35

Assigning a variable directly does not modify expressions that used the variable retroactively.

>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> x = Symbol('x')
>>> y = Symbol('y')
>>> f = x + y
>>> x = 0

>>> f
x + y
4

3 Answers 3

53

To substitute several values:

>>> from sympy import Symbol
>>> x, y = Symbol('x y')
>>> f = x + y
>>> f.subs({x:10, y: 20})
>>> f
30
3
  • Was looking for an answer to this earlier. I understand why my code didn't work but I just needed a quick reference for the syntax to sub the values. Couldn't find anything within my first google search so I thought I would share the answer after I figured it out to hopefully save the next guy sometime. Posting Q&A style is a feature of stackoverflow. meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/290038/…
    – Wesley
    Commented Oct 14, 2015 at 5:47
  • what if f is a matrix of symbols? as in a = symarray('a', 3)? Commented Aug 15, 2017 at 20:23
  • What is happening when this does not work? Is there a difference between Symbol and sympy.var?
    – safetyduck
    Commented Aug 17, 2020 at 9:30
6

The command x = Symbol('x') stores Sympy's Symbol('x') into Python's variable x. The Sympy expression f that you create afterwards does contain Symbol('x'), not the Python variable x.

When you reassign x = 0, the Python variable x is set to zero, and is no longer related to Symbol('x'). This has no effect on the Sympy expression, which still contains Symbol('x').

This is best explained in this page of the Sympy documentation: http://docs.sympy.org/latest/gotchas.html#variables

What you want to do is f.subs(x,0), as said in other answers.

1
  • 1
    what if f is a matrix of symbols? as in a = symarray('a', 3)? Commented Aug 15, 2017 at 20:23
2

Actually sympy is designed not to substitute values until you really want to substitute them with subs (see http://docs.sympy.org/latest/tutorial/basic_operations.html)

Try

f.subs({x:0})
f.subs(x, 0) # as alternative

instead of

x = 0
1
  • what if f is a matrix of symbols? as in a = symarray('a', 3)? Commented Aug 15, 2017 at 20:23

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