NUM, NUMCHECK
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command | return value | value of RC |
---|---|---|
NUM expression
|
value of expression or empty string if the evaluation fails |
0 error code |
NUMCHECK expression
|
value of expression or empty string if the evaluation fails |
0 warning code |
- Description
- The expression will be evaluated numerically, and the result (textual representation) will be returned. The expression may consist of the following parts:
- decimal numbers
123.456, 17.5e3, 100, -312.123, 1e-3
- hexa-decimal numbers
0x1234, 0xabc, 0XabC
- special constants
pi
(=3.1415...),e
(=2.71828...),rand
(a linear distributed pseudo random number r; -1≤r<1)lran
(a linear distributed pseudo random number r; 0≤r<1)- numerical operators
-a
(negate),a+b
(add),a-b
(subtract),a*b
(multiply),a/b
(divide),a%b
(modulo),a^b (power)
- logical operators (bitwise)
!a
(not),a&b
(and),a|b
(or),a^b
(exclusive or)- brackets
(expression)
- functions
- {class="einrahmen"
|setlran(seed)
linear distributed pseudo random number r (0≤r<1)
seed is the start value (0≤seed<<1)
|
|-
|}
_T("RAND"), _T("LRAN"), _T("SETLRAN"), _T("SIN"), _T("COS"), // 00-04 _T("TAN"), _T("ASIN"), _T("ACOS"), _T("ATAN"), _T("EXP"), // 05-09 _T("LOG"), _T("LN"), _T("SQRT"), _T("ABS"), _T("INT"), // 10-14 _T("ROUND"), _T("DB"), _T("SINX"), _T("SINC"), _T("SIGN"), // 15-19 _T("HZ2BARK"), _T("BARK2HZ"), _T("BIT"), _T("FLOOR"), _T("ISERR"), // 20-24 _T("ISERROR"), _T("ISWARNING"),_T("ISWARN"), _T("NPOW2"),
- Notes
-
- The
INT
command converts the result to an integer by truncating it. There is no rounding involved, no rounding at all. - In case of the expression being syntactically ill-formed, an error (
INT
) or warning (INTCHECK
) is reported.
- The
- See also
- NUM, NUMCHECK, EVAL, EVALCHECK
- Examples
#result := int 3.1 // #result is set to 3 #result := int 3.9 // #result is set to 3, too #result := int 3.9 * 3.9 // #result is set to 15 (note that calculation // is done in floating point, resulting in 15.21, // and truncation occurs only on assigning // compare the preceding example with the following one: #result := int 3 * int(3.9) // here, #result will be assigned 9 - cool, isn't it?