Build and run complex models composed of formulas and data
Project description
Use Python like a spreadsheet!
What is modelx?
modelx is a Python package to build object-oriented models consisting of formulas and values to carry out complex calculations. You can think of it as a hierarchical and multidimensional extension of spreadsheet, but there’s so much more to it!
modelx sites
Home page |
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Documentation site |
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Development site |
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modelx on PyPI |
Feature highlights
modelx enables you to interactively develop, run and scrutinize complex models in smart ways:
Only basic Python knowledge required
Formulas defined by Python functions
Object-oriented, supports composition and inheritance
Parameterization
Dependency tracing
Reading from Excel and CSV files
GUI as Spyder plugin (spyder-modelx)
Saving to text files, enabling use of version control systems
Document integration enabling use of document generators
Pandas interface
Who is modelx for?
modelx is designed to be domain agnostic.
The modelx was created by actuary, and its primary use is to develop actuarial projection models. lifelib (https://lifelib.io) is a library of actuarial models that are built on top of modelx.
However, modelx is intentionally designed to eliminate domain specific features so that potential audience for modelx can be wider than actuaries, whoever needs to develop complex models of any sorts that are too much to deal with by spreadsheets.
How modelx works
modelx exposes its API functions and classes such as Model, Space and Cells to its users, and the users build their models from those classes, by defining calculation formulas in the form of Python functions and associating those calculations with Cells objects.
Below is a very simple working example in which following operations are demonstrated:
a new model is created,
and in the model, a new space is created,
and in the space, a new cells is created , which is associated with the Fibonacci series.
from modelx import *
model, space = new_model(), new_space()
@defcells
def fibo(n):
if n == 0 or n == 1:
return n
else:
return fibo(n - 1) + fibo(n - 2)
To get a Fibonacci number for, say 10, you can do:
>>> fibo(10) 55 >>> fibo.series n 0 0 1 1 2 1 3 2 4 3 5 5 6 8 7 13 8 21 9 34 10 55 Name: fibo, dtype: int64
Refer to lifelib (https://lifelib.io) fo more complex examples.
Python and modelx
Aside from modelx being a Python package and written entirely in Python, modelx utilizes Python in that it lets users define formulas by writing Python functions and converting it to modelx formulas. However, there is a critical difference between how Python functions are interpreted by Python and how modelx formulas are interpreted by modelx.
Python employs lexical scoping, i.e. the namespace in which function code is executed is determined by textual context. The global namespace of a function is the module that the function is defined in. In contrast, the evaluation of modelx formulas is based on dynamic scoping. Each Cells belongs to a space, and the space has associated namespace (a mapping of names to objects). The formula associated with the cells is evaluated in that namespace. So, what module a formula is defined (in the form of a Python function) does not affect the result of formula evaluation. It is what space the cells belongs to that affects the result.
License
Copyright 2017-2020, Fumito Hamamura
modelx is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of GNU Lesser General Public License v3 (LGPLv3).
Contributions, productive comments, requests and feedback from the community are always welcome. Information on modelx development is found at Github https://github.com/fumitoh/modelx
Development State
With the release of modelx version 0.1.0 in December 2019, the author of modelx will try to consider maintaining backward compatibility to a limited extent in developing future releases of modelx. Especially, he will try to make it possible to read models written to files by one version’s write_model, by read_model of the next version of modelx. However, models saved by Model.save method may not be opened by open_model method. Overall, modelx is still in its early alpha-release stage, and its specifications may change without consideration on backward compatibility.
History
modelx was originally conceived and written by Fumito Hamamura and it was first released in October 2017.
Requirements
Python 3.6+
NetwrkX 2.0+
asttokens
Pandas
OpenPyXL
Project details
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