NAME¶
icalc - interactive calculator
SYNOPSIS¶
icalc [
file ]
DESCRIPTION¶
Icalc is a algebraic calculator designed primarily for interactive use.
Each formula definition
file is read and compiled. The standard input
is then read, expressions are evaluated and results are sent to the standard
output. If a newline is escaped using a backslash, input is continued on the
next line.
An expression contains real numbers, variable names, function calls, and the
following operators:
+ - * / ^
Operators are evaluated left to right, except '^', which is right associative.
Exponentiation has the highest precedence; multiplication and division are
evaluated before addition and subtraction. Expressions can be grouped with
parentheses. Each result is assigned a number, which can be used in future
expressions. For example, the expression ($3*10) is the result of the third
calculation multiplied by ten. A dollar sign by itself may be used for the
previous result. All values are double precision real.
In addition, variables and functions can be defined by the user. A variable
definition has the form:
var = expression ;
Any instance of the variable in an expression will be replaced with its
definition. A function definition has the form:
func(a1, a2, ..) = expression ;
The expression can contain instances of the function arguments as well as other
variables and functions. Function names can be passed as arguments. Recursive
functions can be defined using calls to the defined function or other
functions calling the defined function.
To define a constant expression, simply replace the equals sign ('=') with a
colon (':') in a definition. Constant expressions are evaluated only once, the
first time they are used. This avoids repeated evaluation of expressions whose
values never change. Ideally, a constant expression contains only numbers and
references to previously defined constant expressions and functions. Constant
function definitions are are replaced by their value in any expression that
uses them with constant arguments. All predefined functions and variables have
the constant attribute. Thus, "sin(PI/4)" in an expression would be
immediately replaced by ".707108" unless sin() or PI were redefined
by the user. (Note that redefining constant expressions is not a recommended
practice!)
A variable or function's definition can be displayed with the '?' command:
? name
If no name is given, all definitions are printed. The '>' command writes
definitions to a file:
> file
Similarly, the '<' command loads definitions.
The following library of predefined functions and variables is provided:
- PI
- the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter.
- if(cond, then, else)
- if cond is greater than zero, then is evaluated, otherwise
else is evaluated. This function is necessary for recursive
definitions.
- select(N, a1, a2, ..)
- return aN (N is rounded to the nearest integer). This
function provides array capabilities. If N is zero, the number of
available arguments is returned.
- rand(x)
- compute a random number between 0 and 1 based on x.
- floor(x)
- return largest integer not greater than x.
- ceil(x)
- return smallest integer not less than x.
- sqrt(x)
- return square root of x.
- exp(x)
- compute e to the power of x (e approx = 2.718281828).
- log(x)
- compute the logarithm of x to the base e.
- log10(x)
- compute the logarithm of x to the base 10.
- sin(x), cos(x), tan(x)
- trigonometric functions.
- asin(x), acos(x), atan(x)
- inverse trigonometric functions.
- atan2(y, x)
- inverse tangent of y/x (range -pi to pi).
AUTHOR¶
Greg Ward
SEE ALSO¶
ev(1),
rcalc(1),
tabfunc(1)