Book Image

Scientific Computing with Python - Second Edition

By : Claus Führer, Jan Erik Solem, Olivier Verdier
Book Image

Scientific Computing with Python - Second Edition

By: Claus Führer, Jan Erik Solem, Olivier Verdier

Overview of this book

Python has tremendous potential within the scientific computing domain. This updated edition of Scientific Computing with Python features new chapters on graphical user interfaces, efficient data processing, and parallel computing to help you perform mathematical and scientific computing efficiently using Python. This book will help you to explore new Python syntax features and create different models using scientific computing principles. The book presents Python alongside mathematical applications and demonstrates how to apply Python concepts in computing with the help of examples involving Python 3.8. You'll use pandas for basic data analysis to understand the modern needs of scientific computing, and cover data module improvements and built-in features. You'll also explore numerical computation modules such as NumPy and SciPy, which enable fast access to highly efficient numerical algorithms. By learning to use the plotting module Matplotlib, you will be able to represent your computational results in talks and publications. A special chapter is devoted to SymPy, a tool for bridging symbolic and numerical computations. By the end of this Python book, you'll have gained a solid understanding of task automation and how to implement and test mathematical algorithms within the realm of scientific computing.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
20
About Packt
22
References

4.7.1 Stacking vectors

You may stack vectors row-wise or column-wise using vstack and column_stack, as illustrated in Figure 4.3:

Figure 4.3: Difference between vstack and column_stack

Note that hstack would produce the concatenation of v1 and v2

Let's consider the symplectic permutation as an example for vector stacking: we have a vector of size . We want to perform a symplectic transformation of a vector with an even number of components, that is, exchange the first half with the second half of the vector with sign change:

This operation is resolved in Python as follows:

# v is supposed to have an even length.
def symp(v):
    n = len(v) // 2 # use the integer division //
    return hstack([v[-n:], -v[:n]])