# Insert calculated results into LaTeX document

For my lab experiments, I write programs that do calculations with my measurements. Currently, those programs print out a plain summary of all the data in the terminal, like so:

U = 2.0 ± 0.1 V
I = 6.0 ± 0.2 A


Since I had to write them by hand, I would just use those to write prose with the values in the text.

From now on, we are allowed create our reports on the computer. I write my report in LaTeX and would like to have the results from the program automatically inserted into the text. That way, I can re-run the program without having to copy-paste the results into the text. Since the measurements and results are very heterogeneous, I thought about using a template language. Since I already use Python, I thought about Jinja like so:

article.tex

We measured the voltage $U = \unit{<< u_val >> \pm << u_err >>}{\volt}$ and the
current $I = \unit{<< i_val >> \pm << i_err >>}{\ampere}$. Then we computed the
resistance $R = \unit{<< r_val >> \pm << r_err >>}{\ohm}$.

All our measurements:
\begin{table}[h]
\begin{tabular}{rrr}
$U/\volt$ & $I/\ampere$ \\
\hline
%< for u, i in data: ->%
$<< u >>$ & $<< i >>$ \\
%< endfor ->%
\end{tabular}
\end{table}


program.py

# Setting up Jinja
env = jinja2.Environment(
"%<", ">%",
"<<", ">>",
"[§", "§]",
)
template = env.get_template("article.tex")

# Measurements.
u_val = 6.2
u_err = 0.1

i_val = 2.0
i_err = 0.1

data = [
(3, 4),
(1, 4.0),
(5, 1),
]

# Calculations
r_val = u_val / i_val
r_err = math.sqrt(
(1/i_val * u_err)**2
+ (u_val/i_val**2 * i_err)**2
)

# Rendering LaTeX document with values.
with open("out.tex", "w") as f:
f.write(template.render(**locals()))


out.tex

We measured the voltage $U = \unit{6.2 \pm 0.1}{\volt}$ and the current $I = \unit{2.0 \pm 0.1}{\ampere}$. Then we computed the resistance $R = \unit{3.1 \pm 0.162864974749}{\ohm}$.

All our measurements:
\begin{table}[h]
\begin{tabular}{rrr}
$U/\volt$ & $I/\ampere$ \\
\hline
$3$ & $4$ \\
$1$ & $4.0$ \\
$5$ & $1$ \\
\end{tabular}
\end{table}


The result looks pretty good, except that the one number would need rounding.

My question is: Would that be a good way to do this, or are there better ways to get the numbers into the document?

Replacing

<< r_err >>


with

<< '%.2f' % r_err|float >>


should give you an output with two decimals.

Or, you could convert your values to strings before rendering.

r_err = "%.2f" % r_err

• Why do you apply the |float to it? Does it change the decimal separator accoding to the locale? – Martin Ueding Feb 14 '13 at 16:31
• |float just adds the float filter, meaning that the value is passed to the (python) function named float before rendering, ensuring it actually is a float before formatting it as a string. You can create your own custom filters if you'd like to. – frogge Feb 14 '13 at 18:12
• @queueoverflow Did it solve your issue? – frogge Mar 4 '13 at 14:52

This is fine. Personally I would use Mako templates though.

There are actually LaTeX packages for this sort of thing. I'm the author of the pythontex package. See the pythontex_gallery file for a quick example of what's possible.

• Looks interesting. I will have a lot of calculations and external library calls, that I rather have in a stand alone Python script instead of interleaved with the LaTeX code. – Martin Ueding Mar 11 '13 at 10:56