gappy provides a Python interface to the GAP computer algebra system by linking to its library interface.
It allows calling functions in GAP directly from Python, and passing supported Python objects back to GAP.
gappy is based on SageMath's LibGAP interface to GAP, originally developed by Volker Braun, but is completely independent of Sage--it does not require or use Sage at all, and can be used in any Python code. If there is enough interest, it may also be enhanced with a complementary GAP package for interacting with Python from within GAP.
To start using GAP functions from Python, just run:
>>> from gappy import gap
Then any global variable in GAP, including functions, can be accessed as attributes on gap like:
>>> gap.Cite()
Please use one of the following samples
to cite GAP version from this installation
Text:
[GAP] GAP – Groups, Algorithms, and Programming, Version 4.dev, The GAP Group, https://www.gap-system.org.
...
All global variables that would be available in a GAP session can be accessed in this way:
>>> gap.GAPInfo.Version
"4.dev"
Most basic Python types have direct equivalents in GAP, and can be passed directly to GAP functions without explicit conversion to their equivalent GAP types:
>>> S4 = gap.SymmetricGroup(4)
>>> S4
Sym( [ 1 .. 4 ] )
You can also call "methods" on GapObj
s. This is just syntactic sugar
for calling a GAP function with that object as its first argument, in cases
where that function supports the object bound to the method. For example:
>>> S4.GeneratorsOfGroup()
[ (1,2,3,4), (1,2) ]
Values returned from GAP functions are GAP objects wrapped in a Python class
for containing them called GapObj
:
>>> type(S4)
<class 'gappy.gapobj.GapObj'>
There are also specialized subclasses of GapObj
for many types of objects
in GAP. To explicitly convert a Python object directly to its GAP
equivalent, you can call gap
like:
>>> one = gap(1)
>>> type(one)
<class 'gappy.gapobj.GapInteger'>
GAP objects are displayed (with repr) or stringified (with str) the same
way they would be in GAP, when displaying the object in the REPL or when
calling GAP's Print()
function on the object, respectively:
>>> one
1
>>> s = gap("Hello GAP!")
>>> s
"Hello GAP!"
>>> print(s)
Hello GAP!
Not all GAP objects have an equivalent in basic Python types, so there is no implicit conversion from GAP back to Python. However, all Python types that can be converted to GAP objects can be converted back to their equivalent Python types in a symmetrical manner:
>>> int(one)
1
>>> type(int(one))
<class 'int'>
>>> str(s)
'Hello GAP!'
>>> type(str(s))
<class 'str'>
Likewise for floats, lists, dicts, among others.
You can also call obj.python()
to convert to its equivalent Python type
if one exists:
>>> type(one.python())
<class 'int'>
To register your own converters for GAP objects to custom Python types, see
the gap.convert_to
decorator.
Finally, you can execute arbitrary GAP code directly with gap.eval
.
This is often the easiest way to construct more complicated GAP objects,
especially if you are more familiar with GAP syntax. The return value of
gap.eval
is the result of evaluating the same statement in GAP (the
semicolon is optional when evaluating a single statement):
>>> rec = gap.eval('rec(a:=123, b:=456, Sym3:=SymmetricGroup(3))')
>>> rec['Sym3']
Sym( [ 1 .. 3 ] )
This is also an easy way to declare new GAP functions from gappy:
>>> sign = gap.eval("""sign := function(n)
... if n < 0 then
... return -1;
... elif n = 0 then
... return 0;
... else
... return 1;
... fi;
... end;""")
>>> sign
<GAP function "sign">
>>> sign(0)
0
>>> sign(-99)
-1
See the full API documentation for many additional examples of how to use
the gap
object as well as the built-in GapObj
types.
Note
These instructions will be updated once there are releases on PyPI.
Supported platforms: Linux, MacOS, Cygwin.
- Likely works with most other *BSD flavors but has not been tested.
Python 3.6 or up with development headers installed. On Debian-based systems this means:
$ sudo apt-get install python3.7-dev
GAP 4.10.2 or greater
It is possible to install from PyPI (note the distribution name gappy-system, do not install the package "gappy" which is an unrelated obsolete package):
$ pip install gappy-system
or from source:
$ git clone https://github.com/embray/gappy.git
$ cd gappy/
$ pip install .
However, depending on how GAP is installed, some extra steps may be required. In particular, if you installed GAP from source using the typical instructions on the GAP website you will need to make sure the libgap shared library is built by running:
$ make install-libgap
in the GAP source directory.
You will also need to point to the location of your GAP installation by
setting the GAP_ROOT
environment variable like:
$ GAP_ROOT=<path/to/gap/root> pip install .
If you needed to provide GAP_ROOT
for the installation, it is also
generally necessary to set this environment variable before using gappy,
so that it can find the path to your GAP installation. See the
documentation for the Gap
class for more information.
If using GAP from a distribution system such as APT on Debian/Ubuntu or from
Conda, however, the GAP library (libgap) is typically installed in a
standard system location, and it may not be necessary to provide
GAP_ROOT
. See the next section for example.
To give an example of the above point, you can install gappy in a Conda environment as follows:
$ conda create -n gap
$ conda activate gap
$ conda install -c conda-forge gap-defaults==4.11 python==3.8
$ pip install .
Alternatively, you can create the conda environment using the supplied environment.yml file:
$ conda env create
Note
With Conda and other distributions that install libgap to a standard
system location (e.g. /usr/lib/libgap.so
) it may not be necessary to
set the GAP_ROOT
environment variable, as the library can locate
your GAP root automatically in most cases.
Warning
The conda package for GAP 4.11 had dependency conflicts with Python 3.7 so you must use Python 3.8 or above, or GAP 4.10.2 with Python 3.7.
Additional notes for installation on Cygwin:
The dependency
psutil
does not support Cygwin. However, there is an unofficial fork which does at: https://github.com/embray/psutil/tree/cygwin/v3. You can install it by running:$ pip install git+https://github.com/embray/psutil.git@cygwin/v3
The path to the libgap DLL (filename
cyggap-0.dll
) needs to be on yourPATH
environment variable in order for gappy to be importable. To do this you can either copy it from your GAP installation to a standard location like:$ cp /path/to/gap_root/.libs/cyggap-0.dll /usr/local/bin
or you can modify your environment to point to where GAP places the built DLL:
$ export PATH="/path/to/gap_root/.libs:$PATH"
and add this to your
.profile
.