On Fri, May 22, 2020 at 04:07:47PM -0700, Jonathan wrote:
> Emmanuel,
>  
> Thanks, that is one of the places I was starting. It turns out that doesn't 
> quite pick up the necessary stuff from the `Expr` type. I have had better 
> luck extending the base type `Expr`. It was not hard to get the arithmetic 
> parts (+, -, /,*, pow) working. I'm still looking for/working on a robust 
> way of extending all the SymPy functions to operate on both the lhs and the 
> rhs.
> 
> The idea here is not to use solve, but allow students to use it to aid them 
> in doing algebra without making silly errors. We still need them to decide 
> on all the steps themselves. This also lets them include units in 
> calculations in a way that is familiar to physical scientists.
> 
> Anyway, my hope is to get some inspiration from how it is done in Sagemath.
> 
> Although my preference is to use Sagemath because of the inherent power, 
> this application needs to play nice with *conda and pip installs. So I 

Conda does have Sagemath available.
Not 100% sure how it works on Windows, though.

We're planning for this year to get Sagemath pip-installable too.


> think it has to be an extension of SymPy rather than trying to convince 
> people to install the other tools they are using in a Sagemath environment.
> 
> I'm definitely thankful for any suggestions people have.
> 
> Jonathan
> On Friday, May 22, 2020 at 11:54:19 AM UTC-5, Emmanuel Charpentier wrote:
> >
> > Well, you  might consider working on the expressions <lef-hend 
> > part>-<right-hand part>. A quick test with Sympy:
> >
> > Python 3.8.3 (default, May 14 2020, 11:03:12) 
> > [GCC 9.3.0] on linux
> > Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
> > >>> python.el: native completion setup loaded
> > >>> from sympy import *
> > >>> p,V,n,R,T=symbols("p,V,n,R,T")
> > >>> Ex1=p*V-n*R*T
> > >>> Ex1
> > -R*T*n + V*p
> > >>> Ex1/V
> > (-R*T*n + V*p)/V
> > >>> solve(Ex1,p)
> > [R*T*n/V]
> >
> > But Sympy *has* the Eq operator, which allows you to build, store and use 
> > symbolic equations :
> >
> > >>> Eq1=Eq(p*V, n*R*T)
> > >>> Eq1
> > Eq(V*p, R*T*n)
> > >>> solve(Eq1,p)
> > [R*T*n/V]
> >
> > OTOH, Sage isn't *that* much heavier than Sympy...
> >
> > HTH,
> >
> > Le jeudi 21 mai 2020 15:30:42 UTC+2, Jonathan a écrit :
> >>
> >> Dear All,
> >>
> >> I have a use case where I need something lighter weight than the whole of 
> >> Sagemath. I think SymPy + the ability to handle math on symbolic equations 
> >> as Sagemath does it might be enough. Thus I wanted to see if I could 
> >> extract from Sagemath the code supporting math on symbolic expressions and 
> >> overlay that on SymPy or at least use that as a template. Can somebody 
> >> please point me to the place to start looking in the codebase?
> >>
> >> To make sure people understand what I am interested in, here is a simple 
> >> example of the ability I would like to extract:
> >> >>>eq1 = p*V==n*R*T
> >> >>>eq1
> >> p*V=n*R*T
> >> >>>eq2=eq1/V
> >> >>>eq2
> >> p=n*R*T/V
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Jonathan
> >>
> >
> 
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