On Jan 27, 12:38 pm, Loïc <xl...@free.fr> wrote: > Hi list, > > I found a problem with simplify_radical() > > sage: f(x)=asin(2*x/(x^2+1)) > sage: g=f.derivative();g > x |--> -2*(2*x^2/(x^2 + 1)^2 - 1/(x^2 + 1))/sqrt(-4*x^2/(x^2 + 1)^2 + > 1) > sage: g.simplify_radical() > x |--> -2/(x^2 + 1) > > The last answer should be: > > x |--> -2/(x^2 + 1)* (x^2-1)/abs(x^2-1) > > or easier > > x |--> -2/(x^2 + 1)*sign(x^2-1)
Hmm, I'm not sure that's exactly a bug. Well, at least I don't know that the Maxima people would say so. But here's a simpler example. sage: h = (2*x^2/(x^2+1)-1)/sqrt(-4*x^2/(x^2+1)^2+1) sage: h.simplify_radical() 1 sage: h = ((2*x^2-x^2-1)/(x^2+1))/sqrt((x^2-1)^2/(x^2+1)^2) # same as the other one, but common denominators gotten sage: h.simplify_radical() (x^2 - 1)/abs(x^2 - 1) So I think that Maxima is treating these two expressions differently in that it might be factoring something out of the square root first which removes the abs() piece. Simplification does simplify, after all. Also, FYI, If you look at the documentation, you'll see "DETAILS: This uses the Maxima radcan() command." And it does from sage.calculus.calculus import maxima maxima.eval('domain: real$') res = self.parent()(self._maxima_().radcan()) maxima.eval('domain: complex$') return res But maybe it should be treated as a bug after all; I'm starting to think so. In which case we'd want to check it in a newer version of Maxima. - kcrisman -- To post to this group, send email to sage-support@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to sage-support+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sage-support URL: http://www.sagemath.org