Power series implemented using PARI¶
EXAMPLES:
This implementation can be selected for any base ring supported by
PARI by passing the keyword implementation='pari'
to the
PowerSeriesRing()
constructor:
sage: R.<q> = PowerSeriesRing(ZZ, implementation='pari'); R
Power Series Ring in q over Integer Ring
sage: S.<t> = PowerSeriesRing(CC, implementation='pari'); S
Power Series Ring in t over Complex Field with 53 bits of precision
Note that only the type of the elements depends on the implementation, not the type of the parents:
sage: type(R)
<class 'sage.rings.power_series_ring.PowerSeriesRing_domain_with_category'>
sage: type(q)
<type 'sage.rings.power_series_pari.PowerSeries_pari'>
sage: type(S)
<class 'sage.rings.power_series_ring.PowerSeriesRing_over_field_with_category'>
sage: type(t)
<type 'sage.rings.power_series_pari.PowerSeries_pari'>
If \(k\) is a finite field implemented using PARI, this is the default implementation for power series over \(k\):
sage: k.<c> = GF(5^12)
sage: type(c)
<type 'sage.rings.finite_rings.element_pari_ffelt.FiniteFieldElement_pari_ffelt'>
sage: A.<x> = k[[]]
sage: type(x)
<type 'sage.rings.power_series_pari.PowerSeries_pari'>
Warning
Because this implementation uses the PARI interface, the PARI variable ordering must be respected in the sense that the variable name of the power series ring must have higher priority than any variable names occurring in the base ring:
sage: R.<y> = QQ[]
sage: S.<x> = PowerSeriesRing(R, implementation='pari'); S
Power Series Ring in x over Univariate Polynomial Ring in y over Rational Field
Reversing the variable ordering leads to errors:
sage: R.<x> = QQ[]
sage: S.<y> = PowerSeriesRing(R, implementation='pari')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
PariError: incorrect priority in gtopoly: variable x <= y
AUTHORS:
- Peter Bruin (December 2013): initial version
-
class
sage.rings.power_series_pari.
PowerSeries_pari
¶ Bases:
sage.rings.power_series_ring_element.PowerSeries
A power series implemented using PARI.
INPUT:
parent
– the power series ring to use as the parentf
– object from which to construct a power seriesprec
– (default: infinity) precision of the element to be constructedcheck
– ignored, but accepted for compatibility withPowerSeries_poly
-
dict
()¶ Return a dictionary of coefficients for
self
.This is simply a dict for the underlying polynomial; it need not have keys corresponding to every number smaller than
self.prec()
.EXAMPLES:
sage: R.<t> = PowerSeriesRing(ZZ, implementation='pari') sage: f = 1 + t^10 + O(t^12) sage: f.dict() {0: 1, 10: 1}
-
integral
(var=None)¶ Return the formal integral of
self
.By default, the integration variable is the variable of the power series. Otherwise, the integration variable is the optional parameter
var
.Note
The integral is always chosen so the constant term is 0.
EXAMPLES:
sage: k.<w> = PowerSeriesRing(QQ, implementation='pari') sage: (1+17*w+15*w^3+O(w^5)).integral() w + 17/2*w^2 + 15/4*w^4 + O(w^6) sage: (w^3 + 4*w^4 + O(w^7)).integral() 1/4*w^4 + 4/5*w^5 + O(w^8) sage: (3*w^2).integral() w^3
-
list
()¶ Return the list of known coefficients for
self
.This is just the list of coefficients of the underlying polynomial; it need not have length equal to
self.prec()
.EXAMPLES:
sage: R.<t> = PowerSeriesRing(ZZ, implementation='pari') sage: f = 1 - 5*t^3 + t^5 + O(t^7) sage: f.list() [1, 0, 0, -5, 0, 1] sage: S.<u> = PowerSeriesRing(pAdicRing(5), implementation='pari') sage: (2 + u).list() [2 + O(5^20), 1 + O(5^20)]
-
padded_list
(n=None)¶ Return a list of coefficients of
self
up to (but not including) \(q^n\).The list is padded with zeroes on the right so that it has length \(n\).
INPUT:
n
– a non-negative integer (optional); if \(n\) is not- given, it will be taken to be the precision of
self`, unless this is ``+Infinity
, in which case we just returnself.list()
EXAMPLES:
sage: R.<q> = PowerSeriesRing(QQ, implementation='pari') sage: f = 1 - 17*q + 13*q^2 + 10*q^4 + O(q^7) sage: f.list() [1, -17, 13, 0, 10] sage: f.padded_list(7) [1, -17, 13, 0, 10, 0, 0] sage: f.padded_list(10) [1, -17, 13, 0, 10, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0] sage: f.padded_list(3) [1, -17, 13] sage: f.padded_list() [1, -17, 13, 0, 10, 0, 0] sage: g = 1 - 17*q + 13*q^2 + 10*q^4 sage: g.list() [1, -17, 13, 0, 10] sage: g.padded_list() [1, -17, 13, 0, 10] sage: g.padded_list(10) [1, -17, 13, 0, 10, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]
-
polynomial
()¶ Convert
self
to a polynomial.EXAMPLES:
sage: R.<t> = PowerSeriesRing(GF(7), implementation='pari') sage: f = 3 - t^3 + O(t^5) sage: f.polynomial() 6*t^3 + 3
-
reverse
(precision=None)¶ Return the reverse of
self
.The reverse of a power series \(f\) is the power series \(g\) such that \(g(f(x)) = x\). This exists if and only if the valuation of
self
is exactly 1 and the coefficient of \(x\) is a unit.If the optional argument
precision
is given, the reverse is returned with this precision. Iff
has infinite precision and the argumentprecision
is not given, then the reverse is returned with the default precision off.parent()
.EXAMPLES:
sage: R.<x> = PowerSeriesRing(QQ, implementation='pari') sage: f = 2*x + 3*x^2 - x^4 + O(x^5) sage: g = f.reverse() sage: g 1/2*x - 3/8*x^2 + 9/16*x^3 - 131/128*x^4 + O(x^5) sage: f(g) x + O(x^5) sage: g(f) x + O(x^5) sage: A.<t> = PowerSeriesRing(ZZ, implementation='pari') sage: a = t - t^2 - 2*t^4 + t^5 + O(t^6) sage: b = a.reverse(); b t + t^2 + 2*t^3 + 7*t^4 + 25*t^5 + O(t^6) sage: a(b) t + O(t^6) sage: b(a) t + O(t^6) sage: B.<b,c> = PolynomialRing(ZZ) sage: A.<t> = PowerSeriesRing(B, implementation='pari') sage: f = t + b*t^2 + c*t^3 + O(t^4) sage: g = f.reverse(); g t - b*t^2 + (2*b^2 - c)*t^3 + O(t^4) sage: f(g) t + O(t^4) sage: g(f) t + O(t^4) sage: A.<t> = PowerSeriesRing(ZZ, implementation='pari') sage: B.<x> = PowerSeriesRing(A, implementation='pari') sage: f = (1 - 3*t + 4*t^3 + O(t^4))*x + (2 + t + t^2 + O(t^3))*x^2 + O(x^3) sage: g = f.reverse(); g (1 + 3*t + 9*t^2 + 23*t^3 + O(t^4))*x + (-2 - 19*t - 118*t^2 + O(t^3))*x^2 + O(x^3)
The optional argument
precision
sets the precision of the output:sage: R.<x> = PowerSeriesRing(QQ, implementation='pari') sage: f = 2*x + 3*x^2 - 7*x^3 + x^4 + O(x^5) sage: g = f.reverse(precision=3); g 1/2*x - 3/8*x^2 + O(x^3) sage: f(g) x + O(x^3) sage: g(f) x + O(x^3)
If the input series has infinite precision, the precision of the output is automatically set to the default precision of the parent ring:
sage: R.<x> = PowerSeriesRing(QQ, default_prec=20, implementation='pari') sage: (x - x^2).reverse() # get some Catalan numbers x + x^2 + 2*x^3 + 5*x^4 + 14*x^5 + 42*x^6 + 132*x^7 + 429*x^8 + 1430*x^9 + 4862*x^10 + 16796*x^11 + 58786*x^12 + 208012*x^13 + 742900*x^14 + 2674440*x^15 + 9694845*x^16 + 35357670*x^17 + 129644790*x^18 + 477638700*x^19 + O(x^20) sage: (x - x^2).reverse(precision=3) x + x^2 + O(x^3)
-
valuation
()¶ Return the valuation of
self
.EXAMPLES:
sage: R.<t> = PowerSeriesRing(QQ, implementation='pari') sage: (5 - t^8 + O(t^11)).valuation() 0 sage: (-t^8 + O(t^11)).valuation() 8 sage: O(t^7).valuation() 7 sage: R(0).valuation() +Infinity