Question

It is straightforward to compute the partial derivatives of a function at a point with respect to the first argument using the SciPy function scipy.misc.derivative. Here is an example:

def foo(x, y):
  return(x**2 + y**3)

from scipy.misc import derivative
derivative(foo, 1, dx = 1e-6, args = (3, ))

But how would I go about taking the derivative of the function foo with respect to the second argument? One way I can think of is to generate a lambda function that rejigs the arguments around, but that can quickly get cumbersome.

Also, is there a way to generate an array of partial derivatives with respect to some or all of the arguments of a function?

Était-ce utile?

La solution

I would write a simple wrapper, something along the lines of

def partial_derivative(func, var=0, point=[]):
    args = point[:]
    def wraps(x):
        args[var] = x
        return func(*args)
    return derivative(wraps, point[var], dx = 1e-6)

Demo:

>>> partial_derivative(foo, 0, [3,1])
6.0000000008386678
>>> partial_derivative(foo, 1, [3,1])
2.9999999995311555

Autres conseils

Yes, it is implemented in sympy. Demo:

>>> from sympy import symbols, diff
>>> x, y = symbols('x y', real=True)
>>> diff( x**2 + y**3, y)
3*y**2
>>> diff( x**2 + y**3, y).subs({x:3, y:1})
3

Here is an answer for numerical differentiation using numdifftools.

import numpy as np
import numdifftools as nd

def partial_function(f___,input,pos,value):
    tmp  = input[pos]
    input[pos] = value
    ret = f___(*input)
    input[pos] = tmp
    return ret

def partial_derivative(f,input):
    ret = np.empty(len(input))
    for i in range(len(input)):
        fg = lambda x:partial_function(f,input,i,x)
        ret[i] = nd.Derivative(fg)(input[i])
    return ret

Then:

print (partial_derivative(lambda x,y: x*x*x+y*y,np.array([1.0,1.0])))

Gives:

[ 3.  2.]
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