Hi,
On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 1:28 PM, William Stein<wst...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 4:11 AM, Golam Mortuza > Hossain<gmhoss...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> It takes too long to check whether x is in a list in new symbolics >> >> --------- >> sage: var('x,x1,x2,x3,x4') >> (x, x1, x2, x3, x4) >> sage: f = function('f') >> sage: mylist = [x1,x2,x3,x4,f(x1),f(x2),f(x3),f(x4)] >> >> sage: timeit('x in mylist') >> 5 loops, best of 3: 461 ms per loop >> -------- >> >> If your program needs to check it couple of more times >> ---------- >> sage: timeit('x in mylist') >> 5 loops, best of 3: 1.26 s per loop >> sage: timeit('x in mylist') >> 5 loops, best of 3: 3.4 s per loop >> ---------- >> >> For a comparison >> --------- >> sage: timeit('x1 in mylist') >> 625 loops, best of 3: 473 ns per loop >> --------- >> >> Reason for this huge discrepancy stems from the fact that >> except for last example, in all previous cases maxima is called >> to check the equality. >> >> Thus it seems, new symbolics depends on maxima for basic >> operations even now. >> >> I don't know the rationale behind this design given pynac has >> a method to compare two symbolic expression (ex1.is_equal(ex2)). >> >> In any case, this design ensures writing a program in new symbolics >> where some basic tests like "if x in list" needs to done, is no better than >> old symbolics. >> > > That's not for any list, but it is for the one you constructed. That why I wrote "symbolics" in the title :-). BTW, I encountered this while doing my own work using sage. So I consider this as a serious drawback. > I > think to get the new symbolics out at some point we finally gave in > and made the compare method fall back to Maxima (in case several > pynac-based methods failed) so that massive amounts of user code and > doctests wouldn't break. Fixing this is obviously something that > needs to be done. Hopefully you will do it! :-) I guess, a policy decision is involved here as to whether use mathematical identities by default or as an option during comparison. To clarify: ex = sin(x)^2 + cos(x)^2 - 1 In pynac, for above expression "ex.is_zero()" test will result False by default where as current maxima based comparison will return True. Personally, I feel we should have a flag something like (1) ex.is_zero(use_identity=False) or may be a new method (2) ex.is_trivially_zero() So that users/developers can make their choice depending on their need. Cheers, Golam --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ To post to this group, send an email to sage-devel@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to sage-devel-unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sage-devel URLs: http://www.sagemath.org -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---