Skip to main content

Mathematics solving Ai tailored to NCERT

Project description

Math AI Documentation

Source

Github repository of the code https://github.com/infinity390/mathai4

Philosophy

I think it is a big realization in computer science and programming to realize that computers can solve mathematics.
This understanding should be made mainstream. It can help transform education, mathematical research, and computation of mathematical equations for work.

Societal Implications Of Such A Computer Program And The Author's Comment On Universities Of India

I think mathematics is valued by society because of education. Schools and universities teach them.
So this kind of software, if made mainstream, could bring real change.

The Summary Of How Computer "Solves" Math

Math equations are a tree data structure (TreeNode class).
We can manipulate the math equations using various algorithms (functions provided by the mathai library).
We first parse the math equation strings to get the tree data structure (parse function in mathai).

The Library

Import the library by doing:

from mathai import *

str_form

It is the string representation of a TreeNode math equation.

Example

(cos(x)^2)+(sin(x)^2)

Is represented internally as:

f_add
 f_pow
  f_cos
   v_0
  d_2
 f_pow
  f_sin
   v_0
  d_2

Leaf Nodes

Variables (start with a v_ prefix):

  • v_0 -> x
  • v_1 -> y
  • v_2 -> z
  • v_3 -> a

Numbers (start with d_ prefix; only integers):

  • d_-1 -> -1
  • d_0 -> 0
  • d_1 -> 1
  • d_2 -> 2

Branch Nodes

  • f_add -> addition
  • f_mul -> multiplication
  • f_pow -> power

parse

Takes a math equation string and outputs a TreeNode object.

from mathai import *

equation = parse("sin(x)^2+cos(x)^2")
print(equation)

Output

(cos(x)^2)+(sin(x)^2)

simplify

It simplifies and cleans up a given math equation.

from mathai import *

equation = simplify(parse("(x+x+x+x-1-1-1-1)*(4*x-4)*sin(sin(x+x+x)*sin(3*x))"))
printeq(equation)

Output

((-4+(4*x))^2)*sin((sin((3*x))^2))

Incomplete Documentation, Will be updated and completed later on

Demonstrations

Example Demonstration 1 (absolute value inequalities)

from mathai import *
question_list_from_lecture = [
    "2*x/(2*x^2 + 5*x + 2) > 1/(x + 1)",
    "(x + 2)*(x + 3)/((x - 2)*(x - 3)) <= 1",
    "(5*x - 1) < (x + 1)^2 & (x + 1)^2 < 7*x - 3",
    "(2*x - 1)/(2*x^3 + 3*x^2 + x) > 0",
    "abs(x + 5)*x + 2*abs(x + 7) - 2 = 0",
    "x*abs(x) - 5*abs(x + 2) + 6 = 0",
    "x^2 - abs(x + 2) + x > 0",
    "abs(abs(x - 2) - 3) <= 2",
    "abs(3*x - 5) + abs(8 - x) = abs(3 + 2*x)",
    "abs(x^2 + 5*x + 9) < abs(x^2 + 2*x + 2) + abs(3*x + 7)"
]

for item in question_list_from_lecture:
  eq = simplify(parse(item))
  eq = dowhile(eq, absolute)
  eq = simplify(factor1(fraction(eq)))
  eq = prepare(eq)
  eq = factor2(eq)
  c = wavycurvy(eq & domain(eq)).fix()
  print(c)

Output

(-2,-1)U(-(2/3),-(1/2))
(-inf,0)U(2,3)U{0}
(2,4)
(-inf,-1)U(-(1/2),0)U(1/2,+inf)
{-4,-3,-(3/2)-(sqrt(57)/2)}
{-1,(5/2)-(sqrt(89)/2),(5/2)+(sqrt(41)/2)}
(-inf,-sqrt(2))U((2*sqrt(2))/2,+inf)
(-3,1)U(3,7)U{1,-3,7,3}
(5/3,8)U{5/3,8}
(-inf,-(7/3))

Example Demonstration 2 (trigonometry)

from mathai import *
def nested_func(eq_node):
    eq_node = fraction(eq_node)
    eq_node = simplify(eq_node)
    eq_node = trig1(eq_node)
    eq_node = trig0(eq_node)
    return eq_node
for item in ["(cosec(x)-cot(x))^2=(1-cos(x))/(1+cos(x))", "cos(x)/(1+sin(x)) + (1+sin(x))/cos(x) = 2*sec(x)",\
             "tan(x)/(1-cot(x)) + cot(x)/(1-tan(x)) = 1 + sec(x)*cosec(x)", "(1+sec(x))/sec(x) = sin(x)^2/(1-cos(x))",\
             "(cos(x)-sin(x)+1)/(cos(x)+sin(x)-1) = cosec(x)+cot(x)"]:
  eq = logic0(dowhile(parse(item), nested_func))
  print(eq)

Output

true
true
true
true
true

Example Demonstration 3 (integration)

from mathai import *

eq = simplify(parse("integrate(2*x/(x^2+1),x)"))
eq = integrate_const(eq)
eq = integrate_fraction(eq)
print(simplify(fraction(simplify(eq))))

eq = simplify(parse("integrate(sin(cos(x))*sin(x),x)"))
eq = integrate_subs(eq)
eq = integrate_const(eq)
eq = integrate_formula(eq)
eq = integrate_clean(eq)
print(simplify(eq))

eq = simplify(parse("integrate(x*sqrt(x+2),x)"))
eq = integrate_subs(eq)
eq = integrate_const(eq)
eq = integrate_formula(eq)
eq = expand(eq)
eq = integrate_const(eq)
eq = integrate_summation(eq)
eq = simplify(eq)
eq = integrate_const(eq)
eq = integrate_formula(eq)
eq = integrate_clean(eq)
print(simplify(fraction(simplify(eq))))

eq = simplify(parse("integrate(x/(e^(x^2)),x)"))
eq = integrate_subs(eq)
eq = integrate_const(eq)
eq = integrate_formula(eq)
eq = simplify(eq)
eq = integrate_formula(eq)
eq = integrate_clean(eq)
print(simplify(eq))

eq = fraction(trig0(trig1(simplify(parse("integrate(sin(x)^4,x)")))))
eq = integrate_const(eq)
eq = integrate_summation(eq)
eq = integrate_formula(eq)
eq = integrate_const(eq)
eq = integrate_formula(eq)
print(factor0(simplify(fraction(simplify(eq)))))

Output

log(abs((1+(x^2))))
cos(cos(x))
((6*((2+x)^(5/2)))-(20*((2+x)^(3/2))))/15
-((e^-(x^2))/2)
-(((8*sin((2*x)))-(12*x)-sin((4*x)))/32)

Example Demonstration 4 (derivation of hydrogen atom's ground state energy in electron volts using the variational principle in quantum physics)

from mathai import *;
def auto_integration(eq):
    for _ in range(3):
        eq=dowhile(integrate_subs(eq),lambda x:integrate_summation(integrate_const(integrate_formula(simplify(expand(x))))));
        out=integrate_clean(copy.deepcopy(eq));
        if "f_integrate" not in str_form(out):return dowhile(out,lambda x:simplify(fraction(x)));
        eq=integrate_byparts(eq);
    return eq;
z,k,m,e1,hbar=map(lambda s:simplify(parse(s)),["1","8987551787","9109383701*10^(-40)","1602176634*10^(-28)","1054571817*10^(-43)"]);
pi,euler,r=tree_form("s_pi"),tree_form("s_e"),parse("r");a0=hbar**2/(k*e1**2*m);psi=((z**3/(pi*a0**3)).fx("sqrt"))*euler**(-(z/a0)*r);
laplace_psi=diff(r**2*diff(psi,r.name),r.name)/r**2;V=-(k*z*e1**2)/r;Hpsi=-hbar**2/(2*m)*laplace_psi+V*psi;
norm=lambda f:simplify(
    limit3(limit2(expand(TreeNode("f_limitpinf",[auto_integration(TreeNode("f_integrate",[f*parse("4")*pi*r**2,r])),r]))))
    -limit1(TreeNode("f_limit",[auto_integration(TreeNode("f_integrate",[f*parse("4")*pi*r**2,r])),r]))
);
print(compute(norm(psi*Hpsi)/(norm(psi**2)*e1)));

Output

-13.605693122882867

Example Demonstration 5 (boolean algebra)

from mathai import *
print(logic_n(simplify(parse("~(p<->q)<->(~p<->q)"))))
print(logic_n(simplify(parse("(p->q)<->(~q->~p)"))))

Output

true
true

Example Demonstration 6 (limits)

from mathai import *
limits = ["(e^(tan(x)) - 1 - tan(x)) / x^2", "sin(x)/x", "(1-cos(x))/x^2", "(sin(x)-x)/sin(x)^3"]
for q in limits:
    q = fraction(simplify(TreeNode("f_limit",[parse(q),parse("x")])))
    q = limit1(q)
    print(q)

Output

1/2
1
1/2
-(1/6)

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

mathai-1.0.6.tar.gz (42.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

mathai-1.0.6-py3-none-any.whl (48.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file mathai-1.0.6.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: mathai-1.0.6.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 42.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.12.4

File hashes

Hashes for mathai-1.0.6.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 efd303b22eaffc77c0f03c61b9d4c2f71198f7ada23d889f32f9d28cb987a44a
MD5 8c5ab4d7c858dc6223f0e5286ac70e15
BLAKE2b-256 f78bc32b4d46bcdb3d8e53c79945691f8804c59501ba0326740aa22d89488ad1

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file mathai-1.0.6-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: mathai-1.0.6-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 48.1 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.12.4

File hashes

Hashes for mathai-1.0.6-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 8a177323b6dfb3d4cc18b6864d3aedae05c4750794bd451cf5cfd666ac30c7df
MD5 bbca45a2e55fb57e37e2d4c5b60697d2
BLAKE2b-256 7319e56a8c2059024567182e455672a488110a7ae18f4fba6d6a32fca38ae1fd

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page