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I am trying to simulate points moving in 2D which have a probability of dying at every step. I am trying to learn SimPy and this is my first programming experience. Why do I get this error? and how to fix it? Thank you

from SimPy.SimulationTrace import *
import random as RD
import scipy as SP
import math
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

N=100
r1=0.02
r2=0.03
maxTime=100


class Point(Process):
    def __init__(self,coord,rate1,rate2):
          Process.__init__(self)
          self.x=coord[0]
          self.y=coord[1]
          self.rate1=r1
          self.rate2=r2

    def Move(self):
        RD.uniform(coord[0]-0.1,coord[0]+0.1)
        RD.uniform(coord[1]-0.1,coord[1]+0.1)
        yield hold,self,0.5
        self.x=coord[0]
        self.y=coord[1]
        yield hold,self,0.5

     #   reactivate(self,now())

    def die(self):
        if RD.random() < self.rate2:
          N-=1
          m.observe(N)
          yield cancel,self


initialize()
m=Monitor()
circular=[RD.uniform(0,100),RD.uniform(0,100)]
for object in xrange(N):
   object=Point(circular,r1,r2)   
activate(object,object.Move())
simulate(until=maxTime)
activate(object,object.die())
simulate(until=maxTime)

h=m.histogram(low=0.0,high=100,nbins=100)
g=m.yseries()
plt.plot(g)
plt.show()

Error

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Users\dell\Desktop\ask.py", line 46, in <module>
    simulate(until=maxTime)
  File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\SimPy\Globals.py", line 61, in simulate
    return sim.simulate(until = until)
  File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\SimPy\SimulationTrace.py", line 96, in simulate
    return Simulation.simulate(self, until)
 File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\SimPy\Simulation.py", line 581, in simulate
  step()
  File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\SimPy\Simulation.py", line 525, in step
  resultTuple = proc._nextpoint.next()
  File "C:\Users\dell\Desktop\ask.py", line 23, in Move
    RD.uniform(coord[0]-0.3,coord[0]+0.3)
NameError: global name 'coord' is not defined

2 Answers 2

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I think you need to replace

def Move(self):

with:

def Move(self, coord):

And after call this function passing the new coordinates as argument, something like:

obj.Move((10, 20))

Where in the example (10, 20) are the new object coordinates (I'm not sure that this is what your code does, but I guess it should be the natural behaviour of a function named 'Move').

From the official documentation: When a name is not found at all, a NameError exception is raised.

Names in python (as explained better in Code Like a Pythonista: Idiomatic Python) are what in other languages you call variables. So:

NameError: global name 'coord' is not defined

basically means that the compiler does not know what 'coord' is.

Note: You shouldn't call your variable 'object' shadowing the buil-in [object][3] that is the base class for every class.

Also I can't see the point in doing something like:

for i in xrange(N):   # Notice that I also used a different name here: i
    obj = Point(circular,r1,r2) 

beacuse is the same as:

obj = Point(circular,r1,r2)

Update: Maybe what you're trying to do something like:

# maybe you want to put this inside a function so every time you get
# different random numbers
def circular():
     return RD.uniform(0,100), RD.uniform(0,100)

points = []
for i in xrange(N):
    p = Point(circular(), r1, r2)
    points.append(p)
    activate(p, p.Move(circular())

simulate(until=maxTime)

for p in points:
    activate(p, p.die())

simulate(until=maxTime)

I never used SimPy so this is just my wild (and off-topic) guess.

It also seems that you have host not defined in your Move method but maybe is imported with from SimPy.SimulationTrace import *. Using from ... import * is a bad practice because prevent others to know exactly what you're importing from that module (I presume that this was done in the SimPy tutorial for having a quick start, but you should import only what you need).

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  • 1
    IMO, not only the definition, but the call to the Move function also needs to be modified here. Jan 24, 2012 at 7:18
  • 1
    @AndreySobolev: Thanks, I made that explicit now.
    – Rik Poggi
    Jan 24, 2012 at 8:57
  • @ Rik Poggi Thank you very much. Unfortunately, this doesn't fix my code. Yes I want the Move function to change the coordinates of each point in each step. I added "for i in xrange(N):" because I want the process to be executed over different 100 points not just one.
    – Aya
    Jan 24, 2012 at 11:59
  • 1
    @Aya: You're welcome! :) I made an update to my answer, but if the problem stated in your question about the global name 'coord' not defined is solved you may consider accepting the answer that helped you the most (and up-vote the useful ones). Trying to solve other problems here will be off-topic. As explained in What happens after I ask a question?.
    – Rik Poggi
    Jan 24, 2012 at 13:19
  • @Aya: I'd also say that you'll have more chance in correcting your code on Code Review and/or making a specific new question about your new problem (supposing that the one about the 'coord' NameError is cleard).
    – Rik Poggi
    Jan 24, 2012 at 13:24
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Coord not defined in move function You don't give it as argument, in my view

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