Lazy Series Rings#
We provide lazy implementations for various \(\NN\)-graded rings.
The ring of lazy Laurent series. |
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The ring of (possibly multivariate) lazy Taylor series. |
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The completion of a graded alebra consisting of formal series. |
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The ring of (possibly multivariate) lazy symmetric functions. |
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The ring of lazy Dirichlet series. |
AUTHORS:
Kwankyu Lee (2019-02-24): initial version
Tejasvi Chebrolu, Martin Rubey, Travis Scrimshaw (2021-08): refactored and expanded functionality
- class sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazyCompletionGradedAlgebra(basis, sparse=True, category=None)#
Bases:
sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazySeriesRing
The completion of a graded alebra consisting of formal series.
For a graded algebra \(A\), we can form a completion of \(A\) consisting of all formal series of \(A\) such that each homogeneous component is a finite linear combination of basis elements of \(A\).
INPUT:
basis
– a graded algebranames
– name(s) of the alphabetssparse
– (default:True
) whether we use a sparse or a dense representation
EXAMPLES:
sage: NCSF = NonCommutativeSymmetricFunctions(QQ) sage: S = NCSF.Complete() sage: L = S.formal_series_ring() sage: L Lazy completion of Non-Commutative Symmetric Functions over the Rational Field in the Complete basis sage: f = 1 / (1 - L(S[1])) sage: f S[] + S[1] + (S[1,1]) + (S[1,1,1]) + (S[1,1,1,1]) + (S[1,1,1,1,1]) + (S[1,1,1,1,1,1]) + O^7 sage: g = 1 / (1 - L(S[2])) sage: g S[] + S[2] + (S[2,2]) + (S[2,2,2]) + O^7 sage: f * g S[] + S[1] + (S[1,1]+S[2]) + (S[1,1,1]+S[1,2]) + (S[1,1,1,1]+S[1,1,2]+S[2,2]) + (S[1,1,1,1,1]+S[1,1,1,2]+S[1,2,2]) + (S[1,1,1,1,1,1]+S[1,1,1,1,2]+S[1,1,2,2]+S[2,2,2]) + O^7 sage: g * f S[] + S[1] + (S[1,1]+S[2]) + (S[1,1,1]+S[2,1]) + (S[1,1,1,1]+S[2,1,1]+S[2,2]) + (S[1,1,1,1,1]+S[2,1,1,1]+S[2,2,1]) + (S[1,1,1,1,1,1]+S[2,1,1,1,1]+S[2,2,1,1]+S[2,2,2]) + O^7 sage: f * g - g * f (S[1,2]-S[2,1]) + (S[1,1,2]-S[2,1,1]) + (S[1,1,1,2]+S[1,2,2]-S[2,1,1,1]-S[2,2,1]) + (S[1,1,1,1,2]+S[1,1,2,2]-S[2,1,1,1,1]-S[2,2,1,1]) + O^7
- Element#
alias of
sage.rings.lazy_series.LazyCompletionGradedAlgebraElement
- class sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazyDirichletSeriesRing(base_ring, names, sparse=True, category=None)#
Bases:
sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazySeriesRing
The ring of lazy Dirichlet series.
INPUT:
base_ring
– base ring of this Dirichlet series ringnames
– name of the generator of this Dirichlet series ringsparse
– (default:True
) whether this series is sparse or not
EXAMPLES:
sage: LazyDirichletSeriesRing(ZZ, 't') Lazy Dirichlet Series Ring in t over Integer Ring
- Element#
- one()#
Return the constant series \(1\).
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyDirichletSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.one() 1 sage: ~L.one() 1 + O(1/(8^z))
- class sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazyLaurentSeriesRing(base_ring, names, sparse=True, category=None)#
Bases:
sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazySeriesRing
The ring of lazy Laurent series.
The ring of Laurent series over a ring with the usual arithmetic where the coefficients are computed lazily.
INPUT:
base_ring
– base ringnames
– name of the generatorsparse
– (default:True
) whether the implementation of the series is sparse or not
EXAMPLES:
sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(QQ) sage: 1 / (1 - z) 1 + z + z^2 + O(z^3) sage: 1 / (1 - z) == 1 / (1 - z) True sage: L in Fields True
Lazy Laurent series ring over a finite field:
sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(GF(3)); L Lazy Laurent Series Ring in z over Finite Field of size 3 sage: e = 1 / (1 + z) sage: e.coefficient(100) 1 sage: e.coefficient(100).parent() Finite Field of size 3
Series can be defined by specifying a coefficient function along with a valuation or a degree where after the series is evenutally constant:
sage: R.<x,y> = QQ[] sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(R) sage: def coeff(n): ....: if n < 0: ....: return -2 + n ....: if n == 0: ....: return 6 ....: return x + y^n sage: f = L(coeff, valuation=-5) sage: f -7*z^-5 - 6*z^-4 - 5*z^-3 - 4*z^-2 - 3*z^-1 + 6 + (x + y)*z + O(z^2) sage: 1 / (1 - f) 1/7*z^5 - 6/49*z^6 + 1/343*z^7 + 8/2401*z^8 + 64/16807*z^9 + 17319/117649*z^10 + (1/49*x + 1/49*y - 180781/823543)*z^11 + O(z^12) sage: L(coeff, valuation=-3, degree=3, constant=x) -5*z^-3 - 4*z^-2 - 3*z^-1 + 6 + (x + y)*z + (y^2 + x)*z^2 + x*z^3 + x*z^4 + x*z^5 + O(z^6)
Similarly, we can specify a polynomial or the initial coefficients with anything that converts into the corresponding Laurent polynomial ring:
sage: L([1, x, y, 0, x+y]) 1 + x*z + y*z^2 + (x + y)*z^4 sage: L([1, x, y, 0, x+y], constant=2) 1 + x*z + y*z^2 + (x + y)*z^4 + 2*z^5 + 2*z^6 + 2*z^7 + O(z^8) sage: L([1, x, y, 0, x+y], degree=7, constant=2) 1 + x*z + y*z^2 + (x + y)*z^4 + 2*z^7 + 2*z^8 + 2*z^9 + O(z^10) sage: L([1, x, y, 0, x+y], valuation=-2) z^-2 + x*z^-1 + y + (x + y)*z^2 sage: L([1, x, y, 0, x+y], valuation=-2, constant=3) z^-2 + x*z^-1 + y + (x + y)*z^2 + 3*z^3 + 3*z^4 + 3*z^5 + O(z^6) sage: L([1, x, y, 0, x+y], valuation=-2, degree=4, constant=3) z^-2 + x*z^-1 + y + (x + y)*z^2 + 3*z^4 + 3*z^5 + 3*z^6 + O(z^7)
Some additional examples over the integer ring:
sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ) sage: L in Fields False sage: 1 / (1 - 2*z)^3 1 + 6*z + 24*z^2 + 80*z^3 + 240*z^4 + 672*z^5 + 1792*z^6 + O(z^7) sage: R.<x> = LaurentPolynomialRing(ZZ) sage: L(x^-2 + 3 + x) z^-2 + 3 + z sage: L(x^-2 + 3 + x, valuation=-5, constant=2) z^-5 + 3*z^-3 + z^-2 + 2*z^-1 + 2 + 2*z + O(z^2) sage: L(x^-2 + 3 + x, valuation=-5, degree=0, constant=2) z^-5 + 3*z^-3 + z^-2 + 2 + 2*z + 2*z^2 + O(z^3)
We can also truncate, shift, and make eventually constant any Laurent series:
sage: f = 1 / (z + z^2) sage: f z^-1 - 1 + z - z^2 + z^3 - z^4 + z^5 + O(z^6) sage: L(f, valuation=2) z^2 - z^3 + z^4 - z^5 + z^6 - z^7 + z^8 + O(z^9) sage: L(f, degree=3) z^-1 - 1 + z - z^2 sage: L(f, degree=3, constant=2) z^-1 - 1 + z - z^2 + 2*z^3 + 2*z^4 + 2*z^5 + O(z^6) sage: L(f, valuation=1, degree=4) z - z^2 + z^3 sage: L(f, valuation=1, degree=4, constant=5) z - z^2 + z^3 + 5*z^4 + 5*z^5 + 5*z^6 + O(z^7)
Power series can be defined recursively (see
sage.rings.lazy_series.LazyModuleElement.define()
for more examples):sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ) sage: s = L(None, valuation=0) sage: s.define(1 + z*s^2) sage: s 1 + z + 2*z^2 + 5*z^3 + 14*z^4 + 42*z^5 + 132*z^6 + O(z^7)
If we do not explcitly know the exact value of every coefficient, then equality checking will depend on the computed coefficients. If at a certain point we cannot prove two series are different (which involves the coefficients we have computed), then we will raise an error:
sage: f = 1 / (z + z^2); f z^-1 - 1 + z - z^2 + z^3 - z^4 + z^5 + O(z^6) sage: f2 = f * 2 # currently no coefficients computed sage: f3 = f * 3 # currently no coefficients computed sage: f2 == f3 Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: undecidable sage: f2 # computes some of the coefficients of f2 2*z^-1 - 2 + 2*z - 2*z^2 + 2*z^3 - 2*z^4 + 2*z^5 + O(z^6) sage: f3 # computes some of the coefficients of f3 3*z^-1 - 3 + 3*z - 3*z^2 + 3*z^3 - 3*z^4 + 3*z^5 + O(z^6) sage: f2 == f3 False
The implementation of the ring can be either be a sparse or a dense one. The default is a sparse implementation:
sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ) sage: L.is_sparse() True sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, sparse=False) sage: L.is_sparse() False
- Element#
- gen(n=0)#
Return the
n
-th generator ofself
.EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.gen() z sage: L.gen(3) Traceback (most recent call last): ... IndexError: there is only one generator
- gens()#
Return the generators of
self
.EXAMPLES:
sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ) sage: L.gens() (z,) sage: 1/(1 - z) 1 + z + z^2 + O(z^3)
- ngens()#
Return the number of generators of
self
.This is always 1.
EXAMPLES:
sage: L.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ) sage: L.ngens() 1
- series(coefficient, valuation, degree=None, constant=None)#
Return a lazy Laurent series.
INPUT:
coefficient
– Python function that computes coefficients or a listvaluation
– integer; approximate valuation of the seriesdegree
– (optional) integerconstant
– (optional) an element of the base ring
Let the coefficient of index \(i\) mean the coefficient of the term of the series with exponent \(i\).
Python function
coefficient
returns the value of the coefficient of index \(i\) from input \(s\) and \(i\) where \(s\) is the series itself.Let
valuation
be \(n\). All coefficients of index below \(n\) are zero. Ifconstant
is not specified, then thecoefficient
function is responsible to compute the values of all coefficients of index \(\ge n\). Ifdegree
orconstant
is a pair \((c,m)\), then thecoefficient
function is responsible to compute the values of all coefficients of index \(\ge n\) and \(< m\) and all the coefficients of index \(\ge m\) is the constant \(c\).EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.series(lambda s, i: i, 5, (1,10)) 5*z^5 + 6*z^6 + 7*z^7 + 8*z^8 + 9*z^9 + z^10 + z^11 + z^12 + O(z^13) sage: def g(s, i): ....: if i < 0: ....: return 1 ....: else: ....: return s.coefficient(i - 1) + i sage: e = L.series(g, -5); e z^-5 + z^-4 + z^-3 + z^-2 + z^-1 + 1 + 2*z + O(z^2) sage: f = e^-1; f z^5 - z^6 - z^11 + O(z^12) sage: f.coefficient(10) 0 sage: f.coefficient(20) 9 sage: f.coefficient(30) -219
Alternatively, the
coefficient
can be a list of elements of the base ring. Then these elements are read as coefficients of the terms of degrees starting from thevaluation
. In this case,constant
may be just an element of the base ring instead of a tuple or can be simply omitted if it is zero.sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: f = L.series([1,2,3,4], -5); f z^-5 + 2*z^-4 + 3*z^-3 + 4*z^-2 sage: g = L.series([1,3,5,7,9], 5, constant=-1); g z^5 + 3*z^6 + 5*z^7 + 7*z^8 + 9*z^9 - z^10 - z^11 - z^12 + O(z^13)
- some_elements()#
Return a list of elements of
self
.EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.some_elements() [0, 1, z, -3*z^-4 + z^-3 - 12*z^-2 - 2*z^-1 - 10 - 8*z + z^2 + z^3, z^-2 + 3*z^-1 + 2*z + z^2 + z^3 + z^4 + z^5 + O(z^6), -2*z^-3 - 2*z^-2 + 4*z^-1 + 11 - z - 34*z^2 - 31*z^3 + O(z^4), 4*z^-2 + z^-1 + z + 4*z^2 + 9*z^3 + 16*z^4 + O(z^5)] sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(GF(2), 'z') sage: L.some_elements() [0, 1, z, z^-4 + z^-3 + z^2 + z^3, z^-1 + z^2 + z^3 + z^4 + z^5 + O(z^6), 1 + z + z^3 + z^4 + z^6 + O(z^7), z^-1 + z + z^3 + O(z^5)] sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(GF(3), 'z') sage: L.some_elements() [0, 1, z, z^-3 + z^-1 + 2 + z + z^2 + z^3, z^2 + z^3 + z^4 + z^5 + O(z^6), z^-3 + z^-2 + z^-1 + 2 + 2*z + 2*z^2 + O(z^3), z^-2 + z^-1 + z + z^2 + z^4 + O(z^5)]
- class sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazySeriesRing#
Bases:
sage.structure.unique_representation.UniqueRepresentation
,sage.structure.parent.Parent
Abstract base class for lazy series.
- characteristic()#
Return the characteristic of this lazy power series ring, which is the same as the characteristic of its base ring.
EXAMPLES:
sage: L.<t> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ) sage: L.characteristic() 0 sage: R.<w> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(GF(11)); R Lazy Laurent Series Ring in w over Finite Field of size 11 sage: R.characteristic() 11 sage: R.<x, y> = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(GF(7)); R Multivariate Lazy Taylor Series Ring in x, y over Finite Field of size 7 sage: R.characteristic() 7 sage: L = LazyDirichletSeriesRing(ZZ, "s") sage: L.characteristic() 0
- is_exact()#
Return if
self
is exact or not.EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.is_exact() True sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(RR, 'z') sage: L.is_exact() False
- is_sparse()#
Return whether
self
is sparse or not.EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z', sparse=False) sage: L.is_sparse() False sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z', sparse=True) sage: L.is_sparse() True
- one()#
Return the constant series \(1\).
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.one() 1 sage: L = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.one() 1 sage: m = SymmetricFunctions(ZZ).m() sage: L = LazySymmetricFunctions(m) sage: L.one() m[]
- options(*get_value, **set_value)#
Set and display the options for lazy series.
If no parameters are set, then the function returns a copy of the options dictionary.
The
options
to lazy series can be accessed as usingLazySeriesRing.options
.OPTIONS:
constant_length
– (default:3
) the number of coefficients to display for nonzero constant seriesdisplay_length
– (default:7
) the number of coefficients to display from the valuation
EXAMPLES:
sage: LLS.<z> = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(QQ) sage: LLS.options Current options for lazy series rings - constant_length: 3 - display_length: 7 sage: LLS.options.display_length 7 sage: f = 1 / (1 + z) sage: f 1 - z + z^2 - z^3 + z^4 - z^5 + z^6 + O(z^7) sage: LLS.options.display_length = 10 sage: f 1 - z + z^2 - z^3 + z^4 - z^5 + z^6 - z^7 + z^8 - z^9 + O(z^10) sage: g = LLS(lambda n: n^2, valuation=-2, degree=5, constant=42) sage: g 4*z^-2 + z^-1 + z + 4*z^2 + 9*z^3 + 16*z^4 + 42*z^5 + 42*z^6 + 42*z^7 + O(z^8) sage: h = 1 / (1 - z) # This is exact sage: h 1 + z + z^2 + O(z^3) sage: LLS.options.constant_length = 1 sage: g 4*z^-2 + z^-1 + z + 4*z^2 + 9*z^3 + 16*z^4 + 42*z^5 + O(z^6) sage: h 1 + O(z) sage: LazyLaurentSeriesRing.options._reset() sage: LazyLaurentSeriesRing.options.display_length 7
See
GlobalOptions
for more features of these options.
- undefined(valuation=None)#
Return an uninitialized series.
INPUT:
valuation
– integer; a lower bound for the valuation of the series
Power series can be defined recursively (see
sage.rings.lazy_series.LazyModuleElement.define()
for more examples).EXAMPLES:
sage: L.<z> = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(QQ) sage: s = L.undefined(1) sage: s.define(z + (s^2+s(z^2))/2) sage: s z + z^2 + z^3 + 2*z^4 + 3*z^5 + 6*z^6 + 11*z^7 + O(z^8)
- unknown(valuation=None)#
Return an uninitialized series.
INPUT:
valuation
– integer; a lower bound for the valuation of the series
Power series can be defined recursively (see
sage.rings.lazy_series.LazyModuleElement.define()
for more examples).EXAMPLES:
sage: L.<z> = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(QQ) sage: s = L.undefined(1) sage: s.define(z + (s^2+s(z^2))/2) sage: s z + z^2 + z^3 + 2*z^4 + 3*z^5 + 6*z^6 + 11*z^7 + O(z^8)
- zero()#
Return the zero series.
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyLaurentSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.zero() 0 sage: s = SymmetricFunctions(ZZ).s() sage: L = LazySymmetricFunctions(s) sage: L.zero() 0 sage: L = LazyDirichletSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.zero() 0 sage: L = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.zero() 0
- class sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazySymmetricFunctions(basis, sparse=True, category=None)#
Bases:
sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazyCompletionGradedAlgebra
The ring of lazy symmetric functions.
INPUT:
basis
– the ring of symmetric functionsnames
– name(s) of the alphabetssparse
– (default:True
) whether we use a sparse or a dense representation
EXAMPLES:
sage: s = SymmetricFunctions(ZZ).s() sage: LazySymmetricFunctions(s) Lazy completion of Symmetric Functions over Integer Ring in the Schur basis sage: m = SymmetricFunctions(ZZ).m() sage: LazySymmetricFunctions(tensor([s, m])) Lazy completion of Symmetric Functions over Integer Ring in the Schur basis # Symmetric Functions over Integer Ring in the monomial basis
- Element#
- class sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazyTaylorSeriesRing(base_ring, names, sparse=True, category=None)#
Bases:
sage.rings.lazy_series_ring.LazySeriesRing
The ring of (possibly multivariate) lazy Taylor series.
INPUT:
base_ring
– base ring of this Taylor series ringnames
– name(s) of the generator of this Taylor series ringsparse
– (default:True
) whether this series is sparse or not
EXAMPLES:
sage: LazyTaylorSeriesRing(ZZ, 't') Lazy Taylor Series Ring in t over Integer Ring sage: L.<x, y> = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(QQ); L Multivariate Lazy Taylor Series Ring in x, y over Rational Field
- Element#
- gen(n=0)#
Return the
n
-th generator ofself
.EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(ZZ, 'z') sage: L.gen() z sage: L.gen(3) Traceback (most recent call last): ... IndexError: there is only one generator
- gens()#
Return the generators of
self
.EXAMPLES:
sage: L = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(ZZ, 'x,y') sage: L.gens() (x, y)
- ngens()#
Return the number of generators of
self
.EXAMPLES:
sage: L.<z> = LazyTaylorSeriesRing(ZZ) sage: L.ngens() 1