As we have already seen, SymPy can pretty print its output using Unicode characters. This is a short introduction to the most common printing options available in SymPy.
There are several printers available in SymPy. The most common ones are
In addition to these, there are also “printers” that can output SymPy objects to code, such as C, Fortran, Javascript, Theano, and Python. These are not discussed in this tutorial.
If all you want is the best pretty printing, use the init_printing function. This will automatically enable the best printer available in your environment.
>>> from sympy import init_printing
>>> init_printing()
If you plan to work in an interactive calculator-type session, the init_session function will automatically import everything in SymPy, create some common Symbols, setup plotting, and run init_printing.
>>> from sympy import init_session >>> init_session()Python console for SymPy 0.7.2-git (Python 2.7.5-64-bit) (ground types: gmpy) These commands were executed: >>> from __future__ import division >>> from sympy import * >>> x, y, z, t = symbols('x y z t') >>> k, m, n = symbols('k m n', integer=True) >>> f, g, h = symbols('f g h', cls=Function) Documentation can be found at http://www.sympy.org>>>
In any case, this is what will happen:
In the IPython QTConsole, if \(\LaTeX\) is installed, it will enable a printer that uses \(\LaTeX\).
If \(\LaTeX\) is not installed, but Matplotlib is installed, it will use the Matplotlib rendering engine. If Matplotlib is not installed, it uses the Unicode pretty printer.
In the IPython notebook, it will use MathJax to render \(\LaTeX\).
In an IPython console session, or a regular Python session, it will use the Unicode pretty printer if the terminal supports Unicode.
In a terminal that does not support Unicode, the ASCII pretty printer is used.
To explicitly not use \(\LaTeX\), pass use_latex=False to init_printing or init_session. To explicitly not use Unicode, pass use_unicode=False.
In addition to automatic printing, you can explicitly use any one of the printers by calling the appropriate function.
To get a string form of an expression, use str(expr). This is also the form that is produced by print expr. String forms are designed to be easy to read, but in a form that is correct Python syntax so that it can be copied and pasted. The str form of an expression will usually look exactly the same as the expression as you would enter it.
>>> from sympy import *
>>> x, y, z = symbols('x y z')
>>> str(Integral(sqrt(1/x), x))
'Integral(sqrt(1/x), x)'
>>> print Integral(sqrt(1/x), x)
Integral(sqrt(1/x), x)
The repr form of an expression is designed to show the exact form of an expression. It will be discussed more in the Advanced Expression Manipulation section. To get it, use srepr [1].
>>> srepr(Integral(sqrt(1/x), x))
"Integral(Pow(Pow(Symbol('x'), Integer(-1)), Rational(1, 2)), Tuple(Symbol('x')))"
The repr form is mostly useful for understanding how an expression is built internally.
The ASCII pretty printer is accessed from pprint. If the terminal does not support Unicode, the ASCII printer is used by default. Otherwise, you must pass use_unicode=False.
>>> pprint(Integral(sqrt(1/x), x), use_unicode=False)
/
|
| ___
| / 1
| / - dx
| \/ x
|
/
pprint prints the output to the screen. If you want the string form, use pretty.
>>> pretty(Integral(sqrt(1/x), x), use_unicode=False)
' / \n | \n | ___ \n | / 1 \n | / - dx\n | \\/ x \n | \n/ '
>>> print pretty(Integral(sqrt(1/x), x), use_unicode=False)
/
|
| ___
| / 1
| / - dx
| \/ x
|
/
The Unicode pretty printer is also accessed from print. It the terminal supports Unicode, it is used automatically. It pprint is not able to detect that the terminal supports unicode, you can pass use_unicode=True.
>>> pprint(Integral(sqrt(1/x), x), use_unicode=True)
⌠
⎮ ___
⎮ ╱ 1
⎮ ╱ ─ dx
⎮ ╲╱ x
⌡
To get the \(\LaTeX\) form of an expression, use latex.
>>> print latex(Integral(sqrt(1/x), x))
\int \sqrt{\frac{1}{x}}\, dx
The latex function has many options to change the formatting of different things. See its documentation for more details.
There is also a printer to MathML, called print_mathml. It must be imported from sympy.printing.mathml.
>>> from sympy.printing.mathml import print_mathml
>>> print_mathml(Integral(sqrt(1/x), x))
<apply>
<int/>
<bvar>
<ci>x</ci>
</bvar>
<apply>
<root/>
<apply>
<power/>
<ci>x</ci>
<cn>-1</cn>
</apply>
</apply>
</apply>
print_mathml prints the output. If you want the string, use the function mathml.
The dotprint function in sympy.printing.dot prints output to dot format, which can be rendered with Graphviz. See the Advanced Expression Manipulation section for some examples of the output of this printer.
Footnotes
[1] | SymPy does not use the Python builtin repr function for repr printing, because in Python str(list) calls repr on the elements of the list, and some SymPy functions return lists (such as solve). Since srepr is so verbose, it is unlikely that anyone would want it called by default on the output of solve. |