Reduce (computer algebra system)

Reduce is a general-purpose computer algebra system geared towards applications in physics.

Reduce
Developer(s)Anthony C. Hearn et al.
Stable release
March 8, 2023; 20 months ago (2023-03-08)[1]
Written inPortable Standard Lisp
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeComputer algebra system
LicenseBSD license
Websitewww.reduce-algebra.com

The development of the Reduce computer algebra system was started in the 1960s by Anthony C. Hearn. Since then, many scientists from all over the world[who?] have contributed to its development under his direction.

Reduce is written entirely in its own LISP dialect called Portable Standard Lisp, expressed in an ALGOL-like syntax called RLISP. The latter is used as a basis for Reduce's user-level language.

Implementations of Reduce are available on most variants of Unix, Linux, Microsoft Windows, or Apple Macintosh systems by using an underlying Portable Standard Lisp or Codemist Standard LISP implementation. The Julia package Reduce.jl[2] uses Reduce as a backend and implements its semantics in Julia style.

Reduce was open sourced in December 2008[3] and is available for free under a modified BSD license on SourceForge. Previously it had cost $695.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Files on SourceForge".
  2. ^ chakravala (April 9, 2019). "chakravala/Reduce.jl". GitHub. Retrieved June 16, 2019.
  3. ^ "REDUCE Computer Algebra System at SourceForge". reduce-algebra.sourceforge.net. Retrieved 2015-09-28.
edit