Maxima (software)

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Infobox software

Maxima (Template:IPAc-en) is a powerful software package for performing computer algebra calculations in mathematics and the physical sciences. It is written in Common Lisp and runs on all POSIX platforms such as macOS, Unix, BSD, and Linux, as well as under Microsoft Windows and Android. It is free software released under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).

History

Maxima is based on a 1982 version of Macsyma, which was developed at MIT with funding from the United States Department of Energy and other government agencies. A version of Macsyma was maintained by Bill Schelter from 1982 until his death in 2001. In 1998, Schelter obtained permission from the Department of Energy to release his version under the GPL. That version, now called Maxima, is maintained by an independent group of users and developers. Maxima does not include any of the many modifications and enhancements made to the commercial version of Macsyma during 1982–1999. Though the core functionality remains similar, code depending on these enhancements may not work on Maxima, and bugs which were fixed in Macsyma may still be present in Maxima, and vice versa. Maxima participated in Google Summer of Code in 2019 under International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility.[1]

Symbolic calculations

Like most computer algebra systems, Maxima supports a variety of ways of reorganizing symbolic algebraic expressions, such as polynomial factorization, polynomial greatest common divisor calculation, expansion, separation into real and imaginary parts, and transformation of trigonometric functions to exponential and vice versa. It has a variety of techniques for simplifying algebraic expressions involving trigonometric functions, roots, and exponential functions. It can calculate symbolic antiderivatives ("indefinite integrals"), definite integrals, and limits. It can derive closed-form series expansions as well as terms of Taylor-Maclaurin-Laurent series. It can perform matrix manipulations with symbolic entries.

Maxima is a general-purpose system, and special-case calculations such as factorization of large numbers, manipulation of extremely large polynomials, etc. are sometimes better done in specialized systems.

Numeric calculations

Maxima specializes in symbolic operations, but it also offers numerical capabilities[2] such as arbitrary-precision integer, rational number, and floating-point numbers, limited only by space and time constraints.

Programming

Maxima includes a complete programming language with ALGOL-like syntax but Lisp-like semantics. It is written in Common Lisp and can be accessed programmatically and extended, as the underlying Lisp can be called from Maxima. It uses gnuplot for drawing.

For calculations using floating point and arrays heavily, Maxima has translators from the Maxima language to other programming languages (notably Fortran), which may execute more efficiently.

Interfaces

Screenshot of the wxMaxima interface for Maxima

Various graphical user interfaces (GUIs) are available for Maxima:

  • wxMaxima[3] is high-quality graphical front-end using the wxWidgets framework. wxMaxima provides a cell structure similar to the Mathematica notebook as shown in the figure to the right.
  • There is a kernel for Project Jupyter, a flexible, notebook-style GUI written in Python.[4]
  • GMaxima is a Maxima interface using GTK+.[5]
  • Cantor, using Qt, can interface with Maxima (along with SageMath, R, and KAlgebra)[6]
  • The GNU TeXmacs and LyX mathematical editor programs can be used to provide an interactive GUI for Maxima, as can SageMath. Other options include the Imaxima front end, as well as an Emacs and XEmacs interaction mode which is activated by Imaxima.
  • Kayali[7]
  • Climaxima,[8] a CLIM-based front-end.[9]

Examples of Maxima code

Basic operations

Arbitrary-precision arithmetic

bfloat(sqrt(2)), fpprec=40;
1.41421356237309504880168872420969807857100

Function

f(x):=x^3$
f(4);
64

Expand

expand((a-b)^3);
b3+3ab23a2b+a3

Factor

factor(x^2-1);
(x1)(x+1)

Solving equations

x2+a x+1=0
solve(x^2 + a*x + 1, x);
[x=(a24+a2),x=a24a2]

Solving equations numerically

cosx=x
find_root(cos(x) = x, x, 0, 1);
0.7390851332151607
bf_find_root(cos(x) = x, x, 0, 1), fpprec = 50;
7.3908513321516064165531208767387340401341175890076101

Indefinite integral

x2+cosx dx
integrate(x^2 + cos(x), x);
sinx+x33

Definite integral

011x3+1dx
integrate(1/(x^3 + 1), x, 0, 1), ratsimp;
3log2+π332

Numerical integral

02sin(sin(x))dx
quad_qags(sin(sin(x)), x, 0, 2)[1];
1.247056058244003

Derivative

d3dx3cos2x
diff(cos(x)^2, x, 3);
8cosxsinx

Limit

limx1+sinhxex
limit((1+sinh(x))/exp(x), x, inf);
12

Number theory

primes(10, 20);
[11,13,17,19]
fib(10);
55

Series

x=11x2
sum(1/x^2, x, 1, inf), simpsum;
π26

Series expansion

taylor(sin(x), x, 0, 9);
xx36+x5120x75040+x9362880
niceindices(powerseries(cos(x), x, 0));
i=0(1)ix2i(2i)!

Special functions

bessel_j(0, 4.5);
0.3205425089851214
airy_ai(1.5);
0.07174949700810543

See also

Template:Portal

Template:Clear

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Wikibooks Template:Commons category

Template:Computer algebra systems Template:Numerical analysis software Template:Authority control