Difference between revisions of "Introduction to MathObjects"
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== What are MathObjects? == |
== What are MathObjects? == |
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− | MathObjects are a set of |
+ | MathObjects are a set of Perl objects that make the manipulation of mathematics within WeBWorK problems more intuitive. They make it possible to define variables in your problems that correspond to common mathematical objects, such as formulas, real number, complex numbers, intervals, vectors, points, and so on. For example: |
− | $f = Formula("sin(x^2+6)"); |
+ | $f = Formula("sin(x^2+6)"); |
− | $a = Real("sqrt(pi/6)"); |
+ | $a = Real("sqrt(pi/6)"); |
− | $z = Complex("1 + 5i"); |
+ | $z = Complex("1 + 5i"); |
− | These are useful (and powerful) because MathObjects "know" information about themselves; thus, |
+ | These are useful (and powerful) because MathObjects "know" information about themselves; thus, you can add formulas to get new formulas, plug real objects into formulas to get formulas evaluated at those values, calculate derivatives of formulas, add and subtract intervals to form unions and intersections, and much more. |
For several reasons it is usually preferable to write the MathObjects above using the <code>Compute()</code> function rather than the individual constructors for the various MathObject types. |
For several reasons it is usually preferable to write the MathObjects above using the <code>Compute()</code> function rather than the individual constructors for the various MathObject types. |
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− | $f = Compute("sin(x^2+6)"); |
+ | $f = Compute("sin(x^2+6)"); |
− | $a = Compute("sqrt(pi/6)"); |
+ | $a = Compute("sqrt(pi/6)"); |
− | $z = Compute("1 + 5i"); |
+ | $z = Compute("1 + 5i"); |
The <code>Compute()</code> function determines the kind of MathObject from the Context and from the syntax of its argument, which is usually a string value that is in the form that a student could type. The <code>Compute</code> function also sets the "correct answer" to be the exact string that it was given, so that if a student were asked to enter a number that matched <code>$a</code> from above and asked to see the correct answer (after the due date), then <code>sqrt(pi/6)</code> would be displayed rather than <code>0.723601</code>. This gives you more control over the format of correct answers that are shown to students. |
The <code>Compute()</code> function determines the kind of MathObject from the Context and from the syntax of its argument, which is usually a string value that is in the form that a student could type. The <code>Compute</code> function also sets the "correct answer" to be the exact string that it was given, so that if a student were asked to enter a number that matched <code>$a</code> from above and asked to see the correct answer (after the due date), then <code>sqrt(pi/6)</code> would be displayed rather than <code>0.723601</code>. This gives you more control over the format of correct answers that are shown to students. |
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== Why use MathObjects? == |
== Why use MathObjects? == |
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− | MathObjects are designed to be used in two ways. First, you can use them within your |
+ | MathObjects are designed to be used in two ways. First, you can use them within your Perl code when writing problems as a means of making it easier to handle formulas and other mathematical items, and in particular to be able to produce numeric values, TeX output, and answer strings from a single formula object. This avoids having to type a function three different ways (as a Perl function, as a TeX string, and as an answer string), making it much easier to maintain a problem, or duplicate and modify it to use a different formula. Since MathObjects also includes vectors, points, matrices, intervals, complex numbers, and a variety of other object types, it is easier to work with these kinds of values as well. |
− | More importantly, using MathObjects improves the processing of student input. This is accomplished through special answer checkers that are part of the MathObjects |
+ | More importantly, using MathObjects improves the processing of student input. This is accomplished through special answer checkers that are part of the MathObjects Parser package rather than the traditional WeBWorK answer checkers. Each of these checkers has error checking customized to the type of input expected from the student and can provide helpful feedback if the syntax of the student's entry is incorrect. Because the MathObject checkers are part of a unified library, students get consistent error messages regardless of the type of answer that is expected or that they provide. For example, if a student enters a formula in an answer blank where the correct answer is actually a number, she will receive a message indicating that what she typed was a formula but that a number was expected. Thus students are given guidance automatically about this type of semantic problem with their answers. Answer checkers for points and vectors can indicate that the number of coordinates are wrong, or can tell the student which coordinates are incorrect (at the problem-author's discretion). |
− | Answer checkers are available for each of the types of values that are part of the MathObjects library (numbers, complex numbers, infinities, points, vectors, intervals, sets, unions, formulas, lists of numbers, lists of points, lists of intervals, lists of formulas returning numbers, lists of formulas returning points, and so on). They are typically invoked using the notation <code>$mathObject->cmp()</code>. The <code>pg/macros</code> directory includes a number of extensions to the MathObjects library. Macro files that begin with <code>parser</code> typically define new classes of objects; e.g., <code>parserParametricLine.pl</code> defines a special class that handles parametric lines in arbitrary dimensions. These are documented in the [[Specialized parsers]] page. |
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+ | == MathObject Contexts == |
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− | == Contexts == |
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+ | Although a problem may include several answer blanks, the problem generally has a collection of variables that it defines, values that it uses, and so on; these form the "context" of the problem. For example, if the problem is concerned with a function of <math>x</math> and <math>y</math> and its partial derivatives, then the context of the problem includes variables <math>x</math> and <math>y</math>, and so all the answer blanks within the problem should recognize that <code>x</code> and <code>y</code> have meaning within the problem, even if the answer blank is only asking for a number. Suppose a student is asked to enter the value of a partial derivative at a particular point and, rather than giving a number, enters the formula for the derivative (not evaluated at the point). He should not be told "x is undefined", as would have been the case with WeBWorK's traditional answer checkers, since <math>x</math> actually <i>is</i> defined as part of the problem. Such messages serve to confuse the student rather than help him resolve the problem. |
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− | |||
− | Although a problem may include several answer blanks, the problem generally has a collection of variables that it defines, values that it uses, and so on; these form the "context" of the problem. For example, if the problem is concerned with a function of <i>x</i> and <i>y</i> and its partial derivatives, then the context of the problem includes variable <i>x</i> and <i>y</i>, and so all the answer blanks within the problem should recognize that <i>x</i> and <i>y</i> have meaning within the problem, even if the answer blank is only asking for a number. If a student is asked to enter the value of a partial derivative at a particular point and, rather than giving a number, entered the formula for the derivative (not evaluated at the point), he should not be told "<i>x</i> is undefined" (which would have been the case with WeBWorK's traditional answer checkers), since <i>x</i> actually <i>is</i> defined as part of the problem. Such messages serve to confuse the student rather than help him resolve the problem. |
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MathObjects solves this issue by using a Context object to maintain the context of a problem. That way, all the answer blanks will know about all the variables and values defined within the problem, and can issue appropriate warning messages when a student uses them inappropriately. For example, in the situation described above where the student entered the unevaluated derivative where the value at a point was requested, he will get the message "Your answer is not a number (it seems to be a formula returning a number)", which should help him figure out what he has done wrong. |
MathObjects solves this issue by using a Context object to maintain the context of a problem. That way, all the answer blanks will know about all the variables and values defined within the problem, and can issue appropriate warning messages when a student uses them inappropriately. For example, in the situation described above where the student entered the unevaluated derivative where the value at a point was requested, he will get the message "Your answer is not a number (it seems to be a formula returning a number)", which should help him figure out what he has done wrong. |
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Thus one of the main purposes for the Context is to maintain the set of variables and values that are part of the problem as a whole. Another key function of the Context is to tell the answer checkers what functions and operations are available within a student answer, and what the various symbols the student can type will mean. For example, if you are asking a student to compute the value of 6 / 3, then you may want to restrict what the student can type so that she can't enter <code>/</code> in her answer, and must type an actual number (not an expression that is evaluated to a number). Or if you are asking a student to determine the value of <code>sin(pi/6)</code>, you might want to restrict his answer so that he can't include <code>sin()</code>, but you do allow arithmetic operations. Such restrictions are also part of the context of the problem, and so are maintained by MathObjects as part of the Context. |
Thus one of the main purposes for the Context is to maintain the set of variables and values that are part of the problem as a whole. Another key function of the Context is to tell the answer checkers what functions and operations are available within a student answer, and what the various symbols the student can type will mean. For example, if you are asking a student to compute the value of 6 / 3, then you may want to restrict what the student can type so that she can't enter <code>/</code> in her answer, and must type an actual number (not an expression that is evaluated to a number). Or if you are asking a student to determine the value of <code>sin(pi/6)</code>, you might want to restrict his answer so that he can't include <code>sin()</code>, but you do allow arithmetic operations. Such restrictions are also part of the context of the problem, and so are maintained by MathObjects as part of the Context. |
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− | In a similar way, some symbols mean different things in different problems. For example in a problem dealing with intervals, <code>(4,5)</code> means the interval between 4 and 5, while in a multi-variable calculus setting, it might mean a single point in the < |
+ | In a similar way, some symbols mean different things in different problems. For example in a problem dealing with intervals, <code>(4,5)</code> means the interval between 4 and 5, while in a multi-variable calculus setting, it might mean a single point in the <math>xy</math>-plane. Or in a problem on complex numbers, the value <math>i</math> means <math>\sqrt{-1}</math>, while in vector calculus, it would mean the coordinate unit vector along the <math>x</math>-axis. Or in a problem on inequalities, <code>5 < x</code> would use <code><</code> as the "less-than" sign, while in a vector calculus problem, <code><5,6,7></code> would mean the vector with coordinates 5, 6, and 7. The Context determines how these symbols will be interpreted by the MathObjects library. |
− | MathObjects comes with a collection of predefined Contexts that you can call on to set the meanings of symbols like these to be what you need for your problems. The default Context is |
+ | The MathObjects library comes with a collection of predefined Contexts that you can call on to set the meanings of symbols like these to be what you need for your problems. The default Context is the <code>Numeric</code> Context, which is sufficient for most first-semester calculus problems. There are Contexts for complex numbers, intervals, vectors, and so forth; see the [[Common Contexts]] list and the links at the bottom of this document for further information. The [https://github.com/openwebwork/pg/tree/master/macros pg/macros/] directory includes a number of specialized Contexts as well; the files beginning with <code>context</code> define these, and are described on the [[Specialized contexts]] page. |
− | Context("Numeric"); |
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+ | Use <code>$context = Context();</code> to obtain a reference to the current context. See the [[Introduction to contexts]] for information about how to use this to modify an existing context (e.g., to add variables to it, or to restrict the functions that can be used). |
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− | and it will be sufficient to use the default context for most first-semester calculus problems. There are Contexts for complex numbers, inequalities, vectors, and so forth; see the [[#List_of_Basic_Contexts |list of basic contexts]], and the links at the bottom of this document, for further information. The <code>pg/macros</code> directory includes a number of specialized Contexts as well; the files beginning with <code>context</code> define these, and are described on the [[Specialized contexts]] page. See the [[Introduction to contexts]] for information about how to modify an existing context (e.g., to add variables to it, or to restrict the functions that can be used). |
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+ | It is possible to use more than one context within the same problem. This is discussed '''(link needed)'''. |
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− | It is possible to use more than one context within the same problem. This is discussed '''(need a link for this)'''. |
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+ | <div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:125%; margin-top:1em">Further Reading</div> |
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+ | * [[Introduction to Contexts]] |
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+ | * [[Common Contexts]] |
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+ | * [[Specialized contexts]] |
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+ | * [https://github.com/openwebwork/pg/tree/master/macros pg/macros] -- files starting with <code>context</code> define new Contexts |
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== How to create a MathObject == |
== How to create a MathObject == |
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− | There are several ways to create MathObjects in your problem: |
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+ | In order to use MathObjects in a problem you are writing, include <code>MathObjects.pl</code> in your <code>loadMacros()</code> call. For example: |
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+ | |||
+ | loadMacros( |
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+ | "PGstandard.pl", |
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+ | "MathObjects.pl", |
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+ | "PGcourse.pl", |
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+ | ); |
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+ | |||
+ | Once this is done, there are several ways to create MathObjects in your problem: |
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* By calling a constructor function for the type of object you want (e.g., <code>Real(3.5)</code> or <code>Complex("3+4i")</code>) |
* By calling a constructor function for the type of object you want (e.g., <code>Real(3.5)</code> or <code>Complex("3+4i")</code>) |
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* By calling <code>Compute()</code> to parse a string and return the resulting object (e.g., <code>Compute("3+4i")</code>) |
* By calling <code>Compute()</code> to parse a string and return the resulting object (e.g., <code>Compute("3+4i")</code>) |
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* By combining existing MathObjects via mathematical operations (e.g., <code>$x = Formula("x"); $f = $x**2 + 2*$x + 1</code>) |
* By combining existing MathObjects via mathematical operations (e.g., <code>$x = Formula("x"); $f = $x**2 + 2*$x + 1</code>) |
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− | + | Some examples: |
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$a = Real(3.5); or |
$a = Real(3.5); or |
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$v = Vector(4,5,8); or |
$v = Vector(4,5,8); or |
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− | $v = Vector( |
+ | $v = Vector([4,5,8]); or |
+ | $v = Vector("<4,5,8>"); or |
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$v = Compute("<4,5,8>"); |
$v = Compute("<4,5,8>"); |
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$f = Compute("sin(x^2) + 6"); |
$f = Compute("sin(x^2) + 6"); |
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− | Here, <code>$a</code> (defined any of the three ways) represents a real number and <code>$b</code> (defined by any of the three) represents a complex number; <code>$v</code> will be a vector, and <code>$f</code> is a formula |
+ | Here, <code>$a</code> (defined any of the three ways) represents a real number and <code>$b</code> (defined by any of the three) represents a complex number; <code>$v</code> will be a vector, and <code>$f</code> is a formula. |
+ | In general, the <code>Compute()</code> variant is preferred because you enter what you want the student to type, and <code>Compute()</code> generates the proper MathObject to handle that (just as it will when it processes the student answer). Another important feature of <code>Compute()</code> is that the input string also serves as the correct answer when a student requests answers after the due date, which lets you put the correct answer in exactly the form you want it to appear. For example if you use |
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− | == Which MathObject types (classes) can be created? == |
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+ | Compute("<cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6>")->cmp |
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− | These classes are listed and made available for writing problems in <code>pg/macros/Value.pl</code>. It is loaded automatically when you load <code>MathObjects.pl</code>. |
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+ | the correct answer will be presented to the student as <code><cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6></code>, while |
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− | === Standard types === |
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+ | Vector("<cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6>")->cmp |
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− | * Real: Behave like real numbers |
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+ | would show <code><0.866025,0.5,0.523599></code> as the correct answer. |
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− | * Infinity: The positive infinity of the extended reals. Can be negated, but can't be added to real numbers. |
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− | * Complex: Behave like complex numbers. The interpretations of <code>+</code> and <code>*</code> are those standardly used for mathematical complex numbers. |
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− | === List types === |
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+ | In addition, <code>Compute()</code> can be used to compute the result of a formula at a given value of its inputs. For example, |
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− | List objects are math objects whose description involves delimiters (parentheses) of some type. For example points <code>(4, 5)</code> or vectors <code><2,5></code> . Here are examples of the construction of the List Objects. |
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+ | $a = Compute("x+3",x => 2); |
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+ | $a = Compute("x^2+y^2",x => 1, y => 2); |
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− | + | both are equivalent to <code>$a = Real(5)</code>. |
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− | * Vector: <code>$b = Vector("<3,5,6!>");</code> |
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− | * Matrix: <code>$c = Matrix("[[1,0],[0,1]]");</code> |
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− | * List: <code>$d = List("3, 7, 3+2i");</code> |
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− | === Types that represent some subset of the real numbers === |
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+ | The MathObjects library defines classes for a variety of common mathematical concepts, including real numbers, complex numbers, intervals, points, vectors, matrices, and formulas. These are described in more detail in the [[:Category:MathObject_Classes| MathObject Class documentation]]. |
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− | * Interval: <code>$I = Interval("[0,1)");</code> |
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+ | The [https://github.com/openwebwork/pg/tree/master/macros pg/macros] directory contains a number of extensions to MathObjects, including files that define specialized MathObject types. The ones that begin with <code>parser</code> typically define a new object class. For example, <code>parserParametricLine.pl</code> defines a constructor <code>ParametricLine()</code> for creating a special object that checks if a student's answer is a given parametric line or not, even if it is parameterized differently. These files usually contain documentation within them; see the [http://webwork.maa.org/pod/pg/ POD pages] for versions that you can read on line, and [[Specialized parsers]] for a list of most of the MathObject extensions. |
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− | * Set (a finite collections of points): <code>$S = Set("{3,5,6,8}");</code> |
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− | * Union (of intervals and sets): <code>$U = Union("I U J");</code> (I union J) |
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− | === The <code>Compute</code> command === |
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+ | <div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:125%; margin-top:1em">Further Reading</div> |
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− | * You can use the <code>Compute</code> command to create any of the objects above from a string |
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+ | * [[:Category:MathObject_Classes| MathObject Class documentation]] |
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− | Compute("3,7,3+2i") |
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+ | * [[Specialized parsers]] |
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− | Compute( "[[1,0],[0,1]]" ); |
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+ | * [https://github.com/openwebwork/pg/tree/master/macros pg/macros] -- files starting with <code>parser</code> define new MathObejcts |
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− | Compute("<cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6>"); |
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− | ==== Why it is usually preferable to use the <code>Compute</code> syntax ==== |
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− | Usually <code>Compute</code> is the preferred way to convert a string to a MathObject. It preserves the original string and uses it to display the correct answer |
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− | expected of the student in the most useful form. |
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− | For example here are the correct answers presented to the students in the two cases: using Compute or using Vector directly. |
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+ | == How to display a MathObject == |
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− | Compute("<cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6>")->cmp |
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+ | MathObject can be inserted into the text of your problem just as any other variable can be. When this is done, the MathObject will insert its string version (as generated by its <code>[[Common MathObject Methods#string|string()]]</code> method). Frequently, however, you want to include the MathObject within a mathematical expression, and would prefer to use its <math>\rm\TeX</math> form (as generated by its <code>[[Common MathObject Methods#TeX|TeX()]]</code> method). One way to do this is to call the <code>TeX()</code> method directly, as in |
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− | Correct answer presented to student: <cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6> |
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− | Vector("<cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6>")->cmp |
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− | Correct answer presented to student: <0.866025,0.5,0.523599> |
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− | === The String type === |
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+ | $f = Formula("(x+1)/(x-1)"); |
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+ | BEGIN_TEXT |
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+ | \[f(x) = \{$f->TeX\}\] |
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+ | END_TEXT |
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− | String is a special purpose type which allows comparison to an arbitrary string. The string which is the correct answer must also be one of the "legitimate" strings in the [[IntroductionToContexts#Context_changes_for_Strings| Context]] being used. |
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+ | but this requires <code>\{...\}</code> and the explicit use of <code>->TeX</code> to get the desired output. There is an easier way, however, that involves telling the Context to produce <math>\rm\TeX</math> format rather than string format via the <code>texStrings()</code> method of the Context object. |
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− | String("DNE") |
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+ | $f = Formula("(x+1)/(x-1)"); |
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+ | Context()->texStrings; |
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+ | BEGIN_TEXT |
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+ | \[f(x) = $f\] |
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+ | END_TEXT |
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+ | Context()->normalStrings; |
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− | === The Formula type === |
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+ | In this case, you just use <code>$f</code> within the text of the problem, which is easier to type and easier to read, especially if you have several MathObjects to insert. It is good practice to return the setting to normal using <code>normalStrings()</code>, as is done here, so that if you use MathObjects withing strings later on (e.g., <code>$g = Compute("3*$f + 1")</code>), you will not be inserting <math>\rm\TeX</math> into those strings inadvertently. |
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− | A Formula object represents a function whose output is one of the MathObject types defined above. Every Formula contains a parse tree which allows you to calculate output values from given input values. |
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− | $f = Formula('2x^2+3x-5'); |
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+ | == MathObject Answer Checkers == |
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− | $n = random(2,5,1); |
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+ | Each MathObject type has a corresponding answer checker that can be used to process student responses. You obtain the checker by using the <code>cmp()</code> method of the MathObject. |
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− | $g = Formula("$n * x**3") -> reduce; # double quotes necessary because of $n |
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+ | ANS($mathObject->cmp); |
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− | == How to invoke a MathObject's method == |
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+ | There is no need to select the right kind of answer checker, as the MathObject library handles that for you. |
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− | Use the standard Perl method call syntax: |
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+ | Many of the answer checkers include options that you can specify. For example, the tolerances to use, or the limits to use for the variables, or whether to provide certain kinds of hints to students as they enter incorrect answers. These are passed as <code>name=>value</code> to the <code>cmp()</code> method, separated by commas if there is more than one option to set, as in the following example: |
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− | $obj->method; |
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+ | ANS(Real(sqrt(2))->cmp(tolerance => .0001)); # requires answer with roughly four decimal places. |
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− | $obj->method($arg1,$arg2); |
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+ | ANS(Formula("sqrt(x-10)")->cmp(limits => [10,12])); # use x in the interval [10,12] so that the square root is defined. |
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− | For example: |
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+ | See the [[Answer Checkers (MathObjects)| Answer Checkers in MathObjects]] page for details about the MathObject Answer checkers, and the [[Answer Checker Options (MathObjects)| Answer Checker Options]] page for more on the options you can set for the different MathObject classes. |
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− | ANS($a->cmp); |
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+ | <div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:125%; margin-top:1em">Further Reading</div> |
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+ | * [[Answer Checkers (MathObjects)| Answer Checkers in MathObjects]] |
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+ | * [[Answer Checker Options (MathObjects)| Answer Checker Options]] |
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+ | * [[Custom Answer Checkers]] |
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− | This compares the student's answer with <code>$a</code>. If <code>$a</code> is Real then this comparison will be "fuzzy" which means that equality is checked to a tolerance defined by the current Context. |
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− | === Examples of Using MathObjects === |
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+ | == MathObject Methods and Properties == |
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− | MathObjects are useful (and powerful) because they "know" information about themselves: how to add themselves to other MathObjects, take derivatives, substitute values, and to compare themselves with student answers, and even to alert students if their entries contain syntactical errors as opposed to substantiative ones. |
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− | $f = Compute("sin(x^2+6)"); |
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+ | Since MathObjects are Perl objects, you call a method on a MathObject as you would a method for any Perl object, using the <code>-></code> operator with the MathObject on the left and the method name and its arguments (if any) on the right. E.g., |
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− | $a = Compute("sqrt(pi/6)"); |
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− | $z = Compute("1 + 5i"); |
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− | $v = Compute(""); |
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− | $M = Compute("[1,0,1],[1,1,0],[0,1,1]"); |
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− | With the definitions given above all of these operations can be performed: |
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+ | $mathObject->method; # when there are no arguments |
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+ | $mathObject->method($arg); # for one argument |
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+ | $mathObject->method($arg1,$arg2); # for two arguments |
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+ | # and so on |
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− | $dfdx = $f->D('x'); |
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+ | Similarly, you access the properties of an object just as you would for a Perl hash, via the <code>-></code> operator with the MathObject on the left and the property name in braces on the right. E.g., |
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− | $dfdx_at4 = $dfdx->eval(x=>4); |
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− | $g = $f + $dfdx; |
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− | $z1 = 5*$z; |
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− | $z2 = $a + $z; |
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− | $x = $M*$v; |
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− | The results are that $dfdx is the derivative of $f, $dfdx_at4 is f'(4), and so forth. |
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+ | $mathObject->{property-name} |
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− | Use the online calculators at [[PGLabs]] to experiment with MathObjects in order to quickly learn the syntax. |
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+ | There are a number of methods and properties that are common to all MathObjects, which are described in the documentation for [[Common MathObject Methods]] and [[Common MathObject Properties]]. Some classes have additional methods and properties, and many of these are described in the [[:Category:MathObject_Classes|MathObject Class documentation]] under the individual class links. |
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− | === Methods shared by all MathObjects === |
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+ | <div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:125%; margin-top:1em">Further Reading</div> |
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+ | * [[Common MathObject Methods]] |
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+ | * [[Common MathObject Properties]] |
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+ | * [[:Category:MathObject_Classes|MathObject Classes]] |
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− | * <code>cmp</code>: Returns an answer checker for the Value. All of the answer checkers are defined in the file lib/Value/AnswerChecker.pm. |
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− | * <code>perl</code>: Returns a string which represents the object as Perl source code. |
||
− | * <code>perlFunction</code>: Returns a Perl subroutine which represents the object. (Only available for Formula objects.) |
||
− | * <code>value</code>: Returns the value of the object. |
||
− | * <code>TeX</code>: Returns a string which represents the object as a TeX math expression. |
||
− | * <code>string</code>: Returns a string similar to that used to create the object. May include extra parentheses. |
||
− | * <code>stringify</code>: Produces the output of the object when inside quotes. Depending on context this is either a TeX string or a regular string. (This is called automatically by Perl when when an object is used in string context, and should not need to be called explicitly by the problem author.) |
||
− | * <code>getFlag("flag name")</code>: Returns the value of one of the object's internal flags. For example: <code>$a->getFlag("tolerance");</code> (see [[ContextFlags]] for a partial list ) |
||
− | === Additional methods for Formulas === |
||
+ | == Experimenting with MathObejcts == |
||
− | Each <code>Formula</code> has a parsed version of its defining string attached. |
||
+ | One way to experiment with MathObjects is to use the [[PGLabs| on-line PG labs]] to write example code and see what it produces. You can copy any of the examples above (or elsewhere in the WIki) and paste them into the lab to check the results. This makes it easy to test code without having to write complete problem files and save them in a course. One lab lets you get the output from a line of PG code, while another lets you try out full problems to see how they work. |
||
− | This is created by the parser whose purpose is to parse a string representing a formula and turn it into a parse tree. |
||
− | Additional <code>Formula</code> methods include: |
||
− | |||
− | * '''eval:''' <code>$f_at32 = $f->eval(x=>32) </code> evaluates the function <code>$f</code> at <code>x=32</code>. The result is no longer a formula (the parse tree is lost) but has the type of f(32) i.e. the type of the range of $f. If <code>$a = random(2,5,1);</code>, then <code>$f_at_a = $f->eval(x=>"$a");</code> will evaluate as expected. |
||
− | * '''reduce:''' <code>$f = $f->reduce </code> does some simplification of the function string --e.g. replace <code>1x^2</code> by <code>x^2</code>. The reduction rules are defined in the Context() and some of them are listed at [[List_of_parser_reduction_rules_for_MathObject_Formulas]]. (This is advanced information and can be skipped on the first reading.) |
||
− | * '''substitute:''' <code>$f = $f->substitute(x=>'y')</code> replaces all occurences of the variable <code>x</code> by the variable <code>y</code>. (One will also need to add the variable <code>y</code> as a legal variable to the context.) The result is a new formula. Using <code>substitute</code> instead of <code>eval</code> preserves the parse string enabling more insightful correct answer hints. (See [[FormattingCorrectAnswers]]) |
||
− | * '''D:''' <code>$fp = $f->D('x')</code> calculates the (partial) derivative of <code>f</code> with respect to x; however this will not be simplified.<code>$fp = $f->D('x')->reduce</code> will perform easy simplifications, but will not completely simplify the formula. |
||
− | |||
− | The parser which creates the parse tree <code>Formula</code> is defined in the file <code>pg/lib/Parser.pm</code> and the files in the <code>pg/lib/Parser</code> directory. Even though the subdirectory names under <code>pg/lib/Parser</code> are similar to those under <code>pg/lib/Value</code> they refer to different although related concepts. Under <code>pg/lib/Parser</code> the files refer to tokens in a string that is to be parsed, while the files under <code>pg/lib/Value</code> refer to MathObjects. |
||
− | |||
− | |||
− | == List of Basic Contexts == |
||
− | |||
− | A Context is a table of values that provides defaults for the Parser and for MathObjects created while the Context is in force. As a quick example: in Numeric context the answer <math>(4,5)</math> is interpreted as a point in the two dimensional plane while in Interval context it is interpreted as the real values <math>x</math> satisfying <math>4 < x < 5</math>. |
||
− | |||
− | * Define context using: <code>Context("Numeric");</code> |
||
− | * To obtain the current context: <code>$context = Context();</code> |
||
− | * Context names: defined in pg/lib/Parser/Context/Default.pm |
||
− | ** <code>Numeric</code>: no Matrix, Complex or Vector (or Interval) type is allowed. |
||
− | ** <code>Complex</code>: no Matrix or Vector type is allowed. Can't use "<" to compare complex numbers. |
||
− | ** <code>Point</code>: Nearly the same as the Vector Context below, but the angle bracket notation is not allowed and vector operations on points are not defined. This is useful if you wish to force students to perform the vector calculations before entering their answer. |
||
− | ** <code>Vector</code>: <code>i</code>, <code>j</code>, and <code>k</code> are defined as unit Vectors, no Complex numbers are allowed. |
||
− | ** <code>Vector2D</code>: <code>i</code> and <code>j</code> are defined as unit Vectors, no Complex numbers are allowed. |
||
− | ** <code>Matrix</code>: square brackets define Matrix instead of Point or Interval |
||
− | ** <code>Interval</code>: similar to Numeric context, but <code>(,)</code> and <code>[,]</code> create Real Intervals rather than Lists. <code>{,}</code> creates finite sets of Reals. |
||
− | ** <code>Full</code>: For internal use. This context is used to seed the others. |
||
− | *** <code>pi</code> is defined |
||
− | *** <code>i</code> is square root of minus one, but <code>j</code> and <code>k</code> are unit Vectors |
||
− | *** Matrix, Vector and Complex are all defined. |
||
− | *** <code>x</code> is a variable |
||
− | |||
− | When first using MathObjects it's easiest to use the standard "Numeric" context, however as you |
||
− | begin to search for better ways to ask questions and to evaluate student responses you will find that customizing the context is a powerful way to proceed. There is more on this subject in the following documents. |
||
== See also == |
== See also == |
||
+ | * [http://webwork.maa.org/pod/pg/doc/MathObjects/UsingMathObjects.html Using Math Objects] POD documentation |
||
+ | <div style="margin-top:.75em"> |
||
+ | * [[:Category:MathObject_Classes| MathObject Classes]] |
||
+ | * [[Common MathObject Methods]] |
||
+ | * [[Common MathObject Properties]] |
||
+ | </div> |
||
+ | <div style="margin-top:.75em"> |
||
+ | * [[Answer Checkers (MathObjects)| Answer Checkers]] |
||
+ | * [[Answer Checker Options (MathObjects)| Answer Checker Options]] |
||
+ | * [[Custom Answer Checkers]] |
||
+ | * [[Custom Answer Checkers for Lists]] |
||
+ | </div> |
||
+ | <div style="margin-top:.75em"> |
||
* [[Introduction to contexts]] |
* [[Introduction to contexts]] |
||
+ | * [[Common Contexts]] |
||
* [[Context flags]] |
* [[Context flags]] |
||
* [[Specialized contexts]] |
* [[Specialized contexts]] |
||
+ | * [[Modifying contexts (advanced)]] |
||
+ | </div> |
||
+ | <div style="margin-top:.75em"> |
||
* [[Specialized parsers]] |
* [[Specialized parsers]] |
||
− | * [[Modifying contexts (advanced)]] |
||
+ | </div> |
||
[[Category:MathObjects]] |
[[Category:MathObjects]] |
Latest revision as of 16:14, 7 April 2021
Contents
What are MathObjects?
MathObjects are a set of Perl objects that make the manipulation of mathematics within WeBWorK problems more intuitive. They make it possible to define variables in your problems that correspond to common mathematical objects, such as formulas, real number, complex numbers, intervals, vectors, points, and so on. For example:
$f = Formula("sin(x^2+6)"); $a = Real("sqrt(pi/6)"); $z = Complex("1 + 5i");
These are useful (and powerful) because MathObjects "know" information about themselves; thus, you can add formulas to get new formulas, plug real objects into formulas to get formulas evaluated at those values, calculate derivatives of formulas, add and subtract intervals to form unions and intersections, and much more.
For several reasons it is usually preferable to write the MathObjects above using the Compute()
function rather than the individual constructors for the various MathObject types.
$f = Compute("sin(x^2+6)"); $a = Compute("sqrt(pi/6)"); $z = Compute("1 + 5i");
The Compute()
function determines the kind of MathObject from the Context and from the syntax of its argument, which is usually a string value that is in the form that a student could type. The Compute
function also sets the "correct answer" to be the exact string that it was given, so that if a student were asked to enter a number that matched $a
from above and asked to see the correct answer (after the due date), then sqrt(pi/6)
would be displayed rather than 0.723601
. This gives you more control over the format of correct answers that are shown to students.
Why use MathObjects?
MathObjects are designed to be used in two ways. First, you can use them within your Perl code when writing problems as a means of making it easier to handle formulas and other mathematical items, and in particular to be able to produce numeric values, TeX output, and answer strings from a single formula object. This avoids having to type a function three different ways (as a Perl function, as a TeX string, and as an answer string), making it much easier to maintain a problem, or duplicate and modify it to use a different formula. Since MathObjects also includes vectors, points, matrices, intervals, complex numbers, and a variety of other object types, it is easier to work with these kinds of values as well.
More importantly, using MathObjects improves the processing of student input. This is accomplished through special answer checkers that are part of the MathObjects Parser package rather than the traditional WeBWorK answer checkers. Each of these checkers has error checking customized to the type of input expected from the student and can provide helpful feedback if the syntax of the student's entry is incorrect. Because the MathObject checkers are part of a unified library, students get consistent error messages regardless of the type of answer that is expected or that they provide. For example, if a student enters a formula in an answer blank where the correct answer is actually a number, she will receive a message indicating that what she typed was a formula but that a number was expected. Thus students are given guidance automatically about this type of semantic problem with their answers. Answer checkers for points and vectors can indicate that the number of coordinates are wrong, or can tell the student which coordinates are incorrect (at the problem-author's discretion).
MathObject Contexts
Although a problem may include several answer blanks, the problem generally has a collection of variables that it defines, values that it uses, and so on; these form the "context" of the problem. For example, if the problem is concerned with a function of [math]x[/math] and [math]y[/math] and its partial derivatives, then the context of the problem includes variables [math]x[/math] and [math]y[/math], and so all the answer blanks within the problem should recognize that x
and y
have meaning within the problem, even if the answer blank is only asking for a number. Suppose a student is asked to enter the value of a partial derivative at a particular point and, rather than giving a number, enters the formula for the derivative (not evaluated at the point). He should not be told "x is undefined", as would have been the case with WeBWorK's traditional answer checkers, since [math]x[/math] actually is defined as part of the problem. Such messages serve to confuse the student rather than help him resolve the problem.
MathObjects solves this issue by using a Context object to maintain the context of a problem. That way, all the answer blanks will know about all the variables and values defined within the problem, and can issue appropriate warning messages when a student uses them inappropriately. For example, in the situation described above where the student entered the unevaluated derivative where the value at a point was requested, he will get the message "Your answer is not a number (it seems to be a formula returning a number)", which should help him figure out what he has done wrong.
Thus one of the main purposes for the Context is to maintain the set of variables and values that are part of the problem as a whole. Another key function of the Context is to tell the answer checkers what functions and operations are available within a student answer, and what the various symbols the student can type will mean. For example, if you are asking a student to compute the value of 6 / 3, then you may want to restrict what the student can type so that she can't enter /
in her answer, and must type an actual number (not an expression that is evaluated to a number). Or if you are asking a student to determine the value of sin(pi/6)
, you might want to restrict his answer so that he can't include sin()
, but you do allow arithmetic operations. Such restrictions are also part of the context of the problem, and so are maintained by MathObjects as part of the Context.
In a similar way, some symbols mean different things in different problems. For example in a problem dealing with intervals, (4,5)
means the interval between 4 and 5, while in a multi-variable calculus setting, it might mean a single point in the [math]xy[/math]-plane. Or in a problem on complex numbers, the value [math]i[/math] means [math]\sqrt{-1}[/math], while in vector calculus, it would mean the coordinate unit vector along the [math]x[/math]-axis. Or in a problem on inequalities, 5 < x
would use <
as the "less-than" sign, while in a vector calculus problem, <5,6,7>
would mean the vector with coordinates 5, 6, and 7. The Context determines how these symbols will be interpreted by the MathObjects library.
The MathObjects library comes with a collection of predefined Contexts that you can call on to set the meanings of symbols like these to be what you need for your problems. The default Context is the Numeric
Context, which is sufficient for most first-semester calculus problems. There are Contexts for complex numbers, intervals, vectors, and so forth; see the Common Contexts list and the links at the bottom of this document for further information. The pg/macros/ directory includes a number of specialized Contexts as well; the files beginning with context
define these, and are described on the Specialized contexts page.
Use $context = Context();
to obtain a reference to the current context. See the Introduction to contexts for information about how to use this to modify an existing context (e.g., to add variables to it, or to restrict the functions that can be used).
It is possible to use more than one context within the same problem. This is discussed (link needed).
- Introduction to Contexts
- Common Contexts
- Specialized contexts
- pg/macros -- files starting with
context
define new Contexts
How to create a MathObject
In order to use MathObjects in a problem you are writing, include MathObjects.pl
in your loadMacros()
call. For example:
loadMacros( "PGstandard.pl", "MathObjects.pl", "PGcourse.pl", );
Once this is done, there are several ways to create MathObjects in your problem:
- By calling a constructor function for the type of object you want (e.g.,
Real(3.5)
orComplex("3+4i")
) - By calling
Compute()
to parse a string and return the resulting object (e.g.,Compute("3+4i")
) - By calling a method of an existing MathObject that returns another object (e.g.,
Formula("sin(x)")->eval(x => pi/2)
) - By combining existing MathObjects via mathematical operations (e.g.,
$x = Formula("x"); $f = $x**2 + 2*$x + 1
)
Some examples:
$a = Real(3.5); or $a = Compute(3.5); or $a = Compute("3.5");
$b = Complex(3, 4); or $b = Complex("3 + 4i"); or $b = Compute("3 + 4i");
$v = Vector(4,5,8); or $v = Vector([4,5,8]); or $v = Vector("<4,5,8>"); or $v = Compute("<4,5,8>");
$f = Formula("sin(x^2) + 6"); or $f = Compute("sin(x^2) + 6");
Here, $a
(defined any of the three ways) represents a real number and $b
(defined by any of the three) represents a complex number; $v
will be a vector, and $f
is a formula.
In general, the Compute()
variant is preferred because you enter what you want the student to type, and Compute()
generates the proper MathObject to handle that (just as it will when it processes the student answer). Another important feature of Compute()
is that the input string also serves as the correct answer when a student requests answers after the due date, which lets you put the correct answer in exactly the form you want it to appear. For example if you use
Compute("<cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6>")->cmp
the correct answer will be presented to the student as <cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6>
, while
Vector("<cos(pi/6),sin(pi/6), pi/6>")->cmp
would show <0.866025,0.5,0.523599>
as the correct answer.
In addition, Compute()
can be used to compute the result of a formula at a given value of its inputs. For example,
$a = Compute("x+3",x => 2); $a = Compute("x^2+y^2",x => 1, y => 2);
both are equivalent to $a = Real(5)
.
The MathObjects library defines classes for a variety of common mathematical concepts, including real numbers, complex numbers, intervals, points, vectors, matrices, and formulas. These are described in more detail in the MathObject Class documentation.
The pg/macros directory contains a number of extensions to MathObjects, including files that define specialized MathObject types. The ones that begin with parser
typically define a new object class. For example, parserParametricLine.pl
defines a constructor ParametricLine()
for creating a special object that checks if a student's answer is a given parametric line or not, even if it is parameterized differently. These files usually contain documentation within them; see the POD pages for versions that you can read on line, and Specialized parsers for a list of most of the MathObject extensions.
- MathObject Class documentation
- Specialized parsers
- pg/macros -- files starting with
parser
define new MathObejcts
How to display a MathObject
MathObject can be inserted into the text of your problem just as any other variable can be. When this is done, the MathObject will insert its string version (as generated by its string()
method). Frequently, however, you want to include the MathObject within a mathematical expression, and would prefer to use its [math]\rm\TeX[/math] form (as generated by its TeX()
method). One way to do this is to call the TeX()
method directly, as in
$f = Formula("(x+1)/(x-1)"); BEGIN_TEXT \[f(x) = \{$f->TeX\}\] END_TEXT
but this requires \{...\}
and the explicit use of ->TeX
to get the desired output. There is an easier way, however, that involves telling the Context to produce [math]\rm\TeX[/math] format rather than string format via the texStrings()
method of the Context object.
$f = Formula("(x+1)/(x-1)"); Context()->texStrings; BEGIN_TEXT \[f(x) = $f\] END_TEXT Context()->normalStrings;
In this case, you just use $f
within the text of the problem, which is easier to type and easier to read, especially if you have several MathObjects to insert. It is good practice to return the setting to normal using normalStrings()
, as is done here, so that if you use MathObjects withing strings later on (e.g., $g = Compute("3*$f + 1")
), you will not be inserting [math]\rm\TeX[/math] into those strings inadvertently.
MathObject Answer Checkers
Each MathObject type has a corresponding answer checker that can be used to process student responses. You obtain the checker by using the cmp()
method of the MathObject.
ANS($mathObject->cmp);
There is no need to select the right kind of answer checker, as the MathObject library handles that for you.
Many of the answer checkers include options that you can specify. For example, the tolerances to use, or the limits to use for the variables, or whether to provide certain kinds of hints to students as they enter incorrect answers. These are passed as name=>value
to the cmp()
method, separated by commas if there is more than one option to set, as in the following example:
ANS(Real(sqrt(2))->cmp(tolerance => .0001)); # requires answer with roughly four decimal places. ANS(Formula("sqrt(x-10)")->cmp(limits => [10,12])); # use x in the interval [10,12] so that the square root is defined.
See the Answer Checkers in MathObjects page for details about the MathObject Answer checkers, and the Answer Checker Options page for more on the options you can set for the different MathObject classes.
MathObject Methods and Properties
Since MathObjects are Perl objects, you call a method on a MathObject as you would a method for any Perl object, using the ->
operator with the MathObject on the left and the method name and its arguments (if any) on the right. E.g.,
$mathObject->method; # when there are no arguments $mathObject->method($arg); # for one argument $mathObject->method($arg1,$arg2); # for two arguments # and so on
Similarly, you access the properties of an object just as you would for a Perl hash, via the ->
operator with the MathObject on the left and the property name in braces on the right. E.g.,
$mathObject->{property-name}
There are a number of methods and properties that are common to all MathObjects, which are described in the documentation for Common MathObject Methods and Common MathObject Properties. Some classes have additional methods and properties, and many of these are described in the MathObject Class documentation under the individual class links.
Experimenting with MathObejcts
One way to experiment with MathObjects is to use the on-line PG labs to write example code and see what it produces. You can copy any of the examples above (or elsewhere in the WIki) and paste them into the lab to check the results. This makes it easy to test code without having to write complete problem files and save them in a course. One lab lets you get the output from a line of PG code, while another lets you try out full problems to see how they work.
See also
- Using Math Objects POD documentation