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Tag Archives: PyXLL
Making Finite Element Analysis go faster …
… with Numba and Scipy sparse matrix functions. As promised in the previous post in this series, I will be looking at speeding up the formation and solving of matrix functions for the analysis of structural frames, using Excel and … Continue reading
Posted in Arrays, Excel, Finite Element Analysis, Frame Analysis, Link to Python, NumPy and SciPy, PyXLL
Tagged Excel, Finite Element Analysis, Iterative solvers, Numba, Numpy, Python, PyXLL, SciPy, sparse matrices
4 Comments
Floating Point Precision Problems
A question on Quora : prompted me to look at how these numbers are handled in Excel, in VBA called from Excel, and in Python called from Excel via pyxll. The results are shown in the screenshot below: Column A … Continue reading
Python callable arguments from Excel
Many Scipy functions have “callable” arguments, i.e. functions that can be called, with the returned data used as input by the calling function. Types of callable arguments include: Functions in the active Python module Functions in any active loaded library … Continue reading
Posted in Excel, Link to Python, NumPy and SciPy, PyXLL, UDFs
Tagged Eval, Excel, getattr, globals, lambda functions, Python, PyXLL, UDFs
1 Comment
Python optional arguments from Excel – Part 2
The previous post provided a method for using pyxll to pass optional arguments from Excel to Python whilst preserving the default values of any called Python function for arguments that were omitted in the Excel function. One condition where this … Continue reading
Posted in Excel, Link to Python, NumPy and SciPy, PyXLL, UDFs, VBA
Tagged default arguments, Excel, Python, PyXLL, UDFs, VBA
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Using Python optional arguments from Excel with pyxll
Python functions allow optional arguments to be specified by allocating a default value to each optional argument. The pyxll add-in allows Python functions called from Excel to work in the same way, so any argument with a default value may … Continue reading
Posted in Excel, Link to Python, PyXLL, UDFs
Tagged default arguments, Excel, Python, PyXLL, SciPy, Scipy stats, UDFs
1 Comment