def gf_quo(f, g, p, K):
"""
Compute exact quotient in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_quo
>>> gf_quo(ZZ.map([1, 0, 1, 1]), ZZ.map([1, 1, 0]), 2, ZZ)
[1, 1]
>>> gf_quo(ZZ.map([1, 0, 3, 2, 3]), ZZ.map([2, 2, 2]), 5, ZZ)
[3, 2, 4]
"""
df = gf_degree(f)
dg = gf_degree(g)
if not g:
raise ZeroDivisionError("polynomial division")
elif df < dg:
return []
inv = K.invert(g[0], p)
h, dq, dr = f[:], df - dg, dg - 1
for i in range(0, dq + 1):
coeff = h[i]
for j in range(max(0, dg - i), min(df - i, dr) + 1):
coeff -= h[i + j - dg] * g[dg - j]
h[i] = (coeff * inv) % p
return h[:dq + 1]
def gf_exquo(f, g, p, K):
"""
Compute polynomial quotient in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_exquo
>>> gf_exquo(ZZ.map([1, 0, 3, 2, 3]), ZZ.map([2, 2, 2]), 5, ZZ)
[3, 2, 4]
>>> gf_exquo(ZZ.map([1, 0, 1, 1]), ZZ.map([1, 1, 0]), 2, ZZ)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ExactQuotientFailed: [1, 1, 0] does not divide [1, 0, 1, 1]
"""
q, r = gf_div(f, g, p, K)
if not r:
return q
else:
raise ExactQuotientFailed(f, g)
def gf_lshift(f, n, K):
"""
Efficiently multiply ``f`` by ``x**n``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_lshift
>>> gf_lshift([3, 2, 4], 4, ZZ)
[3, 2, 4, 0, 0, 0, 0]
"""
if not f:
return f
else:
return f + [K.zero]*n
def gf_rshift(f, n, K):
"""
Efficiently divide ``f`` by ``x**n``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_rshift
>>> gf_rshift([1, 2, 3, 4, 0], 3, ZZ)
([1, 2], [3, 4, 0])
"""
if not n:
return f, []
else:
return f[:-n], f[-n:]
def gf_pow(f, n, p, K):
"""
Compute ``f**n`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` using repeated squaring.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_pow
>>> gf_pow([3, 2, 4], 3, 5, ZZ)
[2, 4, 4, 2, 2, 1, 4]
"""
if not n:
return [K.one]
elif n == 1:
return f
elif n == 2:
return gf_sqr(f, p, K)
h = [K.one]
while True:
if n & 1:
h = gf_mul(h, f, p, K)
n -= 1
n >>= 1
if not n:
break
f = gf_sqr(f, p, K)
return h
def gf_frobenius_monomial_base(g, p, K):
"""
return the list of ``x**(i*p) mod g in Z_p`` for ``i = 0, .., n - 1``
where ``n = gf_degree(g)``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_frobenius_monomial_base
>>> g = ZZ.map([1, 0, 2, 1])
>>> gf_frobenius_monomial_base(g, 5, ZZ)
[[1], [4, 4, 2], [1, 2]]
"""
n = gf_degree(g)
if n == 0:
return []
b = [0]*n
b[0] = [1]
if p < n:
for i in range(1, n):
mon = gf_lshift(b[i - 1], p, K)
b[i] = gf_rem(mon, g, p, K)
elif n > 1:
b[1] = gf_pow_mod([K.one, K.zero], p, g, p, K)
for i in range(2, n):
b[i] = gf_mul(b[i - 1], b[1], p, K)
b[i] = gf_rem(b[i], g, p, K)
return b
def gf_frobenius_map(f, g, b, p, K):
"""
compute gf_pow_mod(f, p, g, p, K) using the Frobenius map
Parameters
==========
f, g : polynomials in ``GF(p)[x]``
b : frobenius monomial base
p : prime number
K : domain
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_frobenius_monomial_base, gf_frobenius_map
>>> f = ZZ.map([2, 1 , 0, 1])
>>> g = ZZ.map([1, 0, 2, 1])
>>> p = 5
>>> b = gf_frobenius_monomial_base(g, p, ZZ)
>>> r = gf_frobenius_map(f, g, b, p, ZZ)
>>> gf_frobenius_map(f, g, b, p, ZZ)
[4, 0, 3]
"""
m = gf_degree(g)
if gf_degree(f) >= m:
f = gf_rem(f, g, p, K)
if not f:
return []
n = gf_degree(f)
sf = [f[-1]]
for i in range(1, n + 1):
v = gf_mul_ground(b[i], f[n - i], p, K)
sf = gf_add(sf, v, p, K)
return sf
def _gf_pow_pnm1d2(f, n, g, b, p, K):
"""
utility function for ``gf_edf_zassenhaus``
Compute ``f**((p**n - 1) // 2)`` in ``GF(p)[x]/(g)``
``f**((p**n - 1) // 2) = (f*f**p*...*f**(p**n - 1))**((p - 1) // 2)``
"""
f = gf_rem(f, g, p, K)
h = f
r = f
for i in range(1, n):
h = gf_frobenius_map(h, g, b, p, K)
r = gf_mul(r, h, p, K)
r = gf_rem(r, g, p, K)
res = gf_pow_mod(r, (p - 1)//2, g, p, K)
return res
def gf_pow_mod(f, n, g, p, K):
"""
Compute ``f**n`` in ``GF(p)[x]/(g)`` using repeated squaring.
Given polynomials ``f`` and ``g`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` and a non-negative
integer ``n``, efficiently computes ``f**n (mod g)`` i.e. the remainder
of ``f**n`` from division by ``g``, using the repeated squaring algorithm.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_pow_mod
>>> gf_pow_mod(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), 3, ZZ.map([1, 1]), 5, ZZ)
[]
References
==========
1. [Gathen99]_
"""
if not n:
return [K.one]
elif n == 1:
return gf_rem(f, g, p, K)
elif n == 2:
return gf_rem(gf_sqr(f, p, K), g, p, K)
h = [K.one]
while True:
if n & 1:
h = gf_mul(h, f, p, K)
h = gf_rem(h, g, p, K)
n -= 1
n >>= 1
if not n:
break
f = gf_sqr(f, p, K)
f = gf_rem(f, g, p, K)
return h
def gf_gcd(f, g, p, K):
"""
Euclidean Algorithm in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_gcd
>>> gf_gcd(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), ZZ.map([2, 2, 3]), 5, ZZ)
[1, 3]
"""
while g:
f, g = g, gf_rem(f, g, p, K)
return gf_monic(f, p, K)[1]
def gf_lcm(f, g, p, K):
"""
Compute polynomial LCM in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_lcm
>>> gf_lcm(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), ZZ.map([2, 2, 3]), 5, ZZ)
[1, 2, 0, 4]
"""
if not f or not g:
return []
h = gf_quo(gf_mul(f, g, p, K),
gf_gcd(f, g, p, K), p, K)
return gf_monic(h, p, K)[1]
def gf_cofactors(f, g, p, K):
"""
Compute polynomial GCD and cofactors in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_cofactors
>>> gf_cofactors(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), ZZ.map([2, 2, 3]), 5, ZZ)
([1, 3], [3, 3], [2, 1])
"""
if not f and not g:
return ([], [], [])
h = gf_gcd(f, g, p, K)
return (h, gf_quo(f, h, p, K),
gf_quo(g, h, p, K))
def gf_gcdex(f, g, p, K):
"""
Extended Euclidean Algorithm in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Given polynomials ``f`` and ``g`` in ``GF(p)[x]``, computes polynomials
``s``, ``t`` and ``h``, such that ``h = gcd(f, g)`` and ``s*f + t*g = h``.
The typical application of EEA is solving polynomial diophantine equations.
Consider polynomials ``f = (x + 7) (x + 1)``, ``g = (x + 7) (x**2 + 1)``
in ``GF(11)[x]``. Application of Extended Euclidean Algorithm gives::
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_gcdex, gf_mul, gf_add
>>> s, t, g = gf_gcdex(ZZ.map([1, 8, 7]), ZZ.map([1, 7, 1, 7]), 11, ZZ)
>>> s, t, g
([5, 6], [6], [1, 7])
As result we obtained polynomials ``s = 5*x + 6`` and ``t = 6``, and
additionally ``gcd(f, g) = x + 7``. This is correct because::
>>> S = gf_mul(s, ZZ.map([1, 8, 7]), 11, ZZ)
>>> T = gf_mul(t, ZZ.map([1, 7, 1, 7]), 11, ZZ)
>>> gf_add(S, T, 11, ZZ) == [1, 7]
True
References
==========
1. [Gathen99]_
"""
if not (f or g):
return [K.one], [], []
p0, r0 = gf_monic(f, p, K)
p1, r1 = gf_monic(g, p, K)
if not f:
return [], [K.invert(p1, p)], r1
if not g:
return [K.invert(p0, p)], [], r0
s0, s1 = [K.invert(p0, p)], []
t0, t1 = [], [K.invert(p1, p)]
while True:
Q, R = gf_div(r0, r1, p, K)
if not R:
break
(lc, r1), r0 = gf_monic(R, p, K), r1
inv = K.invert(lc, p)
s = gf_sub_mul(s0, s1, Q, p, K)
t = gf_sub_mul(t0, t1, Q, p, K)
s1, s0 = gf_mul_ground(s, inv, p, K), s1
t1, t0 = gf_mul_ground(t, inv, p, K), t1
return s1, t1, r1
def gf_monic(f, p, K):
"""
Compute LC and a monic polynomial in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_monic
>>> gf_monic(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), 5, ZZ)
(3, [1, 4, 3])
"""
if not f:
return K.zero, []
else:
lc = f[0]
if K.is_one(lc):
return lc, list(f)
else:
return lc, gf_quo_ground(f, lc, p, K)
def gf_diff(f, p, K):
"""
Differentiate polynomial in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_diff
>>> gf_diff([3, 2, 4], 5, ZZ)
[1, 2]
"""
df = gf_degree(f)
h, n = [K.zero]*df, df
for coeff in f[:-1]:
coeff *= K(n)
coeff %= p
if coeff:
h[df - n] = coeff
n -= 1
return gf_strip(h)
def gf_eval(f, a, p, K):
"""
Evaluate ``f(a)`` in ``GF(p)`` using Horner scheme.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_eval
>>> gf_eval([3, 2, 4], 2, 5, ZZ)
0
"""
result = K.zero
for c in f:
result *= a
result += c
result %= p
return result
def gf_multi_eval(f, A, p, K):
"""
Evaluate ``f(a)`` for ``a`` in ``[a_1, ..., a_n]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_multi_eval
>>> gf_multi_eval([3, 2, 4], [0, 1, 2, 3, 4], 5, ZZ)
[4, 4, 0, 2, 0]
"""
return [ gf_eval(f, a, p, K) for a in A ]
def gf_compose(f, g, p, K):
"""
Compute polynomial composition ``f(g)`` in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_compose
>>> gf_compose([3, 2, 4], [2, 2, 2], 5, ZZ)
[2, 4, 0, 3, 0]
"""
if len(g) <= 1:
return gf_strip([gf_eval(f, gf_LC(g, K), p, K)])
if not f:
return []
h = [f[0]]
for c in f[1:]:
h = gf_mul(h, g, p, K)
h = gf_add_ground(h, c, p, K)
return h
def gf_compose_mod(g, h, f, p, K):
"""
Compute polynomial composition ``g(h)`` in ``GF(p)[x]/(f)``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_compose_mod
>>> gf_compose_mod(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), ZZ.map([2, 2, 2]), ZZ.map([4, 3]), 5, ZZ)
[4]
"""
if not g:
return []
comp = [g[0]]
for a in g[1:]:
comp = gf_mul(comp, h, p, K)
comp = gf_add_ground(comp, a, p, K)
comp = gf_rem(comp, f, p, K)
return comp
def gf_trace_map(a, b, c, n, f, p, K):
"""
Compute polynomial trace map in ``GF(p)[x]/(f)``.
Given a polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]``, polynomials ``a``, ``b``,
``c`` in the quotient ring ``GF(p)[x]/(f)`` such that ``b = c**t
(mod f)`` for some positive power ``t`` of ``p``, and a positive
integer ``n``, returns a mapping::
a -> a**t**n, a + a**t + a**t**2 + ... + a**t**n (mod f)
In factorization context, ``b = x**p mod f`` and ``c = x mod f``.
This way we can efficiently compute trace polynomials in equal
degree factorization routine, much faster than with other methods,
like iterated Frobenius algorithm, for large degrees.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_trace_map
>>> gf_trace_map([1, 2], [4, 4], [1, 1], 4, [3, 2, 4], 5, ZZ)
([1, 3], [1, 3])
References
==========
1. [Gathen92]_
"""
u = gf_compose_mod(a, b, f, p, K)
v = b
if n & 1:
U = gf_add(a, u, p, K)
V = b
else:
U = a
V = c
n >>= 1
while n:
u = gf_add(u, gf_compose_mod(u, v, f, p, K), p, K)
v = gf_compose_mod(v, v, f, p, K)
if n & 1:
U = gf_add(U, gf_compose_mod(u, V, f, p, K), p, K)
V = gf_compose_mod(v, V, f, p, K)
n >>= 1
return gf_compose_mod(a, V, f, p, K), U
def _gf_trace_map(f, n, g, b, p, K):
"""
utility for ``gf_edf_shoup``
"""
f = gf_rem(f, g, p, K)
h = f
r = f
for i in range(1, n):
h = gf_frobenius_map(h, g, b, p, K)
r = gf_add(r, h, p, K)
r = gf_rem(r, g, p, K)
return r
def gf_random(n, p, K):
"""
Generate a random polynomial in ``GF(p)[x]`` of degree ``n``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_random
>>> gf_random(10, 5, ZZ) #doctest: +SKIP
[1, 2, 3, 2, 1, 1, 1, 2, 0, 4, 2]
"""
return [K.one] + [ K(int(uniform(0, p))) for i in range(0, n) ]
def gf_irreducible(n, p, K):
"""
Generate random irreducible polynomial of degree ``n`` in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_irreducible
>>> gf_irreducible(10, 5, ZZ) #doctest: +SKIP
[1, 4, 2, 2, 3, 2, 4, 1, 4, 0, 4]
"""
while True:
f = gf_random(n, p, K)
if gf_irreducible_p(f, p, K):
return f
def gf_irred_p_ben_or(f, p, K):
"""
Ben-Or's polynomial irreducibility test over finite fields.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_irred_p_ben_or
>>> gf_irred_p_ben_or(ZZ.map([1, 4, 2, 2, 3, 2, 4, 1, 4, 0, 4]), 5, ZZ)
True
>>> gf_irred_p_ben_or(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), 5, ZZ)
False
"""
n = gf_degree(f)
if n <= 1:
return True
_, f = gf_monic(f, p, K)
if n < 5:
H = h = gf_pow_mod([K.one, K.zero], p, f, p, K)
for i in range(0, n//2):
g = gf_sub(h, [K.one, K.zero], p, K)
if gf_gcd(f, g, p, K) == [K.one]:
h = gf_compose_mod(h, H, f, p, K)
else:
return False
else:
b = gf_frobenius_monomial_base(f, p, K)
H = h = gf_frobenius_map([K.one, K.zero], f, b, p, K)
for i in range(0, n//2):
g = gf_sub(h, [K.one, K.zero], p, K)
if gf_gcd(f, g, p, K) == [K.one]:
h = gf_frobenius_map(h, f, b, p, K)
else:
return False
return True
def gf_irred_p_rabin(f, p, K):
"""
Rabin's polynomial irreducibility test over finite fields.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_irred_p_rabin
>>> gf_irred_p_rabin(ZZ.map([1, 4, 2, 2, 3, 2, 4, 1, 4, 0, 4]), 5, ZZ)
True
>>> gf_irred_p_rabin(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), 5, ZZ)
False
"""
n = gf_degree(f)
if n <= 1:
return True
_, f = gf_monic(f, p, K)
x = [K.one, K.zero]
indices = { n//d for d in factorint(n) }
b = gf_frobenius_monomial_base(f, p, K)
h = b[1]
for i in range(1, n):
if i in indices:
g = gf_sub(h, x, p, K)
if gf_gcd(f, g, p, K) != [K.one]:
return False
h = gf_frobenius_map(h, f, b, p, K)
return h == x
_irred_methods = {
'ben-or': gf_irred_p_ben_or,
'rabin': gf_irred_p_rabin,
}
def gf_irreducible_p(f, p, K):
"""
Test irreducibility of a polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_irreducible_p
>>> gf_irreducible_p(ZZ.map([1, 4, 2, 2, 3, 2, 4, 1, 4, 0, 4]), 5, ZZ)
True
>>> gf_irreducible_p(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), 5, ZZ)
False
"""
method = query('GF_IRRED_METHOD')
if method is not None:
irred = _irred_methods[method](f, p, K)
else:
irred = gf_irred_p_rabin(f, p, K)
return irred
def gf_sqf_p(f, p, K):
"""
Return ``True`` if ``f`` is square-free in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_sqf_p
>>> gf_sqf_p(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), 5, ZZ)
True
>>> gf_sqf_p(ZZ.map([2, 4, 4, 2, 2, 1, 4]), 5, ZZ)
False
"""
_, f = gf_monic(f, p, K)
if not f:
return True
else:
return gf_gcd(f, gf_diff(f, p, K), p, K) == [K.one]
def gf_sqf_part(f, p, K):
"""
Return square-free part of a ``GF(p)[x]`` polynomial.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_sqf_part
>>> gf_sqf_part(ZZ.map([1, 1, 3, 0, 1, 0, 2, 2, 1]), 5, ZZ)
[1, 4, 3]
"""
_, sqf = gf_sqf_list(f, p, K)
g = [K.one]
for f, _ in sqf:
g = gf_mul(g, f, p, K)
return g
def gf_sqf_list(f, p, K, all=False):
"""
Return the square-free decomposition of a ``GF(p)[x]`` polynomial.
Given a polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]``, returns the leading coefficient
of ``f`` and a square-free decomposition ``f_1**e_1 f_2**e_2 ... f_k**e_k``
such that all ``f_i`` are monic polynomials and ``(f_i, f_j)`` for ``i != j``
are co-prime and ``e_1 ... e_k`` are given in increasing order. All trivial
terms (i.e. ``f_i = 1``) aren't included in the output.
Consider polynomial ``f = x**11 + 1`` over ``GF(11)[x]``::
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import (
... gf_from_dict, gf_diff, gf_sqf_list, gf_pow,
... )
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
>>> f = gf_from_dict({11: ZZ(1), 0: ZZ(1)}, 11, ZZ)
Note that ``f'(x) = 0``::
>>> gf_diff(f, 11, ZZ)
[]
This phenomenon doesn't happen in characteristic zero. However we can
still compute square-free decomposition of ``f`` using ``gf_sqf()``::
>>> gf_sqf_list(f, 11, ZZ)
(1, [([1, 1], 11)])
We obtained factorization ``f = (x + 1)**11``. This is correct because::
>>> gf_pow([1, 1], 11, 11, ZZ) == f
True
References
==========
1. [Geddes92]_
"""
n, sqf, factors, r = 1, False, [], int(p)
lc, f = gf_monic(f, p, K)
if gf_degree(f) < 1:
return lc, []
while True:
F = gf_diff(f, p, K)
if F != []:
g = gf_gcd(f, F, p, K)
h = gf_quo(f, g, p, K)
i = 1
while h != [K.one]:
G = gf_gcd(g, h, p, K)
H = gf_quo(h, G, p, K)
if gf_degree(H) > 0:
factors.append((H, i*n))
g, h, i = gf_quo(g, G, p, K), G, i + 1
if g == [K.one]:
sqf = True
else:
f = g
if not sqf:
d = gf_degree(f) // r
for i in range(0, d + 1):
f[i] = f[i*r]
f, n = f[:d + 1], n*r
else:
break
if all:
raise ValueError("'all=True' is not supported yet")
return lc, factors
def gf_Qmatrix(f, p, K):
"""
Calculate Berlekamp's ``Q`` matrix.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_Qmatrix
>>> gf_Qmatrix([3, 2, 4], 5, ZZ)
[[1, 0],
[3, 4]]
>>> gf_Qmatrix([1, 0, 0, 0, 1], 5, ZZ)
[[1, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 4, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 1, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 4]]
"""
n, r = gf_degree(f), int(p)
q = [K.one] + [K.zero]*(n - 1)
Q = [list(q)] + [[]]*(n - 1)
for i in range(1, (n - 1)*r + 1):
qq, c = [(-q[-1]*f[-1]) % p], q[-1]
for j in range(1, n):
qq.append((q[j - 1] - c*f[-j - 1]) % p)
if not (i % r):
Q[i//r] = list(qq)
q = qq
return Q
def gf_Qbasis(Q, p, K):
"""
Compute a basis of the kernel of ``Q``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_Qmatrix, gf_Qbasis
>>> gf_Qbasis(gf_Qmatrix([1, 0, 0, 0, 1], 5, ZZ), 5, ZZ)
[[1, 0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 1, 0]]
>>> gf_Qbasis(gf_Qmatrix([3, 2, 4], 5, ZZ), 5, ZZ)
[[1, 0]]
"""
Q, n = [ list(q) for q in Q ], len(Q)
for k in range(0, n):
Q[k][k] = (Q[k][k] - K.one) % p
for k in range(0, n):
for i in range(k, n):
if Q[k][i]:
break
else:
continue
inv = K.invert(Q[k][i], p)
for j in range(0, n):
Q[j][i] = (Q[j][i]*inv) % p
for j in range(0, n):
t = Q[j][k]
Q[j][k] = Q[j][i]
Q[j][i] = t
for i in range(0, n):
if i != k:
q = Q[k][i]
for j in range(0, n):
Q[j][i] = (Q[j][i] - Q[j][k]*q) % p
for i in range(0, n):
for j in range(0, n):
if i == j:
Q[i][j] = (K.one - Q[i][j]) % p
else:
Q[i][j] = (-Q[i][j]) % p
basis = []
for q in Q:
if any(q):
basis.append(q)
return basis
def gf_berlekamp(f, p, K):
"""
Factor a square-free ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` for small ``p``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_berlekamp
>>> gf_berlekamp([1, 0, 0, 0, 1], 5, ZZ)
[[1, 0, 2], [1, 0, 3]]
"""
Q = gf_Qmatrix(f, p, K)
V = gf_Qbasis(Q, p, K)
for i, v in enumerate(V):
V[i] = gf_strip(list(reversed(v)))
factors = [f]
for k in range(1, len(V)):
for f in list(factors):
s = K.zero
while s < p:
g = gf_sub_ground(V[k], s, p, K)
h = gf_gcd(f, g, p, K)
if h != [K.one] and h != f:
factors.remove(f)
f = gf_quo(f, h, p, K)
factors.extend([f, h])
if len(factors) == len(V):
return _sort_factors(factors, multiple=False)
s += K.one
return _sort_factors(factors, multiple=False)
def gf_ddf_zassenhaus(f, p, K):
"""
Cantor-Zassenhaus: Deterministic Distinct Degree Factorization
Given a monic square-free polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]``, computes
partial distinct degree factorization ``f_1 ... f_d`` of ``f`` where
``deg(f_i) != deg(f_j)`` for ``i != j``. The result is returned as a
list of pairs ``(f_i, e_i)`` where ``deg(f_i) > 0`` and ``e_i > 0``
is an argument to the equal degree factorization routine.
Consider the polynomial ``x**15 - 1`` in ``GF(11)[x]``::
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_from_dict
>>> f = gf_from_dict({15: ZZ(1), 0: ZZ(-1)}, 11, ZZ)
Distinct degree factorization gives::
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_ddf_zassenhaus
>>> gf_ddf_zassenhaus(f, 11, ZZ)
[([1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 10], 1), ([1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1], 2)]
which means ``x**15 - 1 = (x**5 - 1) (x**10 + x**5 + 1)``. To obtain
factorization into irreducibles, use equal degree factorization
procedure (EDF) with each of the factors.
References
==========
1. [Gathen99]_
2. [Geddes92]_
"""
i, g, factors = 1, [K.one, K.zero], []
b = gf_frobenius_monomial_base(f, p, K)
while 2*i <= gf_degree(f):
g = gf_frobenius_map(g, f, b, p, K)
h = gf_gcd(f, gf_sub(g, [K.one, K.zero], p, K), p, K)
if h != [K.one]:
factors.append((h, i))
f = gf_quo(f, h, p, K)
g = gf_rem(g, f, p, K)
b = gf_frobenius_monomial_base(f, p, K)
i += 1
if f != [K.one]:
return factors + [(f, gf_degree(f))]
else:
return factors
def gf_edf_zassenhaus(f, n, p, K):
"""
Cantor-Zassenhaus: Probabilistic Equal Degree Factorization
Given a monic square-free polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` and
an integer ``n``, such that ``n`` divides ``deg(f)``, returns all
irreducible factors ``f_1,...,f_d`` of ``f``, each of degree ``n``.
EDF procedure gives complete factorization over Galois fields.
Consider the square-free polynomial ``f = x**3 + x**2 + x + 1`` in
``GF(5)[x]``. Let's compute its irreducible factors of degree one::
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_edf_zassenhaus
>>> gf_edf_zassenhaus([1,1,1,1], 1, 5, ZZ)
[[1, 1], [1, 2], [1, 3]]
References
==========
1. [Gathen99]_
2. [Geddes92]_
"""
factors, q = [f], int(p)
if gf_degree(f) <= n:
return factors
N = gf_degree(f) // n
if p != 2:
b = gf_frobenius_monomial_base(f, p, K)
while len(factors) < N:
r = gf_random(2*n - 1, p, K)
if p == 2:
h = r
for i in range(0, 2**(n*N - 1)):
r = gf_pow_mod(r, 2, f, p, K)
h = gf_add(h, r, p, K)
g = gf_gcd(f, h, p, K)
else:
h = _gf_pow_pnm1d2(r, n, f, b, p, K)
g = gf_gcd(f, gf_sub_ground(h, K.one, p, K), p, K)
if g != [K.one] and g != f:
factors = gf_edf_zassenhaus(g, n, p, K) \
+ gf_edf_zassenhaus(gf_quo(f, g, p, K), n, p, K)
return _sort_factors(factors, multiple=False)
def gf_ddf_shoup(f, p, K):
"""
Kaltofen-Shoup: Deterministic Distinct Degree Factorization
Given a monic square-free polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]``, computes
partial distinct degree factorization ``f_1,...,f_d`` of ``f`` where
``deg(f_i) != deg(f_j)`` for ``i != j``. The result is returned as a
list of pairs ``(f_i, e_i)`` where ``deg(f_i) > 0`` and ``e_i > 0``
is an argument to the equal degree factorization routine.
This algorithm is an improved version of Zassenhaus algorithm for
large ``deg(f)`` and modulus ``p`` (especially for ``deg(f) ~ lg(p)``).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_ddf_shoup, gf_from_dict
>>> f = gf_from_dict({6: ZZ(1), 5: ZZ(-1), 4: ZZ(1), 3: ZZ(1), 1: ZZ(-1)}, 3, ZZ)
>>> gf_ddf_shoup(f, 3, ZZ)
[([1, 1, 0], 1), ([1, 1, 0, 1, 2], 2)]
References
==========
1. [Kaltofen98]_
2. [Shoup95]_
3. [Gathen92]_
"""
n = gf_degree(f)
k = int(_ceil(_sqrt(n//2)))
b = gf_frobenius_monomial_base(f, p, K)
h = gf_frobenius_map([K.one, K.zero], f, b, p, K)
# U[i] = x**(p**i)
U = [[K.one, K.zero], h] + [K.zero]*(k - 1)
for i in range(2, k + 1):
U[i] = gf_frobenius_map(U[i-1], f, b, p, K)
h, U = U[k], U[:k]
# V[i] = x**(p**(k*(i+1)))
V = [h] + [K.zero]*(k - 1)
for i in range(1, k):
V[i] = gf_compose_mod(V[i - 1], h, f, p, K)
factors = []
for i, v in enumerate(V):
h, j = [K.one], k - 1
for u in U:
g = gf_sub(v, u, p, K)
h = gf_mul(h, g, p, K)
h = gf_rem(h, f, p, K)
g = gf_gcd(f, h, p, K)
f = gf_quo(f, g, p, K)
for u in reversed(U):
h = gf_sub(v, u, p, K)
F = gf_gcd(g, h, p, K)
if F != [K.one]:
factors.append((F, k*(i + 1) - j))
g, j = gf_quo(g, F, p, K), j - 1
if f != [K.one]:
factors.append((f, gf_degree(f)))
return factors
def gf_edf_shoup(f, n, p, K):
"""
Gathen-Shoup: Probabilistic Equal Degree Factorization
Given a monic square-free polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` and integer
``n`` such that ``n`` divides ``deg(f)``, returns all irreducible factors
``f_1,...,f_d`` of ``f``, each of degree ``n``. This is a complete
factorization over Galois fields.
This algorithm is an improved version of Zassenhaus algorithm for
large ``deg(f)`` and modulus ``p`` (especially for ``deg(f) ~ lg(p)``).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_edf_shoup
>>> gf_edf_shoup(ZZ.map([1, 2837, 2277]), 1, 2917, ZZ)
[[1, 852], [1, 1985]]
References
==========
1. [Shoup91]_
2. [Gathen92]_
"""
N, q = gf_degree(f), int(p)
if not N:
return []
if N <= n:
return [f]
factors, x = [f], [K.one, K.zero]
r = gf_random(N - 1, p, K)
if p == 2:
h = gf_pow_mod(x, q, f, p, K)
H = gf_trace_map(r, h, x, n - 1, f, p, K)[1]
h1 = gf_gcd(f, H, p, K)
h2 = gf_quo(f, h1, p, K)
factors = gf_edf_shoup(h1, n, p, K) \
+ gf_edf_shoup(h2, n, p, K)
else:
b = gf_frobenius_monomial_base(f, p, K)
H = _gf_trace_map(r, n, f, b, p, K)
h = gf_pow_mod(H, (q - 1)//2, f, p, K)
h1 = gf_gcd(f, h, p, K)
h2 = gf_gcd(f, gf_sub_ground(h, K.one, p, K), p, K)
h3 = gf_quo(f, gf_mul(h1, h2, p, K), p, K)
factors = gf_edf_shoup(h1, n, p, K) \
+ gf_edf_shoup(h2, n, p, K) \
+ gf_edf_shoup(h3, n, p, K)
return _sort_factors(factors, multiple=False)
def gf_zassenhaus(f, p, K):
"""
Factor a square-free ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` for medium ``p``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_zassenhaus
>>> gf_zassenhaus(ZZ.map([1, 4, 3]), 5, ZZ)
[[1, 1], [1, 3]]
"""
factors = []
for factor, n in gf_ddf_zassenhaus(f, p, K):
factors += gf_edf_zassenhaus(factor, n, p, K)
return _sort_factors(factors, multiple=False)
def gf_shoup(f, p, K):
"""
Factor a square-free ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]`` for large ``p``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_shoup
>>> gf_shoup(ZZ.map([1, 4, 3]), 5, ZZ)
[[1, 1], [1, 3]]
"""
factors = []
for factor, n in gf_ddf_shoup(f, p, K):
factors += gf_edf_shoup(factor, n, p, K)
return _sort_factors(factors, multiple=False)
_factor_methods = {
'berlekamp': gf_berlekamp, # ``p`` : small
'zassenhaus': gf_zassenhaus, # ``p`` : medium
'shoup': gf_shoup, # ``p`` : large
}
def gf_factor_sqf(f, p, K, method=None):
"""
Factor a square-free polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_factor_sqf
>>> gf_factor_sqf(ZZ.map([3, 2, 4]), 5, ZZ)
(3, [[1, 1], [1, 3]])
"""
lc, f = gf_monic(f, p, K)
if gf_degree(f) < 1:
return lc, []
method = method or query('GF_FACTOR_METHOD')
if method is not None:
factors = _factor_methods[method](f, p, K)
else:
factors = gf_zassenhaus(f, p, K)
return lc, factors
def gf_factor(f, p, K):
"""
Factor (non square-free) polynomials in ``GF(p)[x]``.
Given a possibly non square-free polynomial ``f`` in ``GF(p)[x]``,
returns its complete factorization into irreducibles::
f_1(x)**e_1 f_2(x)**e_2 ... f_d(x)**e_d
where each ``f_i`` is a monic polynomial and ``gcd(f_i, f_j) == 1``,
for ``i != j``. The result is given as a tuple consisting of the
leading coefficient of ``f`` and a list of factors of ``f`` with
their multiplicities.
The algorithm proceeds by first computing square-free decomposition
of ``f`` and then iteratively factoring each of square-free factors.
Consider a non square-free polynomial ``f = (7*x + 1) (x + 2)**2`` in
``GF(11)[x]``. We obtain its factorization into irreducibles as follows::
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_factor
>>> gf_factor(ZZ.map([5, 2, 7, 2]), 11, ZZ)
(5, [([1, 2], 1), ([1, 8], 2)])
We arrived with factorization ``f = 5 (x + 2) (x + 8)**2``. We didn't
recover the exact form of the input polynomial because we requested to
get monic factors of ``f`` and its leading coefficient separately.
Square-free factors of ``f`` can be factored into irreducibles over
``GF(p)`` using three very different methods:
Berlekamp
efficient for very small values of ``p`` (usually ``p < 25``)
Cantor-Zassenhaus
efficient on average input and with "typical" ``p``
Shoup-Kaltofen-Gathen
efficient with very large inputs and modulus
If you want to use a specific factorization method, instead of the default
one, set ``GF_FACTOR_METHOD`` with one of ``berlekamp``, ``zassenhaus`` or
``shoup`` values.
References
==========
1. [Gathen99]_
"""
lc, f = gf_monic(f, p, K)
if gf_degree(f) < 1:
return lc, []
factors = []
for g, n in gf_sqf_list(f, p, K)[1]:
for h in gf_factor_sqf(g, p, K)[1]:
factors.append((h, n))
return lc, _sort_factors(factors)
def gf_value(f, a):
"""
Value of polynomial 'f' at 'a' in field R.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_value
>>> gf_value([1, 7, 2, 4], 11)
2204
"""
result = 0
for c in f:
result *= a
result += c
return result
def linear_congruence(a, b, m):
"""
Returns the values of x satisfying a*x congruent b mod(m)
Here m is positive integer and a, b are natural numbers.
This function returns only those values of x which are distinct mod(m).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import linear_congruence
>>> linear_congruence(3, 12, 15)
[4, 9, 14]
There are 3 solutions distinct mod(15) since gcd(a, m) = gcd(3, 15) = 3.
**Reference**
1) Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_congruence_theorem
"""
from sympy.polys.polytools import gcdex
if a % m == 0:
if b % m == 0:
return list(range(m))
else:
return []
r, _, g = gcdex(a, m)
if b % g != 0:
return []
return [(r * b // g + t * m // g) % m for t in range(g)]
def _raise_mod_power(x, s, p, f):
"""
Used in gf_csolve to generate solutions of f(x) cong 0 mod(p**(s + 1))
from the solutions of f(x) cong 0 mod(p**s).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import _raise_mod_power
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import csolve_prime
These is the solutions of f(x) = x**2 + x + 7 cong 0 mod(3)
>>> f = [1, 1, 7]
>>> csolve_prime(f, 3)
[1]
>>> [ i for i in range(3) if not (i**2 + i + 7) % 3]
[1]
The solutions of f(x) cong 0 mod(9) are constructed from the
values returned from _raise_mod_power:
>>> x, s, p = 1, 1, 3
>>> V = _raise_mod_power(x, s, p, f)
>>> [x + v * p**s for v in V]
[1, 4, 7]
And these are confirmed with the following:
>>> [ i for i in range(3**2) if not (i**2 + i + 7) % 3**2]
[1, 4, 7]
"""
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
f_f = gf_diff(f, p, ZZ)
alpha = gf_value(f_f, x)
beta = - gf_value(f, x) // p**s
return linear_congruence(alpha, beta, p)
def csolve_prime(f, p, e=1):
"""
Solutions of f(x) congruent 0 mod(p**e).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import csolve_prime
>>> csolve_prime([1, 1, 7], 3, 1)
[1]
>>> csolve_prime([1, 1, 7], 3, 2)
[1, 4, 7]
Solutions [7, 4, 1] (mod 3**2) are generated by ``_raise_mod_power()``
from solution [1] (mod 3).
"""
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
X1 = [i for i in range(p) if gf_eval(f, i, p, ZZ) == 0]
if e == 1:
return X1
X = []
S = list(zip(X1, [1]*len(X1)))
while S:
x, s = S.pop()
if s == e:
X.append(x)
else:
s1 = s + 1
ps = p**s
S.extend([(x + v*ps, s1) for v in _raise_mod_power(x, s, p, f)])
return sorted(X)
def gf_csolve(f, n):
"""
To solve f(x) congruent 0 mod(n).
n is divided into canonical factors and f(x) cong 0 mod(p**e) will be
solved for each factor. Applying the Chinese Remainder Theorem to the
results returns the final answers.
Examples
========
Solve [1, 1, 7] congruent 0 mod(189):
>>> from sympy.polys.galoistools import gf_csolve
>>> gf_csolve([1, 1, 7], 189)
[13, 49, 76, 112, 139, 175]
References
==========
[1] 'An introduction to the Theory of Numbers' 5th Edition by Ivan Niven,
Zuckerman and Montgomery.
"""
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ
P = factorint(n)
X = [csolve_prime(f, p, e) for p, e in P.items()]
pools = list(map(tuple, X))
perms = [[]]
for pool in pools:
perms = [x + [y] for x in perms for y in pool]
dist_factors = [pow(p, e) for p, e in P.items()]
return sorted([gf_crt(per, dist_factors, ZZ) for per in perms])
|
47aa824c58c468d597a50af2e3d24a504ba551ffc3f3c1f3838ebffa280de511
|
"""High-level polynomials manipulation functions. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy.polys.polytools import (
poly_from_expr, parallel_poly_from_expr, Poly)
from sympy.polys.polyoptions import allowed_flags
from sympy.polys.specialpolys import (
symmetric_poly, interpolating_poly)
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import (
PolificationFailed, ComputationFailed,
MultivariatePolynomialError, OptionError)
from sympy.utilities import numbered_symbols, take, public
from sympy.core import S, Basic, Add, Mul, symbols
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
from sympy.functions.combinatorial.factorials import factorial
@public
def symmetrize(F, *gens, **args):
"""
Rewrite a polynomial in terms of elementary symmetric polynomials.
A symmetric polynomial is a multivariate polynomial that remains invariant
under any variable permutation, i.e., if ``f = f(x_1, x_2, ..., x_n)``,
then ``f = f(x_{i_1}, x_{i_2}, ..., x_{i_n})``, where
``(i_1, i_2, ..., i_n)`` is a permutation of ``(1, 2, ..., n)`` (an
element of the group ``S_n``).
Returns a tuple of symmetric polynomials ``(f1, f2, ..., fn)`` such that
``f = f1 + f2 + ... + fn``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.polyfuncs import symmetrize
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> symmetrize(x**2 + y**2)
(-2*x*y + (x + y)**2, 0)
>>> symmetrize(x**2 + y**2, formal=True)
(s1**2 - 2*s2, 0, [(s1, x + y), (s2, x*y)])
>>> symmetrize(x**2 - y**2)
(-2*x*y + (x + y)**2, -2*y**2)
>>> symmetrize(x**2 - y**2, formal=True)
(s1**2 - 2*s2, -2*y**2, [(s1, x + y), (s2, x*y)])
"""
allowed_flags(args, ['formal', 'symbols'])
iterable = True
if not hasattr(F, '__iter__'):
iterable = False
F = [F]
try:
F, opt = parallel_poly_from_expr(F, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
result = []
for expr in exc.exprs:
if expr.is_Number:
result.append((expr, S.Zero))
else:
raise ComputationFailed('symmetrize', len(F), exc)
else:
if not iterable:
result, = result
if not exc.opt.formal:
return result
else:
if iterable:
return result, []
else:
return result + ([],)
polys, symbols = [], opt.symbols
gens, dom = opt.gens, opt.domain
for i in range(len(gens)):
poly = symmetric_poly(i + 1, gens, polys=True)
polys.append((next(symbols), poly.set_domain(dom)))
indices = list(range(len(gens) - 1))
weights = list(range(len(gens), 0, -1))
result = []
for f in F:
symmetric = []
if not f.is_homogeneous:
symmetric.append(f.TC())
f -= f.TC()
while f:
_height, _monom, _coeff = -1, None, None
for i, (monom, coeff) in enumerate(f.terms()):
if all(monom[i] >= monom[i + 1] for i in indices):
height = max([n*m for n, m in zip(weights, monom)])
if height > _height:
_height, _monom, _coeff = height, monom, coeff
if _height != -1:
monom, coeff = _monom, _coeff
else:
break
exponents = []
for m1, m2 in zip(monom, monom[1:] + (0,)):
exponents.append(m1 - m2)
term = [s**n for (s, _), n in zip(polys, exponents)]
poly = [p**n for (_, p), n in zip(polys, exponents)]
symmetric.append(Mul(coeff, *term))
product = poly[0].mul(coeff)
for p in poly[1:]:
product = product.mul(p)
f -= product
result.append((Add(*symmetric), f.as_expr()))
polys = [(s, p.as_expr()) for s, p in polys]
if not opt.formal:
for i, (sym, non_sym) in enumerate(result):
result[i] = (sym.subs(polys), non_sym)
if not iterable:
result, = result
if not opt.formal:
return result
else:
if iterable:
return result, polys
else:
return result + (polys,)
@public
def horner(f, *gens, **args):
"""
Rewrite a polynomial in Horner form.
Among other applications, evaluation of a polynomial at a point is optimal
when it is applied using the Horner scheme ([1]).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.polyfuncs import horner
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, a, b, c, d, e
>>> horner(9*x**4 + 8*x**3 + 7*x**2 + 6*x + 5)
x*(x*(x*(9*x + 8) + 7) + 6) + 5
>>> horner(a*x**4 + b*x**3 + c*x**2 + d*x + e)
e + x*(d + x*(c + x*(a*x + b)))
>>> f = 4*x**2*y**2 + 2*x**2*y + 2*x*y**2 + x*y
>>> horner(f, wrt=x)
x*(x*y*(4*y + 2) + y*(2*y + 1))
>>> horner(f, wrt=y)
y*(x*y*(4*x + 2) + x*(2*x + 1))
References
==========
[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horner_scheme
"""
allowed_flags(args, [])
try:
F, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
return exc.expr
form, gen = S.Zero, F.gen
if F.is_univariate:
for coeff in F.all_coeffs():
form = form*gen + coeff
else:
F, gens = Poly(F, gen), gens[1:]
for coeff in F.all_coeffs():
form = form*gen + horner(coeff, *gens, **args)
return form
@public
def interpolate(data, x):
"""
Construct an interpolating polynomial for the data points.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.polyfuncs import interpolate
>>> from sympy.abc import x
A list is interpreted as though it were paired with a range starting
from 1:
>>> interpolate([1, 4, 9, 16], x)
x**2
This can be made explicit by giving a list of coordinates:
>>> interpolate([(1, 1), (2, 4), (3, 9)], x)
x**2
The (x, y) coordinates can also be given as keys and values of a
dictionary (and the points need not be equispaced):
>>> interpolate([(-1, 2), (1, 2), (2, 5)], x)
x**2 + 1
>>> interpolate({-1: 2, 1: 2, 2: 5}, x)
x**2 + 1
"""
n = len(data)
poly = None
if isinstance(data, dict):
X, Y = list(zip(*data.items()))
poly = interpolating_poly(n, x, X, Y)
else:
if isinstance(data[0], tuple):
X, Y = list(zip(*data))
poly = interpolating_poly(n, x, X, Y)
else:
Y = list(data)
numert = Mul(*[(x - i) for i in range(1, n + 1)])
denom = -factorial(n - 1) if n%2 == 0 else factorial(n - 1)
coeffs = []
for i in range(1, n + 1):
coeffs.append(numert/(x - i)/denom)
denom = denom/(i - n)*i
poly = Add(*[coeff*y for coeff, y in zip(coeffs, Y)])
return poly.expand()
@public
def rational_interpolate(data, degnum, X=symbols('x')):
"""
Returns a rational interpolation, where the data points are element of
any integral domain.
The first argument contains the data (as a list of coordinates). The
``degnum`` argument is the degree in the numerator of the rational
function. Setting it too high will decrease the maximal degree in the
denominator for the same amount of data.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.polyfuncs import rational_interpolate
>>> data = [(1, -210), (2, -35), (3, 105), (4, 231), (5, 350), (6, 465)]
>>> rational_interpolate(data, 2)
(105*x**2 - 525)/(x + 1)
Values do not need to be integers:
>>> from sympy import sympify
>>> x = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
>>> y = sympify("[-1, 0, 2, 22/5, 7, 68/7]")
>>> rational_interpolate(zip(x, y), 2)
(3*x**2 - 7*x + 2)/(x + 1)
The symbol for the variable can be changed if needed:
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> z = symbols('z')
>>> rational_interpolate(data, 2, X=z)
(105*z**2 - 525)/(z + 1)
References
==========
Algorithm is adapted from:
http://axiom-wiki.newsynthesis.org/RationalInterpolation
"""
from sympy.matrices.dense import ones
xdata, ydata = list(zip(*data))
k = len(xdata) - degnum - 1
if k < 0:
raise OptionError("Too few values for the required degree.")
c = ones(degnum + k + 1, degnum + k + 2)
for j in range(max(degnum, k)):
for i in range(degnum + k + 1):
c[i, j + 1] = c[i, j]*xdata[i]
for j in range(k + 1):
for i in range(degnum + k + 1):
c[i, degnum + k + 1 - j] = -c[i, k - j]*ydata[i]
r = c.nullspace()[0]
return (sum(r[i] * X**i for i in range(degnum + 1))
/ sum(r[i + degnum + 1] * X**i for i in range(k + 1)))
@public
def viete(f, roots=None, *gens, **args):
"""
Generate Viete's formulas for ``f``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.polyfuncs import viete
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> x, a, b, c, r1, r2 = symbols('x,a:c,r1:3')
>>> viete(a*x**2 + b*x + c, [r1, r2], x)
[(r1 + r2, -b/a), (r1*r2, c/a)]
"""
allowed_flags(args, [])
if isinstance(roots, Basic):
gens, roots = (roots,) + gens, None
try:
f, opt = poly_from_expr(f, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed as exc:
raise ComputationFailed('viete', 1, exc)
if f.is_multivariate:
raise MultivariatePolynomialError(
"multivariate polynomials are not allowed")
n = f.degree()
if n < 1:
raise ValueError(
"can't derive Viete's formulas for a constant polynomial")
if roots is None:
roots = numbered_symbols('r', start=1)
roots = take(roots, n)
if n != len(roots):
raise ValueError("required %s roots, got %s" % (n, len(roots)))
lc, coeffs = f.LC(), f.all_coeffs()
result, sign = [], -1
for i, coeff in enumerate(coeffs[1:]):
poly = symmetric_poly(i + 1, roots)
coeff = sign*(coeff/lc)
result.append((poly, coeff))
sign = -sign
return result
|
787a3f75c55867a3ddf6b2ade70e931ac70b6ad7bf7ffd4364c1e67129a356fc
|
"""Computational algebraic field theory. """
from __future__ import print_function, division
from sympy import (
S, Rational, AlgebraicNumber,
Add, Mul, sympify, Dummy, expand_mul, I, pi
)
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import exp
from sympy.functions.elementary.trigonometric import cos, sin
from sympy.polys.polytools import (
Poly, PurePoly, sqf_norm, invert, factor_list, groebner, resultant,
degree, poly_from_expr, parallel_poly_from_expr, lcm
)
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import (
IsomorphismFailed,
CoercionFailed,
NotAlgebraic,
GeneratorsError,
)
from sympy.polys.rootoftools import CRootOf
from sympy.polys.specialpolys import cyclotomic_poly
from sympy.polys.polyutils import dict_from_expr, expr_from_dict
from sympy.polys.domains import ZZ, QQ
from sympy.polys.orthopolys import dup_chebyshevt
from sympy.polys.rings import ring
from sympy.polys.ring_series import rs_compose_add
from sympy.printing.lambdarepr import LambdaPrinter
from sympy.utilities import (
numbered_symbols, variations, lambdify, public, sift
)
from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
from sympy.core.function import _mexpand
from sympy.simplify.radsimp import _split_gcd
from sympy.simplify.simplify import _is_sum_surds
from sympy.ntheory import sieve
from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import divisors
from mpmath import pslq, mp
from sympy.core.compatibility import reduce
from sympy.core.compatibility import range
def _choose_factor(factors, x, v, dom=QQ, prec=200, bound=5):
"""
Return a factor having root ``v``
It is assumed that one of the factors has root ``v``.
"""
if isinstance(factors[0], tuple):
factors = [f[0] for f in factors]
if len(factors) == 1:
return factors[0]
points = {x:v}
symbols = dom.symbols if hasattr(dom, 'symbols') else []
t = QQ(1, 10)
for n in range(bound**len(symbols)):
prec1 = 10
n_temp = n
for s in symbols:
points[s] = n_temp % bound
n_temp = n_temp // bound
while True:
candidates = []
eps = t**(prec1 // 2)
for f in factors:
if abs(f.as_expr().evalf(prec1, points)) < eps:
candidates.append(f)
if candidates:
factors = candidates
if len(factors) == 1:
return factors[0]
if prec1 > prec:
break
prec1 *= 2
raise NotImplementedError("multiple candidates for the minimal polynomial of %s" % v)
def _separate_sq(p):
"""
helper function for ``_minimal_polynomial_sq``
It selects a rational ``g`` such that the polynomial ``p``
consists of a sum of terms whose surds squared have gcd equal to ``g``
and a sum of terms with surds squared prime with ``g``;
then it takes the field norm to eliminate ``sqrt(g)``
See simplify.simplify.split_surds and polytools.sqf_norm.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> from sympy.polys.numberfields import _separate_sq
>>> p= -x + sqrt(2) + sqrt(3) + sqrt(7)
>>> p = _separate_sq(p); p
-x**2 + 2*sqrt(3)*x + 2*sqrt(7)*x - 2*sqrt(21) - 8
>>> p = _separate_sq(p); p
-x**4 + 4*sqrt(7)*x**3 - 32*x**2 + 8*sqrt(7)*x + 20
>>> p = _separate_sq(p); p
-x**8 + 48*x**6 - 536*x**4 + 1728*x**2 - 400
"""
from sympy.utilities.iterables import sift
def is_sqrt(expr):
return expr.is_Pow and expr.exp is S.Half
# p = c1*sqrt(q1) + ... + cn*sqrt(qn) -> a = [(c1, q1), .., (cn, qn)]
a = []
for y in p.args:
if not y.is_Mul:
if is_sqrt(y):
a.append((S.One, y**2))
elif y.is_Atom:
a.append((y, S.One))
elif y.is_Pow and y.exp.is_integer:
a.append((y, S.One))
else:
raise NotImplementedError
continue
T, F = sift(y.args, is_sqrt, binary=True)
a.append((Mul(*F), Mul(*T)**2))
a.sort(key=lambda z: z[1])
if a[-1][1] is S.One:
# there are no surds
return p
surds = [z for y, z in a]
for i in range(len(surds)):
if surds[i] != 1:
break
g, b1, b2 = _split_gcd(*surds[i:])
a1 = []
a2 = []
for y, z in a:
if z in b1:
a1.append(y*z**S.Half)
else:
a2.append(y*z**S.Half)
p1 = Add(*a1)
p2 = Add(*a2)
p = _mexpand(p1**2) - _mexpand(p2**2)
return p
def _minimal_polynomial_sq(p, n, x):
"""
Returns the minimal polynomial for the ``nth-root`` of a sum of surds
or ``None`` if it fails.
Parameters
==========
p : sum of surds
n : positive integer
x : variable of the returned polynomial
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.polys.numberfields import _minimal_polynomial_sq
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> q = 1 + sqrt(2) + sqrt(3)
>>> _minimal_polynomial_sq(q, 3, x)
x**12 - 4*x**9 - 4*x**6 + 16*x**3 - 8
"""
from sympy.simplify.simplify import _is_sum_surds
p = sympify(p)
n = sympify(n)
r = _is_sum_surds(p)
if not n.is_Integer or not n > 0 or not _is_sum_surds(p):
return None
pn = p**Rational(1, n)
# eliminate the square roots
p -= x
while 1:
p1 = _separate_sq(p)
if p1 is p:
p = p1.subs({x:x**n})
break
else:
p = p1
# _separate_sq eliminates field extensions in a minimal way, so that
# if n = 1 then `p = constant*(minimal_polynomial(p))`
# if n > 1 it contains the minimal polynomial as a factor.
if n == 1:
p1 = Poly(p)
if p.coeff(x**p1.degree(x)) < 0:
p = -p
p = p.primitive()[1]
return p
# by construction `p` has root `pn`
# the minimal polynomial is the factor vanishing in x = pn
factors = factor_list(p)[1]
result = _choose_factor(factors, x, pn)
return result
def _minpoly_op_algebraic_element(op, ex1, ex2, x, dom, mp1=None, mp2=None):
"""
return the minimal polynomial for ``op(ex1, ex2)``
Parameters
==========
op : operation ``Add`` or ``Mul``
ex1, ex2 : expressions for the algebraic elements
x : indeterminate of the polynomials
dom: ground domain
mp1, mp2 : minimal polynomials for ``ex1`` and ``ex2`` or None
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt, Add, Mul, QQ
>>> from sympy.polys.numberfields import _minpoly_op_algebraic_element
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> p1 = sqrt(sqrt(2) + 1)
>>> p2 = sqrt(sqrt(2) - 1)
>>> _minpoly_op_algebraic_element(Mul, p1, p2, x, QQ)
x - 1
>>> q1 = sqrt(y)
>>> q2 = 1 / y
>>> _minpoly_op_algebraic_element(Add, q1, q2, x, QQ.frac_field(y))
x**2*y**2 - 2*x*y - y**3 + 1
References
==========
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resultant
[2] I.M. Isaacs, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 25 (1970), 638
"Degrees of sums in a separable field extension".
"""
y = Dummy(str(x))
if mp1 is None:
mp1 = _minpoly_compose(ex1, x, dom)
if mp2 is None:
mp2 = _minpoly_compose(ex2, y, dom)
else:
mp2 = mp2.subs({x: y})
if op is Add:
# mp1a = mp1.subs({x: x - y})
if dom == QQ:
R, X = ring('X', QQ)
p1 = R(dict_from_expr(mp1)[0])
p2 = R(dict_from_expr(mp2)[0])
else:
(p1, p2), _ = parallel_poly_from_expr((mp1, x - y), x, y)
r = p1.compose(p2)
mp1a = r.as_expr()
elif op is Mul:
mp1a = _muly(mp1, x, y)
else:
raise NotImplementedError('option not available')
if op is Mul or dom != QQ:
r = resultant(mp1a, mp2, gens=[y, x])
else:
r = rs_compose_add(p1, p2)
r = expr_from_dict(r.as_expr_dict(), x)
deg1 = degree(mp1, x)
deg2 = degree(mp2, y)
if op is Mul and deg1 == 1 or deg2 == 1:
# if deg1 = 1, then mp1 = x - a; mp1a = x - y - a;
# r = mp2(x - a), so that `r` is irreducible
return r
r = Poly(r, x, domain=dom)
_, factors = r.factor_list()
res = _choose_factor(factors, x, op(ex1, ex2), dom)
return res.as_expr()
def _invertx(p, x):
"""
Returns ``expand_mul(x**degree(p, x)*p.subs(x, 1/x))``
"""
p1 = poly_from_expr(p, x)[0]
n = degree(p1)
a = [c * x**(n - i) for (i,), c in p1.terms()]
return Add(*a)
def _muly(p, x, y):
"""
Returns ``_mexpand(y**deg*p.subs({x:x / y}))``
"""
p1 = poly_from_expr(p, x)[0]
n = degree(p1)
a = [c * x**i * y**(n - i) for (i,), c in p1.terms()]
return Add(*a)
def _minpoly_pow(ex, pw, x, dom, mp=None):
"""
Returns ``minpoly(ex**pw, x)``
Parameters
==========
ex : algebraic element
pw : rational number
x : indeterminate of the polynomial
dom: ground domain
mp : minimal polynomial of ``p``
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt, QQ, Rational
>>> from sympy.polys.numberfields import _minpoly_pow, minpoly
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> p = sqrt(1 + sqrt(2))
>>> _minpoly_pow(p, 2, x, QQ)
x**2 - 2*x - 1
>>> minpoly(p**2, x)
x**2 - 2*x - 1
>>> _minpoly_pow(y, Rational(1, 3), x, QQ.frac_field(y))
x**3 - y
>>> minpoly(y**Rational(1, 3), x)
x**3 - y
"""
pw = sympify(pw)
if not mp:
mp = _minpoly_compose(ex, x, dom)
if not pw.is_rational:
raise NotAlgebraic("%s doesn't seem to be an algebraic element" % ex)
if pw < 0:
if mp == x:
raise ZeroDivisionError('%s is zero' % ex)
mp = _invertx(mp, x)
if pw == -1:
return mp
pw = -pw
ex = 1/ex
y = Dummy(str(x))
mp = mp.subs({x: y})
n, d = pw.as_numer_denom()
res = Poly(resultant(mp, x**d - y**n, gens=[y]), x, domain=dom)
_, factors = res.factor_list()
res = _choose_factor(factors, x, ex**pw, dom)
return res.as_expr()
def _minpoly_add(x, dom, *a):
"""
returns ``minpoly(Add(*a), dom, x)``
"""
mp = _minpoly_op_algebraic_element(Add, a[0], a[1], x, dom)
p = a[0] + a[1]
for px in a[2:]:
mp = _minpoly_op_algebraic_element(Add, p, px, x, dom, mp1=mp)
p = p + px
return mp
def _minpoly_mul(x, dom, *a):
"""
returns ``minpoly(Mul(*a), dom, x)``
"""
mp = _minpoly_op_algebraic_element(Mul, a[0], a[1], x, dom)
p = a[0] * a[1]
for px in a[2:]:
mp = _minpoly_op_algebraic_element(Mul, p, px, x, dom, mp1=mp)
p = p * px
return mp
def _minpoly_sin(ex, x):
"""
Returns the minimal polynomial of ``sin(ex)``
see http://mathworld.wolfram.com/TrigonometryAngles.html
"""
c, a = ex.args[0].as_coeff_Mul()
if a is pi:
if c.is_rational:
n = c.q
q = sympify(n)
if q.is_prime:
# for a = pi*p/q with q odd prime, using chebyshevt
# write sin(q*a) = mp(sin(a))*sin(a);
# the roots of mp(x) are sin(pi*p/q) for p = 1,..., q - 1
a = dup_chebyshevt(n, ZZ)
return Add(*[x**(n - i - 1)*a[i] for i in range(n)])
if c.p == 1:
if q == 9:
return 64*x**6 - 96*x**4 + 36*x**2 - 3
if n % 2 == 1:
# for a = pi*p/q with q odd, use
# sin(q*a) = 0 to see that the minimal polynomial must be
# a factor of dup_chebyshevt(n, ZZ)
a = dup_chebyshevt(n, ZZ)
a = [x**(n - i)*a[i] for i in range(n + 1)]
r = Add(*a)
_, factors = factor_list(r)
res = _choose_factor(factors, x, ex)
return res
expr = ((1 - cos(2*c*pi))/2)**S.Half
res = _minpoly_compose(expr, x, QQ)
return res
raise NotAlgebraic("%s doesn't seem to be an algebraic element" % ex)
def _minpoly_cos(ex, x):
"""
Returns the minimal polynomial of ``cos(ex)``
see http://mathworld.wolfram.com/TrigonometryAngles.html
"""
from sympy import sqrt
c, a = ex.args[0].as_coeff_Mul()
if a is pi:
if c.is_rational:
if c.p == 1:
if c.q == 7:
return 8*x**3 - 4*x**2 - 4*x + 1
if c.q == 9:
return 8*x**3 - 6*x + 1
elif c.p == 2:
q = sympify(c.q)
if q.is_prime:
s = _minpoly_sin(ex, x)
return _mexpand(s.subs({x:sqrt((1 - x)/2)}))
# for a = pi*p/q, cos(q*a) =T_q(cos(a)) = (-1)**p
n = int(c.q)
a = dup_chebyshevt(n, ZZ)
a = [x**(n - i)*a[i] for i in range(n + 1)]
r = Add(*a) - (-1)**c.p
_, factors = factor_list(r)
res = _choose_factor(factors, x, ex)
return res
raise NotAlgebraic("%s doesn't seem to be an algebraic element" % ex)
def _minpoly_exp(ex, x):
"""
Returns the minimal polynomial of ``exp(ex)``
"""
c, a = ex.args[0].as_coeff_Mul()
p = sympify(c.p)
q = sympify(c.q)
if a == I*pi:
if c.is_rational:
if c.p == 1 or c.p == -1:
if q == 3:
return x**2 - x + 1
if q == 4:
return x**4 + 1
if q == 6:
return x**4 - x**2 + 1
if q == 8:
return x**8 + 1
if q == 9:
return x**6 - x**3 + 1
if q == 10:
return x**8 - x**6 + x**4 - x**2 + 1
if q.is_prime:
s = 0
for i in range(q):
s += (-x)**i
return s
# x**(2*q) = product(factors)
factors = [cyclotomic_poly(i, x) for i in divisors(2*q)]
mp = _choose_factor(factors, x, ex)
return mp
else:
raise NotAlgebraic("%s doesn't seem to be an algebraic element" % ex)
raise NotAlgebraic("%s doesn't seem to be an algebraic element" % ex)
def _minpoly_rootof(ex, x):
"""
Returns the minimal polynomial of a ``CRootOf`` object.
"""
p = ex.expr
p = p.subs({ex.poly.gens[0]:x})
_, factors = factor_list(p, x)
result = _choose_factor(factors, x, ex)
return result
def _minpoly_compose(ex, x, dom):
"""
Computes the minimal polynomial of an algebraic element
using operations on minimal polynomials
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import minimal_polynomial, sqrt, Rational
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> minimal_polynomial(sqrt(2) + 3*Rational(1, 3), x, compose=True)
x**2 - 2*x - 1
>>> minimal_polynomial(sqrt(y) + 1/y, x, compose=True)
x**2*y**2 - 2*x*y - y**3 + 1
"""
if ex.is_Rational:
return ex.q*x - ex.p
if ex is I:
_, factors = factor_list(x**2 + 1, x, domain=dom)
return x**2 + 1 if len(factors) == 1 else x - I
if hasattr(dom, 'symbols') and ex in dom.symbols:
return x - ex
if dom.is_QQ and _is_sum_surds(ex):
# eliminate the square roots
ex -= x
while 1:
ex1 = _separate_sq(ex)
if ex1 is ex:
return ex
else:
ex = ex1
if ex.is_Add:
res = _minpoly_add(x, dom, *ex.args)
elif ex.is_Mul:
f = Factors(ex).factors
r = sift(f.items(), lambda itx: itx[0].is_Rational and itx[1].is_Rational)
if r[True] and dom == QQ:
ex1 = Mul(*[bx**ex for bx, ex in r[False] + r[None]])
r1 = r[True]
dens = [y.q for _, y in r1]
lcmdens = reduce(lcm, dens, 1)
nums = [base**(y.p*lcmdens // y.q) for base, y in r1]
ex2 = Mul(*nums)
mp1 = minimal_polynomial(ex1, x)
# use the fact that in SymPy canonicalization products of integers
# raised to rational powers are organized in relatively prime
# bases, and that in ``base**(n/d)`` a perfect power is
# simplified with the root
mp2 = ex2.q*x**lcmdens - ex2.p
ex2 = ex2**Rational(1, lcmdens)
res = _minpoly_op_algebraic_element(Mul, ex1, ex2, x, dom, mp1=mp1, mp2=mp2)
else:
res = _minpoly_mul(x, dom, *ex.args)
elif ex.is_Pow:
res = _minpoly_pow(ex.base, ex.exp, x, dom)
elif ex.__class__ is sin:
res = _minpoly_sin(ex, x)
elif ex.__class__ is cos:
res = _minpoly_cos(ex, x)
elif ex.__class__ is exp:
res = _minpoly_exp(ex, x)
elif ex.__class__ is CRootOf:
res = _minpoly_rootof(ex, x)
else:
raise NotAlgebraic("%s doesn't seem to be an algebraic element" % ex)
return res
@public
def minimal_polynomial(ex, x=None, compose=True, polys=False, domain=None):
"""
Computes the minimal polynomial of an algebraic element.
Parameters
==========
ex : Expr
Element or expression whose minimal polynomial is to be calculated.
x : Symbol, optional
Independent variable of the minimal polynomial
compose : boolean, optional (default=True)
Method to use for computing minimal polynomial. If ``compose=True``
(default) then ``_minpoly_compose`` is used, if ``compose=False`` then
groebner bases are used.
polys : boolean, optional (default=False)
If ``True`` returns a ``Poly`` object else an ``Expr`` object.
domain : Domain, optional
Ground domain
Notes
=====
By default ``compose=True``, the minimal polynomial of the subexpressions of ``ex``
are computed, then the arithmetic operations on them are performed using the resultant
and factorization.
If ``compose=False``, a bottom-up algorithm is used with ``groebner``.
The default algorithm stalls less frequently.
If no ground domain is given, it will be generated automatically from the expression.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import minimal_polynomial, sqrt, solve, QQ
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> minimal_polynomial(sqrt(2), x)
x**2 - 2
>>> minimal_polynomial(sqrt(2), x, domain=QQ.algebraic_field(sqrt(2)))
x - sqrt(2)
>>> minimal_polynomial(sqrt(2) + sqrt(3), x)
x**4 - 10*x**2 + 1
>>> minimal_polynomial(solve(x**3 + x + 3)[0], x)
x**3 + x + 3
>>> minimal_polynomial(sqrt(y), x)
x**2 - y
"""
from sympy.polys.polytools import degree
from sympy.polys.domains import FractionField
from sympy.core.basic import preorder_traversal
ex = sympify(ex)
if ex.is_number:
# not sure if it's always needed but try it for numbers (issue 8354)
ex = _mexpand(ex, recursive=True)
for expr in preorder_traversal(ex):
if expr.is_AlgebraicNumber:
compose = False
break
if x is not None:
x, cls = sympify(x), Poly
else:
x, cls = Dummy('x'), PurePoly
if not domain:
if ex.free_symbols:
domain = FractionField(QQ, list(ex.free_symbols))
else:
domain = QQ
if hasattr(domain, 'symbols') and x in domain.symbols:
raise GeneratorsError("the variable %s is an element of the ground "
"domain %s" % (x, domain))
if compose:
result = _minpoly_compose(ex, x, domain)
result = result.primitive()[1]
c = result.coeff(x**degree(result, x))
if c.is_negative:
result = expand_mul(-result)
return cls(result, x, field=True) if polys else result.collect(x)
if not domain.is_QQ:
raise NotImplementedError("groebner method only works for QQ")
result = _minpoly_groebner(ex, x, cls)
return cls(result, x, field=True) if polys else result.collect(x)
def _minpoly_groebner(ex, x, cls):
"""
Computes the minimal polynomial of an algebraic number
using Groebner bases
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import minimal_polynomial, sqrt, Rational
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> minimal_polynomial(sqrt(2) + 3*Rational(1, 3), x, compose=False)
x**2 - 2*x - 1
"""
from sympy.polys.polytools import degree
from sympy.core.function import expand_multinomial
generator = numbered_symbols('a', cls=Dummy)
mapping, symbols, replace = {}, {}, []
def update_mapping(ex, exp, base=None):
a = next(generator)
symbols[ex] = a
if base is not None:
mapping[ex] = a**exp + base
else:
mapping[ex] = exp.as_expr(a)
return a
def bottom_up_scan(ex):
if ex.is_Atom:
if ex is S.ImaginaryUnit:
if ex not in mapping:
return update_mapping(ex, 2, 1)
else:
return symbols[ex]
elif ex.is_Rational:
return ex
elif ex.is_Add:
return Add(*[ bottom_up_scan(g) for g in ex.args ])
elif ex.is_Mul:
return Mul(*[ bottom_up_scan(g) for g in ex.args ])
elif ex.is_Pow:
if ex.exp.is_Rational:
if ex.exp < 0 and ex.base.is_Add:
coeff, terms = ex.base.as_coeff_add()
elt, _ = primitive_element(terms, polys=True)
alg = ex.base - coeff
# XXX: turn this into eval()
inverse = invert(elt.gen + coeff, elt).as_expr()
base = inverse.subs(elt.gen, alg).expand()
if ex.exp == -1:
return bottom_up_scan(base)
else:
ex = base**(-ex.exp)
if not ex.exp.is_Integer:
base, exp = (
ex.base**ex.exp.p).expand(), Rational(1, ex.exp.q)
else:
base, exp = ex.base, ex.exp
base = bottom_up_scan(base)
expr = base**exp
if expr not in mapping:
return update_mapping(expr, 1/exp, -base)
else:
return symbols[expr]
elif ex.is_AlgebraicNumber:
if ex.root not in mapping:
return update_mapping(ex.root, ex.minpoly)
else:
return symbols[ex.root]
raise NotAlgebraic("%s doesn't seem to be an algebraic number" % ex)
def simpler_inverse(ex):
"""
Returns True if it is more likely that the minimal polynomial
algorithm works better with the inverse
"""
if ex.is_Pow:
if (1/ex.exp).is_integer and ex.exp < 0:
if ex.base.is_Add:
return True
if ex.is_Mul:
hit = True
a = []
for p in ex.args:
if p.is_Add:
return False
if p.is_Pow:
if p.base.is_Add and p.exp > 0:
return False
if hit:
return True
return False
inverted = False
ex = expand_multinomial(ex)
if ex.is_AlgebraicNumber:
return ex.minpoly.as_expr(x)
elif ex.is_Rational:
result = ex.q*x - ex.p
else:
inverted = simpler_inverse(ex)
if inverted:
ex = ex**-1
res = None
if ex.is_Pow and (1/ex.exp).is_Integer:
n = 1/ex.exp
res = _minimal_polynomial_sq(ex.base, n, x)
elif _is_sum_surds(ex):
res = _minimal_polynomial_sq(ex, S.One, x)
if res is not None:
result = res
if res is None:
bus = bottom_up_scan(ex)
F = [x - bus] + list(mapping.values())
G = groebner(F, list(symbols.values()) + [x], order='lex')
_, factors = factor_list(G[-1])
# by construction G[-1] has root `ex`
result = _choose_factor(factors, x, ex)
if inverted:
result = _invertx(result, x)
if result.coeff(x**degree(result, x)) < 0:
result = expand_mul(-result)
return result
minpoly = minimal_polynomial
__all__.append('minpoly')
def _coeffs_generator(n):
"""Generate coefficients for `primitive_element()`. """
for coeffs in variations([1, -1, 2, -2, 3, -3], n, repetition=True):
# Two linear combinations with coeffs of opposite signs are
# opposites of each other. Hence it suffices to test only one.
if coeffs[0] > 0:
yield list(coeffs)
@public
def primitive_element(extension, x=None, **args):
"""Construct a common number field for all extensions. """
if not extension:
raise ValueError("can't compute primitive element for empty extension")
if x is not None:
x, cls = sympify(x), Poly
else:
x, cls = Dummy('x'), PurePoly
if not args.get('ex', False):
gen, coeffs = extension[0], [1]
# XXX when minimal_polynomial is extended to work
# with AlgebraicNumbers this test can be removed
if isinstance(gen, AlgebraicNumber):
g = gen.minpoly.replace(x)
else:
g = minimal_polynomial(gen, x, polys=True)
for ext in extension[1:]:
_, factors = factor_list(g, extension=ext)
g = _choose_factor(factors, x, gen)
s, _, g = g.sqf_norm()
gen += s*ext
coeffs.append(s)
if not args.get('polys', False):
return g.as_expr(), coeffs
else:
return cls(g), coeffs
generator = numbered_symbols('y', cls=Dummy)
F, Y = [], []
for ext in extension:
y = next(generator)
if ext.is_Poly:
if ext.is_univariate:
f = ext.as_expr(y)
else:
raise ValueError("expected minimal polynomial, got %s" % ext)
else:
f = minpoly(ext, y)
F.append(f)
Y.append(y)
coeffs_generator = args.get('coeffs', _coeffs_generator)
for coeffs in coeffs_generator(len(Y)):
f = x - sum([ c*y for c, y in zip(coeffs, Y)])
G = groebner(F + [f], Y + [x], order='lex', field=True)
H, g = G[:-1], cls(G[-1], x, domain='QQ')
for i, (h, y) in enumerate(zip(H, Y)):
try:
H[i] = Poly(y - h, x,
domain='QQ').all_coeffs() # XXX: composite=False
except CoercionFailed: # pragma: no cover
break # G is not a triangular set
else:
break
else: # pragma: no cover
raise RuntimeError("run out of coefficient configurations")
_, g = g.clear_denoms()
if not args.get('polys', False):
return g.as_expr(), coeffs, H
else:
return g, coeffs, H
def is_isomorphism_possible(a, b):
"""Returns `True` if there is a chance for isomorphism. """
n = a.minpoly.degree()
m = b.minpoly.degree()
if m % n != 0:
return False
if n == m:
return True
da = a.minpoly.discriminant()
db = b.minpoly.discriminant()
i, k, half = 1, m//n, db//2
while True:
p = sieve[i]
P = p**k
if P > half:
break
if ((da % p) % 2) and not (db % P):
return False
i += 1
return True
def field_isomorphism_pslq(a, b):
"""Construct field isomorphism using PSLQ algorithm. """
if not a.root.is_real or not b.root.is_real:
raise NotImplementedError("PSLQ doesn't support complex coefficients")
f = a.minpoly
g = b.minpoly.replace(f.gen)
n, m, prev = 100, b.minpoly.degree(), None
for i in range(1, 5):
A = a.root.evalf(n)
B = b.root.evalf(n)
basis = [1, B] + [ B**i for i in range(2, m) ] + [A]
dps, mp.dps = mp.dps, n
coeffs = pslq(basis, maxcoeff=int(1e10), maxsteps=1000)
mp.dps = dps
if coeffs is None:
break
if coeffs != prev:
prev = coeffs
else:
break
coeffs = [S(c)/coeffs[-1] for c in coeffs[:-1]]
while not coeffs[-1]:
coeffs.pop()
coeffs = list(reversed(coeffs))
h = Poly(coeffs, f.gen, domain='QQ')
if f.compose(h).rem(g).is_zero:
d, approx = len(coeffs) - 1, 0
for i, coeff in enumerate(coeffs):
approx += coeff*B**(d - i)
if A*approx < 0:
return [ -c for c in coeffs ]
else:
return coeffs
elif f.compose(-h).rem(g).is_zero:
return [ -c for c in coeffs ]
else:
n *= 2
return None
def field_isomorphism_factor(a, b):
"""Construct field isomorphism via factorization. """
_, factors = factor_list(a.minpoly, extension=b)
for f, _ in factors:
if f.degree() == 1:
coeffs = f.rep.TC().to_sympy_list()
d, terms = len(coeffs) - 1, []
for i, coeff in enumerate(coeffs):
terms.append(coeff*b.root**(d - i))
root = Add(*terms)
if (a.root - root).evalf(chop=True) == 0:
return coeffs
if (a.root + root).evalf(chop=True) == 0:
return [ -c for c in coeffs ]
else:
return None
@public
def field_isomorphism(a, b, **args):
"""Construct an isomorphism between two number fields. """
a, b = sympify(a), sympify(b)
if not a.is_AlgebraicNumber:
a = AlgebraicNumber(a)
if not b.is_AlgebraicNumber:
b = AlgebraicNumber(b)
if a == b:
return a.coeffs()
n = a.minpoly.degree()
m = b.minpoly.degree()
if n == 1:
return [a.root]
if m % n != 0:
return None
if args.get('fast', True):
try:
result = field_isomorphism_pslq(a, b)
if result is not None:
return result
except NotImplementedError:
pass
return field_isomorphism_factor(a, b)
@public
def to_number_field(extension, theta=None, **args):
"""Express `extension` in the field generated by `theta`. """
gen = args.get('gen')
if hasattr(extension, '__iter__'):
extension = list(extension)
else:
extension = [extension]
if len(extension) == 1 and type(extension[0]) is tuple:
return AlgebraicNumber(extension[0])
minpoly, coeffs = primitive_element(extension, gen, polys=True)
root = sum([ coeff*ext for coeff, ext in zip(coeffs, extension) ])
if theta is None:
return AlgebraicNumber((minpoly, root))
else:
theta = sympify(theta)
if not theta.is_AlgebraicNumber:
theta = AlgebraicNumber(theta, gen=gen)
coeffs = field_isomorphism(root, theta)
if coeffs is not None:
return AlgebraicNumber(theta, coeffs)
else:
raise IsomorphismFailed(
"%s is not in a subfield of %s" % (root, theta.root))
class IntervalPrinter(LambdaPrinter):
"""Use ``lambda`` printer but print numbers as ``mpi`` intervals. """
def _print_Integer(self, expr):
return "mpi('%s')" % super(IntervalPrinter, self)._print_Integer(expr)
def _print_Rational(self, expr):
return "mpi('%s')" % super(IntervalPrinter, self)._print_Rational(expr)
def _print_Pow(self, expr):
return super(IntervalPrinter, self)._print_Pow(expr, rational=True)
@public
def isolate(alg, eps=None, fast=False):
"""Give a rational isolating interval for an algebraic number. """
alg = sympify(alg)
if alg.is_Rational:
return (alg, alg)
elif not alg.is_real:
raise NotImplementedError(
"complex algebraic numbers are not supported")
func = lambdify((), alg, modules="mpmath", printer=IntervalPrinter())
poly = minpoly(alg, polys=True)
intervals = poly.intervals(sqf=True)
dps, done = mp.dps, False
try:
while not done:
alg = func()
for a, b in intervals:
if a <= alg.a and alg.b <= b:
done = True
break
else:
mp.dps *= 2
finally:
mp.dps = dps
if eps is not None:
a, b = poly.refine_root(a, b, eps=eps, fast=fast)
return (a, b)
|
11b49c227154a52359460a16f29e1a0beb60365576cf0fca26051ff5c9d21858
|
from sympy.core.basic import Basic
from sympy import (sympify, eye, sin, cos, rot_axis1, rot_axis2,
rot_axis3, ImmutableMatrix as Matrix, Symbol)
from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
import sympy.vector
class Orienter(Basic):
"""
Super-class for all orienter classes.
"""
def rotation_matrix(self):
"""
The rotation matrix corresponding to this orienter
instance.
"""
return self._parent_orient
class AxisOrienter(Orienter):
"""
Class to denote an axis orienter.
"""
def __new__(cls, angle, axis):
if not isinstance(axis, sympy.vector.Vector):
raise TypeError("axis should be a Vector")
angle = sympify(angle)
obj = super(AxisOrienter, cls).__new__(cls, angle,
axis)
obj._angle = angle
obj._axis = axis
return obj
def __init__(self, angle, axis):
"""
Axis rotation is a rotation about an arbitrary axis by
some angle. The angle is supplied as a SymPy expr scalar, and
the axis is supplied as a Vector.
Parameters
==========
angle : Expr
The angle by which the new system is to be rotated
axis : Vector
The axis around which the rotation has to be performed
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.vector import CoordSys3D
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> q1 = symbols('q1')
>>> N = CoordSys3D('N')
>>> from sympy.vector import AxisOrienter
>>> orienter = AxisOrienter(q1, N.i + 2 * N.j)
>>> B = N.orient_new('B', (orienter, ))
"""
# Dummy initializer for docstrings
pass
@cacheit
def rotation_matrix(self, system):
"""
The rotation matrix corresponding to this orienter
instance.
Parameters
==========
system : CoordSys3D
The coordinate system wrt which the rotation matrix
is to be computed
"""
axis = sympy.vector.express(self.axis, system).normalize()
axis = axis.to_matrix(system)
theta = self.angle
parent_orient = ((eye(3) - axis * axis.T) * cos(theta) +
Matrix([[0, -axis[2], axis[1]],
[axis[2], 0, -axis[0]],
[-axis[1], axis[0], 0]]) * sin(theta) +
axis * axis.T)
parent_orient = parent_orient.T
return parent_orient
@property
def angle(self):
return self._angle
@property
def axis(self):
return self._axis
class ThreeAngleOrienter(Orienter):
"""
Super-class for Body and Space orienters.
"""
def __new__(cls, angle1, angle2, angle3, rot_order):
approved_orders = ('123', '231', '312', '132', '213',
'321', '121', '131', '212', '232',
'313', '323', '')
original_rot_order = rot_order
rot_order = str(rot_order).upper()
if not (len(rot_order) == 3):
raise TypeError('rot_order should be a str of length 3')
rot_order = [i.replace('X', '1') for i in rot_order]
rot_order = [i.replace('Y', '2') for i in rot_order]
rot_order = [i.replace('Z', '3') for i in rot_order]
rot_order = ''.join(rot_order)
if rot_order not in approved_orders:
raise TypeError('Invalid rot_type parameter')
a1 = int(rot_order[0])
a2 = int(rot_order[1])
a3 = int(rot_order[2])
angle1 = sympify(angle1)
angle2 = sympify(angle2)
angle3 = sympify(angle3)
if cls._in_order:
parent_orient = (_rot(a1, angle1) *
_rot(a2, angle2) *
_rot(a3, angle3))
else:
parent_orient = (_rot(a3, angle3) *
_rot(a2, angle2) *
_rot(a1, angle1))
parent_orient = parent_orient.T
obj = super(ThreeAngleOrienter, cls).__new__(
cls, angle1, angle2, angle3, Symbol(original_rot_order))
obj._angle1 = angle1
obj._angle2 = angle2
obj._angle3 = angle3
obj._rot_order = original_rot_order
obj._parent_orient = parent_orient
return obj
@property
def angle1(self):
return self._angle1
@property
def angle2(self):
return self._angle2
@property
def angle3(self):
return self._angle3
@property
def rot_order(self):
return self._rot_order
class BodyOrienter(ThreeAngleOrienter):
"""
Class to denote a body-orienter.
"""
_in_order = True
def __new__(cls, angle1, angle2, angle3, rot_order):
obj = ThreeAngleOrienter.__new__(cls, angle1, angle2, angle3,
rot_order)
return obj
def __init__(self, angle1, angle2, angle3, rot_order):
"""
Body orientation takes this coordinate system through three
successive simple rotations.
Body fixed rotations include both Euler Angles and
Tait-Bryan Angles, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler_angles.
Parameters
==========
angle1, angle2, angle3 : Expr
Three successive angles to rotate the coordinate system by
rotation_order : string
String defining the order of axes for rotation
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.vector import CoordSys3D, BodyOrienter
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> q1, q2, q3 = symbols('q1 q2 q3')
>>> N = CoordSys3D('N')
A 'Body' fixed rotation is described by three angles and
three body-fixed rotation axes. To orient a coordinate system D
with respect to N, each sequential rotation is always about
the orthogonal unit vectors fixed to D. For example, a '123'
rotation will specify rotations about N.i, then D.j, then
D.k. (Initially, D.i is same as N.i)
Therefore,
>>> body_orienter = BodyOrienter(q1, q2, q3, '123')
>>> D = N.orient_new('D', (body_orienter, ))
is same as
>>> from sympy.vector import AxisOrienter
>>> axis_orienter1 = AxisOrienter(q1, N.i)
>>> D = N.orient_new('D', (axis_orienter1, ))
>>> axis_orienter2 = AxisOrienter(q2, D.j)
>>> D = D.orient_new('D', (axis_orienter2, ))
>>> axis_orienter3 = AxisOrienter(q3, D.k)
>>> D = D.orient_new('D', (axis_orienter3, ))
Acceptable rotation orders are of length 3, expressed in XYZ or
123, and cannot have a rotation about about an axis twice in a row.
>>> body_orienter1 = BodyOrienter(q1, q2, q3, '123')
>>> body_orienter2 = BodyOrienter(q1, q2, 0, 'ZXZ')
>>> body_orienter3 = BodyOrienter(0, 0, 0, 'XYX')
"""
# Dummy initializer for docstrings
pass
class SpaceOrienter(ThreeAngleOrienter):
"""
Class to denote a space-orienter.
"""
_in_order = False
def __new__(cls, angle1, angle2, angle3, rot_order):
obj = ThreeAngleOrienter.__new__(cls, angle1, angle2, angle3,
rot_order)
return obj
def __init__(self, angle1, angle2, angle3, rot_order):
"""
Space rotation is similar to Body rotation, but the rotations
are applied in the opposite order.
Parameters
==========
angle1, angle2, angle3 : Expr
Three successive angles to rotate the coordinate system by
rotation_order : string
String defining the order of axes for rotation
See Also
========
BodyOrienter : Orienter to orient systems wrt Euler angles.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.vector import CoordSys3D, SpaceOrienter
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> q1, q2, q3 = symbols('q1 q2 q3')
>>> N = CoordSys3D('N')
To orient a coordinate system D with respect to N, each
sequential rotation is always about N's orthogonal unit vectors.
For example, a '123' rotation will specify rotations about
N.i, then N.j, then N.k.
Therefore,
>>> space_orienter = SpaceOrienter(q1, q2, q3, '312')
>>> D = N.orient_new('D', (space_orienter, ))
is same as
>>> from sympy.vector import AxisOrienter
>>> axis_orienter1 = AxisOrienter(q1, N.i)
>>> B = N.orient_new('B', (axis_orienter1, ))
>>> axis_orienter2 = AxisOrienter(q2, N.j)
>>> C = B.orient_new('C', (axis_orienter2, ))
>>> axis_orienter3 = AxisOrienter(q3, N.k)
>>> D = C.orient_new('C', (axis_orienter3, ))
"""
# Dummy initializer for docstrings
pass
class QuaternionOrienter(Orienter):
"""
Class to denote a quaternion-orienter.
"""
def __new__(cls, q0, q1, q2, q3):
q0 = sympify(q0)
q1 = sympify(q1)
q2 = sympify(q2)
q3 = sympify(q3)
parent_orient = (Matrix([[q0 ** 2 + q1 ** 2 - q2 ** 2 -
q3 ** 2,
2 * (q1 * q2 - q0 * q3),
2 * (q0 * q2 + q1 * q3)],
[2 * (q1 * q2 + q0 * q3),
q0 ** 2 - q1 ** 2 +
q2 ** 2 - q3 ** 2,
2 * (q2 * q3 - q0 * q1)],
[2 * (q1 * q3 - q0 * q2),
2 * (q0 * q1 + q2 * q3),
q0 ** 2 - q1 ** 2 -
q2 ** 2 + q3 ** 2]]))
parent_orient = parent_orient.T
obj = super(QuaternionOrienter, cls).__new__(cls, q0, q1, q2, q3)
obj._q0 = q0
obj._q1 = q1
obj._q2 = q2
obj._q3 = q3
obj._parent_orient = parent_orient
return obj
def __init__(self, angle1, angle2, angle3, rot_order):
"""
Quaternion orientation orients the new CoordSys3D with
Quaternions, defined as a finite rotation about lambda, a unit
vector, by some amount theta.
This orientation is described by four parameters:
q0 = cos(theta/2)
q1 = lambda_x sin(theta/2)
q2 = lambda_y sin(theta/2)
q3 = lambda_z sin(theta/2)
Quaternion does not take in a rotation order.
Parameters
==========
q0, q1, q2, q3 : Expr
The quaternions to rotate the coordinate system by
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.vector import CoordSys3D
>>> from sympy import symbols
>>> q0, q1, q2, q3 = symbols('q0 q1 q2 q3')
>>> N = CoordSys3D('N')
>>> from sympy.vector import QuaternionOrienter
>>> q_orienter = QuaternionOrienter(q0, q1, q2, q3)
>>> B = N.orient_new('B', (q_orienter, ))
"""
# Dummy initializer for docstrings
pass
@property
def q0(self):
return self._q0
@property
def q1(self):
return self._q1
@property
def q2(self):
return self._q2
@property
def q3(self):
return self._q3
def _rot(axis, angle):
"""DCM for simple axis 1, 2 or 3 rotations. """
if axis == 1:
return Matrix(rot_axis1(angle).T)
elif axis == 2:
return Matrix(rot_axis2(angle).T)
elif axis == 3:
return Matrix(rot_axis3(angle).T)
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