# Prevent Sympy from rearranging the equation

Perhaps im overlooking the obvious but how do you prevent sympy from rearranging equations?

Im using Sympy in the iPython notebook so i can easily copy-paste the Latex code to Lyx, but i want the equations in the same order as i defined them.

For example, the formula for grey-body radiation as a function of its temperature:

Sympy automatically places the Temperature component to the front, which gives a very unusual representation of the formula. Is there anyway to prevent this?

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Currently, there is no way in SymPy to print things exactly as they are entered, because that information isn't even saved anywhere.

I believe in a multiplication, symbols are ordered alphabetically, with capital letters coming before lowercase letters (basically, the order from ord). The best trick I can come up with is to use the symbol_names option to latex, which lets you change the name used for a Symbol in its LaTeX representation. The ordering will still be based on the original symbol's name, so you can trick it:

>>> from sympy.abc import epsilon, omega, t
>>> latex(epsilon*sigma*t**4, symbol_names={t:"T"})
\epsilon \sigma T^{4}


If you want this to pretty print nicely in the notebook, you'll have to write a custom version of the printing extension that passes your symbol_names dict to latex. See https://github.com/sympy/sympy/blob/master/sympy/interactive/printing.py (ideally one could just pass the latex options to init_printing, I'll open an issue in the SymPy bug tracker for that).

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I opened this and this SymPy issue for things I mentioned in my answer. –  asmeurer Feb 3 at 0:06
Thanks a lot for answering and opening the issue. I think it would be a nice addition eventhough visualization isnt really what Sympy is about. The future of the notebook looks good and converting it to a pdf/blog or slideshow will probably be common stuff in the near future. –  Rutger Kassies Feb 3 at 19:39
We do care about visualization, though. SymPy wouldn't be nearly as useful as it is without it's printing capabilities. –  asmeurer Feb 3 at 23:43