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python - How can I obtain the same 'special' solutions to underdetermined linear systems that Matlab's `A b` (mldivide) operator returns using numpy/scipy?

I found a link where it is shown with an example that the Matlab mldivide operator () gives 'special' solutions when the system of linear equations has infinitely many solutions.

For example:

A = [1 2 0; 0 4 3];
b = [8; 18];
c_mldivide = A  b
c_pinv = pinv(A) * b

gives the output:

c_mldivide =
                 0
                 4
  0.66666666666667


c_pinv =

  0.918032786885245
  3.54098360655738
  1.27868852459016

The solution is 'special' in the sense that the number of non-zero entries in the solution c_mldivide is equal to rank(A) (in this case 2). I tried the same thing in numpy using numpy.linalg.lstsq, which gives an identical result to c_pinv.

Is there a way to achieve the c_mldivide solution in Python?

There was another very similar question here, but I suppose the explanation of the word 'special' was not clear enough. Another question asked about the internal workings of the mldivide operator, but the accepted answer doesn't seem to address this behavior.

Edit 1 : numpy code

In [149]: test_A = np.array([[1,2,0],[0,4,3]])
          test_b = np.array([[8],[18]])
          np.linalg.lstsq(test_A,test_b)

Out[149]:
(array([[ 0.918 ],
    [ 3.541 ],
    [ 1.2787]]), array([], dtype=float64), 2, array([ 5.2732,  1.4811]))

Edit 2 : Using scipy.optimize.nnls

In[189]:
from scipy.optimize import nnls
nnls(test_A,test_b)
Out[190]:
    ValueError                                Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-165-19ed603bd86c> in <module>()
      1 from scipy.optimize import nnls
      2 
----> 3 nnls(test_A,test_b)

C:UsersabhishekAnacondalibsite-packagesscipyoptimize
nls.py in nnls(A, b)
     43         raise ValueError("expected matrix")
     44     if len(b.shape) != 1:
---> 45         raise ValueError("expected vector")
     46 
     47     m, n = A.shape

    ValueError: expected vector
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Non-negative least squares (scipy.optimize.nnls) is not a general solution to this problem. A trivial case where it will fail is if all of the possible solutions contain negative coefficients:

import numpy as np
from scipy.optimize import nnls

A = np.array([[1, 2, 0],
              [0, 4, 3]])
b = np.array([-1, -2])

print(nnls(A, b))
# (array([ 0.,  0.,  0.]), 2.23606797749979)

In the case where A·x = b is underdetermined,

x1, res, rnk, s = np.linalg.lstsq(A, b)

will pick a solution x' that minimizes ||x||L2 subject to ||A·x - b||L2 = 0. This happens not to be the particular solution we are looking for, but we can linearly transform it to get what we want. In order to do that, we'll first compute the right null space of A, which characterizes the space of all possible solutions to A·x = b. We can get this using a rank-revealing QR decomposition:

from scipy.linalg import qr

def qr_null(A, tol=None):
    Q, R, P = qr(A.T, mode='full', pivoting=True)
    tol = np.finfo(R.dtype).eps if tol is None else tol
    rnk = min(A.shape) - np.abs(np.diag(R))[::-1].searchsorted(tol)
    return Q[:, rnk:].conj()

Z = qr_null(A)

Z is a vector (or, in case where n - rnk(A) > 1, a set of basis vectors spanning a subspace of A) such that A·Z = 0:

print(A.dot(Z))
# [[  0.00000000e+00]
#  [  8.88178420e-16]]

In other words, the column(s) of Z are vectors that are orthogonal to all of the rows in A. This means that for any solution x' to A·x = b, then x' = x + Z·c must also be a solution for any arbitrary scaling factor c. This means that by picking an appropriate value of c, we can set any n - rnk(A) of the coefficients in the solution to zero.

For example, let's say we wanted to set the value of the last coefficient to zero:

c = -x1[-1] / Z[-1, 0]
x2 = x1 + Z * c
print(x2)
# [ -8.32667268e-17  -5.00000000e-01   0.00000000e+00]
print(A.dot(x2))
# [-1. -2.]

The more general case where n - rnk(A) ≤ 1 is a little bit more complicated:

A = np.array([[1, 4, 9, 6, 9, 2, 7],
              [6, 3, 8, 5, 2, 7, 6],
              [7, 4, 5, 7, 6, 3, 2],
              [5, 2, 7, 4, 7, 5, 4],
              [9, 3, 8, 6, 7, 3, 1]])
x_exact = np.array([ 1,  2, -1, -2,  5,  0,  0])
b = A.dot(x_exact)
print(b)
# [33,  4, 26, 29, 30]

We get x' and Z as before:

x1, res, rnk, s = np.linalg.lstsq(A, b)
Z = qr_null(A)

Now in order to maximise the number of zero-valued coefficients in the solution vector, we want to find a vector C such that

x' = x + Z·C = [x'0, x'1, ..., x'rnk(A)-1, 0, ..., 0]T

If the last n - rnk(A) coefficients in x' are to be zeros, this imposes that

Z{rnk(A),...,n}·C = -x{rnk(A),...,n}

We can thus solve for C (exactly, since we know that Z[rnk:] must be full-rank):

C = np.linalg.solve(Z[rnk:], -x1[rnk:])

and compute x' :

x2 = x1 + Z.dot(C)
print(x2)
# [  1.00000000e+00   2.00000000e+00  -1.00000000e+00  -2.00000000e+00
#    5.00000000e+00   5.55111512e-17   0.00000000e+00]
print(A.dot(x2))
# [ 33.   4.  26.  29.  30.]

To put it all together into a single function:

import numpy as np
from scipy.linalg import qr

def solve_minnonzero(A, b):
    x1, res, rnk, s = np.linalg.lstsq(A, b)
    if rnk == A.shape[1]:
        return x1   # nothing more to do if A is full-rank
    Q, R, P = qr(A.T, mode='full', pivoting=True)
    Z = Q[:, rnk:].conj()
    C = np.linalg.solve(Z[rnk:], -x1[rnk:])
    return x1 + Z.dot(C)

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