# Convert a LaTex formula to a type that can be used inside SymPy

I want to parse LaTeX formulas and directly use them as SymPy expressions. In other words, what I need is something similar to sympify:

from sympy import sympify
f = sympify('x^2 + sin(y) + 1/2')
print f


but that can take LaTeX expressions (strings) as input, for example:

f = latex_sympify('\frac{x}{1+x}')


Given that sympify is able to convert a string with a regular mathematical expression into a SymPy object, if there is anything that can convert LaTeX into a regular mathematical expression, I guess that would do the trick---but I would prefer to do everything within Python.

Any suggestions will be much appreciated.

-
I guess something like this doesn't exist... Anyway, LaTeX has tons of features for formulas, so which one should be included at the least? Do you need to handle arrays/matrices/binomials etc.? –  Bakuriu Apr 4 at 16:00
There is no SymPy function for this yet. See code.google.com/p/sympy/issues/detail?id=2319. You might be able to find a secondary parser that can convert LaTeX to something Python-like, which SymPy can then parse. –  asmeurer Apr 4 at 18:49
Also patches welcome :) –  asmeurer Apr 4 at 18:50
Thank you for your comments and for the pointer to the SymPy issue tracker (and sorry for not finding that myself). With regards to what should be included, I am of the same opinion as the comment asmeurer makes in the tracker--some functionality is better than none so maybe it'd be smart to start with simple expressions and go from there. –  user2243748 Apr 5 at 13:17
were you able to find out any solution of this ?? –  gsagrawal Sep 17 at 10:39
show 1 more comment