1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
3 @setfilename ginac.info
4 @settitle GiNaC, an open framework for symbolic computation within the C++ programming language
11 @c I hate putting "@noindent" in front of every paragraph.
18 @dircategory Mathematics
20 * ginac: (ginac). C++ library for symbolic computation.
24 This is a tutorial that documents GiNaC @value{VERSION}, an open
25 framework for symbolic computation within the C++ programming language.
27 Copyright (C) 1999-2007 Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany
29 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
30 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
31 are preserved on all copies.
34 Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
35 results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
36 notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
39 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
40 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
41 resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
42 notice identical to this one.
46 @c finalout prevents ugly black rectangles on overfull hbox lines
48 @title GiNaC @value{VERSION}
49 @subtitle An open framework for symbolic computation within the C++ programming language
50 @subtitle @value{UPDATED}
51 @author @uref{http://www.ginac.de}
54 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
55 Copyright @copyright{} 1999-2007 Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany
57 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
58 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
59 are preserved on all copies.
61 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
62 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
63 resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
64 notice identical to this one.
73 @node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir)
74 @c node-name, next, previous, up
77 This is a tutorial that documents GiNaC @value{VERSION}, an open
78 framework for symbolic computation within the C++ programming language.
81 * Introduction:: GiNaC's purpose.
82 * A tour of GiNaC:: A quick tour of the library.
83 * Installation:: How to install the package.
84 * Basic concepts:: Description of fundamental classes.
85 * Methods and functions:: Algorithms for symbolic manipulations.
86 * Extending GiNaC:: How to extend the library.
87 * A comparison with other CAS:: Compares GiNaC to traditional CAS.
88 * Internal structures:: Description of some internal structures.
89 * Package tools:: Configuring packages to work with GiNaC.
95 @node Introduction, A tour of GiNaC, Top, Top
96 @c node-name, next, previous, up
98 @cindex history of GiNaC
100 The motivation behind GiNaC derives from the observation that most
101 present day computer algebra systems (CAS) are linguistically and
102 semantically impoverished. Although they are quite powerful tools for
103 learning math and solving particular problems they lack modern
104 linguistic structures that allow for the creation of large-scale
105 projects. GiNaC is an attempt to overcome this situation by extending a
106 well established and standardized computer language (C++) by some
107 fundamental symbolic capabilities, thus allowing for integrated systems
108 that embed symbolic manipulations together with more established areas
109 of computer science (like computation-intense numeric applications,
110 graphical interfaces, etc.) under one roof.
112 The particular problem that led to the writing of the GiNaC framework is
113 still a very active field of research, namely the calculation of higher
114 order corrections to elementary particle interactions. There,
115 theoretical physicists are interested in matching present day theories
116 against experiments taking place at particle accelerators. The
117 computations involved are so complex they call for a combined symbolical
118 and numerical approach. This turned out to be quite difficult to
119 accomplish with the present day CAS we have worked with so far and so we
120 tried to fill the gap by writing GiNaC. But of course its applications
121 are in no way restricted to theoretical physics.
123 This tutorial is intended for the novice user who is new to GiNaC but
124 already has some background in C++ programming. However, since a
125 hand-made documentation like this one is difficult to keep in sync with
126 the development, the actual documentation is inside the sources in the
127 form of comments. That documentation may be parsed by one of the many
128 Javadoc-like documentation systems. If you fail at generating it you
129 may access it from @uref{http://www.ginac.de/reference/, the GiNaC home
130 page}. It is an invaluable resource not only for the advanced user who
131 wishes to extend the system (or chase bugs) but for everybody who wants
132 to comprehend the inner workings of GiNaC. This little tutorial on the
133 other hand only covers the basic things that are unlikely to change in
137 The GiNaC framework for symbolic computation within the C++ programming
138 language is Copyright @copyright{} 1999-2007 Johannes Gutenberg
139 University Mainz, Germany.
141 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
142 modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
143 published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
144 License, or (at your option) any later version.
146 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
147 WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
148 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
149 General Public License for more details.
151 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
152 along with this program; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
153 Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston,
157 @node A tour of GiNaC, How to use it from within C++, Introduction, Top
158 @c node-name, next, previous, up
159 @chapter A Tour of GiNaC
161 This quick tour of GiNaC wants to arise your interest in the
162 subsequent chapters by showing off a bit. Please excuse us if it
163 leaves many open questions.
166 * How to use it from within C++:: Two simple examples.
167 * What it can do for you:: A Tour of GiNaC's features.
171 @node How to use it from within C++, What it can do for you, A tour of GiNaC, A tour of GiNaC
172 @c node-name, next, previous, up
173 @section How to use it from within C++
175 The GiNaC open framework for symbolic computation within the C++ programming
176 language does not try to define a language of its own as conventional
177 CAS do. Instead, it extends the capabilities of C++ by symbolic
178 manipulations. Here is how to generate and print a simple (and rather
179 pointless) bivariate polynomial with some large coefficients:
183 #include <ginac/ginac.h>
185 using namespace GiNaC;
189 symbol x("x"), y("y");
192 for (int i=0; i<3; ++i)
193 poly += factorial(i+16)*pow(x,i)*pow(y,2-i);
195 cout << poly << endl;
200 Assuming the file is called @file{hello.cc}, on our system we can compile
201 and run it like this:
204 $ c++ hello.cc -o hello -lcln -lginac
206 355687428096000*x*y+20922789888000*y^2+6402373705728000*x^2
209 (@xref{Package tools}, for tools that help you when creating a software
210 package that uses GiNaC.)
212 @cindex Hermite polynomial
213 Next, there is a more meaningful C++ program that calls a function which
214 generates Hermite polynomials in a specified free variable.
218 #include <ginac/ginac.h>
220 using namespace GiNaC;
222 ex HermitePoly(const symbol & x, int n)
224 ex HKer=exp(-pow(x, 2));
225 // uses the identity H_n(x) == (-1)^n exp(x^2) (d/dx)^n exp(-x^2)
226 return normal(pow(-1, n) * diff(HKer, x, n) / HKer);
233 for (int i=0; i<6; ++i)
234 cout << "H_" << i << "(z) == " << HermitePoly(z,i) << endl;
240 When run, this will type out
246 H_3(z) == -12*z+8*z^3
247 H_4(z) == -48*z^2+16*z^4+12
248 H_5(z) == 120*z-160*z^3+32*z^5
251 This method of generating the coefficients is of course far from optimal
252 for production purposes.
254 In order to show some more examples of what GiNaC can do we will now use
255 the @command{ginsh}, a simple GiNaC interactive shell that provides a
256 convenient window into GiNaC's capabilities.
259 @node What it can do for you, Installation, How to use it from within C++, A tour of GiNaC
260 @c node-name, next, previous, up
261 @section What it can do for you
263 @cindex @command{ginsh}
264 After invoking @command{ginsh} one can test and experiment with GiNaC's
265 features much like in other Computer Algebra Systems except that it does
266 not provide programming constructs like loops or conditionals. For a
267 concise description of the @command{ginsh} syntax we refer to its
268 accompanied man page. Suffice to say that assignments and comparisons in
269 @command{ginsh} are written as they are in C, i.e. @code{=} assigns and
272 It can manipulate arbitrary precision integers in a very fast way.
273 Rational numbers are automatically converted to fractions of coprime
278 369988485035126972924700782451696644186473100389722973815184405301748249
280 123329495011708990974900260817232214728824366796574324605061468433916083
287 Exact numbers are always retained as exact numbers and only evaluated as
288 floating point numbers if requested. For instance, with numeric
289 radicals is dealt pretty much as with symbols. Products of sums of them
293 > expand((1+a^(1/5)-a^(2/5))^3);
294 1+3*a+3*a^(1/5)-5*a^(3/5)-a^(6/5)
295 > expand((1+3^(1/5)-3^(2/5))^3);
297 > evalf((1+3^(1/5)-3^(2/5))^3);
298 0.33408977534118624228
301 The function @code{evalf} that was used above converts any number in
302 GiNaC's expressions into floating point numbers. This can be done to
303 arbitrary predefined accuracy:
307 0.14285714285714285714
311 0.1428571428571428571428571428571428571428571428571428571428571428571428
312 5714285714285714285714285714285714285
315 Exact numbers other than rationals that can be manipulated in GiNaC
316 include predefined constants like Archimedes' @code{Pi}. They can both
317 be used in symbolic manipulations (as an exact number) as well as in
318 numeric expressions (as an inexact number):
324 9.869604401089358619+x
328 11.869604401089358619
331 Built-in functions evaluate immediately to exact numbers if
332 this is possible. Conversions that can be safely performed are done
333 immediately; conversions that are not generally valid are not done:
344 (Note that converting the last input to @code{x} would allow one to
345 conclude that @code{42*Pi} is equal to @code{0}.)
347 Linear equation systems can be solved along with basic linear
348 algebra manipulations over symbolic expressions. In C++ GiNaC offers
349 a matrix class for this purpose but we can see what it can do using
350 @command{ginsh}'s bracket notation to type them in:
353 > lsolve(a+x*y==z,x);
355 > lsolve(@{3*x+5*y == 7, -2*x+10*y == -5@}, @{x, y@});
357 > M = [ [1, 3], [-3, 2] ];
361 > charpoly(M,lambda);
363 > A = [ [1, 1], [2, -1] ];
366 [[1,1],[2,-1]]+2*[[1,3],[-3,2]]
369 > B = [ [0, 0, a], [b, 1, -b], [-1/a, 0, 0] ];
370 > evalm(B^(2^12345));
371 [[1,0,0],[0,1,0],[0,0,1]]
374 Multivariate polynomials and rational functions may be expanded,
375 collected and normalized (i.e. converted to a ratio of two coprime
379 > a = x^4 + 2*x^2*y^2 + 4*x^3*y + 12*x*y^3 - 3*y^4;
380 12*x*y^3+2*x^2*y^2+4*x^3*y-3*y^4+x^4
381 > b = x^2 + 4*x*y - y^2;
384 8*x^5*y+17*x^4*y^2+43*x^2*y^4-24*x*y^5+16*x^3*y^3+3*y^6+x^6
386 4*x^3*y-y^2-3*y^4+(12*y^3+4*y)*x+x^4+x^2*(1+2*y^2)
388 12*x*y^3-3*y^4+(-1+2*x^2)*y^2+(4*x+4*x^3)*y+x^2+x^4
393 You can differentiate functions and expand them as Taylor or Laurent
394 series in a very natural syntax (the second argument of @code{series} is
395 a relation defining the evaluation point, the third specifies the
398 @cindex Zeta function
402 > series(sin(x),x==0,4);
404 > series(1/tan(x),x==0,4);
405 x^(-1)-1/3*x+Order(x^2)
406 > series(tgamma(x),x==0,3);
407 x^(-1)-Euler+(1/12*Pi^2+1/2*Euler^2)*x+
408 (-1/3*zeta(3)-1/12*Pi^2*Euler-1/6*Euler^3)*x^2+Order(x^3)
410 x^(-1)-0.5772156649015328606+(0.9890559953279725555)*x
411 -(0.90747907608088628905)*x^2+Order(x^3)
412 > series(tgamma(2*sin(x)-2),x==Pi/2,6);
413 -(x-1/2*Pi)^(-2)+(-1/12*Pi^2-1/2*Euler^2-1/240)*(x-1/2*Pi)^2
414 -Euler-1/12+Order((x-1/2*Pi)^3)
417 Here we have made use of the @command{ginsh}-command @code{%} to pop the
418 previously evaluated element from @command{ginsh}'s internal stack.
420 Often, functions don't have roots in closed form. Nevertheless, it's
421 quite easy to compute a solution numerically, to arbitrary precision:
426 > fsolve(cos(x)==x,x,0,2);
427 0.7390851332151606416553120876738734040134117589007574649658
429 > X=fsolve(f,x,-10,10);
430 2.2191071489137460325957851882042901681753665565320678854155
432 -6.372367644529809108115521591070847222364418220770475144296E-58
435 Notice how the final result above differs slightly from zero by about
436 @math{6*10^(-58)}. This is because with 50 decimal digits precision the
437 root cannot be represented more accurately than @code{X}. Such
438 inaccuracies are to be expected when computing with finite floating
441 If you ever wanted to convert units in C or C++ and found this is
442 cumbersome, here is the solution. Symbolic types can always be used as
443 tags for different types of objects. Converting from wrong units to the
444 metric system is now easy:
452 140613.91592783185568*kg*m^(-2)
456 @node Installation, Prerequisites, What it can do for you, Top
457 @c node-name, next, previous, up
458 @chapter Installation
461 GiNaC's installation follows the spirit of most GNU software. It is
462 easily installed on your system by three steps: configuration, build,
466 * Prerequisites:: Packages upon which GiNaC depends.
467 * Configuration:: How to configure GiNaC.
468 * Building GiNaC:: How to compile GiNaC.
469 * Installing GiNaC:: How to install GiNaC on your system.
473 @node Prerequisites, Configuration, Installation, Installation
474 @c node-name, next, previous, up
475 @section Prerequisites
477 In order to install GiNaC on your system, some prerequisites need to be
478 met. First of all, you need to have a C++-compiler adhering to the
479 ANSI-standard @cite{ISO/IEC 14882:1998(E)}. We used GCC for development
480 so if you have a different compiler you are on your own. For the
481 configuration to succeed you need a Posix compliant shell installed in
482 @file{/bin/sh}, GNU @command{bash} is fine. The pkg-config utility is
483 required for the configuration, it can be downloaded from
484 @uref{http://pkg-config.freedesktop.org}.
485 Last but not least, the CLN library
486 is used extensively and needs to be installed on your system.
487 Please get it from @uref{ftp://ftpthep.physik.uni-mainz.de/pub/gnu/}
488 (it is covered by GPL) and install it prior to trying to install
489 GiNaC. The configure script checks if it can find it and if it cannot
490 it will refuse to continue.
493 @node Configuration, Building GiNaC, Prerequisites, Installation
494 @c node-name, next, previous, up
495 @section Configuration
496 @cindex configuration
499 To configure GiNaC means to prepare the source distribution for
500 building. It is done via a shell script called @command{configure} that
501 is shipped with the sources and was originally generated by GNU
502 Autoconf. Since a configure script generated by GNU Autoconf never
503 prompts, all customization must be done either via command line
504 parameters or environment variables. It accepts a list of parameters,
505 the complete set of which can be listed by calling it with the
506 @option{--help} option. The most important ones will be shortly
507 described in what follows:
512 @option{--disable-shared}: When given, this option switches off the
513 build of a shared library, i.e. a @file{.so} file. This may be convenient
514 when developing because it considerably speeds up compilation.
517 @option{--prefix=@var{PREFIX}}: The directory where the compiled library
518 and headers are installed. It defaults to @file{/usr/local} which means
519 that the library is installed in the directory @file{/usr/local/lib},
520 the header files in @file{/usr/local/include/ginac} and the documentation
521 (like this one) into @file{/usr/local/share/doc/GiNaC}.
524 @option{--libdir=@var{LIBDIR}}: Use this option in case you want to have
525 the library installed in some other directory than
526 @file{@var{PREFIX}/lib/}.
529 @option{--includedir=@var{INCLUDEDIR}}: Use this option in case you want
530 to have the header files installed in some other directory than
531 @file{@var{PREFIX}/include/ginac/}. For instance, if you specify
532 @option{--includedir=/usr/include} you will end up with the header files
533 sitting in the directory @file{/usr/include/ginac/}. Note that the
534 subdirectory @file{ginac} is enforced by this process in order to
535 keep the header files separated from others. This avoids some
536 clashes and allows for an easier deinstallation of GiNaC. This ought
537 to be considered A Good Thing (tm).
540 @option{--datadir=@var{DATADIR}}: This option may be given in case you
541 want to have the documentation installed in some other directory than
542 @file{@var{PREFIX}/share/doc/GiNaC/}.
546 In addition, you may specify some environment variables. @env{CXX}
547 holds the path and the name of the C++ compiler in case you want to
548 override the default in your path. (The @command{configure} script
549 searches your path for @command{c++}, @command{g++}, @command{gcc},
550 @command{CC}, @command{cxx} and @command{cc++} in that order.) It may
551 be very useful to define some compiler flags with the @env{CXXFLAGS}
552 environment variable, like optimization, debugging information and
553 warning levels. If omitted, it defaults to @option{-g
554 -O2}.@footnote{The @command{configure} script is itself generated from
555 the file @file{configure.ac}. It is only distributed in packaged
556 releases of GiNaC. If you got the naked sources, e.g. from CVS, you
557 must generate @command{configure} along with the various
558 @file{Makefile.in} by using the @command{autoreconf} utility. This will
559 require a fair amount of support from your local toolchain, though.}
561 The whole process is illustrated in the following two
562 examples. (Substitute @command{setenv @var{VARIABLE} @var{value}} for
563 @command{export @var{VARIABLE}=@var{value}} if the Berkeley C shell is
566 Here is a simple configuration for a site-wide GiNaC library assuming
567 everything is in default paths:
570 $ export CXXFLAGS="-Wall -O2"
574 And here is a configuration for a private static GiNaC library with
575 several components sitting in custom places (site-wide GCC and private
576 CLN). The compiler is persuaded to be picky and full assertions and
577 debugging information are switched on:
580 $ export CXX=/usr/local/gnu/bin/c++
581 $ export CPPFLAGS="$(CPPFLAGS) -I$(HOME)/include"
582 $ export CXXFLAGS="$(CXXFLAGS) -DDO_GINAC_ASSERT -ggdb -Wall -pedantic"
583 $ export LDFLAGS="$(LDFLAGS) -L$(HOME)/lib"
584 $ ./configure --disable-shared --prefix=$(HOME)
588 @node Building GiNaC, Installing GiNaC, Configuration, Installation
589 @c node-name, next, previous, up
590 @section Building GiNaC
591 @cindex building GiNaC
593 After proper configuration you should just build the whole
598 at the command prompt and go for a cup of coffee. The exact time it
599 takes to compile GiNaC depends not only on the speed of your machines
600 but also on other parameters, for instance what value for @env{CXXFLAGS}
601 you entered. Optimization may be very time-consuming.
603 Just to make sure GiNaC works properly you may run a collection of
604 regression tests by typing
610 This will compile some sample programs, run them and check the output
611 for correctness. The regression tests fall in three categories. First,
612 the so called @emph{exams} are performed, simple tests where some
613 predefined input is evaluated (like a pupils' exam). Second, the
614 @emph{checks} test the coherence of results among each other with
615 possible random input. Third, some @emph{timings} are performed, which
616 benchmark some predefined problems with different sizes and display the
617 CPU time used in seconds. Each individual test should return a message
618 @samp{passed}. This is mostly intended to be a QA-check if something
619 was broken during development, not a sanity check of your system. Some
620 of the tests in sections @emph{checks} and @emph{timings} may require
621 insane amounts of memory and CPU time. Feel free to kill them if your
622 machine catches fire. Another quite important intent is to allow people
623 to fiddle around with optimization.
625 By default, the only documentation that will be built is this tutorial
626 in @file{.info} format. To build the GiNaC tutorial and reference manual
627 in HTML, DVI, PostScript, or PDF formats, use one of
636 Generally, the top-level Makefile runs recursively to the
637 subdirectories. It is therefore safe to go into any subdirectory
638 (@code{doc/}, @code{ginsh/}, @dots{}) and simply type @code{make}
639 @var{target} there in case something went wrong.
642 @node Installing GiNaC, Basic concepts, Building GiNaC, Installation
643 @c node-name, next, previous, up
644 @section Installing GiNaC
647 To install GiNaC on your system, simply type
653 As described in the section about configuration the files will be
654 installed in the following directories (the directories will be created
655 if they don't already exist):
660 @file{libginac.a} will go into @file{@var{PREFIX}/lib/} (or
661 @file{@var{LIBDIR}}) which defaults to @file{/usr/local/lib/}.
662 So will @file{libginac.so} unless the configure script was
663 given the option @option{--disable-shared}. The proper symlinks
664 will be established as well.
667 All the header files will be installed into @file{@var{PREFIX}/include/ginac/}
668 (or @file{@var{INCLUDEDIR}/ginac/}, if specified).
671 All documentation (info) will be stuffed into
672 @file{@var{PREFIX}/share/doc/GiNaC/} (or
673 @file{@var{DATADIR}/doc/GiNaC/}, if @var{DATADIR} was specified).
677 For the sake of completeness we will list some other useful make
678 targets: @command{make clean} deletes all files generated by
679 @command{make}, i.e. all the object files. In addition @command{make
680 distclean} removes all files generated by the configuration and
681 @command{make maintainer-clean} goes one step further and deletes files
682 that may require special tools to rebuild (like the @command{libtool}
683 for instance). Finally @command{make uninstall} removes the installed
684 library, header files and documentation@footnote{Uninstallation does not
685 work after you have called @command{make distclean} since the
686 @file{Makefile} is itself generated by the configuration from
687 @file{Makefile.in} and hence deleted by @command{make distclean}. There
688 are two obvious ways out of this dilemma. First, you can run the
689 configuration again with the same @var{PREFIX} thus creating a
690 @file{Makefile} with a working @samp{uninstall} target. Second, you can
691 do it by hand since you now know where all the files went during
695 @node Basic concepts, Expressions, Installing GiNaC, Top
696 @c node-name, next, previous, up
697 @chapter Basic concepts
699 This chapter will describe the different fundamental objects that can be
700 handled by GiNaC. But before doing so, it is worthwhile introducing you
701 to the more commonly used class of expressions, representing a flexible
702 meta-class for storing all mathematical objects.
705 * Expressions:: The fundamental GiNaC class.
706 * Automatic evaluation:: Evaluation and canonicalization.
707 * Error handling:: How the library reports errors.
708 * The class hierarchy:: Overview of GiNaC's classes.
709 * Symbols:: Symbolic objects.
710 * Numbers:: Numerical objects.
711 * Constants:: Pre-defined constants.
712 * Fundamental containers:: Sums, products and powers.
713 * Lists:: Lists of expressions.
714 * Mathematical functions:: Mathematical functions.
715 * Relations:: Equality, Inequality and all that.
716 * Integrals:: Symbolic integrals.
717 * Matrices:: Matrices.
718 * Indexed objects:: Handling indexed quantities.
719 * Non-commutative objects:: Algebras with non-commutative products.
720 * Hash maps:: A faster alternative to std::map<>.
724 @node Expressions, Automatic evaluation, Basic concepts, Basic concepts
725 @c node-name, next, previous, up
727 @cindex expression (class @code{ex})
730 The most common class of objects a user deals with is the expression
731 @code{ex}, representing a mathematical object like a variable, number,
732 function, sum, product, etc@dots{} Expressions may be put together to form
733 new expressions, passed as arguments to functions, and so on. Here is a
734 little collection of valid expressions:
737 ex MyEx1 = 5; // simple number
738 ex MyEx2 = x + 2*y; // polynomial in x and y
739 ex MyEx3 = (x + 1)/(x - 1); // rational expression
740 ex MyEx4 = sin(x + 2*y) + 3*z + 41; // containing a function
741 ex MyEx5 = MyEx4 + 1; // similar to above
744 Expressions are handles to other more fundamental objects, that often
745 contain other expressions thus creating a tree of expressions
746 (@xref{Internal structures}, for particular examples). Most methods on
747 @code{ex} therefore run top-down through such an expression tree. For
748 example, the method @code{has()} scans recursively for occurrences of
749 something inside an expression. Thus, if you have declared @code{MyEx4}
750 as in the example above @code{MyEx4.has(y)} will find @code{y} inside
751 the argument of @code{sin} and hence return @code{true}.
753 The next sections will outline the general picture of GiNaC's class
754 hierarchy and describe the classes of objects that are handled by
757 @subsection Note: Expressions and STL containers
759 GiNaC expressions (@code{ex} objects) have value semantics (they can be
760 assigned, reassigned and copied like integral types) but the operator
761 @code{<} doesn't provide a well-defined ordering on them. In STL-speak,
762 expressions are @samp{Assignable} but not @samp{LessThanComparable}.
764 This implies that in order to use expressions in sorted containers such as
765 @code{std::map<>} and @code{std::set<>} you have to supply a suitable
766 comparison predicate. GiNaC provides such a predicate, called
767 @code{ex_is_less}. For example, a set of expressions should be defined
768 as @code{std::set<ex, ex_is_less>}.
770 Unsorted containers such as @code{std::vector<>} and @code{std::list<>}
771 don't pose a problem. A @code{std::vector<ex>} works as expected.
773 @xref{Information about expressions}, for more about comparing and ordering
777 @node Automatic evaluation, Error handling, Expressions, Basic concepts
778 @c node-name, next, previous, up
779 @section Automatic evaluation and canonicalization of expressions
782 GiNaC performs some automatic transformations on expressions, to simplify
783 them and put them into a canonical form. Some examples:
786 ex MyEx1 = 2*x - 1 + x; // 3*x-1
787 ex MyEx2 = x - x; // 0
788 ex MyEx3 = cos(2*Pi); // 1
789 ex MyEx4 = x*y/x; // y
792 This behavior is usually referred to as @dfn{automatic} or @dfn{anonymous
793 evaluation}. GiNaC only performs transformations that are
797 at most of complexity
805 algebraically correct, possibly except for a set of measure zero (e.g.
806 @math{x/x} is transformed to @math{1} although this is incorrect for @math{x=0})
809 There are two types of automatic transformations in GiNaC that may not
810 behave in an entirely obvious way at first glance:
814 The terms of sums and products (and some other things like the arguments of
815 symmetric functions, the indices of symmetric tensors etc.) are re-ordered
816 into a canonical form that is deterministic, but not lexicographical or in
817 any other way easy to guess (it almost always depends on the number and
818 order of the symbols you define). However, constructing the same expression
819 twice, either implicitly or explicitly, will always result in the same
822 Expressions of the form 'number times sum' are automatically expanded (this
823 has to do with GiNaC's internal representation of sums and products). For
826 ex MyEx5 = 2*(x + y); // 2*x+2*y
827 ex MyEx6 = z*(x + y); // z*(x+y)
831 The general rule is that when you construct expressions, GiNaC automatically
832 creates them in canonical form, which might differ from the form you typed in
833 your program. This may create some awkward looking output (@samp{-y+x} instead
834 of @samp{x-y}) but allows for more efficient operation and usually yields
835 some immediate simplifications.
837 @cindex @code{eval()}
838 Internally, the anonymous evaluator in GiNaC is implemented by the methods
841 ex ex::eval(int level = 0) const;
842 ex basic::eval(int level = 0) const;
845 but unless you are extending GiNaC with your own classes or functions, there
846 should never be any reason to call them explicitly. All GiNaC methods that
847 transform expressions, like @code{subs()} or @code{normal()}, automatically
848 re-evaluate their results.
851 @node Error handling, The class hierarchy, Automatic evaluation, Basic concepts
852 @c node-name, next, previous, up
853 @section Error handling
855 @cindex @code{pole_error} (class)
857 GiNaC reports run-time errors by throwing C++ exceptions. All exceptions
858 generated by GiNaC are subclassed from the standard @code{exception} class
859 defined in the @file{<stdexcept>} header. In addition to the predefined
860 @code{logic_error}, @code{domain_error}, @code{out_of_range},
861 @code{invalid_argument}, @code{runtime_error}, @code{range_error} and
862 @code{overflow_error} types, GiNaC also defines a @code{pole_error}
863 exception that gets thrown when trying to evaluate a mathematical function
866 The @code{pole_error} class has a member function
869 int pole_error::degree() const;
872 that returns the order of the singularity (or 0 when the pole is
873 logarithmic or the order is undefined).
875 When using GiNaC it is useful to arrange for exceptions to be caught in
876 the main program even if you don't want to do any special error handling.
877 Otherwise whenever an error occurs in GiNaC, it will be delegated to the
878 default exception handler of your C++ compiler's run-time system which
879 usually only aborts the program without giving any information what went
882 Here is an example for a @code{main()} function that catches and prints
883 exceptions generated by GiNaC:
888 #include <ginac/ginac.h>
890 using namespace GiNaC;
898 @} catch (exception &p) @{
899 cerr << p.what() << endl;
907 @node The class hierarchy, Symbols, Error handling, Basic concepts
908 @c node-name, next, previous, up
909 @section The class hierarchy
911 GiNaC's class hierarchy consists of several classes representing
912 mathematical objects, all of which (except for @code{ex} and some
913 helpers) are internally derived from one abstract base class called
914 @code{basic}. You do not have to deal with objects of class
915 @code{basic}, instead you'll be dealing with symbols, numbers,
916 containers of expressions and so on.
920 To get an idea about what kinds of symbolic composites may be built we
921 have a look at the most important classes in the class hierarchy and
922 some of the relations among the classes:
924 @image{classhierarchy}
926 The abstract classes shown here (the ones without drop-shadow) are of no
927 interest for the user. They are used internally in order to avoid code
928 duplication if two or more classes derived from them share certain
929 features. An example is @code{expairseq}, a container for a sequence of
930 pairs each consisting of one expression and a number (@code{numeric}).
931 What @emph{is} visible to the user are the derived classes @code{add}
932 and @code{mul}, representing sums and products. @xref{Internal
933 structures}, where these two classes are described in more detail. The
934 following table shortly summarizes what kinds of mathematical objects
935 are stored in the different classes:
938 @multitable @columnfractions .22 .78
939 @item @code{symbol} @tab Algebraic symbols @math{a}, @math{x}, @math{y}@dots{}
940 @item @code{constant} @tab Constants like
947 @item @code{numeric} @tab All kinds of numbers, @math{42}, @math{7/3*I}, @math{3.14159}@dots{}
948 @item @code{add} @tab Sums like @math{x+y} or @math{a-(2*b)+3}
949 @item @code{mul} @tab Products like @math{x*y} or @math{2*a^2*(x+y+z)/b}
950 @item @code{ncmul} @tab Products of non-commutative objects
951 @item @code{power} @tab Exponentials such as @math{x^2}, @math{a^b},
956 @code{sqrt(}@math{2}@code{)}
959 @item @code{pseries} @tab Power Series, e.g. @math{x-1/6*x^3+1/120*x^5+O(x^7)}
960 @item @code{function} @tab A symbolic function like
967 @item @code{lst} @tab Lists of expressions @{@math{x}, @math{2*y}, @math{3+z}@}
968 @item @code{matrix} @tab @math{m}x@math{n} matrices of expressions
969 @item @code{relational} @tab A relation like the identity @math{x}@code{==}@math{y}
970 @item @code{indexed} @tab Indexed object like @math{A_ij}
971 @item @code{tensor} @tab Special tensor like the delta and metric tensors
972 @item @code{idx} @tab Index of an indexed object
973 @item @code{varidx} @tab Index with variance
974 @item @code{spinidx} @tab Index with variance and dot (used in Weyl-van-der-Waerden spinor formalism)
975 @item @code{wildcard} @tab Wildcard for pattern matching
976 @item @code{structure} @tab Template for user-defined classes
981 @node Symbols, Numbers, The class hierarchy, Basic concepts
982 @c node-name, next, previous, up
984 @cindex @code{symbol} (class)
985 @cindex hierarchy of classes
988 Symbolic indeterminates, or @dfn{symbols} for short, are for symbolic
989 manipulation what atoms are for chemistry.
991 A typical symbol definition looks like this:
996 This definition actually contains three very different things:
998 @item a C++ variable named @code{x}
999 @item a @code{symbol} object stored in this C++ variable; this object
1000 represents the symbol in a GiNaC expression
1001 @item the string @code{"x"} which is the name of the symbol, used (almost)
1002 exclusively for printing expressions holding the symbol
1005 Symbols have an explicit name, supplied as a string during construction,
1006 because in C++, variable names can't be used as values, and the C++ compiler
1007 throws them away during compilation.
1009 It is possible to omit the symbol name in the definition:
1014 In this case, GiNaC will assign the symbol an internal, unique name of the
1015 form @code{symbolNNN}. This won't affect the usability of the symbol but
1016 the output of your calculations will become more readable if you give your
1017 symbols sensible names (for intermediate expressions that are only used
1018 internally such anonymous symbols can be quite useful, however).
1020 Now, here is one important property of GiNaC that differentiates it from
1021 other computer algebra programs you may have used: GiNaC does @emph{not} use
1022 the names of symbols to tell them apart, but a (hidden) serial number that
1023 is unique for each newly created @code{symbol} object. If you want to use
1024 one and the same symbol in different places in your program, you must only
1025 create one @code{symbol} object and pass that around. If you create another
1026 symbol, even if it has the same name, GiNaC will treat it as a different
1043 // prints "x^6" which looks right, but...
1045 cout << e.degree(x) << endl;
1046 // ...this doesn't work. The symbol "x" here is different from the one
1047 // in f() and in the expression returned by f(). Consequently, it
1052 One possibility to ensure that @code{f()} and @code{main()} use the same
1053 symbol is to pass the symbol as an argument to @code{f()}:
1055 ex f(int n, const ex & x)
1064 // Now, f() uses the same symbol.
1067 cout << e.degree(x) << endl;
1068 // prints "6", as expected
1072 Another possibility would be to define a global symbol @code{x} that is used
1073 by both @code{f()} and @code{main()}. If you are using global symbols and
1074 multiple compilation units you must take special care, however. Suppose
1075 that you have a header file @file{globals.h} in your program that defines
1076 a @code{symbol x("x");}. In this case, every unit that includes
1077 @file{globals.h} would also get its own definition of @code{x} (because
1078 header files are just inlined into the source code by the C++ preprocessor),
1079 and hence you would again end up with multiple equally-named, but different,
1080 symbols. Instead, the @file{globals.h} header should only contain a
1081 @emph{declaration} like @code{extern symbol x;}, with the definition of
1082 @code{x} moved into a C++ source file such as @file{globals.cpp}.
1084 A different approach to ensuring that symbols used in different parts of
1085 your program are identical is to create them with a @emph{factory} function
1088 const symbol & get_symbol(const string & s)
1090 static map<string, symbol> directory;
1091 map<string, symbol>::iterator i = directory.find(s);
1092 if (i != directory.end())
1095 return directory.insert(make_pair(s, symbol(s))).first->second;
1099 This function returns one newly constructed symbol for each name that is
1100 passed in, and it returns the same symbol when called multiple times with
1101 the same name. Using this symbol factory, we can rewrite our example like
1106 return pow(get_symbol("x"), n);
1113 // Both calls of get_symbol("x") yield the same symbol.
1114 cout << e.degree(get_symbol("x")) << endl;
1119 Instead of creating symbols from strings we could also have
1120 @code{get_symbol()} take, for example, an integer number as its argument.
1121 In this case, we would probably want to give the generated symbols names
1122 that include this number, which can be accomplished with the help of an
1123 @code{ostringstream}.
1125 In general, if you're getting weird results from GiNaC such as an expression
1126 @samp{x-x} that is not simplified to zero, you should check your symbol
1129 As we said, the names of symbols primarily serve for purposes of expression
1130 output. But there are actually two instances where GiNaC uses the names for
1131 identifying symbols: When constructing an expression from a string, and when
1132 recreating an expression from an archive (@pxref{Input/output}).
1134 In addition to its name, a symbol may contain a special string that is used
1137 symbol x("x", "\\Box");
1140 This creates a symbol that is printed as "@code{x}" in normal output, but
1141 as "@code{\Box}" in LaTeX code (@xref{Input/output}, for more
1142 information about the different output formats of expressions in GiNaC).
1143 GiNaC automatically creates proper LaTeX code for symbols having names of
1144 greek letters (@samp{alpha}, @samp{mu}, etc.).
1146 @cindex @code{subs()}
1147 Symbols in GiNaC can't be assigned values. If you need to store results of
1148 calculations and give them a name, use C++ variables of type @code{ex}.
1149 If you want to replace a symbol in an expression with something else, you
1150 can invoke the expression's @code{.subs()} method
1151 (@pxref{Substituting expressions}).
1153 @cindex @code{realsymbol()}
1154 By default, symbols are expected to stand in for complex values, i.e. they live
1155 in the complex domain. As a consequence, operations like complex conjugation,
1156 for example (@pxref{Complex expressions}), do @emph{not} evaluate if applied
1157 to such symbols. Likewise @code{log(exp(x))} does not evaluate to @code{x},
1158 because of the unknown imaginary part of @code{x}.
1159 On the other hand, if you are sure that your symbols will hold only real
1160 values, you would like to have such functions evaluated. Therefore GiNaC
1161 allows you to specify
1162 the domain of the symbol. Instead of @code{symbol x("x");} you can write
1163 @code{realsymbol x("x");} to tell GiNaC that @code{x} stands in for real values.
1165 @cindex @code{possymbol()}
1166 Furthermore, it is also possible to declare a symbol as positive. This will,
1167 for instance, enable the automatic simplification of @code{abs(x)} into
1168 @code{x}. This is done by declaring the symbol as @code{possymbol x("x");}.
1171 @node Numbers, Constants, Symbols, Basic concepts
1172 @c node-name, next, previous, up
1174 @cindex @code{numeric} (class)
1180 For storing numerical things, GiNaC uses Bruno Haible's library CLN.
1181 The classes therein serve as foundation classes for GiNaC. CLN stands
1182 for Class Library for Numbers or alternatively for Common Lisp Numbers.
1183 In order to find out more about CLN's internals, the reader is referred to
1184 the documentation of that library. @inforef{Introduction, , cln}, for
1185 more information. Suffice to say that it is by itself build on top of
1186 another library, the GNU Multiple Precision library GMP, which is an
1187 extremely fast library for arbitrary long integers and rationals as well
1188 as arbitrary precision floating point numbers. It is very commonly used
1189 by several popular cryptographic applications. CLN extends GMP by
1190 several useful things: First, it introduces the complex number field
1191 over either reals (i.e. floating point numbers with arbitrary precision)
1192 or rationals. Second, it automatically converts rationals to integers
1193 if the denominator is unity and complex numbers to real numbers if the
1194 imaginary part vanishes and also correctly treats algebraic functions.
1195 Third it provides good implementations of state-of-the-art algorithms
1196 for all trigonometric and hyperbolic functions as well as for
1197 calculation of some useful constants.
1199 The user can construct an object of class @code{numeric} in several
1200 ways. The following example shows the four most important constructors.
1201 It uses construction from C-integer, construction of fractions from two
1202 integers, construction from C-float and construction from a string:
1206 #include <ginac/ginac.h>
1207 using namespace GiNaC;
1211 numeric two = 2; // exact integer 2
1212 numeric r(2,3); // exact fraction 2/3
1213 numeric e(2.71828); // floating point number
1214 numeric p = "3.14159265358979323846"; // constructor from string
1215 // Trott's constant in scientific notation:
1216 numeric trott("1.0841015122311136151E-2");
1218 std::cout << two*p << std::endl; // floating point 6.283...
1223 @cindex complex numbers
1224 The imaginary unit in GiNaC is a predefined @code{numeric} object with the
1229 numeric z1 = 2-3*I; // exact complex number 2-3i
1230 numeric z2 = 5.9+1.6*I; // complex floating point number
1234 It may be tempting to construct fractions by writing @code{numeric r(3/2)}.
1235 This would, however, call C's built-in operator @code{/} for integers
1236 first and result in a numeric holding a plain integer 1. @strong{Never
1237 use the operator @code{/} on integers} unless you know exactly what you
1238 are doing! Use the constructor from two integers instead, as shown in
1239 the example above. Writing @code{numeric(1)/2} may look funny but works
1242 @cindex @code{Digits}
1244 We have seen now the distinction between exact numbers and floating
1245 point numbers. Clearly, the user should never have to worry about
1246 dynamically created exact numbers, since their `exactness' always
1247 determines how they ought to be handled, i.e. how `long' they are. The
1248 situation is different for floating point numbers. Their accuracy is
1249 controlled by one @emph{global} variable, called @code{Digits}. (For
1250 those readers who know about Maple: it behaves very much like Maple's
1251 @code{Digits}). All objects of class numeric that are constructed from
1252 then on will be stored with a precision matching that number of decimal
1257 #include <ginac/ginac.h>
1258 using namespace std;
1259 using namespace GiNaC;
1263 numeric three(3.0), one(1.0);
1264 numeric x = one/three;
1266 cout << "in " << Digits << " digits:" << endl;
1268 cout << Pi.evalf() << endl;
1280 The above example prints the following output to screen:
1284 0.33333333333333333334
1285 3.1415926535897932385
1287 0.33333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333334
1288 3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751058209749445923078
1292 Note that the last number is not necessarily rounded as you would
1293 naively expect it to be rounded in the decimal system. But note also,
1294 that in both cases you got a couple of extra digits. This is because
1295 numbers are internally stored by CLN as chunks of binary digits in order
1296 to match your machine's word size and to not waste precision. Thus, on
1297 architectures with different word size, the above output might even
1298 differ with regard to actually computed digits.
1300 It should be clear that objects of class @code{numeric} should be used
1301 for constructing numbers or for doing arithmetic with them. The objects
1302 one deals with most of the time are the polymorphic expressions @code{ex}.
1304 @subsection Tests on numbers
1306 Once you have declared some numbers, assigned them to expressions and
1307 done some arithmetic with them it is frequently desired to retrieve some
1308 kind of information from them like asking whether that number is
1309 integer, rational, real or complex. For those cases GiNaC provides
1310 several useful methods. (Internally, they fall back to invocations of
1311 certain CLN functions.)
1313 As an example, let's construct some rational number, multiply it with
1314 some multiple of its denominator and test what comes out:
1318 #include <ginac/ginac.h>
1319 using namespace std;
1320 using namespace GiNaC;
1322 // some very important constants:
1323 const numeric twentyone(21);
1324 const numeric ten(10);
1325 const numeric five(5);
1329 numeric answer = twentyone;
1332 cout << answer.is_integer() << endl; // false, it's 21/5
1334 cout << answer.is_integer() << endl; // true, it's 42 now!
1338 Note that the variable @code{answer} is constructed here as an integer
1339 by @code{numeric}'s copy constructor, but in an intermediate step it
1340 holds a rational number represented as integer numerator and integer
1341 denominator. When multiplied by 10, the denominator becomes unity and
1342 the result is automatically converted to a pure integer again.
1343 Internally, the underlying CLN is responsible for this behavior and we
1344 refer the reader to CLN's documentation. Suffice to say that
1345 the same behavior applies to complex numbers as well as return values of
1346 certain functions. Complex numbers are automatically converted to real
1347 numbers if the imaginary part becomes zero. The full set of tests that
1348 can be applied is listed in the following table.
1351 @multitable @columnfractions .30 .70
1352 @item @strong{Method} @tab @strong{Returns true if the object is@dots{}}
1353 @item @code{.is_zero()}
1354 @tab @dots{}equal to zero
1355 @item @code{.is_positive()}
1356 @tab @dots{}not complex and greater than 0
1357 @item @code{.is_negative()}
1358 @tab @dots{}not complex and smaller than 0
1359 @item @code{.is_integer()}
1360 @tab @dots{}a (non-complex) integer
1361 @item @code{.is_pos_integer()}
1362 @tab @dots{}an integer and greater than 0
1363 @item @code{.is_nonneg_integer()}
1364 @tab @dots{}an integer and greater equal 0
1365 @item @code{.is_even()}
1366 @tab @dots{}an even integer
1367 @item @code{.is_odd()}
1368 @tab @dots{}an odd integer
1369 @item @code{.is_prime()}
1370 @tab @dots{}a prime integer (probabilistic primality test)
1371 @item @code{.is_rational()}
1372 @tab @dots{}an exact rational number (integers are rational, too)
1373 @item @code{.is_real()}
1374 @tab @dots{}a real integer, rational or float (i.e. is not complex)
1375 @item @code{.is_cinteger()}
1376 @tab @dots{}a (complex) integer (such as @math{2-3*I})
1377 @item @code{.is_crational()}
1378 @tab @dots{}an exact (complex) rational number (such as @math{2/3+7/2*I})
1384 @subsection Numeric functions
1386 The following functions can be applied to @code{numeric} objects and will be
1387 evaluated immediately:
1390 @multitable @columnfractions .30 .70
1391 @item @strong{Name} @tab @strong{Function}
1392 @item @code{inverse(z)}
1393 @tab returns @math{1/z}
1394 @cindex @code{inverse()} (numeric)
1395 @item @code{pow(a, b)}
1396 @tab exponentiation @math{a^b}
1399 @item @code{real(z)}
1401 @cindex @code{real()}
1402 @item @code{imag(z)}
1404 @cindex @code{imag()}
1405 @item @code{csgn(z)}
1406 @tab complex sign (returns an @code{int})
1407 @item @code{step(x)}
1408 @tab step function (returns an @code{numeric})
1409 @item @code{numer(z)}
1410 @tab numerator of rational or complex rational number
1411 @item @code{denom(z)}
1412 @tab denominator of rational or complex rational number
1413 @item @code{sqrt(z)}
1415 @item @code{isqrt(n)}
1416 @tab integer square root
1417 @cindex @code{isqrt()}
1424 @item @code{asin(z)}
1426 @item @code{acos(z)}
1428 @item @code{atan(z)}
1429 @tab inverse tangent
1430 @item @code{atan(y, x)}
1431 @tab inverse tangent with two arguments
1432 @item @code{sinh(z)}
1433 @tab hyperbolic sine
1434 @item @code{cosh(z)}
1435 @tab hyperbolic cosine
1436 @item @code{tanh(z)}
1437 @tab hyperbolic tangent
1438 @item @code{asinh(z)}
1439 @tab inverse hyperbolic sine
1440 @item @code{acosh(z)}
1441 @tab inverse hyperbolic cosine
1442 @item @code{atanh(z)}
1443 @tab inverse hyperbolic tangent
1445 @tab exponential function
1447 @tab natural logarithm
1450 @item @code{zeta(z)}
1451 @tab Riemann's zeta function
1452 @item @code{tgamma(z)}
1454 @item @code{lgamma(z)}
1455 @tab logarithm of gamma function
1457 @tab psi (digamma) function
1458 @item @code{psi(n, z)}
1459 @tab derivatives of psi function (polygamma functions)
1460 @item @code{factorial(n)}
1461 @tab factorial function @math{n!}
1462 @item @code{doublefactorial(n)}
1463 @tab double factorial function @math{n!!}
1464 @cindex @code{doublefactorial()}
1465 @item @code{binomial(n, k)}
1466 @tab binomial coefficients
1467 @item @code{bernoulli(n)}
1468 @tab Bernoulli numbers
1469 @cindex @code{bernoulli()}
1470 @item @code{fibonacci(n)}
1471 @tab Fibonacci numbers
1472 @cindex @code{fibonacci()}
1473 @item @code{mod(a, b)}
1474 @tab modulus in positive representation (in the range @code{[0, abs(b)-1]} with the sign of b, or zero)
1475 @cindex @code{mod()}
1476 @item @code{smod(a, b)}
1477 @tab modulus in symmetric representation (in the range @code{[-iquo(abs(b)-1, 2), iquo(abs(b), 2)]})
1478 @cindex @code{smod()}
1479 @item @code{irem(a, b)}
1480 @tab integer remainder (has the sign of @math{a}, or is zero)
1481 @cindex @code{irem()}
1482 @item @code{irem(a, b, q)}
1483 @tab integer remainder and quotient, @code{irem(a, b, q) == a-q*b}
1484 @item @code{iquo(a, b)}
1485 @tab integer quotient
1486 @cindex @code{iquo()}
1487 @item @code{iquo(a, b, r)}
1488 @tab integer quotient and remainder, @code{r == a-iquo(a, b)*b}
1489 @item @code{gcd(a, b)}
1490 @tab greatest common divisor
1491 @item @code{lcm(a, b)}
1492 @tab least common multiple
1496 Most of these functions are also available as symbolic functions that can be
1497 used in expressions (@pxref{Mathematical functions}) or, like @code{gcd()},
1498 as polynomial algorithms.
1500 @subsection Converting numbers
1502 Sometimes it is desirable to convert a @code{numeric} object back to a
1503 built-in arithmetic type (@code{int}, @code{double}, etc.). The @code{numeric}
1504 class provides a couple of methods for this purpose:
1506 @cindex @code{to_int()}
1507 @cindex @code{to_long()}
1508 @cindex @code{to_double()}
1509 @cindex @code{to_cl_N()}
1511 int numeric::to_int() const;
1512 long numeric::to_long() const;
1513 double numeric::to_double() const;
1514 cln::cl_N numeric::to_cl_N() const;
1517 @code{to_int()} and @code{to_long()} only work when the number they are
1518 applied on is an exact integer. Otherwise the program will halt with a
1519 message like @samp{Not a 32-bit integer}. @code{to_double()} applied on a
1520 rational number will return a floating-point approximation. Both
1521 @code{to_int()/to_long()} and @code{to_double()} discard the imaginary
1522 part of complex numbers.
1525 @node Constants, Fundamental containers, Numbers, Basic concepts
1526 @c node-name, next, previous, up
1528 @cindex @code{constant} (class)
1531 @cindex @code{Catalan}
1532 @cindex @code{Euler}
1533 @cindex @code{evalf()}
1534 Constants behave pretty much like symbols except that they return some
1535 specific number when the method @code{.evalf()} is called.
1537 The predefined known constants are:
1540 @multitable @columnfractions .14 .32 .54
1541 @item @strong{Name} @tab @strong{Common Name} @tab @strong{Numerical Value (to 35 digits)}
1543 @tab Archimedes' constant
1544 @tab 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288
1545 @item @code{Catalan}
1546 @tab Catalan's constant
1547 @tab 0.91596559417721901505460351493238411
1549 @tab Euler's (or Euler-Mascheroni) constant
1550 @tab 0.57721566490153286060651209008240243
1555 @node Fundamental containers, Lists, Constants, Basic concepts
1556 @c node-name, next, previous, up
1557 @section Sums, products and powers
1561 @cindex @code{power}
1563 Simple rational expressions are written down in GiNaC pretty much like
1564 in other CAS or like expressions involving numerical variables in C.
1565 The necessary operators @code{+}, @code{-}, @code{*} and @code{/} have
1566 been overloaded to achieve this goal. When you run the following
1567 code snippet, the constructor for an object of type @code{mul} is
1568 automatically called to hold the product of @code{a} and @code{b} and
1569 then the constructor for an object of type @code{add} is called to hold
1570 the sum of that @code{mul} object and the number one:
1574 symbol a("a"), b("b");
1579 @cindex @code{pow()}
1580 For exponentiation, you have already seen the somewhat clumsy (though C-ish)
1581 statement @code{pow(x,2);} to represent @code{x} squared. This direct
1582 construction is necessary since we cannot safely overload the constructor
1583 @code{^} in C++ to construct a @code{power} object. If we did, it would
1584 have several counterintuitive and undesired effects:
1588 Due to C's operator precedence, @code{2*x^2} would be parsed as @code{(2*x)^2}.
1590 Due to the binding of the operator @code{^}, @code{x^a^b} would result in
1591 @code{(x^a)^b}. This would be confusing since most (though not all) other CAS
1592 interpret this as @code{x^(a^b)}.
1594 Also, expressions involving integer exponents are very frequently used,
1595 which makes it even more dangerous to overload @code{^} since it is then
1596 hard to distinguish between the semantics as exponentiation and the one
1597 for exclusive or. (It would be embarrassing to return @code{1} where one
1598 has requested @code{2^3}.)
1601 @cindex @command{ginsh}
1602 All effects are contrary to mathematical notation and differ from the
1603 way most other CAS handle exponentiation, therefore overloading @code{^}
1604 is ruled out for GiNaC's C++ part. The situation is different in
1605 @command{ginsh}, there the exponentiation-@code{^} exists. (Also note
1606 that the other frequently used exponentiation operator @code{**} does
1607 not exist at all in C++).
1609 To be somewhat more precise, objects of the three classes described
1610 here, are all containers for other expressions. An object of class
1611 @code{power} is best viewed as a container with two slots, one for the
1612 basis, one for the exponent. All valid GiNaC expressions can be
1613 inserted. However, basic transformations like simplifying
1614 @code{pow(pow(x,2),3)} to @code{x^6} automatically are only performed
1615 when this is mathematically possible. If we replace the outer exponent
1616 three in the example by some symbols @code{a}, the simplification is not
1617 safe and will not be performed, since @code{a} might be @code{1/2} and
1620 Objects of type @code{add} and @code{mul} are containers with an
1621 arbitrary number of slots for expressions to be inserted. Again, simple
1622 and safe simplifications are carried out like transforming
1623 @code{3*x+4-x} to @code{2*x+4}.
1626 @node Lists, Mathematical functions, Fundamental containers, Basic concepts
1627 @c node-name, next, previous, up
1628 @section Lists of expressions
1629 @cindex @code{lst} (class)
1631 @cindex @code{nops()}
1633 @cindex @code{append()}
1634 @cindex @code{prepend()}
1635 @cindex @code{remove_first()}
1636 @cindex @code{remove_last()}
1637 @cindex @code{remove_all()}
1639 The GiNaC class @code{lst} serves for holding a @dfn{list} of arbitrary
1640 expressions. They are not as ubiquitous as in many other computer algebra
1641 packages, but are sometimes used to supply a variable number of arguments of
1642 the same type to GiNaC methods such as @code{subs()} and some @code{matrix}
1643 constructors, so you should have a basic understanding of them.
1645 Lists can be constructed by assigning a comma-separated sequence of
1650 symbol x("x"), y("y");
1653 // now, l is a list holding the expressions 'x', '2', 'y', and 'x+y',
1658 There are also constructors that allow direct creation of lists of up to
1659 16 expressions, which is often more convenient but slightly less efficient:
1663 // This produces the same list 'l' as above:
1664 // lst l(x, 2, y, x+y);
1665 // lst l = lst(x, 2, y, x+y);
1669 Use the @code{nops()} method to determine the size (number of expressions) of
1670 a list and the @code{op()} method or the @code{[]} operator to access
1671 individual elements:
1675 cout << l.nops() << endl; // prints '4'
1676 cout << l.op(2) << " " << l[0] << endl; // prints 'y x'
1680 As with the standard @code{list<T>} container, accessing random elements of a
1681 @code{lst} is generally an operation of order @math{O(N)}. Faster read-only
1682 sequential access to the elements of a list is possible with the
1683 iterator types provided by the @code{lst} class:
1686 typedef ... lst::const_iterator;
1687 typedef ... lst::const_reverse_iterator;
1688 lst::const_iterator lst::begin() const;
1689 lst::const_iterator lst::end() const;
1690 lst::const_reverse_iterator lst::rbegin() const;
1691 lst::const_reverse_iterator lst::rend() const;
1694 For example, to print the elements of a list individually you can use:
1699 for (lst::const_iterator i = l.begin(); i != l.end(); ++i)
1704 which is one order faster than
1709 for (size_t i = 0; i < l.nops(); ++i)
1710 cout << l.op(i) << endl;
1714 These iterators also allow you to use some of the algorithms provided by
1715 the C++ standard library:
1719 // print the elements of the list (requires #include <iterator>)
1720 std::copy(l.begin(), l.end(), ostream_iterator<ex>(cout, "\n"));
1722 // sum up the elements of the list (requires #include <numeric>)
1723 ex sum = std::accumulate(l.begin(), l.end(), ex(0));
1724 cout << sum << endl; // prints '2+2*x+2*y'
1728 @code{lst} is one of the few GiNaC classes that allow in-place modifications
1729 (the only other one is @code{matrix}). You can modify single elements:
1733 l[1] = 42; // l is now @{x, 42, y, x+y@}
1734 l.let_op(1) = 7; // l is now @{x, 7, y, x+y@}
1738 You can append or prepend an expression to a list with the @code{append()}
1739 and @code{prepend()} methods:
1743 l.append(4*x); // l is now @{x, 7, y, x+y, 4*x@}
1744 l.prepend(0); // l is now @{0, x, 7, y, x+y, 4*x@}
1748 You can remove the first or last element of a list with @code{remove_first()}
1749 and @code{remove_last()}:
1753 l.remove_first(); // l is now @{x, 7, y, x+y, 4*x@}
1754 l.remove_last(); // l is now @{x, 7, y, x+y@}
1758 You can remove all the elements of a list with @code{remove_all()}:
1762 l.remove_all(); // l is now empty
1766 You can bring the elements of a list into a canonical order with @code{sort()}:
1775 // l1 and l2 are now equal
1779 Finally, you can remove all but the first element of consecutive groups of
1780 elements with @code{unique()}:
1785 l3 = x, 2, 2, 2, y, x+y, y+x;
1786 l3.unique(); // l3 is now @{x, 2, y, x+y@}
1791 @node Mathematical functions, Relations, Lists, Basic concepts
1792 @c node-name, next, previous, up
1793 @section Mathematical functions
1794 @cindex @code{function} (class)
1795 @cindex trigonometric function
1796 @cindex hyperbolic function
1798 There are quite a number of useful functions hard-wired into GiNaC. For
1799 instance, all trigonometric and hyperbolic functions are implemented
1800 (@xref{Built-in functions}, for a complete list).
1802 These functions (better called @emph{pseudofunctions}) are all objects
1803 of class @code{function}. They accept one or more expressions as
1804 arguments and return one expression. If the arguments are not
1805 numerical, the evaluation of the function may be halted, as it does in
1806 the next example, showing how a function returns itself twice and
1807 finally an expression that may be really useful:
1809 @cindex Gamma function
1810 @cindex @code{subs()}
1813 symbol x("x"), y("y");
1815 cout << tgamma(foo) << endl;
1816 // -> tgamma(x+(1/2)*y)
1817 ex bar = foo.subs(y==1);
1818 cout << tgamma(bar) << endl;
1820 ex foobar = bar.subs(x==7);
1821 cout << tgamma(foobar) << endl;
1822 // -> (135135/128)*Pi^(1/2)
1826 Besides evaluation most of these functions allow differentiation, series
1827 expansion and so on. Read the next chapter in order to learn more about
1830 It must be noted that these pseudofunctions are created by inline
1831 functions, where the argument list is templated. This means that
1832 whenever you call @code{GiNaC::sin(1)} it is equivalent to
1833 @code{sin(ex(1))} and will therefore not result in a floating point
1834 number. Unless of course the function prototype is explicitly
1835 overridden -- which is the case for arguments of type @code{numeric}
1836 (not wrapped inside an @code{ex}). Hence, in order to obtain a floating
1837 point number of class @code{numeric} you should call
1838 @code{sin(numeric(1))}. This is almost the same as calling
1839 @code{sin(1).evalf()} except that the latter will return a numeric
1840 wrapped inside an @code{ex}.
1843 @node Relations, Integrals, Mathematical functions, Basic concepts
1844 @c node-name, next, previous, up
1846 @cindex @code{relational} (class)
1848 Sometimes, a relation holding between two expressions must be stored
1849 somehow. The class @code{relational} is a convenient container for such
1850 purposes. A relation is by definition a container for two @code{ex} and
1851 a relation between them that signals equality, inequality and so on.
1852 They are created by simply using the C++ operators @code{==}, @code{!=},
1853 @code{<}, @code{<=}, @code{>} and @code{>=} between two expressions.
1855 @xref{Mathematical functions}, for examples where various applications
1856 of the @code{.subs()} method show how objects of class relational are
1857 used as arguments. There they provide an intuitive syntax for
1858 substitutions. They are also used as arguments to the @code{ex::series}
1859 method, where the left hand side of the relation specifies the variable
1860 to expand in and the right hand side the expansion point. They can also
1861 be used for creating systems of equations that are to be solved for
1862 unknown variables. But the most common usage of objects of this class
1863 is rather inconspicuous in statements of the form @code{if
1864 (expand(pow(a+b,2))==a*a+2*a*b+b*b) @{...@}}. Here, an implicit
1865 conversion from @code{relational} to @code{bool} takes place. Note,
1866 however, that @code{==} here does not perform any simplifications, hence
1867 @code{expand()} must be called explicitly.
1869 @node Integrals, Matrices, Relations, Basic concepts
1870 @c node-name, next, previous, up
1872 @cindex @code{integral} (class)
1874 An object of class @dfn{integral} can be used to hold a symbolic integral.
1875 If you want to symbolically represent the integral of @code{x*x} from 0 to
1876 1, you would write this as
1878 integral(x, 0, 1, x*x)
1880 The first argument is the integration variable. It should be noted that
1881 GiNaC is not very good (yet?) at symbolically evaluating integrals. In
1882 fact, it can only integrate polynomials. An expression containing integrals
1883 can be evaluated symbolically by calling the
1887 method on it. Numerical evaluation is available by calling the
1891 method on an expression containing the integral. This will only evaluate
1892 integrals into a number if @code{subs}ing the integration variable by a
1893 number in the fourth argument of an integral and then @code{evalf}ing the
1894 result always results in a number. Of course, also the boundaries of the
1895 integration domain must @code{evalf} into numbers. It should be noted that
1896 trying to @code{evalf} a function with discontinuities in the integration
1897 domain is not recommended. The accuracy of the numeric evaluation of
1898 integrals is determined by the static member variable
1900 ex integral::relative_integration_error
1902 of the class @code{integral}. The default value of this is 10^-8.
1903 The integration works by halving the interval of integration, until numeric
1904 stability of the answer indicates that the requested accuracy has been
1905 reached. The maximum depth of the halving can be set via the static member
1908 int integral::max_integration_level
1910 The default value is 15. If this depth is exceeded, @code{evalf} will simply
1911 return the integral unevaluated. The function that performs the numerical
1912 evaluation, is also available as
1914 ex adaptivesimpson(const ex & x, const ex & a, const ex & b, const ex & f,
1917 This function will throw an exception if the maximum depth is exceeded. The
1918 last parameter of the function is optional and defaults to the
1919 @code{relative_integration_error}. To make sure that we do not do too
1920 much work if an expression contains the same integral multiple times,
1921 a lookup table is used.
1923 If you know that an expression holds an integral, you can get the
1924 integration variable, the left boundary, right boundary and integrand by
1925 respectively calling @code{.op(0)}, @code{.op(1)}, @code{.op(2)}, and
1926 @code{.op(3)}. Differentiating integrals with respect to variables works
1927 as expected. Note that it makes no sense to differentiate an integral
1928 with respect to the integration variable.
1930 @node Matrices, Indexed objects, Integrals, Basic concepts
1931 @c node-name, next, previous, up
1933 @cindex @code{matrix} (class)
1935 A @dfn{matrix} is a two-dimensional array of expressions. The elements of a
1936 matrix with @math{m} rows and @math{n} columns are accessed with two
1937 @code{unsigned} indices, the first one in the range 0@dots{}@math{m-1}, the
1938 second one in the range 0@dots{}@math{n-1}.
1940 There are a couple of ways to construct matrices, with or without preset
1941 elements. The constructor
1944 matrix::matrix(unsigned r, unsigned c);
1947 creates a matrix with @samp{r} rows and @samp{c} columns with all elements
1950 The fastest way to create a matrix with preinitialized elements is to assign
1951 a list of comma-separated expressions to an empty matrix (see below for an
1952 example). But you can also specify the elements as a (flat) list with
1955 matrix::matrix(unsigned r, unsigned c, const lst & l);
1960 @cindex @code{lst_to_matrix()}
1962 ex lst_to_matrix(const lst & l);
1965 constructs a matrix from a list of lists, each list representing a matrix row.
1967 There is also a set of functions for creating some special types of
1970 @cindex @code{diag_matrix()}
1971 @cindex @code{unit_matrix()}
1972 @cindex @code{symbolic_matrix()}
1974 ex diag_matrix(const lst & l);
1975 ex unit_matrix(unsigned x);
1976 ex unit_matrix(unsigned r, unsigned c);
1977 ex symbolic_matrix(unsigned r, unsigned c, const string & base_name);
1978 ex symbolic_matrix(unsigned r, unsigned c, const string & base_name,
1979 const string & tex_base_name);
1982 @code{diag_matrix()} constructs a diagonal matrix given the list of diagonal
1983 elements. @code{unit_matrix()} creates an @samp{x} by @samp{x} (or @samp{r}
1984 by @samp{c}) unit matrix. And finally, @code{symbolic_matrix} constructs a
1985 matrix filled with newly generated symbols made of the specified base name
1986 and the position of each element in the matrix.
1988 Matrices often arise by omitting elements of another matrix. For
1989 instance, the submatrix @code{S} of a matrix @code{M} takes a
1990 rectangular block from @code{M}. The reduced matrix @code{R} is defined
1991 by removing one row and one column from a matrix @code{M}. (The
1992 determinant of a reduced matrix is called a @emph{Minor} of @code{M} and
1993 can be used for computing the inverse using Cramer's rule.)
1995 @cindex @code{sub_matrix()}
1996 @cindex @code{reduced_matrix()}
1998 ex sub_matrix(const matrix&m, unsigned r, unsigned nr, unsigned c, unsigned nc);
1999 ex reduced_matrix(const matrix& m, unsigned r, unsigned c);
2002 The function @code{sub_matrix()} takes a row offset @code{r} and a
2003 column offset @code{c} and takes a block of @code{nr} rows and @code{nc}
2004 columns. The function @code{reduced_matrix()} has two integer arguments
2005 that specify which row and column to remove:
2013 cout << reduced_matrix(m, 1, 1) << endl;
2014 // -> [[11,13],[31,33]]
2015 cout << sub_matrix(m, 1, 2, 1, 2) << endl;
2016 // -> [[22,23],[32,33]]
2020 Matrix elements can be accessed and set using the parenthesis (function call)
2024 const ex & matrix::operator()(unsigned r, unsigned c) const;
2025 ex & matrix::operator()(unsigned r, unsigned c);
2028 It is also possible to access the matrix elements in a linear fashion with
2029 the @code{op()} method. But C++-style subscripting with square brackets
2030 @samp{[]} is not available.
2032 Here are a couple of examples for constructing matrices:
2036 symbol a("a"), b("b");
2050 cout << matrix(2, 2, lst(a, 0, 0, b)) << endl;
2053 cout << lst_to_matrix(lst(lst(a, 0), lst(0, b))) << endl;
2056 cout << diag_matrix(lst(a, b)) << endl;
2059 cout << unit_matrix(3) << endl;
2060 // -> [[1,0,0],[0,1,0],[0,0,1]]
2062 cout << symbolic_matrix(2, 3, "x") << endl;
2063 // -> [[x00,x01,x02],[x10,x11,x12]]
2067 @cindex @code{is_zero_matrix()}
2068 The method @code{matrix::is_zero_matrix()} returns @code{true} only if
2069 all entries of the matrix are zeros. There is also method
2070 @code{ex::is_zero_matrix()} which returns @code{true} only if the
2071 expression is zero or a zero matrix.
2073 @cindex @code{transpose()}
2074 There are three ways to do arithmetic with matrices. The first (and most
2075 direct one) is to use the methods provided by the @code{matrix} class:
2078 matrix matrix::add(const matrix & other) const;
2079 matrix matrix::sub(const matrix & other) const;
2080 matrix matrix::mul(const matrix & other) const;
2081 matrix matrix::mul_scalar(const ex & other) const;
2082 matrix matrix::pow(const ex & expn) const;
2083 matrix matrix::transpose() const;
2086 All of these methods return the result as a new matrix object. Here is an
2087 example that calculates @math{A*B-2*C} for three matrices @math{A}, @math{B}
2092 matrix A(2, 2), B(2, 2), C(2, 2);
2100 matrix result = A.mul(B).sub(C.mul_scalar(2));
2101 cout << result << endl;
2102 // -> [[-13,-6],[1,2]]
2107 @cindex @code{evalm()}
2108 The second (and probably the most natural) way is to construct an expression
2109 containing matrices with the usual arithmetic operators and @code{pow()}.
2110 For efficiency reasons, expressions with sums, products and powers of
2111 matrices are not automatically evaluated in GiNaC. You have to call the
2115 ex ex::evalm() const;
2118 to obtain the result:
2125 // -> [[1,2],[3,4]]*[[-1,0],[2,1]]-2*[[8,4],[2,1]]
2126 cout << e.evalm() << endl;
2127 // -> [[-13,-6],[1,2]]
2132 The non-commutativity of the product @code{A*B} in this example is
2133 automatically recognized by GiNaC. There is no need to use a special
2134 operator here. @xref{Non-commutative objects}, for more information about
2135 dealing with non-commutative expressions.
2137 Finally, you can work with indexed matrices and call @code{simplify_indexed()}
2138 to perform the arithmetic:
2143 idx i(symbol("i"), 2), j(symbol("j"), 2), k(symbol("k"), 2);
2144 e = indexed(A, i, k) * indexed(B, k, j) - 2 * indexed(C, i, j);
2146 // -> -2*[[8,4],[2,1]].i.j+[[-1,0],[2,1]].k.j*[[1,2],[3,4]].i.k
2147 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2148 // -> [[-13,-6],[1,2]].i.j
2152 Using indices is most useful when working with rectangular matrices and
2153 one-dimensional vectors because you don't have to worry about having to
2154 transpose matrices before multiplying them. @xref{Indexed objects}, for
2155 more information about using matrices with indices, and about indices in
2158 The @code{matrix} class provides a couple of additional methods for
2159 computing determinants, traces, characteristic polynomials and ranks:
2161 @cindex @code{determinant()}
2162 @cindex @code{trace()}
2163 @cindex @code{charpoly()}
2164 @cindex @code{rank()}
2166 ex matrix::determinant(unsigned algo=determinant_algo::automatic) const;
2167 ex matrix::trace() const;
2168 ex matrix::charpoly(const ex & lambda) const;
2169 unsigned matrix::rank() const;
2172 The @samp{algo} argument of @code{determinant()} allows to select
2173 between different algorithms for calculating the determinant. The
2174 asymptotic speed (as parametrized by the matrix size) can greatly differ
2175 between those algorithms, depending on the nature of the matrix'
2176 entries. The possible values are defined in the @file{flags.h} header
2177 file. By default, GiNaC uses a heuristic to automatically select an
2178 algorithm that is likely (but not guaranteed) to give the result most
2181 @cindex @code{inverse()} (matrix)
2182 @cindex @code{solve()}
2183 Matrices may also be inverted using the @code{ex matrix::inverse()}
2184 method and linear systems may be solved with:
2187 matrix matrix::solve(const matrix & vars, const matrix & rhs,
2188 unsigned algo=solve_algo::automatic) const;
2191 Assuming the matrix object this method is applied on is an @code{m}
2192 times @code{n} matrix, then @code{vars} must be a @code{n} times
2193 @code{p} matrix of symbolic indeterminates and @code{rhs} a @code{m}
2194 times @code{p} matrix. The returned matrix then has dimension @code{n}
2195 times @code{p} and in the case of an underdetermined system will still
2196 contain some of the indeterminates from @code{vars}. If the system is
2197 overdetermined, an exception is thrown.
2200 @node Indexed objects, Non-commutative objects, Matrices, Basic concepts
2201 @c node-name, next, previous, up
2202 @section Indexed objects
2204 GiNaC allows you to handle expressions containing general indexed objects in
2205 arbitrary spaces. It is also able to canonicalize and simplify such
2206 expressions and perform symbolic dummy index summations. There are a number
2207 of predefined indexed objects provided, like delta and metric tensors.
2209 There are few restrictions placed on indexed objects and their indices and
2210 it is easy to construct nonsense expressions, but our intention is to
2211 provide a general framework that allows you to implement algorithms with
2212 indexed quantities, getting in the way as little as possible.
2214 @cindex @code{idx} (class)
2215 @cindex @code{indexed} (class)
2216 @subsection Indexed quantities and their indices
2218 Indexed expressions in GiNaC are constructed of two special types of objects,
2219 @dfn{index objects} and @dfn{indexed objects}.
2223 @cindex contravariant
2226 @item Index objects are of class @code{idx} or a subclass. Every index has
2227 a @dfn{value} and a @dfn{dimension} (which is the dimension of the space
2228 the index lives in) which can both be arbitrary expressions but are usually
2229 a number or a simple symbol. In addition, indices of class @code{varidx} have
2230 a @dfn{variance} (they can be co- or contravariant), and indices of class
2231 @code{spinidx} have a variance and can be @dfn{dotted} or @dfn{undotted}.
2233 @item Indexed objects are of class @code{indexed} or a subclass. They
2234 contain a @dfn{base expression} (which is the expression being indexed), and
2235 one or more indices.
2239 @strong{Please notice:} when printing expressions, covariant indices and indices
2240 without variance are denoted @samp{.i} while contravariant indices are
2241 denoted @samp{~i}. Dotted indices have a @samp{*} in front of the index
2242 value. In the following, we are going to use that notation in the text so
2243 instead of @math{A^i_jk} we will write @samp{A~i.j.k}. Index dimensions are
2244 not visible in the output.
2246 A simple example shall illustrate the concepts:
2250 #include <ginac/ginac.h>
2251 using namespace std;
2252 using namespace GiNaC;
2256 symbol i_sym("i"), j_sym("j");
2257 idx i(i_sym, 3), j(j_sym, 3);
2260 cout << indexed(A, i, j) << endl;
2262 cout << index_dimensions << indexed(A, i, j) << endl;
2264 cout << dflt; // reset cout to default output format (dimensions hidden)
2268 The @code{idx} constructor takes two arguments, the index value and the
2269 index dimension. First we define two index objects, @code{i} and @code{j},
2270 both with the numeric dimension 3. The value of the index @code{i} is the
2271 symbol @code{i_sym} (which prints as @samp{i}) and the value of the index
2272 @code{j} is the symbol @code{j_sym} (which prints as @samp{j}). Next we
2273 construct an expression containing one indexed object, @samp{A.i.j}. It has
2274 the symbol @code{A} as its base expression and the two indices @code{i} and
2277 The dimensions of indices are normally not visible in the output, but one
2278 can request them to be printed with the @code{index_dimensions} manipulator,
2281 Note the difference between the indices @code{i} and @code{j} which are of
2282 class @code{idx}, and the index values which are the symbols @code{i_sym}
2283 and @code{j_sym}. The indices of indexed objects cannot directly be symbols
2284 or numbers but must be index objects. For example, the following is not
2285 correct and will raise an exception:
2288 symbol i("i"), j("j");
2289 e = indexed(A, i, j); // ERROR: indices must be of type idx
2292 You can have multiple indexed objects in an expression, index values can
2293 be numeric, and index dimensions symbolic:
2297 symbol B("B"), dim("dim");
2298 cout << 4 * indexed(A, i)
2299 + indexed(B, idx(j_sym, 4), idx(2, 3), idx(i_sym, dim)) << endl;
2304 @code{B} has a 4-dimensional symbolic index @samp{k}, a 3-dimensional numeric
2305 index of value 2, and a symbolic index @samp{i} with the symbolic dimension
2306 @samp{dim}. Note that GiNaC doesn't automatically notify you that the free
2307 indices of @samp{A} and @samp{B} in the sum don't match (you have to call
2308 @code{simplify_indexed()} for that, see below).
2310 In fact, base expressions, index values and index dimensions can be
2311 arbitrary expressions:
2315 cout << indexed(A+B, idx(2*i_sym+1, dim/2)) << endl;
2320 It's also possible to construct nonsense like @samp{Pi.sin(x)}. You will not
2321 get an error message from this but you will probably not be able to do
2322 anything useful with it.
2324 @cindex @code{get_value()}
2325 @cindex @code{get_dimension()}
2329 ex idx::get_value();
2330 ex idx::get_dimension();
2333 return the value and dimension of an @code{idx} object. If you have an index
2334 in an expression, such as returned by calling @code{.op()} on an indexed
2335 object, you can get a reference to the @code{idx} object with the function
2336 @code{ex_to<idx>()} on the expression.
2338 There are also the methods
2341 bool idx::is_numeric();
2342 bool idx::is_symbolic();
2343 bool idx::is_dim_numeric();
2344 bool idx::is_dim_symbolic();
2347 for checking whether the value and dimension are numeric or symbolic
2348 (non-numeric). Using the @code{info()} method of an index (see @ref{Information
2349 about expressions}) returns information about the index value.
2351 @cindex @code{varidx} (class)
2352 If you need co- and contravariant indices, use the @code{varidx} class:
2356 symbol mu_sym("mu"), nu_sym("nu");
2357 varidx mu(mu_sym, 4), nu(nu_sym, 4); // default is contravariant ~mu, ~nu
2358 varidx mu_co(mu_sym, 4, true); // covariant index .mu
2360 cout << indexed(A, mu, nu) << endl;
2362 cout << indexed(A, mu_co, nu) << endl;
2364 cout << indexed(A, mu.toggle_variance(), nu) << endl;
2369 A @code{varidx} is an @code{idx} with an additional flag that marks it as
2370 co- or contravariant. The default is a contravariant (upper) index, but
2371 this can be overridden by supplying a third argument to the @code{varidx}
2372 constructor. The two methods
2375 bool varidx::is_covariant();
2376 bool varidx::is_contravariant();
2379 allow you to check the variance of a @code{varidx} object (use @code{ex_to<varidx>()}
2380 to get the object reference from an expression). There's also the very useful
2384 ex varidx::toggle_variance();
2387 which makes a new index with the same value and dimension but the opposite
2388 variance. By using it you only have to define the index once.
2390 @cindex @code{spinidx} (class)
2391 The @code{spinidx} class provides dotted and undotted variant indices, as
2392 used in the Weyl-van-der-Waerden spinor formalism:
2396 symbol K("K"), C_sym("C"), D_sym("D");
2397 spinidx C(C_sym, 2), D(D_sym); // default is 2-dimensional,
2398 // contravariant, undotted
2399 spinidx C_co(C_sym, 2, true); // covariant index
2400 spinidx D_dot(D_sym, 2, false, true); // contravariant, dotted
2401 spinidx D_co_dot(D_sym, 2, true, true); // covariant, dotted
2403 cout << indexed(K, C, D) << endl;
2405 cout << indexed(K, C_co, D_dot) << endl;
2407 cout << indexed(K, D_co_dot, D) << endl;
2412 A @code{spinidx} is a @code{varidx} with an additional flag that marks it as
2413 dotted or undotted. The default is undotted but this can be overridden by
2414 supplying a fourth argument to the @code{spinidx} constructor. The two
2418 bool spinidx::is_dotted();
2419 bool spinidx::is_undotted();
2422 allow you to check whether or not a @code{spinidx} object is dotted (use
2423 @code{ex_to<spinidx>()} to get the object reference from an expression).
2424 Finally, the two methods
2427 ex spinidx::toggle_dot();
2428 ex spinidx::toggle_variance_dot();
2431 create a new index with the same value and dimension but opposite dottedness
2432 and the same or opposite variance.
2434 @subsection Substituting indices
2436 @cindex @code{subs()}
2437 Sometimes you will want to substitute one symbolic index with another
2438 symbolic or numeric index, for example when calculating one specific element
2439 of a tensor expression. This is done with the @code{.subs()} method, as it
2440 is done for symbols (see @ref{Substituting expressions}).
2442 You have two possibilities here. You can either substitute the whole index
2443 by another index or expression:
2447 ex e = indexed(A, mu_co);
2448 cout << e << " becomes " << e.subs(mu_co == nu) << endl;
2449 // -> A.mu becomes A~nu
2450 cout << e << " becomes " << e.subs(mu_co == varidx(0, 4)) << endl;
2451 // -> A.mu becomes A~0
2452 cout << e << " becomes " << e.subs(mu_co == 0) << endl;
2453 // -> A.mu becomes A.0
2457 The third example shows that trying to replace an index with something that
2458 is not an index will substitute the index value instead.
2460 Alternatively, you can substitute the @emph{symbol} of a symbolic index by
2465 ex e = indexed(A, mu_co);
2466 cout << e << " becomes " << e.subs(mu_sym == nu_sym) << endl;
2467 // -> A.mu becomes A.nu
2468 cout << e << " becomes " << e.subs(mu_sym == 0) << endl;
2469 // -> A.mu becomes A.0
2473 As you see, with the second method only the value of the index will get
2474 substituted. Its other properties, including its dimension, remain unchanged.
2475 If you want to change the dimension of an index you have to substitute the
2476 whole index by another one with the new dimension.
2478 Finally, substituting the base expression of an indexed object works as
2483 ex e = indexed(A, mu_co);
2484 cout << e << " becomes " << e.subs(A == A+B) << endl;
2485 // -> A.mu becomes (B+A).mu
2489 @subsection Symmetries
2490 @cindex @code{symmetry} (class)
2491 @cindex @code{sy_none()}
2492 @cindex @code{sy_symm()}
2493 @cindex @code{sy_anti()}
2494 @cindex @code{sy_cycl()}
2496 Indexed objects can have certain symmetry properties with respect to their
2497 indices. Symmetries are specified as a tree of objects of class @code{symmetry}
2498 that is constructed with the helper functions
2501 symmetry sy_none(...);
2502 symmetry sy_symm(...);
2503 symmetry sy_anti(...);
2504 symmetry sy_cycl(...);
2507 @code{sy_none()} stands for no symmetry, @code{sy_symm()} and @code{sy_anti()}
2508 specify fully symmetric or antisymmetric, respectively, and @code{sy_cycl()}
2509 represents a cyclic symmetry. Each of these functions accepts up to four
2510 arguments which can be either symmetry objects themselves or unsigned integer
2511 numbers that represent an index position (counting from 0). A symmetry
2512 specification that consists of only a single @code{sy_symm()}, @code{sy_anti()}
2513 or @code{sy_cycl()} with no arguments specifies the respective symmetry for
2516 Here are some examples of symmetry definitions:
2521 e = indexed(A, i, j);
2522 e = indexed(A, sy_none(), i, j); // equivalent
2523 e = indexed(A, sy_none(0, 1), i, j); // equivalent
2525 // Symmetric in all three indices:
2526 e = indexed(A, sy_symm(), i, j, k);
2527 e = indexed(A, sy_symm(0, 1, 2), i, j, k); // equivalent
2528 e = indexed(A, sy_symm(2, 0, 1), i, j, k); // same symmetry, but yields a
2529 // different canonical order
2531 // Symmetric in the first two indices only:
2532 e = indexed(A, sy_symm(0, 1), i, j, k);
2533 e = indexed(A, sy_none(sy_symm(0, 1), 2), i, j, k); // equivalent
2535 // Antisymmetric in the first and last index only (index ranges need not
2537 e = indexed(A, sy_anti(0, 2), i, j, k);
2538 e = indexed(A, sy_none(sy_anti(0, 2), 1), i, j, k); // equivalent
2540 // An example of a mixed symmetry: antisymmetric in the first two and
2541 // last two indices, symmetric when swapping the first and last index
2542 // pairs (like the Riemann curvature tensor):
2543 e = indexed(A, sy_symm(sy_anti(0, 1), sy_anti(2, 3)), i, j, k, l);
2545 // Cyclic symmetry in all three indices:
2546 e = indexed(A, sy_cycl(), i, j, k);
2547 e = indexed(A, sy_cycl(0, 1, 2), i, j, k); // equivalent
2549 // The following examples are invalid constructions that will throw
2550 // an exception at run time.
2552 // An index may not appear multiple times:
2553 e = indexed(A, sy_symm(0, 0, 1), i, j, k); // ERROR
2554 e = indexed(A, sy_none(sy_symm(0, 1), sy_anti(0, 2)), i, j, k); // ERROR
2556 // Every child of sy_symm(), sy_anti() and sy_cycl() must refer to the
2557 // same number of indices:
2558 e = indexed(A, sy_symm(sy_anti(0, 1), 2), i, j, k); // ERROR
2560 // And of course, you cannot specify indices which are not there:
2561 e = indexed(A, sy_symm(0, 1, 2, 3), i, j, k); // ERROR
2565 If you need to specify more than four indices, you have to use the
2566 @code{.add()} method of the @code{symmetry} class. For example, to specify
2567 full symmetry in the first six indices you would write
2568 @code{sy_symm(0, 1, 2, 3).add(4).add(5)}.
2570 If an indexed object has a symmetry, GiNaC will automatically bring the
2571 indices into a canonical order which allows for some immediate simplifications:
2575 cout << indexed(A, sy_symm(), i, j)
2576 + indexed(A, sy_symm(), j, i) << endl;
2578 cout << indexed(B, sy_anti(), i, j)
2579 + indexed(B, sy_anti(), j, i) << endl;
2581 cout << indexed(B, sy_anti(), i, j, k)
2582 - indexed(B, sy_anti(), j, k, i) << endl;
2587 @cindex @code{get_free_indices()}
2589 @subsection Dummy indices
2591 GiNaC treats certain symbolic index pairs as @dfn{dummy indices} meaning
2592 that a summation over the index range is implied. Symbolic indices which are
2593 not dummy indices are called @dfn{free indices}. Numeric indices are neither
2594 dummy nor free indices.
2596 To be recognized as a dummy index pair, the two indices must be of the same
2597 class and their value must be the same single symbol (an index like
2598 @samp{2*n+1} is never a dummy index). If the indices are of class
2599 @code{varidx} they must also be of opposite variance; if they are of class
2600 @code{spinidx} they must be both dotted or both undotted.
2602 The method @code{.get_free_indices()} returns a vector containing the free
2603 indices of an expression. It also checks that the free indices of the terms
2604 of a sum are consistent:
2608 symbol A("A"), B("B"), C("C");
2610 symbol i_sym("i"), j_sym("j"), k_sym("k"), l_sym("l");
2611 idx i(i_sym, 3), j(j_sym, 3), k(k_sym, 3), l(l_sym, 3);
2613 ex e = indexed(A, i, j) * indexed(B, j, k) + indexed(C, k, l, i, l);
2614 cout << exprseq(e.get_free_indices()) << endl;
2616 // 'j' and 'l' are dummy indices
2618 symbol mu_sym("mu"), nu_sym("nu"), rho_sym("rho"), sigma_sym("sigma");
2619 varidx mu(mu_sym, 4), nu(nu_sym, 4), rho(rho_sym, 4), sigma(sigma_sym, 4);
2621 e = indexed(A, mu, nu) * indexed(B, nu.toggle_variance(), rho)
2622 + indexed(C, mu, sigma, rho, sigma.toggle_variance());
2623 cout << exprseq(e.get_free_indices()) << endl;
2625 // 'nu' is a dummy index, but 'sigma' is not
2627 e = indexed(A, mu, mu);
2628 cout << exprseq(e.get_free_indices()) << endl;
2630 // 'mu' is not a dummy index because it appears twice with the same
2633 e = indexed(A, mu, nu) + 42;
2634 cout << exprseq(e.get_free_indices()) << endl; // ERROR
2635 // this will throw an exception:
2636 // "add::get_free_indices: inconsistent indices in sum"
2640 @cindex @code{expand_dummy_sum()}
2641 A dummy index summation like
2648 can be expanded for indices with numeric
2649 dimensions (e.g. 3) into the explicit sum like
2651 $a_1b^1+a_2b^2+a_3b^3 $.
2654 a.1 b~1 + a.2 b~2 + a.3 b~3.
2656 This is performed by the function
2659 ex expand_dummy_sum(const ex & e, bool subs_idx = false);
2662 which takes an expression @code{e} and returns the expanded sum for all
2663 dummy indices with numeric dimensions. If the parameter @code{subs_idx}
2664 is set to @code{true} then all substitutions are made by @code{idx} class
2665 indices, i.e. without variance. In this case the above sum
2674 $a_1b_1+a_2b_2+a_3b_3 $.
2677 a.1 b.1 + a.2 b.2 + a.3 b.3.
2681 @cindex @code{simplify_indexed()}
2682 @subsection Simplifying indexed expressions
2684 In addition to the few automatic simplifications that GiNaC performs on
2685 indexed expressions (such as re-ordering the indices of symmetric tensors
2686 and calculating traces and convolutions of matrices and predefined tensors)
2690 ex ex::simplify_indexed();
2691 ex ex::simplify_indexed(const scalar_products & sp);
2694 that performs some more expensive operations:
2697 @item it checks the consistency of free indices in sums in the same way
2698 @code{get_free_indices()} does
2699 @item it tries to give dummy indices that appear in different terms of a sum
2700 the same name to allow simplifications like @math{a_i*b_i-a_j*b_j=0}
2701 @item it (symbolically) calculates all possible dummy index summations/contractions
2702 with the predefined tensors (this will be explained in more detail in the
2704 @item it detects contractions that vanish for symmetry reasons, for example
2705 the contraction of a symmetric and a totally antisymmetric tensor
2706 @item as a special case of dummy index summation, it can replace scalar products
2707 of two tensors with a user-defined value
2710 The last point is done with the help of the @code{scalar_products} class
2711 which is used to store scalar products with known values (this is not an
2712 arithmetic class, you just pass it to @code{simplify_indexed()}):
2716 symbol A("A"), B("B"), C("C"), i_sym("i");
2720 sp.add(A, B, 0); // A and B are orthogonal
2721 sp.add(A, C, 0); // A and C are orthogonal
2722 sp.add(A, A, 4); // A^2 = 4 (A has length 2)
2724 e = indexed(A + B, i) * indexed(A + C, i);
2726 // -> (B+A).i*(A+C).i
2728 cout << e.expand(expand_options::expand_indexed).simplify_indexed(sp)
2734 The @code{scalar_products} object @code{sp} acts as a storage for the
2735 scalar products added to it with the @code{.add()} method. This method
2736 takes three arguments: the two expressions of which the scalar product is
2737 taken, and the expression to replace it with.
2739 @cindex @code{expand()}
2740 The example above also illustrates a feature of the @code{expand()} method:
2741 if passed the @code{expand_indexed} option it will distribute indices
2742 over sums, so @samp{(A+B).i} becomes @samp{A.i+B.i}.
2744 @cindex @code{tensor} (class)
2745 @subsection Predefined tensors
2747 Some frequently used special tensors such as the delta, epsilon and metric
2748 tensors are predefined in GiNaC. They have special properties when
2749 contracted with other tensor expressions and some of them have constant
2750 matrix representations (they will evaluate to a number when numeric
2751 indices are specified).
2753 @cindex @code{delta_tensor()}
2754 @subsubsection Delta tensor
2756 The delta tensor takes two indices, is symmetric and has the matrix
2757 representation @code{diag(1, 1, 1, ...)}. It is constructed by the function
2758 @code{delta_tensor()}:
2762 symbol A("A"), B("B");
2764 idx i(symbol("i"), 3), j(symbol("j"), 3),
2765 k(symbol("k"), 3), l(symbol("l"), 3);
2767 ex e = indexed(A, i, j) * indexed(B, k, l)
2768 * delta_tensor(i, k) * delta_tensor(j, l);
2769 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2772 cout << delta_tensor(i, i) << endl;
2777 @cindex @code{metric_tensor()}
2778 @subsubsection General metric tensor
2780 The function @code{metric_tensor()} creates a general symmetric metric
2781 tensor with two indices that can be used to raise/lower tensor indices. The
2782 metric tensor is denoted as @samp{g} in the output and if its indices are of
2783 mixed variance it is automatically replaced by a delta tensor:
2789 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), 4), nu(symbol("nu"), 4), rho(symbol("rho"), 4);
2791 ex e = metric_tensor(mu, nu) * indexed(A, nu.toggle_variance(), rho);
2792 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2795 e = delta_tensor(mu, nu.toggle_variance()) * metric_tensor(nu, rho);
2796 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2799 e = metric_tensor(mu.toggle_variance(), nu.toggle_variance())
2800 * metric_tensor(nu, rho);
2801 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2804 e = metric_tensor(nu.toggle_variance(), rho.toggle_variance())
2805 * metric_tensor(mu, nu) * (delta_tensor(mu.toggle_variance(), rho)
2806 + indexed(A, mu.toggle_variance(), rho));
2807 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2812 @cindex @code{lorentz_g()}
2813 @subsubsection Minkowski metric tensor
2815 The Minkowski metric tensor is a special metric tensor with a constant
2816 matrix representation which is either @code{diag(1, -1, -1, ...)} (negative
2817 signature, the default) or @code{diag(-1, 1, 1, ...)} (positive signature).
2818 It is created with the function @code{lorentz_g()} (although it is output as
2823 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), 4);
2825 e = delta_tensor(varidx(0, 4), mu.toggle_variance())
2826 * lorentz_g(mu, varidx(0, 4)); // negative signature
2827 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2830 e = delta_tensor(varidx(0, 4), mu.toggle_variance())
2831 * lorentz_g(mu, varidx(0, 4), true); // positive signature
2832 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2837 @cindex @code{spinor_metric()}
2838 @subsubsection Spinor metric tensor
2840 The function @code{spinor_metric()} creates an antisymmetric tensor with
2841 two indices that is used to raise/lower indices of 2-component spinors.
2842 It is output as @samp{eps}:
2848 spinidx A(symbol("A")), B(symbol("B")), C(symbol("C"));
2849 ex A_co = A.toggle_variance(), B_co = B.toggle_variance();
2851 e = spinor_metric(A, B) * indexed(psi, B_co);
2852 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2855 e = spinor_metric(A, B) * indexed(psi, A_co);
2856 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2859 e = spinor_metric(A_co, B_co) * indexed(psi, B);
2860 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2863 e = spinor_metric(A_co, B_co) * indexed(psi, A);
2864 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2867 e = spinor_metric(A_co, B_co) * spinor_metric(A, B);
2868 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2871 e = spinor_metric(A_co, B_co) * spinor_metric(B, C);
2872 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2877 The matrix representation of the spinor metric is @code{[[0, 1], [-1, 0]]}.
2879 @cindex @code{epsilon_tensor()}
2880 @cindex @code{lorentz_eps()}
2881 @subsubsection Epsilon tensor
2883 The epsilon tensor is totally antisymmetric, its number of indices is equal
2884 to the dimension of the index space (the indices must all be of the same
2885 numeric dimension), and @samp{eps.1.2.3...} (resp. @samp{eps~0~1~2...}) is
2886 defined to be 1. Its behavior with indices that have a variance also
2887 depends on the signature of the metric. Epsilon tensors are output as
2890 There are three functions defined to create epsilon tensors in 2, 3 and 4
2894 ex epsilon_tensor(const ex & i1, const ex & i2);
2895 ex epsilon_tensor(const ex & i1, const ex & i2, const ex & i3);
2896 ex lorentz_eps(const ex & i1, const ex & i2, const ex & i3, const ex & i4,
2897 bool pos_sig = false);
2900 The first two functions create an epsilon tensor in 2 or 3 Euclidean
2901 dimensions, the last function creates an epsilon tensor in a 4-dimensional
2902 Minkowski space (the last @code{bool} argument specifies whether the metric
2903 has negative or positive signature, as in the case of the Minkowski metric
2908 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), 4), nu(symbol("nu"), 4), rho(symbol("rho"), 4),
2909 sig(symbol("sig"), 4), lam(symbol("lam"), 4), bet(symbol("bet"), 4);
2910 e = lorentz_eps(mu, nu, rho, sig) *
2911 lorentz_eps(mu.toggle_variance(), nu.toggle_variance(), lam, bet);
2912 cout << simplify_indexed(e) << endl;
2913 // -> 2*eta~bet~rho*eta~sig~lam-2*eta~sig~bet*eta~rho~lam
2915 idx i(symbol("i"), 3), j(symbol("j"), 3), k(symbol("k"), 3);
2916 symbol A("A"), B("B");
2917 e = epsilon_tensor(i, j, k) * indexed(A, j) * indexed(B, k);
2918 cout << simplify_indexed(e) << endl;
2919 // -> -B.k*A.j*eps.i.k.j
2920 e = epsilon_tensor(i, j, k) * indexed(A, j) * indexed(A, k);
2921 cout << simplify_indexed(e) << endl;
2926 @subsection Linear algebra
2928 The @code{matrix} class can be used with indices to do some simple linear
2929 algebra (linear combinations and products of vectors and matrices, traces
2930 and scalar products):
2934 idx i(symbol("i"), 2), j(symbol("j"), 2);
2935 symbol x("x"), y("y");
2937 // A is a 2x2 matrix, X is a 2x1 vector
2938 matrix A(2, 2), X(2, 1);
2943 cout << indexed(A, i, i) << endl;
2946 ex e = indexed(A, i, j) * indexed(X, j);
2947 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2948 // -> [[2*y+x],[4*y+3*x]].i
2950 e = indexed(A, i, j) * indexed(X, i) + indexed(X, j) * 2;
2951 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
2952 // -> [[3*y+3*x,6*y+2*x]].j
2956 You can of course obtain the same results with the @code{matrix::add()},
2957 @code{matrix::mul()} and @code{matrix::trace()} methods (@pxref{Matrices})
2958 but with indices you don't have to worry about transposing matrices.
2960 Matrix indices always start at 0 and their dimension must match the number
2961 of rows/columns of the matrix. Matrices with one row or one column are
2962 vectors and can have one or two indices (it doesn't matter whether it's a
2963 row or a column vector). Other matrices must have two indices.
2965 You should be careful when using indices with variance on matrices. GiNaC
2966 doesn't look at the variance and doesn't know that @samp{F~mu~nu} and
2967 @samp{F.mu.nu} are different matrices. In this case you should use only
2968 one form for @samp{F} and explicitly multiply it with a matrix representation
2969 of the metric tensor.
2972 @node Non-commutative objects, Hash maps, Indexed objects, Basic concepts
2973 @c node-name, next, previous, up
2974 @section Non-commutative objects
2976 GiNaC is equipped to handle certain non-commutative algebras. Three classes of
2977 non-commutative objects are built-in which are mostly of use in high energy
2981 @item Clifford (Dirac) algebra (class @code{clifford})
2982 @item su(3) Lie algebra (class @code{color})
2983 @item Matrices (unindexed) (class @code{matrix})
2986 The @code{clifford} and @code{color} classes are subclasses of
2987 @code{indexed} because the elements of these algebras usually carry
2988 indices. The @code{matrix} class is described in more detail in
2991 Unlike most computer algebra systems, GiNaC does not primarily provide an
2992 operator (often denoted @samp{&*}) for representing inert products of
2993 arbitrary objects. Rather, non-commutativity in GiNaC is a property of the
2994 classes of objects involved, and non-commutative products are formed with
2995 the usual @samp{*} operator, as are ordinary products. GiNaC is capable of
2996 figuring out by itself which objects commutate and will group the factors
2997 by their class. Consider this example:
3001 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), 4), nu(symbol("nu"), 4);
3002 idx a(symbol("a"), 8), b(symbol("b"), 8);
3003 ex e = -dirac_gamma(mu) * (2*color_T(a)) * 8 * color_T(b) * dirac_gamma(nu);
3005 // -> -16*(gamma~mu*gamma~nu)*(T.a*T.b)
3009 As can be seen, GiNaC pulls out the overall commutative factor @samp{-16} and
3010 groups the non-commutative factors (the gammas and the su(3) generators)
3011 together while preserving the order of factors within each class (because
3012 Clifford objects commutate with color objects). The resulting expression is a
3013 @emph{commutative} product with two factors that are themselves non-commutative
3014 products (@samp{gamma~mu*gamma~nu} and @samp{T.a*T.b}). For clarification,
3015 parentheses are placed around the non-commutative products in the output.
3017 @cindex @code{ncmul} (class)
3018 Non-commutative products are internally represented by objects of the class
3019 @code{ncmul}, as opposed to commutative products which are handled by the
3020 @code{mul} class. You will normally not have to worry about this distinction,
3023 The advantage of this approach is that you never have to worry about using
3024 (or forgetting to use) a special operator when constructing non-commutative
3025 expressions. Also, non-commutative products in GiNaC are more intelligent
3026 than in other computer algebra systems; they can, for example, automatically
3027 canonicalize themselves according to rules specified in the implementation
3028 of the non-commutative classes. The drawback is that to work with other than
3029 the built-in algebras you have to implement new classes yourself. Both
3030 symbols and user-defined functions can be specified as being non-commutative.
3032 @cindex @code{return_type()}
3033 @cindex @code{return_type_tinfo()}
3034 Information about the commutativity of an object or expression can be
3035 obtained with the two member functions
3038 unsigned ex::return_type() const;
3039 unsigned ex::return_type_tinfo() const;
3042 The @code{return_type()} function returns one of three values (defined in
3043 the header file @file{flags.h}), corresponding to three categories of
3044 expressions in GiNaC:
3047 @item @code{return_types::commutative}: Commutates with everything. Most GiNaC
3048 classes are of this kind.
3049 @item @code{return_types::noncommutative}: Non-commutative, belonging to a
3050 certain class of non-commutative objects which can be determined with the
3051 @code{return_type_tinfo()} method. Expressions of this category commutate
3052 with everything except @code{noncommutative} expressions of the same
3054 @item @code{return_types::noncommutative_composite}: Non-commutative, composed
3055 of non-commutative objects of different classes. Expressions of this
3056 category don't commutate with any other @code{noncommutative} or
3057 @code{noncommutative_composite} expressions.
3060 The value returned by the @code{return_type_tinfo()} method is valid only
3061 when the return type of the expression is @code{noncommutative}. It is a
3062 value that is unique to the class of the object, but may vary every time a
3063 GiNaC program is being run (it is dynamically assigned on start-up).
3065 Here are a couple of examples:
3068 @multitable @columnfractions 0.33 0.33 0.34
3069 @item @strong{Expression} @tab @strong{@code{return_type()}} @tab @strong{@code{return_type_tinfo()}}
3070 @item @code{42} @tab @code{commutative} @tab -
3071 @item @code{2*x-y} @tab @code{commutative} @tab -
3072 @item @code{dirac_ONE()} @tab @code{noncommutative} @tab @code{TINFO_clifford}
3073 @item @code{dirac_gamma(mu)*dirac_gamma(nu)} @tab @code{noncommutative} @tab @code{TINFO_clifford}
3074 @item @code{2*color_T(a)} @tab @code{noncommutative} @tab @code{TINFO_color}
3075 @item @code{dirac_ONE()*color_T(a)} @tab @code{noncommutative_composite} @tab -
3079 Note: the @code{return_type_tinfo()} of Clifford objects is only equal to
3080 @code{TINFO_clifford} for objects with a representation label of zero.
3081 Other representation labels yield a different @code{return_type_tinfo()},
3082 but it's the same for any two objects with the same label. This is also true
3085 A last note: With the exception of matrices, positive integer powers of
3086 non-commutative objects are automatically expanded in GiNaC. For example,
3087 @code{pow(a*b, 2)} becomes @samp{a*b*a*b} if @samp{a} and @samp{b} are
3088 non-commutative expressions).
3091 @cindex @code{clifford} (class)
3092 @subsection Clifford algebra
3095 Clifford algebras are supported in two flavours: Dirac gamma
3096 matrices (more physical) and generic Clifford algebras (more
3099 @cindex @code{dirac_gamma()}
3100 @subsubsection Dirac gamma matrices
3101 Dirac gamma matrices (note that GiNaC doesn't treat them
3102 as matrices) are designated as @samp{gamma~mu} and satisfy
3103 @samp{gamma~mu*gamma~nu + gamma~nu*gamma~mu = 2*eta~mu~nu} where
3104 @samp{eta~mu~nu} is the Minkowski metric tensor. Dirac gammas are
3105 constructed by the function
3108 ex dirac_gamma(const ex & mu, unsigned char rl = 0);
3111 which takes two arguments: the index and a @dfn{representation label} in the
3112 range 0 to 255 which is used to distinguish elements of different Clifford
3113 algebras (this is also called a @dfn{spin line index}). Gammas with different
3114 labels commutate with each other. The dimension of the index can be 4 or (in
3115 the framework of dimensional regularization) any symbolic value. Spinor
3116 indices on Dirac gammas are not supported in GiNaC.
3118 @cindex @code{dirac_ONE()}
3119 The unity element of a Clifford algebra is constructed by
3122 ex dirac_ONE(unsigned char rl = 0);
3125 @strong{Please notice:} You must always use @code{dirac_ONE()} when referring to
3126 multiples of the unity element, even though it's customary to omit it.
3127 E.g. instead of @code{dirac_gamma(mu)*(dirac_slash(q,4)+m)} you have to
3128 write @code{dirac_gamma(mu)*(dirac_slash(q,4)+m*dirac_ONE())}. Otherwise,
3129 GiNaC will complain and/or produce incorrect results.
3131 @cindex @code{dirac_gamma5()}
3132 There is a special element @samp{gamma5} that commutates with all other
3133 gammas, has a unit square, and in 4 dimensions equals
3134 @samp{gamma~0 gamma~1 gamma~2 gamma~3}, provided by
3137 ex dirac_gamma5(unsigned char rl = 0);
3140 @cindex @code{dirac_gammaL()}
3141 @cindex @code{dirac_gammaR()}
3142 The chiral projectors @samp{(1+/-gamma5)/2} are also available as proper
3143 objects, constructed by
3146 ex dirac_gammaL(unsigned char rl = 0);
3147 ex dirac_gammaR(unsigned char rl = 0);
3150 They observe the relations @samp{gammaL^2 = gammaL}, @samp{gammaR^2 = gammaR},
3151 and @samp{gammaL gammaR = gammaR gammaL = 0}.
3153 @cindex @code{dirac_slash()}
3154 Finally, the function
3157 ex dirac_slash(const ex & e, const ex & dim, unsigned char rl = 0);
3160 creates a term that represents a contraction of @samp{e} with the Dirac
3161 Lorentz vector (it behaves like a term of the form @samp{e.mu gamma~mu}
3162 with a unique index whose dimension is given by the @code{dim} argument).
3163 Such slashed expressions are printed with a trailing backslash, e.g. @samp{e\}.
3165 In products of dirac gammas, superfluous unity elements are automatically
3166 removed, squares are replaced by their values, and @samp{gamma5}, @samp{gammaL}
3167 and @samp{gammaR} are moved to the front.
3169 The @code{simplify_indexed()} function performs contractions in gamma strings,
3175 symbol a("a"), b("b"), D("D");
3176 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), D);
3177 ex e = dirac_gamma(mu) * dirac_slash(a, D)
3178 * dirac_gamma(mu.toggle_variance());
3180 // -> gamma~mu*a\*gamma.mu
3181 e = e.simplify_indexed();
3184 cout << e.subs(D == 4) << endl;
3190 @cindex @code{dirac_trace()}
3191 To calculate the trace of an expression containing strings of Dirac gammas
3192 you use one of the functions
3195 ex dirac_trace(const ex & e, const std::set<unsigned char> & rls,
3196 const ex & trONE = 4);
3197 ex dirac_trace(const ex & e, const lst & rll, const ex & trONE = 4);
3198 ex dirac_trace(const ex & e, unsigned char rl = 0, const ex & trONE = 4);
3201 These functions take the trace over all gammas in the specified set @code{rls}
3202 or list @code{rll} of representation labels, or the single label @code{rl};
3203 gammas with other labels are left standing. The last argument to
3204 @code{dirac_trace()} is the value to be returned for the trace of the unity
3205 element, which defaults to 4.
3207 The @code{dirac_trace()} function is a linear functional that is equal to the
3208 ordinary matrix trace only in @math{D = 4} dimensions. In particular, the
3209 functional is not cyclic in
3215 dimensions when acting on
3216 expressions containing @samp{gamma5}, so it's not a proper trace. This
3217 @samp{gamma5} scheme is described in greater detail in the article
3218 @cite{The Role of gamma5 in Dimensional Regularization} (@ref{Bibliography}).
3220 The value of the trace itself is also usually different in 4 and in
3231 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), 4), nu(symbol("nu"), 4), rho(symbol("rho"), 4);
3232 ex e = dirac_gamma(mu) * dirac_gamma(nu) *
3233 dirac_gamma(mu.toggle_variance()) * dirac_gamma(rho);
3234 cout << dirac_trace(e).simplify_indexed() << endl;
3241 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), D), nu(symbol("nu"), D), rho(symbol("rho"), D);
3242 ex e = dirac_gamma(mu) * dirac_gamma(nu) *
3243 dirac_gamma(mu.toggle_variance()) * dirac_gamma(rho);
3244 cout << dirac_trace(e).simplify_indexed() << endl;
3245 // -> 8*eta~rho~nu-4*eta~rho~nu*D
3249 Here is an example for using @code{dirac_trace()} to compute a value that
3250 appears in the calculation of the one-loop vacuum polarization amplitude in
3255 symbol q("q"), l("l"), m("m"), ldotq("ldotq"), D("D");
3256 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), D), nu(symbol("nu"), D);
3259 sp.add(l, l, pow(l, 2));
3260 sp.add(l, q, ldotq);
3262 ex e = dirac_gamma(mu) *
3263 (dirac_slash(l, D) + dirac_slash(q, D) + m * dirac_ONE()) *
3264 dirac_gamma(mu.toggle_variance()) *
3265 (dirac_slash(l, D) + m * dirac_ONE());
3266 e = dirac_trace(e).simplify_indexed(sp);
3267 e = e.collect(lst(l, ldotq, m));
3269 // -> (8-4*D)*l^2+(8-4*D)*ldotq+4*D*m^2
3273 The @code{canonicalize_clifford()} function reorders all gamma products that
3274 appear in an expression to a canonical (but not necessarily simple) form.
3275 You can use this to compare two expressions or for further simplifications:
3279 varidx mu(symbol("mu"), 4), nu(symbol("nu"), 4);
3280 ex e = dirac_gamma(mu) * dirac_gamma(nu) + dirac_gamma(nu) * dirac_gamma(mu);
3282 // -> gamma~mu*gamma~nu+gamma~nu*gamma~mu
3284 e = canonicalize_clifford(e);
3286 // -> 2*ONE*eta~mu~nu
3290 @cindex @code{clifford_unit()}
3291 @subsubsection A generic Clifford algebra
3293 A generic Clifford algebra, i.e. a
3299 dimensional algebra with
3306 satisfying the identities
3308 $e_i e_j + e_j e_i = M(i, j) + M(j, i)$
3311 e~i e~j + e~j e~i = M(i, j) + M(j, i)
3313 for some bilinear form (@code{metric})
3314 @math{M(i, j)}, which may be non-symmetric (see arXiv:math.QA/9911180)
3315 and contain symbolic entries. Such generators are created by the
3319 ex clifford_unit(const ex & mu, const ex & metr, unsigned char rl = 0);
3322 where @code{mu} should be a @code{idx} (or descendant) class object
3323 indexing the generators.
3324 Parameter @code{metr} defines the metric @math{M(i, j)} and can be
3325 represented by a square @code{matrix}, @code{tensormetric} or @code{indexed} class
3326 object. In fact, any expression either with two free indices or without
3327 indices at all is admitted as @code{metr}. In the later case an @code{indexed}
3328 object with two newly created indices with @code{metr} as its
3329 @code{op(0)} will be used.
3330 Optional parameter @code{rl} allows to distinguish different
3331 Clifford algebras, which will commute with each other.
3333 Note that the call @code{clifford_unit(mu, minkmetric())} creates
3334 something very close to @code{dirac_gamma(mu)}, although
3335 @code{dirac_gamma} have more efficient simplification mechanism.
3336 @cindex @code{clifford::get_metric()}
3337 The method @code{clifford::get_metric()} returns a metric defining this
3340 If the matrix @math{M(i, j)} is in fact symmetric you may prefer to create
3341 the Clifford algebra units with a call like that
3344 ex e = clifford_unit(mu, indexed(M, sy_symm(), i, j));
3347 since this may yield some further automatic simplifications. Again, for a
3348 metric defined through a @code{matrix} such a symmetry is detected
3351 Individual generators of a Clifford algebra can be accessed in several
3357 idx i(symbol("i"), 4);
3359 ex M = diag_matrix(lst(1, -1, 0, s));
3360 ex e = clifford_unit(i, M);
3361 ex e0 = e.subs(i == 0);
3362 ex e1 = e.subs(i == 1);
3363 ex e2 = e.subs(i == 2);
3364 ex e3 = e.subs(i == 3);
3369 will produce four anti-commuting generators of a Clifford algebra with properties
3371 $e_0^2=1 $, $e_1^2=-1$, $e_2^2=0$ and $e_3^2=s$.
3374 @code{pow(e0, 2) = 1}, @code{pow(e1, 2) = -1}, @code{pow(e2, 2) = 0} and
3375 @code{pow(e3, 2) = s}.
3378 @cindex @code{lst_to_clifford()}
3379 A similar effect can be achieved from the function
3382 ex lst_to_clifford(const ex & v, const ex & mu, const ex & metr,
3383 unsigned char rl = 0);
3384 ex lst_to_clifford(const ex & v, const ex & e);
3387 which converts a list or vector
3389 $v = (v^0, v^1, ..., v^n)$
3392 @samp{v = (v~0, v~1, ..., v~n)}
3397 $v^0 e_0 + v^1 e_1 + ... + v^n e_n$
3400 @samp{v~0 e.0 + v~1 e.1 + ... + v~n e.n}
3403 directly supplied in the second form of the procedure. In the first form
3404 the Clifford unit @samp{e.k} is generated by the call of
3405 @code{clifford_unit(mu, metr, rl)}.
3406 @cindex pseudo-vector
3407 If the number of components supplied
3408 by @code{v} exceeds the dimensionality of the Clifford unit @code{e} by
3409 1 then function @code{lst_to_clifford()} uses the following
3410 pseudo-vector representation:
3412 $v^0 {\bf 1} + v^1 e_0 + v^2 e_1 + ... + v^{n+1} e_n$
3415 @samp{v~0 ONE + v~1 e.0 + v~2 e.1 + ... + v~[n+1] e.n}
3418 The previous code may be rewritten with the help of @code{lst_to_clifford()} as follows
3423 idx i(symbol("i"), 4);
3425 ex M = diag_matrix(lst(1, -1, 0, s));
3426 ex e0 = lst_to_clifford(lst(1, 0, 0, 0), i, M);
3427 ex e1 = lst_to_clifford(lst(0, 1, 0, 0), i, M);
3428 ex e2 = lst_to_clifford(lst(0, 0, 1, 0), i, M);
3429 ex e3 = lst_to_clifford(lst(0, 0, 0, 1), i, M);
3434 @cindex @code{clifford_to_lst()}
3435 There is the inverse function
3438 lst clifford_to_lst(const ex & e, const ex & c, bool algebraic = true);
3441 which takes an expression @code{e} and tries to find a list
3443 $v = (v^0, v^1, ..., v^n)$
3446 @samp{v = (v~0, v~1, ..., v~n)}
3448 such that the expression is either vector
3450 $e = v^0 c_0 + v^1 c_1 + ... + v^n c_n$
3453 @samp{e = v~0 c.0 + v~1 c.1 + ... + v~n c.n}
3457 $v^0 {\bf 1} + v^1 e_0 + v^2 e_1 + ... + v^{n+1} e_n$
3460 @samp{v~0 ONE + v~1 e.0 + v~2 e.1 + ... + v~[n+1] e.n}
3462 with respect to the given Clifford units @code{c}. Here none of the
3463 @samp{v~k} should contain Clifford units @code{c} (of course, this
3464 may be impossible). This function can use an @code{algebraic} method
3465 (default) or a symbolic one. With the @code{algebraic} method the
3466 @samp{v~k} are calculated as
3468 $(e c_k + c_k e)/c_k^2$. If $c_k^2$
3471 @samp{(e c.k + c.k e)/pow(c.k, 2)}. If @samp{pow(c.k, 2)}
3473 is zero or is not @code{numeric} for some @samp{k}
3474 then the method will be automatically changed to symbolic. The same effect
3475 is obtained by the assignment (@code{algebraic = false}) in the procedure call.
3477 @cindex @code{clifford_prime()}
3478 @cindex @code{clifford_star()}
3479 @cindex @code{clifford_bar()}
3480 There are several functions for (anti-)automorphisms of Clifford algebras:
3483 ex clifford_prime(const ex & e)
3484 inline ex clifford_star(const ex & e) @{ return e.conjugate(); @}
3485 inline ex clifford_bar(const ex & e) @{ return clifford_prime(e.conjugate()); @}
3488 The automorphism of a Clifford algebra @code{clifford_prime()} simply
3489 changes signs of all Clifford units in the expression. The reversion
3490 of a Clifford algebra @code{clifford_star()} coincides with the
3491 @code{conjugate()} method and effectively reverses the order of Clifford
3492 units in any product. Finally the main anti-automorphism
3493 of a Clifford algebra @code{clifford_bar()} is the composition of the
3494 previous two, i.e. it makes the reversion and changes signs of all Clifford units
3495 in a product. These functions correspond to the notations
3510 used in Clifford algebra textbooks.
3512 @cindex @code{clifford_norm()}
3516 ex clifford_norm(const ex & e);
3519 @cindex @code{clifford_inverse()}
3520 calculates the norm of a Clifford number from the expression
3522 $||e||^2 = e\overline{e}$.
3525 @code{||e||^2 = e \bar@{e@}}
3527 The inverse of a Clifford expression is returned by the function
3530 ex clifford_inverse(const ex & e);
3533 which calculates it as
3535 $e^{-1} = \overline{e}/||e||^2$.
3538 @math{e^@{-1@} = \bar@{e@}/||e||^2}
3547 then an exception is raised.
3549 @cindex @code{remove_dirac_ONE()}
3550 If a Clifford number happens to be a factor of
3551 @code{dirac_ONE()} then we can convert it to a ``real'' (non-Clifford)
3552 expression by the function
3555 ex remove_dirac_ONE(const ex & e);
3558 @cindex @code{canonicalize_clifford()}
3559 The function @code{canonicalize_clifford()} works for a
3560 generic Clifford algebra in a similar way as for Dirac gammas.
3562 The next provided function is
3564 @cindex @code{clifford_moebius_map()}
3566 ex clifford_moebius_map(const ex & a, const ex & b, const ex & c,
3567 const ex & d, const ex & v, const ex & G,
3568 unsigned char rl = 0);
3569 ex clifford_moebius_map(const ex & M, const ex & v, const ex & G,
3570 unsigned char rl = 0);
3573 It takes a list or vector @code{v} and makes the Moebius (conformal or
3574 linear-fractional) transformation @samp{v -> (av+b)/(cv+d)} defined by
3575 the matrix @samp{M = [[a, b], [c, d]]}. The parameter @code{G} defines
3576 the metric of the surrounding (pseudo-)Euclidean space. This can be an
3577 indexed object, tensormetric, matrix or a Clifford unit, in the later
3578 case the optional parameter @code{rl} is ignored even if supplied.
3579 Depending from the type of @code{v} the returned value of this function
3580 is either a vector or a list holding vector's components.
3582 @cindex @code{clifford_max_label()}
3583 Finally the function
3586 char clifford_max_label(const ex & e, bool ignore_ONE = false);
3589 can detect a presence of Clifford objects in the expression @code{e}: if
3590 such objects are found it returns the maximal
3591 @code{representation_label} of them, otherwise @code{-1}. The optional
3592 parameter @code{ignore_ONE} indicates if @code{dirac_ONE} objects should
3593 be ignored during the search.
3595 LaTeX output for Clifford units looks like
3596 @code{\clifford[1]@{e@}^@{@{\nu@}@}}, where @code{1} is the
3597 @code{representation_label} and @code{\nu} is the index of the
3598 corresponding unit. This provides a flexible typesetting with a suitable
3599 definition of the @code{\clifford} command. For example, the definition
3601 \newcommand@{\clifford@}[1][]@{@}
3603 typesets all Clifford units identically, while the alternative definition
3605 \newcommand@{\clifford@}[2][]@{\ifcase #1 #2\or \tilde@{#2@} \or \breve@{#2@} \fi@}
3607 prints units with @code{representation_label=0} as
3614 with @code{representation_label=1} as
3621 and with @code{representation_label=2} as
3629 @cindex @code{color} (class)
3630 @subsection Color algebra
3632 @cindex @code{color_T()}
3633 For computations in quantum chromodynamics, GiNaC implements the base elements
3634 and structure constants of the su(3) Lie algebra (color algebra). The base
3635 elements @math{T_a} are constructed by the function
3638 ex color_T(const ex & a, unsigned char rl = 0);
3641 which takes two arguments: the index and a @dfn{representation label} in the
3642 range 0 to 255 which is used to distinguish elements of different color
3643 algebras. Objects with different labels commutate with each other. The
3644 dimension of the index must be exactly 8 and it should be of class @code{idx},
3647 @cindex @code{color_ONE()}
3648 The unity element of a color algebra is constructed by
3651 ex color_ONE(unsigned char rl = 0);
3654 @strong{Please notice:} You must always use @code{color_ONE()} when referring to
3655 multiples of the unity element, even though it's customary to omit it.
3656 E.g. instead of @code{color_T(a)*(color_T(b)*indexed(X,b)+1)} you have to
3657 write @code{color_T(a)*(color_T(b)*indexed(X,b)+color_ONE())}. Otherwise,
3658 GiNaC may produce incorrect results.
3660 @cindex @code{color_d()}
3661 @cindex @code{color_f()}
3665 ex color_d(const ex & a, const ex & b, const ex & c);
3666 ex color_f(const ex & a, const ex & b, const ex & c);
3669 create the symmetric and antisymmetric structure constants @math{d_abc} and
3670 @math{f_abc} which satisfy @math{@{T_a, T_b@} = 1/3 delta_ab + d_abc T_c}
3671 and @math{[T_a, T_b] = i f_abc T_c}.
3673 These functions evaluate to their numerical values,
3674 if you supply numeric indices to them. The index values should be in
3675 the range from 1 to 8, not from 0 to 7. This departure from usual conventions
3676 goes along better with the notations used in physical literature.
3678 @cindex @code{color_h()}
3679 There's an additional function
3682 ex color_h(const ex & a, const ex & b, const ex & c);
3685 which returns the linear combination @samp{color_d(a, b, c)+I*color_f(a, b, c)}.
3687 The function @code{simplify_indexed()} performs some simplifications on
3688 expressions containing color objects:
3693 idx a(symbol("a"), 8), b(symbol("b"), 8), c(symbol("c"), 8),
3694 k(symbol("k"), 8), l(symbol("l"), 8);
3696 e = color_d(a, b, l) * color_f(a, b, k);
3697 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
3700 e = color_d(a, b, l) * color_d(a, b, k);
3701 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
3704 e = color_f(l, a, b) * color_f(a, b, k);
3705 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
3708 e = color_h(a, b, c) * color_h(a, b, c);
3709 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
3712 e = color_h(a, b, c) * color_T(b) * color_T(c);
3713 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
3716 e = color_h(a, b, c) * color_T(a) * color_T(b) * color_T(c);
3717 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
3720 e = color_T(k) * color_T(a) * color_T(b) * color_T(k);
3721 cout << e.simplify_indexed() << endl;
3722 // -> 1/4*delta.b.a*ONE-1/6*T.a*T.b
3726 @cindex @code{color_trace()}
3727 To calculate the trace of an expression containing color objects you use one
3731 ex color_trace(const ex & e, const std::set<unsigned char> & rls);
3732 ex color_trace(const ex & e, const lst & rll);
3733 ex color_trace(const ex & e, unsigned char rl = 0);
3736 These functions take the trace over all color @samp{T} objects in the
3737 specified set @code{rls} or list @code{rll} of representation labels, or the
3738 single label @code{rl}; @samp{T}s with other labels are left standing. For
3743 e = color_trace(4 * color_T(a) * color_T(b) * color_T(c));
3745 // -> -I*f.a.c.b+d.a.c.b
3750 @node Hash maps, Methods and functions, Non-commutative objects, Basic concepts
3751 @c node-name, next, previous, up
3754 @cindex @code{exhashmap} (class)
3756 For your convenience, GiNaC offers the container template @code{exhashmap<T>}
3757 that can be used as a drop-in replacement for the STL
3758 @code{std::map<ex, T, ex_is_less>}, using hash tables to provide faster,
3759 typically constant-time, element look-up than @code{map<>}.
3761 @code{exhashmap<>} supports all @code{map<>} members and operations, with the
3762 following differences:
3766 no @code{lower_bound()} and @code{upper_bound()} methods
3768 no reverse iterators, no @code{rbegin()}/@code{rend()}
3770 no @code{operator<(exhashmap, exhashmap)}
3772 the comparison function object @code{key_compare} is hardcoded to
3775 the constructor @code{exhashmap(size_t n)} allows specifying the minimum
3776 initial hash table size (the actual table size after construction may be
3777 larger than the specified value)
3779 the method @code{size_t bucket_count()} returns the current size of the hash
3782 @code{insert()} and @code{erase()} operations invalidate all iterators
3786 @node Methods and functions, Information about expressions, Hash maps, Top
3787 @c node-name, next, previous, up
3788 @chapter Methods and functions
3791 In this chapter the most important algorithms provided by GiNaC will be
3792 described. Some of them are implemented as functions on expressions,
3793 others are implemented as methods provided by expression objects. If
3794 they are methods, there exists a wrapper function around it, so you can
3795 alternatively call it in a functional way as shown in the simple
3800 cout << "As method: " << sin(1).evalf() << endl;
3801 cout << "As function: " << evalf(sin(1)) << endl;
3805 @cindex @code{subs()}
3806 The general rule is that wherever methods accept one or more parameters
3807 (@var{arg1}, @var{arg2}, @dots{}) the order of arguments the function
3808 wrapper accepts is the same but preceded by the object to act on
3809 (@var{object}, @var{arg1}, @var{arg2}, @dots{}). This approach is the
3810 most natural one in an OO model but it may lead to confusion for MapleV
3811 users because where they would type @code{A:=x+1; subs(x=2,A);} GiNaC
3812 would require @code{A=x+1; subs(A,x==2);} (after proper declaration of
3813 @code{A} and @code{x}). On the other hand, since MapleV returns 3 on
3814 @code{A:=x^2+3; coeff(A,x,0);} (GiNaC: @code{A=pow(x,2)+3;
3815 coeff(A,x,0);}) it is clear that MapleV is not trying to be consistent
3816 here. Also, users of MuPAD will in most cases feel more comfortable
3817 with GiNaC's convention. All function wrappers are implemented
3818 as simple inline functions which just call the corresponding method and
3819 are only provided for users uncomfortable with OO who are dead set to
3820 avoid method invocations. Generally, nested function wrappers are much
3821 harder to read than a sequence of methods and should therefore be
3822 avoided if possible. On the other hand, not everything in GiNaC is a
3823 method on class @code{ex} and sometimes calling a function cannot be
3827 * Information about expressions::
3828 * Numerical evaluation::
3829 * Substituting expressions::
3830 * Pattern matching and advanced substitutions::
3831 * Applying a function on subexpressions::
3832 * Visitors and tree traversal::
3833 * Polynomial arithmetic:: Working with polynomials.
3834 * Rational expressions:: Working with rational functions.
3835 * Symbolic differentiation::
3836 * Series expansion:: Taylor and Laurent expansion.
3838 * Built-in functions:: List of predefined mathematical functions.
3839 * Multiple polylogarithms::
3840 * Complex expressions::
3841 * Solving linear systems of equations::
3842 * Input/output:: Input and output of expressions.
3846 @node Information about expressions, Numerical evaluation, Methods and functions, Methods and functions
3847 @c node-name, next, previous, up
3848 @section Getting information about expressions
3850 @subsection Checking expression types
3851 @cindex @code{is_a<@dots{}>()}
3852 @cindex @code{is_exactly_a<@dots{}>()}
3853 @cindex @code{ex_to<@dots{}>()}
3854 @cindex Converting @code{ex} to other classes
3855 @cindex @code{info()}
3856 @cindex @code{return_type()}
3857 @cindex @code{return_type_tinfo()}
3859 Sometimes it's useful to check whether a given expression is a plain number,
3860 a sum, a polynomial with integer coefficients, or of some other specific type.
3861 GiNaC provides a couple of functions for this:
3864 bool is_a<T>(const ex & e);
3865 bool is_exactly_a<T>(const ex & e);
3866 bool ex::info(unsigned flag);
3867 unsigned ex::return_type() const;
3868 unsigned ex::return_type_tinfo() const;
3871 When the test made by @code{is_a<T>()} returns true, it is safe to call
3872 one of the functions @code{ex_to<T>()}, where @code{T} is one of the
3873 class names (@xref{The class hierarchy}, for a list of all classes). For
3874 example, assuming @code{e} is an @code{ex}:
3879 if (is_a<numeric>(e))
3880 numeric n = ex_to<numeric>(e);
3885 @code{is_a<T>(e)} allows you to check whether the top-level object of
3886 an expression @samp{e} is an instance of the GiNaC class @samp{T}
3887 (@xref{The class hierarchy}, for a list of all classes). This is most useful,
3888 e.g., for checking whether an expression is a number, a sum, or a product:
3895 is_a<numeric>(e1); // true
3896 is_a<numeric>(e2); // false
3897 is_a<add>(e1); // false
3898 is_a<add>(e2); // true
3899 is_a<mul>(e1); // false
3900 is_a<mul>(e2); // false
3904 In contrast, @code{is_exactly_a<T>(e)} allows you to check whether the
3905 top-level object of an expression @samp{e} is an instance of the GiNaC
3906 class @samp{T}, not including parent classes.
3908 The @code{info()} method is used for checking certain attributes of
3909 expressions. The possible values for the @code{flag} argument are defined
3910 in @file{ginac/flags.h}, the most important being explained in the following
3914 @multitable @columnfractions .30 .70
3915 @item @strong{Flag} @tab @strong{Returns true if the object is@dots{}}
3916 @item @code{numeric}
3917 @tab @dots{}a number (same as @code{is_a<numeric>(...)})
3919 @tab @dots{}a real number, symbol or constant (i.e. is not complex)
3920 @item @code{rational}
3921 @tab @dots{}an exact rational number (integers are rational, too)
3922 @item @code{integer}
3923 @tab @dots{}a (non-complex) integer
3924 @item @code{crational}
3925 @tab @dots{}an exact (complex) rational number (such as @math{2/3+7/2*I})
3926 @item @code{cinteger}
3927 @tab @dots{}a (complex) integer (such as @math{2-3*I})
3928 @item @code{positive}
3929 @tab @dots{}not complex and greater than 0
3930 @item @code{negative}
3931 @tab @dots{}not complex and less than 0
3932 @item @code{nonnegative}
3933 @tab @dots{}not complex and greater than or equal to 0
3935 @tab @dots{}an integer greater than 0
3937 @tab @dots{}an integer less than 0
3938 @item @code{nonnegint}
3939 @tab @dots{}an integer greater than or equal to 0
3941 @tab @dots{}an even integer
3943 @tab @dots{}an odd integer
3945 @tab @dots{}a prime integer (probabilistic primality test)
3946 @item @code{relation}
3947 @tab @dots{}a relation (same as @code{is_a<relational>(...)})
3948 @item @code{relation_equal}
3949 @tab @dots{}a @code{==} relation
3950 @item @code{relation_not_equal}
3951 @tab @dots{}a @code{!=} relation
3952 @item @code{relation_less}
3953 @tab @dots{}a @code{<} relation
3954 @item @code{relation_less_or_equal}
3955 @tab @dots{}a @code{<=} relation
3956 @item @code{relation_greater}
3957 @tab @dots{}a @code{>} relation
3958 @item @code{relation_greater_or_equal}
3959 @tab @dots{}a @code{>=} relation
3961 @tab @dots{}a symbol (same as @code{is_a<symbol>(...)})
3963 @tab @dots{}a list (same as @code{is_a<lst>(...)})
3964 @item @code{polynomial}
3965 @tab @dots{}a polynomial (i.e. only consists of sums and products of numbers and symbols with positive integer powers)
3966 @item @code{integer_polynomial}
3967 @tab @dots{}a polynomial with (non-complex) integer coefficients
3968 @item @code{cinteger_polynomial}
3969 @tab @dots{}a polynomial with (possibly complex) integer coefficients (such as @math{2-3*I})
3970 @item @code{rational_polynomial}
3971 @tab @dots{}a polynomial with (non-complex) rational coefficients
3972 @item @code{crational_polynomial}
3973 @tab @dots{}a polynomial with (possibly complex) rational coefficients (such as @math{2/3+7/2*I})
3974 @item @code{rational_function}
3975 @tab @dots{}a rational function (@math{x+y}, @math{z/(x+y)})
3976 @item @code{algebraic}
3977 @tab @dots{}an algebraic object (@math{sqrt(2)}, @math{sqrt(x)-1})
3981 To determine whether an expression is commutative or non-commutative and if
3982 so, with which other expressions it would commutate, you use the methods
3983 @code{return_type()} and @code{return_type_tinfo()}. @xref{Non-commutative objects},
3984 for an explanation of these.
3987 @subsection Accessing subexpressions
3990 Many GiNaC classes, like @code{add}, @code{mul}, @code{lst}, and
3991 @code{function}, act as containers for subexpressions. For example, the
3992 subexpressions of a sum (an @code{add} object) are the individual terms,
3993 and the subexpressions of a @code{function} are the function's arguments.
3995 @cindex @code{nops()}
3997 GiNaC provides several ways of accessing subexpressions. The first way is to
4002 ex ex::op(size_t i);
4005 @code{nops()} determines the number of subexpressions (operands) contained
4006 in the expression, while @code{op(i)} returns the @code{i}-th
4007 (0..@code{nops()-1}) subexpression. In the case of a @code{power} object,
4008 @code{op(0)} will return the basis and @code{op(1)} the exponent. For
4009 @code{indexed} objects, @code{op(0)} is the base expression and @code{op(i)},
4010 @math{i>0} are the indices.
4013 @cindex @code{const_iterator}
4014 The second way to access subexpressions is via the STL-style random-access
4015 iterator class @code{const_iterator} and the methods
4018 const_iterator ex::begin();
4019 const_iterator ex::end();
4022 @code{begin()} returns an iterator referring to the first subexpression;
4023 @code{end()} returns an iterator which is one-past the last subexpression.
4024 If the expression has no subexpressions, then @code{begin() == end()}. These
4025 iterators can also be used in conjunction with non-modifying STL algorithms.
4027 Here is an example that (non-recursively) prints the subexpressions of a
4028 given expression in three different ways:
4035 for (size_t i = 0; i != e.nops(); ++i)
4036 cout << e.op(i) << endl;
4039 for (const_iterator i = e.begin(); i != e.end(); ++i)
4042 // with iterators and STL copy()
4043 std::copy(e.begin(), e.end(), std::ostream_iterator<ex>(cout, "\n"));
4047 @cindex @code{const_preorder_iterator}
4048 @cindex @code{const_postorder_iterator}
4049 @code{op()}/@code{nops()} and @code{const_iterator} only access an
4050 expression's immediate children. GiNaC provides two additional iterator
4051 classes, @code{const_preorder_iterator} and @code{const_postorder_iterator},
4052 that iterate over all objects in an expression tree, in preorder or postorder,
4053 respectively. They are STL-style forward iterators, and are created with the
4057 const_preorder_iterator ex::preorder_begin();
4058 const_preorder_iterator ex::preorder_end();
4059 const_postorder_iterator ex::postorder_begin();
4060 const_postorder_iterator ex::postorder_end();
4063 The following example illustrates the differences between
4064 @code{const_iterator}, @code{const_preorder_iterator}, and
4065 @code{const_postorder_iterator}:
4069 symbol A("A"), B("B"), C("C");
4070 ex e = lst(lst(A, B), C);
4072 std::copy(e.begin(), e.end(),
4073 std::ostream_iterator<ex>(cout, "\n"));
4077 std::copy(e.preorder_begin(), e.preorder_end(),
4078 std::ostream_iterator<ex>(cout, "\n"));
4085 std::copy(e.postorder_begin(), e.postorder_end(),
4086 std::ostream_iterator<ex>(cout, "\n"));
4095 @cindex @code{relational} (class)
4096 Finally, the left-hand side and right-hand side expressions of objects of
4097 class @code{relational} (and only of these) can also be accessed with the
4106 @subsection Comparing expressions
4107 @cindex @code{is_equal()}
4108 @cindex @code{is_zero()}
4110 Expressions can be compared with the usual C++ relational operators like
4111 @code{==}, @code{>}, and @code{<} but if the expressions contain symbols,
4112 the result is usually not determinable and the result will be @code{false},
4113 except in the case of the @code{!=} operator. You should also be aware that
4114 GiNaC will only do the most trivial test for equality (subtracting both
4115 expressions), so something like @code{(pow(x,2)+x)/x==x+1} will return
4118 Actually, if you construct an expression like @code{a == b}, this will be
4119 represented by an object of the @code{relational} class (@pxref{Relations})
4120 which is not evaluated until (explicitly or implicitly) cast to a @code{bool}.
4122 There are also two methods
4125 bool ex::is_equal(const ex & other);
4129 for checking whether one expression is equal to another, or equal to zero,
4130 respectively. See also the method @code{ex::is_zero_matrix()},
4134 @subsection Ordering expressions
4135 @cindex @code{ex_is_less} (class)
4136 @cindex @code{ex_is_equal} (class)
4137 @cindex @code{compare()}
4139 Sometimes it is necessary to establish a mathematically well-defined ordering
4140 on a set of arbitrary expressions, for example to use expressions as keys
4141 in a @code{std::map<>} container, or to bring a vector of expressions into
4142 a canonical order (which is done internally by GiNaC for sums and products).
4144 The operators @code{<}, @code{>} etc. described in the last section cannot
4145 be used for this, as they don't implement an ordering relation in the
4146 mathematical sense. In particular, they are not guaranteed to be
4147 antisymmetric: if @samp{a} and @samp{b} are different expressions, and
4148 @code{a < b} yields @code{false}, then @code{b < a} doesn't necessarily
4151 By default, STL classes and algorithms use the @code{<} and @code{==}
4152 operators to compare objects, which are unsuitable for expressions, but GiNaC
4153 provides two functors that can be supplied as proper binary comparison
4154 predicates to the STL:
4157 class ex_is_less : public std::binary_function<ex, ex, bool> @{
4159 bool operator()(const ex &lh, const ex &rh) const;
4162 class ex_is_equal : public std::binary_function<ex, ex, bool> @{
4164 bool operator()(const ex &lh, const ex &rh) const;
4168 For example, to define a @code{map} that maps expressions to strings you
4172 std::map<ex, std::string, ex_is_less> myMap;
4175 Omitting the @code{ex_is_less} template parameter will introduce spurious
4176 bugs because the map operates improperly.
4178 Other examples for the use of the functors:
4186 std::sort(v.begin(), v.end(), ex_is_less());
4188 // count the number of expressions equal to '1'
4189 unsigned num_ones = std::count_if(v.begin(), v.end(),
4190 std::bind2nd(ex_is_equal(), 1));
4193 The implementation of @code{ex_is_less} uses the member function
4196 int ex::compare(const ex & other) const;
4199 which returns @math{0} if @code{*this} and @code{other} are equal, @math{-1}
4200 if @code{*this} sorts before @code{other}, and @math{1} if @code{*this} sorts
4204 @node Numerical evaluation, Substituting expressions, Information about expressions, Methods and functions
4205 @c node-name, next, previous, up
4206 @section Numerical evaluation
4207 @cindex @code{evalf()}
4209 GiNaC keeps algebraic expressions, numbers and constants in their exact form.
4210 To evaluate them using floating-point arithmetic you need to call
4213 ex ex::evalf(int level = 0) const;
4216 @cindex @code{Digits}
4217 The accuracy of the evaluation is controlled by the global object @code{Digits}
4218 which can be assigned an integer value. The default value of @code{Digits}
4219 is 17. @xref{Numbers}, for more information and examples.
4221 To evaluate an expression to a @code{double} floating-point number you can
4222 call @code{evalf()} followed by @code{numeric::to_double()}, like this:
4226 // Approximate sin(x/Pi)
4228 ex e = series(sin(x/Pi), x == 0, 6);
4230 // Evaluate numerically at x=0.1
4231 ex f = evalf(e.subs(x == 0.1));
4233 // ex_to<numeric> is an unsafe cast, so check the type first
4234 if (is_a<numeric>(f)) @{
4235 double d = ex_to<numeric>(f).to_double();
4244 @node Substituting expressions, Pattern matching and advanced substitutions, Numerical evaluation, Methods and functions
4245 @c node-name, next, previous, up
4246 @section Substituting expressions
4247 @cindex @code{subs()}
4249 Algebraic objects inside expressions can be replaced with arbitrary
4250 expressions via the @code{.subs()} method:
4253 ex ex::subs(const ex & e, unsigned options = 0);
4254 ex ex::subs(const exmap & m, unsigned options = 0);
4255 ex ex::subs(const lst & syms, const lst & repls, unsigned options = 0);
4258 In the first form, @code{subs()} accepts a relational of the form
4259 @samp{object == expression} or a @code{lst} of such relationals:
4263 symbol x("x"), y("y");
4265 ex e1 = 2*x^2-4*x+3;
4266 cout << "e1(7) = " << e1.subs(x == 7) << endl;
4270 cout << "e2(-2, 4) = " << e2.subs(lst(x == -2, y == 4)) << endl;
4275 If you specify multiple substitutions, they are performed in parallel, so e.g.
4276 @code{subs(lst(x == y, y == x))} exchanges @samp{x} and @samp{y}.
4278 The second form of @code{subs()} takes an @code{exmap} object which is a
4279 pair associative container that maps expressions to expressions (currently
4280 implemented as a @code{std::map}). This is the most efficient one of the
4281 three @code{subs()} forms and should be used when the number of objects to
4282 be substituted is large or unknown.
4284 Using this form, the second example from above would look like this:
4288 symbol x("x"), y("y");
4294 cout << "e2(-2, 4) = " << e2.subs(m) << endl;
4298 The third form of @code{subs()} takes two lists, one for the objects to be
4299 replaced and one for the expressions to be substituted (both lists must
4300 contain the same number of elements). Using this form, you would write
4304 symbol x("x"), y("y");
4307 cout << "e2(-2, 4) = " << e2.subs(lst(x, y), lst(-2, 4)) << endl;
4311 The optional last argument to @code{subs()} is a combination of
4312 @code{subs_options} flags. There are three options available:
4313 @code{subs_options::no_pattern} disables pattern matching, which makes
4314 large @code{subs()} operations significantly faster if you are not using
4315 patterns. The second option, @code{subs_options::algebraic} enables
4316 algebraic substitutions in products and powers.
4317 @xref{Pattern matching and advanced substitutions}, for more information
4318 about patterns and algebraic substitutions. The third option,
4319 @code{subs_options::no_index_renaming} disables the feature that dummy
4320 indices are renamed if the substitution could give a result in which a
4321 dummy index occurs more than two times. This is sometimes necessary if
4322 you want to use @code{subs()} to rename your dummy indices.
4324 @code{subs()} performs syntactic substitution of any complete algebraic
4325 object; it does not try to match sub-expressions as is demonstrated by the
4330 symbol x("x"), y("y"), z("z");
4332 ex e1 = pow(x+y, 2);
4333 cout << e1.subs(x+y == 4) << endl;
4336 ex e2 = sin(x)*sin(y)*cos(x);
4337 cout << e2.subs(sin(x) == cos(x)) << endl;
4338 // -> cos(x)^2*sin(y)
4341 cout << e3.subs(x+y == 4) << endl;
4343 // (and not 4+z as one might expect)
4347 A more powerful form of substitution using wildcards is described in the
4351 @node Pattern matching and advanced substitutions, Applying a function on subexpressions, Substituting expressions, Methods and functions
4352 @c node-name, next, previous, up
4353 @section Pattern matching and advanced substitutions
4354 @cindex @code{wildcard} (class)
4355 @cindex Pattern matching
4357 GiNaC allows the use of patterns for checking whether an expression is of a
4358 certain form or contains subexpressions of a certain form, and for
4359 substituting expressions in a more general way.
4361 A @dfn{pattern} is an algebraic expression that optionally contains wildcards.
4362 A @dfn{wildcard} is a special kind of object (of class @code{wildcard}) that
4363 represents an arbitrary expression. Every wildcard has a @dfn{label} which is
4364 an unsigned integer number to allow having multiple different wildcards in a
4365 pattern. Wildcards are printed as @samp{$label} (this is also the way they
4366 are specified in @command{ginsh}). In C++ code, wildcard objects are created
4370 ex wild(unsigned label = 0);
4373 which is simply a wrapper for the @code{wildcard()} constructor with a shorter
4376 Some examples for patterns:
4378 @multitable @columnfractions .5 .5
4379 @item @strong{Constructed as} @tab @strong{Output as}
4380 @item @code{wild()} @tab @samp{$0}
4381 @item @code{pow(x,wild())} @tab @samp{x^$0}
4382 @item @code{atan2(wild(1),wild(2))} @tab @samp{atan2($1,$2)}
4383 @item @code{indexed(A,idx(wild(),3))} @tab @samp{A.$0}
4389 @item Wildcards behave like symbols and are subject to the same algebraic
4390 rules. E.g., @samp{$0+2*$0} is automatically transformed to @samp{3*$0}.
4391 @item As shown in the last example, to use wildcards for indices you have to
4392 use them as the value of an @code{idx} object. This is because indices must
4393 always be of class @code{idx} (or a subclass).
4394 @item Wildcards only represent expressions or subexpressions. It is not
4395 possible to use them as placeholders for other properties like index
4396 dimension or variance, representation labels, symmetry of indexed objects
4398 @item Because wildcards are commutative, it is not possible to use wildcards
4399 as part of noncommutative products.
4400 @item A pattern does not have to contain wildcards. @samp{x} and @samp{x+y}
4401 are also valid patterns.
4404 @subsection Matching expressions
4405 @cindex @code{match()}
4406 The most basic application of patterns is to check whether an expression
4407 matches a given pattern. This is done by the function
4410 bool ex::match(const ex & pattern);
4411 bool ex::match(const ex & pattern, lst & repls);
4414 This function returns @code{true} when the expression matches the pattern
4415 and @code{false} if it doesn't. If used in the second form, the actual
4416 subexpressions matched by the wildcards get returned in the @code{repls}
4417 object as a list of relations of the form @samp{wildcard == expression}.
4418 If @code{match()} returns false, the state of @code{repls} is undefined.
4419 For reproducible results, the list should be empty when passed to
4420 @code{match()}, but it is also possible to find similarities in multiple
4421 expressions by passing in the result of a previous match.
4423 The matching algorithm works as follows:
4426 @item A single wildcard matches any expression. If one wildcard appears
4427 multiple times in a pattern, it must match the same expression in all
4428 places (e.g. @samp{$0} matches anything, and @samp{$0*($0+1)} matches
4429 @samp{x*(x+1)} but not @samp{x*(y+1)}).
4430 @item If the expression is not of the same class as the pattern, the match
4431 fails (i.e. a sum only matches a sum, a function only matches a function,
4433 @item If the pattern is a function, it only matches the same function
4434 (i.e. @samp{sin($0)} matches @samp{sin(x)} but doesn't match @samp{exp(x)}).
4435 @item Except for sums and products, the match fails if the number of
4436 subexpressions (@code{nops()}) is not equal to the number of subexpressions
4438 @item If there are no subexpressions, the expressions and the pattern must
4439 be equal (in the sense of @code{is_equal()}).
4440 @item Except for sums and products, each subexpression (@code{op()}) must
4441 match the corresponding subexpression of the pattern.
4444 Sums (@code{add}) and products (@code{mul}) are treated in a special way to
4445 account for their commutativity and associativity:
4448 @item If the pattern contains a term or factor that is a single wildcard,
4449 this one is used as the @dfn{global wildcard}. If there is more than one
4450 such wildcard, one of them is chosen as the global wildcard in a random
4452 @item Every term/factor of the pattern, except the global wildcard, is
4453 matched against every term of the expression in sequence. If no match is
4454 found, the whole match fails. Terms that did match are not considered in
4456 @item If there are no unmatched terms left, the match succeeds. Otherwise