A simple interface for solving systems of linear equations
Project description
==========
pysolve
==========
Solving systems of linear equations
-----------------------------------
The purpose of this code is to aid in expressing and solving
sets of equations using Python.
This tool will take a textual description of the equations
and then run the solver iteratively until it converges to a solution.
The solver provides the following choices for solving:
- Gauss-Seidel
- Newton-Raphson
- Broyden
It also uses parts of sympy to aid in parsing the equations.
The initial motivation for this tool was to solve economic
models based on Stock Flow Consistent (SFC) models.
Installation
--------------
::
pip install pysolve
Usage
-------------
.. code::
from pysolve.model import Model
from pysolve.utils import round_solution,is_close
model = Model()
model.set_var_default(0)
model.var('Cd', desc='Consumption goods demand by households')
model.var('Cs', desc='Consumption goods supply')
model.var('Gs', desc='Government goods, supply')
model.var('Hh', desc='Cash money held by households')
model.var('Hs', desc='Cash money supplied by the government')
model.var('Nd', desc='Demand for labor')
model.var('Ns', desc='Supply of labor')
model.var('Td', desc='Taxes, demand')
model.var('Ts', desc='Taxes, supply')
model.var('Y', desc='Income = GDP')
model.var('YD', desc='Disposable income of households')
# This is a shorter way to declare multiple variables
# model.vars('Y', 'YD', 'Ts', 'Td', 'Hs', 'Hh', 'Gs', 'Cs',
# 'Cd', 'Ns', 'Nd')
model.param('Gd', desc='Government goods, demand', initial=20)
model.param('W', desc='Wage rate', initial=1)
model.param('alpha1', desc='Propensity to consume out of income', initial=0.6)
model.param('alpha2', desc='Propensity to consume o of wealth', initial=0.4)
model.param('theta', desc='Tax rate', initial=0.2)
model.add('Cs = Cd')
model.add('Gs = Gd')
model.add('Ts = Td')
model.add('Ns = Nd')
model.add('YD = (W*Ns) - Ts')
model.add('Td = theta * W * Ns')
model.add('Cd = alpha1*YD + alpha2*Hh(-1)')
model.add('Hs - Hs(-1) = Gd - Td')
model.add('Hh - Hh(-1) = YD - Cd')
model.add('Y = Cs + Gs')
model.add('Nd = Y/W')
# solve until convergence
for _ in xrange(100):
model.solve(iterations=100, threshold=1e-3)
prev_soln = model.solutions[-2]
soln = model.solutions[-1]
if is_close(prev_soln, soln, rtol=1e-3):
break
print round_solution(model.solutions[-1], decimals=1)
For additional examples, view the iPython notebooks at
http://nbviewer.ipython.org/github/kennt/monetary-economics/tree/master/
Tutorial
--------
A short tutorial with more explanation is available at
http://nbviewer.ipython.org/github/kennt/monetary-economics/blob/master/extra/pysolve%20tutorial.ipynb
TODO list
---------
- Sparse matrix support (memory improvements for large systems)
- Documentation
Changelog
---------
0.2.0 (in progress)
-------------------
- Tutorial
- Improved documentation
0.1.7
-----
- Tutorial
0.1.6
-----
- Added support for solving with Broyden's method
- Optimized the code for Broyden and Newton-Raphson, should be much faster now.
0.1.5
-----
- Added the d() function. Implements the difference between the current value
and the value from a previous iteration. d(x) is equivalent to x - x(-1)
- Added support for the following sympy functions: abs, Min, Max, sign, sqrt
- Added some helper functions to aid in debugging larger models
- Added support for solving via Newton-Raphson
0.1.4
-----
- Improved error reporting when unable to solve an equation (due to variable
missing a value).
- Also, evaluate() used to require that all variables have a value, but that
may not be true on initialization, so this requirement has been removed.
0.1.3 (and before)
------------------
- Added support for the exp() and log() functions.
- Fixed a bug where the usage of '>=' within an if_true() would cause an error.
pysolve
==========
Solving systems of linear equations
-----------------------------------
The purpose of this code is to aid in expressing and solving
sets of equations using Python.
This tool will take a textual description of the equations
and then run the solver iteratively until it converges to a solution.
The solver provides the following choices for solving:
- Gauss-Seidel
- Newton-Raphson
- Broyden
It also uses parts of sympy to aid in parsing the equations.
The initial motivation for this tool was to solve economic
models based on Stock Flow Consistent (SFC) models.
Installation
--------------
::
pip install pysolve
Usage
-------------
.. code::
from pysolve.model import Model
from pysolve.utils import round_solution,is_close
model = Model()
model.set_var_default(0)
model.var('Cd', desc='Consumption goods demand by households')
model.var('Cs', desc='Consumption goods supply')
model.var('Gs', desc='Government goods, supply')
model.var('Hh', desc='Cash money held by households')
model.var('Hs', desc='Cash money supplied by the government')
model.var('Nd', desc='Demand for labor')
model.var('Ns', desc='Supply of labor')
model.var('Td', desc='Taxes, demand')
model.var('Ts', desc='Taxes, supply')
model.var('Y', desc='Income = GDP')
model.var('YD', desc='Disposable income of households')
# This is a shorter way to declare multiple variables
# model.vars('Y', 'YD', 'Ts', 'Td', 'Hs', 'Hh', 'Gs', 'Cs',
# 'Cd', 'Ns', 'Nd')
model.param('Gd', desc='Government goods, demand', initial=20)
model.param('W', desc='Wage rate', initial=1)
model.param('alpha1', desc='Propensity to consume out of income', initial=0.6)
model.param('alpha2', desc='Propensity to consume o of wealth', initial=0.4)
model.param('theta', desc='Tax rate', initial=0.2)
model.add('Cs = Cd')
model.add('Gs = Gd')
model.add('Ts = Td')
model.add('Ns = Nd')
model.add('YD = (W*Ns) - Ts')
model.add('Td = theta * W * Ns')
model.add('Cd = alpha1*YD + alpha2*Hh(-1)')
model.add('Hs - Hs(-1) = Gd - Td')
model.add('Hh - Hh(-1) = YD - Cd')
model.add('Y = Cs + Gs')
model.add('Nd = Y/W')
# solve until convergence
for _ in xrange(100):
model.solve(iterations=100, threshold=1e-3)
prev_soln = model.solutions[-2]
soln = model.solutions[-1]
if is_close(prev_soln, soln, rtol=1e-3):
break
print round_solution(model.solutions[-1], decimals=1)
For additional examples, view the iPython notebooks at
http://nbviewer.ipython.org/github/kennt/monetary-economics/tree/master/
Tutorial
--------
A short tutorial with more explanation is available at
http://nbviewer.ipython.org/github/kennt/monetary-economics/blob/master/extra/pysolve%20tutorial.ipynb
TODO list
---------
- Sparse matrix support (memory improvements for large systems)
- Documentation
Changelog
---------
0.2.0 (in progress)
-------------------
- Tutorial
- Improved documentation
0.1.7
-----
- Tutorial
0.1.6
-----
- Added support for solving with Broyden's method
- Optimized the code for Broyden and Newton-Raphson, should be much faster now.
0.1.5
-----
- Added the d() function. Implements the difference between the current value
and the value from a previous iteration. d(x) is equivalent to x - x(-1)
- Added support for the following sympy functions: abs, Min, Max, sign, sqrt
- Added some helper functions to aid in debugging larger models
- Added support for solving via Newton-Raphson
0.1.4
-----
- Improved error reporting when unable to solve an equation (due to variable
missing a value).
- Also, evaluate() used to require that all variables have a value, but that
may not be true on initialization, so this requirement has been removed.
0.1.3 (and before)
------------------
- Added support for the exp() and log() functions.
- Fixed a bug where the usage of '>=' within an if_true() would cause an error.
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