.. _whatsnew_chapter: ===================== Release Notes ===================== .. _lmfit github repository: http://github.com/lmfit/lmfit-py This section discusses changes between versions, especially significant changes to the use and behavior of the library. This is not meant to be a comprehensive list of changes. For such a complete record, consult the `lmfit github repository`_. .. _whatsnew_090_label: Version 0.9.0 Release Notes ========================================== This upgrade makes an important, non-backward-compatible change to the way many fitting scripts and programs will work. Scripts that work with version 0.8.3 will not work with version 0.9.0 and vice versa. The change was not made lightly or without ample discussion, and is really an improvement. Modifying scripts that did work with 0.8.3 to work with 0.9.0 is easy, but needs to be done. Summary ~~~~~~~~~~~~ The upgrade from 0.8.3 to 0.9.0 introduced the :class:`MinimizerResult` class (see :ref:`fit-results-label`) which is now used to hold the return value from :func:`minimize` and :meth:`Minimizer.minimize`. This returned object contains many goodness of fit statistics, and holds the optimized parameters from the fit. Importantly, the parameters passed into :func:`minimize` and :meth:`Minimizer.minimize` are no longer modified by the fit. Instead, a copy of the passed-in parameters is made which is changed and returns as the :attr:`params` attribute of the returned :class:`MinimizerResult`. Impact ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This upgrade means that a script that does:: my_pars = Parameters() my_pars.add('amp', value=300.0, min=0) my_pars.add('center', value= 5.0, min=0, max=10) my_pars.add('decay', value= 1.0, vary=False) result = minimize(objfunc, my_pars) will still work, but that ``my_pars`` will **NOT** be changed by the fit. Instead, ``my_pars`` is copied to an internal set of parameters that is changed in the fit, and this copy is then put in ``result.params``. To look at fit results, use ``result.params``, not ``my_pars``. This has the effect that ``my_pars`` will still hold the starting parameter values, while all of the results from the fit are held in the ``result`` object returned by :func:`minimize`. If you want to do an initial fit, then refine that fit to, for example, do a pre-fit, then refine that result different fitting method, such as:: result1 = minimize(objfunc, my_pars, method='nelder') result1.params['decay'].vary = True result2 = minimize(objfunc, result1.params, method='leastsq') and have access to all of the starting parameters ``my_pars``, the result of the first fit ``result1``, and the result of the final fit ``result2``. Discussion ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The main goal for making this change were to 1. give a better return value to :func:`minimize` and :meth:`Minimizer.minimize` that can hold all of the information about a fit. By having the return value be an instance of the :class:`MinimizerResult` class, it can hold an arbitrary amount of information that is easily accessed by attribute name, and even be given methods. Using objects is good! 2. To limit or even eliminate the amount of "state information" a :class:`Minimizer` holds. By state information, we mean how much of the previous fit is remembered after a fit is done. Keeping (and especially using) such information about a previous fit means that a :class:`Minimizer` might give different results even for the same problem if run a second time. While it's desirable to be able to adjust a set of :class:`Parameters` re-run a fit to get an improved result, doing this by changing an internal attribute (:attr:`Minimizer.params`) has the undesirable side-effect of not being able to "go back", and makes it somewhat cumbersome to keep track of changes made while adjusting parameters and re-running fits.