Solvers

From

    >>> from sympy import *
    >>> x, y, z = symbols("x y z")
    >>> init_printing(use_unicode=True)
In Julia:
julia> using SymPy

julia> x, y, z = symbols("x y z")
(x, y, z)

A Note about Equations

Recall from the :ref:gotchas <tutorial_gotchas_equals> section of this tutorial that symbolic equations in SymPy are not represented by = or ==, but by Eq.

    >>> Eq(x, y)
    x = y
In Julia:
julia> Eq(x, y)
x = y

However, there is an even easier way. In SymPy, any expression not in an Eq is automatically assumed to equal 0 by the solving functions. Since a = b if and only if a - b = 0, this means that instead of using x == y, you can just use x - y. For example

    >>> solveset(Eq(x**2, 1), x)
    {-1, 1}
    >>> solveset(Eq(x**2 - 1, 0), x)
    {-1, 1}
    >>> solveset(x**2 - 1, x)
    {-1, 1}
In Julia:
julia> solveset(Eq(x^2, 1), x)
{-1, 1}

julia> solveset(Eq(x^2 - 1, 0), x)
{-1, 1}

julia> solveset(x^2 - 1, x)
{-1, 1}

This is particularly useful if the equation you wish to solve is already equal to 0. Instead of typing solveset(Eq(expr, 0), x), you can just use solveset(expr, x).

Solving Equations Algebraically

The main function for solving algebraic equations is solveset. The syntax for solveset is solveset(equation, variable=None, domain=S.Complexes) Where equations may be in the form of Eq instances or expressions that are assumed to be equal to zero.

Please note that there is another function called solve which can also be used to solve equations. The syntax is solve(equations, variables) However, it is recommended to use solveset instead.

When solving a single equation, the output of solveset is a FiniteSet or an Interval or ImageSet of the solutions.

    >>> solveset(x**2 - x, x)
    {0, 1}
    >>> solveset(x - x, x, domain=S.Reals)
    ℝ
    >>> solveset(sin(x) - 1, x, domain=S.Reals)
    ⎧        π        ⎫
    ⎨2⋅n⋅π + ─ | n ∊ ℤ⎬
    ⎩        2        ⎭
In Julia:
  • S is not exported, as it is not a function, so we create an alias:
julia> const S = sympy.S
PyObject S

julia> solveset(x^2 - x, x)
{0, 1}

julia> solveset(x - x, x, domain=S.Reals)
ℝ

julia> solveset(sin(x) - 1, x, domain=S.Reals)
⎧        π        ⎫
⎨2⋅n⋅π + ─ | n ∊ ℤ⎬
⎩        2        ⎭

If there are no solutions, an EmptySet is returned and if it is not able to find solutions then a ConditionSet is returned.

    >>> solveset(exp(x), x)     # No solution exists
    ∅
    >>> solveset(cos(x) - x, x)  # Not able to find solution
    {x | x ∊ ℂ ∧ -x + cos(x) = 0}
In Julia:
julia> solveset(exp(x), x)     # No solution exists
∅

julia> solveset(cos(x) - x, x)  # Not able to find solution
{x | x ∊ ℂ ∧ -x + cos(x) = 0}

In the solveset module, the linear system of equations is solved using linsolve. In future we would be able to use linsolve directly from solveset. Following is an example of the syntax of linsolve.

  • List of Equations Form:
    >>> linsolve([x + y + z - 1, x + y + 2*z - 3 ], (x, y, z))
In Julia:

Rather than a vector, we pass a tuple:

julia> linsolve((x + y + z - 1, x + y + 2*z - 3), (x, y, z))
{(-y - 1, y, 2)}

A tuple

Tuples

The linsolve function expects a list of equations, whereas PyCall is instructed to promote the syntax to produce a list in Python into a Array{Sym} object. As such, we pass the equations in a tuple above. Similar considerations are necessary at times for the sympy.Matrix constructor. It is suggested, as in the next example, to work around this by passing Julian arrays to the constructor or bypassing it altogether.


  • Augmented

Matrix Form:

	>>> linsolve(Matrix(([1, 1, 1, 1], [1, 1, 2, 3])), (x, y, z))
	{(-y - 1, y, 2)}
In Julia:

We use Julian syntax for matrices:

julia> A =  [1 1 1; 1  1  2];  b =  [1,3]
2-element Array{Int64,1}:
 1
 3

julia> aug = [A b]
2×4 Array{Int64,2}:
 1  1  1  1
 1  1  2  3

julia> linsolve(sympy.Matrix(aug), (x,y,z))
{(-y - 1, y, 2)}

In lieu of using sympy.Matrix, the matrix can be created symbolically, as:

julia> A =  Sym[1 1 1; 1  1  2];  b =  [1,3]
2-element Array{Int64,1}:
 1
 3

julia> aug = [A b]
2×4 Array{Sym,2}:
 1  1  1  1
 1  1  2  3

julia> linsolve(aug, (x,y,z))
{(-y - 1, y, 2)}

Finally, linear equations are solved in Julia with the \ (backslash) operator:

A \ b

The variables are generated within \ in the sequence x1, x2, ...


  • A*x = b Form
	>>> M = Matrix(((1, 1, 1, 1), (1, 1, 2, 3)))
	>>> system = A, b = M[:, :-1], M[:, -1]
	>>> linsolve(system, x, y, z)
	{(-y - 1, y, 2)}
In Julia:

We follow the syntax above to construct the matrix (tuple of tuples), but not the Julian matrix construtor would be recommended:

julia> M = sympy.Matrix(((1, 1, 1, 1), (1, 1, 2, 3)))
2×4 Array{Sym,2}:
 1  1  1  1
 1  1  2  3

julia> system = A, b = M[:, 1:end-1], M[:, end]
(Sym[1 1 1; 1 1 2], Sym[1, 3])

julia> linsolve(system, x, y, z)
{(-y - 1, y, 2)}

Note

The order of solution corresponds the order of given symbols.

In the solveset module, the non linear system of equations is solved using nonlinsolve. Following are examples of nonlinsolve.

  1. When only real solution is present:
	>>> a, b, c, d = symbols('a, b, c, d', real=True)
	>>> nonlinsolve([a**2 + a, a - b], [a, b])
	{(-1, -1), (0, 0)}
	>>> nonlinsolve([x*y - 1, x - 2], x, y)
	{(2, 1/2)}
In Julia:
  • we pass [a,b] as either a, b or using a tuple, as in (a,b), but not as a vector, as this gets mapped into a vector of symbolic objects which causes issues with nonlinsolve:
julia> a, b, c, d = symbols("a, b, c, d", real=true)
(a, b, c, d)

julia> nonlinsolve([a^2 + a, a - b], a, b)
{(-1, -1), (0, 0)}

julia> nonlinsolve([x*y - 1, x - 2], x, y)
{(2, 1/2)}

  1. When only complex solution is present:
	>>> nonlinsolve([x**2 + 1, y**2 + 1], [x, y])
	{(-ⅈ, -ⅈ), (-ⅈ, ⅈ), (ⅈ, -ⅈ), (ⅈ, ⅈ)}
In Julia:
julia> nonlinsolve([x^2 + 1, y^2 + 1], (x, y))
{(-ⅈ, -ⅈ), (-ⅈ, ⅈ), (ⅈ, -ⅈ), (ⅈ, ⅈ)}

  1. When both real and complex solution is present:
	>>> from sympy import sqrt
	>>> system = [x**2 - 2*y**2 -2, x*y - 2]
	>>> vars = [x, y]
	>>> nonlinsolve(system, vars)
	{(-2, -1), (2, 1), (-√2⋅ⅈ, √2⋅ⅈ), (√2⋅ⅈ, -√2⋅ⅈ)}

	>>> n = Dummy('n')
	>>> system = [exp(x) - sin(y), 1/y - 3]
	>>> real_soln = (log(sin(S(1)/3)), S(1)/3)
	>>> img_lamda = Lambda(n, 2*n*I*pi + Mod(log(sin(S(1)/3)), 2*I*pi))
	>>> complex_soln = (ImageSet(img_lamda, S.Integers), S(1)/3)
	>>> soln = FiniteSet(real_soln, complex_soln)
	>>> nonlinsolve(system, [x, y]) == soln
	True
In Julia:
  • we must remove the spaces within []
  • we must pass vars as a tuple:
julia> system = [x^2-2*y^2-2, x*y-2]
2-element Array{Sym,1}:
 x^2 - 2*y^2 - 2
         x*y - 2

julia> vars = (x, y)
(x, y)

julia> nonlinsolve(system, vars)
{(-2, -1), (2, 1), (-√2⋅ⅈ, √2⋅ⅈ), (√2⋅ⅈ, -√2⋅ⅈ)}

However, the next bit requires some modifications to run:

  • the system array definition must have extra spaces removed
  • Dummy, Lambda, Mod, ImageSet, FiniteSet aren't exported
  • we need PI, not pi to have a symbolic value
  • we compare manually
julia> n = sympy.Dummy("n")
n

julia> system = [exp(x)-sin(y), 1/y-3]
2-element Array{Sym,1}:
 exp(x) - sin(y)
        -3 + 1/y

julia> real_soln = (log(sin(S(1)/3)), S(1)/3)
(log(sin(1/3)), 1/3)

julia> img_lamda = sympy.Lambda(n, 2*n*IM*PI + sympy.Mod(log(sin(S(1)/3)), 2*IM*PI))
n ↦ 2⋅n⋅ⅈ⋅π + (log(sin(1/3)) mod 2⋅ⅈ⋅π)

julia> complex_soln = (sympy.ImageSet(img_lamda, S.Integers), S(1)/3)
(ImageSet(Lambda(_n, 2*_n*I*pi + Mod(log(sin(1/3)), 2*I*pi)), Integers), 1/3)

julia> soln = sympy.FiniteSet(real_soln, complex_soln)
{(log(sin(1/3)), 1/3), ({2⋅n⋅ⅈ⋅π + (log(sin(1/3)) mod 2⋅ⅈ⋅π) | n ∊ ℤ}, 1/3)}

julia> nonlinsolve(system, (x, y)) 
{({2⋅n⋅ⅈ⋅π + log(sin(1/3)) | n ∊ ℤ}, 1/3)}


  1. If non linear system of equations is Positive dimensional system (A system with

infinitely many solutions is said to be positive-dimensional):

	>>> nonlinsolve([x*y, x*y - x], [x, y])
	{(0, y)}

	>>> system = [a**2 + a*c, a - b]
	>>> nonlinsolve(system, [a, b])
	{(0, 0), (-c, -c)}
In Julia:
  • again, we use a tuple for the variables:
julia> nonlinsolve([x*y, x*y-x], (x, y))
{(0, y)}
julia> system = [a^2+a*c, a-b]
2-element Array{Sym,1}:
 a^2 + a*c
     a - b

julia> nonlinsolve(system, (a, b))
{(0, 0), (-c, -c)}

Note:

  1. The order of solution corresponds the order of given symbols.

  2. Currently nonlinsolve doesn't return solution in form of LambertW (if there is solution present in the form of LambertW).

solve can be used for such cases:

   >>> solve([x**2 - y**2/exp(x)], [x, y], dict=True)
   ⎡⎧             ⎛y⎞⎫⎤
   ⎢⎨x: 2⋅LambertW⎜─⎟⎬⎥
   ⎣⎩             ⎝2⎠⎭⎦
In Julia:

it is similar

julia> u = solve([x^2 - y^2/exp(x)], [x, y], dict=true)
2-element Array{Dict{Any,Any},1}:
 Dict(x => 2*LambertW(-y/2))
 Dict(x => 2*LambertW(y/2))

To get prettier output, the dict may be converted to have one with symbolic keys:

julia> convert(Dict{SymPy.Sym, Any}, first(u))
Dict{Sym,Any} with 1 entry:
  x => 2*LambertW(-y/2)

  1. Currently nonlinsolve is not properly capable of solving the system of equations

having trigonometric functions.

solve can be used for such cases(not all solution):

   >>> solve([sin(x + y), cos(x - y)], [x, y])
   ⎡⎛-3⋅π   3⋅π⎞  ⎛-π   π⎞  ⎛π  3⋅π⎞  ⎛3⋅π  π⎞⎤
   ⎢⎜─────, ───⎟, ⎜───, ─⎟, ⎜─, ───⎟, ⎜───, ─⎟⎥
   ⎣⎝  4     4 ⎠  ⎝ 4   4⎠  ⎝4   4 ⎠  ⎝ 4   4⎠⎦
In Julia:
julia> solve([sin(x + y), cos(x - y)], [x, y])
4-element Array{Tuple{Sym,Sym},1}:
 (-3*pi/4, 3*pi/4)
 (-pi/4, pi/4)
 (pi/4, 3*pi/4)
 (3*pi/4, pi/4)

solveset reports each solution only once. To get the solutions of a polynomial including multiplicity use roots.

    >>> solveset(x**3 - 6*x**2 + 9*x, x)
    {0, 3}
    >>> roots(x**3 - 6*x**2 + 9*x, x)
    {0: 1, 3: 2}
In Julia:
julia> solveset(x^3 - 6*x^2 + 9*x, x)
{0, 3}
julia> roots(x^3 - 6*x^2 + 9*x, x)  |>  d -> convert(Dict{Sym, Any}, d) # prettier priting
Dict{Sym,Any} with 2 entries:
  3 => 2
  0 => 1

The output {0: 1, 3: 2} of roots means that 0 is a root of multiplicity 1 and 3 is a root of multiplicity 2.

Note:

Currently solveset is not capable of solving the following types of equations:

  • Equations solvable by LambertW (Transcendental equation solver).

solve can be used for such cases:

   >>> solve(x*exp(x) - 1, x )
   [LambertW(1)]
In Julia:
julia> solve(x*exp(x) - 1, x )
1-element Array{Sym,1}:
 LambertW(1)

Solving Differential Equations

To solve differential equations, use dsolve. First, create an undefined function by passing cls=Function to the symbols function.

    >>> f, g = symbols('f g', cls=Function)
In Julia:
julia> f, g = symbols("f g", cls=sympy.Function)
(PyObject f, PyObject g)

f and g are now undefined functions. We can call f(x), and it will represent an unknown function.

    >>> f(x)
    f(x)
In Julia:
julia> f(x)
f(x)

Derivatives of f(x) are unevaluated.

    >>> f(x).diff(x)
    d
    ──(f(x))
    dx
In Julia:
julia> f(x).diff(x)
d
──(f(x))
dx

(see the :ref:Derivatives <tutorial-derivatives> section for more on derivatives).

To represent the differential equation $f''(x) - 2f'(x) + f(x) = \sin(x)$, we would thus use

    >>> diffeq = Eq(f(x).diff(x, x) - 2*f(x).diff(x) + f(x), sin(x))
    >>> diffeq
                          2
             d           d
    f(x) - 2⋅──(f(x)) + ───(f(x)) = sin(x)
             dx           2
                        dx
In Julia:
julia> diffeq = Eq(f(x).diff(x, x) - 2*f(x).diff(x) + f(x), sin(x)); string(diffeq)
"Eq(f(x) - 2*Derivative(f(x), x) + Derivative(f(x), (x, 2)), sin(x))"

To solve the ODE, pass it and the function to solve for to dsolve.

    >>> dsolve(diffeq, f(x))
                        x   cos(x)
    f(x) = (C₁ + C₂⋅x)⋅ℯ  + ──────
                              2
In Julia:
  • we use dsolve for initial value proplems
julia> dsolve(diffeq, f(x)) |> string
"Eq(f(x), (C1 + C2*x)*exp(x) + cos(x)/2)"

dsolve returns an instance of Eq. This is because in general, solutions to differential equations cannot be solved explicitly for the function.

    >>> dsolve(f(x).diff(x)*(1 - sin(f(x))), f(x))
    f(x) + cos(f(x)) = C₁
In Julia:
julia> dsolve(f(x).diff(x)*(1 - sin(f(x))), f(x))
f(x) = C₁

The arbitrary constants in the solutions from dsolve are symbols of the form C1, C2, C3, and so on.

Julia alternative interface

SymPy.jl adds a SymFunction class, that makes it a bit easier to set up a differential equation, though not as general.

We use either the SymFunction constructor

julia> f = SymFunction("f")
f

or the @symfuns macro, as in @symfuns f to define symbolic functions. For these, rather than use diff to specify derivatives, the prime notation can be used. We then have, with f defined above:

julia> diffeq = Eq(f''(x) - 2*f'(x) + f(x), sin(x)); string(diffeq)
"Eq(f(x) - 2*Derivative(f(x), x) + Derivative(f(x), (x, 2)), sin(x))"

julia> dsolve(diffeq, f(x))  |> string
"Eq(f(x), (C1 + C2*x)*exp(x) + cos(x)/2)"

Or:

julia> dsolve(f'(x)*(1 - sin(f(x))), f(x))
f(x) = C₁

This interface allows a different specification of initial conditions than does sympy.dsolve.

For the initial condition f'(x0) = y0, this would be specified with a tuple (f', x0, y0).

For example, to solve the exponential equation $f'(x) = f(x), f(0) = a$ we would have:

julia> f = SymFunction("f")
f

julia> x, a = symbols("x, a")
(x, a)

julia> dsolve(f'(x) - f(x), f(x), ics = (f, 0, a)) |>  string
"Eq(f(x), a*exp(x))"

To solve the simple harmonic equation, where two initial conditions are specified, we combine the tuple for each within another tuple:

julia> ics = ((f, 0, 1), (f', 0, 2))
((f, 0, 1), (f', 0, 2))

julia> dsolve(f''(x) - f(x), f(x), ics=ics) |> string
"Eq(f(x), 3*exp(x)/2 - exp(-x)/2)"