Package 'evitaicossa'

Title: Antiassociative Algebra
Description: Methods to deal with the free antiassociative algebra over the reals with an arbitrary number of indeterminates. Antiassociativity means that (xy)z = -x(yz). Antiassociative algebras are nilpotent with nilindex four (Remm, 2022, <doi:10.48550/arXiv.2202.10812>) and this drives the design and philosophy of the package. Methods are defined to create and manipulate arbitrary elements of the antiassociative algebra, and to extract and replace coefficients. A vignette is provided.
Authors: Robin K. S. Hankin [aut, cre]
Maintainer: Robin K. S. Hankin <[email protected]>
License: GPL (>= 2)
Version: 0.0-1
Built: 2024-09-27 06:19:24 UTC
Source: CRAN

Help Index


Antiassociative Algebra

Description

Methods to deal with the free antiassociative algebra over the reals with an arbitrary number of indeterminates. Antiassociativity means that (xy)z = -x(yz). Antiassociative algebras are nilpotent with nilindex four (Remm, 2022, <doi:10.48550/arXiv.2202.10812>) and this drives the design and philosophy of the package. Methods are defined to create and manipulate arbitrary elements of the antiassociative algebra, and to extract and replace coefficients. A vignette is provided.

Details

The DESCRIPTION file:

Package: evitaicossa
Type: Package
Title: Antiassociative Algebra
Version: 0.0-1
Authors@R: person(given=c("Robin", "K. S."), family="Hankin", role = c("aut","cre"), email="[email protected]", comment = c(ORCID = "0000-0001-5982-0415"))
Maintainer: Robin K. S. Hankin <[email protected]>
Description: Methods to deal with the free antiassociative algebra over the reals with an arbitrary number of indeterminates. Antiassociativity means that (xy)z = -x(yz). Antiassociative algebras are nilpotent with nilindex four (Remm, 2022, <doi:10.48550/arXiv.2202.10812>) and this drives the design and philosophy of the package. Methods are defined to create and manipulate arbitrary elements of the antiassociative algebra, and to extract and replace coefficients. A vignette is provided.
License: GPL (>= 2)
Depends: R (>= 3.5.0)
Suggests: knitr, markdown, rmarkdown, testthat, mvtnorm, covr
VignetteBuilder: knitr
Imports: Rcpp (>= 1.0-7), disordR (>= 0.9-8-2), methods, Rdpack
LinkingTo: Rcpp
URL: https://github.com/RobinHankin/evitaicossa
BugReports: https://github.com/RobinHankin/evitaicossa/issues
RdMacros: Rdpack
NeedsCompilation: yes
Packaged: 2024-06-26 19:36:19 UTC; rhankin
Author: Robin K. S. Hankin [aut, cre] (<https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5982-0415>)
Repository: CRAN
Date/Publication: 2024-06-28 09:10:06 UTC

Index of help topics:

Arith-methods           Arithmetic methods for 'aaa' objects
Compare-methods         Comparison methods for antiassociative algebra
aaa                     Function to create objects of class 'aaa'
aaa-class               Class '"aaa"'
allsymbols              All symbols in an aaa object
evitaicossa-package     Antiassociative Algebra
linear                  Linear functions
raaa                    Random elements of the free antiassociative
                        algebra
s1                      Extract or Replace Parts of 'aaa' objects
show                    Print method for antiassociative algebra
                        objects
zero                    The additive zero in antiassociative algebras

Further information is available in the following vignettes:

evitaicossa Antiassociative algebra (source, pdf)

Functionality to work with the free antiassociative algebra in R. The hex sticker features an image taken from Hoffnung (1959) in which musical concepts [pizzicato, crescendo, etc] are given whimsical visual form. The character on the hex sticker is captioned “A Discord”: Hoffnung's interpretation of the musical concept of dissonance. In the book, the preceding image was a “chord”, evoking harmony. The discord, on the other hand, embodies–for me at least–antiassociativity: everything is wrong, wrong, wrong.

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin [aut, cre] (<https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5982-0415>)

Maintainer: Robin K. S. Hankin <[email protected]>

References

Hoffnung G (1959). Hoffnung's Acoustics. Dobson.

See Also

aaa

Examples

x <- raaa()
x
y <- raaa()

x+y
x*y

Function to create objects of class aaa

Description

Objects of class aaa

Usage

aaa(s1 = character(0), sc = numeric(0), d1 = character(0), d2 =
character(0), dc = numeric(0), t1 = character(0), t2 = character(0), t3
= character(0), tc = numeric(0))
lavter(cout)
as.aaa(s)
thing_to_aaa(L)

Arguments

s1, d1, d2, t1, t2, t3

single, double, triple symbols

sc, dc, tc

single, double, triple coefficients

L

A list with elements s1 etc

cout

list

s

Object that function as.aaa() will coerce to an aaa object

Details

Function lavter() is the formal creation method for aaa objects; it is the only place that new() is called. It takes a single argument cout, which is a list as returned by C function retval(). But it is a little awkward to use and the user should use other functions for creation, which are more user-friendly and have sensible defaults:

  • Function aaa() takes named arguments s1 etc, with defaults corresponding to “not present”

  • Function thing_to_aaa() takes a list with names s1 etc

  • Function as.aaa() tries hard to coerce its argument to an aaa object

Value

Return objects of class aaa

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin

Examples

aaa(s1 = "x", sc = 13)
aaa(d1 = "z", d2 = "w", dc = 14)
aaa(t1 = "x", t2 = "y", t3 = "z", tc = 15)

aaa(
    s1 = c("a","d"),
    sc = c( 4 , 2 ),
    d1 = c("a", "a", "a", "b"),
    d2 = c("a", "b", "d", "a"),
    dc = c( 3 ,  4 ,  4 ,  3 ),
    t1 = c("a", "a", "a", "b", "b"),
    t2 = c("c", "d", "d", "c", "c"),
    t3 = c("a", "c", "d", "a", "b"),
    tc = c(-4 , -1 , -4 , 11 , 20 )
)


aaa() # the zero object

aaa(s1=letters,sc=seq_along(letters))
aaa(d1=state.abb,d2=rev(state.abb),dc=seq_along(state.abb))

as.aaa(state.abb)


evita <- aaa(s1=letters[1:5],sc=1:5)
icossa <- aaa(d1=c("fish","chips"),d2=c("x","y"),dc=c(6,7))

evita
evita + icossa
evita * icossa
evita^2

f <- function(o){aaa(state.abb[o],seq_along(o))}
f(8:9) - (f(1:2) - f(6:8)^2)^2

Class "aaa"

Description

Class aaa is for elements of the free antiassociative algebra

Objects from the Class

Objects can be created by calls of the form new("aaa", ...).

Slots

single_indeterminate_name1:

Object of class "character"

single_indeterminate_coeff:

Object of class "numeric"

double_indeterminate_name1:

Object of class "character"

double_indeterminate_name2:

Object of class "character"

double_indeterminate_coeff:

Object of class "numeric"

triple_indeterminate_name1:

Object of class "character"

triple_indeterminate_name2:

Object of class "character"

triple_indeterminate_name3:

Object of class "character"

triple_indeterminate_coeff:

Object of class "numeric"

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin

Examples

showClass("aaa")

All symbols in an aaa object

Description

Function allsymbols() returns a character vector whose entries include all symbols of its argument.

Usage

allsymbols(a)

Arguments

a

Object of class aaa

Value

Returns a character vector

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin

Examples

a <- raaaa()
a
allsymbols(a)

a[cbind(allsymbols(a))] == single(a)

Arithmetic methods for aaa objects

Description

Arithmetic methods for objects of class aaa.

Methods

signature(e1 = "aaa", e2 = "aaa")

Dispatches to aaa_arith_aaa()

signature(e1 = "aaa", e2 = "numeric")

Dispatches to aaa_arith_numeric()

signature(e1 = "numeric", e2 = "aaa")

Dispatches to numeric_arith_aaa()

The S4 methods call lower-level functions aaa_plus_aaa(), aaa_prod_aaa(), aaa_prod_numeric(), aaa_negative(), and aaa_plus_numeric().

These functions call the Rcpp functions aaa_identity(), c_aaa_add(), and c_aaa_prod().


Comparison methods for antiassociative algebra

Description

Comparison methods generally do not make sense for elements of an antiassociative algebra. The only exception is equality: x == y returns TRUE if aaa objects x and y are identical.

The test for equality follows the frab package: go through the keys of x, compare the corresponding values of y, and return FALSE when any difference is detected. This is faster than is.zero(x-y).

Technically, x==0 makes sense but I thought consistency was more important: in the package, numeric values cannot be compared with aaa objects.

Functions aaa_compare_aaa() etc. are used in S4 dispatch; c_aaa_equal() is a low-level helper function that uses Rcpp to call the appropriate C routine.

Methods

signature(e1 = "aaa", e2 = "aaa")
signature(e1 = "aaa", e2 = "ANY")
signature(e1 = "aaa", e2 = "numeric")
signature(e1 = "ANY", e2 = "aaa")
signature(e1 = "numeric", e2 = "aaa")

Extract or Replace Parts of aaa objects

Description

Extraction methods for aaa objects. The names of the two-letter functions and arguments follow a pattern: the initial letter (s, d, t) stands for “single”, “double”, or “triple”; the second symbol is c for “coefficients”, or a number (1, 2, 3) denoting first, second, or third. Thus “dc()” gets the coefficients of the double-symbol components, and “t2()” gets the second symbol of the triple-symbol components.

Usage

## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
s1(a)
## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
sc(a)
## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
d1(a)
## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
d2(a)
## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
dc(a)
## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
t1(a)
## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
t2(a)
## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
t3(a)
## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
tc(a)
single(a)
double(a)
triple(a)

Arguments

a

Object of class aaa

Details

An aaa object is a list of 9 vectors, three numeric and six character, which are extractd by functions s1() etc.

Functions single(), double() and triple() extract the single, double, and triple components of their argument, and return the corresponding aaa object.

There is no function evitaicossa::coeffs() because the three types of elements are qualitatively different; use sc(), dc(), and tc() to get the coefficients in disord format.

Functions getthings(), extracter() and overwriter() are lower-level methods, not really intended for the end-user. Function getthings() takes an aaa object and returns a named list with elements being disord objects corresponding to components s1,sc,d1 etc. Function extracter() takes an aaa object and arguments s1, d1,d2,t1 etc. and returns the aaa object corresponding to the specified index elements. Function overwriter takes

Functions single(), double(), and triple() return the index-1, index-2, and index-3 components of their arguments respectively. Functions single<-() et seq. are the corresponding setting methods which overwrite the index-1 (resp. 2,3) components with the right hand side. The right hand side must be purely the correct compponent otherwise an error is returned; thus in double(a) <- x, for example, the single-symbol and triple-symbol components of x must be zero.

Square bracket extraction and replacement methods are more user-friendly. These operate in two distinct modes. If given named arguments (s1, d1,d2, et seq.) then these are interpreted as symbols and coefficients of the different orders. If given an unnamed argument, this is interpreted as a character vector of length one, two, or three specifying a particular term in the object. See examples.

Value

Return disord or aaa objects

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin

Examples

x <- linear1(1:3) + (linear1(1:2) + linear2(1:3))^2
x
x[d1=c("a","a"),d2=c("a","b")]
x[s1="a", t1="b", t2="c", t3="c"]


x[s1="a", t1="b", t2="c", t3="c"] <- 88
x
x[c("c","c","b")] <- -777
x


a <- raaaa()
sc(a)
t2(a)
single(a)

single(a) + double(a) + triple(a) == a  # should be TRUE

aaa(d1=d1(a),d2=d2(a), dc=dc(a)) == double(a)

x <- raaaa()
single(x) <- 0
double(x) <- double(raaa())

Linear functions

Description

Linear functions returning single, double, or triple-symbol aaa objects.

Usage

linear1(x)
linear2(x)
linear3(x)

Arguments

x

A numeric vector

Details

These functions return an antiassociative algebra element with the specified coefficients. Given a numeric vector v with elements v1,v2,,vnv_1,v_2,\ldots, v_n then

linear1(v) returns v1a+v2b++vnLnv_1\mathbf{a} + v_2\mathbf{b}+\cdots+ v_n\mathbf{L_n}, where Ln\mathbf{L_n} is the nthn^\mathrm{th} letter of the alphabet. Similarly, linear2(v) returns v1aa++vnLnLnv_1\mathbf{a}\mathbf{a}+\cdots+ v_n\mathbf{L_n}\mathbf{L_n}, and linear3(v) returns v1(aa)a++vn(LnLn)Lnv_1(\mathbf{a}\mathbf{a})\mathbf{a}+\cdots+ v_n(\mathbf{L_n}\mathbf{L_n})\mathbf{L_n}. They are linear in the sense that

f(αx+βy)=αf(x)+βf(y)f(\alpha\mathbf{x}+\beta\mathbf{y})= \alpha f(\mathbf{x})+\beta f(\mathbf{y})

where α,βR\alpha,\beta\in\mathbb{R} and x,yRn\mathbf{x},\mathbf{y}\in\mathbb{R}^n.

Value

These functions return an object of class aaa.

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin

Examples

linear1(sample(8))
linear2(sample(8))
linear3(sample(8))

a <- 3
b <- 7
x <- sample(9)
y <- sample(9)

linear1(a*x + b*y) == a*linear1(x) + b*linear1(y)
linear2(a*x + b*y) == a*linear2(x) + b*linear2(y)
linear3(a*x + b*y) == a*linear3(x) + b*linear3(y)

Random elements of the free antiassociative algebra

Description

Random elements of the free antiassociative algebra, intended as quick “get you going” examples of aaa objects

Usage

raaa(n = 4, s = 3)
raaaa(n = 10, s = 30)

Arguments

n

Number of terms to generate

s

Number of symbols to use in the alphabet

Details

Function raaa() returns a random aaa object. Function raaaa() returns, by default, a more complicated aaa object.

Value

Returns an object of class aaa

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin

Examples

raaa()
raaaa()

Print method for antiassociative algebra objects

Description

Show methods for aaa objects

Usage

## S4 method for signature 'aaa'
show(object)
aaa_show(a)

Arguments

a, object

Object of class aaa

Details

A bunch of functionality to print aaa objects.

Function putsign() is a low-level helper function that puts the sign (that is, + or -) before each element of a numeric vector. Functions single_string(), double_string(), and triple_string() process the 1,2, and 3- symbols for printing.

Value

No return value, called for side-effects

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin

Examples

aaa_show(raaa())
aaa_show(aaa())

The additive zero in antiassociative algebras

Description

Function is.zero() tests for its argument being the additive zero.

Package idiom to create the zero element of the antiassociative algebra is aaa().

Usage

is.zero(x)

Arguments

x

Object of class aaa

Value

Returns a Boolean.

Note

In any antiassociative algebra, the only scalar is zero.

Author(s)

Robin K. S. Hankin

Examples

is.zero(raaa())
is.zero(raaa()*0)
is.zero(aaa())