symengine
maxima-client
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symengine | maxima-client | |
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5 | 1 | |
1,094 | 47 | |
2.7% | - | |
7.2 | 10.0 | |
13 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
C++ | Common Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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symengine
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C++ library for solving EQUATIONS
SymEngine will do this: https://github.com/symengine/symengine
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Maxima: A computer algebra system written in Common Lisp
If you need programmability or interoperability, Sympy is way nicer. If you just want an interactive symbolic calculator, Maxima is fine but sometimes quirky (has odd conventions due mainly to its age). As heisig points out, Maxima can be quite a bit faster (but I run into slow things with it too). Using Maxima via Sage is in some ways the best of both worlds.
You may also be interested in SymEngine: https://github.com/symengine/symengine
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Help rendering LateX equation to image format
Context: I'm making a application for robotics calculations, making symbolic calculations using (symengine), and at some point I would like to be able to see the steps of these calculations, symengine has a function that returns the latex code do the elements you want. So I was trying to find a library or something of sorts to render that text into an image, I'm using Dear IMGUI in the docking branch to make a simple UI where I would like to display these equations. I know it might not even exists but I would like to give it a try. I found KLateXFormula, which depends on Qt as far as I understood, so I would like to avoid that if possible, I also studied a bit about the TeXStudio repo and found they use Qt to render previews. I also tried to understand the miktex repo searching for a function that I could use, but I barely understood the structure of the repo. I'm getting frustraded. I also found approaches where people would call latex executables to parse latex to DVI(Or something like this) but I would also like to avoid this approaches if possible.
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Announcing Savage, a computer algebra system written in Rust
- Might there be any way to leverage the work of https://github.com/symengine/symengine ? I assume a straight-up language binding to symengine might be a completely separate project, but possibly for some specific features symengine, maybe... (It is a pity they chose c++ and not rust to implement symengine in. In the end, the main target seems python/sympy here and not c++.)
- How do you deal with the fact that all the math, physics you did in university is pretty much useless in the workplace because you don't need them and your position doesn't require you to know them?
maxima-client
What are some alternatives?
ceres-solver - A large scale non-linear optimization library
reduce-algebra - reduce-algebra: a portable general-purpose computer algebra system, automatically mirrored from https://svn.code.sf.net/p/reduce-algebra/code/. Please visit the REDUCE Homepage, https://reduce-algebra.sourceforge.io/, to report any bugs or request assistance.
latex-online - Online latex compiler. You give it a link, it gives you PDF
maxima-jupyter - A Maxima kernel for Jupyter, based on CL-Jupyter (Common Lisp kernel)
ExprTK - C++ Mathematical Expression Parsing And Evaluation Library https://www.partow.net/programming/exprtk/index.html
maxima-interface - Simple interface between Common Lisp and Maxima. Moved to https://git.sr.ht/~jmbr/maxima-interface
Rust-CAS - Rust Computer Algebra library
emacs-ipython-notebook - Jupyter notebook client in Emacs
melpa - Recipes and build machinery for the biggest Emacs package repo
hsluv - Human-friendly HSL, website and math