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-rw-r--r--doc/expr.n159
1 files changed, 30 insertions, 129 deletions
diff --git a/doc/expr.n b/doc/expr.n
index 6779c93..55184b3 100644
--- a/doc/expr.n
+++ b/doc/expr.n
@@ -1,11 +1,12 @@
'\"
'\" Copyright (c) 1993 The Regents of the University of California.
'\" Copyright (c) 1994-2000 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
+.\" Copyright (c) 2005 by Kevin B. Kenny <kennykb@acm.org>. All rights reserved
'\"
'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
'\"
-'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: expr.n,v 1.18 2004/10/27 09:36:58 dkf Exp $
+'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: expr.n,v 1.19 2005/05/10 18:33:59 kennykb Exp $
'\"
.so man.macros
.TH expr n 8.5 Tcl "Tcl Built-In Commands"
@@ -84,8 +85,8 @@ The command will be executed and its result will be used as
the operand.
.IP [7]
As a mathematical function whose arguments have any of the above
-forms for operands, such as \fBsin($x)\fR. See below for a list of defined
-functions.
+forms for operands, such as \fBsin($x)\fR. See MATH FUNCTIONS below for
+a discussion of how mathematical functions are handled.
.LP
Where the above substitutions occur (e.g. inside quoted strings), they
are performed by the expression's instructions.
@@ -211,131 +212,24 @@ the Tcl parser will evaluate both \fB[a]\fR and \fB[b]\fR before
invoking the \fBexpr\fR command.
.SS "MATH FUNCTIONS"
.PP
-Tcl supports the following mathematical functions in expressions, all
-of which work solely with floating-point numbers unless otherwise noted:
-.DS
-.ta 3c 6c 9c
-\fBabs\fR \fBcosh\fR \fBlog\fR \fBsqrt\fR
-\fBacos\fR \fBdouble\fR \fBlog10\fR \fBsrand\fR
-\fBasin\fR \fBexp\fR \fBpow\fR \fBtan\fR
-\fBatan\fR \fBfloor\fR \fBrand\fR \fBtanh\fR
-\fBatan2\fR \fBfmod\fR \fBround\fR \fBwide\fR
-\fBceil\fR \fBhypot\fR \fBsin\fR
-\fBcos\fR \fBint\fR \fBsinh\fR
-.DE
-.PP
-.TP
-\fBabs(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the absolute value of \fIarg\fR. \fIArg\fR may be either
-integer or floating-point, and the result is returned in the same form.
-.TP
-\fBacos(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the arc cosine of \fIarg\fR, in the range [\fI0\fR,\fIpi\fR]
-radians. \fIArg\fR should be in the range [\fI-1\fR,\fI1\fR].
-.TP
-\fBasin(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the arc sine of \fIarg\fR, in the range [\fI-pi/2\fR,\fIpi/2\fR]
-radians. \fIArg\fR should be in the range [\fI-1\fR,\fI1\fR].
-.TP
-\fBatan(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the arc tangent of \fIarg\fR, in the range [\fI-pi/2\fR,\fIpi/2\fR]
-radians.
-.TP
-\fBatan2(\fIy, x\fB)\fR
-Returns the arc tangent of \fIy\fR/\fIx\fR, in the range [\fI-pi\fR,\fIpi\fR]
-radians. \fIx\fR and \fIy\fR cannot both be 0. If \fIx\fR is greater
-than \fI0\fR, this is equivalent to \fBatan(\fIy/x\fB)\fR.
-.TP
-\fBceil(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the smallest integral floating-point value (i.e. with a zero
-fractional part) not less than \fIarg\fR.
-.TP
-\fBcos(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the cosine of \fIarg\fR, measured in radians.
-.TP
-\fBcosh(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the hyperbolic cosine of \fIarg\fR. If the result would cause
-an overflow, an error is returned.
-.TP
-\fBdouble(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-If \fIarg\fR is a floating-point value, returns \fIarg\fR, otherwise converts
-\fIarg\fR to floating-point and returns the converted value.
-.TP
-\fBexp(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the exponential of \fIarg\fR, defined as \fIe\fR**\fIarg\fR.
-If the result would cause an overflow, an error is returned.
-.TP
-\fBfloor(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the largest integral floating-point value (i.e. with a zero
-fractional part) not greater than \fIarg\fR.
-.TP
-\fBfmod(\fIx, y\fB)\fR
-Returns the floating-point remainder of the division of \fIx\fR by
-\fIy\fR. If \fIy\fR is 0, an error is returned.
-.TP
-\fBhypot(\fIx, y\fB)\fR
-Computes the length of the hypotenuse of a right-angled triangle
-\fBsqrt(\fIx\fR*\fIx\fR+\fIy\fR*\fIy\fB)\fR.
-.TP
-\fBint(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-If \fIarg\fR is an integer value of the same width as the machine
-word, returns \fIarg\fR, otherwise
-converts \fIarg\fR to an integer (of the same size as a machine word,
-i.e. 32-bits on 32-bit systems, and 64-bits on 64-bit systems) by
-truncation and returns the converted value.
-.TP
-\fBlog(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the natural logarithm of \fIarg\fR. \fIArg\fR must be a
-positive value.
-.TP
-\fBlog10(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the base 10 logarithm of \fIarg\fR. \fIArg\fR must be a
-positive value.
-.TP
-\fBpow(\fIx, y\fB)\fR
-Computes the value of \fIx\fR raised to the power \fIy\fR. If \fIx\fR
-is negative, \fIy\fR must be an integer value.
-.TP
-\fBrand()\fR
-Returns a pseudo-random floating-point value in the range (\fI0\fR,\fI1\fR).
-The generator algorithm is a simple linear congruential generator that
-is not cryptographically secure. Each result from \fBrand\fR completely
-determines all future results from subsequent calls to \fBrand\fR, so
-\fBrand\fR should not be used to generate a sequence of secrets, such as
-one-time passwords. The seed of the generator is initialized from the
-internal clock of the machine or may be set with the \fBsrand\fR function.
-.TP
-\fBround(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-If \fIarg\fR is an integer value, returns \fIarg\fR, otherwise converts
-\fIarg\fR to integer by rounding and returns the converted value.
-.TP
-\fBsin(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the sine of \fIarg\fR, measured in radians.
-.TP
-\fBsinh(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the hyperbolic sine of \fIarg\fR. If the result would cause
-an overflow, an error is returned.
-.TP
-\fBsqrt(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the square root of \fIarg\fR. \fIArg\fR must be non-negative.
-.TP
-\fBsrand(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-The \fIarg\fR, which must be an integer, is used to reset the seed for
-the random number generator of \fBrand\fR. Returns the first random
-number (see \fBrand()\fR) from that seed. Each interpreter has its own seed.
-.TP
-\fBtan(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the tangent of \fIarg\fR, measured in radians.
-.TP
-\fBtanh(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Returns the hyperbolic tangent of \fIarg\fR.
-.TP
-\fBwide(\fIarg\fB)\fR
-Converts \fIarg\fR to an integer value at least 64-bits wide (by sign-extension
-if \fIarg\fR is a 32-bit number) if it is not one already.
+When the expression parser encounters a mathematical function
+such as \fBsin($x)\fR, it replaces it with a call to an ordinary
+Tcl function in the \fBtcl::mathfunc\fR namespace. The processing
+of an expression such as:
+.CS
+\fBexpr {sin($x+$y)}\fR
+.CE
+is the same in every way as the processing of:
+.CS
+\fBexpr {[tcl::mathfunc::sin [expr {$x+$y}]]}
+.CE
+The executor will search for \fBtcl::mathfunc::sin\fR using the
+usual rules for resolving functions in namespaces. Either
+\fB::tcl::mathfunc::sin\fR or \fB[namespace current]::tcl::mathfunc::sin\fR
+will satisfy the request.
.PP
-In addition to these predefined functions, applications may
-define additional functions using \fBTcl_CreateMathFunc\fR().
+See the \fBmathfunc(n)\fR manual page for the math functions that are
+available by default.
.SS "TYPES, OVERFLOW, AND PRECISION"
.PP
All internal computations involving integers are done with the C type
@@ -430,7 +324,7 @@ each time the expression is executed.
Define a procedure that computes an "interesting" mathematical
function:
.CS
-proc calc {x y} {
+proc tcl::mathfunc::calc {x y} {
\fBexpr\fR { ($x**2 - $y**2) / exp($x**2 + $y**2) }
}
.CE
@@ -470,7 +364,14 @@ set randNum [\fBexpr\fR { int(100 * rand()) }]
.CE
.SH "SEE ALSO"
-array(n), for(n), if(n), string(n), Tcl(n), while(n)
+array(n), for(n), if(n), mathfunc(n), namespace(n), proc(n), string(n), Tcl(n), while(n)
.SH KEYWORDS
arithmetic, boolean, compare, expression, fuzzy comparison
+
+.SH COPYRIGHT
+Copyright (c) 1993 The Regents of the University of California.
+.br
+Copyright (c) 1994-2000 Sun Microsystems Incorporated.
+.br
+Copyright (c) 2005 by Kevin B. Kenny <kennykb@acm.org>. All rights reserved.