from __future__ import print_function, division
from collections import defaultdict
from sympy import SYMPY_DEBUG
from sympy.core import (Basic, S, C, Add, Mul, Pow, Rational, Integer,
Derivative, Wild, Symbol, sympify, expand, expand_mul, expand_func,
Function, Equality, Dummy, Atom, count_ops, Expr, factor_terms,
expand_multinomial, FunctionClass, expand_power_base, symbols, igcd,
expand_power_exp, expand_log)
from sympy.core.add import _unevaluated_Add
from sympy.core.cache import cacheit
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable, reduce, default_sort_key, ordered, xrange
from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors, gcd_terms
from sympy.core.numbers import Float, Number, I
from sympy.core.function import expand_log, count_ops
from sympy.core.mul import _keep_coeff, prod
from sympy.core.rules import Transform
from sympy.functions import (
gamma, exp, sqrt, log, root, exp_polar,
sin, cos, tan, cot, sinh, cosh, tanh, coth, piecewise_fold, Piecewise)
from sympy.functions.elementary.exponential import ExpBase
from sympy.functions.elementary.integers import ceiling
from sympy.utilities.iterables import flatten, has_variety, sift
from sympy.simplify.cse_main import cse
from sympy.simplify.cse_opts import sub_pre, sub_post
from sympy.simplify.sqrtdenest import sqrtdenest
from sympy.ntheory.factor_ import multiplicity
from sympy.polys import (Poly, together, reduced, cancel, factor,
ComputationFailed, lcm, gcd)
import sympy.mpmath as mpmath
def _mexpand(expr):
return expand_mul(expand_multinomial(expr))
[docs]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
>>> fraction(2*x**(-y))
(2, x**y)
>>> fraction(exp(-x))
(1, exp(x))
>>> fraction(exp(-x), exact=True)
(exp(-x), 1)
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
numer, denom = [], []
for term in Mul.make_args(expr):
if term.is_commutative and (term.is_Pow or term.func is exp):
b, ex = term.as_base_exp()
if ex.is_negative:
if ex is S.NegativeOne:
denom.append(b)
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)
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
[docs]def separate(expr, deep=False, force=False):
"""
Deprecated wrapper for ``expand_power_base()``. Use that function instead.
"""
from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning
SymPyDeprecationWarning(
feature="separate()", useinstead="expand_power_base()", issue=3383,
deprecated_since_version="0.7.2", value="Note: in separate() deep "
"defaults to False, whereas in expand_power_base(), "
"deep defaults to True.",
).warn()
return expand_power_base(sympify(expr), deep=deep, force=force)
[docs]def collect(expr, syms, func=None, evaluate=True, 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, x)
>>> collect(a*D(D(f,x),x) + b*D(D(f,x),x), D(f,x), exact=True)
a*Derivative(f(x), x, x) + b*Derivative(f(x), x, x)
>>> 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, x)**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
"""
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 expr.func is C.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 = C.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_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)
if iterable(syms):
syms = [expand_power_base(i, deep=False) for i in syms]
else:
syms = [expand_power_base(syms, deep=False)]
expr = sympify(expr)
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:
terms = [parse_term(i) for i in Mul.make_args(product)]
for symbol in syms:
if SYMPY_DEBUG:
print("DEBUG: parsing of expression %s with symbol %s " % (
str(terms), str(symbol))
)
result = parse_expression(terms, symbol)
if SYMPY_DEBUG:
print("DEBUG: returned %s" % str(result))
if result is not None:
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:
index = 1
for elem in elems:
e = elem[1]
if elem[2] is not None:
e *= elem[2]
index *= Pow(elem[0], e)
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 = dict([(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
[docs]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
[docs]def separatevars(expr, symbols=[], dict=False, force=False):
"""
Separates variables in an expression, if possible. By
default, it separates with respect to all symbols in an
expression and collects constant coefficients that are
independent of symbols.
If dict=True then the separated terms will be returned
in a dictionary keyed to their corresponding symbols.
By default, all symbols in the expression will appear as
keys; if symbols are provided, then all those symbols will
be used as keys, and any terms in the expression containing
other symbols or non-symbols will be returned keyed to the
string 'coeff'. (Passing None for symbols will return the
expression in a dictionary keyed to 'coeff'.)
If force=True, then bases of powers will be separated regardless
of assumptions on the symbols involved.
Notes
=====
The order of the factors is determined by Mul, so that the
separated expressions may not necessarily be grouped together.
Although factoring is necessary to separate variables in some
expressions, it is not necessary in all cases, so one should not
count on the returned factors being factored.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z, alpha
>>> from sympy import separatevars, sin
>>> separatevars((x*y)**y)
(x*y)**y
>>> separatevars((x*y)**y, force=True)
x**y*y**y
>>> e = 2*x**2*z*sin(y)+2*z*x**2
>>> separatevars(e)
2*x**2*z*(sin(y) + 1)
>>> separatevars(e, symbols=(x, y), dict=True)
{'coeff': 2*z, x: x**2, y: sin(y) + 1}
>>> separatevars(e, [x, y, alpha], dict=True)
{'coeff': 2*z, alpha: 1, x: x**2, y: sin(y) + 1}
If the expression is not really separable, or is only partially
separable, separatevars will do the best it can to separate it
by using factoring.
>>> separatevars(x + x*y - 3*x**2)
-x*(3*x - y - 1)
If the expression is not separable then expr is returned unchanged
or (if dict=True) then None is returned.
>>> eq = 2*x + y*sin(x)
>>> separatevars(eq) == eq
True
>>> separatevars(2*x + y*sin(x), symbols=(x, y), dict=True) == None
True
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
if dict:
return _separatevars_dict(_separatevars(expr, force), symbols)
else:
return _separatevars(expr, force)
def _separatevars(expr, force):
if len(expr.free_symbols) == 1:
return expr
# don't destroy a Mul since much of the work may already be done
if expr.is_Mul:
args = list(expr.args)
changed = False
for i, a in enumerate(args):
args[i] = separatevars(a, force)
changed = changed or args[i] != a
if changed:
expr = expr.func(*args)
return expr
# get a Pow ready for expansion
if expr.is_Pow:
expr = Pow(separatevars(expr.base, force=force), expr.exp)
# First try other expansion methods
expr = expr.expand(mul=False, multinomial=False, force=force)
_expr, reps = posify(expr) if force else (expr, {})
expr = factor(_expr).subs(reps)
if not expr.is_Add:
return expr
# Find any common coefficients to pull out
args = list(expr.args)
commonc = args[0].args_cnc(cset=True, warn=False)[0]
for i in args[1:]:
commonc &= i.args_cnc(cset=True, warn=False)[0]
commonc = Mul(*commonc)
commonc = commonc.as_coeff_Mul()[1] # ignore constants
commonc_set = commonc.args_cnc(cset=True, warn=False)[0]
# remove them
for i, a in enumerate(args):
c, nc = a.args_cnc(cset=True, warn=False)
c = c - commonc_set
args[i] = Mul(*c)*Mul(*nc)
nonsepar = Add(*args)
if len(nonsepar.free_symbols) > 1:
_expr = nonsepar
_expr, reps = posify(_expr) if force else (_expr, {})
_expr = (factor(_expr)).subs(reps)
if not _expr.is_Add:
nonsepar = _expr
return commonc*nonsepar
def _separatevars_dict(expr, symbols):
if symbols:
if not all((t.is_Atom for t in symbols)):
raise ValueError("symbols must be Atoms.")
symbols = list(symbols)
elif symbols is None:
return {'coeff': expr}
else:
symbols = list(expr.free_symbols)
if not symbols:
return None
ret = dict(((i, []) for i in symbols + ['coeff']))
for i in Mul.make_args(expr):
expsym = i.free_symbols
intersection = set(symbols).intersection(expsym)
if len(intersection) > 1:
return None
if len(intersection) == 0:
# There are no symbols, so it is part of the coefficient
ret['coeff'].append(i)
else:
ret[intersection.pop()].append(i)
# rebuild
for k, v in ret.items():
ret[k] = Mul(*v)
return ret
[docs]def ratsimp(expr):
"""
Put an expression over a common denominator, cancel and reduce.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import ratsimp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> ratsimp(1/x + 1/y)
(x + y)/(x*y)
"""
f, g = cancel(expr).as_numer_denom()
try:
Q, r = reduced(f, [g], field=True, expand=False)
except ComputationFailed:
return f/g
return Add(*Q) + cancel(r/g)
def ratsimpmodprime(expr, G, *gens, **args):
"""
Simplifies a rational expression ``expr`` modulo the prime ideal
generated by ``G``. ``G`` should be a Groebner basis of the
ideal.
>>> from sympy.simplify.simplify import ratsimpmodprime
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> eq = (x + y**5 + y)/(x - y)
>>> ratsimpmodprime(eq, [x*y**5 - x - y], x, y, order='lex')
(x**2 + x*y + x + y)/(x**2 - x*y)
If ``polynomial`` is False, the algorithm computes a rational
simplification which minimizes the sum of the total degrees of
the numerator and the denominator.
If ``polynomial`` is True, this function just brings numerator and
denominator into a canonical form. This is much faster, but has
potentially worse results.
References
==========
M. Monagan, R. Pearce, Rational Simplification Modulo a Polynomial
Ideal,
http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.163.6984
(specifically, the second algorithm)
"""
from sympy.polys import parallel_poly_from_expr
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import PolificationFailed, DomainError
from sympy import solve, Monomial
from sympy.polys.monomials import monomial_div
from sympy.core.compatibility import combinations_with_replacement
from sympy.utilities.misc import debug
quick = args.pop('quick', True)
polynomial = args.pop('polynomial', False)
debug('ratsimpmodprime', expr)
# usual preparation of polynomials:
num, denom = cancel(expr).as_numer_denom()
try:
polys, opt = parallel_poly_from_expr([num, denom] + G, *gens, **args)
except PolificationFailed:
return expr
domain = opt.domain
if domain.has_assoc_Field:
opt.domain = domain.get_field()
else:
raise DomainError(
"can't compute rational simplification over %s" % domain)
# compute only once
leading_monomials = [g.LM(opt.order) for g in polys[2:]]
tested = set()
def staircase(n):
"""
Compute all monomials with degree less than ``n`` that are
not divisible by any element of ``leading_monomials``.
"""
if n == 0:
return [1]
S = []
for mi in combinations_with_replacement(xrange(len(opt.gens)), n):
m = [0]*len(opt.gens)
for i in mi:
m[i] += 1
if all([monomial_div(m, lmg) is None for lmg in
leading_monomials]):
S.append(m)
return [Monomial(s).as_expr(*opt.gens) for s in S] + staircase(n - 1)
def _ratsimpmodprime(a, b, allsol, N=0, D=0):
"""
Computes a rational simplification of ``a/b`` which minimizes
the sum of the total degrees of the numerator and the denominator.
The algorithm proceeds by looking at ``a * d - b * c`` modulo
the ideal generated by ``G`` for some ``c`` and ``d`` with degree
less than ``a`` and ``b`` respectively.
The coefficients of ``c`` and ``d`` are indeterminates and thus
the coefficients of the normalform of ``a * d - b * c`` are
linear polynomials in these indeterminates.
If these linear polynomials, considered as system of
equations, have a nontrivial solution, then `\frac{a}{b}
\equiv \frac{c}{d}` modulo the ideal generated by ``G``. So,
by construction, the degree of ``c`` and ``d`` is less than
the degree of ``a`` and ``b``, so a simpler representation
has been found.
After a simpler representation has been found, the algorithm
tries to reduce the degree of the numerator and denominator
and returns the result afterwards.
As an extension, if quick=False, we look at all possible degrees such
that the total degree is less than *or equal to* the best current
solution. We retain a list of all solutions of minimal degree, and try
to find the best one at the end.
"""
c, d = a, b
steps = 0
maxdeg = a.total_degree() + b.total_degree()
if quick:
bound = maxdeg - 1
else:
bound = maxdeg
while N + D <= bound:
if (N, D) in tested:
break
tested.add((N, D))
M1 = staircase(N)
M2 = staircase(D)
debug('%s / %s: %s, %s' % (N, D, M1, M2))
Cs = symbols("c:%d" % len(M1), cls=Dummy)
Ds = symbols("d:%d" % len(M2), cls=Dummy)
ng = Cs + Ds
c_hat = Poly(
sum([Cs[i] * M1[i] for i in xrange(len(M1))]), opt.gens + ng)
d_hat = Poly(
sum([Ds[i] * M2[i] for i in xrange(len(M2))]), opt.gens + ng)
r = reduced(a * d_hat - b * c_hat, G, opt.gens + ng,
order=opt.order, polys=True)[1]
S = Poly(r, gens=opt.gens).coeffs()
sol = solve(S, Cs + Ds, particular=True, quick=True)
if sol and not all([s == 0 for s in sol.values()]):
c = c_hat.subs(sol)
d = d_hat.subs(sol)
# The "free" variables occuring before as parameters
# might still be in the substituted c, d, so set them
# to the value chosen before:
c = c.subs(dict(list(zip(Cs + Ds, [1] * (len(Cs) + len(Ds))))))
d = d.subs(dict(list(zip(Cs + Ds, [1] * (len(Cs) + len(Ds))))))
c = Poly(c, opt.gens)
d = Poly(d, opt.gens)
if d == 0:
raise ValueError('Ideal not prime?')
allsol.append((c_hat, d_hat, S, Cs + Ds))
if N + D != maxdeg:
allsol = [allsol[-1]]
break
steps += 1
N += 1
D += 1
if steps > 0:
c, d, allsol = _ratsimpmodprime(c, d, allsol, N, D - steps)
c, d, allsol = _ratsimpmodprime(c, d, allsol, N - steps, D)
return c, d, allsol
# preprocessing. this improves performance a bit when deg(num)
# and deg(denom) are large:
num = reduced(num, G, opt.gens, order=opt.order)[1]
denom = reduced(denom, G, opt.gens, order=opt.order)[1]
if polynomial:
return (num/denom).cancel()
c, d, allsol = _ratsimpmodprime(
Poly(num, opt.gens), Poly(denom, opt.gens), [])
if not quick and allsol:
debug('Looking for best minimal solution. Got: %s' % len(allsol))
newsol = []
for c_hat, d_hat, S, ng in allsol:
sol = solve(S, ng, particular=True, quick=False)
newsol.append((c_hat.subs(sol), d_hat.subs(sol)))
c, d = min(newsol, key=lambda x: len(x[0].terms()) + len(x[1].terms()))
if not domain.has_Field:
cn, c = c.clear_denoms(convert=True)
dn, d = d.clear_denoms(convert=True)
r = Rational(cn, dn)
return (c*r.q)/(d*r.p)
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.simplify 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.
from sympy.utilities.misc import debug
from sympy import symbols
from sympy.polys import parallel_poly_from_expr, groebner, ZZ
from sympy.polys.polyerrors import PolificationFailed
sin, cos, tan = C.sin, C.cos, C.tan
sinh, cosh, tanh = C.sinh, C.cosh, C.tanh
def parse_hints(hints):
"""Split hints into (n, funcs, iterables, gens)."""
n = 1
funcs, iterables, gens = [], [], []
for e in hints:
if isinstance(e, (int, 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 = set([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 accomodate (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:
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 (implicitely) 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 = (C.TrigonometricFunction, C.HyperbolicFunction)
[docs]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)
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)
[docs]def collect_sqrt(expr, evaluate=True):
"""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.simplify 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
"""
# 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
[docs]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.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import a, s, x, y, z
>>> from sympy.simplify.simplify 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 _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.simplify 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
def _is_sum_surds(p):
args = p.args if p.is_Add else [p]
for y in args:
if not ((y**2).is_Rational and y.is_real):
return False
return True
def _nthroot_solve(p, n, prec):
"""
helper function for ``nthroot``
It denests ``p**Rational(1, n)`` using its minimal polynomial
"""
from sympy.polys.numberfields import _minimal_polynomial_sq
from sympy.solvers import solve
while n % 2 == 0:
p = sqrtdenest(sqrt(p))
n = n // 2
if n == 1:
return p
pn = p**Rational(1, n)
x = Symbol('x')
f = _minimal_polynomial_sq(p, n, x)
if f is None:
return None
sols = solve(f, x)
for sol in sols:
if abs(sol - pn).n() < 1./10**prec:
sol = sqrtdenest(sol)
if _mexpand(sol**n) == p:
return sol
[docs]def nthroot(expr, n, max_len=4, prec=15):
"""
compute a real nth-root of a sum of surds
Parameters
==========
expr : sum of surds
n : integer
max_len : maximum number of surds passed as constants to ``nsimplify``
Algorithm
=========
First ``nsimplify`` is used to get a candidate root; if it is not a
root the minimal polynomial is computed; the answer is one of its
roots.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify.simplify import nthroot
>>> from sympy import Rational, sqrt
>>> nthroot(90 + 34*sqrt(7), 3)
sqrt(7) + 3
"""
from sympy.simplify.sqrtdenest import sqrt_depth, is_algebraic
expr = sympify(expr)
n = sympify(n)
p = expr**Rational(1, n)
if not n.is_integer:
return p
if not _is_sum_surds(expr):
return p
surds = []
coeff_muls = [x.as_coeff_Mul() for x in expr.args]
for x, y in coeff_muls:
if not x.is_rational:
return p
if y is S.One:
continue
if not (y.is_Pow and y.exp == S.Half and y.base.is_integer):
return p
surds.append(y)
surds.sort()
surds = surds[:max_len]
if expr < 0 and n % 2 == 1:
p = (-expr)**Rational(1, n)
a = nsimplify(p, constants=surds)
res = a if _mexpand(a**n) == _mexpand(-expr) else p
return -res
a = nsimplify(p, constants=surds)
if _mexpand(a) is not _mexpand(p) and _mexpand(a**n) == _mexpand(expr):
return _mexpand(a)
expr = _nthroot_solve(expr, n, prec)
if expr is None:
return p
return expr
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.simplify 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
[docs]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.simplify 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)
[docs]def radsimp(expr, symbolic=True, max_terms=4):
"""
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.simplify import collect_sqrt
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, c
>>> radsimp(1/(I + 1))
(1 - I)/2
>>> 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.core.mul import _unevaluated_Mul as _umul
from sympy.core.exprtools import Factors
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 handle(expr):
if expr.is_Atom:
return expr
n, d = fraction(expr)
if d.is_Atom:
# n can't be an Atom since expr is not an Atom
n = n.func(*[handle(a) for a in n.args])
return _umul(n, 1/d)
elif n is not S.One:
return Mul(n, handle(1/d))
elif d.is_Mul:
return _umul(*[handle(1/d) for d in d.args])
if not symbolic and d.free_symbols:
return expr
if d.is_Pow and d.exp.is_Rational and d.exp.q == 2:
d2 = sqrtdenest(sqrt(d.base))**d.exp.p
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 d.is_Pow and d.exp.is_Rational and d.exp.q == 2):
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 i.is_Pow and (i.exp is S.Half or
i.exp.is_Rational and i.exp.q != 1 and
log(i.exp.q, 2).is_Integer):
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
num = powsimp(_num(rterms))
n *= num
d *= num
d = _mexpand(d)
if d.is_Atom:
break
if not keep:
return expr
return _umul(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(_umul(n, 1/d))
u = _umul(*[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(_umul(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 + _umul(n, 1/d)
[docs]def posify(eq):
"""Return eq (with generic symbols made positive) and a restore
dictionary.
Any symbol that has positive=None will be replaced with a positive dummy
symbol having the same name. This replacement will allow more symbolic
processing of expressions, especially those involving powers and
logarithms.
A dictionary that can be sent to subs to restore eq to its original
symbols is also returned.
>>> from sympy import posify, Symbol, log
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> posify(x + Symbol('p', positive=True) + Symbol('n', negative=True))
(_x + n + p, {_x: x})
>> log(1/x).expand() # should be log(1/x) but it comes back as -log(x)
log(1/x)
>>> log(posify(1/x)[0]).expand() # take [0] and ignore replacements
-log(_x)
>>> eq, rep = posify(1/x)
>>> log(eq).expand().subs(rep)
-log(x)
>>> posify([x, 1 + x])
([_x, _x + 1], {_x: x})
"""
eq = sympify(eq)
if iterable(eq):
f = type(eq)
eq = list(eq)
syms = set()
for e in eq:
syms = syms.union(e.atoms(C.Symbol))
reps = {}
for s in syms:
reps.update(dict((v, k) for k, v in posify(s)[1].items()))
for i, e in enumerate(eq):
eq[i] = e.subs(reps)
return f(eq), dict([(r, s) for s, r in reps.items()])
reps = dict([(s, Dummy(s.name, positive=True))
for s in eq.atoms(Symbol) if s.is_positive is None])
eq = eq.subs(reps)
return eq, dict([(r, s) for s, r in reps.items()])
def _polarify(eq, lift, pause=False):
from sympy import polar_lift, Integral
if eq.is_polar:
return eq
if eq.is_number and not pause:
return polar_lift(eq)
if isinstance(eq, Symbol) and not pause and lift:
return polar_lift(eq)
elif eq.is_Atom:
return eq
elif eq.is_Add:
r = eq.func(*[_polarify(arg, lift, pause=True) for arg in eq.args])
if lift:
return polar_lift(r)
return r
elif eq.is_Function:
return eq.func(*[_polarify(arg, lift, pause=False) for arg in eq.args])
elif isinstance(eq, Integral):
# Don't lift the integration variable
func = _polarify(eq.function, lift, pause=pause)
limits = []
for limit in eq.args[1:]:
var = _polarify(limit[0], lift=False, pause=pause)
rest = _polarify(limit[1:], lift=lift, pause=pause)
limits.append((var,) + rest)
return Integral(*((func,) + tuple(limits)))
else:
return eq.func(*[_polarify(arg, lift, pause=pause)
if isinstance(arg, Expr) else arg for arg in eq.args])
def polarify(eq, subs=True, lift=False):
"""
Turn all numbers in eq into their polar equivalents (under the standard
choice of argument).
Note that no attempt is made to guess a formal convention of adding
polar numbers, expressions like 1 + x will generally not be altered.
Note also that this function does not promote exp(x) to exp_polar(x).
If ``subs`` is True, all symbols which are not already polar will be
substituted for polar dummies; in this case the function behaves much
like posify.
If ``lift`` is True, both addition statements and non-polar symbols are
changed to their polar_lift()ed versions.
Note that lift=True implies subs=False.
>>> from sympy import polarify, sin, I
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> expr = (-x)**y
>>> expr.expand()
(-x)**y
>>> polarify(expr)
((_x*exp_polar(I*pi))**_y, {_x: x, _y: y})
>>> polarify(expr)[0].expand()
_x**_y*exp_polar(_y*I*pi)
>>> polarify(x, lift=True)
polar_lift(x)
>>> polarify(x*(1+y), lift=True)
polar_lift(x)*polar_lift(y + 1)
Adds are treated carefully:
>>> polarify(1 + sin((1 + I)*x))
(sin(_x*polar_lift(1 + I)) + 1, {_x: x})
"""
if lift:
subs = False
eq = _polarify(sympify(eq), lift)
if not subs:
return eq
reps = dict([(s, Dummy(s.name, polar=True)) for s in eq.atoms(Symbol)])
eq = eq.subs(reps)
return eq, dict([(r, s) for s, r in reps.items()])
def _unpolarify(eq, exponents_only, pause=False):
from sympy import polar_lift, exp, principal_branch, pi
if isinstance(eq, bool) or eq.is_Atom:
return eq
if not pause:
if eq.func is exp_polar:
return exp(_unpolarify(eq.exp, exponents_only))
if eq.func is principal_branch and eq.args[1] == 2*pi:
return _unpolarify(eq.args[0], exponents_only)
if (
eq.is_Add or eq.is_Mul or eq.is_Boolean or
eq.is_Relational and (
eq.rel_op in ('==', '!=') and 0 in eq.args or
eq.rel_op not in ('==', '!='))
):
return eq.func(*[_unpolarify(x, exponents_only) for x in eq.args])
if eq.func is polar_lift:
return _unpolarify(eq.args[0], exponents_only)
if eq.is_Pow:
expo = _unpolarify(eq.exp, exponents_only)
base = _unpolarify(eq.base, exponents_only,
not (expo.is_integer and not pause))
return base**expo
if eq.is_Function and getattr(eq.func, 'unbranched', False):
return eq.func(*[_unpolarify(x, exponents_only, exponents_only)
for x in eq.args])
return eq.func(*[_unpolarify(x, exponents_only, True) for x in eq.args])
def unpolarify(eq, subs={}, exponents_only=False):
"""
If p denotes the projection from the Riemann surface of the logarithm to
the complex line, return a simplified version eq' of `eq` such that
p(eq') == p(eq).
Also apply the substitution subs in the end. (This is a convenience, since
``unpolarify``, in a certain sense, undoes polarify.)
>>> from sympy import unpolarify, polar_lift, sin, I
>>> unpolarify(polar_lift(I + 2))
2 + I
>>> unpolarify(sin(polar_lift(I + 7)))
sin(7 + I)
"""
from sympy import exp_polar, polar_lift
if isinstance(eq, bool):
return eq
eq = sympify(eq)
if subs != {}:
return unpolarify(eq.subs(subs))
changed = True
pause = False
if exponents_only:
pause = True
while changed:
changed = False
res = _unpolarify(eq, exponents_only, pause)
if res != eq:
changed = True
eq = res
if isinstance(res, bool):
return res
# Finally, replacing Exp(0) by 1 is always correct.
# So is polar_lift(0) -> 0.
return res.subs({exp_polar(0): 1, polar_lift(0): 0})
def _denest_pow(eq):
"""
Denest powers.
This is a helper function for powdenest that performs the actual
transformation.
"""
b, e = eq.as_base_exp()
# denest exp with log terms in exponent
if b is S.Exp1 and e.is_Mul:
logs = []
other = []
for ei in e.args:
if any(ai.func is C.log for ai in Add.make_args(ei)):
logs.append(ei)
else:
other.append(ei)
logs = logcombine(Mul(*logs))
return Pow(exp(logs), Mul(*other))
_, be = b.as_base_exp()
if be is S.One and not (b.is_Mul or
b.is_Rational and b.q != 1 or
b.is_positive):
return eq
# denest eq which is either pos**e or Pow**e or Mul**e or
# Mul(b1**e1, b2**e2)
# handle polar numbers specially
polars, nonpolars = [], []
for bb in Mul.make_args(b):
if bb.is_polar:
polars.append(bb.as_base_exp())
else:
nonpolars.append(bb)
if len(polars) == 1 and not polars[0][0].is_Mul:
return Pow(polars[0][0], polars[0][1]*e)*powdenest(Mul(*nonpolars)**e)
elif polars:
return Mul(*[powdenest(bb**(ee*e)) for (bb, ee) in polars]) \
*powdenest(Mul(*nonpolars)**e)
# see if there is a positive, non-Mul base at the very bottom
exponents = []
kernel = eq
while kernel.is_Pow:
kernel, ex = kernel.as_base_exp()
exponents.append(ex)
if kernel.is_positive:
e = Mul(*exponents)
if kernel.is_Mul:
b = kernel
else:
if kernel.is_Integer:
# use log to see if there is a power here
logkernel = expand_log(log(kernel))
if logkernel.is_Mul:
c, logk = logkernel.args
e *= c
kernel = logk.args[0]
return Pow(kernel, e)
# if any factor is an atom then there is nothing to be done
# but the kernel check may have created a new exponent
if any(s.is_Atom for s in Mul.make_args(b)):
if exponents:
return b**e
return eq
# let log handle the case of the base of the argument being a mul, e.g.
# sqrt(x**(2*i)*y**(6*i)) -> x**i*y**(3**i) if x and y are positive; we
# will take the log, expand it, and then factor out the common powers that
# now appear as coefficient. We do this manually since terms_gcd pulls out
# fractions, terms_gcd(x+x*y/2) -> x*(y + 2)/2 and we don't want the 1/2;
# gcd won't pull out numerators from a fraction: gcd(3*x, 9*x/2) -> x but
# we want 3*x. Neither work with noncommutatives.
def nc_gcd(aa, bb):
a, b = [i.as_coeff_Mul() for i in [aa, bb]]
c = gcd(a[0], b[0]).as_numer_denom()[0]
g = Mul(*(a[1].args_cnc(cset=True)[0] & b[1].args_cnc(cset=True)[0]))
return _keep_coeff(c, g)
glogb = expand_log(log(b))
if glogb.is_Add:
args = glogb.args
g = reduce(nc_gcd, args)
if g != 1:
cg, rg = g.as_coeff_Mul()
glogb = _keep_coeff(cg, rg*Add(*[a/g for a in args]))
# now put the log back together again
if glogb.func is C.log or not glogb.is_Mul:
if glogb.args[0].is_Pow or glogb.args[0].func is exp:
glogb = _denest_pow(glogb.args[0])
if (abs(glogb.exp) < 1) is True:
return Pow(glogb.base, glogb.exp*e)
return eq
# the log(b) was a Mul so join any adds with logcombine
add = []
other = []
for a in glogb.args:
if a.is_Add:
add.append(a)
else:
other.append(a)
return Pow(exp(logcombine(Mul(*add))), e*Mul(*other))
[docs]def powdenest(eq, force=False, polar=False):
r"""
Collect exponents on powers as assumptions allow.
Given ``(bb**be)**e``, this can be simplified as follows:
* if ``bb`` is positive, or
* ``e`` is an integer, or
* ``|be| < 1`` then this simplifies to ``bb**(be*e)``
Given a product of powers raised to a power, ``(bb1**be1 *
bb2**be2...)**e``, simplification can be done as follows:
- if e is positive, the gcd of all bei can be joined with e;
- all non-negative bb can be separated from those that are negative
and their gcd can be joined with e; autosimplification already
handles this separation.
- integer factors from powers that have integers in the denominator
of the exponent can be removed from any term and the gcd of such
integers can be joined with e
Setting ``force`` to True will make symbols that are not explicitly
negative behave as though they are positive, resulting in more
denesting.
Setting ``polar`` to True will do simplifications on the riemann surface of
the logarithm, also resulting in more denestings.
When there are sums of logs in exp() then a product of powers may be
obtained e.g. ``exp(3*(log(a) + 2*log(b)))`` - > ``a**3*b**6``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.abc import a, b, x, y, z
>>> from sympy import Symbol, exp, log, sqrt, symbols, powdenest
>>> powdenest((x**(2*a/3))**(3*x))
(x**(2*a/3))**(3*x)
>>> powdenest(exp(3*x*log(2)))
2**(3*x)
Assumptions may prevent expansion:
>>> powdenest(sqrt(x**2))
sqrt(x**2)
>>> p = symbols('p', positive=True)
>>> powdenest(sqrt(p**2))
p
No other expansion is done.
>>> i, j = symbols('i,j', integer=True)
>>> powdenest((x**x)**(i + j)) # -X-> (x**x)**i*(x**x)**j
x**(x*(i + j))
But exp() will be denested by moving all non-log terms outside of
the function; this may result in the collapsing of the exp to a power
with a different base:
>>> powdenest(exp(3*y*log(x)))
x**(3*y)
>>> powdenest(exp(y*(log(a) + log(b))))
(a*b)**y
>>> powdenest(exp(3*(log(a) + log(b))))
a**3*b**3
If assumptions allow, symbols can also be moved to the outermost exponent:
>>> i = Symbol('i', integer=True)
>>> p = Symbol('p', positive=True)
>>> powdenest(((x**(2*i))**(3*y))**x)
((x**(2*i))**(3*y))**x
>>> powdenest(((x**(2*i))**(3*y))**x, force=True)
x**(6*i*x*y)
>>> powdenest(((p**(2*a))**(3*y))**x)
p**(6*a*x*y)
>>> powdenest(((x**(2*a/3))**(3*y/i))**x)
((x**(2*a/3))**(3*y/i))**x
>>> powdenest((x**(2*i)*y**(4*i))**z, force=True)
(x*y**2)**(2*i*z)
>>> n = Symbol('n', negative=True)
>>> powdenest((x**i)**y, force=True)
x**(i*y)
>>> powdenest((n**i)**x, force=True)
(n**i)**x
"""
if force:
eq, rep = posify(eq)
return powdenest(eq, force=False).xreplace(rep)
if polar:
eq, rep = polarify(eq)
return unpolarify(powdenest(unpolarify(eq, exponents_only=True)), rep)
new = powsimp(sympify(eq))
return new.xreplace(Transform(
_denest_pow, filter=lambda m: m.is_Pow or m.func is exp))
_y = Dummy('y')
[docs]def powsimp(expr, deep=False, combine='all', force=False, measure=count_ops):
"""
reduces expression by combining powers with similar bases and exponents.
Notes
=====
If deep is True then powsimp() will also simplify arguments of
functions. By default deep is set to False.
If force is True then bases will be combined without checking for
assumptions, e.g. sqrt(x)*sqrt(y) -> sqrt(x*y) which is not true
if x and y are both negative.
You can make powsimp() only combine bases or only combine exponents by
changing combine='base' or combine='exp'. By default, combine='all',
which does both. combine='base' will only combine::
a a a 2x x
x * y => (x*y) as well as things like 2 => 4
and combine='exp' will only combine
::
a b (a + b)
x * x => x
combine='exp' will strictly only combine exponents in the way that used
to be automatic. Also use deep=True if you need the old behavior.
When combine='all', 'exp' is evaluated first. Consider the first
example below for when there could be an ambiguity relating to this.
This is done so things like the second example can be completely
combined. If you want 'base' combined first, do something like
powsimp(powsimp(expr, combine='base'), combine='exp').
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import powsimp, exp, log, symbols
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y, z, n
>>> powsimp(x**y*x**z*y**z, combine='all')
x**(y + z)*y**z
>>> powsimp(x**y*x**z*y**z, combine='exp')
x**(y + z)*y**z
>>> powsimp(x**y*x**z*y**z, combine='base', force=True)
x**y*(x*y)**z
>>> powsimp(x**z*x**y*n**z*n**y, combine='all', force=True)
(n*x)**(y + z)
>>> powsimp(x**z*x**y*n**z*n**y, combine='exp')
n**(y + z)*x**(y + z)
>>> powsimp(x**z*x**y*n**z*n**y, combine='base', force=True)
(n*x)**y*(n*x)**z
>>> x, y = symbols('x y', positive=True)
>>> powsimp(log(exp(x)*exp(y)))
log(exp(x)*exp(y))
>>> powsimp(log(exp(x)*exp(y)), deep=True)
x + y
Radicals with Mul bases will be combined if combine='exp'
>>> from sympy import sqrt, Mul
>>> x, y = symbols('x y')
Two radicals are automatically joined through Mul:
>>> a=sqrt(x*sqrt(y))
>>> a*a**3 == a**4
True
But if an integer power of that radical has been
autoexpanded then Mul does not join the resulting factors:
>>> a**4 # auto expands to a Mul, no longer a Pow
x**2*y
>>> _*a # so Mul doesn't combine them
x**2*y*sqrt(x*sqrt(y))
>>> powsimp(_) # but powsimp will
(x*sqrt(y))**(5/2)
>>> powsimp(x*y*a) # but won't when doing so would violate assumptions
x*y*sqrt(x*sqrt(y))
"""
def recurse(arg, **kwargs):
_deep = kwargs.get('deep', deep)
_combine = kwargs.get('combine', combine)
_force = kwargs.get('force', force)
_measure = kwargs.get('measure', measure)
return powsimp(arg, _deep, _combine, _force, _measure)
expr = sympify(expr)
if not isinstance(expr, Basic) or expr.is_Atom or expr in (
exp_polar(0), exp_polar(1)):
return expr
if deep or expr.is_Add or expr.is_Mul and _y not in expr.args:
expr = expr.func(*[recurse(w) for w in expr.args])
if expr.is_Pow:
return recurse(expr*_y, deep=False)/_y
if not expr.is_Mul:
return expr
# handle the Mul
if combine in ('exp', 'all'):
# Collect base/exp data, while maintaining order in the
# non-commutative parts of the product
c_powers = defaultdict(list)
nc_part = []
newexpr = []
coeff = S.One
for term in expr.args:
if term.is_Rational:
coeff *= term
continue
if term.is_Pow:
term = _denest_pow(term)
if term.is_commutative:
b, e = term.as_base_exp()
if deep:
b, e = [recurse(i) for i in [b, e]]
c_powers[b].append(e)
else:
# This is the logic that combines exponents for equal,
# but non-commutative bases: A**x*A**y == A**(x+y).
if nc_part:
b1, e1 = nc_part[-1].as_base_exp()
b2, e2 = term.as_base_exp()
if (b1 == b2 and
e1.is_commutative and e2.is_commutative):
nc_part[-1] = Pow(b1, Add(e1, e2))
continue
nc_part.append(term)
# add up exponents of common bases
for b, e in ordered(iter(c_powers.items())):
# allow 2**x/4 -> 2**(x - 2); don't do this when b and e are
# Numbers since autoevaluation will undo it, e.g.
# 2**(1/3)/4 -> 2**(1/3 - 2) -> 2**(1/3)/4
assert 2**(S(1)/3 - 2) == 2**(S(1)/3)/4
if (b and b.is_Number and not all(ei.is_Number for ei in e) and \
coeff is not S.One and
b not in (S.One, S.NegativeOne)):
m = multiplicity(abs(b), abs(coeff))
if m:
e.append(m)
coeff /= b**m
c_powers[b] = Add(*e)
if coeff is not S.One:
if coeff in c_powers:
c_powers[coeff] += S.One
else:
c_powers[coeff] = S.One
# convert to plain dictionary
c_powers = dict(c_powers)
# check for base and inverted base pairs
be = list(c_powers.items())
skip = set() # skip if we already saw them
for b, e in be:
if b in skip:
continue
bpos = b.is_positive or b.is_polar
if bpos:
binv = 1/b
if b != binv and binv in c_powers:
if b.as_numer_denom()[0] is S.One:
c_powers.pop(b)
c_powers[binv] -= e
else:
skip.add(binv)
e = c_powers.pop(binv)
c_powers[b] -= e
# check for base and negated base pairs
be = list(c_powers.items())
_n = S.NegativeOne
for i, (b, e) in enumerate(be):
if ((-b).is_Symbol or b.is_Add) and -b in c_powers:
if (b.is_positive in (0, 1) or e.is_integer):
c_powers[-b] += c_powers.pop(b)
if _n in c_powers:
c_powers[_n] += e
else:
c_powers[_n] = e
# filter c_powers and convert to a list
c_powers = [(b, e) for b, e in c_powers.items() if e]
# ==============================================================
# check for Mul bases of Rational powers that can be combined with
# separated bases, e.g. x*sqrt(x*y)*sqrt(x*sqrt(x*y)) ->
# (x*sqrt(x*y))**(3/2)
# ---------------- helper functions
def ratq(x):
'''Return Rational part of x's exponent as it appears in the bkey.
'''
return bkey(x)[0][1]
def bkey(b, e=None):
'''Return (b**s, c.q), c.p where e -> c*s. If e is not given then
it will be taken by using as_base_exp() on the input b.
e.g.
x**3/2 -> (x, 2), 3
x**y -> (x**y, 1), 1
x**(2*y/3) -> (x**y, 3), 2
exp(x/2) -> (exp(a), 2), 1
'''
if e is not None: # coming from c_powers or from below
if e.is_Integer:
return (b, S.One), e
elif e.is_Rational:
return (b, Integer(e.q)), Integer(e.p)
else:
c, m = e.as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
if c is not S.One:
return (b**m, Integer(c.q)), Integer(c.p)
else:
return (b**e, S.One), S.One
else:
return bkey(*b.as_base_exp())
def update(b):
'''Decide what to do with base, b. If its exponent is now an
integer multiple of the Rational denominator, then remove it
and put the factors of its base in the common_b dictionary or
update the existing bases if necessary. If it has been zeroed
out, simply remove the base.
'''
newe, r = divmod(common_b[b], b[1])
if not r:
common_b.pop(b)
if newe:
for m in Mul.make_args(b[0]**newe):
b, e = bkey(m)
if b not in common_b:
common_b[b] = 0
common_b[b] += e
if b[1] != 1:
bases.append(b)
# ---------------- end of helper functions
# assemble a dictionary of the factors having a Rational power
common_b = {}
done = []
bases = []
for b, e in c_powers:
b, e = bkey(b, e)
common_b[b] = e
if b[1] != 1 and b[0].is_Mul:
bases.append(b)
bases.sort(key=default_sort_key) # this makes tie-breaking canonical
bases.sort(key=measure, reverse=True) # handle longest first
for base in bases:
if base not in common_b: # it may have been removed already
continue
b, exponent = base
last = False # True when no factor of base is a radical
qlcm = 1 # the lcm of the radical denominators
while True:
bstart = b
qstart = qlcm
bb = [] # list of factors
ee = [] # (factor's expo. and it's current value in common_b)
for bi in Mul.make_args(b):
bib, bie = bkey(bi)
if bib not in common_b or common_b[bib] < bie:
ee = bb = [] # failed
break
ee.append([bie, common_b[bib]])
bb.append(bib)
if ee:
# find the number of extractions possible
# e.g. [(1, 2), (2, 2)] -> min(2/1, 2/2) -> 1
min1 = ee[0][1]/ee[0][0]
for i in xrange(len(ee)):
rat = ee[i][1]/ee[i][0]
if rat < 1:
break
min1 = min(min1, rat)
else:
# update base factor counts
# e.g. if ee = [(2, 5), (3, 6)] then min1 = 2
# and the new base counts will be 5-2*2 and 6-2*3
for i in xrange(len(bb)):
common_b[bb[i]] -= min1*ee[i][0]
update(bb[i])
# update the count of the base
# e.g. x**2*y*sqrt(x*sqrt(y)) the count of x*sqrt(y)
# will increase by 4 to give bkey (x*sqrt(y), 2, 5)
common_b[base] += min1*qstart*exponent
if (last # no more radicals in base
or len(common_b) == 1 # nothing left to join with
or all(k[1] == 1 for k in common_b) # no rad's in common_b
):
break
# see what we can exponentiate base by to remove any radicals
# so we know what to search for
# e.g. if base were x**(1/2)*y**(1/3) then we should
# exponentiate by 6 and look for powers of x and y in the ratio
# of 2 to 3
qlcm = lcm([ratq(bi) for bi in Mul.make_args(bstart)])
if qlcm == 1:
break # we are done
b = bstart**qlcm
qlcm *= qstart
if all(ratq(bi) == 1 for bi in Mul.make_args(b)):
last = True # we are going to be done after this next pass
# this base no longer can find anything to join with and
# since it was longer than any other we are done with it
b, q = base
done.append((b, common_b.pop(base)*Rational(1, q)))
# update c_powers and get ready to continue with powsimp
c_powers = done
# there may be terms still in common_b that were bases that were
# identified as needing processing, so remove those, too
for (b, q), e in common_b.items():
if (b.is_Pow or b.func is exp) and \
q is not S.One and not b.exp.is_Rational:
b, be = b.as_base_exp()
b = b**(be/q)
else:
b = root(b, q)
c_powers.append((b, e))
check = len(c_powers)
c_powers = dict(c_powers)
assert len(c_powers) == check # there should have been no duplicates
# ==============================================================
# rebuild the expression
newexpr = expr.func(*(newexpr + [Pow(b, e) for b, e in c_powers.items()]))
if combine == 'exp':
return expr.func(newexpr, expr.func(*nc_part))
else:
return recurse(expr.func(*nc_part), combine='base') * \
recurse(newexpr, combine='base')
elif combine == 'base':
# Build c_powers and nc_part. These must both be lists not
# dicts because exp's are not combined.
c_powers = []
nc_part = []
for term in expr.args:
if term.is_commutative:
c_powers.append(list(term.as_base_exp()))
else:
# This is the logic that combines bases that are
# different and non-commutative, but with equal and
# commutative exponents: A**x*B**x == (A*B)**x.
if nc_part:
b1, e1 = nc_part[-1].as_base_exp()
b2, e2 = term.as_base_exp()
if (e1 == e2 and e2.is_commutative):
nc_part[-1] = Pow(b1*b2, e1)
continue
nc_part.append(term)
# Pull out numerical coefficients from exponent if assumptions allow
# e.g., 2**(2*x) => 4**x
for i in xrange(len(c_powers)):
b, e = c_powers[i]
if not (b.is_nonnegative or e.is_integer or force or b.is_polar):
continue
exp_c, exp_t = e.as_coeff_Mul(rational=True)
if exp_c is not S.One and exp_t is not S.One:
c_powers[i] = [Pow(b, exp_c), exp_t]
# Combine bases whenever they have the same exponent and
# assumptions allow
# first gather the potential bases under the common exponent
c_exp = defaultdict(list)
for b, e in c_powers:
if deep:
e = recurse(e)
c_exp[e].append(b)
del c_powers
# Merge back in the results of the above to form a new product
c_powers = defaultdict(list)
for e in c_exp:
bases = c_exp[e]
# calculate the new base for e
if len(bases) == 1:
new_base = bases[0]
elif e.is_integer or force:
new_base = expr.func(*bases)
else:
# see which ones can be joined
unk = []
nonneg = []
neg = []
for bi in bases:
if bi.is_negative:
neg.append(bi)
elif bi.is_nonnegative:
nonneg.append(bi)
elif bi.is_polar:
nonneg.append(
bi) # polar can be treated like non-negative
else:
unk.append(bi)
if len(unk) == 1 and not neg or len(neg) == 1 and not unk:
# a single neg or a single unk can join the rest
nonneg.extend(unk + neg)
unk = neg = []
elif neg:
# their negative signs cancel in groups of 2*q if we know
# that e = p/q else we have to treat them as unknown
israt = False
if e.is_Rational:
israt = True
else:
p, d = e.as_numer_denom()
if p.is_integer and d.is_integer:
israt = True
if israt:
neg = [-w for w in neg]
unk.extend([S.NegativeOne]*len(neg))
else:
unk.extend(neg)
neg = []
del israt
# these shouldn't be joined
for b in unk:
c_powers[b].append(e)
# here is a new joined base
new_base = expr.func(*(nonneg + neg))
# if there are positive parts they will just get separated
# again unless some change is made
def _terms(e):
# return the number of terms of this expression
# when multiplied out -- assuming no joining of terms
if e.is_Add:
return sum([_terms(ai) for ai in e.args])
if e.is_Mul:
return prod([_terms(mi) for mi in e.args])
return 1
xnew_base = expand_mul(new_base, deep=False)
if len(Add.make_args(xnew_base)) < _terms(new_base):
new_base = factor_terms(xnew_base)
c_powers[new_base].append(e)
# break out the powers from c_powers now
c_part = [Pow(b, ei) for b, e in c_powers.items() for ei in e]
# we're done
return expr.func(*(c_part + nc_part))
else:
raise ValueError("combine must be one of ('all', 'exp', 'base').")
[docs]def hypersimp(f, k):
"""Given combinatorial term f(k) simplify its consecutive term ratio
i.e. f(k+1)/f(k). The input term can be composed of functions and
integer sequences which have equivalent representation in terms
of gamma special function.
The algorithm performs three basic steps:
1. Rewrite all functions in terms of gamma, if possible.
2. Rewrite all occurrences of gamma in terms of products
of gamma and rising factorial with integer, absolute
constant exponent.
3. Perform simplification of nested fractions, powers
and if the resulting expression is a quotient of
polynomials, reduce their total degree.
If f(k) is hypergeometric then as result we arrive with a
quotient of polynomials of minimal degree. Otherwise None
is returned.
For more information on the implemented algorithm refer to:
1. W. Koepf, Algorithms for m-fold Hypergeometric Summation,
Journal of Symbolic Computation (1995) 20, 399-417
"""
f = sympify(f)
g = f.subs(k, k + 1) / f
g = g.rewrite(gamma)
g = expand_func(g)
g = powsimp(g, deep=True, combine='exp')
if g.is_rational_function(k):
return simplify(g, ratio=S.Infinity)
else:
return None
[docs]def hypersimilar(f, g, k):
"""Returns True if 'f' and 'g' are hyper-similar.
Similarity in hypergeometric sense means that a quotient of
f(k) and g(k) is a rational function in k. This procedure
is useful in solving recurrence relations.
For more information see hypersimp().
"""
f, g = list(map(sympify, (f, g)))
h = (f/g).rewrite(gamma)
h = h.expand(func=True, basic=False)
return h.is_rational_function(k)
from sympy.utilities.timeutils import timethis
@timethis('combsimp')
[docs]def combsimp(expr):
r"""
Simplify combinatorial expressions.
This function takes as input an expression containing factorials,
binomials, Pochhammer symbol and other "combinatorial" functions,
and tries to minimize the number of those functions and reduce
the size of their arguments. The result is be given in terms of
binomials and factorials.
The algorithm works by rewriting all combinatorial functions as
expressions involving rising factorials (Pochhammer symbols) and
applies recurrence relations and other transformations applicable
to rising factorials, to reduce their arguments, possibly letting
the resulting rising factorial to cancel. Rising factorials with
the second argument being an integer are expanded into polynomial
forms and finally all other rising factorial are rewritten in terms
more familiar functions. If the initial expression contained any
combinatorial functions, the result is expressed using binomial
coefficients and gamma functions. If the initial expression consisted
of gamma functions alone, the result is expressed in terms of gamma
functions.
If the result is expressed using gamma functions, the following three
additional steps are performed:
1. Reduce the number of gammas by applying the reflection theorem
gamma(x)*gamma(1-x) == pi/sin(pi*x).
2. Reduce the number of gammas by applying the multiplication theorem
gamma(x)*gamma(x+1/n)*...*gamma(x+(n-1)/n) == C*gamma(n*x).
3. Reduce the number of prefactors by absorbing them into gammas, where
possible.
All transformation rules can be found (or was derived from) here:
1. http://functions.wolfram.com/GammaBetaErf/Pochhammer/17/01/02/
2. http://functions.wolfram.com/GammaBetaErf/Pochhammer/27/01/0005/
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.simplify import combsimp
>>> from sympy import factorial, binomial
>>> from sympy.abc import n, k
>>> combsimp(factorial(n)/factorial(n - 3))
n*(n - 2)*(n - 1)
>>> combsimp(binomial(n+1, k+1)/binomial(n, k))
(n + 1)/(k + 1)
"""
factorial = C.factorial
binomial = C.binomial
gamma = C.gamma
# as a rule of thumb, if the expression contained gammas initially, it
# probably makes sense to retain them
as_gamma = not expr.has(factorial, binomial)
class rf(Function):
@classmethod
def eval(cls, a, b):
if b.is_Integer:
if not b:
return S.One
n, result = int(b), S.One
if n > 0:
for i in xrange(n):
result *= a + i
return result
elif n < 0:
for i in xrange(1, -n + 1):
result *= a - i
return 1/result
else:
if b.is_Add:
c, _b = b.as_coeff_Add()
if c.is_Integer:
if c > 0:
return rf(a, _b)*rf(a + _b, c)
elif c < 0:
return rf(a, _b)/rf(a + _b + c, -c)
if a.is_Add:
c, _a = a.as_coeff_Add()
if c.is_Integer:
if c > 0:
return rf(_a, b)*rf(_a + b, c)/rf(_a, c)
elif c < 0:
return rf(_a, b)*rf(_a + c, -c)/rf(_a + b + c, -c)
expr = expr.replace(binomial,
lambda n, k: rf((n - k + 1).expand(), k.expand())/rf(1, k.expand()))
expr = expr.replace(factorial,
lambda n: rf(1, n.expand()))
expr = expr.rewrite(gamma)
expr = expr.replace(gamma,
lambda n: rf(1, (n - 1).expand()))
if as_gamma:
expr = expr.replace(rf,
lambda a, b: gamma(a + b)/gamma(a))
else:
expr = expr.replace(rf,
lambda a, b: binomial(a + b - 1, b)*factorial(b))
def rule(n, k):
coeff, rewrite = S.One, False
cn, _n = n.as_coeff_Add()
if _n and cn.is_Integer and cn:
coeff *= rf(_n + 1, cn)/rf(_n - k + 1, cn)
rewrite = True
n = _n
# this sort of binomial has already been removed by
# rising factorials but is left here in case the order
# of rule application is changed
if k.is_Add:
ck, _k = k.as_coeff_Add()
if _k and ck.is_Integer and ck:
coeff *= rf(n - ck - _k + 1, ck)/rf(_k + 1, ck)
rewrite = True
k = _k
if rewrite:
return coeff*binomial(n, k)
expr = expr.replace(binomial, rule)
def rule_gamma(expr, level=0):
""" Simplify products of gamma functions further. """
if expr.is_Atom:
return expr
def gamma_rat(x):
# helper to simplify ratios of gammas
was = x.count(gamma)
xx = x.replace(gamma, lambda n: rf(1, (n - 1).expand()
).replace(rf, lambda a, b: gamma(a + b)/gamma(a)))
if xx.count(gamma) < was:
x = xx
return x
def gamma_factor(x):
# return True if there is a gamma factor in shallow args
if x.func is gamma:
return True
if x.is_Add or x.is_Mul:
return any(gamma_factor(xi) for xi in x.args)
if x.is_Pow and (x.exp.is_integer or x.base.is_positive):
return gamma_factor(x.base)
return False
# recursion step
if level == 0:
expr = expr.func(*[rule_gamma(x, level + 1) for x in expr.args])
level += 1
if not expr.is_Mul:
return expr
# non-commutative step
if level == 1:
args, nc = expr.args_cnc()
if not args:
return expr
if nc:
return rule_gamma(Mul._from_args(args), level + 1)*Mul._from_args(nc)
level += 1
# pure gamma handling, not factor absorbtion
if level == 2:
sifted = sift(expr.args, gamma_factor)
gamma_ind = Mul(*sifted.pop(False, []))
d = Mul(*sifted.pop(True, []))
assert not sifted
nd, dd = d.as_numer_denom()
for ipass in range(2):
args = list(ordered(Mul.make_args(nd)))
for i, ni in enumerate(args):
if ni.is_Add:
ni, dd = Add(*[
rule_gamma(gamma_rat(a/dd), level + 1) for a in ni.args]
).as_numer_denom()
args[i] = ni
if not dd.has(gamma):
break
nd = Mul(*args)
if ipass == 0 and not gamma_factor(nd):
break
nd, dd = dd, nd # now process in reversed order
expr = gamma_ind*nd/dd
if not (expr.is_Mul and (gamma_factor(dd) or gamma_factor(nd))):
return expr
level += 1
# iteration until constant
if level == 3:
while True:
was = expr
expr = rule_gamma(expr, 4)
if expr == was:
return expr
numer_gammas = []
denom_gammas = []
numer_others = []
denom_others = []
def explicate(p):
if p is S.One:
return None, []
b, e = p.as_base_exp()
if e.is_Integer:
if b.func is gamma:
return True, [b.args[0]]*e
else:
return False, [b]*e
else:
return False, [p]
newargs = list(ordered(expr.args))
while newargs:
n, d = newargs.pop().as_numer_denom()
isg, l = explicate(n)
if isg:
numer_gammas.extend(l)
elif isg is False:
numer_others.extend(l)
isg, l = explicate(d)
if isg:
denom_gammas.extend(l)
elif isg is False:
denom_others.extend(l)
# =========== level 2 work: pure gamma manipulation =========
# Try to reduce the number of gamma factors by applying the
# reflection formula gamma(x)*gamma(1-x) = pi/sin(pi*x)
for gammas, numer, denom in [(
numer_gammas, numer_others, denom_others),
(denom_gammas, denom_others, numer_others)]:
new = []
while gammas:
g1 = gammas.pop()
if g1.is_integer:
new.append(g1)
continue
for i, g2 in enumerate(gammas):
n = g1 + g2 - 1
if not n.is_Integer:
continue
numer.append(S.Pi)
denom.append(C.sin(S.Pi*g1))
gammas.pop(i)
if n > 0:
for k in range(n):
numer.append(1 - g1 + k)
elif n < 0:
for k in range(-n):
denom.append(-g1 - k)
break
else:
new.append(g1)
# /!\ updating IN PLACE
gammas[:] = new
# Try to reduce the number of gammas by using the duplication
# theorem to cancel an upper and lower: gamma(2*s)/gamma(s) =
# 2**(2*s + 1)/(4*sqrt(pi))*gamma(s + 1/2). Although this could
# be done with higher argument ratios like gamma(3*x)/gamma(x),
# this would not reduce the number of gammas as in this case.
for ng, dg, no, do in [(numer_gammas, denom_gammas, numer_others,
denom_others),
(denom_gammas, numer_gammas, denom_others,
numer_others)]:
while True:
for x in ng:
for y in dg:
n = x - 2*y
if n.is_Integer:
break
else:
continue
break
else:
break
ng.remove(x)
dg.remove(y)
if n > 0:
for k in xrange(n):
no.append(2*y + k)
elif n < 0:
for k in xrange(-n):
do.append(2*y - 1 - k)
ng.append(y + S(1)/2)
no.append(2**(2*y - 1))
do.append(sqrt(S.Pi))
# Try to reduce the number of gamma factors by applying the
# multiplication theorem (used when n gammas with args differing
# by 1/n mod 1 are encountered).
#
# run of 2 with args differing by 1/2
#
# >>> combsimp(gamma(x)*gamma(x+S.Half))
# 2*sqrt(2)*2**(-2*x - 1/2)*sqrt(pi)*gamma(2*x)
#
# run of 3 args differing by 1/3 (mod 1)
#
# >>> combsimp(gamma(x)*gamma(x+S(1)/3)*gamma(x+S(2)/3))
# 6*3**(-3*x - 1/2)*pi*gamma(3*x)
# >>> combsimp(gamma(x)*gamma(x+S(1)/3)*gamma(x+S(5)/3))
# 2*3**(-3*x - 1/2)*pi*(3*x + 2)*gamma(3*x)
#
def _run(coeffs):
# find runs in coeffs such that the difference in terms (mod 1)
# of t1, t2, ..., tn is 1/n
from sympy.utilities.iterables import uniq
u = list(uniq(coeffs))
for i in range(len(u)):
dj = ([((u[j] - u[i]) % 1, j) for j in range(i + 1, len(u))])
for one, j in dj:
if one.p == 1 and one.q != 1:
n = one.q
got = [i]
get = list(range(1, n))
for d, j in dj:
m = n*d
if m.is_Integer and m in get:
get.remove(m)
got.append(j)
if not get:
break
else:
continue
for i, j in enumerate(got):
c = u[j]
coeffs.remove(c)
got[i] = c
return one.q, got[0], got[1:]
def _mult_thm(gammas, numer, denom):
# pull off and analyze the leading coefficient from each gamma arg
# looking for runs in those Rationals
# expr -> coeff + resid -> rats[resid] = coeff
rats = {}
for g in gammas:
c, resid = g.as_coeff_Add()
rats.setdefault(resid, []).append(c)
# look for runs in Rationals for each resid
keys = sorted(rats, key=default_sort_key)
for resid in keys:
coeffs = list(sorted(rats[resid]))
new = []
while True:
run = _run(coeffs)
if run is None:
break
# process the sequence that was found:
# 1) convert all the gamma functions to have the right
# argument (could be off by an integer)
# 2) append the factors corresponding to the theorem
# 3) append the new gamma function
n, ui, other = run
# (1)
for u in other:
con = resid + u - 1
for k in range(int(u - ui)):
numer.append(con - k)
con = n*(resid + ui) # for (2) and (3)
# (2)
numer.append((2*S.Pi)**(S(n - 1)/2)*
n**(S(1)/2 - con))
# (3)
new.append(con)
# restore resid to coeffs
rats[resid] = [resid + c for c in coeffs] + new
# rebuild the gamma arguments
g = []
for resid in keys:
g += rats[resid]
# /!\ updating IN PLACE
gammas[:] = g
for l, numer, denom in [(numer_gammas, numer_others, denom_others),
(denom_gammas, denom_others, numer_others)]:
_mult_thm(l, numer, denom)
# =========== level >= 2 work: factor absorbtion =========
if level >= 2:
# Try to absorb factors into the gammas: x*gamma(x) -> gamma(x + 1)
# and gamma(x)/(x - 1) -> gamma(x - 1)
# This code (in particular repeated calls to find_fuzzy) can be very
# slow.
def find_fuzzy(l, x):
if not l:
return
S1, T1 = compute_ST(x)
for y in l:
S2, T2 = inv[y]
if T1 != T2 or (not S1.intersection(S2) and
(S1 != set() or S2 != set())):
continue
# XXX we want some simplification (e.g. cancel or
# simplify) but no matter what it's slow.
a = len(cancel(x/y).free_symbols)
b = len(x.free_symbols)
c = len(y.free_symbols)
# TODO is there a better heuristic?
if a == 0 and (b > 0 or c > 0):
return y
# We thus try to avoid expensive calls by building the following
# "invariants": For every factor or gamma function argument
# - the set of free symbols S
# - the set of functional components T
# We will only try to absorb if T1==T2 and (S1 intersect S2 != emptyset
# or S1 == S2 == emptyset)
inv = {}
def compute_ST(expr):
from sympy import Function, Pow
if expr in inv:
return inv[expr]
return (expr.free_symbols, expr.atoms(Function).union(
set(e.exp for e in expr.atoms(Pow))))
def update_ST(expr):
inv[expr] = compute_ST(expr)
for expr in numer_gammas + denom_gammas + numer_others + denom_others:
update_ST(expr)
for gammas, numer, denom in [(
numer_gammas, numer_others, denom_others),
(denom_gammas, denom_others, numer_others)]:
new = []
while gammas:
g = gammas.pop()
cont = True
while cont:
cont = False
y = find_fuzzy(numer, g)
if y is not None:
numer.remove(y)
if y != g:
numer.append(y/g)
update_ST(y/g)
g += 1
cont = True
y = find_fuzzy(denom, g - 1)
if y is not None:
denom.remove(y)
if y != g - 1:
numer.append((g - 1)/y)
update_ST((g - 1)/y)
g -= 1
cont = True
new.append(g)
# /!\ updating IN PLACE
gammas[:] = new
# =========== rebuild expr ==================================
return C.Mul(*[gamma(g) for g in numer_gammas]) \
/ C.Mul(*[gamma(g) for g in denom_gammas]) \
* C.Mul(*numer_others) / C.Mul(*denom_others)
# (for some reason we cannot use Basic.replace in this case)
was = factor(expr)
expr = rule_gamma(was)
if expr != was:
expr = factor(expr)
return expr
def signsimp(expr, evaluate=True):
"""Make all Add sub-expressions canonical wrt sign.
If an Add subexpression, ``a``, can have a sign extracted,
as determined by could_extract_minus_sign, it is replaced
with Mul(-1, a, evaluate=False). This allows signs to be
extracted from powers and products.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import signsimp, exp
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> n = -1 + 1/x
>>> n/x/(-n)**2 - 1/n/x
(-1 + 1/x)/(x*(1 - 1/x)**2) - 1/(x*(-1 + 1/x))
>>> signsimp(_)
0
>>> x*n + x*-n
x*(-1 + 1/x) + x*(1 - 1/x)
>>> signsimp(_)
0
>>> n**3
(-1 + 1/x)**3
>>> signsimp(_)
-(1 - 1/x)**3
By default, signsimp doesn't leave behind any hollow simplification:
if making an Add canonical wrt sign didn't change the expression, the
original Add is restored. If this is not desired then the keyword
``evaluate`` can be set to False:
>>> e = exp(y - x)
>>> signsimp(e) == e
True
>>> signsimp(e, evaluate=False)
exp(-(x - y))
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
if not isinstance(expr, Expr) or expr.is_Atom:
return expr
e = sub_post(sub_pre(expr))
if not isinstance(e, Expr) or e.is_Atom:
return e
if e.is_Add:
return e.func(*[signsimp(a) for a in e.args])
if evaluate:
e = e.xreplace(dict([(m, -(-m)) for m in e.atoms(Mul) if -(-m) != m]))
return e
[docs]def simplify(expr, ratio=1.7, measure=count_ops, fu=False):
"""
Simplifies the given expression.
Simplification is not a well defined term and the exact strategies
this function tries can change in the future versions of SymPy. If
your algorithm relies on "simplification" (whatever it is), try to
determine what you need exactly - is it powsimp()?, radsimp()?,
together()?, logcombine()?, or something else? And use this particular
function directly, because those are well defined and thus your algorithm
will be robust.
Nonetheless, especially for interactive use, or when you don't know
anything about the structure of the expression, simplify() tries to apply
intelligent heuristics to make the input expression "simpler". For
example:
>>> from sympy import simplify, cos, sin
>>> from sympy.abc import x, y
>>> a = (x + x**2)/(x*sin(y)**2 + x*cos(y)**2)
>>> a
(x**2 + x)/(x*sin(y)**2 + x*cos(y)**2)
>>> simplify(a)
x + 1
Note that we could have obtained the same result by using specific
simplification functions:
>>> from sympy import trigsimp, cancel
>>> trigsimp(a)
(x**2 + x)/x
>>> cancel(_)
x + 1
In some cases, applying :func:`simplify` may actually result in some more
complicated expression. The default ``ratio=1.7`` prevents more extreme
cases: if (result length)/(input length) > ratio, then input is returned
unmodified. The ``measure`` parameter lets you specify the function used
to determine how complex an expression is. The function should take a
single argument as an expression and return a number such that if
expression ``a`` is more complex than expression ``b``, then
``measure(a) > measure(b)``. The default measure function is
:func:`count_ops`, which returns the total number of operations in the
expression.
For example, if ``ratio=1``, ``simplify`` output can't be longer
than input.
::
>>> from sympy import sqrt, simplify, count_ops, oo
>>> root = 1/(sqrt(2)+3)
Since ``simplify(root)`` would result in a slightly longer expression,
root is returned unchanged instead::
>>> simplify(root, ratio=1) == root
True
If ``ratio=oo``, simplify will be applied anyway::
>>> count_ops(simplify(root, ratio=oo)) > count_ops(root)
True
Note that the shortest expression is not necessary the simplest, so
setting ``ratio`` to 1 may not be a good idea.
Heuristically, the default value ``ratio=1.7`` seems like a reasonable
choice.
You can easily define your own measure function based on what you feel
should represent the "size" or "complexity" of the input expression. Note
that some choices, such as ``lambda expr: len(str(expr))`` may appear to be
good metrics, but have other problems (in this case, the measure function
may slow down simplify too much for very large expressions). If you don't
know what a good metric would be, the default, ``count_ops``, is a good
one.
For example:
>>> from sympy import symbols, log
>>> a, b = symbols('a b', positive=True)
>>> g = log(a) + log(b) + log(a)*log(1/b)
>>> h = simplify(g)
>>> h
log(a*b**(-log(a) + 1))
>>> count_ops(g)
8
>>> count_ops(h)
5
So you can see that ``h`` is simpler than ``g`` using the count_ops metric.
However, we may not like how ``simplify`` (in this case, using
``logcombine``) has created the ``b**(log(1/a) + 1)`` term. A simple way
to reduce this would be to give more weight to powers as operations in
``count_ops``. We can do this by using the ``visual=True`` option:
>>> print(count_ops(g, visual=True))
2*ADD + DIV + 4*LOG + MUL
>>> print(count_ops(h, visual=True))
2*LOG + MUL + POW + SUB
>>> from sympy import Symbol, S
>>> def my_measure(expr):
... POW = Symbol('POW')
... # Discourage powers by giving POW a weight of 10
... count = count_ops(expr, visual=True).subs(POW, 10)
... # Every other operation gets a weight of 1 (the default)
... count = count.replace(Symbol, type(S.One))
... return count
>>> my_measure(g)
8
>>> my_measure(h)
14
>>> 15./8 > 1.7 # 1.7 is the default ratio
True
>>> simplify(g, measure=my_measure)
-log(a)*log(b) + log(a) + log(b)
Note that because ``simplify()`` internally tries many different
simplification strategies and then compares them using the measure
function, we get a completely different result that is still different
from the input expression by doing this.
"""
from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import hyperexpand
from sympy.functions.special.bessel import BesselBase
original_expr = expr = signsimp(expr)
try:
return expr._eval_simplify(ratio=ratio, measure=measure)
except AttributeError:
pass
from sympy.simplify.hyperexpand import hyperexpand
from sympy.functions.special.bessel import BesselBase
from sympy import Sum, Product
if not isinstance(expr, Basic) or not expr.args: # XXX: temporary hack
return expr
if not isinstance(expr, (Add, Mul, Pow, ExpBase)):
return expr.func(*[simplify(x, ratio=ratio, measure=measure, fu=fu)
for x in expr.args])
# TODO: Apply different strategies, considering expression pattern:
# is it a purely rational function? Is there any trigonometric function?...
# See also https://github.com/sympy/sympy/pull/185.
def shorter(*choices):
'''Return the choice that has the fewest ops. In case of a tie,
the expression listed first is selected.'''
if not has_variety(choices):
return choices[0]
return min(choices, key=measure)
expr = bottom_up(expr, lambda w: w.normal())
expr = Mul(*powsimp(expr).as_content_primitive())
_e = cancel(expr)
expr1 = shorter(_e, _mexpand(_e).cancel()) # issue 3730
expr2 = shorter(together(expr, deep=True), together(expr1, deep=True))
if ratio is S.Infinity:
expr = expr2
else:
expr = shorter(expr2, expr1, expr)
if not isinstance(expr, Basic): # XXX: temporary hack
return expr
expr = factor_terms(expr, sign=False)
# hyperexpand automatically only works on hypergeometric terms
expr = hyperexpand(expr)
expr = piecewise_fold(expr)
if expr.has(BesselBase):
expr = besselsimp(expr)
if expr.has(C.TrigonometricFunction) and not fu or expr.has(
C.HyperbolicFunction):
expr = trigsimp(expr, deep=True)
if expr.has(C.log):
expr = shorter(expand_log(expr, deep=True), logcombine(expr))
if expr.has(C.CombinatorialFunction, gamma):
expr = combsimp(expr)
if expr.has(Sum):
expr = sum_simplify(expr)
if expr.has(Product):
expr = product_simplify(expr)
short = shorter(powsimp(expr, combine='exp', deep=True), powsimp(expr), expr)
short = shorter(short, factor_terms(short), expand_power_exp(expand_mul(short)))
if short.has(C.TrigonometricFunction, C.HyperbolicFunction, C.ExpBase):
short = exptrigsimp(short, simplify=False)
# get rid of hollow 2-arg Mul factorization
from sympy.core.rules import Transform
hollow_mul = Transform(
lambda x: Mul(*x.args),
lambda x:
x.is_Mul and
len(x.args) == 2 and
x.args[0].is_Number and
x.args[1].is_Add and
x.is_commutative)
expr = short.xreplace(hollow_mul)
numer, denom = expr.as_numer_denom()
if denom.is_Add:
n, d = fraction(radsimp(1/denom, symbolic=False, max_terms=1))
if n is not S.One:
expr = (numer*n).expand()/d
if expr.could_extract_minus_sign():
n, d = fraction(expr)
if d != 0:
expr = signsimp(-n/(-d))
if measure(expr) > ratio*measure(original_expr):
expr = original_expr
return expr
def _real_to_rational(expr, tolerance=None):
"""
Replace all reals in expr with rationals.
>>> from sympy import nsimplify
>>> from sympy.abc import x
>>> nsimplify(.76 + .1*x**.5, rational=True)
sqrt(x)/10 + 19/25
"""
p = expr
reps = {}
reduce_num = None
if tolerance is not None and tolerance < 1:
reduce_num = ceiling(1/tolerance)
for float in p.atoms(C.Float):
key = float
if reduce_num is not None:
r = Rational(float).limit_denominator(reduce_num)
elif (tolerance is not None and tolerance >= 1 and
float.is_Integer is False):
r = Rational(tolerance*round(float/tolerance)
).limit_denominator(int(tolerance))
else:
r = nsimplify(float, rational=False)
# e.g. log(3).n() -> log(3) instead of a Rational
if not r.is_Rational:
if float < 0:
float = -float
d = Pow(10, int((mpmath.log(float)/mpmath.log(10))))
r = -Rational(str(float/d))*d
elif float > 0:
d = Pow(10, int((mpmath.log(float)/mpmath.log(10))))
r = Rational(str(float/d))*d
else:
r = Integer(0)
reps[key] = r
return p.subs(reps, simultaneous=True)
[docs]def nsimplify(expr, constants=[], tolerance=None, full=False, rational=None):
"""
Find a simple representation for a number or, if there are free symbols or
if rational=True, then replace Floats with their Rational equivalents. If
no change is made and rational is not False then Floats will at least be
converted to Rationals.
For numerical expressions, a simple formula that numerically matches the
given numerical expression is sought (and the input should be possible
to evalf to a precision of at least 30 digits).
Optionally, a list of (rationally independent) constants to
include in the formula may be given.
A lower tolerance may be set to find less exact matches. If no tolerance
is given then the least precise value will set the tolerance (e.g. Floats
default to 15 digits of precision, so would be tolerance=10**-15).
With full=True, a more extensive search is performed
(this is useful to find simpler numbers when the tolerance
is set low).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import nsimplify, sqrt, GoldenRatio, exp, I, exp, pi
>>> nsimplify(4/(1+sqrt(5)), [GoldenRatio])
-2 + 2*GoldenRatio
>>> nsimplify((1/(exp(3*pi*I/5)+1)))
1/2 - I*sqrt(sqrt(5)/10 + 1/4)
>>> nsimplify(I**I, [pi])
exp(-pi/2)
>>> nsimplify(pi, tolerance=0.01)
22/7
See Also
========
sympy.core.function.nfloat
"""
expr = sympify(expr)
if rational or expr.free_symbols:
return _real_to_rational(expr, tolerance)
# SymPy's default tolerance for Rationals is 15; other numbers may have
# lower tolerances set, so use them to pick the largest tolerance if None
# was given
if tolerance is None:
tolerance = 10**-min([15] +
[mpmath.libmp.libmpf.prec_to_dps(n._prec)
for n in expr.atoms(Float)])
# XXX should prec be set independent of tolerance or should it be computed
# from tolerance?
prec = 30
bprec = int(prec*3.33)
constants_dict = {}
for constant in constants:
constant = sympify(constant)
v = constant.evalf(prec)
if not v.is_Float:
raise ValueError("constants must be real-valued")
constants_dict[str(constant)] = v._to_mpmath(bprec)
exprval = expr.evalf(prec, chop=True)
re, im = exprval.as_real_imag()
# safety check to make sure that this evaluated to a number
if not (re.is_Number and im.is_Number):
return expr
def nsimplify_real(x):
orig = mpmath.mp.dps
xv = x._to_mpmath(bprec)
try:
# We'll be happy with low precision if a simple fraction
if not (tolerance or full):
mpmath.mp.dps = 15
rat = mpmath.findpoly(xv, 1)
if rat is not None:
return Rational(-int(rat[1]), int(rat[0]))
mpmath.mp.dps = prec
newexpr = mpmath.identify(xv, constants=constants_dict,
tol=tolerance, full=full)
if not newexpr:
raise ValueError
if full:
newexpr = newexpr[0]
expr = sympify(newexpr)
if x and not expr: # don't let x become 0
raise ValueError
if expr.is_bounded is False and not xv in [mpmath.inf, mpmath.ninf]:
raise ValueError
return expr
finally:
# even though there are returns above, this is executed
# before leaving
mpmath.mp.dps = orig
try:
if re:
re = nsimplify_real(re)
if im:
im = nsimplify_real(im)
except ValueError:
if rational is None:
return _real_to_rational(expr)
return expr
rv = re + im*S.ImaginaryUnit
# if there was a change or rational is explicitly not wanted
# return the value, else return the Rational representation
if rv != expr or rational is False:
return rv
return _real_to_rational(expr)
[docs]def logcombine(expr, force=False):
"""
Takes logarithms and combines them using the following rules:
- log(x) + log(y) == log(x*y) if both are not negative
- a*log(x) == log(x**a) if x is positive and a is real
If ``force`` is True then the assumptions above will be assumed to hold if
there is no assumption already in place on a quantity. For example, if
``a`` is imaginary or the argument negative, force will not perform a
combination but if ``a`` is a symbol with no assumptions the change will
take place.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Symbol, symbols, log, logcombine, I
>>> from sympy.abc import a, x, y, z
>>> logcombine(a*log(x) + log(y) - log(z))
a*log(x) + log(y) - log(z)
>>> logcombine(a*log(x) + log(y) - log(z), force=True)
log(x**a*y/z)
>>> x,y,z = symbols('x,y,z', positive=True)
>>> a = Symbol('a', real=True)
>>> logcombine(a*log(x) + log(y) - log(z))
log(x**a*y/z)
The transformation is limited to factors and/or terms that
contain logs, so the result depends on the initial state of
expansion:
>>> eq = (2 + 3*I)*log(x)
>>> logcombine(eq, force=True) == eq
True
>>> logcombine(eq.expand(), force=True)
log(x**2) + I*log(x**3)
See Also
========
posify: replace all symbols with symbols having positive assumptions
"""
def f(rv):
if not (rv.is_Add or rv.is_Mul):
return rv
def gooda(a):
# bool to tell whether the leading ``a`` in ``a*log(x)``
# could appear as log(x**a)
return (a is not S.NegativeOne and # -1 *could* go, but we disallow
(a.is_real or force and a.is_real is not False))
def goodlog(l):
# bool to tell whether log ``l``'s argument can combine with others
a = l.args[0]
return a.is_positive or force and a.is_nonpositive is not False
other = []
logs = []
log1 = defaultdict(list)
for a in Add.make_args(rv):
if a.func is log and goodlog(a):
log1[()].append(([], a))
elif not a.is_Mul:
other.append(a)
else:
ot = []
co = []
lo = []
for ai in a.args:
if ai.is_Rational and ai < 0:
ot.append(S.NegativeOne)
co.append(-ai)
elif ai.func is log and goodlog(ai):
lo.append(ai)
elif gooda(ai):
co.append(ai)
else:
ot.append(ai)
if len(lo) > 1:
logs.append((ot, co, lo))
elif lo:
log1[tuple(ot)].append((co, lo[0]))
else:
other.append(a)
# if there is only one log at each coefficient and none have
# an exponent to place inside the log then there is nothing to do
if not logs and all(len(log1[k]) == 1 and log1[k][0] == [] for k in log1):
return rv
# collapse multi-logs as far as possible in a canonical way
# TODO: see if x*log(a)+x*log(a)*log(b) -> x*log(a)*(1+log(b))?
# -- in this case, it's unambiguous, but if it were were a log(c) in
# each term then it's arbitrary whether they are grouped by log(a) or
# by log(c). So for now, just leave this alone; it's probably better to
# let the user decide
for o, e, l in logs:
l = list(ordered(l))
e = log(l.pop(0).args[0]**Mul(*e))
while l:
li = l.pop(0)
e = log(li.args[0]**e)
c, l = Mul(*o), e
if l.func is log: # it should be, but check to be sure
log1[(c,)].append(([], l))
else:
other.append(c*l)
# logs that have the same coefficient can multiply
for k in list(log1.keys()):
log1[Mul(*k)] = log(logcombine(Mul(*[
l.args[0]**Mul(*c) for c, l in log1.pop(k)]),
force=force))
# logs that have oppositely signed coefficients can divide
for k in ordered(list(log1.keys())):
if not k in log1: # already popped as -k
continue
if -k in log1:
# figure out which has the minus sign; the one with
# more op counts should be the one
num, den = k, -k
if num.count_ops() > den.count_ops():
num, den = den, num
other.append(num*log(log1.pop(num).args[0]/log1.pop(den).args[0]))
else:
other.append(k*log1.pop(k))
return Add(*other)
return bottom_up(expr, f)
def bottom_up(rv, F, atoms=False, nonbasic=False):
"""Apply ``F`` to all expressions in an expression tree from the
bottom up. If ``atoms`` is True, apply ``F`` even if there are no args;
if ``nonbasic`` is True, try to apply ``F`` to non-Basic objects.
"""
try:
if rv.args:
args = tuple([bottom_up(a, F, atoms, nonbasic)
for a in rv.args])
if args != rv.args:
rv = rv.func(*args)
rv = F(rv)
elif atoms:
rv = F(rv)
except AttributeError:
if nonbasic:
try:
rv = F(rv)
except TypeError:
pass
return rv
[docs]def besselsimp(expr):
"""
Simplify bessel-type functions.
This routine tries to simplify bessel-type functions. Currently it only
works on the Bessel J and I functions, however. It works by looking at all
such functions in turn, and eliminating factors of "I" and "-1" (actually
their polar equivalents) in front of the argument. Then, functions of
half-integer order are rewritten using trigonometric functions and
functions of integer order (> 1) are rewritten using functions
of low order. Finally, if the expression was changed, compute
factorization of the result with factor().
>>> from sympy import besselj, besseli, besselsimp, polar_lift, I, S
>>> from sympy.abc import z, nu
>>> besselsimp(besselj(nu, z*polar_lift(-1)))
exp(I*pi*nu)*besselj(nu, z)
>>> besselsimp(besseli(nu, z*polar_lift(-I)))
exp(-I*pi*nu/2)*besselj(nu, z)
>>> besselsimp(besseli(S(-1)/2, z))
sqrt(2)*cosh(z)/(sqrt(pi)*sqrt(z))
>>> besselsimp(z*besseli(0, z) + z*(besseli(2, z))/2 + besseli(1, z))
3*z*besseli(0, z)/2
"""
from sympy import besselj, bessely, besseli, besselk, jn, I, pi, Dummy
# TODO
# - better algorithm?
# - simplify (cos(pi*b)*besselj(b,z) - besselj(-b,z))/sin(pi*b) ...
# - use contiguity relations?
def replacer(fro, to, factors):
factors = set(factors)
def repl(nu, z):
if factors.intersection(Mul.make_args(z)):
return to(nu, z)
return fro(nu, z)
return repl
def torewrite(fro, to):
def tofunc(nu, z):
return fro(nu, z).rewrite(to)
return tofunc
def tominus(fro):
def tofunc(nu, z):
return exp(I*pi*nu)*fro(nu, exp_polar(-I*pi)*z)
return tofunc
orig_expr = expr
ifactors = [I, exp_polar(I*pi/2), exp_polar(-I*pi/2)]
expr = expr.replace(
besselj, replacer(besselj,
torewrite(besselj, besseli), ifactors))
expr = expr.replace(
besseli, replacer(besseli,
torewrite(besseli, besselj), ifactors))
minusfactors = [-1, exp_polar(I*pi)]
expr = expr.replace(
besselj, replacer(besselj, tominus(besselj), minusfactors))
expr = expr.replace(
besseli, replacer(besseli, tominus(besseli), minusfactors))
z0 = Dummy('z')
def expander(fro):
def repl(nu, z):
if (nu % 1) == S(1)/2:
return exptrigsimp(trigsimp(unpolarify(
fro(nu, z0).rewrite(besselj).rewrite(jn).expand(
func=True)).subs(z0, z)))
elif nu.is_Integer and nu > 1:
return fro(nu, z).expand(func=True)
return fro(nu, z)
return repl
expr = expr.replace(besselj, expander(besselj))
expr = expr.replace(bessely, expander(bessely))
expr = expr.replace(besseli, expander(besseli))
expr = expr.replace(besselk, expander(besselk))
if expr != orig_expr:
expr = expr.factor()
return expr
def exptrigsimp(expr, simplify=True):
"""
Simplifies exponential / trigonometric / hyperbolic functions.
When ``simplify`` is True (default) the expression obtained after the
simplification step will be then be passed through simplify to
precondition it so the final transformations will be applied.
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
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)
if simplify:
newexpr = newexpr.simplify()
# conversion from exp to hyperbolic
ex = newexpr.atoms(exp, S.Exp1)
ex = [ei for ei in ex if 1/ei not in ex]
## sinh and cosh
for ei in ex:
e2 = ei**-2
if e2 in ex:
a = e2.args[0]/2 if not e2 is S.Exp1 else S.Half
newexpr = newexpr.subs((e2 + 1)*ei, 2*cosh(a))
newexpr = newexpr.subs((e2 - 1)*ei, 2*sinh(a))
## exp ratios to tan and tanh
for ei in ex:
n, d = ei - 1, ei + 1
et = n/d
etinv = d/n # not 1/et or else recursion errors arise
a = ei.args[0] if ei.func is exp else S.One
if a.is_Mul or a is S.ImaginaryUnit:
c = a.as_coefficient(I)
if c:
t = S.ImaginaryUnit*tan(c/2)
newexpr = newexpr.subs(etinv, 1/t)
newexpr = newexpr.subs(et, t)
continue
t = tanh(a/2)
newexpr = newexpr.subs(etinv, 1/t)
newexpr = newexpr.subs(et, t)
# sin/cos and sinh/cosh ratios to tan and tanh, respectively
if newexpr.has(C.HyperbolicFunction):
e, f = hyper_as_trig(newexpr)
newexpr = f(TR2i(e))
if newexpr.has(C.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
def _is_Expr(e):
"""_eapply helper to tell whether ``e`` and all its args
are Exprs."""
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])
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.simplify 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
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(C.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.strategies.tree import greedy
from sympy.strategies.core import identity
from sympy.simplify.fu import (
TR1, TR2, TR3, TR2i, TR14, TR5, TR10, L, TR10i,
TR8, TR6, TR15, TR16, TR111, TR5, TRmorrie, TR11, TR14, TR22,
TR12)
from sympy.core.compatibility import ordered, _nodes
if not e.has(C.TrigonometricFunction):
return e
if e.is_Mul:
coeff, e = e.as_independent(C.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(C.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)],
TRmorrie,
TR10i, # sin-cos products > sin-cos of sums
[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 sum_simplify(s):
"""Main function for Sum simplification"""
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
terms = Add.make_args(s)
s_t = [] # Sum Terms
o_t = [] # Other Terms
for term in terms:
if isinstance(term, Mul):
constant = 1
other = 1
s = 0
n_sum_terms = 0
for j in range(len(term.args)):
if isinstance(term.args[j], Sum):
s = term.args[j]
n_sum_terms = n_sum_terms + 1
elif term.args[j].is_number == True:
constant = constant * term.args[j]
else:
other = other * term.args[j]
if other == 1 and n_sum_terms == 1:
# Insert the constant inside the Sum
s_t.append(Sum(constant * s.function, *s.limits))
elif other != 1 and n_sum_terms == 1:
o_t.append(other * Sum(constant * s.function, *s.limits))
else:
o_t.append(term)
elif isinstance(term, Sum):
s_t.append(term)
else:
o_t.append(term)
used = [False] * len(s_t)
for method in range(2):
for i, s_term1 in enumerate(s_t):
if not used[i]:
for j, s_term2 in enumerate(s_t):
if not used[j] and i != j:
if isinstance(sum_add(s_term1, s_term2, method), Sum):
s_t[i] = sum_add(s_term1, s_term2, method)
used[j] = True
result = Add(*o_t)
for i, s_term in enumerate(s_t):
if not used[i]:
result = Add(result, s_term)
return result
def sum_add(self, other, method=0):
"""Helper function for Sum simplification"""
from sympy.concrete.summations import Sum
if type(self) == type(other):
if method == 0:
if self.limits == other.limits:
return Sum(self.function + other.function, *self.limits)
elif method == 1:
if simplify(self.function - other.function) == 0:
if len(self.limits) == len(other.limits) == 1:
i = self.limits[0][0]
x1 = self.limits[0][1]
y1 = self.limits[0][2]
j = other.limits[0][0]
x2 = other.limits[0][1]
y2 = other.limits[0][2]
if i == j:
if x2 == y1 + 1:
return Sum(self.function, (i, x1, y2))
elif x1 == y2 + 1:
return Sum(self.function, (i, x2, y1))
return Add(self, other)
def product_simplify(s):
"""Main function for Product simplification"""
from sympy.concrete.products import Product
terms = Mul.make_args(s)
p_t = [] # Product Terms
o_t = [] # Other Terms
for term in terms:
if isinstance(term, Product):
p_t.append(term)
else:
o_t.append(term)
used = [False] * len(p_t)
for method in range(2):
for i, p_term1 in enumerate(p_t):
if not used[i]:
for j, p_term2 in enumerate(p_t):
if not used[j] and i != j:
if isinstance(product_mul(p_term1, p_term2, method), Product):
p_t[i] = product_mul(p_term1, p_term2, method)
used[j] = True
result = Mul(*o_t)
for i, p_term in enumerate(p_t):
if not used[i]:
result = Mul(result, p_term)
return result
def product_mul(self, other, method=0):
"""Helper function for Product simplification"""
from sympy.concrete.products import Product
if type(self) == type(other):
if method == 0:
if self.limits == other.limits:
return Product(self.function * other.function, *self.limits)
elif method == 1:
if simplify(self.function - other.function) == 0:
if len(self.limits) == len(other.limits) == 1:
i = self.limits[0][0]
x1 = self.limits[0][1]
y1 = self.limits[0][2]
j = other.limits[0][0]
x2 = other.limits[0][1]
y2 = other.limits[0][2]
if i == j:
if x2 == y1 + 1:
return Product(self.function, (i, x1, y2))
elif x1 == y2 + 1:
return Product(self.function, (i, x2, y1))
return Mul(self, other)
#-------------------- the old trigsimp routines ---------------------
_trigs = (C.TrigonometricFunction, C.HyperbolicFunction)
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)
"""
from sympy import tan
from sympy.simplify.fu import fu
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(C.TrigonometricFunction) and b.has(C.TrigonometricFunction) or
a.has(C.HyperbolicFunction) and b.has(C.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(
C.TrigonometricFunction, C.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(C.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(
C.TrigonometricFunction, C.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 --------------------