ai-content-maker/.venv/Lib/site-packages/sympy/ntheory/egyptian_fraction.py

224 lines
6.8 KiB
Python
Raw Normal View History

2024-05-03 04:18:51 +03:00
from sympy.core.containers import Tuple
from sympy.core.numbers import (Integer, Rational)
from sympy.core.singleton import S
import sympy.polys
from math import gcd
def egyptian_fraction(r, algorithm="Greedy"):
"""
Return the list of denominators of an Egyptian fraction
expansion [1]_ of the said rational `r`.
Parameters
==========
r : Rational or (p, q)
a positive rational number, ``p/q``.
algorithm : { "Greedy", "Graham Jewett", "Takenouchi", "Golomb" }, optional
Denotes the algorithm to be used (the default is "Greedy").
Examples
========
>>> from sympy import Rational
>>> from sympy.ntheory.egyptian_fraction import egyptian_fraction
>>> egyptian_fraction(Rational(3, 7))
[3, 11, 231]
>>> egyptian_fraction((3, 7), "Graham Jewett")
[7, 8, 9, 56, 57, 72, 3192]
>>> egyptian_fraction((3, 7), "Takenouchi")
[4, 7, 28]
>>> egyptian_fraction((3, 7), "Golomb")
[3, 15, 35]
>>> egyptian_fraction((11, 5), "Golomb")
[1, 2, 3, 4, 9, 234, 1118, 2580]
See Also
========
sympy.core.numbers.Rational
Notes
=====
Currently the following algorithms are supported:
1) Greedy Algorithm
Also called the Fibonacci-Sylvester algorithm [2]_.
At each step, extract the largest unit fraction less
than the target and replace the target with the remainder.
It has some distinct properties:
a) Given `p/q` in lowest terms, generates an expansion of maximum
length `p`. Even as the numerators get large, the number of
terms is seldom more than a handful.
b) Uses minimal memory.
c) The terms can blow up (standard examples of this are 5/121 and
31/311). The denominator is at most squared at each step
(doubly-exponential growth) and typically exhibits
singly-exponential growth.
2) Graham Jewett Algorithm
The algorithm suggested by the result of Graham and Jewett.
Note that this has a tendency to blow up: the length of the
resulting expansion is always ``2**(x/gcd(x, y)) - 1``. See [3]_.
3) Takenouchi Algorithm
The algorithm suggested by Takenouchi (1921).
Differs from the Graham-Jewett algorithm only in the handling
of duplicates. See [3]_.
4) Golomb's Algorithm
A method given by Golumb (1962), using modular arithmetic and
inverses. It yields the same results as a method using continued
fractions proposed by Bleicher (1972). See [4]_.
If the given rational is greater than or equal to 1, a greedy algorithm
of summing the harmonic sequence 1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + ... is used, taking
all the unit fractions of this sequence until adding one more would be
greater than the given number. This list of denominators is prefixed
to the result from the requested algorithm used on the remainder. For
example, if r is 8/3, using the Greedy algorithm, we get [1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, 14, 420], where the beginning of the sequence, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7] is part of the harmonic sequence summing to 363/140, leaving a
remainder of 31/420, which yields [14, 420] by the Greedy algorithm.
The result of egyptian_fraction(Rational(8, 3), "Golomb") is [1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6, 7, 14, 574, 2788, 6460, 11590, 33062, 113820], and so on.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_fraction
.. [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greedy_algorithm_for_Egyptian_fractions
.. [3] https://www.ics.uci.edu/~eppstein/numth/egypt/conflict.html
.. [4] https://web.archive.org/web/20180413004012/https://ami.ektf.hu/uploads/papers/finalpdf/AMI_42_from129to134.pdf
"""
if not isinstance(r, Rational):
if isinstance(r, (Tuple, tuple)) and len(r) == 2:
r = Rational(*r)
else:
raise ValueError("Value must be a Rational or tuple of ints")
if r <= 0:
raise ValueError("Value must be positive")
# common cases that all methods agree on
x, y = r.as_numer_denom()
if y == 1 and x == 2:
return [Integer(i) for i in [1, 2, 3, 6]]
if x == y + 1:
return [S.One, y]
prefix, rem = egypt_harmonic(r)
if rem == 0:
return prefix
# work in Python ints
x, y = rem.p, rem.q
# assert x < y and gcd(x, y) = 1
if algorithm == "Greedy":
postfix = egypt_greedy(x, y)
elif algorithm == "Graham Jewett":
postfix = egypt_graham_jewett(x, y)
elif algorithm == "Takenouchi":
postfix = egypt_takenouchi(x, y)
elif algorithm == "Golomb":
postfix = egypt_golomb(x, y)
else:
raise ValueError("Entered invalid algorithm")
return prefix + [Integer(i) for i in postfix]
def egypt_greedy(x, y):
# assumes gcd(x, y) == 1
if x == 1:
return [y]
else:
a = (-y) % x
b = y*(y//x + 1)
c = gcd(a, b)
if c > 1:
num, denom = a//c, b//c
else:
num, denom = a, b
return [y//x + 1] + egypt_greedy(num, denom)
def egypt_graham_jewett(x, y):
# assumes gcd(x, y) == 1
l = [y] * x
# l is now a list of integers whose reciprocals sum to x/y.
# we shall now proceed to manipulate the elements of l without
# changing the reciprocated sum until all elements are unique.
while len(l) != len(set(l)):
l.sort() # so the list has duplicates. find a smallest pair
for i in range(len(l) - 1):
if l[i] == l[i + 1]:
break
# we have now identified a pair of identical
# elements: l[i] and l[i + 1].
# now comes the application of the result of graham and jewett:
l[i + 1] = l[i] + 1
# and we just iterate that until the list has no duplicates.
l.append(l[i]*(l[i] + 1))
return sorted(l)
def egypt_takenouchi(x, y):
# assumes gcd(x, y) == 1
# special cases for 3/y
if x == 3:
if y % 2 == 0:
return [y//2, y]
i = (y - 1)//2
j = i + 1
k = j + i
return [j, k, j*k]
l = [y] * x
while len(l) != len(set(l)):
l.sort()
for i in range(len(l) - 1):
if l[i] == l[i + 1]:
break
k = l[i]
if k % 2 == 0:
l[i] = l[i] // 2
del l[i + 1]
else:
l[i], l[i + 1] = (k + 1)//2, k*(k + 1)//2
return sorted(l)
def egypt_golomb(x, y):
# assumes x < y and gcd(x, y) == 1
if x == 1:
return [y]
xp = sympy.polys.ZZ.invert(int(x), int(y))
rv = [xp*y]
rv.extend(egypt_golomb((x*xp - 1)//y, xp))
return sorted(rv)
def egypt_harmonic(r):
# assumes r is Rational
rv = []
d = S.One
acc = S.Zero
while acc + 1/d <= r:
acc += 1/d
rv.append(d)
d += 1
return (rv, r - acc)