Mathematical expression evaluation library with big integers, floats, common fractions, and complex numbers support. The library is used by the project RionaCalc
- Automatic selection of more appropriate argument type for a function: e.g,
sqrt(-4)
converts float number-4
into complex one-4+0i
and then calculates the result0+2i
. The same is true for calculating logarithm for negative float numbers, and acos and asin for argument greater than1.0
- Automatic adding multiplication sign where it is omitted: e.g,
(1+2)(2+9)
is calculated as(1+2)*(2+9)
- Functions with a single-value argument do not require to enclose its argument into brackets: e.g,
sin cos 2
is calculated assin(cos(2))
- The final closing brackets can be omitted: e.g,
(1+2)*(2+9
is the same as(1+2)*(2+9)
- Trigonometric functions work with radians and degrees. Bare numbers are treated as radians, degrees requires one or three suffixes. Two degrees formats:
20d30m50s
or20°30'50"
. Minutes and seconds can be omitted, in this case degrees can be float number like30.25d
. So,sin(pi/2)
==sin(90°)
- Every number can include group separator
_
for readability - it is very useful when using big integers.3_000.90_23
==3000.9023
- Both
.
and,
are treated as decimal separators - Function argument separator is
;
. If a function receives more arguments than it requires, the trailing arguments are dropped: e.g,sqrt(11;12;13)
is the same assqrt(11)
- Regular fractions use
\
to separate its parts. They can be written with integer part or only with numerator and denominator, e.g1\1\10
==11\10
- Two complex numbers formats: with marker at the end or in the middle. E.g,
1+2i
==1+i2
. In addition,j
can be used instead ofi
- but the calculator outputs always withi
- Hexadecimal(starts with
0x
), octal(starts with0o
), and binary(starts with0b
) numbers - Character
%
can be either a modulo or a percentage operator. It depends on the character position: if%
is right before the expression end or before closing bracket or before another operator and previous operator is one of+
,-
,*
, or/
, the character is considered a percentage operator