Source code for sympy.calculus.finite_diff

"""
Finite difference weights
=========================

This module implements an algorithm for efficient generation of finite
difference weights for ordinary differentials of functions for
derivatives from 0 (interpolation) up to arbitrary order.

The core algorithm is provided in the finite difference weight generating
function (``finite_diff_weights``), and two convenience functions are provided
for:

- estimating a derivative (or interpolate) directly from a series of points
    is also provided (``apply_finite_diff``).
- differentiating by using finite difference approximations
    (``differentiate_finite``).

"""

from sympy import Derivative, S
from sympy.core.compatibility import iterable, range
from sympy.core.decorators import deprecated


[docs]def finite_diff_weights(order, x_list, x0=S.One): """ Calculates the finite difference weights for an arbitrarily spaced one-dimensional grid (``x_list``) for derivatives at ``x0`` of order 0, 1, ..., up to ``order`` using a recursive formula. Order of accuracy is at least ``len(x_list) - order``, if ``x_list`` is defined correctly. Parameters ========== order: int Up to what derivative order weights should be calculated. 0 corresponds to interpolation. x_list: sequence Sequence of (unique) values for the independent variable. It is useful (but not necessary) to order ``x_list`` from nearest to furthest from ``x0``; see examples below. x0: Number or Symbol Root or value of the independent variable for which the finite difference weights should be generated. Default is ``S.One``. Returns ======= list A list of sublists, each corresponding to coefficients for increasing derivative order, and each containing lists of coefficients for increasing subsets of x_list. Examples ======== >>> from sympy import S >>> from sympy.calculus import finite_diff_weights >>> res = finite_diff_weights(1, [-S(1)/2, S(1)/2, S(3)/2, S(5)/2], 0) >>> res [[[1, 0, 0, 0], [1/2, 1/2, 0, 0], [3/8, 3/4, -1/8, 0], [5/16, 15/16, -5/16, 1/16]], [[0, 0, 0, 0], [-1, 1, 0, 0], [-1, 1, 0, 0], [-23/24, 7/8, 1/8, -1/24]]] >>> res[0][-1] # FD weights for 0th derivative, using full x_list [5/16, 15/16, -5/16, 1/16] >>> res[1][-1] # FD weights for 1st derivative [-23/24, 7/8, 1/8, -1/24] >>> res[1][-2] # FD weights for 1st derivative, using x_list[:-1] [-1, 1, 0, 0] >>> res[1][-1][0] # FD weight for 1st deriv. for x_list[0] -23/24 >>> res[1][-1][1] # FD weight for 1st deriv. for x_list[1], etc. 7/8 Each sublist contains the most accurate formula at the end. Note, that in the above example ``res[1][1]`` is the same as ``res[1][2]``. Since res[1][2] has an order of accuracy of ``len(x_list[:3]) - order = 3 - 1 = 2``, the same is true for ``res[1][1]``! >>> from sympy import S >>> from sympy.calculus import finite_diff_weights >>> res = finite_diff_weights(1, [S(0), S(1), -S(1), S(2), -S(2)], 0)[1] >>> res [[0, 0, 0, 0, 0], [-1, 1, 0, 0, 0], [0, 1/2, -1/2, 0, 0], [-1/2, 1, -1/3, -1/6, 0], [0, 2/3, -2/3, -1/12, 1/12]] >>> res[0] # no approximation possible, using x_list[0] only [0, 0, 0, 0, 0] >>> res[1] # classic forward step approximation [-1, 1, 0, 0, 0] >>> res[2] # classic centered approximation [0, 1/2, -1/2, 0, 0] >>> res[3:] # higher order approximations [[-1/2, 1, -1/3, -1/6, 0], [0, 2/3, -2/3, -1/12, 1/12]] Let us compare this to a differently defined ``x_list``. Pay attention to ``foo[i][k]`` corresponding to the gridpoint defined by ``x_list[k]``. >>> from sympy import S >>> from sympy.calculus import finite_diff_weights >>> foo = finite_diff_weights(1, [-S(2), -S(1), S(0), S(1), S(2)], 0)[1] >>> foo [[0, 0, 0, 0, 0], [-1, 1, 0, 0, 0], [1/2, -2, 3/2, 0, 0], [1/6, -1, 1/2, 1/3, 0], [1/12, -2/3, 0, 2/3, -1/12]] >>> foo[1] # not the same and of lower accuracy as res[1]! [-1, 1, 0, 0, 0] >>> foo[2] # classic double backward step approximation [1/2, -2, 3/2, 0, 0] >>> foo[4] # the same as res[4] [1/12, -2/3, 0, 2/3, -1/12] Note that, unless you plan on using approximations based on subsets of ``x_list``, the order of gridpoints does not matter. The capability to generate weights at arbitrary points can be used e.g. to minimize Runge's phenomenon by using Chebyshev nodes: >>> from sympy import cos, symbols, pi, simplify >>> from sympy.calculus import finite_diff_weights >>> N, (h, x) = 4, symbols('h x') >>> x_list = [x+h*cos(i*pi/(N)) for i in range(N,-1,-1)] # chebyshev nodes >>> print(x_list) [-h + x, -sqrt(2)*h/2 + x, x, sqrt(2)*h/2 + x, h + x] >>> mycoeffs = finite_diff_weights(1, x_list, 0)[1][4] >>> [simplify(c) for c in mycoeffs] #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE [(h**3/2 + h**2*x - 3*h*x**2 - 4*x**3)/h**4, (-sqrt(2)*h**3 - 4*h**2*x + 3*sqrt(2)*h*x**2 + 8*x**3)/h**4, 6*x/h**2 - 8*x**3/h**4, (sqrt(2)*h**3 - 4*h**2*x - 3*sqrt(2)*h*x**2 + 8*x**3)/h**4, (-h**3/2 + h**2*x + 3*h*x**2 - 4*x**3)/h**4] Notes ===== If weights for a finite difference approximation of 3rd order derivative is wanted, weights for 0th, 1st and 2nd order are calculated "for free", so are formulae using subsets of ``x_list``. This is something one can take advantage of to save computational cost. Be aware that one should define ``x_list`` from nearest to farest from ``x0``. If not, subsets of ``x_list`` will yield poorer approximations, which might not grand an order of accuracy of ``len(x_list) - order``. See also ======== sympy.calculus.finite_diff.apply_finite_diff References ========== .. [1] Generation of Finite Difference Formulas on Arbitrarily Spaced Grids, Bengt Fornberg; Mathematics of computation; 51; 184; (1988); 699-706; doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-1988-0935077-0 """ # The notation below closely corresponds to the one used in the paper. if order < 0: raise ValueError("Negative derivative order illegal.") if int(order) != order: raise ValueError("Non-integer order illegal") M = order N = len(x_list) - 1 delta = [[[0 for nu in range(N+1)] for n in range(N+1)] for m in range(M+1)] delta[0][0][0] = S(1) c1 = S(1) for n in range(1, N+1): c2 = S(1) for nu in range(0, n): c3 = x_list[n]-x_list[nu] c2 = c2 * c3 if n <= M: delta[n][n-1][nu] = 0 for m in range(0, min(n, M)+1): delta[m][n][nu] = (x_list[n]-x0)*delta[m][n-1][nu] -\ m*delta[m-1][n-1][nu] delta[m][n][nu] /= c3 for m in range(0, min(n, M)+1): delta[m][n][n] = c1/c2*(m*delta[m-1][n-1][n-1] - (x_list[n-1]-x0)*delta[m][n-1][n-1]) c1 = c2 return delta
[docs]def apply_finite_diff(order, x_list, y_list, x0=S(0)): """ Calculates the finite difference approximation of the derivative of requested order at ``x0`` from points provided in ``x_list`` and ``y_list``. Parameters ========== order: int order of derivative to approximate. 0 corresponds to interpolation. x_list: sequence Sequence of (unique) values for the independent variable. y_list: sequence The function value at corresponding values for the independent variable in x_list. x0: Number or Symbol At what value of the independent variable the derivative should be evaluated. Defaults to S(0). Returns ======= sympy.core.add.Add or sympy.core.numbers.Number The finite difference expression approximating the requested derivative order at ``x0``. Examples ======== >>> from sympy.calculus import apply_finite_diff >>> cube = lambda arg: (1.0*arg)**3 >>> xlist = range(-3,3+1) >>> apply_finite_diff(2, xlist, map(cube, xlist), 2) - 12 # doctest: +SKIP -3.55271367880050e-15 we see that the example above only contain rounding errors. apply_finite_diff can also be used on more abstract objects: >>> from sympy import IndexedBase, Idx >>> from sympy.calculus import apply_finite_diff >>> x, y = map(IndexedBase, 'xy') >>> i = Idx('i') >>> x_list, y_list = zip(*[(x[i+j], y[i+j]) for j in range(-1,2)]) >>> apply_finite_diff(1, x_list, y_list, x[i]) ((x[i + 1] - x[i])/(-x[i - 1] + x[i]) - 1)*y[i]/(x[i + 1] - x[i]) - \ (x[i + 1] - x[i])*y[i - 1]/((x[i + 1] - x[i - 1])*(-x[i - 1] + x[i])) + \ (-x[i - 1] + x[i])*y[i + 1]/((x[i + 1] - x[i - 1])*(x[i + 1] - x[i])) Notes ===== Order = 0 corresponds to interpolation. Only supply so many points you think makes sense to around x0 when extracting the derivative (the function need to be well behaved within that region). Also beware of Runge's phenomenon. See also ======== sympy.calculus.finite_diff.finite_diff_weights References ========== Fortran 90 implementation with Python interface for numerics: finitediff_ .. _finitediff: https://github.com/bjodah/finitediff """ # In the original paper the following holds for the notation: # M = order # N = len(x_list) - 1 N = len(x_list) - 1 if len(x_list) != len(y_list): raise ValueError("x_list and y_list not equal in length.") delta = finite_diff_weights(order, x_list, x0) derivative = 0 for nu in range(0, len(x_list)): derivative += delta[order][N][nu]*y_list[nu] return derivative
def _as_finite_diff(derivative, points=1, x0=None, wrt=None): """ Returns an approximation of a derivative of a function in the form of a finite difference formula. The expression is a weighted sum of the function at a number of discrete values of (one of) the independent variable(s). Parameters ========== derivative: a Derivative instance points: sequence or coefficient, optional If sequence: discrete values (length >= order+1) of the independent variable used for generating the finite difference weights. If it is a coefficient, it will be used as the step-size for generating an equidistant sequence of length order+1 centered around ``x0``. default: 1 (step-size 1) x0: number or Symbol, optional the value of the independent variable (``wrt``) at which the derivative is to be approximated. Default: same as ``wrt``. wrt: Symbol, optional "with respect to" the variable for which the (partial) derivative is to be approximated for. If not provided it is required that the Derivative is ordinary. Default: ``None``. Examples ======== >>> from sympy import symbols, Function, exp, sqrt, Symbol, as_finite_diff >>> from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning >>> import warnings >>> warnings.simplefilter("ignore", SymPyDeprecationWarning) >>> x, h = symbols('x h') >>> f = Function('f') >>> as_finite_diff(f(x).diff(x)) -f(x - 1/2) + f(x + 1/2) The default step size and number of points are 1 and ``order + 1`` respectively. We can change the step size by passing a symbol as a parameter: >>> as_finite_diff(f(x).diff(x), h) -f(-h/2 + x)/h + f(h/2 + x)/h We can also specify the discretized values to be used in a sequence: >>> as_finite_diff(f(x).diff(x), [x, x+h, x+2*h]) -3*f(x)/(2*h) + 2*f(h + x)/h - f(2*h + x)/(2*h) The algorithm is not restricted to use equidistant spacing, nor do we need to make the approximation around ``x0``, but we can get an expression estimating the derivative at an offset: >>> e, sq2 = exp(1), sqrt(2) >>> xl = [x-h, x+h, x+e*h] >>> as_finite_diff(f(x).diff(x, 1), xl, x+h*sq2) 2*h*((h + sqrt(2)*h)/(2*h) - (-sqrt(2)*h + h)/(2*h))*f(E*h + x)/\ ((-h + E*h)*(h + E*h)) + (-(-sqrt(2)*h + h)/(2*h) - \ (-sqrt(2)*h + E*h)/(2*h))*f(-h + x)/(h + E*h) + \ (-(h + sqrt(2)*h)/(2*h) + (-sqrt(2)*h + E*h)/(2*h))*f(h + x)/(-h + E*h) Partial derivatives are also supported: >>> y = Symbol('y') >>> d2fdxdy=f(x,y).diff(x,y) >>> as_finite_diff(d2fdxdy, wrt=x) -Derivative(f(x - 1/2, y), y) + Derivative(f(x + 1/2, y), y) See also ======== sympy.calculus.finite_diff.apply_finite_diff sympy.calculus.finite_diff.finite_diff_weights """ if derivative.is_Derivative: pass elif derivative.is_Atom: return derivative else: return derivative.fromiter( [_as_finite_diff(ar, points, x0, wrt) for ar in derivative.args], **derivative.assumptions0) if wrt is None: old = None for v in derivative.variables: if old is v: continue derivative = _as_finite_diff(derivative, points, x0, v) old = v return derivative order = derivative.variables.count(wrt) if x0 is None: x0 = wrt if not iterable(points): # points is simply the step-size, let's make it a # equidistant sequence centered around x0 if order % 2 == 0: # even order => odd number of points, grid point included points = [x0 + points*i for i in range(-order//2, order//2 + 1)] else: # odd order => even number of points, half-way wrt grid point points = [x0 + points*S(i)/2 for i in range(-order, order + 1, 2)] others = [wrt, 0] for v in set(derivative.variables): if v == wrt: continue others += [v, derivative.variables.count(v)] if len(points) < order+1: raise ValueError("Too few points for order %d" % order) return apply_finite_diff(order, points, [ Derivative(derivative.expr.subs({wrt: x}), *others) for x in points], x0) as_finite_diff = deprecated( useinstead="Derivative.as_finite_difference", deprecated_since_version="1.1", issue=11410)(_as_finite_diff)
[docs]def differentiate_finite(expr, *symbols, # points=1, x0=None, wrt=None, evaluate=True, #Py2: **kwargs): r""" Differentiate expr and replace Derivatives with finite differences. Parameters ========== expr : expression \*symbols : differentiate with respect to symbols points: sequence or coefficient, optional see ``Derivative.as_finite_difference`` x0: number or Symbol, optional see ``Derivative.as_finite_difference`` wrt: Symbol, optional see ``Derivative.as_finite_difference`` evaluate : bool kwarg passed on to ``diff``, whether or not to evaluate the Derivative intermediately (default: ``False``). Examples ======== >>> from sympy import cos, sin, Function, differentiate_finite >>> from sympy.abc import x, y, h >>> f, g = Function('f'), Function('g') >>> differentiate_finite(f(x)*g(x), x, points=[x-h, x+h]) -f(-h + x)*g(-h + x)/(2*h) + f(h + x)*g(h + x)/(2*h) Note that the above form preserves the product rule in discrete form. If we want we can pass ``evaluate=True`` to get another form (which is usually not what we want): >>> differentiate_finite(f(x)*g(x), x, points=[x-h, x+h], evaluate=True).simplify() -((f(-h + x) - f(h + x))*g(x) + (g(-h + x) - g(h + x))*f(x))/(2*h) ``differentiate_finite`` works on any expression: >>> differentiate_finite(f(x) + sin(x), x, 2) -2*f(x) + f(x - 1) + f(x + 1) - 2*sin(x) + sin(x - 1) + sin(x + 1) >>> differentiate_finite(f(x) + sin(x), x, 2, evaluate=True) -2*f(x) + f(x - 1) + f(x + 1) - sin(x) >>> differentiate_finite(f(x, y), x, y) f(x - 1/2, y - 1/2) - f(x - 1/2, y + 1/2) - f(x + 1/2, y - 1/2) + f(x + 1/2, y + 1/2) """ # Key-word only arguments only available in Python 3 points = kwargs.pop('points', 1) x0 = kwargs.pop('x0', None) wrt = kwargs.pop('wrt', None) evaluate = kwargs.pop('evaluate', False) if kwargs != {}: raise ValueError("Unknown kwargs: %s" % kwargs) Dexpr = expr.diff(*symbols, evaluate=evaluate) return Dexpr.replace( lambda arg: arg.is_Derivative, lambda arg: arg.as_finite_difference(points=points, x0=x0, wrt=wrt))