#!/bin/env python """ Module simtk.unit.unit_operators Physical quantities with units, intended to produce similar functionality to Boost.Units package in C++ (but with a runtime cost). Uses similar API as Scientific.Physics.PhysicalQuantities but different internals to satisfy our local requirements. In particular, there is no underlying set of 'canonical' base units, whereas in Scientific.Physics.PhysicalQuantities all units are secretly in terms of SI units. Also, it is easier to add new fundamental dimensions to simtk.dimensions. You might want to make new dimensions for, say, "currency" or "information". Two possible enhancements that have not been implemented are 1) Include uncertainties with propagation of errors 2) Incorporate offsets for celsius <-> kelvin conversion This is part of the OpenMM molecular simulation toolkit originating from Simbios, the NIH National Center for Physics-Based Simulation of Biological Structures at Stanford, funded under the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research, grant U54 GM072970. See https://simtk.org. Portions copyright (c) 2012 Stanford University and the Authors. Authors: Christopher M. Bruns Contributors: Peter Eastman Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS, CONTRIBUTORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. """ __author__ = "Christopher M. Bruns" __version__ = "0.5" from unit import Unit, is_unit from quantity import Quantity, is_quantity # Attach methods of Unit class that return a Quantity to Unit class. # I put them here to avoid circular dependence in imports. # i.e. Quantity depends on Unit, but not vice versa def _unit_class_rdiv(self, other): """ Divide another object type by a Unit. Returns a new Quantity with a value of other and units of the inverse of self. """ if is_unit(other): raise NotImplementedError('programmer is surprised __rtruediv__ was called instead of __truediv__') else: # print "R scalar / unit" unit = pow(self, -1.0) value = other return Quantity(value, unit).reduce_unit(self) Unit.__rtruediv__ = _unit_class_rdiv Unit.__rdiv__ = _unit_class_rdiv def _unit_class_mul(self, other): """Multiply a Unit by an object. If other is another Unit, returns a new composite Unit. Exponents of similar dimensions are added. If self and other share similar BaseDimension, but with different BaseUnits, the resulting BaseUnit for that BaseDimension will be that used in self. If other is a not another Unit, this method returns a new Quantity... UNLESS other is a Quantity and the resulting unit is dimensionless, in which case the underlying value type of the Quantity is returned. """ if is_unit(other): if self in Unit._multiplication_cache: if other in Unit._multiplication_cache[self]: return Unit._multiplication_cache[self][other] else: Unit._multiplication_cache[self] = {} # print "unit * unit" result1 = {} # dictionary of dimensionTuple: (BaseOrScaledUnit, exponent) for unit, exponent in self.iter_base_or_scaled_units(): d = unit.get_dimension_tuple() if d not in result1: result1[d] = {} assert unit not in result1[d] result1[d][unit] = exponent for unit, exponent in other.iter_base_or_scaled_units(): d = unit.get_dimension_tuple() if d not in result1: result1[d] = {} if unit not in result1[d]: result1[d][unit] = 0 result1[d][unit] += exponent result2 = {} # stripped of zero exponents for d in result1: for unit in result1[d]: exponent = result1[d][unit] if exponent != 0: assert unit not in result2 result2[unit] = exponent new_unit = Unit(result2) Unit._multiplication_cache[self][other] = new_unit return new_unit elif is_quantity(other): # print "unit * quantity" value = other._value unit = self * other.unit return Quantity(value, unit).reduce_unit(self) else: # print "scalar * unit" value = other unit = self # Is reduce_unit needed here? I hope not, there is a performance issue... # return Quantity(other, self).reduce_unit(self) return Quantity(other, self) Unit.__mul__ = _unit_class_mul Unit.__rmul__ = Unit.__mul__ Unit._multiplication_cache = {} # run module directly for testing if __name__=='__main__': # Test the examples in the docstrings import doctest, sys doctest.testmod(sys.modules[__name__])