Skip to content

MontePy is the most user friendly Python library (API) to read, edit, and write MCNP input files.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

idaholab/MontePy

Repository files navigation

MontePy

MontePY: a cute snek on a red over white circle

license JOSS article status Coverage Status Project Status: Active – The project has reached a stable, usable state and is being actively developed.

PyPI version Conda Version Docs Deployment PyPI pyversions

MontePy is the most user friendly Python library for reading, editing, and writing MCNP input files.

Installing

Simply run:

pip install montepy

For more complicated setups see the Installing section in the user guide.

User Documentation

MontePy has a website documenting how to work with MCNP in python with MontePy. The website contains a user's guide for getting started, a developer's guide covering the design and approach of MontePy, instructions for contributing, and the Python API documentation.

Features

Here is a quick example showing multiple tasks in MontePy:

import montepy
# read in file
problem = montepy.read_input("tests/inputs/test.imcnp")
  
# set photon importance for multiple cells
importances = {1: 0.005,
   2: 0.1,
   3: 1.0,
   99: 1.235
}
for cell_num, importance in importances.items():
   problem.cells[cell_num].importance.photon = importance

#create a universe and fill another cell with it
universe = montepy.Universe(123)
problem.universes.append(universe)
# add all cells with numbers between 1 and 4
universe.claim(problem.cells[1:5])
# fill cell 99 with universe 123
problem.cells[99].fill.universe = universe

# update all surfaces numbers by adding 1000 to them
for surface in problem.surfaces:
   surface.number += 1000
# all cells using these surfaces will be automatically updated as well

#write out an updated file
problem.write_problem("foo_update.imcnp")

Limitations

Here a few of the known bugs and limitations:

  • Cannot handle vertical input mode.
  • Does not support editing tallies in a user-friendly way.
  • Does not support editing source definition in a user-friendly way.
  • Cannot parse all valid material definitions. There is a known bug (#182) that MontePy can only parse materials where all keyword-value pairs show up after the nuclide definitions. For example:
    • M1 1001.80c 1.0 plib=80p can be parsed.
    • M1 plib=80p 1001.80c 1.0 cannot be parsed; despite it being a valid input.

Alternatives

There are some python packages that offer some of the same features as MontePy, but don't offer the same level of robustness, ease of installation, and user friendliness.

Many of the competitors do not offer the robustness that MontePy does becuase, they do not utilize context-free parsing (as of 2024). These packages are:

The only other library that does utilize context-free parsing that we are aware is MCNP™y. MontePy differs by being:

  • On PyPI, and can be installed via pip.
  • Only requires a python interpreter, and not a Java virtual machine.
  • Allowing contributions from anyone with a public GitHub account

For only writing, or templating an input file there are also some great tools out there. These packages don't provide the same functionality as MontePy inherently, but could be the right tool for the job depending on the user's needs.

Another honorable mention that doesn't replicate the features of MontePy, but could be a great supplement to MontePy for defining materials, performing activations, etc. is PyNE --- the Nuclear Engineering Toolkit.

Bugs, Requests and Development

So MontePy doesn't do what you want? Add an issue here with the "feature request" tag. The system is very modular and you should be able to develop it pretty quickly. Read the developer's guide for more details. If you have any questions feel free to ask @micahgale.

Citation

For citing MontePy in a publication a Journal of Open Source Software article is under review. In the meantime there is a DOI for the software from OSTI: DOI:10.11578/dc.20240115.1.

You can cite MontePy as:

M. Gale, T. Labossiere-Hickman, B. Carbno, A. Bascom, and MontePy contributors, "MontePy", 2024, doi: 10.11578/dc.20240115.1.

Finally: make objects, not regexes!