3 minutes
Written: 2020-04-26 20:01 +0000
Updated: 2024-11-23 00:59 +0000
Using Mathematica with Orgmode
This post is part of the Orgmode Almanac series.
Background
I have been wanting to find a workflow which allows me to bypass writing a lot of TeX by hand for a while now. To that end I looked into using a computer algebra system (CAS). Naturally, my first choice was the FOSS Maxima (also because it uses Lisp under the hood). However, for all the reasons listed here, relating to its accuracy, which have not been fixed even though the post was over 5 years ago, I ended up having to go with the closed source Mathematica.
Packages
Support for Mathematica in modern orgmode is mainly through the use of ob-mathematica, which is the official org-babel extension (from contrib
) for working with Mathematica. However, ob-mathematica
relies on the now-defunct mma
package for font-locking, which is less than ideal. Thankfully, there exists the excellent wolfram-mode package which happens to be in MELPA as well. Finally, since the default return type of a mathematica
block is an input-string meant to be used in another mathematica
block, which is not useful when we work with org-babel
, we will use the excellent mash.pl
utility from here, as suggested by the ob-mathematica
package to sanitize our output and set a unifying path.
So to recap, use your favorite manager to get:
After obtaining the packages, the configuration is then simply2:
1;; Load mathematica from contrib
2(org-babel-do-load-languages 'org-babel-load-languages
3 (append org-babel-load-languages
4 '((mathematica . t))
5 ))
6;; Sanitize output and deal with paths
7(setq org-babel-mathematica-command "~/.local/bin/mash")
8;; Font-locking
9(add-to-list 'org-src-lang-modes '("mathematica" . wolfram))
10;; For wolfram-mode
11(setq mathematica-command-line "~/.local/bin/mash")
Results
LaTeX
Now we are in a position to simply evaluate content with font-locking. We will test our set up with an example lifted from the ob-mathematica
source-code.
1 | 4 |
---|---|
2 | 4 |
3 | 6 |
4 | 8 |
7 | 0 |
1(1+Transpose@x) // TeXForm
Where our header-line (with #+begin_src
) is:
1mathematica :var x=example-table :results latex
Sanity Checks
We can also test the example from the blog post earlier to test basic mathematical sanity.
1Limit[Log[b - a + I eta], eta -> 0, Direction -> -1,Assumptions -> {a > 0, b > 0, a > b}]
2TeXForm[Limit[Log[b - a + I eta], eta -> 0, Direction -> 1,Assumptions -> {a > 0, b > 0, a > b}]]
\((I*Pi + Log[a - b])*\log (a-b)-i \pi\)
Inline Math
Note that we can now also write fractions, integrals and other cumbersome TeX objects a lot faster with this syntax, like \(\frac{x^3}{3}\). Where we are using the following snippet:
1src_mathematica[:exports none :results raw]{Integrate[x^2,x] // TeXForm}
Plots
For plots, the standard orgmode
rules apply, that is, we have to export to a file and return the name through our code snippet. Consider:
1p=Plot[Sin[x], {x, 0, 6 Pi},Frame->True];
2Export["images/sine.png",p];
3Print["images/sine.png"]
Where we have used mathematica :results file
as our header line.
Series info
Orgmode Almanac series
- Replacing Jupyter with Orgmode
- Using Mathematica with Orgmode <-- You are here!
- Pandoc to Orgmode with Babel
- An Orgmode Note Workflow
- Temporary LaTeX Documents with Orgmode
- Anki Decks with Orgmode