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5@c [title]
6@settitle GNU Emacs Calc 2.02 Manual
7@setchapternewpage odd
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8@dircategory Emacs
9@direntry
10* Calc: (calc). Advanced desk calculator and mathematical tool.
11@end direntry
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82@end iftex
83
84@ifinfo
85This file documents Calc, the GNU Emacs calculator.
86
87Copyright (C) 1990, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
88
89Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
90manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
91preserved on all copies.
92
93@ignore
94Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
95results, provided the printed document carries copying permission notice
96identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
97paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
98
99@end ignore
100Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
101manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
102section entitled ``GNU General Public License'' is included exactly as
103in the original, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is
104distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one.
105
106Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
107into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
108except that the section entitled ``GNU General Public License'' may be
109included in a translation approved by the author instead of in the
110original English.
111@end ifinfo
112
113@titlepage
114@sp 6
115@center @titlefont{Calc Manual}
116@sp 4
117@center GNU Emacs Calc Version 2.02
118@c [volume]
119@sp 1
120@center January 1992
121@sp 5
122@center Dave Gillespie
123@center daveg@@synaptics.com
124@page
125
126@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
127Copyright @copyright{} 1990, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
128
129Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
130this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
131are preserved on all copies.
132
133@ignore
134Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
135results, provided the printed document carries copying permission notice
136identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
137paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
138
139@end ignore
140Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
141manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
142section entitled ``GNU General Public License'' is included exactly as
143in the original, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is
144distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one.
145
146Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
147into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
148except that the section entitled ``GNU General Public License'' may be
149included in a translation approved by the author instead of in the
150original English.
151@end titlepage
152
153@c [begin]
154@ifinfo
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155@node Top, , (dir), (dir)
156@chapter The GNU Emacs Calculator
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157
158@noindent
159@dfn{Calc 2.02} is an advanced desk calculator and mathematical tool
160that runs as part of the GNU Emacs environment.
161
162This manual is divided into three major parts: "Getting Started," the
163"Calc Tutorial," and the "Calc Reference." The Tutorial introduces all
164the major aspects of Calculator use in an easy, hands-on way. The
165remainder of the manual is a complete reference to the features of the
166Calculator.
167
168For help in the Emacs Info system (which you are using to read this
169file), type @kbd{?}. (You can also type @kbd{h} to run through a
170longer Info tutorial.)
171
172@end ifinfo
173@menu
174* Copying:: How you can copy and share Calc.
175
176* Getting Started:: General description and overview.
b275eac7 177* Interactive Tutorial::
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178* Tutorial:: A step-by-step introduction for beginners.
179
180* Introduction:: Introduction to the Calc reference manual.
181* Data Types:: Types of objects manipulated by Calc.
182* Stack and Trail:: Manipulating the stack and trail buffers.
183* Mode Settings:: Adjusting display format and other modes.
184* Arithmetic:: Basic arithmetic functions.
185* Scientific Functions:: Transcendentals and other scientific functions.
186* Matrix Functions:: Operations on vectors and matrices.
187* Algebra:: Manipulating expressions algebraically.
188* Units:: Operations on numbers with units.
189* Store and Recall:: Storing and recalling variables.
190* Graphics:: Commands for making graphs of data.
191* Kill and Yank:: Moving data into and out of Calc.
192* Embedded Mode:: Working with formulas embedded in a file.
193* Programming:: Calc as a programmable calculator.
194
195* Installation:: Installing Calc as a part of GNU Emacs.
196* Reporting Bugs:: How to report bugs and make suggestions.
197
198* Summary:: Summary of Calc commands and functions.
199
200* Key Index:: The standard Calc key sequences.
201* Command Index:: The interactive Calc commands.
202* Function Index:: Functions (in algebraic formulas).
203* Concept Index:: General concepts.
204* Variable Index:: Variables used by Calc (both user and internal).
205* Lisp Function Index:: Internal Lisp math functions.
206@end menu
207
208@node Copying, Getting Started, Top, Top
209@unnumbered GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
210@center Version 1, February 1989
211
212@display
213Copyright @copyright{} 1989 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
214675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
215
216Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
217of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
218@end display
219
220@unnumberedsec Preamble
221
222 The license agreements of most software companies try to keep users
223at the mercy of those companies. By contrast, our General Public
224License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
225software---to make sure the software is free for all its users. The
226General Public License applies to the Free Software Foundation's
227software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it.
228You can use it for your programs, too.
229
230 When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
231price. Specifically, the General Public License is designed to make
232sure that you have the freedom to give away or sell copies of free
233software, that you receive source code or can get it if you want it,
234that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free
235programs; and that you know you can do these things.
236
237 To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid
238anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights.
239These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you
240distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
241
242 For example, if you distribute copies of a such a program, whether
243gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that
244you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the
245source code. And you must tell them their rights.
246
247 We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and
248(2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy,
249distribute and/or modify the software.
250
251 Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain
252that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free
253software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we
254want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so
255that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original
256authors' reputations.
257
258 The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and
259modification follow.
260
261@iftex
262@unnumberedsec TERMS AND CONDITIONS
263@end iftex
264@ifinfo
265@center TERMS AND CONDITIONS
266@end ifinfo
267
268@enumerate
269@item
270This License Agreement applies to any program or other work which
271contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be
272distributed under the terms of this General Public License. The
273``Program'', below, refers to any such program or work, and a ``work based
274on the Program'' means either the Program or any work containing the
275Program or a portion of it, either verbatim or with modifications. Each
276licensee is addressed as ``you''.
277
278@item
279You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's source
280code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously and
281appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice and
282disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the notices that refer to this
283General Public License and to the absence of any warranty; and give any
284other recipients of the Program a copy of this General Public License
285along with the Program. You may charge a fee for the physical act of
286transferring a copy.
287
288@item
289You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion of
290it, and copy and distribute such modifications under the terms of Paragraph
2911 above, provided that you also do the following:
292
293@itemize @bullet
294@item
295cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that
296you changed the files and the date of any change; and
297
298@item
299cause the whole of any work that you distribute or publish, that
300in whole or in part contains the Program or any part thereof, either
301with or without modifications, to be licensed at no charge to all
302third parties under the terms of this General Public License (except
303that you may choose to grant warranty protection to some or all
304third parties, at your option).
305
306@item
307If the modified program normally reads commands interactively when
308run, you must cause it, when started running for such interactive use
309in the simplest and most usual way, to print or display an
310announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a notice
311that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide a
312warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under these
313conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this General
314Public License.
315
316@item
317You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a
318copy, and you may at your option offer warranty protection in
319exchange for a fee.
320@end itemize
321
322Mere aggregation of another independent work with the Program (or its
323derivative) on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring
324the other work under the scope of these terms.
325
326@item
327You may copy and distribute the Program (or a portion or derivative of
328it, under Paragraph 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of
329Paragraphs 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
330
331@itemize @bullet
332@item
333accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable
334source code, which must be distributed under the terms of
335Paragraphs 1 and 2 above; or,
336
337@item
338accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three
339years, to give any third party free (except for a nominal charge
340for the cost of distribution) a complete machine-readable copy of the
341corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of
342Paragraphs 1 and 2 above; or,
343
344@item
345accompany it with the information you received as to where the
346corresponding source code may be obtained. (This alternative is
347allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
348received the program in object code or executable form alone.)
349@end itemize
350
351Source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for making
352modifications to it. For an executable file, complete source code means
353all the source code for all modules it contains; but, as a special
354exception, it need not include source code for modules which are standard
355libraries that accompany the operating system on which the executable
356file runs, or for standard header files or definitions files that
357accompany that operating system.
358
359@item
360You may not copy, modify, sublicense, distribute or transfer the
361Program except as expressly provided under this General Public License.
362Any attempt otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense, distribute or transfer
363the Program is void, and will automatically terminate your rights to use
364the Program under this License. However, parties who have received
365copies, or rights to use copies, from you under this General Public
366License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such parties
367remain in full compliance.
368
369@item
370By copying, distributing or modifying the Program (or any work based
371on the Program) you indicate your acceptance of this license to do so,
372and all its terms and conditions.
373
374@item
375Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the
376Program), the recipient automatically receives a license from the original
377licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject to these
378terms and conditions. You may not impose any further restrictions on the
379recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein.
380
381@item
382The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
383of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
384be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
385address new problems or concerns.
386
387Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program
388specifies a version number of the license which applies to it and ``any
389later version'', you have the option of following the terms and conditions
390either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
391Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
392the license, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software
393Foundation.
394
395@item
396If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free
397programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author
398to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free
399Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes
400make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals
401of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and
402of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.
403
404@iftex
405@heading NO WARRANTY
406@end iftex
407@ifinfo
408@center NO WARRANTY
409@end ifinfo
410
411@item
412BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
413FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
414OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
415PROVIDE THE PROGRAM ``AS IS'' WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
416OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
417MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS
418TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
419PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING,
420REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
421
422@item
423IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL
424ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
425REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
426INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
427ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT
428LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES
429SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE
430WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN
431ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
432@end enumerate
433
b275eac7 434@node Getting Started, Tutorial, Copying, Top
d7b8e6c6 435@chapter Getting Started
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436@noindent
437This chapter provides a general overview of Calc, the GNU Emacs
438Calculator: What it is, how to start it and how to exit from it,
439and what are the various ways that it can be used.
440
441@menu
442* What is Calc::
443* About This Manual::
444* Notations Used in This Manual::
445* Using Calc::
446* Demonstration of Calc::
447* History and Acknowledgements::
448@end menu
449
450@node What is Calc, About This Manual, Getting Started, Getting Started
451@section What is Calc?
452
453@noindent
454@dfn{Calc} is an advanced calculator and mathematical tool that runs as
455part of the GNU Emacs environment. Very roughly based on the HP-28/48
456series of calculators, its many features include:
457
458@itemize @bullet
459@item
460Choice of algebraic or RPN (stack-based) entry of calculations.
461
462@item
463Arbitrary precision integers and floating-point numbers.
464
465@item
466Arithmetic on rational numbers, complex numbers (rectangular and polar),
467error forms with standard deviations, open and closed intervals, vectors
468and matrices, dates and times, infinities, sets, quantities with units,
469and algebraic formulas.
470
471@item
472Mathematical operations such as logarithms and trigonometric functions.
473
474@item
475Programmer's features (bitwise operations, non-decimal numbers).
476
477@item
478Financial functions such as future value and internal rate of return.
479
480@item
481Number theoretical features such as prime factorization and arithmetic
5d67986c 482modulo @var{m} for any @var{m}.
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483
484@item
485Algebraic manipulation features, including symbolic calculus.
486
487@item
488Moving data to and from regular editing buffers.
489
490@item
491``Embedded mode'' for manipulating Calc formulas and data directly
492inside any editing buffer.
493
494@item
495Graphics using GNUPLOT, a versatile (and free) plotting program.
496
497@item
498Easy programming using keyboard macros, algebraic formulas,
499algebraic rewrite rules, or extended Emacs Lisp.
500@end itemize
501
502Calc tries to include a little something for everyone; as a result it is
503large and might be intimidating to the first-time user. If you plan to
504use Calc only as a traditional desk calculator, all you really need to
505read is the ``Getting Started'' chapter of this manual and possibly the
506first few sections of the tutorial. As you become more comfortable with
507the program you can learn its additional features. In terms of efficiency,
508scope and depth, Calc cannot replace a powerful tool like Mathematica.
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509But Calc has the advantages of convenience, portability, and availability
510of the source code. And, of course, it's free!
511
512@node About This Manual, Notations Used in This Manual, What is Calc, Getting Started
513@section About This Manual
514
515@noindent
516This document serves as a complete description of the GNU Emacs
517Calculator. It works both as an introduction for novices, and as
518a reference for experienced users. While it helps to have some
519experience with GNU Emacs in order to get the most out of Calc,
520this manual ought to be readable even if you don't know or use Emacs
521regularly.
522
523@ifinfo
524The manual is divided into three major parts:@: the ``Getting
525Started'' chapter you are reading now, the Calc tutorial (chapter 2),
526and the Calc reference manual (the remaining chapters and appendices).
527@end ifinfo
528@iftex
529The manual is divided into three major parts:@: the ``Getting
530Started'' chapter you are reading now, the Calc tutorial (chapter 2),
531and the Calc reference manual (the remaining chapters and appendices).
532@c [when-split]
533@c This manual has been printed in two volumes, the @dfn{Tutorial} and the
534@c @dfn{Reference}. Both volumes include a copy of the ``Getting Started''
535@c chapter.
536@end iftex
537
538If you are in a hurry to use Calc, there is a brief ``demonstration''
539below which illustrates the major features of Calc in just a couple of
540pages. If you don't have time to go through the full tutorial, this
541will show you everything you need to know to begin.
542@xref{Demonstration of Calc}.
543
544The tutorial chapter walks you through the various parts of Calc
545with lots of hands-on examples and explanations. If you are new
546to Calc and you have some time, try going through at least the
547beginning of the tutorial. The tutorial includes about 70 exercises
548with answers. These exercises give you some guided practice with
549Calc, as well as pointing out some interesting and unusual ways
550to use its features.
551
552The reference section discusses Calc in complete depth. You can read
553the reference from start to finish if you want to learn every aspect
554of Calc. Or, you can look in the table of contents or the Concept
555Index to find the parts of the manual that discuss the things you
556need to know.
557
558@cindex Marginal notes
559Every Calc keyboard command is listed in the Calc Summary, and also
560in the Key Index. Algebraic functions, @kbd{M-x} commands, and
561variables also have their own indices. @c{Each}
562@asis{In the printed manual, each}
563paragraph that is referenced in the Key or Function Index is marked
564in the margin with its index entry.
565
566@c [fix-ref Help Commands]
567You can access this manual on-line at any time within Calc by
568pressing the @kbd{h i} key sequence. Outside of the Calc window,
569you can press @kbd{M-# i} to read the manual on-line. Also, you
570can jump directly to the Tutorial by pressing @kbd{h t} or @kbd{M-# t},
571or to the Summary by pressing @kbd{h s} or @kbd{M-# s}. Within Calc,
572you can also go to the part of the manual describing any Calc key,
573function, or variable using @w{@kbd{h k}}, @kbd{h f}, or @kbd{h v},
574respectively. @xref{Help Commands}.
575
576Printed copies of this manual are also available from the Free Software
577Foundation.
578
579@node Notations Used in This Manual, Demonstration of Calc, About This Manual, Getting Started
580@section Notations Used in This Manual
581
582@noindent
583This section describes the various notations that are used
584throughout the Calc manual.
585
586In keystroke sequences, uppercase letters mean you must hold down
587the shift key while typing the letter. Keys pressed with Control
588held down are shown as @kbd{C-x}. Keys pressed with Meta held down
589are shown as @kbd{M-x}. Other notations are @key{RET} for the
590Return key, @key{SPC} for the space bar, @key{TAB} for the Tab key,
591@key{DEL} for the Delete key, and @key{LFD} for the Line-Feed key.
592
593(If you don't have the @key{LFD} or @key{TAB} keys on your keyboard,
594the @kbd{C-j} and @kbd{C-i} keys are equivalent to them, respectively.
595If you don't have a Meta key, look for Alt or Extend Char. You can
596also press @key{ESC} or @key{C-[} first to get the same effect, so
5d67986c 597that @kbd{M-x}, @kbd{@key{ESC} x}, and @kbd{C-[ x} are all equivalent.)
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598
599Sometimes the @key{RET} key is not shown when it is ``obvious''
5d67986c 600that you must press @key{RET} to proceed. For example, the @key{RET}
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601is usually omitted in key sequences like @kbd{M-x calc-keypad @key{RET}}.
602
603Commands are generally shown like this: @kbd{p} (@code{calc-precision})
604or @kbd{M-# k} (@code{calc-keypad}). This means that the command is
605normally used by pressing the @kbd{p} key or @kbd{M-# k} key sequence,
606but it also has the full-name equivalent shown, e.g., @kbd{M-x calc-precision}.
607
608Commands that correspond to functions in algebraic notation
609are written: @kbd{C} (@code{calc-cos}) [@code{cos}]. This means
610the @kbd{C} key is equivalent to @kbd{M-x calc-cos}, and that
611the corresponding function in an algebraic-style formula would
612be @samp{cos(@var{x})}.
613
614A few commands don't have key equivalents: @code{calc-sincos}
615[@code{sincos}].@refill
616
617@node Demonstration of Calc, Using Calc, Notations Used in This Manual, Getting Started
618@section A Demonstration of Calc
619
620@noindent
621@cindex Demonstration of Calc
622This section will show some typical small problems being solved with
623Calc. The focus is more on demonstration than explanation, but
624everything you see here will be covered more thoroughly in the
625Tutorial.
626
627To begin, start Emacs if necessary (usually the command @code{emacs}
5d67986c 628does this), and type @kbd{M-# c} (or @kbd{@key{ESC} # c}) to start the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
629Calculator. (@xref{Starting Calc}, if this doesn't work for you.)
630
631Be sure to type all the sample input exactly, especially noting the
632difference between lower-case and upper-case letters. Remember,
5d67986c 633@key{RET}, @key{TAB}, @key{DEL}, and @key{SPC} are the Return, Tab,
d7b8e6c6
EZ
634Delete, and Space keys.
635
636@strong{RPN calculation.} In RPN, you type the input number(s) first,
637then the command to operate on the numbers.
638
639@noindent
5d67986c 640Type @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 + Q} to compute @c{$\sqrt{2+3} = 2.2360679775$}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
641@asis{the square root of 2+3, which is 2.2360679775}.
642
643@noindent
644Type @kbd{P 2 ^} to compute @c{$\pi^2 = 9.86960440109$}
645@asis{the value of `pi' squared, 9.86960440109}.
646
647@noindent
5d67986c 648Type @key{TAB} to exchange the order of these two results.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
649
650@noindent
651Type @kbd{- I H S} to subtract these results and compute the Inverse
652Hyperbolic sine of the difference, 2.72996136574.
653
654@noindent
5d67986c 655Type @key{DEL} to erase this result.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
656
657@strong{Algebraic calculation.} You can also enter calculations using
658conventional ``algebraic'' notation. To enter an algebraic formula,
659use the apostrophe key.
660
661@noindent
5d67986c 662Type @kbd{' sqrt(2+3) @key{RET}} to compute @c{$\sqrt{2+3}$}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
663@asis{the square root of 2+3}.
664
665@noindent
5d67986c 666Type @kbd{' pi^2 @key{RET}} to enter @c{$\pi^2$}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
667@asis{`pi' squared}. To evaluate this symbolic
668formula as a number, type @kbd{=}.
669
670@noindent
5d67986c 671Type @kbd{' arcsinh($ - $$) @key{RET}} to subtract the second-most-recent
d7b8e6c6
EZ
672result from the most-recent and compute the Inverse Hyperbolic sine.
673
674@strong{Keypad mode.} If you are using the X window system, press
675@w{@kbd{M-# k}} to get Keypad mode. (If you don't use X, skip to
676the next section.)
677
678@noindent
679Click on the @key{2}, @key{ENTER}, @key{3}, @key{+}, and @key{SQRT}
680``buttons'' using your left mouse button.
681
682@noindent
683Click on @key{PI}, @key{2}, and @t{y^x}.
684
685@noindent
686Click on @key{INV}, then @key{ENTER} to swap the two results.
687
688@noindent
689Click on @key{-}, @key{INV}, @key{HYP}, and @key{SIN}.
690
691@noindent
692Click on @key{<-} to erase the result, then click @key{OFF} to turn
693the Keypad Calculator off.
694
695@strong{Grabbing data.} Type @kbd{M-# x} if necessary to exit Calc.
696Now select the following numbers as an Emacs region: ``Mark'' the
5d67986c 697front of the list by typing @kbd{C-@key{SPC}} or @kbd{C-@@} there,
d7b8e6c6
EZ
698then move to the other end of the list. (Either get this list from
699the on-line copy of this manual, accessed by @w{@kbd{M-# i}}, or just
700type these numbers into a scratch file.) Now type @kbd{M-# g} to
701``grab'' these numbers into Calc.
702
d7b8e6c6 703@example
5d67986c 704@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7051.23 1.97
7061.6 2
7071.19 1.08
d7b8e6c6 708@end group
5d67986c 709@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
710
711@noindent
712The result @samp{[1.23, 1.97, 1.6, 2, 1.19, 1.08]} is a Calc ``vector.''
713Type @w{@kbd{V R +}} to compute the sum of these numbers.
714
715@noindent
716Type @kbd{U} to Undo this command, then type @kbd{V R *} to compute
717the product of the numbers.
718
719@noindent
720You can also grab data as a rectangular matrix. Place the cursor on
721the upper-leftmost @samp{1} and set the mark, then move to just after
722the lower-right @samp{8} and press @kbd{M-# r}.
723
724@noindent
725Type @kbd{v t} to transpose this @c{$3\times2$}
726@asis{3x2} matrix into a @c{$2\times3$}
727@asis{2x3} matrix. Type
728@w{@kbd{v u}} to unpack the rows into two separate vectors. Now type
5d67986c 729@w{@kbd{V R + @key{TAB} V R +}} to compute the sums of the two original columns.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
730(There is also a special grab-and-sum-columns command, @kbd{M-# :}.)
731
732@strong{Units conversion.} Units are entered algebraically.
5d67986c
RS
733Type @w{@kbd{' 43 mi/hr @key{RET}}} to enter the quantity 43 miles-per-hour.
734Type @w{@kbd{u c km/hr @key{RET}}}. Type @w{@kbd{u c m/s @key{RET}}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
735
736@strong{Date arithmetic.} Type @kbd{t N} to get the current date and
737time. Type @kbd{90 +} to find the date 90 days from now. Type
5d67986c 738@kbd{' <25 dec 87> @key{RET}} to enter a date, then @kbd{- 7 /} to see how
d7b8e6c6
EZ
739many weeks have passed since then.
740
741@strong{Algebra.} Algebraic entries can also include formulas
5d67986c 742or equations involving variables. Type @kbd{@w{' [x + y} = a, x y = 1] @key{RET}}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
743to enter a pair of equations involving three variables.
744(Note the leading apostrophe in this example; also, note that the space
5d67986c 745between @samp{x y} is required.) Type @w{@kbd{a S x,y @key{RET}}} to solve
d7b8e6c6
EZ
746these equations for the variables @cite{x} and @cite{y}.@refill
747
748@noindent
749Type @kbd{d B} to view the solutions in more readable notation.
750Type @w{@kbd{d C}} to view them in C language notation, and @kbd{d T}
751to view them in the notation for the @TeX{} typesetting system.
752Type @kbd{d N} to return to normal notation.
753
754@noindent
5d67986c 755Type @kbd{7.5}, then @kbd{s l a @key{RET}} to let @cite{a = 7.5} in these formulas.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
756(That's a letter @kbd{l}, not a numeral @kbd{1}.)
757
758@iftex
759@strong{Help functions.} You can read about any command in the on-line
760manual. Type @kbd{M-# c} to return to Calc after each of these
761commands: @kbd{h k t N} to read about the @kbd{t N} command,
5d67986c 762@kbd{h f sqrt @key{RET}} to read about the @code{sqrt} function, and
d7b8e6c6
EZ
763@kbd{h s} to read the Calc summary.
764@end iftex
765@ifinfo
766@strong{Help functions.} You can read about any command in the on-line
767manual. Remember to type the letter @kbd{l}, then @kbd{M-# c}, to
768return here after each of these commands: @w{@kbd{h k t N}} to read
5d67986c 769about the @w{@kbd{t N}} command, @kbd{h f sqrt @key{RET}} to read about the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
770@code{sqrt} function, and @kbd{h s} to read the Calc summary.
771@end ifinfo
772
5d67986c 773Press @key{DEL} repeatedly to remove any leftover results from the stack.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
774To exit from Calc, press @kbd{q} or @kbd{M-# c} again.
775
776@node Using Calc, History and Acknowledgements, Demonstration of Calc, Getting Started
777@section Using Calc
778
779@noindent
780Calc has several user interfaces that are specialized for
781different kinds of tasks. As well as Calc's standard interface,
782there are Quick Mode, Keypad Mode, and Embedded Mode.
783
784@c [fix-ref Installation]
785Calc must be @dfn{installed} before it can be used. @xref{Installation},
786for instructions on setting up and installing Calc. We will assume
787you or someone on your system has already installed Calc as described
788there.
789
790@menu
791* Starting Calc::
792* The Standard Interface::
793* Quick Mode Overview::
794* Keypad Mode Overview::
795* Standalone Operation::
796* Embedded Mode Overview::
797* Other M-# Commands::
798@end menu
799
800@node Starting Calc, The Standard Interface, Using Calc, Using Calc
801@subsection Starting Calc
802
803@noindent
804On most systems, you can type @kbd{M-#} to start the Calculator.
805The notation @kbd{M-#} is short for Meta-@kbd{#}. On most
806keyboards this means holding down the Meta (or Alt) and
807Shift keys while typing @kbd{3}.
808
809@cindex META key
810Once again, if you don't have a Meta key on your keyboard you can type
811@key{ESC} first, then @kbd{#}, to accomplish the same thing. If you
812don't even have an @key{ESC} key, you can fake it by holding down
813Control or @key{CTRL} while typing a left square bracket
814(that's @kbd{C-[} in Emacs notation).@refill
815
816@kbd{M-#} is a @dfn{prefix key}; when you press it, Emacs waits for
817you to press a second key to complete the command. In this case,
818you will follow @kbd{M-#} with a letter (upper- or lower-case, it
819doesn't matter for @kbd{M-#}) that says which Calc interface you
820want to use.
821
822To get Calc's standard interface, type @kbd{M-# c}. To get
823Keypad Mode, type @kbd{M-# k}. Type @kbd{M-# ?} to get a brief
824list of the available options, and type a second @kbd{?} to get
825a complete list.
826
827To ease typing, @kbd{M-# M-#} (or @kbd{M-# #} if that's easier)
828also works to start Calc. It starts the same interface (either
829@kbd{M-# c} or @w{@kbd{M-# k}}) that you last used, selecting the
830@kbd{M-# c} interface by default. (If your installation has
831a special function key set up to act like @kbd{M-#}, hitting that
832function key twice is just like hitting @kbd{M-# M-#}.)
833
834If @kbd{M-#} doesn't work for you, you can always type explicit
835commands like @kbd{M-x calc} (for the standard user interface) or
836@w{@kbd{M-x calc-keypad}} (for Keypad Mode). First type @kbd{M-x}
837(that's Meta with the letter @kbd{x}), then, at the prompt,
838type the full command (like @kbd{calc-keypad}) and press Return.
839
840If you type @kbd{M-x calc} and Emacs still doesn't recognize the
841command (it will say @samp{[No match]} when you try to press
842@key{RET}), then Calc has not been properly installed.
843
844The same commands (like @kbd{M-# c} or @kbd{M-# M-#}) that start
845the Calculator also turn it off if it is already on.
846
847@node The Standard Interface, Quick Mode Overview, Starting Calc, Using Calc
848@subsection The Standard Calc Interface
849
850@noindent
851@cindex Standard user interface
852Calc's standard interface acts like a traditional RPN calculator,
853operated by the normal Emacs keyboard. When you type @kbd{M-# c}
854to start the Calculator, the Emacs screen splits into two windows
855with the file you were editing on top and Calc on the bottom.
856
d7b8e6c6
EZ
857@iftex
858@advance@hsize20pt
859@end iftex
860@smallexample
5d67986c 861@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
862
863...
864--**-Emacs: myfile (Fundamental)----All----------------------
865--- Emacs Calculator Mode --- |Emacs Calc Mode v2.00...
8662: 17.3 | 17.3
8671: -5 | 3
868 . | 2
869 | 4
870 | * 8
871 | ->-5
872 |
873--%%-Calc: 12 Deg (Calculator)----All----- --%%-Emacs: *Calc Trail*
d7b8e6c6 874@end group
5d67986c 875@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
876
877In this figure, the mode-line for @file{myfile} has moved up and the
878``Calculator'' window has appeared below it. As you can see, Calc
879actually makes two windows side-by-side. The lefthand one is
880called the @dfn{stack window} and the righthand one is called the
881@dfn{trail window.} The stack holds the numbers involved in the
882calculation you are currently performing. The trail holds a complete
883record of all calculations you have done. In a desk calculator with
884a printer, the trail corresponds to the paper tape that records what
885you do.
886
887In this case, the trail shows that four numbers (17.3, 3, 2, and 4)
888were first entered into the Calculator, then the 2 and 4 were
889multiplied to get 8, then the 3 and 8 were subtracted to get @i{-5}.
890(The @samp{>} symbol shows that this was the most recent calculation.)
891The net result is the two numbers 17.3 and @i{-5} sitting on the stack.
892
893Most Calculator commands deal explicitly with the stack only, but
894there is a set of commands that allow you to search back through
895the trail and retrieve any previous result.
896
897Calc commands use the digits, letters, and punctuation keys.
898Shifted (i.e., upper-case) letters are different from lowercase
899letters. Some letters are @dfn{prefix} keys that begin two-letter
900commands. For example, @kbd{e} means ``enter exponent'' and shifted
901@kbd{E} means @cite{e^x}. With the @kbd{d} (``display modes'') prefix
902the letter ``e'' takes on very different meanings: @kbd{d e} means
903``engineering notation'' and @kbd{d E} means ``@dfn{eqn} language mode.''
904
905There is nothing stopping you from switching out of the Calc
906window and back into your editing window, say by using the Emacs
907@w{@kbd{C-x o}} (@code{other-window}) command. When the cursor is
908inside a regular window, Emacs acts just like normal. When the
909cursor is in the Calc stack or trail windows, keys are interpreted
910as Calc commands.
911
912When you quit by pressing @kbd{M-# c} a second time, the Calculator
913windows go away but the actual Stack and Trail are not gone, just
914hidden. When you press @kbd{M-# c} once again you will get the
915same stack and trail contents you had when you last used the
916Calculator.
917
918The Calculator does not remember its state between Emacs sessions.
919Thus if you quit Emacs and start it again, @kbd{M-# c} will give you
920a fresh stack and trail. There is a command (@kbd{m m}) that lets
921you save your favorite mode settings between sessions, though.
922One of the things it saves is which user interface (standard or
923Keypad) you last used; otherwise, a freshly started Emacs will
924always treat @kbd{M-# M-#} the same as @kbd{M-# c}.
925
926The @kbd{q} key is another equivalent way to turn the Calculator off.
927
928If you type @kbd{M-# b} first and then @kbd{M-# c}, you get a
929full-screen version of Calc (@code{full-calc}) in which the stack and
930trail windows are still side-by-side but are now as tall as the whole
931Emacs screen. When you press @kbd{q} or @kbd{M-# c} again to quit,
932the file you were editing before reappears. The @kbd{M-# b} key
933switches back and forth between ``big'' full-screen mode and the
934normal partial-screen mode.
935
936Finally, @kbd{M-# o} (@code{calc-other-window}) is like @kbd{M-# c}
937except that the Calc window is not selected. The buffer you were
938editing before remains selected instead. @kbd{M-# o} is a handy
939way to switch out of Calc momentarily to edit your file; type
940@kbd{M-# c} to switch back into Calc when you are done.
941
942@node Quick Mode Overview, Keypad Mode Overview, The Standard Interface, Using Calc
943@subsection Quick Mode (Overview)
944
945@noindent
946@dfn{Quick Mode} is a quick way to use Calc when you don't need the
947full complexity of the stack and trail. To use it, type @kbd{M-# q}
948(@code{quick-calc}) in any regular editing buffer.
949
950Quick Mode is very simple: It prompts you to type any formula in
951standard algebraic notation (like @samp{4 - 2/3}) and then displays
952the result at the bottom of the Emacs screen (@i{3.33333333333}
953in this case). You are then back in the same editing buffer you
954were in before, ready to continue editing or to type @kbd{M-# q}
955again to do another quick calculation. The result of the calculation
956will also be in the Emacs ``kill ring'' so that a @kbd{C-y} command
957at this point will yank the result into your editing buffer.
958
959Calc mode settings affect Quick Mode, too, though you will have to
960go into regular Calc (with @kbd{M-# c}) to change the mode settings.
961
962@c [fix-ref Quick Calculator mode]
963@xref{Quick Calculator}, for further information.
964
965@node Keypad Mode Overview, Standalone Operation, Quick Mode Overview, Using Calc
966@subsection Keypad Mode (Overview)
967
968@noindent
969@dfn{Keypad Mode} is a mouse-based interface to the Calculator.
970It is designed for use with the X window system. If you don't
971have X, you will have to operate keypad mode with your arrow
972keys (which is probably more trouble than it's worth). Keypad
973mode is currently not supported under Emacs 19.
974
975Type @kbd{M-# k} to turn Keypad Mode on or off. Once again you
976get two new windows, this time on the righthand side of the screen
977instead of at the bottom. The upper window is the familiar Calc
978Stack; the lower window is a picture of a typical calculator keypad.
979
980@tex
981\dimen0=\pagetotal%
982\advance \dimen0 by 24\baselineskip%
983\ifdim \dimen0>\pagegoal \vfill\eject \fi%
984\medskip
985@end tex
986@smallexample
987 |--- Emacs Calculator Mode ---
988 |2: 17.3
989 |1: -5
990 | .
991 |--%%-Calc: 12 Deg (Calcul
992 |----+-----Calc 2.00-----+----1
993 |FLR |CEIL|RND |TRNC|CLN2|FLT |
994 |----+----+----+----+----+----|
995 | LN |EXP | |ABS |IDIV|MOD |
996 |----+----+----+----+----+----|
997 |SIN |COS |TAN |SQRT|y^x |1/x |
998 |----+----+----+----+----+----|
999 | ENTER |+/- |EEX |UNDO| <- |
1000 |-----+---+-+--+--+-+---++----|
1001 | INV | 7 | 8 | 9 | / |
1002 |-----+-----+-----+-----+-----|
1003 | HYP | 4 | 5 | 6 | * |
1004 |-----+-----+-----+-----+-----|
1005 |EXEC | 1 | 2 | 3 | - |
1006 |-----+-----+-----+-----+-----|
1007 | OFF | 0 | . | PI | + |
1008 |-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
1009@end smallexample
1010@iftex
1011@begingroup
1012@ifdim@hsize=5in
1013@vskip-3.7in
1014@advance@hsize-2.2in
1015@else
1016@vskip-3.89in
1017@advance@hsize-3.05in
1018@advance@vsize.1in
1019@fi
1020@end iftex
1021
1022Keypad Mode is much easier for beginners to learn, because there
1023is no need to memorize lots of obscure key sequences. But not all
1024commands in regular Calc are available on the Keypad. You can
1025always switch the cursor into the Calc stack window to use
1026standard Calc commands if you need. Serious Calc users, though,
1027often find they prefer the standard interface over Keypad Mode.
1028
1029To operate the Calculator, just click on the ``buttons'' of the
1030keypad using your left mouse button. To enter the two numbers
1031shown here you would click @w{@kbd{1 7 .@: 3 ENTER 5 +/- ENTER}}; to
1032add them together you would then click @kbd{+} (to get 12.3 on
1033the stack).
1034
1035If you click the right mouse button, the top three rows of the
1036keypad change to show other sets of commands, such as advanced
1037math functions, vector operations, and operations on binary
1038numbers.
1039
1040@iftex
1041@endgroup
1042@end iftex
1043Because Keypad Mode doesn't use the regular keyboard, Calc leaves
1044the cursor in your original editing buffer. You can type in
1045this buffer in the usual way while also clicking on the Calculator
1046keypad. One advantage of Keypad Mode is that you don't need an
1047explicit command to switch between editing and calculating.
1048
1049If you press @kbd{M-# b} first, you get a full-screen Keypad Mode
1050(@code{full-calc-keypad}) with three windows: The keypad in the lower
1051left, the stack in the lower right, and the trail on top.
1052
1053@c [fix-ref Keypad Mode]
1054@xref{Keypad Mode}, for further information.
1055
1056@node Standalone Operation, Embedded Mode Overview, Keypad Mode Overview, Using Calc
1057@subsection Standalone Operation
1058
1059@noindent
1060@cindex Standalone Operation
1061If you are not in Emacs at the moment but you wish to use Calc,
1062you must start Emacs first. If all you want is to run Calc, you
1063can give the commands:
1064
1065@example
1066emacs -f full-calc
1067@end example
1068
1069@noindent
1070or
1071
1072@example
1073emacs -f full-calc-keypad
1074@end example
1075
1076@noindent
1077which run a full-screen Calculator (as if by @kbd{M-# b M-# c}) or
1078a full-screen X-based Calculator (as if by @kbd{M-# b M-# k}).
1079In standalone operation, quitting the Calculator (by pressing
1080@kbd{q} or clicking on the keypad @key{EXIT} button) quits Emacs
1081itself.
1082
1083@node Embedded Mode Overview, Other M-# Commands, Standalone Operation, Using Calc
1084@subsection Embedded Mode (Overview)
1085
1086@noindent
1087@dfn{Embedded Mode} is a way to use Calc directly from inside an
1088editing buffer. Suppose you have a formula written as part of a
1089document like this:
1090
d7b8e6c6 1091@smallexample
5d67986c 1092@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1093The derivative of
1094
1095 ln(ln(x))
1096
1097is
d7b8e6c6 1098@end group
5d67986c 1099@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1100
1101@noindent
1102and you wish to have Calc compute and format the derivative for
1103you and store this derivative in the buffer automatically. To
1104do this with Embedded Mode, first copy the formula down to where
1105you want the result to be:
1106
d7b8e6c6 1107@smallexample
5d67986c 1108@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1109The derivative of
1110
1111 ln(ln(x))
1112
1113is
1114
1115 ln(ln(x))
d7b8e6c6 1116@end group
5d67986c 1117@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1118
1119Now, move the cursor onto this new formula and press @kbd{M-# e}.
1120Calc will read the formula (using the surrounding blank lines to
1121tell how much text to read), then push this formula (invisibly)
1122onto the Calc stack. The cursor will stay on the formula in the
1123editing buffer, but the buffer's mode line will change to look
1124like the Calc mode line (with mode indicators like @samp{12 Deg}
1125and so on). Even though you are still in your editing buffer,
1126the keyboard now acts like the Calc keyboard, and any new result
1127you get is copied from the stack back into the buffer. To take
1128the derivative, you would type @kbd{a d x @key{RET}}.
1129
d7b8e6c6 1130@smallexample
5d67986c 1131@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1132The derivative of
1133
1134 ln(ln(x))
1135
1136is
1137
11381 / ln(x) x
d7b8e6c6 1139@end group
5d67986c 1140@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1141
1142To make this look nicer, you might want to press @kbd{d =} to center
1143the formula, and even @kbd{d B} to use ``big'' display mode.
1144
d7b8e6c6 1145@smallexample
5d67986c 1146@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1147The derivative of
1148
1149 ln(ln(x))
1150
1151is
1152% [calc-mode: justify: center]
1153% [calc-mode: language: big]
1154
1155 1
1156 -------
1157 ln(x) x
d7b8e6c6 1158@end group
5d67986c 1159@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1160
1161Calc has added annotations to the file to help it remember the modes
1162that were used for this formula. They are formatted like comments
1163in the @TeX{} typesetting language, just in case you are using @TeX{}.
1164(In this example @TeX{} is not being used, so you might want to move
1165these comments up to the top of the file or otherwise put them out
1166of the way.)
1167
1168As an extra flourish, we can add an equation number using a
5d67986c 1169righthand label: Type @kbd{d @} (1) @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6 1170
d7b8e6c6 1171@smallexample
5d67986c 1172@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1173% [calc-mode: justify: center]
1174% [calc-mode: language: big]
1175% [calc-mode: right-label: " (1)"]
1176
1177 1
1178 ------- (1)
1179 ln(x) x
d7b8e6c6 1180@end group
5d67986c 1181@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1182
1183To leave Embedded Mode, type @kbd{M-# e} again. The mode line
1184and keyboard will revert to the way they were before. (If you have
1185actually been trying this as you read along, you'll want to press
1186@kbd{M-# 0} [with the digit zero] now to reset the modes you changed.)
1187
1188The related command @kbd{M-# w} operates on a single word, which
1189generally means a single number, inside text. It uses any
1190non-numeric characters rather than blank lines to delimit the
1191formula it reads. Here's an example of its use:
1192
1193@smallexample
1194A slope of one-third corresponds to an angle of 1 degrees.
1195@end smallexample
1196
1197Place the cursor on the @samp{1}, then type @kbd{M-# w} to enable
1198Embedded Mode on that number. Now type @kbd{3 /} (to get one-third),
1199and @kbd{I T} (the Inverse Tangent converts a slope into an angle),
1200then @w{@kbd{M-# w}} again to exit Embedded mode.
1201
1202@smallexample
1203A slope of one-third corresponds to an angle of 18.4349488229 degrees.
1204@end smallexample
1205
1206@c [fix-ref Embedded Mode]
1207@xref{Embedded Mode}, for full details.
1208
1209@node Other M-# Commands, , Embedded Mode Overview, Using Calc
1210@subsection Other @kbd{M-#} Commands
1211
1212@noindent
1213Two more Calc-related commands are @kbd{M-# g} and @kbd{M-# r},
1214which ``grab'' data from a selected region of a buffer into the
1215Calculator. The region is defined in the usual Emacs way, by
1216a ``mark'' placed at one end of the region, and the Emacs
1217cursor or ``point'' placed at the other.
1218
1219The @kbd{M-# g} command reads the region in the usual left-to-right,
1220top-to-bottom order. The result is packaged into a Calc vector
1221of numbers and placed on the stack. Calc (in its standard
1222user interface) is then started. Type @kbd{v u} if you want
1223to unpack this vector into separate numbers on the stack. Also,
1224@kbd{C-u M-# g} interprets the region as a single number or
1225formula.
1226
1227The @kbd{M-# r} command reads a rectangle, with the point and
1228mark defining opposite corners of the rectangle. The result
1229is a matrix of numbers on the Calculator stack.
1230
1231Complementary to these is @kbd{M-# y}, which ``yanks'' the
1232value at the top of the Calc stack back into an editing buffer.
1233If you type @w{@kbd{M-# y}} while in such a buffer, the value is
1234yanked at the current position. If you type @kbd{M-# y} while
1235in the Calc buffer, Calc makes an educated guess as to which
1236editing buffer you want to use. The Calc window does not have
1237to be visible in order to use this command, as long as there
1238is something on the Calc stack.
1239
1240Here, for reference, is the complete list of @kbd{M-#} commands.
1241The shift, control, and meta keys are ignored for the keystroke
1242following @kbd{M-#}.
1243
1244@noindent
1245Commands for turning Calc on and off:
1246
1247@table @kbd
1248@item #
1249Turn Calc on or off, employing the same user interface as last time.
1250
1251@item C
1252Turn Calc on or off using its standard bottom-of-the-screen
1253interface. If Calc is already turned on but the cursor is not
1254in the Calc window, move the cursor into the window.
1255
1256@item O
1257Same as @kbd{C}, but don't select the new Calc window. If
1258Calc is already turned on and the cursor is in the Calc window,
1259move it out of that window.
1260
1261@item B
1262Control whether @kbd{M-# c} and @kbd{M-# k} use the full screen.
1263
1264@item Q
1265Use Quick Mode for a single short calculation.
1266
1267@item K
1268Turn Calc Keypad mode on or off.
1269
1270@item E
1271Turn Calc Embedded mode on or off at the current formula.
1272
1273@item J
1274Turn Calc Embedded mode on or off, select the interesting part.
1275
1276@item W
1277Turn Calc Embedded mode on or off at the current word (number).
1278
1279@item Z
1280Turn Calc on in a user-defined way, as defined by a @kbd{Z I} command.
1281
1282@item X
1283Quit Calc; turn off standard, Keypad, or Embedded mode if on.
1284(This is like @kbd{q} or @key{OFF} inside of Calc.)
1285@end table
1286@iftex
1287@sp 2
1288@end iftex
1289
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1290@noindent
1291Commands for moving data into and out of the Calculator:
1292
1293@table @kbd
1294@item G
1295Grab the region into the Calculator as a vector.
1296
1297@item R
1298Grab the rectangular region into the Calculator as a matrix.
1299
1300@item :
1301Grab the rectangular region and compute the sums of its columns.
1302
1303@item _
1304Grab the rectangular region and compute the sums of its rows.
1305
1306@item Y
1307Yank a value from the Calculator into the current editing buffer.
1308@end table
1309@iftex
1310@sp 2
1311@end iftex
d7b8e6c6 1312
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1313@noindent
1314Commands for use with Embedded Mode:
1315
1316@table @kbd
1317@item A
1318``Activate'' the current buffer. Locate all formulas that
1319contain @samp{:=} or @samp{=>} symbols and record their locations
1320so that they can be updated automatically as variables are changed.
1321
1322@item D
1323Duplicate the current formula immediately below and select
1324the duplicate.
1325
1326@item F
1327Insert a new formula at the current point.
1328
1329@item N
1330Move the cursor to the next active formula in the buffer.
1331
1332@item P
1333Move the cursor to the previous active formula in the buffer.
1334
1335@item U
1336Update (i.e., as if by the @kbd{=} key) the formula at the current point.
1337
1338@item `
1339Edit (as if by @code{calc-edit}) the formula at the current point.
1340@end table
1341@iftex
1342@sp 2
1343@end iftex
d7b8e6c6 1344
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1345@noindent
1346Miscellaneous commands:
1347
1348@table @kbd
1349@item I
1350Run the Emacs Info system to read the Calc manual.
1351(This is the same as @kbd{h i} inside of Calc.)
1352
1353@item T
1354Run the Emacs Info system to read the Calc Tutorial.
1355
1356@item S
1357Run the Emacs Info system to read the Calc Summary.
1358
1359@item L
1360Load Calc entirely into memory. (Normally the various parts
1361are loaded only as they are needed.)
1362
1363@item M
5d67986c 1364Read a region of written keystroke names (like @kbd{C-n a b c @key{RET}})
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1365and record them as the current keyboard macro.
1366
1367@item 0
1368(This is the ``zero'' digit key.) Reset the Calculator to
1369its default state: Empty stack, and default mode settings.
1370With any prefix argument, reset everything but the stack.
1371@end table
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1372
1373@node History and Acknowledgements, , Using Calc, Getting Started
1374@section History and Acknowledgements
1375
1376@noindent
1377Calc was originally started as a two-week project to occupy a lull
1378in the author's schedule. Basically, a friend asked if I remembered
1379the value of @c{$2^{32}$}
1380@cite{2^32}. I didn't offhand, but I said, ``that's
1381easy, just call up an @code{xcalc}.'' @code{Xcalc} duly reported
1382that the answer to our question was @samp{4.294967e+09}---with no way to
1383see the full ten digits even though we knew they were there in the
1384program's memory! I was so annoyed, I vowed to write a calculator
1385of my own, once and for all.
1386
1387I chose Emacs Lisp, a) because I had always been curious about it
1388and b) because, being only a text editor extension language after
1389all, Emacs Lisp would surely reach its limits long before the project
1390got too far out of hand.
1391
1392To make a long story short, Emacs Lisp turned out to be a distressingly
1393solid implementation of Lisp, and the humble task of calculating
1394turned out to be more open-ended than one might have expected.
1395
1396Emacs Lisp doesn't have built-in floating point math, so it had to be
1397simulated in software. In fact, Emacs integers will only comfortably
1398fit six decimal digits or so---not enough for a decent calculator. So
1399I had to write my own high-precision integer code as well, and once I had
1400this I figured that arbitrary-size integers were just as easy as large
1401integers. Arbitrary floating-point precision was the logical next step.
1402Also, since the large integer arithmetic was there anyway it seemed only
1403fair to give the user direct access to it, which in turn made it practical
1404to support fractions as well as floats. All these features inspired me
1405to look around for other data types that might be worth having.
1406
1407Around this time, my friend Rick Koshi showed me his nifty new HP-28
1408calculator. It allowed the user to manipulate formulas as well as
1409numerical quantities, and it could also operate on matrices. I decided
1410that these would be good for Calc to have, too. And once things had
1411gone this far, I figured I might as well take a look at serious algebra
1412systems like Mathematica, Macsyma, and Maple for further ideas. Since
1413these systems did far more than I could ever hope to implement, I decided
1414to focus on rewrite rules and other programming features so that users
1415could implement what they needed for themselves.
1416
1417Rick complained that matrices were hard to read, so I put in code to
1418format them in a 2D style. Once these routines were in place, Big mode
1419was obligatory. Gee, what other language modes would be useful?
1420
1421Scott Hemphill and Allen Knutson, two friends with a strong mathematical
1422bent, contributed ideas and algorithms for a number of Calc features
1423including modulo forms, primality testing, and float-to-fraction conversion.
1424
1425Units were added at the eager insistence of Mass Sivilotti. Later,
1426Ulrich Mueller at CERN and Przemek Klosowski at NIST provided invaluable
1427expert assistance with the units table. As far as I can remember, the
1428idea of using algebraic formulas and variables to represent units dates
1429back to an ancient article in Byte magazine about muMath, an early
1430algebra system for microcomputers.
1431
1432Many people have contributed to Calc by reporting bugs and suggesting
1433features, large and small. A few deserve special mention: Tim Peters,
1434who helped develop the ideas that led to the selection commands, rewrite
1435rules, and many other algebra features; @c{Fran\c cois}
1436@asis{Francois} Pinard, who contributed
1437an early prototype of the Calc Summary appendix as well as providing
1438valuable suggestions in many other areas of Calc; Carl Witty, whose eagle
1439eyes discovered many typographical and factual errors in the Calc manual;
1440Tim Kay, who drove the development of Embedded mode; Ove Ewerlid, who
1441made many suggestions relating to the algebra commands and contributed
1442some code for polynomial operations; Randal Schwartz, who suggested the
1443@code{calc-eval} function; Robert J. Chassell, who suggested the Calc
1444Tutorial and exercises; and Juha Sarlin, who first worked out how to split
1445Calc into quickly-loading parts. Bob Weiner helped immensely with the
1446Lucid Emacs port.
1447
1448@cindex Bibliography
1449@cindex Knuth, Art of Computer Programming
1450@cindex Numerical Recipes
1451@c Should these be expanded into more complete references?
1452Among the books used in the development of Calc were Knuth's @emph{Art
1453of Computer Programming} (especially volume II, @emph{Seminumerical
1454Algorithms}); @emph{Numerical Recipes} by Press, Flannery, Teukolsky,
1455and Vetterling; Bevington's @emph{Data Reduction and Error Analysis for
1456the Physical Sciences}; @emph{Concrete Mathematics} by Graham, Knuth,
1457and Patashnik; Steele's @emph{Common Lisp, the Language}; the @emph{CRC
1458Standard Math Tables} (William H. Beyer, ed.); and Abramowitz and
1459Stegun's venerable @emph{Handbook of Mathematical Functions}. I
1460consulted the user's manuals for the HP-28 and HP-48 calculators, as
1461well as for the programs Mathematica, SMP, Macsyma, Maple, MathCAD,
1462Gnuplot, and others. Also, of course, Calc could not have been written
1463without the excellent @emph{GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, by Bil
1464Lewis and Dan LaLiberte.
1465
1466Final thanks go to Richard Stallman, without whose fine implementations
1467of the Emacs editor, language, and environment, Calc would have been
1468finished in two weeks.
1469
1470@c [tutorial]
1471
1472@ifinfo
1473@c This node is accessed by the `M-# t' command.
1474@node Interactive Tutorial, , , Top
1475@chapter Tutorial
1476
1477@noindent
1478Some brief instructions on using the Emacs Info system for this tutorial:
1479
1480Press the space bar and Delete keys to go forward and backward in a
1481section by screenfuls (or use the regular Emacs scrolling commands
1482for this).
1483
1484Press @kbd{n} or @kbd{p} to go to the Next or Previous section.
1485If the section has a @dfn{menu}, press a digit key like @kbd{1}
1486or @kbd{2} to go to a sub-section from the menu. Press @kbd{u} to
1487go back up from a sub-section to the menu it is part of.
1488
1489Exercises in the tutorial all have cross-references to the
1490appropriate page of the ``answers'' section. Press @kbd{f}, then
1491the exercise number, to see the answer to an exercise. After
1492you have followed a cross-reference, you can press the letter
1493@kbd{l} to return to where you were before.
1494
1495You can press @kbd{?} at any time for a brief summary of Info commands.
1496
1497Press @kbd{1} now to enter the first section of the Tutorial.
1498
1499@menu
1500* Tutorial::
1501@end menu
1502@end ifinfo
1503
1504@node Tutorial, Introduction, Getting Started, Top
1505@chapter Tutorial
1506
1507@noindent
1508This chapter explains how to use Calc and its many features, in
1509a step-by-step, tutorial way. You are encouraged to run Calc and
1510work along with the examples as you read (@pxref{Starting Calc}).
1511If you are already familiar with advanced calculators, you may wish
1512@c [not-split]
1513to skip on to the rest of this manual.
1514@c [when-split]
1515@c to skip on to volume II of this manual, the @dfn{Calc Reference}.
1516
1517@c [fix-ref Embedded Mode]
1518This tutorial describes the standard user interface of Calc only.
1519The ``Quick Mode'' and ``Keypad Mode'' interfaces are fairly
1520self-explanatory. @xref{Embedded Mode}, for a description of
1521the ``Embedded Mode'' interface.
1522
1523@ifinfo
1524The easiest way to read this tutorial on-line is to have two windows on
1525your Emacs screen, one with Calc and one with the Info system. (If you
1526have a printed copy of the manual you can use that instead.) Press
1527@kbd{M-# c} to turn Calc on or to switch into the Calc window, and
1528press @kbd{M-# i} to start the Info system or to switch into its window.
1529Or, you may prefer to use the tutorial in printed form.
1530@end ifinfo
1531@iftex
1532The easiest way to read this tutorial on-line is to have two windows on
1533your Emacs screen, one with Calc and one with the Info system. (If you
1534have a printed copy of the manual you can use that instead.) Press
1535@kbd{M-# c} to turn Calc on or to switch into the Calc window, and
1536press @kbd{M-# i} to start the Info system or to switch into its window.
1537@end iftex
1538
1539This tutorial is designed to be done in sequence. But the rest of this
1540manual does not assume you have gone through the tutorial. The tutorial
1541does not cover everything in the Calculator, but it touches on most
1542general areas.
1543
1544@ifinfo
1545You may wish to print out a copy of the Calc Summary and keep notes on
1546it as you learn Calc. @xref{Installation}, to see how to make a printed
1547summary. @xref{Summary}.
1548@end ifinfo
1549@iftex
1550The Calc Summary at the end of the reference manual includes some blank
1551space for your own use. You may wish to keep notes there as you learn
1552Calc.
1553@end iftex
1554
1555@menu
1556* Basic Tutorial::
1557* Arithmetic Tutorial::
1558* Vector/Matrix Tutorial::
1559* Types Tutorial::
1560* Algebra Tutorial::
1561* Programming Tutorial::
1562
1563* Answers to Exercises::
1564@end menu
1565
1566@node Basic Tutorial, Arithmetic Tutorial, Tutorial, Tutorial
1567@section Basic Tutorial
1568
1569@noindent
1570In this section, we learn how RPN and algebraic-style calculations
1571work, how to undo and redo an operation done by mistake, and how
1572to control various modes of the Calculator.
1573
1574@menu
1575* RPN Tutorial:: Basic operations with the stack.
1576* Algebraic Tutorial:: Algebraic entry; variables.
1577* Undo Tutorial:: If you make a mistake: Undo and the trail.
1578* Modes Tutorial:: Common mode-setting commands.
1579@end menu
1580
1581@node RPN Tutorial, Algebraic Tutorial, Basic Tutorial, Basic Tutorial
1582@subsection RPN Calculations and the Stack
1583
1584@cindex RPN notation
1585@ifinfo
1586@noindent
1587Calc normally uses RPN notation. You may be familiar with the RPN
1588system from Hewlett-Packard calculators, FORTH, or PostScript.
1589(Reverse Polish Notation, RPN, is named after the Polish mathematician
1590Jan Lukasiewicz.)
1591@end ifinfo
1592@tex
1593\noindent
1594Calc normally uses RPN notation. You may be familiar with the RPN
1595system from Hewlett-Packard calculators, FORTH, or PostScript.
1596(Reverse Polish Notation, RPN, is named after the Polish mathematician
1597Jan \L ukasiewicz.)
1598@end tex
1599
1600The central component of an RPN calculator is the @dfn{stack}. A
1601calculator stack is like a stack of dishes. New dishes (numbers) are
1602added at the top of the stack, and numbers are normally only removed
1603from the top of the stack.
1604
1605@cindex Operators
1606@cindex Operands
1607In an operation like @cite{2+3}, the 2 and 3 are called the @dfn{operands}
1608and the @cite{+} is the @dfn{operator}. In an RPN calculator you always
1609enter the operands first, then the operator. Each time you type a
1610number, Calc adds or @dfn{pushes} it onto the top of the Stack.
1611When you press an operator key like @kbd{+}, Calc @dfn{pops} the appropriate
1612number of operands from the stack and pushes back the result.
1613
1614Thus we could add the numbers 2 and 3 in an RPN calculator by typing:
1615@kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} +}. (The @key{RET} key, Return, corresponds to
1616the @key{ENTER} key on traditional RPN calculators.) Try this now if
1617you wish; type @kbd{M-# c} to switch into the Calc window (you can type
1618@kbd{M-# c} again or @kbd{M-# o} to switch back to the Tutorial window).
1619The first four keystrokes ``push'' the numbers 2 and 3 onto the stack.
1620The @kbd{+} key ``pops'' the top two numbers from the stack, adds them,
1621and pushes the result (5) back onto the stack. Here's how the stack
1622will look at various points throughout the calculation:@refill
1623
d7b8e6c6 1624@smallexample
5d67986c 1625@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1626 . 1: 2 2: 2 1: 5 .
1627 . 1: 3 .
1628 .
1629
5d67986c 1630 M-# c 2 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} + @key{DEL}
d7b8e6c6 1631@end group
5d67986c 1632@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1633
1634The @samp{.} symbol is a marker that represents the top of the stack.
1635Note that the ``top'' of the stack is really shown at the bottom of
1636the Stack window. This may seem backwards, but it turns out to be
1637less distracting in regular use.
1638
1639@cindex Stack levels
1640@cindex Levels of stack
1641The numbers @samp{1:} and @samp{2:} on the left are @dfn{stack level
1642numbers}. Old RPN calculators always had four stack levels called
1643@cite{x}, @cite{y}, @cite{z}, and @cite{t}. Calc's stack can grow
1644as large as you like, so it uses numbers instead of letters. Some
1645stack-manipulation commands accept a numeric argument that says
1646which stack level to work on. Normal commands like @kbd{+} always
1647work on the top few levels of the stack.@refill
1648
1649@c [fix-ref Truncating the Stack]
1650The Stack buffer is just an Emacs buffer, and you can move around in
1651it using the regular Emacs motion commands. But no matter where the
1652cursor is, even if you have scrolled the @samp{.} marker out of
1653view, most Calc commands always move the cursor back down to level 1
1654before doing anything. It is possible to move the @samp{.} marker
1655upwards through the stack, temporarily ``hiding'' some numbers from
1656commands like @kbd{+}. This is called @dfn{stack truncation} and
1657we will not cover it in this tutorial; @pxref{Truncating the Stack},
1658if you are interested.
1659
1660You don't really need the second @key{RET} in @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3
1661@key{RET} +}. That's because if you type any operator name or
1662other non-numeric key when you are entering a number, the Calculator
1663automatically enters that number and then does the requested command.
1664Thus @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 +} will work just as well.@refill
1665
1666Examples in this tutorial will often omit @key{RET} even when the
1667stack displays shown would only happen if you did press @key{RET}:
1668
d7b8e6c6 1669@smallexample
5d67986c 1670@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16711: 2 2: 2 1: 5
1672 . 1: 3 .
1673 .
1674
5d67986c 1675 2 @key{RET} 3 +
d7b8e6c6 1676@end group
5d67986c 1677@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1678
1679@noindent
1680Here, after pressing @kbd{3} the stack would really show @samp{1: 2}
1681with @samp{Calc:@: 3} in the minibuffer. In these situations, you can
1682press the optional @key{RET} to see the stack as the figure shows.
1683
1684(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} (This tutorial will include exercises
1685at various points. Try them if you wish. Answers to all the exercises
1686are located at the end of the Tutorial chapter. Each exercise will
1687include a cross-reference to its particular answer. If you are
1688reading with the Emacs Info system, press @kbd{f} and the
1689exercise number to go to the answer, then the letter @kbd{l} to
1690return to where you were.)
1691
1692@noindent
1693Here's the first exercise: What will the keystrokes @kbd{1 @key{RET} 2
1694@key{RET} 3 @key{RET} 4 + * -} compute? (@samp{*} is the symbol for
1695multiplication.) Figure it out by hand, then try it with Calc to see
1696if you're right. @xref{RPN Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
1697
1698(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Compute @c{$(2\times4) + (7\times9.4) + {5\over4}$}
1699@cite{2*4 + 7*9.5 + 5/4} using the
1700stack. @xref{RPN Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
1701
1702The @key{DEL} key is called Backspace on some keyboards. It is
1703whatever key you would use to correct a simple typing error when
1704regularly using Emacs. The @key{DEL} key pops and throws away the
1705top value on the stack. (You can still get that value back from
1706the Trail if you should need it later on.) There are many places
1707in this tutorial where we assume you have used @key{DEL} to erase the
1708results of the previous example at the beginning of a new example.
1709In the few places where it is really important to use @key{DEL} to
1710clear away old results, the text will remind you to do so.
1711
1712(It won't hurt to let things accumulate on the stack, except that
1713whenever you give a display-mode-changing command Calc will have to
1714spend a long time reformatting such a large stack.)
1715
1716Since the @kbd{-} key is also an operator (it subtracts the top two
1717stack elements), how does one enter a negative number? Calc uses
1718the @kbd{_} (underscore) key to act like the minus sign in a number.
1719So, typing @kbd{-5 @key{RET}} won't work because the @kbd{-} key
1720will try to do a subtraction, but @kbd{_5 @key{RET}} works just fine.
1721
1722You can also press @kbd{n}, which means ``change sign.'' It changes
1723the number at the top of the stack (or the number being entered)
1724from positive to negative or vice-versa: @kbd{5 n @key{RET}}.
1725
1726@cindex Duplicating a stack entry
1727If you press @key{RET} when you're not entering a number, the effect
1728is to duplicate the top number on the stack. Consider this calculation:
1729
d7b8e6c6 1730@smallexample
5d67986c 1731@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17321: 3 2: 3 1: 9 2: 9 1: 81
1733 . 1: 3 . 1: 9 .
1734 . .
1735
5d67986c 1736 3 @key{RET} @key{RET} * @key{RET} *
d7b8e6c6 1737@end group
5d67986c 1738@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1739
1740@noindent
1741(Of course, an easier way to do this would be @kbd{3 @key{RET} 4 ^},
1742to raise 3 to the fourth power.)
1743
1744The space-bar key (denoted @key{SPC} here) performs the same function
1745as @key{RET}; you could replace all three occurrences of @key{RET} in
1746the above example with @key{SPC} and the effect would be the same.
1747
1748@cindex Exchanging stack entries
1749Another stack manipulation key is @key{TAB}. This exchanges the top
1750two stack entries. Suppose you have computed @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 +}
1751to get 5, and then you realize what you really wanted to compute
1752was @cite{20 / (2+3)}.
1753
d7b8e6c6 1754@smallexample
5d67986c 1755@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17561: 5 2: 5 2: 20 1: 4
1757 . 1: 20 1: 5 .
1758 . .
1759
5d67986c 1760 2 @key{RET} 3 + 20 @key{TAB} /
d7b8e6c6 1761@end group
5d67986c 1762@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1763
1764@noindent
1765Planning ahead, the calculation would have gone like this:
1766
d7b8e6c6 1767@smallexample
5d67986c 1768@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17691: 20 2: 20 3: 20 2: 20 1: 4
1770 . 1: 2 2: 2 1: 5 .
1771 . 1: 3 .
1772 .
1773
5d67986c 1774 20 @key{RET} 2 @key{RET} 3 + /
d7b8e6c6 1775@end group
5d67986c 1776@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1777
1778A related stack command is @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} (hold @key{META} and type
1779@key{TAB}). It rotates the top three elements of the stack upward,
1780bringing the object in level 3 to the top.
1781
d7b8e6c6 1782@smallexample
5d67986c 1783@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17841: 10 2: 10 3: 10 3: 20 3: 30
1785 . 1: 20 2: 20 2: 30 2: 10
1786 . 1: 30 1: 10 1: 20
1787 . . .
1788
5d67986c 1789 10 @key{RET} 20 @key{RET} 30 @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} M-@key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6 1790@end group
5d67986c 1791@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1792
1793(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} Suppose the numbers 10, 20, and 30 are
1794on the stack. Figure out how to add one to the number in level 2
1795without affecting the rest of the stack. Also figure out how to add
1796one to the number in level 3. @xref{RPN Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
1797
1798Operations like @kbd{+}, @kbd{-}, @kbd{*}, @kbd{/}, and @kbd{^} pop two
1799arguments from the stack and push a result. Operations like @kbd{n} and
1800@kbd{Q} (square root) pop a single number and push the result. You can
1801think of them as simply operating on the top element of the stack.
1802
d7b8e6c6 1803@smallexample
5d67986c 1804@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18051: 3 1: 9 2: 9 1: 25 1: 5
1806 . . 1: 16 . .
1807 .
1808
5d67986c 1809 3 @key{RET} @key{RET} * 4 @key{RET} @key{RET} * + Q
d7b8e6c6 1810@end group
5d67986c 1811@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1812
1813@noindent
1814(Note that capital @kbd{Q} means to hold down the Shift key while
1815typing @kbd{q}. Remember, plain unshifted @kbd{q} is the Quit command.)
1816
1817@cindex Pythagorean Theorem
1818Here we've used the Pythagorean Theorem to determine the hypotenuse of a
1819right triangle. Calc actually has a built-in command for that called
1820@kbd{f h}, but let's suppose we can't remember the necessary keystrokes.
1821We can still enter it by its full name using @kbd{M-x} notation:
1822
d7b8e6c6 1823@smallexample
5d67986c 1824@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18251: 3 2: 3 1: 5
1826 . 1: 4 .
1827 .
1828
5d67986c 1829 3 @key{RET} 4 @key{RET} M-x calc-hypot
d7b8e6c6 1830@end group
5d67986c 1831@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1832
1833All Calculator commands begin with the word @samp{calc-}. Since it
1834gets tiring to type this, Calc provides an @kbd{x} key which is just
1835like the regular Emacs @kbd{M-x} key except that it types the @samp{calc-}
1836prefix for you:
1837
d7b8e6c6 1838@smallexample
5d67986c 1839@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18401: 3 2: 3 1: 5
1841 . 1: 4 .
1842 .
1843
5d67986c 1844 3 @key{RET} 4 @key{RET} x hypot
d7b8e6c6 1845@end group
5d67986c 1846@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1847
1848What happens if you take the square root of a negative number?
1849
d7b8e6c6 1850@smallexample
5d67986c 1851@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18521: 4 1: -4 1: (0, 2)
1853 . . .
1854
5d67986c 1855 4 @key{RET} n Q
d7b8e6c6 1856@end group
5d67986c 1857@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1858
1859@noindent
1860The notation @cite{(a, b)} represents a complex number.
1861Complex numbers are more traditionally written @c{$a + b i$}
1862@cite{a + b i};
1863Calc can display in this format, too, but for now we'll stick to the
1864@cite{(a, b)} notation.
1865
1866If you don't know how complex numbers work, you can safely ignore this
1867feature. Complex numbers only arise from operations that would be
1868errors in a calculator that didn't have complex numbers. (For example,
1869taking the square root or logarithm of a negative number produces a
1870complex result.)
1871
1872Complex numbers are entered in the notation shown. The @kbd{(} and
1873@kbd{,} and @kbd{)} keys manipulate ``incomplete complex numbers.''
1874
d7b8e6c6 1875@smallexample
5d67986c 1876@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18771: ( ... 2: ( ... 1: (2, ... 1: (2, ... 1: (2, 3)
1878 . 1: 2 . 3 .
1879 . .
1880
1881 ( 2 , 3 )
d7b8e6c6 1882@end group
5d67986c 1883@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1884
1885You can perform calculations while entering parts of incomplete objects.
1886However, an incomplete object cannot actually participate in a calculation:
1887
d7b8e6c6 1888@smallexample
5d67986c 1889@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18901: ( ... 2: ( ... 3: ( ... 1: ( ... 1: ( ...
1891 . 1: 2 2: 2 5 5
1892 . 1: 3 . .
1893 .
1894 (error)
5d67986c 1895 ( 2 @key{RET} 3 + +
d7b8e6c6 1896@end group
5d67986c 1897@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1898
1899@noindent
1900Adding 5 to an incomplete object makes no sense, so the last command
1901produces an error message and leaves the stack the same.
1902
1903Incomplete objects can't participate in arithmetic, but they can be
1904moved around by the regular stack commands.
1905
d7b8e6c6 1906@smallexample
5d67986c 1907@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19082: 2 3: 2 3: 3 1: ( ... 1: (2, 3)
19091: 3 2: 3 2: ( ... 2 .
1910 . 1: ( ... 1: 2 3
1911 . . .
1912
5d67986c 19132 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} ( M-@key{TAB} M-@key{TAB} )
d7b8e6c6 1914@end group
5d67986c 1915@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1916
1917@noindent
1918Note that the @kbd{,} (comma) key did not have to be used here.
1919When you press @kbd{)} all the stack entries between the incomplete
1920entry and the top are collected, so there's never really a reason
1921to use the comma. It's up to you.
1922
1923(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 4.} To enter the complex number @cite{(2, 3)},
1924your friend Joe typed @kbd{( 2 , @key{SPC} 3 )}. What happened?
1925(Joe thought of a clever way to correct his mistake in only two
1926keystrokes, but it didn't quite work. Try it to find out why.)
1927@xref{RPN Answer 4, 4}. (@bullet{})
1928
1929Vectors are entered the same way as complex numbers, but with square
1930brackets in place of parentheses. We'll meet vectors again later in
1931the tutorial.
1932
1933Any Emacs command can be given a @dfn{numeric prefix argument} by
1934typing a series of @key{META}-digits beforehand. If @key{META} is
1935awkward for you, you can instead type @kbd{C-u} followed by the
1936necessary digits. Numeric prefix arguments can be negative, as in
1937@kbd{M-- M-3 M-5} or @w{@kbd{C-u - 3 5}}. Calc commands use numeric
1938prefix arguments in a variety of ways. For example, a numeric prefix
1939on the @kbd{+} operator adds any number of stack entries at once:
1940
d7b8e6c6 1941@smallexample
5d67986c 1942@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19431: 10 2: 10 3: 10 3: 10 1: 60
1944 . 1: 20 2: 20 2: 20 .
1945 . 1: 30 1: 30
1946 . .
1947
5d67986c 1948 10 @key{RET} 20 @key{RET} 30 @key{RET} C-u 3 +
d7b8e6c6 1949@end group
5d67986c 1950@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1951
1952For stack manipulation commands like @key{RET}, a positive numeric
1953prefix argument operates on the top @var{n} stack entries at once. A
1954negative argument operates on the entry in level @var{n} only. An
1955argument of zero operates on the entire stack. In this example, we copy
1956the second-to-top element of the stack:
1957
d7b8e6c6 1958@smallexample
5d67986c 1959@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19601: 10 2: 10 3: 10 3: 10 4: 10
1961 . 1: 20 2: 20 2: 20 3: 20
1962 . 1: 30 1: 30 2: 30
1963 . . 1: 20
1964 .
1965
5d67986c 1966 10 @key{RET} 20 @key{RET} 30 @key{RET} C-u -2 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 1967@end group
5d67986c 1968@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1969
1970@cindex Clearing the stack
1971@cindex Emptying the stack
5d67986c 1972Another common idiom is @kbd{M-0 @key{DEL}}, which clears the stack.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1973(The @kbd{M-0} numeric prefix tells @key{DEL} to operate on the
1974entire stack.)
1975
1976@node Algebraic Tutorial, Undo Tutorial, RPN Tutorial, Basic Tutorial
1977@subsection Algebraic-Style Calculations
1978
1979@noindent
1980If you are not used to RPN notation, you may prefer to operate the
1981Calculator in ``algebraic mode,'' which is closer to the way
1982non-RPN calculators work. In algebraic mode, you enter formulas
1983in traditional @cite{2+3} notation.
1984
1985You don't really need any special ``mode'' to enter algebraic formulas.
1986You can enter a formula at any time by pressing the apostrophe (@kbd{'})
1987key. Answer the prompt with the desired formula, then press @key{RET}.
1988The formula is evaluated and the result is pushed onto the RPN stack.
1989If you don't want to think in RPN at all, you can enter your whole
1990computation as a formula, read the result from the stack, then press
1991@key{DEL} to delete it from the stack.
1992
1993Try pressing the apostrophe key, then @kbd{2+3+4}, then @key{RET}.
1994The result should be the number 9.
1995
1996Algebraic formulas use the operators @samp{+}, @samp{-}, @samp{*},
1997@samp{/}, and @samp{^}. You can use parentheses to make the order
1998of evaluation clear. In the absence of parentheses, @samp{^} is
1999evaluated first, then @samp{*}, then @samp{/}, then finally
2000@samp{+} and @samp{-}. For example, the expression
2001
2002@example
20032 + 3*4*5 / 6*7^8 - 9
2004@end example
2005
2006@noindent
2007is equivalent to
2008
2009@example
20102 + ((3*4*5) / (6*(7^8)) - 9
2011@end example
2012
2013@noindent
2014or, in large mathematical notation,
2015
2016@ifinfo
d7b8e6c6 2017@example
5d67986c 2018@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2019 3 * 4 * 5
20202 + --------- - 9
2021 8
2022 6 * 7
d7b8e6c6 2023@end group
5d67986c 2024@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2025@end ifinfo
2026@tex
2027\turnoffactive
2028\beforedisplay
2029$$ 2 + { 3 \times 4 \times 5 \over 6 \times 7^8 } - 9 $$
2030\afterdisplay
2031@end tex
2032
2033@noindent
2034The result of this expression will be the number @i{-6.99999826533}.
2035
2036Calc's order of evaluation is the same as for most computer languages,
2037except that @samp{*} binds more strongly than @samp{/}, as the above
2038example shows. As in normal mathematical notation, the @samp{*} symbol
2039can often be omitted: @samp{2 a} is the same as @samp{2*a}.
2040
2041Operators at the same level are evaluated from left to right, except
2042that @samp{^} is evaluated from right to left. Thus, @samp{2-3-4} is
2043equivalent to @samp{(2-3)-4} or @i{-5}, whereas @samp{2^3^4} is equivalent
2044to @samp{2^(3^4)} (a very large integer; try it!).
2045
2046If you tire of typing the apostrophe all the time, there is an
2047``algebraic mode'' you can select in which Calc automatically senses
2048when you are about to type an algebraic expression. To enter this
2049mode, press the two letters @w{@kbd{m a}}. (An @samp{Alg} indicator
2050should appear in the Calc window's mode line.)
2051
2052Press @kbd{m a}, then @kbd{2+3+4} with no apostrophe, then @key{RET}.
2053
2054In algebraic mode, when you press any key that would normally begin
2055entering a number (such as a digit, a decimal point, or the @kbd{_}
2056key), or if you press @kbd{(} or @kbd{[}, Calc automatically begins
2057an algebraic entry.
2058
2059Functions which do not have operator symbols like @samp{+} and @samp{*}
2060must be entered in formulas using function-call notation. For example,
2061the function name corresponding to the square-root key @kbd{Q} is
2062@code{sqrt}. To compute a square root in a formula, you would use
2063the notation @samp{sqrt(@var{x})}.
2064
2065Press the apostrophe, then type @kbd{sqrt(5*2) - 3}. The result should
2066be @cite{0.16227766017}.
2067
2068Note that if the formula begins with a function name, you need to use
2069the apostrophe even if you are in algebraic mode. If you type @kbd{arcsin}
2070out of the blue, the @kbd{a r} will be taken as an Algebraic Rewrite
2071command, and the @kbd{csin} will be taken as the name of the rewrite
2072rule to use!
2073
2074Some people prefer to enter complex numbers and vectors in algebraic
2075form because they find RPN entry with incomplete objects to be too
2076distracting, even though they otherwise use Calc as an RPN calculator.
2077
2078Still in algebraic mode, type:
2079
d7b8e6c6 2080@smallexample
5d67986c 2081@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20821: (2, 3) 2: (2, 3) 1: (8, -1) 2: (8, -1) 1: (9, -1)
2083 . 1: (1, -2) . 1: 1 .
2084 . .
2085
5d67986c 2086 (2,3) @key{RET} (1,-2) @key{RET} * 1 @key{RET} +
d7b8e6c6 2087@end group
5d67986c 2088@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2089
2090Algebraic mode allows us to enter complex numbers without pressing
2091an apostrophe first, but it also means we need to press @key{RET}
2092after every entry, even for a simple number like @cite{1}.
2093
2094(You can type @kbd{C-u m a} to enable a special ``incomplete algebraic
2095mode'' in which the @kbd{(} and @kbd{[} keys use algebraic entry even
2096though regular numeric keys still use RPN numeric entry. There is also
2097a ``total algebraic mode,'' started by typing @kbd{m t}, in which all
2098normal keys begin algebraic entry. You must then use the @key{META} key
2099to type Calc commands: @kbd{M-m t} to get back out of total algebraic
2100mode, @kbd{M-q} to quit, etc. Total algebraic mode is not supported
2101under Emacs 19.)
2102
2103If you're still in algebraic mode, press @kbd{m a} again to turn it off.
2104
2105Actual non-RPN calculators use a mixture of algebraic and RPN styles.
2106In general, operators of two numbers (like @kbd{+} and @kbd{*})
2107use algebraic form, but operators of one number (like @kbd{n} and @kbd{Q})
2108use RPN form. Also, a non-RPN calculator allows you to see the
2109intermediate results of a calculation as you go along. You can
2110accomplish this in Calc by performing your calculation as a series
2111of algebraic entries, using the @kbd{$} sign to tie them together.
2112In an algebraic formula, @kbd{$} represents the number on the top
2113of the stack. Here, we perform the calculation @c{$\sqrt{2\times4+1}$}
2114@cite{sqrt(2*4+1)},
2115which on a traditional calculator would be done by pressing
2116@kbd{2 * 4 + 1 =} and then the square-root key.
2117
d7b8e6c6 2118@smallexample
5d67986c 2119@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21201: 8 1: 9 1: 3
2121 . . .
2122
5d67986c 2123 ' 2*4 @key{RET} $+1 @key{RET} Q
d7b8e6c6 2124@end group
5d67986c 2125@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2126
2127@noindent
2128Notice that we didn't need to press an apostrophe for the @kbd{$+1},
2129because the dollar sign always begins an algebraic entry.
2130
2131(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} How could you get the same effect as
2132pressing @kbd{Q} but using an algebraic entry instead? How about
2133if the @kbd{Q} key on your keyboard were broken?
2134@xref{Algebraic Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
2135
2136The notations @kbd{$$}, @kbd{$$$}, and so on stand for higher stack
5d67986c 2137entries. For example, @kbd{' $$+$ @key{RET}} is just like typing @kbd{+}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2138
2139Algebraic formulas can include @dfn{variables}. To store in a
2140variable, press @kbd{s s}, then type the variable name, then press
2141@key{RET}. (There are actually two flavors of store command:
2142@kbd{s s} stores a number in a variable but also leaves the number
2143on the stack, while @w{@kbd{s t}} removes a number from the stack and
2144stores it in the variable.) A variable name should consist of one
2145or more letters or digits, beginning with a letter.
2146
d7b8e6c6 2147@smallexample
5d67986c 2148@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21491: 17 . 1: a + a^2 1: 306
2150 . . .
2151
5d67986c 2152 17 s t a @key{RET} ' a+a^2 @key{RET} =
d7b8e6c6 2153@end group
5d67986c 2154@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2155
2156@noindent
2157The @kbd{=} key @dfn{evaluates} a formula by replacing all its
2158variables by the values that were stored in them.
2159
2160For RPN calculations, you can recall a variable's value on the
2161stack either by entering its name as a formula and pressing @kbd{=},
2162or by using the @kbd{s r} command.
2163
d7b8e6c6 2164@smallexample
5d67986c 2165@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21661: 17 2: 17 3: 17 2: 17 1: 306
2167 . 1: 17 2: 17 1: 289 .
2168 . 1: 2 .
2169 .
2170
5d67986c 2171 s r a @key{RET} ' a @key{RET} = 2 ^ +
d7b8e6c6 2172@end group
5d67986c 2173@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2174
2175If you press a single digit for a variable name (as in @kbd{s t 3}, you
2176get one of ten @dfn{quick variables} @code{q0} through @code{q9}.
2177They are ``quick'' simply because you don't have to type the letter
2178@code{q} or the @key{RET} after their names. In fact, you can type
2179simply @kbd{s 3} as a shorthand for @kbd{s s 3}, and likewise for
2180@kbd{t 3} and @w{@kbd{r 3}}.
2181
2182Any variables in an algebraic formula for which you have not stored
2183values are left alone, even when you evaluate the formula.
2184
d7b8e6c6 2185@smallexample
5d67986c 2186@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21871: 2 a + 2 b 1: 34 + 2 b
2188 . .
2189
5d67986c 2190 ' 2a+2b @key{RET} =
d7b8e6c6 2191@end group
5d67986c 2192@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2193
2194Calls to function names which are undefined in Calc are also left
2195alone, as are calls for which the value is undefined.
2196
d7b8e6c6 2197@smallexample
5d67986c 2198@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21991: 2 + log10(0) + log10(x) + log10(5, 6) + foo(3)
2200 .
2201
5d67986c 2202 ' log10(100) + log10(0) + log10(x) + log10(5,6) + foo(3) @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 2203@end group
5d67986c 2204@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2205
2206@noindent
2207In this example, the first call to @code{log10} works, but the other
2208calls are not evaluated. In the second call, the logarithm is
2209undefined for that value of the argument; in the third, the argument
2210is symbolic, and in the fourth, there are too many arguments. In the
2211fifth case, there is no function called @code{foo}. You will see a
2212``Wrong number of arguments'' message referring to @samp{log10(5,6)}.
2213Press the @kbd{w} (``why'') key to see any other messages that may
2214have arisen from the last calculation. In this case you will get
2215``logarithm of zero,'' then ``number expected: @code{x}''. Calc
2216automatically displays the first message only if the message is
2217sufficiently important; for example, Calc considers ``wrong number
2218of arguments'' and ``logarithm of zero'' to be important enough to
2219report automatically, while a message like ``number expected: @code{x}''
2220will only show up if you explicitly press the @kbd{w} key.
2221
2222(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Joe entered the formula @samp{2 x y},
2223stored 5 in @code{x}, pressed @kbd{=}, and got the expected result,
2224@samp{10 y}. He then tried the same for the formula @samp{2 x (1+y)},
2225expecting @samp{10 (1+y)}, but it didn't work. Why not?
2226@xref{Algebraic Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
2227
2228(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} What result would you expect
2229@kbd{1 @key{RET} 0 /} to give? What if you then type @kbd{0 *}?
2230@xref{Algebraic Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
2231
2232One interesting way to work with variables is to use the
2233@dfn{evaluates-to} (@samp{=>}) operator. It works like this:
2234Enter a formula algebraically in the usual way, but follow
2235the formula with an @samp{=>} symbol. (There is also an @kbd{s =}
2236command which builds an @samp{=>} formula using the stack.) On
2237the stack, you will see two copies of the formula with an @samp{=>}
2238between them. The lefthand formula is exactly like you typed it;
2239the righthand formula has been evaluated as if by typing @kbd{=}.
2240
d7b8e6c6 2241@smallexample
5d67986c 2242@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
22432: 2 + 3 => 5 2: 2 + 3 => 5
22441: 2 a + 2 b => 34 + 2 b 1: 2 a + 2 b => 20 + 2 b
2245 . .
2246
5d67986c 2247' 2+3 => @key{RET} ' 2a+2b @key{RET} s = 10 s t a @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 2248@end group
5d67986c 2249@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2250
2251@noindent
2252Notice that the instant we stored a new value in @code{a}, all
2253@samp{=>} operators already on the stack that referred to @cite{a}
2254were updated to use the new value. With @samp{=>}, you can push a
2255set of formulas on the stack, then change the variables experimentally
2256to see the effects on the formulas' values.
2257
2258You can also ``unstore'' a variable when you are through with it:
2259
d7b8e6c6 2260@smallexample
5d67986c 2261@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
22622: 2 + 5 => 5
22631: 2 a + 2 b => 2 a + 2 b
2264 .
2265
5d67986c 2266 s u a @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 2267@end group
5d67986c 2268@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2269
2270We will encounter formulas involving variables and functions again
2271when we discuss the algebra and calculus features of the Calculator.
2272
2273@node Undo Tutorial, Modes Tutorial, Algebraic Tutorial, Basic Tutorial
2274@subsection Undo and Redo
2275
2276@noindent
2277If you make a mistake, you can usually correct it by pressing shift-@kbd{U},
5d67986c 2278the ``undo'' command. First, clear the stack (@kbd{M-0 @key{DEL}}) and exit
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2279and restart Calc (@kbd{M-# M-# M-# M-#}) to make sure things start off
2280with a clean slate. Now:
2281
d7b8e6c6 2282@smallexample
5d67986c 2283@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
22841: 2 2: 2 1: 8 2: 2 1: 6
2285 . 1: 3 . 1: 3 .
2286 . .
2287
5d67986c 2288 2 @key{RET} 3 ^ U *
d7b8e6c6 2289@end group
5d67986c 2290@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2291
2292You can undo any number of times. Calc keeps a complete record of
2293all you have done since you last opened the Calc window. After the
2294above example, you could type:
2295
d7b8e6c6 2296@smallexample
5d67986c 2297@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
22981: 6 2: 2 1: 2 . .
2299 . 1: 3 .
2300 .
2301 (error)
2302 U U U U
d7b8e6c6 2303@end group
5d67986c 2304@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2305
2306You can also type @kbd{D} to ``redo'' a command that you have undone
2307mistakenly.
2308
d7b8e6c6 2309@smallexample
5d67986c 2310@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2311 . 1: 2 2: 2 1: 6 1: 6
2312 . 1: 3 . .
2313 .
2314 (error)
2315 D D D D
d7b8e6c6 2316@end group
5d67986c 2317@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2318
2319@noindent
2320It was not possible to redo past the @cite{6}, since that was placed there
2321by something other than an undo command.
2322
2323@cindex Time travel
2324You can think of undo and redo as a sort of ``time machine.'' Press
2325@kbd{U} to go backward in time, @kbd{D} to go forward. If you go
2326backward and do something (like @kbd{*}) then, as any science fiction
2327reader knows, you have changed your future and you cannot go forward
2328again. Thus, the inability to redo past the @cite{6} even though there
2329was an earlier undo command.
2330
2331You can always recall an earlier result using the Trail. We've ignored
2332the trail so far, but it has been faithfully recording everything we
2333did since we loaded the Calculator. If the Trail is not displayed,
2334press @kbd{t d} now to turn it on.
2335
2336Let's try grabbing an earlier result. The @cite{8} we computed was
2337undone by a @kbd{U} command, and was lost even to Redo when we pressed
2338@kbd{*}, but it's still there in the trail. There should be a little
2339@samp{>} arrow (the @dfn{trail pointer}) resting on the last trail
2340entry. If there isn't, press @kbd{t ]} to reset the trail pointer.
2341Now, press @w{@kbd{t p}} to move the arrow onto the line containing
2342@cite{8}, and press @w{@kbd{t y}} to ``yank'' that number back onto the
2343stack.
2344
2345If you press @kbd{t ]} again, you will see that even our Yank command
2346went into the trail.
2347
2348Let's go further back in time. Earlier in the tutorial we computed
2349a huge integer using the formula @samp{2^3^4}. We don't remember
2350what it was, but the first digits were ``241''. Press @kbd{t r}
2351(which stands for trail-search-reverse), then type @kbd{241}.
2352The trail cursor will jump back to the next previous occurrence of
2353the string ``241'' in the trail. This is just a regular Emacs
2354incremental search; you can now press @kbd{C-s} or @kbd{C-r} to
2355continue the search forwards or backwards as you like.
2356
2357To finish the search, press @key{RET}. This halts the incremental
2358search and leaves the trail pointer at the thing we found. Now we
2359can type @kbd{t y} to yank that number onto the stack. If we hadn't
2360remembered the ``241'', we could simply have searched for @kbd{2^3^4},
2361then pressed @kbd{@key{RET} t n} to halt and then move to the next item.
2362
2363You may have noticed that all the trail-related commands begin with
2364the letter @kbd{t}. (The store-and-recall commands, on the other hand,
2365all began with @kbd{s}.) Calc has so many commands that there aren't
2366enough keys for all of them, so various commands are grouped into
2367two-letter sequences where the first letter is called the @dfn{prefix}
2368key. If you type a prefix key by accident, you can press @kbd{C-g}
2369to cancel it. (In fact, you can press @kbd{C-g} to cancel almost
2370anything in Emacs.) To get help on a prefix key, press that key
2371followed by @kbd{?}. Some prefixes have several lines of help,
2372so you need to press @kbd{?} repeatedly to see them all. This may
2373not work under Lucid Emacs, but you can also type @kbd{h h} to
2374see all the help at once.
2375
2376Try pressing @kbd{t ?} now. You will see a line of the form,
2377
2378@smallexample
2379trail/time: Display; Fwd, Back; Next, Prev, Here, [, ]; Yank: [MORE] t-
2380@end smallexample
2381
2382@noindent
2383The word ``trail'' indicates that the @kbd{t} prefix key contains
2384trail-related commands. Each entry on the line shows one command,
2385with a single capital letter showing which letter you press to get
2386that command. We have used @kbd{t n}, @kbd{t p}, @kbd{t ]}, and
2387@kbd{t y} so far. The @samp{[MORE]} means you can press @kbd{?}
2388again to see more @kbd{t}-prefix comands. Notice that the commands
2389are roughly divided (by semicolons) into related groups.
2390
2391When you are in the help display for a prefix key, the prefix is
2392still active. If you press another key, like @kbd{y} for example,
2393it will be interpreted as a @kbd{t y} command. If all you wanted
2394was to look at the help messages, press @kbd{C-g} afterwards to cancel
2395the prefix.
2396
2397One more way to correct an error is by editing the stack entries.
2398The actual Stack buffer is marked read-only and must not be edited
2399directly, but you can press @kbd{`} (the backquote or accent grave)
2400to edit a stack entry.
2401
2402Try entering @samp{3.141439} now. If this is supposed to represent
2403@c{$\pi$}
2404@cite{pi}, it's got several errors. Press @kbd{`} to edit this number.
2405Now use the normal Emacs cursor motion and editing keys to change
2406the second 4 to a 5, and to transpose the 3 and the 9. When you
2407press @key{RET}, the number on the stack will be replaced by your
2408new number. This works for formulas, vectors, and all other types
2409of values you can put on the stack. The @kbd{`} key also works
2410during entry of a number or algebraic formula.
2411
2412@node Modes Tutorial, , Undo Tutorial, Basic Tutorial
2413@subsection Mode-Setting Commands
2414
2415@noindent
2416Calc has many types of @dfn{modes} that affect the way it interprets
2417your commands or the way it displays data. We have already seen one
2418mode, namely algebraic mode. There are many others, too; we'll
2419try some of the most common ones here.
2420
2421Perhaps the most fundamental mode in Calc is the current @dfn{precision}.
2422Notice the @samp{12} on the Calc window's mode line:
2423
2424@smallexample
2425--%%-Calc: 12 Deg (Calculator)----All------
2426@end smallexample
2427
2428@noindent
2429Most of the symbols there are Emacs things you don't need to worry
2430about, but the @samp{12} and the @samp{Deg} are mode indicators.
2431The @samp{12} means that calculations should always be carried to
243212 significant figures. That is why, when we type @kbd{1 @key{RET} 7 /},
2433we get @cite{0.142857142857} with exactly 12 digits, not counting
2434leading and trailing zeros.
2435
2436You can set the precision to anything you like by pressing @kbd{p},
2437then entering a suitable number. Try pressing @kbd{p 30 @key{RET}},
2438then doing @kbd{1 @key{RET} 7 /} again:
2439
d7b8e6c6 2440@smallexample
5d67986c 2441@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24421: 0.142857142857
24432: 0.142857142857142857142857142857
2444 .
d7b8e6c6 2445@end group
5d67986c 2446@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2447
2448Although the precision can be set arbitrarily high, Calc always
2449has to have @emph{some} value for the current precision. After
2450all, the true value @cite{1/7} is an infinitely repeating decimal;
2451Calc has to stop somewhere.
2452
2453Of course, calculations are slower the more digits you request.
2454Press @w{@kbd{p 12}} now to set the precision back down to the default.
2455
2456Calculations always use the current precision. For example, even
2457though we have a 30-digit value for @cite{1/7} on the stack, if
2458we use it in a calculation in 12-digit mode it will be rounded
2459down to 12 digits before it is used. Try it; press @key{RET} to
2460duplicate the number, then @w{@kbd{1 +}}. Notice that the @key{RET}
2461key didn't round the number, because it doesn't do any calculation.
2462But the instant we pressed @kbd{+}, the number was rounded down.
2463
d7b8e6c6 2464@smallexample
5d67986c 2465@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24661: 0.142857142857
24672: 0.142857142857142857142857142857
24683: 1.14285714286
2469 .
d7b8e6c6 2470@end group
5d67986c 2471@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2472
2473@noindent
2474In fact, since we added a digit on the left, we had to lose one
2475digit on the right from even the 12-digit value of @cite{1/7}.
2476
2477How did we get more than 12 digits when we computed @samp{2^3^4}? The
2478answer is that Calc makes a distinction between @dfn{integers} and
2479@dfn{floating-point} numbers, or @dfn{floats}. An integer is a number
2480that does not contain a decimal point. There is no such thing as an
2481``infinitely repeating fraction integer,'' so Calc doesn't have to limit
2482itself. If you asked for @samp{2^10000} (don't try this!), you would
2483have to wait a long time but you would eventually get an exact answer.
2484If you ask for @samp{2.^10000}, you will quickly get an answer which is
2485correct only to 12 places. The decimal point tells Calc that it should
2486use floating-point arithmetic to get the answer, not exact integer
2487arithmetic.
2488
2489You can use the @kbd{F} (@code{calc-floor}) command to convert a
2490floating-point value to an integer, and @kbd{c f} (@code{calc-float})
2491to convert an integer to floating-point form.
2492
2493Let's try entering that last calculation:
2494
d7b8e6c6 2495@smallexample
5d67986c 2496@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24971: 2. 2: 2. 1: 1.99506311689e3010
2498 . 1: 10000 .
2499 .
2500
5d67986c 2501 2.0 @key{RET} 10000 @key{RET} ^
d7b8e6c6 2502@end group
5d67986c 2503@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2504
2505@noindent
2506@cindex Scientific notation, entry of
2507Notice the letter @samp{e} in there. It represents ``times ten to the
2508power of,'' and is used by Calc automatically whenever writing the
2509number out fully would introduce more extra zeros than you probably
2510want to see. You can enter numbers in this notation, too.
2511
d7b8e6c6 2512@smallexample
5d67986c 2513@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25141: 2. 2: 2. 1: 1.99506311678e3010
2515 . 1: 10000. .
2516 .
2517
5d67986c 2518 2.0 @key{RET} 1e4 @key{RET} ^
d7b8e6c6 2519@end group
5d67986c 2520@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2521
2522@cindex Round-off errors
2523@noindent
2524Hey, the answer is different! Look closely at the middle columns
2525of the two examples. In the first, the stack contained the
2526exact integer @cite{10000}, but in the second it contained
2527a floating-point value with a decimal point. When you raise a
2528number to an integer power, Calc uses repeated squaring and
2529multiplication to get the answer. When you use a floating-point
2530power, Calc uses logarithms and exponentials. As you can see,
2531a slight error crept in during one of these methods. Which
2532one should we trust? Let's raise the precision a bit and find
2533out:
2534
d7b8e6c6 2535@smallexample
5d67986c 2536@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2537 . 1: 2. 2: 2. 1: 1.995063116880828e3010
2538 . 1: 10000. .
2539 .
2540
5d67986c 2541 p 16 @key{RET} 2. @key{RET} 1e4 ^ p 12 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 2542@end group
5d67986c 2543@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2544
2545@noindent
2546@cindex Guard digits
2547Presumably, it doesn't matter whether we do this higher-precision
2548calculation using an integer or floating-point power, since we
2549have added enough ``guard digits'' to trust the first 12 digits
2550no matter what. And the verdict is@dots{} Integer powers were more
2551accurate; in fact, the result was only off by one unit in the
2552last place.
2553
2554@cindex Guard digits
2555Calc does many of its internal calculations to a slightly higher
2556precision, but it doesn't always bump the precision up enough.
2557In each case, Calc added about two digits of precision during
2558its calculation and then rounded back down to 12 digits
2559afterward. In one case, it was enough; in the the other, it
2560wasn't. If you really need @var{x} digits of precision, it
2561never hurts to do the calculation with a few extra guard digits.
2562
2563What if we want guard digits but don't want to look at them?
2564We can set the @dfn{float format}. Calc supports four major
2565formats for floating-point numbers, called @dfn{normal},
2566@dfn{fixed-point}, @dfn{scientific notation}, and @dfn{engineering
2567notation}. You get them by pressing @w{@kbd{d n}}, @kbd{d f},
2568@kbd{d s}, and @kbd{d e}, respectively. In each case, you can
2569supply a numeric prefix argument which says how many digits
2570should be displayed. As an example, let's put a few numbers
2571onto the stack and try some different display modes. First,
5d67986c 2572use @kbd{M-0 @key{DEL}} to clear the stack, then enter the four
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2573numbers shown here:
2574
d7b8e6c6 2575@smallexample
5d67986c 2576@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25774: 12345 4: 12345 4: 12345 4: 12345 4: 12345
25783: 12345. 3: 12300. 3: 1.2345e4 3: 1.23e4 3: 12345.000
25792: 123.45 2: 123. 2: 1.2345e2 2: 1.23e2 2: 123.450
25801: 12.345 1: 12.3 1: 1.2345e1 1: 1.23e1 1: 12.345
2581 . . . . .
2582
2583 d n M-3 d n d s M-3 d s M-3 d f
d7b8e6c6 2584@end group
5d67986c 2585@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2586
2587@noindent
2588Notice that when we typed @kbd{M-3 d n}, the numbers were rounded down
2589to three significant digits, but then when we typed @kbd{d s} all
2590five significant figures reappeared. The float format does not
2591affect how numbers are stored, it only affects how they are
2592displayed. Only the current precision governs the actual rounding
2593of numbers in the Calculator's memory.
2594
2595Engineering notation, not shown here, is like scientific notation
2596except the exponent (the power-of-ten part) is always adjusted to be
2597a multiple of three (as in ``kilo,'' ``micro,'' etc.). As a result
2598there will be one, two, or three digits before the decimal point.
2599
2600Whenever you change a display-related mode, Calc redraws everything
2601in the stack. This may be slow if there are many things on the stack,
2602so Calc allows you to type shift-@kbd{H} before any mode command to
2603prevent it from updating the stack. Anything Calc displays after the
2604mode-changing command will appear in the new format.
2605
d7b8e6c6 2606@smallexample
5d67986c 2607@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26084: 12345 4: 12345 4: 12345 4: 12345 4: 12345
26093: 12345.000 3: 12345.000 3: 12345.000 3: 1.2345e4 3: 12345.
26102: 123.450 2: 123.450 2: 1.2345e1 2: 1.2345e1 2: 123.45
26111: 12.345 1: 1.2345e1 1: 1.2345e2 1: 1.2345e2 1: 12.345
2612 . . . . .
2613
5d67986c 2614 H d s @key{DEL} U @key{TAB} d @key{SPC} d n
d7b8e6c6 2615@end group
5d67986c 2616@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2617
2618@noindent
2619Here the @kbd{H d s} command changes to scientific notation but without
2620updating the screen. Deleting the top stack entry and undoing it back
2621causes it to show up in the new format; swapping the top two stack
5d67986c 2622entries reformats both entries. The @kbd{d @key{SPC}} command refreshes the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2623whole stack. The @kbd{d n} command changes back to the normal float
2624format; since it doesn't have an @kbd{H} prefix, it also updates all
2625the stack entries to be in @kbd{d n} format.
2626
2627Notice that the integer @cite{12345} was not affected by any
2628of the float formats. Integers are integers, and are always
2629displayed exactly.
2630
2631@cindex Large numbers, readability
2632Large integers have their own problems. Let's look back at
2633the result of @kbd{2^3^4}.
2634
2635@example
26362417851639229258349412352
2637@end example
2638
2639@noindent
2640Quick---how many digits does this have? Try typing @kbd{d g}:
2641
2642@example
26432,417,851,639,229,258,349,412,352
2644@end example
2645
2646@noindent
2647Now how many digits does this have? It's much easier to tell!
2648We can actually group digits into clumps of any size. Some
2649people prefer @kbd{M-5 d g}:
2650
2651@example
265224178,51639,22925,83494,12352
2653@end example
2654
2655Let's see what happens to floating-point numbers when they are grouped.
2656First, type @kbd{p 25 @key{RET}} to make sure we have enough precision
2657to get ourselves into trouble. Now, type @kbd{1e13 /}:
2658
2659@example
266024,17851,63922.9258349412352
2661@end example
2662
2663@noindent
2664The integer part is grouped but the fractional part isn't. Now try
2665@kbd{M-- M-5 d g} (that's meta-minus-sign, meta-five):
2666
2667@example
266824,17851,63922.92583,49412,352
2669@end example
2670
2671If you find it hard to tell the decimal point from the commas, try
2672changing the grouping character to a space with @kbd{d , @key{SPC}}:
2673
2674@example
267524 17851 63922.92583 49412 352
2676@end example
2677
2678Type @kbd{d , ,} to restore the normal grouping character, then
2679@kbd{d g} again to turn grouping off. Also, press @kbd{p 12} to
2680restore the default precision.
2681
2682Press @kbd{U} enough times to get the original big integer back.
2683(Notice that @kbd{U} does not undo each mode-setting command; if
2684you want to undo a mode-setting command, you have to do it yourself.)
2685Now, type @kbd{d r 16 @key{RET}}:
2686
2687@example
268816#200000000000000000000
2689@end example
2690
2691@noindent
2692The number is now displayed in @dfn{hexadecimal}, or ``base-16'' form.
2693Suddenly it looks pretty simple; this should be no surprise, since we
2694got this number by computing a power of two, and 16 is a power of 2.
2695In fact, we can use @w{@kbd{d r 2 @key{RET}}} to see it in actual binary
2696form:
2697
2698@example
26992#1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 @dots{}
2700@end example
2701
2702@noindent
2703We don't have enough space here to show all the zeros! They won't
2704fit on a typical screen, either, so you will have to use horizontal
2705scrolling to see them all. Press @kbd{<} and @kbd{>} to scroll the
2706stack window left and right by half its width. Another way to view
2707something large is to press @kbd{`} (back-quote) to edit the top of
2708stack in a separate window. (Press @kbd{M-# M-#} when you are done.)
2709
2710You can enter non-decimal numbers using the @kbd{#} symbol, too.
2711Let's see what the hexadecimal number @samp{5FE} looks like in
2712binary. Type @kbd{16#5FE} (the letters can be typed in upper or
2713lower case; they will always appear in upper case). It will also
2714help to turn grouping on with @kbd{d g}:
2715
2716@example
27172#101,1111,1110
2718@end example
2719
2720Notice that @kbd{d g} groups by fours by default if the display radix
2721is binary or hexadecimal, but by threes if it is decimal, octal, or any
2722other radix.
2723
2724Now let's see that number in decimal; type @kbd{d r 10}:
2725
2726@example
27271,534
2728@end example
2729
2730Numbers are not @emph{stored} with any particular radix attached. They're
2731just numbers; they can be entered in any radix, and are always displayed
2732in whatever radix you've chosen with @kbd{d r}. The current radix applies
2733to integers, fractions, and floats.
2734
2735@cindex Roundoff errors, in non-decimal numbers
2736(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} Your friend Joe tried to enter one-third
2737as @samp{3#0.1} in @kbd{d r 3} mode with a precision of 12. He got
2738@samp{3#0.0222222...} (with 25 2's) in the display. When he multiplied
2739that by three, he got @samp{3#0.222222...} instead of the expected
2740@samp{3#1}. Next, Joe entered @samp{3#0.2} and, to his great relief,
2741saw @samp{3#0.2} on the screen. But when he typed @kbd{2 /}, he got
2742@samp{3#0.10000001} (some zeros omitted). What's going on here?
2743@xref{Modes Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
2744
2745@cindex Scientific notation, in non-decimal numbers
2746(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Scientific notation works in non-decimal
2747modes in the natural way (the exponent is a power of the radix instead of
2748a power of ten, although the exponent itself is always written in decimal).
2749Thus @samp{8#1.23e3 = 8#1230.0}. Suppose we have the hexadecimal number
2750@samp{f.e8f} times 16 to the 15th power: We write @samp{16#f.e8fe15}.
2751What is wrong with this picture? What could we write instead that would
2752work better? @xref{Modes Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
2753
2754The @kbd{m} prefix key has another set of modes, relating to the way
2755Calc interprets your inputs and does computations. Whereas @kbd{d}-prefix
2756modes generally affect the way things look, @kbd{m}-prefix modes affect
2757the way they are actually computed.
2758
2759The most popular @kbd{m}-prefix mode is the @dfn{angular mode}. Notice
2760the @samp{Deg} indicator in the mode line. This means that if you use
2761a command that interprets a number as an angle, it will assume the
2762angle is measured in degrees. For example,
2763
d7b8e6c6 2764@smallexample
5d67986c 2765@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
27661: 45 1: 0.707106781187 1: 0.500000000001 1: 0.5
2767 . . . .
2768
2769 45 S 2 ^ c 1
d7b8e6c6 2770@end group
5d67986c 2771@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2772
2773@noindent
2774The shift-@kbd{S} command computes the sine of an angle. The sine
2775of 45 degrees is @c{$\sqrt{2}/2$}
2776@cite{sqrt(2)/2}; squaring this yields @cite{2/4 = 0.5}.
2777However, there has been a slight roundoff error because the
2778representation of @c{$\sqrt{2}/2$}
2779@cite{sqrt(2)/2} wasn't exact. The @kbd{c 1}
2780command is a handy way to clean up numbers in this case; it
2781temporarily reduces the precision by one digit while it
2782re-rounds the number on the top of the stack.
2783
2784@cindex Roundoff errors, examples
2785(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} Your friend Joe computed the sine
2786of 45 degrees as shown above, then, hoping to avoid an inexact
2787result, he increased the precision to 16 digits before squaring.
2788What happened? @xref{Modes Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
2789
2790To do this calculation in radians, we would type @kbd{m r} first.
2791(The indicator changes to @samp{Rad}.) 45 degrees corresponds to
2792@c{$\pi\over4$}
2793@cite{pi/4} radians. To get @c{$\pi$}
2794@cite{pi}, press the @kbd{P} key. (Once
2795again, this is a shifted capital @kbd{P}. Remember, unshifted
2796@kbd{p} sets the precision.)
2797
d7b8e6c6 2798@smallexample
5d67986c 2799@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28001: 3.14159265359 1: 0.785398163398 1: 0.707106781187
2801 . . .
2802
2803 P 4 / m r S
d7b8e6c6 2804@end group
5d67986c 2805@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2806
2807Likewise, inverse trigonometric functions generate results in
2808either radians or degrees, depending on the current angular mode.
2809
d7b8e6c6 2810@smallexample
5d67986c 2811@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28121: 0.707106781187 1: 0.785398163398 1: 45.
2813 . . .
2814
2815 .5 Q m r I S m d U I S
d7b8e6c6 2816@end group
5d67986c 2817@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2818
2819@noindent
2820Here we compute the Inverse Sine of @c{$\sqrt{0.5}$}
2821@cite{sqrt(0.5)}, first in
2822radians, then in degrees.
2823
2824Use @kbd{c d} and @kbd{c r} to convert a number from radians to degrees
2825and vice-versa.
2826
d7b8e6c6 2827@smallexample
5d67986c 2828@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28291: 45 1: 0.785398163397 1: 45.
2830 . . .
2831
2832 45 c r c d
d7b8e6c6 2833@end group
5d67986c 2834@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2835
2836Another interesting mode is @dfn{fraction mode}. Normally,
2837dividing two integers produces a floating-point result if the
2838quotient can't be expressed as an exact integer. Fraction mode
2839causes integer division to produce a fraction, i.e., a rational
2840number, instead.
2841
d7b8e6c6 2842@smallexample
5d67986c 2843@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28442: 12 1: 1.33333333333 1: 4:3
28451: 9 . .
2846 .
2847
5d67986c 2848 12 @key{RET} 9 / m f U / m f
d7b8e6c6 2849@end group
5d67986c 2850@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2851
2852@noindent
2853In the first case, we get an approximate floating-point result.
2854In the second case, we get an exact fractional result (four-thirds).
2855
2856You can enter a fraction at any time using @kbd{:} notation.
2857(Calc uses @kbd{:} instead of @kbd{/} as the fraction separator
2858because @kbd{/} is already used to divide the top two stack
2859elements.) Calculations involving fractions will always
2860produce exact fractional results; fraction mode only says
2861what to do when dividing two integers.
2862
2863@cindex Fractions vs. floats
2864@cindex Floats vs. fractions
2865(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 4.} If fractional arithmetic is exact,
2866why would you ever use floating-point numbers instead?
2867@xref{Modes Answer 4, 4}. (@bullet{})
2868
2869Typing @kbd{m f} doesn't change any existing values in the stack.
2870In the above example, we had to Undo the division and do it over
2871again when we changed to fraction mode. But if you use the
2872evaluates-to operator you can get commands like @kbd{m f} to
2873recompute for you.
2874
d7b8e6c6 2875@smallexample
5d67986c 2876@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28771: 12 / 9 => 1.33333333333 1: 12 / 9 => 1.333 1: 12 / 9 => 4:3
2878 . . .
2879
5d67986c 2880 ' 12/9 => @key{RET} p 4 @key{RET} m f
d7b8e6c6 2881@end group
5d67986c 2882@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2883
2884@noindent
2885In this example, the righthand side of the @samp{=>} operator
2886on the stack is recomputed when we change the precision, then
2887again when we change to fraction mode. All @samp{=>} expressions
2888on the stack are recomputed every time you change any mode that
2889might affect their values.
2890
2891@node Arithmetic Tutorial, Vector/Matrix Tutorial, Basic Tutorial, Tutorial
2892@section Arithmetic Tutorial
2893
2894@noindent
2895In this section, we explore the arithmetic and scientific functions
2896available in the Calculator.
2897
2898The standard arithmetic commands are @kbd{+}, @kbd{-}, @kbd{*}, @kbd{/},
2899and @kbd{^}. Each normally takes two numbers from the top of the stack
2900and pushes back a result. The @kbd{n} and @kbd{&} keys perform
2901change-sign and reciprocal operations, respectively.
2902
d7b8e6c6 2903@smallexample
5d67986c 2904@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29051: 5 1: 0.2 1: 5. 1: -5. 1: 5.
2906 . . . . .
2907
2908 5 & & n n
d7b8e6c6 2909@end group
5d67986c 2910@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2911
2912@cindex Binary operators
2913You can apply a ``binary operator'' like @kbd{+} across any number of
2914stack entries by giving it a numeric prefix. You can also apply it
2915pairwise to several stack elements along with the top one if you use
2916a negative prefix.
2917
d7b8e6c6 2918@smallexample
5d67986c 2919@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29203: 2 1: 9 3: 2 4: 2 3: 12
29212: 3 . 2: 3 3: 3 2: 13
29221: 4 1: 4 2: 4 1: 14
2923 . . 1: 10 .
2924 .
2925
5d67986c 29262 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} 4 M-3 + U 10 M-- M-3 +
d7b8e6c6 2927@end group
5d67986c 2928@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2929
2930@cindex Unary operators
2931You can apply a ``unary operator'' like @kbd{&} to the top @var{n}
2932stack entries with a numeric prefix, too.
2933
d7b8e6c6 2934@smallexample
5d67986c 2935@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29363: 2 3: 0.5 3: 0.5
29372: 3 2: 0.333333333333 2: 3.
29381: 4 1: 0.25 1: 4.
2939 . . .
2940
5d67986c 29412 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} 4 M-3 & M-2 &
d7b8e6c6 2942@end group
5d67986c 2943@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2944
2945Notice that the results here are left in floating-point form.
2946We can convert them back to integers by pressing @kbd{F}, the
2947``floor'' function. This function rounds down to the next lower
2948integer. There is also @kbd{R}, which rounds to the nearest
2949integer.
2950
d7b8e6c6 2951@smallexample
5d67986c 2952@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29537: 2. 7: 2 7: 2
29546: 2.4 6: 2 6: 2
29555: 2.5 5: 2 5: 3
29564: 2.6 4: 2 4: 3
29573: -2. 3: -2 3: -2
29582: -2.4 2: -3 2: -2
29591: -2.6 1: -3 1: -3
2960 . . .
2961
2962 M-7 F U M-7 R
d7b8e6c6 2963@end group
5d67986c 2964@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2965
2966Since dividing-and-flooring (i.e., ``integer quotient'') is such a
2967common operation, Calc provides a special command for that purpose, the
2968backslash @kbd{\}. Another common arithmetic operator is @kbd{%}, which
2969computes the remainder that would arise from a @kbd{\} operation, i.e.,
2970the ``modulo'' of two numbers. For example,
2971
d7b8e6c6 2972@smallexample
5d67986c 2973@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29742: 1234 1: 12 2: 1234 1: 34
29751: 100 . 1: 100 .
2976 . .
2977
5d67986c 29781234 @key{RET} 100 \ U %
d7b8e6c6 2979@end group
5d67986c 2980@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2981
2982These commands actually work for any real numbers, not just integers.
2983
d7b8e6c6 2984@smallexample
5d67986c 2985@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29862: 3.1415 1: 3 2: 3.1415 1: 0.1415
29871: 1 . 1: 1 .
2988 . .
2989
5d67986c 29903.1415 @key{RET} 1 \ U %
d7b8e6c6 2991@end group
5d67986c 2992@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
2993
2994(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} The @kbd{\} command would appear to be a
2995frill, since you could always do the same thing with @kbd{/ F}. Think
2996of a situation where this is not true---@kbd{/ F} would be inadequate.
2997Now think of a way you could get around the problem if Calc didn't
2998provide a @kbd{\} command. @xref{Arithmetic Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
2999
3000We've already seen the @kbd{Q} (square root) and @kbd{S} (sine)
3001commands. Other commands along those lines are @kbd{C} (cosine),
3002@kbd{T} (tangent), @kbd{E} (@cite{e^x}) and @kbd{L} (natural
3003logarithm). These can be modified by the @kbd{I} (inverse) and
3004@kbd{H} (hyperbolic) prefix keys.
3005
3006Let's compute the sine and cosine of an angle, and verify the
3007identity @c{$\sin^2x + \cos^2x = 1$}
3008@cite{sin(x)^2 + cos(x)^2 = 1}. We'll
3009arbitrarily pick @i{-64} degrees as a good value for @cite{x}. With
3010the angular mode set to degrees (type @w{@kbd{m d}}), do:
3011
d7b8e6c6 3012@smallexample
5d67986c 3013@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
30142: -64 2: -64 2: -0.89879 2: -0.89879 1: 1.
30151: -64 1: -0.89879 1: -64 1: 0.43837 .
3016 . . . .
3017
5d67986c 3018 64 n @key{RET} @key{RET} S @key{TAB} C f h
d7b8e6c6 3019@end group
5d67986c 3020@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3021
3022@noindent
3023(For brevity, we're showing only five digits of the results here.
3024You can of course do these calculations to any precision you like.)
3025
3026Remember, @kbd{f h} is the @code{calc-hypot}, or square-root of sum
3027of squares, command.
3028
3029Another identity is @c{$\displaystyle\tan x = {\sin x \over \cos x}$}
3030@cite{tan(x) = sin(x) / cos(x)}.
d7b8e6c6 3031@smallexample
5d67986c 3032@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3033
30342: -0.89879 1: -2.0503 1: -64.
30351: 0.43837 . .
3036 .
3037
3038 U / I T
d7b8e6c6 3039@end group
5d67986c 3040@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3041
3042A physical interpretation of this calculation is that if you move
3043@cite{0.89879} units downward and @cite{0.43837} units to the right,
3044your direction of motion is @i{-64} degrees from horizontal. Suppose
3045we move in the opposite direction, up and to the left:
3046
d7b8e6c6 3047@smallexample
5d67986c 3048@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
30492: -0.89879 2: 0.89879 1: -2.0503 1: -64.
30501: 0.43837 1: -0.43837 . .
3051 . .
3052
3053 U U M-2 n / I T
d7b8e6c6 3054@end group
5d67986c 3055@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3056
3057@noindent
3058How can the angle be the same? The answer is that the @kbd{/} operation
3059loses information about the signs of its inputs. Because the quotient
3060is negative, we know exactly one of the inputs was negative, but we
3061can't tell which one. There is an @kbd{f T} [@code{arctan2}] function which
3062computes the inverse tangent of the quotient of a pair of numbers.
3063Since you feed it the two original numbers, it has enough information
3064to give you a full 360-degree answer.
3065
d7b8e6c6 3066@smallexample
5d67986c 3067@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
30682: 0.89879 1: 116. 3: 116. 2: 116. 1: 180.
30691: -0.43837 . 2: -0.89879 1: -64. .
3070 . 1: 0.43837 .
3071 .
3072
5d67986c 3073 U U f T M-@key{RET} M-2 n f T -
d7b8e6c6 3074@end group
5d67986c 3075@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3076
3077@noindent
3078The resulting angles differ by 180 degrees; in other words, they
3079point in opposite directions, just as we would expect.
3080
3081The @key{META}-@key{RET} we used in the third step is the
3082``last-arguments'' command. It is sort of like Undo, except that it
3083restores the arguments of the last command to the stack without removing
3084the command's result. It is useful in situations like this one,
3085where we need to do several operations on the same inputs. We could
3086have accomplished the same thing by using @kbd{M-2 @key{RET}} to duplicate
3087the top two stack elements right after the @kbd{U U}, then a pair of
3088@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} commands to cycle the 116 up around the duplicates.
3089
3090A similar identity is supposed to hold for hyperbolic sines and cosines,
3091except that it is the @emph{difference}
3092@c{$\cosh^2x - \sinh^2x$}
3093@cite{cosh(x)^2 - sinh(x)^2} that always equals one.
3094Let's try to verify this identity.@refill
3095
d7b8e6c6 3096@smallexample
5d67986c 3097@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
30982: -64 2: -64 2: -64 2: 9.7192e54 2: 9.7192e54
30991: -64 1: -3.1175e27 1: 9.7192e54 1: -64 1: 9.7192e54
3100 . . . . .
3101
5d67986c 3102 64 n @key{RET} @key{RET} H C 2 ^ @key{TAB} H S 2 ^
d7b8e6c6 3103@end group
5d67986c 3104@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3105
3106@noindent
3107@cindex Roundoff errors, examples
3108Something's obviously wrong, because when we subtract these numbers
3109the answer will clearly be zero! But if you think about it, if these
3110numbers @emph{did} differ by one, it would be in the 55th decimal
3111place. The difference we seek has been lost entirely to roundoff
3112error.
3113
3114We could verify this hypothesis by doing the actual calculation with,
3115say, 60 decimal places of precision. This will be slow, but not
3116enormously so. Try it if you wish; sure enough, the answer is
31170.99999, reasonably close to 1.
3118
3119Of course, a more reasonable way to verify the identity is to use
3120a more reasonable value for @cite{x}!
3121
3122@cindex Common logarithm
3123Some Calculator commands use the Hyperbolic prefix for other purposes.
3124The logarithm and exponential functions, for example, work to the base
3125@cite{e} normally but use base-10 instead if you use the Hyperbolic
3126prefix.
3127
d7b8e6c6 3128@smallexample
5d67986c 3129@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
31301: 1000 1: 6.9077 1: 1000 1: 3
3131 . . . .
3132
3133 1000 L U H L
d7b8e6c6 3134@end group
5d67986c 3135@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3136
3137@noindent
3138First, we mistakenly compute a natural logarithm. Then we undo
3139and compute a common logarithm instead.
3140
3141The @kbd{B} key computes a general base-@var{b} logarithm for any
3142value of @var{b}.
3143
d7b8e6c6 3144@smallexample
5d67986c 3145@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
31462: 1000 1: 3 1: 1000. 2: 1000. 1: 6.9077
31471: 10 . . 1: 2.71828 .
3148 . .
3149
5d67986c 3150 1000 @key{RET} 10 B H E H P B
d7b8e6c6 3151@end group
5d67986c 3152@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3153
3154@noindent
3155Here we first use @kbd{B} to compute the base-10 logarithm, then use
3156the ``hyperbolic'' exponential as a cheap hack to recover the number
31571000, then use @kbd{B} again to compute the natural logarithm. Note
3158that @kbd{P} with the hyperbolic prefix pushes the constant @cite{e}
3159onto the stack.
3160
3161You may have noticed that both times we took the base-10 logarithm
3162of 1000, we got an exact integer result. Calc always tries to give
3163an exact rational result for calculations involving rational numbers
3164where possible. But when we used @kbd{H E}, the result was a
3165floating-point number for no apparent reason. In fact, if we had
3166computed @kbd{10 @key{RET} 3 ^} we @emph{would} have gotten an
3167exact integer 1000. But the @kbd{H E} command is rigged to generate
3168a floating-point result all of the time so that @kbd{1000 H E} will
3169not waste time computing a thousand-digit integer when all you
3170probably wanted was @samp{1e1000}.
3171
3172(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Find a pair of integer inputs to
3173the @kbd{B} command for which Calc could find an exact rational
3174result but doesn't. @xref{Arithmetic Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
3175
3176The Calculator also has a set of functions relating to combinatorics
3177and statistics. You may be familiar with the @dfn{factorial} function,
3178which computes the product of all the integers up to a given number.
3179
d7b8e6c6 3180@smallexample
5d67986c 3181@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
31821: 100 1: 93326215443... 1: 100. 1: 9.3326e157
3183 . . . .
3184
3185 100 ! U c f !
d7b8e6c6 3186@end group
5d67986c 3187@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3188
3189@noindent
3190Recall, the @kbd{c f} command converts the integer or fraction at the
3191top of the stack to floating-point format. If you take the factorial
3192of a floating-point number, you get a floating-point result
3193accurate to the current precision. But if you give @kbd{!} an
3194exact integer, you get an exact integer result (158 digits long
3195in this case).
3196
3197If you take the factorial of a non-integer, Calc uses a generalized
3198factorial function defined in terms of Euler's Gamma function
3199@c{$\Gamma(n)$}
3200@cite{gamma(n)}
3201(which is itself available as the @kbd{f g} command).
3202
d7b8e6c6 3203@smallexample
5d67986c 3204@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
32053: 4. 3: 24. 1: 5.5 1: 52.342777847
32062: 4.5 2: 52.3427777847 . .
32071: 5. 1: 120.
3208 . .
3209
5d67986c 3210 M-3 ! M-0 @key{DEL} 5.5 f g
d7b8e6c6 3211@end group
5d67986c 3212@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3213
3214@noindent
3215Here we verify the identity @c{$n! = \Gamma(n+1)$}
3216@cite{@var{n}!@: = gamma(@var{n}+1)}.
3217
3218The binomial coefficient @var{n}-choose-@var{m}@c{ or $\displaystyle {n \choose m}$}
3219@asis{} is defined by
3220@c{$\displaystyle {n! \over m! \, (n-m)!}$}
3221@cite{n!@: / m!@: (n-m)!} for all reals @cite{n} and
3222@cite{m}. The intermediate results in this formula can become quite
3223large even if the final result is small; the @kbd{k c} command computes
3224a binomial coefficient in a way that avoids large intermediate
3225values.
3226
3227The @kbd{k} prefix key defines several common functions out of
3228combinatorics and number theory. Here we compute the binomial
3229coefficient 30-choose-20, then determine its prime factorization.
3230
d7b8e6c6 3231@smallexample
5d67986c 3232@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
32332: 30 1: 30045015 1: [3, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 23, 29]
32341: 20 . .
3235 .
3236
5d67986c 3237 30 @key{RET} 20 k c k f
d7b8e6c6 3238@end group
5d67986c 3239@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3240
3241@noindent
3242You can verify these prime factors by using @kbd{v u} to ``unpack''
3243this vector into 8 separate stack entries, then @kbd{M-8 *} to
3244multiply them back together. The result is the original number,
324530045015.
3246
3247@cindex Hash tables
3248Suppose a program you are writing needs a hash table with at least
324910000 entries. It's best to use a prime number as the actual size
3250of a hash table. Calc can compute the next prime number after 10000:
3251
d7b8e6c6 3252@smallexample
5d67986c 3253@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
32541: 10000 1: 10007 1: 9973
3255 . . .
3256
3257 10000 k n I k n
d7b8e6c6 3258@end group
5d67986c 3259@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3260
3261@noindent
3262Just for kicks we've also computed the next prime @emph{less} than
326310000.
3264
3265@c [fix-ref Financial Functions]
3266@xref{Financial Functions}, for a description of the Calculator
3267commands that deal with business and financial calculations (functions
3268like @code{pv}, @code{rate}, and @code{sln}).
3269
3270@c [fix-ref Binary Number Functions]
3271@xref{Binary Functions}, to read about the commands for operating
3272on binary numbers (like @code{and}, @code{xor}, and @code{lsh}).
3273
3274@node Vector/Matrix Tutorial, Types Tutorial, Arithmetic Tutorial, Tutorial
3275@section Vector/Matrix Tutorial
3276
3277@noindent
3278A @dfn{vector} is a list of numbers or other Calc data objects.
3279Calc provides a large set of commands that operate on vectors. Some
3280are familiar operations from vector analysis. Others simply treat
3281a vector as a list of objects.
3282
3283@menu
3284* Vector Analysis Tutorial::
3285* Matrix Tutorial::
3286* List Tutorial::
3287@end menu
3288
3289@node Vector Analysis Tutorial, Matrix Tutorial, Vector/Matrix Tutorial, Vector/Matrix Tutorial
3290@subsection Vector Analysis
3291
3292@noindent
3293If you add two vectors, the result is a vector of the sums of the
3294elements, taken pairwise.
3295
d7b8e6c6 3296@smallexample
5d67986c 3297@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
32981: [1, 2, 3] 2: [1, 2, 3] 1: [8, 8, 3]
3299 . 1: [7, 6, 0] .
3300 .
3301
3302 [1,2,3] s 1 [7 6 0] s 2 +
d7b8e6c6 3303@end group
5d67986c 3304@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3305
3306@noindent
3307Note that we can separate the vector elements with either commas or
3308spaces. This is true whether we are using incomplete vectors or
3309algebraic entry. The @kbd{s 1} and @kbd{s 2} commands save these
3310vectors so we can easily reuse them later.
3311
3312If you multiply two vectors, the result is the sum of the products
3313of the elements taken pairwise. This is called the @dfn{dot product}
3314of the vectors.
3315
d7b8e6c6 3316@smallexample
5d67986c 3317@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
33182: [1, 2, 3] 1: 19
33191: [7, 6, 0] .
3320 .
3321
3322 r 1 r 2 *
d7b8e6c6 3323@end group
5d67986c 3324@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3325
3326@cindex Dot product
3327The dot product of two vectors is equal to the product of their
3328lengths times the cosine of the angle between them. (Here the vector
3329is interpreted as a line from the origin @cite{(0,0,0)} to the
3330specified point in three-dimensional space.) The @kbd{A}
3331(absolute value) command can be used to compute the length of a
3332vector.
3333
d7b8e6c6 3334@smallexample
5d67986c 3335@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
33363: 19 3: 19 1: 0.550782 1: 56.579
33372: [1, 2, 3] 2: 3.741657 . .
33381: [7, 6, 0] 1: 9.219544
3339 . .
3340
5d67986c 3341 M-@key{RET} M-2 A * / I C
d7b8e6c6 3342@end group
5d67986c 3343@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3344
3345@noindent
3346First we recall the arguments to the dot product command, then
3347we compute the absolute values of the top two stack entries to
3348obtain the lengths of the vectors, then we divide the dot product
3349by the product of the lengths to get the cosine of the angle.
3350The inverse cosine finds that the angle between the vectors
3351is about 56 degrees.
3352
3353@cindex Cross product
3354@cindex Perpendicular vectors
3355The @dfn{cross product} of two vectors is a vector whose length
3356is the product of the lengths of the inputs times the sine of the
3357angle between them, and whose direction is perpendicular to both
3358input vectors. Unlike the dot product, the cross product is
3359defined only for three-dimensional vectors. Let's double-check
3360our computation of the angle using the cross product.
3361
d7b8e6c6 3362@smallexample
5d67986c 3363@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
33642: [1, 2, 3] 3: [-18, 21, -8] 1: [-0.52, 0.61, -0.23] 1: 56.579
33651: [7, 6, 0] 2: [1, 2, 3] . .
3366 . 1: [7, 6, 0]
3367 .
3368
5d67986c 3369 r 1 r 2 V C s 3 M-@key{RET} M-2 A * / A I S
d7b8e6c6 3370@end group
5d67986c 3371@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3372
3373@noindent
3374First we recall the original vectors and compute their cross product,
3375which we also store for later reference. Now we divide the vector
3376by the product of the lengths of the original vectors. The length of
3377this vector should be the sine of the angle; sure enough, it is!
3378
3379@c [fix-ref General Mode Commands]
3380Vector-related commands generally begin with the @kbd{v} prefix key.
3381Some are uppercase letters and some are lowercase. To make it easier
3382to type these commands, the shift-@kbd{V} prefix key acts the same as
3383the @kbd{v} key. (@xref{General Mode Commands}, for a way to make all
3384prefix keys have this property.)
3385
3386If we take the dot product of two perpendicular vectors we expect
3387to get zero, since the cosine of 90 degrees is zero. Let's check
3388that the cross product is indeed perpendicular to both inputs:
3389
d7b8e6c6 3390@smallexample
5d67986c 3391@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
33922: [1, 2, 3] 1: 0 2: [7, 6, 0] 1: 0
33931: [-18, 21, -8] . 1: [-18, 21, -8] .
3394 . .
3395
5d67986c 3396 r 1 r 3 * @key{DEL} r 2 r 3 *
d7b8e6c6 3397@end group
5d67986c 3398@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3399
3400@cindex Normalizing a vector
3401@cindex Unit vectors
3402(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} Given a vector on the top of the
3403stack, what keystrokes would you use to @dfn{normalize} the
3404vector, i.e., to reduce its length to one without changing its
3405direction? @xref{Vector Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
3406
3407(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Suppose a certain particle can be
3408at any of several positions along a ruler. You have a list of
3409those positions in the form of a vector, and another list of the
3410probabilities for the particle to be at the corresponding positions.
3411Find the average position of the particle.
3412@xref{Vector Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
3413
3414@node Matrix Tutorial, List Tutorial, Vector Analysis Tutorial, Vector/Matrix Tutorial
3415@subsection Matrices
3416
3417@noindent
3418A @dfn{matrix} is just a vector of vectors, all the same length.
3419This means you can enter a matrix using nested brackets. You can
3420also use the semicolon character to enter a matrix. We'll show
3421both methods here:
3422
d7b8e6c6 3423@smallexample
5d67986c 3424@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34251: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] 1: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ]
3426 [ 4, 5, 6 ] ] [ 4, 5, 6 ] ]
3427 . .
3428
5d67986c 3429 [[1 2 3] [4 5 6]] ' [1 2 3; 4 5 6] @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 3430@end group
5d67986c 3431@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3432
3433@noindent
3434We'll be using this matrix again, so type @kbd{s 4} to save it now.
3435
3436Note that semicolons work with incomplete vectors, but they work
3437better in algebraic entry. That's why we use the apostrophe in
3438the second example.
3439
3440When two matrices are multiplied, the lefthand matrix must have
3441the same number of columns as the righthand matrix has rows.
3442Row @cite{i}, column @cite{j} of the result is effectively the
3443dot product of row @cite{i} of the left matrix by column @cite{j}
3444of the right matrix.
3445
3446If we try to duplicate this matrix and multiply it by itself,
3447the dimensions are wrong and the multiplication cannot take place:
3448
d7b8e6c6 3449@smallexample
5d67986c 3450@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34511: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] * [ [ 1, 2, 3 ]
3452 [ 4, 5, 6 ] ] [ 4, 5, 6 ] ]
3453 .
3454
5d67986c 3455 @key{RET} *
d7b8e6c6 3456@end group
5d67986c 3457@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3458
3459@noindent
3460Though rather hard to read, this is a formula which shows the product
3461of two matrices. The @samp{*} function, having invalid arguments, has
3462been left in symbolic form.
3463
3464We can multiply the matrices if we @dfn{transpose} one of them first.
3465
d7b8e6c6 3466@smallexample
5d67986c 3467@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34682: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] 1: [ [ 14, 32 ] 1: [ [ 17, 22, 27 ]
3469 [ 4, 5, 6 ] ] [ 32, 77 ] ] [ 22, 29, 36 ]
34701: [ [ 1, 4 ] . [ 27, 36, 45 ] ]
3471 [ 2, 5 ] .
3472 [ 3, 6 ] ]
3473 .
3474
5d67986c 3475 U v t * U @key{TAB} *
d7b8e6c6 3476@end group
5d67986c 3477@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3478
3479Matrix multiplication is not commutative; indeed, switching the
3480order of the operands can even change the dimensions of the result
3481matrix, as happened here!
3482
3483If you multiply a plain vector by a matrix, it is treated as a
3484single row or column depending on which side of the matrix it is
3485on. The result is a plain vector which should also be interpreted
3486as a row or column as appropriate.
3487
d7b8e6c6 3488@smallexample
5d67986c 3489@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34902: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] 1: [14, 32]
3491 [ 4, 5, 6 ] ] .
34921: [1, 2, 3]
3493 .
3494
3495 r 4 r 1 *
d7b8e6c6 3496@end group
5d67986c 3497@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3498
3499Multiplying in the other order wouldn't work because the number of
3500rows in the matrix is different from the number of elements in the
3501vector.
3502
3503(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} Use @samp{*} to sum along the rows
3504of the above @c{$2\times3$}
3505@asis{2x3} matrix to get @cite{[6, 15]}. Now use @samp{*} to
3506sum along the columns to get @cite{[5, 7, 9]}.
3507@xref{Matrix Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
3508
3509@cindex Identity matrix
3510An @dfn{identity matrix} is a square matrix with ones along the
3511diagonal and zeros elsewhere. It has the property that multiplication
3512by an identity matrix, on the left or on the right, always produces
3513the original matrix.
3514
d7b8e6c6 3515@smallexample
5d67986c 3516@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
35171: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] 2: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] 1: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ]
3518 [ 4, 5, 6 ] ] [ 4, 5, 6 ] ] [ 4, 5, 6 ] ]
3519 . 1: [ [ 1, 0, 0 ] .
3520 [ 0, 1, 0 ]
3521 [ 0, 0, 1 ] ]
3522 .
3523
5d67986c 3524 r 4 v i 3 @key{RET} *
d7b8e6c6 3525@end group
5d67986c 3526@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3527
3528If a matrix is square, it is often possible to find its @dfn{inverse},
3529that is, a matrix which, when multiplied by the original matrix, yields
3530an identity matrix. The @kbd{&} (reciprocal) key also computes the
3531inverse of a matrix.
3532
d7b8e6c6 3533@smallexample
5d67986c 3534@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
35351: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] 1: [ [ -2.4, 1.2, -0.2 ]
3536 [ 4, 5, 6 ] [ 2.8, -1.4, 0.4 ]
3537 [ 7, 6, 0 ] ] [ -0.73333, 0.53333, -0.2 ] ]
3538 . .
3539
3540 r 4 r 2 | s 5 &
d7b8e6c6 3541@end group
5d67986c 3542@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3543
3544@noindent
3545The vertical bar @kbd{|} @dfn{concatenates} numbers, vectors, and
3546matrices together. Here we have used it to add a new row onto
3547our matrix to make it square.
3548
3549We can multiply these two matrices in either order to get an identity.
3550
d7b8e6c6 3551@smallexample
5d67986c 3552@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
35531: [ [ 1., 0., 0. ] 1: [ [ 1., 0., 0. ]
3554 [ 0., 1., 0. ] [ 0., 1., 0. ]
3555 [ 0., 0., 1. ] ] [ 0., 0., 1. ] ]
3556 . .
3557
5d67986c 3558 M-@key{RET} * U @key{TAB} *
d7b8e6c6 3559@end group
5d67986c 3560@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3561
3562@cindex Systems of linear equations
3563@cindex Linear equations, systems of
3564Matrix inverses are related to systems of linear equations in algebra.
3565Suppose we had the following set of equations:
3566
3567@ifinfo
3568@group
3569@example
3570 a + 2b + 3c = 6
3571 4a + 5b + 6c = 2
3572 7a + 6b = 3
3573@end example
3574@end group
3575@end ifinfo
3576@tex
3577\turnoffactive
3578\beforedisplayh
3579$$ \openup1\jot \tabskip=0pt plus1fil
3580\halign to\displaywidth{\tabskip=0pt
3581 $\hfil#$&$\hfil{}#{}$&
3582 $\hfil#$&$\hfil{}#{}$&
3583 $\hfil#$&${}#\hfil$\tabskip=0pt plus1fil\cr
3584 a&+&2b&+&3c&=6 \cr
3585 4a&+&5b&+&6c&=2 \cr
3586 7a&+&6b& & &=3 \cr}
3587$$
3588\afterdisplayh
3589@end tex
3590
3591@noindent
3592This can be cast into the matrix equation,
3593
3594@ifinfo
3595@group
3596@example
3597 [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] [ [ a ] [ [ 6 ]
3598 [ 4, 5, 6 ] * [ b ] = [ 2 ]
3599 [ 7, 6, 0 ] ] [ c ] ] [ 3 ] ]
3600@end example
3601@end group
3602@end ifinfo
3603@tex
3604\turnoffactive
3605\beforedisplay
3606$$ \pmatrix{ 1 & 2 & 3 \cr 4 & 5 & 6 \cr 7 & 6 & 0 }
3607 \times
3608 \pmatrix{ a \cr b \cr c } = \pmatrix{ 6 \cr 2 \cr 3 }
3609$$
3610\afterdisplay
3611@end tex
3612
3613We can solve this system of equations by multiplying both sides by the
3614inverse of the matrix. Calc can do this all in one step:
3615
d7b8e6c6 3616@smallexample
5d67986c 3617@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
36182: [6, 2, 3] 1: [-12.6, 15.2, -3.93333]
36191: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] .
3620 [ 4, 5, 6 ]
3621 [ 7, 6, 0 ] ]
3622 .
3623
3624 [6,2,3] r 5 /
d7b8e6c6 3625@end group
5d67986c 3626@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3627
3628@noindent
3629The result is the @cite{[a, b, c]} vector that solves the equations.
3630(Dividing by a square matrix is equivalent to multiplying by its
3631inverse.)
3632
3633Let's verify this solution:
3634
d7b8e6c6 3635@smallexample
5d67986c 3636@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
36372: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] 1: [6., 2., 3.]
3638 [ 4, 5, 6 ] .
3639 [ 7, 6, 0 ] ]
36401: [-12.6, 15.2, -3.93333]
3641 .
3642
5d67986c 3643 r 5 @key{TAB} *
d7b8e6c6 3644@end group
5d67986c 3645@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3646
3647@noindent
3648Note that we had to be careful about the order in which we multiplied
3649the matrix and vector. If we multiplied in the other order, Calc would
3650assume the vector was a row vector in order to make the dimensions
3651come out right, and the answer would be incorrect. If you
3652don't feel safe letting Calc take either interpretation of your
3653vectors, use explicit @c{$N\times1$}
3654@asis{Nx1} or @c{$1\times N$}
3655@asis{1xN} matrices instead.
3656In this case, you would enter the original column vector as
3657@samp{[[6], [2], [3]]} or @samp{[6; 2; 3]}.
3658
3659(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Algebraic entry allows you to make
3660vectors and matrices that include variables. Solve the following
3661system of equations to get expressions for @cite{x} and @cite{y}
3662in terms of @cite{a} and @cite{b}.
3663
3664@ifinfo
3665@group
3666@example
3667 x + a y = 6
3668 x + b y = 10
3669@end example
3670@end group
3671@end ifinfo
3672@tex
3673\turnoffactive
3674\beforedisplay
3675$$ \eqalign{ x &+ a y = 6 \cr
3676 x &+ b y = 10}
3677$$
3678\afterdisplay
3679@end tex
3680
3681@noindent
3682@xref{Matrix Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
3683
3684@cindex Least-squares for over-determined systems
3685@cindex Over-determined systems of equations
3686(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} A system of equations is ``over-determined''
3687if it has more equations than variables. It is often the case that
3688there are no values for the variables that will satisfy all the
3689equations at once, but it is still useful to find a set of values
3690which ``nearly'' satisfy all the equations. In terms of matrix equations,
3691you can't solve @cite{A X = B} directly because the matrix @cite{A}
3692is not square for an over-determined system. Matrix inversion works
3693only for square matrices. One common trick is to multiply both sides
3694on the left by the transpose of @cite{A}:
3695@ifinfo
3696@samp{trn(A)*A*X = trn(A)*B}.
3697@end ifinfo
3698@tex
3699\turnoffactive
3700$A^T A \, X = A^T B$, where $A^T$ is the transpose \samp{trn(A)}.
3701@end tex
3702Now @c{$A^T A$}
3703@cite{trn(A)*A} is a square matrix so a solution is possible. It
3704turns out that the @cite{X} vector you compute in this way will be a
3705``least-squares'' solution, which can be regarded as the ``closest''
3706solution to the set of equations. Use Calc to solve the following
3707over-determined system:@refill
3708
3709@ifinfo
3710@group
3711@example
3712 a + 2b + 3c = 6
3713 4a + 5b + 6c = 2
3714 7a + 6b = 3
3715 2a + 4b + 6c = 11
3716@end example
3717@end group
3718@end ifinfo
3719@tex
3720\turnoffactive
3721\beforedisplayh
3722$$ \openup1\jot \tabskip=0pt plus1fil
3723\halign to\displaywidth{\tabskip=0pt
3724 $\hfil#$&$\hfil{}#{}$&
3725 $\hfil#$&$\hfil{}#{}$&
3726 $\hfil#$&${}#\hfil$\tabskip=0pt plus1fil\cr
3727 a&+&2b&+&3c&=6 \cr
3728 4a&+&5b&+&6c&=2 \cr
3729 7a&+&6b& & &=3 \cr
3730 2a&+&4b&+&6c&=11 \cr}
3731$$
3732\afterdisplayh
3733@end tex
3734
3735@noindent
3736@xref{Matrix Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
3737
3738@node List Tutorial, , Matrix Tutorial, Vector/Matrix Tutorial
3739@subsection Vectors as Lists
3740
3741@noindent
3742@cindex Lists
3743Although Calc has a number of features for manipulating vectors and
3744matrices as mathematical objects, you can also treat vectors as
3745simple lists of values. For example, we saw that the @kbd{k f}
3746command returns a vector which is a list of the prime factors of a
3747number.
3748
3749You can pack and unpack stack entries into vectors:
3750
d7b8e6c6 3751@smallexample
5d67986c 3752@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
37533: 10 1: [10, 20, 30] 3: 10
37542: 20 . 2: 20
37551: 30 1: 30
3756 . .
3757
3758 M-3 v p v u
d7b8e6c6 3759@end group
5d67986c 3760@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3761
3762You can also build vectors out of consecutive integers, or out
3763of many copies of a given value:
3764
d7b8e6c6 3765@smallexample
5d67986c 3766@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
37671: [1, 2, 3, 4] 2: [1, 2, 3, 4] 2: [1, 2, 3, 4]
3768 . 1: 17 1: [17, 17, 17, 17]
3769 . .
3770
5d67986c 3771 v x 4 @key{RET} 17 v b 4 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 3772@end group
5d67986c 3773@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3774
3775You can apply an operator to every element of a vector using the
3776@dfn{map} command.
3777
d7b8e6c6 3778@smallexample
5d67986c 3779@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
37801: [17, 34, 51, 68] 1: [289, 1156, 2601, 4624] 1: [17, 34, 51, 68]
3781 . . .
3782
3783 V M * 2 V M ^ V M Q
d7b8e6c6 3784@end group
5d67986c 3785@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3786
3787@noindent
3788In the first step, we multiply the vector of integers by the vector
3789of 17's elementwise. In the second step, we raise each element to
3790the power two. (The general rule is that both operands must be
3791vectors of the same length, or else one must be a vector and the
3792other a plain number.) In the final step, we take the square root
3793of each element.
3794
3795(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} Compute a vector of powers of two
3796from @c{$2^{-4}$}
3797@cite{2^-4} to @cite{2^4}. @xref{List Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
3798
3799You can also @dfn{reduce} a binary operator across a vector.
3800For example, reducing @samp{*} computes the product of all the
3801elements in the vector:
3802
d7b8e6c6 3803@smallexample
5d67986c 3804@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
38051: 123123 1: [3, 7, 11, 13, 41] 1: 123123
3806 . . .
3807
3808 123123 k f V R *
d7b8e6c6 3809@end group
5d67986c 3810@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3811
3812@noindent
3813In this example, we decompose 123123 into its prime factors, then
3814multiply those factors together again to yield the original number.
3815
3816We could compute a dot product ``by hand'' using mapping and
3817reduction:
3818
d7b8e6c6 3819@smallexample
5d67986c 3820@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
38212: [1, 2, 3] 1: [7, 12, 0] 1: 19
38221: [7, 6, 0] . .
3823 .
3824
3825 r 1 r 2 V M * V R +
d7b8e6c6 3826@end group
5d67986c 3827@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3828
3829@noindent
3830Recalling two vectors from the previous section, we compute the
3831sum of pairwise products of the elements to get the same answer
3832for the dot product as before.
3833
3834A slight variant of vector reduction is the @dfn{accumulate} operation,
3835@kbd{V U}. This produces a vector of the intermediate results from
3836a corresponding reduction. Here we compute a table of factorials:
3837
d7b8e6c6 3838@smallexample
5d67986c 3839@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
38401: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] 1: [1, 2, 6, 24, 120, 720]
3841 . .
3842
5d67986c 3843 v x 6 @key{RET} V U *
d7b8e6c6 3844@end group
5d67986c 3845@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3846
3847Calc allows vectors to grow as large as you like, although it gets
3848rather slow if vectors have more than about a hundred elements.
3849Actually, most of the time is spent formatting these large vectors
3850for display, not calculating on them. Try the following experiment
3851(if your computer is very fast you may need to substitute a larger
3852vector size).
3853
d7b8e6c6 3854@smallexample
5d67986c 3855@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
38561: [1, 2, 3, 4, ... 1: [2, 3, 4, 5, ...
3857 . .
3858
5d67986c 3859 v x 500 @key{RET} 1 V M +
d7b8e6c6 3860@end group
5d67986c 3861@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3862
3863Now press @kbd{v .} (the letter @kbd{v}, then a period) and try the
3864experiment again. In @kbd{v .} mode, long vectors are displayed
3865``abbreviated'' like this:
3866
d7b8e6c6 3867@smallexample
5d67986c 3868@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
38691: [1, 2, 3, ..., 500] 1: [2, 3, 4, ..., 501]
3870 . .
3871
5d67986c 3872 v x 500 @key{RET} 1 V M +
d7b8e6c6 3873@end group
5d67986c 3874@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3875
3876@noindent
3877(where now the @samp{...} is actually part of the Calc display).
3878You will find both operations are now much faster. But notice that
3879even in @w{@kbd{v .}} mode, the full vectors are still shown in the Trail.
3880Type @w{@kbd{t .}} to cause the trail to abbreviate as well, and try the
3881experiment one more time. Operations on long vectors are now quite
3882fast! (But of course if you use @kbd{t .} you will lose the ability
3883to get old vectors back using the @kbd{t y} command.)
3884
3885An easy way to view a full vector when @kbd{v .} mode is active is
3886to press @kbd{`} (back-quote) to edit the vector; editing always works
3887with the full, unabbreviated value.
3888
3889@cindex Least-squares for fitting a straight line
3890@cindex Fitting data to a line
3891@cindex Line, fitting data to
3892@cindex Data, extracting from buffers
3893@cindex Columns of data, extracting
3894As a larger example, let's try to fit a straight line to some data,
3895using the method of least squares. (Calc has a built-in command for
3896least-squares curve fitting, but we'll do it by hand here just to
3897practice working with vectors.) Suppose we have the following list
3898of values in a file we have loaded into Emacs:
3899
3900@smallexample
3901 x y
3902 --- ---
3903 1.34 0.234
3904 1.41 0.298
3905 1.49 0.402
3906 1.56 0.412
3907 1.64 0.466
3908 1.73 0.473
3909 1.82 0.601
3910 1.91 0.519
3911 2.01 0.603
3912 2.11 0.637
3913 2.22 0.645
3914 2.33 0.705
3915 2.45 0.917
3916 2.58 1.009
3917 2.71 0.971
3918 2.85 1.062
3919 3.00 1.148
3920 3.15 1.157
3921 3.32 1.354
3922@end smallexample
3923
3924@noindent
3925If you are reading this tutorial in printed form, you will find it
3926easiest to press @kbd{M-# i} to enter the on-line Info version of
3927the manual and find this table there. (Press @kbd{g}, then type
3928@kbd{List Tutorial}, to jump straight to this section.)
3929
3930Position the cursor at the upper-left corner of this table, just
3931to the left of the @cite{1.34}. Press @kbd{C-@@} to set the mark.
5d67986c 3932(On your system this may be @kbd{C-2}, @kbd{C-@key{SPC}}, or @kbd{NUL}.)
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3933Now position the cursor to the lower-right, just after the @cite{1.354}.
3934You have now defined this region as an Emacs ``rectangle.'' Still
3935in the Info buffer, type @kbd{M-# r}. This command
3936(@code{calc-grab-rectangle}) will pop you back into the Calculator, with
3937the contents of the rectangle you specified in the form of a matrix.@refill
3938
d7b8e6c6 3939@smallexample
5d67986c 3940@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
39411: [ [ 1.34, 0.234 ]
3942 [ 1.41, 0.298 ]
3943 @dots{}
d7b8e6c6 3944@end group
5d67986c 3945@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3946
3947@noindent
3948(You may wish to use @kbd{v .} mode to abbreviate the display of this
3949large matrix.)
3950
3951We want to treat this as a pair of lists. The first step is to
3952transpose this matrix into a pair of rows. Remember, a matrix is
3953just a vector of vectors. So we can unpack the matrix into a pair
3954of row vectors on the stack.
3955
d7b8e6c6 3956@smallexample
5d67986c 3957@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
39581: [ [ 1.34, 1.41, 1.49, ... ] 2: [1.34, 1.41, 1.49, ... ]
3959 [ 0.234, 0.298, 0.402, ... ] ] 1: [0.234, 0.298, 0.402, ... ]
3960 . .
3961
3962 v t v u
d7b8e6c6 3963@end group
5d67986c 3964@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3965
3966@noindent
3967Let's store these in quick variables 1 and 2, respectively.
3968
d7b8e6c6 3969@smallexample
5d67986c 3970@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
39711: [1.34, 1.41, 1.49, ... ] .
3972 .
3973
3974 t 2 t 1
d7b8e6c6 3975@end group
5d67986c 3976@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
3977
3978@noindent
3979(Recall that @kbd{t 2} is a variant of @kbd{s 2} that removes the
3980stored value from the stack.)
3981
3982In a least squares fit, the slope @cite{m} is given by the formula
3983
3984@ifinfo
3985@example
3986m = (N sum(x y) - sum(x) sum(y)) / (N sum(x^2) - sum(x)^2)
3987@end example
3988@end ifinfo
3989@tex
3990\turnoffactive
3991\beforedisplay
3992$$ m = {N \sum x y - \sum x \sum y \over
3993 N \sum x^2 - \left( \sum x \right)^2} $$
3994\afterdisplay
3995@end tex
3996
3997@noindent
3998where @c{$\sum x$}
3999@cite{sum(x)} represents the sum of all the values of @cite{x}.
4000While there is an actual @code{sum} function in Calc, it's easier to
4001sum a vector using a simple reduction. First, let's compute the four
4002different sums that this formula uses.
4003
d7b8e6c6 4004@smallexample
5d67986c 4005@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
40061: 41.63 1: 98.0003
4007 . .
4008
4009 r 1 V R + t 3 r 1 2 V M ^ V R + t 4
4010
d7b8e6c6 4011@end group
5d67986c 4012@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 4013@noindent
d7b8e6c6 4014@smallexample
5d67986c 4015@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
40161: 13.613 1: 33.36554
4017 . .
4018
4019 r 2 V R + t 5 r 1 r 2 V M * V R + t 6
d7b8e6c6 4020@end group
5d67986c 4021@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4022
4023@ifinfo
4024@noindent
4025These are @samp{sum(x)}, @samp{sum(x^2)}, @samp{sum(y)}, and @samp{sum(x y)},
4026respectively. (We could have used @kbd{*} to compute @samp{sum(x^2)} and
4027@samp{sum(x y)}.)
4028@end ifinfo
4029@tex
4030\turnoffactive
4031These are $\sum x$, $\sum x^2$, $\sum y$, and $\sum x y$,
4032respectively. (We could have used \kbd{*} to compute $\sum x^2$ and
4033$\sum x y$.)
4034@end tex
4035
4036Finally, we also need @cite{N}, the number of data points. This is just
4037the length of either of our lists.
4038
d7b8e6c6 4039@smallexample
5d67986c 4040@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
40411: 19
4042 .
4043
4044 r 1 v l t 7
d7b8e6c6 4045@end group
5d67986c 4046@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4047
4048@noindent
4049(That's @kbd{v} followed by a lower-case @kbd{l}.)
4050
4051Now we grind through the formula:
4052
d7b8e6c6 4053@smallexample
5d67986c 4054@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
40551: 633.94526 2: 633.94526 1: 67.23607
4056 . 1: 566.70919 .
4057 .
4058
4059 r 7 r 6 * r 3 r 5 * -
4060
d7b8e6c6 4061@end group
5d67986c 4062@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 4063@noindent
d7b8e6c6 4064@smallexample
5d67986c 4065@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
40662: 67.23607 3: 67.23607 2: 67.23607 1: 0.52141679
40671: 1862.0057 2: 1862.0057 1: 128.9488 .
4068 . 1: 1733.0569 .
4069 .
4070
4071 r 7 r 4 * r 3 2 ^ - / t 8
d7b8e6c6 4072@end group
5d67986c 4073@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4074
4075That gives us the slope @cite{m}. The y-intercept @cite{b} can now
4076be found with the simple formula,
4077
4078@ifinfo
4079@example
4080b = (sum(y) - m sum(x)) / N
4081@end example
4082@end ifinfo
4083@tex
4084\turnoffactive
4085\beforedisplay
4086$$ b = {\sum y - m \sum x \over N} $$
4087\afterdisplay
4088\vskip10pt
4089@end tex
4090
d7b8e6c6 4091@smallexample
5d67986c 4092@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
40931: 13.613 2: 13.613 1: -8.09358 1: -0.425978
4094 . 1: 21.70658 . .
4095 .
4096
4097 r 5 r 8 r 3 * - r 7 / t 9
d7b8e6c6 4098@end group
5d67986c 4099@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4100
4101Let's ``plot'' this straight line approximation, @c{$y \approx m x + b$}
4102@cite{m x + b}, and compare it with the original data.@refill
4103
d7b8e6c6 4104@smallexample
5d67986c 4105@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
41061: [0.699, 0.735, ... ] 1: [0.273, 0.309, ... ]
4107 . .
4108
4109 r 1 r 8 * r 9 + s 0
d7b8e6c6 4110@end group
5d67986c 4111@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4112
4113@noindent
4114Notice that multiplying a vector by a constant, and adding a constant
4115to a vector, can be done without mapping commands since these are
4116common operations from vector algebra. As far as Calc is concerned,
4117we've just been doing geometry in 19-dimensional space!
4118
4119We can subtract this vector from our original @cite{y} vector to get
4120a feel for the error of our fit. Let's find the maximum error:
4121
d7b8e6c6 4122@smallexample
5d67986c 4123@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
41241: [0.0387, 0.0112, ... ] 1: [0.0387, 0.0112, ... ] 1: 0.0897
4125 . . .
4126
4127 r 2 - V M A V R X
d7b8e6c6 4128@end group
5d67986c 4129@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4130
4131@noindent
4132First we compute a vector of differences, then we take the absolute
4133values of these differences, then we reduce the @code{max} function
4134across the vector. (The @code{max} function is on the two-key sequence
4135@kbd{f x}; because it is so common to use @code{max} in a vector
4136operation, the letters @kbd{X} and @kbd{N} are also accepted for
4137@code{max} and @code{min} in this context. In general, you answer
4138the @kbd{V M} or @kbd{V R} prompt with the actual key sequence that
4139invokes the function you want. You could have typed @kbd{V R f x} or
4140even @kbd{V R x max @key{RET}} if you had preferred.)
4141
4142If your system has the GNUPLOT program, you can see graphs of your
4143data and your straight line to see how well they match. (If you have
4144GNUPLOT 3.0, the following instructions will work regardless of the
4145kind of display you have. Some GNUPLOT 2.0, non-X-windows systems
4146may require additional steps to view the graphs.)
4147
5d67986c 4148Let's start by plotting the original data. Recall the ``@var{x}'' and ``@var{y}''
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4149vectors onto the stack and press @kbd{g f}. This ``fast'' graphing
4150command does everything you need to do for simple, straightforward
4151plotting of data.
4152
d7b8e6c6 4153@smallexample
5d67986c 4154@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
41552: [1.34, 1.41, 1.49, ... ]
41561: [0.234, 0.298, 0.402, ... ]
4157 .
4158
4159 r 1 r 2 g f
d7b8e6c6 4160@end group
5d67986c 4161@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4162
4163If all goes well, you will shortly get a new window containing a graph
4164of the data. (If not, contact your GNUPLOT or Calc installer to find
4165out what went wrong.) In the X window system, this will be a separate
4166graphics window. For other kinds of displays, the default is to
4167display the graph in Emacs itself using rough character graphics.
4168Press @kbd{q} when you are done viewing the character graphics.
4169
4170Next, let's add the line we got from our least-squares fit:
4171
d7b8e6c6 4172@smallexample
5d67986c 4173@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
41742: [1.34, 1.41, 1.49, ... ]
41751: [0.273, 0.309, 0.351, ... ]
4176 .
4177
5d67986c 4178 @key{DEL} r 0 g a g p
d7b8e6c6 4179@end group
5d67986c 4180@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4181
4182It's not very useful to get symbols to mark the data points on this
4183second curve; you can type @kbd{g S g p} to remove them. Type @kbd{g q}
4184when you are done to remove the X graphics window and terminate GNUPLOT.
4185
4186(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} An earlier exercise showed how to do
4187least squares fitting to a general system of equations. Our 19 data
4188points are really 19 equations of the form @cite{y_i = m x_i + b} for
4189different pairs of @cite{(x_i,y_i)}. Use the matrix-transpose method
4190to solve for @cite{m} and @cite{b}, duplicating the above result.
4191@xref{List Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
4192
4193@cindex Geometric mean
4194(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} If the input data do not form a
4195rectangle, you can use @w{@kbd{M-# g}} (@code{calc-grab-region})
4196to grab the data the way Emacs normally works with regions---it reads
4197left-to-right, top-to-bottom, treating line breaks the same as spaces.
4198Use this command to find the geometric mean of the following numbers.
4199(The geometric mean is the @var{n}th root of the product of @var{n} numbers.)
4200
4201@example
42022.3 6 22 15.1 7
4203 15 14 7.5
4204 2.5
4205@end example
4206
4207@noindent
4208The @kbd{M-# g} command accepts numbers separated by spaces or commas,
4209with or without surrounding vector brackets.
4210@xref{List Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
4211
4212@ifinfo
4213As another example, a theorem about binomial coefficients tells
4214us that the alternating sum of binomial coefficients
4215@var{n}-choose-0 minus @var{n}-choose-1 plus @var{n}-choose-2, and so
4216on up to @var{n}-choose-@var{n},
4217always comes out to zero. Let's verify this
4218for @cite{n=6}.@refill
4219@end ifinfo
4220@tex
4221As another example, a theorem about binomial coefficients tells
4222us that the alternating sum of binomial coefficients
4223${n \choose 0} - {n \choose 1} + {n \choose 2} - \cdots \pm {n \choose n}$
4224always comes out to zero. Let's verify this
4225for \cite{n=6}.
4226@end tex
4227
d7b8e6c6 4228@smallexample
5d67986c 4229@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
42301: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7] 1: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
4231 . .
4232
5d67986c 4233 v x 7 @key{RET} 1 -
d7b8e6c6 4234
d7b8e6c6 4235@end group
5d67986c 4236@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 4237@noindent
d7b8e6c6 4238@smallexample
5d67986c 4239@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
42401: [1, -6, 15, -20, 15, -6, 1] 1: 0
4241 . .
4242
5d67986c 4243 V M ' (-1)^$ choose(6,$) @key{RET} V R +
d7b8e6c6 4244@end group
5d67986c 4245@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4246
4247The @kbd{V M '} command prompts you to enter any algebraic expression
4248to define the function to map over the vector. The symbol @samp{$}
4249inside this expression represents the argument to the function.
4250The Calculator applies this formula to each element of the vector,
4251substituting each element's value for the @samp{$} sign(s) in turn.
4252
4253To define a two-argument function, use @samp{$$} for the first
5d67986c 4254argument and @samp{$} for the second: @kbd{V M ' $$-$ @key{RET}} is
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4255equivalent to @kbd{V M -}. This is analogous to regular algebraic
4256entry, where @samp{$$} would refer to the next-to-top stack entry
5d67986c 4257and @samp{$} would refer to the top stack entry, and @kbd{' $$-$ @key{RET}}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4258would act exactly like @kbd{-}.
4259
4260Notice that the @kbd{V M '} command has recorded two things in the
4261trail: The result, as usual, and also a funny-looking thing marked
4262@samp{oper} that represents the operator function you typed in.
4263The function is enclosed in @samp{< >} brackets, and the argument is
4264denoted by a @samp{#} sign. If there were several arguments, they
4265would be shown as @samp{#1}, @samp{#2}, and so on. (For example,
4266@kbd{V M ' $$-$} will put the function @samp{<#1 - #2>} on the
4267trail.) This object is a ``nameless function''; you can use nameless
4268@w{@samp{< >}} notation to answer the @kbd{V M '} prompt if you like.
4269Nameless function notation has the interesting, occasionally useful
4270property that a nameless function is not actually evaluated until
4271it is used. For example, @kbd{V M ' $+random(2.0)} evaluates
4272@samp{random(2.0)} once and adds that random number to all elements
4273of the vector, but @kbd{V M ' <#+random(2.0)>} evaluates the
4274@samp{random(2.0)} separately for each vector element.
4275
4276Another group of operators that are often useful with @kbd{V M} are
4277the relational operators: @kbd{a =}, for example, compares two numbers
4278and gives the result 1 if they are equal, or 0 if not. Similarly,
4279@w{@kbd{a <}} checks for one number being less than another.
4280
4281Other useful vector operations include @kbd{v v}, to reverse a
4282vector end-for-end; @kbd{V S}, to sort the elements of a vector
4283into increasing order; and @kbd{v r} and @w{@kbd{v c}}, to extract
4284one row or column of a matrix, or (in both cases) to extract one
4285element of a plain vector. With a negative argument, @kbd{v r}
4286and @kbd{v c} instead delete one row, column, or vector element.
4287
4288@cindex Divisor functions
4289(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 4.} The @cite{k}th @dfn{divisor function}
4290@tex
4291$\sigma_k(n)$
4292@end tex
4293is the sum of the @cite{k}th powers of all the divisors of an
4294integer @cite{n}. Figure out a method for computing the divisor
4295function for reasonably small values of @cite{n}. As a test,
4296the 0th and 1st divisor functions of 30 are 8 and 72, respectively.
4297@xref{List Answer 4, 4}. (@bullet{})
4298
4299@cindex Square-free numbers
4300@cindex Duplicate values in a list
4301(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 5.} The @kbd{k f} command produces a
4302list of prime factors for a number. Sometimes it is important to
4303know that a number is @dfn{square-free}, i.e., that no prime occurs
4304more than once in its list of prime factors. Find a sequence of
4305keystrokes to tell if a number is square-free; your method should
4306leave 1 on the stack if it is, or 0 if it isn't.
4307@xref{List Answer 5, 5}. (@bullet{})
4308
4309@cindex Triangular lists
4310(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 6.} Build a list of lists that looks
4311like the following diagram. (You may wish to use the @kbd{v /}
4312command to enable multi-line display of vectors.)
4313
d7b8e6c6 4314@smallexample
5d67986c 4315@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
43161: [ [1],
4317 [1, 2],
4318 [1, 2, 3],
4319 [1, 2, 3, 4],
4320 [1, 2, 3, 4, 5],
4321 [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] ]
d7b8e6c6 4322@end group
5d67986c 4323@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4324
4325@noindent
4326@xref{List Answer 6, 6}. (@bullet{})
4327
4328(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 7.} Build the following list of lists.
4329
d7b8e6c6 4330@smallexample
5d67986c 4331@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
43321: [ [0],
4333 [1, 2],
4334 [3, 4, 5],
4335 [6, 7, 8, 9],
4336 [10, 11, 12, 13, 14],
4337 [15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20] ]
d7b8e6c6 4338@end group
5d67986c 4339@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4340
4341@noindent
4342@xref{List Answer 7, 7}. (@bullet{})
4343
4344@cindex Maximizing a function over a list of values
4345@c [fix-ref Numerical Solutions]
4346(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 8.} Compute a list of values of Bessel's
4347@c{$J_1(x)$}
4348@cite{J1} function @samp{besJ(1,x)} for @cite{x} from 0 to 5
4349in steps of 0.25.
4350Find the value of @cite{x} (from among the above set of values) for
4351which @samp{besJ(1,x)} is a maximum. Use an ``automatic'' method,
4352i.e., just reading along the list by hand to find the largest value
4353is not allowed! (There is an @kbd{a X} command which does this kind
4354of thing automatically; @pxref{Numerical Solutions}.)
4355@xref{List Answer 8, 8}. (@bullet{})@refill
4356
4357@cindex Digits, vectors of
4358(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 9.} You are given an integer in the range
4359@c{$0 \le N < 10^m$}
4360@cite{0 <= N < 10^m} for @cite{m=12} (i.e., an integer of less than
4361twelve digits). Convert this integer into a vector of @cite{m}
4362digits, each in the range from 0 to 9. In vector-of-digits notation,
4363add one to this integer to produce a vector of @cite{m+1} digits
4364(since there could be a carry out of the most significant digit).
4365Convert this vector back into a regular integer. A good integer
4366to try is 25129925999. @xref{List Answer 9, 9}. (@bullet{})
4367
4368(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 10.} Your friend Joe tried to use
4369@kbd{V R a =} to test if all numbers in a list were equal. What
4370happened? How would you do this test? @xref{List Answer 10, 10}. (@bullet{})
4371
4372(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 11.} The area of a circle of radius one
4373is @c{$\pi$}
4374@cite{pi}. The area of the @c{$2\times2$}
4375@asis{2x2} square that encloses that
5d67986c 4376circle is 4. So if we throw @var{n} darts at random points in the square,
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4377about @c{$\pi/4$}
4378@cite{pi/4} of them will land inside the circle. This gives us
4379an entertaining way to estimate the value of @c{$\pi$}
4380@cite{pi}. The @w{@kbd{k r}}
4381command picks a random number between zero and the value on the stack.
4382We could get a random floating-point number between @i{-1} and 1 by typing
4383@w{@kbd{2.0 k r 1 -}}. Build a vector of 100 random @cite{(x,y)} points in
4384this square, then use vector mapping and reduction to count how many
4385points lie inside the unit circle. Hint: Use the @kbd{v b} command.
4386@xref{List Answer 11, 11}. (@bullet{})
4387
4388@cindex Matchstick problem
4389(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 12.} The @dfn{matchstick problem} provides
4390another way to calculate @c{$\pi$}
4391@cite{pi}. Say you have an infinite field
4392of vertical lines with a spacing of one inch. Toss a one-inch matchstick
4393onto the field. The probability that the matchstick will land crossing
4394a line turns out to be @c{$2/\pi$}
4395@cite{2/pi}. Toss 100 matchsticks to estimate
4396@c{$\pi$}
4397@cite{pi}. (If you want still more fun, the probability that the GCD
4398(@w{@kbd{k g}}) of two large integers is one turns out to be @c{$6/\pi^2$}
4399@cite{6/pi^2}.
4400That provides yet another way to estimate @c{$\pi$}
4401@cite{pi}.)
4402@xref{List Answer 12, 12}. (@bullet{})
4403
4404(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 13.} An algebraic entry of a string in
4405double-quote marks, @samp{"hello"}, creates a vector of the numerical
4406(ASCII) codes of the characters (here, @cite{[104, 101, 108, 108, 111]}).
4407Sometimes it is convenient to compute a @dfn{hash code} of a string,
4408which is just an integer that represents the value of that string.
4409Two equal strings have the same hash code; two different strings
4410@dfn{probably} have different hash codes. (For example, Calc has
4411over 400 function names, but Emacs can quickly find the definition for
4412any given name because it has sorted the functions into ``buckets'' by
4413their hash codes. Sometimes a few names will hash into the same bucket,
4414but it is easier to search among a few names than among all the names.)
4415One popular hash function is computed as follows: First set @cite{h = 0}.
4416Then, for each character from the string in turn, set @cite{h = 3h + c_i}
4417where @cite{c_i} is the character's ASCII code. If we have 511 buckets,
4418we then take the hash code modulo 511 to get the bucket number. Develop a
4419simple command or commands for converting string vectors into hash codes.
4420The hash code for @samp{"Testing, 1, 2, 3"} is 1960915098, which modulo
4421511 is 121. @xref{List Answer 13, 13}. (@bullet{})
4422
4423(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 14.} The @kbd{H V R} and @kbd{H V U}
4424commands do nested function evaluations. @kbd{H V U} takes a starting
4425value and a number of steps @var{n} from the stack; it then applies the
4426function you give to the starting value 0, 1, 2, up to @var{n} times
4427and returns a vector of the results. Use this command to create a
4428``random walk'' of 50 steps. Start with the two-dimensional point
4429@cite{(0,0)}; then take one step a random distance between @i{-1} and 1
4430in both @cite{x} and @cite{y}; then take another step, and so on. Use the
4431@kbd{g f} command to display this random walk. Now modify your random
4432walk to walk a unit distance, but in a random direction, at each step.
4433(Hint: The @code{sincos} function returns a vector of the cosine and
4434sine of an angle.) @xref{List Answer 14, 14}. (@bullet{})
4435
4436@node Types Tutorial, Algebra Tutorial, Vector/Matrix Tutorial, Tutorial
4437@section Types Tutorial
4438
4439@noindent
4440Calc understands a variety of data types as well as simple numbers.
4441In this section, we'll experiment with each of these types in turn.
4442
4443The numbers we've been using so far have mainly been either @dfn{integers}
4444or @dfn{floats}. We saw that floats are usually a good approximation to
4445the mathematical concept of real numbers, but they are only approximations
4446and are susceptible to roundoff error. Calc also supports @dfn{fractions},
4447which can exactly represent any rational number.
4448
d7b8e6c6 4449@smallexample
5d67986c 4450@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
44511: 3628800 2: 3628800 1: 518400:7 1: 518414:7 1: 7:518414
4452 . 1: 49 . . .
4453 .
4454
5d67986c 4455 10 ! 49 @key{RET} : 2 + &
d7b8e6c6 4456@end group
5d67986c 4457@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4458
4459@noindent
4460The @kbd{:} command divides two integers to get a fraction; @kbd{/}
4461would normally divide integers to get a floating-point result.
4462Notice we had to type @key{RET} between the @kbd{49} and the @kbd{:}
4463since the @kbd{:} would otherwise be interpreted as part of a
4464fraction beginning with 49.
4465
4466You can convert between floating-point and fractional format using
4467@kbd{c f} and @kbd{c F}:
4468
d7b8e6c6 4469@smallexample
5d67986c 4470@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
44711: 1.35027217629e-5 1: 7:518414
4472 . .
4473
4474 c f c F
d7b8e6c6 4475@end group
5d67986c 4476@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4477
4478The @kbd{c F} command replaces a floating-point number with the
4479``simplest'' fraction whose floating-point representation is the
4480same, to within the current precision.
4481
d7b8e6c6 4482@smallexample
5d67986c 4483@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
44841: 3.14159265359 1: 1146408:364913 1: 3.1416 1: 355:113
4485 . . . .
4486
5d67986c 4487 P c F @key{DEL} p 5 @key{RET} P c F
d7b8e6c6 4488@end group
5d67986c 4489@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4490
4491(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} A calculation has produced the
4492result 1.26508260337. You suspect it is the square root of the
4493product of @c{$\pi$}
4494@cite{pi} and some rational number. Is it? (Be sure
4495to allow for roundoff error!) @xref{Types Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
4496
4497@dfn{Complex numbers} can be stored in both rectangular and polar form.
4498
d7b8e6c6 4499@smallexample
5d67986c 4500@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
45011: -9 1: (0, 3) 1: (3; 90.) 1: (6; 90.) 1: (2.4495; 45.)
4502 . . . . .
4503
4504 9 n Q c p 2 * Q
d7b8e6c6 4505@end group
5d67986c 4506@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4507
4508@noindent
4509The square root of @i{-9} is by default rendered in rectangular form
4510(@w{@cite{0 + 3i}}), but we can convert it to polar form (3 with a
4511phase angle of 90 degrees). All the usual arithmetic and scientific
4512operations are defined on both types of complex numbers.
4513
4514Another generalized kind of number is @dfn{infinity}. Infinity
4515isn't really a number, but it can sometimes be treated like one.
4516Calc uses the symbol @code{inf} to represent positive infinity,
4517i.e., a value greater than any real number. Naturally, you can
4518also write @samp{-inf} for minus infinity, a value less than any
4519real number. The word @code{inf} can only be input using
4520algebraic entry.
4521
d7b8e6c6 4522@smallexample
5d67986c 4523@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
45242: inf 2: -inf 2: -inf 2: -inf 1: nan
45251: -17 1: -inf 1: -inf 1: inf .
4526 . . . .
4527
5d67986c 4528' inf @key{RET} 17 n * @key{RET} 72 + A +
d7b8e6c6 4529@end group
5d67986c 4530@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4531
4532@noindent
4533Since infinity is infinitely large, multiplying it by any finite
4534number (like @i{-17}) has no effect, except that since @i{-17}
4535is negative, it changes a plus infinity to a minus infinity.
4536(``A huge positive number, multiplied by @i{-17}, yields a huge
4537negative number.'') Adding any finite number to infinity also
4538leaves it unchanged. Taking an absolute value gives us plus
4539infinity again. Finally, we add this plus infinity to the minus
4540infinity we had earlier. If you work it out, you might expect
4541the answer to be @i{-72} for this. But the 72 has been completely
4542lost next to the infinities; by the time we compute @w{@samp{inf - inf}}
4543the finite difference between them, if any, is indetectable.
4544So we say the result is @dfn{indeterminate}, which Calc writes
4545with the symbol @code{nan} (for Not A Number).
4546
4547Dividing by zero is normally treated as an error, but you can get
4548Calc to write an answer in terms of infinity by pressing @kbd{m i}
4549to turn on ``infinite mode.''
4550
d7b8e6c6 4551@smallexample
5d67986c 4552@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
45533: nan 2: nan 2: nan 2: nan 1: nan
45542: 1 1: 1 / 0 1: uinf 1: uinf .
45551: 0 . . .
4556 .
4557
5d67986c 4558 1 @key{RET} 0 / m i U / 17 n * +
d7b8e6c6 4559@end group
5d67986c 4560@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4561
4562@noindent
4563Dividing by zero normally is left unevaluated, but after @kbd{m i}
4564it instead gives an infinite result. The answer is actually
4565@code{uinf}, ``undirected infinity.'' If you look at a graph of
4566@cite{1 / x} around @w{@cite{x = 0}}, you'll see that it goes toward
4567plus infinity as you approach zero from above, but toward minus
4568infinity as you approach from below. Since we said only @cite{1 / 0},
4569Calc knows that the answer is infinite but not in which direction.
4570That's what @code{uinf} means. Notice that multiplying @code{uinf}
4571by a negative number still leaves plain @code{uinf}; there's no
4572point in saying @samp{-uinf} because the sign of @code{uinf} is
4573unknown anyway. Finally, we add @code{uinf} to our @code{nan},
4574yielding @code{nan} again. It's easy to see that, because
4575@code{nan} means ``totally unknown'' while @code{uinf} means
4576``unknown sign but known to be infinite,'' the more mysterious
4577@code{nan} wins out when it is combined with @code{uinf}, or, for
4578that matter, with anything else.
4579
4580(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Predict what Calc will answer
4581for each of these formulas: @samp{inf / inf}, @samp{exp(inf)},
4582@samp{exp(-inf)}, @samp{sqrt(-inf)}, @samp{sqrt(uinf)},
4583@samp{abs(uinf)}, @samp{ln(0)}.
4584@xref{Types Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
4585
4586(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} We saw that @samp{inf - inf = nan},
4587which stands for an unknown value. Can @code{nan} stand for
4588a complex number? Can it stand for infinity?
4589@xref{Types Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
4590
4591@dfn{HMS forms} represent a value in terms of hours, minutes, and
4592seconds.
4593
d7b8e6c6 4594@smallexample
5d67986c 4595@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
45961: 2@@ 30' 0" 1: 3@@ 30' 0" 2: 3@@ 30' 0" 1: 2.
4597 . . 1: 1@@ 45' 0." .
4598 .
4599
5d67986c 4600 2@@ 30' @key{RET} 1 + @key{RET} 2 / /
d7b8e6c6 4601@end group
5d67986c 4602@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4603
4604HMS forms can also be used to hold angles in degrees, minutes, and
4605seconds.
4606
d7b8e6c6 4607@smallexample
5d67986c 4608@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
46091: 0.5 1: 26.56505 1: 26@@ 33' 54.18" 1: 0.44721
4610 . . . .
4611
4612 0.5 I T c h S
d7b8e6c6 4613@end group
5d67986c 4614@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4615
4616@noindent
4617First we convert the inverse tangent of 0.5 to degrees-minutes-seconds
4618form, then we take the sine of that angle. Note that the trigonometric
4619functions will accept HMS forms directly as input.
4620
4621@cindex Beatles
4622(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 4.} The Beatles' @emph{Abbey Road} is
462347 minutes and 26 seconds long, and contains 17 songs. What is the
4624average length of a song on @emph{Abbey Road}? If the Extended Disco
4625Version of @emph{Abbey Road} added 20 seconds to the length of each
4626song, how long would the album be? @xref{Types Answer 4, 4}. (@bullet{})
4627
4628A @dfn{date form} represents a date, or a date and time. Dates must
4629be entered using algebraic entry. Date forms are surrounded by
4630@samp{< >} symbols; most standard formats for dates are recognized.
4631
d7b8e6c6 4632@smallexample
5d67986c 4633@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
46342: <Sun Jan 13, 1991> 1: 2.25
46351: <6:00pm Thu Jan 10, 1991> .
4636 .
4637
5d67986c 4638' <13 Jan 1991>, <1/10/91, 6pm> @key{RET} -
d7b8e6c6 4639@end group
5d67986c 4640@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4641
4642@noindent
4643In this example, we enter two dates, then subtract to find the
4644number of days between them. It is also possible to add an
4645HMS form or a number (of days) to a date form to get another
4646date form.
4647
d7b8e6c6 4648@smallexample
5d67986c 4649@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
46501: <4:45:59pm Mon Jan 14, 1991> 1: <2:50:59am Thu Jan 17, 1991>
4651 . .
4652
4653 t N 2 + 10@@ 5' +
d7b8e6c6 4654@end group
5d67986c 4655@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4656
4657@c [fix-ref Date Arithmetic]
4658@noindent
4659The @kbd{t N} (``now'') command pushes the current date and time on the
4660stack; then we add two days, ten hours and five minutes to the date and
4661time. Other date-and-time related commands include @kbd{t J}, which
4662does Julian day conversions, @kbd{t W}, which finds the beginning of
4663the week in which a date form lies, and @kbd{t I}, which increments a
4664date by one or several months. @xref{Date Arithmetic}, for more.
4665
4666(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 5.} How many days until the next
4667Friday the 13th? @xref{Types Answer 5, 5}. (@bullet{})
4668
4669(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 6.} How many leap years will there be
4670between now and the year 10001 A.D.? @xref{Types Answer 6, 6}. (@bullet{})
4671
4672@cindex Slope and angle of a line
4673@cindex Angle and slope of a line
4674An @dfn{error form} represents a mean value with an attached standard
4675deviation, or error estimate. Suppose our measurements indicate that
4676a certain telephone pole is about 30 meters away, with an estimated
4677error of 1 meter, and 8 meters tall, with an estimated error of 0.2
4678meters. What is the slope of a line from here to the top of the
4679pole, and what is the equivalent angle in degrees?
4680
d7b8e6c6 4681@smallexample
5d67986c 4682@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
46831: 8 +/- 0.2 2: 8 +/- 0.2 1: 0.266 +/- 0.011 1: 14.93 +/- 0.594
4684 . 1: 30 +/- 1 . .
4685 .
4686
5d67986c 4687 8 p .2 @key{RET} 30 p 1 / I T
d7b8e6c6 4688@end group
5d67986c 4689@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4690
4691@noindent
4692This means that the angle is about 15 degrees, and, assuming our
4693original error estimates were valid standard deviations, there is about
4694a 60% chance that the result is correct within 0.59 degrees.
4695
4696@cindex Torus, volume of
4697(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 7.} The volume of a torus (a donut shape) is
4698@c{$2 \pi^2 R r^2$}
4699@w{@cite{2 pi^2 R r^2}} where @cite{R} is the radius of the circle that
4700defines the center of the tube and @cite{r} is the radius of the tube
4701itself. Suppose @cite{R} is 20 cm and @cite{r} is 4 cm, each known to
4702within 5 percent. What is the volume and the relative uncertainty of
4703the volume? @xref{Types Answer 7, 7}. (@bullet{})
4704
4705An @dfn{interval form} represents a range of values. While an
4706error form is best for making statistical estimates, intervals give
4707you exact bounds on an answer. Suppose we additionally know that
4708our telephone pole is definitely between 28 and 31 meters away,
4709and that it is between 7.7 and 8.1 meters tall.
4710
d7b8e6c6 4711@smallexample
5d67986c 4712@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
47131: [7.7 .. 8.1] 2: [7.7 .. 8.1] 1: [0.24 .. 0.28] 1: [13.9 .. 16.1]
4714 . 1: [28 .. 31] . .
4715 .
4716
4717 [ 7.7 .. 8.1 ] [ 28 .. 31 ] / I T
d7b8e6c6 4718@end group
5d67986c 4719@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4720
4721@noindent
4722If our bounds were correct, then the angle to the top of the pole
4723is sure to lie in the range shown.
4724
4725The square brackets around these intervals indicate that the endpoints
4726themselves are allowable values. In other words, the distance to the
4727telephone pole is between 28 and 31, @emph{inclusive}. You can also
4728make an interval that is exclusive of its endpoints by writing
4729parentheses instead of square brackets. You can even make an interval
4730which is inclusive (``closed'') on one end and exclusive (``open'') on
4731the other.
4732
d7b8e6c6 4733@smallexample
5d67986c 4734@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
47351: [1 .. 10) 1: (0.1 .. 1] 2: (0.1 .. 1] 1: (0.2 .. 3)
4736 . . 1: [2 .. 3) .
4737 .
4738
4739 [ 1 .. 10 ) & [ 2 .. 3 ) *
d7b8e6c6 4740@end group
5d67986c 4741@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4742
4743@noindent
4744The Calculator automatically keeps track of which end values should
4745be open and which should be closed. You can also make infinite or
4746semi-infinite intervals by using @samp{-inf} or @samp{inf} for one
4747or both endpoints.
4748
4749(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 8.} What answer would you expect from
4750@samp{@w{1 /} @w{(0 .. 10)}}? What about @samp{@w{1 /} @w{(-10 .. 0)}}? What
4751about @samp{@w{1 /} @w{[0 .. 10]}} (where the interval actually includes
4752zero)? What about @samp{@w{1 /} @w{(-10 .. 10)}}?
4753@xref{Types Answer 8, 8}. (@bullet{})
4754
4755(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 9.} Two easy ways of squaring a number
5d67986c 4756are @kbd{@key{RET} *} and @w{@kbd{2 ^}}. Normally these produce the same
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4757answer. Would you expect this still to hold true for interval forms?
4758If not, which of these will result in a larger interval?
4759@xref{Types Answer 9, 9}. (@bullet{})
4760
5d67986c 4761A @dfn{modulo form} is used for performing arithmetic modulo @var{m}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4762For example, arithmetic involving time is generally done modulo 12
4763or 24 hours.
4764
d7b8e6c6 4765@smallexample
5d67986c 4766@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
47671: 17 mod 24 1: 3 mod 24 1: 21 mod 24 1: 9 mod 24
4768 . . . .
4769
5d67986c 4770 17 M 24 @key{RET} 10 + n 5 /
d7b8e6c6 4771@end group
5d67986c 4772@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4773
4774@noindent
4775In this last step, Calc has found a new number which, when multiplied
5d67986c
RS
4776by 5 modulo 24, produces the original number, 21. If @var{m} is prime
4777it is always possible to find such a number. For non-prime @var{m}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4778like 24, it is only sometimes possible.
4779
d7b8e6c6 4780@smallexample
5d67986c 4781@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
47821: 10 mod 24 1: 16 mod 24 1: 1000000... 1: 16
4783 . . . .
4784
5d67986c 4785 10 M 24 @key{RET} 100 ^ 10 @key{RET} 100 ^ 24 %
d7b8e6c6 4786@end group
5d67986c 4787@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4788
4789@noindent
4790These two calculations get the same answer, but the first one is
4791much more efficient because it avoids the huge intermediate value
4792that arises in the second one.
4793
4794@cindex Fermat, primality test of
4795(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 10.} A theorem of Pierre de Fermat
4796says that @c{\w{$x^{n-1} \bmod n = 1$}}
4797@cite{x^(n-1) mod n = 1} if @cite{n} is a prime number
4798and @cite{x} is an integer less than @cite{n}. If @cite{n} is
4799@emph{not} a prime number, this will @emph{not} be true for most
4800values of @cite{x}. Thus we can test informally if a number is
4801prime by trying this formula for several values of @cite{x}.
4802Use this test to tell whether the following numbers are prime:
4803811749613, 15485863. @xref{Types Answer 10, 10}. (@bullet{})
4804
4805It is possible to use HMS forms as parts of error forms, intervals,
4806modulo forms, or as the phase part of a polar complex number.
4807For example, the @code{calc-time} command pushes the current time
4808of day on the stack as an HMS/modulo form.
4809
d7b8e6c6 4810@smallexample
5d67986c 4811@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
48121: 17@@ 34' 45" mod 24@@ 0' 0" 1: 6@@ 22' 15" mod 24@@ 0' 0"
4813 . .
4814
5d67986c 4815 x time @key{RET} n
d7b8e6c6 4816@end group
5d67986c 4817@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4818
4819@noindent
4820This calculation tells me it is six hours and 22 minutes until midnight.
4821
4822(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 11.} A rule of thumb is that one year
4823is about @c{$\pi \times 10^7$}
4824@w{@cite{pi * 10^7}} seconds. What time will it be that
4825many seconds from right now? @xref{Types Answer 11, 11}. (@bullet{})
4826
4827(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 12.} You are preparing to order packaging
4828for the CD release of the Extended Disco Version of @emph{Abbey Road}.
4829You are told that the songs will actually be anywhere from 20 to 60
4830seconds longer than the originals. One CD can hold about 75 minutes
4831of music. Should you order single or double packages?
4832@xref{Types Answer 12, 12}. (@bullet{})
4833
4834Another kind of data the Calculator can manipulate is numbers with
4835@dfn{units}. This isn't strictly a new data type; it's simply an
4836application of algebraic expressions, where we use variables with
4837suggestive names like @samp{cm} and @samp{in} to represent units
4838like centimeters and inches.
4839
d7b8e6c6 4840@smallexample
5d67986c 4841@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
48421: 2 in 1: 5.08 cm 1: 0.027778 fath 1: 0.0508 m
4843 . . . .
4844
5d67986c 4845 ' 2in @key{RET} u c cm @key{RET} u c fath @key{RET} u b
d7b8e6c6 4846@end group
5d67986c 4847@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4848
4849@noindent
4850We enter the quantity ``2 inches'' (actually an algebraic expression
4851which means two times the variable @samp{in}), then we convert it
4852first to centimeters, then to fathoms, then finally to ``base'' units,
4853which in this case means meters.
4854
d7b8e6c6 4855@smallexample
5d67986c 4856@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
48571: 9 acre 1: 3 sqrt(acre) 1: 190.84 m 1: 190.84 m + 30 cm
4858 . . . .
4859
5d67986c 4860 ' 9 acre @key{RET} Q u s ' $+30 cm @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 4861
d7b8e6c6 4862@end group
5d67986c 4863@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 4864@noindent
d7b8e6c6 4865@smallexample
5d67986c 4866@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
48671: 191.14 m 1: 36536.3046 m^2 1: 365363046 cm^2
4868 . . .
4869
4870 u s 2 ^ u c cgs
d7b8e6c6 4871@end group
5d67986c 4872@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4873
4874@noindent
4875Since units expressions are really just formulas, taking the square
4876root of @samp{acre} is undefined. After all, @code{acre} might be an
4877algebraic variable that you will someday assign a value. We use the
4878``units-simplify'' command to simplify the expression with variables
4879being interpreted as unit names.
4880
4881In the final step, we have converted not to a particular unit, but to a
4882units system. The ``cgs'' system uses centimeters instead of meters
4883as its standard unit of length.
4884
4885There is a wide variety of units defined in the Calculator.
4886
d7b8e6c6 4887@smallexample
5d67986c 4888@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
48891: 55 mph 1: 88.5139 kph 1: 88.5139 km / hr 1: 8.201407e-8 c
4890 . . . .
4891
5d67986c 4892 ' 55 mph @key{RET} u c kph @key{RET} u c km/hr @key{RET} u c c @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 4893@end group
5d67986c 4894@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4895
4896@noindent
4897We express a speed first in miles per hour, then in kilometers per
4898hour, then again using a slightly more explicit notation, then
4899finally in terms of fractions of the speed of light.
4900
4901Temperature conversions are a bit more tricky. There are two ways to
4902interpret ``20 degrees Fahrenheit''---it could mean an actual
4903temperature, or it could mean a change in temperature. For normal
4904units there is no difference, but temperature units have an offset
4905as well as a scale factor and so there must be two explicit commands
4906for them.
4907
d7b8e6c6 4908@smallexample
5d67986c 4909@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
49101: 20 degF 1: 11.1111 degC 1: -20:3 degC 1: -6.666 degC
4911 . . . .
4912
5d67986c 4913 ' 20 degF @key{RET} u c degC @key{RET} U u t degC @key{RET} c f
d7b8e6c6 4914@end group
5d67986c 4915@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4916
4917@noindent
4918First we convert a change of 20 degrees Fahrenheit into an equivalent
4919change in degrees Celsius (or Centigrade). Then, we convert the
4920absolute temperature 20 degrees Fahrenheit into Celsius. Since
4921this comes out as an exact fraction, we then convert to floating-point
4922for easier comparison with the other result.
4923
4924For simple unit conversions, you can put a plain number on the stack.
4925Then @kbd{u c} and @kbd{u t} will prompt for both old and new units.
4926When you use this method, you're responsible for remembering which
4927numbers are in which units:
4928
d7b8e6c6 4929@smallexample
5d67986c 4930@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
49311: 55 1: 88.5139 1: 8.201407e-8
4932 . . .
4933
5d67986c 4934 55 u c mph @key{RET} kph @key{RET} u c km/hr @key{RET} c @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 4935@end group
5d67986c 4936@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4937
4938To see a complete list of built-in units, type @kbd{u v}. Press
4939@w{@kbd{M-# c}} again to re-enter the Calculator when you're done looking
4940at the units table.
4941
4942(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 13.} How many seconds are there really
4943in a year? @xref{Types Answer 13, 13}. (@bullet{})
4944
4945@cindex Speed of light
4946(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 14.} Supercomputer designs are limited by
4947the speed of light (and of electricity, which is nearly as fast).
4948Suppose a computer has a 4.1 ns (nanosecond) clock cycle, and its
4949cabinet is one meter across. Is speed of light going to be a
4950significant factor in its design? @xref{Types Answer 14, 14}. (@bullet{})
4951
4952(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 15.} Sam the Slug normally travels about
4953five yards in an hour. He has obtained a supply of Power Pills; each
4954Power Pill he eats doubles his speed. How many Power Pills can he
4955swallow and still travel legally on most US highways?
4956@xref{Types Answer 15, 15}. (@bullet{})
4957
4958@node Algebra Tutorial, Programming Tutorial, Types Tutorial, Tutorial
4959@section Algebra and Calculus Tutorial
4960
4961@noindent
4962This section shows how to use Calc's algebra facilities to solve
4963equations, do simple calculus problems, and manipulate algebraic
4964formulas.
4965
4966@menu
4967* Basic Algebra Tutorial::
4968* Rewrites Tutorial::
4969@end menu
4970
4971@node Basic Algebra Tutorial, Rewrites Tutorial, Algebra Tutorial, Algebra Tutorial
4972@subsection Basic Algebra
4973
4974@noindent
4975If you enter a formula in algebraic mode that refers to variables,
4976the formula itself is pushed onto the stack. You can manipulate
4977formulas as regular data objects.
4978
d7b8e6c6 4979@smallexample
5d67986c 4980@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
49811: 2 x^2 - 6 1: 6 - 2 x^2 1: (6 - 2 x^2) (3 x^2 + y)
4982 . . .
4983
5d67986c 4984 ' 2x^2-6 @key{RET} n ' 3x^2+y @key{RET} *
d7b8e6c6 4985@end group
5d67986c 4986@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 4987
5d67986c
RS
4988(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} Do @kbd{' x @key{RET} Q 2 ^} and
4989@kbd{' x @key{RET} 2 ^ Q} both wind up with the same result (@samp{x})?
d7b8e6c6
EZ
4990Why or why not? @xref{Algebra Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
4991
4992There are also commands for doing common algebraic operations on
4993formulas. Continuing with the formula from the last example,
4994
d7b8e6c6 4995@smallexample
5d67986c 4996@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
49971: 18 x^2 + 6 y - 6 x^4 - 2 x^2 y 1: (18 - 2 y) x^2 - 6 x^4 + 6 y
4998 . .
4999
5d67986c 5000 a x a c x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5001@end group
5d67986c 5002@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5003
5004@noindent
5005First we ``expand'' using the distributive law, then we ``collect''
5006terms involving like powers of @cite{x}.
5007
5008Let's find the value of this expression when @cite{x} is 2 and @cite{y}
5009is one-half.
5010
d7b8e6c6 5011@smallexample
5d67986c 5012@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
50131: 17 x^2 - 6 x^4 + 3 1: -25
5014 . .
5015
5d67986c 5016 1:2 s l y @key{RET} 2 s l x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5017@end group
5d67986c 5018@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5019
5020@noindent
5021The @kbd{s l} command means ``let''; it takes a number from the top of
5022the stack and temporarily assigns it as the value of the variable
5023you specify. It then evaluates (as if by the @kbd{=} key) the
5024next expression on the stack. After this command, the variable goes
5025back to its original value, if any.
5026
5027(An earlier exercise in this tutorial involved storing a value in the
5028variable @code{x}; if this value is still there, you will have to
5d67986c 5029unstore it with @kbd{s u x @key{RET}} before the above example will work
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5030properly.)
5031
5032@cindex Maximum of a function using Calculus
5033Let's find the maximum value of our original expression when @cite{y}
5034is one-half and @cite{x} ranges over all possible values. We can
5035do this by taking the derivative with respect to @cite{x} and examining
5036values of @cite{x} for which the derivative is zero. If the second
5037derivative of the function at that value of @cite{x} is negative,
5038the function has a local maximum there.
5039
d7b8e6c6 5040@smallexample
5d67986c 5041@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
50421: 17 x^2 - 6 x^4 + 3 1: 34 x - 24 x^3
5043 . .
5044
5d67986c 5045 U @key{DEL} s 1 a d x @key{RET} s 2
d7b8e6c6 5046@end group
5d67986c 5047@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5048
5049@noindent
5050Well, the derivative is clearly zero when @cite{x} is zero. To find
5051the other root(s), let's divide through by @cite{x} and then solve:
5052
d7b8e6c6 5053@smallexample
5d67986c 5054@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
50551: (34 x - 24 x^3) / x 1: 34 x / x - 24 x^3 / x 1: 34 - 24 x^2
5056 . . .
5057
5d67986c 5058 ' x @key{RET} / a x a s
d7b8e6c6 5059
d7b8e6c6 5060@end group
5d67986c 5061@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 5062@noindent
d7b8e6c6 5063@smallexample
5d67986c 5064@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
50651: 34 - 24 x^2 = 0 1: x = 1.19023
5066 . .
5067
5d67986c 5068 0 a = s 3 a S x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5069@end group
5d67986c 5070@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5071
5072@noindent
5073Notice the use of @kbd{a s} to ``simplify'' the formula. When the
5074default algebraic simplifications don't do enough, you can use
5075@kbd{a s} to tell Calc to spend more time on the job.
5076
5077Now we compute the second derivative and plug in our values of @cite{x}:
5078
d7b8e6c6 5079@smallexample
5d67986c 5080@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
50811: 1.19023 2: 1.19023 2: 1.19023
5082 . 1: 34 x - 24 x^3 1: 34 - 72 x^2
5083 . .
5084
5d67986c 5085 a . r 2 a d x @key{RET} s 4
d7b8e6c6 5086@end group
5d67986c 5087@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5088
5089@noindent
5090(The @kbd{a .} command extracts just the righthand side of an equation.
5091Another method would have been to use @kbd{v u} to unpack the equation
5d67986c 5092@w{@samp{x = 1.19}} to @samp{x} and @samp{1.19}, then use @kbd{M-- M-2 @key{DEL}}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5093to delete the @samp{x}.)
5094
d7b8e6c6 5095@smallexample
5d67986c 5096@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
50972: 34 - 72 x^2 1: -68. 2: 34 - 72 x^2 1: 34
50981: 1.19023 . 1: 0 .
5099 . .
5100
5d67986c 5101 @key{TAB} s l x @key{RET} U @key{DEL} 0 s l x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5102@end group
5d67986c 5103@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5104
5105@noindent
5106The first of these second derivatives is negative, so we know the function
5107has a maximum value at @cite{x = 1.19023}. (The function also has a
5108local @emph{minimum} at @cite{x = 0}.)
5109
5110When we solved for @cite{x}, we got only one value even though
5111@cite{34 - 24 x^2 = 0} is a quadratic equation that ought to have
5112two solutions. The reason is that @w{@kbd{a S}} normally returns a
5113single ``principal'' solution. If it needs to come up with an
5114arbitrary sign (as occurs in the quadratic formula) it picks @cite{+}.
5115If it needs an arbitrary integer, it picks zero. We can get a full
5116solution by pressing @kbd{H} (the Hyperbolic flag) before @kbd{a S}.
5117
d7b8e6c6 5118@smallexample
5d67986c 5119@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
51201: 34 - 24 x^2 = 0 1: x = 1.19023 s1 1: x = -1.19023
5121 . . .
5122
5d67986c 5123 r 3 H a S x @key{RET} s 5 1 n s l s1 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5124@end group
5d67986c 5125@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5126
5127@noindent
5128Calc has invented the variable @samp{s1} to represent an unknown sign;
5129it is supposed to be either @i{+1} or @i{-1}. Here we have used
5130the ``let'' command to evaluate the expression when the sign is negative.
5131If we plugged this into our second derivative we would get the same,
5132negative, answer, so @cite{x = -1.19023} is also a maximum.
5133
5134To find the actual maximum value, we must plug our two values of @cite{x}
5135into the original formula.
5136
d7b8e6c6 5137@smallexample
5d67986c 5138@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
51392: 17 x^2 - 6 x^4 + 3 1: 24.08333 s1^2 - 12.04166 s1^4 + 3
51401: x = 1.19023 s1 .
5141 .
5142
5d67986c 5143 r 1 r 5 s l @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5144@end group
5d67986c 5145@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5146
5147@noindent
5148(Here we see another way to use @kbd{s l}; if its input is an equation
5149with a variable on the lefthand side, then @kbd{s l} treats the equation
5150like an assignment to that variable if you don't give a variable name.)
5151
5152It's clear that this will have the same value for either sign of
5153@code{s1}, but let's work it out anyway, just for the exercise:
5154
d7b8e6c6 5155@smallexample
5d67986c 5156@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
51572: [-1, 1] 1: [15.04166, 15.04166]
51581: 24.08333 s1^2 ... .
5159 .
5160
5d67986c 5161 [ 1 n , 1 ] @key{TAB} V M $ @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5162@end group
5d67986c 5163@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5164
5165@noindent
5166Here we have used a vector mapping operation to evaluate the function
5167at several values of @samp{s1} at once. @kbd{V M $} is like @kbd{V M '}
5168except that it takes the formula from the top of the stack. The
5169formula is interpreted as a function to apply across the vector at the
5170next-to-top stack level. Since a formula on the stack can't contain
5171@samp{$} signs, Calc assumes the variables in the formula stand for
5172different arguments. It prompts you for an @dfn{argument list}, giving
5173the list of all variables in the formula in alphabetical order as the
5174default list. In this case the default is @samp{(s1)}, which is just
5175what we want so we simply press @key{RET} at the prompt.
5176
5177If there had been several different values, we could have used
5178@w{@kbd{V R X}} to find the global maximum.
5179
5180Calc has a built-in @kbd{a P} command that solves an equation using
5181@w{@kbd{H a S}} and returns a vector of all the solutions. It simply
5182automates the job we just did by hand. Applied to our original
5183cubic polynomial, it would produce the vector of solutions
5184@cite{[1.19023, -1.19023, 0]}. (There is also an @kbd{a X} command
5185which finds a local maximum of a function. It uses a numerical search
5186method rather than examining the derivatives, and thus requires you
5187to provide some kind of initial guess to show it where to look.)
5188
5189(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Given a vector of the roots of a
5190polynomial (such as the output of an @kbd{a P} command), what
5191sequence of commands would you use to reconstruct the original
5192polynomial? (The answer will be unique to within a constant
5193multiple; choose the solution where the leading coefficient is one.)
5194@xref{Algebra Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
5195
5196The @kbd{m s} command enables ``symbolic mode,'' in which formulas
5197like @samp{sqrt(5)} that can't be evaluated exactly are left in
5198symbolic form rather than giving a floating-point approximate answer.
5199Fraction mode (@kbd{m f}) is also useful when doing algebra.
5200
d7b8e6c6 5201@smallexample
5d67986c 5202@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
52032: 34 x - 24 x^3 2: 34 x - 24 x^3
52041: 34 x - 24 x^3 1: [sqrt(51) / 6, sqrt(51) / -6, 0]
5205 . .
5206
5d67986c 5207 r 2 @key{RET} m s m f a P x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5208@end group
5d67986c 5209@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5210
5211One more mode that makes reading formulas easier is ``Big mode.''
5212
d7b8e6c6 5213@smallexample
5d67986c 5214@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5215 3
52162: 34 x - 24 x
5217
5218 ____ ____
5219 V 51 V 51
52201: [-----, -----, 0]
5221 6 -6
5222
5223 .
5224
5225 d B
d7b8e6c6 5226@end group
5d67986c 5227@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5228
5229Here things like powers, square roots, and quotients and fractions
5230are displayed in a two-dimensional pictorial form. Calc has other
5231language modes as well, such as C mode, FORTRAN mode, and @TeX{} mode.
5232
d7b8e6c6 5233@smallexample
5d67986c 5234@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
52352: 34*x - 24*pow(x, 3) 2: 34*x - 24*x**3
52361: @{sqrt(51) / 6, sqrt(51) / -6, 0@} 1: /sqrt(51) / 6, sqrt(51) / -6, 0/
5237 . .
5238
5239 d C d F
5240
d7b8e6c6 5241@end group
5d67986c 5242@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 5243@noindent
d7b8e6c6 5244@smallexample
5d67986c 5245@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
52463: 34 x - 24 x^3
52472: [@{\sqrt@{51@} \over 6@}, @{\sqrt@{51@} \over -6@}, 0]
52481: @{2 \over 3@} \sqrt@{5@}
5249 .
5250
5d67986c 5251 d T ' 2 \sqrt@{5@} \over 3 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5252@end group
5d67986c 5253@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5254
5255@noindent
5256As you can see, language modes affect both entry and display of
5257formulas. They affect such things as the names used for built-in
5258functions, the set of arithmetic operators and their precedences,
5259and notations for vectors and matrices.
5260
5261Notice that @samp{sqrt(51)} may cause problems with older
5262implementations of C and FORTRAN, which would require something more
5263like @samp{sqrt(51.0)}. It is always wise to check over the formulas
5264produced by the various language modes to make sure they are fully
5265correct.
5266
5267Type @kbd{m s}, @kbd{m f}, and @kbd{d N} to reset these modes. (You
5268may prefer to remain in Big mode, but all the examples in the tutorial
5269are shown in normal mode.)
5270
5271@cindex Area under a curve
5272What is the area under the portion of this curve from @cite{x = 1} to @cite{2}?
5273This is simply the integral of the function:
5274
d7b8e6c6 5275@smallexample
5d67986c 5276@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
52771: 17 x^2 - 6 x^4 + 3 1: 5.6666 x^3 - 1.2 x^5 + 3 x
5278 . .
5279
5280 r 1 a i x
d7b8e6c6 5281@end group
5d67986c 5282@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5283
5284@noindent
5285We want to evaluate this at our two values for @cite{x} and subtract.
5286One way to do it is again with vector mapping and reduction:
5287
d7b8e6c6 5288@smallexample
5d67986c 5289@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
52902: [2, 1] 1: [12.93333, 7.46666] 1: 5.46666
52911: 5.6666 x^3 ... . .
5292
5d67986c 5293 [ 2 , 1 ] @key{TAB} V M $ @key{RET} V R -
d7b8e6c6 5294@end group
5d67986c 5295@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5296
5297(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} Find the integral from 1 to @cite{y}
5298of @c{$x \sin \pi x$}
5299@w{@cite{x sin(pi x)}} (where the sine is calculated in radians).
5300Find the values of the integral for integers @cite{y} from 1 to 5.
5301@xref{Algebra Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
5302
5303Calc's integrator can do many simple integrals symbolically, but many
5304others are beyond its capabilities. Suppose we wish to find the area
5305under the curve @c{$\sin x \ln x$}
5306@cite{sin(x) ln(x)} over the same range of @cite{x}. If
5d67986c 5307you entered this formula and typed @kbd{a i x @key{RET}} (don't bother to try
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5308this), Calc would work for a long time but would be unable to find a
5309solution. In fact, there is no closed-form solution to this integral.
5310Now what do we do?
5311
5312@cindex Integration, numerical
5313@cindex Numerical integration
5314One approach would be to do the integral numerically. It is not hard
5315to do this by hand using vector mapping and reduction. It is rather
5316slow, though, since the sine and logarithm functions take a long time.
5317We can save some time by reducing the working precision.
5318
d7b8e6c6 5319@smallexample
5d67986c 5320@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
53213: 10 1: [1, 1.1, 1.2, ... , 1.8, 1.9]
53222: 1 .
53231: 0.1
5324 .
5325
5d67986c 5326 10 @key{RET} 1 @key{RET} .1 @key{RET} C-u v x
d7b8e6c6 5327@end group
5d67986c 5328@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5329
5330@noindent
5331(Note that we have used the extended version of @kbd{v x}; we could
5d67986c 5332also have used plain @kbd{v x} as follows: @kbd{v x 10 @key{RET} 9 + .1 *}.)
d7b8e6c6 5333
d7b8e6c6 5334@smallexample
5d67986c 5335@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
53362: [1, 1.1, ... ] 1: [0., 0.084941, 0.16993, ... ]
53371: sin(x) ln(x) .
5338 .
5339
5d67986c 5340 ' sin(x) ln(x) @key{RET} s 1 m r p 5 @key{RET} V M $ @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5341
d7b8e6c6 5342@end group
5d67986c 5343@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 5344@noindent
d7b8e6c6 5345@smallexample
5d67986c 5346@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
53471: 3.4195 0.34195
5348 . .
5349
5350 V R + 0.1 *
d7b8e6c6 5351@end group
5d67986c 5352@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5353
5354@noindent
5355(If you got wildly different results, did you remember to switch
5356to radians mode?)
5357
5358Here we have divided the curve into ten segments of equal width;
5359approximating these segments as rectangular boxes (i.e., assuming
5360the curve is nearly flat at that resolution), we compute the areas
5361of the boxes (height times width), then sum the areas. (It is
5362faster to sum first, then multiply by the width, since the width
5363is the same for every box.)
5364
5365The true value of this integral turns out to be about 0.374, so
5366we're not doing too well. Let's try another approach.
5367
d7b8e6c6 5368@smallexample
5d67986c 5369@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
53701: sin(x) ln(x) 1: 0.84147 x - 0.84147 + 0.11957 (x - 1)^2 - ...
5371 . .
5372
5d67986c 5373 r 1 a t x=1 @key{RET} 4 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5374@end group
5d67986c 5375@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5376
5377@noindent
5378Here we have computed the Taylor series expansion of the function
5379about the point @cite{x=1}. We can now integrate this polynomial
5380approximation, since polynomials are easy to integrate.
5381
d7b8e6c6 5382@smallexample
5d67986c 5383@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
53841: 0.42074 x^2 + ... 1: [-0.0446, -0.42073] 1: 0.3761
5385 . . .
5386
5d67986c 5387 a i x @key{RET} [ 2 , 1 ] @key{TAB} V M $ @key{RET} V R -
d7b8e6c6 5388@end group
5d67986c 5389@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5390
5391@noindent
5392Better! By increasing the precision and/or asking for more terms
5393in the Taylor series, we can get a result as accurate as we like.
5394(Taylor series converge better away from singularities in the
5395function such as the one at @code{ln(0)}, so it would also help to
5396expand the series about the points @cite{x=2} or @cite{x=1.5} instead
5397of @cite{x=1}.)
5398
5399@cindex Simpson's rule
5400@cindex Integration by Simpson's rule
5401(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 4.} Our first method approximated the
5402curve by stairsteps of width 0.1; the total area was then the sum
5403of the areas of the rectangles under these stairsteps. Our second
5404method approximated the function by a polynomial, which turned out
5405to be a better approximation than stairsteps. A third method is
5406@dfn{Simpson's rule}, which is like the stairstep method except
5407that the steps are not required to be flat. Simpson's rule boils
5408down to the formula,
5409
5410@ifinfo
5411@example
5412(h/3) * (f(a) + 4 f(a+h) + 2 f(a+2h) + 4 f(a+3h) + ...
5413 + 2 f(a+(n-2)*h) + 4 f(a+(n-1)*h) + f(a+n*h))
5414@end example
5415@end ifinfo
5416@tex
5417\turnoffactive
5418\beforedisplay
5419$$ \displaylines{
5420 \qquad {h \over 3} (f(a) + 4 f(a+h) + 2 f(a+2h) + 4 f(a+3h) + \cdots
5421 \hfill \cr \hfill {} + 2 f(a+(n-2)h) + 4 f(a+(n-1)h) + f(a+n h)) \qquad
5422} $$
5423\afterdisplay
5424@end tex
5425
5426@noindent
5427where @cite{n} (which must be even) is the number of slices and @cite{h}
5428is the width of each slice. These are 10 and 0.1 in our example.
5429For reference, here is the corresponding formula for the stairstep
5430method:
5431
5432@ifinfo
5433@example
5434h * (f(a) + f(a+h) + f(a+2h) + f(a+3h) + ...
5435 + f(a+(n-2)*h) + f(a+(n-1)*h))
5436@end example
5437@end ifinfo
5438@tex
5439\turnoffactive
5440\beforedisplay
5441$$ h (f(a) + f(a+h) + f(a+2h) + f(a+3h) + \cdots
5442 + f(a+(n-2)h) + f(a+(n-1)h)) $$
5443\afterdisplay
5444@end tex
5445
5446Compute the integral from 1 to 2 of @c{$\sin x \ln x$}
5447@cite{sin(x) ln(x)} using
5448Simpson's rule with 10 slices. @xref{Algebra Answer 4, 4}. (@bullet{})
5449
5450Calc has a built-in @kbd{a I} command for doing numerical integration.
5451It uses @dfn{Romberg's method}, which is a more sophisticated cousin
5452of Simpson's rule. In particular, it knows how to keep refining the
5453result until the current precision is satisfied.
5454
5455@c [fix-ref Selecting Sub-Formulas]
5456Aside from the commands we've seen so far, Calc also provides a
5457large set of commands for operating on parts of formulas. You
5458indicate the desired sub-formula by placing the cursor on any part
5459of the formula before giving a @dfn{selection} command. Selections won't
5460be covered in the tutorial; @pxref{Selecting Subformulas}, for
5461details and examples.
5462
5463@c hard exercise: simplify (2^(n r) - 2^(r*(n - 1))) / (2^r - 1) 2^(n - 1)
5464@c to 2^((n-1)*(r-1)).
5465
5466@node Rewrites Tutorial, , Basic Algebra Tutorial, Algebra Tutorial
5467@subsection Rewrite Rules
5468
5469@noindent
5470No matter how many built-in commands Calc provided for doing algebra,
5471there would always be something you wanted to do that Calc didn't have
5472in its repertoire. So Calc also provides a @dfn{rewrite rule} system
5473that you can use to define your own algebraic manipulations.
5474
5475Suppose we want to simplify this trigonometric formula:
5476
d7b8e6c6 5477@smallexample
5d67986c 5478@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
54791: 1 / cos(x) - sin(x) tan(x)
5480 .
5481
5d67986c 5482 ' 1/cos(x) - sin(x) tan(x) @key{RET} s 1
d7b8e6c6 5483@end group
5d67986c 5484@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5485
5486@noindent
5487If we were simplifying this by hand, we'd probably replace the
5488@samp{tan} with a @samp{sin/cos} first, then combine over a common
5489denominator. There is no Calc command to do the former; the @kbd{a n}
5490algebra command will do the latter but we'll do both with rewrite
5491rules just for practice.
5492
5493Rewrite rules are written with the @samp{:=} symbol.
5494
d7b8e6c6 5495@smallexample
5d67986c 5496@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
54971: 1 / cos(x) - sin(x)^2 / cos(x)
5498 .
5499
5d67986c 5500 a r tan(a) := sin(a)/cos(a) @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5501@end group
5d67986c 5502@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5503
5504@noindent
5505(The ``assignment operator'' @samp{:=} has several uses in Calc. All
5506by itself the formula @samp{tan(a) := sin(a)/cos(a)} doesn't do anything,
5507but when it is given to the @kbd{a r} command, that command interprets
5508it as a rewrite rule.)
5509
5510The lefthand side, @samp{tan(a)}, is called the @dfn{pattern} of the
5511rewrite rule. Calc searches the formula on the stack for parts that
5512match the pattern. Variables in a rewrite pattern are called
5513@dfn{meta-variables}, and when matching the pattern each meta-variable
5514can match any sub-formula. Here, the meta-variable @samp{a} matched
5515the actual variable @samp{x}.
5516
5517When the pattern part of a rewrite rule matches a part of the formula,
5518that part is replaced by the righthand side with all the meta-variables
5519substituted with the things they matched. So the result is
5520@samp{sin(x) / cos(x)}. Calc's normal algebraic simplifications then
5521mix this in with the rest of the original formula.
5522
5523To merge over a common denominator, we can use another simple rule:
5524
d7b8e6c6 5525@smallexample
5d67986c 5526@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
55271: (1 - sin(x)^2) / cos(x)
5528 .
5529
5d67986c 5530 a r a/x + b/x := (a+b)/x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5531@end group
5d67986c 5532@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5533
5534This rule points out several interesting features of rewrite patterns.
5535First, if a meta-variable appears several times in a pattern, it must
5536match the same thing everywhere. This rule detects common denominators
5537because the same meta-variable @samp{x} is used in both of the
5538denominators.
5539
5540Second, meta-variable names are independent from variables in the
5541target formula. Notice that the meta-variable @samp{x} here matches
5542the subformula @samp{cos(x)}; Calc never confuses the two meanings of
5543@samp{x}.
5544
5545And third, rewrite patterns know a little bit about the algebraic
5546properties of formulas. The pattern called for a sum of two quotients;
5547Calc was able to match a difference of two quotients by matching
5548@samp{a = 1}, @samp{b = -sin(x)^2}, and @samp{x = cos(x)}.
5549
5550@c [fix-ref Algebraic Properties of Rewrite Rules]
5551We could just as easily have written @samp{a/x - b/x := (a-b)/x} for
5552the rule. It would have worked just the same in all cases. (If we
5553really wanted the rule to apply only to @samp{+} or only to @samp{-},
5554we could have used the @code{plain} symbol. @xref{Algebraic Properties
5555of Rewrite Rules}, for some examples of this.)
5556
5557One more rewrite will complete the job. We want to use the identity
5558@samp{sin(x)^2 + cos(x)^2 = 1}, but of course we must first rearrange
5559the identity in a way that matches our formula. The obvious rule
5560would be @samp{@w{1 - sin(x)^2} := cos(x)^2}, but a little thought shows
5561that the rule @samp{sin(x)^2 := 1 - cos(x)^2} will also work. The
5562latter rule has a more general pattern so it will work in many other
5563situations, too.
5564
d7b8e6c6 5565@smallexample
5d67986c 5566@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
55671: (1 + cos(x)^2 - 1) / cos(x) 1: cos(x)
5568 . .
5569
5d67986c 5570 a r sin(x)^2 := 1 - cos(x)^2 @key{RET} a s
d7b8e6c6 5571@end group
5d67986c 5572@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5573
5574You may ask, what's the point of using the most general rule if you
5575have to type it in every time anyway? The answer is that Calc allows
5576you to store a rewrite rule in a variable, then give the variable
5577name in the @kbd{a r} command. In fact, this is the preferred way to
5578use rewrites. For one, if you need a rule once you'll most likely
5579need it again later. Also, if the rule doesn't work quite right you
5580can simply Undo, edit the variable, and run the rule again without
5581having to retype it.
5582
d7b8e6c6 5583@smallexample
5d67986c
RS
5584@group
5585' tan(x) := sin(x)/cos(x) @key{RET} s t tsc @key{RET}
5586' a/x + b/x := (a+b)/x @key{RET} s t merge @key{RET}
5587' sin(x)^2 := 1 - cos(x)^2 @key{RET} s t sinsqr @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5588
55891: 1 / cos(x) - sin(x) tan(x) 1: cos(x)
5590 . .
5591
5d67986c 5592 r 1 a r tsc @key{RET} a r merge @key{RET} a r sinsqr @key{RET} a s
d7b8e6c6 5593@end group
5d67986c 5594@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5595
5596To edit a variable, type @kbd{s e} and the variable name, use regular
5597Emacs editing commands as necessary, then type @kbd{M-# M-#} or
5598@kbd{C-c C-c} to store the edited value back into the variable.
5599You can also use @w{@kbd{s e}} to create a new variable if you wish.
5600
5601Notice that the first time you use each rule, Calc puts up a ``compiling''
5602message briefly. The pattern matcher converts rules into a special
5603optimized pattern-matching language rather than using them directly.
5604This allows @kbd{a r} to apply even rather complicated rules very
5605efficiently. If the rule is stored in a variable, Calc compiles it
5606only once and stores the compiled form along with the variable. That's
5607another good reason to store your rules in variables rather than
5608entering them on the fly.
5609
5610(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} Type @kbd{m s} to get symbolic
5611mode, then enter the formula @samp{@w{(2 + sqrt(2))} / @w{(1 + sqrt(2))}}.
5612Using a rewrite rule, simplify this formula by multiplying both
5613sides by the conjugate @w{@samp{1 - sqrt(2)}}. The result will have
5614to be expanded by the distributive law; do this with another
5615rewrite. @xref{Rewrites Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
5616
5617The @kbd{a r} command can also accept a vector of rewrite rules, or
5618a variable containing a vector of rules.
5619
d7b8e6c6 5620@smallexample
5d67986c 5621@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
56221: [tsc, merge, sinsqr] 1: [tan(x) := sin(x) / cos(x), ... ]
5623 . .
5624
5d67986c 5625 ' [tsc,merge,sinsqr] @key{RET} =
d7b8e6c6 5626
d7b8e6c6 5627@end group
5d67986c 5628@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 5629@noindent
d7b8e6c6 5630@smallexample
5d67986c 5631@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
56321: 1 / cos(x) - sin(x) tan(x) 1: cos(x)
5633 . .
5634
5d67986c 5635 s t trig @key{RET} r 1 a r trig @key{RET} a s
d7b8e6c6 5636@end group
5d67986c 5637@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5638
5639@c [fix-ref Nested Formulas with Rewrite Rules]
5640Calc tries all the rules you give against all parts of the formula,
5641repeating until no further change is possible. (The exact order in
5642which things are tried is rather complex, but for simple rules like
5643the ones we've used here the order doesn't really matter.
5644@xref{Nested Formulas with Rewrite Rules}.)
5645
5646Calc actually repeats only up to 100 times, just in case your rule set
5647has gotten into an infinite loop. You can give a numeric prefix argument
5648to @kbd{a r} to specify any limit. In particular, @kbd{M-1 a r} does
5649only one rewrite at a time.
5650
d7b8e6c6 5651@smallexample
5d67986c 5652@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
56531: 1 / cos(x) - sin(x)^2 / cos(x) 1: (1 - sin(x)^2) / cos(x)
5654 . .
5655
5d67986c 5656 r 1 M-1 a r trig @key{RET} M-1 a r trig @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5657@end group
5d67986c 5658@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5659
5660You can type @kbd{M-0 a r} if you want no limit at all on the number
5661of rewrites that occur.
5662
5663Rewrite rules can also be @dfn{conditional}. Simply follow the rule
5664with a @samp{::} symbol and the desired condition. For example,
5665
d7b8e6c6 5666@smallexample
5d67986c 5667@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
56681: exp(2 pi i) + exp(3 pi i) + exp(4 pi i)
5669 .
5670
5d67986c 5671 ' exp(2 pi i) + exp(3 pi i) + exp(4 pi i) @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5672
d7b8e6c6 5673@end group
5d67986c 5674@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 5675@noindent
d7b8e6c6 5676@smallexample
5d67986c 5677@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
56781: 1 + exp(3 pi i) + 1
5679 .
5680
5d67986c 5681 a r exp(k pi i) := 1 :: k % 2 = 0 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5682@end group
5d67986c 5683@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5684
5685@noindent
5686(Recall, @samp{k % 2} is the remainder from dividing @samp{k} by 2,
5687which will be zero only when @samp{k} is an even integer.)
5688
5689An interesting point is that the variables @samp{pi} and @samp{i}
5690were matched literally rather than acting as meta-variables.
5691This is because they are special-constant variables. The special
5692constants @samp{e}, @samp{phi}, and so on also match literally.
5693A common error with rewrite
5694rules is to write, say, @samp{f(a,b,c,d,e) := g(a+b+c+d+e)}, expecting
5695to match any @samp{f} with five arguments but in fact matching
5696only when the fifth argument is literally @samp{e}!@refill
5697
5698@cindex Fibonacci numbers
5d67986c
RS
5699@ignore
5700@starindex
5701@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5702@tindex fib
5703Rewrite rules provide an interesting way to define your own functions.
5704Suppose we want to define @samp{fib(n)} to produce the @var{n}th
5705Fibonacci number. The first two Fibonacci numbers are each 1;
5706later numbers are formed by summing the two preceding numbers in
5707the sequence. This is easy to express in a set of three rules:
5708
d7b8e6c6 5709@smallexample
5d67986c
RS
5710@group
5711' [fib(1) := 1, fib(2) := 1, fib(n) := fib(n-1) + fib(n-2)] @key{RET} s t fib
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5712
57131: fib(7) 1: 13
5714 . .
5715
5d67986c 5716 ' fib(7) @key{RET} a r fib @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5717@end group
5d67986c 5718@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5719
5720One thing that is guaranteed about the order that rewrites are tried
5721is that, for any given subformula, earlier rules in the rule set will
5722be tried for that subformula before later ones. So even though the
5723first and third rules both match @samp{fib(1)}, we know the first will
5724be used preferentially.
5725
5726This rule set has one dangerous bug: Suppose we apply it to the
5727formula @samp{fib(x)}? (Don't actually try this.) The third rule
5728will match @samp{fib(x)} and replace it with @w{@samp{fib(x-1) + fib(x-2)}}.
5729Each of these will then be replaced to get @samp{fib(x-2) + 2 fib(x-3) +
5730fib(x-4)}, and so on, expanding forever. What we really want is to apply
5731the third rule only when @samp{n} is an integer greater than two. Type
5d67986c 5732@w{@kbd{s e fib @key{RET}}}, then edit the third rule to:
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5733
5734@smallexample
5735fib(n) := fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) :: integer(n) :: n > 2
5736@end smallexample
5737
5738@noindent
5739Now:
5740
d7b8e6c6 5741@smallexample
5d67986c 5742@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
57431: fib(6) + fib(x) + fib(0) 1: 8 + fib(x) + fib(0)
5744 . .
5745
5d67986c 5746 ' fib(6)+fib(x)+fib(0) @key{RET} a r fib @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5747@end group
5d67986c 5748@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5749
5750@noindent
5751We've created a new function, @code{fib}, and a new command,
5d67986c 5752@w{@kbd{a r fib @key{RET}}}, which means ``evaluate all @code{fib} calls in
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5753this formula.'' To make things easier still, we can tell Calc to
5754apply these rules automatically by storing them in the special
5755variable @code{EvalRules}.
5756
d7b8e6c6 5757@smallexample
5d67986c 5758@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
57591: [fib(1) := ...] . 1: [8, 13]
5760 . .
5761
5d67986c 5762 s r fib @key{RET} s t EvalRules @key{RET} ' [fib(6), fib(7)] @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 5763@end group
5d67986c 5764@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5765
5766It turns out that this rule set has the problem that it does far
5767more work than it needs to when @samp{n} is large. Consider the
5768first few steps of the computation of @samp{fib(6)}:
5769
d7b8e6c6 5770@smallexample
5d67986c 5771@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5772fib(6) =
5773fib(5) + fib(4) =
5774fib(4) + fib(3) + fib(3) + fib(2) =
5775fib(3) + fib(2) + fib(2) + fib(1) + fib(2) + fib(1) + 1 = ...
d7b8e6c6 5776@end group
5d67986c 5777@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5778
5779@noindent
5780Note that @samp{fib(3)} appears three times here. Unless Calc's
5781algebraic simplifier notices the multiple @samp{fib(3)}s and combines
5782them (and, as it happens, it doesn't), this rule set does lots of
5783needless recomputation. To cure the problem, type @code{s e EvalRules}
5784to edit the rules (or just @kbd{s E}, a shorthand command for editing
5785@code{EvalRules}) and add another condition:
5786
5787@smallexample
5788fib(n) := fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) :: integer(n) :: n > 2 :: remember
5789@end smallexample
5790
5791@noindent
5792If a @samp{:: remember} condition appears anywhere in a rule, then if
5793that rule succeeds Calc will add another rule that describes that match
5794to the front of the rule set. (Remembering works in any rule set, but
5795for technical reasons it is most effective in @code{EvalRules}.) For
5796example, if the rule rewrites @samp{fib(7)} to something that evaluates
5797to 13, then the rule @samp{fib(7) := 13} will be added to the rule set.
5798
5d67986c 5799Type @kbd{' fib(8) @key{RET}} to compute the eighth Fibonacci number, then
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5800type @kbd{s E} again to see what has happened to the rule set.
5801
5802With the @code{remember} feature, our rule set can now compute
5803@samp{fib(@var{n})} in just @var{n} steps. In the process it builds
5804up a table of all Fibonacci numbers up to @var{n}. After we have
5805computed the result for a particular @var{n}, we can get it back
5806(and the results for all smaller @var{n}) later in just one step.
5807
5808All Calc operations will run somewhat slower whenever @code{EvalRules}
5d67986c 5809contains any rules. You should type @kbd{s u EvalRules @key{RET}} now to
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5810un-store the variable.
5811
5812(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Sometimes it is possible to reformulate
5813a problem to reduce the amount of recursion necessary to solve it.
5814Create a rule that, in about @var{n} simple steps and without recourse
5815to the @code{remember} option, replaces @samp{fib(@var{n}, 1, 1)} with
5816@samp{fib(1, @var{x}, @var{y})} where @var{x} and @var{y} are the
5817@var{n}th and @var{n+1}st Fibonacci numbers, respectively. This rule is
5818rather clunky to use, so add a couple more rules to make the ``user
5819interface'' the same as for our first version: enter @samp{fib(@var{n})},
5820get back a plain number. @xref{Rewrites Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
5821
5822There are many more things that rewrites can do. For example, there
5823are @samp{&&&} and @samp{|||} pattern operators that create ``and''
5824and ``or'' combinations of rules. As one really simple example, we
5825could combine our first two Fibonacci rules thusly:
5826
5827@example
5828[fib(1 ||| 2) := 1, fib(n) := ... ]
5829@end example
5830
5831@noindent
5832That means ``@code{fib} of something matching either 1 or 2 rewrites
5833to 1.''
5834
5835You can also make meta-variables optional by enclosing them in @code{opt}.
5836For example, the pattern @samp{a + b x} matches @samp{2 + 3 x} but not
5837@samp{2 + x} or @samp{3 x} or @samp{x}. The pattern @samp{opt(a) + opt(b) x}
5838matches all of these forms, filling in a default of zero for @samp{a}
5839and one for @samp{b}.
5840
5841(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} Your friend Joe had @samp{2 + 3 x}
5842on the stack and tried to use the rule
5843@samp{opt(a) + opt(b) x := f(a, b, x)}. What happened?
5844@xref{Rewrites Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
5845
5846(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 4.} Starting with a positive integer @cite{a},
5847divide @cite{a} by two if it is even, otherwise compute @cite{3 a + 1}.
5848Now repeat this step over and over. A famous unproved conjecture
5849is that for any starting @cite{a}, the sequence always eventually
5850reaches 1. Given the formula @samp{seq(@var{a}, 0)}, write a set of
5851rules that convert this into @samp{seq(1, @var{n})} where @var{n}
5852is the number of steps it took the sequence to reach the value 1.
5853Now enhance the rules to accept @samp{seq(@var{a})} as a starting
5854configuration, and to stop with just the number @var{n} by itself.
5855Now make the result be a vector of values in the sequence, from @var{a}
5856to 1. (The formula @samp{@var{x}|@var{y}} appends the vectors @var{x}
5857and @var{y}.) For example, rewriting @samp{seq(6)} should yield the
5858vector @cite{[6, 3, 10, 5, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1]}.
5859@xref{Rewrites Answer 4, 4}. (@bullet{})
5860
5861(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 5.} Define, using rewrite rules, a function
5862@samp{nterms(@var{x})} that returns the number of terms in the sum
5863@var{x}, or 1 if @var{x} is not a sum. (A @dfn{sum} for our purposes
5864is one or more non-sum terms separated by @samp{+} or @samp{-} signs,
5865so that @cite{2 - 3 (x + y) + x y} is a sum of three terms.)
5866@xref{Rewrites Answer 5, 5}. (@bullet{})
5867
5868(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 6.} Calc considers the form @cite{0^0}
5869to be ``indeterminate,'' and leaves it unevaluated (assuming infinite
5870mode is not enabled). Some people prefer to define @cite{0^0 = 1},
5871so that the identity @cite{x^0 = 1} can safely be used for all @cite{x}.
5872Find a way to make Calc follow this convention. What happens if you
5873now type @kbd{m i} to turn on infinite mode?
5874@xref{Rewrites Answer 6, 6}. (@bullet{})
5875
5876(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 7.} A Taylor series for a function is an
5877infinite series that exactly equals the value of that function at
5878values of @cite{x} near zero.
5879
5880@ifinfo
5881@example
5882cos(x) = 1 - x^2 / 2! + x^4 / 4! - x^6 / 6! + ...
5883@end example
5884@end ifinfo
5885@tex
5886\turnoffactive \let\rm\goodrm
5887\beforedisplay
5888$$ \cos x = 1 - {x^2 \over 2!} + {x^4 \over 4!} - {x^6 \over 6!} + \cdots $$
5889\afterdisplay
5890@end tex
5891
5892The @kbd{a t} command produces a @dfn{truncated Taylor series} which
5893is obtained by dropping all the terms higher than, say, @cite{x^2}.
5894Calc represents the truncated Taylor series as a polynomial in @cite{x}.
5895Mathematicians often write a truncated series using a ``big-O'' notation
5896that records what was the lowest term that was truncated.
5897
5898@ifinfo
5899@example
5900cos(x) = 1 - x^2 / 2! + O(x^3)
5901@end example
5902@end ifinfo
5903@tex
5904\turnoffactive \let\rm\goodrm
5905\beforedisplay
5906$$ \cos x = 1 - {x^2 \over 2!} + O(x^3) $$
5907\afterdisplay
5908@end tex
5909
5910@noindent
5911The meaning of @cite{O(x^3)} is ``a quantity which is negligibly small
5912if @cite{x^3} is considered negligibly small as @cite{x} goes to zero.''
5913
5914The exercise is to create rewrite rules that simplify sums and products of
5915power series represented as @samp{@var{polynomial} + O(@var{var}^@var{n})}.
5916For example, given @samp{1 - x^2 / 2 + O(x^3)} and @samp{x - x^3 / 6 + O(x^4)}
5917on the stack, we want to be able to type @kbd{*} and get the result
5918@samp{x - 2:3 x^3 + O(x^4)}. Don't worry if the terms of the sum are
5919rearranged or if @kbd{a s} needs to be typed after rewriting. (This one
5920is rather tricky; the solution at the end of this chapter uses 6 rewrite
5921rules. Hint: The @samp{constant(x)} condition tests whether @samp{x} is
5922a number.) @xref{Rewrites Answer 7, 7}. (@bullet{})
5923
5924@c [fix-ref Rewrite Rules]
5925@xref{Rewrite Rules}, for the whole story on rewrite rules.
5926
5927@node Programming Tutorial, Answers to Exercises, Algebra Tutorial, Tutorial
5928@section Programming Tutorial
5929
5930@noindent
5931The Calculator is written entirely in Emacs Lisp, a highly extensible
5932language. If you know Lisp, you can program the Calculator to do
5933anything you like. Rewrite rules also work as a powerful programming
5934system. But Lisp and rewrite rules take a while to master, and often
5935all you want to do is define a new function or repeat a command a few
5936times. Calc has features that allow you to do these things easily.
5937
5938(Note that the programming commands relating to user-defined keys
5939are not yet supported under Lucid Emacs 19.)
5940
5941One very limited form of programming is defining your own functions.
5942Calc's @kbd{Z F} command allows you to define a function name and
5943key sequence to correspond to any formula. Programming commands use
5944the shift-@kbd{Z} prefix; the user commands they create use the lower
5945case @kbd{z} prefix.
5946
d7b8e6c6 5947@smallexample
5d67986c 5948@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
59491: 1 + x + x^2 / 2 + x^3 / 6 1: 1 + x + x^2 / 2 + x^3 / 6
5950 . .
5951
5d67986c 5952 ' 1 + x + x^2/2! + x^3/3! @key{RET} Z F e myexp @key{RET} @key{RET} @key{RET} y
d7b8e6c6 5953@end group
5d67986c 5954@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5955
5956This polynomial is a Taylor series approximation to @samp{exp(x)}.
5957The @kbd{Z F} command asks a number of questions. The above answers
5958say that the key sequence for our function should be @kbd{z e}; the
5959@kbd{M-x} equivalent should be @code{calc-myexp}; the name of the
5960function in algebraic formulas should also be @code{myexp}; the
5961default argument list @samp{(x)} is acceptable; and finally @kbd{y}
5962answers the question ``leave it in symbolic form for non-constant
5963arguments?''
5964
d7b8e6c6 5965@smallexample
5d67986c 5966@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
59671: 1.3495 2: 1.3495 3: 1.3495
5968 . 1: 1.34986 2: 1.34986
5969 . 1: myexp(a + 1)
5970 .
5971
5d67986c 5972 .3 z e .3 E ' a+1 @key{RET} z e
d7b8e6c6 5973@end group
5d67986c 5974@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5975
5976@noindent
5977First we call our new @code{exp} approximation with 0.3 as an
5978argument, and compare it with the true @code{exp} function. Then
5979we note that, as requested, if we try to give @kbd{z e} an
5980argument that isn't a plain number, it leaves the @code{myexp}
5981function call in symbolic form. If we had answered @kbd{n} to the
5982final question, @samp{myexp(a + 1)} would have evaluated by plugging
5983in @samp{a + 1} for @samp{x} in the defining formula.
5984
5985@cindex Sine integral Si(x)
5d67986c
RS
5986@ignore
5987@starindex
5988@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
5989@tindex Si
5990(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 1.} The ``sine integral'' function
5991@c{${\rm Si}(x)$}
5992@cite{Si(x)} is defined as the integral of @samp{sin(t)/t} for
5993@cite{t = 0} to @cite{x} in radians. (It was invented because this
5994integral has no solution in terms of basic functions; if you give it
5995to Calc's @kbd{a i} command, it will ponder it for a long time and then
5996give up.) We can use the numerical integration command, however,
5997which in algebraic notation is written like @samp{ninteg(f(t), t, 0, x)}
5998with any integrand @samp{f(t)}. Define a @kbd{z s} command and
5999@code{Si} function that implement this. You will need to edit the
6000default argument list a bit. As a test, @samp{Si(1)} should return
60010.946083. (Hint: @code{ninteg} will run a lot faster if you reduce
6002the precision to, say, six digits beforehand.)
6003@xref{Programming Answer 1, 1}. (@bullet{})
6004
6005The simplest way to do real ``programming'' of Emacs is to define a
6006@dfn{keyboard macro}. A keyboard macro is simply a sequence of
6007keystrokes which Emacs has stored away and can play back on demand.
6008For example, if you find yourself typing @kbd{H a S x @key{RET}} often,
6009you may wish to program a keyboard macro to type this for you.
6010
d7b8e6c6 6011@smallexample
5d67986c 6012@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
60131: y = sqrt(x) 1: x = y^2
6014 . .
6015
5d67986c 6016 ' y=sqrt(x) @key{RET} C-x ( H a S x @key{RET} C-x )
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6017
60181: y = cos(x) 1: x = s1 arccos(y) + 2 pi n1
6019 . .
6020
5d67986c 6021 ' y=cos(x) @key{RET} X
d7b8e6c6 6022@end group
5d67986c 6023@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6024
6025@noindent
6026When you type @kbd{C-x (}, Emacs begins recording. But it is also
6027still ready to execute your keystrokes, so you're really ``training''
6028Emacs by walking it through the procedure once. When you type
6029@w{@kbd{C-x )}}, the macro is recorded. You can now type @kbd{X} to
6030re-execute the same keystrokes.
6031
6032You can give a name to your macro by typing @kbd{Z K}.
6033
d7b8e6c6 6034@smallexample
5d67986c 6035@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
60361: . 1: y = x^4 1: x = s2 sqrt(s1 sqrt(y))
6037 . .
6038
5d67986c 6039 Z K x @key{RET} ' y=x^4 @key{RET} z x
d7b8e6c6 6040@end group
5d67986c 6041@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6042
6043@noindent
6044Notice that we use shift-@kbd{Z} to define the command, and lower-case
6045@kbd{z} to call it up.
6046
6047Keyboard macros can call other macros.
6048
d7b8e6c6 6049@smallexample
5d67986c 6050@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
60511: abs(x) 1: x = s1 y 1: 2 / x 1: x = 2 / y
6052 . . . .
6053
5d67986c 6054 ' abs(x) @key{RET} C-x ( ' y @key{RET} a = z x C-x ) ' 2/x @key{RET} X
d7b8e6c6 6055@end group
5d67986c 6056@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6057
6058(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 2.} Define a keyboard macro to negate
6059the item in level 3 of the stack, without disturbing the rest of
6060the stack. @xref{Programming Answer 2, 2}. (@bullet{})
6061
6062(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 3.} Define keyboard macros to compute
6063the following functions:
6064
6065@enumerate
6066@item
6067Compute @c{$\displaystyle{\sin x \over x}$}
6068@cite{sin(x) / x}, where @cite{x} is the number on the
6069top of the stack.
6070
6071@item
6072Compute the base-@cite{b} logarithm, just like the @kbd{B} key except
6073the arguments are taken in the opposite order.
6074
6075@item
6076Produce a vector of integers from 1 to the integer on the top of
6077the stack.
6078@end enumerate
6079@noindent
6080@xref{Programming Answer 3, 3}. (@bullet{})
6081
6082(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 4.} Define a keyboard macro to compute
6083the average (mean) value of a list of numbers.
6084@xref{Programming Answer 4, 4}. (@bullet{})
6085
6086In many programs, some of the steps must execute several times.
6087Calc has @dfn{looping} commands that allow this. Loops are useful
6088inside keyboard macros, but actually work at any time.
6089
d7b8e6c6 6090@smallexample
5d67986c 6091@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
60921: x^6 2: x^6 1: 360 x^2
6093 . 1: 4 .
6094 .
6095
5d67986c 6096 ' x^6 @key{RET} 4 Z < a d x @key{RET} Z >
d7b8e6c6 6097@end group
5d67986c 6098@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6099
6100@noindent
6101Here we have computed the fourth derivative of @cite{x^6} by
6102enclosing a derivative command in a ``repeat loop'' structure.
6103This structure pops a repeat count from the stack, then
6104executes the body of the loop that many times.
6105
6106If you make a mistake while entering the body of the loop,
6107type @w{@kbd{Z C-g}} to cancel the loop command.
6108
6109@cindex Fibonacci numbers
6110Here's another example:
6111
d7b8e6c6 6112@smallexample
5d67986c 6113@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
61143: 1 2: 10946
61152: 1 1: 17711
61161: 20 .
6117 .
6118
5d67986c 61191 @key{RET} @key{RET} 20 Z < @key{TAB} C-j + Z >
d7b8e6c6 6120@end group
5d67986c 6121@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6122
6123@noindent
6124The numbers in levels 2 and 1 should be the 21st and 22nd Fibonacci
6125numbers, respectively. (To see what's going on, try a few repetitions
6126of the loop body by hand; @kbd{C-j}, also on the Line-Feed or @key{LFD}
6127key if you have one, makes a copy of the number in level 2.)
6128
6129@cindex Golden ratio
6130@cindex Phi, golden ratio
6131A fascinating property of the Fibonacci numbers is that the @cite{n}th
6132Fibonacci number can be found directly by computing @c{$\phi^n / \sqrt{5}$}
6133@cite{phi^n / sqrt(5)}
6134and then rounding to the nearest integer, where @c{$\phi$ (``phi'')}
6135@cite{phi}, the
6136``golden ratio,'' is @c{$(1 + \sqrt{5}) / 2$}
6137@cite{(1 + sqrt(5)) / 2}. (For convenience, this constant is available
6138from the @code{phi} variable, or the @kbd{I H P} command.)
6139
d7b8e6c6 6140@smallexample
5d67986c 6141@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
61421: 1.61803 1: 24476.0000409 1: 10945.9999817 1: 10946
6143 . . . .
6144
6145 I H P 21 ^ 5 Q / R
d7b8e6c6 6146@end group
5d67986c 6147@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6148
6149@cindex Continued fractions
6150(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 5.} The @dfn{continued fraction}
6151representation of @c{$\phi$}
6152@cite{phi} is @c{$1 + 1/(1 + 1/(1 + 1/( \ldots )))$}
6153@cite{1 + 1/(1 + 1/(1 + 1/( ...@: )))}.
6154We can compute an approximate value by carrying this however far
6155and then replacing the innermost @c{$1/( \ldots )$}
6156@cite{1/( ...@: )} by 1. Approximate
6157@c{$\phi$}
6158@cite{phi} using a twenty-term continued fraction.
6159@xref{Programming Answer 5, 5}. (@bullet{})
6160
6161(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 6.} Linear recurrences like the one for
6162Fibonacci numbers can be expressed in terms of matrices. Given a
6163vector @w{@cite{[a, b]}} determine a matrix which, when multiplied by this
6164vector, produces the vector @cite{[b, c]}, where @cite{a}, @cite{b} and
6165@cite{c} are three successive Fibonacci numbers. Now write a program
6166that, given an integer @cite{n}, computes the @cite{n}th Fibonacci number
6167using matrix arithmetic. @xref{Programming Answer 6, 6}. (@bullet{})
6168
6169@cindex Harmonic numbers
6170A more sophisticated kind of loop is the @dfn{for} loop. Suppose
6171we wish to compute the 20th ``harmonic'' number, which is equal to
6172the sum of the reciprocals of the integers from 1 to 20.
6173
d7b8e6c6 6174@smallexample
5d67986c 6175@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
61763: 0 1: 3.597739
61772: 1 .
61781: 20
6179 .
6180
5d67986c 61810 @key{RET} 1 @key{RET} 20 Z ( & + 1 Z )
d7b8e6c6 6182@end group
5d67986c 6183@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6184
6185@noindent
6186The ``for'' loop pops two numbers, the lower and upper limits, then
6187repeats the body of the loop as an internal counter increases from
6188the lower limit to the upper one. Just before executing the loop
6189body, it pushes the current loop counter. When the loop body
6190finishes, it pops the ``step,'' i.e., the amount by which to
6191increment the loop counter. As you can see, our loop always
6192uses a step of one.
6193
6194This harmonic number function uses the stack to hold the running
6195total as well as for the various loop housekeeping functions. If
6196you find this disorienting, you can sum in a variable instead:
6197
d7b8e6c6 6198@smallexample
5d67986c 6199@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
62001: 0 2: 1 . 1: 3.597739
6201 . 1: 20 .
6202 .
6203
5d67986c 6204 0 t 7 1 @key{RET} 20 Z ( & s + 7 1 Z ) r 7
d7b8e6c6 6205@end group
5d67986c 6206@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6207
6208@noindent
6209The @kbd{s +} command adds the top-of-stack into the value in a
6210variable (and removes that value from the stack).
6211
6212It's worth noting that many jobs that call for a ``for'' loop can
6213also be done more easily by Calc's high-level operations. Two
6214other ways to compute harmonic numbers are to use vector mapping
6215and reduction (@kbd{v x 20}, then @w{@kbd{V M &}}, then @kbd{V R +}),
6216or to use the summation command @kbd{a +}. Both of these are
6217probably easier than using loops. However, there are some
6218situations where loops really are the way to go:
6219
6220(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 7.} Use a ``for'' loop to find the first
6221harmonic number which is greater than 4.0.
6222@xref{Programming Answer 7, 7}. (@bullet{})
6223
6224Of course, if we're going to be using variables in our programs,
6225we have to worry about the programs clobbering values that the
6226caller was keeping in those same variables. This is easy to
6227fix, though:
6228
d7b8e6c6 6229@smallexample
5d67986c 6230@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6231 . 1: 0.6667 1: 0.6667 3: 0.6667
6232 . . 2: 3.597739
6233 1: 0.6667
6234 .
6235
5d67986c 6236 Z ` p 4 @key{RET} 2 @key{RET} 3 / s 7 s s a @key{RET} Z ' r 7 s r a @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 6237@end group
5d67986c 6238@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6239
6240@noindent
6241When we type @kbd{Z `} (that's a back-quote character), Calc saves
6242its mode settings and the contents of the ten ``quick variables''
6243for later reference. When we type @kbd{Z '} (that's an apostrophe
6244now), Calc restores those saved values. Thus the @kbd{p 4} and
6245@kbd{s 7} commands have no effect outside this sequence. Wrapping
6246this around the body of a keyboard macro ensures that it doesn't
6247interfere with what the user of the macro was doing. Notice that
6248the contents of the stack, and the values of named variables,
6249survive past the @kbd{Z '} command.
6250
6251@cindex Bernoulli numbers, approximate
6252The @dfn{Bernoulli numbers} are a sequence with the interesting
6253property that all of the odd Bernoulli numbers are zero, and the
6254even ones, while difficult to compute, can be roughly approximated
6255by the formula @c{$\displaystyle{2 n! \over (2 \pi)^n}$}
6256@cite{2 n!@: / (2 pi)^n}. Let's write a keyboard
6257macro to compute (approximate) Bernoulli numbers. (Calc has a
6258command, @kbd{k b}, to compute exact Bernoulli numbers, but
6259this command is very slow for large @cite{n} since the higher
6260Bernoulli numbers are very large fractions.)
6261
d7b8e6c6 6262@smallexample
5d67986c 6263@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
62641: 10 1: 0.0756823
6265 . .
6266
5d67986c 6267 10 C-x ( @key{RET} 2 % Z [ @key{DEL} 0 Z : ' 2 $! / (2 pi)^$ @key{RET} = Z ] C-x )
d7b8e6c6 6268@end group
5d67986c 6269@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6270
6271@noindent
6272You can read @kbd{Z [} as ``then,'' @kbd{Z :} as ``else,'' and
6273@kbd{Z ]} as ``end-if.'' There is no need for an explicit ``if''
6274command. For the purposes of @w{@kbd{Z [}}, the condition is ``true''
6275if the value it pops from the stack is a nonzero number, or ``false''
6276if it pops zero or something that is not a number (like a formula).
6277Here we take our integer argument modulo 2; this will be nonzero
6278if we're asking for an odd Bernoulli number.
6279
6280The actual tenth Bernoulli number is @cite{5/66}.
6281
d7b8e6c6 6282@smallexample
5d67986c 6283@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
62843: 0.0756823 1: 0 1: 0.25305 1: 0 1: 1.16659
62852: 5:66 . . . .
62861: 0.0757575
6287 .
6288
5d67986c 628910 k b @key{RET} c f M-0 @key{DEL} 11 X @key{DEL} 12 X @key{DEL} 13 X @key{DEL} 14 X
d7b8e6c6 6290@end group
5d67986c 6291@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6292
6293Just to exercise loops a bit more, let's compute a table of even
6294Bernoulli numbers.
6295
d7b8e6c6 6296@smallexample
5d67986c 6297@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
62983: [] 1: [0.10132, 0.03079, 0.02340, 0.033197, ...]
62992: 2 .
63001: 30
6301 .
6302
5d67986c 6303 [ ] 2 @key{RET} 30 Z ( X | 2 Z )
d7b8e6c6 6304@end group
5d67986c 6305@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6306
6307@noindent
6308The vertical-bar @kbd{|} is the vector-concatenation command. When
6309we execute it, the list we are building will be in stack level 2
6310(initially this is an empty list), and the next Bernoulli number
6311will be in level 1. The effect is to append the Bernoulli number
6312onto the end of the list. (To create a table of exact fractional
6313Bernoulli numbers, just replace @kbd{X} with @kbd{k b} in the above
6314sequence of keystrokes.)
6315
6316With loops and conditionals, you can program essentially anything
6317in Calc. One other command that makes looping easier is @kbd{Z /},
6318which takes a condition from the stack and breaks out of the enclosing
6319loop if the condition is true (non-zero). You can use this to make
6320``while'' and ``until'' style loops.
6321
6322If you make a mistake when entering a keyboard macro, you can edit
6323it using @kbd{Z E}. First, you must attach it to a key with @kbd{Z K}.
6324One technique is to enter a throwaway dummy definition for the macro,
6325then enter the real one in the edit command.
6326
d7b8e6c6 6327@smallexample
5d67986c 6328@group
d7b8e6c6 63291: 3 1: 3 Keyboard Macro Editor.
5d67986c 6330 . . Original keys: 1 @key{RET} 2 +
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6331
6332 type "1\r"
6333 type "2"
6334 calc-plus
6335
5d67986c 6336C-x ( 1 @key{RET} 2 + C-x ) Z K h @key{RET} Z E h
d7b8e6c6 6337@end group
5d67986c 6338@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6339
6340@noindent
6341This shows the screen display assuming you have the @file{macedit}
6342keyboard macro editing package installed, which is usually the case
6343since a copy of @file{macedit} comes bundled with Calc.
6344
6345A keyboard macro is stored as a pure keystroke sequence. The
6346@file{macedit} package (invoked by @kbd{Z E}) scans along the
6347macro and tries to decode it back into human-readable steps.
6348If a key or keys are simply shorthand for some command with a
6349@kbd{M-x} name, that name is shown. Anything that doesn't correspond
6350to a @kbd{M-x} command is written as a @samp{type} command.
6351
6352Let's edit in a new definition, for computing harmonic numbers.
6353First, erase the three lines of the old definition. Then, type
6354in the new definition (or use Emacs @kbd{M-w} and @kbd{C-y} commands
6355to copy it from this page of the Info file; you can skip typing
6356the comments that begin with @samp{#}).
6357
6358@smallexample
6359calc-kbd-push # Save local values (Z `)
6360type "0" # Push a zero
6361calc-store-into # Store it in variable 1
6362type "1"
6363type "1" # Initial value for loop
5d67986c 6364calc-roll-down # This is the @key{TAB} key; swap initial & final
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6365calc-kbd-for # Begin "for" loop...
6366calc-inv # Take reciprocal
6367calc-store-plus # Add to accumulator
6368type "1"
6369type "1" # Loop step is 1
6370calc-kbd-end-for # End "for" loop
6371calc-recall # Now recall final accumulated value
6372type "1"
6373calc-kbd-pop # Restore values (Z ')
6374@end smallexample
6375
6376@noindent
6377Press @kbd{M-# M-#} to finish editing and return to the Calculator.
6378
d7b8e6c6 6379@smallexample
5d67986c 6380@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
63811: 20 1: 3.597739
6382 . .
6383
6384 20 z h
d7b8e6c6 6385@end group
5d67986c 6386@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6387
6388If you don't know how to write a particular command in @file{macedit}
6389format, you can always write it as keystrokes in a @code{type} command.
6390There is also a @code{keys} command which interprets the rest of the
6391line as standard Emacs keystroke names. In fact, @file{macedit} defines
6392a handy @code{read-kbd-macro} command which reads the current region
6393of the current buffer as a sequence of keystroke names, and defines that
6394sequence on the @kbd{X} (and @kbd{C-x e}) key. Because this is so
6395useful, Calc puts this command on the @kbd{M-# m} key. Try reading in
5d67986c 6396this macro in the following form: Press @kbd{C-@@} (or @kbd{C-@key{SPC}}) at
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6397one end of the text below, then type @kbd{M-# m} at the other.
6398
d7b8e6c6 6399@example
5d67986c 6400@group
d7b8e6c6 6401Z ` 0 t 1
5d67986c 6402 1 @key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6403 Z ( & s + 1 1 Z )
6404 r 1
6405Z '
d7b8e6c6 6406@end group
5d67986c 6407@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6408
6409(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 8.} A general algorithm for solving
6410equations numerically is @dfn{Newton's Method}. Given the equation
6411@cite{f(x) = 0} for any function @cite{f}, and an initial guess
6412@cite{x_0} which is reasonably close to the desired solution, apply
6413this formula over and over:
6414
6415@ifinfo
6416@example
6417new_x = x - f(x)/f'(x)
6418@end example
6419@end ifinfo
6420@tex
6421\beforedisplay
6422$$ x_{\goodrm new} = x - {f(x) \over f'(x)} $$
6423\afterdisplay
6424@end tex
6425
6426@noindent
6427where @cite{f'(x)} is the derivative of @cite{f}. The @cite{x}
6428values will quickly converge to a solution, i.e., eventually
6429@c{$x_{\rm new}$}
6430@cite{new_x} and @cite{x} will be equal to within the limits
6431of the current precision. Write a program which takes a formula
6432involving the variable @cite{x}, and an initial guess @cite{x_0},
6433on the stack, and produces a value of @cite{x} for which the formula
6434is zero. Use it to find a solution of @c{$\sin(\cos x) = 0.5$}
6435@cite{sin(cos(x)) = 0.5}
6436near @cite{x = 4.5}. (Use angles measured in radians.) Note that
6437the built-in @w{@kbd{a R}} (@code{calc-find-root}) command uses Newton's
6438method when it is able. @xref{Programming Answer 8, 8}. (@bullet{})
6439
6440@cindex Digamma function
6441@cindex Gamma constant, Euler's
6442@cindex Euler's gamma constant
6443(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 9.} The @dfn{digamma} function @c{$\psi(z)$ (``psi'')}
6444@cite{psi(z)}
6445is defined as the derivative of @c{$\ln \Gamma(z)$}
6446@cite{ln(gamma(z))}. For large
6447values of @cite{z}, it can be approximated by the infinite sum
6448
6449@ifinfo
6450@example
6451psi(z) ~= ln(z) - 1/2z - sum(bern(2 n) / 2 n z^(2 n), n, 1, inf)
6452@end example
6453@end ifinfo
6454@tex
6455\let\rm\goodrm
6456\beforedisplay
6457$$ \psi(z) \approx \ln z - {1\over2z} -
6458 \sum_{n=1}^\infty {\code{bern}(2 n) \over 2 n z^{2n}}
6459$$
6460\afterdisplay
6461@end tex
6462
6463@noindent
6464where @c{$\sum$}
6465@cite{sum} represents the sum over @cite{n} from 1 to infinity
6466(or to some limit high enough to give the desired accuracy), and
6467the @code{bern} function produces (exact) Bernoulli numbers.
6468While this sum is not guaranteed to converge, in practice it is safe.
6469An interesting mathematical constant is Euler's gamma, which is equal
6470to about 0.5772. One way to compute it is by the formula,
6471@c{$\gamma = -\psi(1)$}
6472@cite{gamma = -psi(1)}. Unfortunately, 1 isn't a large enough argument
6473for the above formula to work (5 is a much safer value for @cite{z}).
6474Fortunately, we can compute @c{$\psi(1)$}
6475@cite{psi(1)} from @c{$\psi(5)$}
6476@cite{psi(5)} using
6477the recurrence @c{$\psi(z+1) = \psi(z) + {1 \over z}$}
6478@cite{psi(z+1) = psi(z) + 1/z}. Your task: Develop
6479a program to compute @c{$\psi(z)$}
6480@cite{psi(z)}; it should ``pump up'' @cite{z}
6481if necessary to be greater than 5, then use the above summation
6482formula. Use looping commands to compute the sum. Use your function
6483to compute @c{$\gamma$}
6484@cite{gamma} to twelve decimal places. (Calc has a built-in command
6485for Euler's constant, @kbd{I P}, which you can use to check your answer.)
6486@xref{Programming Answer 9, 9}. (@bullet{})
6487
6488@cindex Polynomial, list of coefficients
6489(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 10.} Given a polynomial in @cite{x} and
6490a number @cite{m} on the stack, where the polynomial is of degree
6491@cite{m} or less (i.e., does not have any terms higher than @cite{x^m}),
6492write a program to convert the polynomial into a list-of-coefficients
6493notation. For example, @cite{5 x^4 + (x + 1)^2} with @cite{m = 6}
6494should produce the list @cite{[1, 2, 1, 0, 5, 0, 0]}. Also develop
6495a way to convert from this form back to the standard algebraic form.
6496@xref{Programming Answer 10, 10}. (@bullet{})
6497
6498@cindex Recursion
6499(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 11.} The @dfn{Stirling numbers of the
6500first kind} are defined by the recurrences,
6501
6502@ifinfo
6503@example
6504s(n,n) = 1 for n >= 0,
6505s(n,0) = 0 for n > 0,
6506s(n+1,m) = s(n,m-1) - n s(n,m) for n >= m >= 1.
6507@end example
6508@end ifinfo
6509@tex
6510\turnoffactive
6511\beforedisplay
6512$$ \eqalign{ s(n,n) &= 1 \qquad \hbox{for } n \ge 0, \cr
6513 s(n,0) &= 0 \qquad \hbox{for } n > 0, \cr
6514 s(n+1,m) &= s(n,m-1) - n \, s(n,m) \qquad
6515 \hbox{for } n \ge m \ge 1.}
6516$$
6517\afterdisplay
6518\vskip5pt
6519(These numbers are also sometimes written $\displaystyle{n \brack m}$.)
6520@end tex
6521
6522This can be implemented using a @dfn{recursive} program in Calc; the
6523program must invoke itself in order to calculate the two righthand
6524terms in the general formula. Since it always invokes itself with
6525``simpler'' arguments, it's easy to see that it must eventually finish
6526the computation. Recursion is a little difficult with Emacs keyboard
6527macros since the macro is executed before its definition is complete.
6528So here's the recommended strategy: Create a ``dummy macro'' and assign
6529it to a key with, e.g., @kbd{Z K s}. Now enter the true definition,
6530using the @kbd{z s} command to call itself recursively, then assign it
6531to the same key with @kbd{Z K s}. Now the @kbd{z s} command will run
6532the complete recursive program. (Another way is to use @w{@kbd{Z E}}
6533or @kbd{M-# m} (@code{read-kbd-macro}) to read the whole macro at once,
6534thus avoiding the ``training'' phase.) The task: Write a program
6535that computes Stirling numbers of the first kind, given @cite{n} and
6536@cite{m} on the stack. Test it with @emph{small} inputs like
6537@cite{s(4,2)}. (There is a built-in command for Stirling numbers,
6538@kbd{k s}, which you can use to check your answers.)
6539@xref{Programming Answer 11, 11}. (@bullet{})
6540
6541The programming commands we've seen in this part of the tutorial
6542are low-level, general-purpose operations. Often you will find
6543that a higher-level function, such as vector mapping or rewrite
6544rules, will do the job much more easily than a detailed, step-by-step
6545program can:
6546
6547(@bullet{}) @strong{Exercise 12.} Write another program for
6548computing Stirling numbers of the first kind, this time using
6549rewrite rules. Once again, @cite{n} and @cite{m} should be taken
6550from the stack. @xref{Programming Answer 12, 12}. (@bullet{})
6551
6552@example
6553
6554@end example
6555This ends the tutorial section of the Calc manual. Now you know enough
6556about Calc to use it effectively for many kinds of calculations. But
6557Calc has many features that were not even touched upon in this tutorial.
6558@c [not-split]
6559The rest of this manual tells the whole story.
6560@c [when-split]
6561@c Volume II of this manual, the @dfn{Calc Reference}, tells the whole story.
6562
6563@page
6564@node Answers to Exercises, , Programming Tutorial, Tutorial
6565@section Answers to Exercises
6566
6567@noindent
6568This section includes answers to all the exercises in the Calc tutorial.
6569
6570@menu
5d67986c 6571* RPN Answer 1:: 1 @key{RET} 2 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} 4 + * -
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6572* RPN Answer 2:: 2*4 + 7*9.5 + 5/4
6573* RPN Answer 3:: Operating on levels 2 and 3
6574* RPN Answer 4:: Joe's complex problems
6575* Algebraic Answer 1:: Simulating Q command
6576* Algebraic Answer 2:: Joe's algebraic woes
6577* Algebraic Answer 3:: 1 / 0
6578* Modes Answer 1:: 3#0.1 = 3#0.0222222?
6579* Modes Answer 2:: 16#f.e8fe15
6580* Modes Answer 3:: Joe's rounding bug
6581* Modes Answer 4:: Why floating point?
6582* Arithmetic Answer 1:: Why the \ command?
6583* Arithmetic Answer 2:: Tripping up the B command
6584* Vector Answer 1:: Normalizing a vector
6585* Vector Answer 2:: Average position
6586* Matrix Answer 1:: Row and column sums
6587* Matrix Answer 2:: Symbolic system of equations
6588* Matrix Answer 3:: Over-determined system
6589* List Answer 1:: Powers of two
6590* List Answer 2:: Least-squares fit with matrices
6591* List Answer 3:: Geometric mean
6592* List Answer 4:: Divisor function
6593* List Answer 5:: Duplicate factors
6594* List Answer 6:: Triangular list
6595* List Answer 7:: Another triangular list
6596* List Answer 8:: Maximum of Bessel function
6597* List Answer 9:: Integers the hard way
6598* List Answer 10:: All elements equal
6599* List Answer 11:: Estimating pi with darts
6600* List Answer 12:: Estimating pi with matchsticks
6601* List Answer 13:: Hash codes
6602* List Answer 14:: Random walk
6603* Types Answer 1:: Square root of pi times rational
6604* Types Answer 2:: Infinities
6605* Types Answer 3:: What can "nan" be?
6606* Types Answer 4:: Abbey Road
6607* Types Answer 5:: Friday the 13th
6608* Types Answer 6:: Leap years
6609* Types Answer 7:: Erroneous donut
6610* Types Answer 8:: Dividing intervals
6611* Types Answer 9:: Squaring intervals
6612* Types Answer 10:: Fermat's primality test
6613* Types Answer 11:: pi * 10^7 seconds
6614* Types Answer 12:: Abbey Road on CD
6615* Types Answer 13:: Not quite pi * 10^7 seconds
6616* Types Answer 14:: Supercomputers and c
6617* Types Answer 15:: Sam the Slug
6618* Algebra Answer 1:: Squares and square roots
6619* Algebra Answer 2:: Building polynomial from roots
6620* Algebra Answer 3:: Integral of x sin(pi x)
6621* Algebra Answer 4:: Simpson's rule
6622* Rewrites Answer 1:: Multiplying by conjugate
6623* Rewrites Answer 2:: Alternative fib rule
6624* Rewrites Answer 3:: Rewriting opt(a) + opt(b) x
6625* Rewrites Answer 4:: Sequence of integers
6626* Rewrites Answer 5:: Number of terms in sum
6627* Rewrites Answer 6:: Defining 0^0 = 1
6628* Rewrites Answer 7:: Truncated Taylor series
6629* Programming Answer 1:: Fresnel's C(x)
6630* Programming Answer 2:: Negate third stack element
6631* Programming Answer 3:: Compute sin(x) / x, etc.
6632* Programming Answer 4:: Average value of a list
6633* Programming Answer 5:: Continued fraction phi
6634* Programming Answer 6:: Matrix Fibonacci numbers
6635* Programming Answer 7:: Harmonic number greater than 4
6636* Programming Answer 8:: Newton's method
6637* Programming Answer 9:: Digamma function
6638* Programming Answer 10:: Unpacking a polynomial
6639* Programming Answer 11:: Recursive Stirling numbers
6640* Programming Answer 12:: Stirling numbers with rewrites
6641@end menu
6642
6643@c The following kludgery prevents the individual answers from
6644@c being entered on the table of contents.
6645@tex
6646\global\let\oldwrite=\write
6647\gdef\skipwrite#1#2{\let\write=\oldwrite}
6648\global\let\oldchapternofonts=\chapternofonts
6649\gdef\chapternofonts{\let\write=\skipwrite\oldchapternofonts}
6650@end tex
6651
6652@node RPN Answer 1, RPN Answer 2, Answers to Exercises, Answers to Exercises
6653@subsection RPN Tutorial Exercise 1
6654
6655@noindent
6656@kbd{1 @key{RET} 2 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} 4 + * -}
6657
6658The result is @c{$1 - (2 \times (3 + 4)) = -13$}
6659@cite{1 - (2 * (3 + 4)) = -13}.
6660
6661@node RPN Answer 2, RPN Answer 3, RPN Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
6662@subsection RPN Tutorial Exercise 2
6663
6664@noindent
6665@c{$2\times4 + 7\times9.5 + {5\over4} = 75.75$}
6666@cite{2*4 + 7*9.5 + 5/4 = 75.75}
6667
6668After computing the intermediate term @c{$2\times4 = 8$}
6669@cite{2*4 = 8}, you can leave
6670that result on the stack while you compute the second term. With
6671both of these results waiting on the stack you can then compute the
6672final term, then press @kbd{+ +} to add everything up.
6673
d7b8e6c6 6674@smallexample
5d67986c 6675@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
66762: 2 1: 8 3: 8 2: 8
66771: 4 . 2: 7 1: 66.5
6678 . 1: 9.5 .
6679 .
6680
5d67986c 6681 2 @key{RET} 4 * 7 @key{RET} 9.5 *
d7b8e6c6 6682
d7b8e6c6 6683@end group
5d67986c 6684@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 6685@noindent
d7b8e6c6 6686@smallexample
5d67986c 6687@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
66884: 8 3: 8 2: 8 1: 75.75
66893: 66.5 2: 66.5 1: 67.75 .
66902: 5 1: 1.25 .
66911: 4 .
6692 .
6693
5d67986c 6694 5 @key{RET} 4 / + +
d7b8e6c6 6695@end group
5d67986c 6696@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6697
6698Alternatively, you could add the first two terms before going on
6699with the third term.
6700
d7b8e6c6 6701@smallexample
5d67986c 6702@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
67032: 8 1: 74.5 3: 74.5 2: 74.5 1: 75.75
67041: 66.5 . 2: 5 1: 1.25 .
6705 . 1: 4 .
6706 .
6707
5d67986c 6708 ... + 5 @key{RET} 4 / +
d7b8e6c6 6709@end group
5d67986c 6710@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6711
6712On an old-style RPN calculator this second method would have the
6713advantage of using only three stack levels. But since Calc's stack
6714can grow arbitrarily large this isn't really an issue. Which method
6715you choose is purely a matter of taste.
6716
6717@node RPN Answer 3, RPN Answer 4, RPN Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
6718@subsection RPN Tutorial Exercise 3
6719
6720@noindent
6721The @key{TAB} key provides a way to operate on the number in level 2.
6722
d7b8e6c6 6723@smallexample
5d67986c 6724@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
67253: 10 3: 10 4: 10 3: 10 3: 10
67262: 20 2: 30 3: 30 2: 30 2: 21
67271: 30 1: 20 2: 20 1: 21 1: 30
6728 . . 1: 1 . .
6729 .
6730
5d67986c 6731 @key{TAB} 1 + @key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6 6732@end group
5d67986c 6733@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 6734
5d67986c 6735Similarly, @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} gives you access to the number in level 3.
d7b8e6c6 6736
d7b8e6c6 6737@smallexample
5d67986c 6738@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
67393: 10 3: 21 3: 21 3: 30 3: 11
67402: 21 2: 30 2: 30 2: 11 2: 21
67411: 30 1: 10 1: 11 1: 21 1: 30
6742 . . . . .
6743
5d67986c 6744 M-@key{TAB} 1 + M-@key{TAB} M-@key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6 6745@end group
5d67986c 6746@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6747
6748@node RPN Answer 4, Algebraic Answer 1, RPN Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
6749@subsection RPN Tutorial Exercise 4
6750
6751@noindent
6752Either @kbd{( 2 , 3 )} or @kbd{( 2 @key{SPC} 3 )} would have worked,
6753but using both the comma and the space at once yields:
6754
d7b8e6c6 6755@smallexample
5d67986c 6756@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
67571: ( ... 2: ( ... 1: (2, ... 2: (2, ... 2: (2, ...
6758 . 1: 2 . 1: (2, ... 1: (2, 3)
6759 . . .
6760
5d67986c 6761 ( 2 , @key{SPC} 3 )
d7b8e6c6 6762@end group
5d67986c 6763@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6764
6765Joe probably tried to type @kbd{@key{TAB} @key{DEL}} to swap the
6766extra incomplete object to the top of the stack and delete it.
6767But a feature of Calc is that @key{DEL} on an incomplete object
6768deletes just one component out of that object, so he had to press
6769@key{DEL} twice to finish the job.
6770
d7b8e6c6 6771@smallexample
5d67986c 6772@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
67732: (2, ... 2: (2, 3) 2: (2, 3) 1: (2, 3)
67741: (2, 3) 1: (2, ... 1: ( ... .
6775 . . .
6776
5d67986c 6777 @key{TAB} @key{DEL} @key{DEL}
d7b8e6c6 6778@end group
5d67986c 6779@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6780
6781(As it turns out, deleting the second-to-top stack entry happens often
5d67986c
RS
6782enough that Calc provides a special key, @kbd{M-@key{DEL}}, to do just that.
6783@kbd{M-@key{DEL}} is just like @kbd{@key{TAB} @key{DEL}}, except that it doesn't exhibit
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6784the ``feature'' that tripped poor Joe.)
6785
6786@node Algebraic Answer 1, Algebraic Answer 2, RPN Answer 4, Answers to Exercises
6787@subsection Algebraic Entry Tutorial Exercise 1
6788
6789@noindent
6790Type @kbd{' sqrt($) @key{RET}}.
6791
6792If the @kbd{Q} key is broken, you could use @kbd{' $^0.5 @key{RET}}.
6793Or, RPN style, @kbd{0.5 ^}.
6794
6795(Actually, @samp{$^1:2}, using the fraction one-half as the power, is
6796a closer equivalent, since @samp{9^0.5} yields @cite{3.0} whereas
6797@samp{sqrt(9)} and @samp{9^1:2} yield the exact integer @cite{3}.)
6798
6799@node Algebraic Answer 2, Algebraic Answer 3, Algebraic Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
6800@subsection Algebraic Entry Tutorial Exercise 2
6801
6802@noindent
6803In the formula @samp{2 x (1+y)}, @samp{x} was interpreted as a function
6804name with @samp{1+y} as its argument. Assigning a value to a variable
6805has no relation to a function by the same name. Joe needed to use an
6806explicit @samp{*} symbol here: @samp{2 x*(1+y)}.
6807
6808@node Algebraic Answer 3, Modes Answer 1, Algebraic Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
6809@subsection Algebraic Entry Tutorial Exercise 3
6810
6811@noindent
6812The result from @kbd{1 @key{RET} 0 /} will be the formula @cite{1 / 0}.
6813The ``function'' @samp{/} cannot be evaluated when its second argument
6814is zero, so it is left in symbolic form. When you now type @kbd{0 *},
6815the result will be zero because Calc uses the general rule that ``zero
6816times anything is zero.''
6817
6818@c [fix-ref Infinities]
6819The @kbd{m i} command enables an @dfn{infinite mode} in which @cite{1 / 0}
6820results in a special symbol that represents ``infinity.'' If you
6821multiply infinity by zero, Calc uses another special new symbol to
6822show that the answer is ``indeterminate.'' @xref{Infinities}, for
6823further discussion of infinite and indeterminate values.
6824
6825@node Modes Answer 1, Modes Answer 2, Algebraic Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
6826@subsection Modes Tutorial Exercise 1
6827
6828@noindent
6829Calc always stores its numbers in decimal, so even though one-third has
6830an exact base-3 representation (@samp{3#0.1}), it is still stored as
68310.3333333 (chopped off after 12 or however many decimal digits) inside
6832the calculator's memory. When this inexact number is converted back
6833to base 3 for display, it may still be slightly inexact. When we
6834multiply this number by 3, we get 0.999999, also an inexact value.
6835
6836When Calc displays a number in base 3, it has to decide how many digits
6837to show. If the current precision is 12 (decimal) digits, that corresponds
6838to @samp{12 / log10(3) = 25.15} base-3 digits. Because 25.15 is not an
6839exact integer, Calc shows only 25 digits, with the result that stored
6840numbers carry a little bit of extra information that may not show up on
6841the screen. When Joe entered @samp{3#0.2}, the stored number 0.666666
6842happened to round to a pleasing value when it lost that last 0.15 of a
6843digit, but it was still inexact in Calc's memory. When he divided by 2,
6844he still got the dreaded inexact value 0.333333. (Actually, he divided
68450.666667 by 2 to get 0.333334, which is why he got something a little
6846higher than @code{3#0.1} instead of a little lower.)
6847
6848If Joe didn't want to be bothered with all this, he could have typed
6849@kbd{M-24 d n} to display with one less digit than the default. (If
6850you give @kbd{d n} a negative argument, it uses default-minus-that,
6851so @kbd{M-- d n} would be an easier way to get the same effect.) Those
6852inexact results would still be lurking there, but they would now be
6853rounded to nice, natural-looking values for display purposes. (Remember,
6854@samp{0.022222} in base 3 is like @samp{0.099999} in base 10; rounding
6855off one digit will round the number up to @samp{0.1}.) Depending on the
6856nature of your work, this hiding of the inexactness may be a benefit or
6857a danger. With the @kbd{d n} command, Calc gives you the choice.
6858
6859Incidentally, another consequence of all this is that if you type
6860@kbd{M-30 d n} to display more digits than are ``really there,''
6861you'll see garbage digits at the end of the number. (In decimal
6862display mode, with decimally-stored numbers, these garbage digits are
6863always zero so they vanish and you don't notice them.) Because Calc
6864rounds off that 0.15 digit, there is the danger that two numbers could
6865be slightly different internally but still look the same. If you feel
6866uneasy about this, set the @kbd{d n} precision to be a little higher
6867than normal; you'll get ugly garbage digits, but you'll always be able
6868to tell two distinct numbers apart.
6869
6870An interesting side note is that most computers store their
6871floating-point numbers in binary, and convert to decimal for display.
6872Thus everyday programs have the same problem: Decimal 0.1 cannot be
6873represented exactly in binary (try it: @kbd{0.1 d 2}), so @samp{0.1 * 10}
6874comes out as an inexact approximation to 1 on some machines (though
6875they generally arrange to hide it from you by rounding off one digit as
6876we did above). Because Calc works in decimal instead of binary, you can
6877be sure that numbers that look exact @emph{are} exact as long as you stay
6878in decimal display mode.
6879
6880It's not hard to show that any number that can be represented exactly
6881in binary, octal, or hexadecimal is also exact in decimal, so the kinds
6882of problems we saw in this exercise are likely to be severe only when
6883you use a relatively unusual radix like 3.
6884
6885@node Modes Answer 2, Modes Answer 3, Modes Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
6886@subsection Modes Tutorial Exercise 2
6887
6888If the radix is 15 or higher, we can't use the letter @samp{e} to mark
6889the exponent because @samp{e} is interpreted as a digit. When Calc
6890needs to display scientific notation in a high radix, it writes
6891@samp{16#F.E8F*16.^15}. You can enter a number like this as an
6892algebraic entry. Also, pressing @kbd{e} without any digits before it
6893normally types @kbd{1e}, but in a high radix it types @kbd{16.^} and
5d67986c 6894puts you in algebraic entry: @kbd{16#f.e8f @key{RET} e 15 @key{RET} *} is another
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6895way to enter this number.
6896
6897The reason Calc puts a decimal point in the @samp{16.^} is to prevent
6898huge integers from being generated if the exponent is large (consider
6899@samp{16#1.23*16^1000}, where we compute @samp{16^1000} as a giant
6900exact integer and then throw away most of the digits when we multiply
6901it by the floating-point @samp{16#1.23}). While this wouldn't normally
6902matter for display purposes, it could give you a nasty surprise if you
6903copied that number into a file and later moved it back into Calc.
6904
6905@node Modes Answer 3, Modes Answer 4, Modes Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
6906@subsection Modes Tutorial Exercise 3
6907
6908@noindent
6909The answer he got was @cite{0.5000000000006399}.
6910
6911The problem is not that the square operation is inexact, but that the
6912sine of 45 that was already on the stack was accurate to only 12 places.
6913Arbitrary-precision calculations still only give answers as good as
6914their inputs.
6915
6916The real problem is that there is no 12-digit number which, when
6917squared, comes out to 0.5 exactly. The @kbd{f [} and @kbd{f ]}
6918commands decrease or increase a number by one unit in the last
6919place (according to the current precision). They are useful for
6920determining facts like this.
6921
d7b8e6c6 6922@smallexample
5d67986c 6923@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
69241: 0.707106781187 1: 0.500000000001
6925 . .
6926
6927 45 S 2 ^
6928
d7b8e6c6 6929@end group
5d67986c 6930@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 6931@noindent
d7b8e6c6 6932@smallexample
5d67986c 6933@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
69341: 0.707106781187 1: 0.707106781186 1: 0.499999999999
6935 . . .
6936
5d67986c 6937 U @key{DEL} f [ 2 ^
d7b8e6c6 6938@end group
5d67986c 6939@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
6940
6941A high-precision calculation must be carried out in high precision
6942all the way. The only number in the original problem which was known
6943exactly was the quantity 45 degrees, so the precision must be raised
6944before anything is done after the number 45 has been entered in order
6945for the higher precision to be meaningful.
6946
6947@node Modes Answer 4, Arithmetic Answer 1, Modes Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
6948@subsection Modes Tutorial Exercise 4
6949
6950@noindent
6951Many calculations involve real-world quantities, like the width and
6952height of a piece of wood or the volume of a jar. Such quantities
6953can't be measured exactly anyway, and if the data that is input to
6954a calculation is inexact, doing exact arithmetic on it is a waste
6955of time.
6956
6957Fractions become unwieldy after too many calculations have been
6958done with them. For example, the sum of the reciprocals of the
6959integers from 1 to 10 is 7381:2520. The sum from 1 to 30 is
69609304682830147:2329089562800. After a point it will take a long
6961time to add even one more term to this sum, but a floating-point
6962calculation of the sum will not have this problem.
6963
6964Also, rational numbers cannot express the results of all calculations.
6965There is no fractional form for the square root of two, so if you type
6966@w{@kbd{2 Q}}, Calc has no choice but to give you a floating-point answer.
6967
6968@node Arithmetic Answer 1, Arithmetic Answer 2, Modes Answer 4, Answers to Exercises
6969@subsection Arithmetic Tutorial Exercise 1
6970
6971@noindent
6972Dividing two integers that are larger than the current precision may
6973give a floating-point result that is inaccurate even when rounded
6974down to an integer. Consider @cite{123456789 / 2} when the current
6975precision is 6 digits. The true answer is @cite{61728394.5}, but
6976with a precision of 6 this will be rounded to @c{$12345700.0/2.0 = 61728500.0$}
6977@cite{12345700.@: / 2.@: = 61728500.}.
6978The result, when converted to an integer, will be off by 106.
6979
6980Here are two solutions: Raise the precision enough that the
6981floating-point round-off error is strictly to the right of the
6982decimal point. Or, convert to fraction mode so that @cite{123456789 / 2}
6983produces the exact fraction @cite{123456789:2}, which can be rounded
6984down by the @kbd{F} command without ever switching to floating-point
6985format.
6986
6987@node Arithmetic Answer 2, Vector Answer 1, Arithmetic Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
6988@subsection Arithmetic Tutorial Exercise 2
6989
6990@noindent
6991@kbd{27 @key{RET} 9 B} could give the exact result @cite{3:2}, but it
6992does a floating-point calculation instead and produces @cite{1.5}.
6993
6994Calc will find an exact result for a logarithm if the result is an integer
6995or the reciprocal of an integer. But there is no efficient way to search
6996the space of all possible rational numbers for an exact answer, so Calc
6997doesn't try.
6998
6999@node Vector Answer 1, Vector Answer 2, Arithmetic Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
7000@subsection Vector Tutorial Exercise 1
7001
7002@noindent
7003Duplicate the vector, compute its length, then divide the vector
7004by its length: @kbd{@key{RET} A /}.
7005
d7b8e6c6 7006@smallexample
5d67986c 7007@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
70081: [1, 2, 3] 2: [1, 2, 3] 1: [0.27, 0.53, 0.80] 1: 1.
7009 . 1: 3.74165738677 . .
7010 .
7011
5d67986c 7012 r 1 @key{RET} A / A
d7b8e6c6 7013@end group
5d67986c 7014@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7015
7016The final @kbd{A} command shows that the normalized vector does
7017indeed have unit length.
7018
7019@node Vector Answer 2, Matrix Answer 1, Vector Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
7020@subsection Vector Tutorial Exercise 2
7021
7022@noindent
7023The average position is equal to the sum of the products of the
7024positions times their corresponding probabilities. This is the
7025definition of the dot product operation. So all you need to do
7026is to put the two vectors on the stack and press @kbd{*}.
7027
7028@node Matrix Answer 1, Matrix Answer 2, Vector Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
7029@subsection Matrix Tutorial Exercise 1
7030
7031@noindent
7032The trick is to multiply by a vector of ones. Use @kbd{r 4 [1 1 1] *} to
7033get the row sum. Similarly, use @kbd{[1 1] r 4 *} to get the column sum.
7034
7035@node Matrix Answer 2, Matrix Answer 3, Matrix Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
7036@subsection Matrix Tutorial Exercise 2
7037
7038@ifinfo
d7b8e6c6 7039@example
5d67986c 7040@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7041 x + a y = 6
7042 x + b y = 10
d7b8e6c6 7043@end group
5d67986c 7044@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7045@end ifinfo
7046@tex
7047\turnoffactive
7048\beforedisplay
7049$$ \eqalign{ x &+ a y = 6 \cr
7050 x &+ b y = 10}
7051$$
7052\afterdisplay
7053@end tex
7054
7055Just enter the righthand side vector, then divide by the lefthand side
7056matrix as usual.
7057
d7b8e6c6 7058@smallexample
5d67986c 7059@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
70601: [6, 10] 2: [6, 10] 1: [6 - 4 a / (b - a), 4 / (b - a) ]
7061 . 1: [ [ 1, a ] .
7062 [ 1, b ] ]
7063 .
7064
5d67986c 7065' [6 10] @key{RET} ' [1 a; 1 b] @key{RET} /
d7b8e6c6 7066@end group
5d67986c 7067@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7068
7069This can be made more readable using @kbd{d B} to enable ``big'' display
7070mode:
7071
d7b8e6c6 7072@smallexample
5d67986c 7073@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7074 4 a 4
70751: [6 - -----, -----]
7076 b - a b - a
d7b8e6c6 7077@end group
5d67986c 7078@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7079
7080Type @kbd{d N} to return to ``normal'' display mode afterwards.
7081
7082@node Matrix Answer 3, List Answer 1, Matrix Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
7083@subsection Matrix Tutorial Exercise 3
7084
7085@noindent
7086To solve @c{$A^T A \, X = A^T B$}
7087@cite{trn(A) * A * X = trn(A) * B}, first we compute
7088@c{$A' = A^T A$}
7089@cite{A2 = trn(A) * A} and @c{$B' = A^T B$}
7090@cite{B2 = trn(A) * B}; now, we have a
7091system @c{$A' X = B'$}
7092@cite{A2 * X = B2} which we can solve using Calc's @samp{/}
7093command.
7094
7095@ifinfo
d7b8e6c6 7096@example
5d67986c 7097@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7098 a + 2b + 3c = 6
7099 4a + 5b + 6c = 2
7100 7a + 6b = 3
7101 2a + 4b + 6c = 11
d7b8e6c6 7102@end group
5d67986c 7103@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7104@end ifinfo
7105@tex
7106\turnoffactive
7107\beforedisplayh
7108$$ \openup1\jot \tabskip=0pt plus1fil
7109\halign to\displaywidth{\tabskip=0pt
7110 $\hfil#$&$\hfil{}#{}$&
7111 $\hfil#$&$\hfil{}#{}$&
7112 $\hfil#$&${}#\hfil$\tabskip=0pt plus1fil\cr
7113 a&+&2b&+&3c&=6 \cr
7114 4a&+&5b&+&6c&=2 \cr
7115 7a&+&6b& & &=3 \cr
7116 2a&+&4b&+&6c&=11 \cr}
7117$$
7118\afterdisplayh
7119@end tex
7120
7121The first step is to enter the coefficient matrix. We'll store it in
7122quick variable number 7 for later reference. Next, we compute the
7123@c{$B'$}
7124@cite{B2} vector.
7125
d7b8e6c6 7126@smallexample
5d67986c 7127@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
71281: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] 2: [ [ 1, 4, 7, 2 ] 1: [57, 84, 96]
7129 [ 4, 5, 6 ] [ 2, 5, 6, 4 ] .
7130 [ 7, 6, 0 ] [ 3, 6, 0, 6 ] ]
7131 [ 2, 4, 6 ] ] 1: [6, 2, 3, 11]
7132 . .
7133
5d67986c 7134' [1 2 3; 4 5 6; 7 6 0; 2 4 6] @key{RET} s 7 v t [6 2 3 11] *
d7b8e6c6 7135@end group
5d67986c 7136@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7137
7138@noindent
7139Now we compute the matrix @c{$A'$}
7140@cite{A2} and divide.
7141
d7b8e6c6 7142@smallexample
5d67986c 7143@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
71442: [57, 84, 96] 1: [-11.64, 14.08, -3.64]
71451: [ [ 70, 72, 39 ] .
7146 [ 72, 81, 60 ]
7147 [ 39, 60, 81 ] ]
7148 .
7149
7150 r 7 v t r 7 * /
d7b8e6c6 7151@end group
5d67986c 7152@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7153
7154@noindent
7155(The actual computed answer will be slightly inexact due to
7156round-off error.)
7157
7158Notice that the answers are similar to those for the @c{$3\times3$}
7159@asis{3x3} system
7160solved in the text. That's because the fourth equation that was
7161added to the system is almost identical to the first one multiplied
7162by two. (If it were identical, we would have gotten the exact same
7163answer since the @c{$4\times3$}
7164@asis{4x3} system would be equivalent to the original @c{$3\times3$}
7165@asis{3x3}
7166system.)
7167
7168Since the first and fourth equations aren't quite equivalent, they
7169can't both be satisfied at once. Let's plug our answers back into
7170the original system of equations to see how well they match.
7171
d7b8e6c6 7172@smallexample
5d67986c 7173@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
71742: [-11.64, 14.08, -3.64] 1: [5.6, 2., 3., 11.2]
71751: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ] .
7176 [ 4, 5, 6 ]
7177 [ 7, 6, 0 ]
7178 [ 2, 4, 6 ] ]
7179 .
7180
5d67986c 7181 r 7 @key{TAB} *
d7b8e6c6 7182@end group
5d67986c 7183@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7184
7185@noindent
7186This is reasonably close to our original @cite{B} vector,
7187@cite{[6, 2, 3, 11]}.
7188
7189@node List Answer 1, List Answer 2, Matrix Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
7190@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 1
7191
7192@noindent
7193We can use @kbd{v x} to build a vector of integers. This needs to be
7194adjusted to get the range of integers we desire. Mapping @samp{-}
7195across the vector will accomplish this, although it turns out the
7196plain @samp{-} key will work just as well.
7197
d7b8e6c6 7198@smallexample
5d67986c 7199@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
72002: 2 2: 2
72011: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9] 1: [-4, -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
7202 . .
7203
5d67986c 7204 2 v x 9 @key{RET} 5 V M - or 5 -
d7b8e6c6 7205@end group
5d67986c 7206@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7207
7208@noindent
7209Now we use @kbd{V M ^} to map the exponentiation operator across the
7210vector.
7211
d7b8e6c6 7212@smallexample
5d67986c 7213@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
72141: [0.0625, 0.125, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16]
7215 .
7216
7217 V M ^
d7b8e6c6 7218@end group
5d67986c 7219@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7220
7221@node List Answer 2, List Answer 3, List Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
7222@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 2
7223
7224@noindent
7225Given @cite{x} and @cite{y} vectors in quick variables 1 and 2 as before,
7226the first job is to form the matrix that describes the problem.
7227
7228@ifinfo
7229@example
7230 m*x + b*1 = y
7231@end example
7232@end ifinfo
7233@tex
7234\turnoffactive
7235\beforedisplay
7236$$ m \times x + b \times 1 = y $$
7237\afterdisplay
7238@end tex
7239
7240Thus we want a @c{$19\times2$}
7241@asis{19x2} matrix with our @cite{x} vector as one column and
7242ones as the other column. So, first we build the column of ones, then
7243we combine the two columns to form our @cite{A} matrix.
7244
d7b8e6c6 7245@smallexample
5d67986c 7246@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
72472: [1.34, 1.41, 1.49, ... ] 1: [ [ 1.34, 1 ]
72481: [1, 1, 1, ...] [ 1.41, 1 ]
7249 . [ 1.49, 1 ]
7250 @dots{}
7251
5d67986c 7252 r 1 1 v b 19 @key{RET} M-2 v p v t s 3
d7b8e6c6 7253@end group
5d67986c 7254@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7255
7256@noindent
7257Now we compute @c{$A^T y$}
7258@cite{trn(A) * y} and @c{$A^T A$}
7259@cite{trn(A) * A} and divide.
7260
d7b8e6c6 7261@smallexample
5d67986c 7262@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
72631: [33.36554, 13.613] 2: [33.36554, 13.613]
7264 . 1: [ [ 98.0003, 41.63 ]
7265 [ 41.63, 19 ] ]
7266 .
7267
7268 v t r 2 * r 3 v t r 3 *
d7b8e6c6 7269@end group
5d67986c 7270@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7271
7272@noindent
7273(Hey, those numbers look familiar!)
7274
d7b8e6c6 7275@smallexample
5d67986c 7276@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
72771: [0.52141679, -0.425978]
7278 .
7279
7280 /
d7b8e6c6 7281@end group
5d67986c 7282@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7283
7284Since we were solving equations of the form @c{$m \times x + b \times 1 = y$}
7285@cite{m*x + b*1 = y}, these
7286numbers should be @cite{m} and @cite{b}, respectively. Sure enough, they
7287agree exactly with the result computed using @kbd{V M} and @kbd{V R}!
7288
7289The moral of this story: @kbd{V M} and @kbd{V R} will probably solve
7290your problem, but there is often an easier way using the higher-level
7291arithmetic functions!
7292
7293@c [fix-ref Curve Fitting]
7294In fact, there is a built-in @kbd{a F} command that does least-squares
7295fits. @xref{Curve Fitting}.
7296
7297@node List Answer 3, List Answer 4, List Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
7298@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 3
7299
7300@noindent
5d67986c 7301Move to one end of the list and press @kbd{C-@@} (or @kbd{C-@key{SPC}} or
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7302whatever) to set the mark, then move to the other end of the list
7303and type @w{@kbd{M-# g}}.
7304
d7b8e6c6 7305@smallexample
5d67986c 7306@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
73071: [2.3, 6, 22, 15.1, 7, 15, 14, 7.5, 2.5]
7308 .
d7b8e6c6 7309@end group
5d67986c 7310@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7311
7312To make things interesting, let's assume we don't know at a glance
7313how many numbers are in this list. Then we could type:
7314
d7b8e6c6 7315@smallexample
5d67986c 7316@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
73172: [2.3, 6, 22, ... ] 2: [2.3, 6, 22, ... ]
73181: [2.3, 6, 22, ... ] 1: 126356422.5
7319 . .
7320
5d67986c 7321 @key{RET} V R *
d7b8e6c6 7322
d7b8e6c6 7323@end group
5d67986c 7324@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7325@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7326@smallexample
5d67986c 7327@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
73282: 126356422.5 2: 126356422.5 1: 7.94652913734
73291: [2.3, 6, 22, ... ] 1: 9 .
7330 . .
7331
5d67986c 7332 @key{TAB} v l I ^
d7b8e6c6 7333@end group
5d67986c 7334@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7335
7336@noindent
7337(The @kbd{I ^} command computes the @var{n}th root of a number.
7338You could also type @kbd{& ^} to take the reciprocal of 9 and
7339then raise the number to that power.)
7340
7341@node List Answer 4, List Answer 5, List Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
7342@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 4
7343
7344@noindent
7345A number @cite{j} is a divisor of @cite{n} if @c{$n \mathbin{\hbox{\code{\%}}} j = 0$}
7346@samp{n % j = 0}. The first
7347step is to get a vector that identifies the divisors.
7348
d7b8e6c6 7349@smallexample
5d67986c 7350@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
73512: 30 2: [0, 0, 0, 2, ...] 1: [1, 1, 1, 0, ...]
73521: [1, 2, 3, 4, ...] 1: 0 .
7353 . .
7354
5d67986c 7355 30 @key{RET} v x 30 @key{RET} s 1 V M % 0 V M a = s 2
d7b8e6c6 7356@end group
5d67986c 7357@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7358
7359@noindent
7360This vector has 1's marking divisors of 30 and 0's marking non-divisors.
7361
7362The zeroth divisor function is just the total number of divisors.
7363The first divisor function is the sum of the divisors.
7364
d7b8e6c6 7365@smallexample
5d67986c 7366@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
73671: 8 3: 8 2: 8 2: 8
7368 2: [1, 2, 3, 4, ...] 1: [1, 2, 3, 0, ...] 1: 72
7369 1: [1, 1, 1, 0, ...] . .
7370 .
7371
7372 V R + r 1 r 2 V M * V R +
d7b8e6c6 7373@end group
5d67986c 7374@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7375
7376@noindent
7377Once again, the last two steps just compute a dot product for which
7378a simple @kbd{*} would have worked equally well.
7379
7380@node List Answer 5, List Answer 6, List Answer 4, Answers to Exercises
7381@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 5
7382
7383@noindent
7384The obvious first step is to obtain the list of factors with @kbd{k f}.
7385This list will always be in sorted order, so if there are duplicates
7386they will be right next to each other. A suitable method is to compare
7387the list with a copy of itself shifted over by one.
7388
d7b8e6c6 7389@smallexample
5d67986c 7390@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
73911: [3, 7, 7, 7, 19] 2: [3, 7, 7, 7, 19] 2: [3, 7, 7, 7, 19, 0]
7392 . 1: [3, 7, 7, 7, 19, 0] 1: [0, 3, 7, 7, 7, 19]
7393 . .
7394
5d67986c 7395 19551 k f @key{RET} 0 | @key{TAB} 0 @key{TAB} |
d7b8e6c6 7396
d7b8e6c6 7397@end group
5d67986c 7398@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7399@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7400@smallexample
5d67986c 7401@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
74021: [0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0] 1: 2 1: 0
7403 . . .
7404
7405 V M a = V R + 0 a =
d7b8e6c6 7406@end group
5d67986c 7407@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7408
7409@noindent
7410Note that we have to arrange for both vectors to have the same length
7411so that the mapping operation works; no prime factor will ever be
7412zero, so adding zeros on the left and right is safe. From then on
7413the job is pretty straightforward.
7414
7415Incidentally, Calc provides the @c{\dfn{M\"obius} $\mu$}
7416@dfn{Moebius mu} function which is
7417zero if and only if its argument is square-free. It would be a much
7418more convenient way to do the above test in practice.
7419
7420@node List Answer 6, List Answer 7, List Answer 5, Answers to Exercises
7421@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 6
7422
7423@noindent
5d67986c 7424First use @kbd{v x 6 @key{RET}} to get a list of integers, then @kbd{V M v x}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7425to get a list of lists of integers!
7426
7427@node List Answer 7, List Answer 8, List Answer 6, Answers to Exercises
7428@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 7
7429
7430@noindent
7431Here's one solution. First, compute the triangular list from the previous
7432exercise and type @kbd{1 -} to subtract one from all the elements.
7433
d7b8e6c6 7434@smallexample
5d67986c 7435@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
74361: [ [0],
7437 [0, 1],
7438 [0, 1, 2],
7439 @dots{}
7440
7441 1 -
d7b8e6c6 7442@end group
5d67986c 7443@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7444
7445The numbers down the lefthand edge of the list we desire are called
7446the ``triangular numbers'' (now you know why!). The @cite{n}th
7447triangular number is the sum of the integers from 1 to @cite{n}, and
7448can be computed directly by the formula @c{$n (n+1) \over 2$}
7449@cite{n * (n+1) / 2}.
7450
d7b8e6c6 7451@smallexample
5d67986c 7452@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
74532: [ [0], [0, 1], ... ] 2: [ [0], [0, 1], ... ]
74541: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5] 1: [0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 15]
7455 . .
7456
5d67986c 7457 v x 6 @key{RET} 1 - V M ' $ ($+1)/2 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 7458@end group
5d67986c 7459@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7460
7461@noindent
7462Adding this list to the above list of lists produces the desired
7463result:
7464
d7b8e6c6 7465@smallexample
5d67986c 7466@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
74671: [ [0],
7468 [1, 2],
7469 [3, 4, 5],
7470 [6, 7, 8, 9],
7471 [10, 11, 12, 13, 14],
7472 [15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20] ]
7473 .
7474
7475 V M +
d7b8e6c6 7476@end group
5d67986c 7477@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7478
7479If we did not know the formula for triangular numbers, we could have
7480computed them using a @kbd{V U +} command. We could also have
7481gotten them the hard way by mapping a reduction across the original
7482triangular list.
7483
d7b8e6c6 7484@smallexample
5d67986c 7485@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
74862: [ [0], [0, 1], ... ] 2: [ [0], [0, 1], ... ]
74871: [ [0], [0, 1], ... ] 1: [0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 15]
7488 . .
7489
5d67986c 7490 @key{RET} V M V R +
d7b8e6c6 7491@end group
5d67986c 7492@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7493
7494@noindent
7495(This means ``map a @kbd{V R +} command across the vector,'' and
7496since each element of the main vector is itself a small vector,
7497@kbd{V R +} computes the sum of its elements.)
7498
7499@node List Answer 8, List Answer 9, List Answer 7, Answers to Exercises
7500@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 8
7501
7502@noindent
7503The first step is to build a list of values of @cite{x}.
7504
d7b8e6c6 7505@smallexample
5d67986c 7506@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
75071: [1, 2, 3, ..., 21] 1: [0, 1, 2, ..., 20] 1: [0, 0.25, 0.5, ..., 5]
7508 . . .
7509
5d67986c 7510 v x 21 @key{RET} 1 - 4 / s 1
d7b8e6c6 7511@end group
5d67986c 7512@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7513
7514Next, we compute the Bessel function values.
7515
d7b8e6c6 7516@smallexample
5d67986c 7517@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
75181: [0., 0.124, 0.242, ..., -0.328]
7519 .
7520
5d67986c 7521 V M ' besJ(1,$) @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 7522@end group
5d67986c 7523@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7524
7525@noindent
5d67986c 7526(Another way to do this would be @kbd{1 @key{TAB} V M f j}.)
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7527
7528A way to isolate the maximum value is to compute the maximum using
7529@kbd{V R X}, then compare all the Bessel values with that maximum.
7530
d7b8e6c6 7531@smallexample
5d67986c 7532@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
75332: [0., 0.124, 0.242, ... ] 1: [0, 0, 0, ... ] 2: [0, 0, 0, ... ]
75341: 0.5801562 . 1: 1
7535 . .
7536
5d67986c 7537 @key{RET} V R X V M a = @key{RET} V R + @key{DEL}
d7b8e6c6 7538@end group
5d67986c 7539@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7540
7541@noindent
7542It's a good idea to verify, as in the last step above, that only
7543one value is equal to the maximum. (After all, a plot of @c{$\sin x$}
7544@cite{sin(x)}
7545might have many points all equal to the maximum value, 1.)
7546
7547The vector we have now has a single 1 in the position that indicates
7548the maximum value of @cite{x}. Now it is a simple matter to convert
7549this back into the corresponding value itself.
7550
d7b8e6c6 7551@smallexample
5d67986c 7552@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
75532: [0, 0, 0, ... ] 1: [0, 0., 0., ... ] 1: 1.75
75541: [0, 0.25, 0.5, ... ] . .
7555 .
7556
7557 r 1 V M * V R +
d7b8e6c6 7558@end group
5d67986c 7559@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7560
7561If @kbd{a =} had produced more than one @cite{1} value, this method
7562would have given the sum of all maximum @cite{x} values; not very
7563useful! In this case we could have used @kbd{v m} (@code{calc-mask-vector})
7564instead. This command deletes all elements of a ``data'' vector that
7565correspond to zeros in a ``mask'' vector, leaving us with, in this
7566example, a vector of maximum @cite{x} values.
7567
7568The built-in @kbd{a X} command maximizes a function using more
7569efficient methods. Just for illustration, let's use @kbd{a X}
7570to maximize @samp{besJ(1,x)} over this same interval.
7571
d7b8e6c6 7572@smallexample
5d67986c 7573@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
75742: besJ(1, x) 1: [1.84115, 0.581865]
75751: [0 .. 5] .
7576 .
7577
5d67986c 7578' besJ(1,x), [0..5] @key{RET} a X x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 7579@end group
5d67986c 7580@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7581
7582@noindent
7583The output from @kbd{a X} is a vector containing the value of @cite{x}
7584that maximizes the function, and the function's value at that maximum.
7585As you can see, our simple search got quite close to the right answer.
7586
7587@node List Answer 9, List Answer 10, List Answer 8, Answers to Exercises
7588@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 9
7589
7590@noindent
7591Step one is to convert our integer into vector notation.
7592
d7b8e6c6 7593@smallexample
5d67986c 7594@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
75951: 25129925999 3: 25129925999
7596 . 2: 10
7597 1: [11, 10, 9, ..., 1, 0]
7598 .
7599
5d67986c 7600 25129925999 @key{RET} 10 @key{RET} 12 @key{RET} v x 12 @key{RET} -
d7b8e6c6 7601
d7b8e6c6 7602@end group
5d67986c 7603@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7604@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7605@smallexample
5d67986c 7606@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
76071: 25129925999 1: [0, 2, 25, 251, 2512, ... ]
76082: [100000000000, ... ] .
7609 .
7610
7611 V M ^ s 1 V M \
d7b8e6c6 7612@end group
5d67986c 7613@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7614
7615@noindent
7616(Recall, the @kbd{\} command computes an integer quotient.)
7617
d7b8e6c6 7618@smallexample
5d67986c 7619@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
76201: [0, 2, 5, 1, 2, 9, 9, 2, 5, 9, 9, 9]
7621 .
7622
7623 10 V M % s 2
d7b8e6c6 7624@end group
5d67986c 7625@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7626
7627Next we must increment this number. This involves adding one to
7628the last digit, plus handling carries. There is a carry to the
7629left out of a digit if that digit is a nine and all the digits to
7630the right of it are nines.
7631
d7b8e6c6 7632@smallexample
5d67986c 7633@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
76341: [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1] 1: [1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, ... ]
7635 . .
7636
7637 9 V M a = v v
7638
d7b8e6c6 7639@end group
5d67986c 7640@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7641@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7642@smallexample
5d67986c 7643@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
76441: [1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, ... ] 1: [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1]
7645 . .
7646
7647 V U * v v 1 |
d7b8e6c6 7648@end group
5d67986c 7649@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7650
7651@noindent
7652Accumulating @kbd{*} across a vector of ones and zeros will preserve
7653only the initial run of ones. These are the carries into all digits
7654except the rightmost digit. Concatenating a one on the right takes
7655care of aligning the carries properly, and also adding one to the
7656rightmost digit.
7657
d7b8e6c6 7658@smallexample
5d67986c 7659@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
76602: [0, 0, 0, 0, ... ] 1: [0, 0, 2, 5, 1, 2, 9, 9, 2, 6, 0, 0, 0]
76611: [0, 0, 2, 5, ... ] .
7662 .
7663
7664 0 r 2 | V M + 10 V M %
d7b8e6c6 7665@end group
5d67986c 7666@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7667
7668@noindent
7669Here we have concatenated 0 to the @emph{left} of the original number;
7670this takes care of shifting the carries by one with respect to the
7671digits that generated them.
7672
7673Finally, we must convert this list back into an integer.
7674
d7b8e6c6 7675@smallexample
5d67986c 7676@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
76773: [0, 0, 2, 5, ... ] 2: [0, 0, 2, 5, ... ]
76782: 1000000000000 1: [1000000000000, 100000000000, ... ]
76791: [100000000000, ... ] .
7680 .
7681
5d67986c 7682 10 @key{RET} 12 ^ r 1 |
d7b8e6c6 7683
d7b8e6c6 7684@end group
5d67986c 7685@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7686@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7687@smallexample
5d67986c 7688@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
76891: [0, 0, 20000000000, 5000000000, ... ] 1: 25129926000
7690 . .
7691
7692 V M * V R +
d7b8e6c6 7693@end group
5d67986c 7694@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7695
7696@noindent
7697Another way to do this final step would be to reduce the formula
7698@w{@samp{10 $$ + $}} across the vector of digits.
7699
d7b8e6c6 7700@smallexample
5d67986c 7701@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
77021: [0, 0, 2, 5, ... ] 1: 25129926000
7703 . .
7704
5d67986c 7705 V R ' 10 $$ + $ @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 7706@end group
5d67986c 7707@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7708
7709@node List Answer 10, List Answer 11, List Answer 9, Answers to Exercises
7710@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 10
7711
7712@noindent
7713For the list @cite{[a, b, c, d]}, the result is @cite{((a = b) = c) = d},
7714which will compare @cite{a} and @cite{b} to produce a 1 or 0, which is
7715then compared with @cite{c} to produce another 1 or 0, which is then
7716compared with @cite{d}. This is not at all what Joe wanted.
7717
7718Here's a more correct method:
7719
d7b8e6c6 7720@smallexample
5d67986c 7721@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
77221: [7, 7, 7, 8, 7] 2: [7, 7, 7, 8, 7]
7723 . 1: 7
7724 .
7725
5d67986c 7726 ' [7,7,7,8,7] @key{RET} @key{RET} v r 1 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 7727
d7b8e6c6 7728@end group
5d67986c 7729@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7730@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7731@smallexample
5d67986c 7732@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
77331: [1, 1, 1, 0, 1] 1: 0
7734 . .
7735
7736 V M a = V R *
d7b8e6c6 7737@end group
5d67986c 7738@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7739
7740@node List Answer 11, List Answer 12, List Answer 10, Answers to Exercises
7741@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 11
7742
7743@noindent
7744The circle of unit radius consists of those points @cite{(x,y)} for which
7745@cite{x^2 + y^2 < 1}. We start by generating a vector of @cite{x^2}
7746and a vector of @cite{y^2}.
7747
7748We can make this go a bit faster by using the @kbd{v .} and @kbd{t .}
7749commands.
7750
d7b8e6c6 7751@smallexample
5d67986c 7752@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
77532: [2., 2., ..., 2.] 2: [2., 2., ..., 2.]
77541: [2., 2., ..., 2.] 1: [1.16, 1.98, ..., 0.81]
7755 . .
7756
5d67986c 7757 v . t . 2. v b 100 @key{RET} @key{RET} V M k r
d7b8e6c6 7758
d7b8e6c6 7759@end group
5d67986c 7760@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7761@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7762@smallexample
5d67986c 7763@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
77642: [2., 2., ..., 2.] 1: [0.026, 0.96, ..., 0.036]
77651: [0.026, 0.96, ..., 0.036] 2: [0.53, 0.81, ..., 0.094]
7766 . .
7767
5d67986c 7768 1 - 2 V M ^ @key{TAB} V M k r 1 - 2 V M ^
d7b8e6c6 7769@end group
5d67986c 7770@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7771
7772Now we sum the @cite{x^2} and @cite{y^2} values, compare with 1 to
7773get a vector of 1/0 truth values, then sum the truth values.
7774
d7b8e6c6 7775@smallexample
5d67986c 7776@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
77771: [0.56, 1.78, ..., 0.13] 1: [1, 0, ..., 1] 1: 84
7778 . . .
7779
7780 + 1 V M a < V R +
d7b8e6c6 7781@end group
5d67986c 7782@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7783
7784@noindent
7785The ratio @cite{84/100} should approximate the ratio @c{$\pi/4$}
7786@cite{pi/4}.
7787
d7b8e6c6 7788@smallexample
5d67986c 7789@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
77901: 0.84 1: 3.36 2: 3.36 1: 1.0695
7791 . . 1: 3.14159 .
7792
7793 100 / 4 * P /
d7b8e6c6 7794@end group
5d67986c 7795@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7796
7797@noindent
7798Our estimate, 3.36, is off by about 7%. We could get a better estimate
7799by taking more points (say, 1000), but it's clear that this method is
7800not very efficient!
7801
7802(Naturally, since this example uses random numbers your own answer
7803will be slightly different from the one shown here!)
7804
7805If you typed @kbd{v .} and @kbd{t .} before, type them again to
7806return to full-sized display of vectors.
7807
7808@node List Answer 12, List Answer 13, List Answer 11, Answers to Exercises
7809@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 12
7810
7811@noindent
7812This problem can be made a lot easier by taking advantage of some
7813symmetries. First of all, after some thought it's clear that the
7814@cite{y} axis can be ignored altogether. Just pick a random @cite{x}
7815component for one end of the match, pick a random direction @c{$\theta$}
7816@cite{theta},
7817and see if @cite{x} and @c{$x + \cos \theta$}
7818@cite{x + cos(theta)} (which is the @cite{x}
7819coordinate of the other endpoint) cross a line. The lines are at
7820integer coordinates, so this happens when the two numbers surround
7821an integer.
7822
7823Since the two endpoints are equivalent, we may as well choose the leftmost
7824of the two endpoints as @cite{x}. Then @cite{theta} is an angle pointing
7825to the right, in the range -90 to 90 degrees. (We could use radians, but
7826it would feel like cheating to refer to @c{$\pi/2$}
7827@cite{pi/2} radians while trying
7828to estimate @c{$\pi$}
7829@cite{pi}!)
7830
7831In fact, since the field of lines is infinite we can choose the
7832coordinates 0 and 1 for the lines on either side of the leftmost
7833endpoint. The rightmost endpoint will be between 0 and 1 if the
7834match does not cross a line, or between 1 and 2 if it does. So:
7835Pick random @cite{x} and @c{$\theta$}
7836@cite{theta}, compute @c{$x + \cos \theta$}
7837@cite{x + cos(theta)},
7838and count how many of the results are greater than one. Simple!
7839
7840We can make this go a bit faster by using the @kbd{v .} and @kbd{t .}
7841commands.
7842
d7b8e6c6 7843@smallexample
5d67986c 7844@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
78451: [0.52, 0.71, ..., 0.72] 2: [0.52, 0.71, ..., 0.72]
7846 . 1: [78.4, 64.5, ..., -42.9]
7847 .
7848
5d67986c 7849v . t . 1. v b 100 @key{RET} V M k r 180. v b 100 @key{RET} V M k r 90 -
d7b8e6c6 7850@end group
5d67986c 7851@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7852
7853@noindent
7854(The next step may be slow, depending on the speed of your computer.)
7855
d7b8e6c6 7856@smallexample
5d67986c 7857@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
78582: [0.52, 0.71, ..., 0.72] 1: [0.72, 1.14, ..., 1.45]
78591: [0.20, 0.43, ..., 0.73] .
7860 .
7861
7862 m d V M C +
7863
d7b8e6c6 7864@end group
5d67986c 7865@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7866@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7867@smallexample
5d67986c 7868@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
78691: [0, 1, ..., 1] 1: 0.64 1: 3.125
7870 . . .
7871
5d67986c 7872 1 V M a > V R + 100 / 2 @key{TAB} /
d7b8e6c6 7873@end group
5d67986c 7874@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7875
7876Let's try the third method, too. We'll use random integers up to
7877one million. The @kbd{k r} command with an integer argument picks
7878a random integer.
7879
d7b8e6c6 7880@smallexample
5d67986c 7881@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
78822: [1000000, 1000000, ..., 1000000] 2: [78489, 527587, ..., 814975]
78831: [1000000, 1000000, ..., 1000000] 1: [324014, 358783, ..., 955450]
7884 . .
7885
5d67986c 7886 1000000 v b 100 @key{RET} @key{RET} V M k r @key{TAB} V M k r
d7b8e6c6 7887
d7b8e6c6 7888@end group
5d67986c 7889@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7890@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7891@smallexample
5d67986c 7892@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
78931: [1, 1, ..., 25] 1: [1, 1, ..., 0] 1: 0.56
7894 . . .
7895
7896 V M k g 1 V M a = V R + 100 /
7897
d7b8e6c6 7898@end group
5d67986c 7899@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7900@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7901@smallexample
5d67986c 7902@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
79031: 10.714 1: 3.273
7904 . .
7905
5d67986c 7906 6 @key{TAB} / Q
d7b8e6c6 7907@end group
5d67986c 7908@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7909
7910For a proof of this property of the GCD function, see section 4.5.2,
7911exercise 10, of Knuth's @emph{Art of Computer Programming}, volume II.
7912
7913If you typed @kbd{v .} and @kbd{t .} before, type them again to
7914return to full-sized display of vectors.
7915
7916@node List Answer 13, List Answer 14, List Answer 12, Answers to Exercises
7917@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 13
7918
7919@noindent
7920First, we put the string on the stack as a vector of ASCII codes.
7921
d7b8e6c6 7922@smallexample
5d67986c 7923@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
79241: [84, 101, 115, ..., 51]
7925 .
7926
5d67986c 7927 "Testing, 1, 2, 3 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 7928@end group
5d67986c 7929@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7930
7931@noindent
7932Note that the @kbd{"} key, like @kbd{$}, initiates algebraic entry so
7933there was no need to type an apostrophe. Also, Calc didn't mind that
7934we omitted the closing @kbd{"}. (The same goes for all closing delimiters
7935like @kbd{)} and @kbd{]} at the end of a formula.
7936
7937We'll show two different approaches here. In the first, we note that
7938if the input vector is @cite{[a, b, c, d]}, then the hash code is
7939@cite{3 (3 (3a + b) + c) + d = 27a + 9b + 3c + d}. In other words,
7940it's a sum of descending powers of three times the ASCII codes.
7941
d7b8e6c6 7942@smallexample
5d67986c 7943@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
79442: [84, 101, 115, ..., 51] 2: [84, 101, 115, ..., 51]
79451: 16 1: [15, 14, 13, ..., 0]
7946 . .
7947
5d67986c 7948 @key{RET} v l v x 16 @key{RET} -
d7b8e6c6 7949
d7b8e6c6 7950@end group
5d67986c 7951@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 7952@noindent
d7b8e6c6 7953@smallexample
5d67986c 7954@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
79552: [84, 101, 115, ..., 51] 1: 1960915098 1: 121
79561: [14348907, ..., 1] . .
7957 .
7958
5d67986c 7959 3 @key{TAB} V M ^ * 511 %
d7b8e6c6 7960@end group
5d67986c 7961@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7962
7963@noindent
7964Once again, @kbd{*} elegantly summarizes most of the computation.
7965But there's an even more elegant approach: Reduce the formula
7966@kbd{3 $$ + $} across the vector. Recall that this represents a
7967function of two arguments that computes its first argument times three
7968plus its second argument.
7969
d7b8e6c6 7970@smallexample
5d67986c 7971@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
79721: [84, 101, 115, ..., 51] 1: 1960915098
7973 . .
7974
5d67986c 7975 "Testing, 1, 2, 3 @key{RET} V R ' 3$$+$ @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 7976@end group
5d67986c 7977@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7978
7979@noindent
7980If you did the decimal arithmetic exercise, this will be familiar.
7981Basically, we're turning a base-3 vector of digits into an integer,
7982except that our ``digits'' are much larger than real digits.
7983
7984Instead of typing @kbd{511 %} again to reduce the result, we can be
7985cleverer still and notice that rather than computing a huge integer
7986and taking the modulo at the end, we can take the modulo at each step
7987without affecting the result. While this means there are more
7988arithmetic operations, the numbers we operate on remain small so
7989the operations are faster.
7990
d7b8e6c6 7991@smallexample
5d67986c 7992@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
79931: [84, 101, 115, ..., 51] 1: 121
7994 . .
7995
5d67986c 7996 "Testing, 1, 2, 3 @key{RET} V R ' (3$$+$)%511 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 7997@end group
5d67986c 7998@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
7999
8000Why does this work? Think about a two-step computation:
8001@w{@cite{3 (3a + b) + c}}. Taking a result modulo 511 basically means
8002subtracting off enough 511's to put the result in the desired range.
8003So the result when we take the modulo after every step is,
8004
8005@ifinfo
8006@example
80073 (3 a + b - 511 m) + c - 511 n
8008@end example
8009@end ifinfo
8010@tex
8011\turnoffactive
8012\beforedisplay
8013$$ 3 (3 a + b - 511 m) + c - 511 n $$
8014\afterdisplay
8015@end tex
8016
8017@noindent
8018for some suitable integers @cite{m} and @cite{n}. Expanding out by
8019the distributive law yields
8020
8021@ifinfo
8022@example
80239 a + 3 b + c - 511*3 m - 511 n
8024@end example
8025@end ifinfo
8026@tex
8027\turnoffactive
8028\beforedisplay
8029$$ 9 a + 3 b + c - 511\times3 m - 511 n $$
8030\afterdisplay
8031@end tex
8032
8033@noindent
8034The @cite{m} term in the latter formula is redundant because any
8035contribution it makes could just as easily be made by the @cite{n}
8036term. So we can take it out to get an equivalent formula with
8037@cite{n' = 3m + n},
8038
8039@ifinfo
8040@example
80419 a + 3 b + c - 511 n'
8042@end example
8043@end ifinfo
8044@tex
8045\turnoffactive
8046\beforedisplay
8047$$ 9 a + 3 b + c - 511 n' $$
8048\afterdisplay
8049@end tex
8050
8051@noindent
8052which is just the formula for taking the modulo only at the end of
8053the calculation. Therefore the two methods are essentially the same.
8054
8055Later in the tutorial we will encounter @dfn{modulo forms}, which
8056basically automate the idea of reducing every intermediate result
5d67986c 8057modulo some value @var{m}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8058
8059@node List Answer 14, Types Answer 1, List Answer 13, Answers to Exercises
8060@subsection List Tutorial Exercise 14
8061
8062We want to use @kbd{H V U} to nest a function which adds a random
8063step to an @cite{(x,y)} coordinate. The function is a bit long, but
8064otherwise the problem is quite straightforward.
8065
d7b8e6c6 8066@smallexample
5d67986c 8067@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
80682: [0, 0] 1: [ [ 0, 0 ]
80691: 50 [ 0.4288, -0.1695 ]
8070 . [ -0.4787, -0.9027 ]
8071 ...
8072
5d67986c 8073 [0,0] 50 H V U ' <# + [random(2.0)-1, random(2.0)-1]> @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8074@end group
5d67986c 8075@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8076
8077Just as the text recommended, we used @samp{< >} nameless function
8078notation to keep the two @code{random} calls from being evaluated
8079before nesting even begins.
8080
8081We now have a vector of @cite{[x, y]} sub-vectors, which by Calc's
8082rules acts like a matrix. We can transpose this matrix and unpack
8083to get a pair of vectors, @cite{x} and @cite{y}, suitable for graphing.
8084
d7b8e6c6 8085@smallexample
5d67986c 8086@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
80872: [ 0, 0.4288, -0.4787, ... ]
80881: [ 0, -0.1696, -0.9027, ... ]
8089 .
8090
8091 v t v u g f
d7b8e6c6 8092@end group
5d67986c 8093@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8094
8095Incidentally, because the @cite{x} and @cite{y} are completely
8096independent in this case, we could have done two separate commands
8097to create our @cite{x} and @cite{y} vectors of numbers directly.
8098
8099To make a random walk of unit steps, we note that @code{sincos} of
8100a random direction exactly gives us an @cite{[x, y]} step of unit
8101length; in fact, the new nesting function is even briefer, though
8102we might want to lower the precision a bit for it.
8103
d7b8e6c6 8104@smallexample
5d67986c 8105@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
81062: [0, 0] 1: [ [ 0, 0 ]
81071: 50 [ 0.1318, 0.9912 ]
8108 . [ -0.5965, 0.3061 ]
8109 ...
8110
5d67986c 8111 [0,0] 50 m d p 6 @key{RET} H V U ' <# + sincos(random(360.0))> @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8112@end group
5d67986c 8113@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8114
8115Another @kbd{v t v u g f} sequence will graph this new random walk.
8116
8117An interesting twist on these random walk functions would be to use
8118complex numbers instead of 2-vectors to represent points on the plane.
8119In the first example, we'd use something like @samp{random + random*(0,1)},
8120and in the second we could use polar complex numbers with random phase
8121angles. (This exercise was first suggested in this form by Randal
8122Schwartz.)
8123
8124@node Types Answer 1, Types Answer 2, List Answer 14, Answers to Exercises
8125@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 1
8126
8127@noindent
8128If the number is the square root of @c{$\pi$}
8129@cite{pi} times a rational number,
8130then its square, divided by @c{$\pi$}
8131@cite{pi}, should be a rational number.
8132
d7b8e6c6 8133@smallexample
5d67986c 8134@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
81351: 1.26508260337 1: 0.509433962268 1: 2486645810:4881193627
8136 . . .
8137
8138 2 ^ P / c F
d7b8e6c6 8139@end group
5d67986c 8140@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8141
8142@noindent
8143Technically speaking this is a rational number, but not one that is
8144likely to have arisen in the original problem. More likely, it just
8145happens to be the fraction which most closely represents some
8146irrational number to within 12 digits.
8147
8148But perhaps our result was not quite exact. Let's reduce the
8149precision slightly and try again:
8150
d7b8e6c6 8151@smallexample
5d67986c 8152@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
81531: 0.509433962268 1: 27:53
8154 . .
8155
5d67986c 8156 U p 10 @key{RET} c F
d7b8e6c6 8157@end group
5d67986c 8158@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8159
8160@noindent
8161Aha! It's unlikely that an irrational number would equal a fraction
8162this simple to within ten digits, so our original number was probably
8163@c{$\sqrt{27 \pi / 53}$}
8164@cite{sqrt(27 pi / 53)}.
8165
8166Notice that we didn't need to re-round the number when we reduced the
8167precision. Remember, arithmetic operations always round their inputs
8168to the current precision before they begin.
8169
8170@node Types Answer 2, Types Answer 3, Types Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
8171@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 2
8172
8173@noindent
8174@samp{inf / inf = nan}. Perhaps @samp{1} is the ``obvious'' answer.
8175But if @w{@samp{17 inf = inf}}, then @samp{17 inf / inf = inf / inf = 17}, too.
8176
8177@samp{exp(inf) = inf}. It's tempting to say that the exponential
8178of infinity must be ``bigger'' than ``regular'' infinity, but as
8179far as Calc is concerned all infinities are as just as big.
8180In other words, as @cite{x} goes to infinity, @cite{e^x} also goes
8181to infinity, but the fact the @cite{e^x} grows much faster than
8182@cite{x} is not relevant here.
8183
8184@samp{exp(-inf) = 0}. Here we have a finite answer even though
8185the input is infinite.
8186
8187@samp{sqrt(-inf) = (0, 1) inf}. Remember that @cite{(0, 1)}
8188represents the imaginary number @cite{i}. Here's a derivation:
8189@samp{sqrt(-inf) = @w{sqrt((-1) * inf)} = sqrt(-1) * sqrt(inf)}.
8190The first part is, by definition, @cite{i}; the second is @code{inf}
8191because, once again, all infinities are the same size.
8192
8193@samp{sqrt(uinf) = uinf}. In fact, we do know something about the
8194direction because @code{sqrt} is defined to return a value in the
8195right half of the complex plane. But Calc has no notation for this,
8196so it settles for the conservative answer @code{uinf}.
8197
8198@samp{abs(uinf) = inf}. No matter which direction @cite{x} points,
8199@samp{abs(x)} always points along the positive real axis.
8200
8201@samp{ln(0) = -inf}. Here we have an infinite answer to a finite
8202input. As in the @cite{1 / 0} case, Calc will only use infinities
8203here if you have turned on ``infinite'' mode. Otherwise, it will
8204treat @samp{ln(0)} as an error.
8205
8206@node Types Answer 3, Types Answer 4, Types Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
8207@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 3
8208
8209@noindent
8210We can make @samp{inf - inf} be any real number we like, say,
8211@cite{a}, just by claiming that we added @cite{a} to the first
8212infinity but not to the second. This is just as true for complex
8213values of @cite{a}, so @code{nan} can stand for a complex number.
8214(And, similarly, @code{uinf} can stand for an infinity that points
8215in any direction in the complex plane, such as @samp{(0, 1) inf}).
8216
8217In fact, we can multiply the first @code{inf} by two. Surely
8218@w{@samp{2 inf - inf = inf}}, but also @samp{2 inf - inf = inf - inf = nan}.
8219So @code{nan} can even stand for infinity. Obviously it's just
8220as easy to make it stand for minus infinity as for plus infinity.
8221
8222The moral of this story is that ``infinity'' is a slippery fish
8223indeed, and Calc tries to handle it by having a very simple model
8224for infinities (only the direction counts, not the ``size''); but
8225Calc is careful to write @code{nan} any time this simple model is
8226unable to tell what the true answer is.
8227
8228@node Types Answer 4, Types Answer 5, Types Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
8229@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 4
8230
d7b8e6c6 8231@smallexample
5d67986c 8232@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
82332: 0@@ 47' 26" 1: 0@@ 2' 47.411765"
82341: 17 .
8235 .
8236
5d67986c 8237 0@@ 47' 26" @key{RET} 17 /
d7b8e6c6 8238@end group
5d67986c 8239@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8240
8241@noindent
8242The average song length is two minutes and 47.4 seconds.
8243
d7b8e6c6 8244@smallexample
5d67986c 8245@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
82462: 0@@ 2' 47.411765" 1: 0@@ 3' 7.411765" 1: 0@@ 53' 6.000005"
82471: 0@@ 0' 20" . .
8248 .
8249
8250 20" + 17 *
d7b8e6c6 8251@end group
5d67986c 8252@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8253
8254@noindent
8255The album would be 53 minutes and 6 seconds long.
8256
8257@node Types Answer 5, Types Answer 6, Types Answer 4, Answers to Exercises
8258@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 5
8259
8260@noindent
8261Let's suppose it's January 14, 1991. The easiest thing to do is
8262to keep trying 13ths of months until Calc reports a Friday.
8263We can do this by manually entering dates, or by using @kbd{t I}:
8264
d7b8e6c6 8265@smallexample
5d67986c 8266@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
82671: <Wed Feb 13, 1991> 1: <Wed Mar 13, 1991> 1: <Sat Apr 13, 1991>
8268 . . .
8269
5d67986c 8270 ' <2/13> @key{RET} @key{DEL} ' <3/13> @key{RET} t I
d7b8e6c6 8271@end group
5d67986c 8272@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8273
8274@noindent
8275(Calc assumes the current year if you don't say otherwise.)
8276
8277This is getting tedious---we can keep advancing the date by typing
8278@kbd{t I} over and over again, but let's automate the job by using
8279vector mapping. The @kbd{t I} command actually takes a second
8280``how-many-months'' argument, which defaults to one. This
8281argument is exactly what we want to map over:
8282
d7b8e6c6 8283@smallexample
5d67986c 8284@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
82852: <Sat Apr 13, 1991> 1: [<Mon May 13, 1991>, <Thu Jun 13, 1991>,
82861: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] <Sat Jul 13, 1991>, <Tue Aug 13, 1991>,
8287 . <Fri Sep 13, 1991>, <Sun Oct 13, 1991>]
8288 .
8289
5d67986c 8290 v x 6 @key{RET} V M t I
d7b8e6c6 8291@end group
5d67986c 8292@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8293
8294@ifinfo
8295@noindent
8296Et voila, September 13, 1991 is a Friday.
8297@end ifinfo
8298@tex
8299\noindent
8300{\it Et voil{\accent"12 a}}, September 13, 1991 is a Friday.
8301@end tex
8302
d7b8e6c6 8303@smallexample
5d67986c 8304@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
83051: 242
8306 .
8307
5d67986c 8308' <sep 13> - <jan 14> @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8309@end group
5d67986c 8310@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8311
8312@noindent
8313And the answer to our original question: 242 days to go.
8314
8315@node Types Answer 6, Types Answer 7, Types Answer 5, Answers to Exercises
8316@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 6
8317
8318@noindent
8319The full rule for leap years is that they occur in every year divisible
8320by four, except that they don't occur in years divisible by 100, except
8321that they @emph{do} in years divisible by 400. We could work out the
8322answer by carefully counting the years divisible by four and the
8323exceptions, but there is a much simpler way that works even if we
8324don't know the leap year rule.
8325
8326Let's assume the present year is 1991. Years have 365 days, except
8327that leap years (whenever they occur) have 366 days. So let's count
8328the number of days between now and then, and compare that to the
8329number of years times 365. The number of extra days we find must be
8330equal to the number of leap years there were.
8331
d7b8e6c6 8332@smallexample
5d67986c 8333@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
83341: <Mon Jan 1, 10001> 2: <Mon Jan 1, 10001> 1: 2925593
8335 . 1: <Tue Jan 1, 1991> .
8336 .
8337
5d67986c 8338 ' <jan 1 10001> @key{RET} ' <jan 1 1991> @key{RET} -
d7b8e6c6 8339
d7b8e6c6 8340@end group
5d67986c 8341@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8342@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8343@smallexample
5d67986c 8344@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
83453: 2925593 2: 2925593 2: 2925593 1: 1943
83462: 10001 1: 8010 1: 2923650 .
83471: 1991 . .
8348 .
8349
5d67986c 8350 10001 @key{RET} 1991 - 365 * -
d7b8e6c6 8351@end group
5d67986c 8352@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8353
8354@c [fix-ref Date Forms]
8355@noindent
8356There will be 1943 leap years before the year 10001. (Assuming,
8357of course, that the algorithm for computing leap years remains
8358unchanged for that long. @xref{Date Forms}, for some interesting
8359background information in that regard.)
8360
8361@node Types Answer 7, Types Answer 8, Types Answer 6, Answers to Exercises
8362@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 7
8363
8364@noindent
8365The relative errors must be converted to absolute errors so that
8366@samp{+/-} notation may be used.
8367
d7b8e6c6 8368@smallexample
5d67986c 8369@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
83701: 1. 2: 1.
8371 . 1: 0.2
8372 .
8373
5d67986c 8374 20 @key{RET} .05 * 4 @key{RET} .05 *
d7b8e6c6 8375@end group
5d67986c 8376@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8377
8378Now we simply chug through the formula.
8379
d7b8e6c6 8380@smallexample
5d67986c 8381@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
83821: 19.7392088022 1: 394.78 +/- 19.739 1: 6316.5 +/- 706.21
8383 . . .
8384
5d67986c 8385 2 P 2 ^ * 20 p 1 * 4 p .2 @key{RET} 2 ^ *
d7b8e6c6 8386@end group
5d67986c 8387@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8388
8389It turns out the @kbd{v u} command will unpack an error form as
8390well as a vector. This saves us some retyping of numbers.
8391
d7b8e6c6 8392@smallexample
5d67986c 8393@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
83943: 6316.5 +/- 706.21 2: 6316.5 +/- 706.21
83952: 6316.5 1: 0.1118
83961: 706.21 .
8397 .
8398
5d67986c 8399 @key{RET} v u @key{TAB} /
d7b8e6c6 8400@end group
5d67986c 8401@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8402
8403@noindent
8404Thus the volume is 6316 cubic centimeters, within about 11 percent.
8405
8406@node Types Answer 8, Types Answer 9, Types Answer 7, Answers to Exercises
8407@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 8
8408
8409@noindent
8410The first answer is pretty simple: @samp{1 / (0 .. 10) = (0.1 .. inf)}.
8411Since a number in the interval @samp{(0 .. 10)} can get arbitrarily
8412close to zero, its reciprocal can get arbitrarily large, so the answer
8413is an interval that effectively means, ``any number greater than 0.1''
8414but with no upper bound.
8415
8416The second answer, similarly, is @samp{1 / (-10 .. 0) = (-inf .. -0.1)}.
8417
8418Calc normally treats division by zero as an error, so that the formula
8419@w{@samp{1 / 0}} is left unsimplified. Our third problem,
8420@w{@samp{1 / [0 .. 10]}}, also (potentially) divides by zero because zero
8421is now a member of the interval. So Calc leaves this one unevaluated, too.
8422
8423If you turn on ``infinite'' mode by pressing @kbd{m i}, you will
8424instead get the answer @samp{[0.1 .. inf]}, which includes infinity
8425as a possible value.
8426
8427The fourth calculation, @samp{1 / (-10 .. 10)}, has the same problem.
8428Zero is buried inside the interval, but it's still a possible value.
8429It's not hard to see that the actual result of @samp{1 / (-10 .. 10)}
8430will be either greater than @i{0.1}, or less than @i{-0.1}. Thus
8431the interval goes from minus infinity to plus infinity, with a ``hole''
8432in it from @i{-0.1} to @i{0.1}. Calc doesn't have any way to
8433represent this, so it just reports @samp{[-inf .. inf]} as the answer.
8434It may be disappointing to hear ``the answer lies somewhere between
8435minus infinity and plus infinity, inclusive,'' but that's the best
8436that interval arithmetic can do in this case.
8437
8438@node Types Answer 9, Types Answer 10, Types Answer 8, Answers to Exercises
8439@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 9
8440
d7b8e6c6 8441@smallexample
5d67986c 8442@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
84431: [-3 .. 3] 2: [-3 .. 3] 2: [0 .. 9]
8444 . 1: [0 .. 9] 1: [-9 .. 9]
8445 . .
8446
5d67986c 8447 [ 3 n .. 3 ] @key{RET} 2 ^ @key{TAB} @key{RET} *
d7b8e6c6 8448@end group
5d67986c 8449@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8450
8451@noindent
8452In the first case the result says, ``if a number is between @i{-3} and
84533, its square is between 0 and 9.'' The second case says, ``the product
8454of two numbers each between @i{-3} and 3 is between @i{-9} and 9.''
8455
8456An interval form is not a number; it is a symbol that can stand for
8457many different numbers. Two identical-looking interval forms can stand
8458for different numbers.
8459
8460The same issue arises when you try to square an error form.
8461
8462@node Types Answer 10, Types Answer 11, Types Answer 9, Answers to Exercises
8463@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 10
8464
8465@noindent
8466Testing the first number, we might arbitrarily choose 17 for @cite{x}.
8467
d7b8e6c6 8468@smallexample
5d67986c 8469@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
84701: 17 mod 811749613 2: 17 mod 811749613 1: 533694123 mod 811749613
8471 . 811749612 .
8472 .
8473
5d67986c 8474 17 M 811749613 @key{RET} 811749612 ^
d7b8e6c6 8475@end group
5d67986c 8476@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8477
8478@noindent
8479Since 533694123 is (considerably) different from 1, the number 811749613
8480must not be prime.
8481
8482It's awkward to type the number in twice as we did above. There are
8483various ways to avoid this, and algebraic entry is one. In fact, using
8484a vector mapping operation we can perform several tests at once. Let's
8485use this method to test the second number.
8486
d7b8e6c6 8487@smallexample
5d67986c 8488@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
84892: [17, 42, 100000] 1: [1 mod 15485863, 1 mod ... ]
84901: 15485863 .
8491 .
8492
5d67986c 8493 [17 42 100000] 15485863 @key{RET} V M ' ($$ mod $)^($-1) @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8494@end group
5d67986c 8495@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8496
8497@noindent
8498The result is three ones (modulo @cite{n}), so it's very probable that
849915485863 is prime. (In fact, this number is the millionth prime.)
8500
8501Note that the functions @samp{($$^($-1)) mod $} or @samp{$$^($-1) % $}
8502would have been hopelessly inefficient, since they would have calculated
8503the power using full integer arithmetic.
8504
8505Calc has a @kbd{k p} command that does primality testing. For small
8506numbers it does an exact test; for large numbers it uses a variant
8507of the Fermat test we used here. You can use @kbd{k p} repeatedly
8508to prove that a large integer is prime with any desired probability.
8509
8510@node Types Answer 11, Types Answer 12, Types Answer 10, Answers to Exercises
8511@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 11
8512
8513@noindent
8514There are several ways to insert a calculated number into an HMS form.
8515One way to convert a number of seconds to an HMS form is simply to
8516multiply the number by an HMS form representing one second:
8517
d7b8e6c6 8518@smallexample
5d67986c 8519@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
85201: 31415926.5359 2: 31415926.5359 1: 8726@@ 38' 46.5359"
8521 . 1: 0@@ 0' 1" .
8522 .
8523
8524 P 1e7 * 0@@ 0' 1" *
8525
d7b8e6c6 8526@end group
5d67986c 8527@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8528@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8529@smallexample
5d67986c 8530@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
85312: 8726@@ 38' 46.5359" 1: 6@@ 6' 2.5359" mod 24@@ 0' 0"
85321: 15@@ 27' 16" mod 24@@ 0' 0" .
8533 .
8534
5d67986c 8535 x time @key{RET} +
d7b8e6c6 8536@end group
5d67986c 8537@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8538
8539@noindent
8540It will be just after six in the morning.
8541
8542The algebraic @code{hms} function can also be used to build an
8543HMS form:
8544
d7b8e6c6 8545@smallexample
5d67986c 8546@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
85471: hms(0, 0, 10000000. pi) 1: 8726@@ 38' 46.5359"
8548 . .
8549
5d67986c 8550 ' hms(0, 0, 1e7 pi) @key{RET} =
d7b8e6c6 8551@end group
5d67986c 8552@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8553
8554@noindent
8555The @kbd{=} key is necessary to evaluate the symbol @samp{pi} to
8556the actual number 3.14159...
8557
8558@node Types Answer 12, Types Answer 13, Types Answer 11, Answers to Exercises
8559@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 12
8560
8561@noindent
8562As we recall, there are 17 songs of about 2 minutes and 47 seconds
8563each.
8564
d7b8e6c6 8565@smallexample
5d67986c 8566@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
85672: 0@@ 2' 47" 1: [0@@ 3' 7" .. 0@@ 3' 47"]
85681: [0@@ 0' 20" .. 0@@ 1' 0"] .
8569 .
8570
8571 [ 0@@ 20" .. 0@@ 1' ] +
8572
d7b8e6c6 8573@end group
5d67986c 8574@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8575@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8576@smallexample
5d67986c 8577@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
85781: [0@@ 52' 59." .. 1@@ 4' 19."]
8579 .
8580
8581 17 *
d7b8e6c6 8582@end group
5d67986c 8583@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8584
8585@noindent
8586No matter how long it is, the album will fit nicely on one CD.
8587
8588@node Types Answer 13, Types Answer 14, Types Answer 12, Answers to Exercises
8589@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 13
8590
8591@noindent
5d67986c 8592Type @kbd{' 1 yr @key{RET} u c s @key{RET}}. The answer is 31557600 seconds.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8593
8594@node Types Answer 14, Types Answer 15, Types Answer 13, Answers to Exercises
8595@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 14
8596
8597@noindent
8598How long will it take for a signal to get from one end of the computer
8599to the other?
8600
d7b8e6c6 8601@smallexample
5d67986c 8602@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
86031: m / c 1: 3.3356 ns
8604 . .
8605
5d67986c 8606 ' 1 m / c @key{RET} u c ns @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8607@end group
5d67986c 8608@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8609
8610@noindent
8611(Recall, @samp{c} is a ``unit'' corresponding to the speed of light.)
8612
d7b8e6c6 8613@smallexample
5d67986c 8614@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
86151: 3.3356 ns 1: 0.81356 ns / ns 1: 0.81356
86162: 4.1 ns . .
8617 .
8618
5d67986c 8619 ' 4.1 ns @key{RET} / u s
d7b8e6c6 8620@end group
5d67986c 8621@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8622
8623@noindent
8624Thus a signal could take up to 81 percent of a clock cycle just to
8625go from one place to another inside the computer, assuming the signal
8626could actually attain the full speed of light. Pretty tight!
8627
8628@node Types Answer 15, Algebra Answer 1, Types Answer 14, Answers to Exercises
8629@subsection Types Tutorial Exercise 15
8630
8631@noindent
8632The speed limit is 55 miles per hour on most highways. We want to
8633find the ratio of Sam's speed to the US speed limit.
8634
d7b8e6c6 8635@smallexample
5d67986c 8636@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
86371: 55 mph 2: 55 mph 3: 11 hr mph / yd
8638 . 1: 5 yd / hr .
8639 .
8640
5d67986c 8641 ' 55 mph @key{RET} ' 5 yd/hr @key{RET} /
d7b8e6c6 8642@end group
5d67986c 8643@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8644
8645The @kbd{u s} command cancels out these units to get a plain
8646number. Now we take the logarithm base two to find the final
8647answer, assuming that each successive pill doubles his speed.
8648
d7b8e6c6 8649@smallexample
5d67986c 8650@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
86511: 19360. 2: 19360. 1: 14.24
8652 . 1: 2 .
8653 .
8654
8655 u s 2 B
d7b8e6c6 8656@end group
5d67986c 8657@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8658
8659@noindent
8660Thus Sam can take up to 14 pills without a worry.
8661
8662@node Algebra Answer 1, Algebra Answer 2, Types Answer 15, Answers to Exercises
8663@subsection Algebra Tutorial Exercise 1
8664
8665@noindent
8666@c [fix-ref Declarations]
8667The result @samp{sqrt(x)^2} is simplified back to @cite{x} by the
8668Calculator, but @samp{sqrt(x^2)} is not. (Consider what happens
8669if @w{@cite{x = -4}}.) If @cite{x} is real, this formula could be
8670simplified to @samp{abs(x)}, but for general complex arguments even
8671that is not safe. (@xref{Declarations}, for a way to tell Calc
8672that @cite{x} is known to be real.)
8673
8674@node Algebra Answer 2, Algebra Answer 3, Algebra Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
8675@subsection Algebra Tutorial Exercise 2
8676
8677@noindent
8678Suppose our roots are @cite{[a, b, c]}. We want a polynomial which
8679is zero when @cite{x} is any of these values. The trivial polynomial
8680@cite{x-a} is zero when @cite{x=a}, so the product @cite{(x-a)(x-b)(x-c)}
8681will do the job. We can use @kbd{a c x} to write this in a more
8682familiar form.
8683
d7b8e6c6 8684@smallexample
5d67986c 8685@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
86861: 34 x - 24 x^3 1: [1.19023, -1.19023, 0]
8687 . .
8688
5d67986c 8689 r 2 a P x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8690
d7b8e6c6 8691@end group
5d67986c 8692@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8693@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8694@smallexample
5d67986c 8695@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
86961: [x - 1.19023, x + 1.19023, x] 1: (x - 1.19023) (x + 1.19023) x
8697 . .
8698
5d67986c 8699 V M ' x-$ @key{RET} V R *
d7b8e6c6 8700
d7b8e6c6 8701@end group
5d67986c 8702@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8703@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8704@smallexample
5d67986c 8705@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
87061: x^3 - 1.41666 x 1: 34 x - 24 x^3
8707 . .
8708
5d67986c 8709 a c x @key{RET} 24 n * a x
d7b8e6c6 8710@end group
5d67986c 8711@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8712
8713@noindent
8714Sure enough, our answer (multiplied by a suitable constant) is the
8715same as the original polynomial.
8716
8717@node Algebra Answer 3, Algebra Answer 4, Algebra Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
8718@subsection Algebra Tutorial Exercise 3
8719
d7b8e6c6 8720@smallexample
5d67986c 8721@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
87221: x sin(pi x) 1: (sin(pi x) - pi x cos(pi x)) / pi^2
8723 . .
8724
5d67986c 8725 ' x sin(pi x) @key{RET} m r a i x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8726
d7b8e6c6 8727@end group
5d67986c 8728@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8729@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8730@smallexample
5d67986c 8731@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
87321: [y, 1]
87332: (sin(pi x) - pi x cos(pi x)) / pi^2
8734 .
8735
5d67986c 8736 ' [y,1] @key{RET} @key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6 8737
d7b8e6c6 8738@end group
5d67986c 8739@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8740@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8741@smallexample
5d67986c 8742@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
87431: [(sin(pi y) - pi y cos(pi y)) / pi^2, (sin(pi) - pi cos(pi)) / pi^2]
8744 .
8745
5d67986c 8746 V M $ @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8747
d7b8e6c6 8748@end group
5d67986c 8749@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8750@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8751@smallexample
5d67986c 8752@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
87531: (sin(pi y) - pi y cos(pi y)) / pi^2 + (pi cos(pi) - sin(pi)) / pi^2
8754 .
8755
8756 V R -
8757
d7b8e6c6 8758@end group
5d67986c 8759@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8760@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8761@smallexample
5d67986c 8762@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
87631: (sin(3.14159 y) - 3.14159 y cos(3.14159 y)) / 9.8696 - 0.3183
8764 .
8765
8766 =
8767
d7b8e6c6 8768@end group
5d67986c 8769@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8770@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8771@smallexample
5d67986c 8772@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
87731: [0., -0.95493, 0.63662, -1.5915, 1.2732]
8774 .
8775
5d67986c 8776 v x 5 @key{RET} @key{TAB} V M $ @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8777@end group
5d67986c 8778@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8779
8780@node Algebra Answer 4, Rewrites Answer 1, Algebra Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
8781@subsection Algebra Tutorial Exercise 4
8782
8783@noindent
8784The hard part is that @kbd{V R +} is no longer sufficient to add up all
8785the contributions from the slices, since the slices have varying
8786coefficients. So first we must come up with a vector of these
8787coefficients. Here's one way:
8788
d7b8e6c6 8789@smallexample
5d67986c 8790@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
87912: -1 2: 3 1: [4, 2, ..., 4]
87921: [1, 2, ..., 9] 1: [-1, 1, ..., -1] .
8793 . .
8794
5d67986c 8795 1 n v x 9 @key{RET} V M ^ 3 @key{TAB} -
d7b8e6c6 8796
d7b8e6c6 8797@end group
5d67986c 8798@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8799@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8800@smallexample
5d67986c 8801@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
88021: [4, 2, ..., 4, 1] 1: [1, 4, 2, ..., 4, 1]
8803 . .
8804
5d67986c 8805 1 | 1 @key{TAB} |
d7b8e6c6 8806@end group
5d67986c 8807@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8808
8809@noindent
8810Now we compute the function values. Note that for this method we need
8811eleven values, including both endpoints of the desired interval.
8812
d7b8e6c6 8813@smallexample
5d67986c 8814@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
88152: [1, 4, 2, ..., 4, 1]
88161: [1, 1.1, 1.2, ... , 1.8, 1.9, 2.]
8817 .
8818
5d67986c 8819 11 @key{RET} 1 @key{RET} .1 @key{RET} C-u v x
d7b8e6c6 8820
d7b8e6c6 8821@end group
5d67986c 8822@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8823@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8824@smallexample
5d67986c 8825@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
88262: [1, 4, 2, ..., 4, 1]
88271: [0., 0.084941, 0.16993, ... ]
8828 .
8829
5d67986c 8830 ' sin(x) ln(x) @key{RET} m r p 5 @key{RET} V M $ @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8831@end group
5d67986c 8832@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8833
8834@noindent
8835Once again this calls for @kbd{V M * V R +}; a simple @kbd{*} does the
8836same thing.
8837
d7b8e6c6 8838@smallexample
5d67986c 8839@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
88401: 11.22 1: 1.122 1: 0.374
8841 . . .
8842
8843 * .1 * 3 /
d7b8e6c6 8844@end group
5d67986c 8845@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8846
8847@noindent
8848Wow! That's even better than the result from the Taylor series method.
8849
8850@node Rewrites Answer 1, Rewrites Answer 2, Algebra Answer 4, Answers to Exercises
8851@subsection Rewrites Tutorial Exercise 1
8852
8853@noindent
8854We'll use Big mode to make the formulas more readable.
8855
d7b8e6c6 8856@smallexample
5d67986c 8857@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8858 ___
8859 2 + V 2
88601: (2 + sqrt(2)) / (1 + sqrt(2)) 1: --------
8861 . ___
8862 1 + V 2
8863
8864 .
8865
5d67986c 8866 ' (2+sqrt(2)) / (1+sqrt(2)) @key{RET} d B
d7b8e6c6 8867@end group
5d67986c 8868@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8869
8870@noindent
8871Multiplying by the conjugate helps because @cite{(a+b) (a-b) = a^2 - b^2}.
8872
d7b8e6c6 8873@smallexample
5d67986c 8874@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8875 ___ ___
88761: (2 + V 2 ) (V 2 - 1)
8877 .
8878
5d67986c 8879 a r a/(b+c) := a*(b-c) / (b^2-c^2) @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 8880
d7b8e6c6 8881@end group
5d67986c 8882@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 8883@noindent
d7b8e6c6 8884@smallexample
5d67986c 8885@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8886 ___ ___
88871: 2 + V 2 - 2 1: V 2
8888 . .
8889
8890 a r a*(b+c) := a*b + a*c a s
d7b8e6c6 8891@end group
5d67986c 8892@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8893
8894@noindent
8895(We could have used @kbd{a x} instead of a rewrite rule for the
8896second step.)
8897
8898The multiply-by-conjugate rule turns out to be useful in many
8899different circumstances, such as when the denominator involves
8900sines and cosines or the imaginary constant @code{i}.
8901
8902@node Rewrites Answer 2, Rewrites Answer 3, Rewrites Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
8903@subsection Rewrites Tutorial Exercise 2
8904
8905@noindent
8906Here is the rule set:
8907
d7b8e6c6 8908@smallexample
5d67986c 8909@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8910[ fib(n) := fib(n, 1, 1) :: integer(n) :: n >= 1,
8911 fib(1, x, y) := x,
8912 fib(n, x, y) := fib(n-1, y, x+y) ]
d7b8e6c6 8913@end group
5d67986c 8914@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8915
8916@noindent
8917The first rule turns a one-argument @code{fib} that people like to write
8918into a three-argument @code{fib} that makes computation easier. The
8919second rule converts back from three-argument form once the computation
8920is done. The third rule does the computation itself. It basically
8921says that if @cite{x} and @cite{y} are two consecutive Fibonacci numbers,
8922then @cite{y} and @cite{x+y} are the next (overlapping) pair of Fibonacci
8923numbers.
8924
8925Notice that because the number @cite{n} was ``validated'' by the
8926conditions on the first rule, there is no need to put conditions on
8927the other rules because the rule set would never get that far unless
8928the input were valid. That further speeds computation, since no
8929extra conditions need to be checked at every step.
8930
8931Actually, a user with a nasty sense of humor could enter a bad
8932three-argument @code{fib} call directly, say, @samp{fib(0, 1, 1)},
8933which would get the rules into an infinite loop. One thing that would
8934help keep this from happening by accident would be to use something like
8935@samp{ZzFib} instead of @code{fib} as the name of the three-argument
8936function.
8937
8938@node Rewrites Answer 3, Rewrites Answer 4, Rewrites Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
8939@subsection Rewrites Tutorial Exercise 3
8940
8941@noindent
8942He got an infinite loop. First, Calc did as expected and rewrote
8943@w{@samp{2 + 3 x}} to @samp{f(2, 3, x)}. Then it looked for ways to
8944apply the rule again, and found that @samp{f(2, 3, x)} looks like
8945@samp{a + b x} with @w{@samp{a = 0}} and @samp{b = 1}, so it rewrote to
8946@samp{f(0, 1, f(2, 3, x))}. It then wrapped another @samp{f(0, 1, ...)}
8947around that, and so on, ad infinitum. Joe should have used @kbd{M-1 a r}
8948to make sure the rule applied only once.
8949
8950(Actually, even the first step didn't work as he expected. What Calc
8951really gives for @kbd{M-1 a r} in this situation is @samp{f(3 x, 1, 2)},
8952treating 2 as the ``variable,'' and @samp{3 x} as a constant being added
8953to it. While this may seem odd, it's just as valid a solution as the
8954``obvious'' one. One way to fix this would be to add the condition
8955@samp{:: variable(x)} to the rule, to make sure the thing that matches
8956@samp{x} is indeed a variable, or to change @samp{x} to @samp{quote(x)}
8957on the lefthand side, so that the rule matches the actual variable
8958@samp{x} rather than letting @samp{x} stand for something else.)
8959
8960@node Rewrites Answer 4, Rewrites Answer 5, Rewrites Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
8961@subsection Rewrites Tutorial Exercise 4
8962
8963@noindent
5d67986c
RS
8964@ignore
8965@starindex
8966@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8967@tindex seq
8968Here is a suitable set of rules to solve the first part of the problem:
8969
d7b8e6c6 8970@smallexample
5d67986c 8971@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8972[ seq(n, c) := seq(n/2, c+1) :: n%2 = 0,
8973 seq(n, c) := seq(3n+1, c+1) :: n%2 = 1 :: n > 1 ]
d7b8e6c6 8974@end group
5d67986c 8975@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8976
8977Given the initial formula @samp{seq(6, 0)}, application of these
8978rules produces the following sequence of formulas:
8979
8980@example
8981seq( 3, 1)
8982seq(10, 2)
8983seq( 5, 3)
8984seq(16, 4)
8985seq( 8, 5)
8986seq( 4, 6)
8987seq( 2, 7)
8988seq( 1, 8)
8989@end example
8990
8991@noindent
8992whereupon neither of the rules match, and rewriting stops.
8993
8994We can pretty this up a bit with a couple more rules:
8995
d7b8e6c6 8996@smallexample
5d67986c 8997@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
8998[ seq(n) := seq(n, 0),
8999 seq(1, c) := c,
9000 ... ]
d7b8e6c6 9001@end group
5d67986c 9002@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9003
9004@noindent
9005Now, given @samp{seq(6)} as the starting configuration, we get 8
9006as the result.
9007
9008The change to return a vector is quite simple:
9009
d7b8e6c6 9010@smallexample
5d67986c 9011@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9012[ seq(n) := seq(n, []) :: integer(n) :: n > 0,
9013 seq(1, v) := v | 1,
9014 seq(n, v) := seq(n/2, v | n) :: n%2 = 0,
9015 seq(n, v) := seq(3n+1, v | n) :: n%2 = 1 ]
d7b8e6c6 9016@end group
5d67986c 9017@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9018
9019@noindent
9020Given @samp{seq(6)}, the result is @samp{[6, 3, 10, 5, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1]}.
9021
9022Notice that the @cite{n > 1} guard is no longer necessary on the last
9023rule since the @cite{n = 1} case is now detected by another rule.
9024But a guard has been added to the initial rule to make sure the
9025initial value is suitable before the computation begins.
9026
9027While still a good idea, this guard is not as vitally important as it
9028was for the @code{fib} function, since calling, say, @samp{seq(x, [])}
9029will not get into an infinite loop. Calc will not be able to prove
9030the symbol @samp{x} is either even or odd, so none of the rules will
9031apply and the rewrites will stop right away.
9032
9033@node Rewrites Answer 5, Rewrites Answer 6, Rewrites Answer 4, Answers to Exercises
9034@subsection Rewrites Tutorial Exercise 5
9035
9036@noindent
5d67986c
RS
9037@ignore
9038@starindex
9039@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 9040@tindex nterms
5d67986c
RS
9041If @cite{x} is the sum @cite{a + b}, then `@t{nterms(}@var{x}@t{)}' must
9042be `@t{nterms(}@var{a}@t{)}' plus `@t{nterms(}@var{b}@t{)}'. If @cite{x}
9043is not a sum, then `@t{nterms(}@var{x}@t{)}' = 1.
d7b8e6c6 9044
d7b8e6c6 9045@smallexample
5d67986c 9046@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9047[ nterms(a + b) := nterms(a) + nterms(b),
9048 nterms(x) := 1 ]
d7b8e6c6 9049@end group
5d67986c 9050@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9051
9052@noindent
9053Here we have taken advantage of the fact that earlier rules always
9054match before later rules; @samp{nterms(x)} will only be tried if we
9055already know that @samp{x} is not a sum.
9056
9057@node Rewrites Answer 6, Rewrites Answer 7, Rewrites Answer 5, Answers to Exercises
9058@subsection Rewrites Tutorial Exercise 6
9059
9060Just put the rule @samp{0^0 := 1} into @code{EvalRules}. For example,
9061before making this definition we have:
9062
d7b8e6c6 9063@smallexample
5d67986c 9064@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
90652: [-2, -1, 0, 1, 2] 1: [1, 1, 0^0, 1, 1]
90661: 0 .
9067 .
9068
5d67986c 9069 v x 5 @key{RET} 3 - 0 V M ^
d7b8e6c6 9070@end group
5d67986c 9071@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9072
9073@noindent
9074But then:
9075
d7b8e6c6 9076@smallexample
5d67986c 9077@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
90782: [-2, -1, 0, 1, 2] 1: [1, 1, 1, 1, 1]
90791: 0 .
9080 .
9081
5d67986c 9082 U ' 0^0:=1 @key{RET} s t EvalRules @key{RET} V M ^
d7b8e6c6 9083@end group
5d67986c 9084@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9085
9086Perhaps more surprisingly, this rule still works with infinite mode
9087turned on. Calc tries @code{EvalRules} before any built-in rules for
9088a function. This allows you to override the default behavior of any
9089Calc feature: Even though Calc now wants to evaluate @cite{0^0} to
9090@code{nan}, your rule gets there first and evaluates it to 1 instead.
9091
9092Just for kicks, try adding the rule @code{2+3 := 6} to @code{EvalRules}.
9093What happens? (Be sure to remove this rule afterward, or you might get
9094a nasty surprise when you use Calc to balance your checkbook!)
9095
9096@node Rewrites Answer 7, Programming Answer 1, Rewrites Answer 6, Answers to Exercises
9097@subsection Rewrites Tutorial Exercise 7
9098
9099@noindent
9100Here is a rule set that will do the job:
9101
d7b8e6c6 9102@smallexample
5d67986c 9103@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9104[ a*(b + c) := a*b + a*c,
9105 opt(a) O(x^n) + opt(b) O(x^m) := O(x^n) :: n <= m
9106 :: constant(a) :: constant(b),
9107 opt(a) O(x^n) + opt(b) x^m := O(x^n) :: n <= m
9108 :: constant(a) :: constant(b),
9109 a O(x^n) := O(x^n) :: constant(a),
9110 x^opt(m) O(x^n) := O(x^(n+m)),
9111 O(x^n) O(x^m) := O(x^(n+m)) ]
d7b8e6c6 9112@end group
5d67986c 9113@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9114
9115If we really want the @kbd{+} and @kbd{*} keys to operate naturally
9116on power series, we should put these rules in @code{EvalRules}. For
9117testing purposes, it is better to put them in a different variable,
9118say, @code{O}, first.
9119
9120The first rule just expands products of sums so that the rest of the
9121rules can assume they have an expanded-out polynomial to work with.
9122Note that this rule does not mention @samp{O} at all, so it will
9123apply to any product-of-sum it encounters---this rule may surprise
9124you if you put it into @code{EvalRules}!
9125
9126In the second rule, the sum of two O's is changed to the smaller O.
9127The optional constant coefficients are there mostly so that
9128@samp{O(x^2) - O(x^3)} and @samp{O(x^3) - O(x^2)} are handled
9129as well as @samp{O(x^2) + O(x^3)}.
9130
9131The third rule absorbs higher powers of @samp{x} into O's.
9132
9133The fourth rule says that a constant times a negligible quantity
9134is still negligible. (This rule will also match @samp{O(x^3) / 4},
9135with @samp{a = 1/4}.)
9136
9137The fifth rule rewrites, for example, @samp{x^2 O(x^3)} to @samp{O(x^5)}.
9138(It is easy to see that if one of these forms is negligible, the other
9139is, too.) Notice the @samp{x^opt(m)} to pick up terms like
9140@w{@samp{x O(x^3)}}. Optional powers will match @samp{x} as @samp{x^1}
9141but not 1 as @samp{x^0}. This turns out to be exactly what we want here.
9142
9143The sixth rule is the corresponding rule for products of two O's.
9144
9145Another way to solve this problem would be to create a new ``data type''
9146that represents truncated power series. We might represent these as
9147function calls @samp{series(@var{coefs}, @var{x})} where @var{coefs} is
9148a vector of coefficients for @cite{x^0}, @cite{x^1}, @cite{x^2}, and so
9149on. Rules would exist for sums and products of such @code{series}
9150objects, and as an optional convenience could also know how to combine a
9151@code{series} object with a normal polynomial. (With this, and with a
9152rule that rewrites @samp{O(x^n)} to the equivalent @code{series} form,
9153you could still enter power series in exactly the same notation as
9154before.) Operations on such objects would probably be more efficient,
9155although the objects would be a bit harder to read.
9156
9157@c [fix-ref Compositions]
9158Some other symbolic math programs provide a power series data type
9159similar to this. Mathematica, for example, has an object that looks
9160like @samp{PowerSeries[@var{x}, @var{x0}, @var{coefs}, @var{nmin},
9161@var{nmax}, @var{den}]}, where @var{x0} is the point about which the
9162power series is taken (we've been assuming this was always zero),
9163and @var{nmin}, @var{nmax}, and @var{den} allow pseudo-power-series
9164with fractional or negative powers. Also, the @code{PowerSeries}
9165objects have a special display format that makes them look like
9166@samp{2 x^2 + O(x^4)} when they are printed out. (@xref{Compositions},
9167for a way to do this in Calc, although for something as involved as
9168this it would probably be better to write the formatting routine
9169in Lisp.)
9170
9171@node Programming Answer 1, Programming Answer 2, Rewrites Answer 7, Answers to Exercises
9172@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 1
9173
9174@noindent
9175Just enter the formula @samp{ninteg(sin(t)/t, t, 0, x)}, type
9176@kbd{Z F}, and answer the questions. Since this formula contains two
9177variables, the default argument list will be @samp{(t x)}. We want to
9178change this to @samp{(x)} since @cite{t} is really a dummy variable
9179to be used within @code{ninteg}.
9180
5d67986c
RS
9181The exact keystrokes are @kbd{Z F s Si @key{RET} @key{RET} C-b C-b @key{DEL} @key{DEL} @key{RET} y}.
9182(The @kbd{C-b C-b @key{DEL} @key{DEL}} are what fix the argument list.)
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9183
9184@node Programming Answer 2, Programming Answer 3, Programming Answer 1, Answers to Exercises
9185@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 2
9186
9187@noindent
9188One way is to move the number to the top of the stack, operate on
5d67986c 9189it, then move it back: @kbd{C-x ( M-@key{TAB} n M-@key{TAB} M-@key{TAB} C-x )}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9190
9191Another way is to negate the top three stack entries, then negate
9192again the top two stack entries: @kbd{C-x ( M-3 n M-2 n C-x )}.
9193
9194Finally, it turns out that a negative prefix argument causes a
9195command like @kbd{n} to operate on the specified stack entry only,
9196which is just what we want: @kbd{C-x ( M-- 3 n C-x )}.
9197
9198Just for kicks, let's also do it algebraically:
5d67986c 9199@w{@kbd{C-x ( ' -$$$, $$, $ @key{RET} C-x )}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9200
9201@node Programming Answer 3, Programming Answer 4, Programming Answer 2, Answers to Exercises
9202@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 3
9203
9204@noindent
9205Each of these functions can be computed using the stack, or using
9206algebraic entry, whichever way you prefer:
9207
9208@noindent
9209Computing @c{$\displaystyle{\sin x \over x}$}
9210@cite{sin(x) / x}:
9211
5d67986c 9212Using the stack: @kbd{C-x ( @key{RET} S @key{TAB} / C-x )}.
d7b8e6c6 9213
5d67986c 9214Using algebraic entry: @kbd{C-x ( ' sin($)/$ @key{RET} C-x )}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9215
9216@noindent
9217Computing the logarithm:
9218
5d67986c 9219Using the stack: @kbd{C-x ( @key{TAB} B C-x )}
d7b8e6c6 9220
5d67986c 9221Using algebraic entry: @kbd{C-x ( ' log($,$$) @key{RET} C-x )}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9222
9223@noindent
9224Computing the vector of integers:
9225
5d67986c 9226Using the stack: @kbd{C-x ( 1 @key{RET} 1 C-u v x C-x )}. (Recall that
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9227@kbd{C-u v x} takes the vector size, starting value, and increment
9228from the stack.)
9229
9230Alternatively: @kbd{C-x ( ~ v x C-x )}. (The @kbd{~} key pops a
9231number from the stack and uses it as the prefix argument for the
9232next command.)
9233
5d67986c 9234Using algebraic entry: @kbd{C-x ( ' index($) @key{RET} C-x )}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9235
9236@node Programming Answer 4, Programming Answer 5, Programming Answer 3, Answers to Exercises
9237@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 4
9238
9239@noindent
5d67986c 9240Here's one way: @kbd{C-x ( @key{RET} V R + @key{TAB} v l / C-x )}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9241
9242@node Programming Answer 5, Programming Answer 6, Programming Answer 4, Answers to Exercises
9243@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 5
9244
d7b8e6c6 9245@smallexample
5d67986c 9246@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
92472: 1 1: 1.61803398502 2: 1.61803398502
92481: 20 . 1: 1.61803398875
9249 . .
9250
5d67986c 9251 1 @key{RET} 20 Z < & 1 + Z > I H P
d7b8e6c6 9252@end group
5d67986c 9253@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9254
9255@noindent
9256This answer is quite accurate.
9257
9258@node Programming Answer 6, Programming Answer 7, Programming Answer 5, Answers to Exercises
9259@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 6
9260
9261@noindent
9262Here is the matrix:
9263
9264@example
9265[ [ 0, 1 ] * [a, b] = [b, a + b]
9266 [ 1, 1 ] ]
9267@end example
9268
9269@noindent
9270Thus @samp{[0, 1; 1, 1]^n * [1, 1]} computes Fibonacci numbers @cite{n+1}
9271and @cite{n+2}. Here's one program that does the job:
9272
9273@example
5d67986c 9274C-x ( ' [0, 1; 1, 1] ^ ($-1) * [1, 1] @key{RET} v u @key{DEL} C-x )
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9275@end example
9276
9277@noindent
9278This program is quite efficient because Calc knows how to raise a
9279matrix (or other value) to the power @cite{n} in only @c{$\log_2 n$}
9280@cite{log(n,2)}
9281steps. For example, this program can compute the 1000th Fibonacci
9282number (a 209-digit integer!) in about 10 steps; even though the
9283@kbd{Z < ... Z >} solution had much simpler steps, it would have
9284required so many steps that it would not have been practical.
9285
9286@node Programming Answer 7, Programming Answer 8, Programming Answer 6, Answers to Exercises
9287@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 7
9288
9289@noindent
9290The trick here is to compute the harmonic numbers differently, so that
9291the loop counter itself accumulates the sum of reciprocals. We use
9292a separate variable to hold the integer counter.
9293
d7b8e6c6 9294@smallexample
5d67986c 9295@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
92961: 1 2: 1 1: .
9297 . 1: 4
9298 .
9299
5d67986c 9300 1 t 1 1 @key{RET} 4 Z ( t 2 r 1 1 + s 1 & Z )
d7b8e6c6 9301@end group
5d67986c 9302@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9303
9304@noindent
9305The body of the loop goes as follows: First save the harmonic sum
9306so far in variable 2. Then delete it from the stack; the for loop
9307itself will take care of remembering it for us. Next, recall the
9308count from variable 1, add one to it, and feed its reciprocal to
9309the for loop to use as the step value. The for loop will increase
9310the ``loop counter'' by that amount and keep going until the
9311loop counter exceeds 4.
9312
d7b8e6c6 9313@smallexample
5d67986c 9314@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
93152: 31 3: 31
93161: 3.99498713092 2: 3.99498713092
9317 . 1: 4.02724519544
9318 .
9319
5d67986c 9320 r 1 r 2 @key{RET} 31 & +
d7b8e6c6 9321@end group
5d67986c 9322@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9323
9324Thus we find that the 30th harmonic number is 3.99, and the 31st
9325harmonic number is 4.02.
9326
9327@node Programming Answer 8, Programming Answer 9, Programming Answer 7, Answers to Exercises
9328@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 8
9329
9330@noindent
9331The first step is to compute the derivative @cite{f'(x)} and thus
9332the formula @c{$\displaystyle{x - {f(x) \over f'(x)}}$}
9333@cite{x - f(x)/f'(x)}.
9334
9335(Because this definition is long, it will be repeated in concise form
9336below. You can use @w{@kbd{M-# m}} to load it from there. While you are
9337entering a @kbd{Z ` Z '} body in a macro, Calc simply collects
9338keystrokes without executing them. In the following diagrams we'll
9339pretend Calc actually executed the keystrokes as you typed them,
9340just for purposes of illustration.)
9341
d7b8e6c6 9342@smallexample
5d67986c 9343@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
93442: sin(cos(x)) - 0.5 3: 4.5
93451: 4.5 2: sin(cos(x)) - 0.5
9346 . 1: -(sin(x) cos(cos(x)))
9347 .
9348
5d67986c 9349' sin(cos(x))-0.5 @key{RET} 4.5 m r C-x ( Z ` @key{TAB} @key{RET} a d x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 9350
d7b8e6c6 9351@end group
5d67986c 9352@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 9353@noindent
d7b8e6c6 9354@smallexample
5d67986c 9355@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
93562: 4.5
93571: x + (sin(cos(x)) - 0.5) / sin(x) cos(cos(x))
9358 .
9359
5d67986c 9360 / ' x @key{RET} @key{TAB} - t 1
d7b8e6c6 9361@end group
5d67986c 9362@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9363
9364Now, we enter the loop. We'll use a repeat loop with a 20-repetition
9365limit just in case the method fails to converge for some reason.
9366(Normally, the @w{@kbd{Z /}} command will stop the loop before all 20
9367repetitions are done.)
9368
d7b8e6c6 9369@smallexample
5d67986c 9370@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
93711: 4.5 3: 4.5 2: 4.5
9372 . 2: x + (sin(cos(x)) ... 1: 5.24196456928
9373 1: 4.5 .
9374 .
9375
5d67986c 9376 20 Z < @key{RET} r 1 @key{TAB} s l x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 9377@end group
5d67986c 9378@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9379
9380This is the new guess for @cite{x}. Now we compare it with the
9381old one to see if we've converged.
9382
d7b8e6c6 9383@smallexample
5d67986c 9384@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
93853: 5.24196 2: 5.24196 1: 5.24196 1: 5.26345856348
93862: 5.24196 1: 0 . .
93871: 4.5 .
9388 .
9389
5d67986c 9390 @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} a = Z / Z > Z ' C-x )
d7b8e6c6 9391@end group
5d67986c 9392@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9393
9394The loop converges in just a few steps to this value. To check
9395the result, we can simply substitute it back into the equation.
9396
d7b8e6c6 9397@smallexample
5d67986c 9398@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
93992: 5.26345856348
94001: 0.499999999997
9401 .
9402
5d67986c 9403 @key{RET} ' sin(cos($)) @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 9404@end group
5d67986c 9405@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9406
9407Let's test the new definition again:
9408
d7b8e6c6 9409@smallexample
5d67986c 9410@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
94112: x^2 - 9 1: 3.
94121: 1 .
9413 .
9414
5d67986c 9415 ' x^2-9 @key{RET} 1 X
d7b8e6c6 9416@end group
5d67986c 9417@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9418
9419Once again, here's the full Newton's Method definition:
9420
d7b8e6c6 9421@example
5d67986c
RS
9422@group
9423C-x ( Z ` @key{TAB} @key{RET} a d x @key{RET} / ' x @key{RET} @key{TAB} - t 1
9424 20 Z < @key{RET} r 1 @key{TAB} s l x @key{RET}
9425 @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} a = Z /
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9426 Z >
9427 Z '
9428C-x )
d7b8e6c6 9429@end group
5d67986c 9430@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9431
9432@c [fix-ref Nesting and Fixed Points]
9433It turns out that Calc has a built-in command for applying a formula
9434repeatedly until it converges to a number. @xref{Nesting and Fixed Points},
9435to see how to use it.
9436
9437@c [fix-ref Root Finding]
9438Also, of course, @kbd{a R} is a built-in command that uses Newton's
9439method (among others) to look for numerical solutions to any equation.
9440@xref{Root Finding}.
9441
9442@node Programming Answer 9, Programming Answer 10, Programming Answer 8, Answers to Exercises
9443@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 9
9444
9445@noindent
9446The first step is to adjust @cite{z} to be greater than 5. A simple
9447``for'' loop will do the job here. If @cite{z} is less than 5, we
9448reduce the problem using @c{$\psi(z) = \psi(z+1) - 1/z$}
9449@cite{psi(z) = psi(z+1) - 1/z}. We go
9450on to compute @c{$\psi(z+1)$}
9451@cite{psi(z+1)}, and remember to add back a factor of
9452@cite{-1/z} when we're done. This step is repeated until @cite{z > 5}.
9453
9454(Because this definition is long, it will be repeated in concise form
9455below. You can use @w{@kbd{M-# m}} to load it from there. While you are
9456entering a @kbd{Z ` Z '} body in a macro, Calc simply collects
9457keystrokes without executing them. In the following diagrams we'll
9458pretend Calc actually executed the keystrokes as you typed them,
9459just for purposes of illustration.)
9460
d7b8e6c6 9461@smallexample
5d67986c 9462@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
94631: 1. 1: 1.
9464 . .
9465
5d67986c 9466 1.0 @key{RET} C-x ( Z ` s 1 0 t 2
d7b8e6c6 9467@end group
5d67986c 9468@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9469
9470Here, variable 1 holds @cite{z} and variable 2 holds the adjustment
9471factor. If @cite{z < 5}, we use a loop to increase it.
9472
9473(By the way, we started with @samp{1.0} instead of the integer 1 because
9474otherwise the calculation below will try to do exact fractional arithmetic,
9475and will never converge because fractions compare equal only if they
9476are exactly equal, not just equal to within the current precision.)
9477
d7b8e6c6 9478@smallexample
5d67986c 9479@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
94803: 1. 2: 1. 1: 6.
94812: 1. 1: 1 .
94821: 5 .
9483 .
9484
5d67986c 9485 @key{RET} 5 a < Z [ 5 Z ( & s + 2 1 s + 1 1 Z ) r 1 Z ]
d7b8e6c6 9486@end group
5d67986c 9487@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9488
9489Now we compute the initial part of the sum: @c{$\ln z - {1 \over 2z}$}
9490@cite{ln(z) - 1/2z}
9491minus the adjustment factor.
9492
d7b8e6c6 9493@smallexample
5d67986c 9494@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
94952: 1.79175946923 2: 1.7084261359 1: -0.57490719743
94961: 0.0833333333333 1: 2.28333333333 .
9497 . .
9498
9499 L r 1 2 * & - r 2 -
d7b8e6c6 9500@end group
5d67986c 9501@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9502
9503Now we evaluate the series. We'll use another ``for'' loop counting
9504up the value of @cite{2 n}. (Calc does have a summation command,
9505@kbd{a +}, but we'll use loops just to get more practice with them.)
9506
d7b8e6c6 9507@smallexample
5d67986c 9508@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
95093: -0.5749 3: -0.5749 4: -0.5749 2: -0.5749
95102: 2 2: 1:6 3: 1:6 1: 2.3148e-3
95111: 40 1: 2 2: 2 .
9512 . . 1: 36.
9513 .
9514
5d67986c 9515 2 @key{RET} 40 Z ( @key{RET} k b @key{TAB} @key{RET} r 1 @key{TAB} ^ * /
d7b8e6c6 9516
d7b8e6c6 9517@end group
5d67986c 9518@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 9519@noindent
d7b8e6c6 9520@smallexample
5d67986c 9521@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
95223: -0.5749 3: -0.5772 2: -0.5772 1: -0.577215664892
95232: -0.5749 2: -0.5772 1: 0 .
95241: 2.3148e-3 1: -0.5749 .
9525 . .
9526
5d67986c 9527 @key{TAB} @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} - @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} a = Z / 2 Z ) Z ' C-x )
d7b8e6c6 9528@end group
5d67986c 9529@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9530
9531This is the value of @c{$-\gamma$}
9532@cite{- gamma}, with a slight bit of roundoff error.
9533To get a full 12 digits, let's use a higher precision:
9534
d7b8e6c6 9535@smallexample
5d67986c 9536@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
95372: -0.577215664892 2: -0.577215664892
95381: 1. 1: -0.577215664901532
9539
5d67986c 9540 1. @key{RET} p 16 @key{RET} X
d7b8e6c6 9541@end group
5d67986c 9542@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9543
9544Here's the complete sequence of keystrokes:
9545
d7b8e6c6 9546@example
5d67986c 9547@group
d7b8e6c6 9548C-x ( Z ` s 1 0 t 2
5d67986c 9549 @key{RET} 5 a < Z [ 5 Z ( & s + 2 1 s + 1 1 Z ) r 1 Z ]
d7b8e6c6 9550 L r 1 2 * & - r 2 -
5d67986c
RS
9551 2 @key{RET} 40 Z ( @key{RET} k b @key{TAB} @key{RET} r 1 @key{TAB} ^ * /
9552 @key{TAB} @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} - @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} a = Z /
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9553 2 Z )
9554 Z '
9555C-x )
d7b8e6c6 9556@end group
5d67986c 9557@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9558
9559@node Programming Answer 10, Programming Answer 11, Programming Answer 9, Answers to Exercises
9560@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 10
9561
9562@noindent
9563Taking the derivative of a term of the form @cite{x^n} will produce
9564a term like @c{$n x^{n-1}$}
9565@cite{n x^(n-1)}. Taking the derivative of a constant
9566produces zero. From this it is easy to see that the @cite{n}th
9567derivative of a polynomial, evaluated at @cite{x = 0}, will equal the
9568coefficient on the @cite{x^n} term times @cite{n!}.
9569
9570(Because this definition is long, it will be repeated in concise form
9571below. You can use @w{@kbd{M-# m}} to load it from there. While you are
9572entering a @kbd{Z ` Z '} body in a macro, Calc simply collects
9573keystrokes without executing them. In the following diagrams we'll
9574pretend Calc actually executed the keystrokes as you typed them,
9575just for purposes of illustration.)
9576
d7b8e6c6 9577@smallexample
5d67986c 9578@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
95792: 5 x^4 + (x + 1)^2 3: 5 x^4 + (x + 1)^2
95801: 6 2: 0
9581 . 1: 6
9582 .
9583
5d67986c 9584 ' 5 x^4 + (x+1)^2 @key{RET} 6 C-x ( Z ` [ ] t 1 0 @key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6 9585@end group
5d67986c 9586@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9587
9588@noindent
9589Variable 1 will accumulate the vector of coefficients.
9590
d7b8e6c6 9591@smallexample
5d67986c 9592@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
95932: 0 3: 0 2: 5 x^4 + ...
95941: 5 x^4 + ... 2: 5 x^4 + ... 1: 1
9595 . 1: 1 .
9596 .
9597
5d67986c 9598 Z ( @key{TAB} @key{RET} 0 s l x @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} ! / s | 1
d7b8e6c6 9599@end group
5d67986c 9600@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9601
9602@noindent
9603Note that @kbd{s | 1} appends the top-of-stack value to the vector
9604in a variable; it is completely analogous to @kbd{s + 1}. We could
5d67986c 9605have written instead, @kbd{r 1 @key{TAB} | t 1}.
d7b8e6c6 9606
d7b8e6c6 9607@smallexample
5d67986c 9608@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
96091: 20 x^3 + 2 x + 2 1: 0 1: [1, 2, 1, 0, 5, 0, 0]
9610 . . .
9611
5d67986c 9612 a d x @key{RET} 1 Z ) @key{DEL} r 1 Z ' C-x )
d7b8e6c6 9613@end group
5d67986c 9614@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9615
9616To convert back, a simple method is just to map the coefficients
9617against a table of powers of @cite{x}.
9618
d7b8e6c6 9619@smallexample
5d67986c 9620@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
96212: [1, 2, 1, 0, 5, 0, 0] 2: [1, 2, 1, 0, 5, 0, 0]
96221: 6 1: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
9623 . .
9624
5d67986c 9625 6 @key{RET} 1 + 0 @key{RET} 1 C-u v x
d7b8e6c6 9626
d7b8e6c6 9627@end group
5d67986c 9628@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 9629@noindent
d7b8e6c6 9630@smallexample
5d67986c 9631@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
96322: [1, 2, 1, 0, 5, 0, 0] 2: 1 + 2 x + x^2 + 5 x^4
96331: [1, x, x^2, x^3, ... ] .
9634 .
9635
5d67986c 9636 ' x @key{RET} @key{TAB} V M ^ *
d7b8e6c6 9637@end group
5d67986c 9638@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9639
9640Once again, here are the whole polynomial to/from vector programs:
9641
d7b8e6c6 9642@example
5d67986c
RS
9643@group
9644C-x ( Z ` [ ] t 1 0 @key{TAB}
9645 Z ( @key{TAB} @key{RET} 0 s l x @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} ! / s | 1
9646 a d x @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9647 1 Z ) r 1
9648 Z '
9649C-x )
9650
5d67986c 9651C-x ( 1 + 0 @key{RET} 1 C-u v x ' x @key{RET} @key{TAB} V M ^ * C-x )
d7b8e6c6 9652@end group
5d67986c 9653@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9654
9655@node Programming Answer 11, Programming Answer 12, Programming Answer 10, Answers to Exercises
9656@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 11
9657
9658@noindent
9659First we define a dummy program to go on the @kbd{z s} key. The true
9660@w{@kbd{z s}} key is supposed to take two numbers from the stack and
5d67986c 9661return one number, so @key{DEL} as a dummy definition will make
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9662sure the stack comes out right.
9663
d7b8e6c6 9664@smallexample
5d67986c 9665@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
96662: 4 1: 4 2: 4
96671: 2 . 1: 2
9668 . .
9669
5d67986c 9670 4 @key{RET} 2 C-x ( @key{DEL} C-x ) Z K s @key{RET} 2
d7b8e6c6 9671@end group
5d67986c 9672@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9673
9674The last step replaces the 2 that was eaten during the creation
9675of the dummy @kbd{z s} command. Now we move on to the real
9676definition. The recurrence needs to be rewritten slightly,
9677to the form @cite{s(n,m) = s(n-1,m-1) - (n-1) s(n-1,m)}.
9678
9679(Because this definition is long, it will be repeated in concise form
9680below. You can use @kbd{M-# m} to load it from there.)
9681
d7b8e6c6 9682@smallexample
5d67986c 9683@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
96842: 4 4: 4 3: 4 2: 4
96851: 2 3: 2 2: 2 1: 2
9686 . 2: 4 1: 0 .
9687 1: 2 .
9688 .
9689
5d67986c 9690 C-x ( M-2 @key{RET} a = Z [ @key{DEL} @key{DEL} 1 Z :
d7b8e6c6 9691
d7b8e6c6 9692@end group
5d67986c 9693@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 9694@noindent
d7b8e6c6 9695@smallexample
5d67986c 9696@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
96974: 4 2: 4 2: 3 4: 3 4: 3 3: 3
96983: 2 1: 2 1: 2 3: 2 3: 2 2: 2
96992: 2 . . 2: 3 2: 3 1: 3
97001: 0 1: 2 1: 1 .
9701 . . .
9702
5d67986c 9703 @key{RET} 0 a = Z [ @key{DEL} @key{DEL} 0 Z : @key{TAB} 1 - @key{TAB} M-2 @key{RET} 1 - z s
d7b8e6c6 9704@end group
5d67986c 9705@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9706
9707@noindent
9708(Note that the value 3 that our dummy @kbd{z s} produces is not correct;
9709it is merely a placeholder that will do just as well for now.)
9710
d7b8e6c6 9711@smallexample
5d67986c 9712@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
97133: 3 4: 3 3: 3 2: 3 1: -6
97142: 3 3: 3 2: 3 1: 9 .
97151: 2 2: 3 1: 3 .
9716 . 1: 2 .
9717 .
9718
5d67986c 9719 M-@key{TAB} M-@key{TAB} @key{TAB} @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} z s * -
d7b8e6c6 9720
d7b8e6c6 9721@end group
5d67986c 9722@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6 9723@noindent
d7b8e6c6 9724@smallexample
5d67986c 9725@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
97261: -6 2: 4 1: 11 2: 11
9727 . 1: 2 . 1: 11
9728 . .
9729
5d67986c 9730 Z ] Z ] C-x ) Z K s @key{RET} @key{DEL} 4 @key{RET} 2 z s M-@key{RET} k s
d7b8e6c6 9731@end group
5d67986c 9732@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9733
9734Even though the result that we got during the definition was highly
9735bogus, once the definition is complete the @kbd{z s} command gets
9736the right answers.
9737
9738Here's the full program once again:
9739
d7b8e6c6 9740@example
5d67986c
RS
9741@group
9742C-x ( M-2 @key{RET} a =
9743 Z [ @key{DEL} @key{DEL} 1
9744 Z : @key{RET} 0 a =
9745 Z [ @key{DEL} @key{DEL} 0
9746 Z : @key{TAB} 1 - @key{TAB} M-2 @key{RET} 1 - z s
9747 M-@key{TAB} M-@key{TAB} @key{TAB} @key{RET} M-@key{TAB} z s * -
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9748 Z ]
9749 Z ]
9750C-x )
d7b8e6c6 9751@end group
5d67986c 9752@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9753
9754You can read this definition using @kbd{M-# m} (@code{read-kbd-macro})
9755followed by @kbd{Z K s}, without having to make a dummy definition
9756first, because @code{read-kbd-macro} doesn't need to execute the
9757definition as it reads it in. For this reason, @code{M-# m} is often
9758the easiest way to create recursive programs in Calc.
9759
9760@node Programming Answer 12, , Programming Answer 11, Answers to Exercises
9761@subsection Programming Tutorial Exercise 12
9762
9763@noindent
9764This turns out to be a much easier way to solve the problem. Let's
9765denote Stirling numbers as calls of the function @samp{s}.
9766
9767First, we store the rewrite rules corresponding to the definition of
9768Stirling numbers in a convenient variable:
9769
9770@smallexample
5d67986c 9771s e StirlingRules @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9772[ s(n,n) := 1 :: n >= 0,
9773 s(n,0) := 0 :: n > 0,
9774 s(n,m) := s(n-1,m-1) - (n-1) s(n-1,m) :: n >= m :: m >= 1 ]
9775C-c C-c
9776@end smallexample
9777
9778Now, it's just a matter of applying the rules:
9779
d7b8e6c6 9780@smallexample
5d67986c 9781@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
97822: 4 1: s(4, 2) 1: 11
97831: 2 . .
9784 .
9785
5d67986c 9786 4 @key{RET} 2 C-x ( ' s($$,$) @key{RET} a r StirlingRules @key{RET} C-x )
d7b8e6c6 9787@end group
5d67986c 9788@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9789
9790As in the case of the @code{fib} rules, it would be useful to put these
9791rules in @code{EvalRules} and to add a @samp{:: remember} condition to
9792the last rule.
9793
9794@c This ends the table-of-contents kludge from above:
9795@tex
9796\global\let\chapternofonts=\oldchapternofonts
9797@end tex
9798
9799@c [reference]
9800
9801@node Introduction, Data Types, Tutorial, Top
9802@chapter Introduction
9803
9804@noindent
9805This chapter is the beginning of the Calc reference manual.
9806It covers basic concepts such as the stack, algebraic and
9807numeric entry, undo, numeric prefix arguments, etc.
9808
9809@c [when-split]
9810@c (Chapter 2, the Tutorial, has been printed in a separate volume.)
9811
9812@menu
9813* Basic Commands::
9814* Help Commands::
9815* Stack Basics::
9816* Numeric Entry::
9817* Algebraic Entry::
9818* Quick Calculator::
9819* Keypad Mode::
9820* Prefix Arguments::
9821* Undo::
9822* Error Messages::
9823* Multiple Calculators::
9824* Troubleshooting Commands::
9825@end menu
9826
9827@node Basic Commands, Help Commands, Introduction, Introduction
9828@section Basic Commands
9829
9830@noindent
9831@pindex calc
9832@pindex calc-mode
9833@cindex Starting the Calculator
9834@cindex Running the Calculator
9835To start the Calculator in its standard interface, type @kbd{M-x calc}.
9836By default this creates a pair of small windows, @samp{*Calculator*}
9837and @samp{*Calc Trail*}. The former displays the contents of the
9838Calculator stack and is manipulated exclusively through Calc commands.
9839It is possible (though not usually necessary) to create several Calc
9840Mode buffers each of which has an independent stack, undo list, and
9841mode settings. There is exactly one Calc Trail buffer; it records a
9842list of the results of all calculations that have been done. The
9843Calc Trail buffer uses a variant of Calc Mode, so Calculator commands
9844still work when the trail buffer's window is selected. It is possible
9845to turn the trail window off, but the @samp{*Calc Trail*} buffer itself
9846still exists and is updated silently. @xref{Trail Commands}.@refill
9847
9848@kindex M-# c
9849@kindex M-# M-#
5d67986c
RS
9850@ignore
9851@mindex @null
9852@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9853@kindex M-# #
9854In most installations, the @kbd{M-# c} key sequence is a more
9855convenient way to start the Calculator. Also, @kbd{M-# M-#} and
9856@kbd{M-# #} are synonyms for @kbd{M-# c} unless you last used Calc
9857in its ``keypad'' mode.
9858
9859@kindex x
9860@kindex M-x
9861@pindex calc-execute-extended-command
9862Most Calc commands use one or two keystrokes. Lower- and upper-case
9863letters are distinct. Commands may also be entered in full @kbd{M-x} form;
9864for some commands this is the only form. As a convenience, the @kbd{x}
9865key (@code{calc-execute-extended-command})
9866is like @kbd{M-x} except that it enters the initial string @samp{calc-}
9867for you. For example, the following key sequences are equivalent:
9868@kbd{S}, @kbd{M-x calc-sin @key{RET}}, @kbd{x sin @key{RET}}.@refill
9869
9870@cindex Extensions module
9871@cindex @file{calc-ext} module
9872The Calculator exists in many parts. When you type @kbd{M-# c}, the
9873Emacs ``auto-load'' mechanism will bring in only the first part, which
9874contains the basic arithmetic functions. The other parts will be
9875auto-loaded the first time you use the more advanced commands like trig
9876functions or matrix operations. This is done to improve the response time
9877of the Calculator in the common case when all you need to do is a
9878little arithmetic. If for some reason the Calculator fails to load an
9879extension module automatically, you can force it to load all the
9880extensions by using the @kbd{M-# L} (@code{calc-load-everything})
9881command. @xref{Mode Settings}.@refill
9882
9883If you type @kbd{M-x calc} or @kbd{M-# c} with any numeric prefix argument,
9884the Calculator is loaded if necessary, but it is not actually started.
9885If the argument is positive, the @file{calc-ext} extensions are also
9886loaded if necessary. User-written Lisp code that wishes to make use
9887of Calc's arithmetic routines can use @samp{(calc 0)} or @samp{(calc 1)}
9888to auto-load the Calculator.@refill
9889
9890@kindex M-# b
9891@pindex full-calc
9892If you type @kbd{M-# b}, then next time you use @kbd{M-# c} you
9893will get a Calculator that uses the full height of the Emacs screen.
9894When full-screen mode is on, @kbd{M-# c} runs the @code{full-calc}
9895command instead of @code{calc}. From the Unix shell you can type
9896@samp{emacs -f full-calc} to start a new Emacs specifically for use
9897as a calculator. When Calc is started from the Emacs command line
9898like this, Calc's normal ``quit'' commands actually quit Emacs itself.
9899
9900@kindex M-# o
9901@pindex calc-other-window
9902The @kbd{M-# o} command is like @kbd{M-# c} except that the Calc
9903window is not actually selected. If you are already in the Calc
9904window, @kbd{M-# o} switches you out of it. (The regular Emacs
9905@kbd{C-x o} command would also work for this, but it has a
9906tendency to drop you into the Calc Trail window instead, which
9907@kbd{M-# o} takes care not to do.)
9908
5d67986c
RS
9909@ignore
9910@mindex M-# q
9911@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9912For one quick calculation, you can type @kbd{M-# q} (@code{quick-calc})
9913which prompts you for a formula (like @samp{2+3/4}). The result is
9914displayed at the bottom of the Emacs screen without ever creating
9915any special Calculator windows. @xref{Quick Calculator}.
9916
5d67986c
RS
9917@ignore
9918@mindex M-# k
9919@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9920Finally, if you are using the X window system you may want to try
9921@kbd{M-# k} (@code{calc-keypad}) which runs Calc with a
9922``calculator keypad'' picture as well as a stack display. Click on
9923the keys with the mouse to operate the calculator. @xref{Keypad Mode}.
9924
9925@kindex q
9926@pindex calc-quit
9927@cindex Quitting the Calculator
9928@cindex Exiting the Calculator
9929The @kbd{q} key (@code{calc-quit}) exits Calc Mode and closes the
9930Calculator's window(s). It does not delete the Calculator buffers.
9931If you type @kbd{M-x calc} again, the Calculator will reappear with the
9932contents of the stack intact. Typing @kbd{M-# c} or @kbd{M-# M-#}
9933again from inside the Calculator buffer is equivalent to executing
9934@code{calc-quit}; you can think of @kbd{M-# M-#} as toggling the
9935Calculator on and off.@refill
9936
9937@kindex M-# x
9938The @kbd{M-# x} command also turns the Calculator off, no matter which
9939user interface (standard, Keypad, or Embedded) is currently active.
9940It also cancels @code{calc-edit} mode if used from there.
9941
5d67986c 9942@kindex d @key{SPC}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9943@pindex calc-refresh
9944@cindex Refreshing a garbled display
9945@cindex Garbled displays, refreshing
5d67986c 9946The @kbd{d @key{SPC}} key sequence (@code{calc-refresh}) redraws the contents
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9947of the Calculator buffer from memory. Use this if the contents of the
9948buffer have been damaged somehow.
9949
5d67986c
RS
9950@ignore
9951@mindex o
9952@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
9953The @kbd{o} key (@code{calc-realign}) moves the cursor back to its
9954``home'' position at the bottom of the Calculator buffer.
9955
9956@kindex <
9957@kindex >
9958@pindex calc-scroll-left
9959@pindex calc-scroll-right
9960@cindex Horizontal scrolling
9961@cindex Scrolling
9962@cindex Wide text, scrolling
9963The @kbd{<} and @kbd{>} keys are bound to @code{calc-scroll-left} and
9964@code{calc-scroll-right}. These are just like the normal horizontal
9965scrolling commands except that they scroll one half-screen at a time by
9966default. (Calc formats its output to fit within the bounds of the
9967window whenever it can.)@refill
9968
9969@kindex @{
9970@kindex @}
9971@pindex calc-scroll-down
9972@pindex calc-scroll-up
9973@cindex Vertical scrolling
9974The @kbd{@{} and @kbd{@}} keys are bound to @code{calc-scroll-down}
9975and @code{calc-scroll-up}. They scroll up or down by one-half the
9976height of the Calc window.@refill
9977
9978@kindex M-# 0
9979@pindex calc-reset
9980The @kbd{M-# 0} command (@code{calc-reset}; that's @kbd{M-#} followed
9981by a zero) resets the Calculator to its default state. This clears
9982the stack, resets all the modes, clears the caches (@pxref{Caches}),
9983and so on. (It does @emph{not} erase the values of any variables.)
9984With a numeric prefix argument, @kbd{M-# 0} preserves the contents
9985of the stack but resets everything else.
9986
9987@pindex calc-version
9988The @kbd{M-x calc-version} command displays the current version number
9989of Calc and the name of the person who installed it on your system.
9990(This information is also present in the @samp{*Calc Trail*} buffer,
9991and in the output of the @kbd{h h} command.)
9992
9993@node Help Commands, Stack Basics, Basic Commands, Introduction
9994@section Help Commands
9995
9996@noindent
9997@cindex Help commands
9998@kindex ?
9999@pindex calc-help
10000The @kbd{?} key (@code{calc-help}) displays a series of brief help messages.
10001Some keys (such as @kbd{b} and @kbd{d}) are prefix keys, like Emacs'
10002@key{ESC} and @kbd{C-x} prefixes. You can type
10003@kbd{?} after a prefix to see a list of commands beginning with that
10004prefix. (If the message includes @samp{[MORE]}, press @kbd{?} again
10005to see additional commands for that prefix.)
10006
10007@kindex h h
10008@pindex calc-full-help
10009The @kbd{h h} (@code{calc-full-help}) command displays all the @kbd{?}
10010responses at once. When printed, this makes a nice, compact (three pages)
10011summary of Calc keystrokes.
10012
10013In general, the @kbd{h} key prefix introduces various commands that
10014provide help within Calc. Many of the @kbd{h} key functions are
10015Calc-specific analogues to the @kbd{C-h} functions for Emacs help.
10016
10017@kindex h i
10018@kindex M-# i
10019@kindex i
10020@pindex calc-info
10021The @kbd{h i} (@code{calc-info}) command runs the Emacs Info system
10022to read this manual on-line. This is basically the same as typing
10023@kbd{C-h i} (the regular way to run the Info system), then, if Info
10024is not already in the Calc manual, selecting the beginning of the
10025manual. The @kbd{M-# i} command is another way to read the Calc
10026manual; it is different from @kbd{h i} in that it works any time,
10027not just inside Calc. The plain @kbd{i} key is also equivalent to
10028@kbd{h i}, though this key is obsolete and may be replaced with a
10029different command in a future version of Calc.
10030
10031@kindex h t
10032@kindex M-# t
10033@pindex calc-tutorial
10034The @kbd{h t} (@code{calc-tutorial}) command runs the Info system on
10035the Tutorial section of the Calc manual. It is like @kbd{h i},
10036except that it selects the starting node of the tutorial rather
10037than the beginning of the whole manual. (It actually selects the
10038node ``Interactive Tutorial'' which tells a few things about
10039using the Info system before going on to the actual tutorial.)
10040The @kbd{M-# t} key is equivalent to @kbd{h t} (but it works at
10041all times).
10042
10043@kindex h s
10044@kindex M-# s
10045@pindex calc-info-summary
10046The @kbd{h s} (@code{calc-info-summary}) command runs the Info system
10047on the Summary node of the Calc manual. @xref{Summary}. The @kbd{M-# s}
10048key is equivalent to @kbd{h s}.
10049
10050@kindex h k
10051@pindex calc-describe-key
10052The @kbd{h k} (@code{calc-describe-key}) command looks up a key
10053sequence in the Calc manual. For example, @kbd{h k H a S} looks
10054up the documentation on the @kbd{H a S} (@code{calc-solve-for})
10055command. This works by looking up the textual description of
10056the key(s) in the Key Index of the manual, then jumping to the
10057node indicated by the index.
10058
10059Most Calc commands do not have traditional Emacs documentation
10060strings, since the @kbd{h k} command is both more convenient and
10061more instructive. This means the regular Emacs @kbd{C-h k}
10062(@code{describe-key}) command will not be useful for Calc keystrokes.
10063
10064@kindex h c
10065@pindex calc-describe-key-briefly
10066The @kbd{h c} (@code{calc-describe-key-briefly}) command reads a
10067key sequence and displays a brief one-line description of it at
10068the bottom of the screen. It looks for the key sequence in the
10069Summary node of the Calc manual; if it doesn't find the sequence
10070there, it acts just like its regular Emacs counterpart @kbd{C-h c}
10071(@code{describe-key-briefly}). For example, @kbd{h c H a S}
10072gives the description:
10073
10074@smallexample
10075H a S runs calc-solve-for: a `H a S' v => fsolve(a,v) (?=notes)
10076@end smallexample
10077
10078@noindent
10079which means the command @kbd{H a S} or @kbd{H M-x calc-solve-for}
10080takes a value @cite{a} from the stack, prompts for a value @cite{v},
10081then applies the algebraic function @code{fsolve} to these values.
10082The @samp{?=notes} message means you can now type @kbd{?} to see
10083additional notes from the summary that apply to this command.
10084
10085@kindex h f
10086@pindex calc-describe-function
10087The @kbd{h f} (@code{calc-describe-function}) command looks up an
10088algebraic function or a command name in the Calc manual. The
10089prompt initially contains @samp{calcFunc-}; follow this with an
10090algebraic function name to look up that function in the Function
10091Index. Or, backspace and enter a command name beginning with
10092@samp{calc-} to look it up in the Command Index. This command
10093will also look up operator symbols that can appear in algebraic
10094formulas, like @samp{%} and @samp{=>}.
10095
10096@kindex h v
10097@pindex calc-describe-variable
10098The @kbd{h v} (@code{calc-describe-variable}) command looks up a
10099variable in the Calc manual. The prompt initially contains the
10100@samp{var-} prefix; just add a variable name like @code{pi} or
10101@code{PlotRejects}.
10102
10103@kindex h b
10104@pindex describe-bindings
10105The @kbd{h b} (@code{calc-describe-bindings}) command is just like
10106@kbd{C-h b}, except that only local (Calc-related) key bindings are
10107listed.
10108
10109@kindex h n
10110The @kbd{h n} or @kbd{h C-n} (@code{calc-view-news}) command displays
10111the ``news'' or change history of Calc. This is kept in the file
10112@file{README}, which Calc looks for in the same directory as the Calc
10113source files.
10114
10115@kindex h C-c
10116@kindex h C-d
10117@kindex h C-w
10118The @kbd{h C-c}, @kbd{h C-d}, and @kbd{h C-w} keys display copying,
10119distribution, and warranty information about Calc. These work by
10120pulling up the appropriate parts of the ``Copying'' or ``Reporting
10121Bugs'' sections of the manual.
10122
10123@node Stack Basics, Numeric Entry, Help Commands, Introduction
10124@section Stack Basics
10125
10126@noindent
10127@cindex Stack basics
10128@c [fix-tut RPN Calculations and the Stack]
10129Calc uses RPN notation. If you are not familar with RPN, @pxref{RPN
10130Tutorial}.
10131
10132To add the numbers 1 and 2 in Calc you would type the keys:
10133@kbd{1 @key{RET} 2 +}.
10134(@key{RET} corresponds to the @key{ENTER} key on most calculators.)
10135The first three keystrokes ``push'' the numbers 1 and 2 onto the stack. The
10136@kbd{+} key always ``pops'' the top two numbers from the stack, adds them,
10137and pushes the result (3) back onto the stack. This number is ready for
10138further calculations: @kbd{5 -} pushes 5 onto the stack, then pops the
101393 and 5, subtracts them, and pushes the result (@i{-2}).@refill
10140
10141Note that the ``top'' of the stack actually appears at the @emph{bottom}
10142of the buffer. A line containing a single @samp{.} character signifies
10143the end of the buffer; Calculator commands operate on the number(s)
10144directly above this line. The @kbd{d t} (@code{calc-truncate-stack})
10145command allows you to move the @samp{.} marker up and down in the stack;
10146@pxref{Truncating the Stack}.
10147
10148@kindex d l
10149@pindex calc-line-numbering
10150Stack elements are numbered consecutively, with number 1 being the top of
10151the stack. These line numbers are ordinarily displayed on the lefthand side
10152of the window. The @kbd{d l} (@code{calc-line-numbering}) command controls
10153whether these numbers appear. (Line numbers may be turned off since they
10154slow the Calculator down a bit and also clutter the display.)
10155
10156@kindex o
10157@pindex calc-realign
10158The unshifted letter @kbd{o} (@code{calc-realign}) command repositions
10159the cursor to its top-of-stack ``home'' position. It also undoes any
10160horizontal scrolling in the window. If you give it a numeric prefix
10161argument, it instead moves the cursor to the specified stack element.
10162
10163The @key{RET} (or equivalent @key{SPC}) key is only required to separate
10164two consecutive numbers.
10165(After all, if you typed @kbd{1 2} by themselves the Calculator
5d67986c 10166would enter the number 12.) If you press @key{RET} or @key{SPC} @emph{not}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
10167right after typing a number, the key duplicates the number on the top of
10168the stack. @kbd{@key{RET} *} is thus a handy way to square a number.@refill
10169
10170The @key{DEL} key pops and throws away the top number on the stack.
10171The @key{TAB} key swaps the top two objects on the stack.
10172@xref{Stack and Trail}, for descriptions of these and other stack-related
10173commands.@refill
10174
10175@node Numeric Entry, Algebraic Entry, Stack Basics, Introduction
10176@section Numeric Entry
10177
10178@noindent
10179@kindex 0-9
10180@kindex .
10181@kindex e
10182@cindex Numeric entry
10183@cindex Entering numbers
10184Pressing a digit or other numeric key begins numeric entry using the
10185minibuffer. The number is pushed on the stack when you press the @key{RET}
10186or @key{SPC} keys. If you press any other non-numeric key, the number is
10187pushed onto the stack and the appropriate operation is performed. If
10188you press a numeric key which is not valid, the key is ignored.
10189
10190@cindex Minus signs
10191@cindex Negative numbers, entering
10192@kindex _
10193There are three different concepts corresponding to the word ``minus,''
10194typified by @cite{a-b} (subtraction), @cite{-x}
10195(change-sign), and @cite{-5} (negative number). Calc uses three
10196different keys for these operations, respectively:
10197@kbd{-}, @kbd{n}, and @kbd{_} (the underscore). The @kbd{-} key subtracts
10198the two numbers on the top of the stack. The @kbd{n} key changes the sign
10199of the number on the top of the stack or the number currently being entered.
10200The @kbd{_} key begins entry of a negative number or changes the sign of
10201the number currently being entered. The following sequences all enter the
10202number @i{-5} onto the stack: @kbd{0 @key{RET} 5 -}, @kbd{5 n @key{RET}},
10203@kbd{5 @key{RET} n}, @kbd{_ 5 @key{RET}}, @kbd{5 _ @key{RET}}.@refill
10204
10205Some other keys are active during numeric entry, such as @kbd{#} for
10206non-decimal numbers, @kbd{:} for fractions, and @kbd{@@} for HMS forms.
10207These notations are described later in this manual with the corresponding
10208data types. @xref{Data Types}.
10209
5d67986c 10210During numeric entry, the only editing key available is @key{DEL}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
10211
10212@node Algebraic Entry, Quick Calculator, Numeric Entry, Introduction
10213@section Algebraic Entry
10214
10215@noindent
10216@kindex '
10217@pindex calc-algebraic-entry
10218@cindex Algebraic notation
10219@cindex Formulas, entering
10220Calculations can also be entered in algebraic form. This is accomplished
10221by typing the apostrophe key, @kbd{'}, followed by the expression in
10222standard format: @kbd{@key{'} 2+3*4 @key{RET}} computes
10223@c{$2+(3\times4) = 14$}
10224@cite{2+(3*4) = 14} and pushes that on the stack. If you wish you can
10225ignore the RPN aspect of Calc altogether and simply enter algebraic
10226expressions in this way. You may want to use @key{DEL} every so often to
10227clear previous results off the stack.@refill
10228
10229You can press the apostrophe key during normal numeric entry to switch
10230the half-entered number into algebraic entry mode. One reason to do this
10231would be to use the full Emacs cursor motion and editing keys, which are
10232available during algebraic entry but not during numeric entry.
10233
10234In the same vein, during either numeric or algebraic entry you can
10235press @kbd{`} (backquote) to switch to @code{calc-edit} mode, where
10236you complete your half-finished entry in a separate buffer.
10237@xref{Editing Stack Entries}.
10238
10239@kindex m a
10240@pindex calc-algebraic-mode
10241@cindex Algebraic mode
10242If you prefer algebraic entry, you can use the command @kbd{m a}
10243(@code{calc-algebraic-mode}) to set Algebraic mode. In this mode,
10244digits and other keys that would normally start numeric entry instead
10245start full algebraic entry; as long as your formula begins with a digit
10246you can omit the apostrophe. Open parentheses and square brackets also
10247begin algebraic entry. You can still do RPN calculations in this mode,
10248but you will have to press @key{RET} to terminate every number:
10249@kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} * 4 @key{RET} +} would accomplish the same
10250thing as @kbd{2*3+4 @key{RET}}.@refill
10251
10252@cindex Incomplete algebraic mode
10253If you give a numeric prefix argument like @kbd{C-u} to the @kbd{m a}
10254command, it enables Incomplete Algebraic mode; this is like regular
10255Algebraic mode except that it applies to the @kbd{(} and @kbd{[} keys
10256only. Numeric keys still begin a numeric entry in this mode.
10257
10258@kindex m t
10259@pindex calc-total-algebraic-mode
10260@cindex Total algebraic mode
10261The @kbd{m t} (@code{calc-total-algebraic-mode}) gives you an even
10262stronger algebraic-entry mode, in which @emph{all} regular letter and
10263punctuation keys begin algebraic entry. Use this if you prefer typing
10264@w{@kbd{sqrt( )}} instead of @kbd{Q}, @w{@kbd{factor( )}} instead of
10265@kbd{a f}, and so on. To type regular Calc commands when you are in
10266``total'' algebraic mode, hold down the @key{META} key. Thus @kbd{M-q}
10267is the command to quit Calc, @kbd{M-p} sets the precision, and
10268@kbd{M-m t} (or @kbd{M-m M-t}, if you prefer) turns total algebraic
10269mode back off again. Meta keys also terminate algebraic entry, so
5d67986c 10270that @kbd{2+3 M-S} is equivalent to @kbd{2+3 @key{RET} M-S}. The symbol
d7b8e6c6
EZ
10271@samp{Alg*} will appear in the mode line whenever you are in this mode.
10272
10273Pressing @kbd{'} (the apostrophe) a second time re-enters the previous
10274algebraic formula. You can then use the normal Emacs editing keys to
10275modify this formula to your liking before pressing @key{RET}.
10276
10277@kindex $
10278@cindex Formulas, referring to stack
10279Within a formula entered from the keyboard, the symbol @kbd{$}
10280represents the number on the top of the stack. If an entered formula
10281contains any @kbd{$} characters, the Calculator replaces the top of
10282stack with that formula rather than simply pushing the formula onto the
10283stack. Thus, @kbd{' 1+2 @key{RET}} pushes 3 on the stack, and @kbd{$*2
10284@key{RET}} replaces it with 6. Note that the @kbd{$} key always
10285initiates algebraic entry; the @kbd{'} is unnecessary if @kbd{$} is the
10286first character in the new formula.@refill
10287
10288Higher stack elements can be accessed from an entered formula with the
10289symbols @kbd{$$}, @kbd{$$$}, and so on. The number of stack elements
10290removed (to be replaced by the entered values) equals the number of dollar
10291signs in the longest such symbol in the formula. For example, @samp{$$+$$$}
10292adds the second and third stack elements, replacing the top three elements
10293with the answer. (All information about the top stack element is thus lost
10294since no single @samp{$} appears in this formula.)@refill
10295
10296A slightly different way to refer to stack elements is with a dollar
10297sign followed by a number: @samp{$1}, @samp{$2}, and so on are much
10298like @samp{$}, @samp{$$}, etc., except that stack entries referred
10299to numerically are not replaced by the algebraic entry. That is, while
10300@samp{$+1} replaces 5 on the stack with 6, @samp{$1+1} leaves the 5
10301on the stack and pushes an additional 6.
10302
10303If a sequence of formulas are entered separated by commas, each formula
10304is pushed onto the stack in turn. For example, @samp{1,2,3} pushes
10305those three numbers onto the stack (leaving the 3 at the top), and
10306@samp{$+1,$-1} replaces a 5 on the stack with 4 followed by 6. Also,
10307@samp{$,$$} exchanges the top two elements of the stack, just like the
10308@key{TAB} key.
10309
5d67986c 10310You can finish an algebraic entry with @kbd{M-=} or @kbd{M-@key{RET}} instead
d7b8e6c6
EZ
10311of @key{RET}. This uses @kbd{=} to evaluate the variables in each
10312formula that goes onto the stack. (Thus @kbd{' pi @key{RET}} pushes
5d67986c 10313the variable @samp{pi}, but @kbd{' pi M-@key{RET}} pushes 3.1415.)
d7b8e6c6 10314
5d67986c 10315If you finish your algebraic entry by pressing @key{LFD} (or @kbd{C-j})
d7b8e6c6
EZ
10316instead of @key{RET}, Calc disables the default simplifications
10317(as if by @kbd{m O}; @pxref{Simplification Modes}) while the entry
10318is being pushed on the stack. Thus @kbd{' 1+2 @key{RET}} pushes 3
10319on the stack, but @kbd{' 1+2 @key{LFD}} pushes the formula @cite{1+2};
10320you might then press @kbd{=} when it is time to evaluate this formula.
10321
10322@node Quick Calculator, Prefix Arguments, Algebraic Entry, Introduction
10323@section ``Quick Calculator'' Mode
10324
10325@noindent
10326@kindex M-# q
10327@pindex quick-calc
10328@cindex Quick Calculator
10329There is another way to invoke the Calculator if all you need to do
10330is make one or two quick calculations. Type @kbd{M-# q} (or
10331@kbd{M-x quick-calc}), then type any formula as an algebraic entry.
10332The Calculator will compute the result and display it in the echo
10333area, without ever actually putting up a Calc window.
10334
10335You can use the @kbd{$} character in a Quick Calculator formula to
10336refer to the previous Quick Calculator result. Older results are
10337not retained; the Quick Calculator has no effect on the full
10338Calculator's stack or trail. If you compute a result and then
10339forget what it was, just run @code{M-# q} again and enter
10340@samp{$} as the formula.
10341
10342If this is the first time you have used the Calculator in this Emacs
10343session, the @kbd{M-# q} command will create the @code{*Calculator*}
10344buffer and perform all the usual initializations; it simply will
10345refrain from putting that buffer up in a new window. The Quick
10346Calculator refers to the @code{*Calculator*} buffer for all mode
10347settings. Thus, for example, to set the precision that the Quick
10348Calculator uses, simply run the full Calculator momentarily and use
10349the regular @kbd{p} command.
10350
10351If you use @code{M-# q} from inside the Calculator buffer, the
10352effect is the same as pressing the apostrophe key (algebraic entry).
10353
10354The result of a Quick calculation is placed in the Emacs ``kill ring''
10355as well as being displayed. A subsequent @kbd{C-y} command will
10356yank the result into the editing buffer. You can also use this
10357to yank the result into the next @kbd{M-# q} input line as a more
10358explicit alternative to @kbd{$} notation, or to yank the result
10359into the Calculator stack after typing @kbd{M-# c}.
10360
10361If you finish your formula by typing @key{LFD} (or @kbd{C-j}) instead
10362of @key{RET}, the result is inserted immediately into the current
10363buffer rather than going into the kill ring.
10364
10365Quick Calculator results are actually evaluated as if by the @kbd{=}
10366key (which replaces variable names by their stored values, if any).
10367If the formula you enter is an assignment to a variable using the
10368@samp{:=} operator, say, @samp{foo := 2 + 3} or @samp{foo := foo + 1},
10369then the result of the evaluation is stored in that Calc variable.
10370@xref{Store and Recall}.
10371
10372If the result is an integer and the current display radix is decimal,
10373the number will also be displayed in hex and octal formats. If the
10374integer is in the range from 1 to 126, it will also be displayed as
10375an ASCII character.
10376
10377For example, the quoted character @samp{"x"} produces the vector
10378result @samp{[120]} (because 120 is the ASCII code of the lower-case
10379`x'; @pxref{Strings}). Since this is a vector, not an integer, it
10380is displayed only according to the current mode settings. But
10381running Quick Calc again and entering @samp{120} will produce the
10382result @samp{120 (16#78, 8#170, x)} which shows the number in its
10383decimal, hexadecimal, octal, and ASCII forms.
10384
10385Please note that the Quick Calculator is not any faster at loading
10386or computing the answer than the full Calculator; the name ``quick''
10387merely refers to the fact that it's much less hassle to use for
10388small calculations.
10389
10390@node Prefix Arguments, Undo, Quick Calculator, Introduction
10391@section Numeric Prefix Arguments
10392
10393@noindent
10394Many Calculator commands use numeric prefix arguments. Some, such as
10395@kbd{d s} (@code{calc-sci-notation}), set a parameter to the value of
10396the prefix argument or use a default if you don't use a prefix.
10397Others (like @kbd{d f} (@code{calc-fix-notation})) require an argument
10398and prompt for a number if you don't give one as a prefix.@refill
10399
10400As a rule, stack-manipulation commands accept a numeric prefix argument
10401which is interpreted as an index into the stack. A positive argument
10402operates on the top @var{n} stack entries; a negative argument operates
10403on the @var{n}th stack entry in isolation; and a zero argument operates
10404on the entire stack.
10405
10406Most commands that perform computations (such as the arithmetic and
10407scientific functions) accept a numeric prefix argument that allows the
10408operation to be applied across many stack elements. For unary operations
10409(that is, functions of one argument like absolute value or complex
10410conjugate), a positive prefix argument applies that function to the top
10411@var{n} stack entries simultaneously, and a negative argument applies it
10412to the @var{n}th stack entry only. For binary operations (functions of
10413two arguments like addition, GCD, and vector concatenation), a positive
10414prefix argument ``reduces'' the function across the top @var{n}
10415stack elements (for example, @kbd{C-u 5 +} sums the top 5 stack entries;
10416@pxref{Reducing and Mapping}), and a negative argument maps the next-to-top
10417@var{n} stack elements with the top stack element as a second argument
10418(for example, @kbd{7 c-u -5 +} adds 7 to the top 5 stack elements).
10419This feature is not available for operations which use the numeric prefix
10420argument for some other purpose.
10421
10422Numeric prefixes are specified the same way as always in Emacs: Press
10423a sequence of @key{META}-digits, or press @key{ESC} followed by digits,
10424or press @kbd{C-u} followed by digits. Some commands treat plain
10425@kbd{C-u} (without any actual digits) specially.@refill
10426
10427@kindex ~
10428@pindex calc-num-prefix
10429You can type @kbd{~} (@code{calc-num-prefix}) to pop an integer from the
10430top of the stack and enter it as the numeric prefix for the next command.
10431For example, @kbd{C-u 16 p} sets the precision to 16 digits; an alternate
10432(silly) way to do this would be @kbd{2 @key{RET} 4 ^ ~ p}, i.e., compute 2
10433to the fourth power and set the precision to that value.@refill
10434
10435Conversely, if you have typed a numeric prefix argument the @kbd{~} key
10436pushes it onto the stack in the form of an integer.
10437
10438@node Undo, Error Messages, Prefix Arguments, Introduction
10439@section Undoing Mistakes
10440
10441@noindent
10442@kindex U
10443@kindex C-_
10444@pindex calc-undo
10445@cindex Mistakes, undoing
10446@cindex Undoing mistakes
10447@cindex Errors, undoing
10448The shift-@kbd{U} key (@code{calc-undo}) undoes the most recent operation.
10449If that operation added or dropped objects from the stack, those objects
10450are removed or restored. If it was a ``store'' operation, you are
10451queried whether or not to restore the variable to its original value.
10452The @kbd{U} key may be pressed any number of times to undo successively
10453farther back in time; with a numeric prefix argument it undoes a
10454specified number of operations. The undo history is cleared only by the
10455@kbd{q} (@code{calc-quit}) command. (Recall that @kbd{M-# c} is
10456synonymous with @code{calc-quit} while inside the Calculator; this
10457also clears the undo history.)
10458
10459Currently the mode-setting commands (like @code{calc-precision}) are not
10460undoable. You can undo past a point where you changed a mode, but you
10461will need to reset the mode yourself.
10462
10463@kindex D
10464@pindex calc-redo
10465@cindex Redoing after an Undo
10466The shift-@kbd{D} key (@code{calc-redo}) redoes an operation that was
10467mistakenly undone. Pressing @kbd{U} with a negative prefix argument is
10468equivalent to executing @code{calc-redo}. You can redo any number of
10469times, up to the number of recent consecutive undo commands. Redo
10470information is cleared whenever you give any command that adds new undo
10471information, i.e., if you undo, then enter a number on the stack or make
10472any other change, then it will be too late to redo.
10473
5d67986c 10474@kindex M-@key{RET}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
10475@pindex calc-last-args
10476@cindex Last-arguments feature
10477@cindex Arguments, restoring
10478The @kbd{M-@key{RET}} key (@code{calc-last-args}) is like undo in that
10479it restores the arguments of the most recent command onto the stack;
10480however, it does not remove the result of that command. Given a numeric
10481prefix argument, this command applies to the @cite{n}th most recent
10482command which removed items from the stack; it pushes those items back
10483onto the stack.
10484
10485The @kbd{K} (@code{calc-keep-args}) command provides a related function
10486to @kbd{M-@key{RET}}. @xref{Stack and Trail}.
10487
10488It is also possible to recall previous results or inputs using the trail.
10489@xref{Trail Commands}.
10490
10491The standard Emacs @kbd{C-_} undo key is recognized as a synonym for @kbd{U}.
10492
10493@node Error Messages, Multiple Calculators, Undo, Introduction
10494@section Error Messages
10495
10496@noindent
10497@kindex w
10498@pindex calc-why
10499@cindex Errors, messages
10500@cindex Why did an error occur?
10501Many situations that would produce an error message in other calculators
10502simply create unsimplified formulas in the Emacs Calculator. For example,
10503@kbd{1 @key{RET} 0 /} pushes the formula @cite{1 / 0}; @w{@kbd{0 L}} pushes
10504the formula @samp{ln(0)}. Floating-point overflow and underflow are also
10505reasons for this to happen.
10506
10507When a function call must be left in symbolic form, Calc usually
10508produces a message explaining why. Messages that are probably
10509surprising or indicative of user errors are displayed automatically.
10510Other messages are simply kept in Calc's memory and are displayed only
10511if you type @kbd{w} (@code{calc-why}). You can also press @kbd{w} if
10512the same computation results in several messages. (The first message
10513will end with @samp{[w=more]} in this case.)
10514
10515@kindex d w
10516@pindex calc-auto-why
10517The @kbd{d w} (@code{calc-auto-why}) command controls when error messages
10518are displayed automatically. (Calc effectively presses @kbd{w} for you
10519after your computation finishes.) By default, this occurs only for
10520``important'' messages. The other possible modes are to report
10521@emph{all} messages automatically, or to report none automatically (so
10522that you must always press @kbd{w} yourself to see the messages).
10523
10524@node Multiple Calculators, Troubleshooting Commands, Error Messages, Introduction
10525@section Multiple Calculators
10526
10527@noindent
10528@pindex another-calc
10529It is possible to have any number of Calc Mode buffers at once.
10530Usually this is done by executing @kbd{M-x another-calc}, which
10531is similar to @kbd{M-# c} except that if a @samp{*Calculator*}
10532buffer already exists, a new, independent one with a name of the
10533form @samp{*Calculator*<@var{n}>} is created. You can also use the
10534command @code{calc-mode} to put any buffer into Calculator mode, but
10535this would ordinarily never be done.
10536
10537The @kbd{q} (@code{calc-quit}) command does not destroy a Calculator buffer;
10538it only closes its window. Use @kbd{M-x kill-buffer} to destroy a
10539Calculator buffer.
10540
10541Each Calculator buffer keeps its own stack, undo list, and mode settings
10542such as precision, angular mode, and display formats. In Emacs terms,
10543variables such as @code{calc-stack} are buffer-local variables. The
10544global default values of these variables are used only when a new
10545Calculator buffer is created. The @code{calc-quit} command saves
10546the stack and mode settings of the buffer being quit as the new defaults.
10547
10548There is only one trail buffer, @samp{*Calc Trail*}, used by all
10549Calculator buffers.
10550
10551@node Troubleshooting Commands, , Multiple Calculators, Introduction
10552@section Troubleshooting Commands
10553
10554@noindent
10555This section describes commands you can use in case a computation
10556incorrectly fails or gives the wrong answer.
10557
10558@xref{Reporting Bugs}, if you find a problem that appears to be due
10559to a bug or deficiency in Calc.
10560
10561@menu
10562* Autoloading Problems::
10563* Recursion Depth::
10564* Caches::
10565* Debugging Calc::
10566@end menu
10567
10568@node Autoloading Problems, Recursion Depth, Troubleshooting Commands, Troubleshooting Commands
10569@subsection Autoloading Problems
10570
10571@noindent
10572The Calc program is split into many component files; components are
10573loaded automatically as you use various commands that require them.
10574Occasionally Calc may lose track of when a certain component is
10575necessary; typically this means you will type a command and it won't
10576work because some function you've never heard of was undefined.
10577
10578@kindex M-# L
10579@pindex calc-load-everything
10580If this happens, the easiest workaround is to type @kbd{M-# L}
10581(@code{calc-load-everything}) to force all the parts of Calc to be
10582loaded right away. This will cause Emacs to take up a lot more
10583memory than it would otherwise, but it's guaranteed to fix the problem.
10584
10585If you seem to run into this problem no matter what you do, or if
10586even the @kbd{M-# L} command crashes, Calc may have been improperly
10587installed. @xref{Installation}, for details of the installation
10588process.
10589
10590@node Recursion Depth, Caches, Autoloading Problems, Troubleshooting Commands
10591@subsection Recursion Depth
10592
10593@noindent
10594@kindex M
10595@kindex I M
10596@pindex calc-more-recursion-depth
10597@pindex calc-less-recursion-depth
10598@cindex Recursion depth
10599@cindex ``Computation got stuck'' message
10600@cindex @code{max-lisp-eval-depth}
10601@cindex @code{max-specpdl-size}
10602Calc uses recursion in many of its calculations. Emacs Lisp keeps a
10603variable @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} which limits the amount of recursion
10604possible in an attempt to recover from program bugs. If a calculation
10605ever halts incorrectly with the message ``Computation got stuck or
10606ran too long,'' use the @kbd{M} command (@code{calc-more-recursion-depth})
10607to increase this limit. (Of course, this will not help if the
10608calculation really did get stuck due to some problem inside Calc.)@refill
10609
10610The limit is always increased (multiplied) by a factor of two. There
10611is also an @kbd{I M} (@code{calc-less-recursion-depth}) command which
10612decreases this limit by a factor of two, down to a minimum value of 200.
10613The default value is 1000.
10614
10615These commands also double or halve @code{max-specpdl-size}, another
10616internal Lisp recursion limit. The minimum value for this limit is 600.
10617
10618@node Caches, Debugging Calc, Recursion Depth, Troubleshooting Commands
10619@subsection Caches
10620
10621@noindent
10622@cindex Caches
10623@cindex Flushing caches
10624Calc saves certain values after they have been computed once. For
10625example, the @kbd{P} (@code{calc-pi}) command initially ``knows'' the
10626constant @c{$\pi$}
10627@cite{pi} to about 20 decimal places; if the current precision
10628is greater than this, it will recompute @c{$\pi$}
10629@cite{pi} using a series
10630approximation. This value will not need to be recomputed ever again
10631unless you raise the precision still further. Many operations such as
10632logarithms and sines make use of similarly cached values such as
10633@c{$\pi \over 4$}
10634@cite{pi/4} and @c{$\ln 2$}
10635@cite{ln(2)}. The visible effect of caching is that
10636high-precision computations may seem to do extra work the first time.
10637Other things cached include powers of two (for the binary arithmetic
10638functions), matrix inverses and determinants, symbolic integrals, and
10639data points computed by the graphing commands.
10640
10641@pindex calc-flush-caches
10642If you suspect a Calculator cache has become corrupt, you can use the
10643@code{calc-flush-caches} command to reset all caches to the empty state.
10644(This should only be necessary in the event of bugs in the Calculator.)
10645The @kbd{M-# 0} (with the zero key) command also resets caches along
10646with all other aspects of the Calculator's state.
10647
10648@node Debugging Calc, , Caches, Troubleshooting Commands
10649@subsection Debugging Calc
10650
10651@noindent
10652A few commands exist to help in the debugging of Calc commands.
10653@xref{Programming}, to see the various ways that you can write
10654your own Calc commands.
10655
10656@kindex Z T
10657@pindex calc-timing
10658The @kbd{Z T} (@code{calc-timing}) command turns on and off a mode
10659in which the timing of slow commands is reported in the Trail.
10660Any Calc command that takes two seconds or longer writes a line
10661to the Trail showing how many seconds it took. This value is
10662accurate only to within one second.
10663
10664All steps of executing a command are included; in particular, time
10665taken to format the result for display in the stack and trail is
10666counted. Some prompts also count time taken waiting for them to
10667be answered, while others do not; this depends on the exact
10668implementation of the command. For best results, if you are timing
10669a sequence that includes prompts or multiple commands, define a
10670keyboard macro to run the whole sequence at once. Calc's @kbd{X}
10671command (@pxref{Keyboard Macros}) will then report the time taken
10672to execute the whole macro.
10673
10674Another advantage of the @kbd{X} command is that while it is
10675executing, the stack and trail are not updated from step to step.
10676So if you expect the output of your test sequence to leave a result
10677that may take a long time to format and you don't wish to count
10678this formatting time, end your sequence with a @key{DEL} keystroke
10679to clear the result from the stack. When you run the sequence with
10680@kbd{X}, Calc will never bother to format the large result.
10681
10682Another thing @kbd{Z T} does is to increase the Emacs variable
10683@code{gc-cons-threshold} to a much higher value (two million; the
10684usual default in Calc is 250,000) for the duration of each command.
10685This generally prevents garbage collection during the timing of
10686the command, though it may cause your Emacs process to grow
10687abnormally large. (Garbage collection time is a major unpredictable
10688factor in the timing of Emacs operations.)
10689
10690Another command that is useful when debugging your own Lisp
10691extensions to Calc is @kbd{M-x calc-pass-errors}, which disables
10692the error handler that changes the ``@code{max-lisp-eval-depth}
10693exceeded'' message to the much more friendly ``Computation got
10694stuck or ran too long.'' This handler interferes with the Emacs
10695Lisp debugger's @code{debug-on-error} mode. Errors are reported
10696in the handler itself rather than at the true location of the
10697error. After you have executed @code{calc-pass-errors}, Lisp
10698errors will be reported correctly but the user-friendly message
10699will be lost.
10700
10701@node Data Types, Stack and Trail, Introduction, Top
10702@chapter Data Types
10703
10704@noindent
10705This chapter discusses the various types of objects that can be placed
10706on the Calculator stack, how they are displayed, and how they are
10707entered. (@xref{Data Type Formats}, for information on how these data
10708types are represented as underlying Lisp objects.)@refill
10709
10710Integers, fractions, and floats are various ways of describing real
10711numbers. HMS forms also for many purposes act as real numbers. These
10712types can be combined to form complex numbers, modulo forms, error forms,
10713or interval forms. (But these last four types cannot be combined
10714arbitrarily:@: error forms may not contain modulo forms, for example.)
10715Finally, all these types of numbers may be combined into vectors,
10716matrices, or algebraic formulas.
10717
10718@menu
10719* Integers:: The most basic data type.
10720* Fractions:: This and above are called @dfn{rationals}.
10721* Floats:: This and above are called @dfn{reals}.
10722* Complex Numbers:: This and above are called @dfn{numbers}.
10723* Infinities::
10724* Vectors and Matrices::
10725* Strings::
10726* HMS Forms::
10727* Date Forms::
10728* Modulo Forms::
10729* Error Forms::
10730* Interval Forms::
10731* Incomplete Objects::
10732* Variables::
10733* Formulas::
10734@end menu
10735
10736@node Integers, Fractions, Data Types, Data Types
10737@section Integers
10738
10739@noindent
10740@cindex Integers
10741The Calculator stores integers to arbitrary precision. Addition,
10742subtraction, and multiplication of integers always yields an exact
10743integer result. (If the result of a division or exponentiation of
10744integers is not an integer, it is expressed in fractional or
10745floating-point form according to the current Fraction Mode.
10746@xref{Fraction Mode}.)
10747
10748A decimal integer is represented as an optional sign followed by a
10749sequence of digits. Grouping (@pxref{Grouping Digits}) can be used to
10750insert a comma at every third digit for display purposes, but you
10751must not type commas during the entry of numbers.@refill
10752
10753@kindex #
10754A non-decimal integer is represented as an optional sign, a radix
10755between 2 and 36, a @samp{#} symbol, and one or more digits. For radix 11
10756and above, the letters A through Z (upper- or lower-case) count as
10757digits and do not terminate numeric entry mode. @xref{Radix Modes}, for how
10758to set the default radix for display of integers. Numbers of any radix
10759may be entered at any time. If you press @kbd{#} at the beginning of a
10760number, the current display radix is used.@refill
10761
10762@node Fractions, Floats, Integers, Data Types
10763@section Fractions
10764
10765@noindent
10766@cindex Fractions
10767A @dfn{fraction} is a ratio of two integers. Fractions are traditionally
10768written ``2/3'' but Calc uses the notation @samp{2:3}. (The @kbd{/} key
10769performs RPN division; the following two sequences push the number
10770@samp{2:3} on the stack: @kbd{2 :@: 3 @key{RET}}, or @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 /}
10771assuming Fraction Mode has been enabled.)
10772When the Calculator produces a fractional result it always reduces it to
10773simplest form, which may in fact be an integer.@refill
10774
10775Fractions may also be entered in a three-part form, where @samp{2:3:4}
10776represents two-and-three-quarters. @xref{Fraction Formats}, for fraction
10777display formats.@refill
10778
10779Non-decimal fractions are entered and displayed as
10780@samp{@var{radix}#@var{num}:@var{denom}} (or in the analogous three-part
10781form). The numerator and denominator always use the same radix.@refill
10782
10783@node Floats, Complex Numbers, Fractions, Data Types
10784@section Floats
10785
10786@noindent
10787@cindex Floating-point numbers
10788A floating-point number or @dfn{float} is a number stored in scientific
10789notation. The number of significant digits in the fractional part is
10790governed by the current floating precision (@pxref{Precision}). The
10791range of acceptable values is from @c{$10^{-3999999}$}
10792@cite{10^-3999999} (inclusive)
10793to @c{$10^{4000000}$}
10794@cite{10^4000000}
10795(exclusive), plus the corresponding negative
10796values and zero.
10797
10798Calculations that would exceed the allowable range of values (such
10799as @samp{exp(exp(20))}) are left in symbolic form by Calc. The
10800messages ``floating-point overflow'' or ``floating-point underflow''
10801indicate that during the calculation a number would have been produced
10802that was too large or too close to zero, respectively, to be represented
10803by Calc. This does not necessarily mean the final result would have
10804overflowed, just that an overflow occurred while computing the result.
10805(In fact, it could report an underflow even though the final result
10806would have overflowed!)
10807
10808If a rational number and a float are mixed in a calculation, the result
10809will in general be expressed as a float. Commands that require an integer
10810value (such as @kbd{k g} [@code{gcd}]) will also accept integer-valued
10811floats, i.e., floating-point numbers with nothing after the decimal point.
10812
10813Floats are identified by the presence of a decimal point and/or an
10814exponent. In general a float consists of an optional sign, digits
10815including an optional decimal point, and an optional exponent consisting
10816of an @samp{e}, an optional sign, and up to seven exponent digits.
10817For example, @samp{23.5e-2} is 23.5 times ten to the minus-second power,
10818or 0.235.
10819
10820Floating-point numbers are normally displayed in decimal notation with
10821all significant figures shown. Exceedingly large or small numbers are
10822displayed in scientific notation. Various other display options are
10823available. @xref{Float Formats}.
10824
10825@cindex Accuracy of calculations
10826Floating-point numbers are stored in decimal, not binary. The result
10827of each operation is rounded to the nearest value representable in the
10828number of significant digits specified by the current precision,
10829rounding away from zero in the case of a tie. Thus (in the default
10830display mode) what you see is exactly what you get. Some operations such
10831as square roots and transcendental functions are performed with several
10832digits of extra precision and then rounded down, in an effort to make the
10833final result accurate to the full requested precision. However,
10834accuracy is not rigorously guaranteed. If you suspect the validity of a
10835result, try doing the same calculation in a higher precision. The
10836Calculator's arithmetic is not intended to be IEEE-conformant in any
10837way.@refill
10838
10839While floats are always @emph{stored} in decimal, they can be entered
10840and displayed in any radix just like integers and fractions. The
10841notation @samp{@var{radix}#@var{ddd}.@var{ddd}} is a floating-point
10842number whose digits are in the specified radix. Note that the @samp{.}
10843is more aptly referred to as a ``radix point'' than as a decimal
10844point in this case. The number @samp{8#123.4567} is defined as
10845@samp{8#1234567 * 8^-4}. If the radix is 14 or less, you can use
10846@samp{e} notation to write a non-decimal number in scientific notation.
10847The exponent is written in decimal, and is considered to be a power
10848of the radix: @samp{8#1234567e-4}. If the radix is 15 or above, the
10849letter @samp{e} is a digit, so scientific notation must be written
10850out, e.g., @samp{16#123.4567*16^2}. The first two exercises of the
10851Modes Tutorial explore some of the properties of non-decimal floats.
10852
10853@node Complex Numbers, Infinities, Floats, Data Types
10854@section Complex Numbers
10855
10856@noindent
10857@cindex Complex numbers
10858There are two supported formats for complex numbers: rectangular and
10859polar. The default format is rectangular, displayed in the form
10860@samp{(@var{real},@var{imag})} where @var{real} is the real part and
10861@var{imag} is the imaginary part, each of which may be any real number.
10862Rectangular complex numbers can also be displayed in @samp{@var{a}+@var{b}i}
10863notation; @pxref{Complex Formats}.@refill
10864
10865Polar complex numbers are displayed in the form `@t{(}@var{r}@t{;}@c{$\theta$}
10866@var{theta}@t{)}'
10867where @var{r} is the nonnegative magnitude and @c{$\theta$}
10868@var{theta} is the argument
10869or phase angle. The range of @c{$\theta$}
10870@var{theta} depends on the current angular
10871mode (@pxref{Angular Modes}); it is generally between @i{-180} and
10872@i{+180} degrees or the equivalent range in radians.@refill
10873
10874Complex numbers are entered in stages using incomplete objects.
10875@xref{Incomplete Objects}.
10876
10877Operations on rectangular complex numbers yield rectangular complex
10878results, and similarly for polar complex numbers. Where the two types
10879are mixed, or where new complex numbers arise (as for the square root of
10880a negative real), the current @dfn{Polar Mode} is used to determine the
10881type. @xref{Polar Mode}.
10882
10883A complex result in which the imaginary part is zero (or the phase angle
10884is 0 or 180 degrees or @c{$\pi$}
10885@cite{pi} radians) is automatically converted to a real
10886number.
10887
10888@node Infinities, Vectors and Matrices, Complex Numbers, Data Types
10889@section Infinities
10890
10891@noindent
10892@cindex Infinity
10893@cindex @code{inf} variable
10894@cindex @code{uinf} variable
10895@cindex @code{nan} variable
10896@vindex inf
10897@vindex uinf
10898@vindex nan
10899The word @code{inf} represents the mathematical concept of @dfn{infinity}.
10900Calc actually has three slightly different infinity-like values:
10901@code{inf}, @code{uinf}, and @code{nan}. These are just regular
10902variable names (@pxref{Variables}); you should avoid using these
10903names for your own variables because Calc gives them special
10904treatment. Infinities, like all variable names, are normally
10905entered using algebraic entry.
10906
10907Mathematically speaking, it is not rigorously correct to treat
10908``infinity'' as if it were a number, but mathematicians often do
10909so informally. When they say that @samp{1 / inf = 0}, what they
10910really mean is that @cite{1 / x}, as @cite{x} becomes larger and
10911larger, becomes arbitrarily close to zero. So you can imagine
10912that if @cite{x} got ``all the way to infinity,'' then @cite{1 / x}
10913would go all the way to zero. Similarly, when they say that
10914@samp{exp(inf) = inf}, they mean that @c{$e^x$}
10915@cite{exp(x)} grows without
10916bound as @cite{x} grows. The symbol @samp{-inf} likewise stands
10917for an infinitely negative real value; for example, we say that
10918@samp{exp(-inf) = 0}. You can have an infinity pointing in any
10919direction on the complex plane: @samp{sqrt(-inf) = i inf}.
10920
10921The same concept of limits can be used to define @cite{1 / 0}. We
10922really want the value that @cite{1 / x} approaches as @cite{x}
10923approaches zero. But if all we have is @cite{1 / 0}, we can't
10924tell which direction @cite{x} was coming from. If @cite{x} was
10925positive and decreasing toward zero, then we should say that
10926@samp{1 / 0 = inf}. But if @cite{x} was negative and increasing
10927toward zero, the answer is @samp{1 / 0 = -inf}. In fact, @cite{x}
10928could be an imaginary number, giving the answer @samp{i inf} or
10929@samp{-i inf}. Calc uses the special symbol @samp{uinf} to mean
10930@dfn{undirected infinity}, i.e., a value which is infinitely
10931large but with an unknown sign (or direction on the complex plane).
10932
10933Calc actually has three modes that say how infinities are handled.
10934Normally, infinities never arise from calculations that didn't
10935already have them. Thus, @cite{1 / 0} is treated simply as an
10936error and left unevaluated. The @kbd{m i} (@code{calc-infinite-mode})
10937command (@pxref{Infinite Mode}) enables a mode in which
10938@cite{1 / 0} evaluates to @code{uinf} instead. There is also
10939an alternative type of infinite mode which says to treat zeros
10940as if they were positive, so that @samp{1 / 0 = inf}. While this
10941is less mathematically correct, it may be the answer you want in
10942some cases.
10943
10944Since all infinities are ``as large'' as all others, Calc simplifies,
10945e.g., @samp{5 inf} to @samp{inf}. Another example is
10946@samp{5 - inf = -inf}, where the @samp{-inf} is so large that
10947adding a finite number like five to it does not affect it.
10948Note that @samp{a - inf} also results in @samp{-inf}; Calc assumes
10949that variables like @code{a} always stand for finite quantities.
10950Just to show that infinities really are all the same size,
10951note that @samp{sqrt(inf) = inf^2 = exp(inf) = inf} in Calc's
10952notation.
10953
10954It's not so easy to define certain formulas like @samp{0 * inf} and
10955@samp{inf / inf}. Depending on where these zeros and infinities
10956came from, the answer could be literally anything. The latter
10957formula could be the limit of @cite{x / x} (giving a result of one),
10958or @cite{2 x / x} (giving two), or @cite{x^2 / x} (giving @code{inf}),
10959or @cite{x / x^2} (giving zero). Calc uses the symbol @code{nan}
10960to represent such an @dfn{indeterminate} value. (The name ``nan''
10961comes from analogy with the ``NAN'' concept of IEEE standard
10962arithmetic; it stands for ``Not A Number.'' This is somewhat of a
10963misnomer, since @code{nan} @emph{does} stand for some number or
10964infinity, it's just that @emph{which} number it stands for
10965cannot be determined.) In Calc's notation, @samp{0 * inf = nan}
10966and @samp{inf / inf = nan}. A few other common indeterminate
10967expressions are @samp{inf - inf} and @samp{inf ^ 0}. Also,
10968@samp{0 / 0 = nan} if you have turned on ``infinite mode''
10969(as described above).
10970
10971Infinities are especially useful as parts of @dfn{intervals}.
10972@xref{Interval Forms}.
10973
10974@node Vectors and Matrices, Strings, Infinities, Data Types
10975@section Vectors and Matrices
10976
10977@noindent
10978@cindex Vectors
10979@cindex Plain vectors
10980@cindex Matrices
10981The @dfn{vector} data type is flexible and general. A vector is simply a
10982list of zero or more data objects. When these objects are numbers, the
10983whole is a vector in the mathematical sense. When these objects are
10984themselves vectors of equal (nonzero) length, the whole is a @dfn{matrix}.
10985A vector which is not a matrix is referred to here as a @dfn{plain vector}.
10986
10987A vector is displayed as a list of values separated by commas and enclosed
10988in square brackets: @samp{[1, 2, 3]}. Thus the following is a 2 row by
109893 column matrix: @samp{[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]}. Vectors, like complex
10990numbers, are entered as incomplete objects. @xref{Incomplete Objects}.
10991During algebraic entry, vectors are entered all at once in the usual
10992brackets-and-commas form. Matrices may be entered algebraically as nested
10993vectors, or using the shortcut notation @w{@samp{[1, 2, 3; 4, 5, 6]}},
10994with rows separated by semicolons. The commas may usually be omitted
10995when entering vectors: @samp{[1 2 3]}. Curly braces may be used in
10996place of brackets: @samp{@{1, 2, 3@}}, but the commas are required in
10997this case.
10998
10999Traditional vector and matrix arithmetic is also supported;
11000@pxref{Basic Arithmetic} and @pxref{Matrix Functions}.
11001Many other operations are applied to vectors element-wise. For example,
11002the complex conjugate of a vector is a vector of the complex conjugates
11003of its elements.@refill
11004
5d67986c
RS
11005@ignore
11006@starindex
11007@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11008@tindex vec
11009Algebraic functions for building vectors include @samp{vec(a, b, c)}
11010to build @samp{[a, b, c]}, @samp{cvec(a, n, m)} to build an @c{$n\times m$}
11011@asis{@var{n}x@var{m}}
11012matrix of @samp{a}s, and @samp{index(n)} to build a vector of integers
11013from 1 to @samp{n}.
11014
11015@node Strings, HMS Forms, Vectors and Matrices, Data Types
11016@section Strings
11017
11018@noindent
11019@kindex "
11020@cindex Strings
11021@cindex Character strings
11022Character strings are not a special data type in the Calculator.
11023Rather, a string is represented simply as a vector all of whose
11024elements are integers in the range 0 to 255 (ASCII codes). You can
11025enter a string at any time by pressing the @kbd{"} key. Quotation
11026marks and backslashes are written @samp{\"} and @samp{\\}, respectively,
11027inside strings. Other notations introduced by backslashes are:
11028
d7b8e6c6 11029@example
5d67986c 11030@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11031\a 7 \^@@ 0
11032\b 8 \^a-z 1-26
11033\e 27 \^[ 27
11034\f 12 \^\\ 28
11035\n 10 \^] 29
11036\r 13 \^^ 30
11037\t 9 \^_ 31
11038 \^? 127
d7b8e6c6 11039@end group
5d67986c 11040@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11041
11042@noindent
11043Finally, a backslash followed by three octal digits produces any
11044character from its ASCII code.
11045
11046@kindex d "
11047@pindex calc-display-strings
11048Strings are normally displayed in vector-of-integers form. The
11049@w{@kbd{d "}} (@code{calc-display-strings}) command toggles a mode in
11050which any vectors of small integers are displayed as quoted strings
11051instead.
11052
11053The backslash notations shown above are also used for displaying
11054strings. Characters 128 and above are not translated by Calc; unless
11055you have an Emacs modified for 8-bit fonts, these will show up in
11056backslash-octal-digits notation. For characters below 32, and
11057for character 127, Calc uses the backslash-letter combination if
11058there is one, or otherwise uses a @samp{\^} sequence.
11059
11060The only Calc feature that uses strings is @dfn{compositions};
11061@pxref{Compositions}. Strings also provide a convenient
11062way to do conversions between ASCII characters and integers.
11063
5d67986c
RS
11064@ignore
11065@starindex
11066@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11067@tindex string
11068There is a @code{string} function which provides a different display
11069format for strings. Basically, @samp{string(@var{s})}, where @var{s}
11070is a vector of integers in the proper range, is displayed as the
11071corresponding string of characters with no surrounding quotation
11072marks or other modifications. Thus @samp{string("ABC")} (or
11073@samp{string([65 66 67])}) will look like @samp{ABC} on the stack.
11074This happens regardless of whether @w{@kbd{d "}} has been used. The
11075only way to turn it off is to use @kbd{d U} (unformatted language
11076mode) which will display @samp{string("ABC")} instead.
11077
11078Control characters are displayed somewhat differently by @code{string}.
11079Characters below 32, and character 127, are shown using @samp{^} notation
11080(same as shown above, but without the backslash). The quote and
11081backslash characters are left alone, as are characters 128 and above.
11082
5d67986c
RS
11083@ignore
11084@starindex
11085@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11086@tindex bstring
11087The @code{bstring} function is just like @code{string} except that
11088the resulting string is breakable across multiple lines if it doesn't
11089fit all on one line. Potential break points occur at every space
11090character in the string.
11091
11092@node HMS Forms, Date Forms, Strings, Data Types
11093@section HMS Forms
11094
11095@noindent
11096@cindex Hours-minutes-seconds forms
11097@cindex Degrees-minutes-seconds forms
11098@dfn{HMS} stands for Hours-Minutes-Seconds; when used as an angular
11099argument, the interpretation is Degrees-Minutes-Seconds. All functions
11100that operate on angles accept HMS forms. These are interpreted as
11101degrees regardless of the current angular mode. It is also possible to
11102use HMS as the angular mode so that calculated angles are expressed in
11103degrees, minutes, and seconds.
11104
11105@kindex @@
5d67986c
RS
11106@ignore
11107@mindex @null
11108@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 11109@kindex ' (HMS forms)
5d67986c
RS
11110@ignore
11111@mindex @null
11112@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 11113@kindex " (HMS forms)
5d67986c
RS
11114@ignore
11115@mindex @null
11116@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 11117@kindex h (HMS forms)
5d67986c
RS
11118@ignore
11119@mindex @null
11120@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 11121@kindex o (HMS forms)
5d67986c
RS
11122@ignore
11123@mindex @null
11124@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 11125@kindex m (HMS forms)
5d67986c
RS
11126@ignore
11127@mindex @null
11128@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11129@kindex s (HMS forms)
11130The default format for HMS values is
11131@samp{@var{hours}@@ @var{mins}' @var{secs}"}. During entry, the letters
11132@samp{h} (for ``hours'') or
11133@samp{o} (approximating the ``degrees'' symbol) are accepted as well as
11134@samp{@@}, @samp{m} is accepted in place of @samp{'}, and @samp{s} is
11135accepted in place of @samp{"}.
11136The @var{hours} value is an integer (or integer-valued float).
11137The @var{mins} value is an integer or integer-valued float between 0 and 59.
11138The @var{secs} value is a real number between 0 (inclusive) and 60
11139(exclusive). A positive HMS form is interpreted as @var{hours} +
11140@var{mins}/60 + @var{secs}/3600. A negative HMS form is interpreted
11141as @i{- @var{hours}} @i{-} @var{mins}/60 @i{-} @var{secs}/3600.
11142Display format for HMS forms is quite flexible. @xref{HMS Formats}.@refill
11143
11144HMS forms can be added and subtracted. When they are added to numbers,
11145the numbers are interpreted according to the current angular mode. HMS
11146forms can also be multiplied and divided by real numbers. Dividing
11147two HMS forms produces a real-valued ratio of the two angles.
11148
11149@pindex calc-time
11150@cindex Time of day
11151Just for kicks, @kbd{M-x calc-time} pushes the current time of day on
11152the stack as an HMS form.
11153
11154@node Date Forms, Modulo Forms, HMS Forms, Data Types
11155@section Date Forms
11156
11157@noindent
11158@cindex Date forms
11159A @dfn{date form} represents a date and possibly an associated time.
11160Simple date arithmetic is supported: Adding a number to a date
11161produces a new date shifted by that many days; adding an HMS form to
11162a date shifts it by that many hours. Subtracting two date forms
11163computes the number of days between them (represented as a simple
11164number). Many other operations, such as multiplying two date forms,
11165are nonsensical and are not allowed by Calc.
11166
11167Date forms are entered and displayed enclosed in @samp{< >} brackets.
11168The default format is, e.g., @samp{<Wed Jan 9, 1991>} for dates,
11169or @samp{<3:32:20pm Wed Jan 9, 1991>} for dates with times.
11170Input is flexible; date forms can be entered in any of the usual
11171notations for dates and times. @xref{Date Formats}.
11172
11173Date forms are stored internally as numbers, specifically the number
11174of days since midnight on the morning of January 1 of the year 1 AD.
11175If the internal number is an integer, the form represents a date only;
11176if the internal number is a fraction or float, the form represents
11177a date and time. For example, @samp{<6:00am Wed Jan 9, 1991>}
11178is represented by the number 726842.25. The standard precision of
1117912 decimal digits is enough to ensure that a (reasonable) date and
11180time can be stored without roundoff error.
11181
11182If the current precision is greater than 12, date forms will keep
11183additional digits in the seconds position. For example, if the
11184precision is 15, the seconds will keep three digits after the
11185decimal point. Decreasing the precision below 12 may cause the
11186time part of a date form to become inaccurate. This can also happen
11187if astronomically high years are used, though this will not be an
11188issue in everyday (or even everymillenium) use. Note that date
11189forms without times are stored as exact integers, so roundoff is
11190never an issue for them.
11191
11192You can use the @kbd{v p} (@code{calc-pack}) and @kbd{v u}
11193(@code{calc-unpack}) commands to get at the numerical representation
11194of a date form. @xref{Packing and Unpacking}.
11195
11196Date forms can go arbitrarily far into the future or past. Negative
11197year numbers represent years BC. Calc uses a combination of the
11198Gregorian and Julian calendars, following the history of Great
11199Britain and the British colonies. This is the same calendar that
11200is used by the @code{cal} program in most Unix implementations.
11201
11202@cindex Julian calendar
11203@cindex Gregorian calendar
11204Some historical background: The Julian calendar was created by
11205Julius Caesar in the year 46 BC as an attempt to fix the gradual
11206drift caused by the lack of leap years in the calendar used
11207until that time. The Julian calendar introduced an extra day in
11208all years divisible by four. After some initial confusion, the
11209calendar was adopted around the year we call 8 AD. Some centuries
11210later it became apparent that the Julian year of 365.25 days was
11211itself not quite right. In 1582 Pope Gregory XIII introduced the
11212Gregorian calendar, which added the new rule that years divisible
11213by 100, but not by 400, were not to be considered leap years
11214despite being divisible by four. Many countries delayed adoption
11215of the Gregorian calendar because of religious differences;
11216in Britain it was put off until the year 1752, by which time
11217the Julian calendar had fallen eleven days behind the true
11218seasons. So the switch to the Gregorian calendar in early
11219September 1752 introduced a discontinuity: The day after
11220Sep 2, 1752 is Sep 14, 1752. Calc follows this convention.
11221To take another example, Russia waited until 1918 before
11222adopting the new calendar, and thus needed to remove thirteen
11223days (between Feb 1, 1918 and Feb 14, 1918). This means that
11224Calc's reckoning will be inconsistent with Russian history between
112251752 and 1918, and similarly for various other countries.
11226
11227Today's timekeepers introduce an occasional ``leap second'' as
11228well, but Calc does not take these minor effects into account.
11229(If it did, it would have to report a non-integer number of days
11230between, say, @samp{<12:00am Mon Jan 1, 1900>} and
11231@samp{<12:00am Sat Jan 1, 2000>}.)
11232
11233Calc uses the Julian calendar for all dates before the year 1752,
11234including dates BC when the Julian calendar technically had not
11235yet been invented. Thus the claim that day number @i{-10000} is
11236called ``August 16, 28 BC'' should be taken with a grain of salt.
11237
11238Please note that there is no ``year 0''; the day before
11239@samp{<Sat Jan 1, +1>} is @samp{<Fri Dec 31, -1>}. These are
11240days 0 and @i{-1} respectively in Calc's internal numbering scheme.
11241
11242@cindex Julian day counting
11243Another day counting system in common use is, confusingly, also
11244called ``Julian.'' It was invented in 1583 by Joseph Justus
11245Scaliger, who named it in honor of his father Julius Caesar
11246Scaliger. For obscure reasons he chose to start his day
11247numbering on Jan 1, 4713 BC at noon, which in Calc's scheme
11248is @i{-1721423.5} (recall that Calc starts at midnight instead
11249of noon). Thus to convert a Calc date code obtained by
11250unpacking a date form into a Julian day number, simply add
112511721423.5. The Julian code for @samp{6:00am Jan 9, 1991}
11252is 2448265.75. The built-in @kbd{t J} command performs
11253this conversion for you.
11254
11255@cindex Unix time format
11256The Unix operating system measures time as an integer number of
11257seconds since midnight, Jan 1, 1970. To convert a Calc date
11258value into a Unix time stamp, first subtract 719164 (the code
11259for @samp{<Jan 1, 1970>}), then multiply by 86400 (the number of
11260seconds in a day) and press @kbd{R} to round to the nearest
11261integer. If you have a date form, you can simply subtract the
11262day @samp{<Jan 1, 1970>} instead of unpacking and subtracting
11263719164. Likewise, divide by 86400 and add @samp{<Jan 1, 1970>}
11264to convert from Unix time to a Calc date form. (Note that
11265Unix normally maintains the time in the GMT time zone; you may
11266need to subtract five hours to get New York time, or eight hours
11267for California time. The same is usually true of Julian day
11268counts.) The built-in @kbd{t U} command performs these
11269conversions.
11270
11271@node Modulo Forms, Error Forms, Date Forms, Data Types
11272@section Modulo Forms
11273
11274@noindent
11275@cindex Modulo forms
11276A @dfn{modulo form} is a real number which is taken modulo (i.e., within
5d67986c 11277an integer multiple of) some value @var{M}. Arithmetic modulo @var{M}
d7b8e6c6 11278often arises in number theory. Modulo forms are written
5d67986c
RS
11279`@var{a} @t{mod} @var{M}',
11280where @var{a} and @var{M} are real numbers or HMS forms, and
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11281@c{$0 \le a < M$}
11282@cite{0 <= a < @var{M}}.
11283In many applications @cite{a} and @cite{M} will be
11284integers but this is not required.@refill
11285
11286Modulo forms are not to be confused with the modulo operator @samp{%}.
11287The expression @samp{27 % 10} means to compute 27 modulo 10 to produce
11288the result 7. Further computations treat this 7 as just a regular integer.
11289The expression @samp{27 mod 10} produces the result @samp{7 mod 10};
11290further computations with this value are again reduced modulo 10 so that
11291the result always lies in the desired range.
11292
11293When two modulo forms with identical @cite{M}'s are added or multiplied,
11294the Calculator simply adds or multiplies the values, then reduces modulo
11295@cite{M}. If one argument is a modulo form and the other a plain number,
11296the plain number is treated like a compatible modulo form. It is also
11297possible to raise modulo forms to powers; the result is the value raised
11298to the power, then reduced modulo @cite{M}. (When all values involved
11299are integers, this calculation is done much more efficiently than
11300actually computing the power and then reducing.)
11301
11302@cindex Modulo division
5d67986c 11303Two modulo forms `@var{a} @t{mod} @var{M}' and `@var{b} @t{mod} @var{M}'
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11304can be divided if @cite{a}, @cite{b}, and @cite{M} are all
11305integers. The result is the modulo form which, when multiplied by
5d67986c 11306`@var{b} @t{mod} @var{M}', produces `@var{a} @t{mod} @var{M}'. If
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11307there is no solution to this equation (which can happen only when
11308@cite{M} is non-prime), or if any of the arguments are non-integers, the
11309division is left in symbolic form. Other operations, such as square
11310roots, are not yet supported for modulo forms. (Note that, although
5d67986c 11311@w{`@t{(}@var{a} @t{mod} @var{M}@t{)^.5}'} will compute a ``modulo square root''
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11312in the sense of reducing @c{$\sqrt a$}
11313@cite{sqrt(a)} modulo @cite{M}, this is not a
11314useful definition from the number-theoretical point of view.)@refill
11315
5d67986c
RS
11316@ignore
11317@mindex M
11318@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 11319@kindex M (modulo forms)
5d67986c
RS
11320@ignore
11321@mindex mod
11322@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11323@tindex mod (operator)
11324To create a modulo form during numeric entry, press the shift-@kbd{M}
11325key to enter the word @samp{mod}. As a special convenience, pressing
11326shift-@kbd{M} a second time automatically enters the value of @cite{M}
11327that was most recently used before. During algebraic entry, either
11328type @samp{mod} by hand or press @kbd{M-m} (that's @kbd{@key{META}-m}).
11329Once again, pressing this a second time enters the current modulo.@refill
11330
11331You can also use @kbd{v p} and @kbd{%} to modify modulo forms.
11332@xref{Building Vectors}. @xref{Basic Arithmetic}.
11333
11334It is possible to mix HMS forms and modulo forms. For example, an
11335HMS form modulo 24 could be used to manipulate clock times; an HMS
11336form modulo 360 would be suitable for angles. Making the modulo @cite{M}
11337also be an HMS form eliminates troubles that would arise if the angular
11338mode were inadvertently set to Radians, in which case
11339@w{@samp{2@@ 0' 0" mod 24}} would be interpreted as two degrees modulo
1134024 radians!
11341
11342Modulo forms cannot have variables or formulas for components. If you
11343enter the formula @samp{(x + 2) mod 5}, Calc propagates the modulus
11344to each of the coefficients: @samp{(1 mod 5) x + (2 mod 5)}.
11345
5d67986c
RS
11346@ignore
11347@starindex
11348@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11349@tindex makemod
11350The algebraic function @samp{makemod(a, m)} builds the modulo form
11351@w{@samp{a mod m}}.
11352
11353@node Error Forms, Interval Forms, Modulo Forms, Data Types
11354@section Error Forms
11355
11356@noindent
11357@cindex Error forms
11358@cindex Standard deviations
11359An @dfn{error form} is a number with an associated standard
11360deviation, as in @samp{2.3 +/- 0.12}. The notation
5d67986c 11361`@var{x} @t{+/-} @c{$\sigma$}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11362@asis{sigma}' stands for an uncertain value which follows a normal or
11363Gaussian distribution of mean @cite{x} and standard deviation or
11364``error'' @c{$\sigma$}
11365@cite{sigma}. Both the mean and the error can be either numbers or
11366formulas. Generally these are real numbers but the mean may also be
11367complex. If the error is negative or complex, it is changed to its
11368absolute value. An error form with zero error is converted to a
11369regular number by the Calculator.@refill
11370
11371All arithmetic and transcendental functions accept error forms as input.
11372Operations on the mean-value part work just like operations on regular
11373numbers. The error part for any function @cite{f(x)} (such as @c{$\sin x$}
11374@cite{sin(x)})
11375is defined by the error of @cite{x} times the derivative of @cite{f}
11376evaluated at the mean value of @cite{x}. For a two-argument function
11377@cite{f(x,y)} (such as addition) the error is the square root of the sum
11378of the squares of the errors due to @cite{x} and @cite{y}.
11379@tex
11380$$ \eqalign{
11381 f(x \hbox{\code{ +/- }} \sigma)
11382 &= f(x) \hbox{\code{ +/- }} \sigma \left| {df(x) \over dx} \right| \cr
11383 f(x \hbox{\code{ +/- }} \sigma_x, y \hbox{\code{ +/- }} \sigma_y)
11384 &= f(x,y) \hbox{\code{ +/- }}
11385 \sqrt{\left(\sigma_x \left| {\partial f(x,y) \over \partial x}
11386 \right| \right)^2
11387 +\left(\sigma_y \left| {\partial f(x,y) \over \partial y}
11388 \right| \right)^2 } \cr
11389} $$
11390@end tex
11391Note that this
11392definition assumes the errors in @cite{x} and @cite{y} are uncorrelated.
11393A side effect of this definition is that @samp{(2 +/- 1) * (2 +/- 1)}
11394is not the same as @samp{(2 +/- 1)^2}; the former represents the product
11395of two independent values which happen to have the same probability
11396distributions, and the latter is the product of one random value with itself.
11397The former will produce an answer with less error, since on the average
11398the two independent errors can be expected to cancel out.@refill
11399
11400Consult a good text on error analysis for a discussion of the proper use
11401of standard deviations. Actual errors often are neither Gaussian-distributed
11402nor uncorrelated, and the above formulas are valid only when errors
11403are small. As an example, the error arising from
5d67986c
RS
11404`@t{sin(}@var{x} @t{+/-} @c{$\sigma$}
11405@var{sigma}@t{)}' is
d7b8e6c6 11406`@c{$\sigma$\nobreak}
5d67986c 11407@var{sigma} @t{abs(cos(}@var{x}@t{))}'. When @cite{x} is close to zero,
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11408@c{$\cos x$}
11409@cite{cos(x)} is
11410close to one so the error in the sine is close to @c{$\sigma$}
11411@cite{sigma}; this makes sense, since @c{$\sin x$}
11412@cite{sin(x)} is approximately @cite{x} near zero, so a given
11413error in @cite{x} will produce about the same error in the sine. Likewise,
11414near 90 degrees @c{$\cos x$}
11415@cite{cos(x)} is nearly zero and so the computed error is
11416small: The sine curve is nearly flat in that region, so an error in @cite{x}
11417has relatively little effect on the value of @c{$\sin x$}
11418@cite{sin(x)}. However, consider
11419@samp{sin(90 +/- 1000)}. The cosine of 90 is zero, so Calc will report
11420zero error! We get an obviously wrong result because we have violated
11421the small-error approximation underlying the error analysis. If the error
11422in @cite{x} had been small, the error in @c{$\sin x$}
11423@cite{sin(x)} would indeed have been negligible.@refill
11424
5d67986c
RS
11425@ignore
11426@mindex p
11427@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11428@kindex p (error forms)
11429@tindex +/-
11430To enter an error form during regular numeric entry, use the @kbd{p}
11431(``plus-or-minus'') key to type the @samp{+/-} symbol. (If you try actually
11432typing @samp{+/-} the @kbd{+} key will be interpreted as the Calculator's
11433@kbd{+} command!) Within an algebraic formula, you can press @kbd{M-p} to
11434type the @samp{+/-} symbol, or type it out by hand.
11435
11436Error forms and complex numbers can be mixed; the formulas shown above
11437are used for complex numbers, too; note that if the error part evaluates
11438to a complex number its absolute value (or the square root of the sum of
11439the squares of the absolute values of the two error contributions) is
11440used. Mathematically, this corresponds to a radially symmetric Gaussian
11441distribution of numbers on the complex plane. However, note that Calc
11442considers an error form with real components to represent a real number,
11443not a complex distribution around a real mean.
11444
11445Error forms may also be composed of HMS forms. For best results, both
11446the mean and the error should be HMS forms if either one is.
11447
5d67986c
RS
11448@ignore
11449@starindex
11450@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11451@tindex sdev
11452The algebraic function @samp{sdev(a, b)} builds the error form @samp{a +/- b}.
11453
11454@node Interval Forms, Incomplete Objects, Error Forms, Data Types
11455@section Interval Forms
11456
11457@noindent
11458@cindex Interval forms
11459An @dfn{interval} is a subset of consecutive real numbers. For example,
11460the interval @samp{[2 ..@: 4]} represents all the numbers from 2 to 4,
11461inclusive. If you multiply it by the interval @samp{[0.5 ..@: 2]} you
11462obtain @samp{[1 ..@: 8]}. This calculation represents the fact that if
11463you multiply some number in the range @samp{[2 ..@: 4]} by some other
11464number in the range @samp{[0.5 ..@: 2]}, your result will lie in the range
11465from 1 to 8. Interval arithmetic is used to get a worst-case estimate
11466of the possible range of values a computation will produce, given the
11467set of possible values of the input.
11468
11469@ifinfo
11470Calc supports several varieties of intervals, including @dfn{closed}
11471intervals of the type shown above, @dfn{open} intervals such as
11472@samp{(2 ..@: 4)}, which represents the range of numbers from 2 to 4
11473@emph{exclusive}, and @dfn{semi-open} intervals in which one end
11474uses a round parenthesis and the other a square bracket. In mathematical
11475terms,
11476@samp{[2 ..@: 4]} means @cite{2 <= x <= 4}, whereas
11477@samp{[2 ..@: 4)} represents @cite{2 <= x < 4},
11478@samp{(2 ..@: 4]} represents @cite{2 < x <= 4}, and
11479@samp{(2 ..@: 4)} represents @cite{2 < x < 4}.@refill
11480@end ifinfo
11481@tex
11482Calc supports several varieties of intervals, including \dfn{closed}
11483intervals of the type shown above, \dfn{open} intervals such as
11484\samp{(2 ..\: 4)}, which represents the range of numbers from 2 to 4
11485\emph{exclusive}, and \dfn{semi-open} intervals in which one end
11486uses a round parenthesis and the other a square bracket. In mathematical
11487terms,
11488$$ \eqalign{
11489 [2 \hbox{\cite{..}} 4] &\quad\hbox{means}\quad 2 \le x \le 4 \cr
11490 [2 \hbox{\cite{..}} 4) &\quad\hbox{means}\quad 2 \le x < 4 \cr
11491 (2 \hbox{\cite{..}} 4] &\quad\hbox{means}\quad 2 < x \le 4 \cr
11492 (2 \hbox{\cite{..}} 4) &\quad\hbox{means}\quad 2 < x < 4 \cr
11493} $$
11494@end tex
11495
11496The lower and upper limits of an interval must be either real numbers
11497(or HMS or date forms), or symbolic expressions which are assumed to be
11498real-valued, or @samp{-inf} and @samp{inf}. In general the lower limit
11499must be less than the upper limit. A closed interval containing only
11500one value, @samp{[3 ..@: 3]}, is converted to a plain number (3)
11501automatically. An interval containing no values at all (such as
11502@samp{[3 ..@: 2]} or @samp{[2 ..@: 2)}) can be represented but is not
11503guaranteed to behave well when used in arithmetic. Note that the
11504interval @samp{[3 .. inf)} represents all real numbers greater than
11505or equal to 3, and @samp{(-inf .. inf)} represents all real numbers.
11506In fact, @samp{[-inf .. inf]} represents all real numbers including
11507the real infinities.
11508
11509Intervals are entered in the notation shown here, either as algebraic
11510formulas, or using incomplete forms. (@xref{Incomplete Objects}.)
11511In algebraic formulas, multiple periods in a row are collected from
11512left to right, so that @samp{1...1e2} is interpreted as @samp{1.0 ..@: 1e2}
11513rather than @samp{1 ..@: 0.1e2}. Add spaces or zeros if you want to
11514get the other interpretation. If you omit the lower or upper limit,
11515a default of @samp{-inf} or @samp{inf} (respectively) is furnished.
11516
11517``Infinite mode'' also affects operations on intervals
11518(@pxref{Infinities}). Calc will always introduce an open infinity,
11519as in @samp{1 / (0 .. 2] = [0.5 .. inf)}. But closed infinities,
11520@w{@samp{1 / [0 .. 2] = [0.5 .. inf]}}, arise only in infinite mode;
11521otherwise they are left unevaluated. Note that the ``direction'' of
11522a zero is not an issue in this case since the zero is always assumed
11523to be continuous with the rest of the interval. For intervals that
11524contain zero inside them Calc is forced to give the result,
11525@samp{1 / (-2 .. 2) = [-inf .. inf]}.
11526
11527While it may seem that intervals and error forms are similar, they are
11528based on entirely different concepts of inexact quantities. An error
5d67986c
RS
11529form `@var{x} @t{+/-} @c{$\sigma$}
11530@var{sigma}' means a variable is random, and its value could
d7b8e6c6 11531be anything but is ``probably'' within one @c{$\sigma$}
5d67986c
RS
11532@var{sigma} of the mean value @cite{x}.
11533An interval `@t{[}@var{a} @t{..@:} @var{b}@t{]}' means a variable's value
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11534is unknown, but guaranteed to lie in the specified range. Error forms
11535are statistical or ``average case'' approximations; interval arithmetic
11536tends to produce ``worst case'' bounds on an answer.@refill
11537
11538Intervals may not contain complex numbers, but they may contain
11539HMS forms or date forms.
11540
11541@xref{Set Operations}, for commands that interpret interval forms
11542as subsets of the set of real numbers.
11543
5d67986c
RS
11544@ignore
11545@starindex
11546@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11547@tindex intv
11548The algebraic function @samp{intv(n, a, b)} builds an interval form
11549from @samp{a} to @samp{b}; @samp{n} is an integer code which must
11550be 0 for @samp{(..)}, 1 for @samp{(..]}, 2 for @samp{[..)}, or
115513 for @samp{[..]}.
11552
11553Please note that in fully rigorous interval arithmetic, care would be
11554taken to make sure that the computation of the lower bound rounds toward
11555minus infinity, while upper bound computations round toward plus
11556infinity. Calc's arithmetic always uses a round-to-nearest mode,
11557which means that roundoff errors could creep into an interval
11558calculation to produce intervals slightly smaller than they ought to
11559be. For example, entering @samp{[1..2]} and pressing @kbd{Q 2 ^}
11560should yield the interval @samp{[1..2]} again, but in fact it yields the
11561(slightly too small) interval @samp{[1..1.9999999]} due to roundoff
11562error.
11563
11564@node Incomplete Objects, Variables, Interval Forms, Data Types
11565@section Incomplete Objects
11566
11567@noindent
5d67986c
RS
11568@ignore
11569@mindex [ ]
11570@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 11571@kindex [
5d67986c
RS
11572@ignore
11573@mindex ( )
11574@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11575@kindex (
11576@kindex ,
5d67986c
RS
11577@ignore
11578@mindex @null
11579@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 11580@kindex ]
5d67986c
RS
11581@ignore
11582@mindex @null
11583@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11584@kindex )
11585@cindex Incomplete vectors
11586@cindex Incomplete complex numbers
11587@cindex Incomplete interval forms
11588When @kbd{(} or @kbd{[} is typed to begin entering a complex number or
11589vector, respectively, the effect is to push an @dfn{incomplete} complex
11590number or vector onto the stack. The @kbd{,} key adds the value(s) at
11591the top of the stack onto the current incomplete object. The @kbd{)}
11592and @kbd{]} keys ``close'' the incomplete object after adding any values
11593on the top of the stack in front of the incomplete object.
11594
11595As a result, the sequence of keystrokes @kbd{[ 2 , 3 @key{RET} 2 * , 9 ]}
11596pushes the vector @samp{[2, 6, 9]} onto the stack. Likewise, @kbd{( 1 , 2 Q )}
11597pushes the complex number @samp{(1, 1.414)} (approximately).
11598
11599If several values lie on the stack in front of the incomplete object,
11600all are collected and appended to the object. Thus the @kbd{,} key
11601is redundant: @kbd{[ 2 @key{RET} 3 @key{RET} 2 * 9 ]}. Some people
11602prefer the equivalent @key{SPC} key to @key{RET}.@refill
11603
11604As a special case, typing @kbd{,} immediately after @kbd{(}, @kbd{[}, or
11605@kbd{,} adds a zero or duplicates the preceding value in the list being
11606formed. Typing @key{DEL} during incomplete entry removes the last item
11607from the list.
11608
11609@kindex ;
11610The @kbd{;} key is used in the same way as @kbd{,} to create polar complex
11611numbers: @kbd{( 1 ; 2 )}. When entering a vector, @kbd{;} is useful for
11612creating a matrix. In particular, @kbd{[ [ 1 , 2 ; 3 , 4 ; 5 , 6 ] ]} is
11613equivalent to @kbd{[ [ 1 , 2 ] , [ 3 , 4 ] , [ 5 , 6 ] ]}.
11614
11615@kindex ..
11616@pindex calc-dots
11617Incomplete entry is also used to enter intervals. For example,
11618@kbd{[ 2 ..@: 4 )} enters a semi-open interval. Note that when you type
11619the first period, it will be interpreted as a decimal point, but when
11620you type a second period immediately afterward, it is re-interpreted as
11621part of the interval symbol. Typing @kbd{..} corresponds to executing
11622the @code{calc-dots} command.
11623
11624If you find incomplete entry distracting, you may wish to enter vectors
11625and complex numbers as algebraic formulas by pressing the apostrophe key.
11626
11627@node Variables, Formulas, Incomplete Objects, Data Types
11628@section Variables
11629
11630@noindent
11631@cindex Variables, in formulas
11632A @dfn{variable} is somewhere between a storage register on a conventional
11633calculator, and a variable in a programming language. (In fact, a Calc
11634variable is really just an Emacs Lisp variable that contains a Calc number
11635or formula.) A variable's name is normally composed of letters and digits.
11636Calc also allows apostrophes and @code{#} signs in variable names.
11637The Calc variable @code{foo} corresponds to the Emacs Lisp variable
11638@code{var-foo}. Commands like @kbd{s s} (@code{calc-store}) that operate
11639on variables can be made to use any arbitrary Lisp variable simply by
11640backspacing over the @samp{var-} prefix in the minibuffer.@refill
11641
11642In a command that takes a variable name, you can either type the full
11643name of a variable, or type a single digit to use one of the special
11644convenience variables @code{var-q0} through @code{var-q9}. For example,
11645@kbd{3 s s 2} stores the number 3 in variable @code{var-q2}, and
11646@w{@kbd{3 s s foo @key{RET}}} stores that number in variable
11647@code{var-foo}.@refill
11648
11649To push a variable itself (as opposed to the variable's value) on the
11650stack, enter its name as an algebraic expression using the apostrophe
11651(@key{'}) key. Variable names in algebraic formulas implicitly have
11652@samp{var-} prefixed to their names. The @samp{#} character in variable
11653names used in algebraic formulas corresponds to a dash @samp{-} in the
11654Lisp variable name. If the name contains any dashes, the prefix @samp{var-}
11655is @emph{not} automatically added. Thus the two formulas @samp{foo + 1}
11656and @samp{var#foo + 1} both refer to the same variable.
11657
11658@kindex =
11659@pindex calc-evaluate
11660@cindex Evaluation of variables in a formula
11661@cindex Variables, evaluation
11662@cindex Formulas, evaluation
11663The @kbd{=} (@code{calc-evaluate}) key ``evaluates'' a formula by
11664replacing all variables in the formula which have been given values by a
11665@code{calc-store} or @code{calc-let} command by their stored values.
11666Other variables are left alone. Thus a variable that has not been
11667stored acts like an abstract variable in algebra; a variable that has
11668been stored acts more like a register in a traditional calculator.
11669With a positive numeric prefix argument, @kbd{=} evaluates the top
11670@var{n} stack entries; with a negative argument, @kbd{=} evaluates
11671the @var{n}th stack entry.
11672
11673@cindex @code{e} variable
11674@cindex @code{pi} variable
11675@cindex @code{i} variable
11676@cindex @code{phi} variable
11677@cindex @code{gamma} variable
11678@vindex e
11679@vindex pi
11680@vindex i
11681@vindex phi
11682@vindex gamma
11683A few variables are called @dfn{special constants}. Their names are
11684@samp{e}, @samp{pi}, @samp{i}, @samp{phi}, and @samp{gamma}.
11685(@xref{Scientific Functions}.) When they are evaluated with @kbd{=},
11686their values are calculated if necessary according to the current precision
11687or complex polar mode. If you wish to use these symbols for other purposes,
11688simply undefine or redefine them using @code{calc-store}.@refill
11689
11690The variables @samp{inf}, @samp{uinf}, and @samp{nan} stand for
11691infinite or indeterminate values. It's best not to use them as
11692regular variables, since Calc uses special algebraic rules when
11693it manipulates them. Calc displays a warning message if you store
11694a value into any of these special variables.
11695
11696@xref{Store and Recall}, for a discussion of commands dealing with variables.
11697
11698@node Formulas, , Variables, Data Types
11699@section Formulas
11700
11701@noindent
11702@cindex Formulas
11703@cindex Expressions
11704@cindex Operators in formulas
11705@cindex Precedence of operators
11706When you press the apostrophe key you may enter any expression or formula
11707in algebraic form. (Calc uses the terms ``expression'' and ``formula''
11708interchangeably.) An expression is built up of numbers, variable names,
11709and function calls, combined with various arithmetic operators.
11710Parentheses may
11711be used to indicate grouping. Spaces are ignored within formulas, except
11712that spaces are not permitted within variable names or numbers.
11713Arithmetic operators, in order from highest to lowest precedence, and
11714with their equivalent function names, are:
11715
11716@samp{_} [@code{subscr}] (subscripts);
11717
11718postfix @samp{%} [@code{percent}] (as in @samp{25% = 0.25});
11719
11720prefix @samp{+} and @samp{-} [@code{neg}] (as in @samp{-x})
11721and prefix @samp{!} [@code{lnot}] (logical ``not,'' as in @samp{!x});
11722
11723@samp{+/-} [@code{sdev}] (the standard deviation symbol) and
11724@samp{mod} [@code{makemod}] (the symbol for modulo forms);
11725
11726postfix @samp{!} [@code{fact}] (factorial, as in @samp{n!})
11727and postfix @samp{!!} [@code{dfact}] (double factorial);
11728
11729@samp{^} [@code{pow}] (raised-to-the-power-of);
11730
11731@samp{*} [@code{mul}];
11732
11733@samp{/} [@code{div}], @samp{%} [@code{mod}] (modulo), and
11734@samp{\} [@code{idiv}] (integer division);
11735
11736infix @samp{+} [@code{add}] and @samp{-} [@code{sub}] (as in @samp{x-y});
11737
11738@samp{|} [@code{vconcat}] (vector concatenation);
11739
11740relations @samp{=} [@code{eq}], @samp{!=} [@code{neq}], @samp{<} [@code{lt}],
11741@samp{>} [@code{gt}], @samp{<=} [@code{leq}], and @samp{>=} [@code{geq}];
11742
11743@samp{&&} [@code{land}] (logical ``and'');
11744
11745@samp{||} [@code{lor}] (logical ``or'');
11746
11747the C-style ``if'' operator @samp{a?b:c} [@code{if}];
11748
11749@samp{!!!} [@code{pnot}] (rewrite pattern ``not'');
11750
11751@samp{&&&} [@code{pand}] (rewrite pattern ``and'');
11752
11753@samp{|||} [@code{por}] (rewrite pattern ``or'');
11754
11755@samp{:=} [@code{assign}] (for assignments and rewrite rules);
11756
11757@samp{::} [@code{condition}] (rewrite pattern condition);
11758
11759@samp{=>} [@code{evalto}].
11760
11761Note that, unlike in usual computer notation, multiplication binds more
11762strongly than division: @samp{a*b/c*d} is equivalent to @c{$a b \over c d$}
11763@cite{(a*b)/(c*d)}.
11764
11765@cindex Multiplication, implicit
11766@cindex Implicit multiplication
11767The multiplication sign @samp{*} may be omitted in many cases. In particular,
11768if the righthand side is a number, variable name, or parenthesized
11769expression, the @samp{*} may be omitted. Implicit multiplication has the
11770same precedence as the explicit @samp{*} operator. The one exception to
11771the rule is that a variable name followed by a parenthesized expression,
11772as in @samp{f(x)},
11773is interpreted as a function call, not an implicit @samp{*}. In many
11774cases you must use a space if you omit the @samp{*}: @samp{2a} is the
11775same as @samp{2*a}, and @samp{a b} is the same as @samp{a*b}, but @samp{ab}
11776is a variable called @code{ab}, @emph{not} the product of @samp{a} and
11777@samp{b}! Also note that @samp{f (x)} is still a function call.@refill
11778
11779@cindex Implicit comma in vectors
11780The rules are slightly different for vectors written with square brackets.
11781In vectors, the space character is interpreted (like the comma) as a
11782separator of elements of the vector. Thus @w{@samp{[ 2a b+c d ]}} is
11783equivalent to @samp{[2*a, b+c, d]}, whereas @samp{2a b+c d} is equivalent
11784to @samp{2*a*b + c*d}.
11785Note that spaces around the brackets, and around explicit commas, are
11786ignored. To force spaces to be interpreted as multiplication you can
11787enclose a formula in parentheses as in @samp{[(a b) 2(c d)]}, which is
11788interpreted as @samp{[a*b, 2*c*d]}. An implicit comma is also inserted
11789between @samp{][}, as in the matrix @samp{[[1 2][3 4]]}.@refill
11790
11791Vectors that contain commas (not embedded within nested parentheses or
11792brackets) do not treat spaces specially: @samp{[a b, 2 c d]} is a vector
11793of two elements. Also, if it would be an error to treat spaces as
11794separators, but not otherwise, then Calc will ignore spaces:
11795@w{@samp{[a - b]}} is a vector of one element, but @w{@samp{[a -b]}} is
11796a vector of two elements. Finally, vectors entered with curly braces
11797instead of square brackets do not give spaces any special treatment.
11798When Calc displays a vector that does not contain any commas, it will
11799insert parentheses if necessary to make the meaning clear:
11800@w{@samp{[(a b)]}}.
11801
11802The expression @samp{5%-2} is ambiguous; is this five-percent minus two,
11803or five modulo minus-two? Calc always interprets the leftmost symbol as
11804an infix operator preferentially (modulo, in this case), so you would
11805need to write @samp{(5%)-2} to get the former interpretation.
11806
11807@cindex Function call notation
11808A function call is, e.g., @samp{sin(1+x)}. Function names follow the same
11809rules as variable names except that the default prefix @samp{calcFunc-} is
11810used (instead of @samp{var-}) for the internal Lisp form.
11811Most mathematical Calculator commands like
11812@code{calc-sin} have function equivalents like @code{sin}.
11813If no Lisp function is defined for a function called by a formula, the
11814call is left as it is during algebraic manipulation: @samp{f(x+y)} is
11815left alone. Beware that many innocent-looking short names like @code{in}
11816and @code{re} have predefined meanings which could surprise you; however,
11817single letters or single letters followed by digits are always safe to
11818use for your own function names. @xref{Function Index}.@refill
11819
11820In the documentation for particular commands, the notation @kbd{H S}
11821(@code{calc-sinh}) [@code{sinh}] means that the key sequence @kbd{H S}, the
11822command @kbd{M-x calc-sinh}, and the algebraic function @code{sinh(x)} all
11823represent the same operation.@refill
11824
11825Commands that interpret (``parse'') text as algebraic formulas include
11826algebraic entry (@kbd{'}), editing commands like @kbd{`} which parse
11827the contents of the editing buffer when you finish, the @kbd{M-# g}
11828and @w{@kbd{M-# r}} commands, the @kbd{C-y} command, the X window system
11829``paste'' mouse operation, and Embedded Mode. All of these operations
11830use the same rules for parsing formulas; in particular, language modes
11831(@pxref{Language Modes}) affect them all in the same way.
11832
11833When you read a large amount of text into the Calculator (say a vector
11834which represents a big set of rewrite rules; @pxref{Rewrite Rules}),
11835you may wish to include comments in the text. Calc's formula parser
11836ignores the symbol @samp{%%} and anything following it on a line:
11837
11838@example
11839[ a + b, %% the sum of "a" and "b"
11840 c + d,
11841 %% last line is coming up:
11842 e + f ]
11843@end example
11844
11845@noindent
11846This is parsed exactly the same as @samp{[ a + b, c + d, e + f ]}.
11847
11848@xref{Syntax Tables}, for a way to create your own operators and other
11849input notations. @xref{Compositions}, for a way to create new display
11850formats.
11851
11852@xref{Algebra}, for commands for manipulating formulas symbolically.
11853
11854@node Stack and Trail, Mode Settings, Data Types, Top
11855@chapter Stack and Trail Commands
11856
11857@noindent
11858This chapter describes the Calc commands for manipulating objects on the
11859stack and in the trail buffer. (These commands operate on objects of any
11860type, such as numbers, vectors, formulas, and incomplete objects.)
11861
11862@menu
11863* Stack Manipulation::
11864* Editing Stack Entries::
11865* Trail Commands::
11866* Keep Arguments::
11867@end menu
11868
11869@node Stack Manipulation, Editing Stack Entries, Stack and Trail, Stack and Trail
11870@section Stack Manipulation Commands
11871
11872@noindent
5d67986c
RS
11873@kindex @key{RET}
11874@kindex @key{SPC}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11875@pindex calc-enter
11876@cindex Duplicating stack entries
11877To duplicate the top object on the stack, press @key{RET} or @key{SPC}
11878(two equivalent keys for the @code{calc-enter} command).
11879Given a positive numeric prefix argument, these commands duplicate
11880several elements at the top of the stack.
11881Given a negative argument,
11882these commands duplicate the specified element of the stack.
11883Given an argument of zero, they duplicate the entire stack.
11884For example, with @samp{10 20 30} on the stack,
11885@key{RET} creates @samp{10 20 30 30},
11886@kbd{C-u 2 @key{RET}} creates @samp{10 20 30 20 30},
11887@kbd{C-u - 2 @key{RET}} creates @samp{10 20 30 20}, and
11888@kbd{C-u 0 @key{RET}} creates @samp{10 20 30 10 20 30}.@refill
11889
5d67986c 11890@kindex @key{LFD}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11891@pindex calc-over
11892The @key{LFD} (@code{calc-over}) command (on a key marked Line-Feed if you
11893have it, else on @kbd{C-j}) is like @code{calc-enter}
11894except that the sign of the numeric prefix argument is interpreted
11895oppositely. Also, with no prefix argument the default argument is 2.
11896Thus with @samp{10 20 30} on the stack, @key{LFD} and @kbd{C-u 2 @key{LFD}}
11897are both equivalent to @kbd{C-u - 2 @key{RET}}, producing
11898@samp{10 20 30 20}.@refill
11899
5d67986c 11900@kindex @key{DEL}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11901@kindex C-d
11902@pindex calc-pop
11903@cindex Removing stack entries
11904@cindex Deleting stack entries
11905To remove the top element from the stack, press @key{DEL} (@code{calc-pop}).
11906The @kbd{C-d} key is a synonym for @key{DEL}.
11907(If the top element is an incomplete object with at least one element, the
11908last element is removed from it.) Given a positive numeric prefix argument,
11909several elements are removed. Given a negative argument, the specified
11910element of the stack is deleted. Given an argument of zero, the entire
11911stack is emptied.
11912For example, with @samp{10 20 30} on the stack,
11913@key{DEL} leaves @samp{10 20},
11914@kbd{C-u 2 @key{DEL}} leaves @samp{10},
11915@kbd{C-u - 2 @key{DEL}} leaves @samp{10 30}, and
11916@kbd{C-u 0 @key{DEL}} leaves an empty stack.@refill
11917
5d67986c 11918@kindex M-@key{DEL}
d7b8e6c6 11919@pindex calc-pop-above
5d67986c 11920The @key{M-@key{DEL}} (@code{calc-pop-above}) command is to @key{DEL} what
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11921@key{LFD} is to @key{RET}: It interprets the sign of the numeric
11922prefix argument in the opposite way, and the default argument is 2.
5d67986c
RS
11923Thus @key{M-@key{DEL}} by itself removes the second-from-top stack element,
11924leaving the first, third, fourth, and so on; @kbd{M-3 M-@key{DEL}} deletes
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11925the third stack element.
11926
5d67986c 11927@kindex @key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11928@pindex calc-roll-down
11929To exchange the top two elements of the stack, press @key{TAB}
11930(@code{calc-roll-down}). Given a positive numeric prefix argument, the
11931specified number of elements at the top of the stack are rotated downward.
11932Given a negative argument, the entire stack is rotated downward the specified
11933number of times. Given an argument of zero, the entire stack is reversed
11934top-for-bottom.
11935For example, with @samp{10 20 30 40 50} on the stack,
11936@key{TAB} creates @samp{10 20 30 50 40},
11937@kbd{C-u 3 @key{TAB}} creates @samp{10 20 50 30 40},
11938@kbd{C-u - 2 @key{TAB}} creates @samp{40 50 10 20 30}, and
11939@kbd{C-u 0 @key{TAB}} creates @samp{50 40 30 20 10}.@refill
11940
5d67986c 11941@kindex M-@key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6 11942@pindex calc-roll-up
5d67986c 11943The command @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} (@code{calc-roll-up}) is analogous to @key{TAB}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11944except that it rotates upward instead of downward. Also, the default
11945with no prefix argument is to rotate the top 3 elements.
11946For example, with @samp{10 20 30 40 50} on the stack,
5d67986c
RS
11947@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} creates @samp{10 20 40 50 30},
11948@kbd{C-u 4 M-@key{TAB}} creates @samp{10 30 40 50 20},
11949@kbd{C-u - 2 M-@key{TAB}} creates @samp{30 40 50 10 20}, and
11950@kbd{C-u 0 M-@key{TAB}} creates @samp{50 40 30 20 10}.@refill
d7b8e6c6 11951
5d67986c 11952A good way to view the operation of @key{TAB} and @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} is in
d7b8e6c6 11953terms of moving a particular element to a new position in the stack.
5d67986c
RS
11954With a positive argument @var{n}, @key{TAB} moves the top stack
11955element down to level @var{n}, making room for it by pulling all the
11956intervening stack elements toward the top. @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} moves the
11957element at level @var{n} up to the top. (Compare with @key{LFD},
11958which copies instead of moving the element in level @var{n}.)
11959
11960With a negative argument @i{-@var{n}}, @key{TAB} rotates the stack
11961to move the object in level @var{n} to the deepest place in the
11962stack, and the object in level @i{@var{n}+1} to the top. @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}
d7b8e6c6 11963rotates the deepest stack element to be in level @i{n}, also
5d67986c 11964putting the top stack element in level @i{@var{n}+1}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
11965
11966@xref{Selecting Subformulas}, for a way to apply these commands to
11967any portion of a vector or formula on the stack.
11968
11969@node Editing Stack Entries, Trail Commands, Stack Manipulation, Stack and Trail
11970@section Editing Stack Entries
11971
11972@noindent
11973@kindex `
11974@pindex calc-edit
11975@pindex calc-edit-finish
11976@cindex Editing the stack with Emacs
11977The backquote, @kbd{`} (@code{calc-edit}) command creates a temporary
11978buffer (@samp{*Calc Edit*}) for editing the top-of-stack value using
11979regular Emacs commands. With a numeric prefix argument, it edits the
11980specified number of stack entries at once. (An argument of zero edits
11981the entire stack; a negative argument edits one specific stack entry.)
11982
11983When you are done editing, press @kbd{M-# M-#} to finish and return
11984to Calc. The @key{RET} and @key{LFD} keys also work to finish most
11985sorts of editing, though in some cases Calc leaves @key{RET} with its
11986usual meaning (``insert a newline'') if it's a situation where you
11987might want to insert new lines into the editing buffer. The traditional
11988Emacs ``finish'' key sequence, @kbd{C-c C-c}, also works to finish
11989editing and may be easier to type, depending on your keyboard.
11990
11991When you finish editing, the Calculator parses the lines of text in
11992the @samp{*Calc Edit*} buffer as numbers or formulas, replaces the
11993original stack elements in the original buffer with these new values,
11994then kills the @samp{*Calc Edit*} buffer. The original Calculator buffer
11995continues to exist during editing, but for best results you should be
11996careful not to change it until you have finished the edit. You can
11997also cancel the edit by pressing @kbd{M-# x}.
11998
11999The formula is normally reevaluated as it is put onto the stack.
12000For example, editing @samp{a + 2} to @samp{3 + 2} and pressing
12001@kbd{M-# M-#} will push 5 on the stack. If you use @key{LFD} to
12002finish, Calc will put the result on the stack without evaluating it.
12003
12004If you give a prefix argument to @kbd{M-# M-#} (or @kbd{C-c C-c}),
12005Calc will not kill the @samp{*Calc Edit*} buffer. You can switch
12006back to that buffer and continue editing if you wish. However, you
12007should understand that if you initiated the edit with @kbd{`}, the
12008@kbd{M-# M-#} operation will be programmed to replace the top of the
12009stack with the new edited value, and it will do this even if you have
12010rearranged the stack in the meanwhile. This is not so much of a problem
12011with other editing commands, though, such as @kbd{s e}
12012(@code{calc-edit-variable}; @pxref{Operations on Variables}).
12013
12014If the @code{calc-edit} command involves more than one stack entry,
12015each line of the @samp{*Calc Edit*} buffer is interpreted as a
12016separate formula. Otherwise, the entire buffer is interpreted as
12017one formula, with line breaks ignored. (You can use @kbd{C-o} or
12018@kbd{C-q C-j} to insert a newline in the buffer without pressing @key{RET}.)
12019
12020The @kbd{`} key also works during numeric or algebraic entry. The
12021text entered so far is moved to the @code{*Calc Edit*} buffer for
12022more extensive editing than is convenient in the minibuffer.
12023
12024@node Trail Commands, Keep Arguments, Editing Stack Entries, Stack and Trail
12025@section Trail Commands
12026
12027@noindent
12028@cindex Trail buffer
12029The commands for manipulating the Calc Trail buffer are two-key sequences
12030beginning with the @kbd{t} prefix.
12031
12032@kindex t d
12033@pindex calc-trail-display
12034The @kbd{t d} (@code{calc-trail-display}) command turns display of the
12035trail on and off. Normally the trail display is toggled on if it was off,
12036off if it was on. With a numeric prefix of zero, this command always
12037turns the trail off; with a prefix of one, it always turns the trail on.
12038The other trail-manipulation commands described here automatically turn
12039the trail on. Note that when the trail is off values are still recorded
12040there; they are simply not displayed. To set Emacs to turn the trail
12041off by default, type @kbd{t d} and then save the mode settings with
12042@kbd{m m} (@code{calc-save-modes}).
12043
12044@kindex t i
12045@pindex calc-trail-in
12046@kindex t o
12047@pindex calc-trail-out
12048The @kbd{t i} (@code{calc-trail-in}) and @kbd{t o}
12049(@code{calc-trail-out}) commands switch the cursor into and out of the
12050Calc Trail window. In practice they are rarely used, since the commands
12051shown below are a more convenient way to move around in the
12052trail, and they work ``by remote control'' when the cursor is still
12053in the Calculator window.@refill
12054
12055@cindex Trail pointer
12056There is a @dfn{trail pointer} which selects some entry of the trail at
12057any given time. The trail pointer looks like a @samp{>} symbol right
12058before the selected number. The following commands operate on the
12059trail pointer in various ways.
12060
12061@kindex t y
12062@pindex calc-trail-yank
12063@cindex Retrieving previous results
12064The @kbd{t y} (@code{calc-trail-yank}) command reads the selected value in
12065the trail and pushes it onto the Calculator stack. It allows you to
12066re-use any previously computed value without retyping. With a numeric
12067prefix argument @var{n}, it yanks the value @var{n} lines above the current
12068trail pointer.
12069
12070@kindex t <
12071@pindex calc-trail-scroll-left
12072@kindex t >
12073@pindex calc-trail-scroll-right
12074The @kbd{t <} (@code{calc-trail-scroll-left}) and @kbd{t >}
12075(@code{calc-trail-scroll-right}) commands horizontally scroll the trail
12076window left or right by one half of its width.@refill
12077
12078@kindex t n
12079@pindex calc-trail-next
12080@kindex t p
12081@pindex calc-trail-previous
12082@kindex t f
12083@pindex calc-trail-forward
12084@kindex t b
12085@pindex calc-trail-backward
12086The @kbd{t n} (@code{calc-trail-next}) and @kbd{t p}
12087(@code{calc-trail-previous)} commands move the trail pointer down or up
12088one line. The @kbd{t f} (@code{calc-trail-forward}) and @kbd{t b}
12089(@code{calc-trail-backward}) commands move the trail pointer down or up
12090one screenful at a time. All of these commands accept numeric prefix
12091arguments to move several lines or screenfuls at a time.@refill
12092
12093@kindex t [
12094@pindex calc-trail-first
12095@kindex t ]
12096@pindex calc-trail-last
12097@kindex t h
12098@pindex calc-trail-here
12099The @kbd{t [} (@code{calc-trail-first}) and @kbd{t ]}
12100(@code{calc-trail-last}) commands move the trail pointer to the first or
12101last line of the trail. The @kbd{t h} (@code{calc-trail-here}) command
12102moves the trail pointer to the cursor position; unlike the other trail
12103commands, @kbd{t h} works only when Calc Trail is the selected window.@refill
12104
12105@kindex t s
12106@pindex calc-trail-isearch-forward
12107@kindex t r
12108@pindex calc-trail-isearch-backward
12109@ifinfo
12110The @kbd{t s} (@code{calc-trail-isearch-forward}) and @kbd{t r}
12111(@code{calc-trail-isearch-backward}) commands perform an incremental
12112search forward or backward through the trail. You can press @key{RET}
12113to terminate the search; the trail pointer moves to the current line.
12114If you cancel the search with @kbd{C-g}, the trail pointer stays where
12115it was when the search began.@refill
12116@end ifinfo
12117@tex
12118The @kbd{t s} (@code{calc-trail-isearch-forward}) and @kbd{t r}
12119(@code{calc-trail-isearch-backward}) com\-mands perform an incremental
12120search forward or backward through the trail. You can press @key{RET}
12121to terminate the search; the trail pointer moves to the current line.
12122If you cancel the search with @kbd{C-g}, the trail pointer stays where
12123it was when the search began.
12124@end tex
12125
12126@kindex t m
12127@pindex calc-trail-marker
12128The @kbd{t m} (@code{calc-trail-marker}) command allows you to enter a
12129line of text of your own choosing into the trail. The text is inserted
12130after the line containing the trail pointer; this usually means it is
12131added to the end of the trail. Trail markers are useful mainly as the
12132targets for later incremental searches in the trail.
12133
12134@kindex t k
12135@pindex calc-trail-kill
12136The @kbd{t k} (@code{calc-trail-kill}) command removes the selected line
12137from the trail. The line is saved in the Emacs kill ring suitable for
12138yanking into another buffer, but it is not easy to yank the text back
12139into the trail buffer. With a numeric prefix argument, this command
12140kills the @var{n} lines below or above the selected one.
12141
12142The @kbd{t .} (@code{calc-full-trail-vectors}) command is described
12143elsewhere; @pxref{Vector and Matrix Formats}.
12144
12145@node Keep Arguments, , Trail Commands, Stack and Trail
12146@section Keep Arguments
12147
12148@noindent
12149@kindex K
12150@pindex calc-keep-args
12151The @kbd{K} (@code{calc-keep-args}) command acts like a prefix for
12152the following command. It prevents that command from removing its
12153arguments from the stack. For example, after @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 +},
12154the stack contains the sole number 5, but after @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 K +},
12155the stack contains the arguments and the result: @samp{2 3 5}.
12156
12157This works for all commands that take arguments off the stack. As
12158another example, @kbd{K a s} simplifies a formula, pushing the
12159simplified version of the formula onto the stack after the original
12160formula (rather than replacing the original formula).
12161
5d67986c 12162Note that you could get the same effect by typing @kbd{@key{RET} a s},
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12163copying the formula and then simplifying the copy. One difference
12164is that for a very large formula the time taken to format the
5d67986c 12165intermediate copy in @kbd{@key{RET} a s} could be noticeable; @kbd{K a s}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12166would avoid this extra work.
12167
12168Even stack manipulation commands are affected. @key{TAB} works by
12169popping two values and pushing them back in the opposite order,
12170so @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 K @key{TAB}} produces @samp{2 3 3 2}.
12171
12172A few Calc commands provide other ways of doing the same thing.
12173For example, @kbd{' sin($)} replaces the number on the stack with
12174its sine using algebraic entry; to push the sine and keep the
12175original argument you could use either @kbd{' sin($1)} or
12176@kbd{K ' sin($)}. @xref{Algebraic Entry}. Also, the @kbd{s s}
12177command is effectively the same as @kbd{K s t}. @xref{Storing Variables}.
12178
12179Keyboard macros may interact surprisingly with the @kbd{K} prefix.
12180If you have defined a keyboard macro to be, say, @samp{Q +} to add
12181one number to the square root of another, then typing @kbd{K X} will
12182execute @kbd{K Q +}, probably not what you expected. The @kbd{K}
12183prefix will apply to just the first command in the macro rather than
12184the whole macro.
12185
12186If you execute a command and then decide you really wanted to keep
12187the argument, you can press @kbd{M-@key{RET}} (@code{calc-last-args}).
12188This command pushes the last arguments that were popped by any command
12189onto the stack. Note that the order of things on the stack will be
12190different than with @kbd{K}: @kbd{2 @key{RET} 3 + M-@key{RET}} leaves
12191@samp{5 2 3} on the stack instead of @samp{2 3 5}. @xref{Undo}.
12192
12193@node Mode Settings, Arithmetic, Stack and Trail, Top
12194@chapter Mode Settings
12195
12196@noindent
12197This chapter describes commands that set modes in the Calculator.
12198They do not affect the contents of the stack, although they may change
12199the @emph{appearance} or @emph{interpretation} of the stack's contents.
12200
12201@menu
12202* General Mode Commands::
12203* Precision::
12204* Inverse and Hyperbolic::
12205* Calculation Modes::
12206* Simplification Modes::
12207* Declarations::
12208* Display Modes::
12209* Language Modes::
12210* Modes Variable::
12211* Calc Mode Line::
12212@end menu
12213
12214@node General Mode Commands, Precision, Mode Settings, Mode Settings
12215@section General Mode Commands
12216
12217@noindent
12218@kindex m m
12219@pindex calc-save-modes
12220@cindex Continuous memory
12221@cindex Saving mode settings
12222@cindex Permanent mode settings
12223@cindex @file{.emacs} file, mode settings
12224You can save all of the current mode settings in your @file{.emacs} file
12225with the @kbd{m m} (@code{calc-save-modes}) command. This will cause
12226Emacs to reestablish these modes each time it starts up. The modes saved
12227in the file include everything controlled by the @kbd{m} and @kbd{d}
12228prefix keys, the current precision and binary word size, whether or not
12229the trail is displayed, the current height of the Calc window, and more.
12230The current interface (used when you type @kbd{M-# M-#}) is also saved.
12231If there were already saved mode settings in the file, they are replaced.
12232Otherwise, the new mode information is appended to the end of the file.
12233
12234@kindex m R
12235@pindex calc-mode-record-mode
12236The @kbd{m R} (@code{calc-mode-record-mode}) command tells Calc to
12237record the new mode settings (as if by pressing @kbd{m m}) every
12238time a mode setting changes. If Embedded Mode is enabled, other
12239options are available; @pxref{Mode Settings in Embedded Mode}.
12240
12241@kindex m F
12242@pindex calc-settings-file-name
12243The @kbd{m F} (@code{calc-settings-file-name}) command allows you to
12244choose a different place than your @file{.emacs} file for @kbd{m m},
12245@kbd{Z P}, and similar commands to save permanent information.
12246You are prompted for a file name. All Calc modes are then reset to
12247their default values, then settings from the file you named are loaded
12248if this file exists, and this file becomes the one that Calc will
12249use in the future for commands like @kbd{m m}. The default settings
12250file name is @file{~/.emacs}. You can see the current file name by
12251giving a blank response to the @kbd{m F} prompt. See also the
12252discussion of the @code{calc-settings-file} variable; @pxref{Installation}.
12253
12254If the file name you give contains the string @samp{.emacs} anywhere
12255inside it, @kbd{m F} will not automatically load the new file. This
12256is because you are presumably switching to your @file{~/.emacs} file,
12257which may contain other things you don't want to reread. You can give
12258a numeric prefix argument of 1 to @kbd{m F} to force it to read the
12259file no matter what its name. Conversely, an argument of @i{-1} tells
12260@kbd{m F} @emph{not} to read the new file. An argument of 2 or @i{-2}
12261tells @kbd{m F} not to reset the modes to their defaults beforehand,
12262which is useful if you intend your new file to have a variant of the
12263modes present in the file you were using before.
12264
12265@kindex m x
12266@pindex calc-always-load-extensions
12267The @kbd{m x} (@code{calc-always-load-extensions}) command enables a mode
12268in which the first use of Calc loads the entire program, including all
12269extensions modules. Otherwise, the extensions modules will not be loaded
12270until the various advanced Calc features are used. Since this mode only
12271has effect when Calc is first loaded, @kbd{m x} is usually followed by
12272@kbd{m m} to make the mode-setting permanent. To load all of Calc just
12273once, rather than always in the future, you can press @kbd{M-# L}.
12274
12275@kindex m S
12276@pindex calc-shift-prefix
12277The @kbd{m S} (@code{calc-shift-prefix}) command enables a mode in which
12278all of Calc's letter prefix keys may be typed shifted as well as unshifted.
12279If you are typing, say, @kbd{a S} (@code{calc-solve-for}) quite often
12280you might find it easier to turn this mode on so that you can type
12281@kbd{A S} instead. When this mode is enabled, the commands that used to
12282be on those single shifted letters (e.g., @kbd{A} (@code{calc-abs})) can
12283now be invoked by pressing the shifted letter twice: @kbd{A A}. Note
12284that the @kbd{v} prefix key always works both shifted and unshifted, and
12285the @kbd{z} and @kbd{Z} prefix keys are always distinct. Also, the @kbd{h}
12286prefix is not affected by this mode. Press @kbd{m S} again to disable
12287shifted-prefix mode.
12288
12289@node Precision, Inverse and Hyperbolic, General Mode Commands, Mode Settings
12290@section Precision
12291
12292@noindent
12293@kindex p
12294@pindex calc-precision
12295@cindex Precision of calculations
12296The @kbd{p} (@code{calc-precision}) command controls the precision to
12297which floating-point calculations are carried. The precision must be
12298at least 3 digits and may be arbitrarily high, within the limits of
12299memory and time. This affects only floats: Integer and rational
12300calculations are always carried out with as many digits as necessary.
12301
12302The @kbd{p} key prompts for the current precision. If you wish you
12303can instead give the precision as a numeric prefix argument.
12304
12305Many internal calculations are carried to one or two digits higher
12306precision than normal. Results are rounded down afterward to the
12307current precision. Unless a special display mode has been selected,
12308floats are always displayed with their full stored precision, i.e.,
12309what you see is what you get. Reducing the current precision does not
12310round values already on the stack, but those values will be rounded
12311down before being used in any calculation. The @kbd{c 0} through
12312@kbd{c 9} commands (@pxref{Conversions}) can be used to round an
12313existing value to a new precision.@refill
12314
12315@cindex Accuracy of calculations
12316It is important to distinguish the concepts of @dfn{precision} and
12317@dfn{accuracy}. In the normal usage of these words, the number
12318123.4567 has a precision of 7 digits but an accuracy of 4 digits.
12319The precision is the total number of digits not counting leading
12320or trailing zeros (regardless of the position of the decimal point).
12321The accuracy is simply the number of digits after the decimal point
12322(again not counting trailing zeros). In Calc you control the precision,
12323not the accuracy of computations. If you were to set the accuracy
12324instead, then calculations like @samp{exp(100)} would generate many
12325more digits than you would typically need, while @samp{exp(-100)} would
12326probably round to zero! In Calc, both these computations give you
12327exactly 12 (or the requested number of) significant digits.
12328
12329The only Calc features that deal with accuracy instead of precision
12330are fixed-point display mode for floats (@kbd{d f}; @pxref{Float Formats}),
12331and the rounding functions like @code{floor} and @code{round}
12332(@pxref{Integer Truncation}). Also, @kbd{c 0} through @kbd{c 9}
12333deal with both precision and accuracy depending on the magnitudes
12334of the numbers involved.
12335
12336If you need to work with a particular fixed accuracy (say, dollars and
12337cents with two digits after the decimal point), one solution is to work
12338with integers and an ``implied'' decimal point. For example, $8.99
5d67986c 12339divided by 6 would be entered @kbd{899 @key{RET} 6 /}, yielding 149.833
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12340(actually $1.49833 with our implied decimal point); pressing @kbd{R}
12341would round this to 150 cents, i.e., $1.50.
12342
12343@xref{Floats}, for still more on floating-point precision and related
12344issues.
12345
12346@node Inverse and Hyperbolic, Calculation Modes, Precision, Mode Settings
12347@section Inverse and Hyperbolic Flags
12348
12349@noindent
12350@kindex I
12351@pindex calc-inverse
12352There is no single-key equivalent to the @code{calc-arcsin} function.
12353Instead, you must first press @kbd{I} (@code{calc-inverse}) to set
12354the @dfn{Inverse Flag}, then press @kbd{S} (@code{calc-sin}).
12355The @kbd{I} key actually toggles the Inverse Flag. When this flag
12356is set, the word @samp{Inv} appears in the mode line.@refill
12357
12358@kindex H
12359@pindex calc-hyperbolic
12360Likewise, the @kbd{H} key (@code{calc-hyperbolic}) sets or clears the
12361Hyperbolic Flag, which transforms @code{calc-sin} into @code{calc-sinh}.
12362If both of these flags are set at once, the effect will be
12363@code{calc-arcsinh}. (The Hyperbolic flag is also used by some
12364non-trigonometric commands; for example @kbd{H L} computes a base-10,
12365instead of base-@i{e}, logarithm.)@refill
12366
12367Command names like @code{calc-arcsin} are provided for completeness, and
12368may be executed with @kbd{x} or @kbd{M-x}. Their effect is simply to
12369toggle the Inverse and/or Hyperbolic flags and then execute the
12370corresponding base command (@code{calc-sin} in this case).
12371
12372The Inverse and Hyperbolic flags apply only to the next Calculator
12373command, after which they are automatically cleared. (They are also
12374cleared if the next keystroke is not a Calc command.) Digits you
12375type after @kbd{I} or @kbd{H} (or @kbd{K}) are treated as prefix
12376arguments for the next command, not as numeric entries. The same
12377is true of @kbd{C-u}, but not of the minus sign (@kbd{K -} means to
12378subtract and keep arguments).
12379
12380The third Calc prefix flag, @kbd{K} (keep-arguments), is discussed
12381elsewhere. @xref{Keep Arguments}.
12382
12383@node Calculation Modes, Simplification Modes, Inverse and Hyperbolic, Mode Settings
12384@section Calculation Modes
12385
12386@noindent
12387The commands in this section are two-key sequences beginning with
12388the @kbd{m} prefix. (That's the letter @kbd{m}, not the @key{META} key.)
12389The @samp{m a} (@code{calc-algebraic-mode}) command is described elsewhere
12390(@pxref{Algebraic Entry}).
12391
12392@menu
12393* Angular Modes::
12394* Polar Mode::
12395* Fraction Mode::
12396* Infinite Mode::
12397* Symbolic Mode::
12398* Matrix Mode::
12399* Automatic Recomputation::
12400* Working Message::
12401@end menu
12402
12403@node Angular Modes, Polar Mode, Calculation Modes, Calculation Modes
12404@subsection Angular Modes
12405
12406@noindent
12407@cindex Angular mode
12408The Calculator supports three notations for angles: radians, degrees,
12409and degrees-minutes-seconds. When a number is presented to a function
12410like @code{sin} that requires an angle, the current angular mode is
12411used to interpret the number as either radians or degrees. If an HMS
12412form is presented to @code{sin}, it is always interpreted as
12413degrees-minutes-seconds.
12414
12415Functions that compute angles produce a number in radians, a number in
12416degrees, or an HMS form depending on the current angular mode. If the
12417result is a complex number and the current mode is HMS, the number is
12418instead expressed in degrees. (Complex-number calculations would
12419normally be done in radians mode, though. Complex numbers are converted
12420to degrees by calculating the complex result in radians and then
12421multiplying by 180 over @c{$\pi$}
12422@cite{pi}.)
12423
12424@kindex m r
12425@pindex calc-radians-mode
12426@kindex m d
12427@pindex calc-degrees-mode
12428@kindex m h
12429@pindex calc-hms-mode
12430The @kbd{m r} (@code{calc-radians-mode}), @kbd{m d} (@code{calc-degrees-mode}),
12431and @kbd{m h} (@code{calc-hms-mode}) commands control the angular mode.
12432The current angular mode is displayed on the Emacs mode line.
12433The default angular mode is degrees.@refill
12434
12435@node Polar Mode, Fraction Mode, Angular Modes, Calculation Modes
12436@subsection Polar Mode
12437
12438@noindent
12439@cindex Polar mode
12440The Calculator normally ``prefers'' rectangular complex numbers in the
12441sense that rectangular form is used when the proper form can not be
12442decided from the input. This might happen by multiplying a rectangular
12443number by a polar one, by taking the square root of a negative real
12444number, or by entering @kbd{( 2 @key{SPC} 3 )}.
12445
12446@kindex m p
12447@pindex calc-polar-mode
12448The @kbd{m p} (@code{calc-polar-mode}) command toggles complex-number
12449preference between rectangular and polar forms. In polar mode, all
12450of the above example situations would produce polar complex numbers.
12451
12452@node Fraction Mode, Infinite Mode, Polar Mode, Calculation Modes
12453@subsection Fraction Mode
12454
12455@noindent
12456@cindex Fraction mode
12457@cindex Division of integers
12458Division of two integers normally yields a floating-point number if the
12459result cannot be expressed as an integer. In some cases you would
12460rather get an exact fractional answer. One way to accomplish this is
12461to multiply fractions instead: @kbd{6 @key{RET} 1:4 *} produces @cite{3:2}
12462even though @kbd{6 @key{RET} 4 /} produces @cite{1.5}.
12463
12464@kindex m f
12465@pindex calc-frac-mode
12466To set the Calculator to produce fractional results for normal integer
12467divisions, use the @kbd{m f} (@code{calc-frac-mode}) command.
12468For example, @cite{8/4} produces @cite{2} in either mode,
12469but @cite{6/4} produces @cite{3:2} in Fraction Mode, @cite{1.5} in
12470Float Mode.@refill
12471
12472At any time you can use @kbd{c f} (@code{calc-float}) to convert a
12473fraction to a float, or @kbd{c F} (@code{calc-fraction}) to convert a
12474float to a fraction. @xref{Conversions}.
12475
12476@node Infinite Mode, Symbolic Mode, Fraction Mode, Calculation Modes
12477@subsection Infinite Mode
12478
12479@noindent
12480@cindex Infinite mode
12481The Calculator normally treats results like @cite{1 / 0} as errors;
12482formulas like this are left in unsimplified form. But Calc can be
12483put into a mode where such calculations instead produce ``infinite''
12484results.
12485
12486@kindex m i
12487@pindex calc-infinite-mode
12488The @kbd{m i} (@code{calc-infinite-mode}) command turns this mode
12489on and off. When the mode is off, infinities do not arise except
12490in calculations that already had infinities as inputs. (One exception
12491is that infinite open intervals like @samp{[0 .. inf)} can be
12492generated; however, intervals closed at infinity (@samp{[0 .. inf]})
12493will not be generated when infinite mode is off.)
12494
12495With infinite mode turned on, @samp{1 / 0} will generate @code{uinf},
12496an undirected infinity. @xref{Infinities}, for a discussion of the
12497difference between @code{inf} and @code{uinf}. Also, @cite{0 / 0}
12498evaluates to @code{nan}, the ``indeterminate'' symbol. Various other
12499functions can also return infinities in this mode; for example,
12500@samp{ln(0) = -inf}, and @samp{gamma(-7) = uinf}. Once again,
12501note that @samp{exp(inf) = inf} regardless of infinite mode because
12502this calculation has infinity as an input.
12503
12504@cindex Positive infinite mode
12505The @kbd{m i} command with a numeric prefix argument of zero,
12506i.e., @kbd{C-u 0 m i}, turns on a ``positive infinite mode'' in
12507which zero is treated as positive instead of being directionless.
12508Thus, @samp{1 / 0 = inf} and @samp{-1 / 0 = -inf} in this mode.
12509Note that zero never actually has a sign in Calc; there are no
12510separate representations for @i{+0} and @i{-0}. Positive
12511infinite mode merely changes the interpretation given to the
12512single symbol, @samp{0}. One consequence of this is that, while
12513you might expect @samp{1 / -0 = -inf}, actually @samp{1 / -0}
12514is equivalent to @samp{1 / 0}, which is equal to positive @code{inf}.
12515
12516@node Symbolic Mode, Matrix Mode, Infinite Mode, Calculation Modes
12517@subsection Symbolic Mode
12518
12519@noindent
12520@cindex Symbolic mode
12521@cindex Inexact results
12522Calculations are normally performed numerically wherever possible.
12523For example, the @code{calc-sqrt} command, or @code{sqrt} function in an
12524algebraic expression, produces a numeric answer if the argument is a
12525number or a symbolic expression if the argument is an expression:
12526@kbd{2 Q} pushes 1.4142 but @kbd{@key{'} x+1 @key{RET} Q} pushes @samp{sqrt(x+1)}.
12527
12528@kindex m s
12529@pindex calc-symbolic-mode
12530In @dfn{symbolic mode}, controlled by the @kbd{m s} (@code{calc-symbolic-mode})
12531command, functions which would produce inexact, irrational results are
12532left in symbolic form. Thus @kbd{16 Q} pushes 4, but @kbd{2 Q} pushes
12533@samp{sqrt(2)}.
12534
12535@kindex N
12536@pindex calc-eval-num
12537The shift-@kbd{N} (@code{calc-eval-num}) command evaluates numerically
12538the expression at the top of the stack, by temporarily disabling
12539@code{calc-symbolic-mode} and executing @kbd{=} (@code{calc-evaluate}).
12540Given a numeric prefix argument, it also
12541sets the floating-point precision to the specified value for the duration
12542of the command.@refill
12543
12544To evaluate a formula numerically without expanding the variables it
12545contains, you can use the key sequence @kbd{m s a v m s} (this uses
12546@code{calc-alg-evaluate}, which resimplifies but doesn't evaluate
12547variables.)
12548
12549@node Matrix Mode, Automatic Recomputation, Symbolic Mode, Calculation Modes
12550@subsection Matrix and Scalar Modes
12551
12552@noindent
12553@cindex Matrix mode
12554@cindex Scalar mode
12555Calc sometimes makes assumptions during algebraic manipulation that
12556are awkward or incorrect when vectors and matrices are involved.
12557Calc has two modes, @dfn{matrix mode} and @dfn{scalar mode}, which
12558modify its behavior around vectors in useful ways.
12559
12560@kindex m v
12561@pindex calc-matrix-mode
12562Press @kbd{m v} (@code{calc-matrix-mode}) once to enter matrix mode.
12563In this mode, all objects are assumed to be matrices unless provably
12564otherwise. One major effect is that Calc will no longer consider
12565multiplication to be commutative. (Recall that in matrix arithmetic,
12566@samp{A*B} is not the same as @samp{B*A}.) This assumption affects
12567rewrite rules and algebraic simplification. Another effect of this
12568mode is that calculations that would normally produce constants like
125690 and 1 (e.g., @cite{a - a} and @cite{a / a}, respectively) will now
12570produce function calls that represent ``generic'' zero or identity
12571matrices: @samp{idn(0)}, @samp{idn(1)}. The @code{idn} function
12572@samp{idn(@var{a},@var{n})} returns @var{a} times an @var{n}x@var{n}
12573identity matrix; if @var{n} is omitted, it doesn't know what
12574dimension to use and so the @code{idn} call remains in symbolic
12575form. However, if this generic identity matrix is later combined
12576with a matrix whose size is known, it will be converted into
12577a true identity matrix of the appropriate size. On the other hand,
12578if it is combined with a scalar (as in @samp{idn(1) + 2}), Calc
12579will assume it really was a scalar after all and produce, e.g., 3.
12580
12581Press @kbd{m v} a second time to get scalar mode. Here, objects are
12582assumed @emph{not} to be vectors or matrices unless provably so.
12583For example, normally adding a variable to a vector, as in
12584@samp{[x, y, z] + a}, will leave the sum in symbolic form because
12585as far as Calc knows, @samp{a} could represent either a number or
12586another 3-vector. In scalar mode, @samp{a} is assumed to be a
12587non-vector, and the addition is evaluated to @samp{[x+a, y+a, z+a]}.
12588
12589Press @kbd{m v} a third time to return to the normal mode of operation.
12590
12591If you press @kbd{m v} with a numeric prefix argument @var{n}, you
12592get a special ``dimensioned matrix mode'' in which matrices of
12593unknown size are assumed to be @var{n}x@var{n} square matrices.
12594Then, the function call @samp{idn(1)} will expand into an actual
12595matrix rather than representing a ``generic'' matrix.
12596
12597@cindex Declaring scalar variables
12598Of course these modes are approximations to the true state of
12599affairs, which is probably that some quantities will be matrices
12600and others will be scalars. One solution is to ``declare''
12601certain variables or functions to be scalar-valued.
12602@xref{Declarations}, to see how to make declarations in Calc.
12603
12604There is nothing stopping you from declaring a variable to be
12605scalar and then storing a matrix in it; however, if you do, the
12606results you get from Calc may not be valid. Suppose you let Calc
12607get the result @samp{[x+a, y+a, z+a]} shown above, and then stored
12608@samp{[1, 2, 3]} in @samp{a}. The result would not be the same as
12609for @samp{[x, y, z] + [1, 2, 3]}, but that's because you have broken
12610your earlier promise to Calc that @samp{a} would be scalar.
12611
12612Another way to mix scalars and matrices is to use selections
12613(@pxref{Selecting Subformulas}). Use matrix mode when operating on
12614your formula normally; then, to apply scalar mode to a certain part
12615of the formula without affecting the rest just select that part,
12616change into scalar mode and press @kbd{=} to resimplify the part
12617under this mode, then change back to matrix mode before deselecting.
12618
12619@node Automatic Recomputation, Working Message, Matrix Mode, Calculation Modes
12620@subsection Automatic Recomputation
12621
12622@noindent
12623The @dfn{evaluates-to} operator, @samp{=>}, has the special
12624property that any @samp{=>} formulas on the stack are recomputed
12625whenever variable values or mode settings that might affect them
12626are changed. @xref{Evaluates-To Operator}.
12627
12628@kindex m C
12629@pindex calc-auto-recompute
12630The @kbd{m C} (@code{calc-auto-recompute}) command turns this
12631automatic recomputation on and off. If you turn it off, Calc will
12632not update @samp{=>} operators on the stack (nor those in the
12633attached Embedded Mode buffer, if there is one). They will not
12634be updated unless you explicitly do so by pressing @kbd{=} or until
12635you press @kbd{m C} to turn recomputation back on. (While automatic
12636recomputation is off, you can think of @kbd{m C m C} as a command
12637to update all @samp{=>} operators while leaving recomputation off.)
12638
12639To update @samp{=>} operators in an Embedded buffer while
12640automatic recomputation is off, use @w{@kbd{M-# u}}.
12641@xref{Embedded Mode}.
12642
12643@node Working Message, , Automatic Recomputation, Calculation Modes
12644@subsection Working Messages
12645
12646@noindent
12647@cindex Performance
12648@cindex Working messages
12649Since the Calculator is written entirely in Emacs Lisp, which is not
12650designed for heavy numerical work, many operations are quite slow.
12651The Calculator normally displays the message @samp{Working...} in the
12652echo area during any command that may be slow. In addition, iterative
12653operations such as square roots and trigonometric functions display the
12654intermediate result at each step. Both of these types of messages can
12655be disabled if you find them distracting.
12656
12657@kindex m w
12658@pindex calc-working
12659Type @kbd{m w} (@code{calc-working}) with a numeric prefix of 0 to
12660disable all ``working'' messages. Use a numeric prefix of 1 to enable
12661only the plain @samp{Working...} message. Use a numeric prefix of 2 to
12662see intermediate results as well. With no numeric prefix this displays
12663the current mode.@refill
12664
12665While it may seem that the ``working'' messages will slow Calc down
12666considerably, experiments have shown that their impact is actually
12667quite small. But if your terminal is slow you may find that it helps
12668to turn the messages off.
12669
12670@node Simplification Modes, Declarations, Calculation Modes, Mode Settings
12671@section Simplification Modes
12672
12673@noindent
12674The current @dfn{simplification mode} controls how numbers and formulas
12675are ``normalized'' when being taken from or pushed onto the stack.
12676Some normalizations are unavoidable, such as rounding floating-point
12677results to the current precision, and reducing fractions to simplest
12678form. Others, such as simplifying a formula like @cite{a+a} (or @cite{2+3}),
12679are done by default but can be turned off when necessary.
12680
12681When you press a key like @kbd{+} when @cite{2} and @cite{3} are on the
12682stack, Calc pops these numbers, normalizes them, creates the formula
12683@cite{2+3}, normalizes it, and pushes the result. Of course the standard
12684rules for normalizing @cite{2+3} will produce the result @cite{5}.
12685
12686Simplification mode commands consist of the lower-case @kbd{m} prefix key
12687followed by a shifted letter.
12688
12689@kindex m O
12690@pindex calc-no-simplify-mode
12691The @kbd{m O} (@code{calc-no-simplify-mode}) command turns off all optional
12692simplifications. These would leave a formula like @cite{2+3} alone. In
12693fact, nothing except simple numbers are ever affected by normalization
12694in this mode.
12695
12696@kindex m N
12697@pindex calc-num-simplify-mode
12698The @kbd{m N} (@code{calc-num-simplify-mode}) command turns off simplification
12699of any formulas except those for which all arguments are constants. For
12700example, @cite{1+2} is simplified to @cite{3}, and @cite{a+(2-2)} is
12701simplified to @cite{a+0} but no further, since one argument of the sum
12702is not a constant. Unfortunately, @cite{(a+2)-2} is @emph{not} simplified
12703because the top-level @samp{-} operator's arguments are not both
12704constant numbers (one of them is the formula @cite{a+2}).
12705A constant is a number or other numeric object (such as a constant
12706error form or modulo form), or a vector all of whose
12707elements are constant.@refill
12708
12709@kindex m D
12710@pindex calc-default-simplify-mode
12711The @kbd{m D} (@code{calc-default-simplify-mode}) command restores the
12712default simplifications for all formulas. This includes many easy and
12713fast algebraic simplifications such as @cite{a+0} to @cite{a}, and
12714@cite{a + 2 a} to @cite{3 a}, as well as evaluating functions like
12715@cite{@t{deriv}(x^2, x)} to @cite{2 x}.
12716
12717@kindex m B
12718@pindex calc-bin-simplify-mode
12719The @kbd{m B} (@code{calc-bin-simplify-mode}) mode applies the default
12720simplifications to a result and then, if the result is an integer,
12721uses the @kbd{b c} (@code{calc-clip}) command to clip the integer according
12722to the current binary word size. @xref{Binary Functions}. Real numbers
12723are rounded to the nearest integer and then clipped; other kinds of
12724results (after the default simplifications) are left alone.
12725
12726@kindex m A
12727@pindex calc-alg-simplify-mode
12728The @kbd{m A} (@code{calc-alg-simplify-mode}) mode does algebraic
12729simplification; it applies all the default simplifications, and also
12730the more powerful (and slower) simplifications made by @kbd{a s}
12731(@code{calc-simplify}). @xref{Algebraic Simplifications}.
12732
12733@kindex m E
12734@pindex calc-ext-simplify-mode
12735The @kbd{m E} (@code{calc-ext-simplify-mode}) mode does ``extended''
12736algebraic simplification, as by the @kbd{a e} (@code{calc-simplify-extended})
12737command. @xref{Unsafe Simplifications}.
12738
12739@kindex m U
12740@pindex calc-units-simplify-mode
12741The @kbd{m U} (@code{calc-units-simplify-mode}) mode does units
12742simplification; it applies the command @kbd{u s}
12743(@code{calc-simplify-units}), which in turn
12744is a superset of @kbd{a s}. In this mode, variable names which
12745are identifiable as unit names (like @samp{mm} for ``millimeters'')
12746are simplified with their unit definitions in mind.@refill
12747
12748A common technique is to set the simplification mode down to the lowest
12749amount of simplification you will allow to be applied automatically, then
12750use manual commands like @kbd{a s} and @kbd{c c} (@code{calc-clean}) to
12751perform higher types of simplifications on demand. @xref{Algebraic
12752Definitions}, for another sample use of no-simplification mode.@refill
12753
12754@node Declarations, Display Modes, Simplification Modes, Mode Settings
12755@section Declarations
12756
12757@noindent
12758A @dfn{declaration} is a statement you make that promises you will
12759use a certain variable or function in a restricted way. This may
12760give Calc the freedom to do things that it couldn't do if it had to
12761take the fully general situation into account.
12762
12763@menu
12764* Declaration Basics::
12765* Kinds of Declarations::
12766* Functions for Declarations::
12767@end menu
12768
12769@node Declaration Basics, Kinds of Declarations, Declarations, Declarations
12770@subsection Declaration Basics
12771
12772@noindent
12773@kindex s d
12774@pindex calc-declare-variable
12775The @kbd{s d} (@code{calc-declare-variable}) command is the easiest
12776way to make a declaration for a variable. This command prompts for
12777the variable name, then prompts for the declaration. The default
12778at the declaration prompt is the previous declaration, if any.
12779You can edit this declaration, or press @kbd{C-k} to erase it and
12780type a new declaration. (Or, erase it and press @key{RET} to clear
12781the declaration, effectively ``undeclaring'' the variable.)
12782
12783A declaration is in general a vector of @dfn{type symbols} and
12784@dfn{range} values. If there is only one type symbol or range value,
12785you can write it directly rather than enclosing it in a vector.
5d67986c
RS
12786For example, @kbd{s d foo @key{RET} real @key{RET}} declares @code{foo} to
12787be a real number, and @kbd{s d bar @key{RET} [int, const, [1..6]] @key{RET}}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12788declares @code{bar} to be a constant integer between 1 and 6.
12789(Actually, you can omit the outermost brackets and Calc will
5d67986c 12790provide them for you: @kbd{s d bar @key{RET} int, const, [1..6] @key{RET}}.)
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12791
12792@cindex @code{Decls} variable
12793@vindex Decls
12794Declarations in Calc are kept in a special variable called @code{Decls}.
12795This variable encodes the set of all outstanding declarations in
12796the form of a matrix. Each row has two elements: A variable or
12797vector of variables declared by that row, and the declaration
12798specifier as described above. You can use the @kbd{s D} command to
12799edit this variable if you wish to see all the declarations at once.
12800@xref{Operations on Variables}, for a description of this command
12801and the @kbd{s p} command that allows you to save your declarations
12802permanently if you wish.
12803
12804Items being declared can also be function calls. The arguments in
12805the call are ignored; the effect is to say that this function returns
12806values of the declared type for any valid arguments. The @kbd{s d}
12807command declares only variables, so if you wish to make a function
12808declaration you will have to edit the @code{Decls} matrix yourself.
12809
12810For example, the declaration matrix
12811
d7b8e6c6 12812@smallexample
5d67986c 12813@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12814[ [ foo, real ]
12815 [ [j, k, n], int ]
12816 [ f(1,2,3), [0 .. inf) ] ]
d7b8e6c6 12817@end group
5d67986c 12818@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12819
12820@noindent
12821declares that @code{foo} represents a real number, @code{j}, @code{k}
12822and @code{n} represent integers, and the function @code{f} always
12823returns a real number in the interval shown.
12824
12825@vindex All
12826If there is a declaration for the variable @code{All}, then that
12827declaration applies to all variables that are not otherwise declared.
12828It does not apply to function names. For example, using the row
12829@samp{[All, real]} says that all your variables are real unless they
12830are explicitly declared without @code{real} in some other row.
12831The @kbd{s d} command declares @code{All} if you give a blank
12832response to the variable-name prompt.
12833
12834@node Kinds of Declarations, Functions for Declarations, Declaration Basics, Declarations
12835@subsection Kinds of Declarations
12836
12837@noindent
12838The type-specifier part of a declaration (that is, the second prompt
12839in the @kbd{s d} command) can be a type symbol, an interval, or a
12840vector consisting of zero or more type symbols followed by zero or
12841more intervals or numbers that represent the set of possible values
12842for the variable.
12843
d7b8e6c6 12844@smallexample
5d67986c 12845@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12846[ [ a, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] ]
12847 [ b, [1 .. 5] ]
12848 [ c, [int, 1 .. 5] ] ]
d7b8e6c6 12849@end group
5d67986c 12850@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12851
12852Here @code{a} is declared to contain one of the five integers shown;
12853@code{b} is any number in the interval from 1 to 5 (any real number
12854since we haven't specified), and @code{c} is any integer in that
12855interval. Thus the declarations for @code{a} and @code{c} are
12856nearly equivalent (see below).
12857
12858The type-specifier can be the empty vector @samp{[]} to say that
12859nothing is known about a given variable's value. This is the same
12860as not declaring the variable at all except that it overrides any
12861@code{All} declaration which would otherwise apply.
12862
12863The initial value of @code{Decls} is the empty vector @samp{[]}.
12864If @code{Decls} has no stored value or if the value stored in it
12865is not valid, it is ignored and there are no declarations as far
12866as Calc is concerned. (The @kbd{s d} command will replace such a
12867malformed value with a fresh empty matrix, @samp{[]}, before recording
12868the new declaration.) Unrecognized type symbols are ignored.
12869
12870The following type symbols describe what sorts of numbers will be
12871stored in a variable:
12872
12873@table @code
12874@item int
12875Integers.
12876@item numint
12877Numerical integers. (Integers or integer-valued floats.)
12878@item frac
12879Fractions. (Rational numbers which are not integers.)
12880@item rat
12881Rational numbers. (Either integers or fractions.)
12882@item float
12883Floating-point numbers.
12884@item real
12885Real numbers. (Integers, fractions, or floats. Actually,
12886intervals and error forms with real components also count as
12887reals here.)
12888@item pos
12889Positive real numbers. (Strictly greater than zero.)
12890@item nonneg
12891Nonnegative real numbers. (Greater than or equal to zero.)
12892@item number
12893Numbers. (Real or complex.)
12894@end table
12895
12896Calc uses this information to determine when certain simplifications
12897of formulas are safe. For example, @samp{(x^y)^z} cannot be
12898simplified to @samp{x^(y z)} in general; for example,
12899@samp{((-3)^2)^1:2} is 3, but @samp{(-3)^(2*1:2) = (-3)^1} is @i{-3}.
12900However, this simplification @emph{is} safe if @code{z} is known
12901to be an integer, or if @code{x} is known to be a nonnegative
12902real number. If you have given declarations that allow Calc to
12903deduce either of these facts, Calc will perform this simplification
12904of the formula.
12905
12906Calc can apply a certain amount of logic when using declarations.
12907For example, @samp{(x^y)^(2n+1)} will be simplified if @code{n}
12908has been declared @code{int}; Calc knows that an integer times an
12909integer, plus an integer, must always be an integer. (In fact,
12910Calc would simplify @samp{(-x)^(2n+1)} to @samp{-(x^(2n+1))} since
12911it is able to determine that @samp{2n+1} must be an odd integer.)
12912
12913Similarly, @samp{(abs(x)^y)^z} will be simplified to @samp{abs(x)^(y z)}
12914because Calc knows that the @code{abs} function always returns a
12915nonnegative real. If you had a @code{myabs} function that also had
12916this property, you could get Calc to recognize it by adding the row
12917@samp{[myabs(), nonneg]} to the @code{Decls} matrix.
12918
12919One instance of this simplification is @samp{sqrt(x^2)} (since the
12920@code{sqrt} function is effectively a one-half power). Normally
12921Calc leaves this formula alone. After the command
5d67986c
RS
12922@kbd{s d x @key{RET} real @key{RET}}, however, it can simplify the formula to
12923@samp{abs(x)}. And after @kbd{s d x @key{RET} nonneg @key{RET}}, Calc can
d7b8e6c6
EZ
12924simplify this formula all the way to @samp{x}.
12925
12926If there are any intervals or real numbers in the type specifier,
12927they comprise the set of possible values that the variable or
12928function being declared can have. In particular, the type symbol
12929@code{real} is effectively the same as the range @samp{[-inf .. inf]}
12930(note that infinity is included in the range of possible values);
12931@code{pos} is the same as @samp{(0 .. inf]}, and @code{nonneg} is
12932the same as @samp{[0 .. inf]}. Saying @samp{[real, [-5 .. 5]]} is
12933redundant because the fact that the variable is real can be
12934deduced just from the interval, but @samp{[int, [-5 .. 5]]} and
12935@samp{[rat, [-5 .. 5]]} are useful combinations.
12936
12937Note that the vector of intervals or numbers is in the same format
12938used by Calc's set-manipulation commands. @xref{Set Operations}.
12939
12940The type specifier @samp{[1, 2, 3]} is equivalent to
12941@samp{[numint, 1, 2, 3]}, @emph{not} to @samp{[int, 1, 2, 3]}.
12942In other words, the range of possible values means only that
12943the variable's value must be numerically equal to a number in
12944that range, but not that it must be equal in type as well.
12945Calc's set operations act the same way; @samp{in(2, [1., 2., 3.])}
12946and @samp{in(1.5, [1:2, 3:2, 5:2])} both report ``true.''
12947
12948If you use a conflicting combination of type specifiers, the
12949results are unpredictable. An example is @samp{[pos, [0 .. 5]]},
12950where the interval does not lie in the range described by the
12951type symbol.
12952
12953``Real'' declarations mostly affect simplifications involving powers
12954like the one described above. Another case where they are used
12955is in the @kbd{a P} command which returns a list of all roots of a
12956polynomial; if the variable has been declared real, only the real
12957roots (if any) will be included in the list.
12958
12959``Integer'' declarations are used for simplifications which are valid
12960only when certain values are integers (such as @samp{(x^y)^z}
12961shown above).
12962
12963Another command that makes use of declarations is @kbd{a s}, when
12964simplifying equations and inequalities. It will cancel @code{x}
12965from both sides of @samp{a x = b x} only if it is sure @code{x}
12966is non-zero, say, because it has a @code{pos} declaration.
12967To declare specifically that @code{x} is real and non-zero,
12968use @samp{[[-inf .. 0), (0 .. inf]]}. (There is no way in the
12969current notation to say that @code{x} is nonzero but not necessarily
12970real.) The @kbd{a e} command does ``unsafe'' simplifications,
12971including cancelling @samp{x} from the equation when @samp{x} is
12972not known to be nonzero.
12973
12974Another set of type symbols distinguish between scalars and vectors.
12975
12976@table @code
12977@item scalar
12978The value is not a vector.
12979@item vector
12980The value is a vector.
12981@item matrix
12982The value is a matrix (a rectangular vector of vectors).
12983@end table
12984
12985These type symbols can be combined with the other type symbols
12986described above; @samp{[int, matrix]} describes an object which
12987is a matrix of integers.
12988
12989Scalar/vector declarations are used to determine whether certain
12990algebraic operations are safe. For example, @samp{[a, b, c] + x}
12991is normally not simplified to @samp{[a + x, b + x, c + x]}, but
12992it will be if @code{x} has been declared @code{scalar}. On the
12993other hand, multiplication is usually assumed to be commutative,
12994but the terms in @samp{x y} will never be exchanged if both @code{x}
12995and @code{y} are known to be vectors or matrices. (Calc currently
12996never distinguishes between @code{vector} and @code{matrix}
12997declarations.)
12998
12999@xref{Matrix Mode}, for a discussion of ``matrix mode'' and
13000``scalar mode,'' which are similar to declaring @samp{[All, matrix]}
13001or @samp{[All, scalar]} but much more convenient.
13002
13003One more type symbol that is recognized is used with the @kbd{H a d}
13004command for taking total derivatives of a formula. @xref{Calculus}.
13005
13006@table @code
13007@item const
13008The value is a constant with respect to other variables.
13009@end table
13010
13011Calc does not check the declarations for a variable when you store
13012a value in it. However, storing @i{-3.5} in a variable that has
13013been declared @code{pos}, @code{int}, or @code{matrix} may have
13014unexpected effects; Calc may evaluate @samp{sqrt(x^2)} to @cite{3.5}
13015if it substitutes the value first, or to @cite{-3.5} if @code{x}
13016was declared @code{pos} and the formula @samp{sqrt(x^2)} is
13017simplified to @samp{x} before the value is substituted. Before
13018using a variable for a new purpose, it is best to use @kbd{s d}
13019or @kbd{s D} to check to make sure you don't still have an old
13020declaration for the variable that will conflict with its new meaning.
13021
13022@node Functions for Declarations, , Kinds of Declarations, Declarations
13023@subsection Functions for Declarations
13024
13025@noindent
13026Calc has a set of functions for accessing the current declarations
13027in a convenient manner. These functions return 1 if the argument
13028can be shown to have the specified property, or 0 if the argument
13029can be shown @emph{not} to have that property; otherwise they are
13030left unevaluated. These functions are suitable for use with rewrite
13031rules (@pxref{Conditional Rewrite Rules}) or programming constructs
13032(@pxref{Conditionals in Macros}). They can be entered only using
13033algebraic notation. @xref{Logical Operations}, for functions
13034that perform other tests not related to declarations.
13035
13036For example, @samp{dint(17)} returns 1 because 17 is an integer, as
13037do @samp{dint(n)} and @samp{dint(2 n - 3)} if @code{n} has been declared
13038@code{int}, but @samp{dint(2.5)} and @samp{dint(n + 0.5)} return 0.
13039Calc consults knowledge of its own built-in functions as well as your
13040own declarations: @samp{dint(floor(x))} returns 1.
13041
5d67986c
RS
13042@ignore
13043@starindex
13044@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 13045@tindex dint
5d67986c
RS
13046@ignore
13047@starindex
13048@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 13049@tindex dnumint
5d67986c
RS
13050@ignore
13051@starindex
13052@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13053@tindex dnatnum
13054The @code{dint} function checks if its argument is an integer.
13055The @code{dnatnum} function checks if its argument is a natural
13056number, i.e., a nonnegative integer. The @code{dnumint} function
13057checks if its argument is numerically an integer, i.e., either an
13058integer or an integer-valued float. Note that these and the other
13059data type functions also accept vectors or matrices composed of
13060suitable elements, and that real infinities @samp{inf} and @samp{-inf}
13061are considered to be integers for the purposes of these functions.
13062
5d67986c
RS
13063@ignore
13064@starindex
13065@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13066@tindex drat
13067The @code{drat} function checks if its argument is rational, i.e.,
13068an integer or fraction. Infinities count as rational, but intervals
13069and error forms do not.
13070
5d67986c
RS
13071@ignore
13072@starindex
13073@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13074@tindex dreal
13075The @code{dreal} function checks if its argument is real. This
13076includes integers, fractions, floats, real error forms, and intervals.
13077
5d67986c
RS
13078@ignore
13079@starindex
13080@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13081@tindex dimag
13082The @code{dimag} function checks if its argument is imaginary,
13083i.e., is mathematically equal to a real number times @cite{i}.
13084
5d67986c
RS
13085@ignore
13086@starindex
13087@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 13088@tindex dpos
5d67986c
RS
13089@ignore
13090@starindex
13091@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 13092@tindex dneg
5d67986c
RS
13093@ignore
13094@starindex
13095@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13096@tindex dnonneg
13097The @code{dpos} function checks for positive (but nonzero) reals.
13098The @code{dneg} function checks for negative reals. The @code{dnonneg}
13099function checks for nonnegative reals, i.e., reals greater than or
13100equal to zero. Note that the @kbd{a s} command can simplify an
13101expression like @cite{x > 0} to 1 or 0 using @code{dpos}, and that
13102@kbd{a s} is effectively applied to all conditions in rewrite rules,
13103so the actual functions @code{dpos}, @code{dneg}, and @code{dnonneg}
13104are rarely necessary.
13105
5d67986c
RS
13106@ignore
13107@starindex
13108@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13109@tindex dnonzero
13110The @code{dnonzero} function checks that its argument is nonzero.
13111This includes all nonzero real or complex numbers, all intervals that
13112do not include zero, all nonzero modulo forms, vectors all of whose
13113elements are nonzero, and variables or formulas whose values can be
13114deduced to be nonzero. It does not include error forms, since they
13115represent values which could be anything including zero. (This is
13116also the set of objects considered ``true'' in conditional contexts.)
13117
5d67986c
RS
13118@ignore
13119@starindex
13120@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 13121@tindex deven
5d67986c
RS
13122@ignore
13123@starindex
13124@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13125@tindex dodd
13126The @code{deven} function returns 1 if its argument is known to be
13127an even integer (or integer-valued float); it returns 0 if its argument
13128is known not to be even (because it is known to be odd or a non-integer).
13129The @kbd{a s} command uses this to simplify a test of the form
13130@samp{x % 2 = 0}. There is also an analogous @code{dodd} function.
13131
5d67986c
RS
13132@ignore
13133@starindex
13134@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13135@tindex drange
13136The @code{drange} function returns a set (an interval or a vector
13137of intervals and/or numbers; @pxref{Set Operations}) that describes
13138the set of possible values of its argument. If the argument is
13139a variable or a function with a declaration, the range is copied
13140from the declaration. Otherwise, the possible signs of the
13141expression are determined using a method similar to @code{dpos},
13142etc., and a suitable set like @samp{[0 .. inf]} is returned. If
13143the expression is not provably real, the @code{drange} function
13144remains unevaluated.
13145
5d67986c
RS
13146@ignore
13147@starindex
13148@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13149@tindex dscalar
13150The @code{dscalar} function returns 1 if its argument is provably
13151scalar, or 0 if its argument is provably non-scalar. It is left
13152unevaluated if this cannot be determined. (If matrix mode or scalar
13153mode are in effect, this function returns 1 or 0, respectively,
13154if it has no other information.) When Calc interprets a condition
13155(say, in a rewrite rule) it considers an unevaluated formula to be
13156``false.'' Thus, @samp{dscalar(a)} is ``true'' only if @code{a} is
13157provably scalar, and @samp{!dscalar(a)} is ``true'' only if @code{a}
13158is provably non-scalar; both are ``false'' if there is insufficient
13159information to tell.
13160
13161@node Display Modes, Language Modes, Declarations, Mode Settings
13162@section Display Modes
13163
13164@noindent
13165The commands in this section are two-key sequences beginning with the
13166@kbd{d} prefix. The @kbd{d l} (@code{calc-line-numbering}) and @kbd{d b}
13167(@code{calc-line-breaking}) commands are described elsewhere;
13168@pxref{Stack Basics} and @pxref{Normal Language Modes}, respectively.
13169Display formats for vectors and matrices are also covered elsewhere;
13170@pxref{Vector and Matrix Formats}.@refill
13171
13172One thing all display modes have in common is their treatment of the
13173@kbd{H} prefix. This prefix causes any mode command that would normally
13174refresh the stack to leave the stack display alone. The word ``Dirty''
13175will appear in the mode line when Calc thinks the stack display may not
13176reflect the latest mode settings.
13177
5d67986c 13178@kindex d @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 13179@pindex calc-refresh-top
5d67986c 13180The @kbd{d @key{RET}} (@code{calc-refresh-top}) command reformats the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13181top stack entry according to all the current modes. Positive prefix
13182arguments reformat the top @var{n} entries; negative prefix arguments
13183reformat the specified entry, and a prefix of zero is equivalent to
5d67986c
RS
13184@kbd{d @key{SPC}} (@code{calc-refresh}), which reformats the entire stack.
13185For example, @kbd{H d s M-2 d @key{RET}} changes to scientific notation
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13186but reformats only the top two stack entries in the new mode.
13187
13188The @kbd{I} prefix has another effect on the display modes. The mode
13189is set only temporarily; the top stack entry is reformatted according
13190to that mode, then the original mode setting is restored. In other
5d67986c 13191words, @kbd{I d s} is equivalent to @kbd{H d s d @key{RET} H d (@var{old mode})}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13192
13193@menu
13194* Radix Modes::
13195* Grouping Digits::
13196* Float Formats::
13197* Complex Formats::
13198* Fraction Formats::
13199* HMS Formats::
13200* Date Formats::
13201* Truncating the Stack::
13202* Justification::
13203* Labels::
13204@end menu
13205
13206@node Radix Modes, Grouping Digits, Display Modes, Display Modes
13207@subsection Radix Modes
13208
13209@noindent
13210@cindex Radix display
13211@cindex Non-decimal numbers
13212@cindex Decimal and non-decimal numbers
13213Calc normally displays numbers in decimal (@dfn{base-10} or @dfn{radix-10})
13214notation. Calc can actually display in any radix from two (binary) to 36.
13215When the radix is above 10, the letters @code{A} to @code{Z} are used as
13216digits. When entering such a number, letter keys are interpreted as
13217potential digits rather than terminating numeric entry mode.
13218
13219@kindex d 2
13220@kindex d 8
13221@kindex d 6
13222@kindex d 0
13223@cindex Hexadecimal integers
13224@cindex Octal integers
13225The key sequences @kbd{d 2}, @kbd{d 8}, @kbd{d 6}, and @kbd{d 0} select
13226binary, octal, hexadecimal, and decimal as the current display radix,
13227respectively. Numbers can always be entered in any radix, though the
13228current radix is used as a default if you press @kbd{#} without any initial
13229digits. A number entered without a @kbd{#} is @emph{always} interpreted
13230as decimal.@refill
13231
13232@kindex d r
13233@pindex calc-radix
13234To set the radix generally, use @kbd{d r} (@code{calc-radix}) and enter
13235an integer from 2 to 36. You can specify the radix as a numeric prefix
13236argument; otherwise you will be prompted for it.
13237
13238@kindex d z
13239@pindex calc-leading-zeros
13240@cindex Leading zeros
13241Integers normally are displayed with however many digits are necessary to
13242represent the integer and no more. The @kbd{d z} (@code{calc-leading-zeros})
13243command causes integers to be padded out with leading zeros according to the
13244current binary word size. (@xref{Binary Functions}, for a discussion of
13245word size.) If the absolute value of the word size is @cite{w}, all integers
13246are displayed with at least enough digits to represent @c{$2^w-1$}
13247@cite{(2^w)-1} in the
13248current radix. (Larger integers will still be displayed in their entirety.)
13249
13250@node Grouping Digits, Float Formats, Radix Modes, Display Modes
13251@subsection Grouping Digits
13252
13253@noindent
13254@kindex d g
13255@pindex calc-group-digits
13256@cindex Grouping digits
13257@cindex Digit grouping
13258Long numbers can be hard to read if they have too many digits. For
13259example, the factorial of 30 is 33 digits long! Press @kbd{d g}
13260(@code{calc-group-digits}) to enable @dfn{grouping} mode, in which digits
13261are displayed in clumps of 3 or 4 (depending on the current radix)
13262separated by commas.
13263
13264The @kbd{d g} command toggles grouping on and off.
13265With a numerix prefix of 0, this command displays the current state of
13266the grouping flag; with an argument of minus one it disables grouping;
13267with a positive argument @cite{N} it enables grouping on every @cite{N}
13268digits. For floating-point numbers, grouping normally occurs only
13269before the decimal point. A negative prefix argument @cite{-N} enables
13270grouping every @cite{N} digits both before and after the decimal point.@refill
13271
13272@kindex d ,
13273@pindex calc-group-char
13274The @kbd{d ,} (@code{calc-group-char}) command allows you to choose any
13275character as the grouping separator. The default is the comma character.
13276If you find it difficult to read vectors of large integers grouped with
13277commas, you may wish to use spaces or some other character instead.
13278This command takes the next character you type, whatever it is, and
13279uses it as the digit separator. As a special case, @kbd{d , \} selects
13280@samp{\,} (@TeX{}'s thin-space symbol) as the digit separator.
13281
13282Please note that grouped numbers will not generally be parsed correctly
13283if re-read in textual form, say by the use of @kbd{M-# y} and @kbd{M-# g}.
13284(@xref{Kill and Yank}, for details on these commands.) One exception is
13285the @samp{\,} separator, which doesn't interfere with parsing because it
13286is ignored by @TeX{} language mode.
13287
13288@node Float Formats, Complex Formats, Grouping Digits, Display Modes
13289@subsection Float Formats
13290
13291@noindent
13292Floating-point quantities are normally displayed in standard decimal
13293form, with scientific notation used if the exponent is especially high
13294or low. All significant digits are normally displayed. The commands
13295in this section allow you to choose among several alternative display
13296formats for floats.
13297
13298@kindex d n
13299@pindex calc-normal-notation
13300The @kbd{d n} (@code{calc-normal-notation}) command selects the normal
13301display format. All significant figures in a number are displayed.
13302With a positive numeric prefix, numbers are rounded if necessary to
13303that number of significant digits. With a negative numerix prefix,
13304the specified number of significant digits less than the current
13305precision is used. (Thus @kbd{C-u -2 d n} displays 10 digits if the
13306current precision is 12.)
13307
13308@kindex d f
13309@pindex calc-fix-notation
13310The @kbd{d f} (@code{calc-fix-notation}) command selects fixed-point
13311notation. The numeric argument is the number of digits after the
13312decimal point, zero or more. This format will relax into scientific
13313notation if a nonzero number would otherwise have been rounded all the
13314way to zero. Specifying a negative number of digits is the same as
13315for a positive number, except that small nonzero numbers will be rounded
13316to zero rather than switching to scientific notation.
13317
13318@kindex d s
13319@pindex calc-sci-notation
13320@cindex Scientific notation, display of
13321The @kbd{d s} (@code{calc-sci-notation}) command selects scientific
13322notation. A positive argument sets the number of significant figures
13323displayed, of which one will be before and the rest after the decimal
13324point. A negative argument works the same as for @kbd{d n} format.
13325The default is to display all significant digits.
13326
13327@kindex d e
13328@pindex calc-eng-notation
13329@cindex Engineering notation, display of
13330The @kbd{d e} (@code{calc-eng-notation}) command selects engineering
13331notation. This is similar to scientific notation except that the
13332exponent is rounded down to a multiple of three, with from one to three
13333digits before the decimal point. An optional numeric prefix sets the
13334number of significant digits to display, as for @kbd{d s}.
13335
13336It is important to distinguish between the current @emph{precision} and
13337the current @emph{display format}. After the commands @kbd{C-u 10 p}
13338and @kbd{C-u 6 d n} the Calculator computes all results to ten
13339significant figures but displays only six. (In fact, intermediate
13340calculations are often carried to one or two more significant figures,
13341but values placed on the stack will be rounded down to ten figures.)
13342Numbers are never actually rounded to the display precision for storage,
13343except by commands like @kbd{C-k} and @kbd{M-# y} which operate on the
13344actual displayed text in the Calculator buffer.
13345
13346@kindex d .
13347@pindex calc-point-char
13348The @kbd{d .} (@code{calc-point-char}) command selects the character used
13349as a decimal point. Normally this is a period; users in some countries
13350may wish to change this to a comma. Note that this is only a display
13351style; on entry, periods must always be used to denote floating-point
13352numbers, and commas to separate elements in a list.
13353
13354@node Complex Formats, Fraction Formats, Float Formats, Display Modes
13355@subsection Complex Formats
13356
13357@noindent
13358@kindex d c
13359@pindex calc-complex-notation
13360There are three supported notations for complex numbers in rectangular
13361form. The default is as a pair of real numbers enclosed in parentheses
13362and separated by a comma: @samp{(a,b)}. The @kbd{d c}
13363(@code{calc-complex-notation}) command selects this style.@refill
13364
13365@kindex d i
13366@pindex calc-i-notation
13367@kindex d j
13368@pindex calc-j-notation
13369The other notations are @kbd{d i} (@code{calc-i-notation}), in which
13370numbers are displayed in @samp{a+bi} form, and @kbd{d j}
13371(@code{calc-j-notation}) which displays the form @samp{a+bj} preferred
13372in some disciplines.@refill
13373
13374@cindex @code{i} variable
13375@vindex i
13376Complex numbers are normally entered in @samp{(a,b)} format.
13377If you enter @samp{2+3i} as an algebraic formula, it will be stored as
13378the formula @samp{2 + 3 * i}. However, if you use @kbd{=} to evaluate
13379this formula and you have not changed the variable @samp{i}, the @samp{i}
13380will be interpreted as @samp{(0,1)} and the formula will be simplified
13381to @samp{(2,3)}. Other commands (like @code{calc-sin}) will @emph{not}
13382interpret the formula @samp{2 + 3 * i} as a complex number.
13383@xref{Variables}, under ``special constants.''@refill
13384
13385@node Fraction Formats, HMS Formats, Complex Formats, Display Modes
13386@subsection Fraction Formats
13387
13388@noindent
13389@kindex d o
13390@pindex calc-over-notation
13391Display of fractional numbers is controlled by the @kbd{d o}
13392(@code{calc-over-notation}) command. By default, a number like
13393eight thirds is displayed in the form @samp{8:3}. The @kbd{d o} command
13394prompts for a one- or two-character format. If you give one character,
13395that character is used as the fraction separator. Common separators are
13396@samp{:} and @samp{/}. (During input of numbers, the @kbd{:} key must be
13397used regardless of the display format; in particular, the @kbd{/} is used
13398for RPN-style division, @emph{not} for entering fractions.)
13399
13400If you give two characters, fractions use ``integer-plus-fractional-part''
13401notation. For example, the format @samp{+/} would display eight thirds
13402as @samp{2+2/3}. If two colons are present in a number being entered,
13403the number is interpreted in this form (so that the entries @kbd{2:2:3}
13404and @kbd{8:3} are equivalent).
13405
13406It is also possible to follow the one- or two-character format with
13407a number. For example: @samp{:10} or @samp{+/3}. In this case,
13408Calc adjusts all fractions that are displayed to have the specified
13409denominator, if possible. Otherwise it adjusts the denominator to
13410be a multiple of the specified value. For example, in @samp{:6} mode
13411the fraction @cite{1:6} will be unaffected, but @cite{2:3} will be
13412displayed as @cite{4:6}, @cite{1:2} will be displayed as @cite{3:6},
13413and @cite{1:8} will be displayed as @cite{3:24}. Integers are also
13414affected by this mode: 3 is displayed as @cite{18:6}. Note that the
13415format @samp{:1} writes fractions the same as @samp{:}, but it writes
13416integers as @cite{n:1}.
13417
13418The fraction format does not affect the way fractions or integers are
13419stored, only the way they appear on the screen. The fraction format
13420never affects floats.
13421
13422@node HMS Formats, Date Formats, Fraction Formats, Display Modes
13423@subsection HMS Formats
13424
13425@noindent
13426@kindex d h
13427@pindex calc-hms-notation
13428The @kbd{d h} (@code{calc-hms-notation}) command controls the display of
13429HMS (hours-minutes-seconds) forms. It prompts for a string which
13430consists basically of an ``hours'' marker, optional punctuation, a
13431``minutes'' marker, more optional punctuation, and a ``seconds'' marker.
13432Punctuation is zero or more spaces, commas, or semicolons. The hours
13433marker is one or more non-punctuation characters. The minutes and
13434seconds markers must be single non-punctuation characters.
13435
13436The default HMS format is @samp{@@ ' "}, producing HMS values of the form
13437@samp{23@@ 30' 15.75"}. The format @samp{deg, ms} would display this same
13438value as @samp{23deg, 30m15.75s}. During numeric entry, the @kbd{h} or @kbd{o}
13439keys are recognized as synonyms for @kbd{@@} regardless of display format.
13440The @kbd{m} and @kbd{s} keys are recognized as synonyms for @kbd{'} and
13441@kbd{"}, respectively, but only if an @kbd{@@} (or @kbd{h} or @kbd{o}) has
13442already been typed; otherwise, they have their usual meanings
13443(@kbd{m-} prefix and @kbd{s-} prefix). Thus, @kbd{5 "}, @kbd{0 @@ 5 "}, and
13444@kbd{0 h 5 s} are some of the ways to enter the quantity ``five seconds.''
13445The @kbd{'} key is recognized as ``minutes'' only if @kbd{@@} (or @kbd{h} or
13446@kbd{o}) has already been pressed; otherwise it means to switch to algebraic
13447entry.
13448
13449@node Date Formats, Truncating the Stack, HMS Formats, Display Modes
13450@subsection Date Formats
13451
13452@noindent
13453@kindex d d
13454@pindex calc-date-notation
13455The @kbd{d d} (@code{calc-date-notation}) command controls the display
13456of date forms (@pxref{Date Forms}). It prompts for a string which
13457contains letters that represent the various parts of a date and time.
13458To show which parts should be omitted when the form represents a pure
13459date with no time, parts of the string can be enclosed in @samp{< >}
13460marks. If you don't include @samp{< >} markers in the format, Calc
13461guesses at which parts, if any, should be omitted when formatting
13462pure dates.
13463
13464The default format is: @samp{<H:mm:SSpp >Www Mmm D, YYYY}.
13465An example string in this format is @samp{3:32pm Wed Jan 9, 1991}.
13466If you enter a blank format string, this default format is
13467reestablished.
13468
13469Calc uses @samp{< >} notation for nameless functions as well as for
13470dates. @xref{Specifying Operators}. To avoid confusion with nameless
13471functions, your date formats should avoid using the @samp{#} character.
13472
13473@menu
13474* Date Formatting Codes::
13475* Free-Form Dates::
13476* Standard Date Formats::
13477@end menu
13478
13479@node Date Formatting Codes, Free-Form Dates, Date Formats, Date Formats
13480@subsubsection Date Formatting Codes
13481
13482@noindent
13483When displaying a date, the current date format is used. All
13484characters except for letters and @samp{<} and @samp{>} are
13485copied literally when dates are formatted. The portion between
13486@samp{< >} markers is omitted for pure dates, or included for
13487date/time forms. Letters are interpreted according to the table
13488below.
13489
13490When dates are read in during algebraic entry, Calc first tries to
13491match the input string to the current format either with or without
13492the time part. The punctuation characters (including spaces) must
13493match exactly; letter fields must correspond to suitable text in
13494the input. If this doesn't work, Calc checks if the input is a
13495simple number; if so, the number is interpreted as a number of days
13496since Jan 1, 1 AD. Otherwise, Calc tries a much more relaxed and
13497flexible algorithm which is described in the next section.
13498
13499Weekday names are ignored during reading.
13500
13501Two-digit year numbers are interpreted as lying in the range
13502from 1941 to 2039. Years outside that range are always
13503entered and displayed in full. Year numbers with a leading
13504@samp{+} sign are always interpreted exactly, allowing the
13505entry and display of the years 1 through 99 AD.
13506
13507Here is a complete list of the formatting codes for dates:
13508
13509@table @asis
13510@item Y
13511Year: ``91'' for 1991, ``7'' for 2007, ``+23'' for 23 AD.
13512@item YY
13513Year: ``91'' for 1991, ``07'' for 2007, ``+23'' for 23 AD.
13514@item BY
13515Year: ``91'' for 1991, `` 7'' for 2007, ``+23'' for 23 AD.
13516@item YYY
13517Year: ``1991'' for 1991, ``23'' for 23 AD.
13518@item YYYY
13519Year: ``1991'' for 1991, ``+23'' for 23 AD.
13520@item aa
13521Year: ``ad'' or blank.
13522@item AA
13523Year: ``AD'' or blank.
13524@item aaa
13525Year: ``ad '' or blank. (Note trailing space.)
13526@item AAA
13527Year: ``AD '' or blank.
13528@item aaaa
13529Year: ``a.d.'' or blank.
13530@item AAAA
13531Year: ``A.D.'' or blank.
13532@item bb
13533Year: ``bc'' or blank.
13534@item BB
13535Year: ``BC'' or blank.
13536@item bbb
13537Year: `` bc'' or blank. (Note leading space.)
13538@item BBB
13539Year: `` BC'' or blank.
13540@item bbbb
13541Year: ``b.c.'' or blank.
13542@item BBBB
13543Year: ``B.C.'' or blank.
13544@item M
13545Month: ``8'' for August.
13546@item MM
13547Month: ``08'' for August.
13548@item BM
13549Month: `` 8'' for August.
13550@item MMM
13551Month: ``AUG'' for August.
13552@item Mmm
13553Month: ``Aug'' for August.
13554@item mmm
13555Month: ``aug'' for August.
13556@item MMMM
13557Month: ``AUGUST'' for August.
13558@item Mmmm
13559Month: ``August'' for August.
13560@item D
13561Day: ``7'' for 7th day of month.
13562@item DD
13563Day: ``07'' for 7th day of month.
13564@item BD
13565Day: `` 7'' for 7th day of month.
13566@item W
13567Weekday: ``0'' for Sunday, ``6'' for Saturday.
13568@item WWW
13569Weekday: ``SUN'' for Sunday.
13570@item Www
13571Weekday: ``Sun'' for Sunday.
13572@item www
13573Weekday: ``sun'' for Sunday.
13574@item WWWW
13575Weekday: ``SUNDAY'' for Sunday.
13576@item Wwww
13577Weekday: ``Sunday'' for Sunday.
13578@item d
13579Day of year: ``34'' for Feb. 3.
13580@item ddd
13581Day of year: ``034'' for Feb. 3.
13582@item bdd
13583Day of year: `` 34'' for Feb. 3.
13584@item h
13585Hour: ``5'' for 5 AM; ``17'' for 5 PM.
13586@item hh
13587Hour: ``05'' for 5 AM; ``17'' for 5 PM.
13588@item bh
13589Hour: `` 5'' for 5 AM; ``17'' for 5 PM.
13590@item H
13591Hour: ``5'' for 5 AM and 5 PM.
13592@item HH
13593Hour: ``05'' for 5 AM and 5 PM.
13594@item BH
13595Hour: `` 5'' for 5 AM and 5 PM.
13596@item p
13597AM/PM: ``a'' or ``p''.
13598@item P
13599AM/PM: ``A'' or ``P''.
13600@item pp
13601AM/PM: ``am'' or ``pm''.
13602@item PP
13603AM/PM: ``AM'' or ``PM''.
13604@item pppp
13605AM/PM: ``a.m.'' or ``p.m.''.
13606@item PPPP
13607AM/PM: ``A.M.'' or ``P.M.''.
13608@item m
13609Minutes: ``7'' for 7.
13610@item mm
13611Minutes: ``07'' for 7.
13612@item bm
13613Minutes: `` 7'' for 7.
13614@item s
13615Seconds: ``7'' for 7; ``7.23'' for 7.23.
13616@item ss
13617Seconds: ``07'' for 7; ``07.23'' for 7.23.
13618@item bs
13619Seconds: `` 7'' for 7; `` 7.23'' for 7.23.
13620@item SS
13621Optional seconds: ``07'' for 7; blank for 0.
13622@item BS
13623Optional seconds: `` 7'' for 7; blank for 0.
13624@item N
13625Numeric date/time: ``726842.25'' for 6:00am Wed Jan 9, 1991.
13626@item n
13627Numeric date: ``726842'' for any time on Wed Jan 9, 1991.
13628@item J
13629Julian date/time: ``2448265.75'' for 6:00am Wed Jan 9, 1991.
13630@item j
13631Julian date: ``2448266'' for any time on Wed Jan 9, 1991.
13632@item U
13633Unix time: ``663400800'' for 6:00am Wed Jan 9, 1991.
13634@item X
13635Brackets suppression. An ``X'' at the front of the format
13636causes the surrounding @w{@samp{< >}} delimiters to be omitted
13637when formatting dates. Note that the brackets are still
13638required for algebraic entry.
13639@end table
13640
13641If ``SS'' or ``BS'' (optional seconds) is preceded by a colon, the
13642colon is also omitted if the seconds part is zero.
13643
13644If ``bb,'' ``bbb'' or ``bbbb'' or their upper-case equivalents
13645appear in the format, then negative year numbers are displayed
13646without a minus sign. Note that ``aa'' and ``bb'' are mutually
13647exclusive. Some typical usages would be @samp{YYYY AABB};
13648@samp{AAAYYYYBBB}; @samp{YYYYBBB}.
13649
13650The formats ``YY,'' ``YYYY,'' ``MM,'' ``DD,'' ``ddd,'' ``hh,'' ``HH,''
13651``mm,'' ``ss,'' and ``SS'' actually match any number of digits during
13652reading unless several of these codes are strung together with no
13653punctuation in between, in which case the input must have exactly as
13654many digits as there are letters in the format.
13655
13656The ``j,'' ``J,'' and ``U'' formats do not make any time zone
13657adjustment. They effectively use @samp{julian(x,0)} and
13658@samp{unixtime(x,0)} to make the conversion; @pxref{Date Arithmetic}.
13659
13660@node Free-Form Dates, Standard Date Formats, Date Formatting Codes, Date Formats
13661@subsubsection Free-Form Dates
13662
13663@noindent
13664When reading a date form during algebraic entry, Calc falls back
13665on the algorithm described here if the input does not exactly
13666match the current date format. This algorithm generally
13667``does the right thing'' and you don't have to worry about it,
13668but it is described here in full detail for the curious.
13669
13670Calc does not distinguish between upper- and lower-case letters
13671while interpreting dates.
13672
13673First, the time portion, if present, is located somewhere in the
13674text and then removed. The remaining text is then interpreted as
13675the date.
13676
13677A time is of the form @samp{hh:mm:ss}, possibly with the seconds
13678part omitted and possibly with an AM/PM indicator added to indicate
1367912-hour time. If the AM/PM is present, the minutes may also be
13680omitted. The AM/PM part may be any of the words @samp{am},
13681@samp{pm}, @samp{noon}, or @samp{midnight}; each of these may be
13682abbreviated to one letter, and the alternate forms @samp{a.m.},
13683@samp{p.m.}, and @samp{mid} are also understood. Obviously
13684@samp{noon} and @samp{midnight} are allowed only on 12:00:00.
13685The words @samp{noon}, @samp{mid}, and @samp{midnight} are also
13686recognized with no number attached.
13687
13688If there is no AM/PM indicator, the time is interpreted in 24-hour
13689format.
13690
13691To read the date portion, all words and numbers are isolated
13692from the string; other characters are ignored. All words must
13693be either month names or day-of-week names (the latter of which
13694are ignored). Names can be written in full or as three-letter
13695abbreviations.
13696
13697Large numbers, or numbers with @samp{+} or @samp{-} signs,
13698are interpreted as years. If one of the other numbers is
13699greater than 12, then that must be the day and the remaining
13700number in the input is therefore the month. Otherwise, Calc
13701assumes the month, day and year are in the same order that they
13702appear in the current date format. If the year is omitted, the
13703current year is taken from the system clock.
13704
13705If there are too many or too few numbers, or any unrecognizable
13706words, then the input is rejected.
13707
13708If there are any large numbers (of five digits or more) other than
13709the year, they are ignored on the assumption that they are something
13710like Julian dates that were included along with the traditional
13711date components when the date was formatted.
13712
13713One of the words @samp{ad}, @samp{a.d.}, @samp{bc}, or @samp{b.c.}
13714may optionally be used; the latter two are equivalent to a
13715minus sign on the year value.
13716
13717If you always enter a four-digit year, and use a name instead
13718of a number for the month, there is no danger of ambiguity.
13719
13720@node Standard Date Formats, , Free-Form Dates, Date Formats
13721@subsubsection Standard Date Formats
13722
13723@noindent
13724There are actually ten standard date formats, numbered 0 through 9.
13725Entering a blank line at the @kbd{d d} command's prompt gives
13726you format number 1, Calc's usual format. You can enter any digit
13727to select the other formats.
13728
13729To create your own standard date formats, give a numeric prefix
13730argument from 0 to 9 to the @w{@kbd{d d}} command. The format you
13731enter will be recorded as the new standard format of that
13732number, as well as becoming the new current date format.
13733You can save your formats permanently with the @w{@kbd{m m}}
13734command (@pxref{Mode Settings}).
13735
13736@table @asis
13737@item 0
13738@samp{N} (Numerical format)
13739@item 1
13740@samp{<H:mm:SSpp >Www Mmm D, YYYY} (American format)
13741@item 2
13742@samp{D Mmm YYYY<, h:mm:SS>} (European format)
13743@item 3
13744@samp{Www Mmm BD< hh:mm:ss> YYYY} (Unix written date format)
13745@item 4
13746@samp{M/D/Y< H:mm:SSpp>} (American slashed format)
13747@item 5
13748@samp{D.M.Y< h:mm:SS>} (European dotted format)
13749@item 6
13750@samp{M-D-Y< H:mm:SSpp>} (American dashed format)
13751@item 7
13752@samp{D-M-Y< h:mm:SS>} (European dashed format)
13753@item 8
13754@samp{j<, h:mm:ss>} (Julian day plus time)
13755@item 9
13756@samp{YYddd< hh:mm:ss>} (Year-day format)
13757@end table
13758
13759@node Truncating the Stack, Justification, Date Formats, Display Modes
13760@subsection Truncating the Stack
13761
13762@noindent
13763@kindex d t
13764@pindex calc-truncate-stack
13765@cindex Truncating the stack
13766@cindex Narrowing the stack
13767The @kbd{d t} (@code{calc-truncate-stack}) command moves the @samp{.}@:
13768line that marks the top-of-stack up or down in the Calculator buffer.
13769The number right above that line is considered to the be at the top of
13770the stack. Any numbers below that line are ``hidden'' from all stack
13771operations. This is similar to the Emacs ``narrowing'' feature, except
13772that the values below the @samp{.} are @emph{visible}, just temporarily
13773frozen. This feature allows you to keep several independent calculations
13774running at once in different parts of the stack, or to apply a certain
13775command to an element buried deep in the stack.@refill
13776
13777Pressing @kbd{d t} by itself moves the @samp{.} to the line the cursor
13778is on. Thus, this line and all those below it become hidden. To un-hide
13779these lines, move down to the end of the buffer and press @w{@kbd{d t}}.
13780With a positive numeric prefix argument @cite{n}, @kbd{d t} hides the
13781bottom @cite{n} values in the buffer. With a negative argument, it hides
13782all but the top @cite{n} values. With an argument of zero, it hides zero
13783values, i.e., moves the @samp{.} all the way down to the bottom.@refill
13784
13785@kindex d [
13786@pindex calc-truncate-up
13787@kindex d ]
13788@pindex calc-truncate-down
13789The @kbd{d [} (@code{calc-truncate-up}) and @kbd{d ]}
13790(@code{calc-truncate-down}) commands move the @samp{.} up or down one
13791line at a time (or several lines with a prefix argument).@refill
13792
13793@node Justification, Labels, Truncating the Stack, Display Modes
13794@subsection Justification
13795
13796@noindent
13797@kindex d <
13798@pindex calc-left-justify
13799@kindex d =
13800@pindex calc-center-justify
13801@kindex d >
13802@pindex calc-right-justify
13803Values on the stack are normally left-justified in the window. You can
13804control this arrangement by typing @kbd{d <} (@code{calc-left-justify}),
13805@kbd{d >} (@code{calc-right-justify}), or @kbd{d =}
13806(@code{calc-center-justify}). For example, in right-justification mode,
13807stack entries are displayed flush-right against the right edge of the
13808window.@refill
13809
13810If you change the width of the Calculator window you may have to type
5d67986c 13811@kbd{d @key{SPC}} (@code{calc-refresh}) to re-align right-justified or centered
d7b8e6c6
EZ
13812text.
13813
13814Right-justification is especially useful together with fixed-point
13815notation (see @code{d f}; @code{calc-fix-notation}). With these modes
13816together, the decimal points on numbers will always line up.
13817
13818With a numeric prefix argument, the justification commands give you
13819a little extra control over the display. The argument specifies the
13820horizontal ``origin'' of a display line. It is also possible to
13821specify a maximum line width using the @kbd{d b} command (@pxref{Normal
13822Language Modes}). For reference, the precise rules for formatting and
13823breaking lines are given below. Notice that the interaction between
13824origin and line width is slightly different in each justification
13825mode.
13826
13827In left-justified mode, the line is indented by a number of spaces
13828given by the origin (default zero). If the result is longer than the
13829maximum line width, if given, or too wide to fit in the Calc window
13830otherwise, then it is broken into lines which will fit; each broken
13831line is indented to the origin.
13832
13833In right-justified mode, lines are shifted right so that the rightmost
13834character is just before the origin, or just before the current
13835window width if no origin was specified. If the line is too long
13836for this, then it is broken; the current line width is used, if
13837specified, or else the origin is used as a width if that is
13838specified, or else the line is broken to fit in the window.
13839
13840In centering mode, the origin is the column number of the center of
13841each stack entry. If a line width is specified, lines will not be
13842allowed to go past that width; Calc will either indent less or
13843break the lines if necessary. If no origin is specified, half the
13844line width or Calc window width is used.
13845
13846Note that, in each case, if line numbering is enabled the display
13847is indented an additional four spaces to make room for the line
13848number. The width of the line number is taken into account when
13849positioning according to the current Calc window width, but not
13850when positioning by explicit origins and widths. In the latter
13851case, the display is formatted as specified, and then uniformly
13852shifted over four spaces to fit the line numbers.
13853
13854@node Labels, , Justification, Display Modes
13855@subsection Labels
13856
13857@noindent
13858@kindex d @{
13859@pindex calc-left-label
13860The @kbd{d @{} (@code{calc-left-label}) command prompts for a string,
13861then displays that string to the left of every stack entry. If the
13862entries are left-justified (@pxref{Justification}), then they will
13863appear immediately after the label (unless you specified an origin
13864greater than the length of the label). If the entries are centered
13865or right-justified, the label appears on the far left and does not
13866affect the horizontal position of the stack entry.
13867
13868Give a blank string (with @kbd{d @{ @key{RET}}) to turn the label off.
13869
13870@kindex d @}
13871@pindex calc-right-label
13872The @kbd{d @}} (@code{calc-right-label}) command similarly adds a
13873label on the righthand side. It does not affect positioning of
13874the stack entries unless they are right-justified. Also, if both
13875a line width and an origin are given in right-justified mode, the
13876stack entry is justified to the origin and the righthand label is
13877justified to the line width.
13878
13879One application of labels would be to add equation numbers to
13880formulas you are manipulating in Calc and then copying into a
13881document (possibly using Embedded Mode). The equations would
13882typically be centered, and the equation numbers would be on the
13883left or right as you prefer.
13884
13885@node Language Modes, Modes Variable, Display Modes, Mode Settings
13886@section Language Modes
13887
13888@noindent
13889The commands in this section change Calc to use a different notation for
13890entry and display of formulas, corresponding to the conventions of some
13891other common language such as Pascal or @TeX{}. Objects displayed on the
13892stack or yanked from the Calculator to an editing buffer will be formatted
13893in the current language; objects entered in algebraic entry or yanked from
13894another buffer will be interpreted according to the current language.
13895
13896The current language has no effect on things written to or read from the
13897trail buffer, nor does it affect numeric entry. Only algebraic entry is
13898affected. You can make even algebraic entry ignore the current language
13899and use the standard notation by giving a numeric prefix, e.g., @kbd{C-u '}.
13900
13901For example, suppose the formula @samp{2*a[1] + atan(a[2])} occurs in a C
13902program; elsewhere in the program you need the derivatives of this formula
13903with respect to @samp{a[1]} and @samp{a[2]}. First, type @kbd{d C}
13904to switch to C notation. Now use @code{C-u M-# g} to grab the formula
13905into the Calculator, @kbd{a d a[1] @key{RET}} to differentiate with respect
13906to the first variable, and @kbd{M-# y} to yank the formula for the derivative
13907back into your C program. Press @kbd{U} to undo the differentiation and
13908repeat with @kbd{a d a[2] @key{RET}} for the other derivative.
13909
13910Without being switched into C mode first, Calc would have misinterpreted
13911the brackets in @samp{a[1]} and @samp{a[2]}, would not have known that
13912@code{atan} was equivalent to Calc's built-in @code{arctan} function,
13913and would have written the formula back with notations (like implicit
13914multiplication) which would not have been legal for a C program.
13915
13916As another example, suppose you are maintaining a C program and a @TeX{}
13917document, each of which needs a copy of the same formula. You can grab the
13918formula from the program in C mode, switch to @TeX{} mode, and yank the
13919formula into the document in @TeX{} math-mode format.
13920
13921Language modes are selected by typing the letter @kbd{d} followed by a
13922shifted letter key.
13923
13924@menu
13925* Normal Language Modes::
13926* C FORTRAN Pascal::
13927* TeX Language Mode::
13928* Eqn Language Mode::
13929* Mathematica Language Mode::
13930* Maple Language Mode::
13931* Compositions::
13932* Syntax Tables::
13933@end menu
13934
13935@node Normal Language Modes, C FORTRAN Pascal, Language Modes, Language Modes
13936@subsection Normal Language Modes
13937
13938@noindent
13939@kindex d N
13940@pindex calc-normal-language
13941The @kbd{d N} (@code{calc-normal-language}) command selects the usual
13942notation for Calc formulas, as described in the rest of this manual.
13943Matrices are displayed in a multi-line tabular format, but all other
13944objects are written in linear form, as they would be typed from the
13945keyboard.
13946
13947@kindex d O
13948@pindex calc-flat-language
13949@cindex Matrix display
13950The @kbd{d O} (@code{calc-flat-language}) command selects a language
13951identical with the normal one, except that matrices are written in
13952one-line form along with everything else. In some applications this
13953form may be more suitable for yanking data into other buffers.
13954
13955@kindex d b
13956@pindex calc-line-breaking
13957@cindex Line breaking
13958@cindex Breaking up long lines
13959Even in one-line mode, long formulas or vectors will still be split
13960across multiple lines if they exceed the width of the Calculator window.
13961The @kbd{d b} (@code{calc-line-breaking}) command turns this line-breaking
13962feature on and off. (It works independently of the current language.)
13963If you give a numeric prefix argument of five or greater to the @kbd{d b}
13964command, that argument will specify the line width used when breaking
13965long lines.
13966
13967@kindex d B
13968@pindex calc-big-language
13969The @kbd{d B} (@code{calc-big-language}) command selects a language
13970which uses textual approximations to various mathematical notations,
13971such as powers, quotients, and square roots:
13972
13973@example
13974 ____________
13975 | a + 1 2
13976 | ----- + c
13977\| b
13978@end example
13979
13980@noindent
13981in place of @samp{sqrt((a+1)/b + c^2)}.
13982
13983Subscripts like @samp{a_i} are displayed as actual subscripts in ``big''
13984mode. Double subscripts, @samp{a_i_j} (@samp{subscr(subscr(a, i), j)})
13985are displayed as @samp{a} with subscripts separated by commas:
13986@samp{i, j}. They must still be entered in the usual underscore
13987notation.
13988
13989One slight ambiguity of Big notation is that
13990
13991@example
13992 3
13993- -
13994 4
13995@end example
13996
13997@noindent
13998can represent either the negative rational number @cite{-3:4}, or the
13999actual expression @samp{-(3/4)}; but the latter formula would normally
14000never be displayed because it would immediately be evaluated to
14001@cite{-3:4} or @cite{-0.75}, so this ambiguity is not a problem in
14002typical use.
14003
14004Non-decimal numbers are displayed with subscripts. Thus there is no
14005way to tell the difference between @samp{16#C2} and @samp{C2_16},
14006though generally you will know which interpretation is correct.
14007Logarithms @samp{log(x,b)} and @samp{log10(x)} also use subscripts
14008in Big mode.
14009
14010In Big mode, stack entries often take up several lines. To aid
14011readability, stack entries are separated by a blank line in this mode.
14012You may find it useful to expand the Calc window's height using
14013@kbd{C-x ^} (@code{enlarge-window}) or to make the Calc window the only
14014one on the screen with @kbd{C-x 1} (@code{delete-other-windows}).
14015
14016Long lines are currently not rearranged to fit the window width in
14017Big mode, so you may need to use the @kbd{<} and @kbd{>} keys
14018to scroll across a wide formula. For really big formulas, you may
14019even need to use @kbd{@{} and @kbd{@}} to scroll up and down.
14020
14021@kindex d U
14022@pindex calc-unformatted-language
14023The @kbd{d U} (@code{calc-unformatted-language}) command altogether disables
14024the use of operator notation in formulas. In this mode, the formula
14025shown above would be displayed:
14026
14027@example
14028sqrt(add(div(add(a, 1), b), pow(c, 2)))
14029@end example
14030
14031These four modes differ only in display format, not in the format
14032expected for algebraic entry. The standard Calc operators work in
14033all four modes, and unformatted notation works in any language mode
14034(except that Mathematica mode expects square brackets instead of
14035parentheses).
14036
14037@node C FORTRAN Pascal, TeX Language Mode, Normal Language Modes, Language Modes
14038@subsection C, FORTRAN, and Pascal Modes
14039
14040@noindent
14041@kindex d C
14042@pindex calc-c-language
14043@cindex C language
14044The @kbd{d C} (@code{calc-c-language}) command selects the conventions
14045of the C language for display and entry of formulas. This differs from
14046the normal language mode in a variety of (mostly minor) ways. In
14047particular, C language operators and operator precedences are used in
14048place of Calc's usual ones. For example, @samp{a^b} means @samp{xor(a,b)}
14049in C mode; a value raised to a power is written as a function call,
14050@samp{pow(a,b)}.
14051
14052In C mode, vectors and matrices use curly braces instead of brackets.
14053Octal and hexadecimal values are written with leading @samp{0} or @samp{0x}
14054rather than using the @samp{#} symbol. Array subscripting is
14055translated into @code{subscr} calls, so that @samp{a[i]} in C
14056mode is the same as @samp{a_i} in normal mode. Assignments
14057turn into the @code{assign} function, which Calc normally displays
14058using the @samp{:=} symbol.
14059
14060The variables @code{var-pi} and @code{var-e} would be displayed @samp{pi}
14061and @samp{e} in normal mode, but in C mode they are displayed as
14062@samp{M_PI} and @samp{M_E}, corresponding to the names of constants
14063typically provided in the @file{<math.h>} header. Functions whose
14064names are different in C are translated automatically for entry and
14065display purposes. For example, entering @samp{asin(x)} will push the
14066formula @samp{arcsin(x)} onto the stack; this formula will be displayed
14067as @samp{asin(x)} as long as C mode is in effect.
14068
14069@kindex d P
14070@pindex calc-pascal-language
14071@cindex Pascal language
14072The @kbd{d P} (@code{calc-pascal-language}) command selects Pascal
14073conventions. Like C mode, Pascal mode interprets array brackets and uses
14074a different table of operators. Hexadecimal numbers are entered and
14075displayed with a preceding dollar sign. (Thus the regular meaning of
14076@kbd{$2} during algebraic entry does not work in Pascal mode, though
14077@kbd{$} (and @kbd{$$}, etc.) not followed by digits works the same as
14078always.) No special provisions are made for other non-decimal numbers,
14079vectors, and so on, since there is no universally accepted standard way
14080of handling these in Pascal.
14081
14082@kindex d F
14083@pindex calc-fortran-language
14084@cindex FORTRAN language
14085The @kbd{d F} (@code{calc-fortran-language}) command selects FORTRAN
14086conventions. Various function names are transformed into FORTRAN
14087equivalents. Vectors are written as @samp{/1, 2, 3/}, and may be
14088entered this way or using square brackets. Since FORTRAN uses round
14089parentheses for both function calls and array subscripts, Calc displays
14090both in the same way; @samp{a(i)} is interpreted as a function call
14091upon reading, and subscripts must be entered as @samp{subscr(a, i)}.
14092Also, if the variable @code{a} has been declared to have type
14093@code{vector} or @code{matrix} then @samp{a(i)} will be parsed as a
14094subscript. (@xref{Declarations}.) Usually it doesn't matter, though;
14095if you enter the subscript expression @samp{a(i)} and Calc interprets
14096it as a function call, you'll never know the difference unless you
14097switch to another language mode or replace @code{a} with an actual
14098vector (or unless @code{a} happens to be the name of a built-in
14099function!).
14100
14101Underscores are allowed in variable and function names in all of these
14102language modes. The underscore here is equivalent to the @samp{#} in
14103normal mode, or to hyphens in the underlying Emacs Lisp variable names.
14104
14105FORTRAN and Pascal modes normally do not adjust the case of letters in
14106formulas. Most built-in Calc names use lower-case letters. If you use a
14107positive numeric prefix argument with @kbd{d P} or @kbd{d F}, these
14108modes will use upper-case letters exclusively for display, and will
14109convert to lower-case on input. With a negative prefix, these modes
14110convert to lower-case for display and input.
14111
14112@node TeX Language Mode, Eqn Language Mode, C FORTRAN Pascal, Language Modes
14113@subsection @TeX{} Language Mode
14114
14115@noindent
14116@kindex d T
14117@pindex calc-tex-language
14118@cindex TeX language
14119The @kbd{d T} (@code{calc-tex-language}) command selects the conventions
14120of ``math mode'' in the @TeX{} typesetting language, by Donald Knuth.
14121Formulas are entered
14122and displayed in @TeX{} notation, as in @samp{\sin\left( a \over b \right)}.
14123Math formulas are usually enclosed by @samp{$ $} signs in @TeX{}; these
14124should be omitted when interfacing with Calc. To Calc, the @samp{$} sign
14125has the same meaning it always does in algebraic formulas (a reference to
14126an existing entry on the stack).@refill
14127
14128Complex numbers are displayed as in @samp{3 + 4i}. Fractions and
14129quotients are written using @code{\over};
14130binomial coefficients are written with @code{\choose}.
14131Interval forms are written with @code{\ldots}, and
14132error forms are written with @code{\pm}.
14133Absolute values are written as in @samp{|x + 1|}, and the floor and
14134ceiling functions are written with @code{\lfloor}, @code{\rfloor}, etc.
14135The words @code{\left} and @code{\right} are ignored when reading
14136formulas in @TeX{} mode. Both @code{inf} and @code{uinf} are written
14137as @code{\infty}; when read, @code{\infty} always translates to
14138@code{inf}.@refill
14139
14140Function calls are written the usual way, with the function name followed
14141by the arguments in parentheses. However, functions for which @TeX{} has
14142special names (like @code{\sin}) will use curly braces instead of
14143parentheses for very simple arguments. During input, curly braces and
14144parentheses work equally well for grouping, but when the document is
14145formatted the curly braces will be invisible. Thus the printed result is
14146@c{$\sin{2 x}$}
14147@cite{sin 2x} but @c{$\sin(2 + x)$}
14148@cite{sin(2 + x)}.
14149
14150Function and variable names not treated specially by @TeX{} are simply
14151written out as-is, which will cause them to come out in italic letters
14152in the printed document. If you invoke @kbd{d T} with a positive numeric
14153prefix argument, names of more than one character will instead be written
14154@samp{\hbox@{@var{name}@}}. The @samp{\hbox@{ @}} notation is ignored
14155during reading. If you use a negative prefix argument, such function
14156names are written @samp{\@var{name}}, and function names that begin
14157with @code{\} during reading have the @code{\} removed. (Note that
14158in this mode, long variable names are still written with @code{\hbox}.
14159However, you can always make an actual variable name like @code{\bar}
14160in any @TeX{} mode.)
14161
14162During reading, text of the form @samp{\matrix@{ ...@: @}} is replaced
14163by @samp{[ ...@: ]}. The same also applies to @code{\pmatrix} and
14164@code{\bmatrix}. The symbol @samp{&} is interpreted as a comma,
14165and the symbols @samp{\cr} and @samp{\\} are interpreted as semicolons.
14166During output, matrices are displayed in @samp{\matrix@{ a & b \\ c & d@}}
14167format; you may need to edit this afterwards to change @code{\matrix}
14168to @code{\pmatrix} or @code{\\} to @code{\cr}.
14169
14170Accents like @code{\tilde} and @code{\bar} translate into function
14171calls internally (@samp{tilde(x)}, @samp{bar(x)}). The @code{\underline}
14172sequence is treated as an accent. The @code{\vec} accent corresponds
14173to the function name @code{Vec}, because @code{vec} is the name of
14174a built-in Calc function. The following table shows the accents
14175in Calc, @TeX{}, and @dfn{eqn} (described in the next section):
14176
14177@iftex
14178@begingroup
14179@let@calcindexershow=@calcindexernoshow @c Suppress marginal notes
14180@let@calcindexersh=@calcindexernoshow
14181@end iftex
5d67986c
RS
14182@ignore
14183@starindex
14184@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14185@tindex acute
5d67986c
RS
14186@ignore
14187@starindex
14188@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14189@tindex bar
5d67986c
RS
14190@ignore
14191@starindex
14192@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14193@tindex breve
5d67986c
RS
14194@ignore
14195@starindex
14196@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14197@tindex check
5d67986c
RS
14198@ignore
14199@starindex
14200@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14201@tindex dot
5d67986c
RS
14202@ignore
14203@starindex
14204@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14205@tindex dotdot
5d67986c
RS
14206@ignore
14207@starindex
14208@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14209@tindex dyad
5d67986c
RS
14210@ignore
14211@starindex
14212@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14213@tindex grave
5d67986c
RS
14214@ignore
14215@starindex
14216@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14217@tindex hat
5d67986c
RS
14218@ignore
14219@starindex
14220@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14221@tindex Prime
5d67986c
RS
14222@ignore
14223@starindex
14224@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14225@tindex tilde
5d67986c
RS
14226@ignore
14227@starindex
14228@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14229@tindex under
5d67986c
RS
14230@ignore
14231@starindex
14232@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14233@tindex Vec
14234@iftex
14235@endgroup
14236@end iftex
14237@example
14238Calc TeX eqn
14239---- --- ---
14240acute \acute
14241bar \bar bar
14242breve \breve
14243check \check
14244dot \dot dot
14245dotdot \ddot dotdot
14246dyad dyad
14247grave \grave
14248hat \hat hat
14249Prime prime
14250tilde \tilde tilde
14251under \underline under
14252Vec \vec vec
14253@end example
14254
14255The @samp{=>} (evaluates-to) operator appears as a @code{\to} symbol:
14256@samp{@{@var{a} \to @var{b}@}}. @TeX{} defines @code{\to} as an
14257alias for @code{\rightarrow}. However, if the @samp{=>} is the
14258top-level expression being formatted, a slightly different notation
14259is used: @samp{\evalto @var{a} \to @var{b}}. The @code{\evalto}
14260word is ignored by Calc's input routines, and is undefined in @TeX{}.
14261You will typically want to include one of the following definitions
14262at the top of a @TeX{} file that uses @code{\evalto}:
14263
14264@example
14265\def\evalto@{@}
14266\def\evalto#1\to@{@}
14267@end example
14268
14269The first definition formats evaluates-to operators in the usual
14270way. The second causes only the @var{b} part to appear in the
14271printed document; the @var{a} part and the arrow are hidden.
14272Another definition you may wish to use is @samp{\let\to=\Rightarrow}
14273which causes @code{\to} to appear more like Calc's @samp{=>} symbol.
14274@xref{Evaluates-To Operator}, for a discussion of @code{evalto}.
14275
14276The complete set of @TeX{} control sequences that are ignored during
14277reading is:
14278
14279@example
14280\hbox \mbox \text \left \right
14281\, \> \: \; \! \quad \qquad \hfil \hfill
14282\displaystyle \textstyle \dsize \tsize
14283\scriptstyle \scriptscriptstyle \ssize \ssize
14284\rm \bf \it \sl \roman \bold \italic \slanted
14285\cal \mit \Cal \Bbb \frak \goth
14286\evalto
14287@end example
14288
14289Note that, because these symbols are ignored, reading a @TeX{} formula
14290into Calc and writing it back out may lose spacing and font information.
14291
14292Also, the ``discretionary multiplication sign'' @samp{\*} is read
14293the same as @samp{*}.
14294
14295@ifinfo
14296The @TeX{} version of this manual includes some printed examples at the
14297end of this section.
14298@end ifinfo
14299@iftex
14300Here are some examples of how various Calc formulas are formatted in @TeX{}:
14301
d7b8e6c6 14302@example
5d67986c 14303@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14304sin(a^2 / b_i)
14305\sin\left( {a^2 \over b_i} \right)
5d67986c 14306@end group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14307@end example
14308@tex
14309\let\rm\goodrm
14310$$ \sin\left( a^2 \over b_i \right) $$
14311@end tex
14312@sp 1
d7b8e6c6 14313
d7b8e6c6 14314@example
5d67986c 14315@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14316[(3, 4), 3:4, 3 +/- 4, [3 .. inf)]
14317[3 + 4i, @{3 \over 4@}, 3 \pm 4, [3 \ldots \infty)]
5d67986c 14318@end group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14319@end example
14320@tex
14321\turnoffactive
14322$$ [3 + 4i, {3 \over 4}, 3 \pm 4, [ 3 \ldots \infty)] $$
14323@end tex
14324@sp 1
d7b8e6c6 14325
d7b8e6c6 14326@example
5d67986c 14327@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14328[abs(a), abs(a / b), floor(a), ceil(a / b)]
14329[|a|, \left| a \over b \right|,
14330 \lfloor a \rfloor, \left\lceil a \over b \right\rceil]
5d67986c 14331@end group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14332@end example
14333@tex
14334$$ [|a|, \left| a \over b \right|,
14335 \lfloor a \rfloor, \left\lceil a \over b \right\rceil] $$
14336@end tex
14337@sp 1
d7b8e6c6 14338
d7b8e6c6 14339@example
5d67986c 14340@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14341[sin(a), sin(2 a), sin(2 + a), sin(a / b)]
14342[\sin@{a@}, \sin@{2 a@}, \sin(2 + a),
14343 \sin\left( @{a \over b@} \right)]
5d67986c 14344@end group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14345@end example
14346@tex
14347\turnoffactive\let\rm\goodrm
14348$$ [\sin{a}, \sin{2 a}, \sin(2 + a), \sin\left( {a \over b} \right)] $$
14349@end tex
14350@sp 2
d7b8e6c6 14351
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14352First with plain @kbd{d T}, then with @kbd{C-u d T}, then finally with
14353@kbd{C-u - d T} (using the example definition
14354@samp{\def\foo#1@{\tilde F(#1)@}}:
14355
14356@example
5d67986c 14357@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14358[f(a), foo(bar), sin(pi)]
14359[f(a), foo(bar), \sin{\pi}]
14360[f(a), \hbox@{foo@}(\hbox@{bar@}), \sin@{\pi@}]
14361[f(a), \foo@{\hbox@{bar@}@}, \sin@{\pi@}]
5d67986c 14362@end group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14363@end example
14364@tex
14365\let\rm\goodrm
14366$$ [f(a), foo(bar), \sin{\pi}] $$
14367$$ [f(a), \hbox{foo}(\hbox{bar}), \sin{\pi}] $$
14368$$ [f(a), \tilde F(\hbox{bar}), \sin{\pi}] $$
14369@end tex
14370@sp 2
d7b8e6c6 14371
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14372First with @samp{\def\evalto@{@}}, then with @samp{\def\evalto#1\to@{@}}:
14373
14374@example
5d67986c 14375@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
143762 + 3 => 5
14377\evalto 2 + 3 \to 5
5d67986c 14378@end group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14379@end example
14380@tex
14381\turnoffactive
14382$$ 2 + 3 \to 5 $$
14383$$ 5 $$
14384@end tex
14385@sp 2
d7b8e6c6 14386
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14387First with standard @code{\to}, then with @samp{\let\to\Rightarrow}:
14388
14389@example
5d67986c 14390@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14391[2 + 3 => 5, a / 2 => (b + c) / 2]
14392[@{2 + 3 \to 5@}, @{@{a \over 2@} \to @{b + c \over 2@}@}]
5d67986c 14393@end group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14394@end example
14395@tex
14396\turnoffactive
14397$$ [{2 + 3 \to 5}, {{a \over 2} \to {b + c \over 2}}] $$
14398{\let\to\Rightarrow
14399$$ [{2 + 3 \to 5}, {{a \over 2} \to {b + c \over 2}}] $$}
14400@end tex
14401@sp 2
d7b8e6c6 14402
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14403Matrices normally, then changing @code{\matrix} to @code{\pmatrix}:
14404
14405@example
5d67986c 14406@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14407[ [ a / b, 0 ], [ 0, 2^(x + 1) ] ]
14408\matrix@{ @{a \over b@} & 0 \\ 0 & 2^@{(x + 1)@} @}
14409\pmatrix@{ @{a \over b@} & 0 \\ 0 & 2^@{(x + 1)@} @}
5d67986c 14410@end group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14411@end example
14412@tex
14413\turnoffactive
14414$$ \matrix{ {a \over b} & 0 \cr 0 & 2^{(x + 1)} } $$
14415$$ \pmatrix{ {a \over b} & 0 \cr 0 & 2^{(x + 1)} } $$
14416@end tex
14417@sp 2
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14418@end iftex
14419
14420@node Eqn Language Mode, Mathematica Language Mode, TeX Language Mode, Language Modes
14421@subsection Eqn Language Mode
14422
14423@noindent
14424@kindex d E
14425@pindex calc-eqn-language
14426@dfn{Eqn} is another popular formatter for math formulas. It is
14427designed for use with the TROFF text formatter, and comes standard
14428with many versions of Unix. The @kbd{d E} (@code{calc-eqn-language})
14429command selects @dfn{eqn} notation.
14430
14431The @dfn{eqn} language's main idiosyncrasy is that whitespace plays
14432a significant part in the parsing of the language. For example,
14433@samp{sqrt x+1 + y} treats @samp{x+1} as the argument of the
14434@code{sqrt} operator. @dfn{Eqn} also understands more conventional
14435grouping using curly braces: @samp{sqrt@{x+1@} + y}. Braces are
14436required only when the argument contains spaces.
14437
14438In Calc's @dfn{eqn} mode, however, curly braces are required to
14439delimit arguments of operators like @code{sqrt}. The first of the
14440above examples would treat only the @samp{x} as the argument of
14441@code{sqrt}, and in fact @samp{sin x+1} would be interpreted as
14442@samp{sin * x + 1}, because @code{sin} is not a special operator
14443in the @dfn{eqn} language. If you always surround the argument
14444with curly braces, Calc will never misunderstand.
14445
14446Calc also understands parentheses as grouping characters. Another
14447peculiarity of @dfn{eqn}'s syntax makes it advisable to separate
14448words with spaces from any surrounding characters that aren't curly
14449braces, so Calc writes @samp{sin ( x + y )} in @dfn{eqn} mode.
14450(The spaces around @code{sin} are important to make @dfn{eqn}
14451recognize that @code{sin} should be typeset in a roman font, and
14452the spaces around @code{x} and @code{y} are a good idea just in
14453case the @dfn{eqn} document has defined special meanings for these
14454names, too.)
14455
14456Powers and subscripts are written with the @code{sub} and @code{sup}
14457operators, respectively. Note that the caret symbol @samp{^} is
14458treated the same as a space in @dfn{eqn} mode, as is the @samp{~}
14459symbol (these are used to introduce spaces of various widths into
14460the typeset output of @dfn{eqn}).
14461
14462As in @TeX{} mode, Calc's formatter omits parentheses around the
14463arguments of functions like @code{ln} and @code{sin} if they are
14464``simple-looking''; in this case Calc surrounds the argument with
14465braces, separated by a @samp{~} from the function name: @samp{sin~@{x@}}.
14466
14467Font change codes (like @samp{roman @var{x}}) and positioning codes
14468(like @samp{~} and @samp{down @var{n} @var{x}}) are ignored by the
14469@dfn{eqn} reader. Also ignored are the words @code{left}, @code{right},
14470@code{mark}, and @code{lineup}. Quotation marks in @dfn{eqn} mode input
14471are treated the same as curly braces: @samp{sqrt "1+x"} is equivalent to
14472@samp{sqrt @{1+x@}}; this is only an approximation to the true meaning
14473of quotes in @dfn{eqn}, but it is good enough for most uses.
14474
14475Accent codes (@samp{@var{x} dot}) are handled by treating them as
14476function calls (@samp{dot(@var{x})}) internally. @xref{TeX Language
b275eac7 14477Mode}, for a table of these accent functions. The @code{prime} accent
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14478is treated specially if it occurs on a variable or function name:
14479@samp{f prime prime @w{( x prime )}} is stored internally as
14480@samp{f'@w{'}(x')}. For example, taking the derivative of @samp{f(2 x)}
14481with @kbd{a d x} will produce @samp{2 f'(2 x)}, which @dfn{eqn} mode
14482will display as @samp{2 f prime ( 2 x )}.
14483
14484Assignments are written with the @samp{<-} (left-arrow) symbol,
14485and @code{evalto} operators are written with @samp{->} or
14486@samp{evalto ... ->} (@pxref{TeX Language Mode}, for a discussion
14487of this). The regular Calc symbols @samp{:=} and @samp{=>} are also
14488recognized for these operators during reading.
14489
14490Vectors in @dfn{eqn} mode use regular Calc square brackets, but
14491matrices are formatted as @samp{matrix @{ ccol @{ a above b @} ... @}}.
14492The words @code{lcol} and @code{rcol} are recognized as synonyms
14493for @code{ccol} during input, and are generated instead of @code{ccol}
14494if the matrix justification mode so specifies.
14495
14496@node Mathematica Language Mode, Maple Language Mode, Eqn Language Mode, Language Modes
14497@subsection Mathematica Language Mode
14498
14499@noindent
14500@kindex d M
14501@pindex calc-mathematica-language
14502@cindex Mathematica language
14503The @kbd{d M} (@code{calc-mathematica-language}) command selects the
14504conventions of Mathematica, a powerful and popular mathematical tool
14505from Wolfram Research, Inc. Notable differences in Mathematica mode
14506are that the names of built-in functions are capitalized, and function
14507calls use square brackets instead of parentheses. Thus the Calc
14508formula @samp{sin(2 x)} is entered and displayed @w{@samp{Sin[2 x]}} in
14509Mathematica mode.
14510
14511Vectors and matrices use curly braces in Mathematica. Complex numbers
14512are written @samp{3 + 4 I}. The standard special constants in Calc are
14513written @code{Pi}, @code{E}, @code{I}, @code{GoldenRatio}, @code{EulerGamma},
14514@code{Infinity}, @code{ComplexInfinity}, and @code{Indeterminate} in
14515Mathematica mode.
14516Non-decimal numbers are written, e.g., @samp{16^^7fff}. Floating-point
14517numbers in scientific notation are written @samp{1.23*10.^3}.
14518Subscripts use double square brackets: @samp{a[[i]]}.@refill
14519
14520@node Maple Language Mode, Compositions, Mathematica Language Mode, Language Modes
14521@subsection Maple Language Mode
14522
14523@noindent
14524@kindex d W
14525@pindex calc-maple-language
14526@cindex Maple language
14527The @kbd{d W} (@code{calc-maple-language}) command selects the
14528conventions of Maple, another mathematical tool from the University
14529of Waterloo.
14530
14531Maple's language is much like C. Underscores are allowed in symbol
14532names; square brackets are used for subscripts; explicit @samp{*}s for
14533multiplications are required. Use either @samp{^} or @samp{**} to
14534denote powers.
14535
14536Maple uses square brackets for lists and curly braces for sets. Calc
14537interprets both notations as vectors, and displays vectors with square
14538brackets. This means Maple sets will be converted to lists when they
14539pass through Calc. As a special case, matrices are written as calls
14540to the function @code{matrix}, given a list of lists as the argument,
14541and can be read in this form or with all-capitals @code{MATRIX}.
14542
14543The Maple interval notation @samp{2 .. 3} has no surrounding brackets;
14544Calc reads @samp{2 .. 3} as the closed interval @samp{[2 .. 3]}, and
14545writes any kind of interval as @samp{2 .. 3}. This means you cannot
14546see the difference between an open and a closed interval while in
14547Maple display mode.
14548
14549Maple writes complex numbers as @samp{3 + 4*I}. Its special constants
14550are @code{Pi}, @code{E}, @code{I}, and @code{infinity} (all three of
14551@code{inf}, @code{uinf}, and @code{nan} display as @code{infinity}).
14552Floating-point numbers are written @samp{1.23*10.^3}.
14553
14554Among things not currently handled by Calc's Maple mode are the
14555various quote symbols, procedures and functional operators, and
14556inert (@samp{&}) operators.
14557
14558@node Compositions, Syntax Tables, Maple Language Mode, Language Modes
14559@subsection Compositions
14560
14561@noindent
14562@cindex Compositions
14563There are several @dfn{composition functions} which allow you to get
14564displays in a variety of formats similar to those in Big language
14565mode. Most of these functions do not evaluate to anything; they are
14566placeholders which are left in symbolic form by Calc's evaluator but
14567are recognized by Calc's display formatting routines.
14568
14569Two of these, @code{string} and @code{bstring}, are described elsewhere.
14570@xref{Strings}. For example, @samp{string("ABC")} is displayed as
14571@samp{ABC}. When viewed on the stack it will be indistinguishable from
14572the variable @code{ABC}, but internally it will be stored as
14573@samp{string([65, 66, 67])} and can still be manipulated this way; for
14574example, the selection and vector commands @kbd{j 1 v v j u} would
14575select the vector portion of this object and reverse the elements, then
14576deselect to reveal a string whose characters had been reversed.
14577
14578The composition functions do the same thing in all language modes
14579(although their components will of course be formatted in the current
14580language mode). The one exception is Unformatted mode (@kbd{d U}),
14581which does not give the composition functions any special treatment.
14582The functions are discussed here because of their relationship to
14583the language modes.
14584
14585@menu
14586* Composition Basics::
14587* Horizontal Compositions::
14588* Vertical Compositions::
14589* Other Compositions::
14590* Information about Compositions::
14591* User-Defined Compositions::
14592@end menu
14593
14594@node Composition Basics, Horizontal Compositions, Compositions, Compositions
14595@subsubsection Composition Basics
14596
14597@noindent
14598Compositions are generally formed by stacking formulas together
14599horizontally or vertically in various ways. Those formulas are
14600themselves compositions. @TeX{} users will find this analogous
14601to @TeX{}'s ``boxes.'' Each multi-line composition has a
14602@dfn{baseline}; horizontal compositions use the baselines to
14603decide how formulas should be positioned relative to one another.
14604For example, in the Big mode formula
14605
d7b8e6c6 14606@example
5d67986c 14607@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14608 2
14609 a + b
1461017 + ------
14611 c
d7b8e6c6 14612@end group
5d67986c 14613@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14614
14615@noindent
14616the second term of the sum is four lines tall and has line three as
14617its baseline. Thus when the term is combined with 17, line three
14618is placed on the same level as the baseline of 17.
14619
14620@tex
14621\bigskip
14622@end tex
14623
14624Another important composition concept is @dfn{precedence}. This is
14625an integer that represents the binding strength of various operators.
14626For example, @samp{*} has higher precedence (195) than @samp{+} (180),
14627which means that @samp{(a * b) + c} will be formatted without the
14628parentheses, but @samp{a * (b + c)} will keep the parentheses.
14629
14630The operator table used by normal and Big language modes has the
14631following precedences:
14632
14633@example
14634_ 1200 @r{(subscripts)}
14635% 1100 @r{(as in n}%@r{)}
14636- 1000 @r{(as in }-@r{n)}
14637! 1000 @r{(as in }!@r{n)}
14638mod 400
14639+/- 300
14640!! 210 @r{(as in n}!!@r{)}
14641! 210 @r{(as in n}!@r{)}
14642^ 200
14643* 195 @r{(or implicit multiplication)}
14644/ % \ 190
14645+ - 180 @r{(as in a}+@r{b)}
14646| 170
14647< = 160 @r{(and other relations)}
14648&& 110
14649|| 100
14650? : 90
14651!!! 85
14652&&& 80
14653||| 75
14654:= 50
14655:: 45
14656=> 40
14657@end example
14658
14659The general rule is that if an operator with precedence @cite{n}
14660occurs as an argument to an operator with precedence @cite{m}, then
14661the argument is enclosed in parentheses if @cite{n < m}. Top-level
14662expressions and expressions which are function arguments, vector
14663components, etc., are formatted with precedence zero (so that they
14664normally never get additional parentheses).
14665
14666For binary left-associative operators like @samp{+}, the righthand
14667argument is actually formatted with one-higher precedence than shown
14668in the table. This makes sure @samp{(a + b) + c} omits the parentheses,
14669but the unnatural form @samp{a + (b + c)} keeps its parentheses.
14670Right-associative operators like @samp{^} format the lefthand argument
14671with one-higher precedence.
14672
5d67986c
RS
14673@ignore
14674@starindex
14675@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14676@tindex cprec
14677The @code{cprec} function formats an expression with an arbitrary
14678precedence. For example, @samp{cprec(abc, 185)} will combine into
14679sums and products as follows: @samp{7 + abc}, @samp{7 (abc)} (because
14680this @code{cprec} form has higher precedence than addition, but lower
14681precedence than multiplication).
14682
14683@tex
14684\bigskip
14685@end tex
14686
14687A final composition issue is @dfn{line breaking}. Calc uses two
14688different strategies for ``flat'' and ``non-flat'' compositions.
14689A non-flat composition is anything that appears on multiple lines
14690(not counting line breaking). Examples would be matrices and Big
14691mode powers and quotients. Non-flat compositions are displayed
14692exactly as specified. If they come out wider than the current
14693window, you must use horizontal scrolling (@kbd{<} and @kbd{>}) to
14694view them.
14695
14696Flat compositions, on the other hand, will be broken across several
14697lines if they are too wide to fit the window. Certain points in a
14698composition are noted internally as @dfn{break points}. Calc's
14699general strategy is to fill each line as much as possible, then to
14700move down to the next line starting at the first break point that
14701didn't fit. However, the line breaker understands the hierarchical
14702structure of formulas. It will not break an ``inner'' formula if
14703it can use an earlier break point from an ``outer'' formula instead.
14704For example, a vector of sums might be formatted as:
14705
d7b8e6c6 14706@example
5d67986c 14707@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14708[ a + b + c, d + e + f,
14709 g + h + i, j + k + l, m ]
d7b8e6c6 14710@end group
5d67986c 14711@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14712
14713@noindent
14714If the @samp{m} can fit, then so, it seems, could the @samp{g}.
14715But Calc prefers to break at the comma since the comma is part
14716of a ``more outer'' formula. Calc would break at a plus sign
14717only if it had to, say, if the very first sum in the vector had
14718itself been too large to fit.
14719
14720Of the composition functions described below, only @code{choriz}
14721generates break points. The @code{bstring} function (@pxref{Strings})
14722also generates breakable items: A break point is added after every
14723space (or group of spaces) except for spaces at the very beginning or
14724end of the string.
14725
14726Composition functions themselves count as levels in the formula
14727hierarchy, so a @code{choriz} that is a component of a larger
14728@code{choriz} will be less likely to be broken. As a special case,
14729if a @code{bstring} occurs as a component of a @code{choriz} or
14730@code{choriz}-like object (such as a vector or a list of arguments
14731in a function call), then the break points in that @code{bstring}
14732will be on the same level as the break points of the surrounding
14733object.
14734
14735@node Horizontal Compositions, Vertical Compositions, Composition Basics, Compositions
14736@subsubsection Horizontal Compositions
14737
14738@noindent
5d67986c
RS
14739@ignore
14740@starindex
14741@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14742@tindex choriz
14743The @code{choriz} function takes a vector of objects and composes
14744them horizontally. For example, @samp{choriz([17, a b/c, d])} formats
14745as @w{@samp{17a b / cd}} in normal language mode, or as
14746
d7b8e6c6 14747@example
5d67986c 14748@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14749 a b
1475017---d
14751 c
d7b8e6c6 14752@end group
5d67986c 14753@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14754
14755@noindent
14756in Big language mode. This is actually one case of the general
14757function @samp{choriz(@var{vec}, @var{sep}, @var{prec})}, where
14758either or both of @var{sep} and @var{prec} may be omitted.
14759@var{Prec} gives the @dfn{precedence} to use when formatting
14760each of the components of @var{vec}. The default precedence is
14761the precedence from the surrounding environment.
14762
14763@var{Sep} is a string (i.e., a vector of character codes as might
14764be entered with @code{" "} notation) which should separate components
14765of the composition. Also, if @var{sep} is given, the line breaker
14766will allow lines to be broken after each occurrence of @var{sep}.
14767If @var{sep} is omitted, the composition will not be breakable
14768(unless any of its component compositions are breakable).
14769
14770For example, @samp{2 choriz([a, b c, d = e], " + ", 180)} is
14771formatted as @samp{2 a + b c + (d = e)}. To get the @code{choriz}
14772to have precedence 180 ``outwards'' as well as ``inwards,''
14773enclose it in a @code{cprec} form: @samp{2 cprec(choriz(...), 180)}
14774formats as @samp{2 (a + b c + (d = e))}.
14775
14776The baseline of a horizontal composition is the same as the
14777baselines of the component compositions, which are all aligned.
14778
14779@node Vertical Compositions, Other Compositions, Horizontal Compositions, Compositions
14780@subsubsection Vertical Compositions
14781
14782@noindent
5d67986c
RS
14783@ignore
14784@starindex
14785@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14786@tindex cvert
14787The @code{cvert} function makes a vertical composition. Each
14788component of the vector is centered in a column. The baseline of
14789the result is by default the top line of the resulting composition.
14790For example, @samp{f(cvert([a, bb, ccc]), cvert([a^2 + 1, b^2]))}
14791formats in Big mode as
14792
d7b8e6c6 14793@example
5d67986c 14794@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14795f( a , 2 )
14796 bb a + 1
14797 ccc 2
14798 b
d7b8e6c6 14799@end group
5d67986c 14800@end example
d7b8e6c6 14801
5d67986c
RS
14802@ignore
14803@starindex
14804@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14805@tindex cbase
14806There are several special composition functions that work only as
14807components of a vertical composition. The @code{cbase} function
14808controls the baseline of the vertical composition; the baseline
14809will be the same as the baseline of whatever component is enclosed
14810in @code{cbase}. Thus @samp{f(cvert([a, cbase(bb), ccc]),
14811cvert([a^2 + 1, cbase(b^2)]))} displays as
14812
d7b8e6c6 14813@example
5d67986c 14814@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14815 2
14816 a + 1
14817 a 2
14818f(bb , b )
14819 ccc
d7b8e6c6 14820@end group
5d67986c 14821@end example
d7b8e6c6 14822
5d67986c
RS
14823@ignore
14824@starindex
14825@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14826@tindex ctbase
5d67986c
RS
14827@ignore
14828@starindex
14829@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14830@tindex cbbase
14831There are also @code{ctbase} and @code{cbbase} functions which
14832make the baseline of the vertical composition equal to the top
14833or bottom line (rather than the baseline) of that component.
14834Thus @samp{cvert([cbase(a / b)]) + cvert([ctbase(a / b)]) +
14835cvert([cbbase(a / b)])} gives
14836
d7b8e6c6 14837@example
5d67986c 14838@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14839 a
14840a -
14841- + a + b
14842b -
14843 b
d7b8e6c6 14844@end group
5d67986c 14845@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14846
14847There should be only one @code{cbase}, @code{ctbase}, or @code{cbbase}
14848function in a given vertical composition. These functions can also
14849be written with no arguments: @samp{ctbase()} is a zero-height object
14850which means the baseline is the top line of the following item, and
14851@samp{cbbase()} means the baseline is the bottom line of the preceding
14852item.
14853
5d67986c
RS
14854@ignore
14855@starindex
14856@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14857@tindex crule
14858The @code{crule} function builds a ``rule,'' or horizontal line,
14859across a vertical composition. By itself @samp{crule()} uses @samp{-}
14860characters to build the rule. You can specify any other character,
14861e.g., @samp{crule("=")}. The argument must be a character code or
14862vector of exactly one character code. It is repeated to match the
14863width of the widest item in the stack. For example, a quotient
14864with a thick line is @samp{cvert([a + 1, cbase(crule("=")), b^2])}:
14865
d7b8e6c6 14866@example
5d67986c 14867@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14868a + 1
14869=====
14870 2
14871 b
d7b8e6c6 14872@end group
5d67986c 14873@end example
d7b8e6c6 14874
5d67986c
RS
14875@ignore
14876@starindex
14877@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14878@tindex clvert
5d67986c
RS
14879@ignore
14880@starindex
14881@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14882@tindex crvert
14883Finally, the functions @code{clvert} and @code{crvert} act exactly
14884like @code{cvert} except that the items are left- or right-justified
14885in the stack. Thus @samp{clvert([a, bb, ccc]) + crvert([a, bb, ccc])}
14886gives:
14887
d7b8e6c6 14888@example
5d67986c 14889@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14890a + a
14891bb bb
14892ccc ccc
d7b8e6c6 14893@end group
5d67986c 14894@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14895
14896Like @code{choriz}, the vertical compositions accept a second argument
14897which gives the precedence to use when formatting the components.
14898Vertical compositions do not support separator strings.
14899
14900@node Other Compositions, Information about Compositions, Vertical Compositions, Compositions
14901@subsubsection Other Compositions
14902
14903@noindent
5d67986c
RS
14904@ignore
14905@starindex
14906@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14907@tindex csup
14908The @code{csup} function builds a superscripted expression. For
14909example, @samp{csup(a, b)} looks the same as @samp{a^b} does in Big
14910language mode. This is essentially a horizontal composition of
14911@samp{a} and @samp{b}, where @samp{b} is shifted up so that its
14912bottom line is one above the baseline.
14913
5d67986c
RS
14914@ignore
14915@starindex
14916@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14917@tindex csub
14918Likewise, the @code{csub} function builds a subscripted expression.
14919This shifts @samp{b} down so that its top line is one below the
14920bottom line of @samp{a} (note that this is not quite analogous to
14921@code{csup}). Other arrangements can be obtained by using
14922@code{choriz} and @code{cvert} directly.
14923
5d67986c
RS
14924@ignore
14925@starindex
14926@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14927@tindex cflat
14928The @code{cflat} function formats its argument in ``flat'' mode,
14929as obtained by @samp{d O}, if the current language mode is normal
14930or Big. It has no effect in other language modes. For example,
14931@samp{a^(b/c)} is formatted by Big mode like @samp{csup(a, cflat(b/c))}
14932to improve its readability.
14933
5d67986c
RS
14934@ignore
14935@starindex
14936@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14937@tindex cspace
14938The @code{cspace} function creates horizontal space. For example,
14939@samp{cspace(4)} is effectively the same as @samp{string(" ")}.
14940A second string (i.e., vector of characters) argument is repeated
14941instead of the space character. For example, @samp{cspace(4, "ab")}
14942looks like @samp{abababab}. If the second argument is not a string,
14943it is formatted in the normal way and then several copies of that
14944are composed together: @samp{cspace(4, a^2)} yields
14945
d7b8e6c6 14946@example
5d67986c 14947@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14948 2 2 2 2
14949a a a a
d7b8e6c6 14950@end group
5d67986c 14951@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14952
14953@noindent
14954If the number argument is zero, this is a zero-width object.
14955
5d67986c
RS
14956@ignore
14957@starindex
14958@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14959@tindex cvspace
14960The @code{cvspace} function creates vertical space, or a vertical
14961stack of copies of a certain string or formatted object. The
14962baseline is the center line of the resulting stack. A numerical
14963argument of zero will produce an object which contributes zero
14964height if used in a vertical composition.
14965
5d67986c
RS
14966@ignore
14967@starindex
14968@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 14969@tindex ctspace
5d67986c
RS
14970@ignore
14971@starindex
14972@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14973@tindex cbspace
14974There are also @code{ctspace} and @code{cbspace} functions which
14975create vertical space with the baseline the same as the baseline
14976of the top or bottom copy, respectively, of the second argument.
14977Thus @samp{cvspace(2, a/b) + ctspace(2, a/b) + cbspace(2, a/b)}
14978displays as:
14979
d7b8e6c6 14980@example
5d67986c 14981@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14982 a
14983 -
14984a b
14985- a a
14986b + - + -
14987a b b
14988- a
14989b -
14990 b
d7b8e6c6 14991@end group
5d67986c 14992@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
14993
14994@node Information about Compositions, User-Defined Compositions, Other Compositions, Compositions
14995@subsubsection Information about Compositions
14996
14997@noindent
14998The functions in this section are actual functions; they compose their
14999arguments according to the current language and other display modes,
15000then return a certain measurement of the composition as an integer.
15001
5d67986c
RS
15002@ignore
15003@starindex
15004@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15005@tindex cwidth
15006The @code{cwidth} function measures the width, in characters, of a
15007composition. For example, @samp{cwidth(a + b)} is 5, and
15008@samp{cwidth(a / b)} is 5 in normal mode, 1 in Big mode, and 11 in
15009@TeX{} mode (for @samp{@{a \over b@}}). The argument may involve
15010the composition functions described in this section.
15011
5d67986c
RS
15012@ignore
15013@starindex
15014@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15015@tindex cheight
15016The @code{cheight} function measures the height of a composition.
15017This is the total number of lines in the argument's printed form.
15018
5d67986c
RS
15019@ignore
15020@starindex
15021@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 15022@tindex cascent
5d67986c
RS
15023@ignore
15024@starindex
15025@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15026@tindex cdescent
15027The functions @code{cascent} and @code{cdescent} measure the amount
15028of the height that is above (and including) the baseline, or below
15029the baseline, respectively. Thus @samp{cascent(@var{x}) + cdescent(@var{x})}
15030always equals @samp{cheight(@var{x})}. For a one-line formula like
15031@samp{a + b}, @code{cascent} returns 1 and @code{cdescent} returns 0.
15032For @samp{a / b} in Big mode, @code{cascent} returns 2 and @code{cdescent}
15033returns 1. The only formula for which @code{cascent} will return zero
15034is @samp{cvspace(0)} or equivalents.
15035
15036@node User-Defined Compositions, , Information about Compositions, Compositions
15037@subsubsection User-Defined Compositions
15038
15039@noindent
15040@kindex Z C
15041@pindex calc-user-define-composition
15042The @kbd{Z C} (@code{calc-user-define-composition}) command lets you
15043define the display format for any algebraic function. You provide a
15044formula containing a certain number of argument variables on the stack.
15045Any time Calc formats a call to the specified function in the current
15046language mode and with that number of arguments, Calc effectively
15047replaces the function call with that formula with the arguments
15048replaced.
15049
15050Calc builds the default argument list by sorting all the variable names
15051that appear in the formula into alphabetical order. You can edit this
15052argument list before pressing @key{RET} if you wish. Any variables in
15053the formula that do not appear in the argument list will be displayed
15054literally; any arguments that do not appear in the formula will not
15055affect the display at all.
15056
15057You can define formats for built-in functions, for functions you have
15058defined with @kbd{Z F} (@pxref{Algebraic Definitions}), or for functions
15059which have no definitions but are being used as purely syntactic objects.
15060You can define different formats for each language mode, and for each
15061number of arguments, using a succession of @kbd{Z C} commands. When
15062Calc formats a function call, it first searches for a format defined
15063for the current language mode (and number of arguments); if there is
15064none, it uses the format defined for the Normal language mode. If
15065neither format exists, Calc uses its built-in standard format for that
15066function (usually just @samp{@var{func}(@var{args})}).
15067
15068If you execute @kbd{Z C} with the number 0 on the stack instead of a
15069formula, any defined formats for the function in the current language
15070mode will be removed. The function will revert to its standard format.
15071
15072For example, the default format for the binomial coefficient function
15073@samp{choose(n, m)} in the Big language mode is
15074
d7b8e6c6 15075@example
5d67986c 15076@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15077 n
15078( )
15079 m
d7b8e6c6 15080@end group
5d67986c 15081@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15082
15083@noindent
15084You might prefer the notation,
15085
d7b8e6c6 15086@example
5d67986c 15087@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15088 C
15089n m
d7b8e6c6 15090@end group
5d67986c 15091@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15092
15093@noindent
15094To define this notation, first make sure you are in Big mode,
15095then put the formula
15096
15097@smallexample
15098choriz([cvert([cvspace(1), n]), C, cvert([cvspace(1), m])])
15099@end smallexample
15100
15101@noindent
15102on the stack and type @kbd{Z C}. Answer the first prompt with
15103@code{choose}. The second prompt will be the default argument list
15104of @samp{(C m n)}. Edit this list to be @samp{(n m)} and press
15105@key{RET}. Now, try it out: For example, turn simplification
15106off with @kbd{m O} and enter @samp{choose(a,b) + choose(7,3)}
15107as an algebraic entry.
15108
d7b8e6c6 15109@example
5d67986c 15110@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15111 C + C
15112a b 7 3
d7b8e6c6 15113@end group
5d67986c 15114@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15115
15116As another example, let's define the usual notation for Stirling
15117numbers of the first kind, @samp{stir1(n, m)}. This is just like
15118the regular format for binomial coefficients but with square brackets
15119instead of parentheses.
15120
15121@smallexample
15122choriz([string("["), cvert([n, cbase(cvspace(1)), m]), string("]")])
15123@end smallexample
15124
15125Now type @kbd{Z C stir1 @key{RET}}, edit the argument list to
15126@samp{(n m)}, and type @key{RET}.
15127
15128The formula provided to @kbd{Z C} usually will involve composition
15129functions, but it doesn't have to. Putting the formula @samp{a + b + c}
15130onto the stack and typing @kbd{Z C foo @key{RET} @key{RET}} would define
15131the function @samp{foo(x,y,z)} to display like @samp{x + y + z}.
15132This ``sum'' will act exactly like a real sum for all formatting
15133purposes (it will be parenthesized the same, and so on). However
15134it will be computationally unrelated to a sum. For example, the
15135formula @samp{2 * foo(1, 2, 3)} will display as @samp{2 (1 + 2 + 3)}.
15136Operator precedences have caused the ``sum'' to be written in
15137parentheses, but the arguments have not actually been summed.
15138(Generally a display format like this would be undesirable, since
15139it can easily be confused with a real sum.)
15140
15141The special function @code{eval} can be used inside a @kbd{Z C}
15142composition formula to cause all or part of the formula to be
15143evaluated at display time. For example, if the formula is
15144@samp{a + eval(b + c)}, then @samp{foo(1, 2, 3)} will be displayed
15145as @samp{1 + 5}. Evaluation will use the default simplifications,
15146regardless of the current simplification mode. There are also
15147@code{evalsimp} and @code{evalextsimp} which simplify as if by
15148@kbd{a s} and @kbd{a e} (respectively). Note that these ``functions''
15149operate only in the context of composition formulas (and also in
15150rewrite rules, where they serve a similar purpose; @pxref{Rewrite
15151Rules}). On the stack, a call to @code{eval} will be left in
15152symbolic form.
15153
15154It is not a good idea to use @code{eval} except as a last resort.
15155It can cause the display of formulas to be extremely slow. For
15156example, while @samp{eval(a + b)} might seem quite fast and simple,
15157there are several situations where it could be slow. For example,
15158@samp{a} and/or @samp{b} could be polar complex numbers, in which
15159case doing the sum requires trigonometry. Or, @samp{a} could be
15160the factorial @samp{fact(100)} which is unevaluated because you
15161have typed @kbd{m O}; @code{eval} will evaluate it anyway to
15162produce a large, unwieldy integer.
15163
15164You can save your display formats permanently using the @kbd{Z P}
15165command (@pxref{Creating User Keys}).
15166
15167@node Syntax Tables, , Compositions, Language Modes
15168@subsection Syntax Tables
15169
15170@noindent
15171@cindex Syntax tables
15172@cindex Parsing formulas, customized
15173Syntax tables do for input what compositions do for output: They
15174allow you to teach custom notations to Calc's formula parser.
15175Calc keeps a separate syntax table for each language mode.
15176
15177(Note that the Calc ``syntax tables'' discussed here are completely
15178unrelated to the syntax tables described in the Emacs manual.)
15179
15180@kindex Z S
15181@pindex calc-edit-user-syntax
15182The @kbd{Z S} (@code{calc-edit-user-syntax}) command edits the
15183syntax table for the current language mode. If you want your
15184syntax to work in any language, define it in the normal language
15185mode. Type @kbd{M-# M-#} to finish editing the syntax table, or
15186@kbd{M-# x} to cancel the edit. The @kbd{m m} command saves all
15187the syntax tables along with the other mode settings;
15188@pxref{General Mode Commands}.
15189
15190@menu
15191* Syntax Table Basics::
15192* Precedence in Syntax Tables::
15193* Advanced Syntax Patterns::
15194* Conditional Syntax Rules::
15195@end menu
15196
15197@node Syntax Table Basics, Precedence in Syntax Tables, Syntax Tables, Syntax Tables
15198@subsubsection Syntax Table Basics
15199
15200@noindent
15201@dfn{Parsing} is the process of converting a raw string of characters,
15202such as you would type in during algebraic entry, into a Calc formula.
15203Calc's parser works in two stages. First, the input is broken down
15204into @dfn{tokens}, such as words, numbers, and punctuation symbols
15205like @samp{+}, @samp{:=}, and @samp{+/-}. Space between tokens is
15206ignored (except when it serves to separate adjacent words). Next,
15207the parser matches this string of tokens against various built-in
15208syntactic patterns, such as ``an expression followed by @samp{+}
15209followed by another expression'' or ``a name followed by @samp{(},
15210zero or more expressions separated by commas, and @samp{)}.''
15211
15212A @dfn{syntax table} is a list of user-defined @dfn{syntax rules},
15213which allow you to specify new patterns to define your own
15214favorite input notations. Calc's parser always checks the syntax
15215table for the current language mode, then the table for the normal
15216language mode, before it uses its built-in rules to parse an
15217algebraic formula you have entered. Each syntax rule should go on
15218its own line; it consists of a @dfn{pattern}, a @samp{:=} symbol,
15219and a Calc formula with an optional @dfn{condition}. (Syntax rules
15220resemble algebraic rewrite rules, but the notation for patterns is
15221completely different.)
15222
15223A syntax pattern is a list of tokens, separated by spaces.
15224Except for a few special symbols, tokens in syntax patterns are
15225matched literally, from left to right. For example, the rule,
15226
15227@example
15228foo ( ) := 2+3
15229@end example
15230
15231@noindent
15232would cause Calc to parse the formula @samp{4+foo()*5} as if it
15233were @samp{4+(2+3)*5}. Notice that the parentheses were written
15234as two separate tokens in the rule. As a result, the rule works
15235for both @samp{foo()} and @w{@samp{foo ( )}}. If we had written
15236the rule as @samp{foo () := 2+3}, then Calc would treat @samp{()}
15237as a single, indivisible token, so that @w{@samp{foo( )}} would
15238not be recognized by the rule. (It would be parsed as a regular
15239zero-argument function call instead.) In fact, this rule would
15240also make trouble for the rest of Calc's parser: An unrelated
15241formula like @samp{bar()} would now be tokenized into @samp{bar ()}
15242instead of @samp{bar ( )}, so that the standard parser for function
15243calls would no longer recognize it!
15244
15245While it is possible to make a token with a mixture of letters
15246and punctuation symbols, this is not recommended. It is better to
15247break it into several tokens, as we did with @samp{foo()} above.
15248
15249The symbol @samp{#} in a syntax pattern matches any Calc expression.
15250On the righthand side, the things that matched the @samp{#}s can
15251be referred to as @samp{#1}, @samp{#2}, and so on (where @samp{#1}
15252matches the leftmost @samp{#} in the pattern). For example, these
15253rules match a user-defined function, prefix operator, infix operator,
15254and postfix operator, respectively:
15255
15256@example
15257foo ( # ) := myfunc(#1)
15258foo # := myprefix(#1)
15259# foo # := myinfix(#1,#2)
15260# foo := mypostfix(#1)
15261@end example
15262
15263Thus @samp{foo(3)} will parse as @samp{myfunc(3)}, and @samp{2+3 foo}
15264will parse as @samp{mypostfix(2+3)}.
15265
15266It is important to write the first two rules in the order shown,
15267because Calc tries rules in order from first to last. If the
15268pattern @samp{foo #} came first, it would match anything that could
15269match the @samp{foo ( # )} rule, since an expression in parentheses
15270is itself a valid expression. Thus the @w{@samp{foo ( # )}} rule would
15271never get to match anything. Likewise, the last two rules must be
15272written in the order shown or else @samp{3 foo 4} will be parsed as
15273@samp{mypostfix(3) * 4}. (Of course, the best way to avoid these
15274ambiguities is not to use the same symbol in more than one way at
15275the same time! In case you're not convinced, try the following
15276exercise: How will the above rules parse the input @samp{foo(3,4)},
15277if at all? Work it out for yourself, then try it in Calc and see.)
15278
15279Calc is quite flexible about what sorts of patterns are allowed.
15280The only rule is that every pattern must begin with a literal
15281token (like @samp{foo} in the first two patterns above), or with
15282a @samp{#} followed by a literal token (as in the last two
15283patterns). After that, any mixture is allowed, although putting
15284two @samp{#}s in a row will not be very useful since two
15285expressions with nothing between them will be parsed as one
15286expression that uses implicit multiplication.
15287
15288As a more practical example, Maple uses the notation
15289@samp{sum(a(i), i=1..10)} for sums, which Calc's Maple mode doesn't
15290recognize at present. To handle this syntax, we simply add the
15291rule,
15292
15293@example
15294sum ( # , # = # .. # ) := sum(#1,#2,#3,#4)
15295@end example
15296
15297@noindent
15298to the Maple mode syntax table. As another example, C mode can't
15299read assignment operators like @samp{++} and @samp{*=}. We can
15300define these operators quite easily:
15301
15302@example
15303# *= # := muleq(#1,#2)
15304# ++ := postinc(#1)
15305++ # := preinc(#1)
15306@end example
15307
15308@noindent
15309To complete the job, we would use corresponding composition functions
15310and @kbd{Z C} to cause these functions to display in their respective
15311Maple and C notations. (Note that the C example ignores issues of
15312operator precedence, which are discussed in the next section.)
15313
15314You can enclose any token in quotes to prevent its usual
15315interpretation in syntax patterns:
15316
15317@example
15318# ":=" # := becomes(#1,#2)
15319@end example
15320
15321Quotes also allow you to include spaces in a token, although once
15322again it is generally better to use two tokens than one token with
15323an embedded space. To include an actual quotation mark in a quoted
15324token, precede it with a backslash. (This also works to include
15325backslashes in tokens.)
15326
15327@example
15328# "bad token" # "/\"\\" # := silly(#1,#2,#3)
15329@end example
15330
15331@noindent
15332This will parse @samp{3 bad token 4 /"\ 5} to @samp{silly(3,4,5)}.
15333
15334The token @kbd{#} has a predefined meaning in Calc's formula parser;
15335it is not legal to use @samp{"#"} in a syntax rule. However, longer
15336tokens that include the @samp{#} character are allowed. Also, while
15337@samp{"$"} and @samp{"\""} are allowed as tokens, their presence in
15338the syntax table will prevent those characters from working in their
15339usual ways (referring to stack entries and quoting strings,
15340respectively).
15341
15342Finally, the notation @samp{%%} anywhere in a syntax table causes
15343the rest of the line to be ignored as a comment.
15344
15345@node Precedence in Syntax Tables, Advanced Syntax Patterns, Syntax Table Basics, Syntax Tables
15346@subsubsection Precedence
15347
15348@noindent
15349Different operators are generally assigned different @dfn{precedences}.
15350By default, an operator defined by a rule like
15351
15352@example
15353# foo # := foo(#1,#2)
15354@end example
15355
15356@noindent
15357will have an extremely low precedence, so that @samp{2*3+4 foo 5 == 6}
15358will be parsed as @samp{(2*3+4) foo (5 == 6)}. To change the
15359precedence of an operator, use the notation @samp{#/@var{p}} in
15360place of @samp{#}, where @var{p} is an integer precedence level.
15361For example, 185 lies between the precedences for @samp{+} and
15362@samp{*}, so if we change this rule to
15363
15364@example
15365#/185 foo #/186 := foo(#1,#2)
15366@end example
15367
15368@noindent
15369then @samp{2+3 foo 4*5} will be parsed as @samp{2+(3 foo (4*5))}.
15370Also, because we've given the righthand expression slightly higher
15371precedence, our new operator will be left-associative:
15372@samp{1 foo 2 foo 3} will be parsed as @samp{(1 foo 2) foo 3}.
15373By raising the precedence of the lefthand expression instead, we
15374can create a right-associative operator.
15375
15376@xref{Composition Basics}, for a table of precedences of the
15377standard Calc operators. For the precedences of operators in other
15378language modes, look in the Calc source file @file{calc-lang.el}.
15379
15380@node Advanced Syntax Patterns, Conditional Syntax Rules, Precedence in Syntax Tables, Syntax Tables
15381@subsubsection Advanced Syntax Patterns
15382
15383@noindent
15384To match a function with a variable number of arguments, you could
15385write
15386
15387@example
15388foo ( # ) := myfunc(#1)
15389foo ( # , # ) := myfunc(#1,#2)
15390foo ( # , # , # ) := myfunc(#1,#2,#3)
15391@end example
15392
15393@noindent
15394but this isn't very elegant. To match variable numbers of items,
15395Calc uses some notations inspired regular expressions and the
15396``extended BNF'' style used by some language designers.
15397
15398@example
15399foo ( @{ # @}*, ) := apply(myfunc,#1)
15400@end example
15401
15402The token @samp{@{} introduces a repeated or optional portion.
15403One of the three tokens @samp{@}*}, @samp{@}+}, or @samp{@}?}
15404ends the portion. These will match zero or more, one or more,
15405or zero or one copies of the enclosed pattern, respectively.
15406In addition, @samp{@}*} and @samp{@}+} can be followed by a
15407separator token (with no space in between, as shown above).
15408Thus @samp{@{ # @}*,} matches nothing, or one expression, or
15409several expressions separated by commas.
15410
15411A complete @samp{@{ ... @}} item matches as a vector of the
15412items that matched inside it. For example, the above rule will
15413match @samp{foo(1,2,3)} to get @samp{apply(myfunc,[1,2,3])}.
15414The Calc @code{apply} function takes a function name and a vector
15415of arguments and builds a call to the function with those
15416arguments, so the net result is the formula @samp{myfunc(1,2,3)}.
15417
15418If the body of a @samp{@{ ... @}} contains several @samp{#}s
15419(or nested @samp{@{ ... @}} constructs), then the items will be
15420strung together into the resulting vector. If the body
15421does not contain anything but literal tokens, the result will
15422always be an empty vector.
15423
15424@example
15425foo ( @{ # , # @}+, ) := bar(#1)
15426foo ( @{ @{ # @}*, @}*; ) := matrix(#1)
15427@end example
15428
15429@noindent
5d67986c
RS
15430will parse @samp{foo(1, 2, 3, 4)} as @samp{bar([1, 2, 3, 4])}, and
15431@samp{foo(1, 2; 3, 4)} as @samp{matrix([[1, 2], [3, 4]])}. Also, after
d7b8e6c6 15432some thought it's easy to see how this pair of rules will parse
5d67986c 15433@samp{foo(1, 2, 3)} as @samp{matrix([[1, 2, 3]])}, since the first
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15434rule will only match an even number of arguments. The rule
15435
15436@example
15437foo ( # @{ , # , # @}? ) := bar(#1,#2)
15438@end example
15439
15440@noindent
15441will parse @samp{foo(2,3,4)} as @samp{bar(2,[3,4])}, and
15442@samp{foo(2)} as @samp{bar(2,[])}.
15443
15444The notation @samp{@{ ... @}?.} (note the trailing period) works
15445just the same as regular @samp{@{ ... @}?}, except that it does not
15446count as an argument; the following two rules are equivalent:
15447
15448@example
15449foo ( # , @{ also @}? # ) := bar(#1,#3)
15450foo ( # , @{ also @}?. # ) := bar(#1,#2)
15451@end example
15452
15453@noindent
15454Note that in the first case the optional text counts as @samp{#2},
15455which will always be an empty vector, but in the second case no
15456empty vector is produced.
15457
15458Another variant is @samp{@{ ... @}?$}, which means the body is
15459optional only at the end of the input formula. All built-in syntax
15460rules in Calc use this for closing delimiters, so that during
5d67986c 15461algebraic entry you can type @kbd{[sqrt(2), sqrt(3 @key{RET}}, omitting
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15462the closing parenthesis and bracket. Calc does this automatically
15463for trailing @samp{)}, @samp{]}, and @samp{>} tokens in syntax
15464rules, but you can use @samp{@{ ... @}?$} explicitly to get
15465this effect with any token (such as @samp{"@}"} or @samp{end}).
15466Like @samp{@{ ... @}?.}, this notation does not count as an
15467argument. Conversely, you can use quotes, as in @samp{")"}, to
15468prevent a closing-delimiter token from being automatically treated
15469as optional.
15470
15471Calc's parser does not have full backtracking, which means some
15472patterns will not work as you might expect:
15473
15474@example
15475foo ( @{ # , @}? # , # ) := bar(#1,#2,#3)
15476@end example
15477
15478@noindent
15479Here we are trying to make the first argument optional, so that
15480@samp{foo(2,3)} parses as @samp{bar([],2,3)}. Unfortunately, Calc
15481first tries to match @samp{2,} against the optional part of the
15482pattern, finds a match, and so goes ahead to match the rest of the
15483pattern. Later on it will fail to match the second comma, but it
15484doesn't know how to go back and try the other alternative at that
15485point. One way to get around this would be to use two rules:
15486
15487@example
15488foo ( # , # , # ) := bar([#1],#2,#3)
15489foo ( # , # ) := bar([],#1,#2)
15490@end example
15491
15492More precisely, when Calc wants to match an optional or repeated
15493part of a pattern, it scans forward attempting to match that part.
15494If it reaches the end of the optional part without failing, it
15495``finalizes'' its choice and proceeds. If it fails, though, it
15496backs up and tries the other alternative. Thus Calc has ``partial''
15497backtracking. A fully backtracking parser would go on to make sure
15498the rest of the pattern matched before finalizing the choice.
15499
15500@node Conditional Syntax Rules, , Advanced Syntax Patterns, Syntax Tables
15501@subsubsection Conditional Syntax Rules
15502
15503@noindent
15504It is possible to attach a @dfn{condition} to a syntax rule. For
15505example, the rules
15506
15507@example
15508foo ( # ) := ifoo(#1) :: integer(#1)
15509foo ( # ) := gfoo(#1)
15510@end example
15511
15512@noindent
15513will parse @samp{foo(3)} as @samp{ifoo(3)}, but will parse
15514@samp{foo(3.5)} and @samp{foo(x)} as calls to @code{gfoo}. Any
15515number of conditions may be attached; all must be true for the
15516rule to succeed. A condition is ``true'' if it evaluates to a
15517nonzero number. @xref{Logical Operations}, for a list of Calc
15518functions like @code{integer} that perform logical tests.
15519
15520The exact sequence of events is as follows: When Calc tries a
15521rule, it first matches the pattern as usual. It then substitutes
15522@samp{#1}, @samp{#2}, etc., in the conditions, if any. Next, the
15523conditions are simplified and evaluated in order from left to right,
15524as if by the @w{@kbd{a s}} algebra command (@pxref{Simplifying Formulas}).
15525Each result is true if it is a nonzero number, or an expression
15526that can be proven to be nonzero (@pxref{Declarations}). If the
15527results of all conditions are true, the expression (such as
15528@samp{ifoo(#1)}) has its @samp{#}s substituted, and that is the
15529result of the parse. If the result of any condition is false, Calc
15530goes on to try the next rule in the syntax table.
15531
15532Syntax rules also support @code{let} conditions, which operate in
15533exactly the same way as they do in algebraic rewrite rules.
15534@xref{Other Features of Rewrite Rules}, for details. A @code{let}
15535condition is always true, but as a side effect it defines a
15536variable which can be used in later conditions, and also in the
15537expression after the @samp{:=} sign:
15538
15539@example
15540foo ( # ) := hifoo(x) :: let(x := #1 + 0.5) :: dnumint(x)
15541@end example
15542
15543@noindent
15544The @code{dnumint} function tests if a value is numerically an
15545integer, i.e., either a true integer or an integer-valued float.
15546This rule will parse @code{foo} with a half-integer argument,
15547like @samp{foo(3.5)}, to a call like @samp{hifoo(4.)}.
15548
15549The lefthand side of a syntax rule @code{let} must be a simple
15550variable, not the arbitrary pattern that is allowed in rewrite
15551rules.
15552
15553The @code{matches} function is also treated specially in syntax
15554rule conditions (again, in the same way as in rewrite rules).
15555@xref{Matching Commands}. If the matching pattern contains
15556meta-variables, then those meta-variables may be used in later
15557conditions and in the result expression. The arguments to
15558@code{matches} are not evaluated in this situation.
15559
15560@example
15561sum ( # , # ) := sum(#1,a,b,c) :: matches(#2, a=[b..c])
15562@end example
15563
15564@noindent
15565This is another way to implement the Maple mode @code{sum} notation.
15566In this approach, we allow @samp{#2} to equal the whole expression
15567@samp{i=1..10}. Then, we use @code{matches} to break it apart into
15568its components. If the expression turns out not to match the pattern,
15569the syntax rule will fail. Note that @kbd{Z S} always uses Calc's
15570normal language mode for editing expressions in syntax rules, so we
15571must use regular Calc notation for the interval @samp{[b..c]} that
15572will correspond to the Maple mode interval @samp{1..10}.
15573
15574@node Modes Variable, Calc Mode Line, Language Modes, Mode Settings
15575@section The @code{Modes} Variable
15576
15577@noindent
15578@kindex m g
15579@pindex calc-get-modes
15580The @kbd{m g} (@code{calc-get-modes}) command pushes onto the stack
15581a vector of numbers that describes the various mode settings that
15582are in effect. With a numeric prefix argument, it pushes only the
15583@var{n}th mode, i.e., the @var{n}th element of this vector. Keyboard
15584macros can use the @kbd{m g} command to modify their behavior based
15585on the current mode settings.
15586
15587@cindex @code{Modes} variable
15588@vindex Modes
15589The modes vector is also available in the special variable
5d67986c 15590@code{Modes}. In other words, @kbd{m g} is like @kbd{s r Modes @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15591It will not work to store into this variable; in fact, if you do,
15592@code{Modes} will cease to track the current modes. (The @kbd{m g}
15593command will continue to work, however.)
15594
15595In general, each number in this vector is suitable as a numeric
15596prefix argument to the associated mode-setting command. (Recall
15597that the @kbd{~} key takes a number from the stack and gives it as
15598a numeric prefix to the next command.)
15599
15600The elements of the modes vector are as follows:
15601
15602@enumerate
15603@item
15604Current precision. Default is 12; associated command is @kbd{p}.
15605
15606@item
15607Binary word size. Default is 32; associated command is @kbd{b w}.
15608
15609@item
15610Stack size (not counting the value about to be pushed by @kbd{m g}).
15611This is zero if @kbd{m g} is executed with an empty stack.
15612
15613@item
15614Number radix. Default is 10; command is @kbd{d r}.
15615
15616@item
15617Floating-point format. This is the number of digits, plus the
15618constant 0 for normal notation, 10000 for scientific notation,
1561920000 for engineering notation, or 30000 for fixed-point notation.
15620These codes are acceptable as prefix arguments to the @kbd{d n}
15621command, but note that this may lose information: For example,
15622@kbd{d s} and @kbd{C-u 12 d s} have similar (but not quite
15623identical) effects if the current precision is 12, but they both
15624produce a code of 10012, which will be treated by @kbd{d n} as
15625@kbd{C-u 12 d s}. If the precision then changes, the float format
15626will still be frozen at 12 significant figures.
15627
15628@item
15629Angular mode. Default is 1 (degrees). Other values are 2 (radians)
15630and 3 (HMS). The @kbd{m d} command accepts these prefixes.
15631
15632@item
15633Symbolic mode. Value is 0 or 1; default is 0. Command is @kbd{m s}.
15634
15635@item
15636Fraction mode. Value is 0 or 1; default is 0. Command is @kbd{m f}.
15637
15638@item
15639Polar mode. Value is 0 (rectangular) or 1 (polar); default is 0.
15640Command is @kbd{m p}.
15641
15642@item
15643Matrix/scalar mode. Default value is @i{-1}. Value is 0 for scalar
5d67986c
RS
15644mode, @i{-2} for matrix mode, or @var{N} for @c{$N\times N$}
15645@var{N}x@var{N} matrix mode. Command is @kbd{m v}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15646
15647@item
15648Simplification mode. Default is 1. Value is @i{-1} for off (@kbd{m O}),
156490 for @kbd{m N}, 2 for @kbd{m B}, 3 for @kbd{m A}, 4 for @kbd{m E},
15650or 5 for @w{@kbd{m U}}. The @kbd{m D} command accepts these prefixes.
15651
15652@item
15653Infinite mode. Default is @i{-1} (off). Value is 1 if the mode is on,
15654or 0 if the mode is on with positive zeros. Command is @kbd{m i}.
15655@end enumerate
15656
5d67986c 15657For example, the sequence @kbd{M-1 m g @key{RET} 2 + ~ p} increases the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15658precision by two, leaving a copy of the old precision on the stack.
15659Later, @kbd{~ p} will restore the original precision using that
15660stack value. (This sequence might be especially useful inside a
15661keyboard macro.)
15662
5d67986c 15663As another example, @kbd{M-3 m g 1 - ~ @key{DEL}} deletes all but the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15664oldest (bottommost) stack entry.
15665
15666Yet another example: The HP-48 ``round'' command rounds a number
15667to the current displayed precision. You could roughly emulate this
15668in Calc with the sequence @kbd{M-5 m g 10000 % ~ c c}. (This
15669would not work for fixed-point mode, but it wouldn't be hard to
15670do a full emulation with the help of the @kbd{Z [} and @kbd{Z ]}
15671programming commands. @xref{Conditionals in Macros}.)
15672
15673@node Calc Mode Line, , Modes Variable, Mode Settings
15674@section The Calc Mode Line
15675
15676@noindent
15677@cindex Mode line indicators
15678This section is a summary of all symbols that can appear on the
15679Calc mode line, the highlighted bar that appears under the Calc
15680stack window (or under an editing window in Embedded Mode).
15681
15682The basic mode line format is:
15683
15684@example
15685--%%-Calc: 12 Deg @var{other modes} (Calculator)
15686@end example
15687
15688The @samp{%%} is the Emacs symbol for ``read-only''; it shows that
15689regular Emacs commands are not allowed to edit the stack buffer
15690as if it were text.
15691
15692The word @samp{Calc:} changes to @samp{CalcEmbed:} if Embedded Mode
15693is enabled. The words after this describe the various Calc modes
15694that are in effect.
15695
15696The first mode is always the current precision, an integer.
15697The second mode is always the angular mode, either @code{Deg},
15698@code{Rad}, or @code{Hms}.
15699
15700Here is a complete list of the remaining symbols that can appear
15701on the mode line:
15702
15703@table @code
15704@item Alg
15705Algebraic mode (@kbd{m a}; @pxref{Algebraic Entry}).
15706
15707@item Alg[(
15708Incomplete algebraic mode (@kbd{C-u m a}).
15709
15710@item Alg*
15711Total algebraic mode (@kbd{m t}).
15712
15713@item Symb
15714Symbolic mode (@kbd{m s}; @pxref{Symbolic Mode}).
15715
15716@item Matrix
15717Matrix mode (@kbd{m v}; @pxref{Matrix Mode}).
15718
15719@item Matrix@var{n}
15720Dimensioned matrix mode (@kbd{C-u @var{n} m v}).
15721
15722@item Scalar
15723Scalar mode (@kbd{m v}; @pxref{Matrix Mode}).
15724
15725@item Polar
15726Polar complex mode (@kbd{m p}; @pxref{Polar Mode}).
15727
15728@item Frac
15729Fraction mode (@kbd{m f}; @pxref{Fraction Mode}).
15730
15731@item Inf
15732Infinite mode (@kbd{m i}; @pxref{Infinite Mode}).
15733
15734@item +Inf
15735Positive infinite mode (@kbd{C-u 0 m i}).
15736
15737@item NoSimp
15738Default simplifications off (@kbd{m O}; @pxref{Simplification Modes}).
15739
15740@item NumSimp
15741Default simplifications for numeric arguments only (@kbd{m N}).
15742
15743@item BinSimp@var{w}
15744Binary-integer simplification mode; word size @var{w} (@kbd{m B}, @kbd{b w}).
15745
15746@item AlgSimp
15747Algebraic simplification mode (@kbd{m A}).
15748
15749@item ExtSimp
15750Extended algebraic simplification mode (@kbd{m E}).
15751
15752@item UnitSimp
15753Units simplification mode (@kbd{m U}).
15754
15755@item Bin
15756Current radix is 2 (@kbd{d 2}; @pxref{Radix Modes}).
15757
15758@item Oct
15759Current radix is 8 (@kbd{d 8}).
15760
15761@item Hex
15762Current radix is 16 (@kbd{d 6}).
15763
15764@item Radix@var{n}
15765Current radix is @var{n} (@kbd{d r}).
15766
15767@item Zero
15768Leading zeros (@kbd{d z}; @pxref{Radix Modes}).
15769
15770@item Big
15771Big language mode (@kbd{d B}; @pxref{Normal Language Modes}).
15772
15773@item Flat
15774One-line normal language mode (@kbd{d O}).
15775
15776@item Unform
15777Unformatted language mode (@kbd{d U}).
15778
15779@item C
15780C language mode (@kbd{d C}; @pxref{C FORTRAN Pascal}).
15781
15782@item Pascal
15783Pascal language mode (@kbd{d P}).
15784
15785@item Fortran
15786FORTRAN language mode (@kbd{d F}).
15787
15788@item TeX
15789@TeX{} language mode (@kbd{d T}; @pxref{TeX Language Mode}).
15790
15791@item Eqn
15792@dfn{Eqn} language mode (@kbd{d E}; @pxref{Eqn Language Mode}).
15793
15794@item Math
15795Mathematica language mode (@kbd{d M}; @pxref{Mathematica Language Mode}).
15796
15797@item Maple
15798Maple language mode (@kbd{d W}; @pxref{Maple Language Mode}).
15799
15800@item Norm@var{n}
15801Normal float mode with @var{n} digits (@kbd{d n}; @pxref{Float Formats}).
15802
15803@item Fix@var{n}
15804Fixed point mode with @var{n} digits after the point (@kbd{d f}).
15805
15806@item Sci
15807Scientific notation mode (@kbd{d s}).
15808
15809@item Sci@var{n}
15810Scientific notation with @var{n} digits (@kbd{d s}).
15811
15812@item Eng
15813Engineering notation mode (@kbd{d e}).
15814
15815@item Eng@var{n}
15816Engineering notation with @var{n} digits (@kbd{d e}).
15817
15818@item Left@var{n}
15819Left-justified display indented by @var{n} (@kbd{d <}; @pxref{Justification}).
15820
15821@item Right
15822Right-justified display (@kbd{d >}).
15823
15824@item Right@var{n}
15825Right-justified display with width @var{n} (@kbd{d >}).
15826
15827@item Center
15828Centered display (@kbd{d =}).
15829
15830@item Center@var{n}
15831Centered display with center column @var{n} (@kbd{d =}).
15832
15833@item Wid@var{n}
15834Line breaking with width @var{n} (@kbd{d b}; @pxref{Normal Language Modes}).
15835
15836@item Wide
15837No line breaking (@kbd{d b}).
15838
15839@item Break
15840Selections show deep structure (@kbd{j b}; @pxref{Making Selections}).
15841
15842@item Save
15843Record modes in @file{~/.emacs} (@kbd{m R}; @pxref{General Mode Commands}).
15844
15845@item Local
15846Record modes in Embedded buffer (@kbd{m R}).
15847
15848@item LocEdit
15849Record modes as editing-only in Embedded buffer (@kbd{m R}).
15850
15851@item LocPerm
15852Record modes as permanent-only in Embedded buffer (@kbd{m R}).
15853
15854@item Global
15855Record modes as global in Embedded buffer (@kbd{m R}).
15856
15857@item Manual
15858Automatic recomputation turned off (@kbd{m C}; @pxref{Automatic
15859Recomputation}).
15860
15861@item Graph
15862GNUPLOT process is alive in background (@pxref{Graphics}).
15863
15864@item Sel
15865Top-of-stack has a selection (Embedded only; @pxref{Making Selections}).
15866
15867@item Dirty
15868The stack display may not be up-to-date (@pxref{Display Modes}).
15869
15870@item Inv
15871``Inverse'' prefix was pressed (@kbd{I}; @pxref{Inverse and Hyperbolic}).
15872
15873@item Hyp
15874``Hyperbolic'' prefix was pressed (@kbd{H}).
15875
15876@item Keep
15877``Keep-arguments'' prefix was pressed (@kbd{K}).
15878
15879@item Narrow
15880Stack is truncated (@kbd{d t}; @pxref{Truncating the Stack}).
15881@end table
15882
15883In addition, the symbols @code{Active} and @code{~Active} can appear
15884as minor modes on an Embedded buffer's mode line. @xref{Embedded Mode}.
15885
15886@node Arithmetic, Scientific Functions, Mode Settings, Top
15887@chapter Arithmetic Functions
15888
15889@noindent
15890This chapter describes the Calc commands for doing simple calculations
15891on numbers, such as addition, absolute value, and square roots. These
15892commands work by removing the top one or two values from the stack,
15893performing the desired operation, and pushing the result back onto the
15894stack. If the operation cannot be performed, the result pushed is a
15895formula instead of a number, such as @samp{2/0} (because division by zero
15896is illegal) or @samp{sqrt(x)} (because the argument @samp{x} is a formula).
15897
15898Most of the commands described here can be invoked by a single keystroke.
15899Some of the more obscure ones are two-letter sequences beginning with
15900the @kbd{f} (``functions'') prefix key.
15901
15902@xref{Prefix Arguments}, for a discussion of the effect of numeric
15903prefix arguments on commands in this chapter which do not otherwise
15904interpret a prefix argument.
15905
15906@menu
15907* Basic Arithmetic::
15908* Integer Truncation::
15909* Complex Number Functions::
15910* Conversions::
15911* Date Arithmetic::
15912* Financial Functions::
15913* Binary Functions::
15914@end menu
15915
15916@node Basic Arithmetic, Integer Truncation, Arithmetic, Arithmetic
15917@section Basic Arithmetic
15918
15919@noindent
15920@kindex +
15921@pindex calc-plus
5d67986c
RS
15922@ignore
15923@mindex @null
15924@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15925@tindex +
15926The @kbd{+} (@code{calc-plus}) command adds two numbers. The numbers may
15927be any of the standard Calc data types. The resulting sum is pushed back
15928onto the stack.
15929
15930If both arguments of @kbd{+} are vectors or matrices (of matching dimensions),
15931the result is a vector or matrix sum. If one argument is a vector and the
15932other a scalar (i.e., a non-vector), the scalar is added to each of the
15933elements of the vector to form a new vector. If the scalar is not a
15934number, the operation is left in symbolic form: Suppose you added @samp{x}
15935to the vector @samp{[1,2]}. You may want the result @samp{[1+x,2+x]}, or
15936you may plan to substitute a 2-vector for @samp{x} in the future. Since
15937the Calculator can't tell which interpretation you want, it makes the
15938safest assumption. @xref{Reducing and Mapping}, for a way to add @samp{x}
15939to every element of a vector.
15940
15941If either argument of @kbd{+} is a complex number, the result will in general
15942be complex. If one argument is in rectangular form and the other polar,
15943the current Polar Mode determines the form of the result. If Symbolic
15944Mode is enabled, the sum may be left as a formula if the necessary
15945conversions for polar addition are non-trivial.
15946
15947If both arguments of @kbd{+} are HMS forms, the forms are added according to
15948the usual conventions of hours-minutes-seconds notation. If one argument
15949is an HMS form and the other is a number, that number is converted from
15950degrees or radians (depending on the current Angular Mode) to HMS format
15951and then the two HMS forms are added.
15952
15953If one argument of @kbd{+} is a date form, the other can be either a
15954real number, which advances the date by a certain number of days, or
15955an HMS form, which advances the date by a certain amount of time.
15956Subtracting two date forms yields the number of days between them.
15957Adding two date forms is meaningless, but Calc interprets it as the
15958subtraction of one date form and the negative of the other. (The
15959negative of a date form can be understood by remembering that dates
15960are stored as the number of days before or after Jan 1, 1 AD.)
15961
15962If both arguments of @kbd{+} are error forms, the result is an error form
15963with an appropriately computed standard deviation. If one argument is an
15964error form and the other is a number, the number is taken to have zero error.
15965Error forms may have symbolic formulas as their mean and/or error parts;
15966adding these will produce a symbolic error form result. However, adding an
15967error form to a plain symbolic formula (as in @samp{(a +/- b) + c}) will not
15968work, for the same reasons just mentioned for vectors. Instead you must
15969write @samp{(a +/- b) + (c +/- 0)}.
15970
15971If both arguments of @kbd{+} are modulo forms with equal values of @cite{M},
15972or if one argument is a modulo form and the other a plain number, the
15973result is a modulo form which represents the sum, modulo @cite{M}, of
15974the two values.
15975
15976If both arguments of @kbd{+} are intervals, the result is an interval
15977which describes all possible sums of the possible input values. If
15978one argument is a plain number, it is treated as the interval
15979@w{@samp{[x ..@: x]}}.
15980
15981If one argument of @kbd{+} is an infinity and the other is not, the
15982result is that same infinity. If both arguments are infinite and in
15983the same direction, the result is the same infinity, but if they are
15984infinite in different directions the result is @code{nan}.
15985
15986@kindex -
15987@pindex calc-minus
5d67986c
RS
15988@ignore
15989@mindex @null
15990@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
15991@tindex -
15992The @kbd{-} (@code{calc-minus}) command subtracts two values. The top
15993number on the stack is subtracted from the one behind it, so that the
15994computation @kbd{5 @key{RET} 2 -} produces 3, not @i{-3}. All options
15995available for @kbd{+} are available for @kbd{-} as well.
15996
15997@kindex *
15998@pindex calc-times
5d67986c
RS
15999@ignore
16000@mindex @null
16001@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16002@tindex *
16003The @kbd{*} (@code{calc-times}) command multiplies two numbers. If one
16004argument is a vector and the other a scalar, the scalar is multiplied by
16005the elements of the vector to produce a new vector. If both arguments
16006are vectors, the interpretation depends on the dimensions of the
16007vectors: If both arguments are matrices, a matrix multiplication is
16008done. If one argument is a matrix and the other a plain vector, the
16009vector is interpreted as a row vector or column vector, whichever is
16010dimensionally correct. If both arguments are plain vectors, the result
16011is a single scalar number which is the dot product of the two vectors.
16012
16013If one argument of @kbd{*} is an HMS form and the other a number, the
16014HMS form is multiplied by that amount. It is an error to multiply two
16015HMS forms together, or to attempt any multiplication involving date
16016forms. Error forms, modulo forms, and intervals can be multiplied;
16017see the comments for addition of those forms. When two error forms
16018or intervals are multiplied they are considered to be statistically
16019independent; thus, @samp{[-2 ..@: 3] * [-2 ..@: 3]} is @samp{[-6 ..@: 9]},
16020whereas @w{@samp{[-2 ..@: 3] ^ 2}} is @samp{[0 ..@: 9]}.
16021
16022@kindex /
16023@pindex calc-divide
5d67986c
RS
16024@ignore
16025@mindex @null
16026@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16027@tindex /
16028The @kbd{/} (@code{calc-divide}) command divides two numbers. When
16029dividing a scalar @cite{B} by a square matrix @cite{A}, the computation
16030performed is @cite{B} times the inverse of @cite{A}. This also occurs
16031if @cite{B} is itself a vector or matrix, in which case the effect is
16032to solve the set of linear equations represented by @cite{B}. If @cite{B}
16033is a matrix with the same number of rows as @cite{A}, or a plain vector
16034(which is interpreted here as a column vector), then the equation
16035@cite{A X = B} is solved for the vector or matrix @cite{X}. Otherwise,
16036if @cite{B} is a non-square matrix with the same number of @emph{columns}
16037as @cite{A}, the equation @cite{X A = B} is solved. If you wish a vector
16038@cite{B} to be interpreted as a row vector to be solved as @cite{X A = B},
16039make it into a one-row matrix with @kbd{C-u 1 v p} first. To force a
16040left-handed solution with a square matrix @cite{B}, transpose @cite{A} and
16041@cite{B} before dividing, then transpose the result.
16042
16043HMS forms can be divided by real numbers or by other HMS forms. Error
16044forms can be divided in any combination of ways. Modulo forms where both
16045values and the modulo are integers can be divided to get an integer modulo
16046form result. Intervals can be divided; dividing by an interval that
16047encompasses zero or has zero as a limit will result in an infinite
16048interval.
16049
16050@kindex ^
16051@pindex calc-power
5d67986c
RS
16052@ignore
16053@mindex @null
16054@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16055@tindex ^
16056The @kbd{^} (@code{calc-power}) command raises a number to a power. If
16057the power is an integer, an exact result is computed using repeated
16058multiplications. For non-integer powers, Calc uses Newton's method or
16059logarithms and exponentials. Square matrices can be raised to integer
16060powers. If either argument is an error (or interval or modulo) form,
16061the result is also an error (or interval or modulo) form.
16062
16063@kindex I ^
16064@tindex nroot
16065If you press the @kbd{I} (inverse) key first, the @kbd{I ^} command
5d67986c
RS
16066computes an Nth root: @kbd{125 @key{RET} 3 I ^} computes the number 5.
16067(This is entirely equivalent to @kbd{125 @key{RET} 1:3 ^}.)
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16068
16069@kindex \
16070@pindex calc-idiv
16071@tindex idiv
5d67986c
RS
16072@ignore
16073@mindex @null
16074@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16075@tindex \
16076The @kbd{\} (@code{calc-idiv}) command divides two numbers on the stack
16077to produce an integer result. It is equivalent to dividing with
16078@key{/}, then rounding down with @kbd{F} (@code{calc-floor}), only a bit
16079more convenient and efficient. Also, since it is an all-integer
16080operation when the arguments are integers, it avoids problems that
16081@kbd{/ F} would have with floating-point roundoff.
16082
16083@kindex %
16084@pindex calc-mod
5d67986c
RS
16085@ignore
16086@mindex @null
16087@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16088@tindex %
16089The @kbd{%} (@code{calc-mod}) command performs a ``modulo'' (or ``remainder'')
16090operation. Mathematically, @samp{a%b = a - (a\b)*b}, and is defined
16091for all real numbers @cite{a} and @cite{b} (except @cite{b=0}). For
16092positive @cite{b}, the result will always be between 0 (inclusive) and
16093@cite{b} (exclusive). Modulo does not work for HMS forms and error forms.
16094If @cite{a} is a modulo form, its modulo is changed to @cite{b}, which
16095must be positive real number.
16096
16097@kindex :
16098@pindex calc-fdiv
16099@tindex fdiv
16100The @kbd{:} (@code{calc-fdiv}) command [@code{fdiv} function in a formula]
16101divides the two integers on the top of the stack to produce a fractional
16102result. This is a convenient shorthand for enabling Fraction Mode (with
16103@kbd{m f}) temporarily and using @samp{/}. Note that during numeric entry
16104the @kbd{:} key is interpreted as a fraction separator, so to divide 8 by 6
16105you would have to type @kbd{8 @key{RET} 6 @key{RET} :}. (Of course, in
16106this case, it would be much easier simply to enter the fraction directly
16107as @kbd{8:6 @key{RET}}!)
16108
16109@kindex n
16110@pindex calc-change-sign
16111The @kbd{n} (@code{calc-change-sign}) command negates the number on the top
16112of the stack. It works on numbers, vectors and matrices, HMS forms, date
16113forms, error forms, intervals, and modulo forms.
16114
16115@kindex A
16116@pindex calc-abs
16117@tindex abs
16118The @kbd{A} (@code{calc-abs}) [@code{abs}] command computes the absolute
16119value of a number. The result of @code{abs} is always a nonnegative
16120real number: With a complex argument, it computes the complex magnitude.
16121With a vector or matrix argument, it computes the Frobenius norm, i.e.,
16122the square root of the sum of the squares of the absolute values of the
16123elements. The absolute value of an error form is defined by replacing
16124the mean part with its absolute value and leaving the error part the same.
16125The absolute value of a modulo form is undefined. The absolute value of
16126an interval is defined in the obvious way.
16127
16128@kindex f A
16129@pindex calc-abssqr
16130@tindex abssqr
16131The @kbd{f A} (@code{calc-abssqr}) [@code{abssqr}] command computes the
16132absolute value squared of a number, vector or matrix, or error form.
16133
16134@kindex f s
16135@pindex calc-sign
16136@tindex sign
16137The @kbd{f s} (@code{calc-sign}) [@code{sign}] command returns 1 if its
16138argument is positive, @i{-1} if its argument is negative, or 0 if its
16139argument is zero. In algebraic form, you can also write @samp{sign(a,x)}
16140which evaluates to @samp{x * sign(a)}, i.e., either @samp{x}, @samp{-x}, or
16141zero depending on the sign of @samp{a}.
16142
16143@kindex &
16144@pindex calc-inv
16145@tindex inv
16146@cindex Reciprocal
16147The @kbd{&} (@code{calc-inv}) [@code{inv}] command computes the
16148reciprocal of a number, i.e., @cite{1 / x}. Operating on a square
16149matrix, it computes the inverse of that matrix.
16150
16151@kindex Q
16152@pindex calc-sqrt
16153@tindex sqrt
16154The @kbd{Q} (@code{calc-sqrt}) [@code{sqrt}] command computes the square
16155root of a number. For a negative real argument, the result will be a
16156complex number whose form is determined by the current Polar Mode.
16157
16158@kindex f h
16159@pindex calc-hypot
16160@tindex hypot
16161The @kbd{f h} (@code{calc-hypot}) [@code{hypot}] command computes the square
16162root of the sum of the squares of two numbers. That is, @samp{hypot(a,b)}
16163is the length of the hypotenuse of a right triangle with sides @cite{a}
16164and @cite{b}. If the arguments are complex numbers, their squared
16165magnitudes are used.
16166
16167@kindex f Q
16168@pindex calc-isqrt
16169@tindex isqrt
16170The @kbd{f Q} (@code{calc-isqrt}) [@code{isqrt}] command computes the
16171integer square root of an integer. This is the true square root of the
16172number, rounded down to an integer. For example, @samp{isqrt(10)}
16173produces 3. Note that, like @kbd{\} [@code{idiv}], this uses exact
16174integer arithmetic throughout to avoid roundoff problems. If the input
16175is a floating-point number or other non-integer value, this is exactly
16176the same as @samp{floor(sqrt(x))}.
16177
16178@kindex f n
16179@kindex f x
16180@pindex calc-min
16181@tindex min
16182@pindex calc-max
16183@tindex max
16184The @kbd{f n} (@code{calc-min}) [@code{min}] and @kbd{f x} (@code{calc-max})
16185[@code{max}] commands take the minimum or maximum of two real numbers,
16186respectively. These commands also work on HMS forms, date forms,
16187intervals, and infinities. (In algebraic expressions, these functions
16188take any number of arguments and return the maximum or minimum among
16189all the arguments.)@refill
16190
16191@kindex f M
16192@kindex f X
16193@pindex calc-mant-part
16194@tindex mant
16195@pindex calc-xpon-part
16196@tindex xpon
16197The @kbd{f M} (@code{calc-mant-part}) [@code{mant}] function extracts
16198the ``mantissa'' part @cite{m} of its floating-point argument; @kbd{f X}
16199(@code{calc-xpon-part}) [@code{xpon}] extracts the ``exponent'' part
16200@cite{e}. The original number is equal to @c{$m \times 10^e$}
16201@cite{m * 10^e},
16202where @cite{m} is in the interval @samp{[1.0 ..@: 10.0)} except that
16203@cite{m=e=0} if the original number is zero. For integers
16204and fractions, @code{mant} returns the number unchanged and @code{xpon}
16205returns zero. The @kbd{v u} (@code{calc-unpack}) command can also be
16206used to ``unpack'' a floating-point number; this produces an integer
16207mantissa and exponent, with the constraint that the mantissa is not
16208a multiple of ten (again except for the @cite{m=e=0} case).@refill
16209
16210@kindex f S
16211@pindex calc-scale-float
16212@tindex scf
16213The @kbd{f S} (@code{calc-scale-float}) [@code{scf}] function scales a number
16214by a given power of ten. Thus, @samp{scf(mant(x), xpon(x)) = x} for any
16215real @samp{x}. The second argument must be an integer, but the first
16216may actually be any numeric value. For example, @samp{scf(5,-2) = 0.05}
16217or @samp{1:20} depending on the current Fraction Mode.@refill
16218
16219@kindex f [
16220@kindex f ]
16221@pindex calc-decrement
16222@pindex calc-increment
16223@tindex decr
16224@tindex incr
16225The @kbd{f [} (@code{calc-decrement}) [@code{decr}] and @kbd{f ]}
16226(@code{calc-increment}) [@code{incr}] functions decrease or increase
16227a number by one unit. For integers, the effect is obvious. For
16228floating-point numbers, the change is by one unit in the last place.
16229For example, incrementing @samp{12.3456} when the current precision
16230is 6 digits yields @samp{12.3457}. If the current precision had been
162318 digits, the result would have been @samp{12.345601}. Incrementing
16232@samp{0.0} produces @c{$10^{-p}$}
16233@cite{10^-p}, where @cite{p} is the current
16234precision. These operations are defined only on integers and floats.
16235With numeric prefix arguments, they change the number by @cite{n} units.
16236
16237Note that incrementing followed by decrementing, or vice-versa, will
16238almost but not quite always cancel out. Suppose the precision is
162396 digits and the number @samp{9.99999} is on the stack. Incrementing
16240will produce @samp{10.0000}; decrementing will produce @samp{9.9999}.
16241One digit has been dropped. This is an unavoidable consequence of the
16242way floating-point numbers work.
16243
16244Incrementing a date/time form adjusts it by a certain number of seconds.
16245Incrementing a pure date form adjusts it by a certain number of days.
16246
16247@node Integer Truncation, Complex Number Functions, Basic Arithmetic, Arithmetic
16248@section Integer Truncation
16249
16250@noindent
16251There are four commands for truncating a real number to an integer,
16252differing mainly in their treatment of negative numbers. All of these
16253commands have the property that if the argument is an integer, the result
16254is the same integer. An integer-valued floating-point argument is converted
16255to integer form.
16256
16257If you press @kbd{H} (@code{calc-hyperbolic}) first, the result will be
16258expressed as an integer-valued floating-point number.
16259
16260@cindex Integer part of a number
16261@kindex F
16262@pindex calc-floor
16263@tindex floor
16264@tindex ffloor
5d67986c
RS
16265@ignore
16266@mindex @null
16267@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16268@kindex H F
16269The @kbd{F} (@code{calc-floor}) [@code{floor} or @code{ffloor}] command
16270truncates a real number to the next lower integer, i.e., toward minus
16271infinity. Thus @kbd{3.6 F} produces 3, but @kbd{_3.6 F} produces
16272@i{-4}.@refill
16273
16274@kindex I F
16275@pindex calc-ceiling
16276@tindex ceil
16277@tindex fceil
5d67986c
RS
16278@ignore
16279@mindex @null
16280@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16281@kindex H I F
16282The @kbd{I F} (@code{calc-ceiling}) [@code{ceil} or @code{fceil}]
16283command truncates toward positive infinity. Thus @kbd{3.6 I F} produces
162844, and @kbd{_3.6 I F} produces @i{-3}.@refill
16285
16286@kindex R
16287@pindex calc-round
16288@tindex round
16289@tindex fround
5d67986c
RS
16290@ignore
16291@mindex @null
16292@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16293@kindex H R
16294The @kbd{R} (@code{calc-round}) [@code{round} or @code{fround}] command
16295rounds to the nearest integer. When the fractional part is .5 exactly,
16296this command rounds away from zero. (All other rounding in the
16297Calculator uses this convention as well.) Thus @kbd{3.5 R} produces 4
16298but @kbd{3.4 R} produces 3; @kbd{_3.5 R} produces @i{-4}.@refill
16299
16300@kindex I R
16301@pindex calc-trunc
16302@tindex trunc
16303@tindex ftrunc
5d67986c
RS
16304@ignore
16305@mindex @null
16306@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16307@kindex H I R
16308The @kbd{I R} (@code{calc-trunc}) [@code{trunc} or @code{ftrunc}]
16309command truncates toward zero. In other words, it ``chops off''
16310everything after the decimal point. Thus @kbd{3.6 I R} produces 3 and
16311@kbd{_3.6 I R} produces @i{-3}.@refill
16312
16313These functions may not be applied meaningfully to error forms, but they
16314do work for intervals. As a convenience, applying @code{floor} to a
16315modulo form floors the value part of the form. Applied to a vector,
16316these functions operate on all elements of the vector one by one.
16317Applied to a date form, they operate on the internal numerical
16318representation of dates, converting a date/time form into a pure date.
16319
5d67986c
RS
16320@ignore
16321@starindex
16322@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 16323@tindex rounde
5d67986c
RS
16324@ignore
16325@starindex
16326@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 16327@tindex roundu
5d67986c
RS
16328@ignore
16329@starindex
16330@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 16331@tindex frounde
5d67986c
RS
16332@ignore
16333@starindex
16334@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16335@tindex froundu
16336There are two more rounding functions which can only be entered in
16337algebraic notation. The @code{roundu} function is like @code{round}
16338except that it rounds up, toward plus infinity, when the fractional
16339part is .5. This distinction matters only for negative arguments.
16340Also, @code{rounde} rounds to an even number in the case of a tie,
16341rounding up or down as necessary. For example, @samp{rounde(3.5)} and
16342@samp{rounde(4.5)} both return 4, but @samp{rounde(5.5)} returns 6.
16343The advantage of round-to-even is that the net error due to rounding
16344after a long calculation tends to cancel out to zero. An important
16345subtle point here is that the number being fed to @code{rounde} will
16346already have been rounded to the current precision before @code{rounde}
16347begins. For example, @samp{rounde(2.500001)} with a current precision
16348of 6 will incorrectly, or at least surprisingly, yield 2 because the
16349argument will first have been rounded down to @cite{2.5} (which
16350@code{rounde} sees as an exact tie between 2 and 3).
16351
16352Each of these functions, when written in algebraic formulas, allows
16353a second argument which specifies the number of digits after the
16354decimal point to keep. For example, @samp{round(123.4567, 2)} will
16355produce the answer 123.46, and @samp{round(123.4567, -1)} will
16356produce 120 (i.e., the cutoff is one digit to the @emph{left} of
16357the decimal point). A second argument of zero is equivalent to
16358no second argument at all.
16359
16360@cindex Fractional part of a number
16361To compute the fractional part of a number (i.e., the amount which, when
5d67986c 16362added to `@t{floor(}@var{n}@t{)}', will produce @var{n}) just take @var{n}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16363modulo 1 using the @code{%} command.@refill
16364
16365Note also the @kbd{\} (integer quotient), @kbd{f I} (integer logarithm),
16366and @kbd{f Q} (integer square root) commands, which are analogous to
16367@kbd{/}, @kbd{B}, and @kbd{Q}, respectively, except that they take integer
16368arguments and return the result rounded down to an integer.
16369
16370@node Complex Number Functions, Conversions, Integer Truncation, Arithmetic
16371@section Complex Number Functions
16372
16373@noindent
16374@kindex J
16375@pindex calc-conj
16376@tindex conj
16377The @kbd{J} (@code{calc-conj}) [@code{conj}] command computes the
16378complex conjugate of a number. For complex number @cite{a+bi}, the
16379complex conjugate is @cite{a-bi}. If the argument is a real number,
16380this command leaves it the same. If the argument is a vector or matrix,
16381this command replaces each element by its complex conjugate.
16382
16383@kindex G
16384@pindex calc-argument
16385@tindex arg
16386The @kbd{G} (@code{calc-argument}) [@code{arg}] command computes the
16387``argument'' or polar angle of a complex number. For a number in polar
16388notation, this is simply the second component of the pair
5d67986c
RS
16389`@t{(}@var{r}@t{;}@c{$\theta$}
16390@var{theta}@t{)}'.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16391The result is expressed according to the current angular mode and will
16392be in the range @i{-180} degrees (exclusive) to @i{+180} degrees
16393(inclusive), or the equivalent range in radians.@refill
16394
16395@pindex calc-imaginary
16396The @code{calc-imaginary} command multiplies the number on the
16397top of the stack by the imaginary number @cite{i = (0,1)}. This
16398command is not normally bound to a key in Calc, but it is available
16399on the @key{IMAG} button in Keypad Mode.
16400
16401@kindex f r
16402@pindex calc-re
16403@tindex re
16404The @kbd{f r} (@code{calc-re}) [@code{re}] command replaces a complex number
16405by its real part. This command has no effect on real numbers. (As an
16406added convenience, @code{re} applied to a modulo form extracts
16407the value part.)@refill
16408
16409@kindex f i
16410@pindex calc-im
16411@tindex im
16412The @kbd{f i} (@code{calc-im}) [@code{im}] command replaces a complex number
16413by its imaginary part; real numbers are converted to zero. With a vector
16414or matrix argument, these functions operate element-wise.@refill
16415
5d67986c
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16416@ignore
16417@mindex v p
16418@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16419@kindex v p (complex)
16420@pindex calc-pack
16421The @kbd{v p} (@code{calc-pack}) command can pack the top two numbers on
16422the the stack into a composite object such as a complex number. With
16423a prefix argument of @i{-1}, it produces a rectangular complex number;
16424with an argument of @i{-2}, it produces a polar complex number.
16425(Also, @pxref{Building Vectors}.)
16426
5d67986c
RS
16427@ignore
16428@mindex v u
16429@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16430@kindex v u (complex)
16431@pindex calc-unpack
16432The @kbd{v u} (@code{calc-unpack}) command takes the complex number
16433(or other composite object) on the top of the stack and unpacks it
16434into its separate components.
16435
16436@node Conversions, Date Arithmetic, Complex Number Functions, Arithmetic
16437@section Conversions
16438
16439@noindent
16440The commands described in this section convert numbers from one form
16441to another; they are two-key sequences beginning with the letter @kbd{c}.
16442
16443@kindex c f
16444@pindex calc-float
16445@tindex pfloat
16446The @kbd{c f} (@code{calc-float}) [@code{pfloat}] command converts the
16447number on the top of the stack to floating-point form. For example,
16448@cite{23} is converted to @cite{23.0}, @cite{3:2} is converted to
16449@cite{1.5}, and @cite{2.3} is left the same. If the value is a composite
16450object such as a complex number or vector, each of the components is
16451converted to floating-point. If the value is a formula, all numbers
16452in the formula are converted to floating-point. Note that depending
16453on the current floating-point precision, conversion to floating-point
16454format may lose information.@refill
16455
16456As a special exception, integers which appear as powers or subscripts
16457are not floated by @kbd{c f}. If you really want to float a power,
16458you can use a @kbd{j s} command to select the power followed by @kbd{c f}.
16459Because @kbd{c f} cannot examine the formula outside of the selection,
16460it does not notice that the thing being floated is a power.
16461@xref{Selecting Subformulas}.
16462
16463The normal @kbd{c f} command is ``pervasive'' in the sense that it
16464applies to all numbers throughout the formula. The @code{pfloat}
16465algebraic function never stays around in a formula; @samp{pfloat(a + 1)}
16466changes to @samp{a + 1.0} as soon as it is evaluated.
16467
16468@kindex H c f
16469@tindex float
16470With the Hyperbolic flag, @kbd{H c f} [@code{float}] operates
16471only on the number or vector of numbers at the top level of its
16472argument. Thus, @samp{float(1)} is 1.0, but @samp{float(a + 1)}
16473is left unevaluated because its argument is not a number.
16474
16475You should use @kbd{H c f} if you wish to guarantee that the final
16476value, once all the variables have been assigned, is a float; you
16477would use @kbd{c f} if you wish to do the conversion on the numbers
16478that appear right now.
16479
16480@kindex c F
16481@pindex calc-fraction
16482@tindex pfrac
16483The @kbd{c F} (@code{calc-fraction}) [@code{pfrac}] command converts a
16484floating-point number into a fractional approximation. By default, it
16485produces a fraction whose decimal representation is the same as the
16486input number, to within the current precision. You can also give a
16487numeric prefix argument to specify a tolerance, either directly, or,
16488if the prefix argument is zero, by using the number on top of the stack
16489as the tolerance. If the tolerance is a positive integer, the fraction
16490is correct to within that many significant figures. If the tolerance is
16491a non-positive integer, it specifies how many digits fewer than the current
16492precision to use. If the tolerance is a floating-point number, the
16493fraction is correct to within that absolute amount.
16494
16495@kindex H c F
16496@tindex frac
16497The @code{pfrac} function is pervasive, like @code{pfloat}.
16498There is also a non-pervasive version, @kbd{H c F} [@code{frac}],
16499which is analogous to @kbd{H c f} discussed above.
16500
16501@kindex c d
16502@pindex calc-to-degrees
16503@tindex deg
16504The @kbd{c d} (@code{calc-to-degrees}) [@code{deg}] command converts a
16505number into degrees form. The value on the top of the stack may be an
16506HMS form (interpreted as degrees-minutes-seconds), or a real number which
16507will be interpreted in radians regardless of the current angular mode.@refill
16508
16509@kindex c r
16510@pindex calc-to-radians
16511@tindex rad
16512The @kbd{c r} (@code{calc-to-radians}) [@code{rad}] command converts an
16513HMS form or angle in degrees into an angle in radians.
16514
16515@kindex c h
16516@pindex calc-to-hms
16517@tindex hms
16518The @kbd{c h} (@code{calc-to-hms}) [@code{hms}] command converts a real
16519number, interpreted according to the current angular mode, to an HMS
16520form describing the same angle. In algebraic notation, the @code{hms}
16521function also accepts three arguments: @samp{hms(@var{h}, @var{m}, @var{s})}.
16522(The three-argument version is independent of the current angular mode.)
16523
16524@pindex calc-from-hms
16525The @code{calc-from-hms} command converts the HMS form on the top of the
16526stack into a real number according to the current angular mode.
16527
16528@kindex c p
16529@kindex I c p
16530@pindex calc-polar
16531@tindex polar
16532@tindex rect
16533The @kbd{c p} (@code{calc-polar}) command converts the complex number on
16534the top of the stack from polar to rectangular form, or from rectangular
16535to polar form, whichever is appropriate. Real numbers are left the same.
16536This command is equivalent to the @code{rect} or @code{polar}
16537functions in algebraic formulas, depending on the direction of
16538conversion. (It uses @code{polar}, except that if the argument is
16539already a polar complex number, it uses @code{rect} instead. The
16540@kbd{I c p} command always uses @code{rect}.)@refill
16541
16542@kindex c c
16543@pindex calc-clean
16544@tindex pclean
16545The @kbd{c c} (@code{calc-clean}) [@code{pclean}] command ``cleans'' the
16546number on the top of the stack. Floating point numbers are re-rounded
16547according to the current precision. Polar numbers whose angular
16548components have strayed from the @i{-180} to @i{+180} degree range
16549are normalized. (Note that results will be undesirable if the current
16550angular mode is different from the one under which the number was
16551produced!) Integers and fractions are generally unaffected by this
16552operation. Vectors and formulas are cleaned by cleaning each component
16553number (i.e., pervasively).@refill
16554
16555If the simplification mode is set below the default level, it is raised
16556to the default level for the purposes of this command. Thus, @kbd{c c}
16557applies the default simplifications even if their automatic application
16558is disabled. @xref{Simplification Modes}.
16559
16560@cindex Roundoff errors, correcting
16561A numeric prefix argument to @kbd{c c} sets the floating-point precision
16562to that value for the duration of the command. A positive prefix (of at
16563least 3) sets the precision to the specified value; a negative or zero
16564prefix decreases the precision by the specified amount.
16565
16566@kindex c 0-9
16567@pindex calc-clean-num
16568The keystroke sequences @kbd{c 0} through @kbd{c 9} are equivalent
16569to @kbd{c c} with the corresponding negative prefix argument. If roundoff
16570errors have changed 2.0 into 1.999999, typing @kbd{c 1} to clip off one
16571decimal place often conveniently does the trick.
16572
16573The @kbd{c c} command with a numeric prefix argument, and the @kbd{c 0}
16574through @kbd{c 9} commands, also ``clip'' very small floating-point
16575numbers to zero. If the exponent is less than or equal to the negative
16576of the specified precision, the number is changed to 0.0. For example,
16577if the current precision is 12, then @kbd{c 2} changes the vector
16578@samp{[1e-8, 1e-9, 1e-10, 1e-11]} to @samp{[1e-8, 1e-9, 0, 0]}.
16579Numbers this small generally arise from roundoff noise.
16580
16581If the numbers you are using really are legitimately this small,
16582you should avoid using the @kbd{c 0} through @kbd{c 9} commands.
16583(The plain @kbd{c c} command rounds to the current precision but
16584does not clip small numbers.)
16585
16586One more property of @kbd{c 0} through @kbd{c 9}, and of @kbd{c c} with
16587a prefix argument, is that integer-valued floats are converted to
16588plain integers, so that @kbd{c 1} on @samp{[1., 1.5, 2., 2.5, 3.]}
16589produces @samp{[1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3]}. This is not done for huge
16590numbers (@samp{1e100} is technically an integer-valued float, but
16591you wouldn't want it automatically converted to a 100-digit integer).
16592
16593@kindex H c 0-9
16594@kindex H c c
16595@tindex clean
16596With the Hyperbolic flag, @kbd{H c c} and @kbd{H c 0} through @kbd{H c 9}
16597operate non-pervasively [@code{clean}].
16598
16599@node Date Arithmetic, Financial Functions, Conversions, Arithmetic
16600@section Date Arithmetic
16601
16602@noindent
16603@cindex Date arithmetic, additional functions
16604The commands described in this section perform various conversions
16605and calculations involving date forms (@pxref{Date Forms}). They
16606use the @kbd{t} (for time/date) prefix key followed by shifted
16607letters.
16608
16609The simplest date arithmetic is done using the regular @kbd{+} and @kbd{-}
16610commands. In particular, adding a number to a date form advances the
16611date form by a certain number of days; adding an HMS form to a date
16612form advances the date by a certain amount of time; and subtracting two
16613date forms produces a difference measured in days. The commands
16614described here provide additional, more specialized operations on dates.
16615
16616Many of these commands accept a numeric prefix argument; if you give
16617plain @kbd{C-u} as the prefix, these commands will instead take the
16618additional argument from the top of the stack.
16619
16620@menu
16621* Date Conversions::
16622* Date Functions::
16623* Time Zones::
16624* Business Days::
16625@end menu
16626
16627@node Date Conversions, Date Functions, Date Arithmetic, Date Arithmetic
16628@subsection Date Conversions
16629
16630@noindent
16631@kindex t D
16632@pindex calc-date
16633@tindex date
16634The @kbd{t D} (@code{calc-date}) [@code{date}] command converts a
16635date form into a number, measured in days since Jan 1, 1 AD. The
16636result will be an integer if @var{date} is a pure date form, or a
16637fraction or float if @var{date} is a date/time form. Or, if its
16638argument is a number, it converts this number into a date form.
16639
16640With a numeric prefix argument, @kbd{t D} takes that many objects
16641(up to six) from the top of the stack and interprets them in one
16642of the following ways:
16643
16644The @samp{date(@var{year}, @var{month}, @var{day})} function
16645builds a pure date form out of the specified year, month, and
16646day, which must all be integers. @var{Year} is a year number,
16647such as 1991 (@emph{not} the same as 91!). @var{Month} must be
16648an integer in the range 1 to 12; @var{day} must be in the range
166491 to 31. If the specified month has fewer than 31 days and
16650@var{day} is too large, the equivalent day in the following
16651month will be used.
16652
16653The @samp{date(@var{month}, @var{day})} function builds a
16654pure date form using the current year, as determined by the
16655real-time clock.
16656
16657The @samp{date(@var{year}, @var{month}, @var{day}, @var{hms})}
16658function builds a date/time form using an @var{hms} form.
16659
16660The @samp{date(@var{year}, @var{month}, @var{day}, @var{hour},
16661@var{minute}, @var{second})} function builds a date/time form.
16662@var{hour} should be an integer in the range 0 to 23;
16663@var{minute} should be an integer in the range 0 to 59;
16664@var{second} should be any real number in the range @samp{[0 .. 60)}.
16665The last two arguments default to zero if omitted.
16666
16667@kindex t J
16668@pindex calc-julian
16669@tindex julian
16670@cindex Julian day counts, conversions
16671The @kbd{t J} (@code{calc-julian}) [@code{julian}] command converts
16672a date form into a Julian day count, which is the number of days
16673since noon on Jan 1, 4713 BC. A pure date is converted to an integer
16674Julian count representing noon of that day. A date/time form is
16675converted to an exact floating-point Julian count, adjusted to
16676interpret the date form in the current time zone but the Julian
16677day count in Greenwich Mean Time. A numeric prefix argument allows
16678you to specify the time zone; @pxref{Time Zones}. Use a prefix of
16679zero to suppress the time zone adjustment. Note that pure date forms
16680are never time-zone adjusted.
16681
16682This command can also do the opposite conversion, from a Julian day
16683count (either an integer day, or a floating-point day and time in
16684the GMT zone), into a pure date form or a date/time form in the
16685current or specified time zone.
16686
16687@kindex t U
16688@pindex calc-unix-time
16689@tindex unixtime
16690@cindex Unix time format, conversions
16691The @kbd{t U} (@code{calc-unix-time}) [@code{unixtime}] command
16692converts a date form into a Unix time value, which is the number of
16693seconds since midnight on Jan 1, 1970, or vice-versa. The numeric result
16694will be an integer if the current precision is 12 or less; for higher
5d67986c 16695precisions, the result may be a float with (@var{precision}@minus{}12)
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16696digits after the decimal. Just as for @kbd{t J}, the numeric time
16697is interpreted in the GMT time zone and the date form is interpreted
16698in the current or specified zone. Some systems use Unix-like
16699numbering but with the local time zone; give a prefix of zero to
16700suppress the adjustment if so.
16701
16702@kindex t C
16703@pindex calc-convert-time-zones
16704@tindex tzconv
16705@cindex Time Zones, converting between
16706The @kbd{t C} (@code{calc-convert-time-zones}) [@code{tzconv}]
16707command converts a date form from one time zone to another. You
16708are prompted for each time zone name in turn; you can answer with
16709any suitable Calc time zone expression (@pxref{Time Zones}).
16710If you answer either prompt with a blank line, the local time
16711zone is used for that prompt. You can also answer the first
16712prompt with @kbd{$} to take the two time zone names from the
16713stack (and the date to be converted from the third stack level).
16714
16715@node Date Functions, Business Days, Date Conversions, Date Arithmetic
16716@subsection Date Functions
16717
16718@noindent
16719@kindex t N
16720@pindex calc-now
16721@tindex now
16722The @kbd{t N} (@code{calc-now}) [@code{now}] command pushes the
16723current date and time on the stack as a date form. The time is
16724reported in terms of the specified time zone; with no numeric prefix
16725argument, @kbd{t N} reports for the current time zone.
16726
16727@kindex t P
16728@pindex calc-date-part
16729The @kbd{t P} (@code{calc-date-part}) command extracts one part
16730of a date form. The prefix argument specifies the part; with no
16731argument, this command prompts for a part code from 1 to 9.
16732The various part codes are described in the following paragraphs.
16733
16734@tindex year
16735The @kbd{M-1 t P} [@code{year}] function extracts the year number
16736from a date form as an integer, e.g., 1991. This and the
16737following functions will also accept a real number for an
16738argument, which is interpreted as a standard Calc day number.
16739Note that this function will never return zero, since the year
167401 BC immediately precedes the year 1 AD.
16741
16742@tindex month
16743The @kbd{M-2 t P} [@code{month}] function extracts the month number
16744from a date form as an integer in the range 1 to 12.
16745
16746@tindex day
16747The @kbd{M-3 t P} [@code{day}] function extracts the day number
16748from a date form as an integer in the range 1 to 31.
16749
16750@tindex hour
16751The @kbd{M-4 t P} [@code{hour}] function extracts the hour from
16752a date form as an integer in the range 0 (midnight) to 23. Note
16753that 24-hour time is always used. This returns zero for a pure
16754date form. This function (and the following two) also accept
16755HMS forms as input.
16756
16757@tindex minute
16758The @kbd{M-5 t P} [@code{minute}] function extracts the minute
16759from a date form as an integer in the range 0 to 59.
16760
16761@tindex second
16762The @kbd{M-6 t P} [@code{second}] function extracts the second
16763from a date form. If the current precision is 12 or less,
16764the result is an integer in the range 0 to 59. For higher
16765precisions, the result may instead be a floating-point number.
16766
16767@tindex weekday
16768The @kbd{M-7 t P} [@code{weekday}] function extracts the weekday
16769number from a date form as an integer in the range 0 (Sunday)
16770to 6 (Saturday).
16771
16772@tindex yearday
16773The @kbd{M-8 t P} [@code{yearday}] function extracts the day-of-year
16774number from a date form as an integer in the range 1 (January 1)
16775to 366 (December 31 of a leap year).
16776
16777@tindex time
16778The @kbd{M-9 t P} [@code{time}] function extracts the time portion
16779of a date form as an HMS form. This returns @samp{0@@ 0' 0"}
16780for a pure date form.
16781
16782@kindex t M
16783@pindex calc-new-month
16784@tindex newmonth
16785The @kbd{t M} (@code{calc-new-month}) [@code{newmonth}] command
16786computes a new date form that represents the first day of the month
16787specified by the input date. The result is always a pure date
16788form; only the year and month numbers of the input are retained.
16789With a numeric prefix argument @var{n} in the range from 1 to 31,
16790@kbd{t M} computes the @var{n}th day of the month. (If @var{n}
16791is greater than the actual number of days in the month, or if
16792@var{n} is zero, the last day of the month is used.)
16793
16794@kindex t Y
16795@pindex calc-new-year
16796@tindex newyear
16797The @kbd{t Y} (@code{calc-new-year}) [@code{newyear}] command
16798computes a new pure date form that represents the first day of
16799the year specified by the input. The month, day, and time
16800of the input date form are lost. With a numeric prefix argument
16801@var{n} in the range from 1 to 366, @kbd{t Y} computes the
16802@var{n}th day of the year (366 is treated as 365 in non-leap
16803years). A prefix argument of 0 computes the last day of the
16804year (December 31). A negative prefix argument from @i{-1} to
16805@i{-12} computes the first day of the @var{n}th month of the year.
16806
16807@kindex t W
16808@pindex calc-new-week
16809@tindex newweek
16810The @kbd{t W} (@code{calc-new-week}) [@code{newweek}] command
16811computes a new pure date form that represents the Sunday on or before
16812the input date. With a numeric prefix argument, it can be made to
16813use any day of the week as the starting day; the argument must be in
16814the range from 0 (Sunday) to 6 (Saturday). This function always
16815subtracts between 0 and 6 days from the input date.
16816
16817Here's an example use of @code{newweek}: Find the date of the next
16818Wednesday after a given date. Using @kbd{M-3 t W} or @samp{newweek(d, 3)}
16819will give you the @emph{preceding} Wednesday, so @samp{newweek(d+7, 3)}
16820will give you the following Wednesday. A further look at the definition
16821of @code{newweek} shows that if the input date is itself a Wednesday,
16822this formula will return the Wednesday one week in the future. An
16823exercise for the reader is to modify this formula to yield the same day
16824if the input is already a Wednesday. Another interesting exercise is
16825to preserve the time-of-day portion of the input (@code{newweek} resets
16826the time to midnight; hint:@: how can @code{newweek} be defined in terms
16827of the @code{weekday} function?).
16828
5d67986c
RS
16829@ignore
16830@starindex
16831@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16832@tindex pwday
16833The @samp{pwday(@var{date})} function (not on any key) computes the
16834day-of-month number of the Sunday on or before @var{date}. With
16835two arguments, @samp{pwday(@var{date}, @var{day})} computes the day
16836number of the Sunday on or before day number @var{day} of the month
16837specified by @var{date}. The @var{day} must be in the range from
168387 to 31; if the day number is greater than the actual number of days
16839in the month, the true number of days is used instead. Thus
16840@samp{pwday(@var{date}, 7)} finds the first Sunday of the month, and
16841@samp{pwday(@var{date}, 31)} finds the last Sunday of the month.
16842With a third @var{weekday} argument, @code{pwday} can be made to look
16843for any day of the week instead of Sunday.
16844
16845@kindex t I
16846@pindex calc-inc-month
16847@tindex incmonth
16848The @kbd{t I} (@code{calc-inc-month}) [@code{incmonth}] command
16849increases a date form by one month, or by an arbitrary number of
16850months specified by a numeric prefix argument. The time portion,
16851if any, of the date form stays the same. The day also stays the
16852same, except that if the new month has fewer days the day
16853number may be reduced to lie in the valid range. For example,
16854@samp{incmonth(<Jan 31, 1991>)} produces @samp{<Feb 28, 1991>}.
16855Because of this, @kbd{t I t I} and @kbd{M-2 t I} do not always give
16856the same results (@samp{<Mar 28, 1991>} versus @samp{<Mar 31, 1991>}
16857in this case).
16858
5d67986c
RS
16859@ignore
16860@starindex
16861@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
16862@tindex incyear
16863The @samp{incyear(@var{date}, @var{step})} function increases
16864a date form by the specified number of years, which may be
16865any positive or negative integer. Note that @samp{incyear(d, n)}
16866is equivalent to @w{@samp{incmonth(d, 12*n)}}, but these do not have
16867simple equivalents in terms of day arithmetic because
16868months and years have varying lengths. If the @var{step}
16869argument is omitted, 1 year is assumed. There is no keyboard
16870command for this function; use @kbd{C-u 12 t I} instead.
16871
16872There is no @code{newday} function at all because @kbd{F} [@code{floor}]
16873serves this purpose. Similarly, instead of @code{incday} and
16874@code{incweek} simply use @cite{d + n} or @cite{d + 7 n}.
16875
16876@xref{Basic Arithmetic}, for the @kbd{f ]} [@code{incr}] command
16877which can adjust a date/time form by a certain number of seconds.
16878
16879@node Business Days, Time Zones, Date Functions, Date Arithmetic
16880@subsection Business Days
16881
16882@noindent
16883Often time is measured in ``business days'' or ``working days,''
16884where weekends and holidays are skipped. Calc's normal date
16885arithmetic functions use calendar days, so that subtracting two
16886consecutive Mondays will yield a difference of 7 days. By contrast,
16887subtracting two consecutive Mondays would yield 5 business days
16888(assuming two-day weekends and the absence of holidays).
16889
16890@kindex t +
16891@kindex t -
16892@tindex badd
16893@tindex bsub
16894@pindex calc-business-days-plus
16895@pindex calc-business-days-minus
16896The @kbd{t +} (@code{calc-business-days-plus}) [@code{badd}]
16897and @kbd{t -} (@code{calc-business-days-minus}) [@code{bsub}]
16898commands perform arithmetic using business days. For @kbd{t +},
16899one argument must be a date form and the other must be a real
16900number (positive or negative). If the number is not an integer,
16901then a certain amount of time is added as well as a number of
16902days; for example, adding 0.5 business days to a time in Friday
16903evening will produce a time in Monday morning. It is also
16904possible to add an HMS form; adding @samp{12@@ 0' 0"} also adds
16905half a business day. For @kbd{t -}, the arguments are either a
16906date form and a number or HMS form, or two date forms, in which
16907case the result is the number of business days between the two
16908dates.
16909
16910@cindex @code{Holidays} variable
16911@vindex Holidays
16912By default, Calc considers any day that is not a Saturday or
16913Sunday to be a business day. You can define any number of
16914additional holidays by editing the variable @code{Holidays}.
16915(There is an @w{@kbd{s H}} convenience command for editing this
16916variable.) Initially, @code{Holidays} contains the vector
16917@samp{[sat, sun]}. Entries in the @code{Holidays} vector may
16918be any of the following kinds of objects:
16919
16920@itemize @bullet
16921@item
16922Date forms (pure dates, not date/time forms). These specify
16923particular days which are to be treated as holidays.
16924
16925@item
16926Intervals of date forms. These specify a range of days, all of
16927which are holidays (e.g., Christmas week). @xref{Interval Forms}.
16928
16929@item
16930Nested vectors of date forms. Each date form in the vector is
16931considered to be a holiday.
16932
16933@item
16934Any Calc formula which evaluates to one of the above three things.
16935If the formula involves the variable @cite{y}, it stands for a
16936yearly repeating holiday; @cite{y} will take on various year
16937numbers like 1992. For example, @samp{date(y, 12, 25)} specifies
16938Christmas day, and @samp{newweek(date(y, 11, 7), 4) + 21} specifies
16939Thanksgiving (which is held on the fourth Thursday of November).
16940If the formula involves the variable @cite{m}, that variable
16941takes on month numbers from 1 to 12: @samp{date(y, m, 15)} is
16942a holiday that takes place on the 15th of every month.
16943
16944@item
16945A weekday name, such as @code{sat} or @code{sun}. This is really
16946a variable whose name is a three-letter, lower-case day name.
16947
16948@item
16949An interval of year numbers (integers). This specifies the span of
16950years over which this holiday list is to be considered valid. Any
16951business-day arithmetic that goes outside this range will result
16952in an error message. Use this if you are including an explicit
16953list of holidays, rather than a formula to generate them, and you
16954want to make sure you don't accidentally go beyond the last point
16955where the holidays you entered are complete. If there is no
16956limiting interval in the @code{Holidays} vector, the default
16957@samp{[1 .. 2737]} is used. (This is the absolute range of years
16958for which Calc's business-day algorithms will operate.)
16959
16960@item
16961An interval of HMS forms. This specifies the span of hours that
16962are to be considered one business day. For example, if this
16963range is @samp{[9@@ 0' 0" .. 17@@ 0' 0"]} (i.e., 9am to 5pm), then
16964the business day is only eight hours long, so that @kbd{1.5 t +}
16965on @samp{<4:00pm Fri Dec 13, 1991>} will add one business day and
16966four business hours to produce @samp{<12:00pm Tue Dec 17, 1991>}.
16967Likewise, @kbd{t -} will now express differences in time as
16968fractions of an eight-hour day. Times before 9am will be treated
16969as 9am by business date arithmetic, and times at or after 5pm will
16970be treated as 4:59:59pm. If there is no HMS interval in @code{Holidays},
16971the full 24-hour day @samp{[0@ 0' 0" .. 24@ 0' 0"]} is assumed.
16972(Regardless of the type of bounds you specify, the interval is
16973treated as inclusive on the low end and exclusive on the high end,
16974so that the work day goes from 9am up to, but not including, 5pm.)
16975@end itemize
16976
16977If the @code{Holidays} vector is empty, then @kbd{t +} and
16978@kbd{t -} will act just like @kbd{+} and @kbd{-} because there will
16979then be no difference between business days and calendar days.
16980
16981Calc expands the intervals and formulas you give into a complete
16982list of holidays for internal use. This is done mainly to make
16983sure it can detect multiple holidays. (For example,
16984@samp{<Jan 1, 1989>} is both New Year's Day and a Sunday, but
16985Calc's algorithms take care to count it only once when figuring
16986the number of holidays between two dates.)
16987
16988Since the complete list of holidays for all the years from 1 to
169892737 would be huge, Calc actually computes only the part of the
16990list between the smallest and largest years that have been involved
16991in business-day calculations so far. Normally, you won't have to
16992worry about this. Keep in mind, however, that if you do one
16993calculation for 1992, and another for 1792, even if both involve
16994only a small range of years, Calc will still work out all the
16995holidays that fall in that 200-year span.
16996
16997If you add a (positive) number of days to a date form that falls on a
16998weekend or holiday, the date form is treated as if it were the most
16999recent business day. (Thus adding one business day to a Friday,
17000Saturday, or Sunday will all yield the following Monday.) If you
17001subtract a number of days from a weekend or holiday, the date is
17002effectively on the following business day. (So subtracting one business
17003day from Saturday, Sunday, or Monday yields the preceding Friday.) The
17004difference between two dates one or both of which fall on holidays
17005equals the number of actual business days between them. These
17006conventions are consistent in the sense that, if you add @var{n}
17007business days to any date, the difference between the result and the
17008original date will come out to @var{n} business days. (It can't be
17009completely consistent though; a subtraction followed by an addition
17010might come out a bit differently, since @kbd{t +} is incapable of
17011producing a date that falls on a weekend or holiday.)
17012
5d67986c
RS
17013@ignore
17014@starindex
17015@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17016@tindex holiday
17017There is a @code{holiday} function, not on any keys, that takes
17018any date form and returns 1 if that date falls on a weekend or
17019holiday, as defined in @code{Holidays}, or 0 if the date is a
17020business day.
17021
17022@node Time Zones, , Business Days, Date Arithmetic
17023@subsection Time Zones
17024
17025@noindent
17026@cindex Time zones
17027@cindex Daylight savings time
17028Time zones and daylight savings time are a complicated business.
17029The conversions to and from Julian and Unix-style dates automatically
17030compute the correct time zone and daylight savings adjustment to use,
17031provided they can figure out this information. This section describes
17032Calc's time zone adjustment algorithm in detail, in case you want to
17033do conversions in different time zones or in case Calc's algorithms
17034can't determine the right correction to use.
17035
17036Adjustments for time zones and daylight savings time are done by
17037@kbd{t U}, @kbd{t J}, @kbd{t N}, and @kbd{t C}, but not by any other
17038commands. In particular, @samp{<may 1 1991> - <apr 1 1991>} evaluates
17039to exactly 30 days even though there is a daylight-savings
17040transition in between. This is also true for Julian pure dates:
17041@samp{julian(<may 1 1991>) - julian(<apr 1 1991>)}. But Julian
17042and Unix date/times will adjust for daylight savings time:
17043@samp{julian(<12am may 1 1991>) - julian(<12am apr 1 1991>)}
17044evaluates to @samp{29.95834} (that's 29 days and 23 hours)
17045because one hour was lost when daylight savings commenced on
17046April 7, 1991.
17047
17048In brief, the idiom @samp{julian(@var{date1}) - julian(@var{date2})}
17049computes the actual number of 24-hour periods between two dates, whereas
17050@samp{@var{date1} - @var{date2}} computes the number of calendar
17051days between two dates without taking daylight savings into account.
17052
17053@pindex calc-time-zone
5d67986c
RS
17054@ignore
17055@starindex
17056@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17057@tindex tzone
17058The @code{calc-time-zone} [@code{tzone}] command converts the time
17059zone specified by its numeric prefix argument into a number of
17060seconds difference from Greenwich mean time (GMT). If the argument
17061is a number, the result is simply that value multiplied by 3600.
17062Typical arguments for North America are 5 (Eastern) or 8 (Pacific). If
17063Daylight Savings time is in effect, one hour should be subtracted from
17064the normal difference.
17065
17066If you give a prefix of plain @kbd{C-u}, @code{calc-time-zone} (like other
17067date arithmetic commands that include a time zone argument) takes the
17068zone argument from the top of the stack. (In the case of @kbd{t J}
17069and @kbd{t U}, the normal argument is then taken from the second-to-top
17070stack position.) This allows you to give a non-integer time zone
17071adjustment. The time-zone argument can also be an HMS form, or
17072it can be a variable which is a time zone name in upper- or lower-case.
17073For example @samp{tzone(PST) = tzone(8)} and @samp{tzone(pdt) = tzone(7)}
17074(for Pacific standard and daylight savings times, respectively).
17075
17076North American and European time zone names are defined as follows;
17077note that for each time zone there is one name for standard time,
17078another for daylight savings time, and a third for ``generalized'' time
17079in which the daylight savings adjustment is computed from context.
17080
d7b8e6c6 17081@smallexample
5d67986c 17082@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17083YST PST MST CST EST AST NST GMT WET MET MEZ
17084 9 8 7 6 5 4 3.5 0 -1 -2 -2
17085
17086YDT PDT MDT CDT EDT ADT NDT BST WETDST METDST MESZ
17087 8 7 6 5 4 3 2.5 -1 -2 -3 -3
17088
17089YGT PGT MGT CGT EGT AGT NGT BGT WEGT MEGT MEGZ
170909/8 8/7 7/6 6/5 5/4 4/3 3.5/2.5 0/-1 -1/-2 -2/-3 -2/-3
d7b8e6c6 17091@end group
5d67986c 17092@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17093
17094@vindex math-tzone-names
17095To define time zone names that do not appear in the above table,
17096you must modify the Lisp variable @code{math-tzone-names}. This
17097is a list of lists describing the different time zone names; its
17098structure is best explained by an example. The three entries for
17099Pacific Time look like this:
17100
d7b8e6c6 17101@smallexample
5d67986c 17102@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17103( ( "PST" 8 0 ) ; Name as an upper-case string, then standard
17104 ( "PDT" 8 -1 ) ; adjustment, then daylight savings adjustment.
17105 ( "PGT" 8 "PST" "PDT" ) ) ; Generalized time zone.
d7b8e6c6 17106@end group
5d67986c 17107@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17108
17109@cindex @code{TimeZone} variable
17110@vindex TimeZone
17111With no arguments, @code{calc-time-zone} or @samp{tzone()} obtains an
17112argument from the Calc variable @code{TimeZone} if a value has been
17113stored for that variable. If not, Calc runs the Unix @samp{date}
17114command and looks for one of the above time zone names in the output;
17115if this does not succeed, @samp{tzone()} leaves itself unevaluated.
17116The time zone name in the @samp{date} output may be followed by a signed
17117adjustment, e.g., @samp{GMT+5} or @samp{GMT+0500} which specifies a
17118number of hours and minutes to be added to the base time zone.
17119Calc stores the time zone it finds into @code{TimeZone} to speed
17120later calls to @samp{tzone()}.
17121
17122The special time zone name @code{local} is equivalent to no argument,
17123i.e., it uses the local time zone as obtained from the @code{date}
17124command.
17125
17126If the time zone name found is one of the standard or daylight
17127savings zone names from the above table, and Calc's internal
17128daylight savings algorithm says that time and zone are consistent
17129(e.g., @code{PDT} accompanies a date that Calc's algorithm would also
17130consider to be daylight savings, or @code{PST} accompanies a date
17131that Calc would consider to be standard time), then Calc substitutes
17132the corresponding generalized time zone (like @code{PGT}).
17133
17134If your system does not have a suitable @samp{date} command, you
17135may wish to put a @samp{(setq var-TimeZone ...)} in your Emacs
17136initialization file to set the time zone. The easiest way to do
17137this is to edit the @code{TimeZone} variable using Calc's @kbd{s T}
17138command, then use the @kbd{s p} (@code{calc-permanent-variable})
17139command to save the value of @code{TimeZone} permanently.
17140
17141The @kbd{t J} and @code{t U} commands with no numeric prefix
17142arguments do the same thing as @samp{tzone()}. If the current
17143time zone is a generalized time zone, e.g., @code{EGT}, Calc
17144examines the date being converted to tell whether to use standard
17145or daylight savings time. But if the current time zone is explicit,
17146e.g., @code{EST} or @code{EDT}, then that adjustment is used exactly
17147and Calc's daylight savings algorithm is not consulted.
17148
17149Some places don't follow the usual rules for daylight savings time.
17150The state of Arizona, for example, does not observe daylight savings
17151time. If you run Calc during the winter season in Arizona, the
17152Unix @code{date} command will report @code{MST} time zone, which
17153Calc will change to @code{MGT}. If you then convert a time that
17154lies in the summer months, Calc will apply an incorrect daylight
17155savings time adjustment. To avoid this, set your @code{TimeZone}
17156variable explicitly to @code{MST} to force the use of standard,
17157non-daylight-savings time.
17158
17159@vindex math-daylight-savings-hook
17160@findex math-std-daylight-savings
17161By default Calc always considers daylight savings time to begin at
171622 a.m.@: on the first Sunday of April, and to end at 2 a.m.@: on the
17163last Sunday of October. This is the rule that has been in effect
17164in North America since 1987. If you are in a country that uses
17165different rules for computing daylight savings time, you have two
17166choices: Write your own daylight savings hook, or control time
17167zones explicitly by setting the @code{TimeZone} variable and/or
17168always giving a time-zone argument for the conversion functions.
17169
17170The Lisp variable @code{math-daylight-savings-hook} holds the
17171name of a function that is used to compute the daylight savings
17172adjustment for a given date. The default is
17173@code{math-std-daylight-savings}, which computes an adjustment
17174(either 0 or @i{-1}) using the North American rules given above.
17175
17176The daylight savings hook function is called with four arguments:
17177The date, as a floating-point number in standard Calc format;
17178a six-element list of the date decomposed into year, month, day,
17179hour, minute, and second, respectively; a string which contains
17180the generalized time zone name in upper-case, e.g., @code{"WEGT"};
17181and a special adjustment to be applied to the hour value when
17182converting into a generalized time zone (see below).
17183
17184@findex math-prev-weekday-in-month
17185The Lisp function @code{math-prev-weekday-in-month} is useful for
17186daylight savings computations. This is an internal version of
17187the user-level @code{pwday} function described in the previous
17188section. It takes four arguments: The floating-point date value,
17189the corresponding six-element date list, the day-of-month number,
17190and the weekday number (0-6).
17191
17192The default daylight savings hook ignores the time zone name, but a
17193more sophisticated hook could use different algorithms for different
17194time zones. It would also be possible to use different algorithms
17195depending on the year number, but the default hook always uses the
17196algorithm for 1987 and later. Here is a listing of the default
17197daylight savings hook:
17198
17199@smallexample
17200(defun math-std-daylight-savings (date dt zone bump)
17201 (cond ((< (nth 1 dt) 4) 0)
17202 ((= (nth 1 dt) 4)
17203 (let ((sunday (math-prev-weekday-in-month date dt 7 0)))
17204 (cond ((< (nth 2 dt) sunday) 0)
17205 ((= (nth 2 dt) sunday)
17206 (if (>= (nth 3 dt) (+ 3 bump)) -1 0))
17207 (t -1))))
17208 ((< (nth 1 dt) 10) -1)
17209 ((= (nth 1 dt) 10)
17210 (let ((sunday (math-prev-weekday-in-month date dt 31 0)))
17211 (cond ((< (nth 2 dt) sunday) -1)
17212 ((= (nth 2 dt) sunday)
17213 (if (>= (nth 3 dt) (+ 2 bump)) 0 -1))
17214 (t 0))))
17215 (t 0))
17216)
17217@end smallexample
17218
17219@noindent
17220The @code{bump} parameter is equal to zero when Calc is converting
17221from a date form in a generalized time zone into a GMT date value.
17222It is @i{-1} when Calc is converting in the other direction. The
17223adjustments shown above ensure that the conversion behaves correctly
17224and reasonably around the 2 a.m.@: transition in each direction.
17225
17226There is a ``missing'' hour between 2 a.m.@: and 3 a.m.@: at the
17227beginning of daylight savings time; converting a date/time form that
17228falls in this hour results in a time value for the following hour,
17229from 3 a.m.@: to 4 a.m. At the end of daylight savings time, the
17230hour from 1 a.m.@: to 2 a.m.@: repeats itself; converting a date/time
17231form that falls in in this hour results in a time value for the first
17232manifestion of that time (@emph{not} the one that occurs one hour later).
17233
17234If @code{math-daylight-savings-hook} is @code{nil}, then the
17235daylight savings adjustment is always taken to be zero.
17236
17237In algebraic formulas, @samp{tzone(@var{zone}, @var{date})}
17238computes the time zone adjustment for a given zone name at a
17239given date. The @var{date} is ignored unless @var{zone} is a
17240generalized time zone. If @var{date} is a date form, the
17241daylight savings computation is applied to it as it appears.
17242If @var{date} is a numeric date value, it is adjusted for the
17243daylight-savings version of @var{zone} before being given to
17244the daylight savings hook. This odd-sounding rule ensures
17245that the daylight-savings computation is always done in
17246local time, not in the GMT time that a numeric @var{date}
17247is typically represented in.
17248
5d67986c
RS
17249@ignore
17250@starindex
17251@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17252@tindex dsadj
17253The @samp{dsadj(@var{date}, @var{zone})} function computes the
17254daylight savings adjustment that is appropriate for @var{date} in
17255time zone @var{zone}. If @var{zone} is explicitly in or not in
17256daylight savings time (e.g., @code{PDT} or @code{PST}) the
17257@var{date} is ignored. If @var{zone} is a generalized time zone,
17258the algorithms described above are used. If @var{zone} is omitted,
17259the computation is done for the current time zone.
17260
17261@xref{Reporting Bugs}, for the address of Calc's author, if you
17262should wish to contribute your improved versions of
17263@code{math-tzone-names} and @code{math-daylight-savings-hook}
17264to the Calc distribution.
17265
17266@node Financial Functions, Binary Functions, Date Arithmetic, Arithmetic
17267@section Financial Functions
17268
17269@noindent
17270Calc's financial or business functions use the @kbd{b} prefix
17271key followed by a shifted letter. (The @kbd{b} prefix followed by
17272a lower-case letter is used for operations on binary numbers.)
17273
17274Note that the rate and the number of intervals given to these
17275functions must be on the same time scale, e.g., both months or
17276both years. Mixing an annual interest rate with a time expressed
17277in months will give you very wrong answers!
17278
17279It is wise to compute these functions to a higher precision than
17280you really need, just to make sure your answer is correct to the
17281last penny; also, you may wish to check the definitions at the end
17282of this section to make sure the functions have the meaning you expect.
17283
17284@menu
17285* Percentages::
17286* Future Value::
17287* Present Value::
17288* Related Financial Functions::
17289* Depreciation Functions::
17290* Definitions of Financial Functions::
17291@end menu
17292
17293@node Percentages, Future Value, Financial Functions, Financial Functions
17294@subsection Percentages
17295
17296@kindex M-%
17297@pindex calc-percent
17298@tindex %
17299@tindex percent
17300The @kbd{M-%} (@code{calc-percent}) command takes a percentage value,
17301say 5.4, and converts it to an equivalent actual number. For example,
17302@kbd{5.4 M-%} enters 0.054 on the stack. (That's the @key{META} or
17303@key{ESC} key combined with @kbd{%}.)
17304
17305Actually, @kbd{M-%} creates a formula of the form @samp{5.4%}.
17306You can enter @samp{5.4%} yourself during algebraic entry. The
17307@samp{%} operator simply means, ``the preceding value divided by
17308100.'' The @samp{%} operator has very high precedence, so that
17309@samp{1+8%} is interpreted as @samp{1+(8%)}, not as @samp{(1+8)%}.
17310(The @samp{%} operator is just a postfix notation for the
17311@code{percent} function, just like @samp{20!} is the notation for
17312@samp{fact(20)}, or twenty-factorial.)
17313
17314The formula @samp{5.4%} would normally evaluate immediately to
173150.054, but the @kbd{M-%} command suppresses evaluation as it puts
17316the formula onto the stack. However, the next Calc command that
17317uses the formula @samp{5.4%} will evaluate it as its first step.
17318The net effect is that you get to look at @samp{5.4%} on the stack,
17319but Calc commands see it as @samp{0.054}, which is what they expect.
17320
17321In particular, @samp{5.4%} and @samp{0.054} are suitable values
17322for the @var{rate} arguments of the various financial functions,
17323but the number @samp{5.4} is probably @emph{not} suitable---it
17324represents a rate of 540 percent!
17325
17326The key sequence @kbd{M-% *} effectively means ``percent-of.''
5d67986c 17327For example, @kbd{68 @key{RET} 25 M-% *} computes 17, which is 25% of
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1732868 (and also 68% of 25, which comes out to the same thing).
17329
17330@kindex c %
17331@pindex calc-convert-percent
17332The @kbd{c %} (@code{calc-convert-percent}) command converts the
17333value on the top of the stack from numeric to percentage form.
17334For example, if 0.08 is on the stack, @kbd{c %} converts it to
17335@samp{8%}. The quantity is the same, it's just represented
17336differently. (Contrast this with @kbd{M-%}, which would convert
17337this number to @samp{0.08%}.) The @kbd{=} key is a convenient way
17338to convert a formula like @samp{8%} back to numeric form, 0.08.
17339
17340To compute what percentage one quantity is of another quantity,
5d67986c 17341use @kbd{/ c %}. For example, @w{@kbd{17 @key{RET} 68 / c %}} displays
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17342@samp{25%}.
17343
17344@kindex b %
17345@pindex calc-percent-change
17346@tindex relch
17347The @kbd{b %} (@code{calc-percent-change}) [@code{relch}] command
17348calculates the percentage change from one number to another.
5d67986c 17349For example, @kbd{40 @key{RET} 50 b %} produces the answer @samp{25%},
d7b8e6c6 17350since 50 is 25% larger than 40. A negative result represents a
5d67986c 17351decrease: @kbd{50 @key{RET} 40 b %} produces @samp{-20%}, since 40 is
d7b8e6c6
EZ
1735220% smaller than 50. (The answers are different in magnitude
17353because, in the first case, we're increasing by 25% of 40, but
17354in the second case, we're decreasing by 20% of 50.) The effect
5d67986c 17355of @kbd{40 @key{RET} 50 b %} is to compute @cite{(50-40)/40}, converting
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17356the answer to percentage form as if by @kbd{c %}.
17357
17358@node Future Value, Present Value, Percentages, Financial Functions
17359@subsection Future Value
17360
17361@noindent
17362@kindex b F
17363@pindex calc-fin-fv
17364@tindex fv
17365The @kbd{b F} (@code{calc-fin-fv}) [@code{fv}] command computes
17366the future value of an investment. It takes three arguments
17367from the stack: @samp{fv(@var{rate}, @var{n}, @var{payment})}.
17368If you give payments of @var{payment} every year for @var{n}
17369years, and the money you have paid earns interest at @var{rate} per
17370year, then this function tells you what your investment would be
17371worth at the end of the period. (The actual interval doesn't
17372have to be years, as long as @var{n} and @var{rate} are expressed
17373in terms of the same intervals.) This function assumes payments
17374occur at the @emph{end} of each interval.
17375
17376@kindex I b F
17377@tindex fvb
17378The @kbd{I b F} [@code{fvb}] command does the same computation,
17379but assuming your payments are at the beginning of each interval.
17380Suppose you plan to deposit $1000 per year in a savings account
17381earning 5.4% interest, starting right now. How much will be
17382in the account after five years? @code{fvb(5.4%, 5, 1000) = 5870.73}.
17383Thus you will have earned $870 worth of interest over the years.
17384Using the stack, this calculation would have been
5d67986c 17385@kbd{5.4 M-% 5 @key{RET} 1000 I b F}. Note that the rate is expressed
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17386as a number between 0 and 1, @emph{not} as a percentage.
17387
17388@kindex H b F
17389@tindex fvl
17390The @kbd{H b F} [@code{fvl}] command computes the future value
17391of an initial lump sum investment. Suppose you could deposit
17392those five thousand dollars in the bank right now; how much would
17393they be worth in five years? @code{fvl(5.4%, 5, 5000) = 6503.89}.
17394
17395The algebraic functions @code{fv} and @code{fvb} accept an optional
17396fourth argument, which is used as an initial lump sum in the sense
17397of @code{fvl}. In other words, @code{fv(@var{rate}, @var{n},
17398@var{payment}, @var{initial}) = fv(@var{rate}, @var{n}, @var{payment})
17399+ fvl(@var{rate}, @var{n}, @var{initial})}.@refill
17400
17401To illustrate the relationships between these functions, we could
17402do the @code{fvb} calculation ``by hand'' using @code{fvl}. The
17403final balance will be the sum of the contributions of our five
17404deposits at various times. The first deposit earns interest for
17405five years: @code{fvl(5.4%, 5, 1000) = 1300.78}. The second
17406deposit only earns interest for four years: @code{fvl(5.4%, 4, 1000) =
174071234.13}. And so on down to the last deposit, which earns one
17408year's interest: @code{fvl(5.4%, 1, 1000) = 1054.00}. The sum of
17409these five values is, sure enough, $5870.73, just as was computed
17410by @code{fvb} directly.
17411
17412What does @code{fv(5.4%, 5, 1000) = 5569.96} mean? The payments
17413are now at the ends of the periods. The end of one year is the same
17414as the beginning of the next, so what this really means is that we've
17415lost the payment at year zero (which contributed $1300.78), but we're
17416now counting the payment at year five (which, since it didn't have
17417a chance to earn interest, counts as $1000). Indeed, @cite{5569.96 =
174185870.73 - 1300.78 + 1000} (give or take a bit of roundoff error).
17419
17420@node Present Value, Related Financial Functions, Future Value, Financial Functions
17421@subsection Present Value
17422
17423@noindent
17424@kindex b P
17425@pindex calc-fin-pv
17426@tindex pv
17427The @kbd{b P} (@code{calc-fin-pv}) [@code{pv}] command computes
17428the present value of an investment. Like @code{fv}, it takes
17429three arguments: @code{pv(@var{rate}, @var{n}, @var{payment})}.
17430It computes the present value of a series of regular payments.
17431Suppose you have the chance to make an investment that will
17432pay $2000 per year over the next four years; as you receive
17433these payments you can put them in the bank at 9% interest.
17434You want to know whether it is better to make the investment, or
17435to keep the money in the bank where it earns 9% interest right
17436from the start. The calculation @code{pv(9%, 4, 2000)} gives the
17437result 6479.44. If your initial investment must be less than this,
17438say, $6000, then the investment is worthwhile. But if you had to
17439put up $7000, then it would be better just to leave it in the bank.
17440
17441Here is the interpretation of the result of @code{pv}: You are
17442trying to compare the return from the investment you are
17443considering, which is @code{fv(9%, 4, 2000) = 9146.26}, with
17444the return from leaving the money in the bank, which is
17445@code{fvl(9%, 4, @var{x})} where @var{x} is the amount of money
17446you would have to put up in advance. The @code{pv} function
17447finds the break-even point, @cite{x = 6479.44}, at which
17448@code{fvl(9%, 4, 6479.44)} is also equal to 9146.26. This is
17449the largest amount you should be willing to invest.
17450
17451@kindex I b P
17452@tindex pvb
17453The @kbd{I b P} [@code{pvb}] command solves the same problem,
17454but with payments occurring at the beginning of each interval.
17455It has the same relationship to @code{fvb} as @code{pv} has
17456to @code{fv}. For example @code{pvb(9%, 4, 2000) = 7062.59},
17457a larger number than @code{pv} produced because we get to start
17458earning interest on the return from our investment sooner.
17459
17460@kindex H b P
17461@tindex pvl
17462The @kbd{H b P} [@code{pvl}] command computes the present value of
17463an investment that will pay off in one lump sum at the end of the
17464period. For example, if we get our $8000 all at the end of the
17465four years, @code{pvl(9%, 4, 8000) = 5667.40}. This is much
17466less than @code{pv} reported, because we don't earn any interest
17467on the return from this investment. Note that @code{pvl} and
17468@code{fvl} are simple inverses: @code{fvl(9%, 4, 5667.40) = 8000}.
17469
17470You can give an optional fourth lump-sum argument to @code{pv}
17471and @code{pvb}; this is handled in exactly the same way as the
17472fourth argument for @code{fv} and @code{fvb}.
17473
17474@kindex b N
17475@pindex calc-fin-npv
17476@tindex npv
17477The @kbd{b N} (@code{calc-fin-npv}) [@code{npv}] command computes
17478the net present value of a series of irregular investments.
17479The first argument is the interest rate. The second argument is
17480a vector which represents the expected return from the investment
17481at the end of each interval. For example, if the rate represents
17482a yearly interest rate, then the vector elements are the return
17483from the first year, second year, and so on.
17484
17485Thus, @code{npv(9%, [2000,2000,2000,2000]) = pv(9%, 4, 2000) = 6479.44}.
17486Obviously this function is more interesting when the payments are
17487not all the same!
17488
17489The @code{npv} function can actually have two or more arguments.
17490Multiple arguments are interpreted in the same way as for the
17491vector statistical functions like @code{vsum}.
17492@xref{Single-Variable Statistics}. Basically, if there are several
17493payment arguments, each either a vector or a plain number, all these
17494values are collected left-to-right into the complete list of payments.
17495A numeric prefix argument on the @kbd{b N} command says how many
17496payment values or vectors to take from the stack.@refill
17497
17498@kindex I b N
17499@tindex npvb
17500The @kbd{I b N} [@code{npvb}] command computes the net present
17501value where payments occur at the beginning of each interval
17502rather than at the end.
17503
17504@node Related Financial Functions, Depreciation Functions, Present Value, Financial Functions
17505@subsection Related Financial Functions
17506
17507@noindent
17508The functions in this section are basically inverses of the
17509present value functions with respect to the various arguments.
17510
17511@kindex b M
17512@pindex calc-fin-pmt
17513@tindex pmt
17514The @kbd{b M} (@code{calc-fin-pmt}) [@code{pmt}] command computes
17515the amount of periodic payment necessary to amortize a loan.
17516Thus @code{pmt(@var{rate}, @var{n}, @var{amount})} equals the
17517value of @var{payment} such that @code{pv(@var{rate}, @var{n},
17518@var{payment}) = @var{amount}}.@refill
17519
17520@kindex I b M
17521@tindex pmtb
17522The @kbd{I b M} [@code{pmtb}] command does the same computation
17523but using @code{pvb} instead of @code{pv}. Like @code{pv} and
17524@code{pvb}, these functions can also take a fourth argument which
17525represents an initial lump-sum investment.
17526
17527@kindex H b M
17528The @kbd{H b M} key just invokes the @code{fvl} function, which is
17529the inverse of @code{pvl}. There is no explicit @code{pmtl} function.
17530
17531@kindex b #
17532@pindex calc-fin-nper
17533@tindex nper
17534The @kbd{b #} (@code{calc-fin-nper}) [@code{nper}] command computes
17535the number of regular payments necessary to amortize a loan.
17536Thus @code{nper(@var{rate}, @var{payment}, @var{amount})} equals
17537the value of @var{n} such that @code{pv(@var{rate}, @var{n},
17538@var{payment}) = @var{amount}}. If @var{payment} is too small
17539ever to amortize a loan for @var{amount} at interest rate @var{rate},
17540the @code{nper} function is left in symbolic form.@refill
17541
17542@kindex I b #
17543@tindex nperb
17544The @kbd{I b #} [@code{nperb}] command does the same computation
17545but using @code{pvb} instead of @code{pv}. You can give a fourth
17546lump-sum argument to these functions, but the computation will be
17547rather slow in the four-argument case.@refill
17548
17549@kindex H b #
17550@tindex nperl
17551The @kbd{H b #} [@code{nperl}] command does the same computation
17552using @code{pvl}. By exchanging @var{payment} and @var{amount} you
17553can also get the solution for @code{fvl}. For example,
17554@code{nperl(8%, 2000, 1000) = 9.006}, so if you place $1000 in a
17555bank account earning 8%, it will take nine years to grow to $2000.@refill
17556
17557@kindex b T
17558@pindex calc-fin-rate
17559@tindex rate
17560The @kbd{b T} (@code{calc-fin-rate}) [@code{rate}] command computes
17561the rate of return on an investment. This is also an inverse of @code{pv}:
17562@code{rate(@var{n}, @var{payment}, @var{amount})} computes the value of
17563@var{rate} such that @code{pv(@var{rate}, @var{n}, @var{payment}) =
17564@var{amount}}. The result is expressed as a formula like @samp{6.3%}.@refill
17565
17566@kindex I b T
17567@kindex H b T
17568@tindex rateb
17569@tindex ratel
17570The @kbd{I b T} [@code{rateb}] and @kbd{H b T} [@code{ratel}]
17571commands solve the analogous equations with @code{pvb} or @code{pvl}
17572in place of @code{pv}. Also, @code{rate} and @code{rateb} can
17573accept an optional fourth argument just like @code{pv} and @code{pvb}.
17574To redo the above example from a different perspective,
17575@code{ratel(9, 2000, 1000) = 8.00597%}, which says you will need an
17576interest rate of 8% in order to double your account in nine years.@refill
17577
17578@kindex b I
17579@pindex calc-fin-irr
17580@tindex irr
17581The @kbd{b I} (@code{calc-fin-irr}) [@code{irr}] command is the
17582analogous function to @code{rate} but for net present value.
17583Its argument is a vector of payments. Thus @code{irr(@var{payments})}
17584computes the @var{rate} such that @code{npv(@var{rate}, @var{payments}) = 0};
17585this rate is known as the @dfn{internal rate of return}.
17586
17587@kindex I b I
17588@tindex irrb
17589The @kbd{I b I} [@code{irrb}] command computes the internal rate of
17590return assuming payments occur at the beginning of each period.
17591
17592@node Depreciation Functions, Definitions of Financial Functions, Related Financial Functions, Financial Functions
17593@subsection Depreciation Functions
17594
17595@noindent
17596The functions in this section calculate @dfn{depreciation}, which is
17597the amount of value that a possession loses over time. These functions
17598are characterized by three parameters: @var{cost}, the original cost
17599of the asset; @var{salvage}, the value the asset will have at the end
17600of its expected ``useful life''; and @var{life}, the number of years
17601(or other periods) of the expected useful life.
17602
17603There are several methods for calculating depreciation that differ in
17604the way they spread the depreciation over the lifetime of the asset.
17605
17606@kindex b S
17607@pindex calc-fin-sln
17608@tindex sln
17609The @kbd{b S} (@code{calc-fin-sln}) [@code{sln}] command computes the
17610``straight-line'' depreciation. In this method, the asset depreciates
17611by the same amount every year (or period). For example,
17612@samp{sln(12000, 2000, 5)} returns 2000. The asset costs $12000
17613initially and will be worth $2000 after five years; it loses $2000
17614per year.
17615
17616@kindex b Y
17617@pindex calc-fin-syd
17618@tindex syd
17619The @kbd{b Y} (@code{calc-fin-syd}) [@code{syd}] command computes the
17620accelerated ``sum-of-years'-digits'' depreciation. Here the depreciation
17621is higher during the early years of the asset's life. Since the
17622depreciation is different each year, @kbd{b Y} takes a fourth @var{period}
17623parameter which specifies which year is requested, from 1 to @var{life}.
17624If @var{period} is outside this range, the @code{syd} function will
17625return zero.
17626
17627@kindex b D
17628@pindex calc-fin-ddb
17629@tindex ddb
17630The @kbd{b D} (@code{calc-fin-ddb}) [@code{ddb}] command computes an
17631accelerated depreciation using the double-declining balance method.
17632It also takes a fourth @var{period} parameter.
17633
17634For symmetry, the @code{sln} function will accept a @var{period}
17635parameter as well, although it will ignore its value except that the
17636return value will as usual be zero if @var{period} is out of range.
17637
17638For example, pushing the vector @cite{[1,2,3,4,5]} (perhaps with @kbd{v x 5})
17639and then mapping @kbd{V M ' [sln(12000,2000,5,$), syd(12000,2000,5,$),
5d67986c 17640ddb(12000,2000,5,$)] @key{RET}} produces a matrix that allows us to compare
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17641the three depreciation methods:
17642
d7b8e6c6 17643@example
5d67986c 17644@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17645[ [ 2000, 3333, 4800 ]
17646 [ 2000, 2667, 2880 ]
17647 [ 2000, 2000, 1728 ]
17648 [ 2000, 1333, 592 ]
17649 [ 2000, 667, 0 ] ]
d7b8e6c6 17650@end group
5d67986c 17651@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17652
17653@noindent
17654(Values have been rounded to nearest integers in this figure.)
17655We see that @code{sln} depreciates by the same amount each year,
17656@kbd{syd} depreciates more at the beginning and less at the end,
17657and @kbd{ddb} weights the depreciation even more toward the beginning.
17658
17659Summing columns with @kbd{V R : +} yields @cite{[10000, 10000, 10000]};
17660the total depreciation in any method is (by definition) the
17661difference between the cost and the salvage value.
17662
17663@node Definitions of Financial Functions, , Depreciation Functions, Financial Functions
17664@subsection Definitions
17665
17666@noindent
17667For your reference, here are the actual formulas used to compute
17668Calc's financial functions.
17669
17670Calc will not evaluate a financial function unless the @var{rate} or
17671@var{n} argument is known. However, @var{payment} or @var{amount} can
17672be a variable. Calc expands these functions according to the
17673formulas below for symbolic arguments only when you use the @kbd{a "}
17674(@code{calc-expand-formula}) command, or when taking derivatives or
17675integrals or solving equations involving the functions.
17676
17677@ifinfo
17678These formulas are shown using the conventions of ``Big'' display
17679mode (@kbd{d B}); for example, the formula for @code{fv} written
17680linearly is @samp{pmt * ((1 + rate)^n) - 1) / rate}.
17681
17682@example
17683 n
17684 (1 + rate) - 1
17685fv(rate, n, pmt) = pmt * ---------------
17686 rate
17687
17688 n
17689 ((1 + rate) - 1) (1 + rate)
17690fvb(rate, n, pmt) = pmt * ----------------------------
17691 rate
17692
17693 n
17694fvl(rate, n, pmt) = pmt * (1 + rate)
17695
17696 -n
17697 1 - (1 + rate)
17698pv(rate, n, pmt) = pmt * ----------------
17699 rate
17700
17701 -n
17702 (1 - (1 + rate) ) (1 + rate)
17703pvb(rate, n, pmt) = pmt * -----------------------------
17704 rate
17705
17706 -n
17707pvl(rate, n, pmt) = pmt * (1 + rate)
17708
17709 -1 -2 -3
17710npv(rate, [a, b, c]) = a*(1 + rate) + b*(1 + rate) + c*(1 + rate)
17711
17712 -1 -2
17713npvb(rate, [a, b, c]) = a + b*(1 + rate) + c*(1 + rate)
17714
17715 -n
17716 (amt - x * (1 + rate) ) * rate
17717pmt(rate, n, amt, x) = -------------------------------
17718 -n
17719 1 - (1 + rate)
17720
17721 -n
17722 (amt - x * (1 + rate) ) * rate
17723pmtb(rate, n, amt, x) = -------------------------------
17724 -n
17725 (1 - (1 + rate) ) (1 + rate)
17726
17727 amt * rate
17728nper(rate, pmt, amt) = - log(1 - ------------, 1 + rate)
17729 pmt
17730
17731 amt * rate
17732nperb(rate, pmt, amt) = - log(1 - ---------------, 1 + rate)
17733 pmt * (1 + rate)
17734
17735 amt
17736nperl(rate, pmt, amt) = - log(---, 1 + rate)
17737 pmt
17738
17739 1/n
17740 pmt
17741ratel(n, pmt, amt) = ------ - 1
17742 1/n
17743 amt
17744
17745 cost - salv
17746sln(cost, salv, life) = -----------
17747 life
17748
17749 (cost - salv) * (life - per + 1)
17750syd(cost, salv, life, per) = --------------------------------
17751 life * (life + 1) / 2
17752
17753 book * 2
17754ddb(cost, salv, life, per) = --------, book = cost - depreciation so far
17755 life
17756@end example
17757@end ifinfo
17758@tex
17759\turnoffactive
17760$$ \code{fv}(r, n, p) = p { (1 + r)^n - 1 \over r } $$
17761$$ \code{fvb}(r, n, p) = p { ((1 + r)^n - 1) (1 + r) \over r } $$
17762$$ \code{fvl}(r, n, p) = p (1 + r)^n $$
17763$$ \code{pv}(r, n, p) = p { 1 - (1 + r)^{-n} \over r } $$
17764$$ \code{pvb}(r, n, p) = p { (1 - (1 + r)^{-n}) (1 + r) \over r } $$
17765$$ \code{pvl}(r, n, p) = p (1 + r)^{-n} $$
17766$$ \code{npv}(r, [a,b,c]) = a (1 + r)^{-1} + b (1 + r)^{-2} + c (1 + r)^{-3} $$
17767$$ \code{npvb}(r, [a,b,c]) = a + b (1 + r)^{-1} + c (1 + r)^{-2} $$
17768$$ \code{pmt}(r, n, a, x) = { (a - x (1 + r)^{-n}) r \over 1 - (1 + r)^{-n} }$$
17769$$ \code{pmtb}(r, n, a, x) = { (a - x (1 + r)^{-n}) r \over
17770 (1 - (1 + r)^{-n}) (1 + r) } $$
17771$$ \code{nper}(r, p, a) = -\code{log}(1 - { a r \over p }, 1 + r) $$
17772$$ \code{nperb}(r, p, a) = -\code{log}(1 - { a r \over p (1 + r) }, 1 + r) $$
17773$$ \code{nperl}(r, p, a) = -\code{log}({a \over p}, 1 + r) $$
17774$$ \code{ratel}(n, p, a) = { p^{1/n} \over a^{1/n} } - 1 $$
17775$$ \code{sln}(c, s, l) = { c - s \over l } $$
17776$$ \code{syd}(c, s, l, p) = { (c - s) (l - p + 1) \over l (l+1) / 2 } $$
17777$$ \code{ddb}(c, s, l, p) = { 2 (c - \hbox{depreciation so far}) \over l } $$
17778@end tex
17779
17780@noindent
17781In @code{pmt} and @code{pmtb}, @cite{x=0} if omitted.
17782
17783These functions accept any numeric objects, including error forms,
17784intervals, and even (though not very usefully) complex numbers. The
17785above formulas specify exactly the behavior of these functions with
17786all sorts of inputs.
17787
17788Note that if the first argument to the @code{log} in @code{nper} is
17789negative, @code{nper} leaves itself in symbolic form rather than
17790returning a (financially meaningless) complex number.
17791
17792@samp{rate(num, pmt, amt)} solves the equation
17793@samp{pv(rate, num, pmt) = amt} for @samp{rate} using @kbd{H a R}
17794(@code{calc-find-root}), with the interval @samp{[.01% .. 100%]}
17795for an initial guess. The @code{rateb} function is the same except
17796that it uses @code{pvb}. Note that @code{ratel} can be solved
17797directly; its formula is shown in the above list.
17798
17799Similarly, @samp{irr(pmts)} solves the equation @samp{npv(rate, pmts) = 0}
17800for @samp{rate}.
17801
17802If you give a fourth argument to @code{nper} or @code{nperb}, Calc
17803will also use @kbd{H a R} to solve the equation using an initial
17804guess interval of @samp{[0 .. 100]}.
17805
17806A fourth argument to @code{fv} simply sums the two components
17807calculated from the above formulas for @code{fv} and @code{fvl}.
17808The same is true of @code{fvb}, @code{pv}, and @code{pvb}.
17809
17810The @kbd{ddb} function is computed iteratively; the ``book'' value
17811starts out equal to @var{cost}, and decreases according to the above
17812formula for the specified number of periods. If the book value
17813would decrease below @var{salvage}, it only decreases to @var{salvage}
17814and the depreciation is zero for all subsequent periods. The @code{ddb}
17815function returns the amount the book value decreased in the specified
17816period.
17817
17818The Calc financial function names were borrowed mostly from Microsoft
17819Excel and Borland's Quattro. The @code{ratel} function corresponds to
17820@samp{@@CGR} in Borland's Reflex. The @code{nper} and @code{nperl}
17821functions correspond to @samp{@@TERM} and @samp{@@CTERM} in Quattro,
17822respectively. Beware that the Calc functions may take their arguments
17823in a different order than the corresponding functions in your favorite
17824spreadsheet.
17825
17826@node Binary Functions, , Financial Functions, Arithmetic
17827@section Binary Number Functions
17828
17829@noindent
17830The commands in this chapter all use two-letter sequences beginning with
17831the @kbd{b} prefix.
17832
17833@cindex Binary numbers
17834The ``binary'' operations actually work regardless of the currently
17835displayed radix, although their results make the most sense in a radix
17836like 2, 8, or 16 (as obtained by the @kbd{d 2}, @kbd{d 8}, or @w{@kbd{d 6}}
17837commands, respectively). You may also wish to enable display of leading
17838zeros with @kbd{d z}. @xref{Radix Modes}.
17839
17840@cindex Word size for binary operations
17841The Calculator maintains a current @dfn{word size} @cite{w}, an
17842arbitrary positive or negative integer. For a positive word size, all
17843of the binary operations described here operate modulo @cite{2^w}. In
17844particular, negative arguments are converted to positive integers modulo
17845@cite{2^w} by all binary functions.@refill
17846
17847If the word size is negative, binary operations produce 2's complement
17848integers from @c{$-2^{-w-1}$}
17849@cite{-(2^(-w-1))} to @c{$2^{-w-1}-1$}
17850@cite{2^(-w-1)-1} inclusive. Either
17851mode accepts inputs in any range; the sign of @cite{w} affects only
17852the results produced.
17853
17854@kindex b c
17855@pindex calc-clip
17856@tindex clip
17857The @kbd{b c} (@code{calc-clip})
17858[@code{clip}] command can be used to clip a number by reducing it modulo
17859@cite{2^w}. The commands described in this chapter automatically clip
17860their results to the current word size. Note that other operations like
17861addition do not use the current word size, since integer addition
17862generally is not ``binary.'' (However, @pxref{Simplification Modes},
17863@code{calc-bin-simplify-mode}.) For example, with a word size of 8
17864bits @kbd{b c} converts a number to the range 0 to 255; with a word
17865size of @i{-8} @kbd{b c} converts to the range @i{-128} to 127.@refill
17866
17867@kindex b w
17868@pindex calc-word-size
17869The default word size is 32 bits. All operations except the shifts and
17870rotates allow you to specify a different word size for that one
17871operation by giving a numeric prefix argument: @kbd{C-u 8 b c} clips the
17872top of stack to the range 0 to 255 regardless of the current word size.
17873To set the word size permanently, use @kbd{b w} (@code{calc-word-size}).
17874This command displays a prompt with the current word size; press @key{RET}
17875immediately to keep this word size, or type a new word size at the prompt.
17876
17877When the binary operations are written in symbolic form, they take an
17878optional second (or third) word-size parameter. When a formula like
17879@samp{and(a,b)} is finally evaluated, the word size current at that time
17880will be used, but when @samp{and(a,b,-8)} is evaluated, a word size of
17881@i{-8} will always be used. A symbolic binary function will be left
17882in symbolic form unless the all of its argument(s) are integers or
17883integer-valued floats.
17884
17885If either or both arguments are modulo forms for which @cite{M} is a
17886power of two, that power of two is taken as the word size unless a
17887numeric prefix argument overrides it. The current word size is never
17888consulted when modulo-power-of-two forms are involved.
17889
17890@kindex b a
17891@pindex calc-and
17892@tindex and
17893The @kbd{b a} (@code{calc-and}) [@code{and}] command computes the bitwise
17894AND of the two numbers on the top of the stack. In other words, for each
17895of the @cite{w} binary digits of the two numbers (pairwise), the corresponding
17896bit of the result is 1 if and only if both input bits are 1:
17897@samp{and(2#1100, 2#1010) = 2#1000}.
17898
17899@kindex b o
17900@pindex calc-or
17901@tindex or
17902The @kbd{b o} (@code{calc-or}) [@code{or}] command computes the bitwise
17903inclusive OR of two numbers. A bit is 1 if either of the input bits, or
17904both, are 1: @samp{or(2#1100, 2#1010) = 2#1110}.
17905
17906@kindex b x
17907@pindex calc-xor
17908@tindex xor
17909The @kbd{b x} (@code{calc-xor}) [@code{xor}] command computes the bitwise
17910exclusive OR of two numbers. A bit is 1 if exactly one of the input bits
17911is 1: @samp{xor(2#1100, 2#1010) = 2#0110}.
17912
17913@kindex b d
17914@pindex calc-diff
17915@tindex diff
17916The @kbd{b d} (@code{calc-diff}) [@code{diff}] command computes the bitwise
17917difference of two numbers; this is defined by @samp{diff(a,b) = and(a,not(b))},
17918so that @samp{diff(2#1100, 2#1010) = 2#0100}.
17919
17920@kindex b n
17921@pindex calc-not
17922@tindex not
17923The @kbd{b n} (@code{calc-not}) [@code{not}] command computes the bitwise
17924NOT of a number. A bit is 1 if the input bit is 0 and vice-versa.
17925
17926@kindex b l
17927@pindex calc-lshift-binary
17928@tindex lsh
17929The @kbd{b l} (@code{calc-lshift-binary}) [@code{lsh}] command shifts a
17930number left by one bit, or by the number of bits specified in the numeric
17931prefix argument. A negative prefix argument performs a logical right shift,
17932in which zeros are shifted in on the left. In symbolic form, @samp{lsh(a)}
17933is short for @samp{lsh(a,1)}, which in turn is short for @samp{lsh(a,n,w)}.
17934Bits shifted ``off the end,'' according to the current word size, are lost.
17935
17936@kindex H b l
17937@kindex H b r
5d67986c
RS
17938@ignore
17939@mindex @idots
17940@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 17941@kindex H b L
5d67986c
RS
17942@ignore
17943@mindex @null
17944@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 17945@kindex H b R
5d67986c
RS
17946@ignore
17947@mindex @null
17948@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
17949@kindex H b t
17950The @kbd{H b l} command also does a left shift, but it takes two arguments
17951from the stack (the value to shift, and, at top-of-stack, the number of
17952bits to shift). This version interprets the prefix argument just like
17953the regular binary operations, i.e., as a word size. The Hyperbolic flag
17954has a similar effect on the rest of the binary shift and rotate commands.
17955
17956@kindex b r
17957@pindex calc-rshift-binary
17958@tindex rsh
17959The @kbd{b r} (@code{calc-rshift-binary}) [@code{rsh}] command shifts a
17960number right by one bit, or by the number of bits specified in the numeric
17961prefix argument: @samp{rsh(a,n) = lsh(a,-n)}.
17962
17963@kindex b L
17964@pindex calc-lshift-arith
17965@tindex ash
17966The @kbd{b L} (@code{calc-lshift-arith}) [@code{ash}] command shifts a
17967number left. It is analogous to @code{lsh}, except that if the shift
17968is rightward (the prefix argument is negative), an arithmetic shift
17969is performed as described below.
17970
17971@kindex b R
17972@pindex calc-rshift-arith
17973@tindex rash
17974The @kbd{b R} (@code{calc-rshift-arith}) [@code{rash}] command performs
17975an ``arithmetic'' shift to the right, in which the leftmost bit (according
17976to the current word size) is duplicated rather than shifting in zeros.
17977This corresponds to dividing by a power of two where the input is interpreted
17978as a signed, twos-complement number. (The distinction between the @samp{rsh}
17979and @samp{rash} operations is totally independent from whether the word
17980size is positive or negative.) With a negative prefix argument, this
17981performs a standard left shift.
17982
17983@kindex b t
17984@pindex calc-rotate-binary
17985@tindex rot
17986The @kbd{b t} (@code{calc-rotate-binary}) [@code{rot}] command rotates a
17987number one bit to the left. The leftmost bit (according to the current
17988word size) is dropped off the left and shifted in on the right. With a
17989numeric prefix argument, the number is rotated that many bits to the left
17990or right.
17991
17992@xref{Set Operations}, for the @kbd{b p} and @kbd{b u} commands that
17993pack and unpack binary integers into sets. (For example, @kbd{b u}
17994unpacks the number @samp{2#11001} to the set of bit-numbers
17995@samp{[0, 3, 4]}.) Type @kbd{b u V #} to count the number of ``1''
17996bits in a binary integer.
17997
17998Another interesting use of the set representation of binary integers
17999is to reverse the bits in, say, a 32-bit integer. Type @kbd{b u} to
5d67986c 18000unpack; type @kbd{31 @key{TAB} -} to replace each bit-number in the set
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18001with 31 minus that bit-number; type @kbd{b p} to pack the set back
18002into a binary integer.
18003
18004@node Scientific Functions, Matrix Functions, Arithmetic, Top
18005@chapter Scientific Functions
18006
18007@noindent
18008The functions described here perform trigonometric and other transcendental
18009calculations. They generally produce floating-point answers correct to the
18010full current precision. The @kbd{H} (Hyperbolic) and @kbd{I} (Inverse)
18011flag keys must be used to get some of these functions from the keyboard.
18012
18013@kindex P
18014@pindex calc-pi
18015@cindex @code{pi} variable
18016@vindex pi
18017@kindex H P
18018@cindex @code{e} variable
18019@vindex e
18020@kindex I P
18021@cindex @code{gamma} variable
18022@vindex gamma
18023@cindex Gamma constant, Euler's
18024@cindex Euler's gamma constant
18025@kindex H I P
18026@cindex @code{phi} variable
18027@cindex Phi, golden ratio
18028@cindex Golden ratio
18029One miscellanous command is shift-@kbd{P} (@code{calc-pi}), which pushes
18030the value of @c{$\pi$}
18031@cite{pi} (at the current precision) onto the stack. With the
18032Hyperbolic flag, it pushes the value @cite{e}, the base of natural logarithms.
18033With the Inverse flag, it pushes Euler's constant @c{$\gamma$}
18034@cite{gamma} (about 0.5772). With both Inverse and Hyperbolic, it
18035pushes the ``golden ratio'' @c{$\phi$}
18036@cite{phi} (about 1.618). (At present, Euler's constant is not available
18037to unlimited precision; Calc knows only the first 100 digits.)
18038In Symbolic mode, these commands push the
18039actual variables @samp{pi}, @samp{e}, @samp{gamma}, and @samp{phi},
18040respectively, instead of their values; @pxref{Symbolic Mode}.@refill
18041
5d67986c
RS
18042@ignore
18043@mindex Q
18044@end ignore
18045@ignore
18046@mindex I Q
18047@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18048@kindex I Q
18049@tindex sqr
18050The @kbd{Q} (@code{calc-sqrt}) [@code{sqrt}] function is described elsewhere;
18051@pxref{Basic Arithmetic}. With the Inverse flag [@code{sqr}], this command
18052computes the square of the argument.
18053
18054@xref{Prefix Arguments}, for a discussion of the effect of numeric
18055prefix arguments on commands in this chapter which do not otherwise
18056interpret a prefix argument.
18057
18058@menu
18059* Logarithmic Functions::
18060* Trigonometric and Hyperbolic Functions::
18061* Advanced Math Functions::
18062* Branch Cuts::
18063* Random Numbers::
18064* Combinatorial Functions::
18065* Probability Distribution Functions::
18066@end menu
18067
18068@node Logarithmic Functions, Trigonometric and Hyperbolic Functions, Scientific Functions, Scientific Functions
18069@section Logarithmic Functions
18070
18071@noindent
18072@kindex L
18073@pindex calc-ln
18074@tindex ln
5d67986c
RS
18075@ignore
18076@mindex @null
18077@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18078@kindex I E
18079The shift-@kbd{L} (@code{calc-ln}) [@code{ln}] command computes the natural
18080logarithm of the real or complex number on the top of the stack. With
18081the Inverse flag it computes the exponential function instead, although
18082this is redundant with the @kbd{E} command.
18083
18084@kindex E
18085@pindex calc-exp
18086@tindex exp
5d67986c
RS
18087@ignore
18088@mindex @null
18089@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18090@kindex I L
18091The shift-@kbd{E} (@code{calc-exp}) [@code{exp}] command computes the
18092exponential, i.e., @cite{e} raised to the power of the number on the stack.
18093The meanings of the Inverse and Hyperbolic flags follow from those for
18094the @code{calc-ln} command.
18095
18096@kindex H L
18097@kindex H E
18098@pindex calc-log10
18099@tindex log10
18100@tindex exp10
5d67986c
RS
18101@ignore
18102@mindex @null
18103@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18104@kindex H I L
5d67986c
RS
18105@ignore
18106@mindex @null
18107@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18108@kindex H I E
18109The @kbd{H L} (@code{calc-log10}) [@code{log10}] command computes the common
18110(base-10) logarithm of a number. (With the Inverse flag [@code{exp10}],
18111it raises ten to a given power.) Note that the common logarithm of a
18112complex number is computed by taking the natural logarithm and dividing
18113by @c{$\ln10$}
18114@cite{ln(10)}.
18115
18116@kindex B
18117@kindex I B
18118@pindex calc-log
18119@tindex log
18120@tindex alog
18121The @kbd{B} (@code{calc-log}) [@code{log}] command computes a logarithm
18122to any base. For example, @kbd{1024 @key{RET} 2 B} produces 10, since
18123@c{$2^{10} = 1024$}
18124@cite{2^10 = 1024}. In certain cases like @samp{log(3,9)}, the result
18125will be either @cite{1:2} or @cite{0.5} depending on the current Fraction
18126Mode setting. With the Inverse flag [@code{alog}], this command is
18127similar to @kbd{^} except that the order of the arguments is reversed.
18128
18129@kindex f I
18130@pindex calc-ilog
18131@tindex ilog
18132The @kbd{f I} (@code{calc-ilog}) [@code{ilog}] command computes the
18133integer logarithm of a number to any base. The number and the base must
18134themselves be positive integers. This is the true logarithm, rounded
18135down to an integer. Thus @kbd{ilog(x,10)} is 3 for all @cite{x} in the
18136range from 1000 to 9999. If both arguments are positive integers, exact
18137integer arithmetic is used; otherwise, this is equivalent to
18138@samp{floor(log(x,b))}.
18139
18140@kindex f E
18141@pindex calc-expm1
18142@tindex expm1
18143The @kbd{f E} (@code{calc-expm1}) [@code{expm1}] command computes
18144@c{$e^x - 1$}
18145@cite{exp(x)-1}, but using an algorithm that produces a more accurate
18146answer when the result is close to zero, i.e., when @c{$e^x$}
18147@cite{exp(x)} is close
18148to one.
18149
18150@kindex f L
18151@pindex calc-lnp1
18152@tindex lnp1
18153The @kbd{f L} (@code{calc-lnp1}) [@code{lnp1}] command computes
18154@c{$\ln(x+1)$}
18155@cite{ln(x+1)}, producing a more accurate answer when @cite{x} is close
18156to zero.
18157
18158@node Trigonometric and Hyperbolic Functions, Advanced Math Functions, Logarithmic Functions, Scientific Functions
18159@section Trigonometric/Hyperbolic Functions
18160
18161@noindent
18162@kindex S
18163@pindex calc-sin
18164@tindex sin
18165The shift-@kbd{S} (@code{calc-sin}) [@code{sin}] command computes the sine
18166of an angle or complex number. If the input is an HMS form, it is interpreted
18167as degrees-minutes-seconds; otherwise, the input is interpreted according
18168to the current angular mode. It is best to use Radians mode when operating
18169on complex numbers.@refill
18170
18171Calc's ``units'' mechanism includes angular units like @code{deg},
18172@code{rad}, and @code{grad}. While @samp{sin(45 deg)} is not evaluated
18173all the time, the @kbd{u s} (@code{calc-simplify-units}) command will
18174simplify @samp{sin(45 deg)} by taking the sine of 45 degrees, regardless
18175of the current angular mode. @xref{Basic Operations on Units}.
18176
18177Also, the symbolic variable @code{pi} is not ordinarily recognized in
18178arguments to trigonometric functions, as in @samp{sin(3 pi / 4)}, but
18179the @kbd{a s} (@code{calc-simplify}) command recognizes many such
18180formulas when the current angular mode is radians @emph{and} symbolic
18181mode is enabled; this example would be replaced by @samp{sqrt(2) / 2}.
18182@xref{Symbolic Mode}. Beware, this simplification occurs even if you
18183have stored a different value in the variable @samp{pi}; this is one
18184reason why changing built-in variables is a bad idea. Arguments of
18185the form @cite{x} plus a multiple of @c{$\pi/2$}
18186@cite{pi/2} are also simplified.
18187Calc includes similar formulas for @code{cos} and @code{tan}.@refill
18188
18189The @kbd{a s} command knows all angles which are integer multiples of
18190@c{$\pi/12$}
18191@cite{pi/12}, @c{$\pi/10$}
18192@cite{pi/10}, or @c{$\pi/8$}
18193@cite{pi/8} radians. In degrees mode,
18194analogous simplifications occur for integer multiples of 15 or 18
18195degrees, and for arguments plus multiples of 90 degrees.
18196
18197@kindex I S
18198@pindex calc-arcsin
18199@tindex arcsin
18200With the Inverse flag, @code{calc-sin} computes an arcsine. This is also
18201available as the @code{calc-arcsin} command or @code{arcsin} algebraic
18202function. The returned argument is converted to degrees, radians, or HMS
18203notation depending on the current angular mode.
18204
18205@kindex H S
18206@pindex calc-sinh
18207@tindex sinh
18208@kindex H I S
18209@pindex calc-arcsinh
18210@tindex arcsinh
18211With the Hyperbolic flag, @code{calc-sin} computes the hyperbolic
18212sine, also available as @code{calc-sinh} [@code{sinh}]. With the
18213Hyperbolic and Inverse flags, it computes the hyperbolic arcsine
18214(@code{calc-arcsinh}) [@code{arcsinh}].
18215
18216@kindex C
18217@pindex calc-cos
18218@tindex cos
5d67986c
RS
18219@ignore
18220@mindex @idots
18221@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18222@kindex I C
18223@pindex calc-arccos
5d67986c
RS
18224@ignore
18225@mindex @null
18226@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18227@tindex arccos
5d67986c
RS
18228@ignore
18229@mindex @null
18230@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18231@kindex H C
18232@pindex calc-cosh
5d67986c
RS
18233@ignore
18234@mindex @null
18235@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18236@tindex cosh
5d67986c
RS
18237@ignore
18238@mindex @null
18239@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18240@kindex H I C
18241@pindex calc-arccosh
5d67986c
RS
18242@ignore
18243@mindex @null
18244@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18245@tindex arccosh
5d67986c
RS
18246@ignore
18247@mindex @null
18248@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18249@kindex T
18250@pindex calc-tan
5d67986c
RS
18251@ignore
18252@mindex @null
18253@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18254@tindex tan
5d67986c
RS
18255@ignore
18256@mindex @null
18257@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18258@kindex I T
18259@pindex calc-arctan
5d67986c
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18260@ignore
18261@mindex @null
18262@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18263@tindex arctan
5d67986c
RS
18264@ignore
18265@mindex @null
18266@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18267@kindex H T
18268@pindex calc-tanh
5d67986c
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18269@ignore
18270@mindex @null
18271@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18272@tindex tanh
5d67986c
RS
18273@ignore
18274@mindex @null
18275@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18276@kindex H I T
18277@pindex calc-arctanh
5d67986c
RS
18278@ignore
18279@mindex @null
18280@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18281@tindex arctanh
18282The shift-@kbd{C} (@code{calc-cos}) [@code{cos}] command computes the cosine
18283of an angle or complex number, and shift-@kbd{T} (@code{calc-tan}) [@code{tan}]
18284computes the tangent, along with all the various inverse and hyperbolic
18285variants of these functions.
18286
18287@kindex f T
18288@pindex calc-arctan2
18289@tindex arctan2
18290The @kbd{f T} (@code{calc-arctan2}) [@code{arctan2}] command takes two
18291numbers from the stack and computes the arc tangent of their ratio. The
18292result is in the full range from @i{-180} (exclusive) to @i{+180}
18293(inclusive) degrees, or the analogous range in radians. A similar
18294result would be obtained with @kbd{/} followed by @kbd{I T}, but the
18295value would only be in the range from @i{-90} to @i{+90} degrees
18296since the division loses information about the signs of the two
18297components, and an error might result from an explicit division by zero
18298which @code{arctan2} would avoid. By (arbitrary) definition,
18299@samp{arctan2(0,0)=0}.
18300
18301@pindex calc-sincos
5d67986c
RS
18302@ignore
18303@starindex
18304@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18305@tindex sincos
5d67986c
RS
18306@ignore
18307@starindex
18308@end ignore
18309@ignore
18310@mindex arc@idots
18311@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18312@tindex arcsincos
18313The @code{calc-sincos} [@code{sincos}] command computes the sine and
18314cosine of a number, returning them as a vector of the form
18315@samp{[@var{cos}, @var{sin}]}.
18316With the Inverse flag [@code{arcsincos}], this command takes a two-element
18317vector as an argument and computes @code{arctan2} of the elements.
18318(This command does not accept the Hyperbolic flag.)@refill
18319
18320@node Advanced Math Functions, Branch Cuts, Trigonometric and Hyperbolic Functions, Scientific Functions
18321@section Advanced Mathematical Functions
18322
18323@noindent
18324Calc can compute a variety of less common functions that arise in
18325various branches of mathematics. All of the functions described in
18326this section allow arbitrary complex arguments and, except as noted,
18327will work to arbitrarily large precisions. They can not at present
18328handle error forms or intervals as arguments.
18329
18330NOTE: These functions are still experimental. In particular, their
18331accuracy is not guaranteed in all domains. It is advisable to set the
18332current precision comfortably higher than you actually need when
18333using these functions. Also, these functions may be impractically
18334slow for some values of the arguments.
18335
18336@kindex f g
18337@pindex calc-gamma
18338@tindex gamma
18339The @kbd{f g} (@code{calc-gamma}) [@code{gamma}] command computes the Euler
18340gamma function. For positive integer arguments, this is related to the
18341factorial function: @samp{gamma(n+1) = fact(n)}. For general complex
18342arguments the gamma function can be defined by the following definite
18343integral: @c{$\Gamma(a) = \int_0^\infty t^{a-1} e^t dt$}
18344@cite{gamma(a) = integ(t^(a-1) exp(t), t, 0, inf)}.
18345(The actual implementation uses far more efficient computational methods.)
18346
18347@kindex f G
18348@tindex gammaP
5d67986c
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18349@ignore
18350@mindex @idots
18351@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18352@kindex I f G
5d67986c
RS
18353@ignore
18354@mindex @null
18355@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18356@kindex H f G
5d67986c
RS
18357@ignore
18358@mindex @null
18359@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18360@kindex H I f G
18361@pindex calc-inc-gamma
5d67986c
RS
18362@ignore
18363@mindex @null
18364@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18365@tindex gammaQ
5d67986c
RS
18366@ignore
18367@mindex @null
18368@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 18369@tindex gammag
5d67986c
RS
18370@ignore
18371@mindex @null
18372@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18373@tindex gammaG
18374The @kbd{f G} (@code{calc-inc-gamma}) [@code{gammaP}] command computes
18375the incomplete gamma function, denoted @samp{P(a,x)}. This is defined by
18376the integral, @c{$P(a,x) = \left( \int_0^x t^{a-1} e^t dt \right) / \Gamma(a)$}
18377@cite{gammaP(a,x) = integ(t^(a-1) exp(t), t, 0, x) / gamma(a)}.
18378This implies that @samp{gammaP(a,inf) = 1} for any @cite{a} (see the
18379definition of the normal gamma function).
18380
18381Several other varieties of incomplete gamma function are defined.
18382The complement of @cite{P(a,x)}, called @cite{Q(a,x) = 1-P(a,x)} by
18383some authors, is computed by the @kbd{I f G} [@code{gammaQ}] command.
18384You can think of this as taking the other half of the integral, from
18385@cite{x} to infinity.
18386
18387@ifinfo
18388The functions corresponding to the integrals that define @cite{P(a,x)}
18389and @cite{Q(a,x)} but without the normalizing @cite{1/gamma(a)}
18390factor are called @cite{g(a,x)} and @cite{G(a,x)}, respectively
18391(where @cite{g} and @cite{G} represent the lower- and upper-case Greek
18392letter gamma). You can obtain these using the @kbd{H f G} [@code{gammag}]
18393and @kbd{H I f G} [@code{gammaG}] commands.
18394@end ifinfo
18395@tex
18396\turnoffactive
18397The functions corresponding to the integrals that define $P(a,x)$
18398and $Q(a,x)$ but without the normalizing $1/\Gamma(a)$
18399factor are called $\gamma(a,x)$ and $\Gamma(a,x)$, respectively.
18400You can obtain these using the \kbd{H f G} [\code{gammag}] and
18401\kbd{I H f G} [\code{gammaG}] commands.
18402@end tex
18403
18404@kindex f b
18405@pindex calc-beta
18406@tindex beta
18407The @kbd{f b} (@code{calc-beta}) [@code{beta}] command computes the
18408Euler beta function, which is defined in terms of the gamma function as
18409@c{$B(a,b) = \Gamma(a) \Gamma(b) / \Gamma(a+b)$}
18410@cite{beta(a,b) = gamma(a) gamma(b) / gamma(a+b)}, or by
18411@c{$B(a,b) = \int_0^1 t^{a-1} (1-t)^{b-1} dt$}
18412@cite{beta(a,b) = integ(t^(a-1) (1-t)^(b-1), t, 0, 1)}.
18413
18414@kindex f B
18415@kindex H f B
18416@pindex calc-inc-beta
18417@tindex betaI
18418@tindex betaB
18419The @kbd{f B} (@code{calc-inc-beta}) [@code{betaI}] command computes
18420the incomplete beta function @cite{I(x,a,b)}. It is defined by
18421@c{$I(x,a,b) = \left( \int_0^x t^{a-1} (1-t)^{b-1} dt \right) / B(a,b)$}
18422@cite{betaI(x,a,b) = integ(t^(a-1) (1-t)^(b-1), t, 0, x) / beta(a,b)}.
18423Once again, the @kbd{H} (hyperbolic) prefix gives the corresponding
18424un-normalized version [@code{betaB}].
18425
18426@kindex f e
18427@kindex I f e
18428@pindex calc-erf
18429@tindex erf
18430@tindex erfc
18431The @kbd{f e} (@code{calc-erf}) [@code{erf}] command computes the
18432error function @c{$\hbox{erf}(x) = {2 \over \sqrt{\pi}} \int_0^x e^{-t^2} dt$}
18433@cite{erf(x) = 2 integ(exp(-(t^2)), t, 0, x) / sqrt(pi)}.
18434The complementary error function @kbd{I f e} (@code{calc-erfc}) [@code{erfc}]
18435is the corresponding integral from @samp{x} to infinity; the sum
18436@c{$\hbox{erf}(x) + \hbox{erfc}(x) = 1$}
18437@cite{erf(x) + erfc(x) = 1}.
18438
18439@kindex f j
18440@kindex f y
18441@pindex calc-bessel-J
18442@pindex calc-bessel-Y
18443@tindex besJ
18444@tindex besY
18445The @kbd{f j} (@code{calc-bessel-J}) [@code{besJ}] and @kbd{f y}
18446(@code{calc-bessel-Y}) [@code{besY}] commands compute the Bessel
18447functions of the first and second kinds, respectively.
18448In @samp{besJ(n,x)} and @samp{besY(n,x)} the ``order'' parameter
18449@cite{n} is often an integer, but is not required to be one.
18450Calc's implementation of the Bessel functions currently limits the
18451precision to 8 digits, and may not be exact even to that precision.
18452Use with care!@refill
18453
18454@node Branch Cuts, Random Numbers, Advanced Math Functions, Scientific Functions
18455@section Branch Cuts and Principal Values
18456
18457@noindent
18458@cindex Branch cuts
18459@cindex Principal values
18460All of the logarithmic, trigonometric, and other scientific functions are
18461defined for complex numbers as well as for reals.
18462This section describes the values
18463returned in cases where the general result is a family of possible values.
18464Calc follows section 12.5.3 of Steele's @dfn{Common Lisp, the Language},
18465second edition, in these matters. This section will describe each
18466function briefly; for a more detailed discussion (including some nifty
18467diagrams), consult Steele's book.
18468
18469Note that the branch cuts for @code{arctan} and @code{arctanh} were
18470changed between the first and second editions of Steele. Versions of
18471Calc starting with 2.00 follow the second edition.
18472
18473The new branch cuts exactly match those of the HP-28/48 calculators.
18474They also match those of Mathematica 1.2, except that Mathematica's
18475@code{arctan} cut is always in the right half of the complex plane,
18476and its @code{arctanh} cut is always in the top half of the plane.
18477Calc's cuts are continuous with quadrants I and III for @code{arctan},
18478or II and IV for @code{arctanh}.
18479
18480Note: The current implementations of these functions with complex arguments
18481are designed with proper behavior around the branch cuts in mind, @emph{not}
18482efficiency or accuracy. You may need to increase the floating precision
18483and wait a while to get suitable answers from them.
18484
18485For @samp{sqrt(a+bi)}: When @cite{a<0} and @cite{b} is small but positive
18486or zero, the result is close to the @cite{+i} axis. For @cite{b} small and
18487negative, the result is close to the @cite{-i} axis. The result always lies
18488in the right half of the complex plane.
18489
18490For @samp{ln(a+bi)}: The real part is defined as @samp{ln(abs(a+bi))}.
18491The imaginary part is defined as @samp{arg(a+bi) = arctan2(b,a)}.
18492Thus the branch cuts for @code{sqrt} and @code{ln} both lie on the
18493negative real axis.
18494
18495The following table describes these branch cuts in another way.
18496If the real and imaginary parts of @cite{z} are as shown, then
18497the real and imaginary parts of @cite{f(z)} will be as shown.
18498Here @code{eps} stands for a small positive value; each
18499occurrence of @code{eps} may stand for a different small value.
18500
18501@smallexample
18502 z sqrt(z) ln(z)
18503----------------------------------------
18504 +, 0 +, 0 any, 0
18505 -, 0 0, + any, pi
18506 -, +eps +eps, + +eps, +
18507 -, -eps +eps, - +eps, -
18508@end smallexample
18509
18510For @samp{z1^z2}: This is defined by @samp{exp(ln(z1)*z2)}.
18511One interesting consequence of this is that @samp{(-8)^1:3} does
18512not evaluate to @i{-2} as you might expect, but to the complex
18513number @cite{(1., 1.732)}. Both of these are valid cube roots
18514of @i{-8} (as is @cite{(1., -1.732)}); Calc chooses a perhaps
18515less-obvious root for the sake of mathematical consistency.
18516
18517For @samp{arcsin(z)}: This is defined by @samp{-i*ln(i*z + sqrt(1-z^2))}.
18518The branch cuts are on the real axis, less than @i{-1} and greater than 1.
18519
18520For @samp{arccos(z)}: This is defined by @samp{-i*ln(z + i*sqrt(1-z^2))},
18521or equivalently by @samp{pi/2 - arcsin(z)}. The branch cuts are on
18522the real axis, less than @i{-1} and greater than 1.
18523
18524For @samp{arctan(z)}: This is defined by
18525@samp{(ln(1+i*z) - ln(1-i*z)) / (2*i)}. The branch cuts are on the
18526imaginary axis, below @cite{-i} and above @cite{i}.
18527
18528For @samp{arcsinh(z)}: This is defined by @samp{ln(z + sqrt(1+z^2))}.
18529The branch cuts are on the imaginary axis, below @cite{-i} and
18530above @cite{i}.
18531
18532For @samp{arccosh(z)}: This is defined by
18533@samp{ln(z + (z+1)*sqrt((z-1)/(z+1)))}. The branch cut is on the
18534real axis less than 1.
18535
18536For @samp{arctanh(z)}: This is defined by @samp{(ln(1+z) - ln(1-z)) / 2}.
18537The branch cuts are on the real axis, less than @i{-1} and greater than 1.
18538
18539The following tables for @code{arcsin}, @code{arccos}, and
18540@code{arctan} assume the current angular mode is radians. The
18541hyperbolic functions operate independently of the angular mode.
18542
18543@smallexample
18544 z arcsin(z) arccos(z)
18545-------------------------------------------------------
18546 (-1..1), 0 (-pi/2..pi/2), 0 (0..pi), 0
18547 (-1..1), +eps (-pi/2..pi/2), +eps (0..pi), -eps
18548 (-1..1), -eps (-pi/2..pi/2), -eps (0..pi), +eps
18549 <-1, 0 -pi/2, + pi, -
18550 <-1, +eps -pi/2 + eps, + pi - eps, -
18551 <-1, -eps -pi/2 + eps, - pi - eps, +
18552 >1, 0 pi/2, - 0, +
18553 >1, +eps pi/2 - eps, + +eps, -
18554 >1, -eps pi/2 - eps, - +eps, +
18555@end smallexample
18556
18557@smallexample
18558 z arccosh(z) arctanh(z)
18559-----------------------------------------------------
18560 (-1..1), 0 0, (0..pi) any, 0
18561 (-1..1), +eps +eps, (0..pi) any, +eps
18562 (-1..1), -eps +eps, (-pi..0) any, -eps
18563 <-1, 0 +, pi -, pi/2
18564 <-1, +eps +, pi - eps -, pi/2 - eps
18565 <-1, -eps +, -pi + eps -, -pi/2 + eps
18566 >1, 0 +, 0 +, -pi/2
18567 >1, +eps +, +eps +, pi/2 - eps
18568 >1, -eps +, -eps +, -pi/2 + eps
18569@end smallexample
18570
18571@smallexample
18572 z arcsinh(z) arctan(z)
18573-----------------------------------------------------
18574 0, (-1..1) 0, (-pi/2..pi/2) 0, any
18575 0, <-1 -, -pi/2 -pi/2, -
18576 +eps, <-1 +, -pi/2 + eps pi/2 - eps, -
18577 -eps, <-1 -, -pi/2 + eps -pi/2 + eps, -
18578 0, >1 +, pi/2 pi/2, +
18579 +eps, >1 +, pi/2 - eps pi/2 - eps, +
18580 -eps, >1 -, pi/2 - eps -pi/2 + eps, +
18581@end smallexample
18582
18583Finally, the following identities help to illustrate the relationship
18584between the complex trigonometric and hyperbolic functions. They
18585are valid everywhere, including on the branch cuts.
18586
18587@smallexample
18588sin(i*z) = i*sinh(z) arcsin(i*z) = i*arcsinh(z)
18589cos(i*z) = cosh(z) arcsinh(i*z) = i*arcsin(z)
18590tan(i*z) = i*tanh(z) arctan(i*z) = i*arctanh(z)
18591sinh(i*z) = i*sin(z) cosh(i*z) = cos(z)
18592@end smallexample
18593
18594The ``advanced math'' functions (gamma, Bessel, etc.@:) are also defined
18595for general complex arguments, but their branch cuts and principal values
18596are not rigorously specified at present.
18597
18598@node Random Numbers, Combinatorial Functions, Branch Cuts, Scientific Functions
18599@section Random Numbers
18600
18601@noindent
18602@kindex k r
18603@pindex calc-random
18604@tindex random
18605The @kbd{k r} (@code{calc-random}) [@code{random}] command produces
18606random numbers of various sorts.
18607
18608Given a positive numeric prefix argument @cite{M}, it produces a random
18609integer @cite{N} in the range @c{$0 \le N < M$}
18610@cite{0 <= N < M}. Each of the @cite{M}
18611values appears with equal probability.@refill
18612
18613With no numeric prefix argument, the @kbd{k r} command takes its argument
18614from the stack instead. Once again, if this is a positive integer @cite{M}
18615the result is a random integer less than @cite{M}. However, note that
18616while numeric prefix arguments are limited to six digits or so, an @cite{M}
18617taken from the stack can be arbitrarily large. If @cite{M} is negative,
18618the result is a random integer in the range @c{$M < N \le 0$}
18619@cite{M < N <= 0}.
18620
18621If the value on the stack is a floating-point number @cite{M}, the result
18622is a random floating-point number @cite{N} in the range @c{$0 \le N < M$}
18623@cite{0 <= N < M}
18624or @c{$M < N \le 0$}
18625@cite{M < N <= 0}, according to the sign of @cite{M}.
18626
18627If @cite{M} is zero, the result is a Gaussian-distributed random real
18628number; the distribution has a mean of zero and a standard deviation
18629of one. The algorithm used generates random numbers in pairs; thus,
18630every other call to this function will be especially fast.
18631
18632If @cite{M} is an error form @c{$m$ @code{+/-} $\sigma$}
5d67986c 18633@samp{m +/- s} where @var{m}
d7b8e6c6 18634and @c{$\sigma$}
5d67986c
RS
18635@var{s} are both real numbers, the result uses a Gaussian
18636distribution with mean @var{m} and standard deviation @c{$\sigma$}
18637@var{s}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18638
18639If @cite{M} is an interval form, the lower and upper bounds specify the
18640acceptable limits of the random numbers. If both bounds are integers,
18641the result is a random integer in the specified range. If either bound
18642is floating-point, the result is a random real number in the specified
18643range. If the interval is open at either end, the result will be sure
18644not to equal that end value. (This makes a big difference for integer
18645intervals, but for floating-point intervals it's relatively minor:
18646with a precision of 6, @samp{random([1.0..2.0))} will return any of one
18647million numbers from 1.00000 to 1.99999; @samp{random([1.0..2.0])} may
18648additionally return 2.00000, but the probability of this happening is
18649extremely small.)
18650
18651If @cite{M} is a vector, the result is one element taken at random from
18652the vector. All elements of the vector are given equal probabilities.
18653
18654@vindex RandSeed
18655The sequence of numbers produced by @kbd{k r} is completely random by
18656default, i.e., the sequence is seeded each time you start Calc using
18657the current time and other information. You can get a reproducible
18658sequence by storing a particular ``seed value'' in the Calc variable
18659@code{RandSeed}. Any integer will do for a seed; integers of from 1
18660to 12 digits are good. If you later store a different integer into
18661@code{RandSeed}, Calc will switch to a different pseudo-random
18662sequence. If you ``unstore'' @code{RandSeed}, Calc will re-seed itself
18663from the current time. If you store the same integer that you used
18664before back into @code{RandSeed}, you will get the exact same sequence
18665of random numbers as before.
18666
18667@pindex calc-rrandom
18668The @code{calc-rrandom} command (not on any key) produces a random real
18669number between zero and one. It is equivalent to @samp{random(1.0)}.
18670
18671@kindex k a
18672@pindex calc-random-again
18673The @kbd{k a} (@code{calc-random-again}) command produces another random
18674number, re-using the most recent value of @cite{M}. With a numeric
18675prefix argument @var{n}, it produces @var{n} more random numbers using
18676that value of @cite{M}.
18677
18678@kindex k h
18679@pindex calc-shuffle
18680@tindex shuffle
18681The @kbd{k h} (@code{calc-shuffle}) command produces a vector of several
18682random values with no duplicates. The value on the top of the stack
18683specifies the set from which the random values are drawn, and may be any
18684of the @cite{M} formats described above. The numeric prefix argument
18685gives the length of the desired list. (If you do not provide a numeric
18686prefix argument, the length of the list is taken from the top of the
18687stack, and @cite{M} from second-to-top.)
18688
18689If @cite{M} is a floating-point number, zero, or an error form (so
18690that the random values are being drawn from the set of real numbers)
18691there is little practical difference between using @kbd{k h} and using
18692@kbd{k r} several times. But if the set of possible values consists
18693of just a few integers, or the elements of a vector, then there is
18694a very real chance that multiple @kbd{k r}'s will produce the same
18695number more than once. The @kbd{k h} command produces a vector whose
18696elements are always distinct. (Actually, there is a slight exception:
18697If @cite{M} is a vector, no given vector element will be drawn more
18698than once, but if several elements of @cite{M} are equal, they may
18699each make it into the result vector.)
18700
18701One use of @kbd{k h} is to rearrange a list at random. This happens
18702if the prefix argument is equal to the number of values in the list:
18703@kbd{[1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3] 5 k h} might produce the permuted list
18704@samp{[2.5, 1, 1.5, 3, 2]}. As a convenient feature, if the argument
18705@var{n} is negative it is replaced by the size of the set represented
18706by @cite{M}. Naturally, this is allowed only when @cite{M} specifies
18707a small discrete set of possibilities.
18708
18709To do the equivalent of @kbd{k h} but with duplications allowed,
18710given @cite{M} on the stack and with @var{n} just entered as a numeric
18711prefix, use @kbd{v b} to build a vector of copies of @cite{M}, then use
18712@kbd{V M k r} to ``map'' the normal @kbd{k r} function over the
18713elements of this vector. @xref{Matrix Functions}.
18714
18715@menu
18716* Random Number Generator:: (Complete description of Calc's algorithm)
18717@end menu
18718
18719@node Random Number Generator, , Random Numbers, Random Numbers
18720@subsection Random Number Generator
18721
18722Calc's random number generator uses several methods to ensure that
18723the numbers it produces are highly random. Knuth's @emph{Art of
18724Computer Programming}, Volume II, contains a thorough description
18725of the theory of random number generators and their measurement and
18726characterization.
18727
18728If @code{RandSeed} has no stored value, Calc calls Emacs' built-in
18729@code{random} function to get a stream of random numbers, which it
18730then treats in various ways to avoid problems inherent in the simple
18731random number generators that many systems use to implement @code{random}.
18732
18733When Calc's random number generator is first invoked, it ``seeds''
18734the low-level random sequence using the time of day, so that the
18735random number sequence will be different every time you use Calc.
18736
18737Since Emacs Lisp doesn't specify the range of values that will be
18738returned by its @code{random} function, Calc exercises the function
18739several times to estimate the range. When Calc subsequently uses
18740the @code{random} function, it takes only 10 bits of the result
18741near the most-significant end. (It avoids at least the bottom
18742four bits, preferably more, and also tries to avoid the top two
18743bits.) This strategy works well with the linear congruential
18744generators that are typically used to implement @code{random}.
18745
18746If @code{RandSeed} contains an integer, Calc uses this integer to
18747seed an ``additive congruential'' method (Knuth's algorithm 3.2.2A,
18748computing @c{$X_{n-55} - X_{n-24}$}
18749@cite{X_n-55 - X_n-24}). This method expands the seed
18750value into a large table which is maintained internally; the variable
18751@code{RandSeed} is changed from, e.g., 42 to the vector @cite{[42]}
18752to indicate that the seed has been absorbed into this table. When
18753@code{RandSeed} contains a vector, @kbd{k r} and related commands
18754continue to use the same internal table as last time. There is no
18755way to extract the complete state of the random number generator
18756so that you can restart it from any point; you can only restart it
18757from the same initial seed value. A simple way to restart from the
18758same seed is to type @kbd{s r RandSeed} to get the seed vector,
18759@kbd{v u} to unpack it back into a number, then @kbd{s t RandSeed}
18760to reseed the generator with that number.
18761
18762Calc uses a ``shuffling'' method as described in algorithm 3.2.2B
18763of Knuth. It fills a table with 13 random 10-bit numbers. Then,
18764to generate a new random number, it uses the previous number to
18765index into the table, picks the value it finds there as the new
18766random number, then replaces that table entry with a new value
18767obtained from a call to the base random number generator (either
18768the additive congruential generator or the @code{random} function
18769supplied by the system). If there are any flaws in the base
18770generator, shuffling will tend to even them out. But if the system
18771provides an excellent @code{random} function, shuffling will not
18772damage its randomness.
18773
18774To create a random integer of a certain number of digits, Calc
18775builds the integer three decimal digits at a time. For each group
18776of three digits, Calc calls its 10-bit shuffling random number generator
18777(which returns a value from 0 to 1023); if the random value is 1000
18778or more, Calc throws it out and tries again until it gets a suitable
18779value.
18780
18781To create a random floating-point number with precision @var{p}, Calc
18782simply creates a random @var{p}-digit integer and multiplies by
18783@c{$10^{-p}$}
18784@cite{10^-p}. The resulting random numbers should be very clean, but note
18785that relatively small numbers will have few significant random digits.
18786In other words, with a precision of 12, you will occasionally get
18787numbers on the order of @c{$10^{-9}$}
18788@cite{10^-9} or @c{$10^{-10}$}
18789@cite{10^-10}, but those numbers
18790will only have two or three random digits since they correspond to small
18791integers times @c{$10^{-12}$}
18792@cite{10^-12}.
18793
18794To create a random integer in the interval @samp{[0 .. @var{m})}, Calc
18795counts the digits in @var{m}, creates a random integer with three
18796additional digits, then reduces modulo @var{m}. Unless @var{m} is a
18797power of ten the resulting values will be very slightly biased toward
18798the lower numbers, but this bias will be less than 0.1%. (For example,
18799if @var{m} is 42, Calc will reduce a random integer less than 100000
18800modulo 42 to get a result less than 42. It is easy to show that the
18801numbers 40 and 41 will be only 2380/2381 as likely to result from this
18802modulo operation as numbers 39 and below.) If @var{m} is a power of
18803ten, however, the numbers should be completely unbiased.
18804
18805The Gaussian random numbers generated by @samp{random(0.0)} use the
18806``polar'' method described in Knuth section 3.4.1C. This method
18807generates a pair of Gaussian random numbers at a time, so only every
18808other call to @samp{random(0.0)} will require significant calculations.
18809
18810@node Combinatorial Functions, Probability Distribution Functions, Random Numbers, Scientific Functions
18811@section Combinatorial Functions
18812
18813@noindent
18814Commands relating to combinatorics and number theory begin with the
18815@kbd{k} key prefix.
18816
18817@kindex k g
18818@pindex calc-gcd
18819@tindex gcd
18820The @kbd{k g} (@code{calc-gcd}) [@code{gcd}] command computes the
18821Greatest Common Divisor of two integers. It also accepts fractions;
18822the GCD of two fractions is defined by taking the GCD of the
18823numerators, and the LCM of the denominators. This definition is
18824consistent with the idea that @samp{a / gcd(a,x)} should yield an
18825integer for any @samp{a} and @samp{x}. For other types of arguments,
18826the operation is left in symbolic form.@refill
18827
18828@kindex k l
18829@pindex calc-lcm
18830@tindex lcm
18831The @kbd{k l} (@code{calc-lcm}) [@code{lcm}] command computes the
18832Least Common Multiple of two integers or fractions. The product of
18833the LCM and GCD of two numbers is equal to the product of the
18834numbers.@refill
18835
18836@kindex k E
18837@pindex calc-extended-gcd
18838@tindex egcd
18839The @kbd{k E} (@code{calc-extended-gcd}) [@code{egcd}] command computes
18840the GCD of two integers @cite{x} and @cite{y} and returns a vector
18841@cite{[g, a, b]} where @c{$g = \gcd(x,y) = a x + b y$}
18842@cite{g = gcd(x,y) = a x + b y}.
18843
18844@kindex !
18845@pindex calc-factorial
18846@tindex fact
5d67986c
RS
18847@ignore
18848@mindex @null
18849@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18850@tindex !
18851The @kbd{!} (@code{calc-factorial}) [@code{fact}] command computes the
18852factorial of the number at the top of the stack. If the number is an
18853integer, the result is an exact integer. If the number is an
18854integer-valued float, the result is a floating-point approximation. If
18855the number is a non-integral real number, the generalized factorial is used,
18856as defined by the Euler Gamma function. Please note that computation of
18857large factorials can be slow; using floating-point format will help
18858since fewer digits must be maintained. The same is true of many of
18859the commands in this section.@refill
18860
18861@kindex k d
18862@pindex calc-double-factorial
18863@tindex dfact
5d67986c
RS
18864@ignore
18865@mindex @null
18866@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18867@tindex !!
18868The @kbd{k d} (@code{calc-double-factorial}) [@code{dfact}] command
18869computes the ``double factorial'' of an integer. For an even integer,
18870this is the product of even integers from 2 to @cite{N}. For an odd
18871integer, this is the product of odd integers from 3 to @cite{N}. If
18872the argument is an integer-valued float, the result is a floating-point
18873approximation. This function is undefined for negative even integers.
18874The notation @cite{N!!} is also recognized for double factorials.@refill
18875
18876@kindex k c
18877@pindex calc-choose
18878@tindex choose
18879The @kbd{k c} (@code{calc-choose}) [@code{choose}] command computes the
18880binomial coefficient @cite{N}-choose-@cite{M}, where @cite{M} is the number
18881on the top of the stack and @cite{N} is second-to-top. If both arguments
18882are integers, the result is an exact integer. Otherwise, the result is a
18883floating-point approximation. The binomial coefficient is defined for all
18884real numbers by @c{$N! \over M! (N-M)!\,$}
18885@cite{N! / M! (N-M)!}.
18886
18887@kindex H k c
18888@pindex calc-perm
18889@tindex perm
18890@ifinfo
18891The @kbd{H k c} (@code{calc-perm}) [@code{perm}] command computes the
18892number-of-permutations function @cite{N! / (N-M)!}.
18893@end ifinfo
18894@tex
18895The \kbd{H k c} (\code{calc-perm}) [\code{perm}] command computes the
18896number-of-perm\-utations function $N! \over (N-M)!\,$.
18897@end tex
18898
18899@kindex k b
18900@kindex H k b
18901@pindex calc-bernoulli-number
18902@tindex bern
18903The @kbd{k b} (@code{calc-bernoulli-number}) [@code{bern}] command
18904computes a given Bernoulli number. The value at the top of the stack
18905is a nonnegative integer @cite{n} that specifies which Bernoulli number
18906is desired. The @kbd{H k b} command computes a Bernoulli polynomial,
18907taking @cite{n} from the second-to-top position and @cite{x} from the
18908top of the stack. If @cite{x} is a variable or formula the result is
18909a polynomial in @cite{x}; if @cite{x} is a number the result is a number.
18910
18911@kindex k e
18912@kindex H k e
18913@pindex calc-euler-number
18914@tindex euler
18915The @kbd{k e} (@code{calc-euler-number}) [@code{euler}] command similarly
18916computes an Euler number, and @w{@kbd{H k e}} computes an Euler polynomial.
18917Bernoulli and Euler numbers occur in the Taylor expansions of several
18918functions.
18919
18920@kindex k s
18921@kindex H k s
18922@pindex calc-stirling-number
18923@tindex stir1
18924@tindex stir2
18925The @kbd{k s} (@code{calc-stirling-number}) [@code{stir1}] command
18926computes a Stirling number of the first kind@c{ $n \brack m$}
18927@asis{}, given two integers
18928@cite{n} and @cite{m} on the stack. The @kbd{H k s} [@code{stir2}]
18929command computes a Stirling number of the second kind@c{ $n \brace m$}
18930@asis{}. These are
18931the number of @cite{m}-cycle permutations of @cite{n} objects, and
18932the number of ways to partition @cite{n} objects into @cite{m}
18933non-empty sets, respectively.
18934
18935@kindex k p
18936@pindex calc-prime-test
18937@cindex Primes
18938The @kbd{k p} (@code{calc-prime-test}) command checks if the integer on
18939the top of the stack is prime. For integers less than eight million, the
18940answer is always exact and reasonably fast. For larger integers, a
18941probabilistic method is used (see Knuth vol. II, section 4.5.4, algorithm P).
18942The number is first checked against small prime factors (up to 13). Then,
18943any number of iterations of the algorithm are performed. Each step either
18944discovers that the number is non-prime, or substantially increases the
18945certainty that the number is prime. After a few steps, the chance that
18946a number was mistakenly described as prime will be less than one percent.
18947(Indeed, this is a worst-case estimate of the probability; in practice
18948even a single iteration is quite reliable.) After the @kbd{k p} command,
18949the number will be reported as definitely prime or non-prime if possible,
18950or otherwise ``probably'' prime with a certain probability of error.
18951
5d67986c
RS
18952@ignore
18953@starindex
18954@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18955@tindex prime
18956The normal @kbd{k p} command performs one iteration of the primality
18957test. Pressing @kbd{k p} repeatedly for the same integer will perform
18958additional iterations. Also, @kbd{k p} with a numeric prefix performs
18959the specified number of iterations. There is also an algebraic function
18960@samp{prime(n)} or @samp{prime(n,iters)} which returns 1 if @cite{n}
18961is (probably) prime and 0 if not.
18962
18963@kindex k f
18964@pindex calc-prime-factors
18965@tindex prfac
18966The @kbd{k f} (@code{calc-prime-factors}) [@code{prfac}] command
18967attempts to decompose an integer into its prime factors. For numbers up
18968to 25 million, the answer is exact although it may take some time. The
18969result is a vector of the prime factors in increasing order. For larger
18970inputs, prime factors above 5000 may not be found, in which case the
18971last number in the vector will be an unfactored integer greater than 25
18972million (with a warning message). For negative integers, the first
18973element of the list will be @i{-1}. For inputs @i{-1}, @i{0}, and
18974@i{1}, the result is a list of the same number.
18975
18976@kindex k n
18977@pindex calc-next-prime
5d67986c
RS
18978@ignore
18979@mindex nextpr@idots
18980@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18981@tindex nextprime
18982The @kbd{k n} (@code{calc-next-prime}) [@code{nextprime}] command finds
18983the next prime above a given number. Essentially, it searches by calling
18984@code{calc-prime-test} on successive integers until it finds one that
18985passes the test. This is quite fast for integers less than eight million,
18986but once the probabilistic test comes into play the search may be rather
18987slow. Ordinarily this command stops for any prime that passes one iteration
18988of the primality test. With a numeric prefix argument, a number must pass
18989the specified number of iterations before the search stops. (This only
18990matters when searching above eight million.) You can always use additional
18991@kbd{k p} commands to increase your certainty that the number is indeed
18992prime.
18993
18994@kindex I k n
18995@pindex calc-prev-prime
5d67986c
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18996@ignore
18997@mindex prevpr@idots
18998@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
18999@tindex prevprime
19000The @kbd{I k n} (@code{calc-prev-prime}) [@code{prevprime}] command
19001analogously finds the next prime less than a given number.
19002
19003@kindex k t
19004@pindex calc-totient
19005@tindex totient
19006The @kbd{k t} (@code{calc-totient}) [@code{totient}] command computes the
19007Euler ``totient'' function@c{ $\phi(n)$}
19008@asis{}, the number of integers less than @cite{n} which
19009are relatively prime to @cite{n}.
19010
19011@kindex k m
19012@pindex calc-moebius
19013@tindex moebius
19014The @kbd{k m} (@code{calc-moebius}) [@code{moebius}] command computes the
19015@c{M\"obius $\mu$}
19016@asis{Moebius ``mu''} function. If the input number is a product of @cite{k}
19017distinct factors, this is @cite{(-1)^k}. If the input number has any
19018duplicate factors (i.e., can be divided by the same prime more than once),
19019the result is zero.
19020
19021@node Probability Distribution Functions, , Combinatorial Functions, Scientific Functions
19022@section Probability Distribution Functions
19023
19024@noindent
19025The functions in this section compute various probability distributions.
19026For continuous distributions, this is the integral of the probability
19027density function from @cite{x} to infinity. (These are the ``upper
19028tail'' distribution functions; there are also corresponding ``lower
19029tail'' functions which integrate from minus infinity to @cite{x}.)
19030For discrete distributions, the upper tail function gives the sum
19031from @cite{x} to infinity; the lower tail function gives the sum
19032from minus infinity up to, but not including,@w{ }@cite{x}.
19033
19034To integrate from @cite{x} to @cite{y}, just use the distribution
19035function twice and subtract. For example, the probability that a
19036Gaussian random variable with mean 2 and standard deviation 1 will
19037lie in the range from 2.5 to 2.8 is @samp{utpn(2.5,2,1) - utpn(2.8,2,1)}
19038(``the probability that it is greater than 2.5, but not greater than 2.8''),
19039or equivalently @samp{ltpn(2.8,2,1) - ltpn(2.5,2,1)}.
19040
19041@kindex k B
19042@kindex I k B
19043@pindex calc-utpb
19044@tindex utpb
19045@tindex ltpb
19046The @kbd{k B} (@code{calc-utpb}) [@code{utpb}] function uses the
19047binomial distribution. Push the parameters @var{n}, @var{p}, and
19048then @var{x} onto the stack; the result (@samp{utpb(x,n,p)}) is the
19049probability that an event will occur @var{x} or more times out
19050of @var{n} trials, if its probability of occurring in any given
19051trial is @var{p}. The @kbd{I k B} [@code{ltpb}] function is
19052the probability that the event will occur fewer than @var{x} times.
19053
19054The other probability distribution functions similarly take the
19055form @kbd{k @var{X}} (@code{calc-utp@var{x}}) [@code{utp@var{x}}]
19056and @kbd{I k @var{X}} [@code{ltp@var{x}}], for various letters
19057@var{x}. The arguments to the algebraic functions are the value of
19058the random variable first, then whatever other parameters define the
19059distribution. Note these are among the few Calc functions where the
19060order of the arguments in algebraic form differs from the order of
19061arguments as found on the stack. (The random variable comes last on
19062the stack, so that you can type, e.g., @kbd{2 @key{RET} 1 @key{RET} 2.5
19063k N M-@key{RET} @key{DEL} 2.8 k N -}, using @kbd{M-@key{RET} @key{DEL}} to
19064recover the original arguments but substitute a new value for @cite{x}.)
19065
19066@kindex k C
19067@pindex calc-utpc
19068@tindex utpc
5d67986c
RS
19069@ignore
19070@mindex @idots
19071@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 19072@kindex I k C
5d67986c
RS
19073@ignore
19074@mindex @null
19075@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19076@tindex ltpc
19077The @samp{utpc(x,v)} function uses the chi-square distribution with
19078@c{$\nu$}
19079@cite{v} degrees of freedom. It is the probability that a model is
19080correct if its chi-square statistic is @cite{x}.
19081
19082@kindex k F
19083@pindex calc-utpf
19084@tindex utpf
5d67986c
RS
19085@ignore
19086@mindex @idots
19087@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 19088@kindex I k F
5d67986c
RS
19089@ignore
19090@mindex @null
19091@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19092@tindex ltpf
19093The @samp{utpf(F,v1,v2)} function uses the F distribution, used in
19094various statistical tests. The parameters @c{$\nu_1$}
19095@cite{v1} and @c{$\nu_2$}
19096@cite{v2}
19097are the degrees of freedom in the numerator and denominator,
19098respectively, used in computing the statistic @cite{F}.
19099
19100@kindex k N
19101@pindex calc-utpn
19102@tindex utpn
5d67986c
RS
19103@ignore
19104@mindex @idots
19105@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 19106@kindex I k N
5d67986c
RS
19107@ignore
19108@mindex @null
19109@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19110@tindex ltpn
19111The @samp{utpn(x,m,s)} function uses a normal (Gaussian) distribution
19112with mean @cite{m} and standard deviation @c{$\sigma$}
19113@cite{s}. It is the
19114probability that such a normal-distributed random variable would
19115exceed @cite{x}.
19116
19117@kindex k P
19118@pindex calc-utpp
19119@tindex utpp
5d67986c
RS
19120@ignore
19121@mindex @idots
19122@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 19123@kindex I k P
5d67986c
RS
19124@ignore
19125@mindex @null
19126@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19127@tindex ltpp
19128The @samp{utpp(n,x)} function uses a Poisson distribution with
19129mean @cite{x}. It is the probability that @cite{n} or more such
19130Poisson random events will occur.
19131
19132@kindex k T
19133@pindex calc-ltpt
19134@tindex utpt
5d67986c
RS
19135@ignore
19136@mindex @idots
19137@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 19138@kindex I k T
5d67986c
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19139@ignore
19140@mindex @null
19141@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19142@tindex ltpt
19143The @samp{utpt(t,v)} function uses the Student's ``t'' distribution
19144with @c{$\nu$}
19145@cite{v} degrees of freedom. It is the probability that a
19146t-distributed random variable will be greater than @cite{t}.
19147(Note: This computes the distribution function @c{$A(t|\nu)$}
19148@cite{A(t|v)}
19149where @c{$A(0|\nu) = 1$}
19150@cite{A(0|v) = 1} and @c{$A(\infty|\nu) \to 0$}
19151@cite{A(inf|v) -> 0}. The
19152@code{UTPT} operation on the HP-48 uses a different definition
19153which returns half of Calc's value: @samp{UTPT(t,v) = .5*utpt(t,v)}.)
19154
19155While Calc does not provide inverses of the probability distribution
19156functions, the @kbd{a R} command can be used to solve for the inverse.
19157Since the distribution functions are monotonic, @kbd{a R} is guaranteed
19158to be able to find a solution given any initial guess.
19159@xref{Numerical Solutions}.
19160
19161@node Matrix Functions, Algebra, Scientific Functions, Top
19162@chapter Vector/Matrix Functions
19163
19164@noindent
19165Many of the commands described here begin with the @kbd{v} prefix.
19166(For convenience, the shift-@kbd{V} prefix is equivalent to @kbd{v}.)
19167The commands usually apply to both plain vectors and matrices; some
19168apply only to matrices or only to square matrices. If the argument
19169has the wrong dimensions the operation is left in symbolic form.
19170
19171Vectors are entered and displayed using @samp{[a,b,c]} notation.
19172Matrices are vectors of which all elements are vectors of equal length.
19173(Though none of the standard Calc commands use this concept, a
19174three-dimensional matrix or rank-3 tensor could be defined as a
19175vector of matrices, and so on.)
19176
19177@menu
19178* Packing and Unpacking::
19179* Building Vectors::
19180* Extracting Elements::
19181* Manipulating Vectors::
19182* Vector and Matrix Arithmetic::
19183* Set Operations::
19184* Statistical Operations::
19185* Reducing and Mapping::
19186* Vector and Matrix Formats::
19187@end menu
19188
19189@node Packing and Unpacking, Building Vectors, Matrix Functions, Matrix Functions
19190@section Packing and Unpacking
19191
19192@noindent
19193Calc's ``pack'' and ``unpack'' commands collect stack entries to build
19194composite objects such as vectors and complex numbers. They are
19195described in this chapter because they are most often used to build
19196vectors.
19197
19198@kindex v p
19199@pindex calc-pack
19200The @kbd{v p} (@code{calc-pack}) [@code{pack}] command collects several
19201elements from the stack into a matrix, complex number, HMS form, error
19202form, etc. It uses a numeric prefix argument to specify the kind of
19203object to be built; this argument is referred to as the ``packing mode.''
19204If the packing mode is a nonnegative integer, a vector of that
19205length is created. For example, @kbd{C-u 5 v p} will pop the top
19206five stack elements and push back a single vector of those five
19207elements. (@kbd{C-u 0 v p} simply creates an empty vector.)
19208
19209The same effect can be had by pressing @kbd{[} to push an incomplete
19210vector on the stack, using @key{TAB} (@code{calc-roll-down}) to sneak
19211the incomplete object up past a certain number of elements, and
19212then pressing @kbd{]} to complete the vector.
19213
19214Negative packing modes create other kinds of composite objects:
19215
19216@table @cite
19217@item -1
19218Two values are collected to build a complex number. For example,
19219@kbd{5 @key{RET} 7 C-u -1 v p} creates the complex number
19220@cite{(5, 7)}. The result is always a rectangular complex
19221number. The two input values must both be real numbers,
19222i.e., integers, fractions, or floats. If they are not, Calc
19223will instead build a formula like @samp{a + (0, 1) b}. (The
19224other packing modes also create a symbolic answer if the
19225components are not suitable.)
19226
19227@item -2
19228Two values are collected to build a polar complex number.
19229The first is the magnitude; the second is the phase expressed
19230in either degrees or radians according to the current angular
19231mode.
19232
19233@item -3
19234Three values are collected into an HMS form. The first
19235two values (hours and minutes) must be integers or
19236integer-valued floats. The third value may be any real
19237number.
19238
19239@item -4
19240Two values are collected into an error form. The inputs
19241may be real numbers or formulas.
19242
19243@item -5
19244Two values are collected into a modulo form. The inputs
19245must be real numbers.
19246
19247@item -6
19248Two values are collected into the interval @samp{[a .. b]}.
19249The inputs may be real numbers, HMS or date forms, or formulas.
19250
19251@item -7
19252Two values are collected into the interval @samp{[a .. b)}.
19253
19254@item -8
19255Two values are collected into the interval @samp{(a .. b]}.
19256
19257@item -9
19258Two values are collected into the interval @samp{(a .. b)}.
19259
19260@item -10
19261Two integer values are collected into a fraction.
19262
19263@item -11
19264Two values are collected into a floating-point number.
19265The first is the mantissa; the second, which must be an
19266integer, is the exponent. The result is the mantissa
19267times ten to the power of the exponent.
19268
19269@item -12
19270This is treated the same as @i{-11} by the @kbd{v p} command.
19271When unpacking, @i{-12} specifies that a floating-point mantissa
19272is desired.
19273
19274@item -13
19275A real number is converted into a date form.
19276
19277@item -14
19278Three numbers (year, month, day) are packed into a pure date form.
19279
19280@item -15
19281Six numbers are packed into a date/time form.
19282@end table
19283
19284With any of the two-input negative packing modes, either or both
19285of the inputs may be vectors. If both are vectors of the same
19286length, the result is another vector made by packing corresponding
19287elements of the input vectors. If one input is a vector and the
19288other is a plain number, the number is packed along with each vector
19289element to produce a new vector. For example, @kbd{C-u -4 v p}
19290could be used to convert a vector of numbers and a vector of errors
19291into a single vector of error forms; @kbd{C-u -5 v p} could convert
19292a vector of numbers and a single number @var{M} into a vector of
19293numbers modulo @var{M}.
19294
19295If you don't give a prefix argument to @kbd{v p}, it takes
19296the packing mode from the top of the stack. The elements to
19297be packed then begin at stack level 2. Thus
19298@kbd{1 @key{RET} 2 @key{RET} 4 n v p} is another way to
19299enter the error form @samp{1 +/- 2}.
19300
19301If the packing mode taken from the stack is a vector, the result is a
19302matrix with the dimensions specified by the elements of the vector,
19303which must each be integers. For example, if the packing mode is
19304@samp{[2, 3]}, then six numbers will be taken from the stack and
19305returned in the form @samp{[@w{[a, b, c]}, [d, e, f]]}.
19306
19307If any elements of the vector are negative, other kinds of
19308packing are done at that level as described above. For
19309example, @samp{[2, 3, -4]} takes 12 objects and creates a
19310@c{$2\times3$}
19311@asis{2x3} matrix of error forms: @samp{[[a +/- b, c +/- d ... ]]}.
19312Also, @samp{[-4, -10]} will convert four integers into an
19313error form consisting of two fractions: @samp{a:b +/- c:d}.
19314
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19315@ignore
19316@starindex
19317@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19318@tindex pack
19319There is an equivalent algebraic function,
19320@samp{pack(@var{mode}, @var{items})} where @var{mode} is a
19321packing mode (an integer or a vector of integers) and @var{items}
19322is a vector of objects to be packed (re-packed, really) according
19323to that mode. For example, @samp{pack([3, -4], [a,b,c,d,e,f])}
19324yields @samp{[a +/- b, @w{c +/- d}, e +/- f]}. The function is
19325left in symbolic form if the packing mode is illegal, or if the
19326number of data items does not match the number of items required
19327by the mode.
19328
19329@kindex v u
19330@pindex calc-unpack
19331The @kbd{v u} (@code{calc-unpack}) command takes the vector, complex
19332number, HMS form, or other composite object on the top of the stack and
19333``unpacks'' it, pushing each of its elements onto the stack as separate
19334objects. Thus, it is the ``inverse'' of @kbd{v p}. If the value
19335at the top of the stack is a formula, @kbd{v u} unpacks it by pushing
19336each of the arguments of the top-level operator onto the stack.
19337
19338You can optionally give a numeric prefix argument to @kbd{v u}
19339to specify an explicit (un)packing mode. If the packing mode is
19340negative and the input is actually a vector or matrix, the result
19341will be two or more similar vectors or matrices of the elements.
19342For example, given the vector @samp{[@w{a +/- b}, c^2, d +/- 7]},
19343the result of @kbd{C-u -4 v u} will be the two vectors
19344@samp{[a, c^2, d]} and @w{@samp{[b, 0, 7]}}.
19345
19346Note that the prefix argument can have an effect even when the input is
19347not a vector. For example, if the input is the number @i{-5}, then
19348@kbd{c-u -1 v u} yields @i{-5} and 0 (the components of @i{-5}
19349when viewed as a rectangular complex number); @kbd{C-u -2 v u} yields 5
19350and 180 (assuming degrees mode); and @kbd{C-u -10 v u} yields @i{-5}
19351and 1 (the numerator and denominator of @i{-5}, viewed as a rational
19352number). Plain @kbd{v u} with this input would complain that the input
19353is not a composite object.
19354
19355Unpacking mode @i{-11} converts a float into an integer mantissa and
19356an integer exponent, where the mantissa is not divisible by 10
19357(except that 0.0 is represented by a mantissa and exponent of 0).
19358Unpacking mode @i{-12} converts a float into a floating-point mantissa
19359and integer exponent, where the mantissa (for non-zero numbers)
19360is guaranteed to lie in the range [1 .. 10). In both cases,
19361the mantissa is shifted left or right (and the exponent adjusted
19362to compensate) in order to satisfy these constraints.
19363
19364Positive unpacking modes are treated differently than for @kbd{v p}.
19365A mode of 1 is much like plain @kbd{v u} with no prefix argument,
19366except that in addition to the components of the input object,
19367a suitable packing mode to re-pack the object is also pushed.
19368Thus, @kbd{C-u 1 v u} followed by @kbd{v p} will re-build the
19369original object.
19370
19371A mode of 2 unpacks two levels of the object; the resulting
19372re-packing mode will be a vector of length 2. This might be used
19373to unpack a matrix, say, or a vector of error forms. Higher
19374unpacking modes unpack the input even more deeply.
19375
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19376@ignore
19377@starindex
19378@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19379@tindex unpack
19380There are two algebraic functions analogous to @kbd{v u}.
19381The @samp{unpack(@var{mode}, @var{item})} function unpacks the
19382@var{item} using the given @var{mode}, returning the result as
19383a vector of components. Here the @var{mode} must be an
19384integer, not a vector. For example, @samp{unpack(-4, a +/- b)}
19385returns @samp{[a, b]}, as does @samp{unpack(1, a +/- b)}.
19386
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19387@ignore
19388@starindex
19389@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19390@tindex unpackt
19391The @code{unpackt} function is like @code{unpack} but instead
19392of returning a simple vector of items, it returns a vector of
19393two things: The mode, and the vector of items. For example,
19394@samp{unpackt(1, 2:3 +/- 1:4)} returns @samp{[-4, [2:3, 1:4]]},
19395and @samp{unpackt(2, 2:3 +/- 1:4)} returns @samp{[[-4, -10], [2, 3, 1, 4]]}.
19396The identity for re-building the original object is
19397@samp{apply(pack, unpackt(@var{n}, @var{x})) = @var{x}}. (The
19398@code{apply} function builds a function call given the function
19399name and a vector of arguments.)
19400
19401@cindex Numerator of a fraction, extracting
19402Subscript notation is a useful way to extract a particular part
19403of an object. For example, to get the numerator of a rational
19404number, you can use @samp{unpack(-10, @var{x})_1}.
19405
19406@node Building Vectors, Extracting Elements, Packing and Unpacking, Matrix Functions
19407@section Building Vectors
19408
19409@noindent
19410Vectors and matrices can be added,
19411subtracted, multiplied, and divided; @pxref{Basic Arithmetic}.@refill
19412
19413@kindex |
19414@pindex calc-concat
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RS
19415@ignore
19416@mindex @null
19417@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19418@tindex |
19419The @kbd{|} (@code{calc-concat}) command ``concatenates'' two vectors
19420into one. For example, after @kbd{@w{[ 1 , 2 ]} [ 3 , 4 ] |}, the stack
19421will contain the single vector @samp{[1, 2, 3, 4]}. If the arguments
19422are matrices, the rows of the first matrix are concatenated with the
19423rows of the second. (In other words, two matrices are just two vectors
19424of row-vectors as far as @kbd{|} is concerned.)
19425
19426If either argument to @kbd{|} is a scalar (a non-vector), it is treated
19427like a one-element vector for purposes of concatenation: @kbd{1 [ 2 , 3 ] |}
19428produces the vector @samp{[1, 2, 3]}. Likewise, if one argument is a
19429matrix and the other is a plain vector, the vector is treated as a
19430one-row matrix.
19431
19432@kindex H |
19433@tindex append
19434The @kbd{H |} (@code{calc-append}) [@code{append}] command concatenates
19435two vectors without any special cases. Both inputs must be vectors.
19436Whether or not they are matrices is not taken into account. If either
19437argument is a scalar, the @code{append} function is left in symbolic form.
19438See also @code{cons} and @code{rcons} below.
19439
19440@kindex I |
19441@kindex H I |
19442The @kbd{I |} and @kbd{H I |} commands are similar, but they use their
19443two stack arguments in the opposite order. Thus @kbd{I |} is equivalent
5d67986c 19444to @kbd{@key{TAB} |}, but possibly more convenient and also a bit faster.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19445
19446@kindex v d
19447@pindex calc-diag
19448@tindex diag
19449The @kbd{v d} (@code{calc-diag}) [@code{diag}] function builds a diagonal
19450square matrix. The optional numeric prefix gives the number of rows
19451and columns in the matrix. If the value at the top of the stack is a
19452vector, the elements of the vector are used as the diagonal elements; the
19453prefix, if specified, must match the size of the vector. If the value on
19454the stack is a scalar, it is used for each element on the diagonal, and
19455the prefix argument is required.
19456
19457To build a constant square matrix, e.g., a @c{$3\times3$}
19458@asis{3x3} matrix filled with ones,
19459use @kbd{0 M-3 v d 1 +}, i.e., build a zero matrix first and then add a
19460constant value to that matrix. (Another alternative would be to use
19461@kbd{v b} and @kbd{v a}; see below.)
19462
19463@kindex v i
19464@pindex calc-ident
19465@tindex idn
19466The @kbd{v i} (@code{calc-ident}) [@code{idn}] function builds an identity
19467matrix of the specified size. It is a convenient form of @kbd{v d}
19468where the diagonal element is always one. If no prefix argument is given,
19469this command prompts for one.
19470
19471In algebraic notation, @samp{idn(a,n)} acts much like @samp{diag(a,n)},
19472except that @cite{a} is required to be a scalar (non-vector) quantity.
19473If @cite{n} is omitted, @samp{idn(a)} represents @cite{a} times an
19474identity matrix of unknown size. Calc can operate algebraically on
19475such generic identity matrices, and if one is combined with a matrix
19476whose size is known, it is converted automatically to an identity
19477matrix of a suitable matching size. The @kbd{v i} command with an
19478argument of zero creates a generic identity matrix, @samp{idn(1)}.
19479Note that in dimensioned matrix mode (@pxref{Matrix Mode}), generic
19480identity matrices are immediately expanded to the current default
19481dimensions.
19482
19483@kindex v x
19484@pindex calc-index
19485@tindex index
19486The @kbd{v x} (@code{calc-index}) [@code{index}] function builds a vector
19487of consecutive integers from 1 to @var{n}, where @var{n} is the numeric
19488prefix argument. If you do not provide a prefix argument, you will be
19489prompted to enter a suitable number. If @var{n} is negative, the result
19490is a vector of negative integers from @var{n} to @i{-1}.
19491
19492With a prefix argument of just @kbd{C-u}, the @kbd{v x} command takes
19493three values from the stack: @var{n}, @var{start}, and @var{incr} (with
19494@var{incr} at top-of-stack). Counting starts at @var{start} and increases
19495by @var{incr} for successive vector elements. If @var{start} or @var{n}
19496is in floating-point format, the resulting vector elements will also be
19497floats. Note that @var{start} and @var{incr} may in fact be any kind
19498of numbers or formulas.
19499
19500When @var{start} and @var{incr} are specified, a negative @var{n} has a
19501different interpretation: It causes a geometric instead of arithmetic
19502sequence to be generated. For example, @samp{index(-3, a, b)} produces
19503@samp{[a, a b, a b^2]}. If you omit @var{incr} in the algebraic form,
19504@samp{index(@var{n}, @var{start})}, the default value for @var{incr}
19505is one for positive @var{n} or two for negative @var{n}.
19506
19507@kindex v b
19508@pindex calc-build-vector
19509@tindex cvec
19510The @kbd{v b} (@code{calc-build-vector}) [@code{cvec}] function builds a
19511vector of @var{n} copies of the value on the top of the stack, where @var{n}
19512is the numeric prefix argument. In algebraic formulas, @samp{cvec(x,n,m)}
19513can also be used to build an @var{n}-by-@var{m} matrix of copies of @var{x}.
19514(Interactively, just use @kbd{v b} twice: once to build a row, then again
19515to build a matrix of copies of that row.)
19516
19517@kindex v h
19518@kindex I v h
19519@pindex calc-head
19520@pindex calc-tail
19521@tindex head
19522@tindex tail
19523The @kbd{v h} (@code{calc-head}) [@code{head}] function returns the first
19524element of a vector. The @kbd{I v h} (@code{calc-tail}) [@code{tail}]
19525function returns the vector with its first element removed. In both
19526cases, the argument must be a non-empty vector.
19527
19528@kindex v k
19529@pindex calc-cons
19530@tindex cons
19531The @kbd{v k} (@code{calc-cons}) [@code{cons}] function takes a value @var{h}
19532and a vector @var{t} from the stack, and produces the vector whose head is
19533@var{h} and whose tail is @var{t}. This is similar to @kbd{|}, except
19534if @var{h} is itself a vector, @kbd{|} will concatenate the two vectors
19535whereas @code{cons} will insert @var{h} at the front of the vector @var{t}.
19536
19537@kindex H v h
19538@tindex rhead
5d67986c
RS
19539@ignore
19540@mindex @idots
19541@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 19542@kindex H I v h
5d67986c
RS
19543@ignore
19544@mindex @null
19545@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 19546@kindex H v k
5d67986c
RS
19547@ignore
19548@mindex @null
19549@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 19550@tindex rtail
5d67986c
RS
19551@ignore
19552@mindex @null
19553@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
19554@tindex rcons
19555Each of these three functions also accepts the Hyperbolic flag [@code{rhead},
19556@code{rtail}, @code{rcons}] in which case @var{t} instead represents
19557the @emph{last} single element of the vector, with @var{h}
19558representing the remainder of the vector. Thus the vector
19559@samp{[a, b, c, d] = cons(a, [b, c, d]) = rcons([a, b, c], d)}.
19560Also, @samp{head([a, b, c, d]) = a}, @samp{tail([a, b, c, d]) = [b, c, d]},
19561@samp{rhead([a, b, c, d]) = [a, b, c]}, and @samp{rtail([a, b, c, d]) = d}.
19562
19563@node Extracting Elements, Manipulating Vectors, Building Vectors, Matrix Functions
19564@section Extracting Vector Elements
19565
19566@noindent
19567@kindex v r
19568@pindex calc-mrow
19569@tindex mrow
19570The @kbd{v r} (@code{calc-mrow}) [@code{mrow}] command extracts one row of
19571the matrix on the top of the stack, or one element of the plain vector on
19572the top of the stack. The row or element is specified by the numeric
19573prefix argument; the default is to prompt for the row or element number.
19574The matrix or vector is replaced by the specified row or element in the
19575form of a vector or scalar, respectively.
19576
19577@cindex Permutations, applying
19578With a prefix argument of @kbd{C-u} only, @kbd{v r} takes the index of
19579the element or row from the top of the stack, and the vector or matrix
19580from the second-to-top position. If the index is itself a vector of
19581integers, the result is a vector of the corresponding elements of the
19582input vector, or a matrix of the corresponding rows of the input matrix.
19583This command can be used to obtain any permutation of a vector.
19584
19585With @kbd{C-u}, if the index is an interval form with integer components,
19586it is interpreted as a range of indices and the corresponding subvector or
19587submatrix is returned.
19588
19589@cindex Subscript notation
19590@kindex a _
19591@pindex calc-subscript
19592@tindex subscr
19593@tindex _
19594Subscript notation in algebraic formulas (@samp{a_b}) stands for the
19595Calc function @code{subscr}, which is synonymous with @code{mrow}.
19596Thus, @samp{[x, y, z]_k} produces @cite{x}, @cite{y}, or @cite{z} if
19597@cite{k} is one, two, or three, respectively. A double subscript
19598(@samp{M_i_j}, equivalent to @samp{subscr(subscr(M, i), j)}) will
19599access the element at row @cite{i}, column @cite{j} of a matrix.
19600The @kbd{a _} (@code{calc-subscript}) command creates a subscript
19601formula @samp{a_b} out of two stack entries. (It is on the @kbd{a}
19602``algebra'' prefix because subscripted variables are often used
19603purely as an algebraic notation.)
19604
19605@tindex mrrow
19606Given a negative prefix argument, @kbd{v r} instead deletes one row or
19607element from the matrix or vector on the top of the stack. Thus
19608@kbd{C-u 2 v r} replaces a matrix with its second row, but @kbd{C-u -2 v r}
19609replaces the matrix with the same matrix with its second row removed.
19610In algebraic form this function is called @code{mrrow}.
19611
19612@tindex getdiag
19613Given a prefix argument of zero, @kbd{v r} extracts the diagonal elements
19614of a square matrix in the form of a vector. In algebraic form this
19615function is called @code{getdiag}.
19616
19617@kindex v c
19618@pindex calc-mcol
19619@tindex mcol
19620@tindex mrcol
19621The @kbd{v c} (@code{calc-mcol}) [@code{mcol} or @code{mrcol}] command is
19622the analogous operation on columns of a matrix. Given a plain vector
19623it extracts (or removes) one element, just like @kbd{v r}. If the
19624index in @kbd{C-u v c} is an interval or vector and the argument is a
19625matrix, the result is a submatrix with only the specified columns
19626retained (and possibly permuted in the case of a vector index).@refill
19627
19628To extract a matrix element at a given row and column, use @kbd{v r} to
19629extract the row as a vector, then @kbd{v c} to extract the column element
19630from that vector. In algebraic formulas, it is often more convenient to
19631use subscript notation: @samp{m_i_j} gives row @cite{i}, column @cite{j}
19632of matrix @cite{m}.
19633
19634@kindex v s
19635@pindex calc-subvector
19636@tindex subvec
19637The @kbd{v s} (@code{calc-subvector}) [@code{subvec}] command extracts
19638a subvector of a vector. The arguments are the vector, the starting
19639index, and the ending index, with the ending index in the top-of-stack
19640position. The starting index indicates the first element of the vector
19641to take. The ending index indicates the first element @emph{past} the
19642range to be taken. Thus, @samp{subvec([a, b, c, d, e], 2, 4)} produces
19643the subvector @samp{[b, c]}. You could get the same result using
19644@samp{mrow([a, b, c, d, e], @w{[2 .. 4)})}.
19645
19646If either the start or the end index is zero or negative, it is
19647interpreted as relative to the end of the vector. Thus
19648@samp{subvec([a, b, c, d, e], 2, -2)} also produces @samp{[b, c]}. In
19649the algebraic form, the end index can be omitted in which case it
19650is taken as zero, i.e., elements from the starting element to the
19651end of the vector are used. The infinity symbol, @code{inf}, also
19652has this effect when used as the ending index.
19653
19654@kindex I v s
19655@tindex rsubvec
19656With the Inverse flag, @kbd{I v s} [@code{rsubvec}] removes a subvector
19657from a vector. The arguments are interpreted the same as for the
19658normal @kbd{v s} command. Thus, @samp{rsubvec([a, b, c, d, e], 2, 4)}
19659produces @samp{[a, d, e]}. It is always true that @code{subvec} and
19660@code{rsubvec} return complementary parts of the input vector.
19661
19662@xref{Selecting Subformulas}, for an alternative way to operate on
19663vectors one element at a time.
19664
19665@node Manipulating Vectors, Vector and Matrix Arithmetic, Extracting Elements, Matrix Functions
19666@section Manipulating Vectors
19667
19668@noindent
19669@kindex v l
19670@pindex calc-vlength
19671@tindex vlen
19672The @kbd{v l} (@code{calc-vlength}) [@code{vlen}] command computes the
19673length of a vector. The length of a non-vector is considered to be zero.
19674Note that matrices are just vectors of vectors for the purposes of this
19675command.@refill
19676
19677@kindex H v l
19678@tindex mdims
19679With the Hyperbolic flag, @kbd{H v l} [@code{mdims}] computes a vector
19680of the dimensions of a vector, matrix, or higher-order object. For
19681example, @samp{mdims([[a,b,c],[d,e,f]])} returns @samp{[2, 3]} since
19682its argument is a @c{$2\times3$}
19683@asis{2x3} matrix.
19684
19685@kindex v f
19686@pindex calc-vector-find
19687@tindex find
19688The @kbd{v f} (@code{calc-vector-find}) [@code{find}] command searches
19689along a vector for the first element equal to a given target. The target
19690is on the top of the stack; the vector is in the second-to-top position.
19691If a match is found, the result is the index of the matching element.
19692Otherwise, the result is zero. The numeric prefix argument, if given,
19693allows you to select any starting index for the search.
19694
19695@kindex v a
19696@pindex calc-arrange-vector
19697@tindex arrange
19698@cindex Arranging a matrix
19699@cindex Reshaping a matrix
19700@cindex Flattening a matrix
19701The @kbd{v a} (@code{calc-arrange-vector}) [@code{arrange}] command
19702rearranges a vector to have a certain number of columns and rows. The
19703numeric prefix argument specifies the number of columns; if you do not
19704provide an argument, you will be prompted for the number of columns.
19705The vector or matrix on the top of the stack is @dfn{flattened} into a
19706plain vector. If the number of columns is nonzero, this vector is
19707then formed into a matrix by taking successive groups of @var{n} elements.
19708If the number of columns does not evenly divide the number of elements
19709in the vector, the last row will be short and the result will not be
19710suitable for use as a matrix. For example, with the matrix
19711@samp{[[1, 2], @w{[3, 4]}]} on the stack, @kbd{v a 4} produces
19712@samp{[[1, 2, 3, 4]]} (a @c{$1\times4$}
19713@asis{1x4} matrix), @kbd{v a 1} produces
19714@samp{[[1], [2], [3], [4]]} (a @c{$4\times1$}
19715@asis{4x1} matrix), @kbd{v a 2} produces
19716@samp{[[1, 2], [3, 4]]} (the original @c{$2\times2$}
19717@asis{2x2} matrix), @w{@kbd{v a 3}} produces
19718@samp{[[1, 2, 3], [4]]} (not a matrix), and @kbd{v a 0} produces
19719the flattened list @samp{[1, 2, @w{3, 4}]}.
19720
19721@cindex Sorting data
19722@kindex V S
19723@kindex I V S
19724@pindex calc-sort
19725@tindex sort
19726@tindex rsort
19727The @kbd{V S} (@code{calc-sort}) [@code{sort}] command sorts the elements of
19728a vector into increasing order. Real numbers, real infinities, and
19729constant interval forms come first in this ordering; next come other
19730kinds of numbers, then variables (in alphabetical order), then finally
19731come formulas and other kinds of objects; these are sorted according
19732to a kind of lexicographic ordering with the useful property that
19733one vector is less or greater than another if the first corresponding
19734unequal elements are less or greater, respectively. Since quoted strings
19735are stored by Calc internally as vectors of ASCII character codes
19736(@pxref{Strings}), this means vectors of strings are also sorted into
19737alphabetical order by this command.
19738
19739The @kbd{I V S} [@code{rsort}] command sorts a vector into decreasing order.
19740
19741@cindex Permutation, inverse of
19742@cindex Inverse of permutation
19743@cindex Index tables
19744@cindex Rank tables
19745@kindex V G
19746@kindex I V G
19747@pindex calc-grade
19748@tindex grade
19749@tindex rgrade
19750The @kbd{V G} (@code{calc-grade}) [@code{grade}, @code{rgrade}] command
19751produces an index table or permutation vector which, if applied to the
19752input vector (as the index of @kbd{C-u v r}, say), would sort the vector.
19753A permutation vector is just a vector of integers from 1 to @var{n}, where
19754each integer occurs exactly once. One application of this is to sort a
19755matrix of data rows using one column as the sort key; extract that column,
19756grade it with @kbd{V G}, then use the result to reorder the original matrix
19757with @kbd{C-u v r}. Another interesting property of the @code{V G} command
19758is that, if the input is itself a permutation vector, the result will
19759be the inverse of the permutation. The inverse of an index table is
19760a rank table, whose @var{k}th element says where the @var{k}th original
19761vector element will rest when the vector is sorted. To get a rank
19762table, just use @kbd{V G V G}.
19763
19764With the Inverse flag, @kbd{I V G} produces an index table that would
19765sort the input into decreasing order. Note that @kbd{V S} and @kbd{V G}
19766use a ``stable'' sorting algorithm, i.e., any two elements which are equal
19767will not be moved out of their original order. Generally there is no way
19768to tell with @kbd{V S}, since two elements which are equal look the same,
19769but with @kbd{V G} this can be an important issue. In the matrix-of-rows
19770example, suppose you have names and telephone numbers as two columns and
19771you wish to sort by phone number primarily, and by name when the numbers
19772are equal. You can sort the data matrix by names first, and then again
19773by phone numbers. Because the sort is stable, any two rows with equal
19774phone numbers will remain sorted by name even after the second sort.
19775
19776@cindex Histograms
19777@kindex V H
19778@pindex calc-histogram
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19779@ignore
19780@mindex histo@idots
19781@end ignore
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19782@tindex histogram
19783The @kbd{V H} (@code{calc-histogram}) [@code{histogram}] command builds a
19784histogram of a vector of numbers. Vector elements are assumed to be
19785integers or real numbers in the range [0..@var{n}) for some ``number of
19786bins'' @var{n}, which is the numeric prefix argument given to the
19787command. The result is a vector of @var{n} counts of how many times
19788each value appeared in the original vector. Non-integers in the input
19789are rounded down to integers. Any vector elements outside the specified
19790range are ignored. (You can tell if elements have been ignored by noting
19791that the counts in the result vector don't add up to the length of the
19792input vector.)
19793
19794@kindex H V H
19795With the Hyperbolic flag, @kbd{H V H} pulls two vectors from the stack.
19796The second-to-top vector is the list of numbers as before. The top
19797vector is an equal-sized list of ``weights'' to attach to the elements
19798of the data vector. For example, if the first data element is 4.2 and
19799the first weight is 10, then 10 will be added to bin 4 of the result
19800vector. Without the hyperbolic flag, every element has a weight of one.
19801
19802@kindex v t
19803@pindex calc-transpose
19804@tindex trn
19805The @kbd{v t} (@code{calc-transpose}) [@code{trn}] command computes
19806the transpose of the matrix at the top of the stack. If the argument
19807is a plain vector, it is treated as a row vector and transposed into
19808a one-column matrix.
19809
19810@kindex v v
19811@pindex calc-reverse-vector
19812@tindex rev
19813The @kbd{v v} (@code{calc-reverse-vector}) [@code{vec}] command reverses
19814a vector end-for-end. Given a matrix, it reverses the order of the rows.
19815(To reverse the columns instead, just use @kbd{v t v v v t}. The same
19816principle can be used to apply other vector commands to the columns of
19817a matrix.)
19818
19819@kindex v m
19820@pindex calc-mask-vector
19821@tindex vmask
19822The @kbd{v m} (@code{calc-mask-vector}) [@code{vmask}] command uses
19823one vector as a mask to extract elements of another vector. The mask
19824is in the second-to-top position; the target vector is on the top of
19825the stack. These vectors must have the same length. The result is
19826the same as the target vector, but with all elements which correspond
19827to zeros in the mask vector deleted. Thus, for example,
19828@samp{vmask([1, 0, 1, 0, 1], [a, b, c, d, e])} produces @samp{[a, c, e]}.
19829@xref{Logical Operations}.
19830
19831@kindex v e
19832@pindex calc-expand-vector
19833@tindex vexp
19834The @kbd{v e} (@code{calc-expand-vector}) [@code{vexp}] command
19835expands a vector according to another mask vector. The result is a
19836vector the same length as the mask, but with nonzero elements replaced
19837by successive elements from the target vector. The length of the target
19838vector is normally the number of nonzero elements in the mask. If the
19839target vector is longer, its last few elements are lost. If the target
19840vector is shorter, the last few nonzero mask elements are left
19841unreplaced in the result. Thus @samp{vexp([2, 0, 3, 0, 7], [a, b])}
19842produces @samp{[a, 0, b, 0, 7]}.
19843
19844@kindex H v e
19845With the Hyperbolic flag, @kbd{H v e} takes a filler value from the
19846top of the stack; the mask and target vectors come from the third and
19847second elements of the stack. This filler is used where the mask is
19848zero: @samp{vexp([2, 0, 3, 0, 7], [a, b], z)} produces
19849@samp{[a, z, c, z, 7]}. If the filler value is itself a vector,
19850then successive values are taken from it, so that the effect is to
19851interleave two vectors according to the mask:
19852@samp{vexp([2, 0, 3, 7, 0, 0], [a, b], [x, y])} produces
19853@samp{[a, x, b, 7, y, 0]}.
19854
19855Another variation on the masking idea is to combine @samp{[a, b, c, d, e]}
19856with the mask @samp{[1, 0, 1, 0, 1]} to produce @samp{[a, 0, c, 0, e]}.
19857You can accomplish this with @kbd{V M a &}, mapping the logical ``and''
19858operation across the two vectors. @xref{Logical Operations}. Note that
19859the @code{? :} operation also discussed there allows other types of
19860masking using vectors.
19861
19862@node Vector and Matrix Arithmetic, Set Operations, Manipulating Vectors, Matrix Functions
19863@section Vector and Matrix Arithmetic
19864
19865@noindent
19866Basic arithmetic operations like addition and multiplication are defined
19867for vectors and matrices as well as for numbers. Division of matrices, in
19868the sense of multiplying by the inverse, is supported. (Division by a
19869matrix actually uses LU-decomposition for greater accuracy and speed.)
19870@xref{Basic Arithmetic}.
19871
19872The following functions are applied element-wise if their arguments are
19873vectors or matrices: @code{change-sign}, @code{conj}, @code{arg},
19874@code{re}, @code{im}, @code{polar}, @code{rect}, @code{clean},
19875@code{float}, @code{frac}. @xref{Function Index}.@refill
19876
19877@kindex V J
19878@pindex calc-conj-transpose
19879@tindex ctrn
19880The @kbd{V J} (@code{calc-conj-transpose}) [@code{ctrn}] command computes
19881the conjugate transpose of its argument, i.e., @samp{conj(trn(x))}.
19882
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19883@ignore
19884@mindex A
19885@end ignore
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19886@kindex A (vectors)
19887@pindex calc-abs (vectors)
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19888@ignore
19889@mindex abs
19890@end ignore
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19891@tindex abs (vectors)
19892The @kbd{A} (@code{calc-abs}) [@code{abs}] command computes the
19893Frobenius norm of a vector or matrix argument. This is the square
19894root of the sum of the squares of the absolute values of the
19895elements of the vector or matrix. If the vector is interpreted as
19896a point in two- or three-dimensional space, this is the distance
19897from that point to the origin.@refill
19898
19899@kindex v n
19900@pindex calc-rnorm
19901@tindex rnorm
19902The @kbd{v n} (@code{calc-rnorm}) [@code{rnorm}] command computes
19903the row norm, or infinity-norm, of a vector or matrix. For a plain
19904vector, this is the maximum of the absolute values of the elements.
19905For a matrix, this is the maximum of the row-absolute-value-sums,
19906i.e., of the sums of the absolute values of the elements along the
19907various rows.
19908
19909@kindex V N
19910@pindex calc-cnorm
19911@tindex cnorm
19912The @kbd{V N} (@code{calc-cnorm}) [@code{cnorm}] command computes
19913the column norm, or one-norm, of a vector or matrix. For a plain
19914vector, this is the sum of the absolute values of the elements.
19915For a matrix, this is the maximum of the column-absolute-value-sums.
19916General @cite{k}-norms for @cite{k} other than one or infinity are
19917not provided.
19918
19919@kindex V C
19920@pindex calc-cross
19921@tindex cross
19922The @kbd{V C} (@code{calc-cross}) [@code{cross}] command computes the
19923right-handed cross product of two vectors, each of which must have
19924exactly three elements.
19925
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19926@ignore
19927@mindex &
19928@end ignore
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19929@kindex & (matrices)
19930@pindex calc-inv (matrices)
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19931@ignore
19932@mindex inv
19933@end ignore
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19934@tindex inv (matrices)
19935The @kbd{&} (@code{calc-inv}) [@code{inv}] command computes the
19936inverse of a square matrix. If the matrix is singular, the inverse
19937operation is left in symbolic form. Matrix inverses are recorded so
19938that once an inverse (or determinant) of a particular matrix has been
19939computed, the inverse and determinant of the matrix can be recomputed
19940quickly in the future.
19941
19942If the argument to @kbd{&} is a plain number @cite{x}, this
19943command simply computes @cite{1/x}. This is okay, because the
19944@samp{/} operator also does a matrix inversion when dividing one
19945by a matrix.
19946
19947@kindex V D
19948@pindex calc-mdet
19949@tindex det
19950The @kbd{V D} (@code{calc-mdet}) [@code{det}] command computes the
19951determinant of a square matrix.
19952
19953@kindex V L
19954@pindex calc-mlud
19955@tindex lud
19956The @kbd{V L} (@code{calc-mlud}) [@code{lud}] command computes the
19957LU decomposition of a matrix. The result is a list of three matrices
19958which, when multiplied together left-to-right, form the original matrix.
19959The first is a permutation matrix that arises from pivoting in the
19960algorithm, the second is lower-triangular with ones on the diagonal,
19961and the third is upper-triangular.
19962
19963@kindex V T
19964@pindex calc-mtrace
19965@tindex tr
19966The @kbd{V T} (@code{calc-mtrace}) [@code{tr}] command computes the
19967trace of a square matrix. This is defined as the sum of the diagonal
19968elements of the matrix.
19969
19970@node Set Operations, Statistical Operations, Vector and Matrix Arithmetic, Matrix Functions
19971@section Set Operations using Vectors
19972
19973@noindent
19974@cindex Sets, as vectors
19975Calc includes several commands which interpret vectors as @dfn{sets} of
19976objects. A set is a collection of objects; any given object can appear
19977only once in the set. Calc stores sets as vectors of objects in
19978sorted order. Objects in a Calc set can be any of the usual things,
19979such as numbers, variables, or formulas. Two set elements are considered
19980equal if they are identical, except that numerically equal numbers like
19981the integer 4 and the float 4.0 are considered equal even though they
19982are not ``identical.'' Variables are treated like plain symbols without
19983attached values by the set operations; subtracting the set @samp{[b]}
19984from @samp{[a, b]} always yields the set @samp{[a]} even though if
19985the variables @samp{a} and @samp{b} both equalled 17, you might
19986expect the answer @samp{[]}.
19987
19988If a set contains interval forms, then it is assumed to be a set of
19989real numbers. In this case, all set operations require the elements
19990of the set to be only things that are allowed in intervals: Real
19991numbers, plus and minus infinity, HMS forms, and date forms. If
19992there are variables or other non-real objects present in a real set,
19993all set operations on it will be left in unevaluated form.
19994
19995If the input to a set operation is a plain number or interval form
19996@var{a}, it is treated like the one-element vector @samp{[@var{a}]}.
19997The result is always a vector, except that if the set consists of a
19998single interval, the interval itself is returned instead.
19999
20000@xref{Logical Operations}, for the @code{in} function which tests if
20001a certain value is a member of a given set. To test if the set @cite{A}
20002is a subset of the set @cite{B}, use @samp{vdiff(A, B) = []}.
20003
20004@kindex V +
20005@pindex calc-remove-duplicates
20006@tindex rdup
20007The @kbd{V +} (@code{calc-remove-duplicates}) [@code{rdup}] command
20008converts an arbitrary vector into set notation. It works by sorting
20009the vector as if by @kbd{V S}, then removing duplicates. (For example,
20010@kbd{[a, 5, 4, a, 4.0]} is sorted to @samp{[4, 4.0, 5, a, a]} and then
20011reduced to @samp{[4, 5, a]}). Overlapping intervals are merged as
20012necessary. You rarely need to use @kbd{V +} explicitly, since all the
20013other set-based commands apply @kbd{V +} to their inputs before using
20014them.
20015
20016@kindex V V
20017@pindex calc-set-union
20018@tindex vunion
20019The @kbd{V V} (@code{calc-set-union}) [@code{vunion}] command computes
20020the union of two sets. An object is in the union of two sets if and
20021only if it is in either (or both) of the input sets. (You could
20022accomplish the same thing by concatenating the sets with @kbd{|},
20023then using @kbd{V +}.)
20024
20025@kindex V ^
20026@pindex calc-set-intersect
20027@tindex vint
20028The @kbd{V ^} (@code{calc-set-intersect}) [@code{vint}] command computes
20029the intersection of two sets. An object is in the intersection if
20030and only if it is in both of the input sets. Thus if the input
20031sets are disjoint, i.e., if they share no common elements, the result
20032will be the empty vector @samp{[]}. Note that the characters @kbd{V}
20033and @kbd{^} were chosen to be close to the conventional mathematical
20034notation for set union@c{ ($A \cup B$)}
20035@asis{} and intersection@c{ ($A \cap B$)}
20036@asis{}.
20037
20038@kindex V -
20039@pindex calc-set-difference
20040@tindex vdiff
20041The @kbd{V -} (@code{calc-set-difference}) [@code{vdiff}] command computes
20042the difference between two sets. An object is in the difference
20043@cite{A - B} if and only if it is in @cite{A} but not in @cite{B}.
20044Thus subtracting @samp{[y,z]} from a set will remove the elements
20045@samp{y} and @samp{z} if they are present. You can also think of this
20046as a general @dfn{set complement} operator; if @cite{A} is the set of
20047all possible values, then @cite{A - B} is the ``complement'' of @cite{B}.
20048Obviously this is only practical if the set of all possible values in
20049your problem is small enough to list in a Calc vector (or simple
20050enough to express in a few intervals).
20051
20052@kindex V X
20053@pindex calc-set-xor
20054@tindex vxor
20055The @kbd{V X} (@code{calc-set-xor}) [@code{vxor}] command computes
20056the ``exclusive-or,'' or ``symmetric difference'' of two sets.
20057An object is in the symmetric difference of two sets if and only
20058if it is in one, but @emph{not} both, of the sets. Objects that
20059occur in both sets ``cancel out.''
20060
20061@kindex V ~
20062@pindex calc-set-complement
20063@tindex vcompl
20064The @kbd{V ~} (@code{calc-set-complement}) [@code{vcompl}] command
20065computes the complement of a set with respect to the real numbers.
20066Thus @samp{vcompl(x)} is equivalent to @samp{vdiff([-inf .. inf], x)}.
20067For example, @samp{vcompl([2, (3 .. 4]])} evaluates to
20068@samp{[[-inf .. 2), (2 .. 3], (4 .. inf]]}.
20069
20070@kindex V F
20071@pindex calc-set-floor
20072@tindex vfloor
20073The @kbd{V F} (@code{calc-set-floor}) [@code{vfloor}] command
20074reinterprets a set as a set of integers. Any non-integer values,
20075and intervals that do not enclose any integers, are removed. Open
20076intervals are converted to equivalent closed intervals. Successive
20077integers are converted into intervals of integers. For example, the
20078complement of the set @samp{[2, 6, 7, 8]} is messy, but if you wanted
20079the complement with respect to the set of integers you could type
20080@kbd{V ~ V F} to get @samp{[[-inf .. 1], [3 .. 5], [9 .. inf]]}.
20081
20082@kindex V E
20083@pindex calc-set-enumerate
20084@tindex venum
20085The @kbd{V E} (@code{calc-set-enumerate}) [@code{venum}] command
20086converts a set of integers into an explicit vector. Intervals in
20087the set are expanded out to lists of all integers encompassed by
20088the intervals. This only works for finite sets (i.e., sets which
20089do not involve @samp{-inf} or @samp{inf}).
20090
20091@kindex V :
20092@pindex calc-set-span
20093@tindex vspan
20094The @kbd{V :} (@code{calc-set-span}) [@code{vspan}] command converts any
20095set of reals into an interval form that encompasses all its elements.
20096The lower limit will be the smallest element in the set; the upper
20097limit will be the largest element. For an empty set, @samp{vspan([])}
20098returns the empty interval @w{@samp{[0 .. 0)}}.
20099
20100@kindex V #
20101@pindex calc-set-cardinality
20102@tindex vcard
20103The @kbd{V #} (@code{calc-set-cardinality}) [@code{vcard}] command counts
20104the number of integers in a set. The result is the length of the vector
20105that would be produced by @kbd{V E}, although the computation is much
20106more efficient than actually producing that vector.
20107
20108@cindex Sets, as binary numbers
20109Another representation for sets that may be more appropriate in some
20110cases is binary numbers. If you are dealing with sets of integers
20111in the range 0 to 49, you can use a 50-bit binary number where a
20112particular bit is 1 if the corresponding element is in the set.
20113@xref{Binary Functions}, for a list of commands that operate on
20114binary numbers. Note that many of the above set operations have
20115direct equivalents in binary arithmetic: @kbd{b o} (@code{calc-or}),
20116@kbd{b a} (@code{calc-and}), @kbd{b d} (@code{calc-diff}),
20117@kbd{b x} (@code{calc-xor}), and @kbd{b n} (@code{calc-not}),
20118respectively. You can use whatever representation for sets is most
20119convenient to you.
20120
20121@kindex b p
20122@kindex b u
20123@pindex calc-pack-bits
20124@pindex calc-unpack-bits
20125@tindex vpack
20126@tindex vunpack
20127The @kbd{b u} (@code{calc-unpack-bits}) [@code{vunpack}] command
20128converts an integer that represents a set in binary into a set
20129in vector/interval notation. For example, @samp{vunpack(67)}
20130returns @samp{[[0 .. 1], 6]}. If the input is negative, the set
20131it represents is semi-infinite: @samp{vunpack(-4) = [2 .. inf)}.
20132Use @kbd{V E} afterwards to expand intervals to individual
20133values if you wish. Note that this command uses the @kbd{b}
20134(binary) prefix key.
20135
20136The @kbd{b p} (@code{calc-pack-bits}) [@code{vpack}] command
20137converts the other way, from a vector or interval representing
20138a set of nonnegative integers into a binary integer describing
20139the same set. The set may include positive infinity, but must
20140not include any negative numbers. The input is interpreted as a
20141set of integers in the sense of @kbd{V F} (@code{vfloor}). Beware
20142that a simple input like @samp{[100]} can result in a huge integer
20143representation (@c{$2^{100}$}
20144@cite{2^100}, a 31-digit integer, in this case).
20145
20146@node Statistical Operations, Reducing and Mapping, Set Operations, Matrix Functions
20147@section Statistical Operations on Vectors
20148
20149@noindent
20150@cindex Statistical functions
20151The commands in this section take vectors as arguments and compute
20152various statistical measures on the data stored in the vectors. The
20153references used in the definitions of these functions are Bevington's
20154@emph{Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences},
20155and @emph{Numerical Recipes} by Press, Flannery, Teukolsky and
20156Vetterling.
20157
20158The statistical commands use the @kbd{u} prefix key followed by
20159a shifted letter or other character.
20160
20161@xref{Manipulating Vectors}, for a description of @kbd{V H}
20162(@code{calc-histogram}).
20163
20164@xref{Curve Fitting}, for the @kbd{a F} command for doing
20165least-squares fits to statistical data.
20166
20167@xref{Probability Distribution Functions}, for several common
20168probability distribution functions.
20169
20170@menu
20171* Single-Variable Statistics::
20172* Paired-Sample Statistics::
20173@end menu
20174
20175@node Single-Variable Statistics, Paired-Sample Statistics, Statistical Operations, Statistical Operations
20176@subsection Single-Variable Statistics
20177
20178@noindent
20179These functions do various statistical computations on single
20180vectors. Given a numeric prefix argument, they actually pop
20181@var{n} objects from the stack and combine them into a data
20182vector. Each object may be either a number or a vector; if a
20183vector, any sub-vectors inside it are ``flattened'' as if by
20184@kbd{v a 0}; @pxref{Manipulating Vectors}. By default one object
20185is popped, which (in order to be useful) is usually a vector.
20186
20187If an argument is a variable name, and the value stored in that
20188variable is a vector, then the stored vector is used. This method
20189has the advantage that if your data vector is large, you can avoid
20190the slow process of manipulating it directly on the stack.
20191
20192These functions are left in symbolic form if any of their arguments
20193are not numbers or vectors, e.g., if an argument is a formula, or
20194a non-vector variable. However, formulas embedded within vector
20195arguments are accepted; the result is a symbolic representation
20196of the computation, based on the assumption that the formula does
20197not itself represent a vector. All varieties of numbers such as
20198error forms and interval forms are acceptable.
20199
20200Some of the functions in this section also accept a single error form
20201or interval as an argument. They then describe a property of the
20202normal or uniform (respectively) statistical distribution described
20203by the argument. The arguments are interpreted in the same way as
20204the @var{M} argument of the random number function @kbd{k r}. In
20205particular, an interval with integer limits is considered an integer
20206distribution, so that @samp{[2 .. 6)} is the same as @samp{[2 .. 5]}.
20207An interval with at least one floating-point limit is a continuous
20208distribution: @samp{[2.0 .. 6.0)} is @emph{not} the same as
20209@samp{[2.0 .. 5.0]}!
20210
20211@kindex u #
20212@pindex calc-vector-count
20213@tindex vcount
20214The @kbd{u #} (@code{calc-vector-count}) [@code{vcount}] command
20215computes the number of data values represented by the inputs.
20216For example, @samp{vcount(1, [2, 3], [[4, 5], [], x, y])} returns 7.
20217If the argument is a single vector with no sub-vectors, this
20218simply computes the length of the vector.
20219
20220@kindex u +
20221@kindex u *
20222@pindex calc-vector-sum
20223@pindex calc-vector-prod
20224@tindex vsum
20225@tindex vprod
20226@cindex Summations (statistical)
20227The @kbd{u +} (@code{calc-vector-sum}) [@code{vsum}] command
20228computes the sum of the data values. The @kbd{u *}
20229(@code{calc-vector-prod}) [@code{vprod}] command computes the
20230product of the data values. If the input is a single flat vector,
20231these are the same as @kbd{V R +} and @kbd{V R *}
20232(@pxref{Reducing and Mapping}).@refill
20233
20234@kindex u X
20235@kindex u N
20236@pindex calc-vector-max
20237@pindex calc-vector-min
20238@tindex vmax
20239@tindex vmin
20240The @kbd{u X} (@code{calc-vector-max}) [@code{vmax}] command
20241computes the maximum of the data values, and the @kbd{u N}
20242(@code{calc-vector-min}) [@code{vmin}] command computes the minimum.
20243If the argument is an interval, this finds the minimum or maximum
20244value in the interval. (Note that @samp{vmax([2..6)) = 5} as
20245described above.) If the argument is an error form, this returns
20246plus or minus infinity.
20247
20248@kindex u M
20249@pindex calc-vector-mean
20250@tindex vmean
20251@cindex Mean of data values
20252The @kbd{u M} (@code{calc-vector-mean}) [@code{vmean}] command
20253computes the average (arithmetic mean) of the data values.
20254If the inputs are error forms @c{$x$ @code{+/-} $\sigma$}
20255@samp{x +/- s}, this is the weighted
20256mean of the @cite{x} values with weights @c{$1 / \sigma^2$}
20257@cite{1 / s^2}.
20258@tex
20259\turnoffactive
20260$$ \mu = { \displaystyle \sum { x_i \over \sigma_i^2 } \over
20261 \displaystyle \sum { 1 \over \sigma_i^2 } } $$
20262@end tex
20263If the inputs are not error forms, this is simply the sum of the
20264values divided by the count of the values.@refill
20265
20266Note that a plain number can be considered an error form with
20267error @c{$\sigma = 0$}
20268@cite{s = 0}. If the input to @kbd{u M} is a mixture of
20269plain numbers and error forms, the result is the mean of the
20270plain numbers, ignoring all values with non-zero errors. (By the
20271above definitions it's clear that a plain number effectively
20272has an infinite weight, next to which an error form with a finite
20273weight is completely negligible.)
20274
20275This function also works for distributions (error forms or
5d67986c 20276intervals). The mean of an error form `@var{a} @t{+/-} @var{b}' is simply
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20277@cite{a}. The mean of an interval is the mean of the minimum
20278and maximum values of the interval.
20279
20280@kindex I u M
20281@pindex calc-vector-mean-error
20282@tindex vmeane
20283The @kbd{I u M} (@code{calc-vector-mean-error}) [@code{vmeane}]
20284command computes the mean of the data points expressed as an
20285error form. This includes the estimated error associated with
20286the mean. If the inputs are error forms, the error is the square
20287root of the reciprocal of the sum of the reciprocals of the squares
20288of the input errors. (I.e., the variance is the reciprocal of the
20289sum of the reciprocals of the variances.)
20290@tex
20291\turnoffactive
20292$$ \sigma_\mu^2 = {1 \over \displaystyle \sum {1 \over \sigma_i^2}} $$
20293@end tex
20294If the inputs are plain
20295numbers, the error is equal to the standard deviation of the values
20296divided by the square root of the number of values. (This works
20297out to be equivalent to calculating the standard deviation and
20298then assuming each value's error is equal to this standard
20299deviation.)@refill
20300@tex
20301\turnoffactive
20302$$ \sigma_\mu^2 = {\sigma^2 \over N} $$
20303@end tex
20304
20305@kindex H u M
20306@pindex calc-vector-median
20307@tindex vmedian
20308@cindex Median of data values
20309The @kbd{H u M} (@code{calc-vector-median}) [@code{vmedian}]
20310command computes the median of the data values. The values are
20311first sorted into numerical order; the median is the middle
20312value after sorting. (If the number of data values is even,
20313the median is taken to be the average of the two middle values.)
20314The median function is different from the other functions in
20315this section in that the arguments must all be real numbers;
20316variables are not accepted even when nested inside vectors.
20317(Otherwise it is not possible to sort the data values.) If
20318any of the input values are error forms, their error parts are
20319ignored.
20320
20321The median function also accepts distributions. For both normal
20322(error form) and uniform (interval) distributions, the median is
20323the same as the mean.
20324
20325@kindex H I u M
20326@pindex calc-vector-harmonic-mean
20327@tindex vhmean
20328@cindex Harmonic mean
20329The @kbd{H I u M} (@code{calc-vector-harmonic-mean}) [@code{vhmean}]
20330command computes the harmonic mean of the data values. This is
20331defined as the reciprocal of the arithmetic mean of the reciprocals
20332of the values.
20333@tex
20334\turnoffactive
20335$$ { N \over \displaystyle \sum {1 \over x_i} } $$
20336@end tex
20337
20338@kindex u G
20339@pindex calc-vector-geometric-mean
20340@tindex vgmean
20341@cindex Geometric mean
20342The @kbd{u G} (@code{calc-vector-geometric-mean}) [@code{vgmean}]
20343command computes the geometric mean of the data values. This
5d67986c 20344is the @var{n}th root of the product of the values. This is also
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20345equal to the @code{exp} of the arithmetic mean of the logarithms
20346of the data values.
20347@tex
20348\turnoffactive
20349$$ \exp \left ( \sum { \ln x_i } \right ) =
20350 \left ( \prod { x_i } \right)^{1 / N} $$
20351@end tex
20352
20353@kindex H u G
20354@tindex agmean
20355The @kbd{H u G} [@code{agmean}] command computes the ``arithmetic-geometric
20356mean'' of two numbers taken from the stack. This is computed by
20357replacing the two numbers with their arithmetic mean and geometric
20358mean, then repeating until the two values converge.
20359@tex
20360\turnoffactive
20361$$ a_{i+1} = { a_i + b_i \over 2 } , \qquad b_{i+1} = \sqrt{a_i b_i} $$
20362@end tex
20363
20364@cindex Root-mean-square
20365Another commonly used mean, the RMS (root-mean-square), can be computed
20366for a vector of numbers simply by using the @kbd{A} command.
20367
20368@kindex u S
20369@pindex calc-vector-sdev
20370@tindex vsdev
20371@cindex Standard deviation
20372@cindex Sample statistics
20373The @kbd{u S} (@code{calc-vector-sdev}) [@code{vsdev}] command
20374computes the standard deviation@c{ $\sigma$}
20375@asis{} of the data values. If the
20376values are error forms, the errors are used as weights just
20377as for @kbd{u M}. This is the @emph{sample} standard deviation,
20378whose value is the square root of the sum of the squares of the
20379differences between the values and the mean of the @cite{N} values,
20380divided by @cite{N-1}.
20381@tex
20382\turnoffactive
20383$$ \sigma^2 = {1 \over N - 1} \sum (x_i - \mu)^2 $$
20384@end tex
20385
20386This function also applies to distributions. The standard deviation
20387of a single error form is simply the error part. The standard deviation
20388of a continuous interval happens to equal the difference between the
20389limits, divided by @c{$\sqrt{12}$}
20390@cite{sqrt(12)}. The standard deviation of an
20391integer interval is the same as the standard deviation of a vector
20392of those integers.
20393
20394@kindex I u S
20395@pindex calc-vector-pop-sdev
20396@tindex vpsdev
20397@cindex Population statistics
20398The @kbd{I u S} (@code{calc-vector-pop-sdev}) [@code{vpsdev}]
20399command computes the @emph{population} standard deviation.
20400It is defined by the same formula as above but dividing
20401by @cite{N} instead of by @cite{N-1}. The population standard
20402deviation is used when the input represents the entire set of
20403data values in the distribution; the sample standard deviation
20404is used when the input represents a sample of the set of all
20405data values, so that the mean computed from the input is itself
20406only an estimate of the true mean.
20407@tex
20408\turnoffactive
20409$$ \sigma^2 = {1 \over N} \sum (x_i - \mu)^2 $$
20410@end tex
20411
20412For error forms and continuous intervals, @code{vpsdev} works
20413exactly like @code{vsdev}. For integer intervals, it computes the
20414population standard deviation of the equivalent vector of integers.
20415
20416@kindex H u S
20417@kindex H I u S
20418@pindex calc-vector-variance
20419@pindex calc-vector-pop-variance
20420@tindex vvar
20421@tindex vpvar
20422@cindex Variance of data values
20423The @kbd{H u S} (@code{calc-vector-variance}) [@code{vvar}] and
20424@kbd{H I u S} (@code{calc-vector-pop-variance}) [@code{vpvar}]
20425commands compute the variance of the data values. The variance
20426is the square@c{ $\sigma^2$}
20427@asis{} of the standard deviation, i.e., the sum of the
20428squares of the deviations of the data values from the mean.
20429(This definition also applies when the argument is a distribution.)
20430
5d67986c
RS
20431@ignore
20432@starindex
20433@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20434@tindex vflat
20435The @code{vflat} algebraic function returns a vector of its
20436arguments, interpreted in the same way as the other functions
20437in this section. For example, @samp{vflat(1, [2, [3, 4]], 5)}
20438returns @samp{[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]}.
20439
20440@node Paired-Sample Statistics, , Single-Variable Statistics, Statistical Operations
20441@subsection Paired-Sample Statistics
20442
20443@noindent
20444The functions in this section take two arguments, which must be
20445vectors of equal size. The vectors are each flattened in the same
20446way as by the single-variable statistical functions. Given a numeric
20447prefix argument of 1, these functions instead take one object from
20448the stack, which must be an @c{$N\times2$}
20449@asis{Nx2} matrix of data values. Once
20450again, variable names can be used in place of actual vectors and
20451matrices.
20452
20453@kindex u C
20454@pindex calc-vector-covariance
20455@tindex vcov
20456@cindex Covariance
20457The @kbd{u C} (@code{calc-vector-covariance}) [@code{vcov}] command
20458computes the sample covariance of two vectors. The covariance
20459of vectors @var{x} and @var{y} is the sum of the products of the
20460differences between the elements of @var{x} and the mean of @var{x}
20461times the differences between the corresponding elements of @var{y}
20462and the mean of @var{y}, all divided by @cite{N-1}. Note that
20463the variance of a vector is just the covariance of the vector
20464with itself. Once again, if the inputs are error forms the
20465errors are used as weight factors. If both @var{x} and @var{y}
20466are composed of error forms, the error for a given data point
20467is taken as the square root of the sum of the squares of the two
20468input errors.
20469@tex
20470\turnoffactive
20471$$ \sigma_{x\!y}^2 = {1 \over N-1} \sum (x_i - \mu_x) (y_i - \mu_y) $$
20472$$ \sigma_{x\!y}^2 =
20473 {\displaystyle {1 \over N-1}
20474 \sum {(x_i - \mu_x) (y_i - \mu_y) \over \sigma_i^2}
20475 \over \displaystyle {1 \over N} \sum {1 \over \sigma_i^2}}
20476$$
20477@end tex
20478
20479@kindex I u C
20480@pindex calc-vector-pop-covariance
20481@tindex vpcov
20482The @kbd{I u C} (@code{calc-vector-pop-covariance}) [@code{vpcov}]
20483command computes the population covariance, which is the same as the
20484sample covariance computed by @kbd{u C} except dividing by @cite{N}
20485instead of @cite{N-1}.
20486
20487@kindex H u C
20488@pindex calc-vector-correlation
20489@tindex vcorr
20490@cindex Correlation coefficient
20491@cindex Linear correlation
20492The @kbd{H u C} (@code{calc-vector-correlation}) [@code{vcorr}]
20493command computes the linear correlation coefficient of two vectors.
20494This is defined by the covariance of the vectors divided by the
20495product of their standard deviations. (There is no difference
20496between sample or population statistics here.)
20497@tex
20498\turnoffactive
20499$$ r_{x\!y} = { \sigma_{x\!y}^2 \over \sigma_x^2 \sigma_y^2 } $$
20500@end tex
20501
20502@node Reducing and Mapping, Vector and Matrix Formats, Statistical Operations, Matrix Functions
20503@section Reducing and Mapping Vectors
20504
20505@noindent
20506The commands in this section allow for more general operations on the
20507elements of vectors.
20508
20509@kindex V A
20510@pindex calc-apply
20511@tindex apply
20512The simplest of these operations is @kbd{V A} (@code{calc-apply})
20513[@code{apply}], which applies a given operator to the elements of a vector.
20514For example, applying the hypothetical function @code{f} to the vector
20515@w{@samp{[1, 2, 3]}} would produce the function call @samp{f(1, 2, 3)}.
20516Applying the @code{+} function to the vector @samp{[a, b]} gives
20517@samp{a + b}. Applying @code{+} to the vector @samp{[a, b, c]} is an
20518error, since the @code{+} function expects exactly two arguments.
20519
20520While @kbd{V A} is useful in some cases, you will usually find that either
20521@kbd{V R} or @kbd{V M}, described below, is closer to what you want.
20522
20523@menu
20524* Specifying Operators::
20525* Mapping::
20526* Reducing::
20527* Nesting and Fixed Points::
20528* Generalized Products::
20529@end menu
20530
20531@node Specifying Operators, Mapping, Reducing and Mapping, Reducing and Mapping
20532@subsection Specifying Operators
20533
20534@noindent
20535Commands in this section (like @kbd{V A}) prompt you to press the key
20536corresponding to the desired operator. Press @kbd{?} for a partial
20537list of the available operators. Generally, an operator is any key or
20538sequence of keys that would normally take one or more arguments from
20539the stack and replace them with a result. For example, @kbd{V A H C}
20540uses the hyperbolic cosine operator, @code{cosh}. (Since @code{cosh}
20541expects one argument, @kbd{V A H C} requires a vector with a single
20542element as its argument.)
20543
20544You can press @kbd{x} at the operator prompt to select any algebraic
20545function by name to use as the operator. This includes functions you
20546have defined yourself using the @kbd{Z F} command. (@xref{Algebraic
20547Definitions}.) If you give a name for which no function has been
20548defined, the result is left in symbolic form, as in @samp{f(1, 2, 3)}.
20549Calc will prompt for the number of arguments the function takes if it
20550can't figure it out on its own (say, because you named a function that
20551is currently undefined). It is also possible to type a digit key before
20552the function name to specify the number of arguments, e.g.,
5d67986c 20553@kbd{V M 3 x f @key{RET}} calls @code{f} with three arguments even if it
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20554looks like it ought to have only two. This technique may be necessary
20555if the function allows a variable number of arguments. For example,
20556the @kbd{v e} [@code{vexp}] function accepts two or three arguments;
20557if you want to map with the three-argument version, you will have to
20558type @kbd{V M 3 v e}.
20559
20560It is also possible to apply any formula to a vector by treating that
20561formula as a function. When prompted for the operator to use, press
20562@kbd{'} (the apostrophe) and type your formula as an algebraic entry.
20563You will then be prompted for the argument list, which defaults to a
20564list of all variables that appear in the formula, sorted into alphabetic
20565order. For example, suppose you enter the formula @w{@samp{x + 2y^x}}.
20566The default argument list would be @samp{(x y)}, which means that if
20567this function is applied to the arguments @samp{[3, 10]} the result will
20568be @samp{3 + 2*10^3}. (If you plan to use a certain formula in this
20569way often, you might consider defining it as a function with @kbd{Z F}.)
20570
20571Another way to specify the arguments to the formula you enter is with
20572@kbd{$}, @kbd{$$}, and so on. For example, @kbd{V A ' $$ + 2$^$$}
20573has the same effect as the previous example. The argument list is
20574automatically taken to be @samp{($$ $)}. (The order of the arguments
20575may seem backwards, but it is analogous to the way normal algebraic
20576entry interacts with the stack.)
20577
20578If you press @kbd{$} at the operator prompt, the effect is similar to
20579the apostrophe except that the relevant formula is taken from top-of-stack
20580instead. The actual vector arguments of the @kbd{V A $} or related command
20581then start at the second-to-top stack position. You will still be
20582prompted for an argument list.
20583
20584@cindex Nameless functions
20585@cindex Generic functions
20586A function can be written without a name using the notation @samp{<#1 - #2>},
20587which means ``a function of two arguments that computes the first
20588argument minus the second argument.'' The symbols @samp{#1} and @samp{#2}
20589are placeholders for the arguments. You can use any names for these
20590placeholders if you wish, by including an argument list followed by a
5d67986c 20591colon: @samp{<x, y : x - y>}. When you type @kbd{V A ' $$ + 2$^$$ @key{RET}},
d7b8e6c6 20592Calc builds the nameless function @samp{<#1 + 2 #2^#1>} as the function
5d67986c 20593to map across the vectors. When you type @kbd{V A ' x + 2y^x @key{RET} @key{RET}},
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20594Calc builds the nameless function @w{@samp{<x, y : x + 2 y^x>}}. In both
20595cases, Calc also writes the nameless function to the Trail so that you
20596can get it back later if you wish.
20597
20598If there is only one argument, you can write @samp{#} in place of @samp{#1}.
20599(Note that @samp{< >} notation is also used for date forms. Calc tells
20600that @samp{<@var{stuff}>} is a nameless function by the presence of
20601@samp{#} signs inside @var{stuff}, or by the fact that @var{stuff}
20602begins with a list of variables followed by a colon.)
20603
20604You can type a nameless function directly to @kbd{V A '}, or put one on
20605the stack and use it with @w{@kbd{V A $}}. Calc will not prompt for an
20606argument list in this case, since the nameless function specifies the
20607argument list as well as the function itself. In @kbd{V A '}, you can
20608omit the @samp{< >} marks if you use @samp{#} notation for the arguments,
5d67986c
RS
20609so that @kbd{V A ' #1+#2 @key{RET}} is the same as @kbd{V A ' <#1+#2> @key{RET}},
20610which in turn is the same as @kbd{V A ' $$+$ @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20611
20612@cindex Lambda expressions
5d67986c
RS
20613@ignore
20614@starindex
20615@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20616@tindex lambda
20617The internal format for @samp{<x, y : x + y>} is @samp{lambda(x, y, x + y)}.
20618(The word @code{lambda} derives from Lisp notation and the theory of
20619functions.) The internal format for @samp{<#1 + #2>} is @samp{lambda(ArgA,
20620ArgB, ArgA + ArgB)}. Note that there is no actual Calc function called
20621@code{lambda}; the whole point is that the @code{lambda} expression is
20622used in its symbolic form, not evaluated for an answer until it is applied
20623to specific arguments by a command like @kbd{V A} or @kbd{V M}.
20624
20625(Actually, @code{lambda} does have one special property: Its arguments
20626are never evaluated; for example, putting @samp{<(2/3) #>} on the stack
20627will not simplify the @samp{2/3} until the nameless function is actually
20628called.)
20629
20630@tindex add
20631@tindex sub
5d67986c
RS
20632@ignore
20633@mindex @idots
20634@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 20635@tindex mul
5d67986c
RS
20636@ignore
20637@mindex @null
20638@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 20639@tindex div
5d67986c
RS
20640@ignore
20641@mindex @null
20642@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 20643@tindex pow
5d67986c
RS
20644@ignore
20645@mindex @null
20646@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 20647@tindex neg
5d67986c
RS
20648@ignore
20649@mindex @null
20650@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 20651@tindex mod
5d67986c
RS
20652@ignore
20653@mindex @null
20654@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20655@tindex vconcat
20656As usual, commands like @kbd{V A} have algebraic function name equivalents.
20657For example, @kbd{V A k g} with an argument of @samp{v} is equivalent to
20658@samp{apply(gcd, v)}. The first argument specifies the operator name,
20659and is either a variable whose name is the same as the function name,
20660or a nameless function like @samp{<#^3+1>}. Operators that are normally
20661written as algebraic symbols have the names @code{add}, @code{sub},
20662@code{mul}, @code{div}, @code{pow}, @code{neg}, @code{mod}, and
20663@code{vconcat}.@refill
20664
5d67986c
RS
20665@ignore
20666@starindex
20667@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
20668@tindex call
20669The @code{call} function builds a function call out of several arguments:
20670@samp{call(gcd, x, y)} is the same as @samp{apply(gcd, [x, y])}, which
20671in turn is the same as @samp{gcd(x, y)}. The first argument of @code{call},
20672like the other functions described here, may be either a variable naming a
20673function, or a nameless function (@samp{call(<#1+2#2>, x, y)} is the same
20674as @samp{x + 2y}).
20675
20676(Experts will notice that it's not quite proper to use a variable to name
20677a function, since the name @code{gcd} corresponds to the Lisp variable
20678@code{var-gcd} but to the Lisp function @code{calcFunc-gcd}. Calc
20679automatically makes this translation, so you don't have to worry
20680about it.)
20681
20682@node Mapping, Reducing, Specifying Operators, Reducing and Mapping
20683@subsection Mapping
20684
20685@noindent
20686@kindex V M
20687@pindex calc-map
20688@tindex map
20689The @kbd{V M} (@code{calc-map}) [@code{map}] command applies a given
20690operator elementwise to one or more vectors. For example, mapping
20691@code{A} [@code{abs}] produces a vector of the absolute values of the
20692elements in the input vector. Mapping @code{+} pops two vectors from
20693the stack, which must be of equal length, and produces a vector of the
20694pairwise sums of the elements. If either argument is a non-vector, it
20695is duplicated for each element of the other vector. For example,
20696@kbd{[1,2,3] 2 V M ^} squares the elements of the specified vector.
20697With the 2 listed first, it would have computed a vector of powers of
20698two. Mapping a user-defined function pops as many arguments from the
20699stack as the function requires. If you give an undefined name, you will
20700be prompted for the number of arguments to use.@refill
20701
20702If any argument to @kbd{V M} is a matrix, the operator is normally mapped
20703across all elements of the matrix. For example, given the matrix
20704@cite{[[1, -2, 3], [-4, 5, -6]]}, @kbd{V M A} takes six absolute values to
20705produce another @c{$3\times2$}
20706@asis{3x2} matrix, @cite{[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]}.
20707
20708@tindex mapr
20709The command @kbd{V M _} [@code{mapr}] (i.e., type an underscore at the
20710operator prompt) maps by rows instead. For example, @kbd{V M _ A} views
20711the above matrix as a vector of two 3-element row vectors. It produces
20712a new vector which contains the absolute values of those row vectors,
20713namely @cite{[3.74, 8.77]}. (Recall, the absolute value of a vector is
20714defined as the square root of the sum of the squares of the elements.)
20715Some operators accept vectors and return new vectors; for example,
20716@kbd{v v} reverses a vector, so @kbd{V M _ v v} would reverse each row
20717of the matrix to get a new matrix, @cite{[[3, -2, 1], [-6, 5, -4]]}.
20718
20719Sometimes a vector of vectors (representing, say, strings, sets, or lists)
20720happens to look like a matrix. If so, remember to use @kbd{V M _} if you
20721want to map a function across the whole strings or sets rather than across
20722their individual elements.
20723
20724@tindex mapc
20725The command @kbd{V M :} [@code{mapc}] maps by columns. Basically, it
20726transposes the input matrix, maps by rows, and then, if the result is a
20727matrix, transposes again. For example, @kbd{V M : A} takes the absolute
20728values of the three columns of the matrix, treating each as a 2-vector,
20729and @kbd{V M : v v} reverses the columns to get the matrix
20730@cite{[[-4, 5, -6], [1, -2, 3]]}.
20731
20732(The symbols @kbd{_} and @kbd{:} were chosen because they had row-like
20733and column-like appearances, and were not already taken by useful
20734operators. Also, they appear shifted on most keyboards so they are easy
20735to type after @kbd{V M}.)
20736
20737The @kbd{_} and @kbd{:} modifiers have no effect on arguments that are
20738not matrices (so if none of the arguments are matrices, they have no
20739effect at all). If some of the arguments are matrices and others are
20740plain numbers, the plain numbers are held constant for all rows of the
20741matrix (so that @kbd{2 V M _ ^} squares every row of a matrix; squaring
20742a vector takes a dot product of the vector with itself).
20743
20744If some of the arguments are vectors with the same lengths as the
20745rows (for @kbd{V M _}) or columns (for @kbd{V M :}) of the matrix
20746arguments, those vectors are also held constant for every row or
20747column.
20748
20749Sometimes it is useful to specify another mapping command as the operator
20750to use with @kbd{V M}. For example, @kbd{V M _ V A +} applies @kbd{V A +}
20751to each row of the input matrix, which in turn adds the two values on that
20752row. If you give another vector-operator command as the operator for
20753@kbd{V M}, it automatically uses map-by-rows mode if you don't specify
20754otherwise; thus @kbd{V M V A +} is equivalent to @kbd{V M _ V A +}. (If
20755you really want to map-by-elements another mapping command, you can use
20756a triple-nested mapping command: @kbd{V M V M V A +} means to map
20757@kbd{V M V A +} over the rows of the matrix; in turn, @kbd{V A +} is
20758mapped over the elements of each row.)
20759
20760@tindex mapa
20761@tindex mapd
20762Previous versions of Calc had ``map across'' and ``map down'' modes
20763that are now considered obsolete; the old ``map across'' is now simply
20764@kbd{V M V A}, and ``map down'' is now @kbd{V M : V A}. The algebraic
20765functions @code{mapa} and @code{mapd} are still supported, though.
20766Note also that, while the old mapping modes were persistent (once you
20767set the mode, it would apply to later mapping commands until you reset
20768it), the new @kbd{:} and @kbd{_} modifiers apply only to the current
20769mapping command. The default @kbd{V M} always means map-by-elements.
20770
20771@xref{Algebraic Manipulation}, for the @kbd{a M} command, which is like
20772@kbd{V M} but for equations and inequalities instead of vectors.
20773@xref{Storing Variables}, for the @kbd{s m} command which modifies a
20774variable's stored value using a @kbd{V M}-like operator.
20775
20776@node Reducing, Nesting and Fixed Points, Mapping, Reducing and Mapping
20777@subsection Reducing
20778
20779@noindent
20780@kindex V R
20781@pindex calc-reduce
20782@tindex reduce
20783The @kbd{V R} (@code{calc-reduce}) [@code{reduce}] command applies a given
20784binary operator across all the elements of a vector. A binary operator is
20785a function such as @code{+} or @code{max} which takes two arguments. For
20786example, reducing @code{+} over a vector computes the sum of the elements
20787of the vector. Reducing @code{-} computes the first element minus each of
20788the remaining elements. Reducing @code{max} computes the maximum element
20789and so on. In general, reducing @code{f} over the vector @samp{[a, b, c, d]}
20790produces @samp{f(f(f(a, b), c), d)}.
20791
20792@kindex I V R
20793@tindex rreduce
20794The @kbd{I V R} [@code{rreduce}] command is similar to @kbd{V R} except
20795that works from right to left through the vector. For example, plain
20796@kbd{V R -} on the vector @samp{[a, b, c, d]} produces @samp{a - b - c - d}
20797but @kbd{I V R -} on the same vector produces @samp{a - (b - (c - d))},
20798or @samp{a - b + c - d}. This ``alternating sum'' occurs frequently
20799in power series expansions.
20800
20801@kindex V U
20802@tindex accum
20803The @kbd{V U} (@code{calc-accumulate}) [@code{accum}] command does an
20804accumulation operation. Here Calc does the corresponding reduction
20805operation, but instead of producing only the final result, it produces
20806a vector of all the intermediate results. Accumulating @code{+} over
20807the vector @samp{[a, b, c, d]} produces the vector
20808@samp{[a, a + b, a + b + c, a + b + c + d]}.
20809
20810@kindex I V U
20811@tindex raccum
20812The @kbd{I V U} [@code{raccum}] command does a right-to-left accumulation.
20813For example, @kbd{I V U -} on the vector @samp{[a, b, c, d]} produces the
20814vector @samp{[a - b + c - d, b - c + d, c - d, d]}.
20815
20816@tindex reducea
20817@tindex rreducea
20818@tindex reduced
20819@tindex rreduced
20820As for @kbd{V M}, @kbd{V R} normally reduces a matrix elementwise. For
20821example, given the matrix @cite{[[a, b, c], [d, e, f]]}, @kbd{V R +} will
20822compute @cite{a + b + c + d + e + f}. You can type @kbd{V R _} or
20823@kbd{V R :} to modify this behavior. The @kbd{V R _} [@code{reducea}]
20824command reduces ``across'' the matrix; it reduces each row of the matrix
20825as a vector, then collects the results. Thus @kbd{V R _ +} of this
20826matrix would produce @cite{[a + b + c, d + e + f]}. Similarly, @kbd{V R :}
20827[@code{reduced}] reduces down; @kbd{V R : +} would produce @cite{[a + d,
20828b + e, c + f]}.
20829
20830@tindex reducer
20831@tindex rreducer
20832There is a third ``by rows'' mode for reduction that is occasionally
20833useful; @kbd{V R =} [@code{reducer}] simply reduces the operator over
20834the rows of the matrix themselves. Thus @kbd{V R = +} on the above
20835matrix would get the same result as @kbd{V R : +}, since adding two
20836row vectors is equivalent to adding their elements. But @kbd{V R = *}
20837would multiply the two rows (to get a single number, their dot product),
20838while @kbd{V R : *} would produce a vector of the products of the columns.
20839
20840These three matrix reduction modes work with @kbd{V R} and @kbd{I V R},
20841but they are not currently supported with @kbd{V U} or @kbd{I V U}.
20842
20843@tindex reducec
20844@tindex rreducec
20845The obsolete reduce-by-columns function, @code{reducec}, is still
20846supported but there is no way to get it through the @kbd{V R} command.
20847
20848The commands @kbd{M-# :} and @kbd{M-# _} are equivalent to typing
20849@kbd{M-# r} to grab a rectangle of data into Calc, and then typing
20850@kbd{V R : +} or @kbd{V R _ +}, respectively, to sum the columns or
20851rows of the matrix. @xref{Grabbing From Buffers}.
20852
20853@node Nesting and Fixed Points, Generalized Products, Reducing, Reducing and Mapping
20854@subsection Nesting and Fixed Points
20855
20856@noindent
20857@kindex H V R
20858@tindex nest
20859The @kbd{H V R} [@code{nest}] command applies a function to a given
20860argument repeatedly. It takes two values, @samp{a} and @samp{n}, from
20861the stack, where @samp{n} must be an integer. It then applies the
20862function nested @samp{n} times; if the function is @samp{f} and @samp{n}
20863is 3, the result is @samp{f(f(f(a)))}. The number @samp{n} may be
20864negative if Calc knows an inverse for the function @samp{f}; for
20865example, @samp{nest(sin, a, -2)} returns @samp{arcsin(arcsin(a))}.
20866
20867@kindex H V U
20868@tindex anest
20869The @kbd{H V U} [@code{anest}] command is an accumulating version of
20870@code{nest}: It returns a vector of @samp{n+1} values, e.g.,
20871@samp{[a, f(a), f(f(a)), f(f(f(a)))]}. If @samp{n} is negative and
20872@samp{F} is the inverse of @samp{f}, then the result is of the
20873form @samp{[a, F(a), F(F(a)), F(F(F(a)))]}.
20874
20875@kindex H I V R
20876@tindex fixp
20877@cindex Fixed points
20878The @kbd{H I V R} [@code{fixp}] command is like @kbd{H V R}, except
20879that it takes only an @samp{a} value from the stack; the function is
20880applied until it reaches a ``fixed point,'' i.e., until the result
20881no longer changes.
20882
20883@kindex H I V U
20884@tindex afixp
20885The @kbd{H I V U} [@code{afixp}] command is an accumulating @code{fixp}.
20886The first element of the return vector will be the initial value @samp{a};
20887the last element will be the final result that would have been returned
20888by @code{fixp}.
20889
20890For example, 0.739085 is a fixed point of the cosine function (in radians):
20891@samp{cos(0.739085) = 0.739085}. You can find this value by putting, say,
208921.0 on the stack and typing @kbd{H I V U C}. (We use the accumulating
20893version so we can see the intermediate results: @samp{[1, 0.540302, 0.857553,
208940.65329, ...]}. With a precision of six, this command will take 36 steps
20895to converge to 0.739085.)
20896
20897Newton's method for finding roots is a classic example of iteration
20898to a fixed point. To find the square root of five starting with an
20899initial guess, Newton's method would look for a fixed point of the
20900function @samp{(x + 5/x) / 2}. Putting a guess of 1 on the stack
5d67986c 20901and typing @kbd{H I V R ' ($ + 5/$)/2 @key{RET}} quickly yields the result
d7b8e6c6
EZ
209022.23607. This is equivalent to using the @kbd{a R} (@code{calc-find-root})
20903command to find a root of the equation @samp{x^2 = 5}.
20904
20905These examples used numbers for @samp{a} values. Calc keeps applying
20906the function until two successive results are equal to within the
20907current precision. For complex numbers, both the real parts and the
20908imaginary parts must be equal to within the current precision. If
20909@samp{a} is a formula (say, a variable name), then the function is
20910applied until two successive results are exactly the same formula.
20911It is up to you to ensure that the function will eventually converge;
20912if it doesn't, you may have to press @kbd{C-g} to stop the Calculator.
20913
20914The algebraic @code{fixp} function takes two optional arguments, @samp{n}
20915and @samp{tol}. The first is the maximum number of steps to be allowed,
20916and must be either an integer or the symbol @samp{inf} (infinity, the
20917default). The second is a convergence tolerance. If a tolerance is
20918specified, all results during the calculation must be numbers, not
20919formulas, and the iteration stops when the magnitude of the difference
20920between two successive results is less than or equal to the tolerance.
20921(This implies that a tolerance of zero iterates until the results are
20922exactly equal.)
20923
20924Putting it all together, @samp{fixp(<(# + A/#)/2>, B, 20, 1e-10)}
20925computes the square root of @samp{A} given the initial guess @samp{B},
20926stopping when the result is correct within the specified tolerance, or
20927when 20 steps have been taken, whichever is sooner.
20928
20929@node Generalized Products, , Nesting and Fixed Points, Reducing and Mapping
20930@subsection Generalized Products
20931
20932@kindex V O
20933@pindex calc-outer-product
20934@tindex outer
20935The @kbd{V O} (@code{calc-outer-product}) [@code{outer}] command applies
20936a given binary operator to all possible pairs of elements from two
20937vectors, to produce a matrix. For example, @kbd{V O *} with @samp{[a, b]}
20938and @samp{[x, y, z]} on the stack produces a multiplication table:
20939@samp{[[a x, a y, a z], [b x, b y, b z]]}. Element @var{r},@var{c} of
20940the result matrix is obtained by applying the operator to element @var{r}
20941of the lefthand vector and element @var{c} of the righthand vector.
20942
20943@kindex V I
20944@pindex calc-inner-product
20945@tindex inner
20946The @kbd{V I} (@code{calc-inner-product}) [@code{inner}] command computes
20947the generalized inner product of two vectors or matrices, given a
20948``multiplicative'' operator and an ``additive'' operator. These can each
20949actually be any binary operators; if they are @samp{*} and @samp{+},
20950respectively, the result is a standard matrix multiplication. Element
20951@var{r},@var{c} of the result matrix is obtained by mapping the
20952multiplicative operator across row @var{r} of the lefthand matrix and
20953column @var{c} of the righthand matrix, and then reducing with the additive
20954operator. Just as for the standard @kbd{*} command, this can also do a
20955vector-matrix or matrix-vector inner product, or a vector-vector
20956generalized dot product.
20957
20958Since @kbd{V I} requires two operators, it prompts twice. In each case,
20959you can use any of the usual methods for entering the operator. If you
20960use @kbd{$} twice to take both operator formulas from the stack, the
20961first (multiplicative) operator is taken from the top of the stack
20962and the second (additive) operator is taken from second-to-top.
20963
20964@node Vector and Matrix Formats, , Reducing and Mapping, Matrix Functions
20965@section Vector and Matrix Display Formats
20966
20967@noindent
20968Commands for controlling vector and matrix display use the @kbd{v} prefix
20969instead of the usual @kbd{d} prefix. But they are display modes; in
20970particular, they are influenced by the @kbd{I} and @kbd{H} prefix keys
20971in the same way (@pxref{Display Modes}). Matrix display is also
20972influenced by the @kbd{d O} (@code{calc-flat-language}) mode;
20973@pxref{Normal Language Modes}.
20974
20975@kindex V <
20976@pindex calc-matrix-left-justify
20977@kindex V =
20978@pindex calc-matrix-center-justify
20979@kindex V >
20980@pindex calc-matrix-right-justify
20981The commands @kbd{v <} (@code{calc-matrix-left-justify}), @kbd{v >}
20982(@code{calc-matrix-right-justify}), and @w{@kbd{v =}}
20983(@code{calc-matrix-center-justify}) control whether matrix elements
20984are justified to the left, right, or center of their columns.@refill
20985
20986@kindex V [
20987@pindex calc-vector-brackets
20988@kindex V @{
20989@pindex calc-vector-braces
20990@kindex V (
20991@pindex calc-vector-parens
20992The @kbd{v [} (@code{calc-vector-brackets}) command turns the square
20993brackets that surround vectors and matrices displayed in the stack on
20994and off. The @kbd{v @{} (@code{calc-vector-braces}) and @kbd{v (}
20995(@code{calc-vector-parens}) commands use curly braces or parentheses,
20996respectively, instead of square brackets. For example, @kbd{v @{} might
20997be used in preparation for yanking a matrix into a buffer running
20998Mathematica. (In fact, the Mathematica language mode uses this mode;
20999@pxref{Mathematica Language Mode}.) Note that, regardless of the
21000display mode, either brackets or braces may be used to enter vectors,
21001and parentheses may never be used for this purpose.@refill
21002
21003@kindex V ]
21004@pindex calc-matrix-brackets
21005The @kbd{v ]} (@code{calc-matrix-brackets}) command controls the
21006``big'' style display of matrices. It prompts for a string of code
21007letters; currently implemented letters are @code{R}, which enables
21008brackets on each row of the matrix; @code{O}, which enables outer
21009brackets in opposite corners of the matrix; and @code{C}, which
21010enables commas or semicolons at the ends of all rows but the last.
21011The default format is @samp{RO}. (Before Calc 2.00, the format
21012was fixed at @samp{ROC}.) Here are some example matrices:
21013
d7b8e6c6 21014@example
5d67986c 21015@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21016[ [ 123, 0, 0 ] [ [ 123, 0, 0 ],
21017 [ 0, 123, 0 ] [ 0, 123, 0 ],
21018 [ 0, 0, 123 ] ] [ 0, 0, 123 ] ]
21019
21020 RO ROC
21021
d7b8e6c6 21022@end group
5d67986c 21023@end example
d7b8e6c6 21024@noindent
d7b8e6c6 21025@example
5d67986c 21026@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21027 [ 123, 0, 0 [ 123, 0, 0 ;
21028 0, 123, 0 0, 123, 0 ;
21029 0, 0, 123 ] 0, 0, 123 ]
21030
21031 O OC
21032
d7b8e6c6 21033@end group
5d67986c 21034@end example
d7b8e6c6 21035@noindent
d7b8e6c6 21036@example
5d67986c 21037@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21038 [ 123, 0, 0 ] 123, 0, 0
21039 [ 0, 123, 0 ] 0, 123, 0
21040 [ 0, 0, 123 ] 0, 0, 123
21041
21042 R @r{blank}
d7b8e6c6 21043@end group
5d67986c 21044@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21045
21046@noindent
21047Note that of the formats shown here, @samp{RO}, @samp{ROC}, and
21048@samp{OC} are all recognized as matrices during reading, while
21049the others are useful for display only.
21050
21051@kindex V ,
21052@pindex calc-vector-commas
21053The @kbd{v ,} (@code{calc-vector-commas}) command turns commas on and
21054off in vector and matrix display.@refill
21055
21056In vectors of length one, and in all vectors when commas have been
21057turned off, Calc adds extra parentheses around formulas that might
21058otherwise be ambiguous. For example, @samp{[a b]} could be a vector
21059of the one formula @samp{a b}, or it could be a vector of two
21060variables with commas turned off. Calc will display the former
21061case as @samp{[(a b)]}. You can disable these extra parentheses
21062(to make the output less cluttered at the expense of allowing some
21063ambiguity) by adding the letter @code{P} to the control string you
21064give to @kbd{v ]} (as described above).
21065
21066@kindex V .
21067@pindex calc-full-vectors
21068The @kbd{v .} (@code{calc-full-vectors}) command turns abbreviated
21069display of long vectors on and off. In this mode, vectors of six
21070or more elements, or matrices of six or more rows or columns, will
21071be displayed in an abbreviated form that displays only the first
21072three elements and the last element: @samp{[a, b, c, ..., z]}.
21073When very large vectors are involved this will substantially
21074improve Calc's display speed.
21075
21076@kindex t .
21077@pindex calc-full-trail-vectors
21078The @kbd{t .} (@code{calc-full-trail-vectors}) command controls a
21079similar mode for recording vectors in the Trail. If you turn on
21080this mode, vectors of six or more elements and matrices of six or
21081more rows or columns will be abbreviated when they are put in the
21082Trail. The @kbd{t y} (@code{calc-trail-yank}) command will be
21083unable to recover those vectors. If you are working with very
21084large vectors, this mode will improve the speed of all operations
21085that involve the trail.
21086
21087@kindex V /
21088@pindex calc-break-vectors
21089The @kbd{v /} (@code{calc-break-vectors}) command turns multi-line
21090vector display on and off. Normally, matrices are displayed with one
21091row per line but all other types of vectors are displayed in a single
21092line. This mode causes all vectors, whether matrices or not, to be
21093displayed with a single element per line. Sub-vectors within the
21094vectors will still use the normal linear form.
21095
21096@node Algebra, Units, Matrix Functions, Top
21097@chapter Algebra
21098
21099@noindent
21100This section covers the Calc features that help you work with
21101algebraic formulas. First, the general sub-formula selection
21102mechanism is described; this works in conjunction with any Calc
21103commands. Then, commands for specific algebraic operations are
21104described. Finally, the flexible @dfn{rewrite rule} mechanism
21105is discussed.
21106
21107The algebraic commands use the @kbd{a} key prefix; selection
21108commands use the @kbd{j} (for ``just a letter that wasn't used
21109for anything else'') prefix.
21110
21111@xref{Editing Stack Entries}, to see how to manipulate formulas
21112using regular Emacs editing commands.@refill
21113
21114When doing algebraic work, you may find several of the Calculator's
21115modes to be helpful, including algebraic-simplification mode (@kbd{m A})
21116or no-simplification mode (@kbd{m O}),
21117algebraic-entry mode (@kbd{m a}), fraction mode (@kbd{m f}), and
21118symbolic mode (@kbd{m s}). @xref{Mode Settings}, for discussions
21119of these modes. You may also wish to select ``big'' display mode (@kbd{d B}).
21120@xref{Normal Language Modes}.@refill
21121
21122@menu
21123* Selecting Subformulas::
21124* Algebraic Manipulation::
21125* Simplifying Formulas::
21126* Polynomials::
21127* Calculus::
21128* Solving Equations::
21129* Numerical Solutions::
21130* Curve Fitting::
21131* Summations::
21132* Logical Operations::
21133* Rewrite Rules::
21134@end menu
21135
21136@node Selecting Subformulas, Algebraic Manipulation, Algebra, Algebra
21137@section Selecting Sub-Formulas
21138
21139@noindent
21140@cindex Selections
21141@cindex Sub-formulas
21142@cindex Parts of formulas
21143When working with an algebraic formula it is often necessary to
21144manipulate a portion of the formula rather than the formula as a
21145whole. Calc allows you to ``select'' a portion of any formula on
21146the stack. Commands which would normally operate on that stack
21147entry will now operate only on the sub-formula, leaving the
21148surrounding part of the stack entry alone.
21149
21150One common non-algebraic use for selection involves vectors. To work
21151on one element of a vector in-place, simply select that element as a
21152``sub-formula'' of the vector.
21153
21154@menu
21155* Making Selections::
21156* Changing Selections::
21157* Displaying Selections::
21158* Operating on Selections::
21159* Rearranging with Selections::
21160@end menu
21161
21162@node Making Selections, Changing Selections, Selecting Subformulas, Selecting Subformulas
21163@subsection Making Selections
21164
21165@noindent
21166@kindex j s
21167@pindex calc-select-here
21168To select a sub-formula, move the Emacs cursor to any character in that
21169sub-formula, and press @w{@kbd{j s}} (@code{calc-select-here}). Calc will
21170highlight the smallest portion of the formula that contains that
21171character. By default the sub-formula is highlighted by blanking out
21172all of the rest of the formula with dots. Selection works in any
21173display mode but is perhaps easiest in ``big'' (@kbd{d B}) mode.
21174Suppose you enter the following formula:
21175
d7b8e6c6 21176@smallexample
5d67986c 21177@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21178 3 ___
21179 (a + b) + V c
211801: ---------------
21181 2 x + 1
d7b8e6c6 21182@end group
5d67986c 21183@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21184
21185@noindent
21186(by typing @kbd{' ((a+b)^3 + sqrt(c)) / (2x+1)}). If you move the
21187cursor to the letter @samp{b} and press @w{@kbd{j s}}, the display changes
21188to
21189
d7b8e6c6 21190@smallexample
5d67986c 21191@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21192 . ...
21193 .. . b. . . .
211941* ...............
21195 . . . .
d7b8e6c6 21196@end group
5d67986c 21197@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21198
21199@noindent
21200Every character not part of the sub-formula @samp{b} has been changed
21201to a dot. The @samp{*} next to the line number is to remind you that
21202the formula has a portion of it selected. (In this case, it's very
21203obvious, but it might not always be. If Embedded Mode is enabled,
21204the word @samp{Sel} also appears in the mode line because the stack
21205may not be visible. @pxref{Embedded Mode}.)
21206
21207If you had instead placed the cursor on the parenthesis immediately to
21208the right of the @samp{b}, the selection would have been:
21209
d7b8e6c6 21210@smallexample
5d67986c 21211@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21212 . ...
21213 (a + b) . . .
212141* ...............
21215 . . . .
d7b8e6c6 21216@end group
5d67986c 21217@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21218
21219@noindent
21220The portion selected is always large enough to be considered a complete
21221formula all by itself, so selecting the parenthesis selects the whole
21222formula that it encloses. Putting the cursor on the the @samp{+} sign
21223would have had the same effect.
21224
21225(Strictly speaking, the Emacs cursor is really the manifestation of
21226the Emacs ``point,'' which is a position @emph{between} two characters
21227in the buffer. So purists would say that Calc selects the smallest
21228sub-formula which contains the character to the right of ``point.'')
21229
21230If you supply a numeric prefix argument @var{n}, the selection is
21231expanded to the @var{n}th enclosing sub-formula. Thus, positioning
21232the cursor on the @samp{b} and typing @kbd{C-u 1 j s} will select
21233@samp{a + b}; typing @kbd{C-u 2 j s} will select @samp{(a + b)^3},
21234and so on.
21235
21236If the cursor is not on any part of the formula, or if you give a
21237numeric prefix that is too large, the entire formula is selected.
21238
21239If the cursor is on the @samp{.} line that marks the top of the stack
21240(i.e., its normal ``rest position''), this command selects the entire
21241formula at stack level 1. Most selection commands similarly operate
21242on the formula at the top of the stack if you haven't positioned the
21243cursor on any stack entry.
21244
21245@kindex j a
21246@pindex calc-select-additional
21247The @kbd{j a} (@code{calc-select-additional}) command enlarges the
21248current selection to encompass the cursor. To select the smallest
21249sub-formula defined by two different points, move to the first and
21250press @kbd{j s}, then move to the other and press @kbd{j a}. This
21251is roughly analogous to using @kbd{C-@@} (@code{set-mark-command}) to
21252select the two ends of a region of text during normal Emacs editing.
21253
21254@kindex j o
21255@pindex calc-select-once
21256The @kbd{j o} (@code{calc-select-once}) command selects a formula in
21257exactly the same way as @kbd{j s}, except that the selection will
21258last only as long as the next command that uses it. For example,
21259@kbd{j o 1 +} is a handy way to add one to the sub-formula indicated
21260by the cursor.
21261
21262(A somewhat more precise definition: The @kbd{j o} command sets a flag
21263such that the next command involving selected stack entries will clear
21264the selections on those stack entries afterwards. All other selection
21265commands except @kbd{j a} and @kbd{j O} clear this flag.)
21266
21267@kindex j S
21268@kindex j O
21269@pindex calc-select-here-maybe
21270@pindex calc-select-once-maybe
21271The @kbd{j S} (@code{calc-select-here-maybe}) and @kbd{j O}
21272(@code{calc-select-once-maybe}) commands are equivalent to @kbd{j s}
21273and @kbd{j o}, respectively, except that if the formula already
21274has a selection they have no effect. This is analogous to the
21275behavior of some commands such as @kbd{j r} (@code{calc-rewrite-selection};
21276@pxref{Selections with Rewrite Rules}) and is mainly intended to be
21277used in keyboard macros that implement your own selection-oriented
21278commands.@refill
21279
21280Selection of sub-formulas normally treats associative terms like
21281@samp{a + b - c + d} and @samp{x * y * z} as single levels of the formula.
21282If you place the cursor anywhere inside @samp{a + b - c + d} except
21283on one of the variable names and use @kbd{j s}, you will select the
21284entire four-term sum.
21285
21286@kindex j b
21287@pindex calc-break-selections
21288The @kbd{j b} (@code{calc-break-selections}) command controls a mode
21289in which the ``deep structure'' of these associative formulas shows
21290through. Calc actually stores the above formulas as @samp{((a + b) - c) + d}
21291and @samp{x * (y * z)}. (Note that for certain obscure reasons, Calc
21292treats multiplication as right-associative.) Once you have enabled
21293@kbd{j b} mode, selecting with the cursor on the @samp{-} sign would
21294only select the @samp{a + b - c} portion, which makes sense when the
21295deep structure of the sum is considered. There is no way to select
21296the @samp{b - c + d} portion; although this might initially look
21297like just as legitimate a sub-formula as @samp{a + b - c}, the deep
21298structure shows that it isn't. The @kbd{d U} command can be used
21299to view the deep structure of any formula (@pxref{Normal Language Modes}).
21300
21301When @kbd{j b} mode has not been enabled, the deep structure is
21302generally hidden by the selection commands---what you see is what
21303you get.
21304
21305@kindex j u
21306@pindex calc-unselect
21307The @kbd{j u} (@code{calc-unselect}) command unselects the formula
21308that the cursor is on. If there was no selection in the formula,
21309this command has no effect. With a numeric prefix argument, it
21310unselects the @var{n}th stack element rather than using the cursor
21311position.
21312
21313@kindex j c
21314@pindex calc-clear-selections
21315The @kbd{j c} (@code{calc-clear-selections}) command unselects all
21316stack elements.
21317
21318@node Changing Selections, Displaying Selections, Making Selections, Selecting Subformulas
21319@subsection Changing Selections
21320
21321@noindent
21322@kindex j m
21323@pindex calc-select-more
21324Once you have selected a sub-formula, you can expand it using the
21325@w{@kbd{j m}} (@code{calc-select-more}) command. If @samp{a + b} is
21326selected, pressing @w{@kbd{j m}} repeatedly works as follows:
21327
d7b8e6c6 21328@smallexample
5d67986c 21329@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21330 3 ... 3 ___ 3 ___
21331 (a + b) . . . (a + b) + V c (a + b) + V c
213321* ............... 1* ............... 1* ---------------
21333 . . . . . . . . 2 x + 1
d7b8e6c6 21334@end group
5d67986c 21335@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21336
21337@noindent
21338In the last example, the entire formula is selected. This is roughly
21339the same as having no selection at all, but because there are subtle
21340differences the @samp{*} character is still there on the line number.
21341
21342With a numeric prefix argument @var{n}, @kbd{j m} expands @var{n}
21343times (or until the entire formula is selected). Note that @kbd{j s}
21344with argument @var{n} is equivalent to plain @kbd{j s} followed by
21345@kbd{j m} with argument @var{n}. If @w{@kbd{j m}} is used when there
21346is no current selection, it is equivalent to @w{@kbd{j s}}.
21347
21348Even though @kbd{j m} does not explicitly use the location of the
21349cursor within the formula, it nevertheless uses the cursor to determine
21350which stack element to operate on. As usual, @kbd{j m} when the cursor
21351is not on any stack element operates on the top stack element.
21352
21353@kindex j l
21354@pindex calc-select-less
21355The @kbd{j l} (@code{calc-select-less}) command reduces the current
21356selection around the cursor position. That is, it selects the
21357immediate sub-formula of the current selection which contains the
21358cursor, the opposite of @kbd{j m}. If the cursor is not inside the
21359current selection, the command de-selects the formula.
21360
21361@kindex j 1-9
21362@pindex calc-select-part
21363The @kbd{j 1} through @kbd{j 9} (@code{calc-select-part}) commands
21364select the @var{n}th sub-formula of the current selection. They are
21365like @kbd{j l} (@code{calc-select-less}) except they use counting
21366rather than the cursor position to decide which sub-formula to select.
21367For example, if the current selection is @kbd{a + b + c} or
21368@kbd{f(a, b, c)} or @kbd{[a, b, c]}, then @kbd{j 1} selects @samp{a},
21369@kbd{j 2} selects @samp{b}, and @kbd{j 3} selects @samp{c}; in each of
21370these cases, @kbd{j 4} through @kbd{j 9} would be errors.
21371
21372If there is no current selection, @kbd{j 1} through @kbd{j 9} select
21373the @var{n}th top-level sub-formula. (In other words, they act as if
21374the entire stack entry were selected first.) To select the @var{n}th
21375sub-formula where @var{n} is greater than nine, you must instead invoke
21376@w{@kbd{j 1}} with @var{n} as a numeric prefix argument.@refill
21377
21378@kindex j n
21379@kindex j p
21380@pindex calc-select-next
21381@pindex calc-select-previous
21382The @kbd{j n} (@code{calc-select-next}) and @kbd{j p}
21383(@code{calc-select-previous}) commands change the current selection
21384to the next or previous sub-formula at the same level. For example,
21385if @samp{b} is selected in @w{@samp{2 + a*b*c + x}}, then @kbd{j n}
21386selects @samp{c}. Further @kbd{j n} commands would be in error because,
21387even though there is something to the right of @samp{c} (namely, @samp{x}),
21388it is not at the same level; in this case, it is not a term of the
21389same product as @samp{b} and @samp{c}. However, @kbd{j m} (to select
21390the whole product @samp{a*b*c} as a term of the sum) followed by
21391@w{@kbd{j n}} would successfully select the @samp{x}.
21392
21393Similarly, @kbd{j p} moves the selection from the @samp{b} in this
21394sample formula to the @samp{a}. Both commands accept numeric prefix
21395arguments to move several steps at a time.
21396
21397It is interesting to compare Calc's selection commands with the
21398Emacs Info system's commands for navigating through hierarchically
21399organized documentation. Calc's @kbd{j n} command is completely
21400analogous to Info's @kbd{n} command. Likewise, @kbd{j p} maps to
21401@kbd{p}, @kbd{j 2} maps to @kbd{2}, and Info's @kbd{u} is like @kbd{j m}.
21402(Note that @kbd{j u} stands for @code{calc-unselect}, not ``up''.)
21403The Info @kbd{m} command is somewhat similar to Calc's @kbd{j s} and
21404@kbd{j l}; in each case, you can jump directly to a sub-component
21405of the hierarchy simply by pointing to it with the cursor.
21406
21407@node Displaying Selections, Operating on Selections, Changing Selections, Selecting Subformulas
21408@subsection Displaying Selections
21409
21410@noindent
21411@kindex j d
21412@pindex calc-show-selections
21413The @kbd{j d} (@code{calc-show-selections}) command controls how
21414selected sub-formulas are displayed. One of the alternatives is
21415illustrated in the above examples; if we press @kbd{j d} we switch
21416to the other style in which the selected portion itself is obscured
21417by @samp{#} signs:
21418
d7b8e6c6 21419@smallexample
5d67986c 21420@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21421 3 ... # ___
21422 (a + b) . . . ## # ## + V c
214231* ............... 1* ---------------
21424 . . . . 2 x + 1
d7b8e6c6 21425@end group
5d67986c 21426@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21427
21428@node Operating on Selections, Rearranging with Selections, Displaying Selections, Selecting Subformulas
21429@subsection Operating on Selections
21430
21431@noindent
21432Once a selection is made, all Calc commands that manipulate items
21433on the stack will operate on the selected portions of the items
21434instead. (Note that several stack elements may have selections
21435at once, though there can be only one selection at a time in any
21436given stack element.)
21437
21438@kindex j e
21439@pindex calc-enable-selections
21440The @kbd{j e} (@code{calc-enable-selections}) command disables the
21441effect that selections have on Calc commands. The current selections
21442still exist, but Calc commands operate on whole stack elements anyway.
21443This mode can be identified by the fact that the @samp{*} markers on
21444the line numbers are gone, even though selections are visible. To
21445reactivate the selections, press @kbd{j e} again.
21446
21447To extract a sub-formula as a new formula, simply select the
21448sub-formula and press @key{RET}. This normally duplicates the top
21449stack element; here it duplicates only the selected portion of that
21450element.
21451
21452To replace a sub-formula with something different, you can enter the
21453new value onto the stack and press @key{TAB}. This normally exchanges
21454the top two stack elements; here it swaps the value you entered into
21455the selected portion of the formula, returning the old selected
21456portion to the top of the stack.
21457
d7b8e6c6 21458@smallexample
5d67986c 21459@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21460 3 ... ... ___
21461 (a + b) . . . 17 x y . . . 17 x y + V c
214622* ............... 2* ............. 2: -------------
21463 . . . . . . . . 2 x + 1
21464
21465 3 3
214661: 17 x y 1: (a + b) 1: (a + b)
d7b8e6c6 21467@end group
5d67986c 21468@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21469
21470In this example we select a sub-formula of our original example,
21471enter a new formula, @key{TAB} it into place, then deselect to see
21472the complete, edited formula.
21473
21474If you want to swap whole formulas around even though they contain
21475selections, just use @kbd{j e} before and after.
21476
21477@kindex j '
21478@pindex calc-enter-selection
21479The @kbd{j '} (@code{calc-enter-selection}) command is another way
21480to replace a selected sub-formula. This command does an algebraic
21481entry just like the regular @kbd{'} key. When you press @key{RET},
21482the formula you type replaces the original selection. You can use
21483the @samp{$} symbol in the formula to refer to the original
21484selection. If there is no selection in the formula under the cursor,
21485the cursor is used to make a temporary selection for the purposes of
21486the command. Thus, to change a term of a formula, all you have to
21487do is move the Emacs cursor to that term and press @kbd{j '}.
21488
21489@kindex j `
21490@pindex calc-edit-selection
21491The @kbd{j `} (@code{calc-edit-selection}) command is a similar
21492analogue of the @kbd{`} (@code{calc-edit}) command. It edits the
21493selected sub-formula in a separate buffer. If there is no
21494selection, it edits the sub-formula indicated by the cursor.
21495
21496To delete a sub-formula, press @key{DEL}. This generally replaces
21497the sub-formula with the constant zero, but in a few suitable contexts
21498it uses the constant one instead. The @key{DEL} key automatically
21499deselects and re-simplifies the entire formula afterwards. Thus:
21500
d7b8e6c6 21501@smallexample
5d67986c 21502@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21503 ###
21504 17 x y + # # 17 x y 17 # y 17 y
215051* ------------- 1: ------- 1* ------- 1: -------
21506 2 x + 1 2 x + 1 2 x + 1 2 x + 1
d7b8e6c6 21507@end group
5d67986c 21508@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21509
21510In this example, we first delete the @samp{sqrt(c)} term; Calc
21511accomplishes this by replacing @samp{sqrt(c)} with zero and
21512resimplifying. We then delete the @kbd{x} in the numerator;
21513since this is part of a product, Calc replaces it with @samp{1}
21514and resimplifies.
21515
21516If you select an element of a vector and press @key{DEL}, that
21517element is deleted from the vector. If you delete one side of
21518an equation or inequality, only the opposite side remains.
21519
5d67986c 21520@kindex j @key{DEL}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21521@pindex calc-del-selection
21522The @kbd{j @key{DEL}} (@code{calc-del-selection}) command is like
21523@key{DEL} but with the auto-selecting behavior of @kbd{j '} and
21524@kbd{j `}. It deletes the selected portion of the formula
21525indicated by the cursor, or, in the absence of a selection, it
21526deletes the sub-formula indicated by the cursor position.
21527
5d67986c 21528@kindex j @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21529@pindex calc-grab-selection
21530(There is also an auto-selecting @kbd{j @key{RET}} (@code{calc-copy-selection})
21531command.)
21532
21533Normal arithmetic operations also apply to sub-formulas. Here we
21534select the denominator, press @kbd{5 -} to subtract five from the
21535denominator, press @kbd{n} to negate the denominator, then
21536press @kbd{Q} to take the square root.
21537
d7b8e6c6 21538@smallexample
5d67986c 21539@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21540 .. . .. . .. . .. .
215411* ....... 1* ....... 1* ....... 1* ..........
21542 2 x + 1 2 x - 4 4 - 2 x _________
21543 V 4 - 2 x
d7b8e6c6 21544@end group
5d67986c 21545@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21546
21547Certain types of operations on selections are not allowed. For
21548example, for an arithmetic function like @kbd{-} no more than one of
21549the arguments may be a selected sub-formula. (As the above example
21550shows, the result of the subtraction is spliced back into the argument
21551which had the selection; if there were more than one selection involved,
21552this would not be well-defined.) If you try to subtract two selections,
21553the command will abort with an error message.
21554
21555Operations on sub-formulas sometimes leave the formula as a whole
21556in an ``un-natural'' state. Consider negating the @samp{2 x} term
21557of our sample formula by selecting it and pressing @kbd{n}
21558(@code{calc-change-sign}).@refill
21559
d7b8e6c6 21560@smallexample
5d67986c 21561@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21562 .. . .. .
215631* .......... 1* ...........
21564 ......... ..........
21565 . . . 2 x . . . -2 x
d7b8e6c6 21566@end group
5d67986c 21567@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21568
21569Unselecting the sub-formula reveals that the minus sign, which would
21570normally have cancelled out with the subtraction automatically, has
21571not been able to do so because the subtraction was not part of the
21572selected portion. Pressing @kbd{=} (@code{calc-evaluate}) or doing
21573any other mathematical operation on the whole formula will cause it
21574to be simplified.
21575
d7b8e6c6 21576@smallexample
5d67986c 21577@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21578 17 y 17 y
215791: ----------- 1: ----------
21580 __________ _________
21581 V 4 - -2 x V 4 + 2 x
d7b8e6c6 21582@end group
5d67986c 21583@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21584
21585@node Rearranging with Selections, , Operating on Selections, Selecting Subformulas
21586@subsection Rearranging Formulas using Selections
21587
21588@noindent
21589@kindex j R
21590@pindex calc-commute-right
21591The @kbd{j R} (@code{calc-commute-right}) command moves the selected
21592sub-formula to the right in its surrounding formula. Generally the
21593selection is one term of a sum or product; the sum or product is
21594rearranged according to the commutative laws of algebra.
21595
5d67986c 21596As with @kbd{j '} and @kbd{j @key{DEL}}, the term under the cursor is used
d7b8e6c6
EZ
21597if there is no selection in the current formula. All commands described
21598in this section share this property. In this example, we place the
21599cursor on the @samp{a} and type @kbd{j R}, then repeat.
21600
21601@smallexample
216021: a + b - c 1: b + a - c 1: b - c + a
21603@end smallexample
21604
21605@noindent
21606Note that in the final step above, the @samp{a} is switched with
21607the @samp{c} but the signs are adjusted accordingly. When moving
21608terms of sums and products, @kbd{j R} will never change the
21609mathematical meaning of the formula.
21610
21611The selected term may also be an element of a vector or an argument
21612of a function. The term is exchanged with the one to its right.
21613In this case, the ``meaning'' of the vector or function may of
21614course be drastically changed.
21615
21616@smallexample
216171: [a, b, c] 1: [b, a, c] 1: [b, c, a]
21618
216191: f(a, b, c) 1: f(b, a, c) 1: f(b, c, a)
21620@end smallexample
21621
21622@kindex j L
21623@pindex calc-commute-left
21624The @kbd{j L} (@code{calc-commute-left}) command is like @kbd{j R}
21625except that it swaps the selected term with the one to its left.
21626
21627With numeric prefix arguments, these commands move the selected
21628term several steps at a time. It is an error to try to move a
21629term left or right past the end of its enclosing formula.
21630With numeric prefix arguments of zero, these commands move the
21631selected term as far as possible in the given direction.
21632
21633@kindex j D
21634@pindex calc-sel-distribute
21635The @kbd{j D} (@code{calc-sel-distribute}) command mixes the selected
21636sum or product into the surrounding formula using the distributive
21637law. For example, in @samp{a * (b - c)} with the @samp{b - c}
21638selected, the result is @samp{a b - a c}. This also distributes
21639products or quotients into surrounding powers, and can also do
21640transformations like @samp{exp(a + b)} to @samp{exp(a) exp(b)},
21641where @samp{a + b} is the selected term, and @samp{ln(a ^ b)}
21642to @samp{ln(a) b}, where @samp{a ^ b} is the selected term.
21643
21644For multiple-term sums or products, @kbd{j D} takes off one term
21645at a time: @samp{a * (b + c - d)} goes to @samp{a * (c - d) + a b}
21646with the @samp{c - d} selected so that you can type @kbd{j D}
21647repeatedly to expand completely. The @kbd{j D} command allows a
21648numeric prefix argument which specifies the maximum number of
21649times to expand at once; the default is one time only.
21650
21651@vindex DistribRules
21652The @kbd{j D} command is implemented using rewrite rules.
21653@xref{Selections with Rewrite Rules}. The rules are stored in
21654the Calc variable @code{DistribRules}. A convenient way to view
21655these rules is to use @kbd{s e} (@code{calc-edit-variable}) which
21656displays and edits the stored value of a variable. Press @key{M-# M-#}
21657to return from editing mode; be careful not to make any actual changes
21658or else you will affect the behavior of future @kbd{j D} commands!
21659
21660To extend @kbd{j D} to handle new cases, just edit @code{DistribRules}
21661as described above. You can then use the @kbd{s p} command to save
21662this variable's value permanently for future Calc sessions.
21663@xref{Operations on Variables}.
21664
21665@kindex j M
21666@pindex calc-sel-merge
21667@vindex MergeRules
21668The @kbd{j M} (@code{calc-sel-merge}) command is the complement
21669of @kbd{j D}; given @samp{a b - a c} with either @samp{a b} or
21670@samp{a c} selected, the result is @samp{a * (b - c)}. Once
21671again, @kbd{j M} can also merge calls to functions like @code{exp}
21672and @code{ln}; examine the variable @code{MergeRules} to see all
21673the relevant rules.
21674
21675@kindex j C
21676@pindex calc-sel-commute
21677@vindex CommuteRules
21678The @kbd{j C} (@code{calc-sel-commute}) command swaps the arguments
21679of the selected sum, product, or equation. It always behaves as
21680if @kbd{j b} mode were in effect, i.e., the sum @samp{a + b + c} is
21681treated as the nested sums @samp{(a + b) + c} by this command.
21682If you put the cursor on the first @samp{+}, the result is
21683@samp{(b + a) + c}; if you put the cursor on the second @samp{+}, the
21684result is @samp{c + (a + b)} (which the default simplifications
21685will rearrange to @samp{(c + a) + b}). The relevant rules are stored
21686in the variable @code{CommuteRules}.
21687
21688You may need to turn default simplifications off (with the @kbd{m O}
21689command) in order to get the full benefit of @kbd{j C}. For example,
21690commuting @samp{a - b} produces @samp{-b + a}, but the default
21691simplifications will ``simplify'' this right back to @samp{a - b} if
21692you don't turn them off. The same is true of some of the other
21693manipulations described in this section.
21694
21695@kindex j N
21696@pindex calc-sel-negate
21697@vindex NegateRules
21698The @kbd{j N} (@code{calc-sel-negate}) command replaces the selected
21699term with the negative of that term, then adjusts the surrounding
21700formula in order to preserve the meaning. For example, given
21701@samp{exp(a - b)} where @samp{a - b} is selected, the result is
21702@samp{1 / exp(b - a)}. By contrast, selecting a term and using the
21703regular @kbd{n} (@code{calc-change-sign}) command negates the
21704term without adjusting the surroundings, thus changing the meaning
21705of the formula as a whole. The rules variable is @code{NegateRules}.
21706
21707@kindex j &
21708@pindex calc-sel-invert
21709@vindex InvertRules
21710The @kbd{j &} (@code{calc-sel-invert}) command is similar to @kbd{j N}
21711except it takes the reciprocal of the selected term. For example,
21712given @samp{a - ln(b)} with @samp{b} selected, the result is
21713@samp{a + ln(1/b)}. The rules variable is @code{InvertRules}.
21714
21715@kindex j E
21716@pindex calc-sel-jump-equals
21717@vindex JumpRules
21718The @kbd{j E} (@code{calc-sel-jump-equals}) command moves the
21719selected term from one side of an equation to the other. Given
21720@samp{a + b = c + d} with @samp{c} selected, the result is
21721@samp{a + b - c = d}. This command also works if the selected
21722term is part of a @samp{*}, @samp{/}, or @samp{^} formula. The
21723relevant rules variable is @code{JumpRules}.
21724
21725@kindex j I
21726@kindex H j I
21727@pindex calc-sel-isolate
21728The @kbd{j I} (@code{calc-sel-isolate}) command isolates the
21729selected term on its side of an equation. It uses the @kbd{a S}
21730(@code{calc-solve-for}) command to solve the equation, and the
21731Hyperbolic flag affects it in the same way. @xref{Solving Equations}.
21732When it applies, @kbd{j I} is often easier to use than @kbd{j E}.
21733It understands more rules of algebra, and works for inequalities
21734as well as equations.
21735
21736@kindex j *
21737@kindex j /
21738@pindex calc-sel-mult-both-sides
21739@pindex calc-sel-div-both-sides
21740The @kbd{j *} (@code{calc-sel-mult-both-sides}) command prompts for a
21741formula using algebraic entry, then multiplies both sides of the
21742selected quotient or equation by that formula. It simplifies each
21743side with @kbd{a s} (@code{calc-simplify}) before re-forming the
21744quotient or equation. You can suppress this simplification by
21745providing any numeric prefix argument. There is also a @kbd{j /}
21746(@code{calc-sel-div-both-sides}) which is similar to @kbd{j *} but
21747dividing instead of multiplying by the factor you enter.
21748
21749As a special feature, if the numerator of the quotient is 1, then
21750the denominator is expanded at the top level using the distributive
21751law (i.e., using the @kbd{C-u -1 a x} command). Suppose the
21752formula on the stack is @samp{1 / (sqrt(a) + 1)}, and you wish
21753to eliminate the square root in the denominator by multiplying both
21754sides by @samp{sqrt(a) - 1}. Calc's default simplifications would
21755change the result @samp{(sqrt(a) - 1) / (sqrt(a) - 1) (sqrt(a) + 1)}
21756right back to the original form by cancellation; Calc expands the
21757denominator to @samp{sqrt(a) (sqrt(a) - 1) + sqrt(a) - 1} to prevent
21758this. (You would now want to use an @kbd{a x} command to expand
21759the rest of the way, whereupon the denominator would cancel out to
21760the desired form, @samp{a - 1}.) When the numerator is not 1, this
21761initial expansion is not necessary because Calc's default
21762simplifications will not notice the potential cancellation.
21763
21764If the selection is an inequality, @kbd{j *} and @kbd{j /} will
21765accept any factor, but will warn unless they can prove the factor
21766is either positive or negative. (In the latter case the direction
21767of the inequality will be switched appropriately.) @xref{Declarations},
21768for ways to inform Calc that a given variable is positive or
21769negative. If Calc can't tell for sure what the sign of the factor
21770will be, it will assume it is positive and display a warning
21771message.
21772
21773For selections that are not quotients, equations, or inequalities,
21774these commands pull out a multiplicative factor: They divide (or
21775multiply) by the entered formula, simplify, then multiply (or divide)
21776back by the formula.
21777
21778@kindex j +
21779@kindex j -
21780@pindex calc-sel-add-both-sides
21781@pindex calc-sel-sub-both-sides
21782The @kbd{j +} (@code{calc-sel-add-both-sides}) and @kbd{j -}
21783(@code{calc-sel-sub-both-sides}) commands analogously add to or
21784subtract from both sides of an equation or inequality. For other
21785types of selections, they extract an additive factor. A numeric
21786prefix argument suppresses simplification of the intermediate
21787results.
21788
21789@kindex j U
21790@pindex calc-sel-unpack
21791The @kbd{j U} (@code{calc-sel-unpack}) command replaces the
21792selected function call with its argument. For example, given
21793@samp{a + sin(x^2)} with @samp{sin(x^2)} selected, the result
21794is @samp{a + x^2}. (The @samp{x^2} will remain selected; if you
21795wanted to change the @code{sin} to @code{cos}, just press @kbd{C}
21796now to take the cosine of the selected part.)
21797
21798@kindex j v
21799@pindex calc-sel-evaluate
21800The @kbd{j v} (@code{calc-sel-evaluate}) command performs the
21801normal default simplifications on the selected sub-formula.
21802These are the simplifications that are normally done automatically
21803on all results, but which may have been partially inhibited by
21804previous selection-related operations, or turned off altogether
21805by the @kbd{m O} command. This command is just an auto-selecting
21806version of the @w{@kbd{a v}} command (@pxref{Algebraic Manipulation}).
21807
21808With a numeric prefix argument of 2, @kbd{C-u 2 j v} applies
21809the @kbd{a s} (@code{calc-simplify}) command to the selected
21810sub-formula. With a prefix argument of 3 or more, e.g., @kbd{C-u j v}
21811applies the @kbd{a e} (@code{calc-simplify-extended}) command.
21812@xref{Simplifying Formulas}. With a negative prefix argument
21813it simplifies at the top level only, just as with @kbd{a v}.
21814Here the ``top'' level refers to the top level of the selected
21815sub-formula.
21816
21817@kindex j "
21818@pindex calc-sel-expand-formula
21819The @kbd{j "} (@code{calc-sel-expand-formula}) command is to @kbd{a "}
21820(@pxref{Algebraic Manipulation}) what @kbd{j v} is to @kbd{a v}.
21821
21822You can use the @kbd{j r} (@code{calc-rewrite-selection}) command
21823to define other algebraic operations on sub-formulas. @xref{Rewrite Rules}.
21824
21825@node Algebraic Manipulation, Simplifying Formulas, Selecting Subformulas, Algebra
21826@section Algebraic Manipulation
21827
21828@noindent
21829The commands in this section perform general-purpose algebraic
21830manipulations. They work on the whole formula at the top of the
21831stack (unless, of course, you have made a selection in that
21832formula).
21833
21834Many algebra commands prompt for a variable name or formula. If you
21835answer the prompt with a blank line, the variable or formula is taken
21836from top-of-stack, and the normal argument for the command is taken
21837from the second-to-top stack level.
21838
21839@kindex a v
21840@pindex calc-alg-evaluate
21841The @kbd{a v} (@code{calc-alg-evaluate}) command performs the normal
21842default simplifications on a formula; for example, @samp{a - -b} is
21843changed to @samp{a + b}. These simplifications are normally done
21844automatically on all Calc results, so this command is useful only if
21845you have turned default simplifications off with an @kbd{m O}
21846command. @xref{Simplification Modes}.
21847
21848It is often more convenient to type @kbd{=}, which is like @kbd{a v}
21849but which also substitutes stored values for variables in the formula.
21850Use @kbd{a v} if you want the variables to ignore their stored values.
21851
21852If you give a numeric prefix argument of 2 to @kbd{a v}, it simplifies
21853as if in algebraic simplification mode. This is equivalent to typing
21854@kbd{a s}; @pxref{Simplifying Formulas}. If you give a numeric prefix
21855of 3 or more, it uses extended simplification mode (@kbd{a e}).
21856
21857If you give a negative prefix argument @i{-1}, @i{-2}, or @i{-3},
21858it simplifies in the corresponding mode but only works on the top-level
21859function call of the formula. For example, @samp{(2 + 3) * (2 + 3)} will
21860simplify to @samp{(2 + 3)^2}, without simplifying the sub-formulas
21861@samp{2 + 3}. As another example, typing @kbd{V R +} to sum the vector
21862@samp{[1, 2, 3, 4]} produces the formula @samp{reduce(add, [1, 2, 3, 4])}
21863in no-simplify mode. Using @kbd{a v} will evaluate this all the way to
2186410; using @kbd{C-u - a v} will evaluate it only to @samp{1 + 2 + 3 + 4}.
21865(@xref{Reducing and Mapping}.)
21866
21867@tindex evalv
21868@tindex evalvn
21869The @kbd{=} command corresponds to the @code{evalv} function, and
21870the related @kbd{N} command, which is like @kbd{=} but temporarily
21871disables symbolic (@kbd{m s}) mode during the evaluation, corresponds
21872to the @code{evalvn} function. (These commands interpret their prefix
21873arguments differently than @kbd{a v}; @kbd{=} treats the prefix as
21874the number of stack elements to evaluate at once, and @kbd{N} treats
21875it as a temporary different working precision.)
21876
21877The @code{evalvn} function can take an alternate working precision
21878as an optional second argument. This argument can be either an
21879integer, to set the precision absolutely, or a vector containing
21880a single integer, to adjust the precision relative to the current
21881precision. Note that @code{evalvn} with a larger than current
21882precision will do the calculation at this higher precision, but the
21883result will as usual be rounded back down to the current precision
21884afterward. For example, @samp{evalvn(pi - 3.1415)} at a precision
21885of 12 will return @samp{9.265359e-5}; @samp{evalvn(pi - 3.1415, 30)}
21886will return @samp{9.26535897932e-5} (computing a 25-digit result which
21887is then rounded down to 12); and @samp{evalvn(pi - 3.1415, [-2])}
21888will return @samp{9.2654e-5}.
21889
21890@kindex a "
21891@pindex calc-expand-formula
21892The @kbd{a "} (@code{calc-expand-formula}) command expands functions
21893into their defining formulas wherever possible. For example,
21894@samp{deg(x^2)} is changed to @samp{180 x^2 / pi}. Most functions,
21895like @code{sin} and @code{gcd}, are not defined by simple formulas
21896and so are unaffected by this command. One important class of
21897functions which @emph{can} be expanded is the user-defined functions
21898created by the @kbd{Z F} command. @xref{Algebraic Definitions}.
21899Other functions which @kbd{a "} can expand include the probability
21900distribution functions, most of the financial functions, and the
21901hyperbolic and inverse hyperbolic functions. A numeric prefix argument
21902affects @kbd{a "} in the same way as it does @kbd{a v}: A positive
21903argument expands all functions in the formula and then simplifies in
21904various ways; a negative argument expands and simplifies only the
21905top-level function call.
21906
21907@kindex a M
21908@pindex calc-map-equation
21909@tindex mapeq
21910The @kbd{a M} (@code{calc-map-equation}) [@code{mapeq}] command applies
21911a given function or operator to one or more equations. It is analogous
21912to @kbd{V M}, which operates on vectors instead of equations.
21913@pxref{Reducing and Mapping}. For example, @kbd{a M S} changes
21914@samp{x = y+1} to @samp{sin(x) = sin(y+1)}, and @kbd{a M +} with
21915@samp{x = y+1} and @cite{6} on the stack produces @samp{x+6 = y+7}.
21916With two equations on the stack, @kbd{a M +} would add the lefthand
21917sides together and the righthand sides together to get the two
21918respective sides of a new equation.
21919
21920Mapping also works on inequalities. Mapping two similar inequalities
21921produces another inequality of the same type. Mapping an inequality
21922with an equation produces an inequality of the same type. Mapping a
21923@samp{<=} with a @samp{<} or @samp{!=} (not-equal) produces a @samp{<}.
21924If inequalities with opposite direction (e.g., @samp{<} and @samp{>})
21925are mapped, the direction of the second inequality is reversed to
21926match the first: Using @kbd{a M +} on @samp{a < b} and @samp{a > 2}
21927reverses the latter to get @samp{2 < a}, which then allows the
21928combination @samp{a + 2 < b + a}, which the @kbd{a s} command can
21929then simplify to get @samp{2 < b}.
21930
21931Using @kbd{a M *}, @kbd{a M /}, @kbd{a M n}, or @kbd{a M &} to negate
21932or invert an inequality will reverse the direction of the inequality.
21933Other adjustments to inequalities are @emph{not} done automatically;
21934@kbd{a M S} will change @w{@samp{x < y}} to @samp{sin(x) < sin(y)} even
21935though this is not true for all values of the variables.
21936
21937@kindex H a M
21938@tindex mapeqp
21939With the Hyperbolic flag, @kbd{H a M} [@code{mapeqp}] does a plain
21940mapping operation without reversing the direction of any inequalities.
21941Thus, @kbd{H a M &} would change @kbd{x > 2} to @kbd{1/x > 0.5}.
21942(This change is mathematically incorrect, but perhaps you were
21943fixing an inequality which was already incorrect.)
21944
21945@kindex I a M
21946@tindex mapeqr
21947With the Inverse flag, @kbd{I a M} [@code{mapeqr}] always reverses
21948the direction of the inequality. You might use @kbd{I a M C} to
21949change @samp{x < y} to @samp{cos(x) > cos(y)} if you know you are
21950working with small positive angles.
21951
21952@kindex a b
21953@pindex calc-substitute
21954@tindex subst
21955The @kbd{a b} (@code{calc-substitute}) [@code{subst}] command substitutes
21956all occurrences
21957of some variable or sub-expression of an expression with a new
21958sub-expression. For example, substituting @samp{sin(x)} with @samp{cos(y)}
21959in @samp{2 sin(x)^2 + x sin(x) + sin(2 x)} produces
21960@samp{2 cos(y)^2 + x cos(y) + @w{sin(2 x)}}.
21961Note that this is a purely structural substitution; the lone @samp{x} and
21962the @samp{sin(2 x)} stayed the same because they did not look like
21963@samp{sin(x)}. @xref{Rewrite Rules}, for a more general method for
21964doing substitutions.@refill
21965
21966The @kbd{a b} command normally prompts for two formulas, the old
21967one and the new one. If you enter a blank line for the first
21968prompt, all three arguments are taken from the stack (new, then old,
21969then target expression). If you type an old formula but then enter a
21970blank line for the new one, the new formula is taken from top-of-stack
21971and the target from second-to-top. If you answer both prompts, the
21972target is taken from top-of-stack as usual.
21973
21974Note that @kbd{a b} has no understanding of commutativity or
21975associativity. The pattern @samp{x+y} will not match the formula
21976@samp{y+x}. Also, @samp{y+z} will not match inside the formula @samp{x+y+z}
21977because the @samp{+} operator is left-associative, so the ``deep
21978structure'' of that formula is @samp{(x+y) + z}. Use @kbd{d U}
21979(@code{calc-unformatted-language}) mode to see the true structure of
21980a formula. The rewrite rule mechanism, discussed later, does not have
21981these limitations.
21982
21983As an algebraic function, @code{subst} takes three arguments:
21984Target expression, old, new. Note that @code{subst} is always
21985evaluated immediately, even if its arguments are variables, so if
21986you wish to put a call to @code{subst} onto the stack you must
21987turn the default simplifications off first (with @kbd{m O}).
21988
21989@node Simplifying Formulas, Polynomials, Algebraic Manipulation, Algebra
21990@section Simplifying Formulas
21991
21992@noindent
21993@kindex a s
21994@pindex calc-simplify
21995@tindex simplify
21996The @kbd{a s} (@code{calc-simplify}) [@code{simplify}] command applies
21997various algebraic rules to simplify a formula. This includes rules which
21998are not part of the default simplifications because they may be too slow
21999to apply all the time, or may not be desirable all of the time. For
22000example, non-adjacent terms of sums are combined, as in @samp{a + b + 2 a}
22001to @samp{b + 3 a}, and some formulas like @samp{sin(arcsin(x))} are
22002simplified to @samp{x}.
22003
22004The sections below describe all the various kinds of algebraic
22005simplifications Calc provides in full detail. None of Calc's
22006simplification commands are designed to pull rabbits out of hats;
22007they simply apply certain specific rules to put formulas into
22008less redundant or more pleasing forms. Serious algebra in Calc
22009must be done manually, usually with a combination of selections
22010and rewrite rules. @xref{Rearranging with Selections}.
22011@xref{Rewrite Rules}.
22012
22013@xref{Simplification Modes}, for commands to control what level of
22014simplification occurs automatically. Normally only the ``default
22015simplifications'' occur.
22016
22017@menu
22018* Default Simplifications::
22019* Algebraic Simplifications::
22020* Unsafe Simplifications::
22021* Simplification of Units::
22022@end menu
22023
22024@node Default Simplifications, Algebraic Simplifications, Simplifying Formulas, Simplifying Formulas
22025@subsection Default Simplifications
22026
22027@noindent
22028@cindex Default simplifications
22029This section describes the ``default simplifications,'' those which are
22030normally applied to all results. For example, if you enter the variable
22031@cite{x} on the stack twice and push @kbd{+}, Calc's default
22032simplifications automatically change @cite{x + x} to @cite{2 x}.
22033
22034The @kbd{m O} command turns off the default simplifications, so that
22035@cite{x + x} will remain in this form unless you give an explicit
22036``simplify'' command like @kbd{=} or @kbd{a v}. @xref{Algebraic
22037Manipulation}. The @kbd{m D} command turns the default simplifications
22038back on.
22039
22040The most basic default simplification is the evaluation of functions.
22041For example, @cite{2 + 3} is evaluated to @cite{5}, and @cite{@t{sqrt}(9)}
22042is evaluated to @cite{3}. Evaluation does not occur if the arguments
22043to a function are somehow of the wrong type (@cite{@t{tan}([2,3,4])},
22044range (@cite{@t{tan}(90)}), or number (@cite{@t{tan}(3,5)}), or if the
22045function name is not recognized (@cite{@t{f}(5)}), or if ``symbolic''
22046mode (@pxref{Symbolic Mode}) prevents evaluation (@cite{@t{sqrt}(2)}).
22047
22048Calc simplifies (evaluates) the arguments to a function before it
22049simplifies the function itself. Thus @cite{@t{sqrt}(5+4)} is
22050simplified to @cite{@t{sqrt}(9)} before the @code{sqrt} function
22051itself is applied. There are very few exceptions to this rule:
22052@code{quote}, @code{lambda}, and @code{condition} (the @code{::}
22053operator) do not evaluate their arguments, @code{if} (the @code{? :}
22054operator) does not evaluate all of its arguments, and @code{evalto}
22055does not evaluate its lefthand argument.
22056
22057Most commands apply the default simplifications to all arguments they
22058take from the stack, perform a particular operation, then simplify
22059the result before pushing it back on the stack. In the common special
22060case of regular arithmetic commands like @kbd{+} and @kbd{Q} [@code{sqrt}],
22061the arguments are simply popped from the stack and collected into a
22062suitable function call, which is then simplified (the arguments being
22063simplified first as part of the process, as described above).
22064
22065The default simplifications are too numerous to describe completely
22066here, but this section will describe the ones that apply to the
22067major arithmetic operators. This list will be rather technical in
22068nature, and will probably be interesting to you only if you are
22069a serious user of Calc's algebra facilities.
22070
22071@tex
22072\bigskip
22073@end tex
22074
22075As well as the simplifications described here, if you have stored
22076any rewrite rules in the variable @code{EvalRules} then these rules
22077will also be applied before any built-in default simplifications.
22078@xref{Automatic Rewrites}, for details.
22079
22080@tex
22081\bigskip
22082@end tex
22083
22084And now, on with the default simplifications:
22085
22086Arithmetic operators like @kbd{+} and @kbd{*} always take two
22087arguments in Calc's internal form. Sums and products of three or
22088more terms are arranged by the associative law of algebra into
22089a left-associative form for sums, @cite{((a + b) + c) + d}, and
22090a right-associative form for products, @cite{a * (b * (c * d))}.
22091Formulas like @cite{(a + b) + (c + d)} are rearranged to
22092left-associative form, though this rarely matters since Calc's
22093algebra commands are designed to hide the inner structure of
22094sums and products as much as possible. Sums and products in
22095their proper associative form will be written without parentheses
22096in the examples below.
22097
22098Sums and products are @emph{not} rearranged according to the
22099commutative law (@cite{a + b} to @cite{b + a}) except in a few
22100special cases described below. Some algebra programs always
22101rearrange terms into a canonical order, which enables them to
22102see that @cite{a b + b a} can be simplified to @cite{2 a b}.
22103Calc assumes you have put the terms into the order you want
22104and generally leaves that order alone, with the consequence
22105that formulas like the above will only be simplified if you
22106explicitly give the @kbd{a s} command. @xref{Algebraic
22107Simplifications}.
22108
22109Differences @cite{a - b} are treated like sums @cite{a + (-b)}
22110for purposes of simplification; one of the default simplifications
22111is to rewrite @cite{a + (-b)} or @cite{(-b) + a}, where @cite{-b}
22112represents a ``negative-looking'' term, into @cite{a - b} form.
22113``Negative-looking'' means negative numbers, negated formulas like
22114@cite{-x}, and products or quotients in which either term is
22115negative-looking.
22116
22117Other simplifications involving negation are @cite{-(-x)} to @cite{x};
22118@cite{-(a b)} or @cite{-(a/b)} where either @cite{a} or @cite{b} is
22119negative-looking, simplified by negating that term, or else where
22120@cite{a} or @cite{b} is any number, by negating that number;
22121@cite{-(a + b)} to @cite{-a - b}, and @cite{-(b - a)} to @cite{a - b}.
22122(This, and rewriting @cite{(-b) + a} to @cite{a - b}, are the only
22123cases where the order of terms in a sum is changed by the default
22124simplifications.)
22125
22126The distributive law is used to simplify sums in some cases:
22127@cite{a x + b x} to @cite{(a + b) x}, where @cite{a} represents
22128a number or an implicit 1 or @i{-1} (as in @cite{x} or @cite{-x})
22129and similarly for @cite{b}. Use the @kbd{a c}, @w{@kbd{a f}}, or
22130@kbd{j M} commands to merge sums with non-numeric coefficients
22131using the distributive law.
22132
22133The distributive law is only used for sums of two terms, or
22134for adjacent terms in a larger sum. Thus @cite{a + b + b + c}
22135is simplified to @cite{a + 2 b + c}, but @cite{a + b + c + b}
22136is not simplified. The reason is that comparing all terms of a
22137sum with one another would require time proportional to the
22138square of the number of terms; Calc relegates potentially slow
22139operations like this to commands that have to be invoked
22140explicitly, like @kbd{a s}.
22141
22142Finally, @cite{a + 0} and @cite{0 + a} are simplified to @cite{a}.
22143A consequence of the above rules is that @cite{0 - a} is simplified
22144to @cite{-a}.
22145
22146@tex
22147\bigskip
22148@end tex
22149
22150The products @cite{1 a} and @cite{a 1} are simplified to @cite{a};
22151@cite{(-1) a} and @cite{a (-1)} are simplified to @cite{-a};
22152@cite{0 a} and @cite{a 0} are simplified to @cite{0}, except that
22153in matrix mode where @cite{a} is not provably scalar the result
22154is the generic zero matrix @samp{idn(0)}, and that if @cite{a} is
22155infinite the result is @samp{nan}.
22156
22157Also, @cite{(-a) b} and @cite{a (-b)} are simplified to @cite{-(a b)},
22158where this occurs for negated formulas but not for regular negative
22159numbers.
22160
22161Products are commuted only to move numbers to the front:
22162@cite{a b 2} is commuted to @cite{2 a b}.
22163
22164The product @cite{a (b + c)} is distributed over the sum only if
22165@cite{a} and at least one of @cite{b} and @cite{c} are numbers:
22166@cite{2 (x + 3)} goes to @cite{2 x + 6}. The formula
22167@cite{(-a) (b - c)}, where @cite{-a} is a negative number, is
22168rewritten to @cite{a (c - b)}.
22169
22170The distributive law of products and powers is used for adjacent
22171terms of the product: @cite{x^a x^b} goes to @c{$x^{a+b}$}
22172@cite{x^(a+b)}
22173where @cite{a} is a number, or an implicit 1 (as in @cite{x}),
22174or the implicit one-half of @cite{@t{sqrt}(x)}, and similarly for
22175@cite{b}. The result is written using @samp{sqrt} or @samp{1/sqrt}
22176if the sum of the powers is @cite{1/2} or @cite{-1/2}, respectively.
22177If the sum of the powers is zero, the product is simplified to
22178@cite{1} or to @samp{idn(1)} if matrix mode is enabled.
22179
22180The product of a negative power times anything but another negative
22181power is changed to use division: @c{$x^{-2} y$}
22182@cite{x^(-2) y} goes to @cite{y / x^2} unless matrix mode is
22183in effect and neither @cite{x} nor @cite{y} are scalar (in which
22184case it is considered unsafe to rearrange the order of the terms).
22185
22186Finally, @cite{a (b/c)} is rewritten to @cite{(a b)/c}, and also
22187@cite{(a/b) c} is changed to @cite{(a c)/b} unless in matrix mode.
22188
22189@tex
22190\bigskip
22191@end tex
22192
22193Simplifications for quotients are analogous to those for products.
22194The quotient @cite{0 / x} is simplified to @cite{0}, with the same
22195exceptions that were noted for @cite{0 x}. Likewise, @cite{x / 1}
22196and @cite{x / (-1)} are simplified to @cite{x} and @cite{-x},
22197respectively.
22198
22199The quotient @cite{x / 0} is left unsimplified or changed to an
22200infinite quantity, as directed by the current infinite mode.
22201@xref{Infinite Mode}.
22202
22203The expression @c{$a / b^{-c}$}
22204@cite{a / b^(-c)} is changed to @cite{a b^c},
22205where @cite{-c} is any negative-looking power. Also, @cite{1 / b^c}
22206is changed to @c{$b^{-c}$}
22207@cite{b^(-c)} for any power @cite{c}.
22208
22209Also, @cite{(-a) / b} and @cite{a / (-b)} go to @cite{-(a/b)};
22210@cite{(a/b) / c} goes to @cite{a / (b c)}; and @cite{a / (b/c)}
22211goes to @cite{(a c) / b} unless matrix mode prevents this
22212rearrangement. Similarly, @cite{a / (b:c)} is simplified to
22213@cite{(c:b) a} for any fraction @cite{b:c}.
22214
22215The distributive law is applied to @cite{(a + b) / c} only if
22216@cite{c} and at least one of @cite{a} and @cite{b} are numbers.
22217Quotients of powers and square roots are distributed just as
22218described for multiplication.
22219
22220Quotients of products cancel only in the leading terms of the
22221numerator and denominator. In other words, @cite{a x b / a y b}
22222is cancelled to @cite{x b / y b} but not to @cite{x / y}. Once
22223again this is because full cancellation can be slow; use @kbd{a s}
22224to cancel all terms of the quotient.
22225
22226Quotients of negative-looking values are simplified according
22227to @cite{(-a) / (-b)} to @cite{a / b}, @cite{(-a) / (b - c)}
22228to @cite{a / (c - b)}, and @cite{(a - b) / (-c)} to @cite{(b - a) / c}.
22229
22230@tex
22231\bigskip
22232@end tex
22233
22234The formula @cite{x^0} is simplified to @cite{1}, or to @samp{idn(1)}
22235in matrix mode. The formula @cite{0^x} is simplified to @cite{0}
22236unless @cite{x} is a negative number or complex number, in which
22237case the result is an infinity or an unsimplified formula according
22238to the current infinite mode. Note that @cite{0^0} is an
22239indeterminate form, as evidenced by the fact that the simplifications
22240for @cite{x^0} and @cite{0^x} conflict when @cite{x=0}.
22241
22242Powers of products or quotients @cite{(a b)^c}, @cite{(a/b)^c}
22243are distributed to @cite{a^c b^c}, @cite{a^c / b^c} only if @cite{c}
22244is an integer, or if either @cite{a} or @cite{b} are nonnegative
22245real numbers. Powers of powers @cite{(a^b)^c} are simplified to
22246@c{$a^{b c}$}
22247@cite{a^(b c)} only when @cite{c} is an integer and @cite{b c} also
22248evaluates to an integer. Without these restrictions these simplifications
22249would not be safe because of problems with principal values.
22250(In other words, @c{$((-3)^{1/2})^2$}
22251@cite{((-3)^1:2)^2} is safe to simplify, but
22252@c{$((-3)^2)^{1/2}$}
22253@cite{((-3)^2)^1:2} is not.) @xref{Declarations}, for ways to inform
22254Calc that your variables satisfy these requirements.
22255
22256As a special case of this rule, @cite{@t{sqrt}(x)^n} is simplified to
22257@c{$x^{n/2}$}
22258@cite{x^(n/2)} only for even integers @cite{n}.
22259
22260If @cite{a} is known to be real, @cite{b} is an even integer, and
22261@cite{c} is a half- or quarter-integer, then @cite{(a^b)^c} is
22262simplified to @c{$@t{abs}(a^{b c})$}
22263@cite{@t{abs}(a^(b c))}.
22264
22265Also, @cite{(-a)^b} is simplified to @cite{a^b} if @cite{b} is an
22266even integer, or to @cite{-(a^b)} if @cite{b} is an odd integer,
22267for any negative-looking expression @cite{-a}.
22268
22269Square roots @cite{@t{sqrt}(x)} generally act like one-half powers
22270@c{$x^{1:2}$}
22271@cite{x^1:2} for the purposes of the above-listed simplifications.
22272
22273Also, note that @c{$1 / x^{1:2}$}
22274@cite{1 / x^1:2} is changed to @c{$x^{-1:2}$}
22275@cite{x^(-1:2)},
22276but @cite{1 / @t{sqrt}(x)} is left alone.
22277
22278@tex
22279\bigskip
22280@end tex
22281
22282Generic identity matrices (@pxref{Matrix Mode}) are simplified by the
22283following rules: @cite{@t{idn}(a) + b} to @cite{a + b} if @cite{b}
22284is provably scalar, or expanded out if @cite{b} is a matrix;
22285@cite{@t{idn}(a) + @t{idn}(b)} to @cite{@t{idn}(a + b)};
22286@cite{-@t{idn}(a)} to @cite{@t{idn}(-a)}; @cite{a @t{idn}(b)} to
22287@cite{@t{idn}(a b)} if @cite{a} is provably scalar, or to @cite{a b}
22288if @cite{a} is provably non-scalar; @cite{@t{idn}(a) @t{idn}(b)}
22289to @cite{@t{idn}(a b)}; analogous simplifications for quotients
22290involving @code{idn}; and @cite{@t{idn}(a)^n} to @cite{@t{idn}(a^n)}
22291where @cite{n} is an integer.
22292
22293@tex
22294\bigskip
22295@end tex
22296
22297The @code{floor} function and other integer truncation functions
22298vanish if the argument is provably integer-valued, so that
22299@cite{@t{floor}(@t{round}(x))} simplifies to @cite{@t{round}(x)}.
22300Also, combinations of @code{float}, @code{floor} and its friends,
22301and @code{ffloor} and its friends, are simplified in appropriate
22302ways. @xref{Integer Truncation}.
22303
22304The expression @cite{@t{abs}(-x)} changes to @cite{@t{abs}(x)}.
22305The expression @cite{@t{abs}(@t{abs}(x))} changes to @cite{@t{abs}(x)};
22306in fact, @cite{@t{abs}(x)} changes to @cite{x} or @cite{-x} if @cite{x}
22307is provably nonnegative or nonpositive (@pxref{Declarations}).
22308
22309While most functions do not recognize the variable @code{i} as an
22310imaginary number, the @code{arg} function does handle the two cases
22311@cite{@t{arg}(@t{i})} and @cite{@t{arg}(-@t{i})} just for convenience.
22312
22313The expression @cite{@t{conj}(@t{conj}(x))} simplifies to @cite{x}.
22314Various other expressions involving @code{conj}, @code{re}, and
22315@code{im} are simplified, especially if some of the arguments are
22316provably real or involve the constant @code{i}. For example,
22317@cite{@t{conj}(a + b i)} is changed to @cite{@t{conj}(a) - @t{conj}(b) i},
22318or to @cite{a - b i} if @cite{a} and @cite{b} are known to be real.
22319
22320Functions like @code{sin} and @code{arctan} generally don't have
22321any default simplifications beyond simply evaluating the functions
22322for suitable numeric arguments and infinity. The @kbd{a s} command
22323described in the next section does provide some simplifications for
22324these functions, though.
22325
22326One important simplification that does occur is that @cite{@t{ln}(@t{e})}
22327is simplified to 1, and @cite{@t{ln}(@t{e}^x)} is simplified to @cite{x}
22328for any @cite{x}. This occurs even if you have stored a different
22329value in the Calc variable @samp{e}; but this would be a bad idea
22330in any case if you were also using natural logarithms!
22331
5d67986c
RS
22332Among the logical functions, @t{(@var{a} <= @var{b})} changes to
22333@t{@var{a} > @var{b}} and so on. Equations and inequalities where both sides
d7b8e6c6
EZ
22334are either negative-looking or zero are simplified by negating both sides
22335and reversing the inequality. While it might seem reasonable to simplify
22336@cite{!!x} to @cite{x}, this would not be valid in general because
22337@cite{!!2} is 1, not 2.
22338
22339Most other Calc functions have few if any default simplifications
22340defined, aside of course from evaluation when the arguments are
22341suitable numbers.
22342
22343@node Algebraic Simplifications, Unsafe Simplifications, Default Simplifications, Simplifying Formulas
22344@subsection Algebraic Simplifications
22345
22346@noindent
22347@cindex Algebraic simplifications
22348The @kbd{a s} command makes simplifications that may be too slow to
22349do all the time, or that may not be desirable all of the time.
22350If you find these simplifications are worthwhile, you can type
22351@kbd{m A} to have Calc apply them automatically.
22352
22353This section describes all simplifications that are performed by
22354the @kbd{a s} command. Note that these occur in addition to the
22355default simplifications; even if the default simplifications have
22356been turned off by an @kbd{m O} command, @kbd{a s} will turn them
22357back on temporarily while it simplifies the formula.
22358
22359There is a variable, @code{AlgSimpRules}, in which you can put rewrites
22360to be applied by @kbd{a s}. Its use is analogous to @code{EvalRules},
22361but without the special restrictions. Basically, the simplifier does
22362@samp{@w{a r} AlgSimpRules} with an infinite repeat count on the whole
22363expression being simplified, then it traverses the expression applying
22364the built-in rules described below. If the result is different from
22365the original expression, the process repeats with the default
22366simplifications (including @code{EvalRules}), then @code{AlgSimpRules},
22367then the built-in simplifications, and so on.
22368
22369@tex
22370\bigskip
22371@end tex
22372
22373Sums are simplified in two ways. Constant terms are commuted to the
22374end of the sum, so that @cite{a + 2 + b} changes to @cite{a + b + 2}.
22375The only exception is that a constant will not be commuted away
22376from the first position of a difference, i.e., @cite{2 - x} is not
22377commuted to @cite{-x + 2}.
22378
22379Also, terms of sums are combined by the distributive law, as in
22380@cite{x + y + 2 x} to @cite{y + 3 x}. This always occurs for
22381adjacent terms, but @kbd{a s} compares all pairs of terms including
22382non-adjacent ones.
22383
22384@tex
22385\bigskip
22386@end tex
22387
22388Products are sorted into a canonical order using the commutative
22389law. For example, @cite{b c a} is commuted to @cite{a b c}.
22390This allows easier comparison of products; for example, the default
22391simplifications will not change @cite{x y + y x} to @cite{2 x y},
22392but @kbd{a s} will; it first rewrites the sum to @cite{x y + x y},
22393and then the default simplifications are able to recognize a sum
22394of identical terms.
22395
22396The canonical ordering used to sort terms of products has the
22397property that real-valued numbers, interval forms and infinities
22398come first, and are sorted into increasing order. The @kbd{V S}
22399command uses the same ordering when sorting a vector.
22400
22401Sorting of terms of products is inhibited when matrix mode is
22402turned on; in this case, Calc will never exchange the order of
22403two terms unless it knows at least one of the terms is a scalar.
22404
22405Products of powers are distributed by comparing all pairs of
22406terms, using the same method that the default simplifications
22407use for adjacent terms of products.
22408
22409Even though sums are not sorted, the commutative law is still
22410taken into account when terms of a product are being compared.
22411Thus @cite{(x + y) (y + x)} will be simplified to @cite{(x + y)^2}.
22412A subtle point is that @cite{(x - y) (y - x)} will @emph{not}
22413be simplified to @cite{-(x - y)^2}; Calc does not notice that
22414one term can be written as a constant times the other, even if
22415that constant is @i{-1}.
22416
22417A fraction times any expression, @cite{(a:b) x}, is changed to
22418a quotient involving integers: @cite{a x / b}. This is not
22419done for floating-point numbers like @cite{0.5}, however. This
22420is one reason why you may find it convenient to turn Fraction mode
22421on while doing algebra; @pxref{Fraction Mode}.
22422
22423@tex
22424\bigskip
22425@end tex
22426
22427Quotients are simplified by comparing all terms in the numerator
22428with all terms in the denominator for possible cancellation using
22429the distributive law. For example, @cite{a x^2 b / c x^3 d} will
22430cancel @cite{x^2} from both sides to get @cite{a b / c x d}.
22431(The terms in the denominator will then be rearranged to @cite{c d x}
22432as described above.) If there is any common integer or fractional
22433factor in the numerator and denominator, it is cancelled out;
22434for example, @cite{(4 x + 6) / 8 x} simplifies to @cite{(2 x + 3) / 4 x}.
22435
22436Non-constant common factors are not found even by @kbd{a s}. To
22437cancel the factor @cite{a} in @cite{(a x + a) / a^2} you could first
22438use @kbd{j M} on the product @cite{a x} to Merge the numerator to
22439@cite{a (1+x)}, which can then be simplified successfully.
22440
22441@tex
22442\bigskip
22443@end tex
22444
22445Integer powers of the variable @code{i} are simplified according
22446to the identity @cite{i^2 = -1}. If you store a new value other
22447than the complex number @cite{(0,1)} in @code{i}, this simplification
22448will no longer occur. This is done by @kbd{a s} instead of by default
22449in case someone (unwisely) uses the name @code{i} for a variable
22450unrelated to complex numbers; it would be unfortunate if Calc
22451quietly and automatically changed this formula for reasons the
22452user might not have been thinking of.
22453
22454Square roots of integer or rational arguments are simplified in
22455several ways. (Note that these will be left unevaluated only in
22456Symbolic mode.) First, square integer or rational factors are
22457pulled out so that @cite{@t{sqrt}(8)} is rewritten as
22458@c{$2\,\t{sqrt}(2)$}
22459@cite{2 sqrt(2)}. Conceptually speaking this implies factoring
22460the argument into primes and moving pairs of primes out of the
22461square root, but for reasons of efficiency Calc only looks for
22462primes up to 29.
22463
22464Square roots in the denominator of a quotient are moved to the
22465numerator: @cite{1 / @t{sqrt}(3)} changes to @cite{@t{sqrt}(3) / 3}.
22466The same effect occurs for the square root of a fraction:
22467@cite{@t{sqrt}(2:3)} changes to @cite{@t{sqrt}(6) / 3}.
22468
22469@tex
22470\bigskip
22471@end tex
22472
22473The @code{%} (modulo) operator is simplified in several ways
22474when the modulus @cite{M} is a positive real number. First, if
22475the argument is of the form @cite{x + n} for some real number
22476@cite{n}, then @cite{n} is itself reduced modulo @cite{M}. For
22477example, @samp{(x - 23) % 10} is simplified to @samp{(x + 7) % 10}.
22478
22479If the argument is multiplied by a constant, and this constant
22480has a common integer divisor with the modulus, then this factor is
22481cancelled out. For example, @samp{12 x % 15} is changed to
22482@samp{3 (4 x % 5)} by factoring out 3. Also, @samp{(12 x + 1) % 15}
22483is changed to @samp{3 ((4 x + 1:3) % 5)}. While these forms may
22484not seem ``simpler,'' they allow Calc to discover useful information
22485about modulo forms in the presence of declarations.
22486
22487If the modulus is 1, then Calc can use @code{int} declarations to
22488evaluate the expression. For example, the idiom @samp{x % 2} is
22489often used to check whether a number is odd or even. As described
22490above, @w{@samp{2 n % 2}} and @samp{(2 n + 1) % 2} are simplified to
22491@samp{2 (n % 1)} and @samp{2 ((n + 1:2) % 1)}, respectively; Calc
22492can simplify these to 0 and 1 (respectively) if @code{n} has been
22493declared to be an integer.
22494
22495@tex
22496\bigskip
22497@end tex
22498
22499Trigonometric functions are simplified in several ways. First,
22500@cite{@t{sin}(@t{arcsin}(x))} is simplified to @cite{x}, and
22501similarly for @code{cos} and @code{tan}. If the argument to
22502@code{sin} is negative-looking, it is simplified to @cite{-@t{sin}(x)},
22503and similarly for @code{cos} and @code{tan}. Finally, certain
22504special values of the argument are recognized;
22505@pxref{Trigonometric and Hyperbolic Functions}.
22506
22507Trigonometric functions of inverses of different trigonometric
22508functions can also be simplified, as in @cite{@t{sin}(@t{arccos}(x))}
22509to @cite{@t{sqrt}(1 - x^2)}.
22510
22511Hyperbolic functions of their inverses and of negative-looking
22512arguments are also handled, as are exponentials of inverse
22513hyperbolic functions.
22514
22515No simplifications for inverse trigonometric and hyperbolic
22516functions are known, except for negative arguments of @code{arcsin},
22517@code{arctan}, @code{arcsinh}, and @code{arctanh}. Note that
22518@cite{@t{arcsin}(@t{sin}(x))} can @emph{not} safely change to
22519@cite{x}, since this only correct within an integer multiple
22520of @c{$2 \pi$}
22521@cite{2 pi} radians or 360 degrees. However,
22522@cite{@t{arcsinh}(@t{sinh}(x))} is simplified to @cite{x} if
22523@cite{x} is known to be real.
22524
22525Several simplifications that apply to logarithms and exponentials
22526are that @cite{@t{exp}(@t{ln}(x))}, @c{$@t{e}^{\ln(x)}$}
22527@cite{e^@t{ln}(x)}, and
22528@c{$10^{{\rm log10}(x)}$}
22529@cite{10^@t{log10}(x)} all reduce to @cite{x}.
22530Also, @cite{@t{ln}(@t{exp}(x))}, etc., can reduce to @cite{x} if
22531@cite{x} is provably real. The form @cite{@t{exp}(x)^y} is simplified
22532to @cite{@t{exp}(x y)}. If @cite{x} is a suitable multiple of @c{$\pi i$}
22533@cite{pi i}
22534(as described above for the trigonometric functions), then @cite{@t{exp}(x)}
22535or @cite{e^x} will be expanded. Finally, @cite{@t{ln}(x)} is simplified
22536to a form involving @code{pi} and @code{i} where @cite{x} is provably
22537negative, positive imaginary, or negative imaginary.
22538
22539The error functions @code{erf} and @code{erfc} are simplified when
22540their arguments are negative-looking or are calls to the @code{conj}
22541function.
22542
22543@tex
22544\bigskip
22545@end tex
22546
22547Equations and inequalities are simplified by cancelling factors
22548of products, quotients, or sums on both sides. Inequalities
22549change sign if a negative multiplicative factor is cancelled.
22550Non-constant multiplicative factors as in @cite{a b = a c} are
22551cancelled from equations only if they are provably nonzero (generally
22552because they were declared so; @pxref{Declarations}). Factors
22553are cancelled from inequalities only if they are nonzero and their
22554sign is known.
22555
22556Simplification also replaces an equation or inequality with
225571 or 0 (``true'' or ``false'') if it can through the use of
22558declarations. If @cite{x} is declared to be an integer greater
22559than 5, then @cite{x < 3}, @cite{x = 3}, and @cite{x = 7.5} are
22560all simplified to 0, but @cite{x > 3} is simplified to 1.
22561By a similar analysis, @cite{abs(x) >= 0} is simplified to 1,
22562as is @cite{x^2 >= 0} if @cite{x} is known to be real.
22563
22564@node Unsafe Simplifications, Simplification of Units, Algebraic Simplifications, Simplifying Formulas
22565@subsection ``Unsafe'' Simplifications
22566
22567@noindent
22568@cindex Unsafe simplifications
22569@cindex Extended simplification
22570@kindex a e
22571@pindex calc-simplify-extended
5d67986c
RS
22572@ignore
22573@mindex esimpl@idots
22574@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
22575@tindex esimplify
22576The @kbd{a e} (@code{calc-simplify-extended}) [@code{esimplify}] command
22577is like @kbd{a s}
22578except that it applies some additional simplifications which are not
22579``safe'' in all cases. Use this only if you know the values in your
22580formula lie in the restricted ranges for which these simplifications
22581are valid. The symbolic integrator uses @kbd{a e};
22582one effect of this is that the integrator's results must be used with
22583caution. Where an integral table will often attach conditions like
22584``for positive @cite{a} only,'' Calc (like most other symbolic
22585integration programs) will simply produce an unqualified result.@refill
22586
22587Because @kbd{a e}'s simplifications are unsafe, it is sometimes better
22588to type @kbd{C-u -3 a v}, which does extended simplification only
22589on the top level of the formula without affecting the sub-formulas.
22590In fact, @kbd{C-u -3 j v} allows you to target extended simplification
22591to any specific part of a formula.
22592
22593The variable @code{ExtSimpRules} contains rewrites to be applied by
22594the @kbd{a e} command. These are applied in addition to
22595@code{EvalRules} and @code{AlgSimpRules}. (The @kbd{a r AlgSimpRules}
22596step described above is simply followed by an @kbd{a r ExtSimpRules} step.)
22597
22598Following is a complete list of ``unsafe'' simplifications performed
22599by @kbd{a e}.
22600
22601@tex
22602\bigskip
22603@end tex
22604
22605Inverse trigonometric or hyperbolic functions, called with their
22606corresponding non-inverse functions as arguments, are simplified
22607by @kbd{a e}. For example, @cite{@t{arcsin}(@t{sin}(x))} changes
22608to @cite{x}. Also, @cite{@t{arcsin}(@t{cos}(x))} and
22609@cite{@t{arccos}(@t{sin}(x))} both change to @cite{@t{pi}/2 - x}.
22610These simplifications are unsafe because they are valid only for
22611values of @cite{x} in a certain range; outside that range, values
22612are folded down to the 360-degree range that the inverse trigonometric
22613functions always produce.
22614
22615Powers of powers @cite{(x^a)^b} are simplified to @c{$x^{a b}$}
22616@cite{x^(a b)}
22617for all @cite{a} and @cite{b}. These results will be valid only
22618in a restricted range of @cite{x}; for example, in @c{$(x^2)^{1:2}$}
22619@cite{(x^2)^1:2}
22620the powers cancel to get @cite{x}, which is valid for positive values
22621of @cite{x} but not for negative or complex values.
22622
22623Similarly, @cite{@t{sqrt}(x^a)} and @cite{@t{sqrt}(x)^a} are both
22624simplified (possibly unsafely) to @c{$x^{a/2}$}
22625@cite{x^(a/2)}.
22626
22627Forms like @cite{@t{sqrt}(1 - @t{sin}(x)^2)} are simplified to, e.g.,
22628@cite{@t{cos}(x)}. Calc has identities of this sort for @code{sin},
22629@code{cos}, @code{tan}, @code{sinh}, and @code{cosh}.
22630
22631Arguments of square roots are partially factored to look for
22632squared terms that can be extracted. For example,
22633@cite{@t{sqrt}(a^2 b^3 + a^3 b^2)} simplifies to @cite{a b @t{sqrt}(a+b)}.
22634
22635The simplifications of @cite{@t{ln}(@t{exp}(x))}, @cite{@t{ln}(@t{e}^x)},
22636and @cite{@t{log10}(10^x)} to @cite{x} are also unsafe because
22637of problems with principal values (although these simplifications
22638are safe if @cite{x} is known to be real).
22639
22640Common factors are cancelled from products on both sides of an
22641equation, even if those factors may be zero: @cite{a x / b x}
22642to @cite{a / b}. Such factors are never cancelled from
22643inequalities: Even @kbd{a e} is not bold enough to reduce
22644@cite{a x < b x} to @cite{a < b} (or @cite{a > b}, depending
22645on whether you believe @cite{x} is positive or negative).
22646The @kbd{a M /} command can be used to divide a factor out of
22647both sides of an inequality.
22648
22649@node Simplification of Units, , Unsafe Simplifications, Simplifying Formulas
22650@subsection Simplification of Units
22651
22652@noindent
22653The simplifications described in this section are applied by the
22654@kbd{u s} (@code{calc-simplify-units}) command. These are in addition
22655to the regular @kbd{a s} (but not @kbd{a e}) simplifications described
22656earlier. @xref{Basic Operations on Units}.
22657
22658The variable @code{UnitSimpRules} contains rewrites to be applied by
22659the @kbd{u s} command. These are applied in addition to @code{EvalRules}
22660and @code{AlgSimpRules}.
22661
22662Scalar mode is automatically put into effect when simplifying units.
22663@xref{Matrix Mode}.
22664
22665Sums @cite{a + b} involving units are simplified by extracting the
22666units of @cite{a} as if by the @kbd{u x} command (call the result
22667@cite{u_a}), then simplifying the expression @cite{b / u_a}
22668using @kbd{u b} and @kbd{u s}. If the result has units then the sum
22669is inconsistent and is left alone. Otherwise, it is rewritten
22670in terms of the units @cite{u_a}.
22671
22672If units auto-ranging mode is enabled, products or quotients in
22673which the first argument is a number which is out of range for the
22674leading unit are modified accordingly.
22675
22676When cancelling and combining units in products and quotients,
22677Calc accounts for unit names that differ only in the prefix letter.
22678For example, @samp{2 km m} is simplified to @samp{2000 m^2}.
22679However, compatible but different units like @code{ft} and @code{in}
22680are not combined in this way.
22681
22682Quotients @cite{a / b} are simplified in three additional ways. First,
22683if @cite{b} is a number or a product beginning with a number, Calc
22684computes the reciprocal of this number and moves it to the numerator.
22685
22686Second, for each pair of unit names from the numerator and denominator
22687of a quotient, if the units are compatible (e.g., they are both
22688units of area) then they are replaced by the ratio between those
22689units. For example, in @samp{3 s in N / kg cm} the units
22690@samp{in / cm} will be replaced by @cite{2.54}.
22691
22692Third, if the units in the quotient exactly cancel out, so that
22693a @kbd{u b} command on the quotient would produce a dimensionless
22694number for an answer, then the quotient simplifies to that number.
22695
22696For powers and square roots, the ``unsafe'' simplifications
22697@cite{(a b)^c} to @cite{a^c b^c}, @cite{(a/b)^c} to @cite{a^c / b^c},
22698and @cite{(a^b)^c} to @c{$a^{b c}$}
22699@cite{a^(b c)} are done if the powers are
22700real numbers. (These are safe in the context of units because
22701all numbers involved can reasonably be assumed to be real.)
22702
22703Also, if a unit name is raised to a fractional power, and the
22704base units in that unit name all occur to powers which are a
22705multiple of the denominator of the power, then the unit name
22706is expanded out into its base units, which can then be simplified
22707according to the previous paragraph. For example, @samp{acre^1.5}
22708is simplified by noting that @cite{1.5 = 3:2}, that @samp{acre}
22709is defined in terms of @samp{m^2}, and that the 2 in the power of
22710@code{m} is a multiple of 2 in @cite{3:2}. Thus, @code{acre^1.5} is
22711replaced by approximately @c{$(4046 m^2)^{1.5}$}
22712@cite{(4046 m^2)^1.5}, which is then
22713changed to @c{$4046^{1.5} \, (m^2)^{1.5}$}
22714@cite{4046^1.5 (m^2)^1.5}, then to @cite{257440 m^3}.
22715
22716The functions @code{float}, @code{frac}, @code{clean}, @code{abs},
22717as well as @code{floor} and the other integer truncation functions,
22718applied to unit names or products or quotients involving units, are
22719simplified. For example, @samp{round(1.6 in)} is changed to
22720@samp{round(1.6) round(in)}; the lefthand term evaluates to 2,
22721and the righthand term simplifies to @code{in}.
22722
22723The functions @code{sin}, @code{cos}, and @code{tan} with arguments
22724that have angular units like @code{rad} or @code{arcmin} are
22725simplified by converting to base units (radians), then evaluating
22726with the angular mode temporarily set to radians.
22727
22728@node Polynomials, Calculus, Simplifying Formulas, Algebra
22729@section Polynomials
22730
22731A @dfn{polynomial} is a sum of terms which are coefficients times
22732various powers of a ``base'' variable. For example, @cite{2 x^2 + 3 x - 4}
22733is a polynomial in @cite{x}. Some formulas can be considered
22734polynomials in several different variables: @cite{1 + 2 x + 3 y + 4 x y^2}
22735is a polynomial in both @cite{x} and @cite{y}. Polynomial coefficients
22736are often numbers, but they may in general be any formulas not
22737involving the base variable.
22738
22739@kindex a f
22740@pindex calc-factor
22741@tindex factor
22742The @kbd{a f} (@code{calc-factor}) [@code{factor}] command factors a
22743polynomial into a product of terms. For example, the polynomial
22744@cite{x^3 + 2 x^2 + x} is factored into @samp{x*(x+1)^2}. As another
22745example, @cite{a c + b d + b c + a d} is factored into the product
22746@cite{(a + b) (c + d)}.
22747
22748Calc currently has three algorithms for factoring. Formulas which are
22749linear in several variables, such as the second example above, are
22750merged according to the distributive law. Formulas which are
22751polynomials in a single variable, with constant integer or fractional
22752coefficients, are factored into irreducible linear and/or quadratic
22753terms. The first example above factors into three linear terms
22754(@cite{x}, @cite{x+1}, and @cite{x+1} again). Finally, formulas
22755which do not fit the above criteria are handled by the algebraic
22756rewrite mechanism.
22757
22758Calc's polynomial factorization algorithm works by using the general
22759root-finding command (@w{@kbd{a P}}) to solve for the roots of the
22760polynomial. It then looks for roots which are rational numbers
22761or complex-conjugate pairs, and converts these into linear and
22762quadratic terms, respectively. Because it uses floating-point
22763arithmetic, it may be unable to find terms that involve large
22764integers (whose number of digits approaches the current precision).
22765Also, irreducible factors of degree higher than quadratic are not
22766found, and polynomials in more than one variable are not treated.
22767(A more robust factorization algorithm may be included in a future
22768version of Calc.)
22769
22770@vindex FactorRules
5d67986c
RS
22771@ignore
22772@starindex
22773@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 22774@tindex thecoefs
5d67986c
RS
22775@ignore
22776@starindex
22777@end ignore
22778@ignore
22779@mindex @idots
22780@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
22781@tindex thefactors
22782The rewrite-based factorization method uses rules stored in the variable
22783@code{FactorRules}. @xref{Rewrite Rules}, for a discussion of the
22784operation of rewrite rules. The default @code{FactorRules} are able
22785to factor quadratic forms symbolically into two linear terms,
22786@cite{(a x + b) (c x + d)}. You can edit these rules to include other
22787cases if you wish. To use the rules, Calc builds the formula
22788@samp{thecoefs(x, [a, b, c, ...])} where @code{x} is the polynomial
22789base variable and @code{a}, @code{b}, etc., are polynomial coefficients
22790(which may be numbers or formulas). The constant term is written first,
22791i.e., in the @code{a} position. When the rules complete, they should have
22792changed the formula into the form @samp{thefactors(x, [f1, f2, f3, ...])}
22793where each @code{fi} should be a factored term, e.g., @samp{x - ai}.
22794Calc then multiplies these terms together to get the complete
22795factored form of the polynomial. If the rules do not change the
22796@code{thecoefs} call to a @code{thefactors} call, @kbd{a f} leaves the
22797polynomial alone on the assumption that it is unfactorable. (Note that
22798the function names @code{thecoefs} and @code{thefactors} are used only
22799as placeholders; there are no actual Calc functions by those names.)
22800
22801@kindex H a f
22802@tindex factors
22803The @kbd{H a f} [@code{factors}] command also factors a polynomial,
22804but it returns a list of factors instead of an expression which is the
22805product of the factors. Each factor is represented by a sub-vector
22806of the factor, and the power with which it appears. For example,
22807@cite{x^5 + x^4 - 33 x^3 + 63 x^2} factors to @cite{(x + 7) x^2 (x - 3)^2}
22808in @kbd{a f}, or to @cite{[ [x, 2], [x+7, 1], [x-3, 2] ]} in @kbd{H a f}.
22809If there is an overall numeric factor, it always comes first in the list.
22810The functions @code{factor} and @code{factors} allow a second argument
22811when written in algebraic form; @samp{factor(x,v)} factors @cite{x} with
22812respect to the specific variable @cite{v}. The default is to factor with
22813respect to all the variables that appear in @cite{x}.
22814
22815@kindex a c
22816@pindex calc-collect
22817@tindex collect
22818The @kbd{a c} (@code{calc-collect}) [@code{collect}] command rearranges a
22819formula as a
22820polynomial in a given variable, ordered in decreasing powers of that
22821variable. For example, given @cite{1 + 2 x + 3 y + 4 x y^2} on
22822the stack, @kbd{a c x} would produce @cite{(2 + 4 y^2) x + (1 + 3 y)},
22823and @kbd{a c y} would produce @cite{(4 x) y^2 + 3 y + (1 + 2 x)}.
22824The polynomial will be expanded out using the distributive law as
22825necessary: Collecting @cite{x} in @cite{(x - 1)^3} produces
22826@cite{x^3 - 3 x^2 + 3 x - 1}. Terms not involving @cite{x} will
22827not be expanded.
22828
22829The ``variable'' you specify at the prompt can actually be any
22830expression: @kbd{a c ln(x+1)} will collect together all terms multiplied
22831by @samp{ln(x+1)} or integer powers thereof. If @samp{x} also appears
22832in the formula in a context other than @samp{ln(x+1)}, @kbd{a c} will
22833treat those occurrences as unrelated to @samp{ln(x+1)}, i.e., as constants.
22834
22835@kindex a x
22836@pindex calc-expand
22837@tindex expand
22838The @kbd{a x} (@code{calc-expand}) [@code{expand}] command expands an
22839expression by applying the distributive law everywhere. It applies to
22840products, quotients, and powers involving sums. By default, it fully
22841distributes all parts of the expression. With a numeric prefix argument,
22842the distributive law is applied only the specified number of times, then
22843the partially expanded expression is left on the stack.
22844
22845The @kbd{a x} and @kbd{j D} commands are somewhat redundant. Use
22846@kbd{a x} if you want to expand all products of sums in your formula.
22847Use @kbd{j D} if you want to expand a particular specified term of
22848the formula. There is an exactly analogous correspondence between
22849@kbd{a f} and @kbd{j M}. (The @kbd{j D} and @kbd{j M} commands
22850also know many other kinds of expansions, such as
22851@samp{exp(a + b) = exp(a) exp(b)}, which @kbd{a x} and @kbd{a f}
22852do not do.)
22853
22854Calc's automatic simplifications will sometimes reverse a partial
22855expansion. For example, the first step in expanding @cite{(x+1)^3} is
22856to write @cite{(x+1) (x+1)^2}. If @kbd{a x} stops there and tries
22857to put this formula onto the stack, though, Calc will automatically
22858simplify it back to @cite{(x+1)^3} form. The solution is to turn
22859simplification off first (@pxref{Simplification Modes}), or to run
22860@kbd{a x} without a numeric prefix argument so that it expands all
22861the way in one step.
22862
22863@kindex a a
22864@pindex calc-apart
22865@tindex apart
22866The @kbd{a a} (@code{calc-apart}) [@code{apart}] command expands a
22867rational function by partial fractions. A rational function is the
22868quotient of two polynomials; @code{apart} pulls this apart into a
22869sum of rational functions with simple denominators. In algebraic
22870notation, the @code{apart} function allows a second argument that
22871specifies which variable to use as the ``base''; by default, Calc
22872chooses the base variable automatically.
22873
22874@kindex a n
22875@pindex calc-normalize-rat
22876@tindex nrat
22877The @kbd{a n} (@code{calc-normalize-rat}) [@code{nrat}] command
22878attempts to arrange a formula into a quotient of two polynomials.
22879For example, given @cite{1 + (a + b/c) / d}, the result would be
22880@cite{(b + a c + c d) / c d}. The quotient is reduced, so that
22881@kbd{a n} will simplify @cite{(x^2 + 2x + 1) / (x^2 - 1)} by dividing
22882out the common factor @cite{x + 1}, yielding @cite{(x + 1) / (x - 1)}.
22883
22884@kindex a \
22885@pindex calc-poly-div
22886@tindex pdiv
22887The @kbd{a \} (@code{calc-poly-div}) [@code{pdiv}] command divides
22888two polynomials @cite{u} and @cite{v}, yielding a new polynomial
22889@cite{q}. If several variables occur in the inputs, the inputs are
22890considered multivariate polynomials. (Calc divides by the variable
22891with the largest power in @cite{u} first, or, in the case of equal
22892powers, chooses the variables in alphabetical order.) For example,
22893dividing @cite{x^2 + 3 x + 2} by @cite{x + 2} yields @cite{x + 1}.
22894The remainder from the division, if any, is reported at the bottom
22895of the screen and is also placed in the Trail along with the quotient.
22896
22897Using @code{pdiv} in algebraic notation, you can specify the particular
5d67986c 22898variable to be used as the base: @code{pdiv(@var{a},@var{b},@var{x})}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
22899If @code{pdiv} is given only two arguments (as is always the case with
22900the @kbd{a \} command), then it does a multivariate division as outlined
22901above.
22902
22903@kindex a %
22904@pindex calc-poly-rem
22905@tindex prem
22906The @kbd{a %} (@code{calc-poly-rem}) [@code{prem}] command divides
22907two polynomials and keeps the remainder @cite{r}. The quotient
22908@cite{q} is discarded. For any formulas @cite{a} and @cite{b}, the
22909results of @kbd{a \} and @kbd{a %} satisfy @cite{a = q b + r}.
22910(This is analogous to plain @kbd{\} and @kbd{%}, which compute the
22911integer quotient and remainder from dividing two numbers.)
22912
22913@kindex a /
22914@kindex H a /
22915@pindex calc-poly-div-rem
22916@tindex pdivrem
22917@tindex pdivide
22918The @kbd{a /} (@code{calc-poly-div-rem}) [@code{pdivrem}] command
22919divides two polynomials and reports both the quotient and the
22920remainder as a vector @cite{[q, r]}. The @kbd{H a /} [@code{pdivide}]
22921command divides two polynomials and constructs the formula
22922@cite{q + r/b} on the stack. (Naturally if the remainder is zero,
22923this will immediately simplify to @cite{q}.)
22924
22925@kindex a g
22926@pindex calc-poly-gcd
22927@tindex pgcd
22928The @kbd{a g} (@code{calc-poly-gcd}) [@code{pgcd}] command computes
22929the greatest common divisor of two polynomials. (The GCD actually
22930is unique only to within a constant multiplier; Calc attempts to
22931choose a GCD which will be unsurprising.) For example, the @kbd{a n}
22932command uses @kbd{a g} to take the GCD of the numerator and denominator
22933of a quotient, then divides each by the result using @kbd{a \}. (The
22934definition of GCD ensures that this division can take place without
22935leaving a remainder.)
22936
22937While the polynomials used in operations like @kbd{a /} and @kbd{a g}
22938often have integer coefficients, this is not required. Calc can also
22939deal with polynomials over the rationals or floating-point reals.
22940Polynomials with modulo-form coefficients are also useful in many
22941applications; if you enter @samp{(x^2 + 3 x - 1) mod 5}, Calc
22942automatically transforms this into a polynomial over the field of
22943integers mod 5: @samp{(1 mod 5) x^2 + (3 mod 5) x + (4 mod 5)}.
22944
22945Congratulations and thanks go to Ove Ewerlid
22946(@code{ewerlid@@mizar.DoCS.UU.SE}), who contributed many of the
22947polynomial routines used in the above commands.
22948
22949@xref{Decomposing Polynomials}, for several useful functions for
22950extracting the individual coefficients of a polynomial.
22951
22952@node Calculus, Solving Equations, Polynomials, Algebra
22953@section Calculus
22954
22955@noindent
22956The following calculus commands do not automatically simplify their
22957inputs or outputs using @code{calc-simplify}. You may find it helps
22958to do this by hand by typing @kbd{a s} or @kbd{a e}. It may also help
22959to use @kbd{a x} and/or @kbd{a c} to arrange a result in the most
22960readable way.
22961
22962@menu
22963* Differentiation::
22964* Integration::
22965* Customizing the Integrator::
22966* Numerical Integration::
22967* Taylor Series::
22968@end menu
22969
22970@node Differentiation, Integration, Calculus, Calculus
22971@subsection Differentiation
22972
22973@noindent
22974@kindex a d
22975@kindex H a d
22976@pindex calc-derivative
22977@tindex deriv
22978@tindex tderiv
22979The @kbd{a d} (@code{calc-derivative}) [@code{deriv}] command computes
22980the derivative of the expression on the top of the stack with respect to
22981some variable, which it will prompt you to enter. Normally, variables
22982in the formula other than the specified differentiation variable are
22983considered constant, i.e., @samp{deriv(y,x)} is reduced to zero. With
22984the Hyperbolic flag, the @code{tderiv} (total derivative) operation is used
22985instead, in which derivatives of variables are not reduced to zero
22986unless those variables are known to be ``constant,'' i.e., independent
22987of any other variables. (The built-in special variables like @code{pi}
22988are considered constant, as are variables that have been declared
22989@code{const}; @pxref{Declarations}.)
22990
22991With a numeric prefix argument @var{n}, this command computes the
22992@var{n}th derivative.
22993
22994When working with trigonometric functions, it is best to switch to
22995radians mode first (with @w{@kbd{m r}}). The derivative of @samp{sin(x)}
22996in degrees is @samp{(pi/180) cos(x)}, probably not the expected
22997answer!
22998
22999If you use the @code{deriv} function directly in an algebraic formula,
23000you can write @samp{deriv(f,x,x0)} which represents the derivative
23001of @cite{f} with respect to @cite{x}, evaluated at the point @c{$x=x_0$}
23002@cite{x=x0}.
23003
23004If the formula being differentiated contains functions which Calc does
23005not know, the derivatives of those functions are produced by adding
23006primes (apostrophe characters). For example, @samp{deriv(f(2x), x)}
23007produces @samp{2 f'(2 x)}, where the function @code{f'} represents the
23008derivative of @code{f}.
23009
23010For functions you have defined with the @kbd{Z F} command, Calc expands
23011the functions according to their defining formulas unless you have
23012also defined @code{f'} suitably. For example, suppose we define
23013@samp{sinc(x) = sin(x)/x} using @kbd{Z F}. If we then differentiate
23014the formula @samp{sinc(2 x)}, the formula will be expanded to
23015@samp{sin(2 x) / (2 x)} and differentiated. However, if we also
23016define @samp{sinc'(x) = dsinc(x)}, say, then Calc will write the
23017result as @samp{2 dsinc(2 x)}. @xref{Algebraic Definitions}.
23018
23019For multi-argument functions @samp{f(x,y,z)}, the derivative with respect
23020to the first argument is written @samp{f'(x,y,z)}; derivatives with
23021respect to the other arguments are @samp{f'2(x,y,z)} and @samp{f'3(x,y,z)}.
23022Various higher-order derivatives can be formed in the obvious way, e.g.,
23023@samp{f'@var{}'(x)} (the second derivative of @code{f}) or
23024@samp{f'@var{}'2'3(x,y,z)} (@code{f} differentiated with respect to each
23025argument once).@refill
23026
23027@node Integration, Customizing the Integrator, Differentiation, Calculus
23028@subsection Integration
23029
23030@noindent
23031@kindex a i
23032@pindex calc-integral
23033@tindex integ
23034The @kbd{a i} (@code{calc-integral}) [@code{integ}] command computes the
23035indefinite integral of the expression on the top of the stack with
23036respect to a variable. The integrator is not guaranteed to work for
23037all integrable functions, but it is able to integrate several large
23038classes of formulas. In particular, any polynomial or rational function
23039(a polynomial divided by a polynomial) is acceptable. (Rational functions
23040don't have to be in explicit quotient form, however; @c{$x/(1+x^{-2})$}
23041@cite{x/(1+x^-2)}
23042is not strictly a quotient of polynomials, but it is equivalent to
23043@cite{x^3/(x^2+1)}, which is.) Also, square roots of terms involving
23044@cite{x} and @cite{x^2} may appear in rational functions being
23045integrated. Finally, rational functions involving trigonometric or
23046hyperbolic functions can be integrated.
23047
23048@ifinfo
23049If you use the @code{integ} function directly in an algebraic formula,
23050you can also write @samp{integ(f,x,v)} which expresses the resulting
23051indefinite integral in terms of variable @code{v} instead of @code{x}.
23052With four arguments, @samp{integ(f(x),x,a,b)} represents a definite
23053integral from @code{a} to @code{b}.
23054@end ifinfo
23055@tex
23056If you use the @code{integ} function directly in an algebraic formula,
23057you can also write @samp{integ(f,x,v)} which expresses the resulting
23058indefinite integral in terms of variable @code{v} instead of @code{x}.
23059With four arguments, @samp{integ(f(x),x,a,b)} represents a definite
23060integral $\int_a^b f(x) \, dx$.
23061@end tex
23062
23063Please note that the current implementation of Calc's integrator sometimes
23064produces results that are significantly more complex than they need to
23065be. For example, the integral Calc finds for @c{$1/(x+\sqrt{x^2+1})$}
23066@cite{1/(x+sqrt(x^2+1))}
23067is several times more complicated than the answer Mathematica
23068returns for the same input, although the two forms are numerically
23069equivalent. Also, any indefinite integral should be considered to have
23070an arbitrary constant of integration added to it, although Calc does not
23071write an explicit constant of integration in its result. For example,
23072Calc's solution for @c{$1/(1+\tan x)$}
23073@cite{1/(1+tan(x))} differs from the solution given
23074in the @emph{CRC Math Tables} by a constant factor of @c{$\pi i / 2$}
23075@cite{pi i / 2},
23076due to a different choice of constant of integration.
23077
23078The Calculator remembers all the integrals it has done. If conditions
23079change in a way that would invalidate the old integrals, say, a switch
23080from degrees to radians mode, then they will be thrown out. If you
23081suspect this is not happening when it should, use the
23082@code{calc-flush-caches} command; @pxref{Caches}.
23083
23084@vindex IntegLimit
23085Calc normally will pursue integration by substitution or integration by
23086parts up to 3 nested times before abandoning an approach as fruitless.
23087If the integrator is taking too long, you can lower this limit by storing
23088a number (like 2) in the variable @code{IntegLimit}. (The @kbd{s I}
23089command is a convenient way to edit @code{IntegLimit}.) If this variable
23090has no stored value or does not contain a nonnegative integer, a limit
23091of 3 is used. The lower this limit is, the greater the chance that Calc
23092will be unable to integrate a function it could otherwise handle. Raising
23093this limit allows the Calculator to solve more integrals, though the time
23094it takes may grow exponentially. You can monitor the integrator's actions
23095by creating an Emacs buffer called @code{*Trace*}. If such a buffer
23096exists, the @kbd{a i} command will write a log of its actions there.
23097
23098If you want to manipulate integrals in a purely symbolic way, you can
23099set the integration nesting limit to 0 to prevent all but fast
23100table-lookup solutions of integrals. You might then wish to define
23101rewrite rules for integration by parts, various kinds of substitutions,
23102and so on. @xref{Rewrite Rules}.
23103
23104@node Customizing the Integrator, Numerical Integration, Integration, Calculus
23105@subsection Customizing the Integrator
23106
23107@noindent
23108@vindex IntegRules
23109Calc has two built-in rewrite rules called @code{IntegRules} and
23110@code{IntegAfterRules} which you can edit to define new integration
23111methods. @xref{Rewrite Rules}. At each step of the integration process,
23112Calc wraps the current integrand in a call to the fictitious function
23113@samp{integtry(@var{expr},@var{var})}, where @var{expr} is the
23114integrand and @var{var} is the integration variable. If your rules
23115rewrite this to be a plain formula (not a call to @code{integtry}), then
23116Calc will use this formula as the integral of @var{expr}. For example,
23117the rule @samp{integtry(mysin(x),x) := -mycos(x)} would define a rule to
23118integrate a function @code{mysin} that acts like the sine function.
23119Then, putting @samp{4 mysin(2y+1)} on the stack and typing @kbd{a i y}
23120will produce the integral @samp{-2 mycos(2y+1)}. Note that Calc has
23121automatically made various transformations on the integral to allow it
23122to use your rule; integral tables generally give rules for
23123@samp{mysin(a x + b)}, but you don't need to use this much generality
23124in your @code{IntegRules}.
23125
23126@cindex Exponential integral Ei(x)
5d67986c
RS
23127@ignore
23128@starindex
23129@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23130@tindex Ei
23131As a more serious example, the expression @samp{exp(x)/x} cannot be
23132integrated in terms of the standard functions, so the ``exponential
23133integral'' function @c{${\rm Ei}(x)$}
23134@cite{Ei(x)} was invented to describe it.
23135We can get Calc to do this integral in terms of a made-up @code{Ei}
23136function by adding the rule @samp{[integtry(exp(x)/x, x) := Ei(x)]}
23137to @code{IntegRules}. Now entering @samp{exp(2x)/x} on the stack
23138and typing @kbd{a i x} yields @samp{Ei(2 x)}. This new rule will
23139work with Calc's various built-in integration methods (such as
23140integration by substitution) to solve a variety of other problems
23141involving @code{Ei}: For example, now Calc will also be able to
23142integrate @samp{exp(exp(x))} and @samp{ln(ln(x))} (to get @samp{Ei(exp(x))}
23143and @samp{x ln(ln(x)) - Ei(ln(x))}, respectively).
23144
23145Your rule may do further integration by calling @code{integ}. For
23146example, @samp{integtry(twice(u),x) := twice(integ(u))} allows Calc
23147to integrate @samp{twice(sin(x))} to get @samp{twice(-cos(x))}.
23148Note that @code{integ} was called with only one argument. This notation
23149is allowed only within @code{IntegRules}; it means ``integrate this
23150with respect to the same integration variable.'' If Calc is unable
23151to integrate @code{u}, the integration that invoked @code{IntegRules}
23152also fails. Thus integrating @samp{twice(f(x))} fails, returning the
23153unevaluated integral @samp{integ(twice(f(x)), x)}. It is still legal
23154to call @code{integ} with two or more arguments, however; in this case,
23155if @code{u} is not integrable, @code{twice} itself will still be
23156integrated: If the above rule is changed to @samp{... := twice(integ(u,x))},
23157then integrating @samp{twice(f(x))} will yield @samp{twice(integ(f(x),x))}.
23158
23159If a rule instead produces the formula @samp{integsubst(@var{sexpr},
23160@var{svar})}, either replacing the top-level @code{integtry} call or
23161nested anywhere inside the expression, then Calc will apply the
23162substitution @samp{@var{u} = @var{sexpr}(@var{svar})} to try to
23163integrate the original @var{expr}. For example, the rule
23164@samp{sqrt(a) := integsubst(sqrt(x),x)} says that if Calc ever finds
23165a square root in the integrand, it should attempt the substitution
23166@samp{u = sqrt(x)}. (This particular rule is unnecessary because
23167Calc always tries ``obvious'' substitutions where @var{sexpr} actually
23168appears in the integrand.) The variable @var{svar} may be the same
23169as the @var{var} that appeared in the call to @code{integtry}, but
23170it need not be.
23171
23172When integrating according to an @code{integsubst}, Calc uses the
23173equation solver to find the inverse of @var{sexpr} (if the integrand
23174refers to @var{var} anywhere except in subexpressions that exactly
23175match @var{sexpr}). It uses the differentiator to find the derivative
23176of @var{sexpr} and/or its inverse (it has two methods that use one
23177derivative or the other). You can also specify these items by adding
23178extra arguments to the @code{integsubst} your rules construct; the
23179general form is @samp{integsubst(@var{sexpr}, @var{svar}, @var{sinv},
23180@var{sprime})}, where @var{sinv} is the inverse of @var{sexpr} (still
23181written as a function of @var{svar}), and @var{sprime} is the
23182derivative of @var{sexpr} with respect to @var{svar}. If you don't
23183specify these things, and Calc is not able to work them out on its
23184own with the information it knows, then your substitution rule will
23185work only in very specific, simple cases.
23186
23187Calc applies @code{IntegRules} as if by @kbd{C-u 1 a r IntegRules};
23188in other words, Calc stops rewriting as soon as any rule in your rule
23189set succeeds. (If it weren't for this, the @samp{integsubst(sqrt(x),x)}
23190example above would keep on adding layers of @code{integsubst} calls
23191forever!)
23192
23193@vindex IntegSimpRules
23194Another set of rules, stored in @code{IntegSimpRules}, are applied
23195every time the integrator uses @kbd{a s} to simplify an intermediate
23196result. For example, putting the rule @samp{twice(x) := 2 x} into
23197@code{IntegSimpRules} would tell Calc to convert the @code{twice}
23198function into a form it knows whenever integration is attempted.
23199
23200One more way to influence the integrator is to define a function with
23201the @kbd{Z F} command (@pxref{Algebraic Definitions}). Calc's
23202integrator automatically expands such functions according to their
23203defining formulas, even if you originally asked for the function to
23204be left unevaluated for symbolic arguments. (Certain other Calc
23205systems, such as the differentiator and the equation solver, also
23206do this.)
23207
23208@vindex IntegAfterRules
23209Sometimes Calc is able to find a solution to your integral, but it
23210expresses the result in a way that is unnecessarily complicated. If
23211this happens, you can either use @code{integsubst} as described
23212above to try to hint at a more direct path to the desired result, or
23213you can use @code{IntegAfterRules}. This is an extra rule set that
23214runs after the main integrator returns its result; basically, Calc does
23215an @kbd{a r IntegAfterRules} on the result before showing it to you.
23216(It also does an @kbd{a s}, without @code{IntegSimpRules}, after that
23217to further simplify the result.) For example, Calc's integrator
23218sometimes produces expressions of the form @samp{ln(1+x) - ln(1-x)};
23219the default @code{IntegAfterRules} rewrite this into the more readable
23220form @samp{2 arctanh(x)}. Note that, unlike @code{IntegRules},
23221@code{IntegSimpRules} and @code{IntegAfterRules} are applied any number
23222of times until no further changes are possible. Rewriting by
23223@code{IntegAfterRules} occurs only after the main integrator has
23224finished, not at every step as for @code{IntegRules} and
23225@code{IntegSimpRules}.
23226
23227@node Numerical Integration, Taylor Series, Customizing the Integrator, Calculus
23228@subsection Numerical Integration
23229
23230@noindent
23231@kindex a I
23232@pindex calc-num-integral
23233@tindex ninteg
23234If you want a purely numerical answer to an integration problem, you can
23235use the @kbd{a I} (@code{calc-num-integral}) [@code{ninteg}] command. This
23236command prompts for an integration variable, a lower limit, and an
23237upper limit. Except for the integration variable, all other variables
23238that appear in the integrand formula must have stored values. (A stored
23239value, if any, for the integration variable itself is ignored.)
23240
23241Numerical integration works by evaluating your formula at many points in
23242the specified interval. Calc uses an ``open Romberg'' method; this means
23243that it does not evaluate the formula actually at the endpoints (so that
23244it is safe to integrate @samp{sin(x)/x} from zero, for example). Also,
23245the Romberg method works especially well when the function being
23246integrated is fairly smooth. If the function is not smooth, Calc will
23247have to evaluate it at quite a few points before it can accurately
23248determine the value of the integral.
23249
23250Integration is much faster when the current precision is small. It is
23251best to set the precision to the smallest acceptable number of digits
23252before you use @kbd{a I}. If Calc appears to be taking too long, press
23253@kbd{C-g} to halt it and try a lower precision. If Calc still appears
23254to need hundreds of evaluations, check to make sure your function is
23255well-behaved in the specified interval.
23256
23257It is possible for the lower integration limit to be @samp{-inf} (minus
23258infinity). Likewise, the upper limit may be plus infinity. Calc
23259internally transforms the integral into an equivalent one with finite
23260limits. However, integration to or across singularities is not supported:
23261The integral of @samp{1/sqrt(x)} from 0 to 1 exists (it can be found
23262by Calc's symbolic integrator, for example), but @kbd{a I} will fail
23263because the integrand goes to infinity at one of the endpoints.
23264
23265@node Taylor Series, , Numerical Integration, Calculus
23266@subsection Taylor Series
23267
23268@noindent
23269@kindex a t
23270@pindex calc-taylor
23271@tindex taylor
23272The @kbd{a t} (@code{calc-taylor}) [@code{taylor}] command computes a
23273power series expansion or Taylor series of a function. You specify the
23274variable and the desired number of terms. You may give an expression of
23275the form @samp{@var{var} = @var{a}} or @samp{@var{var} - @var{a}} instead
23276of just a variable to produce a Taylor expansion about the point @var{a}.
23277You may specify the number of terms with a numeric prefix argument;
23278otherwise the command will prompt you for the number of terms. Note that
23279many series expansions have coefficients of zero for some terms, so you
23280may appear to get fewer terms than you asked for.@refill
23281
23282If the @kbd{a i} command is unable to find a symbolic integral for a
23283function, you can get an approximation by integrating the function's
23284Taylor series.
23285
23286@node Solving Equations, Numerical Solutions, Calculus, Algebra
23287@section Solving Equations
23288
23289@noindent
23290@kindex a S
23291@pindex calc-solve-for
23292@tindex solve
23293@cindex Equations, solving
23294@cindex Solving equations
23295The @kbd{a S} (@code{calc-solve-for}) [@code{solve}] command rearranges
23296an equation to solve for a specific variable. An equation is an
23297expression of the form @cite{L = R}. For example, the command @kbd{a S x}
23298will rearrange @cite{y = 3x + 6} to the form, @cite{x = y/3 - 2}. If the
23299input is not an equation, it is treated like an equation of the
23300form @cite{X = 0}.
23301
23302This command also works for inequalities, as in @cite{y < 3x + 6}.
23303Some inequalities cannot be solved where the analogous equation could
23304be; for example, solving @c{$a < b \, c$}
23305@cite{a < b c} for @cite{b} is impossible
23306without knowing the sign of @cite{c}. In this case, @kbd{a S} will
23307produce the result @c{$b \mathbin{\hbox{\code{!=}}} a/c$}
23308@cite{b != a/c} (using the not-equal-to operator)
23309to signify that the direction of the inequality is now unknown. The
23310inequality @c{$a \le b \, c$}
23311@cite{a <= b c} is not even partially solved.
23312@xref{Declarations}, for a way to tell Calc that the signs of the
23313variables in a formula are in fact known.
23314
23315Two useful commands for working with the result of @kbd{a S} are
23316@kbd{a .} (@pxref{Logical Operations}), which converts @cite{x = y/3 - 2}
23317to @cite{y/3 - 2}, and @kbd{s l} (@pxref{Let Command}) which evaluates
23318another formula with @cite{x} set equal to @cite{y/3 - 2}.
23319
23320@menu
23321* Multiple Solutions::
23322* Solving Systems of Equations::
23323* Decomposing Polynomials::
23324@end menu
23325
23326@node Multiple Solutions, Solving Systems of Equations, Solving Equations, Solving Equations
23327@subsection Multiple Solutions
23328
23329@noindent
23330@kindex H a S
23331@tindex fsolve
23332Some equations have more than one solution. The Hyperbolic flag
23333(@code{H a S}) [@code{fsolve}] tells the solver to report the fully
23334general family of solutions. It will invent variables @code{n1},
23335@code{n2}, @dots{}, which represent independent arbitrary integers, and
23336@code{s1}, @code{s2}, @dots{}, which represent independent arbitrary
23337signs (either @i{+1} or @i{-1}). If you don't use the Hyperbolic
23338flag, Calc will use zero in place of all arbitrary integers, and plus
23339one in place of all arbitrary signs. Note that variables like @code{n1}
23340and @code{s1} are not given any special interpretation in Calc except by
23341the equation solver itself. As usual, you can use the @w{@kbd{s l}}
23342(@code{calc-let}) command to obtain solutions for various actual values
23343of these variables.
23344
23345For example, @kbd{' x^2 = y @key{RET} H a S x @key{RET}} solves to
23346get @samp{x = s1 sqrt(y)}, indicating that the two solutions to the
23347equation are @samp{sqrt(y)} and @samp{-sqrt(y)}. Another way to
23348think about it is that the square-root operation is really a
23349two-valued function; since every Calc function must return a
23350single result, @code{sqrt} chooses to return the positive result.
23351Then @kbd{H a S} doctors this result using @code{s1} to indicate
23352the full set of possible values of the mathematical square-root.
23353
23354There is a similar phenomenon going the other direction: Suppose
23355we solve @samp{sqrt(y) = x} for @code{y}. Calc squares both sides
23356to get @samp{y = x^2}. This is correct, except that it introduces
23357some dubious solutions. Consider solving @samp{sqrt(y) = -3}:
23358Calc will report @cite{y = 9} as a valid solution, which is true
23359in the mathematical sense of square-root, but false (there is no
23360solution) for the actual Calc positive-valued @code{sqrt}. This
23361happens for both @kbd{a S} and @kbd{H a S}.
23362
23363@cindex @code{GenCount} variable
23364@vindex GenCount
5d67986c
RS
23365@ignore
23366@starindex
23367@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 23368@tindex an
5d67986c
RS
23369@ignore
23370@starindex
23371@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23372@tindex as
23373If you store a positive integer in the Calc variable @code{GenCount},
23374then Calc will generate formulas of the form @samp{as(@var{n})} for
23375arbitrary signs, and @samp{an(@var{n})} for arbitrary integers,
23376where @var{n} represents successive values taken by incrementing
23377@code{GenCount} by one. While the normal arbitrary sign and
23378integer symbols start over at @code{s1} and @code{n1} with each
23379new Calc command, the @code{GenCount} approach will give each
23380arbitrary value a name that is unique throughout the entire Calc
23381session. Also, the arbitrary values are function calls instead
23382of variables, which is advantageous in some cases. For example,
23383you can make a rewrite rule that recognizes all arbitrary signs
23384using a pattern like @samp{as(n)}. The @kbd{s l} command only works
23385on variables, but you can use the @kbd{a b} (@code{calc-substitute})
23386command to substitute actual values for function calls like @samp{as(3)}.
23387
23388The @kbd{s G} (@code{calc-edit-GenCount}) command is a convenient
23389way to create or edit this variable. Press @kbd{M-# M-#} to finish.
23390
23391If you have not stored a value in @code{GenCount}, or if the value
23392in that variable is not a positive integer, the regular
23393@code{s1}/@code{n1} notation is used.
23394
23395@kindex I a S
23396@kindex H I a S
23397@tindex finv
23398@tindex ffinv
23399With the Inverse flag, @kbd{I a S} [@code{finv}] treats the expression
23400on top of the stack as a function of the specified variable and solves
23401to find the inverse function, written in terms of the same variable.
23402For example, @kbd{I a S x} inverts @cite{2x + 6} to @cite{x/2 - 3}.
23403You can use both Inverse and Hyperbolic [@code{ffinv}] to obtain a
23404fully general inverse, as described above.
23405
23406@kindex a P
23407@pindex calc-poly-roots
23408@tindex roots
23409Some equations, specifically polynomials, have a known, finite number
23410of solutions. The @kbd{a P} (@code{calc-poly-roots}) [@code{roots}]
23411command uses @kbd{H a S} to solve an equation in general form, then, for
23412all arbitrary-sign variables like @code{s1}, and all arbitrary-integer
23413variables like @code{n1} for which @code{n1} only usefully varies over
23414a finite range, it expands these variables out to all their possible
23415values. The results are collected into a vector, which is returned.
23416For example, @samp{roots(x^4 = 1, x)} returns the four solutions
23417@samp{[1, -1, (0, 1), (0, -1)]}. Generally an @var{n}th degree
23418polynomial will always have @var{n} roots on the complex plane.
23419(If you have given a @code{real} declaration for the solution
23420variable, then only the real-valued solutions, if any, will be
23421reported; @pxref{Declarations}.)
23422
23423Note that because @kbd{a P} uses @kbd{H a S}, it is able to deliver
23424symbolic solutions if the polynomial has symbolic coefficients. Also
23425note that Calc's solver is not able to get exact symbolic solutions
23426to all polynomials. Polynomials containing powers up to @cite{x^4}
23427can always be solved exactly; polynomials of higher degree sometimes
23428can be: @cite{x^6 + x^3 + 1} is converted to @cite{(x^3)^2 + (x^3) + 1},
23429which can be solved for @cite{x^3} using the quadratic equation, and then
23430for @cite{x} by taking cube roots. But in many cases, like
23431@cite{x^6 + x + 1}, Calc does not know how to rewrite the polynomial
23432into a form it can solve. The @kbd{a P} command can still deliver a
23433list of numerical roots, however, provided that symbolic mode (@kbd{m s})
23434is not turned on. (If you work with symbolic mode on, recall that the
23435@kbd{N} (@code{calc-eval-num}) key is a handy way to reevaluate the
23436formula on the stack with symbolic mode temporarily off.) Naturally,
23437@kbd{a P} can only provide numerical roots if the polynomial coefficents
23438are all numbers (real or complex).
23439
23440@node Solving Systems of Equations, Decomposing Polynomials, Multiple Solutions, Solving Equations
23441@subsection Solving Systems of Equations
23442
23443@noindent
23444@cindex Systems of equations, symbolic
23445You can also use the commands described above to solve systems of
23446simultaneous equations. Just create a vector of equations, then
23447specify a vector of variables for which to solve. (You can omit
23448the surrounding brackets when entering the vector of variables
23449at the prompt.)
23450
23451For example, putting @samp{[x + y = a, x - y = b]} on the stack
23452and typing @kbd{a S x,y @key{RET}} produces the vector of solutions
23453@samp{[x = a - (a-b)/2, y = (a-b)/2]}. The result vector will
23454have the same length as the variables vector, and the variables
23455will be listed in the same order there. Note that the solutions
23456are not always simplified as far as possible; the solution for
23457@cite{x} here could be improved by an application of the @kbd{a n}
23458command.
23459
23460Calc's algorithm works by trying to eliminate one variable at a
23461time by solving one of the equations for that variable and then
23462substituting into the other equations. Calc will try all the
23463possibilities, but you can speed things up by noting that Calc
23464first tries to eliminate the first variable with the first
23465equation, then the second variable with the second equation,
23466and so on. It also helps to put the simpler (e.g., more linear)
23467equations toward the front of the list. Calc's algorithm will
23468solve any system of linear equations, and also many kinds of
23469nonlinear systems.
23470
5d67986c
RS
23471@ignore
23472@starindex
23473@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23474@tindex elim
23475Normally there will be as many variables as equations. If you
23476give fewer variables than equations (an ``over-determined'' system
23477of equations), Calc will find a partial solution. For example,
23478typing @kbd{a S y @key{RET}} with the above system of equations
23479would produce @samp{[y = a - x]}. There are now several ways to
23480express this solution in terms of the original variables; Calc uses
23481the first one that it finds. You can control the choice by adding
23482variable specifiers of the form @samp{elim(@var{v})} to the
23483variables list. This says that @var{v} should be eliminated from
23484the equations; the variable will not appear at all in the solution.
23485For example, typing @kbd{a S y,elim(x)} would yield
23486@samp{[y = a - (b+a)/2]}.
23487
23488If the variables list contains only @code{elim} specifiers,
23489Calc simply eliminates those variables from the equations
23490and then returns the resulting set of equations. For example,
23491@kbd{a S elim(x)} produces @samp{[a - 2 y = b]}. Every variable
23492eliminated will reduce the number of equations in the system
23493by one.
23494
23495Again, @kbd{a S} gives you one solution to the system of
23496equations. If there are several solutions, you can use @kbd{H a S}
23497to get a general family of solutions, or, if there is a finite
23498number of solutions, you can use @kbd{a P} to get a list. (In
23499the latter case, the result will take the form of a matrix where
23500the rows are different solutions and the columns correspond to the
23501variables you requested.)
23502
23503Another way to deal with certain kinds of overdetermined systems of
23504equations is the @kbd{a F} command, which does least-squares fitting
23505to satisfy the equations. @xref{Curve Fitting}.
23506
23507@node Decomposing Polynomials, , Solving Systems of Equations, Solving Equations
23508@subsection Decomposing Polynomials
23509
23510@noindent
5d67986c
RS
23511@ignore
23512@starindex
23513@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23514@tindex poly
23515The @code{poly} function takes a polynomial and a variable as
23516arguments, and returns a vector of polynomial coefficients (constant
23517coefficient first). For example, @samp{poly(x^3 + 2 x, x)} returns
23518@cite{[0, 2, 0, 1]}. If the input is not a polynomial in @cite{x},
23519the call to @code{poly} is left in symbolic form. If the input does
23520not involve the variable @cite{x}, the input is returned in a list
23521of length one, representing a polynomial with only a constant
23522coefficient. The call @samp{poly(x, x)} returns the vector @cite{[0, 1]}.
23523The last element of the returned vector is guaranteed to be nonzero;
23524note that @samp{poly(0, x)} returns the empty vector @cite{[]}.
23525Note also that @cite{x} may actually be any formula; for example,
23526@samp{poly(sin(x)^2 - sin(x) + 3, sin(x))} returns @cite{[3, -1, 1]}.
23527
23528@cindex Coefficients of polynomial
23529@cindex Degree of polynomial
23530To get the @cite{x^k} coefficient of polynomial @cite{p}, use
23531@samp{poly(p, x)_(k+1)}. To get the degree of polynomial @cite{p},
23532use @samp{vlen(poly(p, x)) - 1}. For example, @samp{poly((x+1)^4, x)}
23533returns @samp{[1, 4, 6, 4, 1]}, so @samp{poly((x+1)^4, x)_(2+1)}
23534gives the @cite{x^2} coefficient of this polynomial, 6.
23535
5d67986c
RS
23536@ignore
23537@starindex
23538@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23539@tindex gpoly
23540One important feature of the solver is its ability to recognize
23541formulas which are ``essentially'' polynomials. This ability is
23542made available to the user through the @code{gpoly} function, which
23543is used just like @code{poly}: @samp{gpoly(@var{expr}, @var{var})}.
23544If @var{expr} is a polynomial in some term which includes @var{var}, then
23545this function will return a vector @samp{[@var{x}, @var{c}, @var{a}]}
23546where @var{x} is the term that depends on @var{var}, @var{c} is a
23547vector of polynomial coefficients (like the one returned by @code{poly}),
23548and @var{a} is a multiplier which is usually 1. Basically,
23549@samp{@var{expr} = @var{a}*(@var{c}_1 + @var{c}_2 @var{x} +
23550@var{c}_3 @var{x}^2 + ...)}. The last element of @var{c} is
23551guaranteed to be non-zero, and @var{c} will not equal @samp{[1]}
23552(i.e., the trivial decomposition @var{expr} = @var{x} is not
23553considered a polynomial). One side effect is that @samp{gpoly(x, x)}
23554and @samp{gpoly(6, x)}, both of which might be expected to recognize
23555their arguments as polynomials, will not because the decomposition
23556is considered trivial.
23557
23558For example, @samp{gpoly((x-2)^2, x)} returns @samp{[x, [4, -4, 1], 1]},
23559since the expanded form of this polynomial is @cite{4 - 4 x + x^2}.
23560
23561The term @var{x} may itself be a polynomial in @var{var}. This is
23562done to reduce the size of the @var{c} vector. For example,
23563@samp{gpoly(x^4 + x^2 - 1, x)} returns @samp{[x^2, [-1, 1, 1], 1]},
23564since a quadratic polynomial in @cite{x^2} is easier to solve than
23565a quartic polynomial in @cite{x}.
23566
23567A few more examples of the kinds of polynomials @code{gpoly} can
23568discover:
23569
23570@smallexample
23571sin(x) - 1 [sin(x), [-1, 1], 1]
23572x + 1/x - 1 [x, [1, -1, 1], 1/x]
23573x + 1/x [x^2, [1, 1], 1/x]
23574x^3 + 2 x [x^2, [2, 1], x]
23575x + x^2:3 + sqrt(x) [x^1:6, [1, 1, 0, 1], x^1:2]
23576x^(2a) + 2 x^a + 5 [x^a, [5, 2, 1], 1]
23577(exp(-x) + exp(x)) / 2 [e^(2 x), [0.5, 0.5], e^-x]
23578@end smallexample
23579
23580The @code{poly} and @code{gpoly} functions accept a third integer argument
23581which specifies the largest degree of polynomial that is acceptable.
23582If this is @cite{n}, then only @var{c} vectors of length @cite{n+1}
23583or less will be returned. Otherwise, the @code{poly} or @code{gpoly}
23584call will remain in symbolic form. For example, the equation solver
23585can handle quartics and smaller polynomials, so it calls
23586@samp{gpoly(@var{expr}, @var{var}, 4)} to discover whether @var{expr}
23587can be treated by its linear, quadratic, cubic, or quartic formulas.
23588
5d67986c
RS
23589@ignore
23590@starindex
23591@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23592@tindex pdeg
23593The @code{pdeg} function computes the degree of a polynomial;
23594@samp{pdeg(p,x)} is the highest power of @code{x} that appears in
23595@code{p}. This is the same as @samp{vlen(poly(p,x))-1}, but is
23596much more efficient. If @code{p} is constant with respect to @code{x},
23597then @samp{pdeg(p,x) = 0}. If @code{p} is not a polynomial in @code{x}
23598(e.g., @samp{pdeg(2 cos(x), x)}, the function remains unevaluated.
23599It is possible to omit the second argument @code{x}, in which case
23600@samp{pdeg(p)} returns the highest total degree of any term of the
23601polynomial, counting all variables that appear in @code{p}. Note
23602that @code{pdeg(c) = pdeg(c,x) = 0} for any nonzero constant @code{c};
23603the degree of the constant zero is considered to be @code{-inf}
23604(minus infinity).
23605
5d67986c
RS
23606@ignore
23607@starindex
23608@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23609@tindex plead
23610The @code{plead} function finds the leading term of a polynomial.
23611Thus @samp{plead(p,x)} is equivalent to @samp{poly(p,x)_vlen(poly(p,x))},
23612though again more efficient. In particular, @samp{plead((2x+1)^10, x)}
23613returns 1024 without expanding out the list of coefficients. The
23614value of @code{plead(p,x)} will be zero only if @cite{p = 0}.
23615
5d67986c
RS
23616@ignore
23617@starindex
23618@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23619@tindex pcont
23620The @code{pcont} function finds the @dfn{content} of a polynomial. This
23621is the greatest common divisor of all the coefficients of the polynomial.
23622With two arguments, @code{pcont(p,x)} effectively uses @samp{poly(p,x)}
23623to get a list of coefficients, then uses @code{pgcd} (the polynomial
23624GCD function) to combine these into an answer. For example,
23625@samp{pcont(4 x y^2 + 6 x^2 y, x)} is @samp{2 y}. The content is
23626basically the ``biggest'' polynomial that can be divided into @code{p}
23627exactly. The sign of the content is the same as the sign of the leading
23628coefficient.
23629
23630With only one argument, @samp{pcont(p)} computes the numerical
23631content of the polynomial, i.e., the @code{gcd} of the numerical
23632coefficients of all the terms in the formula. Note that @code{gcd}
23633is defined on rational numbers as well as integers; it computes
23634the @code{gcd} of the numerators and the @code{lcm} of the
23635denominators. Thus @samp{pcont(4:3 x y^2 + 6 x^2 y)} returns 2:3.
23636Dividing the polynomial by this number will clear all the
23637denominators, as well as dividing by any common content in the
23638numerators. The numerical content of a polynomial is negative only
23639if all the coefficients in the polynomial are negative.
23640
5d67986c
RS
23641@ignore
23642@starindex
23643@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23644@tindex pprim
23645The @code{pprim} function finds the @dfn{primitive part} of a
23646polynomial, which is simply the polynomial divided (using @code{pdiv}
23647if necessary) by its content. If the input polynomial has rational
23648coefficients, the result will have integer coefficients in simplest
23649terms.
23650
23651@node Numerical Solutions, Curve Fitting, Solving Equations, Algebra
23652@section Numerical Solutions
23653
23654@noindent
23655Not all equations can be solved symbolically. The commands in this
23656section use numerical algorithms that can find a solution to a specific
23657instance of an equation to any desired accuracy. Note that the
23658numerical commands are slower than their algebraic cousins; it is a
23659good idea to try @kbd{a S} before resorting to these commands.
23660
23661(@xref{Curve Fitting}, for some other, more specialized, operations
23662on numerical data.)
23663
23664@menu
23665* Root Finding::
23666* Minimization::
23667* Numerical Systems of Equations::
23668@end menu
23669
23670@node Root Finding, Minimization, Numerical Solutions, Numerical Solutions
23671@subsection Root Finding
23672
23673@noindent
23674@kindex a R
23675@pindex calc-find-root
23676@tindex root
23677@cindex Newton's method
23678@cindex Roots of equations
23679@cindex Numerical root-finding
23680The @kbd{a R} (@code{calc-find-root}) [@code{root}] command finds a
23681numerical solution (or @dfn{root}) of an equation. (This command treats
23682inequalities the same as equations. If the input is any other kind
23683of formula, it is interpreted as an equation of the form @cite{X = 0}.)
23684
23685The @kbd{a R} command requires an initial guess on the top of the
23686stack, and a formula in the second-to-top position. It prompts for a
23687solution variable, which must appear in the formula. All other variables
23688that appear in the formula must have assigned values, i.e., when
23689a value is assigned to the solution variable and the formula is
23690evaluated with @kbd{=}, it should evaluate to a number. Any assigned
23691value for the solution variable itself is ignored and unaffected by
23692this command.
23693
23694When the command completes, the initial guess is replaced on the stack
23695by a vector of two numbers: The value of the solution variable that
23696solves the equation, and the difference between the lefthand and
23697righthand sides of the equation at that value. Ordinarily, the second
23698number will be zero or very nearly zero. (Note that Calc uses a
23699slightly higher precision while finding the root, and thus the second
23700number may be slightly different from the value you would compute from
23701the equation yourself.)
23702
23703The @kbd{v h} (@code{calc-head}) command is a handy way to extract
23704the first element of the result vector, discarding the error term.
23705
23706The initial guess can be a real number, in which case Calc searches
23707for a real solution near that number, or a complex number, in which
23708case Calc searches the whole complex plane near that number for a
23709solution, or it can be an interval form which restricts the search
23710to real numbers inside that interval.
23711
23712Calc tries to use @kbd{a d} to take the derivative of the equation.
23713If this succeeds, it uses Newton's method. If the equation is not
23714differentiable Calc uses a bisection method. (If Newton's method
23715appears to be going astray, Calc switches over to bisection if it
23716can, or otherwise gives up. In this case it may help to try again
23717with a slightly different initial guess.) If the initial guess is a
23718complex number, the function must be differentiable.
23719
23720If the formula (or the difference between the sides of an equation)
23721is negative at one end of the interval you specify and positive at
23722the other end, the root finder is guaranteed to find a root.
23723Otherwise, Calc subdivides the interval into small parts looking for
23724positive and negative values to bracket the root. When your guess is
23725an interval, Calc will not look outside that interval for a root.
23726
23727@kindex H a R
23728@tindex wroot
23729The @kbd{H a R} [@code{wroot}] command is similar to @kbd{a R}, except
23730that if the initial guess is an interval for which the function has
23731the same sign at both ends, then rather than subdividing the interval
23732Calc attempts to widen it to enclose a root. Use this mode if
23733you are not sure if the function has a root in your interval.
23734
23735If the function is not differentiable, and you give a simple number
23736instead of an interval as your initial guess, Calc uses this widening
23737process even if you did not type the Hyperbolic flag. (If the function
23738@emph{is} differentiable, Calc uses Newton's method which does not
23739require a bounding interval in order to work.)
23740
23741If Calc leaves the @code{root} or @code{wroot} function in symbolic
23742form on the stack, it will normally display an explanation for why
23743no root was found. If you miss this explanation, press @kbd{w}
23744(@code{calc-why}) to get it back.
23745
23746@node Minimization, Numerical Systems of Equations, Root Finding, Numerical Solutions
23747@subsection Minimization
23748
23749@noindent
23750@kindex a N
23751@kindex H a N
23752@kindex a X
23753@kindex H a X
23754@pindex calc-find-minimum
23755@pindex calc-find-maximum
23756@tindex minimize
23757@tindex maximize
23758@cindex Minimization, numerical
23759The @kbd{a N} (@code{calc-find-minimum}) [@code{minimize}] command
23760finds a minimum value for a formula. It is very similar in operation
23761to @kbd{a R} (@code{calc-find-root}): You give the formula and an initial
23762guess on the stack, and are prompted for the name of a variable. The guess
23763may be either a number near the desired minimum, or an interval enclosing
23764the desired minimum. The function returns a vector containing the
23765value of the the variable which minimizes the formula's value, along
23766with the minimum value itself.
23767
23768Note that this command looks for a @emph{local} minimum. Many functions
23769have more than one minimum; some, like @c{$x \sin x$}
23770@cite{x sin(x)}, have infinitely
23771many. In fact, there is no easy way to define the ``global'' minimum
23772of @c{$x \sin x$}
23773@cite{x sin(x)} but Calc can still locate any particular local minimum
23774for you. Calc basically goes downhill from the initial guess until it
23775finds a point at which the function's value is greater both to the left
23776and to the right. Calc does not use derivatives when minimizing a function.
23777
23778If your initial guess is an interval and it looks like the minimum
23779occurs at one or the other endpoint of the interval, Calc will return
23780that endpoint only if that endpoint is closed; thus, minimizing @cite{17 x}
23781over @cite{[2..3]} will return @cite{[2, 38]}, but minimizing over
23782@cite{(2..3]} would report no minimum found. In general, you should
23783use closed intervals to find literally the minimum value in that
23784range of @cite{x}, or open intervals to find the local minimum, if
23785any, that happens to lie in that range.
23786
23787Most functions are smooth and flat near their minimum values. Because
23788of this flatness, if the current precision is, say, 12 digits, the
23789variable can only be determined meaningfully to about six digits. Thus
23790you should set the precision to twice as many digits as you need in your
23791answer.
23792
5d67986c
RS
23793@ignore
23794@mindex wmin@idots
23795@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 23796@tindex wminimize
5d67986c
RS
23797@ignore
23798@mindex wmax@idots
23799@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23800@tindex wmaximize
23801The @kbd{H a N} [@code{wminimize}] command, analogously to @kbd{H a R},
23802expands the guess interval to enclose a minimum rather than requiring
23803that the minimum lie inside the interval you supply.
23804
23805The @kbd{a X} (@code{calc-find-maximum}) [@code{maximize}] and
23806@kbd{H a X} [@code{wmaximize}] commands effectively minimize the
23807negative of the formula you supply.
23808
23809The formula must evaluate to a real number at all points inside the
23810interval (or near the initial guess if the guess is a number). If
23811the initial guess is a complex number the variable will be minimized
23812over the complex numbers; if it is real or an interval it will
23813be minimized over the reals.
23814
23815@node Numerical Systems of Equations, , Minimization, Numerical Solutions
23816@subsection Systems of Equations
23817
23818@noindent
23819@cindex Systems of equations, numerical
23820The @kbd{a R} command can also solve systems of equations. In this
23821case, the equation should instead be a vector of equations, the
23822guess should instead be a vector of numbers (intervals are not
23823supported), and the variable should be a vector of variables. You
23824can omit the brackets while entering the list of variables. Each
23825equation must be differentiable by each variable for this mode to
23826work. The result will be a vector of two vectors: The variable
23827values that solved the system of equations, and the differences
23828between the sides of the equations with those variable values.
23829There must be the same number of equations as variables. Since
23830only plain numbers are allowed as guesses, the Hyperbolic flag has
23831no effect when solving a system of equations.
23832
23833It is also possible to minimize over many variables with @kbd{a N}
23834(or maximize with @kbd{a X}). Once again the variable name should
23835be replaced by a vector of variables, and the initial guess should
23836be an equal-sized vector of initial guesses. But, unlike the case of
23837multidimensional @kbd{a R}, the formula being minimized should
23838still be a single formula, @emph{not} a vector. Beware that
23839multidimensional minimization is currently @emph{very} slow.
23840
23841@node Curve Fitting, Summations, Numerical Solutions, Algebra
23842@section Curve Fitting
23843
23844@noindent
23845The @kbd{a F} command fits a set of data to a @dfn{model formula},
23846such as @cite{y = m x + b} where @cite{m} and @cite{b} are parameters
23847to be determined. For a typical set of measured data there will be
23848no single @cite{m} and @cite{b} that exactly fit the data; in this
23849case, Calc chooses values of the parameters that provide the closest
23850possible fit.
23851
23852@menu
23853* Linear Fits::
23854* Polynomial and Multilinear Fits::
23855* Error Estimates for Fits::
23856* Standard Nonlinear Models::
23857* Curve Fitting Details::
23858* Interpolation::
23859@end menu
23860
23861@node Linear Fits, Polynomial and Multilinear Fits, Curve Fitting, Curve Fitting
23862@subsection Linear Fits
23863
23864@noindent
23865@kindex a F
23866@pindex calc-curve-fit
23867@tindex fit
23868@cindex Linear regression
23869@cindex Least-squares fits
23870The @kbd{a F} (@code{calc-curve-fit}) [@code{fit}] command attempts
23871to fit a set of data (@cite{x} and @cite{y} vectors of numbers) to a
23872straight line, polynomial, or other function of @cite{x}. For the
23873moment we will consider only the case of fitting to a line, and we
23874will ignore the issue of whether or not the model was in fact a good
23875fit for the data.
23876
23877In a standard linear least-squares fit, we have a set of @cite{(x,y)}
23878data points that we wish to fit to the model @cite{y = m x + b}
23879by adjusting the parameters @cite{m} and @cite{b} to make the @cite{y}
23880values calculated from the formula be as close as possible to the actual
23881@cite{y} values in the data set. (In a polynomial fit, the model is
23882instead, say, @cite{y = a x^3 + b x^2 + c x + d}. In a multilinear fit,
23883we have data points of the form @cite{(x_1,x_2,x_3,y)} and our model is
23884@cite{y = a x_1 + b x_2 + c x_3 + d}. These will be discussed later.)
23885
23886In the model formula, variables like @cite{x} and @cite{x_2} are called
23887the @dfn{independent variables}, and @cite{y} is the @dfn{dependent
23888variable}. Variables like @cite{m}, @cite{a}, and @cite{b} are called
23889the @dfn{parameters} of the model.
23890
23891The @kbd{a F} command takes the data set to be fitted from the stack.
23892By default, it expects the data in the form of a matrix. For example,
23893for a linear or polynomial fit, this would be a @c{$2\times N$}
23894@asis{2xN} matrix where
23895the first row is a list of @cite{x} values and the second row has the
23896corresponding @cite{y} values. For the multilinear fit shown above,
23897the matrix would have four rows (@cite{x_1}, @cite{x_2}, @cite{x_3}, and
23898@cite{y}, respectively).
23899
23900If you happen to have an @c{$N\times2$}
23901@asis{Nx2} matrix instead of a @c{$2\times N$}
23902@asis{2xN} matrix,
23903just press @kbd{v t} first to transpose the matrix.
23904
23905After you type @kbd{a F}, Calc prompts you to select a model. For a
23906linear fit, press the digit @kbd{1}.
23907
23908Calc then prompts for you to name the variables. By default it chooses
23909high letters like @cite{x} and @cite{y} for independent variables and
23910low letters like @cite{a} and @cite{b} for parameters. (The dependent
23911variable doesn't need a name.) The two kinds of variables are separated
23912by a semicolon. Since you generally care more about the names of the
23913independent variables than of the parameters, Calc also allows you to
23914name only those and let the parameters use default names.
23915
23916For example, suppose the data matrix
23917
23918@ifinfo
d7b8e6c6 23919@example
5d67986c 23920@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23921[ [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]
23922 [ 5, 7, 9, 11, 13 ] ]
d7b8e6c6 23923@end group
5d67986c 23924@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23925@end ifinfo
23926@tex
23927\turnoffactive
23928\turnoffactive
23929\beforedisplay
23930$$ \pmatrix{ 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5 \cr
23931 5 & 7 & 9 & 11 & 13 }
23932$$
23933\afterdisplay
23934@end tex
23935
23936@noindent
23937is on the stack and we wish to do a simple linear fit. Type
5d67986c 23938@kbd{a F}, then @kbd{1} for the model, then @key{RET} to use
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23939the default names. The result will be the formula @cite{3 + 2 x}
23940on the stack. Calc has created the model expression @kbd{a + b x},
23941then found the optimal values of @cite{a} and @cite{b} to fit the
23942data. (In this case, it was able to find an exact fit.) Calc then
23943substituted those values for @cite{a} and @cite{b} in the model
23944formula.
23945
23946The @kbd{a F} command puts two entries in the trail. One is, as
23947always, a copy of the result that went to the stack; the other is
23948a vector of the actual parameter values, written as equations:
23949@cite{[a = 3, b = 2]}, in case you'd rather read them in a list
23950than pick them out of the formula. (You can type @kbd{t y}
b275eac7 23951to move this vector to the stack; see @ref{Trail Commands}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23952
23953Specifying a different independent variable name will affect the
5d67986c
RS
23954resulting formula: @kbd{a F 1 k @key{RET}} produces @kbd{3 + 2 k}.
23955Changing the parameter names (say, @kbd{a F 1 k;b,m @key{RET}}) will affect
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23956the equations that go into the trail.
23957
23958@tex
23959\bigskip
23960@end tex
23961
23962To see what happens when the fit is not exact, we could change
23963the number 13 in the data matrix to 14 and try the fit again.
23964The result is:
23965
23966@example
239672.6 + 2.2 x
23968@end example
23969
5d67986c 23970Evaluating this formula, say with @kbd{v x 5 @key{RET} @key{TAB} V M $ @key{RET}}, shows
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23971a reasonably close match to the y-values in the data.
23972
23973@example
23974[4.8, 7., 9.2, 11.4, 13.6]
23975@end example
23976
5d67986c 23977Since there is no line which passes through all the @var{n} data points,
d7b8e6c6
EZ
23978Calc has chosen a line that best approximates the data points using
23979the method of least squares. The idea is to define the @dfn{chi-square}
23980error measure
23981
23982@ifinfo
23983@example
23984chi^2 = sum((y_i - (a + b x_i))^2, i, 1, N)
23985@end example
23986@end ifinfo
23987@tex
23988\turnoffactive
23989\beforedisplay
23990$$ \chi^2 = \sum_{i=1}^N (y_i - (a + b x_i))^2 $$
23991\afterdisplay
23992@end tex
23993
23994@noindent
23995which is clearly zero if @cite{a + b x} exactly fits all data points,
23996and increases as various @cite{a + b x_i} values fail to match the
23997corresponding @cite{y_i} values. There are several reasons why the
23998summand is squared, one of them being to ensure that @c{$\chi^2 \ge 0$}
23999@cite{chi^2 >= 0}.
24000Least-squares fitting simply chooses the values of @cite{a} and @cite{b}
24001for which the error @c{$\chi^2$}
24002@cite{chi^2} is as small as possible.
24003
24004Other kinds of models do the same thing but with a different model
24005formula in place of @cite{a + b x_i}.
24006
24007@tex
24008\bigskip
24009@end tex
24010
24011A numeric prefix argument causes the @kbd{a F} command to take the
5d67986c
RS
24012data in some other form than one big matrix. A positive argument @var{n}
24013will take @var{N} items from the stack, corresponding to the @var{n} rows
24014of a data matrix. In the linear case, @var{n} must be 2 since there
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24015is always one independent variable and one dependent variable.
24016
24017A prefix of zero or plain @kbd{C-u} is a compromise; Calc takes two
5d67986c 24018items from the stack, an @var{n}-row matrix of @cite{x} values, and a
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24019vector of @cite{y} values. If there is only one independent variable,
24020the @cite{x} values can be either a one-row matrix or a plain vector,
24021in which case the @kbd{C-u} prefix is the same as a @w{@kbd{C-u 2}} prefix.
24022
24023@node Polynomial and Multilinear Fits, Error Estimates for Fits, Linear Fits, Curve Fitting
24024@subsection Polynomial and Multilinear Fits
24025
24026@noindent
24027To fit the data to higher-order polynomials, just type one of the
24028digits @kbd{2} through @kbd{9} when prompted for a model. For example,
24029we could fit the original data matrix from the previous section
24030(with 13, not 14) to a parabola instead of a line by typing
5d67986c 24031@kbd{a F 2 @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24032
24033@example
240342.00000000001 x - 1.5e-12 x^2 + 2.99999999999
24035@end example
24036
24037Note that since the constant and linear terms are enough to fit the
24038data exactly, it's no surprise that Calc chose a tiny contribution
24039for @cite{x^2}. (The fact that it's not exactly zero is due only
24040to roundoff error. Since our data are exact integers, we could get
24041an exact answer by typing @kbd{m f} first to get fraction mode.
24042Then the @cite{x^2} term would vanish altogether. Usually, though,
24043the data being fitted will be approximate floats so fraction mode
24044won't help.)
24045
24046Doing the @kbd{a F 2} fit on the data set with 14 instead of 13
24047gives a much larger @cite{x^2} contribution, as Calc bends the
24048line slightly to improve the fit.
24049
24050@example
240510.142857142855 x^2 + 1.34285714287 x + 3.59999999998
24052@end example
24053
24054An important result from the theory of polynomial fitting is that it
5d67986c
RS
24055is always possible to fit @var{n} data points exactly using a polynomial
24056of degree @i{@var{n}-1}, sometimes called an @dfn{interpolating polynomial}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24057Using the modified (14) data matrix, a model number of 4 gives
24058a polynomial that exactly matches all five data points:
24059
24060@example
240610.04167 x^4 - 0.4167 x^3 + 1.458 x^2 - 0.08333 x + 4.
24062@end example
24063
24064The actual coefficients we get with a precision of 12, like
24065@cite{0.0416666663588}, clearly suffer from loss of precision.
24066It is a good idea to increase the working precision to several
24067digits beyond what you need when you do a fitting operation.
24068Or, if your data are exact, use fraction mode to get exact
24069results.
24070
24071You can type @kbd{i} instead of a digit at the model prompt to fit
24072the data exactly to a polynomial. This just counts the number of
24073columns of the data matrix to choose the degree of the polynomial
24074automatically.
24075
24076Fitting data ``exactly'' to high-degree polynomials is not always
24077a good idea, though. High-degree polynomials have a tendency to
24078wiggle uncontrollably in between the fitting data points. Also,
24079if the exact-fit polynomial is going to be used to interpolate or
24080extrapolate the data, it is numerically better to use the @kbd{a p}
24081command described below. @xref{Interpolation}.
24082
24083@tex
24084\bigskip
24085@end tex
24086
24087Another generalization of the linear model is to assume the
24088@cite{y} values are a sum of linear contributions from several
24089@cite{x} values. This is a @dfn{multilinear} fit, and it is also
24090selected by the @kbd{1} digit key. (Calc decides whether the fit
24091is linear or multilinear by counting the rows in the data matrix.)
24092
24093Given the data matrix,
24094
d7b8e6c6 24095@example
5d67986c 24096@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24097[ [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]
24098 [ 7, 2, 3, 5, 2 ]
24099 [ 14.5, 15, 18.5, 22.5, 24 ] ]
d7b8e6c6 24100@end group
5d67986c 24101@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24102
24103@noindent
5d67986c 24104the command @kbd{a F 1 @key{RET}} will call the first row @cite{x} and the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24105second row @cite{y}, and will fit the values in the third row to the
24106model @cite{a + b x + c y}.
24107
24108@example
241098. + 3. x + 0.5 y
24110@end example
24111
24112Calc can do multilinear fits with any number of independent variables
24113(i.e., with any number of data rows).
24114
24115@tex
24116\bigskip
24117@end tex
24118
24119Yet another variation is @dfn{homogeneous} linear models, in which
24120the constant term is known to be zero. In the linear case, this
24121means the model formula is simply @cite{a x}; in the multilinear
24122case, the model might be @cite{a x + b y + c z}; and in the polynomial
24123case, the model could be @cite{a x + b x^2 + c x^3}. You can get
24124a homogeneous linear or multilinear model by pressing the letter
24125@kbd{h} followed by a regular model key, like @kbd{1} or @kbd{2}.
24126
24127It is certainly possible to have other constrained linear models,
24128like @cite{2.3 + a x} or @cite{a - 4 x}. While there is no single
24129key to select models like these, a later section shows how to enter
24130any desired model by hand. In the first case, for example, you
24131would enter @kbd{a F ' 2.3 + a x}.
24132
24133Another class of models that will work but must be entered by hand
24134are multinomial fits, e.g., @cite{a + b x + c y + d x^2 + e y^2 + f x y}.
24135
24136@node Error Estimates for Fits, Standard Nonlinear Models, Polynomial and Multilinear Fits, Curve Fitting
24137@subsection Error Estimates for Fits
24138
24139@noindent
24140@kindex H a F
24141@tindex efit
24142With the Hyperbolic flag, @kbd{H a F} [@code{efit}] performs the same
24143fitting operation as @kbd{a F}, but reports the coefficients as error
24144forms instead of plain numbers. Fitting our two data matrices (first
24145with 13, then with 14) to a line with @kbd{H a F} gives the results,
24146
24147@example
241483. + 2. x
241492.6 +/- 0.382970843103 + 2.2 +/- 0.115470053838 x
24150@end example
24151
24152In the first case the estimated errors are zero because the linear
24153fit is perfect. In the second case, the errors are nonzero but
24154moderately small, because the data are still very close to linear.
24155
24156It is also possible for the @emph{input} to a fitting operation to
24157contain error forms. The data values must either all include errors
24158or all be plain numbers. Error forms can go anywhere but generally
24159go on the numbers in the last row of the data matrix. If the last
24160row contains error forms
5d67986c
RS
24161`@var{y_i}@w{ @t{+/-} }@c{$\sigma_i$}
24162@var{sigma_i}', then the @c{$\chi^2$}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24163@cite{chi^2}
24164statistic is now,
24165
24166@ifinfo
24167@example
24168chi^2 = sum(((y_i - (a + b x_i)) / sigma_i)^2, i, 1, N)
24169@end example
24170@end ifinfo
24171@tex
24172\turnoffactive
24173\beforedisplay
24174$$ \chi^2 = \sum_{i=1}^N \left(y_i - (a + b x_i) \over \sigma_i\right)^2 $$
24175\afterdisplay
24176@end tex
24177
24178@noindent
24179so that data points with larger error estimates contribute less to
24180the fitting operation.
24181
24182If there are error forms on other rows of the data matrix, all the
24183errors for a given data point are combined; the square root of the
24184sum of the squares of the errors forms the @c{$\sigma_i$}
24185@cite{sigma_i} used for
24186the data point.
24187
24188Both @kbd{a F} and @kbd{H a F} can accept error forms in the input
24189matrix, although if you are concerned about error analysis you will
24190probably use @kbd{H a F} so that the output also contains error
24191estimates.
24192
24193If the input contains error forms but all the @c{$\sigma_i$}
24194@cite{sigma_i} values are
24195the same, it is easy to see that the resulting fitted model will be
24196the same as if the input did not have error forms at all (@c{$\chi^2$}
24197@cite{chi^2}
24198is simply scaled uniformly by @c{$1 / \sigma^2$}
24199@cite{1 / sigma^2}, which doesn't affect
24200where it has a minimum). But there @emph{will} be a difference
24201in the estimated errors of the coefficients reported by @kbd{H a F}.
24202
24203Consult any text on statistical modelling of data for a discussion
24204of where these error estimates come from and how they should be
24205interpreted.
24206
24207@tex
24208\bigskip
24209@end tex
24210
24211@kindex I a F
24212@tindex xfit
24213With the Inverse flag, @kbd{I a F} [@code{xfit}] produces even more
24214information. The result is a vector of six items:
24215
24216@enumerate
24217@item
24218The model formula with error forms for its coefficients or
24219parameters. This is the result that @kbd{H a F} would have
24220produced.
24221
24222@item
24223A vector of ``raw'' parameter values for the model. These are the
24224polynomial coefficients or other parameters as plain numbers, in the
24225same order as the parameters appeared in the final prompt of the
24226@kbd{I a F} command. For polynomials of degree @cite{d}, this vector
24227will have length @cite{M = d+1} with the constant term first.
24228
24229@item
24230The covariance matrix @cite{C} computed from the fit. This is
5d67986c 24231an @var{m}x@var{m} symmetric matrix; the diagonal elements
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24232@c{$C_{jj}$}
24233@cite{C_j_j} are the variances @c{$\sigma_j^2$}
24234@cite{sigma_j^2} of the parameters.
24235The other elements are covariances @c{$\sigma_{ij}^2$}
24236@cite{sigma_i_j^2} that describe the
24237correlation between pairs of parameters. (A related set of
24238numbers, the @dfn{linear correlation coefficients} @c{$r_{ij}$}
24239@cite{r_i_j},
24240are defined as @c{$\sigma_{ij}^2 / \sigma_i \, \sigma_j$}
24241@cite{sigma_i_j^2 / sigma_i sigma_j}.)
24242
24243@item
24244A vector of @cite{M} ``parameter filter'' functions whose
24245meanings are described below. If no filters are necessary this
24246will instead be an empty vector; this is always the case for the
24247polynomial and multilinear fits described so far.
24248
24249@item
24250The value of @c{$\chi^2$}
24251@cite{chi^2} for the fit, calculated by the formulas
24252shown above. This gives a measure of the quality of the fit;
24253statisticians consider @c{$\chi^2 \approx N - M$}
24254@cite{chi^2 = N - M} to indicate a moderately good fit
24255(where again @cite{N} is the number of data points and @cite{M}
24256is the number of parameters).
24257
24258@item
24259A measure of goodness of fit expressed as a probability @cite{Q}.
24260This is computed from the @code{utpc} probability distribution
24261function using @c{$\chi^2$}
24262@cite{chi^2} with @cite{N - M} degrees of freedom. A
24263value of 0.5 implies a good fit; some texts recommend that often
24264@cite{Q = 0.1} or even 0.001 can signify an acceptable fit. In
24265particular, @c{$\chi^2$}
24266@cite{chi^2} statistics assume the errors in your inputs
24267follow a normal (Gaussian) distribution; if they don't, you may
24268have to accept smaller values of @cite{Q}.
24269
24270The @cite{Q} value is computed only if the input included error
24271estimates. Otherwise, Calc will report the symbol @code{nan}
24272for @cite{Q}. The reason is that in this case the @c{$\chi^2$}
24273@cite{chi^2}
24274value has effectively been used to estimate the original errors
24275in the input, and thus there is no redundant information left
24276over to use for a confidence test.
24277@end enumerate
24278
24279@node Standard Nonlinear Models, Curve Fitting Details, Error Estimates for Fits, Curve Fitting
24280@subsection Standard Nonlinear Models
24281
24282@noindent
24283The @kbd{a F} command also accepts other kinds of models besides
24284lines and polynomials. Some common models have quick single-key
24285abbreviations; others must be entered by hand as algebraic formulas.
24286
24287Here is a complete list of the standard models recognized by @kbd{a F}:
24288
24289@table @kbd
24290@item 1
24291Linear or multilinear. @i{a + b x + c y + d z}.
24292@item 2-9
24293Polynomials. @i{a + b x + c x^2 + d x^3}.
24294@item e
24295Exponential. @i{a} @t{exp}@i{(b x)} @t{exp}@i{(c y)}.
24296@item E
24297Base-10 exponential. @i{a} @t{10^}@i{(b x)} @t{10^}@i{(c y)}.
24298@item x
24299Exponential (alternate notation). @t{exp}@i{(a + b x + c y)}.
24300@item X
24301Base-10 exponential (alternate). @t{10^}@i{(a + b x + c y)}.
24302@item l
24303Logarithmic. @i{a + b} @t{ln}@i{(x) + c} @t{ln}@i{(y)}.
24304@item L
24305Base-10 logarithmic. @i{a + b} @t{log10}@i{(x) + c} @t{log10}@i{(y)}.
24306@item ^
24307General exponential. @i{a b^x c^y}.
24308@item p
24309Power law. @i{a x^b y^c}.
24310@item q
24311Quadratic. @i{a + b (x-c)^2 + d (x-e)^2}.
24312@item g
24313Gaussian. @c{${a \over b \sqrt{2 \pi}} \exp\left( -{1 \over 2} \left( x - c \over b \right)^2 \right)$}
24314@i{(a / b sqrt(2 pi)) exp(-0.5*((x-c)/b)^2)}.
24315@end table
24316
24317All of these models are used in the usual way; just press the appropriate
24318letter at the model prompt, and choose variable names if you wish. The
24319result will be a formula as shown in the above table, with the best-fit
24320values of the parameters substituted. (You may find it easier to read
24321the parameter values from the vector that is placed in the trail.)
24322
24323All models except Gaussian and polynomials can generalize as shown to any
24324number of independent variables. Also, all the built-in models have an
24325additive or multiplicative parameter shown as @cite{a} in the above table
24326which can be replaced by zero or one, as appropriate, by typing @kbd{h}
24327before the model key.
24328
24329Note that many of these models are essentially equivalent, but express
24330the parameters slightly differently. For example, @cite{a b^x} and
24331the other two exponential models are all algebraic rearrangements of
24332each other. Also, the ``quadratic'' model is just a degree-2 polynomial
24333with the parameters expressed differently. Use whichever form best
24334matches the problem.
24335
24336The HP-28/48 calculators support four different models for curve
24337fitting, called @code{LIN}, @code{LOG}, @code{EXP}, and @code{PWR}.
24338These correspond to Calc models @samp{a + b x}, @samp{a + b ln(x)},
24339@samp{a exp(b x)}, and @samp{a x^b}, respectively. In each case,
24340@cite{a} is what the HP-48 identifies as the ``intercept,'' and
24341@cite{b} is what it calls the ``slope.''
24342
24343@tex
24344\bigskip
24345@end tex
24346
24347If the model you want doesn't appear on this list, press @kbd{'}
24348(the apostrophe key) at the model prompt to enter any algebraic
24349formula, such as @kbd{m x - b}, as the model. (Not all models
24350will work, though---see the next section for details.)
24351
24352The model can also be an equation like @cite{y = m x + b}.
24353In this case, Calc thinks of all the rows of the data matrix on
24354equal terms; this model effectively has two parameters
24355(@cite{m} and @cite{b}) and two independent variables (@cite{x}
24356and @cite{y}), with no ``dependent'' variables. Model equations
24357do not need to take this @cite{y =} form. For example, the
24358implicit line equation @cite{a x + b y = 1} works fine as a
24359model.
24360
24361When you enter a model, Calc makes an alphabetical list of all
24362the variables that appear in the model. These are used for the
24363default parameters, independent variables, and dependent variable
24364(in that order). If you enter a plain formula (not an equation),
24365Calc assumes the dependent variable does not appear in the formula
24366and thus does not need a name.
24367
24368For example, if the model formula has the variables @cite{a,mu,sigma,t,x},
24369and the data matrix has three rows (meaning two independent variables),
24370Calc will use @cite{a,mu,sigma} as the default parameters, and the
24371data rows will be named @cite{t} and @cite{x}, respectively. If you
24372enter an equation instead of a plain formula, Calc will use @cite{a,mu}
24373as the parameters, and @cite{sigma,t,x} as the three independent
24374variables.
24375
24376You can, of course, override these choices by entering something
24377different at the prompt. If you leave some variables out of the list,
24378those variables must have stored values and those stored values will
24379be used as constants in the model. (Stored values for the parameters
24380and independent variables are ignored by the @kbd{a F} command.)
24381If you list only independent variables, all the remaining variables
24382in the model formula will become parameters.
24383
24384If there are @kbd{$} signs in the model you type, they will stand
24385for parameters and all other variables (in alphabetical order)
24386will be independent. Use @kbd{$} for one parameter, @kbd{$$} for
24387another, and so on. Thus @kbd{$ x + $$} is another way to describe
24388a linear model.
24389
24390If you type a @kbd{$} instead of @kbd{'} at the model prompt itself,
24391Calc will take the model formula from the stack. (The data must then
24392appear at the second stack level.) The same conventions are used to
24393choose which variables in the formula are independent by default and
24394which are parameters.
24395
24396Models taken from the stack can also be expressed as vectors of
24397two or three elements, @cite{[@var{model}, @var{vars}]} or
24398@cite{[@var{model}, @var{vars}, @var{params}]}. Each of @var{vars}
24399and @var{params} may be either a variable or a vector of variables.
24400(If @var{params} is omitted, all variables in @var{model} except
24401those listed as @var{vars} are parameters.)@refill
24402
24403When you enter a model manually with @kbd{'}, Calc puts a 3-vector
24404describing the model in the trail so you can get it back if you wish.
24405
24406@tex
24407\bigskip
24408@end tex
24409
24410@vindex Model1
24411@vindex Model2
24412Finally, you can store a model in one of the Calc variables
24413@code{Model1} or @code{Model2}, then use this model by typing
24414@kbd{a F u} or @kbd{a F U} (respectively). The value stored in
24415the variable can be any of the formats that @kbd{a F $} would
24416accept for a model on the stack.
24417
24418@tex
24419\bigskip
24420@end tex
24421
24422Calc uses the principal values of inverse functions like @code{ln}
24423and @code{arcsin} when doing fits. For example, when you enter
24424the model @samp{y = sin(a t + b)} Calc actually uses the easier
24425form @samp{arcsin(y) = a t + b}. The @code{arcsin} function always
24426returns results in the range from @i{-90} to 90 degrees (or the
24427equivalent range in radians). Suppose you had data that you
24428believed to represent roughly three oscillations of a sine wave,
24429so that the argument of the sine might go from zero to @c{$3\times360$}
24430@i{3*360} degrees.
24431The above model would appear to be a good way to determine the
24432true frequency and phase of the sine wave, but in practice it
24433would fail utterly. The righthand side of the actual model
24434@samp{arcsin(y) = a t + b} will grow smoothly with @cite{t}, but
24435the lefthand side will bounce back and forth between @i{-90} and 90.
24436No values of @cite{a} and @cite{b} can make the two sides match,
24437even approximately.
24438
24439There is no good solution to this problem at present. You could
24440restrict your data to small enough ranges so that the above problem
24441doesn't occur (i.e., not straddling any peaks in the sine wave).
24442Or, in this case, you could use a totally different method such as
24443Fourier analysis, which is beyond the scope of the @kbd{a F} command.
24444(Unfortunately, Calc does not currently have any facilities for
24445taking Fourier and related transforms.)
24446
24447@node Curve Fitting Details, Interpolation, Standard Nonlinear Models, Curve Fitting
24448@subsection Curve Fitting Details
24449
24450@noindent
24451Calc's internal least-squares fitter can only handle multilinear
24452models. More precisely, it can handle any model of the form
24453@cite{a f(x,y,z) + b g(x,y,z) + c h(x,y,z)}, where @cite{a,b,c}
24454are the parameters and @cite{x,y,z} are the independent variables
24455(of course there can be any number of each, not just three).
24456
24457In a simple multilinear or polynomial fit, it is easy to see how
24458to convert the model into this form. For example, if the model
24459is @cite{a + b x + c x^2}, then @cite{f(x) = 1}, @cite{g(x) = x},
24460and @cite{h(x) = x^2} are suitable functions.
24461
24462For other models, Calc uses a variety of algebraic manipulations
24463to try to put the problem into the form
24464
24465@smallexample
24466Y(x,y,z) = A(a,b,c) F(x,y,z) + B(a,b,c) G(x,y,z) + C(a,b,c) H(x,y,z)
24467@end smallexample
24468
24469@noindent
24470where @cite{Y,A,B,C,F,G,H} are arbitrary functions. It computes
24471@cite{Y}, @cite{F}, @cite{G}, and @cite{H} for all the data points,
24472does a standard linear fit to find the values of @cite{A}, @cite{B},
24473and @cite{C}, then uses the equation solver to solve for @cite{a,b,c}
24474in terms of @cite{A,B,C}.
24475
24476A remarkable number of models can be cast into this general form.
24477We'll look at two examples here to see how it works. The power-law
24478model @cite{y = a x^b} with two independent variables and two parameters
24479can be rewritten as follows:
24480
24481@example
24482y = a x^b
24483y = a exp(b ln(x))
24484y = exp(ln(a) + b ln(x))
24485ln(y) = ln(a) + b ln(x)
24486@end example
24487
24488@noindent
24489which matches the desired form with @c{$Y = \ln(y)$}
24490@cite{Y = ln(y)}, @c{$A = \ln(a)$}
24491@cite{A = ln(a)},
24492@cite{F = 1}, @cite{B = b}, and @c{$G = \ln(x)$}
24493@cite{G = ln(x)}. Calc thus computes
24494the logarithms of your @cite{y} and @cite{x} values, does a linear fit
24495for @cite{A} and @cite{B}, then solves to get @c{$a = \exp(A)$}
24496@cite{a = exp(A)} and
24497@cite{b = B}.
24498
24499Another interesting example is the ``quadratic'' model, which can
24500be handled by expanding according to the distributive law.
24501
24502@example
24503y = a + b*(x - c)^2
24504y = a + b c^2 - 2 b c x + b x^2
24505@end example
24506
24507@noindent
24508which matches with @cite{Y = y}, @cite{A = a + b c^2}, @cite{F = 1},
24509@cite{B = -2 b c}, @cite{G = x} (the @i{-2} factor could just as easily
24510have been put into @cite{G} instead of @cite{B}), @cite{C = b}, and
24511@cite{H = x^2}.
24512
24513The Gaussian model looks quite complicated, but a closer examination
24514shows that it's actually similar to the quadratic model but with an
24515exponential that can be brought to the top and moved into @cite{Y}.
24516
24517An example of a model that cannot be put into general linear
24518form is a Gaussian with a constant background added on, i.e.,
24519@cite{d} + the regular Gaussian formula. If you have a model like
24520this, your best bet is to replace enough of your parameters with
24521constants to make the model linearizable, then adjust the constants
24522manually by doing a series of fits. You can compare the fits by
24523graphing them, by examining the goodness-of-fit measures returned by
24524@kbd{I a F}, or by some other method suitable to your application.
24525Note that some models can be linearized in several ways. The
5d67986c 24526Gaussian-plus-@var{d} model can be linearized by setting @cite{d}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24527(the background) to a constant, or by setting @cite{b} (the standard
24528deviation) and @cite{c} (the mean) to constants.
24529
24530To fit a model with constants substituted for some parameters, just
24531store suitable values in those parameter variables, then omit them
24532from the list of parameters when you answer the variables prompt.
24533
24534@tex
24535\bigskip
24536@end tex
24537
24538A last desperate step would be to use the general-purpose
24539@code{minimize} function rather than @code{fit}. After all, both
24540functions solve the problem of minimizing an expression (the @c{$\chi^2$}
24541@cite{chi^2}
24542sum) by adjusting certain parameters in the expression. The @kbd{a F}
24543command is able to use a vastly more efficient algorithm due to its
24544special knowledge about linear chi-square sums, but the @kbd{a N}
24545command can do the same thing by brute force.
24546
24547A compromise would be to pick out a few parameters without which the
24548fit is linearizable, and use @code{minimize} on a call to @code{fit}
24549which efficiently takes care of the rest of the parameters. The thing
24550to be minimized would be the value of @c{$\chi^2$}
24551@cite{chi^2} returned as
24552the fifth result of the @code{xfit} function:
24553
24554@smallexample
24555minimize(xfit(gaus(a,b,c,d,x), x, [a,b,c], data)_5, d, guess)
24556@end smallexample
24557
24558@noindent
24559where @code{gaus} represents the Gaussian model with background,
24560@code{data} represents the data matrix, and @code{guess} represents
24561the initial guess for @cite{d} that @code{minimize} requires.
24562This operation will only be, shall we say, extraordinarily slow
24563rather than astronomically slow (as would be the case if @code{minimize}
24564were used by itself to solve the problem).
24565
24566@tex
24567\bigskip
24568@end tex
24569
24570The @kbd{I a F} [@code{xfit}] command is somewhat trickier when
24571nonlinear models are used. The second item in the result is the
24572vector of ``raw'' parameters @cite{A}, @cite{B}, @cite{C}. The
24573covariance matrix is written in terms of those raw parameters.
24574The fifth item is a vector of @dfn{filter} expressions. This
24575is the empty vector @samp{[]} if the raw parameters were the same
24576as the requested parameters, i.e., if @cite{A = a}, @cite{B = b},
24577and so on (which is always true if the model is already linear
24578in the parameters as written, e.g., for polynomial fits). If the
24579parameters had to be rearranged, the fifth item is instead a vector
24580of one formula per parameter in the original model. The raw
24581parameters are expressed in these ``filter'' formulas as
24582@samp{fitdummy(1)} for @cite{A}, @samp{fitdummy(2)} for @cite{B},
24583and so on.
24584
24585When Calc needs to modify the model to return the result, it replaces
24586@samp{fitdummy(1)} in all the filters with the first item in the raw
24587parameters list, and so on for the other raw parameters, then
24588evaluates the resulting filter formulas to get the actual parameter
24589values to be substituted into the original model. In the case of
24590@kbd{H a F} and @kbd{I a F} where the parameters must be error forms,
24591Calc uses the square roots of the diagonal entries of the covariance
24592matrix as error values for the raw parameters, then lets Calc's
24593standard error-form arithmetic take it from there.
24594
24595If you use @kbd{I a F} with a nonlinear model, be sure to remember
24596that the covariance matrix is in terms of the raw parameters,
24597@emph{not} the actual requested parameters. It's up to you to
24598figure out how to interpret the covariances in the presence of
24599nontrivial filter functions.
24600
24601Things are also complicated when the input contains error forms.
24602Suppose there are three independent and dependent variables, @cite{x},
24603@cite{y}, and @cite{z}, one or more of which are error forms in the
24604data. Calc combines all the error values by taking the square root
24605of the sum of the squares of the errors. It then changes @cite{x}
24606and @cite{y} to be plain numbers, and makes @cite{z} into an error
24607form with this combined error. The @cite{Y(x,y,z)} part of the
24608linearized model is evaluated, and the result should be an error
24609form. The error part of that result is used for @c{$\sigma_i$}
24610@cite{sigma_i} for
24611the data point. If for some reason @cite{Y(x,y,z)} does not return
24612an error form, the combined error from @cite{z} is used directly
24613for @c{$\sigma_i$}
24614@cite{sigma_i}. Finally, @cite{z} is also stripped of its error
24615for use in computing @cite{F(x,y,z)}, @cite{G(x,y,z)} and so on;
24616the righthand side of the linearized model is computed in regular
24617arithmetic with no error forms.
24618
24619(While these rules may seem complicated, they are designed to do
24620the most reasonable thing in the typical case that @cite{Y(x,y,z)}
24621depends only on the dependent variable @cite{z}, and in fact is
24622often simply equal to @cite{z}. For common cases like polynomials
24623and multilinear models, the combined error is simply used as the
24624@c{$\sigma$}
24625@cite{sigma} for the data point with no further ado.)
24626
24627@tex
24628\bigskip
24629@end tex
24630
24631@vindex FitRules
24632It may be the case that the model you wish to use is linearizable,
24633but Calc's built-in rules are unable to figure it out. Calc uses
24634its algebraic rewrite mechanism to linearize a model. The rewrite
24635rules are kept in the variable @code{FitRules}. You can edit this
24636variable using the @kbd{s e FitRules} command; in fact, there is
24637a special @kbd{s F} command just for editing @code{FitRules}.
24638@xref{Operations on Variables}.
24639
24640@xref{Rewrite Rules}, for a discussion of rewrite rules.
24641
5d67986c
RS
24642@ignore
24643@starindex
24644@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 24645@tindex fitvar
5d67986c
RS
24646@ignore
24647@starindex
24648@end ignore
24649@ignore
24650@mindex @idots
24651@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 24652@tindex fitparam
5d67986c
RS
24653@ignore
24654@starindex
24655@end ignore
24656@ignore
24657@mindex @null
24658@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 24659@tindex fitmodel
5d67986c
RS
24660@ignore
24661@starindex
24662@end ignore
24663@ignore
24664@mindex @null
24665@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 24666@tindex fitsystem
5d67986c
RS
24667@ignore
24668@starindex
24669@end ignore
24670@ignore
24671@mindex @null
24672@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24673@tindex fitdummy
24674Calc uses @code{FitRules} as follows. First, it converts the model
24675to an equation if necessary and encloses the model equation in a
24676call to the function @code{fitmodel} (which is not actually a defined
24677function in Calc; it is only used as a placeholder by the rewrite rules).
24678Parameter variables are renamed to function calls @samp{fitparam(1)},
24679@samp{fitparam(2)}, and so on, and independent variables are renamed
24680to @samp{fitvar(1)}, @samp{fitvar(2)}, etc. The dependent variable
24681is the highest-numbered @code{fitvar}. For example, the power law
24682model @cite{a x^b} is converted to @cite{y = a x^b}, then to
24683
d7b8e6c6 24684@smallexample
5d67986c 24685@group
d7b8e6c6 24686fitmodel(fitvar(2) = fitparam(1) fitvar(1)^fitparam(2))
d7b8e6c6 24687@end group
5d67986c 24688@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24689
24690Calc then applies the rewrites as if by @samp{C-u 0 a r FitRules}.
24691(The zero prefix means that rewriting should continue until no further
24692changes are possible.)
24693
24694When rewriting is complete, the @code{fitmodel} call should have
24695been replaced by a @code{fitsystem} call that looks like this:
24696
24697@example
24698fitsystem(@var{Y}, @var{FGH}, @var{abc})
24699@end example
24700
24701@noindent
24702where @var{Y} is a formula that describes the function @cite{Y(x,y,z)},
24703@var{FGH} is the vector of formulas @cite{[F(x,y,z), G(x,y,z), H(x,y,z)]},
24704and @var{abc} is the vector of parameter filters which refer to the
24705raw parameters as @samp{fitdummy(1)} for @cite{A}, @samp{fitdummy(2)}
24706for @cite{B}, etc. While the number of raw parameters (the length of
24707the @var{FGH} vector) is usually the same as the number of original
24708parameters (the length of the @var{abc} vector), this is not required.
24709
24710The power law model eventually boils down to
24711
d7b8e6c6 24712@smallexample
5d67986c 24713@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24714fitsystem(ln(fitvar(2)),
24715 [1, ln(fitvar(1))],
24716 [exp(fitdummy(1)), fitdummy(2)])
d7b8e6c6 24717@end group
5d67986c 24718@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24719
24720The actual implementation of @code{FitRules} is complicated; it
24721proceeds in four phases. First, common rearrangements are done
24722to try to bring linear terms together and to isolate functions like
24723@code{exp} and @code{ln} either all the way ``out'' (so that they
24724can be put into @var{Y}) or all the way ``in'' (so that they can
24725be put into @var{abc} or @var{FGH}). In particular, all
24726non-constant powers are converted to logs-and-exponentials form,
24727and the distributive law is used to expand products of sums.
24728Quotients are rewritten to use the @samp{fitinv} function, where
24729@samp{fitinv(x)} represents @cite{1/x} while the @code{FitRules}
24730are operating. (The use of @code{fitinv} makes recognition of
24731linear-looking forms easier.) If you modify @code{FitRules}, you
24732will probably only need to modify the rules for this phase.
24733
24734Phase two, whose rules can actually also apply during phases one
24735and three, first rewrites @code{fitmodel} to a two-argument
24736form @samp{fitmodel(@var{Y}, @var{model})}, where @var{Y} is
24737initially zero and @var{model} has been changed from @cite{a=b}
24738to @cite{a-b} form. It then tries to peel off invertible functions
24739from the outside of @var{model} and put them into @var{Y} instead,
24740calling the equation solver to invert the functions. Finally, when
24741this is no longer possible, the @code{fitmodel} is changed to a
24742four-argument @code{fitsystem}, where the fourth argument is
24743@var{model} and the @var{FGH} and @var{abc} vectors are initially
24744empty. (The last vector is really @var{ABC}, corresponding to
24745raw parameters, for now.)
24746
24747Phase three converts a sum of items in the @var{model} to a sum
24748of @samp{fitpart(@var{a}, @var{b}, @var{c})} terms which represent
24749terms @samp{@var{a}*@var{b}*@var{c}} of the sum, where @var{a}
24750is all factors that do not involve any variables, @var{b} is all
24751factors that involve only parameters, and @var{c} is the factors
24752that involve only independent variables. (If this decomposition
24753is not possible, the rule set will not complete and Calc will
24754complain that the model is too complex.) Then @code{fitpart}s
24755with equal @var{b} or @var{c} components are merged back together
24756using the distributive law in order to minimize the number of
24757raw parameters needed.
24758
24759Phase four moves the @code{fitpart} terms into the @var{FGH} and
24760@var{ABC} vectors. Also, some of the algebraic expansions that
24761were done in phase 1 are undone now to make the formulas more
24762computationally efficient. Finally, it calls the solver one more
24763time to convert the @var{ABC} vector to an @var{abc} vector, and
24764removes the fourth @var{model} argument (which by now will be zero)
24765to obtain the three-argument @code{fitsystem} that the linear
24766least-squares solver wants to see.
24767
5d67986c
RS
24768@ignore
24769@starindex
24770@end ignore
24771@ignore
24772@mindex hasfit@idots
24773@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 24774@tindex hasfitparams
5d67986c
RS
24775@ignore
24776@starindex
24777@end ignore
24778@ignore
24779@mindex @null
24780@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24781@tindex hasfitvars
24782Two functions which are useful in connection with @code{FitRules}
24783are @samp{hasfitparams(x)} and @samp{hasfitvars(x)}, which check
24784whether @cite{x} refers to any parameters or independent variables,
24785respectively. Specifically, these functions return ``true'' if the
24786argument contains any @code{fitparam} (or @code{fitvar}) function
24787calls, and ``false'' otherwise. (Recall that ``true'' means a
24788nonzero number, and ``false'' means zero. The actual nonzero number
24789returned is the largest @var{n} from all the @samp{fitparam(@var{n})}s
24790or @samp{fitvar(@var{n})}s, respectively, that appear in the formula.)
24791
24792@tex
24793\bigskip
24794@end tex
24795
24796The @code{fit} function in algebraic notation normally takes four
24797arguments, @samp{fit(@var{model}, @var{vars}, @var{params}, @var{data})},
24798where @var{model} is the model formula as it would be typed after
24799@kbd{a F '}, @var{vars} is the independent variable or a vector of
24800independent variables, @var{params} likewise gives the parameter(s),
24801and @var{data} is the data matrix. Note that the length of @var{vars}
24802must be equal to the number of rows in @var{data} if @var{model} is
24803an equation, or one less than the number of rows if @var{model} is
24804a plain formula. (Actually, a name for the dependent variable is
24805allowed but will be ignored in the plain-formula case.)
24806
24807If @var{params} is omitted, the parameters are all variables in
24808@var{model} except those that appear in @var{vars}. If @var{vars}
24809is also omitted, Calc sorts all the variables that appear in
24810@var{model} alphabetically and uses the higher ones for @var{vars}
24811and the lower ones for @var{params}.
24812
24813Alternatively, @samp{fit(@var{modelvec}, @var{data})} is allowed
24814where @var{modelvec} is a 2- or 3-vector describing the model
24815and variables, as discussed previously.
24816
24817If Calc is unable to do the fit, the @code{fit} function is left
24818in symbolic form, ordinarily with an explanatory message. The
24819message will be ``Model expression is too complex'' if the
24820linearizer was unable to put the model into the required form.
24821
24822The @code{efit} (corresponding to @kbd{H a F}) and @code{xfit}
24823(for @kbd{I a F}) functions are completely analogous.
24824
24825@node Interpolation, , Curve Fitting Details, Curve Fitting
24826@subsection Polynomial Interpolation
24827
24828@kindex a p
24829@pindex calc-poly-interp
24830@tindex polint
24831The @kbd{a p} (@code{calc-poly-interp}) [@code{polint}] command does
24832a polynomial interpolation at a particular @cite{x} value. It takes
24833two arguments from the stack: A data matrix of the sort used by
24834@kbd{a F}, and a single number which represents the desired @cite{x}
24835value. Calc effectively does an exact polynomial fit as if by @kbd{a F i},
24836then substitutes the @cite{x} value into the result in order to get an
24837approximate @cite{y} value based on the fit. (Calc does not actually
24838use @kbd{a F i}, however; it uses a direct method which is both more
24839efficient and more numerically stable.)
24840
24841The result of @kbd{a p} is actually a vector of two values: The @cite{y}
24842value approximation, and an error measure @cite{dy} that reflects Calc's
24843estimation of the probable error of the approximation at that value of
24844@cite{x}. If the input @cite{x} is equal to any of the @cite{x} values
24845in the data matrix, the output @cite{y} will be the corresponding @cite{y}
24846value from the matrix, and the output @cite{dy} will be exactly zero.
24847
24848A prefix argument of 2 causes @kbd{a p} to take separate x- and
24849y-vectors from the stack instead of one data matrix.
24850
24851If @cite{x} is a vector of numbers, @kbd{a p} will return a matrix of
24852interpolated results for each of those @cite{x} values. (The matrix will
24853have two columns, the @cite{y} values and the @cite{dy} values.)
24854If @cite{x} is a formula instead of a number, the @code{polint} function
24855remains in symbolic form; use the @kbd{a "} command to expand it out to
24856a formula that describes the fit in symbolic terms.
24857
24858In all cases, the @kbd{a p} command leaves the data vectors or matrix
24859on the stack. Only the @cite{x} value is replaced by the result.
24860
24861@kindex H a p
24862@tindex ratint
24863The @kbd{H a p} [@code{ratint}] command does a rational function
24864interpolation. It is used exactly like @kbd{a p}, except that it
24865uses as its model the quotient of two polynomials. If there are
24866@cite{N} data points, the numerator and denominator polynomials will
24867each have degree @cite{N/2} (if @cite{N} is odd, the denominator will
24868have degree one higher than the numerator).
24869
24870Rational approximations have the advantage that they can accurately
24871describe functions that have poles (points at which the function's value
24872goes to infinity, so that the denominator polynomial of the approximation
24873goes to zero). If @cite{x} corresponds to a pole of the fitted rational
24874function, then the result will be a division by zero. If Infinite mode
24875is enabled, the result will be @samp{[uinf, uinf]}.
24876
24877There is no way to get the actual coefficients of the rational function
24878used by @kbd{H a p}. (The algorithm never generates these coefficients
24879explicitly, and quotients of polynomials are beyond @w{@kbd{a F}}'s
24880capabilities to fit.)
24881
24882@node Summations, Logical Operations, Curve Fitting, Algebra
24883@section Summations
24884
24885@noindent
24886@cindex Summation of a series
24887@kindex a +
24888@pindex calc-summation
24889@tindex sum
24890The @kbd{a +} (@code{calc-summation}) [@code{sum}] command computes
24891the sum of a formula over a certain range of index values. The formula
24892is taken from the top of the stack; the command prompts for the
24893name of the summation index variable, the lower limit of the
24894sum (any formula), and the upper limit of the sum. If you
24895enter a blank line at any of these prompts, that prompt and
24896any later ones are answered by reading additional elements from
5d67986c 24897the stack. Thus, @kbd{' k^2 @key{RET} ' k @key{RET} 1 @key{RET} 5 @key{RET} a + @key{RET}}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24898produces the result 55.
24899@tex
24900\turnoffactive
24901$$ \sum_{k=1}^5 k^2 = 55 $$
24902@end tex
24903
24904The choice of index variable is arbitrary, but it's best not to
24905use a variable with a stored value. In particular, while
24906@code{i} is often a favorite index variable, it should be avoided
24907in Calc because @code{i} has the imaginary constant @cite{(0, 1)}
24908as a value. If you pressed @kbd{=} on a sum over @code{i}, it would
24909be changed to a nonsensical sum over the ``variable'' @cite{(0, 1)}!
24910If you really want to use @code{i} as an index variable, use
5d67986c 24911@w{@kbd{s u i @key{RET}}} first to ``unstore'' this variable.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24912(@xref{Storing Variables}.)
24913
24914A numeric prefix argument steps the index by that amount rather
5d67986c 24915than by one. Thus @kbd{' a_k @key{RET} C-u -2 a + k @key{RET} 10 @key{RET} 0 @key{RET}}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
24916yields @samp{a_10 + a_8 + a_6 + a_4 + a_2 + a_0}. A prefix
24917argument of plain @kbd{C-u} causes @kbd{a +} to prompt for the
24918step value, in which case you can enter any formula or enter
24919a blank line to take the step value from the stack. With the
24920@kbd{C-u} prefix, @kbd{a +} can take up to five arguments from
24921the stack: The formula, the variable, the lower limit, the
24922upper limit, and (at the top of the stack), the step value.
24923
24924Calc knows how to do certain sums in closed form. For example,
24925@samp{sum(6 k^2, k, 1, n) = @w{2 n^3} + 3 n^2 + n}. In particular,
24926this is possible if the formula being summed is polynomial or
24927exponential in the index variable. Sums of logarithms are
24928transformed into logarithms of products. Sums of trigonometric
24929and hyperbolic functions are transformed to sums of exponentials
24930and then done in closed form. Also, of course, sums in which the
24931lower and upper limits are both numbers can always be evaluated
24932just by grinding them out, although Calc will use closed forms
24933whenever it can for the sake of efficiency.
24934
24935The notation for sums in algebraic formulas is
24936@samp{sum(@var{expr}, @var{var}, @var{low}, @var{high}, @var{step})}.
24937If @var{step} is omitted, it defaults to one. If @var{high} is
24938omitted, @var{low} is actually the upper limit and the lower limit
24939is one. If @var{low} is also omitted, the limits are @samp{-inf}
24940and @samp{inf}, respectively.
24941
24942Infinite sums can sometimes be evaluated: @samp{sum(.5^k, k, 1, inf)}
24943returns @cite{1}. This is done by evaluating the sum in closed
24944form (to @samp{1. - 0.5^n} in this case), then evaluating this
24945formula with @code{n} set to @code{inf}. Calc's usual rules
24946for ``infinite'' arithmetic can find the answer from there. If
24947infinite arithmetic yields a @samp{nan}, or if the sum cannot be
24948solved in closed form, Calc leaves the @code{sum} function in
24949symbolic form. @xref{Infinities}.
24950
24951As a special feature, if the limits are infinite (or omitted, as
24952described above) but the formula includes vectors subscripted by
24953expressions that involve the iteration variable, Calc narrows
24954the limits to include only the range of integers which result in
24955legal subscripts for the vector. For example, the sum
24956@samp{sum(k [a,b,c,d,e,f,g]_(2k),k)} evaluates to @samp{b + 2 d + 3 f}.
24957
24958The limits of a sum do not need to be integers. For example,
24959@samp{sum(a_k, k, 0, 2 n, n)} produces @samp{a_0 + a_n + a_(2 n)}.
24960Calc computes the number of iterations using the formula
24961@samp{1 + (@var{high} - @var{low}) / @var{step}}, which must,
24962after simplification as if by @kbd{a s}, evaluate to an integer.
24963
24964If the number of iterations according to the above formula does
24965not come out to an integer, the sum is illegal and will be left
24966in symbolic form. However, closed forms are still supplied, and
24967you are on your honor not to misuse the resulting formulas by
24968substituting mismatched bounds into them. For example,
24969@samp{sum(k, k, 1, 10, 2)} is invalid, but Calc will go ahead and
24970evaluate the closed form solution for the limits 1 and 10 to get
24971the rather dubious answer, 29.25.
24972
24973If the lower limit is greater than the upper limit (assuming a
24974positive step size), the result is generally zero. However,
24975Calc only guarantees a zero result when the upper limit is
24976exactly one step less than the lower limit, i.e., if the number
24977of iterations is @i{-1}. Thus @samp{sum(f(k), k, n, n-1)} is zero
24978but the sum from @samp{n} to @samp{n-2} may report a nonzero value
24979if Calc used a closed form solution.
24980
24981Calc's logical predicates like @cite{a < b} return 1 for ``true''
24982and 0 for ``false.'' @xref{Logical Operations}. This can be
24983used to advantage for building conditional sums. For example,
24984@samp{sum(prime(k)*k^2, k, 1, 20)} is the sum of the squares of all
24985prime numbers from 1 to 20; the @code{prime} predicate returns 1 if
24986its argument is prime and 0 otherwise. You can read this expression
24987as ``the sum of @cite{k^2}, where @cite{k} is prime.'' Indeed,
24988@samp{sum(prime(k)*k^2, k)} would represent the sum of @emph{all} primes
24989squared, since the limits default to plus and minus infinity, but
24990there are no such sums that Calc's built-in rules can do in
24991closed form.
24992
24993As another example, @samp{sum((k != k_0) * f(k), k, 1, n)} is the
24994sum of @cite{f(k)} for all @cite{k} from 1 to @cite{n}, excluding
24995one value @cite{k_0}. Slightly more tricky is the summand
24996@samp{(k != k_0) / (k - k_0)}, which is an attempt to describe
24997the sum of all @cite{1/(k-k_0)} except at @cite{k = k_0}, where
24998this would be a division by zero. But at @cite{k = k_0}, this
24999formula works out to the indeterminate form @cite{0 / 0}, which
25000Calc will not assume is zero. Better would be to use
25001@samp{(k != k_0) ? 1/(k-k_0) : 0}; the @samp{? :} operator does
25002an ``if-then-else'' test: This expression says, ``if @c{$k \ne k_0$}
25003@cite{k != k_0},
25004then @cite{1/(k-k_0)}, else zero.'' Now the formula @cite{1/(k-k_0)}
25005will not even be evaluated by Calc when @cite{k = k_0}.
25006
25007@cindex Alternating sums
25008@kindex a -
25009@pindex calc-alt-summation
25010@tindex asum
25011The @kbd{a -} (@code{calc-alt-summation}) [@code{asum}] command
25012computes an alternating sum. Successive terms of the sequence
25013are given alternating signs, with the first term (corresponding
25014to the lower index value) being positive. Alternating sums
25015are converted to normal sums with an extra term of the form
25016@samp{(-1)^(k-@var{low})}. This formula is adjusted appropriately
25017if the step value is other than one. For example, the Taylor
25018series for the sine function is @samp{asum(x^k / k!, k, 1, inf, 2)}.
25019(Calc cannot evaluate this infinite series, but it can approximate
25020it if you replace @code{inf} with any particular odd number.)
25021Calc converts this series to a regular sum with a step of one,
25022namely @samp{sum((-1)^k x^(2k+1) / (2k+1)!, k, 0, inf)}.
25023
25024@cindex Product of a sequence
25025@kindex a *
25026@pindex calc-product
25027@tindex prod
25028The @kbd{a *} (@code{calc-product}) [@code{prod}] command is
25029the analogous way to take a product of many terms. Calc also knows
25030some closed forms for products, such as @samp{prod(k, k, 1, n) = n!}.
25031Conditional products can be written @samp{prod(k^prime(k), k, 1, n)}
25032or @samp{prod(prime(k) ? k : 1, k, 1, n)}.
25033
25034@kindex a T
25035@pindex calc-tabulate
25036@tindex table
25037The @kbd{a T} (@code{calc-tabulate}) [@code{table}] command
25038evaluates a formula at a series of iterated index values, just
25039like @code{sum} and @code{prod}, but its result is simply a
25040vector of the results. For example, @samp{table(a_i, i, 1, 7, 2)}
25041produces @samp{[a_1, a_3, a_5, a_7]}.
25042
25043@node Logical Operations, Rewrite Rules, Summations, Algebra
25044@section Logical Operations
25045
25046@noindent
25047The following commands and algebraic functions return true/false values,
25048where 1 represents ``true'' and 0 represents ``false.'' In cases where
25049a truth value is required (such as for the condition part of a rewrite
25050rule, or as the condition for a @w{@kbd{Z [ Z ]}} control structure), any
25051nonzero value is accepted to mean ``true.'' (Specifically, anything
25052for which @code{dnonzero} returns 1 is ``true,'' and anything for
25053which @code{dnonzero} returns 0 or cannot decide is assumed ``false.''
25054Note that this means that @w{@kbd{Z [ Z ]}} will execute the ``then''
25055portion if its condition is provably true, but it will execute the
25056``else'' portion for any condition like @cite{a = b} that is not
25057provably true, even if it might be true. Algebraic functions that
25058have conditions as arguments, like @code{? :} and @code{&&}, remain
25059unevaluated if the condition is neither provably true nor provably
25060false. @xref{Declarations}.)
25061
25062@kindex a =
25063@pindex calc-equal-to
25064@tindex eq
25065@tindex =
25066@tindex ==
25067The @kbd{a =} (@code{calc-equal-to}) command, or @samp{eq(a,b)} function
25068(which can also be written @samp{a = b} or @samp{a == b} in an algebraic
25069formula) is true if @cite{a} and @cite{b} are equal, either because they
25070are identical expressions, or because they are numbers which are
25071numerically equal. (Thus the integer 1 is considered equal to the float
250721.0.) If the equality of @cite{a} and @cite{b} cannot be determined,
25073the comparison is left in symbolic form. Note that as a command, this
25074operation pops two values from the stack and pushes back either a 1 or
25075a 0, or a formula @samp{a = b} if the values' equality cannot be determined.
25076
25077Many Calc commands use @samp{=} formulas to represent @dfn{equations}.
25078For example, the @kbd{a S} (@code{calc-solve-for}) command rearranges
25079an equation to solve for a given variable. The @kbd{a M}
25080(@code{calc-map-equation}) command can be used to apply any
25081function to both sides of an equation; for example, @kbd{2 a M *}
25082multiplies both sides of the equation by two. Note that just
25083@kbd{2 *} would not do the same thing; it would produce the formula
25084@samp{2 (a = b)} which represents 2 if the equality is true or
25085zero if not.
25086
25087The @code{eq} function with more than two arguments (e.g., @kbd{C-u 3 a =}
25088or @samp{a = b = c}) tests if all of its arguments are equal. In
25089algebraic notation, the @samp{=} operator is unusual in that it is
25090neither left- nor right-associative: @samp{a = b = c} is not the
25091same as @samp{(a = b) = c} or @samp{a = (b = c)} (which each compare
25092one variable with the 1 or 0 that results from comparing two other
25093variables).
25094
25095@kindex a #
25096@pindex calc-not-equal-to
25097@tindex neq
25098@tindex !=
25099The @kbd{a #} (@code{calc-not-equal-to}) command, or @samp{neq(a,b)} or
25100@samp{a != b} function, is true if @cite{a} and @cite{b} are not equal.
25101This also works with more than two arguments; @samp{a != b != c != d}
25102tests that all four of @cite{a}, @cite{b}, @cite{c}, and @cite{d} are
25103distinct numbers.
25104
25105@kindex a <
25106@tindex lt
5d67986c
RS
25107@ignore
25108@mindex @idots
25109@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25110@kindex a >
5d67986c
RS
25111@ignore
25112@mindex @null
25113@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25114@kindex a [
5d67986c
RS
25115@ignore
25116@mindex @null
25117@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25118@kindex a ]
25119@pindex calc-less-than
25120@pindex calc-greater-than
25121@pindex calc-less-equal
25122@pindex calc-greater-equal
5d67986c
RS
25123@ignore
25124@mindex @null
25125@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25126@tindex gt
5d67986c
RS
25127@ignore
25128@mindex @null
25129@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25130@tindex leq
5d67986c
RS
25131@ignore
25132@mindex @null
25133@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25134@tindex geq
5d67986c
RS
25135@ignore
25136@mindex @null
25137@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25138@tindex <
5d67986c
RS
25139@ignore
25140@mindex @null
25141@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25142@tindex >
5d67986c
RS
25143@ignore
25144@mindex @null
25145@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25146@tindex <=
5d67986c
RS
25147@ignore
25148@mindex @null
25149@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25150@tindex >=
25151The @kbd{a <} (@code{calc-less-than}) [@samp{lt(a,b)} or @samp{a < b}]
25152operation is true if @cite{a} is less than @cite{b}. Similar functions
25153are @kbd{a >} (@code{calc-greater-than}) [@samp{gt(a,b)} or @samp{a > b}],
25154@kbd{a [} (@code{calc-less-equal}) [@samp{leq(a,b)} or @samp{a <= b}], and
25155@kbd{a ]} (@code{calc-greater-equal}) [@samp{geq(a,b)} or @samp{a >= b}].
25156
25157While the inequality functions like @code{lt} do not accept more
25158than two arguments, the syntax @w{@samp{a <= b < c}} is translated to an
25159equivalent expression involving intervals: @samp{b in [a .. c)}.
25160(See the description of @code{in} below.) All four combinations
25161of @samp{<} and @samp{<=} are allowed, or any of the four combinations
25162of @samp{>} and @samp{>=}. Four-argument constructions like
25163@samp{a < b < c < d}, and mixtures like @w{@samp{a < b = c}} that
25164involve both equalities and inequalities, are not allowed.
25165
25166@kindex a .
25167@pindex calc-remove-equal
25168@tindex rmeq
25169The @kbd{a .} (@code{calc-remove-equal}) [@code{rmeq}] command extracts
25170the righthand side of the equation or inequality on the top of the
25171stack. It also works elementwise on vectors. For example, if
25172@samp{[x = 2.34, y = z / 2]} is on the stack, then @kbd{a .} produces
25173@samp{[2.34, z / 2]}. As a special case, if the righthand side is a
25174variable and the lefthand side is a number (as in @samp{2.34 = x}), then
25175Calc keeps the lefthand side instead. Finally, this command works with
25176assignments @samp{x := 2.34} as well as equations, always taking the
25177the righthand side, and for @samp{=>} (evaluates-to) operators, always
25178taking the lefthand side.
25179
25180@kindex a &
25181@pindex calc-logical-and
25182@tindex land
25183@tindex &&
25184The @kbd{a &} (@code{calc-logical-and}) [@samp{land(a,b)} or @samp{a && b}]
25185function is true if both of its arguments are true, i.e., are
25186non-zero numbers. In this case, the result will be either @cite{a} or
25187@cite{b}, chosen arbitrarily. If either argument is zero, the result is
25188zero. Otherwise, the formula is left in symbolic form.
25189
25190@kindex a |
25191@pindex calc-logical-or
25192@tindex lor
25193@tindex ||
25194The @kbd{a |} (@code{calc-logical-or}) [@samp{lor(a,b)} or @samp{a || b}]
25195function is true if either or both of its arguments are true (nonzero).
25196The result is whichever argument was nonzero, choosing arbitrarily if both
25197are nonzero. If both @cite{a} and @cite{b} are zero, the result is
25198zero.
25199
25200@kindex a !
25201@pindex calc-logical-not
25202@tindex lnot
25203@tindex !
25204The @kbd{a !} (@code{calc-logical-not}) [@samp{lnot(a)} or @samp{!@: a}]
25205function is true if @cite{a} is false (zero), or false if @cite{a} is
25206true (nonzero). It is left in symbolic form if @cite{a} is not a
25207number.
25208
25209@kindex a :
25210@pindex calc-logical-if
25211@tindex if
5d67986c
RS
25212@ignore
25213@mindex ? :
25214@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25215@tindex ?
5d67986c
RS
25216@ignore
25217@mindex @null
25218@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25219@tindex :
25220@cindex Arguments, not evaluated
25221The @kbd{a :} (@code{calc-logical-if}) [@samp{if(a,b,c)} or @samp{a ? b :@: c}]
25222function is equal to either @cite{b} or @cite{c} if @cite{a} is a nonzero
25223number or zero, respectively. If @cite{a} is not a number, the test is
25224left in symbolic form and neither @cite{b} nor @cite{c} is evaluated in
25225any way. In algebraic formulas, this is one of the few Calc functions
25226whose arguments are not automatically evaluated when the function itself
25227is evaluated. The others are @code{lambda}, @code{quote}, and
25228@code{condition}.
25229
25230One minor surprise to watch out for is that the formula @samp{a?3:4}
25231will not work because the @samp{3:4} is parsed as a fraction instead of
25232as three separate symbols. Type something like @samp{a ? 3 : 4} or
25233@samp{a?(3):4} instead.
25234
25235As a special case, if @cite{a} evaluates to a vector, then both @cite{b}
25236and @cite{c} are evaluated; the result is a vector of the same length
25237as @cite{a} whose elements are chosen from corresponding elements of
25238@cite{b} and @cite{c} according to whether each element of @cite{a}
25239is zero or nonzero. Each of @cite{b} and @cite{c} must be either a
25240vector of the same length as @cite{a}, or a non-vector which is matched
25241with all elements of @cite{a}.
25242
25243@kindex a @{
25244@pindex calc-in-set
25245@tindex in
25246The @kbd{a @{} (@code{calc-in-set}) [@samp{in(a,b)}] function is true if
25247the number @cite{a} is in the set of numbers represented by @cite{b}.
25248If @cite{b} is an interval form, @cite{a} must be one of the values
25249encompassed by the interval. If @cite{b} is a vector, @cite{a} must be
25250equal to one of the elements of the vector. (If any vector elements are
25251intervals, @cite{a} must be in any of the intervals.) If @cite{b} is a
25252plain number, @cite{a} must be numerically equal to @cite{b}.
25253@xref{Set Operations}, for a group of commands that manipulate sets
25254of this sort.
25255
5d67986c
RS
25256@ignore
25257@starindex
25258@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25259@tindex typeof
25260The @samp{typeof(a)} function produces an integer or variable which
25261characterizes @cite{a}. If @cite{a} is a number, vector, or variable,
25262the result will be one of the following numbers:
25263
25264@example
25265 1 Integer
25266 2 Fraction
25267 3 Floating-point number
25268 4 HMS form
25269 5 Rectangular complex number
25270 6 Polar complex number
25271 7 Error form
25272 8 Interval form
25273 9 Modulo form
2527410 Date-only form
2527511 Date/time form
2527612 Infinity (inf, uinf, or nan)
25277100 Variable
25278101 Vector (but not a matrix)
25279102 Matrix
25280@end example
25281
25282Otherwise, @cite{a} is a formula, and the result is a variable which
25283represents the name of the top-level function call.
25284
5d67986c
RS
25285@ignore
25286@starindex
25287@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25288@tindex integer
5d67986c
RS
25289@ignore
25290@starindex
25291@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25292@tindex real
5d67986c
RS
25293@ignore
25294@starindex
25295@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25296@tindex constant
25297The @samp{integer(a)} function returns true if @cite{a} is an integer.
25298The @samp{real(a)} function
25299is true if @cite{a} is a real number, either integer, fraction, or
25300float. The @samp{constant(a)} function returns true if @cite{a} is
25301any of the objects for which @code{typeof} would produce an integer
25302code result except for variables, and provided that the components of
25303an object like a vector or error form are themselves constant.
25304Note that infinities do not satisfy any of these tests, nor do
25305special constants like @code{pi} and @code{e}.@refill
25306
25307@xref{Declarations}, for a set of similar functions that recognize
25308formulas as well as actual numbers. For example, @samp{dint(floor(x))}
25309is true because @samp{floor(x)} is provably integer-valued, but
25310@samp{integer(floor(x))} does not because @samp{floor(x)} is not
25311literally an integer constant.
25312
5d67986c
RS
25313@ignore
25314@starindex
25315@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25316@tindex refers
25317The @samp{refers(a,b)} function is true if the variable (or sub-expression)
25318@cite{b} appears in @cite{a}, or false otherwise. Unlike the other
25319tests described here, this function returns a definite ``no'' answer
25320even if its arguments are still in symbolic form. The only case where
25321@code{refers} will be left unevaluated is if @cite{a} is a plain
25322variable (different from @cite{b}).
25323
5d67986c
RS
25324@ignore
25325@starindex
25326@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25327@tindex negative
25328The @samp{negative(a)} function returns true if @cite{a} ``looks'' negative,
25329because it is a negative number, because it is of the form @cite{-x},
25330or because it is a product or quotient with a term that looks negative.
25331This is most useful in rewrite rules. Beware that @samp{negative(a)}
25332evaluates to 1 or 0 for @emph{any} argument @cite{a}, so it can only
25333be stored in a formula if the default simplifications are turned off
25334first with @kbd{m O} (or if it appears in an unevaluated context such
25335as a rewrite rule condition).
25336
5d67986c
RS
25337@ignore
25338@starindex
25339@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25340@tindex variable
25341The @samp{variable(a)} function is true if @cite{a} is a variable,
25342or false if not. If @cite{a} is a function call, this test is left
25343in symbolic form. Built-in variables like @code{pi} and @code{inf}
25344are considered variables like any others by this test.
25345
5d67986c
RS
25346@ignore
25347@starindex
25348@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25349@tindex nonvar
25350The @samp{nonvar(a)} function is true if @cite{a} is a non-variable.
25351If its argument is a variable it is left unsimplified; it never
25352actually returns zero. However, since Calc's condition-testing
25353commands consider ``false'' anything not provably true, this is
25354often good enough.
25355
5d67986c
RS
25356@ignore
25357@starindex
25358@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25359@tindex lin
5d67986c
RS
25360@ignore
25361@starindex
25362@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25363@tindex linnt
5d67986c
RS
25364@ignore
25365@starindex
25366@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 25367@tindex islin
5d67986c
RS
25368@ignore
25369@starindex
25370@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25371@tindex islinnt
25372@cindex Linearity testing
25373The functions @code{lin}, @code{linnt}, @code{islin}, and @code{islinnt}
25374check if an expression is ``linear,'' i.e., can be written in the form
25375@cite{a + b x} for some constants @cite{a} and @cite{b}, and some
25376variable or subformula @cite{x}. The function @samp{islin(f,x)} checks
25377if formula @cite{f} is linear in @cite{x}, returning 1 if so. For
25378example, @samp{islin(x,x)}, @samp{islin(-x,x)}, @samp{islin(3,x)}, and
25379@samp{islin(x y / 3 - 2, x)} all return 1. The @samp{lin(f,x)} function
25380is similar, except that instead of returning 1 it returns the vector
25381@cite{[a, b, x]}. For the above examples, this vector would be
25382@cite{[0, 1, x]}, @cite{[0, -1, x]}, @cite{[3, 0, x]}, and
25383@cite{[-2, y/3, x]}, respectively. Both @code{lin} and @code{islin}
25384generally remain unevaluated for expressions which are not linear,
25385e.g., @samp{lin(2 x^2, x)} and @samp{lin(sin(x), x)}. The second
25386argument can also be a formula; @samp{islin(2 + 3 sin(x), sin(x))}
25387returns true.
25388
25389The @code{linnt} and @code{islinnt} functions perform a similar check,
25390but require a ``non-trivial'' linear form, which means that the
25391@cite{b} coefficient must be non-zero. For example, @samp{lin(2,x)}
25392returns @cite{[2, 0, x]} and @samp{lin(y,x)} returns @cite{[y, 0, x]},
25393but @samp{linnt(2,x)} and @samp{linnt(y,x)} are left unevaluated
25394(in other words, these formulas are considered to be only ``trivially''
25395linear in @cite{x}).
25396
25397All four linearity-testing functions allow you to omit the second
25398argument, in which case the input may be linear in any non-constant
25399formula. Here, the @cite{a=0}, @cite{b=1} case is also considered
25400trivial, and only constant values for @cite{a} and @cite{b} are
25401recognized. Thus, @samp{lin(2 x y)} returns @cite{[0, 2, x y]},
25402@samp{lin(2 - x y)} returns @cite{[2, -1, x y]}, and @samp{lin(x y)}
25403returns @cite{[0, 1, x y]}. The @code{linnt} function would allow the
25404first two cases but not the third. Also, neither @code{lin} nor
25405@code{linnt} accept plain constants as linear in the one-argument
25406case: @samp{islin(2,x)} is true, but @samp{islin(2)} is false.
25407
5d67986c
RS
25408@ignore
25409@starindex
25410@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25411@tindex istrue
25412The @samp{istrue(a)} function returns 1 if @cite{a} is a nonzero
25413number or provably nonzero formula, or 0 if @cite{a} is anything else.
25414Calls to @code{istrue} can only be manipulated if @kbd{m O} mode is
25415used to make sure they are not evaluated prematurely. (Note that
25416declarations are used when deciding whether a formula is true;
25417@code{istrue} returns 1 when @code{dnonzero} would return 1, and
25418it returns 0 when @code{dnonzero} would return 0 or leave itself
25419in symbolic form.)
25420
25421@node Rewrite Rules, , Logical Operations, Algebra
25422@section Rewrite Rules
25423
25424@noindent
25425@cindex Rewrite rules
25426@cindex Transformations
25427@cindex Pattern matching
25428@kindex a r
25429@pindex calc-rewrite
25430@tindex rewrite
25431The @kbd{a r} (@code{calc-rewrite}) [@code{rewrite}] command makes
25432substitutions in a formula according to a specified pattern or patterns
25433known as @dfn{rewrite rules}. Whereas @kbd{a b} (@code{calc-substitute})
25434matches literally, so that substituting @samp{sin(x)} with @samp{cos(x)}
25435matches only the @code{sin} function applied to the variable @code{x},
25436rewrite rules match general kinds of formulas; rewriting using the rule
25437@samp{sin(x) := cos(x)} matches @code{sin} of any argument and replaces
25438it with @code{cos} of that same argument. The only significance of the
25439name @code{x} is that the same name is used on both sides of the rule.
25440
25441Rewrite rules rearrange formulas already in Calc's memory.
25442@xref{Syntax Tables}, to read about @dfn{syntax rules}, which are
25443similar to algebraic rewrite rules but operate when new algebraic
25444entries are being parsed, converting strings of characters into
25445Calc formulas.
25446
25447@menu
25448* Entering Rewrite Rules::
25449* Basic Rewrite Rules::
25450* Conditional Rewrite Rules::
25451* Algebraic Properties of Rewrite Rules::
25452* Other Features of Rewrite Rules::
25453* Composing Patterns in Rewrite Rules::
25454* Nested Formulas with Rewrite Rules::
25455* Multi-Phase Rewrite Rules::
25456* Selections with Rewrite Rules::
25457* Matching Commands::
25458* Automatic Rewrites::
25459* Debugging Rewrites::
25460* Examples of Rewrite Rules::
25461@end menu
25462
25463@node Entering Rewrite Rules, Basic Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
25464@subsection Entering Rewrite Rules
25465
25466@noindent
25467Rewrite rules normally use the ``assignment'' operator
25468@samp{@var{old} := @var{new}}.
25469This operator is equivalent to the function call @samp{assign(old, new)}.
25470The @code{assign} function is undefined by itself in Calc, so an
25471assignment formula such as a rewrite rule will be left alone by ordinary
25472Calc commands. But certain commands, like the rewrite system, interpret
25473assignments in special ways.@refill
25474
25475For example, the rule @samp{sin(x)^2 := 1-cos(x)^2} says to replace
25476every occurrence of the sine of something, squared, with one minus the
25477square of the cosine of that same thing. All by itself as a formula
25478on the stack it does nothing, but when given to the @kbd{a r} command
25479it turns that command into a sine-squared-to-cosine-squared converter.
25480
25481To specify a set of rules to be applied all at once, make a vector of
25482rules.
25483
25484When @kbd{a r} prompts you to enter the rewrite rules, you can answer
25485in several ways:
25486
25487@enumerate
25488@item
5d67986c 25489With a rule: @kbd{f(x) := g(x) @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6 25490@item
5d67986c 25491With a vector of rules: @kbd{[f1(x) := g1(x), f2(x) := g2(x)] @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25492(You can omit the enclosing square brackets if you wish.)
25493@item
25494With the name of a variable that contains the rule or rules vector:
5d67986c 25495@kbd{myrules @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25496@item
25497With any formula except a rule, a vector, or a variable name; this
25498will be interpreted as the @var{old} half of a rewrite rule,
25499and you will be prompted a second time for the @var{new} half:
25500@kbd{f(x) @key{RET} g(x) @key{RET}}.
25501@item
25502With a blank line, in which case the rule, rules vector, or variable
25503will be taken from the top of the stack (and the formula to be
25504rewritten will come from the second-to-top position).
25505@end enumerate
25506
25507If you enter the rules directly (as opposed to using rules stored
25508in a variable), those rules will be put into the Trail so that you
25509can retrieve them later. @xref{Trail Commands}.
25510
25511It is most convenient to store rules you use often in a variable and
25512invoke them by giving the variable name. The @kbd{s e}
25513(@code{calc-edit-variable}) command is an easy way to create or edit a
25514rule set stored in a variable. You may also wish to use @kbd{s p}
25515(@code{calc-permanent-variable}) to save your rules permanently;
25516@pxref{Operations on Variables}.@refill
25517
25518Rewrite rules are compiled into a special internal form for faster
25519matching. If you enter a rule set directly it must be recompiled
25520every time. If you store the rules in a variable and refer to them
25521through that variable, they will be compiled once and saved away
25522along with the variable for later reference. This is another good
25523reason to store your rules in a variable.
25524
25525Calc also accepts an obsolete notation for rules, as vectors
25526@samp{[@var{old}, @var{new}]}. But because it is easily confused with a
25527vector of two rules, the use of this notation is no longer recommended.
25528
25529@node Basic Rewrite Rules, Conditional Rewrite Rules, Entering Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
25530@subsection Basic Rewrite Rules
25531
25532@noindent
25533To match a particular formula @cite{x} with a particular rewrite rule
25534@samp{@var{old} := @var{new}}, Calc compares the structure of @cite{x} with
25535the structure of @var{old}. Variables that appear in @var{old} are
25536treated as @dfn{meta-variables}; the corresponding positions in @cite{x}
25537may contain any sub-formulas. For example, the pattern @samp{f(x,y)}
25538would match the expression @samp{f(12, a+1)} with the meta-variable
25539@samp{x} corresponding to 12 and with @samp{y} corresponding to
25540@samp{a+1}. However, this pattern would not match @samp{f(12)} or
25541@samp{g(12, a+1)}, since there is no assignment of the meta-variables
25542that will make the pattern match these expressions. Notice that if
25543the pattern is a single meta-variable, it will match any expression.
25544
25545If a given meta-variable appears more than once in @var{old}, the
25546corresponding sub-formulas of @cite{x} must be identical. Thus
25547the pattern @samp{f(x,x)} would match @samp{f(12, 12)} and
25548@samp{f(a+1, a+1)} but not @samp{f(12, a+1)} or @samp{f(a+b, b+a)}.
25549(@xref{Conditional Rewrite Rules}, for a way to match the latter.)
25550
25551Things other than variables must match exactly between the pattern
25552and the target formula. To match a particular variable exactly, use
25553the pseudo-function @samp{quote(v)} in the pattern. For example, the
25554pattern @samp{x+quote(y)} matches @samp{x+y}, @samp{2+y}, or
25555@samp{sin(a)+y}.
25556
25557The special variable names @samp{e}, @samp{pi}, @samp{i}, @samp{phi},
25558@samp{gamma}, @samp{inf}, @samp{uinf}, and @samp{nan} always match
25559literally. Thus the pattern @samp{sin(d + e + f)} acts exactly like
25560@samp{sin(d + quote(e) + f)}.
25561
25562If the @var{old} pattern is found to match a given formula, that
25563formula is replaced by @var{new}, where any occurrences in @var{new}
25564of meta-variables from the pattern are replaced with the sub-formulas
25565that they matched. Thus, applying the rule @samp{f(x,y) := g(y+x,x)}
25566to @samp{f(12, a+1)} would produce @samp{g(a+13, 12)}.
25567
25568The normal @kbd{a r} command applies rewrite rules over and over
25569throughout the target formula until no further changes are possible
25570(up to a limit of 100 times). Use @kbd{C-u 1 a r} to make only one
25571change at a time.
25572
25573@node Conditional Rewrite Rules, Algebraic Properties of Rewrite Rules, Basic Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
25574@subsection Conditional Rewrite Rules
25575
25576@noindent
25577A rewrite rule can also be @dfn{conditional}, written in the form
25578@samp{@var{old} := @var{new} :: @var{cond}}. (There is also the obsolete
25579form @samp{[@var{old}, @var{new}, @var{cond}]}.) If a @var{cond} part
25580is present in the
25581rule, this is an additional condition that must be satisfied before
25582the rule is accepted. Once @var{old} has been successfully matched
25583to the target expression, @var{cond} is evaluated (with all the
25584meta-variables substituted for the values they matched) and simplified
25585with @kbd{a s} (@code{calc-simplify}). If the result is a nonzero
25586number or any other object known to be nonzero (@pxref{Declarations}),
25587the rule is accepted. If the result is zero or if it is a symbolic
25588formula that is not known to be nonzero, the rule is rejected.
25589@xref{Logical Operations}, for a number of functions that return
255901 or 0 according to the results of various tests.@refill
25591
25592For example, the formula @samp{n > 0} simplifies to 1 or 0 if @cite{n}
25593is replaced by a positive or nonpositive number, respectively (or if
25594@cite{n} has been declared to be positive or nonpositive). Thus,
25595the rule @samp{f(x,y) := g(y+x,x) :: x+y > 0} would apply to
25596@samp{f(0, 4)} but not to @samp{f(-3, 2)} or @samp{f(12, a+1)}
25597(assuming no outstanding declarations for @cite{a}). In the case of
25598@samp{f(-3, 2)}, the condition can be shown not to be satisfied; in
25599the case of @samp{f(12, a+1)}, the condition merely cannot be shown
25600to be satisfied, but that is enough to reject the rule.
25601
25602While Calc will use declarations to reason about variables in the
25603formula being rewritten, declarations do not apply to meta-variables.
25604For example, the rule @samp{f(a) := g(a+1)} will match for any values
25605of @samp{a}, such as complex numbers, vectors, or formulas, even if
25606@samp{a} has been declared to be real or scalar. If you want the
25607meta-variable @samp{a} to match only literal real numbers, use
25608@samp{f(a) := g(a+1) :: real(a)}. If you want @samp{a} to match only
25609reals and formulas which are provably real, use @samp{dreal(a)} as
25610the condition.
25611
25612The @samp{::} operator is a shorthand for the @code{condition}
25613function; @samp{@var{old} := @var{new} :: @var{cond}} is equivalent to
25614the formula @samp{condition(assign(@var{old}, @var{new}), @var{cond})}.
25615
25616If you have several conditions, you can use @samp{... :: c1 :: c2 :: c3}
25617or @samp{... :: c1 && c2 && c3}. The two are entirely equivalent.
25618
25619It is also possible to embed conditions inside the pattern:
25620@samp{f(x :: x>0, y) := g(y+x, x)}. This is purely a notational
25621convenience, though; where a condition appears in a rule has no
25622effect on when it is tested. The rewrite-rule compiler automatically
25623decides when it is best to test each condition while a rule is being
25624matched.
25625
25626Certain conditions are handled as special cases by the rewrite rule
25627system and are tested very efficiently: Where @cite{x} is any
25628meta-variable, these conditions are @samp{integer(x)}, @samp{real(x)},
25629@samp{constant(x)}, @samp{negative(x)}, @samp{x >= y} where @cite{y}
25630is either a constant or another meta-variable and @samp{>=} may be
25631replaced by any of the six relational operators, and @samp{x % a = b}
25632where @cite{a} and @cite{b} are constants. Other conditions, like
25633@samp{x >= y+1} or @samp{dreal(x)}, will be less efficient to check
25634since Calc must bring the whole evaluator and simplifier into play.
25635
25636An interesting property of @samp{::} is that neither of its arguments
25637will be touched by Calc's default simplifications. This is important
25638because conditions often are expressions that cannot safely be
25639evaluated early. For example, the @code{typeof} function never
25640remains in symbolic form; entering @samp{typeof(a)} will put the
25641number 100 (the type code for variables like @samp{a}) on the stack.
25642But putting the condition @samp{... :: typeof(a) = 6} on the stack
25643is safe since @samp{::} prevents the @code{typeof} from being
25644evaluated until the condition is actually used by the rewrite system.
25645
25646Since @samp{::} protects its lefthand side, too, you can use a dummy
25647condition to protect a rule that must itself not evaluate early.
25648For example, it's not safe to put @samp{a(f,x) := apply(f, [x])} on
25649the stack because it will immediately evaluate to @samp{a(f,x) := f(x)},
25650where the meta-variable-ness of @code{f} on the righthand side has been
25651lost. But @samp{a(f,x) := apply(f, [x]) :: 1} is safe, and of course
25652the condition @samp{1} is always true (nonzero) so it has no effect on
25653the functioning of the rule. (The rewrite compiler will ensure that
25654it doesn't even impact the speed of matching the rule.)
25655
25656@node Algebraic Properties of Rewrite Rules, Other Features of Rewrite Rules, Conditional Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
25657@subsection Algebraic Properties of Rewrite Rules
25658
25659@noindent
25660The rewrite mechanism understands the algebraic properties of functions
25661like @samp{+} and @samp{*}. In particular, pattern matching takes
25662the associativity and commutativity of the following functions into
25663account:
25664
25665@smallexample
25666+ - * = != && || and or xor vint vunion vxor gcd lcm max min beta
25667@end smallexample
25668
25669For example, the rewrite rule:
25670
25671@example
25672a x + b x := (a + b) x
25673@end example
25674
25675@noindent
25676will match formulas of the form,
25677
25678@example
25679a x + b x, x a + x b, a x + x b, x a + b x
25680@end example
25681
25682Rewrites also understand the relationship between the @samp{+} and @samp{-}
25683operators. The above rewrite rule will also match the formulas,
25684
25685@example
25686a x - b x, x a - x b, a x - x b, x a - b x
25687@end example
25688
25689@noindent
25690by matching @samp{b} in the pattern to @samp{-b} from the formula.
25691
25692Applied to a sum of many terms like @samp{r + a x + s + b x + t}, this
25693pattern will check all pairs of terms for possible matches. The rewrite
25694will take whichever suitable pair it discovers first.
25695
25696In general, a pattern using an associative operator like @samp{a + b}
5d67986c 25697will try @var{2 n} different ways to match a sum of @var{n} terms
d7b8e6c6
EZ
25698like @samp{x + y + z - w}. First, @samp{a} is matched against each
25699of @samp{x}, @samp{y}, @samp{z}, and @samp{-w} in turn, with @samp{b}
25700being matched to the remainders @samp{y + z - w}, @samp{x + z - w}, etc.
25701If none of these succeed, then @samp{b} is matched against each of the
25702four terms with @samp{a} matching the remainder. Half-and-half matches,
25703like @samp{(x + y) + (z - w)}, are not tried.
25704
25705Note that @samp{*} is not commutative when applied to matrices, but
25706rewrite rules pretend that it is. If you type @kbd{m v} to enable
25707matrix mode (@pxref{Matrix Mode}), rewrite rules will match @samp{*}
25708literally, ignoring its usual commutativity property. (In the
25709current implementation, the associativity also vanishes---it is as
25710if the pattern had been enclosed in a @code{plain} marker; see below.)
25711If you are applying rewrites to formulas with matrices, it's best to
25712enable matrix mode first to prevent algebraically incorrect rewrites
25713from occurring.
25714
25715The pattern @samp{-x} will actually match any expression. For example,
25716the rule
25717
25718@example
25719f(-x) := -f(x)
25720@end example
25721
25722@noindent
25723will rewrite @samp{f(a)} to @samp{-f(-a)}. To avoid this, either use
25724a @code{plain} marker as described below, or add a @samp{negative(x)}
25725condition. The @code{negative} function is true if its argument
25726``looks'' negative, for example, because it is a negative number or
25727because it is a formula like @samp{-x}. The new rule using this
25728condition is:
25729
25730@example
25731f(x) := -f(-x) :: negative(x) @r{or, equivalently,}
25732f(-x) := -f(x) :: negative(-x)
25733@end example
25734
25735In the same way, the pattern @samp{x - y} will match the sum @samp{a + b}
25736by matching @samp{y} to @samp{-b}.
25737
25738The pattern @samp{a b} will also match the formula @samp{x/y} if
25739@samp{y} is a number. Thus the rule @samp{a x + @w{b x} := (a+b) x}
25740will also convert @samp{a x + x / 2} to @samp{(a + 0.5) x} (or
25741@samp{(a + 1:2) x}, depending on the current fraction mode).
25742
25743Calc will @emph{not} take other liberties with @samp{*}, @samp{/}, and
25744@samp{^}. For example, the pattern @samp{f(a b)} will not match
25745@samp{f(x^2)}, and @samp{f(a + b)} will not match @samp{f(2 x)}, even
25746though conceivably these patterns could match with @samp{a = b = x}.
25747Nor will @samp{f(a b)} match @samp{f(x / y)} if @samp{y} is not a
25748constant, even though it could be considered to match with @samp{a = x}
25749and @samp{b = 1/y}. The reasons are partly for efficiency, and partly
25750because while few mathematical operations are substantively different
25751for addition and subtraction, often it is preferable to treat the cases
25752of multiplication, division, and integer powers separately.
25753
25754Even more subtle is the rule set
25755
25756@example
25757[ f(a) + f(b) := f(a + b), -f(a) := f(-a) ]
25758@end example
25759
25760@noindent
25761attempting to match @samp{f(x) - f(y)}. You might think that Calc
25762will view this subtraction as @samp{f(x) + (-f(y))} and then apply
25763the above two rules in turn, but actually this will not work because
25764Calc only does this when considering rules for @samp{+} (like the
25765first rule in this set). So it will see first that @samp{f(x) + (-f(y))}
25766does not match @samp{f(a) + f(b)} for any assignments of the
25767meta-variables, and then it will see that @samp{f(x) - f(y)} does
25768not match @samp{-f(a)} for any assignment of @samp{a}. Because Calc
25769tries only one rule at a time, it will not be able to rewrite
25770@samp{f(x) - f(y)} with this rule set. An explicit @samp{f(a) - f(b)}
25771rule will have to be added.
25772
25773Another thing patterns will @emph{not} do is break up complex numbers.
25774The pattern @samp{myconj(a + @w{b i)} := a - b i} will work for formulas
25775involving the special constant @samp{i} (such as @samp{3 - 4 i}), but
25776it will not match actual complex numbers like @samp{(3, -4)}. A version
25777of the above rule for complex numbers would be
25778
25779@example
25780myconj(a) := re(a) - im(a) (0,1) :: im(a) != 0
25781@end example
25782
25783@noindent
25784(Because the @code{re} and @code{im} functions understand the properties
25785of the special constant @samp{i}, this rule will also work for
25786@samp{3 - 4 i}. In fact, this particular rule would probably be better
25787without the @samp{im(a) != 0} condition, since if @samp{im(a) = 0} the
25788righthand side of the rule will still give the correct answer for the
25789conjugate of a real number.)
25790
25791It is also possible to specify optional arguments in patterns. The rule
25792
25793@example
25794opt(a) x + opt(b) (x^opt(c) + opt(d)) := f(a, b, c, d)
25795@end example
25796
25797@noindent
25798will match the formula
25799
25800@example
258015 (x^2 - 4) + 3 x
25802@end example
25803
25804@noindent
25805in a fairly straightforward manner, but it will also match reduced
25806formulas like
25807
25808@example
25809x + x^2, 2(x + 1) - x, x + x
25810@end example
25811
25812@noindent
25813producing, respectively,
25814
25815@example
25816f(1, 1, 2, 0), f(-1, 2, 1, 1), f(1, 1, 1, 0)
25817@end example
25818
25819(The latter two formulas can be entered only if default simplifications
25820have been turned off with @kbd{m O}.)
25821
25822The default value for a term of a sum is zero. The default value
25823for a part of a product, for a power, or for the denominator of a
25824quotient, is one. Also, @samp{-x} matches the pattern @samp{opt(a) b}
25825with @samp{a = -1}.
25826
25827In particular, the distributive-law rule can be refined to
25828
25829@example
25830opt(a) x + opt(b) x := (a + b) x
25831@end example
25832
25833@noindent
25834so that it will convert, e.g., @samp{a x - x}, to @samp{(a - 1) x}.
25835
25836The pattern @samp{opt(a) + opt(b) x} matches almost any formulas which
25837are linear in @samp{x}. You can also use the @code{lin} and @code{islin}
25838functions with rewrite conditions to test for this; @pxref{Logical
25839Operations}. These functions are not as convenient to use in rewrite
25840rules, but they recognize more kinds of formulas as linear:
25841@samp{x/z} is considered linear with @cite{b = 1/z} by @code{lin},
25842but it will not match the above pattern because that pattern calls
25843for a multiplication, not a division.
25844
25845As another example, the obvious rule to replace @samp{sin(x)^2 + cos(x)^2}
25846by 1,
25847
25848@example
25849sin(x)^2 + cos(x)^2 := 1
25850@end example
25851
25852@noindent
25853misses many cases because the sine and cosine may both be multiplied by
25854an equal factor. Here's a more successful rule:
25855
25856@example
25857opt(a) sin(x)^2 + opt(a) cos(x)^2 := a
25858@end example
25859
25860Note that this rule will @emph{not} match @samp{sin(x)^2 + 6 cos(x)^2}
25861because one @cite{a} would have ``matched'' 1 while the other matched 6.
25862
25863Calc automatically converts a rule like
25864
25865@example
25866f(x-1, x) := g(x)
25867@end example
25868
25869@noindent
25870into the form
25871
25872@example
25873f(temp, x) := g(x) :: temp = x-1
25874@end example
25875
25876@noindent
25877(where @code{temp} stands for a new, invented meta-variable that
25878doesn't actually have a name). This modified rule will successfully
25879match @samp{f(6, 7)}, binding @samp{temp} and @samp{x} to 6 and 7,
25880respectively, then verifying that they differ by one even though
25881@samp{6} does not superficially look like @samp{x-1}.
25882
25883However, Calc does not solve equations to interpret a rule. The
25884following rule,
25885
25886@example
25887f(x-1, x+1) := g(x)
25888@end example
25889
25890@noindent
25891will not work. That is, it will match @samp{f(a - 1 + b, a + 1 + b)}
25892but not @samp{f(6, 8)}. Calc always interprets at least one occurrence
25893of a variable by literal matching. If the variable appears ``isolated''
25894then Calc is smart enough to use it for literal matching. But in this
25895last example, Calc is forced to rewrite the rule to @samp{f(x-1, temp)
25896:= g(x) :: temp = x+1} where the @samp{x-1} term must correspond to an
25897actual ``something-minus-one'' in the target formula.
25898
25899A successful way to write this would be @samp{f(x, x+2) := g(x+1)}.
25900You could make this resemble the original form more closely by using
25901@code{let} notation, which is described in the next section:
25902
25903@example
25904f(xm1, x+1) := g(x) :: let(x := xm1+1)
25905@end example
25906
25907Calc does this rewriting or ``conditionalizing'' for any sub-pattern
25908which involves only the functions in the following list, operating
25909only on constants and meta-variables which have already been matched
25910elsewhere in the pattern. When matching a function call, Calc is
25911careful to match arguments which are plain variables before arguments
25912which are calls to any of the functions below, so that a pattern like
25913@samp{f(x-1, x)} can be conditionalized even though the isolated
25914@samp{x} comes after the @samp{x-1}.
25915
25916@smallexample
25917+ - * / \ % ^ abs sign round rounde roundu trunc floor ceil
25918max min re im conj arg
25919@end smallexample
25920
25921You can suppress all of the special treatments described in this
25922section by surrounding a function call with a @code{plain} marker.
25923This marker causes the function call which is its argument to be
25924matched literally, without regard to commutativity, associativity,
25925negation, or conditionalization. When you use @code{plain}, the
25926``deep structure'' of the formula being matched can show through.
25927For example,
25928
25929@example
25930plain(a - a b) := f(a, b)
25931@end example
25932
25933@noindent
25934will match only literal subtractions. However, the @code{plain}
25935marker does not affect its arguments' arguments. In this case,
25936commutativity and associativity is still considered while matching
25937the @w{@samp{a b}} sub-pattern, so the whole pattern will match
25938@samp{x - y x} as well as @samp{x - x y}. We could go still
25939further and use
25940
25941@example
25942plain(a - plain(a b)) := f(a, b)
25943@end example
25944
25945@noindent
25946which would do a completely strict match for the pattern.
25947
25948By contrast, the @code{quote} marker means that not only the
25949function name but also the arguments must be literally the same.
25950The above pattern will match @samp{x - x y} but
25951
25952@example
25953quote(a - a b) := f(a, b)
25954@end example
25955
25956@noindent
25957will match only the single formula @samp{a - a b}. Also,
25958
25959@example
25960quote(a - quote(a b)) := f(a, b)
25961@end example
25962
25963@noindent
25964will match only @samp{a - quote(a b)}---probably not the desired
25965effect!
25966
25967A certain amount of algebra is also done when substituting the
25968meta-variables on the righthand side of a rule. For example,
25969in the rule
25970
25971@example
25972a + f(b) := f(a + b)
25973@end example
25974
25975@noindent
25976matching @samp{f(x) - y} would produce @samp{f((-y) + x)} if
25977taken literally, but the rewrite mechanism will simplify the
25978righthand side to @samp{f(x - y)} automatically. (Of course,
25979the default simplifications would do this anyway, so this
25980special simplification is only noticeable if you have turned the
25981default simplifications off.) This rewriting is done only when
25982a meta-variable expands to a ``negative-looking'' expression.
25983If this simplification is not desirable, you can use a @code{plain}
25984marker on the righthand side:
25985
25986@example
25987a + f(b) := f(plain(a + b))
25988@end example
25989
25990@noindent
25991In this example, we are still allowing the pattern-matcher to
25992use all the algebra it can muster, but the righthand side will
25993always simplify to a literal addition like @samp{f((-y) + x)}.
25994
25995@node Other Features of Rewrite Rules, Composing Patterns in Rewrite Rules, Algebraic Properties of Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
25996@subsection Other Features of Rewrite Rules
25997
25998@noindent
25999Certain ``function names'' serve as markers in rewrite rules.
26000Here is a complete list of these markers. First are listed the
26001markers that work inside a pattern; then come the markers that
26002work in the righthand side of a rule.
26003
5d67986c
RS
26004@ignore
26005@starindex
26006@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26007@tindex import
26008One kind of marker, @samp{import(x)}, takes the place of a whole
26009rule. Here @cite{x} is the name of a variable containing another
26010rule set; those rules are ``spliced into'' the rule set that
26011imports them. For example, if @samp{[f(a+b) := f(a) + f(b),
26012f(a b) := a f(b) :: real(a)]} is stored in variable @samp{linearF},
26013then the rule set @samp{[f(0) := 0, import(linearF)]} will apply
26014all three rules. It is possible to modify the imported rules
26015slightly: @samp{import(x, v1, x1, v2, x2, @dots{})} imports
26016the rule set @cite{x} with all occurrences of @c{$v_1$}
26017@cite{v1}, as either
26018a variable name or a function name, replaced with @c{$x_1$}
26019@cite{x1} and
26020so on. (If @c{$v_1$}
26021@cite{v1} is used as a function name, then @c{$x_1$}
26022@cite{x1}
26023must be either a function name itself or a @w{@samp{< >}} nameless
26024function; @pxref{Specifying Operators}.) For example, @samp{[g(0) := 0,
26025import(linearF, f, g)]} applies the linearity rules to the function
26026@samp{g} instead of @samp{f}. Imports can be nested, but the
26027import-with-renaming feature may fail to rename sub-imports properly.
26028
26029The special functions allowed in patterns are:
26030
26031@table @samp
26032@item quote(x)
5d67986c
RS
26033@ignore
26034@starindex
26035@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26036@tindex quote
26037This pattern matches exactly @cite{x}; variable names in @cite{x} are
26038not interpreted as meta-variables. The only flexibility is that
26039numbers are compared for numeric equality, so that the pattern
26040@samp{f(quote(12))} will match both @samp{f(12)} and @samp{f(12.0)}.
26041(Numbers are always treated this way by the rewrite mechanism:
26042The rule @samp{f(x,x) := g(x)} will match @samp{f(12, 12.0)}.
26043The rewrite may produce either @samp{g(12)} or @samp{g(12.0)}
26044as a result in this case.)
26045
26046@item plain(x)
5d67986c
RS
26047@ignore
26048@starindex
26049@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26050@tindex plain
26051Here @cite{x} must be a function call @samp{f(x1,x2,@dots{})}. This
26052pattern matches a call to function @cite{f} with the specified
26053argument patterns. No special knowledge of the properties of the
26054function @cite{f} is used in this case; @samp{+} is not commutative or
26055associative. Unlike @code{quote}, the arguments @samp{x1,x2,@dots{}}
26056are treated as patterns. If you wish them to be treated ``plainly''
26057as well, you must enclose them with more @code{plain} markers:
26058@samp{plain(plain(@w{-a}) + plain(b c))}.
26059
26060@item opt(x,def)
5d67986c
RS
26061@ignore
26062@starindex
26063@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26064@tindex opt
26065Here @cite{x} must be a variable name. This must appear as an
26066argument to a function or an element of a vector; it specifies that
26067the argument or element is optional.
26068As an argument to @samp{+}, @samp{-}, @samp{*}, @samp{&&}, or @samp{||},
26069or as the second argument to @samp{/} or @samp{^}, the value @var{def}
26070may be omitted. The pattern @samp{x + opt(y)} matches a sum by
26071binding one summand to @cite{x} and the other to @cite{y}, and it
26072matches anything else by binding the whole expression to @cite{x} and
26073zero to @cite{y}. The other operators above work similarly.@refill
26074
26075For general miscellanous functions, the default value @code{def}
26076must be specified. Optional arguments are dropped starting with
26077the rightmost one during matching. For example, the pattern
26078@samp{f(opt(a,0), b, opt(c,b))} will match @samp{f(b)}, @samp{f(a,b)},
26079or @samp{f(a,b,c)}. Default values of zero and @cite{b} are
26080supplied in this example for the omitted arguments. Note that
26081the literal variable @cite{b} will be the default in the latter
26082case, @emph{not} the value that matched the meta-variable @cite{b}.
26083In other words, the default @var{def} is effectively quoted.
26084
26085@item condition(x,c)
5d67986c
RS
26086@ignore
26087@starindex
26088@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26089@tindex condition
26090@tindex ::
26091This matches the pattern @cite{x}, with the attached condition
26092@cite{c}. It is the same as @samp{x :: c}.
26093
26094@item pand(x,y)
5d67986c
RS
26095@ignore
26096@starindex
26097@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26098@tindex pand
26099@tindex &&&
26100This matches anything that matches both pattern @cite{x} and
26101pattern @cite{y}. It is the same as @samp{x &&& y}.
26102@pxref{Composing Patterns in Rewrite Rules}.
26103
26104@item por(x,y)
5d67986c
RS
26105@ignore
26106@starindex
26107@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26108@tindex por
26109@tindex |||
26110This matches anything that matches either pattern @cite{x} or
26111pattern @cite{y}. It is the same as @w{@samp{x ||| y}}.
26112
26113@item pnot(x)
5d67986c
RS
26114@ignore
26115@starindex
26116@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26117@tindex pnot
26118@tindex !!!
26119This matches anything that does not match pattern @cite{x}.
26120It is the same as @samp{!!! x}.
26121
26122@item cons(h,t)
5d67986c
RS
26123@ignore
26124@mindex cons
26125@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26126@tindex cons (rewrites)
26127This matches any vector of one or more elements. The first
26128element is matched to @cite{h}; a vector of the remaining
26129elements is matched to @cite{t}. Note that vectors of fixed
26130length can also be matched as actual vectors: The rule
26131@samp{cons(a,cons(b,[])) := cons(a+b,[])} is equivalent
26132to the rule @samp{[a,b] := [a+b]}.
26133
26134@item rcons(t,h)
5d67986c
RS
26135@ignore
26136@mindex rcons
26137@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26138@tindex rcons (rewrites)
26139This is like @code{cons}, except that the @emph{last} element
26140is matched to @cite{h}, with the remaining elements matched
26141to @cite{t}.
26142
26143@item apply(f,args)
5d67986c
RS
26144@ignore
26145@mindex apply
26146@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26147@tindex apply (rewrites)
26148This matches any function call. The name of the function, in
26149the form of a variable, is matched to @cite{f}. The arguments
26150of the function, as a vector of zero or more objects, are
26151matched to @samp{args}. Constants, variables, and vectors
26152do @emph{not} match an @code{apply} pattern. For example,
26153@samp{apply(f,x)} matches any function call, @samp{apply(quote(f),x)}
26154matches any call to the function @samp{f}, @samp{apply(f,[a,b])}
26155matches any function call with exactly two arguments, and
26156@samp{apply(quote(f), cons(a,cons(b,x)))} matches any call
26157to the function @samp{f} with two or more arguments. Another
26158way to implement the latter, if the rest of the rule does not
26159need to refer to the first two arguments of @samp{f} by name,
26160would be @samp{apply(quote(f), x :: vlen(x) >= 2)}.
26161Here's a more interesting sample use of @code{apply}:
26162
26163@example
26164apply(f,[x+n]) := n + apply(f,[x])
26165 :: in(f, [floor,ceil,round,trunc]) :: integer(n)
26166@end example
26167
26168Note, however, that this will be slower to match than a rule
26169set with four separate rules. The reason is that Calc sorts
26170the rules of a rule set according to top-level function name;
26171if the top-level function is @code{apply}, Calc must try the
26172rule for every single formula and sub-formula. If the top-level
26173function in the pattern is, say, @code{floor}, then Calc invokes
26174the rule only for sub-formulas which are calls to @code{floor}.
26175
26176Formulas normally written with operators like @code{+} are still
26177considered function calls: @code{apply(f,x)} matches @samp{a+b}
26178with @samp{f = add}, @samp{x = [a,b]}.
26179
26180You must use @code{apply} for meta-variables with function names
26181on both sides of a rewrite rule: @samp{apply(f, [x]) := f(x+1)}
26182is @emph{not} correct, because it rewrites @samp{spam(6)} into
26183@samp{f(7)}. The righthand side should be @samp{apply(f, [x+1])}.
26184Also note that you will have to use no-simplify (@kbd{m O})
26185mode when entering this rule so that the @code{apply} isn't
26186evaluated immediately to get the new rule @samp{f(x) := f(x+1)}.
26187Or, use @kbd{s e} to enter the rule without going through the stack,
26188or enter the rule as @samp{apply(f, [x]) := apply(f, [x+1]) @w{:: 1}}.
26189@xref{Conditional Rewrite Rules}.
26190
26191@item select(x)
5d67986c
RS
26192@ignore
26193@starindex
26194@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26195@tindex select
26196This is used for applying rules to formulas with selections;
26197@pxref{Selections with Rewrite Rules}.
26198@end table
26199
26200Special functions for the righthand sides of rules are:
26201
26202@table @samp
26203@item quote(x)
26204The notation @samp{quote(x)} is changed to @samp{x} when the
26205righthand side is used. As far as the rewrite rule is concerned,
26206@code{quote} is invisible. However, @code{quote} has the special
26207property in Calc that its argument is not evaluated. Thus,
26208while it will not work to put the rule @samp{t(a) := typeof(a)}
26209on the stack because @samp{typeof(a)} is evaluated immediately
26210to produce @samp{t(a) := 100}, you can use @code{quote} to
26211protect the righthand side: @samp{t(a) := quote(typeof(a))}.
26212(@xref{Conditional Rewrite Rules}, for another trick for
26213protecting rules from evaluation.)
26214
26215@item plain(x)
26216Special properties of and simplifications for the function call
26217@cite{x} are not used. One interesting case where @code{plain}
26218is useful is the rule, @samp{q(x) := quote(x)}, trying to expand a
26219shorthand notation for the @code{quote} function. This rule will
26220not work as shown; instead of replacing @samp{q(foo)} with
26221@samp{quote(foo)}, it will replace it with @samp{foo}! The correct
26222rule would be @samp{q(x) := plain(quote(x))}.
26223
26224@item cons(h,t)
26225Where @cite{t} is a vector, this is converted into an expanded
26226vector during rewrite processing. Note that @code{cons} is a regular
26227Calc function which normally does this anyway; the only way @code{cons}
26228is treated specially by rewrites is that @code{cons} on the righthand
26229side of a rule will be evaluated even if default simplifications
26230have been turned off.
26231
26232@item rcons(t,h)
26233Analogous to @code{cons} except putting @cite{h} at the @emph{end} of
26234the vector @cite{t}.
26235
26236@item apply(f,args)
26237Where @cite{f} is a variable and @var{args} is a vector, this
26238is converted to a function call. Once again, note that @code{apply}
26239is also a regular Calc function.
26240
26241@item eval(x)
5d67986c
RS
26242@ignore
26243@starindex
26244@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26245@tindex eval
26246The formula @cite{x} is handled in the usual way, then the
26247default simplifications are applied to it even if they have
26248been turned off normally. This allows you to treat any function
26249similarly to the way @code{cons} and @code{apply} are always
26250treated. However, there is a slight difference: @samp{cons(2+3, [])}
26251with default simplifications off will be converted to @samp{[2+3]},
26252whereas @samp{eval(cons(2+3, []))} will be converted to @samp{[5]}.
26253
26254@item evalsimp(x)
5d67986c
RS
26255@ignore
26256@starindex
26257@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26258@tindex evalsimp
26259The formula @cite{x} has meta-variables substituted in the usual
26260way, then algebraically simplified as if by the @kbd{a s} command.
26261
26262@item evalextsimp(x)
5d67986c
RS
26263@ignore
26264@starindex
26265@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26266@tindex evalextsimp
26267The formula @cite{x} has meta-variables substituted in the normal
26268way, then ``extendedly'' simplified as if by the @kbd{a e} command.
26269
26270@item select(x)
26271@xref{Selections with Rewrite Rules}.
26272@end table
26273
26274There are also some special functions you can use in conditions.
26275
26276@table @samp
26277@item let(v := x)
5d67986c
RS
26278@ignore
26279@starindex
26280@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26281@tindex let
26282The expression @cite{x} is evaluated with meta-variables substituted.
26283The @kbd{a s} command's simplifications are @emph{not} applied by
26284default, but @cite{x} can include calls to @code{evalsimp} or
26285@code{evalextsimp} as described above to invoke higher levels
26286of simplification. The
26287result of @cite{x} is then bound to the meta-variable @cite{v}. As
26288usual, if this meta-variable has already been matched to something
26289else the two values must be equal; if the meta-variable is new then
26290it is bound to the result of the expression. This variable can then
26291appear in later conditions, and on the righthand side of the rule.
26292In fact, @cite{v} may be any pattern in which case the result of
26293evaluating @cite{x} is matched to that pattern, binding any
26294meta-variables that appear in that pattern. Note that @code{let}
26295can only appear by itself as a condition, or as one term of an
26296@samp{&&} which is a whole condition: It cannot be inside
26297an @samp{||} term or otherwise buried.@refill
26298
26299The alternate, equivalent form @samp{let(v, x)} is also recognized.
26300Note that the use of @samp{:=} by @code{let}, while still being
26301assignment-like in character, is unrelated to the use of @samp{:=}
26302in the main part of a rewrite rule.
26303
26304As an example, @samp{f(a) := g(ia) :: let(ia := 1/a) :: constant(ia)}
26305replaces @samp{f(a)} with @samp{g} of the inverse of @samp{a}, if
26306that inverse exists and is constant. For example, if @samp{a} is a
26307singular matrix the operation @samp{1/a} is left unsimplified and
26308@samp{constant(ia)} fails, but if @samp{a} is an invertible matrix
26309then the rule succeeds. Without @code{let} there would be no way
26310to express this rule that didn't have to invert the matrix twice.
26311Note that, because the meta-variable @samp{ia} is otherwise unbound
26312in this rule, the @code{let} condition itself always ``succeeds''
26313because no matter what @samp{1/a} evaluates to, it can successfully
26314be bound to @code{ia}.@refill
26315
26316Here's another example, for integrating cosines of linear
26317terms: @samp{myint(cos(y),x) := sin(y)/b :: let([a,b,x] := lin(y,x))}.
26318The @code{lin} function returns a 3-vector if its argument is linear,
26319or leaves itself unevaluated if not. But an unevaluated @code{lin}
26320call will not match the 3-vector on the lefthand side of the @code{let},
26321so this @code{let} both verifies that @code{y} is linear, and binds
26322the coefficients @code{a} and @code{b} for use elsewhere in the rule.
26323(It would have been possible to use @samp{sin(a x + b)/b} for the
26324righthand side instead, but using @samp{sin(y)/b} avoids gratuitous
26325rearrangement of the argument of the sine.)@refill
26326
5d67986c
RS
26327@ignore
26328@starindex
26329@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26330@tindex ierf
26331Similarly, here is a rule that implements an inverse-@code{erf}
26332function. It uses @code{root} to search for a solution. If
26333@code{root} succeeds, it will return a vector of two numbers
26334where the first number is the desired solution. If no solution
26335is found, @code{root} remains in symbolic form. So we use
26336@code{let} to check that the result was indeed a vector.
26337
26338@example
26339ierf(x) := y :: let([y,z] := root(erf(a) = x, a, .5))
26340@end example
26341
26342@item matches(v,p)
26343The meta-variable @var{v}, which must already have been matched
26344to something elsewhere in the rule, is compared against pattern
26345@var{p}. Since @code{matches} is a standard Calc function, it
26346can appear anywhere in a condition. But if it appears alone or
26347as a term of a top-level @samp{&&}, then you get the special
26348extra feature that meta-variables which are bound to things
26349inside @var{p} can be used elsewhere in the surrounding rewrite
26350rule.
26351
26352The only real difference between @samp{let(p := v)} and
26353@samp{matches(v, p)} is that the former evaluates @samp{v} using
26354the default simplifications, while the latter does not.
26355
26356@item remember
26357@vindex remember
26358This is actually a variable, not a function. If @code{remember}
26359appears as a condition in a rule, then when that rule succeeds
26360the original expression and rewritten expression are added to the
26361front of the rule set that contained the rule. If the rule set
26362was not stored in a variable, @code{remember} is ignored. The
26363lefthand side is enclosed in @code{quote} in the added rule if it
26364contains any variables.
26365
26366For example, the rule @samp{f(n) := n f(n-1) :: remember} applied
26367to @samp{f(7)} will add the rule @samp{f(7) := 7 f(6)} to the front
26368of the rule set. The rule set @code{EvalRules} works slightly
26369differently: There, the evaluation of @samp{f(6)} will complete before
26370the result is added to the rule set, in this case as @samp{f(7) := 5040}.
26371Thus @code{remember} is most useful inside @code{EvalRules}.
26372
26373It is up to you to ensure that the optimization performed by
26374@code{remember} is safe. For example, the rule @samp{foo(n) := n
26375:: evalv(eatfoo) > 0 :: remember} is a bad idea (@code{evalv} is
26376the function equivalent of the @kbd{=} command); if the variable
26377@code{eatfoo} ever contains 1, rules like @samp{foo(7) := 7} will
26378be added to the rule set and will continue to operate even if
26379@code{eatfoo} is later changed to 0.
26380
26381@item remember(c)
5d67986c
RS
26382@ignore
26383@starindex
26384@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26385@tindex remember
26386Remember the match as described above, but only if condition @cite{c}
26387is true. For example, @samp{remember(n % 4 = 0)} in the above factorial
26388rule remembers only every fourth result. Note that @samp{remember(1)}
26389is equivalent to @samp{remember}, and @samp{remember(0)} has no effect.
26390@end table
26391
26392@node Composing Patterns in Rewrite Rules, Nested Formulas with Rewrite Rules, Other Features of Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
26393@subsection Composing Patterns in Rewrite Rules
26394
26395@noindent
26396There are three operators, @samp{&&&}, @samp{|||}, and @samp{!!!},
26397that combine rewrite patterns to make larger patterns. The
26398combinations are ``and,'' ``or,'' and ``not,'' respectively, and
26399these operators are the pattern equivalents of @samp{&&}, @samp{||}
26400and @samp{!} (which operate on zero-or-nonzero logical values).
26401
26402Note that @samp{&&&}, @samp{|||}, and @samp{!!!} are left in symbolic
26403form by all regular Calc features; they have special meaning only in
26404the context of rewrite rule patterns.
26405
26406The pattern @samp{@var{p1} &&& @var{p2}} matches anything that
26407matches both @var{p1} and @var{p2}. One especially useful case is
26408when one of @var{p1} or @var{p2} is a meta-variable. For example,
26409here is a rule that operates on error forms:
26410
26411@example
26412f(x &&& a +/- b, x) := g(x)
26413@end example
26414
26415This does the same thing, but is arguably simpler than, the rule
26416
26417@example
26418f(a +/- b, a +/- b) := g(a +/- b)
26419@end example
26420
5d67986c
RS
26421@ignore
26422@starindex
26423@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26424@tindex ends
26425Here's another interesting example:
26426
26427@example
26428ends(cons(a, x) &&& rcons(y, b)) := [a, b]
26429@end example
26430
26431@noindent
26432which effectively clips out the middle of a vector leaving just
26433the first and last elements. This rule will change a one-element
26434vector @samp{[a]} to @samp{[a, a]}. The similar rule
26435
26436@example
26437ends(cons(a, rcons(y, b))) := [a, b]
26438@end example
26439
26440@noindent
26441would do the same thing except that it would fail to match a
26442one-element vector.
26443
26444@tex
26445\bigskip
26446@end tex
26447
26448The pattern @samp{@var{p1} ||| @var{p2}} matches anything that
26449matches either @var{p1} or @var{p2}. Calc first tries matching
26450against @var{p1}; if that fails, it goes on to try @var{p2}.
26451
5d67986c
RS
26452@ignore
26453@starindex
26454@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26455@tindex curve
26456A simple example of @samp{|||} is
26457
26458@example
26459curve(inf ||| -inf) := 0
26460@end example
26461
26462@noindent
26463which converts both @samp{curve(inf)} and @samp{curve(-inf)} to zero.
26464
26465Here is a larger example:
26466
26467@example
26468log(a, b) ||| (ln(a) :: let(b := e)) := mylog(a, b)
26469@end example
26470
26471This matches both generalized and natural logarithms in a single rule.
26472Note that the @samp{::} term must be enclosed in parentheses because
26473that operator has lower precedence than @samp{|||} or @samp{:=}.
26474
26475(In practice this rule would probably include a third alternative,
26476omitted here for brevity, to take care of @code{log10}.)
26477
26478While Calc generally treats interior conditions exactly the same as
26479conditions on the outside of a rule, it does guarantee that if all the
26480variables in the condition are special names like @code{e}, or already
26481bound in the pattern to which the condition is attached (say, if
26482@samp{a} had appeared in this condition), then Calc will process this
26483condition right after matching the pattern to the left of the @samp{::}.
26484Thus, we know that @samp{b} will be bound to @samp{e} only if the
26485@code{ln} branch of the @samp{|||} was taken.
26486
26487Note that this rule was careful to bind the same set of meta-variables
26488on both sides of the @samp{|||}. Calc does not check this, but if
26489you bind a certain meta-variable only in one branch and then use that
26490meta-variable elsewhere in the rule, results are unpredictable:
26491
26492@example
26493f(a,b) ||| g(b) := h(a,b)
26494@end example
26495
26496Here if the pattern matches @samp{g(17)}, Calc makes no promises about
26497the value that will be substituted for @samp{a} on the righthand side.
26498
26499@tex
26500\bigskip
26501@end tex
26502
26503The pattern @samp{!!! @var{pat}} matches anything that does not
26504match @var{pat}. Any meta-variables that are bound while matching
26505@var{pat} remain unbound outside of @var{pat}.
26506
26507For example,
26508
26509@example
26510f(x &&& !!! a +/- b, !!![]) := g(x)
26511@end example
26512
26513@noindent
26514converts @code{f} whose first argument is anything @emph{except} an
26515error form, and whose second argument is not the empty vector, into
26516a similar call to @code{g} (but without the second argument).
26517
26518If we know that the second argument will be a vector (empty or not),
26519then an equivalent rule would be:
26520
26521@example
26522f(x, y) := g(x) :: typeof(x) != 7 :: vlen(y) > 0
26523@end example
26524
26525@noindent
26526where of course 7 is the @code{typeof} code for error forms.
26527Another final condition, that works for any kind of @samp{y},
26528would be @samp{!istrue(y == [])}. (The @code{istrue} function
26529returns an explicit 0 if its argument was left in symbolic form;
26530plain @samp{!(y == [])} or @samp{y != []} would not work to replace
26531@samp{!!![]} since these would be left unsimplified, and thus cause
26532the rule to fail, if @samp{y} was something like a variable name.)
26533
26534It is possible for a @samp{!!!} to refer to meta-variables bound
26535elsewhere in the pattern. For example,
26536
26537@example
26538f(a, !!!a) := g(a)
26539@end example
26540
26541@noindent
26542matches any call to @code{f} with different arguments, changing
26543this to @code{g} with only the first argument.
26544
26545If a function call is to be matched and one of the argument patterns
26546contains a @samp{!!!} somewhere inside it, that argument will be
26547matched last. Thus
26548
26549@example
26550f(!!!a, a) := g(a)
26551@end example
26552
26553@noindent
26554will be careful to bind @samp{a} to the second argument of @code{f}
26555before testing the first argument. If Calc had tried to match the
26556first argument of @code{f} first, the results would have been
26557disasterous: Since @code{a} was unbound so far, the pattern @samp{a}
26558would have matched anything at all, and the pattern @samp{!!!a}
26559therefore would @emph{not} have matched anything at all!
26560
26561@node Nested Formulas with Rewrite Rules, Multi-Phase Rewrite Rules, Composing Patterns in Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
26562@subsection Nested Formulas with Rewrite Rules
26563
26564@noindent
26565When @kbd{a r} (@code{calc-rewrite}) is used, it takes an expression from
26566the top of the stack and attempts to match any of the specified rules
26567to any part of the expression, starting with the whole expression
26568and then, if that fails, trying deeper and deeper sub-expressions.
26569For each part of the expression, the rules are tried in the order
26570they appear in the rules vector. The first rule to match the first
26571sub-expression wins; it replaces the matched sub-expression according
26572to the @var{new} part of the rule.
26573
26574Often, the rule set will match and change the formula several times.
26575The top-level formula is first matched and substituted repeatedly until
26576it no longer matches the pattern; then, sub-formulas are tried, and
26577so on. Once every part of the formula has gotten its chance, the
26578rewrite mechanism starts over again with the top-level formula
26579(in case a substitution of one of its arguments has caused it again
26580to match). This continues until no further matches can be made
26581anywhere in the formula.
26582
26583It is possible for a rule set to get into an infinite loop. The
26584most obvious case, replacing a formula with itself, is not a problem
26585because a rule is not considered to ``succeed'' unless the righthand
26586side actually comes out to something different than the original
26587formula or sub-formula that was matched. But if you accidentally
26588had both @samp{ln(a b) := ln(a) + ln(b)} and the reverse
26589@samp{ln(a) + ln(b) := ln(a b)} in your rule set, Calc would
26590run forever switching a formula back and forth between the two
26591forms.
26592
26593To avoid disaster, Calc normally stops after 100 changes have been
26594made to the formula. This will be enough for most multiple rewrites,
26595but it will keep an endless loop of rewrites from locking up the
26596computer forever. (On most systems, you can also type @kbd{C-g} to
26597halt any Emacs command prematurely.)
26598
26599To change this limit, give a positive numeric prefix argument.
26600In particular, @kbd{M-1 a r} applies only one rewrite at a time,
26601useful when you are first testing your rule (or just if repeated
26602rewriting is not what is called for by your application).
26603
5d67986c
RS
26604@ignore
26605@starindex
26606@end ignore
26607@ignore
26608@mindex iter@idots
26609@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26610@tindex iterations
26611You can also put a ``function call'' @samp{iterations(@var{n})}
26612in place of a rule anywhere in your rules vector (but usually at
26613the top). Then, @var{n} will be used instead of 100 as the default
26614number of iterations for this rule set. You can use
26615@samp{iterations(inf)} if you want no iteration limit by default.
26616A prefix argument will override the @code{iterations} limit in the
26617rule set.
26618
26619@example
26620[ iterations(1),
26621 f(x) := f(x+1) ]
26622@end example
26623
26624More precisely, the limit controls the number of ``iterations,''
26625where each iteration is a successful matching of a rule pattern whose
26626righthand side, after substituting meta-variables and applying the
26627default simplifications, is different from the original sub-formula
26628that was matched.
26629
26630A prefix argument of zero sets the limit to infinity. Use with caution!
26631
26632Given a negative numeric prefix argument, @kbd{a r} will match and
26633substitute the top-level expression up to that many times, but
26634will not attempt to match the rules to any sub-expressions.
26635
26636In a formula, @code{rewrite(@var{expr}, @var{rules}, @var{n})}
26637does a rewriting operation. Here @var{expr} is the expression
26638being rewritten, @var{rules} is the rule, vector of rules, or
26639variable containing the rules, and @var{n} is the optional
26640iteration limit, which may be a positive integer, a negative
26641integer, or @samp{inf} or @samp{-inf}. If @var{n} is omitted
26642the @code{iterations} value from the rule set is used; if both
26643are omitted, 100 is used.
26644
26645@node Multi-Phase Rewrite Rules, Selections with Rewrite Rules, Nested Formulas with Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
26646@subsection Multi-Phase Rewrite Rules
26647
26648@noindent
26649It is possible to separate a rewrite rule set into several @dfn{phases}.
26650During each phase, certain rules will be enabled while certain others
26651will be disabled. A @dfn{phase schedule} controls the order in which
26652phases occur during the rewriting process.
26653
5d67986c
RS
26654@ignore
26655@starindex
26656@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26657@tindex phase
26658@vindex all
26659If a call to the marker function @code{phase} appears in the rules
26660vector in place of a rule, all rules following that point will be
26661members of the phase(s) identified in the arguments to @code{phase}.
26662Phases are given integer numbers. The markers @samp{phase()} and
26663@samp{phase(all)} both mean the following rules belong to all phases;
26664this is the default at the start of the rule set.
26665
26666If you do not explicitly schedule the phases, Calc sorts all phase
26667numbers that appear in the rule set and executes the phases in
26668ascending order. For example, the rule set
26669
d7b8e6c6 26670@example
5d67986c 26671@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26672[ f0(x) := g0(x),
26673 phase(1),
26674 f1(x) := g1(x),
26675 phase(2),
26676 f2(x) := g2(x),
26677 phase(3),
26678 f3(x) := g3(x),
26679 phase(1,2),
26680 f4(x) := g4(x) ]
d7b8e6c6 26681@end group
5d67986c 26682@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26683
26684@noindent
26685has three phases, 1 through 3. Phase 1 consists of the @code{f0},
26686@code{f1}, and @code{f4} rules (in that order). Phase 2 consists of
26687@code{f0}, @code{f2}, and @code{f4}. Phase 3 consists of @code{f0}
26688and @code{f3}.
26689
26690When Calc rewrites a formula using this rule set, it first rewrites
26691the formula using only the phase 1 rules until no further changes are
26692possible. Then it switches to the phase 2 rule set and continues
26693until no further changes occur, then finally rewrites with phase 3.
26694When no more phase 3 rules apply, rewriting finishes. (This is
26695assuming @kbd{a r} with a large enough prefix argument to allow the
26696rewriting to run to completion; the sequence just described stops
26697early if the number of iterations specified in the prefix argument,
26698100 by default, is reached.)
26699
26700During each phase, Calc descends through the nested levels of the
26701formula as described previously. (@xref{Nested Formulas with Rewrite
26702Rules}.) Rewriting starts at the top of the formula, then works its
26703way down to the parts, then goes back to the top and works down again.
26704The phase 2 rules do not begin until no phase 1 rules apply anywhere
26705in the formula.
26706
5d67986c
RS
26707@ignore
26708@starindex
26709@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26710@tindex schedule
26711A @code{schedule} marker appearing in the rule set (anywhere, but
26712conventionally at the top) changes the default schedule of phases.
26713In the simplest case, @code{schedule} has a sequence of phase numbers
26714for arguments; each phase number is invoked in turn until the
26715arguments to @code{schedule} are exhausted. Thus adding
26716@samp{schedule(3,2,1)} at the top of the above rule set would
26717reverse the order of the phases; @samp{schedule(1,2,3)} would have
26718no effect since this is the default schedule; and @samp{schedule(1,2,1,3)}
26719would give phase 1 a second chance after phase 2 has completed, before
26720moving on to phase 3.
26721
26722Any argument to @code{schedule} can instead be a vector of phase
26723numbers (or even of sub-vectors). Then the sub-sequence of phases
26724described by the vector are tried repeatedly until no change occurs
26725in any phase in the sequence. For example, @samp{schedule([1, 2], 3)}
26726tries phase 1, then phase 2, then, if either phase made any changes
26727to the formula, repeats these two phases until they can make no
26728further progress. Finally, it goes on to phase 3 for finishing
26729touches.
26730
26731Also, items in @code{schedule} can be variable names as well as
26732numbers. A variable name is interpreted as the name of a function
26733to call on the whole formula. For example, @samp{schedule(1, simplify)}
26734says to apply the phase-1 rules (presumably, all of them), then to
26735call @code{simplify} which is the function name equivalent of @kbd{a s}.
26736Likewise, @samp{schedule([1, simplify])} says to alternate between
26737phase 1 and @kbd{a s} until no further changes occur.
26738
26739Phases can be used purely to improve efficiency; if it is known that
26740a certain group of rules will apply only at the beginning of rewriting,
26741and a certain other group will apply only at the end, then rewriting
26742will be faster if these groups are identified as separate phases.
26743Once the phase 1 rules are done, Calc can put them aside and no longer
26744spend any time on them while it works on phase 2.
26745
26746There are also some problems that can only be solved with several
26747rewrite phases. For a real-world example of a multi-phase rule set,
26748examine the set @code{FitRules}, which is used by the curve-fitting
26749command to convert a model expression to linear form.
26750@xref{Curve Fitting Details}. This set is divided into four phases.
26751The first phase rewrites certain kinds of expressions to be more
26752easily linearizable, but less computationally efficient. After the
26753linear components have been picked out, the final phase includes the
26754opposite rewrites to put each component back into an efficient form.
26755If both sets of rules were included in one big phase, Calc could get
26756into an infinite loop going back and forth between the two forms.
26757
26758Elsewhere in @code{FitRules}, the components are first isolated,
26759then recombined where possible to reduce the complexity of the linear
26760fit, then finally packaged one component at a time into vectors.
26761If the packaging rules were allowed to begin before the recombining
26762rules were finished, some components might be put away into vectors
26763before they had a chance to recombine. By putting these rules in
26764two separate phases, this problem is neatly avoided.
26765
26766@node Selections with Rewrite Rules, Matching Commands, Multi-Phase Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
26767@subsection Selections with Rewrite Rules
26768
26769@noindent
26770If a sub-formula of the current formula is selected (as by @kbd{j s};
26771@pxref{Selecting Subformulas}), the @kbd{a r} (@code{calc-rewrite})
26772command applies only to that sub-formula. Together with a negative
26773prefix argument, you can use this fact to apply a rewrite to one
26774specific part of a formula without affecting any other parts.
26775
26776@kindex j r
26777@pindex calc-rewrite-selection
26778The @kbd{j r} (@code{calc-rewrite-selection}) command allows more
26779sophisticated operations on selections. This command prompts for
26780the rules in the same way as @kbd{a r}, but it then applies those
26781rules to the whole formula in question even though a sub-formula
26782of it has been selected. However, the selected sub-formula will
26783first have been surrounded by a @samp{select( )} function call.
26784(Calc's evaluator does not understand the function name @code{select};
26785this is only a tag used by the @kbd{j r} command.)
26786
26787For example, suppose the formula on the stack is @samp{2 (a + b)^2}
26788and the sub-formula @samp{a + b} is selected. This formula will
26789be rewritten to @samp{2 select(a + b)^2} and then the rewrite
26790rules will be applied in the usual way. The rewrite rules can
26791include references to @code{select} to tell where in the pattern
26792the selected sub-formula should appear.
26793
26794If there is still exactly one @samp{select( )} function call in
26795the formula after rewriting is done, it indicates which part of
26796the formula should be selected afterwards. Otherwise, the
26797formula will be unselected.
26798
26799You can make @kbd{j r} act much like @kbd{a r} by enclosing both parts
26800of the rewrite rule with @samp{select()}. However, @kbd{j r}
26801allows you to use the current selection in more flexible ways.
26802Suppose you wished to make a rule which removed the exponent from
26803the selected term; the rule @samp{select(a)^x := select(a)} would
26804work. In the above example, it would rewrite @samp{2 select(a + b)^2}
26805to @samp{2 select(a + b)}. This would then be returned to the
26806stack as @samp{2 (a + b)} with the @samp{a + b} selected.
26807
26808The @kbd{j r} command uses one iteration by default, unlike
26809@kbd{a r} which defaults to 100 iterations. A numeric prefix
26810argument affects @kbd{j r} in the same way as @kbd{a r}.
26811@xref{Nested Formulas with Rewrite Rules}.
26812
26813As with other selection commands, @kbd{j r} operates on the stack
26814entry that contains the cursor. (If the cursor is on the top-of-stack
26815@samp{.} marker, it works as if the cursor were on the formula
26816at stack level 1.)
26817
26818If you don't specify a set of rules, the rules are taken from the
26819top of the stack, just as with @kbd{a r}. In this case, the
26820cursor must indicate stack entry 2 or above as the formula to be
26821rewritten (otherwise the same formula would be used as both the
26822target and the rewrite rules).
26823
26824If the indicated formula has no selection, the cursor position within
26825the formula temporarily selects a sub-formula for the purposes of this
26826command. If the cursor is not on any sub-formula (e.g., it is in
26827the line-number area to the left of the formula), the @samp{select( )}
26828markers are ignored by the rewrite mechanism and the rules are allowed
26829to apply anywhere in the formula.
26830
26831As a special feature, the normal @kbd{a r} command also ignores
26832@samp{select( )} calls in rewrite rules. For example, if you used the
26833above rule @samp{select(a)^x := select(a)} with @kbd{a r}, it would apply
26834the rule as if it were @samp{a^x := a}. Thus, you can write general
26835purpose rules with @samp{select( )} hints inside them so that they
26836will ``do the right thing'' in both @kbd{a r} and @kbd{j r},
26837both with and without selections.
26838
26839@node Matching Commands, Automatic Rewrites, Selections with Rewrite Rules, Rewrite Rules
26840@subsection Matching Commands
26841
26842@noindent
26843@kindex a m
26844@pindex calc-match
26845@tindex match
26846The @kbd{a m} (@code{calc-match}) [@code{match}] function takes a
26847vector of formulas and a rewrite-rule-style pattern, and produces
26848a vector of all formulas which match the pattern. The command
26849prompts you to enter the pattern; as for @kbd{a r}, you can enter
26850a single pattern (i.e., a formula with meta-variables), or a
26851vector of patterns, or a variable which contains patterns, or
26852you can give a blank response in which case the patterns are taken
26853from the top of the stack. The pattern set will be compiled once
26854and saved if it is stored in a variable. If there are several
26855patterns in the set, vector elements are kept if they match any
26856of the patterns.
26857
26858For example, @samp{match(a+b, [x, x+y, x-y, 7, x+y+z])}
26859will return @samp{[x+y, x-y, x+y+z]}.
26860
26861The @code{import} mechanism is not available for pattern sets.
26862
26863The @kbd{a m} command can also be used to extract all vector elements
26864which satisfy any condition: The pattern @samp{x :: x>0} will select
26865all the positive vector elements.
26866
26867@kindex I a m
26868@tindex matchnot
26869With the Inverse flag [@code{matchnot}], this command extracts all
26870vector elements which do @emph{not} match the given pattern.
26871
5d67986c
RS
26872@ignore
26873@starindex
26874@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26875@tindex matches
26876There is also a function @samp{matches(@var{x}, @var{p})} which
26877evaluates to 1 if expression @var{x} matches pattern @var{p}, or
26878to 0 otherwise. This is sometimes useful for including into the
26879conditional clauses of other rewrite rules.
26880
5d67986c
RS
26881@ignore
26882@starindex
26883@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26884@tindex vmatches
26885The function @code{vmatches} is just like @code{matches}, except
26886that if the match succeeds it returns a vector of assignments to
26887the meta-variables instead of the number 1. For example,
26888@samp{vmatches(f(1,2), f(a,b))} returns @samp{[a := 1, b := 2]}.
26889If the match fails, the function returns the number 0.
26890
26891@node Automatic Rewrites, Debugging Rewrites, Matching Commands, Rewrite Rules
26892@subsection Automatic Rewrites
26893
26894@noindent
26895@cindex @code{EvalRules} variable
26896@vindex EvalRules
26897It is possible to get Calc to apply a set of rewrite rules on all
26898results, effectively adding to the built-in set of default
26899simplifications. To do this, simply store your rule set in the
26900variable @code{EvalRules}. There is a convenient @kbd{s E} command
26901for editing @code{EvalRules}; @pxref{Operations on Variables}.
26902
26903For example, suppose you want @samp{sin(a + b)} to be expanded out
26904to @samp{sin(b) cos(a) + cos(b) sin(a)} wherever it appears, and
26905similarly for @samp{cos(a + b)}. The corresponding rewrite rule
26906set would be,
26907
d7b8e6c6 26908@smallexample
5d67986c 26909@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26910[ sin(a + b) := cos(a) sin(b) + sin(a) cos(b),
26911 cos(a + b) := cos(a) cos(b) - sin(a) sin(b) ]
d7b8e6c6 26912@end group
5d67986c 26913@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
26914
26915To apply these manually, you could put them in a variable called
26916@code{trigexp} and then use @kbd{a r trigexp} every time you wanted
26917to expand trig functions. But if instead you store them in the
26918variable @code{EvalRules}, they will automatically be applied to all
26919sines and cosines of sums. Then, with @samp{2 x} and @samp{45} on
26920the stack, typing @kbd{+ S} will (assuming degrees mode) result in
26921@samp{0.7071 sin(2 x) + 0.7071 cos(2 x)} automatically.
26922
26923As each level of a formula is evaluated, the rules from
26924@code{EvalRules} are applied before the default simplifications.
26925Rewriting continues until no further @code{EvalRules} apply.
26926Note that this is different from the usual order of application of
26927rewrite rules: @code{EvalRules} works from the bottom up, simplifying
26928the arguments to a function before the function itself, while @kbd{a r}
26929applies rules from the top down.
26930
26931Because the @code{EvalRules} are tried first, you can use them to
26932override the normal behavior of any built-in Calc function.
26933
26934It is important not to write a rule that will get into an infinite
26935loop. For example, the rule set @samp{[f(0) := 1, f(n) := n f(n-1)]}
26936appears to be a good definition of a factorial function, but it is
26937unsafe. Imagine what happens if @samp{f(2.5)} is simplified. Calc
26938will continue to subtract 1 from this argument forever without reaching
26939zero. A safer second rule would be @samp{f(n) := n f(n-1) :: n>0}.
26940Another dangerous rule is @samp{g(x, y) := g(y, x)}. Rewriting
26941@samp{g(2, 4)}, this would bounce back and forth between that and
26942@samp{g(4, 2)} forever. If an infinite loop in @code{EvalRules}
26943occurs, Emacs will eventually stop with a ``Computation got stuck
26944or ran too long'' message.
26945
26946Another subtle difference between @code{EvalRules} and regular rewrites
26947concerns rules that rewrite a formula into an identical formula. For
26948example, @samp{f(n) := f(floor(n))} ``fails to match'' when @cite{n} is
26949already an integer. But in @code{EvalRules} this case is detected only
26950if the righthand side literally becomes the original formula before any
26951further simplification. This means that @samp{f(n) := f(floor(n))} will
26952get into an infinite loop if it occurs in @code{EvalRules}. Calc will
26953replace @samp{f(6)} with @samp{f(floor(6))}, which is different from
26954@samp{f(6)}, so it will consider the rule to have matched and will
26955continue simplifying that formula; first the argument is simplified
26956to get @samp{f(6)}, then the rule matches again to get @samp{f(floor(6))}
26957again, ad infinitum. A much safer rule would check its argument first,
26958say, with @samp{f(n) := f(floor(n)) :: !dint(n)}.
26959
26960(What really happens is that the rewrite mechanism substitutes the
26961meta-variables in the righthand side of a rule, compares to see if the
26962result is the same as the original formula and fails if so, then uses
26963the default simplifications to simplify the result and compares again
26964(and again fails if the formula has simplified back to its original
26965form). The only special wrinkle for the @code{EvalRules} is that the
26966same rules will come back into play when the default simplifications
26967are used. What Calc wants to do is build @samp{f(floor(6))}, see that
26968this is different from the original formula, simplify to @samp{f(6)},
26969see that this is the same as the original formula, and thus halt the
26970rewriting. But while simplifying, @samp{f(6)} will again trigger
26971the same @code{EvalRules} rule and Calc will get into a loop inside
26972the rewrite mechanism itself.)
26973
26974The @code{phase}, @code{schedule}, and @code{iterations} markers do
26975not work in @code{EvalRules}. If the rule set is divided into phases,
26976only the phase 1 rules are applied, and the schedule is ignored.
26977The rules are always repeated as many times as possible.
26978
26979The @code{EvalRules} are applied to all function calls in a formula,
26980but not to numbers (and other number-like objects like error forms),
26981nor to vectors or individual variable names. (Though they will apply
26982to @emph{components} of vectors and error forms when appropriate.) You
26983might try to make a variable @code{phihat} which automatically expands
26984to its definition without the need to press @kbd{=} by writing the
26985rule @samp{quote(phihat) := (1-sqrt(5))/2}, but unfortunately this rule
26986will not work as part of @code{EvalRules}.
26987
26988Finally, another limitation is that Calc sometimes calls its built-in
26989functions directly rather than going through the default simplifications.
26990When it does this, @code{EvalRules} will not be able to override those
26991functions. For example, when you take the absolute value of the complex
26992number @cite{(2, 3)}, Calc computes @samp{sqrt(2*2 + 3*3)} by calling
26993the multiplication, addition, and square root functions directly rather
26994than applying the default simplifications to this formula. So an
26995@code{EvalRules} rule that (perversely) rewrites @samp{sqrt(13) := 6}
26996would not apply. (However, if you put Calc into symbolic mode so that
26997@samp{sqrt(13)} will be left in symbolic form by the built-in square
26998root function, your rule will be able to apply. But if the complex
26999number were @cite{(3,4)}, so that @samp{sqrt(25)} must be calculated,
27000then symbolic mode will not help because @samp{sqrt(25)} can be
27001evaluated exactly to 5.)
27002
27003One subtle restriction that normally only manifests itself with
27004@code{EvalRules} is that while a given rewrite rule is in the process
27005of being checked, that same rule cannot be recursively applied. Calc
27006effectively removes the rule from its rule set while checking the rule,
27007then puts it back once the match succeeds or fails. (The technical
27008reason for this is that compiled pattern programs are not reentrant.)
27009For example, consider the rule @samp{foo(x) := x :: foo(x/2) > 0}
27010attempting to match @samp{foo(8)}. This rule will be inactive while
27011the condition @samp{foo(4) > 0} is checked, even though it might be
27012an integral part of evaluating that condition. Note that this is not
27013a problem for the more usual recursive type of rule, such as
27014@samp{foo(x) := foo(x/2)}, because there the rule has succeeded and
27015been reactivated by the time the righthand side is evaluated.
27016
27017If @code{EvalRules} has no stored value (its default state), or if
27018anything but a vector is stored in it, then it is ignored.
27019
27020Even though Calc's rewrite mechanism is designed to compare rewrite
27021rules to formulas as quickly as possible, storing rules in
27022@code{EvalRules} may make Calc run substantially slower. This is
27023particularly true of rules where the top-level call is a commonly used
27024function, or is not fixed. The rule @samp{f(n) := n f(n-1) :: n>0} will
27025only activate the rewrite mechanism for calls to the function @code{f},
27026but @samp{lg(n) + lg(m) := lg(n m)} will check every @samp{+} operator.
5d67986c
RS
27027
27028@smallexample
27029apply(f, [a*b]) := apply(f, [a]) + apply(f, [b]) :: in(f, [ln, log10])
27030@end smallexample
27031
27032@noindent
27033may seem more ``efficient'' than two separate rules for @code{ln} and
27034@code{log10}, but actually it is vastly less efficient because rules
27035with @code{apply} as the top-level pattern must be tested against
27036@emph{every} function call that is simplified.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
27037
27038@cindex @code{AlgSimpRules} variable
27039@vindex AlgSimpRules
27040Suppose you want @samp{sin(a + b)} to be expanded out not all the time,
27041but only when @kbd{a s} is used to simplify the formula. The variable
27042@code{AlgSimpRules} holds rules for this purpose. The @kbd{a s} command
27043will apply @code{EvalRules} and @code{AlgSimpRules} to the formula, as
27044well as all of its built-in simplifications.
27045
27046Most of the special limitations for @code{EvalRules} don't apply to
27047@code{AlgSimpRules}. Calc simply does an @kbd{a r AlgSimpRules}
27048command with an infinite repeat count as the first step of @kbd{a s}.
27049It then applies its own built-in simplifications throughout the
27050formula, and then repeats these two steps (along with applying the
27051default simplifications) until no further changes are possible.
27052
27053@cindex @code{ExtSimpRules} variable
27054@cindex @code{UnitSimpRules} variable
27055@vindex ExtSimpRules
27056@vindex UnitSimpRules
27057There are also @code{ExtSimpRules} and @code{UnitSimpRules} variables
27058that are used by @kbd{a e} and @kbd{u s}, respectively; these commands
27059also apply @code{EvalRules} and @code{AlgSimpRules}. The variable
27060@code{IntegSimpRules} contains simplification rules that are used
27061only during integration by @kbd{a i}.
27062
27063@node Debugging Rewrites, Examples of Rewrite Rules, Automatic Rewrites, Rewrite Rules
27064@subsection Debugging Rewrites
27065
27066@noindent
27067If a buffer named @samp{*Trace*} exists, the rewrite mechanism will
27068record some useful information there as it operates. The original
27069formula is written there, as is the result of each successful rewrite,
27070and the final result of the rewriting. All phase changes are also
27071noted.
27072
27073Calc always appends to @samp{*Trace*}. You must empty this buffer
27074yourself periodically if it is in danger of growing unwieldy.
27075
27076Note that the rewriting mechanism is substantially slower when the
27077@samp{*Trace*} buffer exists, even if the buffer is not visible on
27078the screen. Once you are done, you will probably want to kill this
27079buffer (with @kbd{C-x k *Trace* @key{RET}}). If you leave it in
27080existence and forget about it, all your future rewrite commands will
27081be needlessly slow.
27082
27083@node Examples of Rewrite Rules, , Debugging Rewrites, Rewrite Rules
27084@subsection Examples of Rewrite Rules
27085
27086@noindent
27087Returning to the example of substituting the pattern
27088@samp{sin(x)^2 + cos(x)^2} with 1, we saw that the rule
27089@samp{opt(a) sin(x)^2 + opt(a) cos(x)^2 := a} does a good job of
27090finding suitable cases. Another solution would be to use the rule
27091@samp{cos(x)^2 := 1 - sin(x)^2}, followed by algebraic simplification
27092if necessary. This rule will be the most effective way to do the job,
27093but at the expense of making some changes that you might not desire.@refill
27094
27095Another algebraic rewrite rule is @samp{exp(x+y) := exp(x) exp(y)}.
27096To make this work with the @w{@kbd{j r}} command so that it can be
27097easily targeted to a particular exponential in a large formula,
27098you might wish to write the rule as @samp{select(exp(x+y)) :=
27099select(exp(x) exp(y))}. The @samp{select} markers will be
27100ignored by the regular @kbd{a r} command
27101(@pxref{Selections with Rewrite Rules}).@refill
27102
27103A surprisingly useful rewrite rule is @samp{a/(b-c) := a*(b+c)/(b^2-c^2)}.
27104This will simplify the formula whenever @cite{b} and/or @cite{c} can
27105be made simpler by squaring. For example, applying this rule to
27106@samp{2 / (sqrt(2) + 3)} yields @samp{6:7 - 2:7 sqrt(2)} (assuming
27107Symbolic Mode has been enabled to keep the square root from being
27108evaulated to a floating-point approximation). This rule is also
27109useful when working with symbolic complex numbers, e.g.,
27110@samp{(a + b i) / (c + d i)}.
27111
27112As another example, we could define our own ``triangular numbers'' function
27113with the rules @samp{[tri(0) := 0, tri(n) := n + tri(n-1) :: n>0]}. Enter
27114this vector and store it in a variable: @kbd{@w{s t} trirules}. Now, given
27115a suitable formula like @samp{tri(5)} on the stack, type @samp{a r trirules}
27116to apply these rules repeatedly. After six applications, @kbd{a r} will
27117stop with 15 on the stack. Once these rules are debugged, it would probably
27118be most useful to add them to @code{EvalRules} so that Calc will evaluate
27119the new @code{tri} function automatically. We could then use @kbd{Z K} on
5d67986c 27120the keyboard macro @kbd{' tri($) @key{RET}} to make a command that applies
d7b8e6c6
EZ
27121@code{tri} to the value on the top of the stack. @xref{Programming}.
27122
27123@cindex Quaternions
27124The following rule set, contributed by @c{Fran\c cois}
27125@asis{Francois} Pinard, implements
27126@dfn{quaternions}, a generalization of the concept of complex numbers.
27127Quaternions have four components, and are here represented by function
27128calls @samp{quat(@var{w}, [@var{x}, @var{y}, @var{z}])} with ``real
27129part'' @var{w} and the three ``imaginary'' parts collected into a
27130vector. Various arithmetical operations on quaternions are supported.
27131To use these rules, either add them to @code{EvalRules}, or create a
27132command based on @kbd{a r} for simplifying quaternion formulas.
27133A convenient way to enter quaternions would be a command defined by
27134a keyboard macro containing: @kbd{' quat($$$$, [$$$, $$, $]) @key{RET}}.
27135
27136@smallexample
27137[ quat(w, x, y, z) := quat(w, [x, y, z]),
27138 quat(w, [0, 0, 0]) := w,
27139 abs(quat(w, v)) := hypot(w, v),
27140 -quat(w, v) := quat(-w, -v),
27141 r + quat(w, v) := quat(r + w, v) :: real(r),
27142 r - quat(w, v) := quat(r - w, -v) :: real(r),
27143 quat(w1, v1) + quat(w2, v2) := quat(w1 + w2, v1 + v2),
27144 r * quat(w, v) := quat(r * w, r * v) :: real(r),
27145 plain(quat(w1, v1) * quat(w2, v2))
27146 := quat(w1 * w2 - v1 * v2, w1 * v2 + w2 * v1 + cross(v1, v2)),
27147 quat(w1, v1) / r := quat(w1 / r, v1 / r) :: real(r),
27148 z / quat(w, v) := z * quatinv(quat(w, v)),
27149 quatinv(quat(w, v)) := quat(w, -v) / (w^2 + v^2),
27150 quatsqr(quat(w, v)) := quat(w^2 - v^2, 2 * w * v),
27151 quat(w, v)^k := quatsqr(quat(w, v)^(k / 2))
27152 :: integer(k) :: k > 0 :: k % 2 = 0,
27153 quat(w, v)^k := quatsqr(quat(w, v)^((k - 1) / 2)) * quat(w, v)
27154 :: integer(k) :: k > 2,
27155 quat(w, v)^-k := quatinv(quat(w, v)^k) :: integer(k) :: k > 0 ]
27156@end smallexample
27157
27158Quaternions, like matrices, have non-commutative multiplication.
27159In other words, @cite{q1 * q2 = q2 * q1} is not necessarily true if
27160@cite{q1} and @cite{q2} are @code{quat} forms. The @samp{quat*quat}
27161rule above uses @code{plain} to prevent Calc from rearranging the
27162product. It may also be wise to add the line @samp{[quat(), matrix]}
27163to the @code{Decls} matrix, to ensure that Calc's other algebraic
27164operations will not rearrange a quaternion product. @xref{Declarations}.
27165
27166These rules also accept a four-argument @code{quat} form, converting
27167it to the preferred form in the first rule. If you would rather see
27168results in the four-argument form, just append the two items
27169@samp{phase(2), quat(w, [x, y, z]) := quat(w, x, y, z)} to the end
27170of the rule set. (But remember that multi-phase rule sets don't work
27171in @code{EvalRules}.)
27172
27173@node Units, Store and Recall, Algebra, Top
27174@chapter Operating on Units
27175
27176@noindent
27177One special interpretation of algebraic formulas is as numbers with units.
27178For example, the formula @samp{5 m / s^2} can be read ``five meters
27179per second squared.'' The commands in this chapter help you
27180manipulate units expressions in this form. Units-related commands
27181begin with the @kbd{u} prefix key.
27182
27183@menu
27184* Basic Operations on Units::
27185* The Units Table::
27186* Predefined Units::
27187* User-Defined Units::
27188@end menu
27189
27190@node Basic Operations on Units, The Units Table, Units, Units
27191@section Basic Operations on Units
27192
27193@noindent
27194A @dfn{units expression} is a formula which is basically a number
27195multiplied and/or divided by one or more @dfn{unit names}, which may
27196optionally be raised to integer powers. Actually, the value part need not
27197be a number; any product or quotient involving unit names is a units
27198expression. Many of the units commands will also accept any formula,
27199where the command applies to all units expressions which appear in the
27200formula.
27201
27202A unit name is a variable whose name appears in the @dfn{unit table},
27203or a variable whose name is a prefix character like @samp{k} (for ``kilo'')
27204or @samp{u} (for ``micro'') followed by a name in the unit table.
27205A substantial table of built-in units is provided with Calc;
27206@pxref{Predefined Units}. You can also define your own unit names;
27207@pxref{User-Defined Units}.@refill
27208
27209Note that if the value part of a units expression is exactly @samp{1},
27210it will be removed by the Calculator's automatic algebra routines: The
27211formula @samp{1 mm} is ``simplified'' to @samp{mm}. This is only a
27212display anomaly, however; @samp{mm} will work just fine as a
27213representation of one millimeter.@refill
27214
27215You may find that Algebraic Mode (@pxref{Algebraic Entry}) makes working
27216with units expressions easier. Otherwise, you will have to remember
27217to hit the apostrophe key every time you wish to enter units.
27218
27219@kindex u s
27220@pindex calc-simplify-units
5d67986c
RS
27221@ignore
27222@mindex usimpl@idots
27223@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
27224@tindex usimplify
27225The @kbd{u s} (@code{calc-simplify-units}) [@code{usimplify}] command
27226simplifies a units
27227expression. It uses @kbd{a s} (@code{calc-simplify}) to simplify the
27228expression first as a regular algebraic formula; it then looks for
27229features that can be further simplified by converting one object's units
27230to be compatible with another's. For example, @samp{5 m + 23 mm} will
27231simplify to @samp{5.023 m}. When different but compatible units are
27232added, the righthand term's units are converted to match those of the
27233lefthand term. @xref{Simplification Modes}, for a way to have this done
27234automatically at all times.@refill
27235
27236Units simplification also handles quotients of two units with the same
27237dimensionality, as in @w{@samp{2 in s/L cm}} to @samp{5.08 s/L}; fractional
27238powers of unit expressions, as in @samp{sqrt(9 mm^2)} to @samp{3 mm} and
27239@samp{sqrt(9 acre)} to a quantity in meters; and @code{floor},
27240@code{ceil}, @code{round}, @code{rounde}, @code{roundu}, @code{trunc},
27241@code{float}, @code{frac}, @code{abs}, and @code{clean}
27242applied to units expressions, in which case
27243the operation in question is applied only to the numeric part of the
27244expression. Finally, trigonometric functions of quantities with units
27245of angle are evaluated, regardless of the current angular mode.@refill
27246
27247@kindex u c
27248@pindex calc-convert-units
27249The @kbd{u c} (@code{calc-convert-units}) command converts a units
27250expression to new, compatible units. For example, given the units
27251expression @samp{55 mph}, typing @kbd{u c m/s @key{RET}} produces
27252@samp{24.5872 m/s}. If the units you request are inconsistent with
27253the original units, the number will be converted into your units
27254times whatever ``remainder'' units are left over. For example,
27255converting @samp{55 mph} into acres produces @samp{6.08e-3 acre / m s}.
27256(Recall that multiplication binds more strongly than division in Calc
27257formulas, so the units here are acres per meter-second.) Remainder
27258units are expressed in terms of ``fundamental'' units like @samp{m} and
27259@samp{s}, regardless of the input units.
27260
27261One special exception is that if you specify a single unit name, and
27262a compatible unit appears somewhere in the units expression, then
27263that compatible unit will be converted to the new unit and the
27264remaining units in the expression will be left alone. For example,
27265given the input @samp{980 cm/s^2}, the command @kbd{u c ms} will
27266change the @samp{s} to @samp{ms} to get @samp{9.8e-4 cm/ms^2}.
27267The ``remainder unit'' @samp{cm} is left alone rather than being
27268changed to the base unit @samp{m}.
27269
27270You can use explicit unit conversion instead of the @kbd{u s} command
27271to gain more control over the units of the result of an expression.
27272For example, given @samp{5 m + 23 mm}, you can type @kbd{u c m} or
27273@kbd{u c mm} to express the result in either meters or millimeters.
27274(For that matter, you could type @kbd{u c fath} to express the result
27275in fathoms, if you preferred!)
27276
27277In place of a specific set of units, you can also enter one of the
27278units system names @code{si}, @code{mks} (equivalent), or @code{cgs}.
27279For example, @kbd{u c si @key{RET}} converts the expression into
27280International System of Units (SI) base units. Also, @kbd{u c base}
27281converts to Calc's base units, which are the same as @code{si} units
27282except that @code{base} uses @samp{g} as the fundamental unit of mass
27283whereas @code{si} uses @samp{kg}.
27284
27285@cindex Composite units
27286The @kbd{u c} command also accepts @dfn{composite units}, which
27287are expressed as the sum of several compatible unit names. For
27288example, converting @samp{30.5 in} to units @samp{mi+ft+in} (miles,
27289feet, and inches) produces @samp{2 ft + 6.5 in}. Calc first
27290sorts the unit names into order of decreasing relative size.
27291It then accounts for as much of the input quantity as it can
27292using an integer number times the largest unit, then moves on
27293to the next smaller unit, and so on. Only the smallest unit
27294may have a non-integer amount attached in the result. A few
27295standard unit names exist for common combinations, such as
27296@code{mfi} for @samp{mi+ft+in}, and @code{tpo} for @samp{ton+lb+oz}.
27297Composite units are expanded as if by @kbd{a x}, so that
27298@samp{(ft+in)/hr} is first converted to @samp{ft/hr+in/hr}.
27299
27300If the value on the stack does not contain any units, @kbd{u c} will
27301prompt first for the old units which this value should be considered
27302to have, then for the new units. Assuming the old and new units you
27303give are consistent with each other, the result also will not contain
5d67986c 27304any units. For example, @kbd{@w{u c} cm @key{RET} in @key{RET}} converts the number
d7b8e6c6
EZ
273052 on the stack to 5.08.
27306
27307@kindex u b
27308@pindex calc-base-units
27309The @kbd{u b} (@code{calc-base-units}) command is shorthand for
27310@kbd{u c base}; it converts the units expression on the top of the
27311stack into @code{base} units. If @kbd{u s} does not simplify a
27312units expression as far as you would like, try @kbd{u b}.
27313
27314The @kbd{u c} and @kbd{u b} commands treat temperature units (like
27315@samp{degC} and @samp{K}) as relative temperatures. For example,
27316@kbd{u c} converts @samp{10 degC} to @samp{18 degF}: A change of 10
27317degrees Celsius corresponds to a change of 18 degrees Fahrenheit.
27318
27319@kindex u t
27320@pindex calc-convert-temperature
27321@cindex Temperature conversion
27322The @kbd{u t} (@code{calc-convert-temperature}) command converts
27323absolute temperatures. The value on the stack must be a simple units
27324expression with units of temperature only. This command would convert
27325@samp{10 degC} to @samp{50 degF}, the equivalent temperature on the
27326Fahrenheit scale.@refill
27327
27328@kindex u r
27329@pindex calc-remove-units
27330@kindex u x
27331@pindex calc-extract-units
27332The @kbd{u r} (@code{calc-remove-units}) command removes units from the
27333formula at the top of the stack. The @kbd{u x}
27334(@code{calc-extract-units}) command extracts only the units portion of a
27335formula. These commands essentially replace every term of the formula
27336that does or doesn't (respectively) look like a unit name by the
27337constant 1, then resimplify the formula.@refill
27338
27339@kindex u a
27340@pindex calc-autorange-units
27341The @kbd{u a} (@code{calc-autorange-units}) command turns on and off a
27342mode in which unit prefixes like @code{k} (``kilo'') are automatically
27343applied to keep the numeric part of a units expression in a reasonable
27344range. This mode affects @kbd{u s} and all units conversion commands
27345except @kbd{u b}. For example, with autoranging on, @samp{12345 Hz}
27346will be simplified to @samp{12.345 kHz}. Autoranging is useful for
27347some kinds of units (like @code{Hz} and @code{m}), but is probably
27348undesirable for non-metric units like @code{ft} and @code{tbsp}.
27349(Composite units are more appropriate for those; see above.)
27350
27351Autoranging always applies the prefix to the leftmost unit name.
27352Calc chooses the largest prefix that causes the number to be greater
27353than or equal to 1.0. Thus an increasing sequence of adjusted times
27354would be @samp{1 ms, 10 ms, 100 ms, 1 s, 10 s, 100 s, 1 ks}.
27355Generally the rule of thumb is that the number will be adjusted
27356to be in the interval @samp{[1 .. 1000)}, although there are several
27357exceptions to this rule. First, if the unit has a power then this
27358is not possible; @samp{0.1 s^2} simplifies to @samp{100000 ms^2}.
27359Second, the ``centi-'' prefix is allowed to form @code{cm} (centimeters),
27360but will not apply to other units. The ``deci-,'' ``deka-,'' and
27361``hecto-'' prefixes are never used. Thus the allowable interval is
27362@samp{[1 .. 10)} for millimeters and @samp{[1 .. 100)} for centimeters.
27363Finally, a prefix will not be added to a unit if the resulting name
27364is also the actual name of another unit; @samp{1e-15 t} would normally
27365be considered a ``femto-ton,'' but it is written as @samp{1000 at}
27366(1000 atto-tons) instead because @code{ft} would be confused with feet.
27367
27368@node The Units Table, Predefined Units, Basic Operations on Units, Units
27369@section The Units Table
27370
27371@noindent
27372@kindex u v
27373@pindex calc-enter-units-table
27374The @kbd{u v} (@code{calc-enter-units-table}) command displays the units table
27375in another buffer called @code{*Units Table*}. Each entry in this table
27376gives the unit name as it would appear in an expression, the definition
27377of the unit in terms of simpler units, and a full name or description of
27378the unit. Fundamental units are defined as themselves; these are the
27379units produced by the @kbd{u b} command. The fundamental units are
27380meters, seconds, grams, kelvins, amperes, candelas, moles, radians,
27381and steradians.
27382
27383The Units Table buffer also displays the Unit Prefix Table. Note that
27384two prefixes, ``kilo'' and ``hecto,'' accept either upper- or lower-case
27385prefix letters. @samp{Meg} is also accepted as a synonym for the @samp{M}
27386prefix. Whenever a unit name can be interpreted as either a built-in name
27387or a prefix followed by another built-in name, the former interpretation
27388wins. For example, @samp{2 pt} means two pints, not two pico-tons.
27389
27390The Units Table buffer, once created, is not rebuilt unless you define
27391new units. To force the buffer to be rebuilt, give any numeric prefix
27392argument to @kbd{u v}.
27393
27394@kindex u V
27395@pindex calc-view-units-table
27396The @kbd{u V} (@code{calc-view-units-table}) command is like @kbd{u v} except
27397that the cursor is not moved into the Units Table buffer. You can
27398type @kbd{u V} again to remove the Units Table from the display. To
27399return from the Units Table buffer after a @kbd{u v}, type @kbd{M-# c}
27400again or use the regular Emacs @w{@kbd{C-x o}} (@code{other-window})
27401command. You can also kill the buffer with @kbd{C-x k} if you wish;
27402the actual units table is safely stored inside the Calculator.
27403
27404@kindex u g
27405@pindex calc-get-unit-definition
27406The @kbd{u g} (@code{calc-get-unit-definition}) command retrieves a unit's
27407defining expression and pushes it onto the Calculator stack. For example,
27408@kbd{u g in} will produce the expression @samp{2.54 cm}. This is the
27409same definition for the unit that would appear in the Units Table buffer.
27410Note that this command works only for actual unit names; @kbd{u g km}
27411will report that no such unit exists, for example, because @code{km} is
27412really the unit @code{m} with a @code{k} (``kilo'') prefix. To see a
27413definition of a unit in terms of base units, it is easier to push the
27414unit name on the stack and then reduce it to base units with @kbd{u b}.
27415
27416@kindex u e
27417@pindex calc-explain-units
27418The @kbd{u e} (@code{calc-explain-units}) command displays an English
27419description of the units of the expression on the stack. For example,
27420for the expression @samp{62 km^2 g / s^2 mol K}, the description is
27421``Square-Kilometer Gram per (Second-squared Mole Degree-Kelvin).'' This
27422command uses the English descriptions that appear in the righthand
27423column of the Units Table.
27424
27425@node Predefined Units, User-Defined Units, The Units Table, Units
27426@section Predefined Units
27427
27428@noindent
27429Since the exact definitions of many kinds of units have evolved over the
27430years, and since certain countries sometimes have local differences in
27431their definitions, it is a good idea to examine Calc's definition of a
27432unit before depending on its exact value. For example, there are three
27433different units for gallons, corresponding to the US (@code{gal}),
27434Canadian (@code{galC}), and British (@code{galUK}) definitions. Also,
27435note that @code{oz} is a standard ounce of mass, @code{ozt} is a Troy
27436ounce, and @code{ozfl} is a fluid ounce.
27437
27438The temperature units corresponding to degrees Kelvin and Centigrade
27439(Celsius) are the same in this table, since most units commands treat
27440temperatures as being relative. The @code{calc-convert-temperature}
27441command has special rules for handling the different absolute magnitudes
27442of the various temperature scales.
27443
27444The unit of volume ``liters'' can be referred to by either the lower-case
27445@code{l} or the upper-case @code{L}.
27446
27447The unit @code{A} stands for Amperes; the name @code{Ang} is used
27448@tex
27449for \AA ngstroms.
27450@end tex
27451@ifinfo
27452for Angstroms.
27453@end ifinfo
27454
27455The unit @code{pt} stands for pints; the name @code{point} stands for
27456a typographical point, defined by @samp{72 point = 1 in}. There is
27457also @code{tpt}, which stands for a printer's point as defined by the
27458@TeX{} typesetting system: @samp{72.27 tpt = 1 in}.
27459
27460The unit @code{e} stands for the elementary (electron) unit of charge;
27461because algebra command could mistake this for the special constant
27462@cite{e}, Calc provides the alternate unit name @code{ech} which is
27463preferable to @code{e}.
27464
27465The name @code{g} stands for one gram of mass; there is also @code{gf},
27466one gram of force. (Likewise for @kbd{lb}, pounds, and @kbd{lbf}.)
27467Meanwhile, one ``@cite{g}'' of acceleration is denoted @code{ga}.
27468
27469The unit @code{ton} is a U.S. ton of @samp{2000 lb}, and @code{t} is
27470a metric ton of @samp{1000 kg}.
27471
27472The names @code{s} (or @code{sec}) and @code{min} refer to units of
27473time; @code{arcsec} and @code{arcmin} are units of angle.
27474
27475Some ``units'' are really physical constants; for example, @code{c}
27476represents the speed of light, and @code{h} represents Planck's
27477constant. You can use these just like other units: converting
27478@samp{.5 c} to @samp{m/s} expresses one-half the speed of light in
27479meters per second. You can also use this merely as a handy reference;
27480the @kbd{u g} command gets the definition of one of these constants
27481in its normal terms, and @kbd{u b} expresses the definition in base
27482units.
27483
27484Two units, @code{pi} and @code{fsc} (the fine structure constant,
27485approximately @i{1/137}) are dimensionless. The units simplification
27486commands simply treat these names as equivalent to their corresponding
27487values. However you can, for example, use @kbd{u c} to convert a pure
27488number into multiples of the fine structure constant, or @kbd{u b} to
27489convert this back into a pure number. (When @kbd{u c} prompts for the
27490``old units,'' just enter a blank line to signify that the value
27491really is unitless.)
27492
27493@c Describe angular units, luminosity vs. steradians problem.
27494
27495@node User-Defined Units, , Predefined Units, Units
27496@section User-Defined Units
27497
27498@noindent
27499Calc provides ways to get quick access to your selected ``favorite''
27500units, as well as ways to define your own new units.
27501
27502@kindex u 0-9
27503@pindex calc-quick-units
27504@vindex Units
27505@cindex @code{Units} variable
27506@cindex Quick units
27507To select your favorite units, store a vector of unit names or
27508expressions in the Calc variable @code{Units}. The @kbd{u 1}
27509through @kbd{u 9} commands (@code{calc-quick-units}) provide access
27510to these units. If the value on the top of the stack is a plain
27511number (with no units attached), then @kbd{u 1} gives it the
27512specified units. (Basically, it multiplies the number by the
27513first item in the @code{Units} vector.) If the number on the
27514stack @emph{does} have units, then @kbd{u 1} converts that number
27515to the new units. For example, suppose the vector @samp{[in, ft]}
27516is stored in @code{Units}. Then @kbd{30 u 1} will create the
27517expression @samp{30 in}, and @kbd{u 2} will convert that expression
27518to @samp{2.5 ft}.
27519
27520The @kbd{u 0} command accesses the tenth element of @code{Units}.
27521Only ten quick units may be defined at a time. If the @code{Units}
27522variable has no stored value (the default), or if its value is not
27523a vector, then the quick-units commands will not function. The
27524@kbd{s U} command is a convenient way to edit the @code{Units}
27525variable; @pxref{Operations on Variables}.
27526
27527@kindex u d
27528@pindex calc-define-unit
27529@cindex User-defined units
27530The @kbd{u d} (@code{calc-define-unit}) command records the units
27531expression on the top of the stack as the definition for a new,
27532user-defined unit. For example, putting @samp{16.5 ft} on the stack and
27533typing @kbd{u d rod} defines the new unit @samp{rod} to be equivalent to
2753416.5 feet. The unit conversion and simplification commands will now
27535treat @code{rod} just like any other unit of length. You will also be
27536prompted for an optional English description of the unit, which will
27537appear in the Units Table.
27538
27539@kindex u u
27540@pindex calc-undefine-unit
27541The @kbd{u u} (@code{calc-undefine-unit}) command removes a user-defined
27542unit. It is not possible to remove one of the predefined units,
27543however.
27544
27545If you define a unit with an existing unit name, your new definition
27546will replace the original definition of that unit. If the unit was a
27547predefined unit, the old definition will not be replaced, only
27548``shadowed.'' The built-in definition will reappear if you later use
27549@kbd{u u} to remove the shadowing definition.
27550
27551To create a new fundamental unit, use either 1 or the unit name itself
27552as the defining expression. Otherwise the expression can involve any
27553other units that you like (except for composite units like @samp{mfi}).
27554You can create a new composite unit with a sum of other units as the
27555defining expression. The next unit operation like @kbd{u c} or @kbd{u v}
27556will rebuild the internal unit table incorporating your modifications.
27557Note that erroneous definitions (such as two units defined in terms of
27558each other) will not be detected until the unit table is next rebuilt;
27559@kbd{u v} is a convenient way to force this to happen.
27560
27561Temperature units are treated specially inside the Calculator; it is not
27562possible to create user-defined temperature units.
27563
27564@kindex u p
27565@pindex calc-permanent-units
27566@cindex @file{.emacs} file, user-defined units
27567The @kbd{u p} (@code{calc-permanent-units}) command stores the user-defined
27568units in your @file{.emacs} file, so that the units will still be
27569available in subsequent Emacs sessions. If there was already a set of
27570user-defined units in your @file{.emacs} file, it is replaced by the
27571new set. (@xref{General Mode Commands}, for a way to tell Calc to use
27572a different file instead of @file{.emacs}.)
27573
27574@node Store and Recall, Graphics, Units, Top
27575@chapter Storing and Recalling
27576
27577@noindent
27578Calculator variables are really just Lisp variables that contain numbers
27579or formulas in a form that Calc can understand. The commands in this
27580section allow you to manipulate variables conveniently. Commands related
27581to variables use the @kbd{s} prefix key.
27582
27583@menu
27584* Storing Variables::
27585* Recalling Variables::
27586* Operations on Variables::
27587* Let Command::
27588* Evaluates-To Operator::
27589@end menu
27590
27591@node Storing Variables, Recalling Variables, Store and Recall, Store and Recall
27592@section Storing Variables
27593
27594@noindent
27595@kindex s s
27596@pindex calc-store
27597@cindex Storing variables
27598@cindex Quick variables
27599@vindex q0
27600@vindex q9
27601The @kbd{s s} (@code{calc-store}) command stores the value at the top of
27602the stack into a specified variable. It prompts you to enter the
27603name of the variable. If you press a single digit, the value is stored
27604immediately in one of the ``quick'' variables @code{var-q0} through
27605@code{var-q9}. Or you can enter any variable name. The prefix @samp{var-}
27606is supplied for you; when a name appears in a formula (as in @samp{a+q2})
27607the prefix @samp{var-} is also supplied there, so normally you can simply
27608forget about @samp{var-} everywhere. Its only purpose is to enable you to
27609use Calc variables without fear of accidentally clobbering some variable in
27610another Emacs package. If you really want to store in an arbitrary Lisp
27611variable, just backspace over the @samp{var-}.
27612
27613@kindex s t
27614@pindex calc-store-into
27615The @kbd{s s} command leaves the stored value on the stack. There is
27616also an @kbd{s t} (@code{calc-store-into}) command, which removes a
27617value from the stack and stores it in a variable.
27618
27619If the top of stack value is an equation @samp{a = 7} or assignment
27620@samp{a := 7} with a variable on the lefthand side, then Calc will
27621assign that variable with that value by default, i.e., if you type
27622@kbd{s s @key{RET}} or @kbd{s t @key{RET}}. In this example, the
27623value 7 would be stored in the variable @samp{a}. (If you do type
27624a variable name at the prompt, the top-of-stack value is stored in
27625its entirety, even if it is an equation: @samp{s s b @key{RET}}
27626with @samp{a := 7} on the stack stores @samp{a := 7} in @code{b}.)
27627
27628In fact, the top of stack value can be a vector of equations or
27629assignments with different variables on their lefthand sides; the
27630default will be to store all the variables with their corresponding
27631righthand sides simultaneously.
27632
27633It is also possible to type an equation or assignment directly at
27634the prompt for the @kbd{s s} or @kbd{s t} command: @kbd{s s foo = 7}.
27635In this case the expression to the right of the @kbd{=} or @kbd{:=}
27636symbol is evaluated as if by the @kbd{=} command, and that value is
27637stored in the variable. No value is taken from the stack; @kbd{s s}
27638and @kbd{s t} are equivalent when used in this way.
27639
27640@kindex s 0-9
27641@kindex t 0-9
27642The prefix keys @kbd{s} and @kbd{t} may be followed immediately by a
27643digit; @kbd{s 9} is equivalent to @kbd{s s 9}, and @kbd{t 9} is
27644equivalent to @kbd{s t 9}. (The @kbd{t} prefix is otherwise used
27645for trail and time/date commands.)
27646
27647@kindex s +
27648@kindex s -
5d67986c
RS
27649@ignore
27650@mindex @idots
27651@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27652@kindex s *
5d67986c
RS
27653@ignore
27654@mindex @null
27655@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27656@kindex s /
5d67986c
RS
27657@ignore
27658@mindex @null
27659@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27660@kindex s ^
5d67986c
RS
27661@ignore
27662@mindex @null
27663@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27664@kindex s |
5d67986c
RS
27665@ignore
27666@mindex @null
27667@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27668@kindex s n
5d67986c
RS
27669@ignore
27670@mindex @null
27671@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27672@kindex s &
5d67986c
RS
27673@ignore
27674@mindex @null
27675@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27676@kindex s [
5d67986c
RS
27677@ignore
27678@mindex @null
27679@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
27680@kindex s ]
27681@pindex calc-store-plus
27682@pindex calc-store-minus
27683@pindex calc-store-times
27684@pindex calc-store-div
27685@pindex calc-store-power
27686@pindex calc-store-concat
27687@pindex calc-store-neg
27688@pindex calc-store-inv
27689@pindex calc-store-decr
27690@pindex calc-store-incr
27691There are also several ``arithmetic store'' commands. For example,
27692@kbd{s +} removes a value from the stack and adds it to the specified
27693variable. The other arithmetic stores are @kbd{s -}, @kbd{s *}, @kbd{s /},
27694@kbd{s ^}, and @w{@kbd{s |}} (vector concatenation), plus @kbd{s n} and
27695@kbd{s &} which negate or invert the value in a variable, and @w{@kbd{s [}}
27696and @kbd{s ]} which decrease or increase a variable by one.
27697
27698All the arithmetic stores accept the Inverse prefix to reverse the
27699order of the operands. If @cite{v} represents the contents of the
27700variable, and @cite{a} is the value drawn from the stack, then regular
27701@w{@kbd{s -}} assigns @c{$v \coloneq v - a$}
27702@cite{v := v - a}, but @kbd{I s -} assigns
27703@c{$v \coloneq a - v$}
27704@cite{v := a - v}. While @kbd{I s *} might seem pointless, it is
27705useful if matrix multiplication is involved. Actually, all the
27706arithmetic stores use formulas designed to behave usefully both
27707forwards and backwards:
27708
d7b8e6c6 27709@example
5d67986c 27710@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
27711s + v := v + a v := a + v
27712s - v := v - a v := a - v
27713s * v := v * a v := a * v
27714s / v := v / a v := a / v
27715s ^ v := v ^ a v := a ^ v
27716s | v := v | a v := a | v
27717s n v := v / (-1) v := (-1) / v
27718s & v := v ^ (-1) v := (-1) ^ v
27719s [ v := v - 1 v := 1 - v
27720s ] v := v - (-1) v := (-1) - v
d7b8e6c6 27721@end group
5d67986c 27722@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
27723
27724In the last four cases, a numeric prefix argument will be used in
27725place of the number one. (For example, @kbd{M-2 s ]} increases
27726a variable by 2, and @kbd{M-2 I s ]} replaces a variable by
27727minus-two minus the variable.
27728
27729The first six arithmetic stores can also be typed @kbd{s t +}, @kbd{s t -},
27730etc. The commands @kbd{s s +}, @kbd{s s -}, and so on are analogous
27731arithmetic stores that don't remove the value @cite{a} from the stack.
27732
27733All arithmetic stores report the new value of the variable in the
27734Trail for your information. They signal an error if the variable
27735previously had no stored value. If default simplifications have been
27736turned off, the arithmetic stores temporarily turn them on for numeric
27737arguments only (i.e., they temporarily do an @kbd{m N} command).
27738@xref{Simplification Modes}. Large vectors put in the trail by
27739these commands always use abbreviated (@kbd{t .}) mode.
27740
27741@kindex s m
27742@pindex calc-store-map
27743The @kbd{s m} command is a general way to adjust a variable's value
27744using any Calc function. It is a ``mapping'' command analogous to
27745@kbd{V M}, @kbd{V R}, etc. @xref{Reducing and Mapping}, to see
27746how to specify a function for a mapping command. Basically,
27747all you do is type the Calc command key that would invoke that
27748function normally. For example, @kbd{s m n} applies the @kbd{n}
27749key to negate the contents of the variable, so @kbd{s m n} is
27750equivalent to @kbd{s n}. Also, @kbd{s m Q} takes the square root
27751of the value stored in a variable, @kbd{s m v v} uses @kbd{v v} to
27752reverse the vector stored in the variable, and @kbd{s m H I S}
27753takes the hyperbolic arcsine of the variable contents.
27754
27755If the mapping function takes two or more arguments, the additional
27756arguments are taken from the stack; the old value of the variable
27757is provided as the first argument. Thus @kbd{s m -} with @cite{a}
27758on the stack computes @cite{v - a}, just like @kbd{s -}. With the
27759Inverse prefix, the variable's original value becomes the @emph{last}
27760argument instead of the first. Thus @kbd{I s m -} is also
27761equivalent to @kbd{I s -}.
27762
27763@kindex s x
27764@pindex calc-store-exchange
27765The @kbd{s x} (@code{calc-store-exchange}) command exchanges the value
27766of a variable with the value on the top of the stack. Naturally, the
27767variable must already have a stored value for this to work.
27768
27769You can type an equation or assignment at the @kbd{s x} prompt. The
27770command @kbd{s x a=6} takes no values from the stack; instead, it
27771pushes the old value of @samp{a} on the stack and stores @samp{a = 6}.
27772
27773@kindex s u
27774@pindex calc-unstore
27775@cindex Void variables
27776@cindex Un-storing variables
27777Until you store something in them, variables are ``void,'' that is, they
27778contain no value at all. If they appear in an algebraic formula they
27779will be left alone even if you press @kbd{=} (@code{calc-evaluate}).
27780The @kbd{s u} (@code{calc-unstore}) command returns a variable to the
27781void state.@refill
27782
27783The only variables with predefined values are the ``special constants''
27784@code{pi}, @code{e}, @code{i}, @code{phi}, and @code{gamma}. You are free
27785to unstore these variables or to store new values into them if you like,
27786although some of the algebraic-manipulation functions may assume these
27787variables represent their standard values. Calc displays a warning if
27788you change the value of one of these variables, or of one of the other
27789special variables @code{inf}, @code{uinf}, and @code{nan} (which are
27790normally void).
27791
27792Note that @code{var-pi} doesn't actually have 3.14159265359 stored
27793in it, but rather a special magic value that evaluates to @c{$\pi$}
27794@cite{pi}
27795at the current precision. Likewise @code{var-e}, @code{var-i}, and
27796@code{var-phi} evaluate according to the current precision or polar mode.
27797If you recall a value from @code{pi} and store it back, this magic
27798property will be lost.
27799
27800@kindex s c
27801@pindex calc-copy-variable
27802The @kbd{s c} (@code{calc-copy-variable}) command copies the stored
27803value of one variable to another. It differs from a simple @kbd{s r}
27804followed by an @kbd{s t} in two important ways. First, the value never
27805goes on the stack and thus is never rounded, evaluated, or simplified
27806in any way; it is not even rounded down to the current precision.
27807Second, the ``magic'' contents of a variable like @code{var-e} can
27808be copied into another variable with this command, perhaps because
27809you need to unstore @code{var-e} right now but you wish to put it
27810back when you're done. The @kbd{s c} command is the only way to
27811manipulate these magic values intact.
27812
27813@node Recalling Variables, Operations on Variables, Storing Variables, Store and Recall
27814@section Recalling Variables
27815
27816@noindent
27817@kindex s r
27818@pindex calc-recall
27819@cindex Recalling variables
27820The most straightforward way to extract the stored value from a variable
27821is to use the @kbd{s r} (@code{calc-recall}) command. This command prompts
27822for a variable name (similarly to @code{calc-store}), looks up the value
27823of the specified variable, and pushes that value onto the stack. It is
27824an error to try to recall a void variable.
27825
27826It is also possible to recall the value from a variable by evaluating a
27827formula containing that variable. For example, @kbd{' a @key{RET} =} is
27828the same as @kbd{s r a @key{RET}} except that if the variable is void, the
27829former will simply leave the formula @samp{a} on the stack whereas the
27830latter will produce an error message.
27831
27832@kindex r 0-9
27833The @kbd{r} prefix may be followed by a digit, so that @kbd{r 9} is
27834equivalent to @kbd{s r 9}. (The @kbd{r} prefix is otherwise unused
27835in the current version of Calc.)
27836
27837@node Operations on Variables, Let Command, Recalling Variables, Store and Recall
27838@section Other Operations on Variables
27839
27840@noindent
27841@kindex s e
27842@pindex calc-edit-variable
27843The @kbd{s e} (@code{calc-edit-variable}) command edits the stored
27844value of a variable without ever putting that value on the stack
27845or simplifying or evaluating the value. It prompts for the name of
27846the variable to edit. If the variable has no stored value, the
27847editing buffer will start out empty. If the editing buffer is
27848empty when you press @key{M-# M-#} to finish, the variable will
27849be made void. @xref{Editing Stack Entries}, for a general
27850description of editing.
27851
27852The @kbd{s e} command is especially useful for creating and editing
27853rewrite rules which are stored in variables. Sometimes these rules
27854contain formulas which must not be evaluated until the rules are
27855actually used. (For example, they may refer to @samp{deriv(x,y)},
27856where @code{x} will someday become some expression involving @code{y};
27857if you let Calc evaluate the rule while you are defining it, Calc will
27858replace @samp{deriv(x,y)} with 0 because the formula @code{x} does
27859not itself refer to @code{y}.) By contrast, recalling the variable,
27860editing with @kbd{`}, and storing will evaluate the variable's value
27861as a side effect of putting the value on the stack.
27862
27863@kindex s A
27864@kindex s D
5d67986c
RS
27865@ignore
27866@mindex @idots
27867@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27868@kindex s E
5d67986c
RS
27869@ignore
27870@mindex @null
27871@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27872@kindex s F
5d67986c
RS
27873@ignore
27874@mindex @null
27875@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27876@kindex s G
5d67986c
RS
27877@ignore
27878@mindex @null
27879@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27880@kindex s H
5d67986c
RS
27881@ignore
27882@mindex @null
27883@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27884@kindex s I
5d67986c
RS
27885@ignore
27886@mindex @null
27887@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27888@kindex s L
5d67986c
RS
27889@ignore
27890@mindex @null
27891@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27892@kindex s P
5d67986c
RS
27893@ignore
27894@mindex @null
27895@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27896@kindex s R
5d67986c
RS
27897@ignore
27898@mindex @null
27899@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27900@kindex s T
5d67986c
RS
27901@ignore
27902@mindex @null
27903@end ignore
d7b8e6c6 27904@kindex s U
5d67986c
RS
27905@ignore
27906@mindex @null
27907@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
27908@kindex s X
27909@pindex calc-store-AlgSimpRules
27910@pindex calc-store-Decls
27911@pindex calc-store-EvalRules
27912@pindex calc-store-FitRules
27913@pindex calc-store-GenCount
27914@pindex calc-store-Holidays
27915@pindex calc-store-IntegLimit
27916@pindex calc-store-LineStyles
27917@pindex calc-store-PointStyles
27918@pindex calc-store-PlotRejects
27919@pindex calc-store-TimeZone
27920@pindex calc-store-Units
27921@pindex calc-store-ExtSimpRules
27922There are several special-purpose variable-editing commands that
27923use the @kbd{s} prefix followed by a shifted letter:
27924
27925@table @kbd
27926@item s A
27927Edit @code{AlgSimpRules}. @xref{Algebraic Simplifications}.
27928@item s D
27929Edit @code{Decls}. @xref{Declarations}.
27930@item s E
27931Edit @code{EvalRules}. @xref{Default Simplifications}.
27932@item s F
27933Edit @code{FitRules}. @xref{Curve Fitting}.
27934@item s G
27935Edit @code{GenCount}. @xref{Solving Equations}.
27936@item s H
27937Edit @code{Holidays}. @xref{Business Days}.
27938@item s I
27939Edit @code{IntegLimit}. @xref{Calculus}.
27940@item s L
27941Edit @code{LineStyles}. @xref{Graphics}.
27942@item s P
27943Edit @code{PointStyles}. @xref{Graphics}.
27944@item s R
27945Edit @code{PlotRejects}. @xref{Graphics}.
27946@item s T
27947Edit @code{TimeZone}. @xref{Time Zones}.
27948@item s U
27949Edit @code{Units}. @xref{User-Defined Units}.
27950@item s X
27951Edit @code{ExtSimpRules}. @xref{Unsafe Simplifications}.
27952@end table
27953
27954These commands are just versions of @kbd{s e} that use fixed variable
27955names rather than prompting for the variable name.
27956
27957@kindex s p
27958@pindex calc-permanent-variable
27959@cindex Storing variables
27960@cindex Permanent variables
27961@cindex @file{.emacs} file, veriables
27962The @kbd{s p} (@code{calc-permanent-variable}) command saves a
27963variable's value permanently in your @file{.emacs} file, so that its
27964value will still be available in future Emacs sessions. You can
27965re-execute @w{@kbd{s p}} later on to update the saved value, but the
27966only way to remove a saved variable is to edit your @file{.emacs} file
27967by hand. (@xref{General Mode Commands}, for a way to tell Calc to
27968use a different file instead of @file{.emacs}.)
27969
27970If you do not specify the name of a variable to save (i.e.,
27971@kbd{s p @key{RET}}), all @samp{var-} variables with defined values
27972are saved except for the special constants @code{pi}, @code{e},
27973@code{i}, @code{phi}, and @code{gamma}; the variables @code{TimeZone}
27974and @code{PlotRejects};
27975@code{FitRules}, @code{DistribRules}, and other built-in rewrite
27976rules; and @code{PlotData@var{n}} variables generated
27977by the graphics commands. (You can still save these variables by
27978explicitly naming them in an @kbd{s p} command.)@refill
27979
27980@kindex s i
27981@pindex calc-insert-variables
27982The @kbd{s i} (@code{calc-insert-variables}) command writes
27983the values of all @samp{var-} variables into a specified buffer.
27984The variables are written in the form of Lisp @code{setq} commands
27985which store the values in string form. You can place these commands
27986in your @file{.emacs} buffer if you wish, though in this case it
27987would be easier to use @kbd{s p @key{RET}}. (Note that @kbd{s i}
27988omits the same set of variables as @w{@kbd{s p @key{RET}}}; the difference
27989is that @kbd{s i} will store the variables in any buffer, and it also
27990stores in a more human-readable format.)
27991
27992@node Let Command, Evaluates-To Operator, Operations on Variables, Store and Recall
27993@section The Let Command
27994
27995@noindent
27996@kindex s l
27997@pindex calc-let
27998@cindex Variables, temporary assignment
27999@cindex Temporary assignment to variables
28000If you have an expression like @samp{a+b^2} on the stack and you wish to
28001compute its value where @cite{b=3}, you can simply store 3 in @cite{b} and
28002then press @kbd{=} to reevaluate the formula. This has the side-effect
28003of leaving the stored value of 3 in @cite{b} for future operations.
28004
28005The @kbd{s l} (@code{calc-let}) command evaluates a formula under a
28006@emph{temporary} assignment of a variable. It stores the value on the
28007top of the stack into the specified variable, then evaluates the
28008second-to-top stack entry, then restores the original value (or lack of one)
28009in the variable. Thus after @kbd{'@w{ }a+b^2 @key{RET} 3 s l b @key{RET}},
28010the stack will contain the formula @samp{a + 9}. The subsequent command
28011@kbd{@w{5 s l a} @key{RET}} will replace this formula with the number 14.
28012The variables @samp{a} and @samp{b} are not permanently affected in any way
28013by these commands.
28014
28015The value on the top of the stack may be an equation or assignment, or
28016a vector of equations or assignments, in which case the default will be
28017analogous to the case of @kbd{s t @key{RET}}. @xref{Storing Variables}.
28018
28019Also, you can answer the variable-name prompt with an equation or
5d67986c
RS
28020assignment: @kbd{s l b=3 @key{RET}} is the same as storing 3 on the stack
28021and typing @kbd{s l b @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28022
28023The @kbd{a b} (@code{calc-substitute}) command is another way to substitute
28024a variable with a value in a formula. It does an actual substitution
28025rather than temporarily assigning the variable and evaluating. For
28026example, letting @cite{n=2} in @samp{f(n pi)} with @kbd{a b} will
28027produce @samp{f(2 pi)}, whereas @kbd{s l} would give @samp{f(6.28)}
28028since the evaluation step will also evaluate @code{pi}.
28029
28030@node Evaluates-To Operator, , Let Command, Store and Recall
28031@section The Evaluates-To Operator
28032
28033@noindent
28034@tindex evalto
28035@tindex =>
28036@cindex Evaluates-to operator
28037@cindex @samp{=>} operator
28038The special algebraic symbol @samp{=>} is known as the @dfn{evaluates-to
28039operator}. (It will show up as an @code{evalto} function call in
28040other language modes like Pascal and @TeX{}.) This is a binary
28041operator, that is, it has a lefthand and a righthand argument,
28042although it can be entered with the righthand argument omitted.
28043
28044A formula like @samp{@var{a} => @var{b}} is evaluated by Calc as
28045follows: First, @var{a} is not simplified or modified in any
28046way. The previous value of argument @var{b} is thrown away; the
28047formula @var{a} is then copied and evaluated as if by the @kbd{=}
28048command according to all current modes and stored variable values,
28049and the result is installed as the new value of @var{b}.
28050
28051For example, suppose you enter the algebraic formula @samp{2 + 3 => 17}.
28052The number 17 is ignored, and the lefthand argument is left in its
28053unevaluated form; the result is the formula @samp{2 + 3 => 5}.
28054
28055@kindex s =
28056@pindex calc-evalto
28057You can enter an @samp{=>} formula either directly using algebraic
28058entry (in which case the righthand side may be omitted since it is
28059going to be replaced right away anyhow), or by using the @kbd{s =}
28060(@code{calc-evalto}) command, which takes @var{a} from the stack
28061and replaces it with @samp{@var{a} => @var{b}}.
28062
28063Calc keeps track of all @samp{=>} operators on the stack, and
28064recomputes them whenever anything changes that might affect their
28065values, i.e., a mode setting or variable value. This occurs only
28066if the @samp{=>} operator is at the top level of the formula, or
28067if it is part of a top-level vector. In other words, pushing
28068@samp{2 + (a => 17)} will change the 17 to the actual value of
28069@samp{a} when you enter the formula, but the result will not be
28070dynamically updated when @samp{a} is changed later because the
28071@samp{=>} operator is buried inside a sum. However, a vector
28072of @samp{=>} operators will be recomputed, since it is convenient
28073to push a vector like @samp{[a =>, b =>, c =>]} on the stack to
28074make a concise display of all the variables in your problem.
28075(Another way to do this would be to use @samp{[a, b, c] =>},
28076which provides a slightly different format of display. You
28077can use whichever you find easiest to read.)
28078
28079@kindex m C
28080@pindex calc-auto-recompute
28081The @kbd{m C} (@code{calc-auto-recompute}) command allows you to
28082turn this automatic recomputation on or off. If you turn
28083recomputation off, you must explicitly recompute an @samp{=>}
28084operator on the stack in one of the usual ways, such as by
28085pressing @kbd{=}. Turning recomputation off temporarily can save
28086a lot of time if you will be changing several modes or variables
28087before you look at the @samp{=>} entries again.
28088
28089Most commands are not especially useful with @samp{=>} operators
28090as arguments. For example, given @samp{x + 2 => 17}, it won't
28091work to type @kbd{1 +} to get @samp{x + 3 => 18}. If you want
28092to operate on the lefthand side of the @samp{=>} operator on
28093the top of the stack, type @kbd{j 1} (that's the digit ``one'')
28094to select the lefthand side, execute your commands, then type
28095@kbd{j u} to unselect.
28096
28097All current modes apply when an @samp{=>} operator is computed,
28098including the current simplification mode. Recall that the
28099formula @samp{x + y + x} is not handled by Calc's default
28100simplifications, but the @kbd{a s} command will reduce it to
28101the simpler form @samp{y + 2 x}. You can also type @kbd{m A}
28102to enable an algebraic-simplification mode in which the
28103equivalent of @kbd{a s} is used on all of Calc's results.
28104If you enter @samp{x + y + x =>} normally, the result will
28105be @samp{x + y + x => x + y + x}. If you change to
28106algebraic-simplification mode, the result will be
28107@samp{x + y + x => y + 2 x}. However, just pressing @kbd{a s}
28108once will have no effect on @samp{x + y + x => x + y + x},
28109because the righthand side depends only on the lefthand side
28110and the current mode settings, and the lefthand side is not
28111affected by commands like @kbd{a s}.
28112
28113The ``let'' command (@kbd{s l}) has an interesting interaction
28114with the @samp{=>} operator. The @kbd{s l} command evaluates the
28115second-to-top stack entry with the top stack entry supplying
28116a temporary value for a given variable. As you might expect,
28117if that stack entry is an @samp{=>} operator its righthand
28118side will temporarily show this value for the variable. In
28119fact, all @samp{=>}s on the stack will be updated if they refer
28120to that variable. But this change is temporary in the sense
28121that the next command that causes Calc to look at those stack
28122entries will make them revert to the old variable value.
28123
d7b8e6c6 28124@smallexample
5d67986c 28125@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
281262: a => a 2: a => 17 2: a => a
281271: a + 1 => a + 1 1: a + 1 => 18 1: a + 1 => a + 1
28128 . . .
28129
5d67986c 28130 17 s l a @key{RET} p 8 @key{RET}
d7b8e6c6 28131@end group
5d67986c 28132@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28133
28134Here the @kbd{p 8} command changes the current precision,
28135thus causing the @samp{=>} forms to be recomputed after the
5d67986c 28136influence of the ``let'' is gone. The @kbd{d @key{SPC}} command
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28137(@code{calc-refresh}) is a handy way to force the @samp{=>}
28138operators on the stack to be recomputed without any other
28139side effects.
28140
28141@kindex s :
28142@pindex calc-assign
28143@tindex assign
28144@tindex :=
28145Embedded Mode also uses @samp{=>} operators. In embedded mode,
28146the lefthand side of an @samp{=>} operator can refer to variables
28147assigned elsewhere in the file by @samp{:=} operators. The
28148assignment operator @samp{a := 17} does not actually do anything
28149by itself. But Embedded Mode recognizes it and marks it as a sort
28150of file-local definition of the variable. You can enter @samp{:=}
28151operators in algebraic mode, or by using the @kbd{s :}
28152(@code{calc-assign}) [@code{assign}] command which takes a variable
28153and value from the stack and replaces them with an assignment.
28154
28155@xref{TeX Language Mode}, for the way @samp{=>} appears in
28156@TeX{} language output. The @dfn{eqn} mode gives similar
28157treatment to @samp{=>}.
28158
28159@node Graphics, Kill and Yank, Store and Recall, Top
28160@chapter Graphics
28161
28162@noindent
28163The commands for graphing data begin with the @kbd{g} prefix key. Calc
28164uses GNUPLOT 2.0 or 3.0 to do graphics. These commands will only work
28165if GNUPLOT is available on your system. (While GNUPLOT sounds like
28166a relative of GNU Emacs, it is actually completely unrelated.
28167However, it is free software and can be obtained from the Free
28168Software Foundation's machine @samp{prep.ai.mit.edu}.)
28169
28170@vindex calc-gnuplot-name
28171If you have GNUPLOT installed on your system but Calc is unable to
28172find it, you may need to set the @code{calc-gnuplot-name} variable
28173in your @file{.emacs} file. You may also need to set some Lisp
28174variables to show Calc how to run GNUPLOT on your system; these
28175are described under @kbd{g D} and @kbd{g O} below. If you are
28176using the X window system, Calc will configure GNUPLOT for you
28177automatically. If you have GNUPLOT 3.0 and you are not using X,
28178Calc will configure GNUPLOT to display graphs using simple character
28179graphics that will work on any terminal.
28180
28181@menu
28182* Basic Graphics::
28183* Three Dimensional Graphics::
28184* Managing Curves::
28185* Graphics Options::
28186* Devices::
28187@end menu
28188
28189@node Basic Graphics, Three Dimensional Graphics, Graphics, Graphics
28190@section Basic Graphics
28191
28192@noindent
28193@kindex g f
28194@pindex calc-graph-fast
28195The easiest graphics command is @kbd{g f} (@code{calc-graph-fast}).
28196This command takes two vectors of equal length from the stack.
28197The vector at the top of the stack represents the ``y'' values of
28198the various data points. The vector in the second-to-top position
28199represents the corresponding ``x'' values. This command runs
28200GNUPLOT (if it has not already been started by previous graphing
28201commands) and displays the set of data points. The points will
28202be connected by lines, and there will also be some kind of symbol
28203to indicate the points themselves.
28204
28205The ``x'' entry may instead be an interval form, in which case suitable
28206``x'' values are interpolated between the minimum and maximum values of
28207the interval (whether the interval is open or closed is ignored).
28208
28209The ``x'' entry may also be a number, in which case Calc uses the
28210sequence of ``x'' values @cite{x}, @cite{x+1}, @cite{x+2}, etc.
28211(Generally the number 0 or 1 would be used for @cite{x} in this case.)
28212
28213The ``y'' entry may be any formula instead of a vector. Calc effectively
28214uses @kbd{N} (@code{calc-eval-num}) to evaluate variables in the formula;
28215the result of this must be a formula in a single (unassigned) variable.
28216The formula is plotted with this variable taking on the various ``x''
28217values. Graphs of formulas by default use lines without symbols at the
28218computed data points. Note that if neither ``x'' nor ``y'' is a vector,
28219Calc guesses at a reasonable number of data points to use. See the
28220@kbd{g N} command below. (The ``x'' values must be either a vector
28221or an interval if ``y'' is a formula.)
28222
5d67986c
RS
28223@ignore
28224@starindex
28225@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28226@tindex xy
28227If ``y'' is (or evaluates to) a formula of the form
28228@samp{xy(@var{x}, @var{y})} then the result is a
28229parametric plot. The two arguments of the fictitious @code{xy} function
28230are used as the ``x'' and ``y'' coordinates of the curve, respectively.
28231In this case the ``x'' vector or interval you specified is not directly
28232visible in the graph. For example, if ``x'' is the interval @samp{[0..360]}
28233and ``y'' is the formula @samp{xy(sin(t), cos(t))}, the resulting graph
28234will be a circle.@refill
28235
28236Also, ``x'' and ``y'' may each be variable names, in which case Calc
28237looks for suitable vectors, intervals, or formulas stored in those
28238variables.
28239
28240The ``x'' and ``y'' values for the data points (as pulled from the vectors,
28241calculated from the formulas, or interpolated from the intervals) should
28242be real numbers (integers, fractions, or floats). If either the ``x''
28243value or the ``y'' value of a given data point is not a real number, that
28244data point will be omitted from the graph. The points on either side
28245of the invalid point will @emph{not} be connected by a line.
28246
28247See the documentation for @kbd{g a} below for a description of the way
28248numeric prefix arguments affect @kbd{g f}.
28249
28250@cindex @code{PlotRejects} variable
28251@vindex PlotRejects
28252If you store an empty vector in the variable @code{PlotRejects}
28253(i.e., @kbd{[ ] s t PlotRejects}), Calc will append information to
28254this vector for every data point which was rejected because its
28255``x'' or ``y'' values were not real numbers. The result will be
28256a matrix where each row holds the curve number, data point number,
28257``x'' value, and ``y'' value for a rejected data point.
28258@xref{Evaluates-To Operator}, for a handy way to keep tabs on the
28259current value of @code{PlotRejects}. @xref{Operations on Variables},
28260for the @kbd{s R} command which is another easy way to examine
28261@code{PlotRejects}.
28262
28263@kindex g c
28264@pindex calc-graph-clear
28265To clear the graphics display, type @kbd{g c} (@code{calc-graph-clear}).
28266If the GNUPLOT output device is an X window, the window will go away.
28267Effects on other kinds of output devices will vary. You don't need
28268to use @kbd{g c} if you don't want to---if you give another @kbd{g f}
28269or @kbd{g p} command later on, it will reuse the existing graphics
28270window if there is one.
28271
28272@node Three Dimensional Graphics, Managing Curves, Basic Graphics, Graphics
28273@section Three-Dimensional Graphics
28274
28275@kindex g F
28276@pindex calc-graph-fast-3d
28277The @kbd{g F} (@code{calc-graph-fast-3d}) command makes a three-dimensional
28278graph. It works only if you have GNUPLOT 3.0 or later; with GNUPLOT 2.0,
28279you will see a GNUPLOT error message if you try this command.
28280
28281The @kbd{g F} command takes three values from the stack, called ``x'',
28282``y'', and ``z'', respectively. As was the case for 2D graphs, there
28283are several options for these values.
28284
28285In the first case, ``x'' and ``y'' are each vectors (not necessarily of
28286the same length); either or both may instead be interval forms. The
28287``z'' value must be a matrix with the same number of rows as elements
28288in ``x'', and the same number of columns as elements in ``y''. The
28289result is a surface plot where @c{$z_{ij}$}
28290@cite{z_ij} is the height of the point
28291at coordinate @cite{(x_i, y_j)} on the surface. The 3D graph will
28292be displayed from a certain default viewpoint; you can change this
28293viewpoint by adding a @samp{set view} to the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*}
28294buffer as described later. See the GNUPLOT 3.0 documentation for a
28295description of the @samp{set view} command.
28296
28297Each point in the matrix will be displayed as a dot in the graph,
28298and these points will be connected by a grid of lines (@dfn{isolines}).
28299
28300In the second case, ``x'', ``y'', and ``z'' are all vectors of equal
28301length. The resulting graph displays a 3D line instead of a surface,
28302where the coordinates of points along the line are successive triplets
28303of values from the input vectors.
28304
28305In the third case, ``x'' and ``y'' are vectors or interval forms, and
28306``z'' is any formula involving two variables (not counting variables
28307with assigned values). These variables are sorted into alphabetical
28308order; the first takes on values from ``x'' and the second takes on
28309values from ``y'' to form a matrix of results that are graphed as a
283103D surface.
28311
5d67986c
RS
28312@ignore
28313@starindex
28314@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28315@tindex xyz
28316If the ``z'' formula evaluates to a call to the fictitious function
28317@samp{xyz(@var{x}, @var{y}, @var{z})}, then the result is a
28318``parametric surface.'' In this case, the axes of the graph are
28319taken from the @var{x} and @var{y} values in these calls, and the
28320``x'' and ``y'' values from the input vectors or intervals are used only
28321to specify the range of inputs to the formula. For example, plotting
28322@samp{[0..360], [0..180], xyz(sin(x)*sin(y), cos(x)*sin(y), cos(y))}
28323will draw a sphere. (Since the default resolution for 3D plots is
283245 steps in each of ``x'' and ``y'', this will draw a very crude
28325sphere. You could use the @kbd{g N} command, described below, to
28326increase this resolution, or specify the ``x'' and ``y'' values as
28327vectors with more than 5 elements.
28328
28329It is also possible to have a function in a regular @kbd{g f} plot
28330evaluate to an @code{xyz} call. Since @kbd{g f} plots a line, not
28331a surface, the result will be a 3D parametric line. For example,
28332@samp{[[0..720], xyz(sin(x), cos(x), x)]} will plot two turns of a
28333helix (a three-dimensional spiral).
28334
28335As for @kbd{g f}, each of ``x'', ``y'', and ``z'' may instead be
28336variables containing the relevant data.
28337
28338@node Managing Curves, Graphics Options, Three Dimensional Graphics, Graphics
28339@section Managing Curves
28340
28341@noindent
28342The @kbd{g f} command is really shorthand for the following commands:
28343@kbd{C-u g d g a g p}. Likewise, @w{@kbd{g F}} is shorthand for
28344@kbd{C-u g d g A g p}. You can gain more control over your graph
28345by using these commands directly.
28346
28347@kindex g a
28348@pindex calc-graph-add
28349The @kbd{g a} (@code{calc-graph-add}) command adds the ``curve''
28350represented by the two values on the top of the stack to the current
28351graph. You can have any number of curves in the same graph. When
28352you give the @kbd{g p} command, all the curves will be drawn superimposed
28353on the same axes.
28354
28355The @kbd{g a} command (and many others that affect the current graph)
28356will cause a special buffer, @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*}, to be displayed
28357in another window. This buffer is a template of the commands that will
28358be sent to GNUPLOT when it is time to draw the graph. The first
28359@kbd{g a} command adds a @code{plot} command to this buffer. Succeeding
28360@kbd{g a} commands add extra curves onto that @code{plot} command.
28361Other graph-related commands put other GNUPLOT commands into this
28362buffer. In normal usage you never need to work with this buffer
28363directly, but you can if you wish. The only constraint is that there
28364must be only one @code{plot} command, and it must be the last command
28365in the buffer. If you want to save and later restore a complete graph
28366configuration, you can use regular Emacs commands to save and restore
28367the contents of the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer.
28368
28369@vindex PlotData1
28370@vindex PlotData2
28371If the values on the stack are not variable names, @kbd{g a} will invent
28372variable names for them (of the form @samp{PlotData@var{n}}) and store
28373the values in those variables. The ``x'' and ``y'' variables are what
28374go into the @code{plot} command in the template. If you add a curve
28375that uses a certain variable and then later change that variable, you
28376can replot the graph without having to delete and re-add the curve.
28377That's because the variable name, not the vector, interval or formula
28378itself, is what was added by @kbd{g a}.
28379
28380A numeric prefix argument on @kbd{g a} or @kbd{g f} changes the way
28381stack entries are interpreted as curves. With a positive prefix
28382argument @cite{n}, the top @cite{n} stack entries are ``y'' values
28383for @cite{n} different curves which share a common ``x'' value in
28384the @cite{n+1}st stack entry. (Thus @kbd{g a} with no prefix
28385argument is equivalent to @kbd{C-u 1 g a}.)
28386
28387A prefix of zero or plain @kbd{C-u} means to take two stack entries,
28388``x'' and ``y'' as usual, but to interpret ``y'' as a vector of
28389``y'' values for several curves that share a common ``x''.
28390
28391A negative prefix argument tells Calc to read @cite{n} vectors from
28392the stack; each vector @cite{[x, y]} describes an independent curve.
28393This is the only form of @kbd{g a} that creates several curves at once
28394that don't have common ``x'' values. (Of course, the range of ``x''
28395values covered by all the curves ought to be roughly the same if
28396they are to look nice on the same graph.)
28397
28398For example, to plot @c{$\sin n x$}
28399@cite{sin(n x)} for integers @cite{n}
28400from 1 to 5, you could use @kbd{v x} to create a vector of integers
28401(@cite{n}), then @kbd{V M '} or @kbd{V M $} to map @samp{sin(n x)}
28402across this vector. The resulting vector of formulas is suitable
28403for use as the ``y'' argument to a @kbd{C-u g a} or @kbd{C-u g f}
28404command.
28405
28406@kindex g A
28407@pindex calc-graph-add-3d
28408The @kbd{g A} (@code{calc-graph-add-3d}) command adds a 3D curve
28409to the graph. It is not legal to intermix 2D and 3D curves in a
28410single graph. This command takes three arguments, ``x'', ``y'',
28411and ``z'', from the stack. With a positive prefix @cite{n}, it
28412takes @cite{n+2} arguments (common ``x'' and ``y'', plus @cite{n}
28413separate ``z''s). With a zero prefix, it takes three stack entries
28414but the ``z'' entry is a vector of curve values. With a negative
28415prefix @cite{-n}, it takes @cite{n} vectors of the form @cite{[x, y, z]}.
28416The @kbd{g A} command works by adding a @code{splot} (surface-plot)
28417command to the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer.
28418
28419(Although @kbd{g a} adds a 2D @code{plot} command to the
28420@samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer, Calc changes this to @code{splot}
28421before sending it to GNUPLOT if it notices that the data points are
28422evaluating to @code{xyz} calls. It will not work to mix 2D and 3D
28423@kbd{g a} curves in a single graph, although Calc does not currently
28424check for this.)
28425
28426@kindex g d
28427@pindex calc-graph-delete
28428The @kbd{g d} (@code{calc-graph-delete}) command deletes the most
28429recently added curve from the graph. It has no effect if there are
28430no curves in the graph. With a numeric prefix argument of any kind,
28431it deletes all of the curves from the graph.
28432
28433@kindex g H
28434@pindex calc-graph-hide
28435The @kbd{g H} (@code{calc-graph-hide}) command ``hides'' or ``unhides''
28436the most recently added curve. A hidden curve will not appear in
28437the actual plot, but information about it such as its name and line and
28438point styles will be retained.
28439
28440@kindex g j
28441@pindex calc-graph-juggle
28442The @kbd{g j} (@code{calc-graph-juggle}) command moves the curve
28443at the end of the list (the ``most recently added curve'') to the
28444front of the list. The next-most-recent curve is thus exposed for
28445@w{@kbd{g d}} or similar commands to use. With @kbd{g j} you can work
28446with any curve in the graph even though curve-related commands only
28447affect the last curve in the list.
28448
28449@kindex g p
28450@pindex calc-graph-plot
28451The @kbd{g p} (@code{calc-graph-plot}) command uses GNUPLOT to draw
28452the graph described in the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer. Any
28453GNUPLOT parameters which are not defined by commands in this buffer
28454are reset to their default values. The variables named in the @code{plot}
28455command are written to a temporary data file and the variable names
28456are then replaced by the file name in the template. The resulting
28457plotting commands are fed to the GNUPLOT program. See the documentation
28458for the GNUPLOT program for more specific information. All temporary
28459files are removed when Emacs or GNUPLOT exits.
28460
28461If you give a formula for ``y'', Calc will remember all the values that
28462it calculates for the formula so that later plots can reuse these values.
28463Calc throws out these saved values when you change any circumstances
28464that may affect the data, such as switching from Degrees to Radians
28465mode, or changing the value of a parameter in the formula. You can
28466force Calc to recompute the data from scratch by giving a negative
28467numeric prefix argument to @kbd{g p}.
28468
28469Calc uses a fairly rough step size when graphing formulas over intervals.
28470This is to ensure quick response. You can ``refine'' a plot by giving
28471a positive numeric prefix argument to @kbd{g p}. Calc goes through
28472the data points it has computed and saved from previous plots of the
28473function, and computes and inserts a new data point midway between
28474each of the existing points. You can refine a plot any number of times,
28475but beware that the amount of calculation involved doubles each time.
28476
28477Calc does not remember computed values for 3D graphs. This means the
28478numerix prefix argument, if any, to @kbd{g p} is effectively ignored if
28479the current graph is three-dimensional.
28480
28481@kindex g P
28482@pindex calc-graph-print
28483The @kbd{g P} (@code{calc-graph-print}) command is like @kbd{g p},
28484except that it sends the output to a printer instead of to the
28485screen. More precisely, @kbd{g p} looks for @samp{set terminal}
28486or @samp{set output} commands in the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer;
28487lacking these it uses the default settings. However, @kbd{g P}
28488ignores @samp{set terminal} and @samp{set output} commands and
28489uses a different set of default values. All of these values are
28490controlled by the @kbd{g D} and @kbd{g O} commands discussed below.
28491Provided everything is set up properly, @kbd{g p} will plot to
28492the screen unless you have specified otherwise and @kbd{g P} will
28493always plot to the printer.
28494
28495@node Graphics Options, Devices, Managing Curves, Graphics
28496@section Graphics Options
28497
28498@noindent
28499@kindex g g
28500@pindex calc-graph-grid
28501The @kbd{g g} (@code{calc-graph-grid}) command turns the ``grid''
28502on and off. It is off by default; tick marks appear only at the
28503edges of the graph. With the grid turned on, dotted lines appear
28504across the graph at each tick mark. Note that this command only
28505changes the setting in @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*}; to see the effects
28506of the change you must give another @kbd{g p} command.
28507
28508@kindex g b
28509@pindex calc-graph-border
28510The @kbd{g b} (@code{calc-graph-border}) command turns the border
28511(the box that surrounds the graph) on and off. It is on by default.
28512This command will only work with GNUPLOT 3.0 and later versions.
28513
28514@kindex g k
28515@pindex calc-graph-key
28516The @kbd{g k} (@code{calc-graph-key}) command turns the ``key''
28517on and off. The key is a chart in the corner of the graph that
28518shows the correspondence between curves and line styles. It is
28519off by default, and is only really useful if you have several
28520curves on the same graph.
28521
28522@kindex g N
28523@pindex calc-graph-num-points
28524The @kbd{g N} (@code{calc-graph-num-points}) command allows you
28525to select the number of data points in the graph. This only affects
28526curves where neither ``x'' nor ``y'' is specified as a vector.
28527Enter a blank line to revert to the default value (initially 15).
28528With no prefix argument, this command affects only the current graph.
28529With a positive prefix argument this command changes or, if you enter
28530a blank line, displays the default number of points used for all
28531graphs created by @kbd{g a} that don't specify the resolution explicitly.
28532With a negative prefix argument, this command changes or displays
28533the default value (initially 5) used for 3D graphs created by @kbd{g A}.
28534Note that a 3D setting of 5 means that a total of @cite{5^2 = 25} points
28535will be computed for the surface.
28536
28537Data values in the graph of a function are normally computed to a
28538precision of five digits, regardless of the current precision at the
28539time. This is usually more than adequate, but there are cases where
28540it will not be. For example, plotting @cite{1 + x} with @cite{x} in the
28541interval @samp{[0 ..@: 1e-6]} will round all the data points down
28542to 1.0! Putting the command @samp{set precision @var{n}} in the
28543@samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer will cause the data to be computed
28544at precision @var{n} instead of 5. Since this is such a rare case,
28545there is no keystroke-based command to set the precision.
28546
28547@kindex g h
28548@pindex calc-graph-header
28549The @kbd{g h} (@code{calc-graph-header}) command sets the title
28550for the graph. This will show up centered above the graph.
28551The default title is blank (no title).
28552
28553@kindex g n
28554@pindex calc-graph-name
28555The @kbd{g n} (@code{calc-graph-name}) command sets the title of an
28556individual curve. Like the other curve-manipulating commands, it
28557affects the most recently added curve, i.e., the last curve on the
28558list in the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer. To set the title of
28559the other curves you must first juggle them to the end of the list
28560with @kbd{g j}, or edit the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer by hand.
28561Curve titles appear in the key; if the key is turned off they are
28562not used.
28563
28564@kindex g t
28565@kindex g T
28566@pindex calc-graph-title-x
28567@pindex calc-graph-title-y
28568The @kbd{g t} (@code{calc-graph-title-x}) and @kbd{g T}
28569(@code{calc-graph-title-y}) commands set the titles on the ``x''
28570and ``y'' axes, respectively. These titles appear next to the
28571tick marks on the left and bottom edges of the graph, respectively.
28572Calc does not have commands to control the tick marks themselves,
28573but you can edit them into the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer if
28574you wish. See the GNUPLOT documentation for details.
28575
28576@kindex g r
28577@kindex g R
28578@pindex calc-graph-range-x
28579@pindex calc-graph-range-y
28580The @kbd{g r} (@code{calc-graph-range-x}) and @kbd{g R}
28581(@code{calc-graph-range-y}) commands set the range of values on the
28582``x'' and ``y'' axes, respectively. You are prompted to enter a
28583suitable range. This should be either a pair of numbers of the
28584form, @samp{@var{min}:@var{max}}, or a blank line to revert to the
28585default behavior of setting the range based on the range of values
28586in the data, or @samp{$} to take the range from the top of the stack.
28587Ranges on the stack can be represented as either interval forms or
28588vectors: @samp{[@var{min} ..@: @var{max}]} or @samp{[@var{min}, @var{max}]}.
28589
28590@kindex g l
28591@kindex g L
28592@pindex calc-graph-log-x
28593@pindex calc-graph-log-y
28594The @kbd{g l} (@code{calc-graph-log-x}) and @kbd{g L} (@code{calc-graph-log-y})
28595commands allow you to set either or both of the axes of the graph to
28596be logarithmic instead of linear.
28597
28598@kindex g C-l
28599@kindex g C-r
28600@kindex g C-t
28601@pindex calc-graph-log-z
28602@pindex calc-graph-range-z
28603@pindex calc-graph-title-z
28604For 3D plots, @kbd{g C-t}, @kbd{g C-r}, and @kbd{g C-l} (those are
28605letters with the Control key held down) are the corresponding commands
28606for the ``z'' axis.
28607
28608@kindex g z
28609@kindex g Z
28610@pindex calc-graph-zero-x
28611@pindex calc-graph-zero-y
28612The @kbd{g z} (@code{calc-graph-zero-x}) and @kbd{g Z}
28613(@code{calc-graph-zero-y}) commands control whether a dotted line is
28614drawn to indicate the ``x'' and/or ``y'' zero axes. (These are the same
28615dotted lines that would be drawn there anyway if you used @kbd{g g} to
28616turn the ``grid'' feature on.) Zero-axis lines are on by default, and
28617may be turned off only in GNUPLOT 3.0 and later versions. They are
28618not available for 3D plots.
28619
28620@kindex g s
28621@pindex calc-graph-line-style
28622The @kbd{g s} (@code{calc-graph-line-style}) command turns the connecting
28623lines on or off for the most recently added curve, and optionally selects
28624the style of lines to be used for that curve. Plain @kbd{g s} simply
28625toggles the lines on and off. With a numeric prefix argument, @kbd{g s}
28626turns lines on and sets a particular line style. Line style numbers
28627start at one and their meanings vary depending on the output device.
28628GNUPLOT guarantees that there will be at least six different line styles
28629available for any device.
28630
28631@kindex g S
28632@pindex calc-graph-point-style
28633The @kbd{g S} (@code{calc-graph-point-style}) command similarly turns
28634the symbols at the data points on or off, or sets the point style.
28635If you turn both lines and points off, the data points will show as
28636tiny dots.
28637
28638@cindex @code{LineStyles} variable
28639@cindex @code{PointStyles} variable
28640@vindex LineStyles
28641@vindex PointStyles
28642Another way to specify curve styles is with the @code{LineStyles} and
28643@code{PointStyles} variables. These variables initially have no stored
28644values, but if you store a vector of integers in one of these variables,
28645the @kbd{g a} and @kbd{g f} commands will use those style numbers
28646instead of the defaults for new curves that are added to the graph.
28647An entry should be a positive integer for a specific style, or 0 to let
28648the style be chosen automatically, or @i{-1} to turn off lines or points
28649altogether. If there are more curves than elements in the vector, the
28650last few curves will continue to have the default styles. Of course,
28651you can later use @kbd{g s} and @kbd{g S} to change any of these styles.
28652
5d67986c 28653For example, @kbd{'[2 -1 3] @key{RET} s t LineStyles} causes the first curve
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28654to have lines in style number 2, the second curve to have no connecting
28655lines, and the third curve to have lines in style 3. Point styles will
28656still be assigned automatically, but you could store another vector in
28657@code{PointStyles} to define them, too.
28658
28659@node Devices, , Graphics Options, Graphics
28660@section Graphical Devices
28661
28662@noindent
28663@kindex g D
28664@pindex calc-graph-device
28665The @kbd{g D} (@code{calc-graph-device}) command sets the device name
28666(or ``terminal name'' in GNUPLOT lingo) to be used by @kbd{g p} commands
28667on this graph. It does not affect the permanent default device name.
28668If you enter a blank name, the device name reverts to the default.
28669Enter @samp{?} to see a list of supported devices.
28670
28671With a positive numeric prefix argument, @kbd{g D} instead sets
28672the default device name, used by all plots in the future which do
28673not override it with a plain @kbd{g D} command. If you enter a
28674blank line this command shows you the current default. The special
28675name @code{default} signifies that Calc should choose @code{x11} if
28676the X window system is in use (as indicated by the presence of a
28677@code{DISPLAY} environment variable), or otherwise @code{dumb} under
28678GNUPLOT 3.0 and later, or @code{postscript} under GNUPLOT 2.0.
28679This is the initial default value.
28680
28681The @code{dumb} device is an interface to ``dumb terminals,'' i.e.,
28682terminals with no special graphics facilities. It writes a crude
28683picture of the graph composed of characters like @code{-} and @code{|}
28684to a buffer called @samp{*Gnuplot Trail*}, which Calc then displays.
28685The graph is made the same size as the Emacs screen, which on most
28686dumb terminals will be @c{$80\times24$}
28687@asis{80x24} characters. The graph is displayed in
28688an Emacs ``recursive edit''; type @kbd{q} or @kbd{M-# M-#} to exit
28689the recursive edit and return to Calc. Note that the @code{dumb}
28690device is present only in GNUPLOT 3.0 and later versions.
28691
28692The word @code{dumb} may be followed by two numbers separated by
28693spaces. These are the desired width and height of the graph in
28694characters. Also, the device name @code{big} is like @code{dumb}
28695but creates a graph four times the width and height of the Emacs
28696screen. You will then have to scroll around to view the entire
28697graph. In the @samp{*Gnuplot Trail*} buffer, @key{SPC}, @key{DEL},
28698@kbd{<}, and @kbd{>} are defined to scroll by one screenful in each
28699of the four directions.
28700
28701With a negative numeric prefix argument, @kbd{g D} sets or displays
28702the device name used by @kbd{g P} (@code{calc-graph-print}). This
28703is initially @code{postscript}. If you don't have a PostScript
28704printer, you may decide once again to use @code{dumb} to create a
28705plot on any text-only printer.
28706
28707@kindex g O
28708@pindex calc-graph-output
28709The @kbd{g O} (@code{calc-graph-output}) command sets the name of
28710the output file used by GNUPLOT. For some devices, notably @code{x11},
28711there is no output file and this information is not used. Many other
28712``devices'' are really file formats like @code{postscript}; in these
28713cases the output in the desired format goes into the file you name
5d67986c 28714with @kbd{g O}. Type @kbd{g O stdout @key{RET}} to set GNUPLOT to write
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28715to its standard output stream, i.e., to @samp{*Gnuplot Trail*}.
28716This is the default setting.
28717
28718Another special output name is @code{tty}, which means that GNUPLOT
28719is going to write graphics commands directly to its standard output,
28720which you wish Emacs to pass through to your terminal. Tektronix
28721graphics terminals, among other devices, operate this way. Calc does
28722this by telling GNUPLOT to write to a temporary file, then running a
28723sub-shell executing the command @samp{cat tempfile >/dev/tty}. On
28724typical Unix systems, this will copy the temporary file directly to
28725the terminal, bypassing Emacs entirely. You will have to type @kbd{C-l}
28726to Emacs afterwards to refresh the screen.
28727
28728Once again, @kbd{g O} with a positive or negative prefix argument
28729sets the default or printer output file names, respectively. In each
28730case you can specify @code{auto}, which causes Calc to invent a temporary
28731file name for each @kbd{g p} (or @kbd{g P}) command. This temporary file
28732will be deleted once it has been displayed or printed. If the output file
28733name is not @code{auto}, the file is not automatically deleted.
28734
28735The default and printer devices and output files can be saved
28736permanently by the @kbd{m m} (@code{calc-save-modes}) command. The
28737default number of data points (see @kbd{g N}) and the X geometry
28738(see @kbd{g X}) are also saved. Other graph information is @emph{not}
28739saved; you can save a graph's configuration simply by saving the contents
28740of the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer.
28741
28742@vindex calc-gnuplot-plot-command
28743@vindex calc-gnuplot-default-device
28744@vindex calc-gnuplot-default-output
28745@vindex calc-gnuplot-print-command
28746@vindex calc-gnuplot-print-device
28747@vindex calc-gnuplot-print-output
28748If you are installing Calc you may wish to configure the default and
28749printer devices and output files for the whole system. The relevant
28750Lisp variables are @code{calc-gnuplot-default-device} and @code{-output},
28751and @code{calc-gnuplot-print-device} and @code{-output}. The output
28752file names must be either strings as described above, or Lisp
28753expressions which are evaluated on the fly to get the output file names.
28754
28755Other important Lisp variables are @code{calc-gnuplot-plot-command} and
28756@code{calc-gnuplot-print-command}, which give the system commands to
28757display or print the output of GNUPLOT, respectively. These may be
28758@code{nil} if no command is necessary, or strings which can include
28759@samp{%s} to signify the name of the file to be displayed or printed.
28760Or, these variables may contain Lisp expressions which are evaluated
28761to display or print the output.
28762
28763@kindex g x
28764@pindex calc-graph-display
28765The @kbd{g x} (@code{calc-graph-display}) command lets you specify
28766on which X window system display your graphs should be drawn. Enter
28767a blank line to see the current display name. This command has no
28768effect unless the current device is @code{x11}.
28769
28770@kindex g X
28771@pindex calc-graph-geometry
28772The @kbd{g X} (@code{calc-graph-geometry}) command is a similar
28773command for specifying the position and size of the X window.
28774The normal value is @code{default}, which generally means your
28775window manager will let you place the window interactively.
28776Entering @samp{800x500+0+0} would create an 800-by-500 pixel
28777window in the upper-left corner of the screen.
28778
28779The buffer called @samp{*Gnuplot Trail*} holds a transcript of the
28780session with GNUPLOT. This shows the commands Calc has ``typed'' to
28781GNUPLOT and the responses it has received. Calc tries to notice when an
28782error message has appeared here and display the buffer for you when
28783this happens. You can check this buffer yourself if you suspect
28784something has gone wrong.
28785
28786@kindex g C
28787@pindex calc-graph-command
28788The @kbd{g C} (@code{calc-graph-command}) command prompts you to
28789enter any line of text, then simply sends that line to the current
28790GNUPLOT process. The @samp{*Gnuplot Trail*} buffer looks deceptively
28791like a Shell buffer but you can't type commands in it yourself.
28792Instead, you must use @kbd{g C} for this purpose.
28793
28794@kindex g v
28795@kindex g V
28796@pindex calc-graph-view-commands
28797@pindex calc-graph-view-trail
28798The @kbd{g v} (@code{calc-graph-view-commands}) and @kbd{g V}
28799(@code{calc-graph-view-trail}) commands display the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*}
28800and @samp{*Gnuplot Trail*} buffers, respectively, in another window.
28801This happens automatically when Calc thinks there is something you
28802will want to see in either of these buffers. If you type @kbd{g v}
28803or @kbd{g V} when the relevant buffer is already displayed, the
28804buffer is hidden again.
28805
28806One reason to use @kbd{g v} is to add your own commands to the
28807@samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer. Press @kbd{g v}, then use
28808@kbd{C-x o} to switch into that window. For example, GNUPLOT has
28809@samp{set label} and @samp{set arrow} commands that allow you to
28810annotate your plots. Since Calc doesn't understand these commands,
28811you have to add them to the @samp{*Gnuplot Commands*} buffer
28812yourself, then use @w{@kbd{g p}} to replot using these new commands. Note
28813that your commands must appear @emph{before} the @code{plot} command.
28814To get help on any GNUPLOT feature, type, e.g., @kbd{g C help set label}.
5d67986c 28815You may have to type @kbd{g C @key{RET}} a few times to clear the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
28816``press return for more'' or ``subtopic of @dots{}'' requests.
28817Note that Calc always sends commands (like @samp{set nolabel}) to
28818reset all plotting parameters to the defaults before each plot, so
28819to delete a label all you need to do is delete the @samp{set label}
28820line you added (or comment it out with @samp{#}) and then replot
28821with @kbd{g p}.
28822
28823@kindex g q
28824@pindex calc-graph-quit
28825You can use @kbd{g q} (@code{calc-graph-quit}) to kill the GNUPLOT
28826process that is running. The next graphing command you give will
28827start a fresh GNUPLOT process. The word @samp{Graph} appears in
28828the Calc window's mode line whenever a GNUPLOT process is currently
28829running. The GNUPLOT process is automatically killed when you
28830exit Emacs if you haven't killed it manually by then.
28831
28832@kindex g K
28833@pindex calc-graph-kill
28834The @kbd{g K} (@code{calc-graph-kill}) command is like @kbd{g q}
28835except that it also views the @samp{*Gnuplot Trail*} buffer so that
28836you can see the process being killed. This is better if you are
28837killing GNUPLOT because you think it has gotten stuck.
28838
28839@node Kill and Yank, Keypad Mode, Graphics, Top
28840@chapter Kill and Yank Functions
28841
28842@noindent
28843The commands in this chapter move information between the Calculator and
28844other Emacs editing buffers.
28845
28846In many cases Embedded Mode is an easier and more natural way to
28847work with Calc from a regular editing buffer. @xref{Embedded Mode}.
28848
28849@menu
28850* Killing From Stack::
28851* Yanking Into Stack::
28852* Grabbing From Buffers::
28853* Yanking Into Buffers::
28854* X Cut and Paste::
28855@end menu
28856
28857@node Killing From Stack, Yanking Into Stack, Kill and Yank, Kill and Yank
28858@section Killing from the Stack
28859
28860@noindent
28861@kindex C-k
28862@pindex calc-kill
28863@kindex M-k
28864@pindex calc-copy-as-kill
28865@kindex C-w
28866@pindex calc-kill-region
28867@kindex M-w
28868@pindex calc-copy-region-as-kill
28869@cindex Kill ring
28870@dfn{Kill} commands are Emacs commands that insert text into the
28871``kill ring,'' from which it can later be ``yanked'' by a @kbd{C-y}
28872command. Three common kill commands in normal Emacs are @kbd{C-k}, which
28873kills one line, @kbd{C-w}, which kills the region between mark and point,
28874and @kbd{M-w}, which puts the region into the kill ring without actually
28875deleting it. All of these commands work in the Calculator, too. Also,
28876@kbd{M-k} has been provided to complete the set; it puts the current line
28877into the kill ring without deleting anything.
28878
28879The kill commands are unusual in that they pay attention to the location
28880of the cursor in the Calculator buffer. If the cursor is on or below the
28881bottom line, the kill commands operate on the top of the stack. Otherwise,
28882they operate on whatever stack element the cursor is on. Calc's kill
28883commands always operate on whole stack entries. (They act the same as their
28884standard Emacs cousins except they ``round up'' the specified region to
28885encompass full lines.) The text is copied into the kill ring exactly as
28886it appears on the screen, including line numbers if they are enabled.
28887
28888A numeric prefix argument to @kbd{C-k} or @kbd{M-k} affects the number
28889of lines killed. A positive argument kills the current line and @cite{n-1}
28890lines below it. A negative argument kills the @cite{-n} lines above the
28891current line. Again this mirrors the behavior of the standard Emacs
28892@kbd{C-k} command. Although a whole line is always deleted, @kbd{C-k}
28893with no argument copies only the number itself into the kill ring, whereas
28894@kbd{C-k} with a prefix argument of 1 copies the number with its trailing
28895newline.
28896
28897@node Yanking Into Stack, Grabbing From Buffers, Killing From Stack, Kill and Yank
28898@section Yanking into the Stack
28899
28900@noindent
28901@kindex C-y
28902@pindex calc-yank
28903The @kbd{C-y} command yanks the most recently killed text back into the
28904Calculator. It pushes this value onto the top of the stack regardless of
28905the cursor position. In general it re-parses the killed text as a number
28906or formula (or a list of these separated by commas or newlines). However if
28907the thing being yanked is something that was just killed from the Calculator
28908itself, its full internal structure is yanked. For example, if you have
28909set the floating-point display mode to show only four significant digits,
28910then killing and re-yanking 3.14159 (which displays as 3.142) will yank the
28911full 3.14159, even though yanking it into any other buffer would yank the
28912number in its displayed form, 3.142. (Since the default display modes
28913show all objects to their full precision, this feature normally makes no
28914difference.)
28915
28916@node Grabbing From Buffers, Yanking Into Buffers, Yanking Into Stack, Kill and Yank
28917@section Grabbing from Other Buffers
28918
28919@noindent
28920@kindex M-# g
28921@pindex calc-grab-region
28922The @kbd{M-# g} (@code{calc-grab-region}) command takes the text between
28923point and mark in the current buffer and attempts to parse it as a
28924vector of values. Basically, it wraps the text in vector brackets
28925@samp{[ ]} unless the text already is enclosed in vector brackets,
28926then reads the text as if it were an algebraic entry. The contents
28927of the vector may be numbers, formulas, or any other Calc objects.
28928If the @kbd{M-# g} command works successfully, it does an automatic
28929@kbd{M-# c} to enter the Calculator buffer.
28930
28931A numeric prefix argument grabs the specified number of lines around
28932point, ignoring the mark. A positive prefix grabs from point to the
28933@cite{n}th following newline (so that @kbd{M-1 M-# g} grabs from point
28934to the end of the current line); a negative prefix grabs from point
28935back to the @cite{n+1}st preceding newline. In these cases the text
28936that is grabbed is exactly the same as the text that @kbd{C-k} would
28937delete given that prefix argument.
28938
28939A prefix of zero grabs the current line; point may be anywhere on the
28940line.
28941
28942A plain @kbd{C-u} prefix interprets the region between point and mark
28943as a single number or formula rather than a vector. For example,
28944@kbd{M-# g} on the text @samp{2 a b} produces the vector of three
28945values @samp{[2, a, b]}, but @kbd{C-u M-# g} on the same region
28946reads a formula which is a product of three things: @samp{2 a b}.
28947(The text @samp{a + b}, on the other hand, will be grabbed as a
28948vector of one element by plain @kbd{M-# g} because the interpretation
28949@samp{[a, +, b]} would be a syntax error.)
28950
28951If a different language has been specified (@pxref{Language Modes}),
28952the grabbed text will be interpreted according to that language.
28953
28954@kindex M-# r
28955@pindex calc-grab-rectangle
28956The @kbd{M-# r} (@code{calc-grab-rectangle}) command takes the text between
28957point and mark and attempts to parse it as a matrix. If point and mark
28958are both in the leftmost column, the lines in between are parsed in their
28959entirety. Otherwise, point and mark define the corners of a rectangle
28960whose contents are parsed.
28961
28962Each line of the grabbed area becomes a row of the matrix. The result
28963will actually be a vector of vectors, which Calc will treat as a matrix
28964only if every row contains the same number of values.
28965
28966If a line contains a portion surrounded by square brackets (or curly
28967braces), that portion is interpreted as a vector which becomes a row
28968of the matrix. Any text surrounding the bracketed portion on the line
28969is ignored.
28970
28971Otherwise, the entire line is interpreted as a row vector as if it
28972were surrounded by square brackets. Leading line numbers (in the
28973format used in the Calc stack buffer) are ignored. If you wish to
28974force this interpretation (even if the line contains bracketed
28975portions), give a negative numeric prefix argument to the
28976@kbd{M-# r} command.
28977
28978If you give a numeric prefix argument of zero or plain @kbd{C-u}, each
28979line is instead interpreted as a single formula which is converted into
28980a one-element vector. Thus the result of @kbd{C-u M-# r} will be a
28981one-column matrix. For example, suppose one line of the data is the
28982expression @samp{2 a}. A plain @w{@kbd{M-# r}} will interpret this as
28983@samp{[2 a]}, which in turn is read as a two-element vector that forms
28984one row of the matrix. But a @kbd{C-u M-# r} will interpret this row
28985as @samp{[2*a]}.
28986
28987If you give a positive numeric prefix argument @var{n}, then each line
28988will be split up into columns of width @var{n}; each column is parsed
28989separately as a matrix element. If a line contained
28990@w{@samp{2 +/- 3 4 +/- 5}}, then grabbing with a prefix argument of 8
28991would correctly split the line into two error forms.@refill
28992
28993@xref{Matrix Functions}, to see how to pull the matrix apart into its
28994constituent rows and columns. (If it is a @c{$1\times1$}
28995@asis{1x1} matrix, just hit @kbd{v u}
28996(@code{calc-unpack}) twice.)
28997
28998@kindex M-# :
28999@kindex M-# _
29000@pindex calc-grab-sum-across
29001@pindex calc-grab-sum-down
29002@cindex Summing rows and columns of data
29003The @kbd{M-# :} (@code{calc-grab-sum-down}) command is a handy way to
29004grab a rectangle of data and sum its columns. It is equivalent to
29005typing @kbd{M-# r}, followed by @kbd{V R : +} (the vector reduction
29006command that sums the columns of a matrix; @pxref{Reducing}). The
29007result of the command will be a vector of numbers, one for each column
29008in the input data. The @kbd{M-# _} (@code{calc-grab-sum-across}) command
29009similarly grabs a rectangle and sums its rows by executing @w{@kbd{V R _ +}}.
29010
29011As well as being more convenient, @kbd{M-# :} and @kbd{M-# _} are also
29012much faster because they don't actually place the grabbed vector on
29013the stack. In a @kbd{M-# r V R : +} sequence, formatting the vector
29014for display on the stack takes a large fraction of the total time
29015(unless you have planned ahead and used @kbd{v .} and @kbd{t .} modes).
29016
29017For example, suppose we have a column of numbers in a file which we
29018wish to sum. Go to one corner of the column and press @kbd{C-@@} to
29019set the mark; go to the other corner and type @kbd{M-# :}. Since there
29020is only one column, the result will be a vector of one number, the sum.
29021(You can type @kbd{v u} to unpack this vector into a plain number if
29022you want to do further arithmetic with it.)
29023
29024To compute the product of the column of numbers, we would have to do
29025it ``by hand'' since there's no special grab-and-multiply command.
29026Use @kbd{M-# r} to grab the column of numbers into the calculator in
29027the form of a column matrix. The statistics command @kbd{u *} is a
29028handy way to find the product of a vector or matrix of numbers.
29029@xref{Statistical Operations}. Another approach would be to use
29030an explicit column reduction command, @kbd{V R : *}.
29031
29032@node Yanking Into Buffers, X Cut and Paste, Grabbing From Buffers, Kill and Yank
29033@section Yanking into Other Buffers
29034
29035@noindent
29036@kindex y
29037@pindex calc-copy-to-buffer
29038The plain @kbd{y} (@code{calc-copy-to-buffer}) command inserts the number
29039at the top of the stack into the most recently used normal editing buffer.
29040(More specifically, this is the most recently used buffer which is displayed
29041in a window and whose name does not begin with @samp{*}. If there is no
29042such buffer, this is the most recently used buffer except for Calculator
29043and Calc Trail buffers.) The number is inserted exactly as it appears and
29044without a newline. (If line-numbering is enabled, the line number is
29045normally not included.) The number is @emph{not} removed from the stack.
29046
29047With a prefix argument, @kbd{y} inserts several numbers, one per line.
29048A positive argument inserts the specified number of values from the top
29049of the stack. A negative argument inserts the @cite{n}th value from the
29050top of the stack. An argument of zero inserts the entire stack. Note
29051that @kbd{y} with an argument of 1 is slightly different from @kbd{y}
29052with no argument; the former always copies full lines, whereas the
29053latter strips off the trailing newline.
29054
29055With a lone @kbd{C-u} as a prefix argument, @kbd{y} @emph{replaces} the
29056region in the other buffer with the yanked text, then quits the
29057Calculator, leaving you in that buffer. A typical use would be to use
29058@kbd{M-# g} to read a region of data into the Calculator, operate on the
29059data to produce a new matrix, then type @kbd{C-u y} to replace the
29060original data with the new data. One might wish to alter the matrix
29061display style (@pxref{Vector and Matrix Formats}) or change the current
29062display language (@pxref{Language Modes}) before doing this. Also, note
29063that this command replaces a linear region of text (as grabbed by
29064@kbd{M-# g}), not a rectangle (as grabbed by @kbd{M-# r}).@refill
29065
29066If the editing buffer is in overwrite (as opposed to insert) mode,
29067and the @kbd{C-u} prefix was not used, then the yanked number will
29068overwrite the characters following point rather than being inserted
29069before those characters. The usual conventions of overwrite mode
29070are observed; for example, characters will be inserted at the end of
29071a line rather than overflowing onto the next line. Yanking a multi-line
29072object such as a matrix in overwrite mode overwrites the next @var{n}
29073lines in the buffer, lengthening or shortening each line as necessary.
29074Finally, if the thing being yanked is a simple integer or floating-point
29075number (like @samp{-1.2345e-3}) and the characters following point also
29076make up such a number, then Calc will replace that number with the new
29077number, lengthening or shortening as necessary. The concept of
29078``overwrite mode'' has thus been generalized from overwriting characters
29079to overwriting one complete number with another.
29080
29081@kindex M-# y
29082The @kbd{M-# y} key sequence is equivalent to @kbd{y} except that
29083it can be typed anywhere, not just in Calc. This provides an easy
29084way to guarantee that Calc knows which editing buffer you want to use!
29085
29086@node X Cut and Paste, , Yanking Into Buffers, Kill and Yank
29087@section X Cut and Paste
29088
29089@noindent
29090If you are using Emacs with the X window system, there is an easier
29091way to move small amounts of data into and out of the calculator:
29092Use the mouse-oriented cut and paste facilities of X.
29093
29094The default bindings for a three-button mouse cause the left button
29095to move the Emacs cursor to the given place, the right button to
29096select the text between the cursor and the clicked location, and
29097the middle button to yank the selection into the buffer at the
29098clicked location. So, if you have a Calc window and an editing
29099window on your Emacs screen, you can use left-click/right-click
29100to select a number, vector, or formula from one window, then
29101middle-click to paste that value into the other window. When you
29102paste text into the Calc window, Calc interprets it as an algebraic
29103entry. It doesn't matter where you click in the Calc window; the
29104new value is always pushed onto the top of the stack.
29105
29106The @code{xterm} program that is typically used for general-purpose
29107shell windows in X interprets the mouse buttons in the same way.
29108So you can use the mouse to move data between Calc and any other
29109Unix program. One nice feature of @code{xterm} is that a double
29110left-click selects one word, and a triple left-click selects a
29111whole line. So you can usually transfer a single number into Calc
29112just by double-clicking on it in the shell, then middle-clicking
29113in the Calc window.
29114
29115@node Keypad Mode, Embedded Mode, Kill and Yank, Introduction
29116@chapter ``Keypad'' Mode
29117
29118@noindent
29119@kindex M-# k
29120@pindex calc-keypad
29121The @kbd{M-# k} (@code{calc-keypad}) command starts the Calculator
29122and displays a picture of a calculator-style keypad. If you are using
29123the X window system, you can click on any of the ``keys'' in the
29124keypad using the left mouse button to operate the calculator.
29125The original window remains the selected window; in keypad mode
29126you can type in your file while simultaneously performing
29127calculations with the mouse.
29128
29129@pindex full-calc-keypad
29130If you have used @kbd{M-# b} first, @kbd{M-# k} instead invokes
29131the @code{full-calc-keypad} command, which takes over the whole
29132Emacs screen and displays the keypad, the Calc stack, and the Calc
29133trail all at once. This mode would normally be used when running
29134Calc standalone (@pxref{Standalone Operation}).
29135
29136If you aren't using the X window system, you must switch into
29137the @samp{*Calc Keypad*} window, place the cursor on the desired
29138``key,'' and type @key{SPC} or @key{RET}. If you think this
29139is easier than using Calc normally, go right ahead.
29140
29141Calc commands are more or less the same in keypad mode. Certain
29142keypad keys differ slightly from the corresponding normal Calc
29143keystrokes; all such deviations are described below.
29144
29145Keypad Mode includes many more commands than will fit on the keypad
29146at once. Click the right mouse button [@code{calc-keypad-menu}]
29147to switch to the next menu. The bottom five rows of the keypad
29148stay the same; the top three rows change to a new set of commands.
29149To return to earlier menus, click the middle mouse button
29150[@code{calc-keypad-menu-back}] or simply advance through the menus
29151until you wrap around. Typing @key{TAB} inside the keypad window
29152is equivalent to clicking the right mouse button there.
29153
29154You can always click the @key{EXEC} button and type any normal
29155Calc key sequence. This is equivalent to switching into the
29156Calc buffer, typing the keys, then switching back to your
29157original buffer.
29158
29159@menu
29160* Keypad Main Menu::
29161* Keypad Functions Menu::
29162* Keypad Binary Menu::
29163* Keypad Vectors Menu::
29164* Keypad Modes Menu::
29165@end menu
29166
29167@node Keypad Main Menu, Keypad Functions Menu, Keypad Mode, Keypad Mode
29168@section Main Menu
29169
d7b8e6c6 29170@smallexample
5d67986c 29171@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29172|----+-----Calc 2.00-----+----1
29173|FLR |CEIL|RND |TRNC|CLN2|FLT |
29174|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29175| LN |EXP | |ABS |IDIV|MOD |
29176|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29177|SIN |COS |TAN |SQRT|y^x |1/x |
29178|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29179| ENTER |+/- |EEX |UNDO| <- |
29180|-----+---+-+--+--+-+---++----|
29181| INV | 7 | 8 | 9 | / |
29182|-----+-----+-----+-----+-----|
29183| HYP | 4 | 5 | 6 | * |
29184|-----+-----+-----+-----+-----|
29185|EXEC | 1 | 2 | 3 | - |
29186|-----+-----+-----+-----+-----|
29187| OFF | 0 | . | PI | + |
29188|-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
d7b8e6c6 29189@end group
5d67986c 29190@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29191
29192@noindent
29193This is the menu that appears the first time you start Keypad Mode.
29194It will show up in a vertical window on the right side of your screen.
29195Above this menu is the traditional Calc stack display. On a 24-line
29196screen you will be able to see the top three stack entries.
29197
29198The ten digit keys, decimal point, and @key{EEX} key are used for
29199entering numbers in the obvious way. @key{EEX} begins entry of an
29200exponent in scientific notation. Just as with regular Calc, the
29201number is pushed onto the stack as soon as you press @key{ENTER}
29202or any other function key.
29203
29204The @key{+/-} key corresponds to normal Calc's @kbd{n} key. During
29205numeric entry it changes the sign of the number or of the exponent.
29206At other times it changes the sign of the number on the top of the
29207stack.
29208
29209The @key{INV} and @key{HYP} keys modify other keys. As well as
29210having the effects described elsewhere in this manual, Keypad Mode
29211defines several other ``inverse'' operations. These are described
29212below and in the following sections.
29213
29214The @key{ENTER} key finishes the current numeric entry, or otherwise
29215duplicates the top entry on the stack.
29216
29217The @key{UNDO} key undoes the most recent Calc operation.
29218@kbd{INV UNDO} is the ``redo'' command, and @kbd{HYP UNDO} is
5d67986c 29219``last arguments'' (@kbd{M-@key{RET}}).
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29220
29221The @key{<-} key acts as a ``backspace'' during numeric entry.
29222At other times it removes the top stack entry. @kbd{INV <-}
29223clears the entire stack. @kbd{HYP <-} takes an integer from
29224the stack, then removes that many additional stack elements.
29225
29226The @key{EXEC} key prompts you to enter any keystroke sequence
29227that would normally work in Calc mode. This can include a
29228numeric prefix if you wish. It is also possible simply to
29229switch into the Calc window and type commands in it; there is
29230nothing ``magic'' about this window when Keypad Mode is active.
29231
29232The other keys in this display perform their obvious calculator
29233functions. @key{CLN2} rounds the top-of-stack by temporarily
29234reducing the precision by 2 digits. @key{FLT} converts an
29235integer or fraction on the top of the stack to floating-point.
29236
29237The @key{INV} and @key{HYP} keys combined with several of these keys
29238give you access to some common functions even if the appropriate menu
29239is not displayed. Obviously you don't need to learn these keys
29240unless you find yourself wasting time switching among the menus.
29241
29242@table @kbd
29243@item INV +/-
29244is the same as @key{1/x}.
29245@item INV +
29246is the same as @key{SQRT}.
29247@item INV -
29248is the same as @key{CONJ}.
29249@item INV *
29250is the same as @key{y^x}.
29251@item INV /
29252is the same as @key{INV y^x} (the @cite{x}th root of @cite{y}).
29253@item HYP/INV 1
29254are the same as @key{SIN} / @kbd{INV SIN}.
29255@item HYP/INV 2
29256are the same as @key{COS} / @kbd{INV COS}.
29257@item HYP/INV 3
29258are the same as @key{TAN} / @kbd{INV TAN}.
29259@item INV/HYP 4
29260are the same as @key{LN} / @kbd{HYP LN}.
29261@item INV/HYP 5
29262are the same as @key{EXP} / @kbd{HYP EXP}.
29263@item INV 6
29264is the same as @key{ABS}.
29265@item INV 7
29266is the same as @key{RND} (@code{calc-round}).
29267@item INV 8
29268is the same as @key{CLN2}.
29269@item INV 9
29270is the same as @key{FLT} (@code{calc-float}).
29271@item INV 0
29272is the same as @key{IMAG}.
29273@item INV .
29274is the same as @key{PREC}.
29275@item INV ENTER
29276is the same as @key{SWAP}.
29277@item HYP ENTER
29278is the same as @key{RLL3}.
29279@item INV HYP ENTER
29280is the same as @key{OVER}.
29281@item HYP +/-
29282packs the top two stack entries as an error form.
29283@item HYP EEX
29284packs the top two stack entries as a modulo form.
29285@item INV EEX
29286creates an interval form; this removes an integer which is one
29287of 0 @samp{[]}, 1 @samp{[)}, 2 @samp{(]} or 3 @samp{()}, followed
29288by the two limits of the interval.
29289@end table
29290
29291The @kbd{OFF} key turns Calc off; typing @kbd{M-# k} or @kbd{M-# M-#}
29292again has the same effect. This is analogous to typing @kbd{q} or
29293hitting @kbd{M-# c} again in the normal calculator. If Calc is
29294running standalone (the @code{full-calc-keypad} command appeared in the
29295command line that started Emacs), then @kbd{OFF} is replaced with
29296@kbd{EXIT}; clicking on this actually exits Emacs itself.
29297
29298@node Keypad Functions Menu, Keypad Binary Menu, Keypad Main Menu, Keypad Mode
29299@section Functions Menu
29300
d7b8e6c6 29301@smallexample
5d67986c 29302@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29303|----+----+----+----+----+----2
29304|IGAM|BETA|IBET|ERF |BESJ|BESY|
29305|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29306|IMAG|CONJ| RE |ATN2|RAND|RAGN|
29307|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29308|GCD |FACT|DFCT|BNOM|PERM|NXTP|
29309|----+----+----+----+----+----|
d7b8e6c6 29310@end group
5d67986c 29311@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29312
29313@noindent
29314This menu provides various operations from the @kbd{f} and @kbd{k}
29315prefix keys.
29316
29317@key{IMAG} multiplies the number on the stack by the imaginary
29318number @cite{i = (0, 1)}.
29319
29320@key{RE} extracts the real part a complex number. @kbd{INV RE}
29321extracts the imaginary part.
29322
29323@key{RAND} takes a number from the top of the stack and computes
29324a random number greater than or equal to zero but less than that
29325number. (@xref{Random Numbers}.) @key{RAGN} is the ``random
29326again'' command; it computes another random number using the
29327same limit as last time.
29328
29329@key{INV GCD} computes the LCM (least common multiple) function.
29330
29331@key{INV FACT} is the gamma function. @c{$\Gamma(x) = (x-1)!$}
29332@cite{gamma(x) = (x-1)!}.
29333
29334@key{PERM} is the number-of-permutations function, which is on the
29335@kbd{H k c} key in normal Calc.
29336
29337@key{NXTP} finds the next prime after a number. @kbd{INV NXTP}
29338finds the previous prime.
29339
29340@node Keypad Binary Menu, Keypad Vectors Menu, Keypad Functions Menu, Keypad Mode
29341@section Binary Menu
29342
d7b8e6c6 29343@smallexample
5d67986c 29344@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29345|----+----+----+----+----+----3
29346|AND | OR |XOR |NOT |LSH |RSH |
29347|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29348|DEC |HEX |OCT |BIN |WSIZ|ARSH|
29349|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29350| A | B | C | D | E | F |
29351|----+----+----+----+----+----|
d7b8e6c6 29352@end group
5d67986c 29353@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29354
29355@noindent
29356The keys in this menu perform operations on binary integers.
29357Note that both logical and arithmetic right-shifts are provided.
29358@key{INV LSH} rotates one bit to the left.
29359
29360The ``difference'' function (normally on @kbd{b d}) is on @key{INV AND}.
29361The ``clip'' function (normally on @w{@kbd{b c}}) is on @key{INV NOT}.
29362
29363The @key{DEC}, @key{HEX}, @key{OCT}, and @key{BIN} keys select the
29364current radix for display and entry of numbers: Decimal, hexadecimal,
29365octal, or binary. The six letter keys @key{A} through @key{F} are used
29366for entering hexadecimal numbers.
29367
29368The @key{WSIZ} key displays the current word size for binary operations
29369and allows you to enter a new word size. You can respond to the prompt
29370using either the keyboard or the digits and @key{ENTER} from the keypad.
29371The initial word size is 32 bits.
29372
29373@node Keypad Vectors Menu, Keypad Modes Menu, Keypad Binary Menu, Keypad Mode
29374@section Vectors Menu
29375
d7b8e6c6 29376@smallexample
5d67986c 29377@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29378|----+----+----+----+----+----4
29379|SUM |PROD|MAX |MAP*|MAP^|MAP$|
29380|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29381|MINV|MDET|MTRN|IDNT|CRSS|"x" |
29382|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29383|PACK|UNPK|INDX|BLD |LEN |... |
29384|----+----+----+----+----+----|
d7b8e6c6 29385@end group
5d67986c 29386@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29387
29388@noindent
29389The keys in this menu operate on vectors and matrices.
29390
29391@key{PACK} removes an integer @var{n} from the top of the stack;
29392the next @var{n} stack elements are removed and packed into a vector,
29393which is replaced onto the stack. Thus the sequence
29394@kbd{1 ENTER 3 ENTER 5 ENTER 3 PACK} enters the vector
29395@samp{[1, 3, 5]} onto the stack. To enter a matrix, build each row
29396on the stack as a vector, then use a final @key{PACK} to collect the
29397rows into a matrix.
29398
29399@key{UNPK} unpacks the vector on the stack, pushing each of its
29400components separately.
29401
29402@key{INDX} removes an integer @var{n}, then builds a vector of
29403integers from 1 to @var{n}. @kbd{INV INDX} takes three numbers
29404from the stack: The vector size @var{n}, the starting number,
29405and the increment. @kbd{BLD} takes an integer @var{n} and any
29406value @var{x} and builds a vector of @var{n} copies of @var{x}.
29407
29408@key{IDNT} removes an integer @var{n}, then builds an @var{n}-by-@var{n}
29409identity matrix.
29410
29411@key{LEN} replaces a vector by its length, an integer.
29412
29413@key{...} turns on or off ``abbreviated'' display mode for large vectors.
29414
29415@key{MINV}, @key{MDET}, @key{MTRN}, and @key{CROSS} are the matrix
29416inverse, determinant, and transpose, and vector cross product.
29417
29418@key{SUM} replaces a vector by the sum of its elements. It is
29419equivalent to @kbd{u +} in normal Calc (@pxref{Statistical Operations}).
29420@key{PROD} computes the product of the elements of a vector, and
29421@key{MAX} computes the maximum of all the elements of a vector.
29422
29423@key{INV SUM} computes the alternating sum of the first element
29424minus the second, plus the third, minus the fourth, and so on.
29425@key{INV MAX} computes the minimum of the vector elements.
29426
29427@key{HYP SUM} computes the mean of the vector elements.
29428@key{HYP PROD} computes the sample standard deviation.
29429@key{HYP MAX} computes the median.
29430
29431@key{MAP*} multiplies two vectors elementwise. It is equivalent
29432to the @kbd{V M *} command. @key{MAP^} computes powers elementwise.
29433The arguments must be vectors of equal length, or one must be a vector
29434and the other must be a plain number. For example, @kbd{2 MAP^} squares
29435all the elements of a vector.
29436
29437@key{MAP$} maps the formula on the top of the stack across the
29438vector in the second-to-top position. If the formula contains
29439several variables, Calc takes that many vectors starting at the
29440second-to-top position and matches them to the variables in
29441alphabetical order. The result is a vector of the same size as
29442the input vectors, whose elements are the formula evaluated with
29443the variables set to the various sets of numbers in those vectors.
29444For example, you could simulate @key{MAP^} using @key{MAP$} with
29445the formula @samp{x^y}.
29446
29447The @kbd{"x"} key pushes the variable name @cite{x} onto the
29448stack. To build the formula @cite{x^2 + 6}, you would use the
29449key sequence @kbd{"x" 2 y^x 6 +}. This formula would then be
29450suitable for use with the @key{MAP$} key described above.
29451With @key{INV}, @key{HYP}, or @key{INV} and @key{HYP}, the
29452@kbd{"x"} key pushes the variable names @cite{y}, @cite{z}, and
29453@cite{t}, respectively.
29454
29455@node Keypad Modes Menu, , Keypad Vectors Menu, Keypad Mode
29456@section Modes Menu
29457
d7b8e6c6 29458@smallexample
5d67986c 29459@group
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29460|----+----+----+----+----+----5
29461|FLT |FIX |SCI |ENG |GRP | |
29462|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29463|RAD |DEG |FRAC|POLR|SYMB|PREC|
29464|----+----+----+----+----+----|
29465|SWAP|RLL3|RLL4|OVER|STO |RCL |
29466|----+----+----+----+----+----|
d7b8e6c6 29467@end group
5d67986c 29468@end smallexample
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29469
29470@noindent
29471The keys in this menu manipulate modes, variables, and the stack.
29472
29473The @key{FLT}, @key{FIX}, @key{SCI}, and @key{ENG} keys select
29474floating-point, fixed-point, scientific, or engineering notation.
29475@key{FIX} displays two digits after the decimal by default; the
29476others display full precision. With the @key{INV} prefix, these
29477keys pop a number-of-digits argument from the stack.
29478
29479The @key{GRP} key turns grouping of digits with commas on or off.
29480@kbd{INV GRP} enables grouping to the right of the decimal point as
29481well as to the left.
29482
29483The @key{RAD} and @key{DEG} keys switch between radians and degrees
29484for trigonometric functions.
29485
29486The @key{FRAC} key turns Fraction mode on or off. This affects
29487whether commands like @kbd{/} with integer arguments produce
29488fractional or floating-point results.
29489
29490The @key{POLR} key turns Polar mode on or off, determining whether
29491polar or rectangular complex numbers are used by default.
29492
29493The @key{SYMB} key turns Symbolic mode on or off, in which
29494operations that would produce inexact floating-point results
29495are left unevaluated as algebraic formulas.
29496
29497The @key{PREC} key selects the current precision. Answer with
29498the keyboard or with the keypad digit and @key{ENTER} keys.
29499
29500The @key{SWAP} key exchanges the top two stack elements.
29501The @key{RLL3} key rotates the top three stack elements upwards.
29502The @key{RLL4} key rotates the top four stack elements upwards.
29503The @key{OVER} key duplicates the second-to-top stack element.
29504
29505The @key{STO} and @key{RCL} keys are analogous to @kbd{s t} and
29506@kbd{s r} in regular Calc. @xref{Store and Recall}. Click the
29507@key{STO} or @key{RCL} key, then one of the ten digits. (Named
29508variables are not available in Keypad Mode.) You can also use,
29509for example, @kbd{STO + 3} to add to register 3.
29510
29511@node Embedded Mode, Programming, Keypad Mode, Top
29512@chapter Embedded Mode
29513
29514@noindent
29515Embedded Mode in Calc provides an alternative to copying numbers
29516and formulas back and forth between editing buffers and the Calc
29517stack. In Embedded Mode, your editing buffer becomes temporarily
29518linked to the stack and this copying is taken care of automatically.
29519
29520@menu
29521* Basic Embedded Mode::
29522* More About Embedded Mode::
29523* Assignments in Embedded Mode::
29524* Mode Settings in Embedded Mode::
29525* Customizing Embedded Mode::
29526@end menu
29527
29528@node Basic Embedded Mode, More About Embedded Mode, Embedded Mode, Embedded Mode
29529@section Basic Embedded Mode
29530
29531@noindent
29532@kindex M-# e
29533@pindex calc-embedded
29534To enter Embedded mode, position the Emacs point (cursor) on a
29535formula in any buffer and press @kbd{M-# e} (@code{calc-embedded}).
29536Note that @kbd{M-# e} is not to be used in the Calc stack buffer
29537like most Calc commands, but rather in regular editing buffers that
29538are visiting your own files.
29539
29540Calc normally scans backward and forward in the buffer for the
29541nearest opening and closing @dfn{formula delimiters}. The simplest
29542delimiters are blank lines. Other delimiters that Embedded Mode
29543understands are:
29544
29545@enumerate
29546@item
29547The @TeX{} and La@TeX{} math delimiters @samp{$ $}, @samp{$$ $$},
29548@samp{\[ \]}, and @samp{\( \)};
29549@item
29550Lines beginning with @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end};
29551@item
29552Lines beginning with @samp{@@} (Texinfo delimiters).
29553@item
29554Lines beginning with @samp{.EQ} and @samp{.EN} (@dfn{eqn} delimiters);
29555@item
29556Lines containing a single @samp{%} or @samp{.\"} symbol and nothing else.
29557@end enumerate
29558
29559@xref{Customizing Embedded Mode}, to see how to make Calc recognize
29560your own favorite delimiters. Delimiters like @samp{$ $} can appear
29561on their own separate lines or in-line with the formula.
29562
29563If you give a positive or negative numeric prefix argument, Calc
29564instead uses the current point as one end of the formula, and moves
29565forward or backward (respectively) by that many lines to find the
29566other end. Explicit delimiters are not necessary in this case.
29567
29568With a prefix argument of zero, Calc uses the current region
29569(delimited by point and mark) instead of formula delimiters.
29570
29571@kindex M-# w
29572@pindex calc-embedded-word
29573With a prefix argument of @kbd{C-u} only, Calc scans for the first
29574non-numeric character (i.e., the first character that is not a
29575digit, sign, decimal point, or upper- or lower-case @samp{e})
29576forward and backward to delimit the formula. @kbd{M-# w}
29577(@code{calc-embedded-word}) is equivalent to @kbd{C-u M-# e}.
29578
29579When you enable Embedded mode for a formula, Calc reads the text
29580between the delimiters and tries to interpret it as a Calc formula.
29581It's best if the current Calc language mode is correct for the
29582formula, but Calc can generally identify @TeX{} formulas and
29583Big-style formulas even if the language mode is wrong. If Calc
29584can't make sense of the formula, it beeps and refuses to enter
29585Embedded mode. But if the current language is wrong, Calc can
29586sometimes parse the formula successfully (but incorrectly);
29587for example, the C expression @samp{atan(a[1])} can be parsed
29588in Normal language mode, but the @code{atan} won't correspond to
29589the built-in @code{arctan} function, and the @samp{a[1]} will be
29590interpreted as @samp{a} times the vector @samp{[1]}!
29591
29592If you press @kbd{M-# e} or @kbd{M-# w} to activate an embedded
29593formula which is blank, say with the cursor on the space between
29594the two delimiters @samp{$ $}, Calc will immediately prompt for
29595an algebraic entry.
29596
29597Only one formula in one buffer can be enabled at a time. If you
29598move to another area of the current buffer and give Calc commands,
29599Calc turns Embedded mode off for the old formula and then tries
29600to restart Embedded mode at the new position. Other buffers are
29601not affected by Embedded mode.
29602
29603When Embedded mode begins, Calc pushes the current formula onto
29604the stack. No Calc stack window is created; however, Calc copies
29605the top-of-stack position into the original buffer at all times.
29606You can create a Calc window by hand with @kbd{M-# o} if you
29607find you need to see the entire stack.
29608
29609For example, typing @kbd{M-# e} while somewhere in the formula
29610@samp{n>2} in the following line enables Embedded mode on that
29611inequality:
29612
29613@example
29614We define $F_n = F_(n-1)+F_(n-2)$ for all $n>2$.
29615@end example
29616
29617@noindent
29618The formula @cite{n>2} will be pushed onto the Calc stack, and
29619the top of stack will be copied back into the editing buffer.
29620This means that spaces will appear around the @samp{>} symbol
29621to match Calc's usual display style:
29622
29623@example
29624We define $F_n = F_(n-1)+F_(n-2)$ for all $n > 2$.
29625@end example
29626
29627@noindent
29628No spaces have appeared around the @samp{+} sign because it's
29629in a different formula, one which we have not yet touched with
29630Embedded mode.
29631
29632Now that Embedded mode is enabled, keys you type in this buffer
29633are interpreted as Calc commands. At this point we might use
29634the ``commute'' command @kbd{j C} to reverse the inequality.
29635This is a selection-based command for which we first need to
29636move the cursor onto the operator (@samp{>} in this case) that
29637needs to be commuted.
29638
29639@example
29640We define $F_n = F_(n-1)+F_(n-2)$ for all $2 < n$.
29641@end example
29642
29643The @kbd{M-# o} command is a useful way to open a Calc window
29644without actually selecting that window. Giving this command
29645verifies that @samp{2 < n} is also on the Calc stack. Typing
5d67986c 29646@kbd{17 @key{RET}} would produce:
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29647
29648@example
29649We define $F_n = F_(n-1)+F_(n-2)$ for all $17$.
29650@end example
29651
29652@noindent
29653with @samp{2 < n} and @samp{17} on the stack; typing @key{TAB}
29654at this point will exchange the two stack values and restore
29655@samp{2 < n} to the embedded formula. Even though you can't
29656normally see the stack in Embedded mode, it is still there and
29657it still operates in the same way. But, as with old-fashioned
29658RPN calculators, you can only see the value at the top of the
29659stack at any given time (unless you use @kbd{M-# o}).
29660
29661Typing @kbd{M-# e} again turns Embedded mode off. The Calc
29662window reveals that the formula @w{@samp{2 < n}} is automatically
29663removed from the stack, but the @samp{17} is not. Entering
29664Embedded mode always pushes one thing onto the stack, and
29665leaving Embedded mode always removes one thing. Anything else
29666that happens on the stack is entirely your business as far as
29667Embedded mode is concerned.
29668
29669If you press @kbd{M-# e} in the wrong place by accident, it is
29670possible that Calc will be able to parse the nearby text as a
29671formula and will mangle that text in an attempt to redisplay it
29672``properly'' in the current language mode. If this happens,
29673press @kbd{M-# e} again to exit Embedded mode, then give the
29674regular Emacs ``undo'' command (@kbd{C-_} or @kbd{C-x u}) to put
29675the text back the way it was before Calc edited it. Note that Calc's
29676own Undo command (typed before you turn Embedded mode back off)
29677will not do you any good, because as far as Calc is concerned
29678you haven't done anything with this formula yet.
29679
29680@node More About Embedded Mode, Assignments in Embedded Mode, Basic Embedded Mode, Embedded Mode
29681@section More About Embedded Mode
29682
29683@noindent
29684When Embedded mode ``activates'' a formula, i.e., when it examines
29685the formula for the first time since the buffer was created or
29686loaded, Calc tries to sense the language in which the formula was
29687written. If the formula contains any @TeX{}-like @samp{\} sequences,
29688it is parsed (i.e., read) in @TeX{} mode. If the formula appears to
29689be written in multi-line Big mode, it is parsed in Big mode. Otherwise,
29690it is parsed according to the current language mode.
29691
29692Note that Calc does not change the current language mode according
29693to what it finds. Even though it can read a @TeX{} formula when
29694not in @TeX{} mode, it will immediately rewrite this formula using
29695whatever language mode is in effect. You must then type @kbd{d T}
29696to switch Calc permanently into @TeX{} mode if that is what you
29697desire.
29698
29699@tex
29700\bigskip
29701@end tex
29702
29703@kindex d p
29704@pindex calc-show-plain
29705Calc's parser is unable to read certain kinds of formulas. For
29706example, with @kbd{v ]} (@code{calc-matrix-brackets}) you can
29707specify matrix display styles which the parser is unable to
29708recognize as matrices. The @kbd{d p} (@code{calc-show-plain})
29709command turns on a mode in which a ``plain'' version of a
29710formula is placed in front of the fully-formatted version.
29711When Calc reads a formula that has such a plain version in
29712front, it reads the plain version and ignores the formatted
29713version.
29714
29715Plain formulas are preceded and followed by @samp{%%%} signs
29716by default. This notation has the advantage that the @samp{%}
29717character begins a comment in @TeX{}, so if your formula is
29718embedded in a @TeX{} document its plain version will be
29719invisible in the final printed copy. @xref{Customizing
29720Embedded Mode}, to see how to change the ``plain'' formula
29721delimiters, say to something that @dfn{eqn} or some other
29722formatter will treat as a comment.
29723
29724There are several notations which Calc's parser for ``big''
29725formatted formulas can't yet recognize. In particular, it can't
29726read the large symbols for @code{sum}, @code{prod}, and @code{integ},
29727and it can't handle @samp{=>} with the righthand argument omitted.
29728Also, Calc won't recognize special formats you have defined with
29729the @kbd{Z C} command (@pxref{User-Defined Compositions}). In
29730these cases it is important to use ``plain'' mode to make sure
29731Calc will be able to read your formula later.
29732
29733Another example where ``plain'' mode is important is if you have
29734specified a float mode with few digits of precision. Normally
29735any digits that are computed but not displayed will simply be
29736lost when you save and re-load your embedded buffer, but ``plain''
29737mode allows you to make sure that the complete number is present
29738in the file as well as the rounded-down number.
29739
29740@tex
29741\bigskip
29742@end tex
29743
29744Embedded buffers remember active formulas for as long as they
29745exist in Emacs memory. Suppose you have an embedded formula
29746which is @c{$\pi$}
29747@cite{pi} to the normal 12 decimal places, and then
29748type @w{@kbd{C-u 5 d n}} to display only five decimal places.
29749If you then type @kbd{d n}, all 12 places reappear because the
29750full number is still there on the Calc stack. More surprisingly,
29751even if you exit Embedded mode and later re-enter it for that
29752formula, typing @kbd{d n} will restore all 12 places because
29753each buffer remembers all its active formulas. However, if you
29754save the buffer in a file and reload it in a new Emacs session,
29755all non-displayed digits will have been lost unless you used
29756``plain'' mode.
29757
29758@tex
29759\bigskip
29760@end tex
29761
29762In some applications of Embedded mode, you will want to have a
29763sequence of copies of a formula that show its evolution as you
29764work on it. For example, you might want to have a sequence
29765like this in your file (elaborating here on the example from
29766the ``Getting Started'' chapter):
29767
29768@smallexample
29769The derivative of
29770
29771 ln(ln(x))
29772
29773is
29774
29775 @r{(the derivative of }ln(ln(x))@r{)}
29776
29777whose value at x = 2 is
29778
29779 @r{(the value)}
29780
29781and at x = 3 is
29782
29783 @r{(the value)}
29784@end smallexample
29785
29786@kindex M-# d
29787@pindex calc-embedded-duplicate
29788The @kbd{M-# d} (@code{calc-embedded-duplicate}) command is a
29789handy way to make sequences like this. If you type @kbd{M-# d},
29790the formula under the cursor (which may or may not have Embedded
29791mode enabled for it at the time) is copied immediately below and
29792Embedded mode is then enabled for that copy.
29793
29794For this example, you would start with just
29795
29796@smallexample
29797The derivative of
29798
29799 ln(ln(x))
29800@end smallexample
29801
29802@noindent
29803and press @kbd{M-# d} with the cursor on this formula. The result
29804is
29805
29806@smallexample
29807The derivative of
29808
29809 ln(ln(x))
29810
29811
29812 ln(ln(x))
29813@end smallexample
29814
29815@noindent
29816with the second copy of the formula enabled in Embedded mode.
5d67986c 29817You can now press @kbd{a d x @key{RET}} to take the derivative, and
d7b8e6c6 29818@kbd{M-# d M-# d} to make two more copies of the derivative.
5d67986c 29819To complete the computations, type @kbd{3 s l x @key{RET}} to evaluate
d7b8e6c6 29820the last formula, then move up to the second-to-last formula
5d67986c 29821and type @kbd{2 s l x @key{RET}}.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29822
29823Finally, you would want to press @kbd{M-# e} to exit Embedded
29824mode, then go up and insert the necessary text in between the
29825various formulas and numbers.
29826
29827@tex
29828\bigskip
29829@end tex
29830
29831@kindex M-# f
29832@kindex M-# '
29833@pindex calc-embedded-new-formula
29834The @kbd{M-# f} (@code{calc-embedded-new-formula}) command
29835creates a new embedded formula at the current point. It inserts
29836some default delimiters, which are usually just blank lines,
29837and then does an algebraic entry to get the formula (which is
29838then enabled for Embedded mode). This is just shorthand for
29839typing the delimiters yourself, positioning the cursor between
29840the new delimiters, and pressing @kbd{M-# e}. The key sequence
29841@kbd{M-# '} is equivalent to @kbd{M-# f}.
29842
29843@kindex M-# n
29844@kindex M-# p
29845@pindex calc-embedded-next
29846@pindex calc-embedded-previous
29847The @kbd{M-# n} (@code{calc-embedded-next}) and @kbd{M-# p}
29848(@code{calc-embedded-previous}) commands move the cursor to the
29849next or previous active embedded formula in the buffer. They
29850can take positive or negative prefix arguments to move by several
29851formulas. Note that these commands do not actually examine the
29852text of the buffer looking for formulas; they only see formulas
29853which have previously been activated in Embedded mode. In fact,
29854@kbd{M-# n} and @kbd{M-# p} are a useful way to tell which
29855embedded formulas are currently active. Also, note that these
29856commands do not enable Embedded mode on the next or previous
29857formula, they just move the cursor. (By the way, @kbd{M-# n} is
29858not as awkward to type as it may seem, because @kbd{M-#} ignores
29859Shift and Meta on the second keystroke: @kbd{M-# M-N} can be typed
29860by holding down Shift and Meta and alternately typing two keys.)
29861
29862@kindex M-# `
29863@pindex calc-embedded-edit
29864The @kbd{M-# `} (@code{calc-embedded-edit}) command edits the
29865embedded formula at the current point as if by @kbd{`} (@code{calc-edit}).
29866Embedded mode does not have to be enabled for this to work. Press
29867@kbd{M-# M-#} to finish the edit, or @kbd{M-# x} to cancel.
29868
29869@node Assignments in Embedded Mode, Mode Settings in Embedded Mode, More About Embedded Mode, Embedded Mode
29870@section Assignments in Embedded Mode
29871
29872@noindent
29873The @samp{:=} (assignment) and @samp{=>} (``evaluates-to'') operators
29874are especially useful in Embedded mode. They allow you to make
29875a definition in one formula, then refer to that definition in
29876other formulas embedded in the same buffer.
29877
29878An embedded formula which is an assignment to a variable, as in
29879
29880@example
29881foo := 5
29882@end example
29883
29884@noindent
29885records @cite{5} as the stored value of @code{foo} for the
29886purposes of Embedded mode operations in the current buffer. It
29887does @emph{not} actually store @cite{5} as the ``global'' value
29888of @code{foo}, however. Regular Calc operations, and Embedded
29889formulas in other buffers, will not see this assignment.
29890
29891One way to use this assigned value is simply to create an
29892Embedded formula elsewhere that refers to @code{foo}, and to press
29893@kbd{=} in that formula. However, this permanently replaces the
29894@code{foo} in the formula with its current value. More interesting
29895is to use @samp{=>} elsewhere:
29896
29897@example
29898foo + 7 => 12
29899@end example
29900
29901@xref{Evaluates-To Operator}, for a general discussion of @samp{=>}.
29902
29903If you move back and change the assignment to @code{foo}, any
29904@samp{=>} formulas which refer to it are automatically updated.
29905
29906@example
29907foo := 17
29908
29909foo + 7 => 24
29910@end example
29911
29912The obvious question then is, @emph{how} can one easily change the
29913assignment to @code{foo}? If you simply select the formula in
29914Embedded mode and type 17, the assignment itself will be replaced
29915by the 17. The effect on the other formula will be that the
29916variable @code{foo} becomes unassigned:
29917
29918@example
2991917
29920
29921foo + 7 => foo + 7
29922@end example
29923
29924The right thing to do is first to use a selection command (@kbd{j 2}
29925will do the trick) to select the righthand side of the assignment.
5d67986c 29926Then, @kbd{17 @key{TAB} @key{DEL}} will swap the 17 into place (@pxref{Selecting
d7b8e6c6
EZ
29927Subformulas}, to see how this works).
29928
29929@kindex M-# j
29930@pindex calc-embedded-select
29931The @kbd{M-# j} (@code{calc-embedded-select}) command provides an
29932easy way to operate on assigments. It is just like @kbd{M-# e},
29933except that if the enabled formula is an assignment, it uses
29934@kbd{j 2} to select the righthand side. If the enabled formula
29935is an evaluates-to, it uses @kbd{j 1} to select the lefthand side.
29936A formula can also be a combination of both:
29937
29938@example
29939bar := foo + 3 => 20
29940@end example
29941
29942@noindent
29943in which case @kbd{M-# j} will select the middle part (@samp{foo + 3}).
29944
29945The formula is automatically deselected when you leave Embedded
29946mode.
29947
29948@kindex M-# u
29949@kindex M-# =
29950@pindex calc-embedded-update
29951Another way to change the assignment to @code{foo} would simply be
29952to edit the number using regular Emacs editing rather than Embedded
29953mode. Then, we have to find a way to get Embedded mode to notice
29954the change. The @kbd{M-# u} or @kbd{M-# =}
29955(@code{calc-embedded-update-formula}) command is a convenient way
29956to do this.@refill
29957
29958@example
29959foo := 6
29960
29961foo + 7 => 13
29962@end example
29963
29964Pressing @kbd{M-# u} is much like pressing @kbd{M-# e = M-# e}, that
29965is, temporarily enabling Embedded mode for the formula under the
29966cursor and then evaluating it with @kbd{=}. But @kbd{M-# u} does
29967not actually use @kbd{M-# e}, and in fact another formula somewhere
29968else can be enabled in Embedded mode while you use @kbd{M-# u} and
29969that formula will not be disturbed.
29970
29971With a numeric prefix argument, @kbd{M-# u} updates all active
29972@samp{=>} formulas in the buffer. Formulas which have not yet
29973been activated in Embedded mode, and formulas which do not have
29974@samp{=>} as their top-level operator, are not affected by this.
29975(This is useful only if you have used @kbd{m C}; see below.)
29976
29977With a plain @kbd{C-u} prefix, @kbd{C-u M-# u} updates only in the
29978region between mark and point rather than in the whole buffer.
29979
29980@kbd{M-# u} is also a handy way to activate a formula, such as an
29981@samp{=>} formula that has freshly been typed in or loaded from a
29982file.
29983
29984@kindex M-# a
29985@pindex calc-embedded-activate
29986The @kbd{M-# a} (@code{calc-embedded-activate}) command scans
29987through the current buffer and activates all embedded formulas
29988that contain @samp{:=} or @samp{=>} symbols. This does not mean
29989that Embedded mode is actually turned on, but only that the
29990formulas' positions are registered with Embedded mode so that
29991the @samp{=>} values can be properly updated as assignments are
29992changed.
29993
29994It is a good idea to type @kbd{M-# a} right after loading a file
29995that uses embedded @samp{=>} operators. Emacs includes a nifty
29996``buffer-local variables'' feature that you can use to do this
29997automatically. The idea is to place near the end of your file
29998a few lines that look like this:
29999
30000@example
30001--- Local Variables: ---
30002--- eval:(calc-embedded-activate) ---
30003--- End: ---
30004@end example
30005
30006@noindent
30007where the leading and trailing @samp{---} can be replaced by
30008any suitable strings (which must be the same on all three lines)
30009or omitted altogether; in a @TeX{} file, @samp{%} would be a good
30010leading string and no trailing string would be necessary. In a
30011C program, @samp{/*} and @samp{*/} would be good leading and
30012trailing strings.
30013
30014When Emacs loads a file into memory, it checks for a Local Variables
30015section like this one at the end of the file. If it finds this
30016section, it does the specified things (in this case, running
30017@kbd{M-# a} automatically) before editing of the file begins.
30018The Local Variables section must be within 3000 characters of the
30019end of the file for Emacs to find it, and it must be in the last
30020page of the file if the file has any page separators.
30021@xref{File Variables, , Local Variables in Files, emacs, the
30022Emacs manual}.
30023
30024Note that @kbd{M-# a} does not update the formulas it finds.
30025To do this, type, say, @kbd{M-1 M-# u} after @w{@kbd{M-# a}}.
30026Generally this should not be a problem, though, because the
30027formulas will have been up-to-date already when the file was
30028saved.
30029
30030Normally, @kbd{M-# a} activates all the formulas it finds, but
30031any previous active formulas remain active as well. With a
30032positive numeric prefix argument, @kbd{M-# a} first deactivates
30033all current active formulas, then actives the ones it finds in
30034its scan of the buffer. With a negative prefix argument,
30035@kbd{M-# a} simply deactivates all formulas.
30036
30037Embedded mode has two symbols, @samp{Active} and @samp{~Active},
30038which it puts next to the major mode name in a buffer's mode line.
30039It puts @samp{Active} if it has reason to believe that all
30040formulas in the buffer are active, because you have typed @kbd{M-# a}
30041and Calc has not since had to deactivate any formulas (which can
30042happen if Calc goes to update an @samp{=>} formula somewhere because
30043a variable changed, and finds that the formula is no longer there
30044due to some kind of editing outside of Embedded mode). Calc puts
30045@samp{~Active} in the mode line if some, but probably not all,
30046formulas in the buffer are active. This happens if you activate
30047a few formulas one at a time but never use @kbd{M-# a}, or if you
30048used @kbd{M-# a} but then Calc had to deactivate a formula
30049because it lost track of it. If neither of these symbols appears
30050in the mode line, no embedded formulas are active in the buffer
30051(e.g., before Embedded mode has been used, or after a @kbd{M-- M-# a}).
30052
30053Embedded formulas can refer to assignments both before and after them
30054in the buffer. If there are several assignments to a variable, the
30055nearest preceding assignment is used if there is one, otherwise the
30056following assignment is used.
30057
30058@example
30059x => 1
30060
30061x := 1
30062
30063x => 1
30064
30065x := 2
30066
30067x => 2
30068@end example
30069
30070As well as simple variables, you can also assign to subscript
30071expressions of the form @samp{@var{var}_@var{number}} (as in
30072@code{x_0}), or @samp{@var{var}_@var{var}} (as in @code{x_max}).
30073Assignments to other kinds of objects can be represented by Calc,
30074but the automatic linkage between assignments and references works
30075only for plain variables and these two kinds of subscript expressions.
30076
30077If there are no assignments to a given variable, the global
30078stored value for the variable is used (@pxref{Storing Variables}),
30079or, if no value is stored, the variable is left in symbolic form.
30080Note that global stored values will be lost when the file is saved
30081and loaded in a later Emacs session, unless you have used the
30082@kbd{s p} (@code{calc-permanent-variable}) command to save them;
30083@pxref{Operations on Variables}.
30084
30085The @kbd{m C} (@code{calc-auto-recompute}) command turns automatic
30086recomputation of @samp{=>} forms on and off. If you turn automatic
30087recomputation off, you will have to use @kbd{M-# u} to update these
30088formulas manually after an assignment has been changed. If you
30089plan to change several assignments at once, it may be more efficient
30090to type @kbd{m C}, change all the assignments, then use @kbd{M-1 M-# u}
30091to update the entire buffer afterwards. The @kbd{m C} command also
30092controls @samp{=>} formulas on the stack; @pxref{Evaluates-To
30093Operator}. When you turn automatic recomputation back on, the
30094stack will be updated but the Embedded buffer will not; you must
30095use @kbd{M-# u} to update the buffer by hand.
30096
30097@node Mode Settings in Embedded Mode, Customizing Embedded Mode, Assignments in Embedded Mode, Embedded Mode
30098@section Mode Settings in Embedded Mode
30099
30100@noindent
30101Embedded Mode has a rather complicated mechanism for handling mode
30102settings in Embedded formulas. It is possible to put annotations
30103in the file that specify mode settings either global to the entire
30104file or local to a particular formula or formulas. In the latter
30105case, different modes can be specified for use when a formula
30106is the enabled Embedded Mode formula.
30107
30108When you give any mode-setting command, like @kbd{m f} (for fraction
30109mode) or @kbd{d s} (for scientific notation), Embedded Mode adds
30110a line like the following one to the file just before the opening
30111delimiter of the formula.
30112
30113@example
30114% [calc-mode: fractions: t]
30115% [calc-mode: float-format: (sci 0)]
30116@end example
30117
30118When Calc interprets an embedded formula, it scans the text before
30119the formula for mode-setting annotations like these and sets the
30120Calc buffer to match these modes. Modes not explicitly described
30121in the file are not changed. Calc scans all the way to the top of
30122the file, or up to a line of the form
30123
30124@example
30125% [calc-defaults]
30126@end example
30127
30128@noindent
30129which you can insert at strategic places in the file if this backward
30130scan is getting too slow, or just to provide a barrier between one
30131``zone'' of mode settings and another.
30132
30133If the file contains several annotations for the same mode, the
30134closest one before the formula is used. Annotations after the
30135formula are never used (except for global annotations, described
30136below).
30137
30138The scan does not look for the leading @samp{% }, only for the
30139square brackets and the text they enclose. You can edit the mode
30140annotations to a style that works better in context if you wish.
30141@xref{Customizing Embedded Mode}, to see how to change the style
30142that Calc uses when it generates the annotations. You can write
30143mode annotations into the file yourself if you know the syntax;
30144the easiest way to find the syntax for a given mode is to let
30145Calc write the annotation for it once and see what it does.
30146
30147If you give a mode-changing command for a mode that already has
30148a suitable annotation just above the current formula, Calc will
30149modify that annotation rather than generating a new, conflicting
30150one.
30151
30152Mode annotations have three parts, separated by colons. (Spaces
30153after the colons are optional.) The first identifies the kind
30154of mode setting, the second is a name for the mode itself, and
30155the third is the value in the form of a Lisp symbol, number,
30156or list. Annotations with unrecognizable text in the first or
30157second parts are ignored. The third part is not checked to make
30158sure the value is of a legal type or range; if you write an
30159annotation by hand, be sure to give a proper value or results
30160will be unpredictable. Mode-setting annotations are case-sensitive.
30161
30162While Embedded Mode is enabled, the word @code{Local} appears in
30163the mode line. This is to show that mode setting commands generate
30164annotations that are ``local'' to the current formula or set of
30165formulas. The @kbd{m R} (@code{calc-mode-record-mode}) command
30166causes Calc to generate different kinds of annotations. Pressing
30167@kbd{m R} repeatedly cycles through the possible modes.
30168
30169@code{LocEdit} and @code{LocPerm} modes generate annotations
30170that look like this, respectively:
30171
30172@example
30173% [calc-edit-mode: float-format: (sci 0)]
30174% [calc-perm-mode: float-format: (sci 5)]
30175@end example
30176
30177The first kind of annotation will be used only while a formula
30178is enabled in Embedded Mode. The second kind will be used only
30179when the formula is @emph{not} enabled. (Whether the formula
30180is ``active'' or not, i.e., whether Calc has seen this formula
30181yet, is not relevant here.)
30182
30183@code{Global} mode generates an annotation like this at the end
30184of the file:
30185
30186@example
30187% [calc-global-mode: fractions t]
30188@end example
30189
30190Global mode annotations affect all formulas throughout the file,
30191and may appear anywhere in the file. This allows you to tuck your
30192mode annotations somewhere out of the way, say, on a new page of
30193the file, as long as those mode settings are suitable for all
30194formulas in the file.
30195
30196Enabling a formula with @kbd{M-# e} causes a fresh scan for local
30197mode annotations; you will have to use this after adding annotations
30198above a formula by hand to get the formula to notice them. Updating
30199a formula with @kbd{M-# u} will also re-scan the local modes, but
30200global modes are only re-scanned by @kbd{M-# a}.
30201
30202Another way that modes can get out of date is if you add a local
30203mode annotation to a formula that has another formula after it.
30204In this example, we have used the @kbd{d s} command while the
30205first of the two embedded formulas is active. But the second
30206formula has not changed its style to match, even though by the
30207rules of reading annotations the @samp{(sci 0)} applies to it, too.
30208
30209@example
30210% [calc-mode: float-format: (sci 0)]
302111.23e2
30212
30213456.
30214@end example
30215
30216We would have to go down to the other formula and press @kbd{M-# u}
30217on it in order to get it to notice the new annotation.
30218
30219Two more mode-recording modes selectable by @kbd{m R} are @code{Save}
30220(which works even outside of Embedded Mode), in which mode settings
30221are recorded permanently in your Emacs startup file @file{~/.emacs}
30222rather than by annotating the current document, and no-recording
30223mode (where there is no symbol like @code{Save} or @code{Local} in
30224the mode line), in which mode-changing commands do not leave any
30225annotations at all.
30226
30227When Embedded Mode is not enabled, mode-recording modes except
30228for @code{Save} have no effect.
30229
30230@node Customizing Embedded Mode, , Mode Settings in Embedded Mode, Embedded Mode
30231@section Customizing Embedded Mode
30232
30233@noindent
30234You can modify Embedded Mode's behavior by setting various Lisp
30235variables described here. Use @kbd{M-x set-variable} or
30236@kbd{M-x edit-options} to adjust a variable on the fly, or
30237put a suitable @code{setq} statement in your @file{~/.emacs}
30238file to set a variable permanently. (Another possibility would
30239be to use a file-local variable annotation at the end of the
30240file; @pxref{File Variables, , Local Variables in Files, emacs, the
30241Emacs manual}.)
30242
30243While none of these variables will be buffer-local by default, you
30244can make any of them local to any embedded-mode buffer. (Their
30245values in the @samp{*Calculator*} buffer are never used.)
30246
30247@vindex calc-embedded-open-formula
30248The @code{calc-embedded-open-formula} variable holds a regular
30249expression for the opening delimiter of a formula. @xref{Regexp Search,
30250, Regular Expression Search, emacs, the Emacs manual}, to see
30251how regular expressions work. Basically, a regular expression is a
30252pattern that Calc can search for. A regular expression that considers
30253blank lines, @samp{$}, and @samp{$$} to be opening delimiters is
30254@code{"\\`\\|^\n\\|\\$\\$?"}. Just in case the meaning of this
30255regular expression is not completely plain, let's go through it
30256in detail.
30257
30258The surrounding @samp{" "} marks quote the text between them as a
30259Lisp string. If you left them off, @code{set-variable} or
30260@code{edit-options} would try to read the regular expression as a
30261Lisp program.
30262
30263The most obvious property of this regular expression is that it
30264contains indecently many backslashes. There are actually two levels
30265of backslash usage going on here. First, when Lisp reads a quoted
30266string, all pairs of characters beginning with a backslash are
30267interpreted as special characters. Here, @code{\n} changes to a
30268new-line character, and @code{\\} changes to a single backslash.
30269So the actual regular expression seen by Calc is
30270@samp{\`\|^ @r{(newline)} \|\$\$?}.
30271
30272Regular expressions also consider pairs beginning with backslash
30273to have special meanings. Sometimes the backslash is used to quote
30274a character that otherwise would have a special meaning in a regular
30275expression, like @samp{$}, which normally means ``end-of-line,''
30276or @samp{?}, which means that the preceding item is optional. So
30277@samp{\$\$?} matches either one or two dollar signs.
30278
30279The other codes in this regular expression are @samp{^}, which matches
30280``beginning-of-line,'' @samp{\|}, which means ``or,'' and @samp{\`},
30281which matches ``beginning-of-buffer.'' So the whole pattern means
30282that a formula begins at the beginning of the buffer, or on a newline
30283that occurs at the beginning of a line (i.e., a blank line), or at
30284one or two dollar signs.
30285
30286The default value of @code{calc-embedded-open-formula} looks just
30287like this example, with several more alternatives added on to
30288recognize various other common kinds of delimiters.
30289
30290By the way, the reason to use @samp{^\n} rather than @samp{^$}
30291or @samp{\n\n}, which also would appear to match blank lines,
30292is that the former expression actually ``consumes'' only one
30293newline character as @emph{part of} the delimiter, whereas the
30294latter expressions consume zero or two newlines, respectively.
30295The former choice gives the most natural behavior when Calc
30296must operate on a whole formula including its delimiters.
30297
30298See the Emacs manual for complete details on regular expressions.
30299But just for your convenience, here is a list of all characters
30300which must be quoted with backslash (like @samp{\$}) to avoid
30301some special interpretation: @samp{. * + ? [ ] ^ $ \}. (Note
30302the backslash in this list; for example, to match @samp{\[} you
30303must use @code{"\\\\\\["}. An exercise for the reader is to
30304account for each of these six backslashes!)
30305
30306@vindex calc-embedded-close-formula
30307The @code{calc-embedded-close-formula} variable holds a regular
30308expression for the closing delimiter of a formula. A closing
30309regular expression to match the above example would be
30310@code{"\\'\\|\n$\\|\\$\\$?"}. This is almost the same as the
30311other one, except it now uses @samp{\'} (``end-of-buffer'') and
30312@samp{\n$} (newline occurring at end of line, yet another way
30313of describing a blank line that is more appropriate for this
30314case).
30315
30316@vindex calc-embedded-open-word
30317@vindex calc-embedded-close-word
30318The @code{calc-embedded-open-word} and @code{calc-embedded-close-word}
30319variables are similar expressions used when you type @kbd{M-# w}
30320instead of @kbd{M-# e} to enable Embedded mode.
30321
30322@vindex calc-embedded-open-plain
30323The @code{calc-embedded-open-plain} variable is a string which
30324begins a ``plain'' formula written in front of the formatted
30325formula when @kbd{d p} mode is turned on. Note that this is an
30326actual string, not a regular expression, because Calc must be able
30327to write this string into a buffer as well as to recognize it.
30328The default string is @code{"%%% "} (note the trailing space).
30329
30330@vindex calc-embedded-close-plain
30331The @code{calc-embedded-close-plain} variable is a string which
30332ends a ``plain'' formula. The default is @code{" %%%\n"}. Without
30333the trailing newline here, the first line of a ``big'' mode formula
30334that followed might be shifted over with respect to the other lines.
30335
30336@vindex calc-embedded-open-new-formula
30337The @code{calc-embedded-open-new-formula} variable is a string
30338which is inserted at the front of a new formula when you type
30339@kbd{M-# f}. Its default value is @code{"\n\n"}. If this
30340string begins with a newline character and the @kbd{M-# f} is
30341typed at the beginning of a line, @kbd{M-# f} will skip this
30342first newline to avoid introducing unnecessary blank lines in
30343the file.
30344
30345@vindex calc-embedded-close-new-formula
30346The @code{calc-embedded-close-new-formula} variable is the corresponding
30347string which is inserted at the end of a new formula. Its default
30348value is also @code{"\n\n"}. The final newline is omitted by
30349@w{@kbd{M-# f}} if typed at the end of a line. (It follows that if
30350@kbd{M-# f} is typed on a blank line, both a leading opening
30351newline and a trailing closing newline are omitted.)
30352
30353@vindex calc-embedded-announce-formula
30354The @code{calc-embedded-announce-formula} variable is a regular
30355expression which is sure to be followed by an embedded formula.
30356The @kbd{M-# a} command searches for this pattern as well as for
30357@samp{=>} and @samp{:=} operators. Note that @kbd{M-# a} will
30358not activate just anything surrounded by formula delimiters; after
30359all, blank lines are considered formula delimiters by default!
30360But if your language includes a delimiter which can only occur
30361actually in front of a formula, you can take advantage of it here.
30362The default pattern is @code{"%Embed\n\\(% .*\n\\)*"}, which
30363checks for @samp{%Embed} followed by any number of lines beginning
30364with @samp{%} and a space. This last is important to make Calc
30365consider mode annotations part of the pattern, so that the formula's
30366opening delimiter really is sure to follow the pattern.
30367
30368@vindex calc-embedded-open-mode
30369The @code{calc-embedded-open-mode} variable is a string (not a
30370regular expression) which should precede a mode annotation.
30371Calc never scans for this string; Calc always looks for the
30372annotation itself. But this is the string that is inserted before
30373the opening bracket when Calc adds an annotation on its own.
30374The default is @code{"% "}.
30375
30376@vindex calc-embedded-close-mode
30377The @code{calc-embedded-close-mode} variable is a string which
30378follows a mode annotation written by Calc. Its default value
30379is simply a newline, @code{"\n"}. If you change this, it is a
30380good idea still to end with a newline so that mode annotations
30381will appear on lines by themselves.
30382
30383@node Programming, Installation, Embedded Mode, Top
30384@chapter Programming
30385
30386@noindent
30387There are several ways to ``program'' the Emacs Calculator, depending
30388on the nature of the problem you need to solve.
30389
30390@enumerate
30391@item
30392@dfn{Keyboard macros} allow you to record a sequence of keystrokes
30393and play them back at a later time. This is just the standard Emacs
30394keyboard macro mechanism, dressed up with a few more features such
30395as loops and conditionals.
30396
30397@item
30398@dfn{Algebraic definitions} allow you to use any formula to define a
30399new function. This function can then be used in algebraic formulas or
30400as an interactive command.
30401
30402@item
30403@dfn{Rewrite rules} are discussed in the section on algebra commands.
30404@xref{Rewrite Rules}. If you put your rewrite rules in the variable
30405@code{EvalRules}, they will be applied automatically to all Calc
30406results in just the same way as an internal ``rule'' is applied to
30407evaluate @samp{sqrt(9)} to 3 and so on. @xref{Automatic Rewrites}.
30408
30409@item
30410@dfn{Lisp} is the programming language that Calc (and most of Emacs)
30411is written in. If the above techniques aren't powerful enough, you
30412can write Lisp functions to do anything that built-in Calc commands
30413can do. Lisp code is also somewhat faster than keyboard macros or
30414rewrite rules.
30415@end enumerate
30416
30417@kindex z
30418Programming features are available through the @kbd{z} and @kbd{Z}
30419prefix keys. New commands that you define are two-key sequences
30420beginning with @kbd{z}. Commands for managing these definitions
30421use the shift-@kbd{Z} prefix. (The @kbd{Z T} (@code{calc-timing})
30422command is described elsewhere; @pxref{Troubleshooting Commands}.
30423The @kbd{Z C} (@code{calc-user-define-composition}) command is also
30424described elsewhere; @pxref{User-Defined Compositions}.)
30425
30426@menu
30427* Creating User Keys::
30428* Keyboard Macros::
30429* Invocation Macros::
30430* Algebraic Definitions::
30431* Lisp Definitions::
30432@end menu
30433
30434@node Creating User Keys, Keyboard Macros, Programming, Programming
30435@section Creating User Keys
30436
30437@noindent
30438@kindex Z D
30439@pindex calc-user-define
30440Any Calculator command may be bound to a key using the @kbd{Z D}
30441(@code{calc-user-define}) command. Actually, it is bound to a two-key
30442sequence beginning with the lower-case @kbd{z} prefix.
30443
30444The @kbd{Z D} command first prompts for the key to define. For example,
30445press @kbd{Z D a} to define the new key sequence @kbd{z a}. You are then
30446prompted for the name of the Calculator command that this key should
30447run. For example, the @code{calc-sincos} command is not normally
30448available on a key. Typing @kbd{Z D s sincos @key{RET}} programs the
30449@kbd{z s} key sequence to run @code{calc-sincos}. This definition will remain
30450in effect for the rest of this Emacs session, or until you redefine
30451@kbd{z s} to be something else.
30452
30453You can actually bind any Emacs command to a @kbd{z} key sequence by
30454backspacing over the @samp{calc-} when you are prompted for the command name.
30455
30456As with any other prefix key, you can type @kbd{z ?} to see a list of
30457all the two-key sequences you have defined that start with @kbd{z}.
30458Initially, no @kbd{z} sequences (except @kbd{z ?} itself) are defined.
30459
30460User keys are typically letters, but may in fact be any key.
30461(@key{META}-keys are not permitted, nor are a terminal's special
30462function keys which generate multi-character sequences when pressed.)
30463You can define different commands on the shifted and unshifted versions
30464of a letter if you wish.
30465
30466@kindex Z U
30467@pindex calc-user-undefine
30468The @kbd{Z U} (@code{calc-user-undefine}) command unbinds a user key.
30469For example, the key sequence @kbd{Z U s} will undefine the @code{sincos}
30470key we defined above.
30471
30472@kindex Z P
30473@pindex calc-user-define-permanent
30474@cindex Storing user definitions
30475@cindex Permanent user definitions
30476@cindex @file{.emacs} file, user-defined commands
30477The @kbd{Z P} (@code{calc-user-define-permanent}) command makes a key
30478binding permanent so that it will remain in effect even in future Emacs
30479sessions. (It does this by adding a suitable bit of Lisp code into
30480your @file{.emacs} file.) For example, @kbd{Z P s} would register
30481our @code{sincos} command permanently. If you later wish to unregister
30482this command you must edit your @file{.emacs} file by hand.
30483(@xref{General Mode Commands}, for a way to tell Calc to use a
30484different file instead of @file{.emacs}.)
30485
30486The @kbd{Z P} command also saves the user definition, if any, for the
30487command bound to the key. After @kbd{Z F} and @kbd{Z C}, a given user
30488key could invoke a command, which in turn calls an algebraic function,
30489which might have one or more special display formats. A single @kbd{Z P}
30490command will save all of these definitions.
30491
30492To save a command or function without its key binding (or if there is
30493no key binding for the command or function), type @kbd{'} (the apostrophe)
30494when prompted for a key. Then, type the function name, or backspace
30495to change the @samp{calcFunc-} prefix to @samp{calc-} and enter a
30496command name. (If the command you give implies a function, the function
30497will be saved, and if the function has any display formats, those will
30498be saved, but not the other way around: Saving a function will not save
30499any commands or key bindings associated with the function.)
30500
30501@kindex Z E
30502@pindex calc-user-define-edit
30503@cindex Editing user definitions
30504The @kbd{Z E} (@code{calc-user-define-edit}) command edits the definition
30505of a user key. This works for keys that have been defined by either
30506keyboard macros or formulas; further details are contained in the relevant
30507following sections.
30508
30509@node Keyboard Macros, Invocation Macros, Creating User Keys, Programming
30510@section Programming with Keyboard Macros
30511
30512@noindent
30513@kindex X
30514@cindex Programming with keyboard macros
30515@cindex Keyboard macros
30516The easiest way to ``program'' the Emacs Calculator is to use standard
30517keyboard macros. Press @w{@kbd{C-x (}} to begin recording a macro. From
30518this point on, keystrokes you type will be saved away as well as
30519performing their usual functions. Press @kbd{C-x )} to end recording.
30520Press shift-@kbd{X} (or the standard Emacs key sequence @kbd{C-x e}) to
30521execute your keyboard macro by replaying the recorded keystrokes.
30522@xref{Keyboard Macros, , , emacs, the Emacs Manual}, for further
30523information.@refill
30524
30525When you use @kbd{X} to invoke a keyboard macro, the entire macro is
30526treated as a single command by the undo and trail features. The stack
30527display buffer is not updated during macro execution, but is instead
30528fixed up once the macro completes. Thus, commands defined with keyboard
30529macros are convenient and efficient. The @kbd{C-x e} command, on the
30530other hand, invokes the keyboard macro with no special treatment: Each
30531command in the macro will record its own undo information and trail entry,
30532and update the stack buffer accordingly. If your macro uses features
30533outside of Calc's control to operate on the contents of the Calc stack
30534buffer, or if it includes Undo, Redo, or last-arguments commands, you
30535must use @kbd{C-x e} to make sure the buffer and undo list are up-to-date
30536at all times. You could also consider using @kbd{K} (@code{calc-keep-args})
30537instead of @kbd{M-@key{RET}} (@code{calc-last-args}).
30538
30539Calc extends the standard Emacs keyboard macros in several ways.
30540Keyboard macros can be used to create user-defined commands. Keyboard
30541macros can include conditional and iteration structures, somewhat
30542analogous to those provided by a traditional programmable calculator.
30543
30544@menu
30545* Naming Keyboard Macros::
30546* Conditionals in Macros::
30547* Loops in Macros::
30548* Local Values in Macros::
30549* Queries in Macros::
30550@end menu
30551
30552@node Naming Keyboard Macros, Conditionals in Macros, Keyboard Macros, Keyboard Macros
30553@subsection Naming Keyboard Macros
30554
30555@noindent
30556@kindex Z K
30557@pindex calc-user-define-kbd-macro
30558Once you have defined a keyboard macro, you can bind it to a @kbd{z}
30559key sequence with the @kbd{Z K} (@code{calc-user-define-kbd-macro}) command.
30560This command prompts first for a key, then for a command name. For
30561example, if you type @kbd{C-x ( n @key{TAB} n @key{TAB} C-x )} you will
30562define a keyboard macro which negates the top two numbers on the stack
30563(@key{TAB} swaps the top two stack elements). Now you can type
30564@kbd{Z K n @key{RET}} to define this keyboard macro onto the @kbd{z n} key
30565sequence. The default command name (if you answer the second prompt with
30566just the @key{RET} key as in this example) will be something like
30567@samp{calc-User-n}. The keyboard macro will now be available as both
30568@kbd{z n} and @kbd{M-x calc-User-n}. You can backspace and enter a more
30569descriptive command name if you wish.@refill
30570
30571Macros defined by @kbd{Z K} act like single commands; they are executed
30572in the same way as by the @kbd{X} key. If you wish to define the macro
30573as a standard no-frills Emacs macro (to be executed as if by @kbd{C-x e}),
30574give a negative prefix argument to @kbd{Z K}.
30575
30576Once you have bound your keyboard macro to a key, you can use
30577@kbd{Z P} to register it permanently with Emacs. @xref{Creating User Keys}.
30578
30579@cindex Keyboard macros, editing
30580The @kbd{Z E} (@code{calc-user-define-edit}) command on a key that has
30581been defined by a keyboard macro tries to use the @code{edit-kbd-macro}
30582command to edit the macro. This command may be found in the
30583@file{macedit} package, a copy of which comes with Calc. It decomposes
30584the macro definition into full Emacs command names, like @code{calc-pop}
30585and @code{calc-add}. Type @kbd{M-# M-#} to finish editing and update
30586the definition stored on the key, or, to cancel the edit, type
30587@kbd{M-# x}.@refill
30588
30589If you give a negative numeric prefix argument to @kbd{Z E}, the keyboard
30590macro is edited in spelled-out keystroke form. For example, the editing
5d67986c 30591buffer might contain the nine characters @w{@samp{1 @key{RET} 2 +}}. When you press
d7b8e6c6
EZ
30592@kbd{M-# M-#}, the @code{read-kbd-macro} feature of the @file{macedit}
30593package is used to reinterpret these key names. The
30594notations @code{RET}, @code{LFD}, @code{TAB}, @code{SPC}, @code{DEL}, and
30595@code{NUL} must be written in all uppercase, as must the prefixes @code{C-}
30596and @code{M-}. Spaces and line breaks are ignored. Other characters are
30597copied verbatim into the keyboard macro. Basically, the notation is the
30598same as is used in all of this manual's examples, except that the manual
5d67986c
RS
30599takes some liberties with spaces: When we say @kbd{' [1 2 3] @key{RET}}, we take
30600it for granted that it is clear we really mean @kbd{' [1 @key{SPC} 2 @key{SPC} 3] @key{RET}},
d7b8e6c6
EZ
30601which is what @code{read-kbd-macro} wants to see.@refill
30602
30603If @file{macedit} is not available, @kbd{Z E} edits the keyboard macro
30604in ``raw'' form; the editing buffer simply contains characters like
30605@samp{1^M2+} (here @samp{^M} represents the carriage-return character).
30606Editing in this mode, you will have to use @kbd{C-q} to enter new
30607control characters into the buffer.@refill
30608
30609@kindex M-# m
30610@pindex read-kbd-macro
30611The @kbd{M-# m} (@code{read-kbd-macro}) command reads an Emacs ``region''
30612of spelled-out keystrokes and defines it as the current keyboard macro.
30613It is a convenient way to define a keyboard macro that has been stored
30614in a file, or to define a macro without executing it at the same time.
30615The @kbd{M-# m} command works only if @file{macedit} is present.
30616
30617@node Conditionals in Macros, Loops in Macros, Naming Keyboard Macros, Keyboard Macros
30618@subsection Conditionals in Keyboard Macros
30619
30620@noindent
30621@kindex Z [
30622@kindex Z ]
30623@pindex calc-kbd-if
30624@pindex calc-kbd-else
30625@pindex calc-kbd-else-if
30626@pindex calc-kbd-end-if
30627@cindex Conditional structures
30628The @kbd{Z [} (@code{calc-kbd-if}) and @kbd{Z ]} (@code{calc-kbd-end-if})
30629commands allow you to put simple tests in a keyboard macro. When Calc
30630sees the @kbd{Z [}, it pops an object from the stack and, if the object is
30631a non-zero value, continues executing keystrokes. But if the object is
30632zero, or if it is not provably nonzero, Calc skips ahead to the matching
30633@kbd{Z ]} keystroke. @xref{Logical Operations}, for a set of commands for
30634performing tests which conveniently produce 1 for true and 0 for false.
30635
30636For example, @kbd{@key{RET} 0 a < Z [ n Z ]} implements an absolute-value
30637function in the form of a keyboard macro. This macro duplicates the
30638number on the top of the stack, pushes zero and compares using @kbd{a <}
30639(@code{calc-less-than}), then, if the number was less than zero,
30640executes @kbd{n} (@code{calc-change-sign}). Otherwise, the change-sign
30641command is skipped.
30642
30643To program this macro, type @kbd{C-x (}, type the above sequence of
30644keystrokes, then type @kbd{C-x )}. Note that the keystrokes will be
30645executed while you are making the definition as well as when you later
30646re-execute the macro by typing @kbd{X}. Thus you should make sure a
30647suitable number is on the stack before defining the macro so that you
30648don't get a stack-underflow error during the definition process.
30649
30650Conditionals can be nested arbitrarily. However, there should be exactly
30651one @kbd{Z ]} for each @kbd{Z [} in a keyboard macro.
30652
30653@kindex Z :
30654The @kbd{Z :} (@code{calc-kbd-else}) command allows you to choose between
30655two keystroke sequences. The general format is @kbd{@var{cond} Z [
30656@var{then-part} Z : @var{else-part} Z ]}. If @var{cond} is true
30657(i.e., if the top of stack contains a non-zero number after @var{cond}
30658has been executed), the @var{then-part} will be executed and the
30659@var{else-part} will be skipped. Otherwise, the @var{then-part} will
30660be skipped and the @var{else-part} will be executed.
30661
30662@kindex Z |
30663The @kbd{Z |} (@code{calc-kbd-else-if}) command allows you to choose
30664between any number of alternatives. For example,
30665@kbd{@var{cond1} Z [ @var{part1} Z : @var{cond2} Z | @var{part2} Z :
30666@var{part3} Z ]} will execute @var{part1} if @var{cond1} is true,
30667otherwise it will execute @var{part2} if @var{cond2} is true, otherwise
30668it will execute @var{part3}.
30669
30670More precisely, @kbd{Z [} pops a number and conditionally skips to the
30671next matching @kbd{Z :} or @kbd{Z ]} key. @w{@kbd{Z ]}} has no effect when
30672actually executed. @kbd{Z :} skips to the next matching @kbd{Z ]}.
30673@kbd{Z |} pops a number and conditionally skips to the next matching
30674@kbd{Z :} or @kbd{Z ]}; thus, @kbd{Z [} and @kbd{Z |} are functionally
30675equivalent except that @kbd{Z [} participates in nesting but @kbd{Z |}
30676does not.
30677
30678Calc's conditional and looping constructs work by scanning the
30679keyboard macro for occurrences of character sequences like @samp{Z:}
30680and @samp{Z]}. One side-effect of this is that if you use these
30681constructs you must be careful that these character pairs do not
30682occur by accident in other parts of the macros. Since Calc rarely
30683uses shift-@kbd{Z} for any purpose except as a prefix character, this
30684is not likely to be a problem. Another side-effect is that it will
30685not work to define your own custom key bindings for these commands.
30686Only the standard shift-@kbd{Z} bindings will work correctly.
30687
30688@kindex Z C-g
30689If Calc gets stuck while skipping characters during the definition of a
30690macro, type @kbd{Z C-g} to cancel the definition. (Typing plain @kbd{C-g}
30691actually adds a @kbd{C-g} keystroke to the macro.)
30692
30693@node Loops in Macros, Local Values in Macros, Conditionals in Macros, Keyboard Macros
30694@subsection Loops in Keyboard Macros
30695
30696@noindent
30697@kindex Z <
30698@kindex Z >
30699@pindex calc-kbd-repeat
30700@pindex calc-kbd-end-repeat
30701@cindex Looping structures
30702@cindex Iterative structures
30703The @kbd{Z <} (@code{calc-kbd-repeat}) and @kbd{Z >}
30704(@code{calc-kbd-end-repeat}) commands pop a number from the stack,
30705which must be an integer, then repeat the keystrokes between the brackets
30706the specified number of times. If the integer is zero or negative, the
30707body is skipped altogether. For example, @kbd{1 @key{TAB} Z < 2 * Z >}
30708computes two to a nonnegative integer power. First, we push 1 on the
30709stack and then swap the integer argument back to the top. The @kbd{Z <}
30710pops that argument leaving the 1 back on top of the stack. Then, we
30711repeat a multiply-by-two step however many times.@refill
30712
30713Once again, the keyboard macro is executed as it is being entered.
30714In this case it is especially important to set up reasonable initial
30715conditions before making the definition: Suppose the integer 1000 just
30716happened to be sitting on the stack before we typed the above definition!
30717Another approach is to enter a harmless dummy definition for the macro,
30718then go back and edit in the real one with a @kbd{Z E} command. Yet
30719another approach is to type the macro as written-out keystroke names
30720in a buffer, then use @kbd{M-# m} (@code{read-kbd-macro}) to read the
30721macro.
30722
30723@kindex Z /
30724@pindex calc-break
30725The @kbd{Z /} (@code{calc-kbd-break}) command allows you to break out
30726of a keyboard macro loop prematurely. It pops an object from the stack;
30727if that object is true (a non-zero number), control jumps out of the
30728innermost enclosing @kbd{Z <} @dots{} @kbd{Z >} loop and continues
30729after the @kbd{Z >}. If the object is false, the @kbd{Z /} has no
30730effect. Thus @kbd{@var{cond} Z /} is similar to @samp{if (@var{cond}) break;}
30731in the C language.@refill
30732
30733@kindex Z (
30734@kindex Z )
30735@pindex calc-kbd-for
30736@pindex calc-kbd-end-for
30737The @kbd{Z (} (@code{calc-kbd-for}) and @kbd{Z )} (@code{calc-kbd-end-for})
30738commands are similar to @kbd{Z <} and @kbd{Z >}, except that they make the
30739value of the counter available inside the loop. The general layout is
30740@kbd{@var{init} @var{final} Z ( @var{body} @var{step} Z )}. The @kbd{Z (}
30741command pops initial and final values from the stack. It then creates
30742a temporary internal counter and initializes it with the value @var{init}.
30743The @kbd{Z (} command then repeatedly pushes the counter value onto the
30744stack and executes @var{body} and @var{step}, adding @var{step} to the
30745counter each time until the loop finishes.@refill
30746
30747@cindex Summations (by keyboard macros)
30748By default, the loop finishes when the counter becomes greater than (or
30749less than) @var{final}, assuming @var{initial} is less than (greater
30750than) @var{final}. If @var{initial} is equal to @var{final}, the body
30751executes exactly once. The body of the loop always executes at least
30752once. For example, @kbd{0 1 10 Z ( 2 ^ + 1 Z )} computes the sum of the
30753squares of the integers from 1 to 10, in steps of 1.
30754
30755If you give a numeric prefix argument of 1 to @kbd{Z (}, the loop is
30756forced to use upward-counting conventions. In this case, if @var{initial}
30757is greater than @var{final} the body will not be executed at all.
30758Note that @var{step} may still be negative in this loop; the prefix
30759argument merely constrains the loop-finished test. Likewise, a prefix
30760argument of @i{-1} forces downward-counting conventions.
30761
30762@kindex Z @{
30763@kindex Z @}
30764@pindex calc-kbd-loop
30765@pindex calc-kbd-end-loop
30766The @kbd{Z @{} (@code{calc-kbd-loop}) and @kbd{Z @}}
30767(@code{calc-kbd-end-loop}) commands are similar to @kbd{Z <} and
30768@kbd{Z >}, except that they do not pop a count from the stack---they
30769effectively create an infinite loop. Every @kbd{Z @{} @dots{} @kbd{Z @}}
30770loop ought to include at least one @kbd{Z /} to make sure the loop
30771doesn't run forever. (If any error message occurs which causes Emacs
30772to beep, the keyboard macro will also be halted; this is a standard
30773feature of Emacs. You can also generally press @kbd{C-g} to halt a
30774running keyboard macro, although not all versions of Unix support
30775this feature.)
30776
30777The conditional and looping constructs are not actually tied to
30778keyboard macros, but they are most often used in that context.
30779For example, the keystrokes @kbd{10 Z < 23 @key{RET} Z >} push
30780ten copies of 23 onto the stack. This can be typed ``live'' just
30781as easily as in a macro definition.
30782
30783@xref{Conditionals in Macros}, for some additional notes about
30784conditional and looping commands.
30785
30786@node Local Values in Macros, Queries in Macros, Loops in Macros, Keyboard Macros
30787@subsection Local Values in Macros
30788
30789@noindent
30790@cindex Local variables
30791@cindex Restoring saved modes
30792Keyboard macros sometimes want to operate under known conditions
30793without affecting surrounding conditions. For example, a keyboard
30794macro may wish to turn on Fraction Mode, or set a particular
30795precision, independent of the user's normal setting for those
30796modes.
30797
30798@kindex Z `
30799@kindex Z '
30800@pindex calc-kbd-push
30801@pindex calc-kbd-pop
30802Macros also sometimes need to use local variables. Assignments to
30803local variables inside the macro should not affect any variables
30804outside the macro. The @kbd{Z `} (@code{calc-kbd-push}) and @kbd{Z '}
30805(@code{calc-kbd-pop}) commands give you both of these capabilities.
30806
30807When you type @kbd{Z `} (with a backquote or accent grave character),
30808the values of various mode settings are saved away. The ten ``quick''
30809variables @code{q0} through @code{q9} are also saved. When
30810you type @w{@kbd{Z '}} (with an apostrophe), these values are restored.
30811Pairs of @kbd{Z `} and @kbd{Z '} commands may be nested.
30812
30813If a keyboard macro halts due to an error in between a @kbd{Z `} and
30814a @kbd{Z '}, the saved values will be restored correctly even though
30815the macro never reaches the @kbd{Z '} command. Thus you can use
30816@kbd{Z `} and @kbd{Z '} without having to worry about what happens
30817in exceptional conditions.
30818
30819If you type @kbd{Z `} ``live'' (not in a keyboard macro), Calc puts
30820you into a ``recursive edit.'' You can tell you are in a recursive
30821edit because there will be extra square brackets in the mode line,
30822as in @samp{[(Calculator)]}. These brackets will go away when you
30823type the matching @kbd{Z '} command. The modes and quick variables
30824will be saved and restored in just the same way as if actual keyboard
30825macros were involved.
30826
30827The modes saved by @kbd{Z `} and @kbd{Z '} are the current precision
30828and binary word size, the angular mode (Deg, Rad, or HMS), the
30829simplification mode, Algebraic mode, Symbolic mode, Infinite mode,
30830Matrix or Scalar mode, Fraction mode, and the current complex mode
30831(Polar or Rectangular). The ten ``quick'' variables' values (or lack
30832thereof) are also saved.
30833
30834Most mode-setting commands act as toggles, but with a numeric prefix
30835they force the mode either on (positive prefix) or off (negative
30836or zero prefix). Since you don't know what the environment might
30837be when you invoke your macro, it's best to use prefix arguments
30838for all mode-setting commands inside the macro.
30839
30840In fact, @kbd{C-u Z `} is like @kbd{Z `} except that it sets the modes
30841listed above to their default values. As usual, the matching @kbd{Z '}
30842will restore the modes to their settings from before the @kbd{C-u Z `}.
30843Also, @w{@kbd{Z `}} with a negative prefix argument resets algebraic mode
30844to its default (off) but leaves the other modes the same as they were
30845outside the construct.
30846
30847The contents of the stack and trail, values of non-quick variables, and
30848other settings such as the language mode and the various display modes,
30849are @emph{not} affected by @kbd{Z `} and @kbd{Z '}.
30850
30851@node Queries in Macros, , Local Values in Macros, Keyboard Macros
30852@subsection Queries in Keyboard Macros
30853
30854@noindent
30855@kindex Z =
30856@pindex calc-kbd-report
30857The @kbd{Z =} (@code{calc-kbd-report}) command displays an informative
30858message including the value on the top of the stack. You are prompted
30859to enter a string. That string, along with the top-of-stack value,
30860is displayed unless @kbd{m w} (@code{calc-working}) has been used
30861to turn such messages off.
30862
30863@kindex Z #
30864@pindex calc-kbd-query
30865The @kbd{Z #} (@code{calc-kbd-query}) command displays a prompt message
30866(which you enter during macro definition), then does an algebraic entry
30867which takes its input from the keyboard, even during macro execution.
30868This command allows your keyboard macros to accept numbers or formulas
30869as interactive input. All the normal conventions of algebraic input,
30870including the use of @kbd{$} characters, are supported.
30871
30872@xref{Kbd Macro Query, , , emacs, the Emacs Manual}, for a description of
30873@kbd{C-x q} (@code{kbd-macro-query}), the standard Emacs way to accept
30874keyboard input during a keyboard macro. In particular, you can use
30875@kbd{C-x q} to enter a recursive edit, which allows the user to perform
30876any Calculator operations interactively before pressing @kbd{C-M-c} to
30877return control to the keyboard macro.
30878
30879@node Invocation Macros, Algebraic Definitions, Keyboard Macros, Programming
30880@section Invocation Macros
30881
30882@kindex M-# z
30883@kindex Z I
30884@pindex calc-user-invocation
30885@pindex calc-user-define-invocation
30886Calc provides one special keyboard macro, called up by @kbd{M-# z}
30887(@code{calc-user-invocation}), that is intended to allow you to define
30888your own special way of starting Calc. To define this ``invocation
30889macro,'' create the macro in the usual way with @kbd{C-x (} and
30890@kbd{C-x )}, then type @kbd{Z I} (@code{calc-user-define-invocation}).
30891There is only one invocation macro, so you don't need to type any
30892additional letters after @kbd{Z I}. From now on, you can type
30893@kbd{M-# z} at any time to execute your invocation macro.
30894
30895For example, suppose you find yourself often grabbing rectangles of
30896numbers into Calc and multiplying their columns. You can do this
30897by typing @kbd{M-# r} to grab, and @kbd{V R : *} to multiply columns.
30898To make this into an invocation macro, just type @kbd{C-x ( M-# r
30899V R : * C-x )}, then @kbd{Z I}. Then, to multiply a rectangle of data,
30900just mark the data in its buffer in the usual way and type @kbd{M-# z}.
30901
30902Invocation macros are treated like regular Emacs keyboard macros;
30903all the special features described above for @kbd{Z K}-style macros
30904do not apply. @kbd{M-# z} is just like @kbd{C-x e}, except that it
30905uses the macro that was last stored by @kbd{Z I}. (In fact, the
30906macro does not even have to have anything to do with Calc!)
30907
30908The @kbd{m m} command saves the last invocation macro defined by
30909@kbd{Z I} along with all the other Calc mode settings.
30910@xref{General Mode Commands}.
30911
30912@node Algebraic Definitions, Lisp Definitions, Invocation Macros, Programming
30913@section Programming with Formulas
30914
30915@noindent
30916@kindex Z F
30917@pindex calc-user-define-formula
30918@cindex Programming with algebraic formulas
30919Another way to create a new Calculator command uses algebraic formulas.
30920The @kbd{Z F} (@code{calc-user-define-formula}) command stores the
30921formula at the top of the stack as the definition for a key. This
30922command prompts for five things: The key, the command name, the function
30923name, the argument list, and the behavior of the command when given
30924non-numeric arguments.
30925
30926For example, suppose we type @kbd{' a+2b @key{RET}} to push the formula
30927@samp{a + 2*b} onto the stack. We now type @kbd{Z F m} to define this
30928formula on the @kbd{z m} key sequence. The next prompt is for a command
30929name, beginning with @samp{calc-}, which should be the long (@kbd{M-x}) form
30930for the new command. If you simply press @key{RET}, a default name like
30931@code{calc-User-m} will be constructed. In our example, suppose we enter
30932@kbd{spam @key{RET}} to define the new command as @code{calc-spam}.
30933
30934If you want to give the formula a long-style name only, you can press
30935@key{SPC} or @key{RET} when asked which single key to use. For example
30936@kbd{Z F @key{RET} spam @key{RET}} defines the new command as
30937@kbd{M-x calc-spam}, with no keyboard equivalent.
30938
30939The third prompt is for a function name. The default is to use the same
30940name as the command name but with @samp{calcFunc-} in place of
30941@samp{calc-}. This is the name you will use if you want to enter your
30942new function in an algebraic formula. Suppose we enter @kbd{yow @key{RET}}.
30943Then the new function can be invoked by pushing two numbers on the
30944stack and typing @kbd{z m} or @kbd{x spam}, or by entering the algebraic
30945formula @samp{yow(x,y)}.@refill
30946
30947The fourth prompt is for the function's argument list. This is used to
30948associate values on the stack with the variables that appear in the formula.
30949The default is a list of all variables which appear in the formula, sorted
30950into alphabetical order. In our case, the default would be @samp{(a b)}.
30951This means that, when the user types @kbd{z m}, the Calculator will remove
30952two numbers from the stack, substitute these numbers for @samp{a} and
30953@samp{b} (respectively) in the formula, then simplify the formula and
30954push the result on the stack. In other words, @kbd{10 @key{RET} 100 z m}
30955would replace the 10 and 100 on the stack with the number 210, which is
30956@cite{a + 2 b} with @cite{a=10} and @cite{b=100}. Likewise, the formula
30957@samp{yow(10, 100)} will be evaluated by substituting @cite{a=10} and
30958@cite{b=100} in the definition.
30959
30960You can rearrange the order of the names before pressing @key{RET} to
30961control which stack positions go to which variables in the formula. If
30962you remove a variable from the argument list, that variable will be left
30963in symbolic form by the command. Thus using an argument list of @samp{(b)}
30964for our function would cause @kbd{10 z m} to replace the 10 on the stack
30965with the formula @samp{a + 20}. If we had used an argument list of
30966@samp{(b a)}, the result with inputs 10 and 100 would have been 120.
30967
30968You can also put a nameless function on the stack instead of just a
30969formula, as in @samp{<a, b : a + 2 b>}. @xref{Specifying Operators}.
30970In this example, the command will be defined by the formula @samp{a + 2 b}
30971using the argument list @samp{(a b)}.
30972
30973The final prompt is a y-or-n question concerning what to do if symbolic
30974arguments are given to your function. If you answer @kbd{y}, then
30975executing @kbd{z m} (using the original argument list @samp{(a b)}) with
30976arguments @cite{10} and @cite{x} will leave the function in symbolic
30977form, i.e., @samp{yow(10,x)}. On the other hand, if you answer @kbd{n},
30978then the formula will always be expanded, even for non-constant
30979arguments: @samp{10 + 2 x}. If you never plan to feed algebraic
30980formulas to your new function, it doesn't matter how you answer this
30981question.@refill
30982
30983If you answered @kbd{y} to this question you can still cause a function
30984call to be expanded by typing @kbd{a "} (@code{calc-expand-formula}).
30985Also, Calc will expand the function if necessary when you take a
30986derivative or integral or solve an equation involving the function.
30987
30988@kindex Z G
30989@pindex calc-get-user-defn
30990Once you have defined a formula on a key, you can retrieve this formula
30991with the @kbd{Z G} (@code{calc-user-define-get-defn}) command. Press a
30992key, and this command pushes the formula that was used to define that
30993key onto the stack. Actually, it pushes a nameless function that
30994specifies both the argument list and the defining formula. You will get
30995an error message if the key is undefined, or if the key was not defined
30996by a @kbd{Z F} command.@refill
30997
30998The @kbd{Z E} (@code{calc-user-define-edit}) command on a key that has
30999been defined by a formula uses a variant of the @code{calc-edit} command
31000to edit the defining formula. Press @kbd{M-# M-#} to finish editing and
31001store the new formula back in the definition, or @kbd{M-# x} to
31002cancel the edit. (The argument list and other properties of the
31003definition are unchanged; to adjust the argument list, you can use
31004@kbd{Z G} to grab the function onto the stack, edit with @kbd{`}, and
31005then re-execute the @kbd{Z F} command.)
31006
31007As usual, the @kbd{Z P} command records your definition permanently.
31008In this case it will permanently record all three of the relevant
31009definitions: the key, the command, and the function.
31010
31011You may find it useful to turn off the default simplifications with
31012@kbd{m O} (@code{calc-no-simplify-mode}) when entering a formula to be
31013used as a function definition. For example, the formula @samp{deriv(a^2,v)}
31014which might be used to define a new function @samp{dsqr(a,v)} will be
31015``simplified'' to 0 immediately upon entry since @code{deriv} considers
31016@cite{a} to be constant with respect to @cite{v}. Turning off
31017default simplifications cures this problem: The definition will be stored
31018in symbolic form without ever activating the @code{deriv} function. Press
31019@kbd{m D} to turn the default simplifications back on afterwards.
31020
31021@node Lisp Definitions, , Algebraic Definitions, Programming
31022@section Programming with Lisp
31023
31024@noindent
31025The Calculator can be programmed quite extensively in Lisp. All you
31026do is write a normal Lisp function definition, but with @code{defmath}
31027in place of @code{defun}. This has the same form as @code{defun}, but it
31028automagically replaces calls to standard Lisp functions like @code{+} and
31029@code{zerop} with calls to the corresponding functions in Calc's own library.
31030Thus you can write natural-looking Lisp code which operates on all of the
31031standard Calculator data types. You can then use @kbd{Z D} if you wish to
31032bind your new command to a @kbd{z}-prefix key sequence. The @kbd{Z E} command
31033will not edit a Lisp-based definition.
31034
31035Emacs Lisp is described in the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. This section
31036assumes a familiarity with Lisp programming concepts; if you do not know
31037Lisp, you may find keyboard macros or rewrite rules to be an easier way
31038to program the Calculator.
31039
31040This section first discusses ways to write commands, functions, or
31041small programs to be executed inside of Calc. Then it discusses how
31042your own separate programs are able to call Calc from the outside.
31043Finally, there is a list of internal Calc functions and data structures
31044for the true Lisp enthusiast.
31045
31046@menu
31047* Defining Functions::
31048* Defining Simple Commands::
31049* Defining Stack Commands::
31050* Argument Qualifiers::
31051* Example Definitions::
31052
31053* Calling Calc from Your Programs::
31054* Internals::
31055@end menu
31056
31057@node Defining Functions, Defining Simple Commands, Lisp Definitions, Lisp Definitions
31058@subsection Defining New Functions
31059
31060@noindent
31061@findex defmath
31062The @code{defmath} function (actually a Lisp macro) is like @code{defun}
31063except that code in the body of the definition can make use of the full
31064range of Calculator data types. The prefix @samp{calcFunc-} is added
31065to the specified name to get the actual Lisp function name. As a simple
31066example,
31067
31068@example
31069(defmath myfact (n)
31070 (if (> n 0)
31071 (* n (myfact (1- n)))
31072 1))
31073@end example
31074
31075@noindent
31076This actually expands to the code,
31077
31078@example
31079(defun calcFunc-myfact (n)
31080 (if (math-posp n)
31081 (math-mul n (calcFunc-myfact (math-add n -1)))
31082 1))
31083@end example
31084
31085@noindent
31086This function can be used in algebraic expressions, e.g., @samp{myfact(5)}.
31087
31088The @samp{myfact} function as it is defined above has the bug that an
31089expression @samp{myfact(a+b)} will be simplified to 1 because the
31090formula @samp{a+b} is not considered to be @code{posp}. A robust
31091factorial function would be written along the following lines:
31092
31093@smallexample
31094(defmath myfact (n)
31095 (if (> n 0)
31096 (* n (myfact (1- n)))
31097 (if (= n 0)
31098 1
31099 nil))) ; this could be simplified as: (and (= n 0) 1)
31100@end smallexample
31101
31102If a function returns @code{nil}, it is left unsimplified by the Calculator
31103(except that its arguments will be simplified). Thus, @samp{myfact(a+1+2)}
31104will be simplified to @samp{myfact(a+3)} but no further. Beware that every
31105time the Calculator reexamines this formula it will attempt to resimplify
31106it, so your function ought to detect the returning-@code{nil} case as
31107efficiently as possible.
31108
31109The following standard Lisp functions are treated by @code{defmath}:
31110@code{+}, @code{-}, @code{*}, @code{/}, @code{%}, @code{^} or
31111@code{expt}, @code{=}, @code{<}, @code{>}, @code{<=}, @code{>=},
31112@code{/=}, @code{1+}, @code{1-}, @code{logand}, @code{logior}, @code{logxor},
31113@code{logandc2}, @code{lognot}. Also, @code{~=} is an abbreviation for
31114@code{math-nearly-equal}, which is useful in implementing Taylor series.@refill
31115
31116For other functions @var{func}, if a function by the name
31117@samp{calcFunc-@var{func}} exists it is used, otherwise if a function by the
31118name @samp{math-@var{func}} exists it is used, otherwise if @var{func} itself
31119is defined as a function it is used, otherwise @samp{calcFunc-@var{func}} is
31120used on the assumption that this is a to-be-defined math function. Also, if
31121the function name is quoted as in @samp{('integerp a)} the function name is
31122always used exactly as written (but not quoted).@refill
31123
31124Variable names have @samp{var-} prepended to them unless they appear in
31125the function's argument list or in an enclosing @code{let}, @code{let*},
31126@code{for}, or @code{foreach} form,
31127or their names already contain a @samp{-} character. Thus a reference to
31128@samp{foo} is the same as a reference to @samp{var-foo}.@refill
31129
31130A few other Lisp extensions are available in @code{defmath} definitions:
31131
31132@itemize @bullet
31133@item
31134The @code{elt} function accepts any number of index variables.
31135Note that Calc vectors are stored as Lisp lists whose first
31136element is the symbol @code{vec}; thus, @samp{(elt v 2)} yields
31137the second element of vector @code{v}, and @samp{(elt m i j)}
31138yields one element of a Calc matrix.
31139
31140@item
31141The @code{setq} function has been extended to act like the Common
31142Lisp @code{setf} function. (The name @code{setf} is recognized as
31143a synonym of @code{setq}.) Specifically, the first argument of
31144@code{setq} can be an @code{nth}, @code{elt}, @code{car}, or @code{cdr} form,
31145in which case the effect is to store into the specified
31146element of a list. Thus, @samp{(setq (elt m i j) x)} stores @cite{x}
31147into one element of a matrix.
31148
31149@item
31150A @code{for} looping construct is available. For example,
31151@samp{(for ((i 0 10)) body)} executes @code{body} once for each
31152binding of @cite{i} from zero to 10. This is like a @code{let}
31153form in that @cite{i} is temporarily bound to the loop count
31154without disturbing its value outside the @code{for} construct.
31155Nested loops, as in @samp{(for ((i 0 10) (j 0 (1- i) 2)) body)},
31156are also available. For each value of @cite{i} from zero to 10,
31157@cite{j} counts from 0 to @cite{i-1} in steps of two. Note that
31158@code{for} has the same general outline as @code{let*}, except
31159that each element of the header is a list of three or four
31160things, not just two.
31161
31162@item
31163The @code{foreach} construct loops over elements of a list.
31164For example, @samp{(foreach ((x (cdr v))) body)} executes
31165@code{body} with @cite{x} bound to each element of Calc vector
31166@cite{v} in turn. The purpose of @code{cdr} here is to skip over
31167the initial @code{vec} symbol in the vector.
31168
31169@item
31170The @code{break} function breaks out of the innermost enclosing
31171@code{while}, @code{for}, or @code{foreach} loop. If given a
31172value, as in @samp{(break x)}, this value is returned by the
31173loop. (Lisp loops otherwise always return @code{nil}.)
31174
31175@item
31176The @code{return} function prematurely returns from the enclosing
31177function. For example, @samp{(return (+ x y))} returns @cite{x+y}
31178as the value of a function. You can use @code{return} anywhere
31179inside the body of the function.
31180@end itemize
31181
31182Non-integer numbers (and extremely large integers) cannot be included
31183directly into a @code{defmath} definition. This is because the Lisp
31184reader will fail to parse them long before @code{defmath} ever gets control.
31185Instead, use the notation, @samp{:"3.1415"}. In fact, any algebraic
31186formula can go between the quotes. For example,
31187
31188@smallexample
31189(defmath sqexp (x) ; sqexp(x) == sqrt(exp(x)) == exp(x*0.5)
31190 (and (numberp x)
31191 (exp :"x * 0.5")))
31192@end smallexample
31193
31194expands to
31195
31196@smallexample
31197(defun calcFunc-sqexp (x)
31198 (and (math-numberp x)
31199 (calcFunc-exp (math-mul x '(float 5 -1)))))
31200@end smallexample
31201
31202Note the use of @code{numberp} as a guard to ensure that the argument is
31203a number first, returning @code{nil} if not. The exponential function
31204could itself have been included in the expression, if we had preferred:
31205@samp{:"exp(x * 0.5)"}. As another example, the multiplication-and-recursion
31206step of @code{myfact} could have been written
31207
31208@example
31209:"n * myfact(n-1)"
31210@end example
31211
31212If a file named @file{.emacs} exists in your home directory, Emacs reads
31213and executes the Lisp forms in this file as it starts up. While it may
31214seem like a good idea to put your favorite @code{defmath} commands here,
31215this has the unfortunate side-effect that parts of the Calculator must be
31216loaded in to process the @code{defmath} commands whether or not you will
31217actually use the Calculator! A better effect can be had by writing
31218
31219@example
31220(put 'calc-define 'thing '(progn
31221 (defmath ... )
31222 (defmath ... )
31223))
31224@end example
31225
31226@noindent
31227@vindex calc-define
31228The @code{put} function adds a @dfn{property} to a symbol. Each Lisp
31229symbol has a list of properties associated with it. Here we add a
31230property with a name of @code{thing} and a @samp{(progn ...)} form as
31231its value. When Calc starts up, and at the start of every Calc command,
31232the property list for the symbol @code{calc-define} is checked and the
31233values of any properties found are evaluated as Lisp forms. The
31234properties are removed as they are evaluated. The property names
31235(like @code{thing}) are not used; you should choose something like the
31236name of your project so as not to conflict with other properties.
31237
31238The net effect is that you can put the above code in your @file{.emacs}
31239file and it will not be executed until Calc is loaded. Or, you can put
31240that same code in another file which you load by hand either before or
31241after Calc itself is loaded.
31242
31243The properties of @code{calc-define} are evaluated in the same order
31244that they were added. They can assume that the Calc modules @file{calc.el},
31245@file{calc-ext.el}, and @file{calc-macs.el} have been fully loaded, and
31246that the @samp{*Calculator*} buffer will be the current buffer.
31247
31248If your @code{calc-define} property only defines algebraic functions,
31249you can be sure that it will have been evaluated before Calc tries to
31250call your function, even if the file defining the property is loaded
31251after Calc is loaded. But if the property defines commands or key
31252sequences, it may not be evaluated soon enough. (Suppose it defines the
31253new command @code{tweak-calc}; the user can load your file, then type
31254@kbd{M-x tweak-calc} before Calc has had chance to do anything.) To
31255protect against this situation, you can put
31256
31257@example
31258(run-hooks 'calc-check-defines)
31259@end example
31260
31261@findex calc-check-defines
31262@noindent
31263at the end of your file. The @code{calc-check-defines} function is what
31264looks for and evaluates properties on @code{calc-define}; @code{run-hooks}
31265has the advantage that it is quietly ignored if @code{calc-check-defines}
31266is not yet defined because Calc has not yet been loaded.
31267
31268Examples of things that ought to be enclosed in a @code{calc-define}
31269property are @code{defmath} calls, @code{define-key} calls that modify
31270the Calc key map, and any calls that redefine things defined inside Calc.
31271Ordinary @code{defun}s need not be enclosed with @code{calc-define}.
31272
31273@node Defining Simple Commands, Defining Stack Commands, Defining Functions, Lisp Definitions
31274@subsection Defining New Simple Commands
31275
31276@noindent
31277@findex interactive
31278If a @code{defmath} form contains an @code{interactive} clause, it defines
31279a Calculator command. Actually such a @code{defmath} results in @emph{two}
31280function definitions: One, a @samp{calcFunc-} function as was just described,
31281with the @code{interactive} clause removed. Two, a @samp{calc-} function
31282with a suitable @code{interactive} clause and some sort of wrapper to make
31283the command work in the Calc environment.
31284
31285In the simple case, the @code{interactive} clause has the same form as
31286for normal Emacs Lisp commands:
31287
31288@smallexample
31289(defmath increase-precision (delta)
31290 "Increase precision by DELTA." ; This is the "documentation string"
31291 (interactive "p") ; Register this as a M-x-able command
31292 (setq calc-internal-prec (+ calc-internal-prec delta)))
31293@end smallexample
31294
31295This expands to the pair of definitions,
31296
31297@smallexample
31298(defun calc-increase-precision (delta)
31299 "Increase precision by DELTA."
31300 (interactive "p")
31301 (calc-wrapper
31302 (setq calc-internal-prec (math-add calc-internal-prec delta))))
31303
31304(defun calcFunc-increase-precision (delta)
31305 "Increase precision by DELTA."
31306 (setq calc-internal-prec (math-add calc-internal-prec delta)))
31307@end smallexample
31308
31309@noindent
31310where in this case the latter function would never really be used! Note
31311that since the Calculator stores small integers as plain Lisp integers,
31312the @code{math-add} function will work just as well as the native
31313@code{+} even when the intent is to operate on native Lisp integers.
31314
31315@findex calc-wrapper
31316The @samp{calc-wrapper} call invokes a macro which surrounds the body of
31317the function with code that looks roughly like this:
31318
31319@smallexample
31320(let ((calc-command-flags nil))
31321 (unwind-protect
31322 (save-excursion
31323 (calc-select-buffer)
31324 @emph{body of function}
31325 @emph{renumber stack}
31326 @emph{clear} Working @emph{message})
31327 @emph{realign cursor and window}
31328 @emph{clear Inverse, Hyperbolic, and Keep Args flags}
31329 @emph{update Emacs mode line}))
31330@end smallexample
31331
31332@findex calc-select-buffer
31333The @code{calc-select-buffer} function selects the @samp{*Calculator*}
31334buffer if necessary, say, because the command was invoked from inside
31335the @samp{*Calc Trail*} window.
31336
31337@findex calc-set-command-flag
5d67986c
RS
31338You can call, for example, @code{(calc-set-command-flag 'no-align)} to
31339set the above-mentioned command flags. Calc routines recognize the
31340following command flags:
d7b8e6c6
EZ
31341
31342@table @code
31343@item renum-stack
31344Stack line numbers @samp{1:}, @samp{2:}, and so on must be renumbered
31345after this command completes. This is set by routines like
31346@code{calc-push}.
31347
31348@item clear-message
31349Calc should call @samp{(message "")} if this command completes normally
31350(to clear a ``Working@dots{}'' message out of the echo area).
31351
31352@item no-align
31353Do not move the cursor back to the @samp{.} top-of-stack marker.
31354
31355@item position-point
31356Use the variables @code{calc-position-point-line} and
31357@code{calc-position-point-column} to position the cursor after
31358this command finishes.
31359
31360@item keep-flags
31361Do not clear @code{calc-inverse-flag}, @code{calc-hyperbolic-flag},
31362and @code{calc-keep-args-flag} at the end of this command.
31363
31364@item do-edit
31365Switch to buffer @samp{*Calc Edit*} after this command.
31366
31367@item hold-trail
31368Do not move trail pointer to end of trail when something is recorded
31369there.
31370@end table
31371
31372@kindex Y
31373@kindex Y ?
31374@vindex calc-Y-help-msgs
31375Calc reserves a special prefix key, shift-@kbd{Y}, for user-written
31376extensions to Calc. There are no built-in commands that work with
31377this prefix key; you must call @code{define-key} from Lisp (probably
31378from inside a @code{calc-define} property) to add to it. Initially only
31379@kbd{Y ?} is defined; it takes help messages from a list of strings
31380(initially @code{nil}) in the variable @code{calc-Y-help-msgs}. All
31381other undefined keys except for @kbd{Y} are reserved for use by
31382future versions of Calc.
31383
31384If you are writing a Calc enhancement which you expect to give to
31385others, it is best to minimize the number of @kbd{Y}-key sequences
31386you use. In fact, if you have more than one key sequence you should
31387consider defining three-key sequences with a @kbd{Y}, then a key that
31388stands for your package, then a third key for the particular command
31389within your package.
31390
31391Users may wish to install several Calc enhancements, and it is possible
31392that several enhancements will choose to use the same key. In the
31393example below, a variable @code{inc-prec-base-key} has been defined
31394to contain the key that identifies the @code{inc-prec} package. Its
31395value is initially @code{"P"}, but a user can change this variable
31396if necessary without having to modify the file.
31397
31398Here is a complete file, @file{inc-prec.el}, which makes a @kbd{Y P I}
31399command that increases the precision, and a @kbd{Y P D} command that
31400decreases the precision.
31401
31402@smallexample
31403;;; Increase and decrease Calc precision. Dave Gillespie, 5/31/91.
31404;;; (Include copyright or copyleft stuff here.)
31405
31406(defvar inc-prec-base-key "P"
31407 "Base key for inc-prec.el commands.")
31408
31409(put 'calc-define 'inc-prec '(progn
31410
31411(define-key calc-mode-map (format "Y%sI" inc-prec-base-key)
31412 'increase-precision)
31413(define-key calc-mode-map (format "Y%sD" inc-prec-base-key)
31414 'decrease-precision)
31415
31416(setq calc-Y-help-msgs
31417 (cons (format "%s + Inc-prec, Dec-prec" inc-prec-base-key)
31418 calc-Y-help-msgs))
31419
31420(defmath increase-precision (delta)
31421 "Increase precision by DELTA."
31422 (interactive "p")
31423 (setq calc-internal-prec (+ calc-internal-prec delta)))
31424
31425(defmath decrease-precision (delta)
31426 "Decrease precision by DELTA."
31427 (interactive "p")
31428 (setq calc-internal-prec (- calc-internal-prec delta)))
31429
31430)) ; end of calc-define property
31431
31432(run-hooks 'calc-check-defines)
31433@end smallexample
31434
31435@node Defining Stack Commands, Argument Qualifiers, Defining Simple Commands, Lisp Definitions
31436@subsection Defining New Stack-Based Commands
31437
31438@noindent
31439To define a new computational command which takes and/or leaves arguments
31440on the stack, a special form of @code{interactive} clause is used.
31441
31442@example
31443(interactive @var{num} @var{tag})
31444@end example
31445
31446@noindent
31447where @var{num} is an integer, and @var{tag} is a string. The effect is
31448to pop @var{num} values off the stack, resimplify them by calling
31449@code{calc-normalize}, and hand them to your function according to the
31450function's argument list. Your function may include @code{&optional} and
31451@code{&rest} parameters, so long as calling the function with @var{num}
31452parameters is legal.
31453
31454Your function must return either a number or a formula in a form
31455acceptable to Calc, or a list of such numbers or formulas. These value(s)
31456are pushed onto the stack when the function completes. They are also
31457recorded in the Calc Trail buffer on a line beginning with @var{tag},
31458a string of (normally) four characters or less. If you omit @var{tag}
31459or use @code{nil} as a tag, the result is not recorded in the trail.
31460
31461As an example, the definition
31462
31463@smallexample
31464(defmath myfact (n)
31465 "Compute the factorial of the integer at the top of the stack."
31466 (interactive 1 "fact")
31467 (if (> n 0)
31468 (* n (myfact (1- n)))
31469 (and (= n 0) 1)))
31470@end smallexample
31471
31472@noindent
31473is a version of the factorial function shown previously which can be used
31474as a command as well as an algebraic function. It expands to
31475
31476@smallexample
31477(defun calc-myfact ()
31478 "Compute the factorial of the integer at the top of the stack."
31479 (interactive)
31480 (calc-slow-wrapper
31481 (calc-enter-result 1 "fact"
31482 (cons 'calcFunc-myfact (calc-top-list-n 1)))))
31483
31484(defun calcFunc-myfact (n)
31485 "Compute the factorial of the integer at the top of the stack."
31486 (if (math-posp n)
31487 (math-mul n (calcFunc-myfact (math-add n -1)))
31488 (and (math-zerop n) 1)))
31489@end smallexample
31490
31491@findex calc-slow-wrapper
31492The @code{calc-slow-wrapper} function is a version of @code{calc-wrapper}
31493that automatically puts up a @samp{Working...} message before the
31494computation begins. (This message can be turned off by the user
31495with an @kbd{m w} (@code{calc-working}) command.)
31496
31497@findex calc-top-list-n
31498The @code{calc-top-list-n} function returns a list of the specified number
31499of values from the top of the stack. It resimplifies each value by
31500calling @code{calc-normalize}. If its argument is zero it returns an
31501empty list. It does not actually remove these values from the stack.
31502
31503@findex calc-enter-result
31504The @code{calc-enter-result} function takes an integer @var{num} and string
31505@var{tag} as described above, plus a third argument which is either a
31506Calculator data object or a list of such objects. These objects are
31507resimplified and pushed onto the stack after popping the specified number
31508of values from the stack. If @var{tag} is non-@code{nil}, the values
31509being pushed are also recorded in the trail.
31510
31511Note that if @code{calcFunc-myfact} returns @code{nil} this represents
31512``leave the function in symbolic form.'' To return an actual empty list,
31513in the sense that @code{calc-enter-result} will push zero elements back
31514onto the stack, you should return the special value @samp{'(nil)}, a list
31515containing the single symbol @code{nil}.
31516
31517The @code{interactive} declaration can actually contain a limited
31518Emacs-style code string as well which comes just before @var{num} and
31519@var{tag}. Currently the only Emacs code supported is @samp{"p"}, as in
31520
31521@example
31522(defmath foo (a b &optional c)
31523 (interactive "p" 2 "foo")
31524 @var{body})
31525@end example
31526
31527In this example, the command @code{calc-foo} will evaluate the expression
31528@samp{foo(a,b)} if executed with no argument, or @samp{foo(a,b,n)} if
31529executed with a numeric prefix argument of @cite{n}.
31530
31531The other code string allowed is @samp{"m"} (unrelated to the usual @samp{"m"}
31532code as used with @code{defun}). It uses the numeric prefix argument as the
31533number of objects to remove from the stack and pass to the function.
31534In this case, the integer @var{num} serves as a default number of
31535arguments to be used when no prefix is supplied.
31536
31537@node Argument Qualifiers, Example Definitions, Defining Stack Commands, Lisp Definitions
31538@subsection Argument Qualifiers
31539
31540@noindent
31541Anywhere a parameter name can appear in the parameter list you can also use
31542an @dfn{argument qualifier}. Thus the general form of a definition is:
31543
31544@example
31545(defmath @var{name} (@var{param} @var{param...}
31546 &optional @var{param} @var{param...}
31547 &rest @var{param})
31548 @var{body})
31549@end example
31550
31551@noindent
31552where each @var{param} is either a symbol or a list of the form
31553
31554@example
31555(@var{qual} @var{param})
31556@end example
31557
31558The following qualifiers are recognized:
31559
31560@table @samp
31561@item complete
31562@findex complete
31563The argument must not be an incomplete vector, interval, or complex number.
31564(This is rarely needed since the Calculator itself will never call your
31565function with an incomplete argument. But there is nothing stopping your
31566own Lisp code from calling your function with an incomplete argument.)@refill
31567
31568@item integer
31569@findex integer
31570The argument must be an integer. If it is an integer-valued float
31571it will be accepted but converted to integer form. Non-integers and
31572formulas are rejected.
31573
31574@item natnum
31575@findex natnum
31576Like @samp{integer}, but the argument must be non-negative.
31577
31578@item fixnum
31579@findex fixnum
31580Like @samp{integer}, but the argument must fit into a native Lisp integer,
31581which on most systems means less than 2^23 in absolute value. The
31582argument is converted into Lisp-integer form if necessary.
31583
31584@item float
31585@findex float
31586The argument is converted to floating-point format if it is a number or
31587vector. If it is a formula it is left alone. (The argument is never
31588actually rejected by this qualifier.)
31589
31590@item @var{pred}
31591The argument must satisfy predicate @var{pred}, which is one of the
31592standard Calculator predicates. @xref{Predicates}.
31593
31594@item not-@var{pred}
31595The argument must @emph{not} satisfy predicate @var{pred}.
31596@end table
31597
31598For example,
31599
31600@example
31601(defmath foo (a (constp (not-matrixp b)) &optional (float c)
31602 &rest (integer d))
31603 @var{body})
31604@end example
31605
31606@noindent
31607expands to
31608
31609@example
31610(defun calcFunc-foo (a b &optional c &rest d)
31611 (and (math-matrixp b)
31612 (math-reject-arg b 'not-matrixp))
31613 (or (math-constp b)
31614 (math-reject-arg b 'constp))
31615 (and c (setq c (math-check-float c)))
31616 (setq d (mapcar 'math-check-integer d))
31617 @var{body})
31618@end example
31619
31620@noindent
31621which performs the necessary checks and conversions before executing the
31622body of the function.
31623
31624@node Example Definitions, Calling Calc from Your Programs, Argument Qualifiers, Lisp Definitions
31625@subsection Example Definitions
31626
31627@noindent
31628This section includes some Lisp programming examples on a larger scale.
31629These programs make use of some of the Calculator's internal functions;
31630@pxref{Internals}.
31631
31632@menu
31633* Bit Counting Example::
31634* Sine Example::
31635@end menu
31636
31637@node Bit Counting Example, Sine Example, Example Definitions, Example Definitions
31638@subsubsection Bit-Counting
31639
31640@noindent
5d67986c
RS
31641@ignore
31642@starindex
31643@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
31644@tindex bcount
31645Calc does not include a built-in function for counting the number of
31646``one'' bits in a binary integer. It's easy to invent one using @kbd{b u}
31647to convert the integer to a set, and @kbd{V #} to count the elements of
31648that set; let's write a function that counts the bits without having to
31649create an intermediate set.
31650
31651@smallexample
31652(defmath bcount ((natnum n))
31653 (interactive 1 "bcnt")
31654 (let ((count 0))
31655 (while (> n 0)
31656 (if (oddp n)
31657 (setq count (1+ count)))
31658 (setq n (lsh n -1)))
31659 count))
31660@end smallexample
31661
31662@noindent
31663When this is expanded by @code{defmath}, it will become the following
31664Emacs Lisp function:
31665
31666@smallexample
31667(defun calcFunc-bcount (n)
31668 (setq n (math-check-natnum n))
31669 (let ((count 0))
31670 (while (math-posp n)
31671 (if (math-oddp n)
31672 (setq count (math-add count 1)))
31673 (setq n (calcFunc-lsh n -1)))
31674 count))
31675@end smallexample
31676
31677If the input numbers are large, this function involves a fair amount
31678of arithmetic. A binary right shift is essentially a division by two;
31679recall that Calc stores integers in decimal form so bit shifts must
31680involve actual division.
31681
31682To gain a bit more efficiency, we could divide the integer into
5d67986c 31683@var{n}-bit chunks, each of which can be handled quickly because
d7b8e6c6
EZ
31684they fit into Lisp integers. It turns out that Calc's arithmetic
31685routines are especially fast when dividing by an integer less than
5d67986c 316861000, so we can set @var{n = 9} bits and use repeated division by 512:
d7b8e6c6
EZ
31687
31688@smallexample
31689(defmath bcount ((natnum n))
31690 (interactive 1 "bcnt")
31691 (let ((count 0))
31692 (while (not (fixnump n))
31693 (let ((qr (idivmod n 512)))
31694 (setq count (+ count (bcount-fixnum (cdr qr)))
31695 n (car qr))))
31696 (+ count (bcount-fixnum n))))
31697
31698(defun bcount-fixnum (n)
31699 (let ((count 0))
31700 (while (> n 0)
31701 (setq count (+ count (logand n 1))
31702 n (lsh n -1)))
31703 count))
31704@end smallexample
31705
31706@noindent
31707Note that the second function uses @code{defun}, not @code{defmath}.
31708Because this function deals only with native Lisp integers (``fixnums''),
31709it can use the actual Emacs @code{+} and related functions rather
31710than the slower but more general Calc equivalents which @code{defmath}
31711uses.
31712
31713The @code{idivmod} function does an integer division, returning both
31714the quotient and the remainder at once. Again, note that while it
31715might seem that @samp{(logand n 511)} and @samp{(lsh n -9)} are
31716more efficient ways to split off the bottom nine bits of @code{n},
31717actually they are less efficient because each operation is really
31718a division by 512 in disguise; @code{idivmod} allows us to do the
31719same thing with a single division by 512.
31720
31721@node Sine Example, , Bit Counting Example, Example Definitions
31722@subsubsection The Sine Function
31723
31724@noindent
5d67986c
RS
31725@ignore
31726@starindex
31727@end ignore
d7b8e6c6
EZ
31728@tindex mysin
31729A somewhat limited sine function could be defined as follows, using the
31730well-known Taylor series expansion for @c{$\sin x$}
31731@samp{sin(x)}:
31732
31733@smallexample
31734(defmath mysin ((float (anglep x)))
31735 (interactive 1 "mysn")
31736 (setq x (to-radians x)) ; Convert from current angular mode.
31737 (let ((sum x) ; Initial term of Taylor expansion of sin.
31738 newsum
31739 (nfact 1) ; "nfact" equals "n" factorial at all times.
31740 (xnegsqr :"-(x^2)")) ; "xnegsqr" equals -x^2.
31741 (for ((n 3 100 2)) ; Upper limit of 100 is a good precaution.
31742 (working "mysin" sum) ; Display "Working" message, if enabled.
31743 (setq nfact (* nfact (1- n) n)
31744 x (* x xnegsqr)
31745 newsum (+ sum (/ x nfact)))
31746 (if (~= newsum sum) ; If newsum is "nearly equal to" sum,
31747 (break)) ; then we are done.
31748 (setq sum newsum))
31749 sum))
31750@end smallexample
31751
31752The actual @code{sin} function in Calc works by first reducing the problem
31753to a sine or cosine of a nonnegative number less than @c{$\pi \over 4$}
31754@cite{pi/4}. This
31755ensures that the Taylor series will converge quickly. Also, the calculation
31756is carried out with two extra digits of precision to guard against cumulative
31757round-off in @samp{sum}. Finally, complex arguments are allowed and handled
31758by a separate algorithm.
31759
31760@smallexample
31761(defmath mysin ((float (scalarp x)))
31762 (interactive 1 "mysn")
31763 (setq x (to-radians x)) ; Convert from current angular mode.
31764 (with-extra-prec 2 ; Evaluate with extra precision.
31765 (cond ((complexp x)
31766 (mysin-complex x))
31767 ((< x 0)
31768 (- (mysin-raw (- x))) ; Always call mysin-raw with x >= 0.
31769 (t (mysin-raw x))))))
31770
31771(defmath mysin-raw (x)
31772 (cond ((>= x 7)
31773 (mysin-raw (% x (two-pi)))) ; Now x < 7.
31774 ((> x (pi-over-2))
31775 (- (mysin-raw (- x (pi))))) ; Now -pi/2 <= x <= pi/2.
31776 ((> x (pi-over-4))
31777 (mycos-raw (- x (pi-over-2)))) ; Now -pi/2 <= x <= pi/4.
31778 ((< x (- (pi-over-4)))
31779 (- (mycos-raw (+ x (pi-over-2))))) ; Now -pi/4 <= x <= pi/4,
31780 (t (mysin-series x)))) ; so the series will be efficient.
31781@end smallexample
31782
31783@noindent
31784where @code{mysin-complex} is an appropriate function to handle complex
31785numbers, @code{mysin-series} is the routine to compute the sine Taylor
31786series as before, and @code{mycos-raw} is a function analogous to
31787@code{mysin-raw} for cosines.
31788
31789The strategy is to ensure that @cite{x} is nonnegative before calling
31790@code{mysin-raw}. This function then recursively reduces its argument
31791to a suitable range, namely, plus-or-minus @c{$\pi \over 4$}
31792@cite{pi/4}. Note that each
31793test, and particularly the first comparison against 7, is designed so
31794that small roundoff errors cannnot produce an infinite loop. (Suppose
31795we compared with @samp{(two-pi)} instead; if due to roundoff problems
31796the modulo operator ever returned @samp{(two-pi)} exactly, an infinite
31797recursion could result!) We use modulo only for arguments that will
31798clearly get reduced, knowing that the next rule will catch any reductions
31799that this rule misses.
31800
31801If a program is being written for general use, it is important to code
31802it carefully as shown in this second example. For quick-and-dirty programs,
31803when you know that your own use of the sine function will never encounter
31804a large argument, a simpler program like the first one shown is fine.
31805
31806@node Calling Calc from Your Programs, Internals, Example Definitions, Lisp Definitions
31807@subsection Calling Calc from Your Lisp Programs
31808
31809@noindent
31810A later section (@pxref{Internals}) gives a full description of
31811Calc's internal Lisp functions. It's not hard to call Calc from
31812inside your programs, but the number of these functions can be daunting.
31813So Calc provides one special ``programmer-friendly'' function called
31814@code{calc-eval} that can be made to do just about everything you
31815need. It's not as fast as the low-level Calc functions, but it's
31816much simpler to use!
31817
31818It may seem that @code{calc-eval} itself has a daunting number of
31819options, but they all stem from one simple operation.
31820
31821In its simplest manifestation, @samp{(calc-eval "1+2")} parses the
31822string @code{"1+2"} as if it were a Calc algebraic entry and returns
31823the result formatted as a string: @code{"3"}.
31824
31825Since @code{calc-eval} is on the list of recommended @code{autoload}
31826functions, you don't need to make any special preparations to load
31827Calc before calling @code{calc-eval} the first time. Calc will be
31828loaded and initialized for you.
31829
31830All the Calc modes that are currently in effect will be used when
31831evaluating the expression and formatting the result.
31832
31833@ifinfo
31834@example
31835
31836@end example
31837@end ifinfo
31838@subsubsection Additional Arguments to @code{calc-eval}
31839
31840@noindent
31841If the input string parses to a list of expressions, Calc returns
31842the results separated by @code{", "}. You can specify a different
31843separator by giving a second string argument to @code{calc-eval}:
31844@samp{(calc-eval "1+2,3+4" ";")} returns @code{"3;7"}.
31845
31846The ``separator'' can also be any of several Lisp symbols which
31847request other behaviors from @code{calc-eval}. These are discussed
31848one by one below.
31849
31850You can give additional arguments to be substituted for
31851@samp{$}, @samp{$$}, and so on in the main expression. For
31852example, @samp{(calc-eval "$/$$" nil "7" "1+1")} evaluates the
31853expression @code{"7/(1+1)"} to yield the result @code{"3.5"}
31854(assuming Fraction mode is not in effect). Note the @code{nil}
31855used as a placeholder for the item-separator argument.
31856
31857@ifinfo
31858@example
31859
31860@end example
31861@end ifinfo
31862@subsubsection Error Handling
31863
31864@noindent
31865If @code{calc-eval} encounters an error, it returns a list containing
31866the character position of the error, plus a suitable message as a
31867string. Note that @samp{1 / 0} is @emph{not} an error by Calc's
31868standards; it simply returns the string @code{"1 / 0"} which is the
31869division left in symbolic form. But @samp{(calc-eval "1/")} will
31870return the list @samp{(2 "Expected a number")}.
31871
31872If you bind the variable @code{calc-eval-error} to @code{t}
31873using a @code{let} form surrounding the call to @code{calc-eval},
31874errors instead call the Emacs @code{error} function which aborts
31875to the Emacs command loop with a beep and an error message.
31876
31877If you bind this variable to the symbol @code{string}, error messages
31878are returned as strings instead of lists. The character position is
31879ignored.
31880
31881As a courtesy to other Lisp code which may be using Calc, be sure
31882to bind @code{calc-eval-error} using @code{let} rather than changing
31883it permanently with @code{setq}.
31884
31885@ifinfo
31886@example
31887
31888@end example
31889@end ifinfo
31890@subsubsection Numbers Only
31891
31892@noindent
31893Sometimes it is preferable to treat @samp{1 / 0} as an error
31894rather than returning a symbolic result. If you pass the symbol
31895@code{num} as the second argument to @code{calc-eval}, results
31896that are not constants are treated as errors. The error message
31897reported is the first @code{calc-why} message if there is one,
31898or otherwise ``Number expected.''
31899
31900A result is ``constant'' if it is a number, vector, or other
31901object that does not include variables or function calls. If it
31902is a vector, the components must themselves be constants.
31903
31904@ifinfo
31905@example
31906
31907@end example
31908@end ifinfo
31909@subsubsection Default Modes
31910
31911@noindent
31912If the first argument to @code{calc-eval} is a list whose first
31913element is a formula string, then @code{calc-eval} sets all the
31914various Calc modes to their default values while the formula is
31915evaluated and formatted. For example, the precision is set to 12
31916digits, digit grouping is turned off, and the normal language
31917mode is used.
31918
31919This same principle applies to the other options discussed below.
31920If the first argument would normally be @var{x}, then it can also
31921be the list @samp{(@var{x})} to use the default mode settings.
31922
31923If there are other elements in the list, they are taken as
31924variable-name/value pairs which override the default mode
31925settings. Look at the documentation at the front of the
31926@file{calc.el} file to find the names of the Lisp variables for
31927the various modes. The mode settings are restored to their
31928original values when @code{calc-eval} is done.
31929
31930For example, @samp{(calc-eval '("$+$$" calc-internal-prec 8) 'num a b)}
31931computes the sum of two numbers, requiring a numeric result, and
31932using default mode settings except that the precision is 8 instead
31933of the default of 12.
31934
31935It's usually best to use this form of @code{calc-eval} unless your
31936program actually considers the interaction with Calc's mode settings
31937to be a feature. This will avoid all sorts of potential ``gotchas'';
31938consider what happens with @samp{(calc-eval "sqrt(2)" 'num)}
31939when the user has left Calc in symbolic mode or no-simplify mode.
31940
31941As another example, @samp{(equal (calc-eval '("$<$$") nil a b) "1")}
31942checks if the number in string @cite{a} is less than the one in
31943string @cite{b}. Without using a list, the integer 1 might
31944come out in a variety of formats which would be hard to test for
31945conveniently: @code{"1"}, @code{"8#1"}, @code{"00001"}. (But
31946see ``Predicates'' mode, below.)
31947
31948@ifinfo
31949@example
31950
31951@end example
31952@end ifinfo
31953@subsubsection Raw Numbers
31954
31955@noindent
31956Normally all input and output for @code{calc-eval} is done with strings.
31957You can do arithmetic with, say, @samp{(calc-eval "$+$$" nil a b)}
31958in place of @samp{(+ a b)}, but this is very inefficient since the
31959numbers must be converted to and from string format as they are passed
31960from one @code{calc-eval} to the next.
31961
31962If the separator is the symbol @code{raw}, the result will be returned
31963as a raw Calc data structure rather than a string. You can read about
31964how these objects look in the following sections, but usually you can
31965treat them as ``black box'' objects with no important internal
31966structure.
31967
31968There is also a @code{rawnum} symbol, which is a combination of
31969@code{raw} (returning a raw Calc object) and @code{num} (signalling
31970an error if that object is not a constant).
31971
31972You can pass a raw Calc object to @code{calc-eval} in place of a
31973string, either as the formula itself or as one of the @samp{$}
31974arguments. Thus @samp{(calc-eval "$+$$" 'raw a b)} is an
31975addition function that operates on raw Calc objects. Of course
31976in this case it would be easier to call the low-level @code{math-add}
31977function in Calc, if you can remember its name.
31978
31979In particular, note that a plain Lisp integer is acceptable to Calc
31980as a raw object. (All Lisp integers are accepted on input, but
31981integers of more than six decimal digits are converted to ``big-integer''
31982form for output. @xref{Data Type Formats}.)
31983
31984When it comes time to display the object, just use @samp{(calc-eval a)}
31985to format it as a string.
31986
31987It is an error if the input expression evaluates to a list of
31988values. The separator symbol @code{list} is like @code{raw}
31989except that it returns a list of one or more raw Calc objects.
31990
31991Note that a Lisp string is not a valid Calc object, nor is a list
31992containing a string. Thus you can still safely distinguish all the
31993various kinds of error returns discussed above.
31994
31995@ifinfo
31996@example
31997
31998@end example
31999@end ifinfo
32000@subsubsection Predicates
32001
32002@noindent
32003If the separator symbol is @code{pred}, the result of the formula is
32004treated as a true/false value; @code{calc-eval} returns @code{t} or
32005@code{nil}, respectively. A value is considered ``true'' if it is a
32006non-zero number, or false if it is zero or if it is not a number.
32007
32008For example, @samp{(calc-eval "$<$$" 'pred a b)} tests whether
32009one value is less than another.
32010
32011As usual, it is also possible for @code{calc-eval} to return one of
32012the error indicators described above. Lisp will interpret such an
32013indicator as ``true'' if you don't check for it explicitly. If you
32014wish to have an error register as ``false'', use something like
32015@samp{(eq (calc-eval ...) t)}.
32016
32017@ifinfo
32018@example
32019
32020@end example
32021@end ifinfo
32022@subsubsection Variable Values
32023
32024@noindent
32025Variables in the formula passed to @code{calc-eval} are not normally
32026replaced by their values. If you wish this, you can use the
32027@code{evalv} function (@pxref{Algebraic Manipulation}). For example,
32028if 4 is stored in Calc variable @code{a} (i.e., in Lisp variable
32029@code{var-a}), then @samp{(calc-eval "a+pi")} will return the
32030formula @code{"a + pi"}, but @samp{(calc-eval "evalv(a+pi)")}
32031will return @code{"7.14159265359"}.
32032
32033To store in a Calc variable, just use @code{setq} to store in the
32034corresponding Lisp variable. (This is obtained by prepending
32035@samp{var-} to the Calc variable name.) Calc routines will
32036understand either string or raw form values stored in variables,
32037although raw data objects are much more efficient. For example,
32038to increment the Calc variable @code{a}:
32039
32040@example
32041(setq var-a (calc-eval "evalv(a+1)" 'raw))
32042@end example
32043
32044@ifinfo
32045@example
32046
32047@end example
32048@end ifinfo
32049@subsubsection Stack Access
32050
32051@noindent
32052If the separator symbol is @code{push}, the formula argument is
32053evaluated (with possible @samp{$} expansions, as usual). The
32054result is pushed onto the Calc stack. The return value is @code{nil}
32055(unless there is an error from evaluating the formula, in which
32056case the return value depends on @code{calc-eval-error} in the
32057usual way).
32058
32059If the separator symbol is @code{pop}, the first argument to
32060@code{calc-eval} must be an integer instead of a string. That
32061many values are popped from the stack and thrown away. A negative
32062argument deletes the entry at that stack level. The return value
32063is the number of elements remaining in the stack after popping;
32064@samp{(calc-eval 0 'pop)} is a good way to measure the size of
32065the stack.
32066
32067If the separator symbol is @code{top}, the first argument to
32068@code{calc-eval} must again be an integer. The value at that
32069stack level is formatted as a string and returned. Thus
32070@samp{(calc-eval 1 'top)} returns the top-of-stack value. If the
32071integer is out of range, @code{nil} is returned.
32072
32073The separator symbol @code{rawtop} is just like @code{top} except
32074that the stack entry is returned as a raw Calc object instead of
32075as a string.
32076
32077In all of these cases the first argument can be made a list in
32078order to force the default mode settings, as described above.
32079Thus @samp{(calc-eval '(2 calc-number-radix 16) 'top)} returns the
32080second-to-top stack entry, formatted as a string using the default
32081instead of current display modes, except that the radix is
32082hexadecimal instead of decimal.
32083
32084It is, of course, polite to put the Calc stack back the way you
32085found it when you are done, unless the user of your program is
32086actually expecting it to affect the stack.
32087
32088Note that you do not actually have to switch into the @samp{*Calculator*}
32089buffer in order to use @code{calc-eval}; it temporarily switches into
32090the stack buffer if necessary.
32091
32092@ifinfo
32093@example
32094
32095@end example
32096@end ifinfo
32097@subsubsection Keyboard Macros
32098
32099@noindent
32100If the separator symbol is @code{macro}, the first argument must be a
32101string of characters which Calc can execute as a sequence of keystrokes.
32102This switches into the Calc buffer for the duration of the macro.
32103For example, @samp{(calc-eval "vx5\rVR+" 'macro)} pushes the
32104vector @samp{[1,2,3,4,5]} on the stack and then replaces it
32105with the sum of those numbers. Note that @samp{\r} is the Lisp
32106notation for the carriage-return, @key{RET}, character.
32107
32108If your keyboard macro wishes to pop the stack, @samp{\C-d} is
32109safer than @samp{\177} (the @key{DEL} character) because some
32110installations may have switched the meanings of @key{DEL} and
32111@kbd{C-h}. Calc always interprets @kbd{C-d} as a synonym for
32112``pop-stack'' regardless of key mapping.
32113
32114If you provide a third argument to @code{calc-eval}, evaluation
32115of the keyboard macro will leave a record in the Trail using
32116that argument as a tag string. Normally the Trail is unaffected.
32117
32118The return value in this case is always @code{nil}.
32119
32120@ifinfo
32121@example
32122
32123@end example
32124@end ifinfo
32125@subsubsection Lisp Evaluation
32126
32127@noindent
32128Finally, if the separator symbol is @code{eval}, then the Lisp
32129@code{eval} function is called on the first argument, which must
32130be a Lisp expression rather than a Calc formula. Remember to
32131quote the expression so that it is not evaluated until inside
32132@code{calc-eval}.
32133
32134The difference from plain @code{eval} is that @code{calc-eval}
32135switches to the Calc buffer before evaluating the expression.
32136For example, @samp{(calc-eval '(setq calc-internal-prec 17) 'eval)}
32137will correctly affect the buffer-local Calc precision variable.
32138
32139An alternative would be @samp{(calc-eval '(calc-precision 17) 'eval)}.
32140This is evaluating a call to the function that is normally invoked
32141by the @kbd{p} key, giving it 17 as its ``numeric prefix argument.''
32142Note that this function will leave a message in the echo area as
32143a side effect. Also, all Calc functions switch to the Calc buffer
32144automatically if not invoked from there, so the above call is
32145also equivalent to @samp{(calc-precision 17)} by itself.
32146In all cases, Calc uses @code{save-excursion} to switch back to
32147your original buffer when it is done.
32148
32149As usual the first argument can be a list that begins with a Lisp
32150expression to use default instead of current mode settings.
32151
32152The result of @code{calc-eval} in this usage is just the result
32153returned by the evaluated Lisp expression.
32154
32155@ifinfo
32156@example
32157
32158@end example
32159@end ifinfo
32160@subsubsection Example
32161
32162@noindent
32163@findex convert-temp
32164Here is a sample Emacs command that uses @code{calc-eval}. Suppose
32165you have a document with lots of references to temperatures on the
32166Fahrenheit scale, say ``98.6 F'', and you wish to convert these
32167references to Centigrade. The following command does this conversion.
32168Place the Emacs cursor right after the letter ``F'' and invoke the
32169command to change ``98.6 F'' to ``37 C''. Or, if the temperature is
32170already in Centigrade form, the command changes it back to Fahrenheit.
32171
32172@example
32173(defun convert-temp ()
32174 (interactive)
32175 (save-excursion
32176 (re-search-backward "[^-.0-9]\\([-.0-9]+\\) *\\([FC]\\)")
32177 (let* ((top1 (match-beginning 1))
32178 (bot1 (match-end 1))
32179 (number (buffer-substring top1 bot1))
32180 (top2 (match-beginning 2))
32181 (bot2 (match-end 2))
32182 (type (buffer-substring top2 bot2)))
32183 (if (equal type "F")
32184 (setq type "C"
32185 number (calc-eval "($ - 32)*5/9" nil number))
32186 (setq type "F"
32187 number (calc-eval "$*9/5 + 32" nil number)))
32188 (goto-char top2)
32189 (delete-region top2 bot2)
32190 (insert-before-markers type)
32191 (goto-char top1)
32192 (delete-region top1 bot1)
32193 (if (string-match "\\.$" number) ; change "37." to "37"
32194 (setq number (substring number 0 -1)))
32195 (insert number))))
32196@end example
32197
32198Note the use of @code{insert-before-markers} when changing between
32199``F'' and ``C'', so that the character winds up before the cursor
32200instead of after it.
32201
32202@node Internals, , Calling Calc from Your Programs, Lisp Definitions
32203@subsection Calculator Internals
32204
32205@noindent
32206This section describes the Lisp functions defined by the Calculator that
32207may be of use to user-written Calculator programs (as described in the
32208rest of this chapter). These functions are shown by their names as they
32209conventionally appear in @code{defmath}. Their full Lisp names are
32210generally gotten by prepending @samp{calcFunc-} or @samp{math-} to their
32211apparent names. (Names that begin with @samp{calc-} are already in
32212their full Lisp form.) You can use the actual full names instead if you
32213prefer them, or if you are calling these functions from regular Lisp.
32214
32215The functions described here are scattered throughout the various
32216Calc component files. Note that @file{calc.el} includes @code{autoload}s
32217for only a few component files; when Calc wants to call an advanced
32218function it calls @samp{(calc-extensions)} first; this function
32219autoloads @file{calc-ext.el}, which in turn autoloads all the functions
32220in the remaining component files.
32221
32222Because @code{defmath} itself uses the extensions, user-written code
32223generally always executes with the extensions already loaded, so
32224normally you can use any Calc function and be confident that it will
32225be autoloaded for you when necessary. If you are doing something
32226special, check carefully to make sure each function you are using is
32227from @file{calc.el} or its components, and call @samp{(calc-extensions)}
32228before using any function based in @file{calc-ext.el} if you can't
32229prove this file will already be loaded.
32230
32231@menu
32232* Data Type Formats::
32233* Interactive Lisp Functions::
32234* Stack Lisp Functions::
32235* Predicates::
32236* Computational Lisp Functions::
32237* Vector Lisp Functions::
32238* Symbolic Lisp Functions::
32239* Formatting Lisp Functions::
32240* Hooks::
32241@end menu
32242
32243@node Data Type Formats, Interactive Lisp Functions, Internals, Internals
32244@subsubsection Data Type Formats
32245
32246@noindent
32247Integers are stored in either of two ways, depending on their magnitude.
32248Integers less than one million in absolute value are stored as standard
32249Lisp integers. This is the only storage format for Calc data objects
32250which is not a Lisp list.
32251
32252Large integers are stored as lists of the form @samp{(bigpos @var{d0}
32253@var{d1} @var{d2} @dots{})} for positive integers 1000000 or more, or
32254@samp{(bigneg @var{d0} @var{d1} @var{d2} @dots{})} for negative integers
32255@i{-1000000} or less. Each @var{d} is a base-1000 ``digit,'' a Lisp integer
32256from 0 to 999. The least significant digit is @var{d0}; the last digit,
32257@var{dn}, which is always nonzero, is the most significant digit. For
32258example, the integer @i{-12345678} is stored as @samp{(bigneg 678 345 12)}.
32259
32260The distinction between small and large integers is entirely hidden from
32261the user. In @code{defmath} definitions, the Lisp predicate @code{integerp}
32262returns true for either kind of integer, and in general both big and small
32263integers are accepted anywhere the word ``integer'' is used in this manual.
32264If the distinction must be made, native Lisp integers are called @dfn{fixnums}
32265and large integers are called @dfn{bignums}.
32266
32267Fractions are stored as a list of the form, @samp{(frac @var{n} @var{d})}
32268where @var{n} is an integer (big or small) numerator, @var{d} is an
32269integer denominator greater than one, and @var{n} and @var{d} are relatively
32270prime. Note that fractions where @var{d} is one are automatically converted
32271to plain integers by all math routines; fractions where @var{d} is negative
32272are normalized by negating the numerator and denominator.
32273
32274Floating-point numbers are stored in the form, @samp{(float @var{mant}
32275@var{exp})}, where @var{mant} (the ``mantissa'') is an integer less than
32276@samp{10^@var{p}} in absolute value (@var{p} represents the current
32277precision), and @var{exp} (the ``exponent'') is a fixnum. The value of
32278the float is @samp{@var{mant} * 10^@var{exp}}. For example, the number
32279@i{-3.14} is stored as @samp{(float -314 -2) = -314*10^-2}. Other constraints
32280are that the number 0.0 is always stored as @samp{(float 0 0)}, and,
32281except for the 0.0 case, the rightmost base-10 digit of @var{mant} is
32282always nonzero. (If the rightmost digit is zero, the number is
32283rearranged by dividing @var{mant} by ten and incrementing @var{exp}.)@refill
32284
32285Rectangular complex numbers are stored in the form @samp{(cplx @var{re}
32286@var{im})}, where @var{re} and @var{im} are each real numbers, either
32287integers, fractions, or floats. The value is @samp{@var{re} + @var{im}i}.
32288The @var{im} part is nonzero; complex numbers with zero imaginary
32289components are converted to real numbers automatically.@refill
32290
32291Polar complex numbers are stored in the form @samp{(polar @var{r}
32292@var{theta})}, where @var{r} is a positive real value and @var{theta}
32293is a real value or HMS form representing an angle. This angle is
32294usually normalized to lie in the interval @samp{(-180 ..@: 180)} degrees,
32295or @samp{(-pi ..@: pi)} radians, according to the current angular mode.
32296If the angle is 0 the value is converted to a real number automatically.
32297(If the angle is 180 degrees, the value is usually also converted to a
32298negative real number.)@refill
32299
32300Hours-minutes-seconds forms are stored as @samp{(hms @var{h} @var{m}
32301@var{s})}, where @var{h} is an integer or an integer-valued float (i.e.,
32302a float with @samp{@var{exp} >= 0}), @var{m} is an integer or integer-valued
32303float in the range @w{@samp{[0 ..@: 60)}}, and @var{s} is any real number
32304in the range @samp{[0 ..@: 60)}.@refill
32305
32306Date forms are stored as @samp{(date @var{n})}, where @var{n} is
32307a real number that counts days since midnight on the morning of
32308January 1, 1 AD. If @var{n} is an integer, this is a pure date
32309form. If @var{n} is a fraction or float, this is a date/time form.
32310
32311Modulo forms are stored as @samp{(mod @var{n} @var{m})}, where @var{m} is a
32312positive real number or HMS form, and @var{n} is a real number or HMS
32313form in the range @samp{[0 ..@: @var{m})}.
32314
32315Error forms are stored as @samp{(sdev @var{x} @var{sigma})}, where @var{x}
32316is the mean value and @var{sigma} is the standard deviation. Each
32317component is either a number, an HMS form, or a symbolic object
32318(a variable or function call). If @var{sigma} is zero, the value is
32319converted to a plain real number. If @var{sigma} is negative or
32320complex, it is automatically normalized to be a positive real.
32321
32322Interval forms are stored as @samp{(intv @var{mask} @var{lo} @var{hi})},
32323where @var{mask} is one of the integers 0, 1, 2, or 3, and @var{lo} and
32324@var{hi} are real numbers, HMS forms, or symbolic objects. The @var{mask}
32325is a binary integer where 1 represents the fact that the interval is
32326closed on the high end, and 2 represents the fact that it is closed on
32327the low end. (Thus 3 represents a fully closed interval.) The interval
32328@w{@samp{(intv 3 @var{x} @var{x})}} is converted to the plain number @var{x};
32329intervals @samp{(intv @var{mask} @var{x} @var{x})} for any other @var{mask}
32330represent empty intervals. If @var{hi} is less than @var{lo}, the interval
32331is converted to a standard empty interval by replacing @var{hi} with @var{lo}.
32332
32333Vectors are stored as @samp{(vec @var{v1} @var{v2} @dots{})}, where @var{v1}
32334is the first element of the vector, @var{v2} is the second, and so on.
32335An empty vector is stored as @samp{(vec)}. A matrix is simply a vector
32336where all @var{v}'s are themselves vectors of equal lengths. Note that
32337Calc vectors are unrelated to the Emacs Lisp ``vector'' type, which is
32338generally unused by Calc data structures.
32339
32340Variables are stored as @samp{(var @var{name} @var{sym})}, where
32341@var{name} is a Lisp symbol whose print name is used as the visible name
32342of the variable, and @var{sym} is a Lisp symbol in which the variable's
32343value is actually stored. Thus, @samp{(var pi var-pi)} represents the
32344special constant @samp{pi}. Almost always, the form is @samp{(var
32345@var{v} var-@var{v})}. If the variable name was entered with @code{#}
32346signs (which are converted to hyphens internally), the form is
32347@samp{(var @var{u} @var{v})}, where @var{u} is a symbol whose name
32348contains @code{#} characters, and @var{v} is a symbol that contains
32349@code{-} characters instead. The value of a variable is the Calc
32350object stored in its @var{sym} symbol's value cell. If the symbol's
32351value cell is void or if it contains @code{nil}, the variable has no
32352value. Special constants have the form @samp{(special-const
32353@var{value})} stored in their value cell, where @var{value} is a formula
32354which is evaluated when the constant's value is requested. Variables
32355which represent units are not stored in any special way; they are units
32356only because their names appear in the units table. If the value
32357cell contains a string, it is parsed to get the variable's value when
32358the variable is used.@refill
32359
32360A Lisp list with any other symbol as the first element is a function call.
32361The symbols @code{+}, @code{-}, @code{*}, @code{/}, @code{%}, @code{^},
32362and @code{|} represent special binary operators; these lists are always
32363of the form @samp{(@var{op} @var{lhs} @var{rhs})} where @var{lhs} is the
32364sub-formula on the lefthand side and @var{rhs} is the sub-formula on the
32365right. The symbol @code{neg} represents unary negation; this list is always
32366of the form @samp{(neg @var{arg})}. Any other symbol @var{func} represents a
32367function that would be displayed in function-call notation; the symbol
32368@var{func} is in general always of the form @samp{calcFunc-@var{name}}.
32369The function cell of the symbol @var{func} should contain a Lisp function
32370for evaluating a call to @var{func}. This function is passed the remaining
32371elements of the list (themselves already evaluated) as arguments; such
32372functions should return @code{nil} or call @code{reject-arg} to signify
32373that they should be left in symbolic form, or they should return a Calc
32374object which represents their value, or a list of such objects if they
32375wish to return multiple values. (The latter case is allowed only for
32376functions which are the outer-level call in an expression whose value is
32377about to be pushed on the stack; this feature is considered obsolete
32378and is not used by any built-in Calc functions.)@refill
32379
32380@node Interactive Lisp Functions, Stack Lisp Functions, Data Type Formats, Internals
32381@subsubsection Interactive Functions
32382
32383@noindent
32384The functions described here are used in implementing interactive Calc
32385commands. Note that this list is not exhaustive! If there is an
32386existing command that behaves similarly to the one you want to define,
32387you may find helpful tricks by checking the source code for that command.
32388
32389@defun calc-set-command-flag flag
32390Set the command flag @var{flag}. This is generally a Lisp symbol, but
32391may in fact be anything. The effect is to add @var{flag} to the list
32392stored in the variable @code{calc-command-flags}, unless it is already
32393there. @xref{Defining Simple Commands}.
32394@end defun
32395
32396@defun calc-clear-command-flag flag
32397If @var{flag} appears among the list of currently-set command flags,
32398remove it from that list.
32399@end defun
32400
32401@defun calc-record-undo rec
32402Add the ``undo record'' @var{rec} to the list of steps to take if the
32403current operation should need to be undone. Stack push and pop functions
32404automatically call @code{calc-record-undo}, so the kinds of undo records
32405you might need to create take the form @samp{(set @var{sym} @var{value})},
32406which says that the Lisp variable @var{sym} was changed and had previously
32407contained @var{value}; @samp{(store @var{var} @var{value})} which says that
32408the Calc variable @var{var} (a string which is the name of the symbol that
32409contains the variable's value) was stored and its previous value was
32410@var{value} (either a Calc data object, or @code{nil} if the variable was
32411previously void); or @samp{(eval @var{undo} @var{redo} @var{args} @dots{})},
32412which means that to undo requires calling the function @samp{(@var{undo}
32413@var{args} @dots{})} and, if the undo is later redone, calling
32414@samp{(@var{redo} @var{args} @dots{})}.@refill
32415@end defun
32416
32417@defun calc-record-why msg args
32418Record the error or warning message @var{msg}, which is normally a string.
32419This message will be replayed if the user types @kbd{w} (@code{calc-why});
32420if the message string begins with a @samp{*}, it is considered important
32421enough to display even if the user doesn't type @kbd{w}. If one or more
32422@var{args} are present, the displayed message will be of the form,
32423@samp{@var{msg}: @var{arg1}, @var{arg2}, @dots{}}, where the arguments are
32424formatted on the assumption that they are either strings or Calc objects of
32425some sort. If @var{msg} is a symbol, it is the name of a Calc predicate
32426(such as @code{integerp} or @code{numvecp}) which the arguments did not
32427satisfy; it is expanded to a suitable string such as ``Expected an
32428integer.'' The @code{reject-arg} function calls @code{calc-record-why}
32429automatically; @pxref{Predicates}.@refill
32430@end defun
32431
32432@defun calc-is-inverse
32433This predicate returns true if the current command is inverse,
32434i.e., if the Inverse (@kbd{I} key) flag was set.
32435@end defun
32436
32437@defun calc-is-hyperbolic
32438This predicate is the analogous function for the @kbd{H} key.
32439@end defun
32440
32441@node Stack Lisp Functions, Predicates, Interactive Lisp Functions, Internals
32442@subsubsection Stack-Oriented Functions
32443
32444@noindent
32445The functions described here perform various operations on the Calc
32446stack and trail. They are to be used in interactive Calc commands.
32447
32448@defun calc-push-list vals n
32449Push the Calc objects in list @var{vals} onto the stack at stack level
32450@var{n}. If @var{n} is omitted it defaults to 1, so that the elements
32451are pushed at the top of the stack. If @var{n} is greater than 1, the
32452elements will be inserted into the stack so that the last element will
32453end up at level @var{n}, the next-to-last at level @var{n}+1, etc.
32454The elements of @var{vals} are assumed to be valid Calc objects, and
32455are not evaluated, rounded, or renormalized in any way. If @var{vals}
32456is an empty list, nothing happens.@refill
32457
32458The stack elements are pushed without any sub-formula selections.
32459You can give an optional third argument to this function, which must
32460be a list the same size as @var{vals} of selections. Each selection
32461must be @code{eq} to some sub-formula of the corresponding formula
32462in @var{vals}, or @code{nil} if that formula should have no selection.
32463@end defun
32464
32465@defun calc-top-list n m
32466Return a list of the @var{n} objects starting at level @var{m} of the
32467stack. If @var{m} is omitted it defaults to 1, so that the elements are
32468taken from the top of the stack. If @var{n} is omitted, it also
32469defaults to 1, so that the top stack element (in the form of a
32470one-element list) is returned. If @var{m} is greater than 1, the
32471@var{m}th stack element will be at the end of the list, the @var{m}+1st
32472element will be next-to-last, etc. If @var{n} or @var{m} are out of
32473range, the command is aborted with a suitable error message. If @var{n}
32474is zero, the function returns an empty list. The stack elements are not
32475evaluated, rounded, or renormalized.@refill
32476
32477If any stack elements contain selections, and selections have not
32478been disabled by the @kbd{j e} (@code{calc-enable-selections}) command,
32479this function returns the selected portions rather than the entire
32480stack elements. It can be given a third ``selection-mode'' argument
32481which selects other behaviors. If it is the symbol @code{t}, then
32482a selection in any of the requested stack elements produces an
32483``illegal operation on selections'' error. If it is the symbol @code{full},
32484the whole stack entry is always returned regardless of selections.
32485If it is the symbol @code{sel}, the selected portion is always returned,
32486or @code{nil} if there is no selection. (This mode ignores the @kbd{j e}
32487command.) If the symbol is @code{entry}, the complete stack entry in
32488list form is returned; the first element of this list will be the whole
32489formula, and the third element will be the selection (or @code{nil}).
32490@end defun
32491
32492@defun calc-pop-stack n m
32493Remove the specified elements from the stack. The parameters @var{n}
32494and @var{m} are defined the same as for @code{calc-top-list}. The return
32495value of @code{calc-pop-stack} is uninteresting.
32496
32497If there are any selected sub-formulas among the popped elements, and
32498@kbd{j e} has not been used to disable selections, this produces an
32499error without changing the stack. If you supply an optional third
32500argument of @code{t}, the stack elements are popped even if they
32501contain selections.
32502@end defun
32503
32504@defun calc-record-list vals tag
32505This function records one or more results in the trail. The @var{vals}
32506are a list of strings or Calc objects. The @var{tag} is the four-character
32507tag string to identify the values. If @var{tag} is omitted, a blank tag
32508will be used.
32509@end defun
32510
32511@defun calc-normalize n
32512This function takes a Calc object and ``normalizes'' it. At the very
32513least this involves re-rounding floating-point values according to the
32514current precision and other similar jobs. Also, unless the user has
32515selected no-simplify mode (@pxref{Simplification Modes}), this involves
32516actually evaluating a formula object by executing the function calls
32517it contains, and possibly also doing algebraic simplification, etc.
32518@end defun
32519
32520@defun calc-top-list-n n m
32521This function is identical to @code{calc-top-list}, except that it calls
32522@code{calc-normalize} on the values that it takes from the stack. They
32523are also passed through @code{check-complete}, so that incomplete
32524objects will be rejected with an error message. All computational
32525commands should use this in preference to @code{calc-top-list}; the only
32526standard Calc commands that operate on the stack without normalizing
32527are stack management commands like @code{calc-enter} and @code{calc-roll-up}.
32528This function accepts the same optional selection-mode argument as
32529@code{calc-top-list}.
32530@end defun
32531
32532@defun calc-top-n m
32533This function is a convenient form of @code{calc-top-list-n} in which only
32534a single element of the stack is taken and returned, rather than a list
32535of elements. This also accepts an optional selection-mode argument.
32536@end defun
32537
32538@defun calc-enter-result n tag vals
32539This function is a convenient interface to most of the above functions.
32540The @var{vals} argument should be either a single Calc object, or a list
32541of Calc objects; the object or objects are normalized, and the top @var{n}
32542stack entries are replaced by the normalized objects. If @var{tag} is
32543non-@code{nil}, the normalized objects are also recorded in the trail.
32544A typical stack-based computational command would take the form,
32545
32546@smallexample
32547(calc-enter-result @var{n} @var{tag} (cons 'calcFunc-@var{func}
32548 (calc-top-list-n @var{n})))
32549@end smallexample
32550
32551If any of the @var{n} stack elements replaced contain sub-formula
32552selections, and selections have not been disabled by @kbd{j e},
32553this function takes one of two courses of action. If @var{n} is
32554equal to the number of elements in @var{vals}, then each element of
32555@var{vals} is spliced into the corresponding selection; this is what
32556happens when you use the @key{TAB} key, or when you use a unary
32557arithmetic operation like @code{sqrt}. If @var{vals} has only one
32558element but @var{n} is greater than one, there must be only one
32559selection among the top @var{n} stack elements; the element from
32560@var{vals} is spliced into that selection. This is what happens when
32561you use a binary arithmetic operation like @kbd{+}. Any other
32562combination of @var{n} and @var{vals} is an error when selections
32563are present.
32564@end defun
32565
32566@defun calc-unary-op tag func arg
32567This function implements a unary operator that allows a numeric prefix
32568argument to apply the operator over many stack entries. If the prefix
32569argument @var{arg} is @code{nil}, this uses @code{calc-enter-result}
32570as outlined above. Otherwise, it maps the function over several stack
32571elements; @pxref{Prefix Arguments}. For example,@refill
32572
32573@smallexample
32574(defun calc-zeta (arg)
32575 (interactive "P")
32576 (calc-unary-op "zeta" 'calcFunc-zeta arg))
32577@end smallexample
32578@end defun
32579
32580@defun calc-binary-op tag func arg ident unary
32581This function implements a binary operator, analogously to
32582@code{calc-unary-op}. The optional @var{ident} and @var{unary}
32583arguments specify the behavior when the prefix argument is zero or
32584one, respectively. If the prefix is zero, the value @var{ident}
32585is pushed onto the stack, if specified, otherwise an error message
32586is displayed. If the prefix is one, the unary function @var{unary}
32587is applied to the top stack element, or, if @var{unary} is not
32588specified, nothing happens. When the argument is two or more,
32589the binary function @var{func} is reduced across the top @var{arg}
32590stack elements; when the argument is negative, the function is
32591mapped between the next-to-top @i{-@var{arg}} stack elements and the
32592top element.@refill
32593@end defun
32594
32595@defun calc-stack-size
32596Return the number of elements on the stack as an integer. This count
32597does not include elements that have been temporarily hidden by stack
32598truncation; @pxref{Truncating the Stack}.
32599@end defun
32600
32601@defun calc-cursor-stack-index n
32602Move the point to the @var{n}th stack entry. If @var{n} is zero, this
32603will be the @samp{.} line. If @var{n} is from 1 to the current stack size,
32604this will be the beginning of the first line of that stack entry's display.
32605If line numbers are enabled, this will move to the first character of the
32606line number, not the stack entry itself.@refill
32607@end defun
32608
32609@defun calc-substack-height n
32610Return the number of lines between the beginning of the @var{n}th stack
32611entry and the bottom of the buffer. If @var{n} is zero, this
32612will be one (assuming no stack truncation). If all stack entries are
32613one line long (i.e., no matrices are displayed), the return value will
32614be equal @var{n}+1 as long as @var{n} is in range. (Note that in Big
32615mode, the return value includes the blank lines that separate stack
32616entries.)@refill
32617@end defun
32618
32619@defun calc-refresh
32620Erase the @code{*Calculator*} buffer and reformat its contents from memory.
32621This must be called after changing any parameter, such as the current
32622display radix, which might change the appearance of existing stack
32623entries. (During a keyboard macro invoked by the @kbd{X} key, refreshing
32624is suppressed, but a flag is set so that the entire stack will be refreshed
32625rather than just the top few elements when the macro finishes.)@refill
32626@end defun
32627
32628@node Predicates, Computational Lisp Functions, Stack Lisp Functions, Internals
32629@subsubsection Predicates
32630
32631@noindent
32632The functions described here are predicates, that is, they return a
32633true/false value where @code{nil} means false and anything else means
32634true. These predicates are expanded by @code{defmath}, for example,
32635from @code{zerop} to @code{math-zerop}. In many cases they correspond
32636to native Lisp functions by the same name, but are extended to cover
32637the full range of Calc data types.
32638
32639@defun zerop x
32640Returns true if @var{x} is numerically zero, in any of the Calc data
32641types. (Note that for some types, such as error forms and intervals,
32642it never makes sense to return true.) In @code{defmath}, the expression
32643@samp{(= x 0)} will automatically be converted to @samp{(math-zerop x)},
32644and @samp{(/= x 0)} will be converted to @samp{(not (math-zerop x))}.
32645@end defun
32646
32647@defun negp x
32648Returns true if @var{x} is negative. This accepts negative real numbers
32649of various types, negative HMS and date forms, and intervals in which
32650all included values are negative. In @code{defmath}, the expression
32651@samp{(< x 0)} will automatically be converted to @samp{(math-negp x)},
32652and @samp{(>= x 0)} will be converted to @samp{(not (math-negp x))}.
32653@end defun
32654
32655@defun posp x
32656Returns true if @var{x} is positive (and non-zero). For complex
32657numbers, none of these three predicates will return true.
32658@end defun
32659
32660@defun looks-negp x
32661Returns true if @var{x} is ``negative-looking.'' This returns true if
32662@var{x} is a negative number, or a formula with a leading minus sign
32663such as @samp{-a/b}. In other words, this is an object which can be
32664made simpler by calling @code{(- @var{x})}.
32665@end defun
32666
32667@defun integerp x
32668Returns true if @var{x} is an integer of any size.
32669@end defun
32670
32671@defun fixnump x
32672Returns true if @var{x} is a native Lisp integer.
32673@end defun
32674
32675@defun natnump x
32676Returns true if @var{x} is a nonnegative integer of any size.
32677@end defun
32678
32679@defun fixnatnump x
32680Returns true if @var{x} is a nonnegative Lisp integer.
32681@end defun
32682
32683@defun num-integerp x
32684Returns true if @var{x} is numerically an integer, i.e., either a
32685true integer or a float with no significant digits to the right of
32686the decimal point.
32687@end defun
32688
32689@defun messy-integerp x
32690Returns true if @var{x} is numerically, but not literally, an integer.
32691A value is @code{num-integerp} if it is @code{integerp} or
32692@code{messy-integerp} (but it is never both at once).
32693@end defun
32694
32695@defun num-natnump x
32696Returns true if @var{x} is numerically a nonnegative integer.
32697@end defun
32698
32699@defun evenp x
32700Returns true if @var{x} is an even integer.
32701@end defun
32702
32703@defun looks-evenp x
32704Returns true if @var{x} is an even integer, or a formula with a leading
32705multiplicative coefficient which is an even integer.
32706@end defun
32707
32708@defun oddp x
32709Returns true if @var{x} is an odd integer.
32710@end defun
32711
32712@defun ratp x
32713Returns true if @var{x} is a rational number, i.e., an integer or a
32714fraction.
32715@end defun
32716
32717@defun realp x
32718Returns true if @var{x} is a real number, i.e., an integer, fraction,
32719or floating-point number.
32720@end defun
32721
32722@defun anglep x
32723Returns true if @var{x} is a real number or HMS form.
32724@end defun
32725
32726@defun floatp x
32727Returns true if @var{x} is a float, or a complex number, error form,
32728interval, date form, or modulo form in which at least one component
32729is a float.
32730@end defun
32731
32732@defun complexp x
32733Returns true if @var{x} is a rectangular or polar complex number
32734(but not a real number).
32735@end defun
32736
32737@defun rect-complexp x
32738Returns true if @var{x} is a rectangular complex number.
32739@end defun
32740
32741@defun polar-complexp x
32742Returns true if @var{x} is a polar complex number.
32743@end defun
32744
32745@defun numberp x
32746Returns true if @var{x} is a real number or a complex number.
32747@end defun
32748
32749@defun scalarp x
32750Returns true if @var{x} is a real or complex number or an HMS form.
32751@end defun
32752
32753@defun vectorp x
32754Returns true if @var{x} is a vector (this simply checks if its argument
32755is a list whose first element is the symbol @code{vec}).
32756@end defun
32757
32758@defun numvecp x
32759Returns true if @var{x} is a number or vector.
32760@end defun
32761
32762@defun matrixp x
32763Returns true if @var{x} is a matrix, i.e., a vector of one or more vectors,
32764all of the same size.
32765@end defun
32766
32767@defun square-matrixp x
32768Returns true if @var{x} is a square matrix.
32769@end defun
32770
32771@defun objectp x
32772Returns true if @var{x} is any numeric Calc object, including real and
32773complex numbers, HMS forms, date forms, error forms, intervals, and
32774modulo forms. (Note that error forms and intervals may include formulas
32775as their components; see @code{constp} below.)
32776@end defun
32777
32778@defun objvecp x
32779Returns true if @var{x} is an object or a vector. This also accepts
32780incomplete objects, but it rejects variables and formulas (except as
32781mentioned above for @code{objectp}).
32782@end defun
32783
32784@defun primp x
32785Returns true if @var{x} is a ``primitive'' or ``atomic'' Calc object,
32786i.e., one whose components cannot be regarded as sub-formulas. This
32787includes variables, and all @code{objectp} types except error forms
32788and intervals.
32789@end defun
32790
32791@defun constp x
32792Returns true if @var{x} is constant, i.e., a real or complex number,
32793HMS form, date form, or error form, interval, or vector all of whose
32794components are @code{constp}.
32795@end defun
32796
32797@defun lessp x y
32798Returns true if @var{x} is numerically less than @var{y}. Returns false
32799if @var{x} is greater than or equal to @var{y}, or if the order is
32800undefined or cannot be determined. Generally speaking, this works
32801by checking whether @samp{@var{x} - @var{y}} is @code{negp}. In
32802@code{defmath}, the expression @samp{(< x y)} will automatically be
32803converted to @samp{(lessp x y)}; expressions involving @code{>}, @code{<=},
32804and @code{>=} are similarly converted in terms of @code{lessp}.@refill
32805@end defun
32806
32807@defun beforep x y
32808Returns true if @var{x} comes before @var{y} in a canonical ordering
32809of Calc objects. If @var{x} and @var{y} are both real numbers, this
32810will be the same as @code{lessp}. But whereas @code{lessp} considers
32811other types of objects to be unordered, @code{beforep} puts any two
32812objects into a definite, consistent order. The @code{beforep}
32813function is used by the @kbd{V S} vector-sorting command, and also
32814by @kbd{a s} to put the terms of a product into canonical order:
32815This allows @samp{x y + y x} to be simplified easily to @samp{2 x y}.
32816@end defun
32817
32818@defun equal x y
32819This is the standard Lisp @code{equal} predicate; it returns true if
32820@var{x} and @var{y} are structurally identical. This is the usual way
32821to compare numbers for equality, but note that @code{equal} will treat
328220 and 0.0 as different.
32823@end defun
32824
32825@defun math-equal x y
32826Returns true if @var{x} and @var{y} are numerically equal, either because
32827they are @code{equal}, or because their difference is @code{zerop}. In
32828@code{defmath}, the expression @samp{(= x y)} will automatically be
32829converted to @samp{(math-equal x y)}.
32830@end defun
32831
32832@defun equal-int x n
32833Returns true if @var{x} and @var{n} are numerically equal, where @var{n}
32834is a fixnum which is not a multiple of 10. This will automatically be
32835used by @code{defmath} in place of the more general @code{math-equal}
32836whenever possible.@refill
32837@end defun
32838
32839@defun nearly-equal x y
32840Returns true if @var{x} and @var{y}, as floating-point numbers, are
32841equal except possibly in the last decimal place. For example,
32842314.159 and 314.166 are considered nearly equal if the current
32843precision is 6 (since they differ by 7 units), but not if the current
32844precision is 7 (since they differ by 70 units). Most functions which
32845use series expansions use @code{with-extra-prec} to evaluate the
32846series with 2 extra digits of precision, then use @code{nearly-equal}
32847to decide when the series has converged; this guards against cumulative
32848error in the series evaluation without doing extra work which would be
32849lost when the result is rounded back down to the current precision.
32850In @code{defmath}, this can be written @samp{(~= @var{x} @var{y})}.
32851The @var{x} and @var{y} can be numbers of any kind, including complex.
32852@end defun
32853
32854@defun nearly-zerop x y
32855Returns true if @var{x} is nearly zero, compared to @var{y}. This
32856checks whether @var{x} plus @var{y} would by be @code{nearly-equal}
32857to @var{y} itself, to within the current precision, in other words,
32858if adding @var{x} to @var{y} would have a negligible effect on @var{y}
32859due to roundoff error. @var{X} may be a real or complex number, but
32860@var{y} must be real.
32861@end defun
32862
32863@defun is-true x
32864Return true if the formula @var{x} represents a true value in
32865Calc, not Lisp, terms. It tests if @var{x} is a non-zero number
32866or a provably non-zero formula.
32867@end defun
32868
32869@defun reject-arg val pred
32870Abort the current function evaluation due to unacceptable argument values.
32871This calls @samp{(calc-record-why @var{pred} @var{val})}, then signals a
32872Lisp error which @code{normalize} will trap. The net effect is that the
32873function call which led here will be left in symbolic form.@refill
32874@end defun
32875
32876@defun inexact-value
32877If Symbolic Mode is enabled, this will signal an error that causes
32878@code{normalize} to leave the formula in symbolic form, with the message
32879``Inexact result.'' (This function has no effect when not in Symbolic Mode.)
32880Note that if your function calls @samp{(sin 5)} in Symbolic Mode, the
32881@code{sin} function will call @code{inexact-value}, which will cause your
32882function to be left unsimplified. You may instead wish to call
32883@samp{(normalize (list 'calcFunc-sin 5))}, which in Symbolic Mode will
32884return the formula @samp{sin(5)} to your function.@refill
32885@end defun
32886
32887@defun overflow
32888This signals an error that will be reported as a floating-point overflow.
32889@end defun
32890
32891@defun underflow
32892This signals a floating-point underflow.
32893@end defun
32894
32895@node Computational Lisp Functions, Vector Lisp Functions, Predicates, Internals
32896@subsubsection Computational Functions
32897
32898@noindent
32899The functions described here do the actual computational work of the
32900Calculator. In addition to these, note that any function described in
32901the main body of this manual may be called from Lisp; for example, if
32902the documentation refers to the @code{calc-sqrt} [@code{sqrt}] command,
32903this means @code{calc-sqrt} is an interactive stack-based square-root
32904command and @code{sqrt} (which @code{defmath} expands to @code{calcFunc-sqrt})
32905is the actual Lisp function for taking square roots.@refill
32906
32907The functions @code{math-add}, @code{math-sub}, @code{math-mul},
32908@code{math-div}, @code{math-mod}, and @code{math-neg} are not included
32909in this list, since @code{defmath} allows you to write native Lisp
32910@code{+}, @code{-}, @code{*}, @code{/}, @code{%}, and unary @code{-},
32911respectively, instead.@refill
32912
32913@defun normalize val
32914(Full form: @code{math-normalize}.)
32915Reduce the value @var{val} to standard form. For example, if @var{val}
32916is a fixnum, it will be converted to a bignum if it is too large, and
32917if @var{val} is a bignum it will be normalized by clipping off trailing
32918(i.e., most-significant) zero digits and converting to a fixnum if it is
32919small. All the various data types are similarly converted to their standard
32920forms. Variables are left alone, but function calls are actually evaluated
32921in formulas. For example, normalizing @samp{(+ 2 (calcFunc-abs -4))} will
32922return 6.@refill
32923
32924If a function call fails, because the function is void or has the wrong
32925number of parameters, or because it returns @code{nil} or calls
32926@code{reject-arg} or @code{inexact-result}, @code{normalize} returns
32927the formula still in symbolic form.@refill
32928
32929If the current Simplification Mode is ``none'' or ``numeric arguments
32930only,'' @code{normalize} will act appropriately. However, the more
32931powerful simplification modes (like algebraic simplification) are
32932not handled by @code{normalize}. They are handled by @code{calc-normalize},
32933which calls @code{normalize} and possibly some other routines, such
32934as @code{simplify} or @code{simplify-units}. Programs generally will
32935never call @code{calc-normalize} except when popping or pushing values
32936on the stack.@refill
32937@end defun
32938
32939@defun evaluate-expr expr
32940Replace all variables in @var{expr} that have values with their values,
32941then use @code{normalize} to simplify the result. This is what happens
32942when you press the @kbd{=} key interactively.@refill
32943@end defun
32944
32945@defmac with-extra-prec n body
32946Evaluate the Lisp forms in @var{body} with precision increased by @var{n}
32947digits. This is a macro which expands to
32948
32949@smallexample
32950(math-normalize
32951 (let ((calc-internal-prec (+ calc-internal-prec @var{n})))
32952 @var{body}))
32953@end smallexample
32954
32955The surrounding call to @code{math-normalize} causes a floating-point
32956result to be rounded down to the original precision afterwards. This
32957is important because some arithmetic operations assume a number's
32958mantissa contains no more digits than the current precision allows.
32959@end defmac
32960
32961@defun make-frac n d
32962Build a fraction @samp{@var{n}:@var{d}}. This is equivalent to calling
32963@samp{(normalize (list 'frac @var{n} @var{d}))}, but more efficient.
32964@end defun
32965
32966@defun make-float mant exp
32967Build a floating-point value out of @var{mant} and @var{exp}, both
32968of which are arbitrary integers. This function will return a
32969properly normalized float value, or signal an overflow or underflow
32970if @var{exp} is out of range.
32971@end defun
32972
32973@defun make-sdev x sigma
32974Build an error form out of @var{x} and the absolute value of @var{sigma}.
32975If @var{sigma} is zero, the result is the number @var{x} directly.
32976If @var{sigma} is negative or complex, its absolute value is used.
32977If @var{x} or @var{sigma} is not a valid type of object for use in
32978error forms, this calls @code{reject-arg}.
32979@end defun
32980
32981@defun make-intv mask lo hi
32982Build an interval form out of @var{mask} (which is assumed to be an
32983integer from 0 to 3), and the limits @var{lo} and @var{hi}. If
32984@var{lo} is greater than @var{hi}, an empty interval form is returned.
32985This calls @code{reject-arg} if @var{lo} or @var{hi} is unsuitable.
32986@end defun
32987
32988@defun sort-intv mask lo hi
32989Build an interval form, similar to @code{make-intv}, except that if
32990@var{lo} is less than @var{hi} they are simply exchanged, and the
32991bits of @var{mask} are swapped accordingly.
32992@end defun
32993
32994@defun make-mod n m
32995Build a modulo form out of @var{n} and the modulus @var{m}. Since modulo
32996forms do not allow formulas as their components, if @var{n} or @var{m}
32997is not a real number or HMS form the result will be a formula which
32998is a call to @code{makemod}, the algebraic version of this function.
32999@end defun
33000
33001@defun float x
33002Convert @var{x} to floating-point form. Integers and fractions are
33003converted to numerically equivalent floats; components of complex
33004numbers, vectors, HMS forms, date forms, error forms, intervals, and
33005modulo forms are recursively floated. If the argument is a variable
33006or formula, this calls @code{reject-arg}.
33007@end defun
33008
33009@defun compare x y
33010Compare the numbers @var{x} and @var{y}, and return @i{-1} if
33011@samp{(lessp @var{x} @var{y})}, 1 if @samp{(lessp @var{y} @var{x})},
330120 if @samp{(math-equal @var{x} @var{y})}, or 2 if the order is
33013undefined or cannot be determined.@refill
33014@end defun
33015
33016@defun numdigs n
33017Return the number of digits of integer @var{n}, effectively
33018@samp{ceil(log10(@var{n}))}, but much more efficient. Zero is
33019considered to have zero digits.
33020@end defun
33021
33022@defun scale-int x n
33023Shift integer @var{x} left @var{n} decimal digits, or right @i{-@var{n}}
33024digits with truncation toward zero.
33025@end defun
33026
33027@defun scale-rounding x n
33028Like @code{scale-int}, except that a right shift rounds to the nearest
33029integer rather than truncating.
33030@end defun
33031
33032@defun fixnum n
33033Return the integer @var{n} as a fixnum, i.e., a native Lisp integer.
33034If @var{n} is outside the permissible range for Lisp integers (usually
3303524 binary bits) the result is undefined.
33036@end defun
33037
33038@defun sqr x
33039Compute the square of @var{x}; short for @samp{(* @var{x} @var{x})}.
33040@end defun
33041
33042@defun quotient x y
33043Divide integer @var{x} by integer @var{y}; return an integer quotient
33044and discard the remainder. If @var{x} or @var{y} is negative, the
33045direction of rounding is undefined.
33046@end defun
33047
33048@defun idiv x y
33049Perform an integer division; if @var{x} and @var{y} are both nonnegative
33050integers, this uses the @code{quotient} function, otherwise it computes
33051@samp{floor(@var{x}/@var{y})}. Thus the result is well-defined but
33052slower than for @code{quotient}.
33053@end defun
33054
33055@defun imod x y
33056Divide integer @var{x} by integer @var{y}; return the integer remainder
33057and discard the quotient. Like @code{quotient}, this works only for
33058integer arguments and is not well-defined for negative arguments.
33059For a more well-defined result, use @samp{(% @var{x} @var{y})}.
33060@end defun
33061
33062@defun idivmod x y
33063Divide integer @var{x} by integer @var{y}; return a cons cell whose
33064@code{car} is @samp{(quotient @var{x} @var{y})} and whose @code{cdr}
33065is @samp{(imod @var{x} @var{y})}.@refill
33066@end defun
33067
33068@defun pow x y
33069Compute @var{x} to the power @var{y}. In @code{defmath} code, this can
33070also be written @samp{(^ @var{x} @var{y})} or
33071@w{@samp{(expt @var{x} @var{y})}}.@refill
33072@end defun
33073
33074@defun abs-approx x
33075Compute a fast approximation to the absolute value of @var{x}. For
33076example, for a rectangular complex number the result is the sum of
33077the absolute values of the components.
33078@end defun
33079
33080@findex two-pi
33081@findex pi-over-2
33082@findex pi-over-4
33083@findex pi-over-180
33084@findex sqrt-two-pi
33085@findex sqrt-e
33086@findex e
33087@findex ln-2
33088@findex ln-10
33089@defun pi
33090The function @samp{(pi)} computes @samp{pi} to the current precision.
33091Other related constant-generating functions are @code{two-pi},
33092@code{pi-over-2}, @code{pi-over-4}, @code{pi-over-180}, @code{sqrt-two-pi},
33093@code{e}, @code{sqrt-e}, @code{ln-2}, and @code{ln-10}. Each function
33094returns a floating-point value in the current precision, and each uses
33095caching so that all calls after the first are essentially free.@refill
33096@end defun
33097
33098@defmac math-defcache @var{func} @var{initial} @var{form}
33099This macro, usually used as a top-level call like @code{defun} or
33100@code{defvar}, defines a new cached constant analogous to @code{pi}, etc.
33101It defines a function @code{func} which returns the requested value;
33102if @var{initial} is non-@code{nil} it must be a @samp{(float @dots{})}
33103form which serves as an initial value for the cache. If @var{func}
33104is called when the cache is empty or does not have enough digits to
33105satisfy the current precision, the Lisp expression @var{form} is evaluated
33106with the current precision increased by four, and the result minus its
33107two least significant digits is stored in the cache. For example,
33108calling @samp{(pi)} with a precision of 30 computes @samp{pi} to 34
33109digits, rounds it down to 32 digits for future use, then rounds it
33110again to 30 digits for use in the present request.@refill
33111@end defmac
33112
33113@findex half-circle
33114@findex quarter-circle
33115@defun full-circle symb
33116If the current angular mode is Degrees or HMS, this function returns the
33117integer 360. In Radians mode, this function returns either the
33118corresponding value in radians to the current precision, or the formula
33119@samp{2*pi}, depending on the Symbolic Mode. There are also similar
33120function @code{half-circle} and @code{quarter-circle}.
33121@end defun
33122
33123@defun power-of-2 n
33124Compute two to the integer power @var{n}, as a (potentially very large)
33125integer. Powers of two are cached, so only the first call for a
33126particular @var{n} is expensive.
33127@end defun
33128
33129@defun integer-log2 n
33130Compute the base-2 logarithm of @var{n}, which must be an integer which
33131is a power of two. If @var{n} is not a power of two, this function will
33132return @code{nil}.
33133@end defun
33134
33135@defun div-mod a b m
33136Divide @var{a} by @var{b}, modulo @var{m}. This returns @code{nil} if
33137there is no solution, or if any of the arguments are not integers.@refill
33138@end defun
33139
33140@defun pow-mod a b m
33141Compute @var{a} to the power @var{b}, modulo @var{m}. If @var{a},
33142@var{b}, and @var{m} are integers, this uses an especially efficient
33143algorithm. Otherwise, it simply computes @samp{(% (^ a b) m)}.
33144@end defun
33145
33146@defun isqrt n
33147Compute the integer square root of @var{n}. This is the square root
33148of @var{n} rounded down toward zero, i.e., @samp{floor(sqrt(@var{n}))}.
33149If @var{n} is itself an integer, the computation is especially efficient.
33150@end defun
33151
33152@defun to-hms a ang
33153Convert the argument @var{a} into an HMS form. If @var{ang} is specified,
33154it is the angular mode in which to interpret @var{a}, either @code{deg}
33155or @code{rad}. Otherwise, the current angular mode is used. If @var{a}
33156is already an HMS form it is returned as-is.
33157@end defun
33158
33159@defun from-hms a ang
33160Convert the HMS form @var{a} into a real number. If @var{ang} is specified,
33161it is the angular mode in which to express the result, otherwise the
33162current angular mode is used. If @var{a} is already a real number, it
33163is returned as-is.
33164@end defun
33165
33166@defun to-radians a
33167Convert the number or HMS form @var{a} to radians from the current
33168angular mode.
33169@end defun
33170
33171@defun from-radians a
33172Convert the number @var{a} from radians to the current angular mode.
33173If @var{a} is a formula, this returns the formula @samp{deg(@var{a})}.
33174@end defun
33175
33176@defun to-radians-2 a
33177Like @code{to-radians}, except that in Symbolic Mode a degrees to
33178radians conversion yields a formula like @samp{@var{a}*pi/180}.
33179@end defun
33180
33181@defun from-radians-2 a
33182Like @code{from-radians}, except that in Symbolic Mode a radians to
33183degrees conversion yields a formula like @samp{@var{a}*180/pi}.
33184@end defun
33185
33186@defun random-digit
33187Produce a random base-1000 digit in the range 0 to 999.
33188@end defun
33189
33190@defun random-digits n
33191Produce a random @var{n}-digit integer; this will be an integer
33192in the interval @samp{[0, 10^@var{n})}.
33193@end defun
33194
33195@defun random-float
33196Produce a random float in the interval @samp{[0, 1)}.
33197@end defun
33198
33199@defun prime-test n iters
33200Determine whether the integer @var{n} is prime. Return a list which has
33201one of these forms: @samp{(nil @var{f})} means the number is non-prime
33202because it was found to be divisible by @var{f}; @samp{(nil)} means it
33203was found to be non-prime by table look-up (so no factors are known);
33204@samp{(nil unknown)} means it is definitely non-prime but no factors
33205are known because @var{n} was large enough that Fermat's probabilistic
33206test had to be used; @samp{(t)} means the number is definitely prime;
33207and @samp{(maybe @var{i} @var{p})} means that Fermat's test, after @var{i}
33208iterations, is @var{p} percent sure that the number is prime. The
33209@var{iters} parameter is the number of Fermat iterations to use, in the
33210case that this is necessary. If @code{prime-test} returns ``maybe,''
33211you can call it again with the same @var{n} to get a greater certainty;
33212@code{prime-test} remembers where it left off.@refill
33213@end defun
33214
33215@defun to-simple-fraction f
33216If @var{f} is a floating-point number which can be represented exactly
33217as a small rational number. return that number, else return @var{f}.
33218For example, 0.75 would be converted to 3:4. This function is very
33219fast.
33220@end defun
33221
33222@defun to-fraction f tol
33223Find a rational approximation to floating-point number @var{f} to within
33224a specified tolerance @var{tol}; this corresponds to the algebraic
33225function @code{frac}, and can be rather slow.
33226@end defun
33227
33228@defun quarter-integer n
33229If @var{n} is an integer or integer-valued float, this function
33230returns zero. If @var{n} is a half-integer (i.e., an integer plus
33231@i{1:2} or 0.5), it returns 2. If @var{n} is a quarter-integer,
33232it returns 1 or 3. If @var{n} is anything else, this function
33233returns @code{nil}.
33234@end defun
33235
33236@node Vector Lisp Functions, Symbolic Lisp Functions, Computational Lisp Functions, Internals
33237@subsubsection Vector Functions
33238
33239@noindent
33240The functions described here perform various operations on vectors and
33241matrices.
33242
33243@defun math-concat x y
33244Do a vector concatenation; this operation is written @samp{@var{x} | @var{y}}
33245in a symbolic formula. @xref{Building Vectors}.
33246@end defun
33247
33248@defun vec-length v
33249Return the length of vector @var{v}. If @var{v} is not a vector, the
33250result is zero. If @var{v} is a matrix, this returns the number of
33251rows in the matrix.
33252@end defun
33253
33254@defun mat-dimens m
33255Determine the dimensions of vector or matrix @var{m}. If @var{m} is not
33256a vector, the result is an empty list. If @var{m} is a plain vector
33257but not a matrix, the result is a one-element list containing the length
33258of the vector. If @var{m} is a matrix with @var{r} rows and @var{c} columns,
33259the result is the list @samp{(@var{r} @var{c})}. Higher-order tensors
33260produce lists of more than two dimensions. Note that the object
33261@samp{[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5]]} is a vector of vectors not all the same size,
33262and is treated by this and other Calc routines as a plain vector of two
33263elements.@refill
33264@end defun
33265
33266@defun dimension-error
33267Abort the current function with a message of ``Dimension error.''
33268The Calculator will leave the function being evaluated in symbolic
33269form; this is really just a special case of @code{reject-arg}.
33270@end defun
33271
33272@defun build-vector args
5d67986c 33273Return a Calc vector with @var{args} as elements.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
33274For example, @samp{(build-vector 1 2 3)} returns the Calc vector
33275@samp{[1, 2, 3]}, stored internally as the list @samp{(vec 1 2 3)}.
33276@end defun
33277
33278@defun make-vec obj dims
33279Return a Calc vector or matrix all of whose elements are equal to
33280@var{obj}. For example, @samp{(make-vec 27 3 4)} returns a 3x4 matrix
33281filled with 27's.
33282@end defun
33283
33284@defun row-matrix v
33285If @var{v} is a plain vector, convert it into a row matrix, i.e.,
33286a matrix whose single row is @var{v}. If @var{v} is already a matrix,
33287leave it alone.
33288@end defun
33289
33290@defun col-matrix v
33291If @var{v} is a plain vector, convert it into a column matrix, i.e., a
33292matrix with each element of @var{v} as a separate row. If @var{v} is
33293already a matrix, leave it alone.
33294@end defun
33295
33296@defun map-vec f v
33297Map the Lisp function @var{f} over the Calc vector @var{v}. For example,
33298@samp{(map-vec 'math-floor v)} returns a vector of the floored components
33299of vector @var{v}.
33300@end defun
33301
33302@defun map-vec-2 f a b
33303Map the Lisp function @var{f} over the two vectors @var{a} and @var{b}.
33304If @var{a} and @var{b} are vectors of equal length, the result is a
33305vector of the results of calling @samp{(@var{f} @var{ai} @var{bi})}
33306for each pair of elements @var{ai} and @var{bi}. If either @var{a} or
33307@var{b} is a scalar, it is matched with each value of the other vector.
33308For example, @samp{(map-vec-2 'math-add v 1)} returns the vector @var{v}
33309with each element increased by one. Note that using @samp{'+} would not
33310work here, since @code{defmath} does not expand function names everywhere,
33311just where they are in the function position of a Lisp expression.@refill
33312@end defun
33313
33314@defun reduce-vec f v
33315Reduce the function @var{f} over the vector @var{v}. For example, if
33316@var{v} is @samp{[10, 20, 30, 40]}, this calls @samp{(f (f (f 10 20) 30) 40)}.
33317If @var{v} is a matrix, this reduces over the rows of @var{v}.
33318@end defun
33319
33320@defun reduce-cols f m
33321Reduce the function @var{f} over the columns of matrix @var{m}. For
33322example, if @var{m} is @samp{[[1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6]]}, the result
33323is a vector of the two elements @samp{(f (f 1 3) 5)} and @samp{(f (f 2 4) 6)}.
33324@end defun
33325
33326@defun mat-row m n
33327Return the @var{n}th row of matrix @var{m}. This is equivalent to
33328@samp{(elt m n)}. For a slower but safer version, use @code{mrow}.
33329(@xref{Extracting Elements}.)
33330@end defun
33331
33332@defun mat-col m n
33333Return the @var{n}th column of matrix @var{m}, in the form of a vector.
33334The arguments are not checked for correctness.
33335@end defun
33336
33337@defun mat-less-row m n
33338Return a copy of matrix @var{m} with its @var{n}th row deleted. The
33339number @var{n} must be in range from 1 to the number of rows in @var{m}.
33340@end defun
33341
33342@defun mat-less-col m n
33343Return a copy of matrix @var{m} with its @var{n}th column deleted.
33344@end defun
33345
33346@defun transpose m
33347Return the transpose of matrix @var{m}.
33348@end defun
33349
33350@defun flatten-vector v
33351Flatten nested vector @var{v} into a vector of scalars. For example,
33352if @var{v} is @samp{[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5]]} the result is @samp{[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]}.
33353@end defun
33354
33355@defun copy-matrix m
33356If @var{m} is a matrix, return a copy of @var{m}. This maps
33357@code{copy-sequence} over the rows of @var{m}; in Lisp terms, each
33358element of the result matrix will be @code{eq} to the corresponding
33359element of @var{m}, but none of the @code{cons} cells that make up
33360the structure of the matrix will be @code{eq}. If @var{m} is a plain
33361vector, this is the same as @code{copy-sequence}.@refill
33362@end defun
33363
33364@defun swap-rows m r1 r2
33365Exchange rows @var{r1} and @var{r2} of matrix @var{m} in-place. In
33366other words, unlike most of the other functions described here, this
33367function changes @var{m} itself rather than building up a new result
33368matrix. The return value is @var{m}, i.e., @samp{(eq (swap-rows m 1 2) m)}
33369is true, with the side effect of exchanging the first two rows of
33370@var{m}.@refill
33371@end defun
33372
33373@node Symbolic Lisp Functions, Formatting Lisp Functions, Vector Lisp Functions, Internals
33374@subsubsection Symbolic Functions
33375
33376@noindent
33377The functions described here operate on symbolic formulas in the
33378Calculator.
33379
33380@defun calc-prepare-selection num
33381Prepare a stack entry for selection operations. If @var{num} is
33382omitted, the stack entry containing the cursor is used; otherwise,
33383it is the number of the stack entry to use. This function stores
33384useful information about the current stack entry into a set of
33385variables. @code{calc-selection-cache-num} contains the number of
33386the stack entry involved (equal to @var{num} if you specified it);
33387@code{calc-selection-cache-entry} contains the stack entry as a
33388list (such as @code{calc-top-list} would return with @code{entry}
33389as the selection mode); and @code{calc-selection-cache-comp} contains
33390a special ``tagged'' composition (@pxref{Formatting Lisp Functions})
33391which allows Calc to relate cursor positions in the buffer with
33392their corresponding sub-formulas.
33393
33394A slight complication arises in the selection mechanism because
33395formulas may contain small integers. For example, in the vector
33396@samp{[1, 2, 1]} the first and last elements are @code{eq} to each
33397other; selections are recorded as the actual Lisp object that
33398appears somewhere in the tree of the whole formula, but storing
33399@code{1} would falsely select both @code{1}'s in the vector. So
33400@code{calc-prepare-selection} also checks the stack entry and
33401replaces any plain integers with ``complex number'' lists of the form
33402@samp{(cplx @var{n} 0)}. This list will be displayed the same as a
33403plain @var{n} and the change will be completely invisible to the
33404user, but it will guarantee that no two sub-formulas of the stack
33405entry will be @code{eq} to each other. Next time the stack entry
33406is involved in a computation, @code{calc-normalize} will replace
33407these lists with plain numbers again, again invisibly to the user.
33408@end defun
33409
33410@defun calc-encase-atoms x
33411This modifies the formula @var{x} to ensure that each part of the
33412formula is a unique atom, using the @samp{(cplx @var{n} 0)} trick
33413described above. This function may use @code{setcar} to modify
33414the formula in-place.
33415@end defun
33416
33417@defun calc-find-selected-part
33418Find the smallest sub-formula of the current formula that contains
33419the cursor. This assumes @code{calc-prepare-selection} has been
33420called already. If the cursor is not actually on any part of the
33421formula, this returns @code{nil}.
33422@end defun
33423
33424@defun calc-change-current-selection selection
33425Change the currently prepared stack element's selection to
33426@var{selection}, which should be @code{eq} to some sub-formula
33427of the stack element, or @code{nil} to unselect the formula.
33428The stack element's appearance in the Calc buffer is adjusted
33429to reflect the new selection.
33430@end defun
33431
33432@defun calc-find-nth-part expr n
33433Return the @var{n}th sub-formula of @var{expr}. This function is used
33434by the selection commands, and (unless @kbd{j b} has been used) treats
33435sums and products as flat many-element formulas. Thus if @var{expr}
33436is @samp{((a + b) - c) + d}, calling @code{calc-find-nth-part} with
33437@var{n} equal to four will return @samp{d}.
33438@end defun
33439
33440@defun calc-find-parent-formula expr part
33441Return the sub-formula of @var{expr} which immediately contains
33442@var{part}. If @var{expr} is @samp{a*b + (c+1)*d} and @var{part}
33443is @code{eq} to the @samp{c+1} term of @var{expr}, then this function
33444will return @samp{(c+1)*d}. If @var{part} turns out not to be a
33445sub-formula of @var{expr}, the function returns @code{nil}. If
33446@var{part} is @code{eq} to @var{expr}, the function returns @code{t}.
33447This function does not take associativity into account.
33448@end defun
33449
33450@defun calc-find-assoc-parent-formula expr part
33451This is the same as @code{calc-find-parent-formula}, except that
33452(unless @kbd{j b} has been used) it continues widening the selection
33453to contain a complete level of the formula. Given @samp{a} from
33454@samp{((a + b) - c) + d}, @code{calc-find-parent-formula} will
33455return @samp{a + b} but @code{calc-find-assoc-parent-formula} will
33456return the whole expression.
33457@end defun
33458
33459@defun calc-grow-assoc-formula expr part
33460This expands sub-formula @var{part} of @var{expr} to encompass a
33461complete level of the formula. If @var{part} and its immediate
33462parent are not compatible associative operators, or if @kbd{j b}
33463has been used, this simply returns @var{part}.
33464@end defun
33465
33466@defun calc-find-sub-formula expr part
33467This finds the immediate sub-formula of @var{expr} which contains
33468@var{part}. It returns an index @var{n} such that
33469@samp{(calc-find-nth-part @var{expr} @var{n})} would return @var{part}.
33470If @var{part} is not a sub-formula of @var{expr}, it returns @code{nil}.
33471If @var{part} is @code{eq} to @var{expr}, it returns @code{t}. This
33472function does not take associativity into account.
33473@end defun
33474
33475@defun calc-replace-sub-formula expr old new
33476This function returns a copy of formula @var{expr}, with the
33477sub-formula that is @code{eq} to @var{old} replaced by @var{new}.
33478@end defun
33479
33480@defun simplify expr
33481Simplify the expression @var{expr} by applying various algebraic rules.
33482This is what the @w{@kbd{a s}} (@code{calc-simplify}) command uses. This
33483always returns a copy of the expression; the structure @var{expr} points
33484to remains unchanged in memory.
33485
33486More precisely, here is what @code{simplify} does: The expression is
33487first normalized and evaluated by calling @code{normalize}. If any
33488@code{AlgSimpRules} have been defined, they are then applied. Then
33489the expression is traversed in a depth-first, bottom-up fashion; at
33490each level, any simplifications that can be made are made until no
33491further changes are possible. Once the entire formula has been
33492traversed in this way, it is compared with the original formula (from
33493before the call to @code{normalize}) and, if it has changed,
33494the entire procedure is repeated (starting with @code{normalize})
33495until no further changes occur. Usually only two iterations are
33496needed:@: one to simplify the formula, and another to verify that no
33497further simplifications were possible.
33498@end defun
33499
33500@defun simplify-extended expr
33501Simplify the expression @var{expr}, with additional rules enabled that
33502help do a more thorough job, while not being entirely ``safe'' in all
33503circumstances. (For example, this mode will simplify @samp{sqrt(x^2)}
33504to @samp{x}, which is only valid when @var{x} is positive.) This is
33505implemented by temporarily binding the variable @code{math-living-dangerously}
33506to @code{t} (using a @code{let} form) and calling @code{simplify}.
33507Dangerous simplification rules are written to check this variable
33508before taking any action.@refill
33509@end defun
33510
33511@defun simplify-units expr
33512Simplify the expression @var{expr}, treating variable names as units
33513whenever possible. This works by binding the variable
33514@code{math-simplifying-units} to @code{t} while calling @code{simplify}.
33515@end defun
33516
33517@defmac math-defsimplify funcs body
33518Register a new simplification rule; this is normally called as a top-level
33519form, like @code{defun} or @code{defmath}. If @var{funcs} is a symbol
33520(like @code{+} or @code{calcFunc-sqrt}), this simplification rule is
33521applied to the formulas which are calls to the specified function. Or,
33522@var{funcs} can be a list of such symbols; the rule applies to all
33523functions on the list. The @var{body} is written like the body of a
33524function with a single argument called @code{expr}. The body will be
33525executed with @code{expr} bound to a formula which is a call to one of
33526the functions @var{funcs}. If the function body returns @code{nil}, or
33527if it returns a result @code{equal} to the original @code{expr}, it is
33528ignored and Calc goes on to try the next simplification rule that applies.
33529If the function body returns something different, that new formula is
33530substituted for @var{expr} in the original formula.@refill
33531
33532At each point in the formula, rules are tried in the order of the
33533original calls to @code{math-defsimplify}; the search stops after the
33534first rule that makes a change. Thus later rules for that same
33535function will not have a chance to trigger until the next iteration
33536of the main @code{simplify} loop.
33537
33538Note that, since @code{defmath} is not being used here, @var{body} must
33539be written in true Lisp code without the conveniences that @code{defmath}
33540provides. If you prefer, you can have @var{body} simply call another
33541function (defined with @code{defmath}) which does the real work.
33542
33543The arguments of a function call will already have been simplified
33544before any rules for the call itself are invoked. Since a new argument
33545list is consed up when this happens, this means that the rule's body is
33546allowed to rearrange the function's arguments destructively if that is
33547convenient. Here is a typical example of a simplification rule:
33548
33549@smallexample
33550(math-defsimplify calcFunc-arcsinh
33551 (or (and (math-looks-negp (nth 1 expr))
33552 (math-neg (list 'calcFunc-arcsinh
33553 (math-neg (nth 1 expr)))))
33554 (and (eq (car-safe (nth 1 expr)) 'calcFunc-sinh)
33555 (or math-living-dangerously
33556 (math-known-realp (nth 1 (nth 1 expr))))
33557 (nth 1 (nth 1 expr)))))
33558@end smallexample
33559
33560This is really a pair of rules written with one @code{math-defsimplify}
33561for convenience; the first replaces @samp{arcsinh(-x)} with
33562@samp{-arcsinh(x)}, and the second, which is safe only for real @samp{x},
33563replaces @samp{arcsinh(sinh(x))} with @samp{x}.@refill
33564@end defmac
33565
33566@defun common-constant-factor expr
33567Check @var{expr} to see if it is a sum of terms all multiplied by the
33568same rational value. If so, return this value. If not, return @code{nil}.
33569For example, if called on @samp{6x + 9y + 12z}, it would return 3, since
335703 is a common factor of all the terms.
33571@end defun
33572
33573@defun cancel-common-factor expr factor
33574Assuming @var{expr} is a sum with @var{factor} as a common factor,
33575divide each term of the sum by @var{factor}. This is done by
33576destructively modifying parts of @var{expr}, on the assumption that
33577it is being used by a simplification rule (where such things are
33578allowed; see above). For example, consider this built-in rule for
33579square roots:
33580
33581@smallexample
33582(math-defsimplify calcFunc-sqrt
33583 (let ((fac (math-common-constant-factor (nth 1 expr))))
33584 (and fac (not (eq fac 1))
33585 (math-mul (math-normalize (list 'calcFunc-sqrt fac))
33586 (math-normalize
33587 (list 'calcFunc-sqrt
33588 (math-cancel-common-factor
33589 (nth 1 expr) fac)))))))
33590@end smallexample
33591@end defun
33592
33593@defun frac-gcd a b
33594Compute a ``rational GCD'' of @var{a} and @var{b}, which must both be
33595rational numbers. This is the fraction composed of the GCD of the
33596numerators of @var{a} and @var{b}, over the GCD of the denominators.
33597It is used by @code{common-constant-factor}. Note that the standard
33598@code{gcd} function uses the LCM to combine the denominators.@refill
33599@end defun
33600
33601@defun map-tree func expr many
33602Try applying Lisp function @var{func} to various sub-expressions of
33603@var{expr}. Initially, call @var{func} with @var{expr} itself as an
33604argument. If this returns an expression which is not @code{equal} to
33605@var{expr}, apply @var{func} again until eventually it does return
33606@var{expr} with no changes. Then, if @var{expr} is a function call,
33607recursively apply @var{func} to each of the arguments. This keeps going
33608until no changes occur anywhere in the expression; this final expression
33609is returned by @code{map-tree}. Note that, unlike simplification rules,
33610@var{func} functions may @emph{not} make destructive changes to
33611@var{expr}. If a third argument @var{many} is provided, it is an
33612integer which says how many times @var{func} may be applied; the
33613default, as described above, is infinitely many times.@refill
33614@end defun
33615
33616@defun compile-rewrites rules
33617Compile the rewrite rule set specified by @var{rules}, which should
33618be a formula that is either a vector or a variable name. If the latter,
33619the compiled rules are saved so that later @code{compile-rules} calls
33620for that same variable can return immediately. If there are problems
33621with the rules, this function calls @code{error} with a suitable
33622message.
33623@end defun
33624
33625@defun apply-rewrites expr crules heads
33626Apply the compiled rewrite rule set @var{crules} to the expression
33627@var{expr}. This will make only one rewrite and only checks at the
33628top level of the expression. The result @code{nil} if no rules
33629matched, or if the only rules that matched did not actually change
33630the expression. The @var{heads} argument is optional; if is given,
33631it should be a list of all function names that (may) appear in
33632@var{expr}. The rewrite compiler tags each rule with the
33633rarest-looking function name in the rule; if you specify @var{heads},
33634@code{apply-rewrites} can use this information to narrow its search
33635down to just a few rules in the rule set.
33636@end defun
33637
33638@defun rewrite-heads expr
33639Compute a @var{heads} list for @var{expr} suitable for use with
33640@code{apply-rewrites}, as discussed above.
33641@end defun
33642
33643@defun rewrite expr rules many
33644This is an all-in-one rewrite function. It compiles the rule set
33645specified by @var{rules}, then uses @code{map-tree} to apply the
33646rules throughout @var{expr} up to @var{many} (default infinity)
33647times.
33648@end defun
33649
33650@defun match-patterns pat vec not-flag
33651Given a Calc vector @var{vec} and an uncompiled pattern set or
33652pattern set variable @var{pat}, this function returns a new vector
33653of all elements of @var{vec} which do (or don't, if @var{not-flag} is
33654non-@code{nil}) match any of the patterns in @var{pat}.
33655@end defun
33656
33657@defun deriv expr var value symb
33658Compute the derivative of @var{expr} with respect to variable @var{var}
33659(which may actually be any sub-expression). If @var{value} is specified,
33660the derivative is evaluated at the value of @var{var}; otherwise, the
33661derivative is left in terms of @var{var}. If the expression contains
33662functions for which no derivative formula is known, new derivative
33663functions are invented by adding primes to the names; @pxref{Calculus}.
33664However, if @var{symb} is non-@code{nil}, the presence of undifferentiable
33665functions in @var{expr} instead cancels the whole differentiation, and
33666@code{deriv} returns @code{nil} instead.
33667
33668Derivatives of an @var{n}-argument function can be defined by
33669adding a @code{math-derivative-@var{n}} property to the property list
33670of the symbol for the function's derivative, which will be the
33671function name followed by an apostrophe. The value of the property
33672should be a Lisp function; it is called with the same arguments as the
33673original function call that is being differentiated. It should return
33674a formula for the derivative. For example, the derivative of @code{ln}
33675is defined by
33676
33677@smallexample
33678(put 'calcFunc-ln\' 'math-derivative-1
33679 (function (lambda (u) (math-div 1 u))))
33680@end smallexample
33681
33682The two-argument @code{log} function has two derivatives,
33683@smallexample
33684(put 'calcFunc-log\' 'math-derivative-2 ; d(log(x,b)) / dx
33685 (function (lambda (x b) ... )))
33686(put 'calcFunc-log\'2 'math-derivative-2 ; d(log(x,b)) / db
33687 (function (lambda (x b) ... )))
33688@end smallexample
33689@end defun
33690
33691@defun tderiv expr var value symb
33692Compute the total derivative of @var{expr}. This is the same as
33693@code{deriv}, except that variables other than @var{var} are not
33694assumed to be constant with respect to @var{var}.
33695@end defun
33696
33697@defun integ expr var low high
33698Compute the integral of @var{expr} with respect to @var{var}.
33699@xref{Calculus}, for further details.
33700@end defun
33701
33702@defmac math-defintegral funcs body
33703Define a rule for integrating a function or functions of one argument;
33704this macro is very similar in format to @code{math-defsimplify}.
33705The main difference is that here @var{body} is the body of a function
33706with a single argument @code{u} which is bound to the argument to the
33707function being integrated, not the function call itself. Also, the
33708variable of integration is available as @code{math-integ-var}. If
33709evaluation of the integral requires doing further integrals, the body
33710should call @samp{(math-integral @var{x})} to find the integral of
33711@var{x} with respect to @code{math-integ-var}; this function returns
33712@code{nil} if the integral could not be done. Some examples:
33713
33714@smallexample
33715(math-defintegral calcFunc-conj
33716 (let ((int (math-integral u)))
33717 (and int
33718 (list 'calcFunc-conj int))))
33719
33720(math-defintegral calcFunc-cos
33721 (and (equal u math-integ-var)
33722 (math-from-radians-2 (list 'calcFunc-sin u))))
33723@end smallexample
33724
33725In the @code{cos} example, we define only the integral of @samp{cos(x) dx},
33726relying on the general integration-by-substitution facility to handle
33727cosines of more complicated arguments. An integration rule should return
33728@code{nil} if it can't do the integral; if several rules are defined for
33729the same function, they are tried in order until one returns a non-@code{nil}
33730result.@refill
33731@end defmac
33732
33733@defmac math-defintegral-2 funcs body
33734Define a rule for integrating a function or functions of two arguments.
33735This is exactly analogous to @code{math-defintegral}, except that @var{body}
33736is written as the body of a function with two arguments, @var{u} and
33737@var{v}.@refill
33738@end defmac
33739
33740@defun solve-for lhs rhs var full
33741Attempt to solve the equation @samp{@var{lhs} = @var{rhs}} by isolating
33742the variable @var{var} on the lefthand side; return the resulting righthand
33743side, or @code{nil} if the equation cannot be solved. The variable
33744@var{var} must appear at least once in @var{lhs} or @var{rhs}. Note that
33745the return value is a formula which does not contain @var{var}; this is
33746different from the user-level @code{solve} and @code{finv} functions,
33747which return a rearranged equation or a functional inverse, respectively.
33748If @var{full} is non-@code{nil}, a full solution including dummy signs
33749and dummy integers will be produced. User-defined inverses are provided
33750as properties in a manner similar to derivatives:@refill
33751
33752@smallexample
33753(put 'calcFunc-ln 'math-inverse
33754 (function (lambda (x) (list 'calcFunc-exp x))))
33755@end smallexample
33756
33757This function can call @samp{(math-solve-get-sign @var{x})} to create
33758a new arbitrary sign variable, returning @var{x} times that sign, and
33759@samp{(math-solve-get-int @var{x})} to create a new arbitrary integer
33760variable multiplied by @var{x}. These functions simply return @var{x}
33761if the caller requested a non-``full'' solution.
33762@end defun
33763
33764@defun solve-eqn expr var full
33765This version of @code{solve-for} takes an expression which will
33766typically be an equation or inequality. (If it is not, it will be
33767interpreted as the equation @samp{@var{expr} = 0}.) It returns an
33768equation or inequality, or @code{nil} if no solution could be found.
33769@end defun
33770
33771@defun solve-system exprs vars full
33772This function solves a system of equations. Generally, @var{exprs}
33773and @var{vars} will be vectors of equal length.
33774@xref{Solving Systems of Equations}, for other options.
33775@end defun
33776
33777@defun expr-contains expr var
33778Returns a non-@code{nil} value if @var{var} occurs as a subexpression
33779of @var{expr}.
33780
33781This function might seem at first to be identical to
33782@code{calc-find-sub-formula}. The key difference is that
33783@code{expr-contains} uses @code{equal} to test for matches, whereas
33784@code{calc-find-sub-formula} uses @code{eq}. In the formula
33785@samp{f(a, a)}, the two @samp{a}s will be @code{equal} but not
33786@code{eq} to each other.@refill
33787@end defun
33788
33789@defun expr-contains-count expr var
33790Returns the number of occurrences of @var{var} as a subexpression
33791of @var{expr}, or @code{nil} if there are no occurrences.@refill
33792@end defun
33793
33794@defun expr-depends expr var
33795Returns true if @var{expr} refers to any variable the occurs in @var{var}.
33796In other words, it checks if @var{expr} and @var{var} have any variables
33797in common.
33798@end defun
33799
33800@defun expr-contains-vars expr
33801Return true if @var{expr} contains any variables, or @code{nil} if @var{expr}
33802contains only constants and functions with constant arguments.
33803@end defun
33804
33805@defun expr-subst expr old new
33806Returns a copy of @var{expr}, with all occurrences of @var{old} replaced
33807by @var{new}. This treats @code{lambda} forms specially with respect
33808to the dummy argument variables, so that the effect is always to return
33809@var{expr} evaluated at @var{old} = @var{new}.@refill
33810@end defun
33811
33812@defun multi-subst expr old new
33813This is like @code{expr-subst}, except that @var{old} and @var{new}
33814are lists of expressions to be substituted simultaneously. If one
33815list is shorter than the other, trailing elements of the longer list
33816are ignored.
33817@end defun
33818
33819@defun expr-weight expr
33820Returns the ``weight'' of @var{expr}, basically a count of the total
33821number of objects and function calls that appear in @var{expr}. For
33822``primitive'' objects, this will be one.
33823@end defun
33824
33825@defun expr-height expr
33826Returns the ``height'' of @var{expr}, which is the deepest level to
33827which function calls are nested. (Note that @samp{@var{a} + @var{b}}
33828counts as a function call.) For primitive objects, this returns zero.@refill
33829@end defun
33830
33831@defun polynomial-p expr var
33832Check if @var{expr} is a polynomial in variable (or sub-expression)
33833@var{var}. If so, return the degree of the polynomial, that is, the
33834highest power of @var{var} that appears in @var{expr}. For example,
33835for @samp{(x^2 + 3)^3 + 4} this would return 6. This function returns
33836@code{nil} unless @var{expr}, when expanded out by @kbd{a x}
33837(@code{calc-expand}), would consist of a sum of terms in which @var{var}
33838appears only raised to nonnegative integer powers. Note that if
33839@var{var} does not occur in @var{expr}, then @var{expr} is considered
33840a polynomial of degree 0.@refill
33841@end defun
33842
33843@defun is-polynomial expr var degree loose
33844Check if @var{expr} is a polynomial in variable or sub-expression
33845@var{var}, and, if so, return a list representation of the polynomial
33846where the elements of the list are coefficients of successive powers of
33847@var{var}: @samp{@var{a} + @var{b} x + @var{c} x^3} would produce the
33848list @samp{(@var{a} @var{b} 0 @var{c})}, and @samp{(x + 1)^2} would
33849produce the list @samp{(1 2 1)}. The highest element of the list will
33850be non-zero, with the special exception that if @var{expr} is the
33851constant zero, the returned value will be @samp{(0)}. Return @code{nil}
33852if @var{expr} is not a polynomial in @var{var}. If @var{degree} is
33853specified, this will not consider polynomials of degree higher than that
33854value. This is a good precaution because otherwise an input of
33855@samp{(x+1)^1000} will cause a huge coefficient list to be built. If
33856@var{loose} is non-@code{nil}, then a looser definition of a polynomial
33857is used in which coefficients are no longer required not to depend on
33858@var{var}, but are only required not to take the form of polynomials
33859themselves. For example, @samp{sin(x) x^2 + cos(x)} is a loose
33860polynomial with coefficients @samp{((calcFunc-cos x) 0 (calcFunc-sin
33861x))}. The result will never be @code{nil} in loose mode, since any
33862expression can be interpreted as a ``constant'' loose polynomial.@refill
33863@end defun
33864
33865@defun polynomial-base expr pred
33866Check if @var{expr} is a polynomial in any variable that occurs in it;
33867if so, return that variable. (If @var{expr} is a multivariate polynomial,
33868this chooses one variable arbitrarily.) If @var{pred} is specified, it should
33869be a Lisp function which is called as @samp{(@var{pred} @var{subexpr})},
33870and which should return true if @code{mpb-top-expr} (a global name for
33871the original @var{expr}) is a suitable polynomial in @var{subexpr}.
33872The default predicate uses @samp{(polynomial-p mpb-top-expr @var{subexpr})};
33873you can use @var{pred} to specify additional conditions. Or, you could
33874have @var{pred} build up a list of every suitable @var{subexpr} that
33875is found.@refill
33876@end defun
33877
33878@defun poly-simplify poly
33879Simplify polynomial coefficient list @var{poly} by (destructively)
33880clipping off trailing zeros.
33881@end defun
33882
33883@defun poly-mix a ac b bc
33884Mix two polynomial lists @var{a} and @var{b} (in the form returned by
33885@code{is-polynomial}) in a linear combination with coefficient expressions
33886@var{ac} and @var{bc}. The result is a (not necessarily simplified)
33887polynomial list representing @samp{@var{ac} @var{a} + @var{bc} @var{b}}.@refill
33888@end defun
33889
33890@defun poly-mul a b
33891Multiply two polynomial coefficient lists @var{a} and @var{b}. The
33892result will be in simplified form if the inputs were simplified.
33893@end defun
33894
33895@defun build-polynomial-expr poly var
33896Construct a Calc formula which represents the polynomial coefficient
33897list @var{poly} applied to variable @var{var}. The @kbd{a c}
33898(@code{calc-collect}) command uses @code{is-polynomial} to turn an
33899expression into a coefficient list, then @code{build-polynomial-expr}
33900to turn the list back into an expression in regular form.@refill
33901@end defun
33902
33903@defun check-unit-name var
33904Check if @var{var} is a variable which can be interpreted as a unit
33905name. If so, return the units table entry for that unit. This
33906will be a list whose first element is the unit name (not counting
33907prefix characters) as a symbol and whose second element is the
33908Calc expression which defines the unit. (Refer to the Calc sources
33909for details on the remaining elements of this list.) If @var{var}
33910is not a variable or is not a unit name, return @code{nil}.
33911@end defun
33912
33913@defun units-in-expr-p expr sub-exprs
33914Return true if @var{expr} contains any variables which can be
33915interpreted as units. If @var{sub-exprs} is @code{t}, the entire
33916expression is searched. If @var{sub-exprs} is @code{nil}, this
33917checks whether @var{expr} is directly a units expression.@refill
33918@end defun
33919
33920@defun single-units-in-expr-p expr
33921Check whether @var{expr} contains exactly one units variable. If so,
33922return the units table entry for the variable. If @var{expr} does
33923not contain any units, return @code{nil}. If @var{expr} contains
33924two or more units, return the symbol @code{wrong}.
33925@end defun
33926
33927@defun to-standard-units expr which
33928Convert units expression @var{expr} to base units. If @var{which}
33929is @code{nil}, use Calc's native base units. Otherwise, @var{which}
33930can specify a units system, which is a list of two-element lists,
33931where the first element is a Calc base symbol name and the second
33932is an expression to substitute for it.@refill
33933@end defun
33934
33935@defun remove-units expr
33936Return a copy of @var{expr} with all units variables replaced by ones.
33937This expression is generally normalized before use.
33938@end defun
33939
33940@defun extract-units expr
33941Return a copy of @var{expr} with everything but units variables replaced
33942by ones.
33943@end defun
33944
33945@node Formatting Lisp Functions, Hooks, Symbolic Lisp Functions, Internals
33946@subsubsection I/O and Formatting Functions
33947
33948@noindent
33949The functions described here are responsible for parsing and formatting
33950Calc numbers and formulas.
33951
33952@defun calc-eval str sep arg1 arg2 @dots{}
33953This is the simplest interface to the Calculator from another Lisp program.
33954@xref{Calling Calc from Your Programs}.
33955@end defun
33956
33957@defun read-number str
33958If string @var{str} contains a valid Calc number, either integer,
33959fraction, float, or HMS form, this function parses and returns that
33960number. Otherwise, it returns @code{nil}.
33961@end defun
33962
33963@defun read-expr str
33964Read an algebraic expression from string @var{str}. If @var{str} does
33965not have the form of a valid expression, return a list of the form
33966@samp{(error @var{pos} @var{msg})} where @var{pos} is an integer index
33967into @var{str} of the general location of the error, and @var{msg} is
33968a string describing the problem.@refill
33969@end defun
33970
33971@defun read-exprs str
33972Read a list of expressions separated by commas, and return it as a
33973Lisp list. If an error occurs in any expressions, an error list as
33974shown above is returned instead.
33975@end defun
33976
33977@defun calc-do-alg-entry initial prompt no-norm
33978Read an algebraic formula or formulas using the minibuffer. All
33979conventions of regular algebraic entry are observed. The return value
33980is a list of Calc formulas; there will be more than one if the user
33981entered a list of values separated by commas. The result is @code{nil}
33982if the user presses Return with a blank line. If @var{initial} is
33983given, it is a string which the minibuffer will initially contain.
33984If @var{prompt} is given, it is the prompt string to use; the default
33985is ``Algebraic:''. If @var{no-norm} is @code{t}, the formulas will
33986be returned exactly as parsed; otherwise, they will be passed through
33987@code{calc-normalize} first.@refill
33988
33989To support the use of @kbd{$} characters in the algebraic entry, use
33990@code{let} to bind @code{calc-dollar-values} to a list of the values
33991to be substituted for @kbd{$}, @kbd{$$}, and so on, and bind
33992@code{calc-dollar-used} to 0. Upon return, @code{calc-dollar-used}
33993will have been changed to the highest number of consecutive @kbd{$}s
33994that actually appeared in the input.@refill
33995@end defun
33996
33997@defun format-number a
33998Convert the real or complex number or HMS form @var{a} to string form.
33999@end defun
34000
34001@defun format-flat-expr a prec
34002Convert the arbitrary Calc number or formula @var{a} to string form,
34003in the style used by the trail buffer and the @code{calc-edit} command.
34004This is a simple format designed
34005mostly to guarantee the string is of a form that can be re-parsed by
34006@code{read-expr}. Most formatting modes, such as digit grouping,
34007complex number format, and point character, are ignored to ensure the
34008result will be re-readable. The @var{prec} parameter is normally 0; if
34009you pass a large integer like 1000 instead, the expression will be
34010surrounded by parentheses unless it is a plain number or variable name.@refill
34011@end defun
34012
34013@defun format-nice-expr a width
34014This is like @code{format-flat-expr} (with @var{prec} equal to 0),
34015except that newlines will be inserted to keep lines down to the
34016specified @var{width}, and vectors that look like matrices or rewrite
34017rules are written in a pseudo-matrix format. The @code{calc-edit}
34018command uses this when only one stack entry is being edited.
34019@end defun
34020
34021@defun format-value a width
34022Convert the Calc number or formula @var{a} to string form, using the
34023format seen in the stack buffer. Beware the the string returned may
34024not be re-readable by @code{read-expr}, for example, because of digit
34025grouping. Multi-line objects like matrices produce strings that
34026contain newline characters to separate the lines. The @var{w}
34027parameter, if given, is the target window size for which to format
34028the expressions. If @var{w} is omitted, the width of the Calculator
34029window is used.@refill
34030@end defun
34031
34032@defun compose-expr a prec
34033Format the Calc number or formula @var{a} according to the current
34034language mode, returning a ``composition.'' To learn about the
34035structure of compositions, see the comments in the Calc source code.
34036You can specify the format of a given type of function call by putting
34037a @code{math-compose-@var{lang}} property on the function's symbol,
34038whose value is a Lisp function that takes @var{a} and @var{prec} as
34039arguments and returns a composition. Here @var{lang} is a language
34040mode name, one of @code{normal}, @code{big}, @code{c}, @code{pascal},
34041@code{fortran}, @code{tex}, @code{eqn}, @code{math}, or @code{maple}.
34042In Big mode, Calc actually tries @code{math-compose-big} first, then
34043tries @code{math-compose-normal}. If this property does not exist,
34044or if the function returns @code{nil}, the function is written in the
34045normal function-call notation for that language.
34046@end defun
34047
34048@defun composition-to-string c w
34049Convert a composition structure returned by @code{compose-expr} into
34050a string. Multi-line compositions convert to strings containing
34051newline characters. The target window size is given by @var{w}.
34052The @code{format-value} function basically calls @code{compose-expr}
34053followed by @code{composition-to-string}.
34054@end defun
34055
34056@defun comp-width c
34057Compute the width in characters of composition @var{c}.
34058@end defun
34059
34060@defun comp-height c
34061Compute the height in lines of composition @var{c}.
34062@end defun
34063
34064@defun comp-ascent c
34065Compute the portion of the height of composition @var{c} which is on or
34066above the baseline. For a one-line composition, this will be one.
34067@end defun
34068
34069@defun comp-descent c
34070Compute the portion of the height of composition @var{c} which is below
34071the baseline. For a one-line composition, this will be zero.
34072@end defun
34073
34074@defun comp-first-char c
34075If composition @var{c} is a ``flat'' composition, return the first
34076(leftmost) character of the composition as an integer. Otherwise,
34077return @code{nil}.@refill
34078@end defun
34079
34080@defun comp-last-char c
34081If composition @var{c} is a ``flat'' composition, return the last
34082(rightmost) character, otherwise return @code{nil}.
34083@end defun
34084
34085@comment @node Lisp Variables, Hooks, Formatting Lisp Functions, Internals
34086@comment @subsubsection Lisp Variables
34087@comment
34088@comment @noindent
34089@comment (This section is currently unfinished.)
34090
34091@node Hooks, , Formatting Lisp Functions, Internals
34092@subsubsection Hooks
34093
34094@noindent
34095Hooks are variables which contain Lisp functions (or lists of functions)
34096which are called at various times. Calc defines a number of hooks
34097that help you to customize it in various ways. Calc uses the Lisp
34098function @code{run-hooks} to invoke the hooks shown below. Several
34099other customization-related variables are also described here.
34100
34101@defvar calc-load-hook
34102This hook is called at the end of @file{calc.el}, after the file has
34103been loaded, before any functions in it have been called, but after
34104@code{calc-mode-map} and similar variables have been set up.
34105@end defvar
34106
34107@defvar calc-ext-load-hook
34108This hook is called at the end of @file{calc-ext.el}.
34109@end defvar
34110
34111@defvar calc-start-hook
34112This hook is called as the last step in a @kbd{M-x calc} command.
34113At this point, the Calc buffer has been created and initialized if
34114necessary, the Calc window and trail window have been created,
34115and the ``Welcome to Calc'' message has been displayed.
34116@end defvar
34117
34118@defvar calc-mode-hook
34119This hook is called when the Calc buffer is being created. Usually
34120this will only happen once per Emacs session. The hook is called
34121after Emacs has switched to the new buffer, the mode-settings file
34122has been read if necessary, and all other buffer-local variables
34123have been set up. After this hook returns, Calc will perform a
34124@code{calc-refresh} operation, set up the mode line display, then
34125evaluate any deferred @code{calc-define} properties that have not
34126been evaluated yet.
34127@end defvar
34128
34129@defvar calc-trail-mode-hook
34130This hook is called when the Calc Trail buffer is being created.
34131It is called as the very last step of setting up the Trail buffer.
34132Like @code{calc-mode-hook}, this will normally happen only once
34133per Emacs session.
34134@end defvar
34135
34136@defvar calc-end-hook
34137This hook is called by @code{calc-quit}, generally because the user
34138presses @kbd{q} or @kbd{M-# c} while in Calc. The Calc buffer will
34139be the current buffer. The hook is called as the very first
34140step, before the Calc window is destroyed.
34141@end defvar
34142
34143@defvar calc-window-hook
34144If this hook exists, it is called to create the Calc window.
34145Upon return, this new Calc window should be the current window.
34146(The Calc buffer will already be the current buffer when the
34147hook is called.) If the hook is not defined, Calc will
34148generally use @code{split-window}, @code{set-window-buffer},
34149and @code{select-window} to create the Calc window.
34150@end defvar
34151
34152@defvar calc-trail-window-hook
34153If this hook exists, it is called to create the Calc Trail window.
34154The variable @code{calc-trail-buffer} will contain the buffer
34155which the window should use. Unlike @code{calc-window-hook},
34156this hook must @emph{not} switch into the new window.
34157@end defvar
34158
34159@defvar calc-edit-mode-hook
34160This hook is called by @code{calc-edit} (and the other ``edit''
34161commands) when the temporary editing buffer is being created.
34162The buffer will have been selected and set up to be in
34163@code{calc-edit-mode}, but will not yet have been filled with
34164text. (In fact it may still have leftover text from a previous
34165@code{calc-edit} command.)
34166@end defvar
34167
34168@defvar calc-mode-save-hook
34169This hook is called by the @code{calc-save-modes} command,
34170after Calc's own mode features have been inserted into the
34171@file{.emacs} buffer and just before the ``End of mode settings''
34172message is inserted.
34173@end defvar
34174
34175@defvar calc-reset-hook
34176This hook is called after @kbd{M-# 0} (@code{calc-reset}) has
34177reset all modes. The Calc buffer will be the current buffer.
34178@end defvar
34179
34180@defvar calc-other-modes
34181This variable contains a list of strings. The strings are
34182concatenated at the end of the modes portion of the Calc
34183mode line (after standard modes such as ``Deg'', ``Inv'' and
34184``Hyp''). Each string should be a short, single word followed
34185by a space. The variable is @code{nil} by default.
34186@end defvar
34187
34188@defvar calc-mode-map
34189This is the keymap that is used by Calc mode. The best time
34190to adjust it is probably in a @code{calc-mode-hook}. If the
34191Calc extensions package (@file{calc-ext.el}) has not yet been
34192loaded, many of these keys will be bound to @code{calc-missing-key},
34193which is a command that loads the extensions package and
34194``retypes'' the key. If your @code{calc-mode-hook} rebinds
34195one of these keys, it will probably be overridden when the
34196extensions are loaded.
34197@end defvar
34198
34199@defvar calc-digit-map
34200This is the keymap that is used during numeric entry. Numeric
34201entry uses the minibuffer, but this map binds every non-numeric
34202key to @code{calcDigit-nondigit} which generally calls
34203@code{exit-minibuffer} and ``retypes'' the key.
34204@end defvar
34205
34206@defvar calc-alg-ent-map
34207This is the keymap that is used during algebraic entry. This is
34208mostly a copy of @code{minibuffer-local-map}.
34209@end defvar
34210
34211@defvar calc-store-var-map
34212This is the keymap that is used during entry of variable names for
34213commands like @code{calc-store} and @code{calc-recall}. This is
34214mostly a copy of @code{minibuffer-local-completion-map}.
34215@end defvar
34216
34217@defvar calc-edit-mode-map
34218This is the (sparse) keymap used by @code{calc-edit} and other
34219temporary editing commands. It binds @key{RET}, @key{LFD},
34220and @kbd{C-c C-c} to @code{calc-edit-finish}.
34221@end defvar
34222
34223@defvar calc-mode-var-list
34224This is a list of variables which are saved by @code{calc-save-modes}.
34225Each entry is a list of two items, the variable (as a Lisp symbol)
34226and its default value. When modes are being saved, each variable
34227is compared with its default value (using @code{equal}) and any
34228non-default variables are written out.
34229@end defvar
34230
34231@defvar calc-local-var-list
34232This is a list of variables which should be buffer-local to the
34233Calc buffer. Each entry is a variable name (as a Lisp symbol).
34234These variables also have their default values manipulated by
34235the @code{calc} and @code{calc-quit} commands; @pxref{Multiple Calculators}.
34236Since @code{calc-mode-hook} is called after this list has been
34237used the first time, your hook should add a variable to the
34238list and also call @code{make-local-variable} itself.
34239@end defvar
34240
34241@node Installation, Reporting Bugs, Programming, Top
34242@appendix Installation
34243
34244@noindent
ed7899e8
CW
34245As of Calc 2.02g, Calc is integrated with GNU Emacs, and thus requires
34246no separate installation of its Lisp files and this manual.
d7b8e6c6 34247
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34248@appendixsec The GNUPLOT Program
34249
34250@noindent
34251Calc's graphing commands use the GNUPLOT program. If you have GNUPLOT
34252but you must type some command other than @file{gnuplot} to get it,
34253you should add a command to set the Lisp variable @code{calc-gnuplot-name}
34254to the appropriate file name. You may also need to change the variables
34255@code{calc-gnuplot-plot-command} and @code{calc-gnuplot-print-command} in
34256order to get correct displays and hardcopies, respectively, of your
34257plots.@refill
34258
34259@ifinfo
34260@example
34261
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34262@end example
34263@end ifinfo
34264@appendixsec Printed Documentation
34265
34266@noindent
34267Because the Calc manual is so large, you should only make a printed
34268copy if you really need it. To print the manual, you will need the
34269@TeX{} typesetting program (this is a free program by Donald Knuth
34270at Stanford University) as well as the @file{texindex} program and
34271@file{texinfo.tex} file, both of which can be obtained from the FSF
ed7899e8 34272as part of the @code{texinfo} package.@refill
d7b8e6c6 34273
ed7899e8
CW
34274To print the Calc manual in one huge 550 page tome, you will need the
34275source code to this manual, @file{calc.texi}, available as part of the
34276Emacs source. Once you have this file, type @samp{tex calc.texi}
34277twice. (Running the manual through @TeX{} twice is necessary so that
34278references to later parts of the manual will have correct page
34279numbers. (Don't worry if you get some ``overfull box'' warnings.)
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34280
34281The result will be a device-independent output file called
34282@file{calc.dvi}, which you must print in whatever way is right
34283for your system. On many systems, the command is
34284
34285@example
34286lpr -d calc.dvi
34287@end example
34288
34289@cindex Marginal notes, adjusting
34290Marginal notes for each function and key sequence normally alternate
34291between the left and right sides of the page, which is correct if the
34292manual is going to be bound as double-sided pages. Near the top of
ed7899e8 34293the file @file{calc.texi} you will find alternate definitions of
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34294the @code{\bumpoddpages} macro that put the marginal notes always on
34295the same side, best if you plan to be binding single-sided pages.
34296
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34297@appendixsec Settings File
34298
34299@noindent
34300@vindex calc-settings-file
34301Another variable you might want to set is @code{calc-settings-file},
34302which holds the file name in which commands like @kbd{m m} and @kbd{Z P}
34303store ``permanent'' definitions. The default value for this variable
34304is @code{"~/.emacs"}. If @code{calc-settings-file} does not contain
34305@code{".emacs"} as a substring, and if the variable
34306@code{calc-loaded-settings-file} is @code{nil}, then Calc will
34307automatically load your settings file (if it exists) the first time
34308Calc is invoked.@refill
34309
34310@ifinfo
34311@example
34312
34313@end example
34314@end ifinfo
34315@appendixsec Testing the Installation
34316
34317@noindent
34318To test your installation of Calc, start a new Emacs and type @kbd{M-# c}
34319to make sure the autoloads and key bindings work. Type @kbd{M-# i}
34320to make sure Calc can find its Info documentation. Press @kbd{q} to
34321exit the Info system and @kbd{M-# c} to re-enter the Calculator.
34322Type @kbd{20 S} to compute the sine of 20 degrees; this will test the
34323autoloading of the extensions modules. The result should be
343240.342020143326. Finally, press @kbd{M-# c} again to make sure the
34325Calculator can exit.
34326
34327You may also wish to test the GNUPLOT interface; to plot a sine wave,
5d67986c 34328type @kbd{' [0 ..@: 360], sin(x) @key{RET} g f}. Type @kbd{g q} when you
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34329are done viewing the plot.
34330
34331Calc is now ready to use. If you wish to go through the Calc Tutorial,
34332press @kbd{M-# t} to begin.
34333@example
34334
34335@end example
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34336@node Reporting Bugs, Summary, Installation, Top
34337@appendix Reporting Bugs
34338
34339@noindent
ed7899e8 34340If you find a bug in Calc, send e-mail to Colin Walters,
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34341
34342@example
ed7899e8
CW
34343walters@@debian.org @r{or}
34344walters@@verbum.org
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34345@end example
34346
34347@noindent
ed7899e8
CW
34348(In the following text, ``I'' refers to the original Calc author, Dave
34349Gillespie).
34350
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34351While I cannot guarantee that I will have time to work on your bug,
34352I do try to fix bugs quickly whenever I can.
34353
ed7899e8 34354The latest version of Calc is available from Savannah, in the Emacs
450c6476 34355CVS tree. See @uref{http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/emacs}.
d7b8e6c6 34356
ed7899e8 34357There is an automatic command @kbd{M-x report-calc-bug} which helps
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34358you to report bugs. This command prompts you for a brief subject
34359line, then leaves you in a mail editing buffer. Type @kbd{C-c C-c} to
34360send your mail. Make sure your subject line indicates that you are
ed7899e8
CW
34361reporting a Calc bug; this command sends mail to the maintainer's
34362regular mailbox.
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34363
34364If you have suggestions for additional features for Calc, I would
34365love to hear them. Some have dared to suggest that Calc is already
34366top-heavy with features; I really don't see what they're talking
34367about, so, if you have ideas, send them right in. (I may even have
34368time to implement them!)
34369
34370At the front of the source file, @file{calc.el}, is a list of ideas for
34371future work which I have not had time to do. If any enthusiastic souls
34372wish to take it upon themselves to work on these, I would be delighted.
34373Please let me know if you plan to contribute to Calc so I can coordinate
34374your efforts with mine and those of others. I will do my best to help
34375you in whatever way I can.
34376
34377@c [summary]
34378@node Summary, Key Index, Reporting Bugs, Top
34379@appendix Calc Summary
34380
34381@noindent
34382This section includes a complete list of Calc 2.02 keystroke commands.
34383Each line lists the stack entries used by the command (top-of-stack
34384last), the keystrokes themselves, the prompts asked by the command,
34385and the result of the command (also with top-of-stack last).
34386The result is expressed using the equivalent algebraic function.
34387Commands which put no results on the stack show the full @kbd{M-x}
34388command name in that position. Numbers preceding the result or
34389command name refer to notes at the end.
34390
34391Algebraic functions and @kbd{M-x} commands that don't have corresponding
34392keystrokes are not listed in this summary.
34393@xref{Command Index}. @xref{Function Index}.
34394
34395@iftex
34396@begingroup
34397@tex
34398\vskip-2\baselineskip \null
34399\gdef\sumrow#1{\sumrowx#1\relax}%
34400\gdef\sumrowx#1\:#2\:#3\:#4\:#5\:#6\relax{%
34401\leavevmode%
5d67986c
RS
34402{\smallfonts
34403\hbox to5em{\sl\hss#1}%
34404\hbox to5em{\tt#2\hss}%
34405\hbox to4em{\sl#3\hss}%
34406\hbox to5em{\rm\hss#4}%
d7b8e6c6 34407\thinspace%
5d67986c
RS
34408{\tt#5}%
34409{\sl#6}%
34410}}%
34411\gdef\sumlpar{{\rm(}}%
34412\gdef\sumrpar{{\rm)}}%
34413\gdef\sumcomma{{\rm,\thinspace}}%
34414\gdef\sumexcl{{\rm!}}%
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34415\gdef\sumbreak{\vskip-2.5\baselineskip\goodbreak}%
34416\gdef\minus#1{{\tt-}}%
34417@end tex
34418@let@:=@sumsep
34419@let@r=@sumrow
34420@catcode`@(=@active @let(=@sumlpar
34421@catcode`@)=@active @let)=@sumrpar
34422@catcode`@,=@active @let,=@sumcomma
34423@catcode`@!=@active @let!=@sumexcl
34424@end iftex
34425@format
34426@iftex
34427@advance@baselineskip-2.5pt
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34428@let@c@sumbreak
34429@end iftex
34430@r{ @: M-# a @: @: 33 @:calc-embedded-activate@:}
34431@r{ @: M-# b @: @: @:calc-big-or-small@:}
34432@r{ @: M-# c @: @: @:calc@:}
34433@r{ @: M-# d @: @: @:calc-embedded-duplicate@:}
34434@r{ @: M-# e @: @: 34 @:calc-embedded@:}
34435@r{ @: M-# f @:formula @: @:calc-embedded-new-formula@:}
34436@r{ @: M-# g @: @: 35 @:calc-grab-region@:}
34437@r{ @: M-# i @: @: @:calc-info@:}
34438@r{ @: M-# j @: @: @:calc-embedded-select@:}
34439@r{ @: M-# k @: @: @:calc-keypad@:}
34440@r{ @: M-# l @: @: @:calc-load-everything@:}
34441@r{ @: M-# m @: @: @:read-kbd-macro@:}
34442@r{ @: M-# n @: @: 4 @:calc-embedded-next@:}
34443@r{ @: M-# o @: @: @:calc-other-window@:}
34444@r{ @: M-# p @: @: 4 @:calc-embedded-previous@:}
34445@r{ @: M-# q @:formula @: @:quick-calc@:}
34446@r{ @: M-# r @: @: 36 @:calc-grab-rectangle@:}
34447@r{ @: M-# s @: @: @:calc-info-summary@:}
34448@r{ @: M-# t @: @: @:calc-tutorial@:}
34449@r{ @: M-# u @: @: @:calc-embedded-update@:}
34450@r{ @: M-# w @: @: @:calc-embedded-word@:}
34451@r{ @: M-# x @: @: @:calc-quit@:}
34452@r{ @: M-# y @: @:1,28,49 @:calc-copy-to-buffer@:}
34453@r{ @: M-# z @: @: @:calc-user-invocation@:}
34454@r{ @: M-# : @: @: 36 @:calc-grab-sum-down@:}
34455@r{ @: M-# _ @: @: 36 @:calc-grab-sum-across@:}
34456@r{ @: M-# ` @:editing @: 30 @:calc-embedded-edit@:}
34457@r{ @: M-# 0 @:(zero) @: @:calc-reset@:}
34458
34459@c
34460@r{ @: 0-9 @:number @: @:@:number}
34461@r{ @: . @:number @: @:@:0.number}
34462@r{ @: _ @:number @: @:-@:number}
34463@r{ @: e @:number @: @:@:1e number}
34464@r{ @: # @:number @: @:@:current-radix@t{#}number}
34465@r{ @: P @:(in number) @: @:+/-@:}
34466@r{ @: M @:(in number) @: @:mod@:}
34467@r{ @: @@ ' " @: (in number)@: @:@:HMS form}
34468@r{ @: h m s @: (in number)@: @:@:HMS form}
34469
34470@c
34471@r{ @: ' @:formula @: 37,46 @:@:formula}
34472@r{ @: $ @:formula @: 37,46 @:$@:formula}
34473@r{ @: " @:string @: 37,46 @:@:string}
34474
34475@c
34476@r{ a b@: + @: @: 2 @:add@:(a,b) a+b}
34477@r{ a b@: - @: @: 2 @:sub@:(a,b) a@minus{}b}
34478@r{ a b@: * @: @: 2 @:mul@:(a,b) a b, a*b}
34479@r{ a b@: / @: @: 2 @:div@:(a,b) a/b}
34480@r{ a b@: ^ @: @: 2 @:pow@:(a,b) a^b}
34481@r{ a b@: I ^ @: @: 2 @:nroot@:(a,b) a^(1/b)}
34482@r{ a b@: % @: @: 2 @:mod@:(a,b) a%b}
34483@r{ a b@: \ @: @: 2 @:idiv@:(a,b) a\b}
34484@r{ a b@: : @: @: 2 @:fdiv@:(a,b)}
34485@r{ a b@: | @: @: 2 @:vconcat@:(a,b) a|b}
34486@r{ a b@: I | @: @: @:vconcat@:(b,a) b|a}
34487@r{ a b@: H | @: @: 2 @:append@:(a,b)}
34488@r{ a b@: I H | @: @: @:append@:(b,a)}
34489@r{ a@: & @: @: 1 @:inv@:(a) 1/a}
34490@r{ a@: ! @: @: 1 @:fact@:(a) a!}
34491@r{ a@: = @: @: 1 @:evalv@:(a)}
34492@r{ a@: M-% @: @: @:percent@:(a) a%}
34493
34494@c
5d67986c
RS
34495@r{ ... a@: @key{RET} @: @: 1 @:@:... a a}
34496@r{ ... a@: @key{SPC} @: @: 1 @:@:... a a}
34497@r{... a b@: @key{TAB} @: @: 3 @:@:... b a}
34498@r{. a b c@: M-@key{TAB} @: @: 3 @:@:... b c a}
34499@r{... a b@: @key{LFD} @: @: 1 @:@:... a b a}
34500@r{ ... a@: @key{DEL} @: @: 1 @:@:...}
34501@r{... a b@: M-@key{DEL} @: @: 1 @:@:... b}
34502@r{ @: M-@key{RET} @: @: 4 @:calc-last-args@:}
d7b8e6c6
EZ
34503@r{ a@: ` @:editing @: 1,30 @:calc-edit@:}
34504
34505@c
34506@r{ ... a@: C-d @: @: 1 @:@:...}
34507@r{ @: C-k @: @: 27 @:calc-kill@:}
34508@r{ @: C-w @: @: 27 @:calc-kill-region@:}
34509@r{ @: C-y @: @: @:calc-yank@:}
34510@r{ @: C-_ @: @: 4 @:calc-undo@:}
34511@r{ @: M-k @: @: 27 @:calc-copy-as-kill@:}
34512@r{ @: M-w @: @: 27 @:calc-copy-region-as-kill@:}
34513
34514@c
34515@r{ @: [ @: @: @:@:[...}
34516@r{[.. a b@: ] @: @: @:@:[a,b]}
34517@r{ @: ( @: @: @:@:(...}
34518@r{(.. a b@: ) @: @: @:@:(a,b)}
34519@r{ @: , @: @: @:@:vector or rect complex}
34520@r{ @: ; @: @: @:@:matrix or polar complex}
34521@r{ @: .. @: @: @:@:interval}
34522
34523@c
34524@r{ @: ~ @: @: @:calc-num-prefix@:}
34525@r{ @: < @: @: 4 @:calc-scroll-left@:}
34526@r{ @: > @: @: 4 @:calc-scroll-right@:}
34527@r{ @: @{ @: @: 4 @:calc-scroll-down@:}
34528@r{ @: @} @: @: 4 @:calc-scroll-up@:}
34529@r{ @: ? @: @: @:calc-help@:}
34530
34531@c
34532@r{ a@: n @: @: 1 @:neg@:(a) @minus{}a}
34533@r{ @: o @: @: 4 @:calc-realign@:}
34534@r{ @: p @:precision @: 31 @:calc-precision@:}
34535@r{ @: q @: @: @:calc-quit@:}
34536@r{ @: w @: @: @:calc-why@:}
34537@r{ @: x @:command @: @:M-x calc-@:command}
34538@r{ a@: y @: @:1,28,49 @:calc-copy-to-buffer@:}
34539
34540@c
34541@r{ a@: A @: @: 1 @:abs@:(a)}
34542@r{ a b@: B @: @: 2 @:log@:(a,b)}
34543@r{ a b@: I B @: @: 2 @:alog@:(a,b) b^a}
34544@r{ a@: C @: @: 1 @:cos@:(a)}
34545@r{ a@: I C @: @: 1 @:arccos@:(a)}
34546@r{ a@: H C @: @: 1 @:cosh@:(a)}
34547@r{ a@: I H C @: @: 1 @:arccosh@:(a)}
34548@r{ @: D @: @: 4 @:calc-redo@:}
34549@r{ a@: E @: @: 1 @:exp@:(a)}
34550@r{ a@: H E @: @: 1 @:exp10@:(a) 10.^a}
34551@r{ a@: F @: @: 1,11 @:floor@:(a,d)}
34552@r{ a@: I F @: @: 1,11 @:ceil@:(a,d)}
34553@r{ a@: H F @: @: 1,11 @:ffloor@:(a,d)}
34554@r{ a@: I H F @: @: 1,11 @:fceil@:(a,d)}
34555@r{ a@: G @: @: 1 @:arg@:(a)}
34556@r{ @: H @:command @: 32 @:@:Hyperbolic}
34557@r{ @: I @:command @: 32 @:@:Inverse}
34558@r{ a@: J @: @: 1 @:conj@:(a)}
34559@r{ @: K @:command @: 32 @:@:Keep-args}
34560@r{ a@: L @: @: 1 @:ln@:(a)}
34561@r{ a@: H L @: @: 1 @:log10@:(a)}
34562@r{ @: M @: @: @:calc-more-recursion-depth@:}
34563@r{ @: I M @: @: @:calc-less-recursion-depth@:}
34564@r{ a@: N @: @: 5 @:evalvn@:(a)}
34565@r{ @: P @: @: @:@:pi}
34566@r{ @: I P @: @: @:@:gamma}
34567@r{ @: H P @: @: @:@:e}
34568@r{ @: I H P @: @: @:@:phi}
34569@r{ a@: Q @: @: 1 @:sqrt@:(a)}
34570@r{ a@: I Q @: @: 1 @:sqr@:(a) a^2}
34571@r{ a@: R @: @: 1,11 @:round@:(a,d)}
34572@r{ a@: I R @: @: 1,11 @:trunc@:(a,d)}
34573@r{ a@: H R @: @: 1,11 @:fround@:(a,d)}
34574@r{ a@: I H R @: @: 1,11 @:ftrunc@:(a,d)}
34575@r{ a@: S @: @: 1 @:sin@:(a)}
34576@r{ a@: I S @: @: 1 @:arcsin@:(a)}
34577@r{ a@: H S @: @: 1 @:sinh@:(a)}
34578@r{ a@: I H S @: @: 1 @:arcsinh@:(a)}
34579@r{ a@: T @: @: 1 @:tan@:(a)}
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35236@r{ @: Z K @:key, command @: @:calc-user-define-kbd-macro@:}
35237@r{ @: Z P @:key @: @:calc-user-define-permanent@:}
35238@r{ @: Z S @: @: 30 @:calc-edit-user-syntax@:}
35239@r{ @: Z T @: @: 12 @:calc-timing@:}
35240@r{ @: Z U @:key @: @:calc-user-undefine@:}
35241
35242@end format
35243
35244@noindent
35245NOTES
35246
35247@enumerate
35248@c 1
35249@item
35250Positive prefix arguments apply to @cite{n} stack entries.
35251Negative prefix arguments apply to the @cite{-n}th stack entry.
35252A prefix of zero applies to the entire stack. (For @key{LFD} and
5d67986c 35253@kbd{M-@key{DEL}}, the meaning of the sign is reversed.)
d7b8e6c6
EZ
35254
35255@c 2
35256@item
35257Positive prefix arguments apply to @cite{n} stack entries.
35258Negative prefix arguments apply to the top stack entry
35259and the next @cite{-n} stack entries.
35260
35261@c 3
35262@item
35263Positive prefix arguments rotate top @cite{n} stack entries by one.
35264Negative prefix arguments rotate the entire stack by @cite{-n}.
35265A prefix of zero reverses the entire stack.
35266
35267@c 4
35268@item
35269Prefix argument specifies a repeat count or distance.
35270
35271@c 5
35272@item
35273Positive prefix arguments specify a precision @cite{p}.
35274Negative prefix arguments reduce the current precision by @cite{-p}.
35275
35276@c 6
35277@item
35278A prefix argument is interpreted as an additional step-size parameter.
35279A plain @kbd{C-u} prefix means to prompt for the step size.
35280
35281@c 7
35282@item
35283A prefix argument specifies simplification level and depth.
352841=Default, 2=like @kbd{a s}, 3=like @kbd{a e}.
35285
35286@c 8
35287@item
35288A negative prefix operates only on the top level of the input formula.
35289
35290@c 9
35291@item
35292Positive prefix arguments specify a word size of @cite{w} bits, unsigned.
35293Negative prefix arguments specify a word size of @cite{w} bits, signed.
35294
35295@c 10
35296@item
35297Prefix arguments specify the shift amount @cite{n}. The @cite{w} argument
35298cannot be specified in the keyboard version of this command.
35299
35300@c 11
35301@item
35302From the keyboard, @cite{d} is omitted and defaults to zero.
35303
35304@c 12
35305@item
35306Mode is toggled; a positive prefix always sets the mode, and a negative
35307prefix always clears the mode.
35308
35309@c 13
35310@item
35311Some prefix argument values provide special variations of the mode.
35312
35313@c 14
35314@item
35315A prefix argument, if any, is used for @cite{m} instead of taking
35316@cite{m} from the stack. @cite{M} may take any of these values:
35317@iftex
35318{@advance@tableindent10pt
35319@end iftex
35320@table @asis
35321@item Integer
35322Random integer in the interval @cite{[0 .. m)}.
35323@item Float
35324Random floating-point number in the interval @cite{[0 .. m)}.
35325@item 0.0
35326Gaussian with mean 1 and standard deviation 0.
35327@item Error form
35328Gaussian with specified mean and standard deviation.
35329@item Interval
35330Random integer or floating-point number in that interval.
35331@item Vector
35332Random element from the vector.
35333@end table
35334@iftex
35335}
35336@end iftex
35337
35338@c 15
35339@item
35340A prefix argument from 1 to 6 specifies number of date components
35341to remove from the stack. @xref{Date Conversions}.
35342
35343@c 16
35344@item
35345A prefix argument specifies a time zone; @kbd{C-u} says to take the
35346time zone number or name from the top of the stack. @xref{Time Zones}.
35347
35348@c 17
35349@item
35350A prefix argument specifies a day number (0-6, 0-31, or 0-366).
35351
35352@c 18
35353@item
35354If the input has no units, you will be prompted for both the old and
35355the new units.
35356
35357@c 19
35358@item
35359With a prefix argument, collect that many stack entries to form the
35360input data set. Each entry may be a single value or a vector of values.
35361
35362@c 20
35363@item
5d67986c
RS
35364With a prefix argument of 1, take a single @c{$@var{n}\times2$}
35365@i{@var{N}x2} matrix from the
d7b8e6c6
EZ
35366stack instead of two separate data vectors.
35367
35368@c 21
35369@item
35370The row or column number @cite{n} may be given as a numeric prefix
35371argument instead. A plain @kbd{C-u} prefix says to take @cite{n}
35372from the top of the stack. If @cite{n} is a vector or interval,
35373a subvector/submatrix of the input is created.
35374
35375@c 22
35376@item
35377The @cite{op} prompt can be answered with the key sequence for the
35378desired function, or with @kbd{x} or @kbd{z} followed by a function name,
35379or with @kbd{$} to take a formula from the top of the stack, or with
35380@kbd{'} and a typed formula. In the last two cases, the formula may
35381be a nameless function like @samp{<#1+#2>} or @samp{<x, y : x+y>}, or it
35382may include @kbd{$}, @kbd{$$}, etc. (where @kbd{$} will correspond to the
35383last argument of the created function), or otherwise you will be
35384prompted for an argument list. The number of vectors popped from the
35385stack by @kbd{V M} depends on the number of arguments of the function.
35386
35387@c 23
35388@item
35389One of the mapping direction keys @kbd{_} (horizontal, i.e., map
35390by rows or reduce across), @kbd{:} (vertical, i.e., map by columns or
35391reduce down), or @kbd{=} (map or reduce by rows) may be used before
35392entering @cite{op}; these modify the function name by adding the letter
35393@code{r} for ``rows,'' @code{c} for ``columns,'' @code{a} for ``across,''
35394or @code{d} for ``down.''
35395
35396@c 24
35397@item
35398The prefix argument specifies a packing mode. A nonnegative mode
35399is the number of items (for @kbd{v p}) or the number of levels
35400(for @kbd{v u}). A negative mode is as described below. With no
35401prefix argument, the mode is taken from the top of the stack and
35402may be an integer or a vector of integers.
35403@iftex
35404{@advance@tableindent-20pt
35405@end iftex
35406@table @cite
35407@item -1
b275eac7 35408(@var{2}) Rectangular complex number.
d7b8e6c6 35409@item -2
b275eac7 35410(@var{2}) Polar complex number.
d7b8e6c6 35411@item -3
b275eac7 35412(@var{3}) HMS form.
d7b8e6c6 35413@item -4
b275eac7 35414(@var{2}) Error form.
d7b8e6c6 35415@item -5
b275eac7 35416(@var{2}) Modulo form.
d7b8e6c6 35417@item -6
b275eac7 35418(@var{2}) Closed interval.
d7b8e6c6 35419@item -7
b275eac7 35420(@var{2}) Closed .. open interval.
d7b8e6c6 35421@item -8
b275eac7 35422(@var{2}) Open .. closed interval.
d7b8e6c6 35423@item -9
b275eac7 35424(@var{2}) Open interval.
d7b8e6c6 35425@item -10
b275eac7 35426(@var{2}) Fraction.
d7b8e6c6 35427@item -11
b275eac7 35428(@var{2}) Float with integer mantissa.
d7b8e6c6 35429@item -12
b275eac7 35430(@var{2}) Float with mantissa in @cite{[1 .. 10)}.
d7b8e6c6 35431@item -13
b275eac7 35432(@var{1}) Date form (using date numbers).
d7b8e6c6 35433@item -14
b275eac7 35434(@var{3}) Date form (using year, month, day).
d7b8e6c6 35435@item -15
b275eac7 35436(@var{6}) Date form (using year, month, day, hour, minute, second).
d7b8e6c6
EZ
35437@end table
35438@iftex
35439}
35440@end iftex
35441
35442@c 25
35443@item
35444A prefix argument specifies the size @cite{n} of the matrix. With no
35445prefix argument, @cite{n} is omitted and the size is inferred from
35446the input vector.
35447
35448@c 26
35449@item
35450The prefix argument specifies the starting position @cite{n} (default 1).
35451
35452@c 27
35453@item
35454Cursor position within stack buffer affects this command.
35455
35456@c 28
35457@item
35458Arguments are not actually removed from the stack by this command.
35459
35460@c 29
35461@item
35462Variable name may be a single digit or a full name.
35463
35464@c 30
35465@item
35466Editing occurs in a separate buffer. Press @kbd{M-# M-#} (or @kbd{C-c C-c},
35467@key{LFD}, or in some cases @key{RET}) to finish the edit, or press
35468@kbd{M-# x} to cancel the edit. The @key{LFD} key prevents evaluation
35469of the result of the edit.
35470
35471@c 31
35472@item
35473The number prompted for can also be provided as a prefix argument.
35474
35475@c 32
35476@item
35477Press this key a second time to cancel the prefix.
35478
35479@c 33
35480@item
35481With a negative prefix, deactivate all formulas. With a positive
35482prefix, deactivate and then reactivate from scratch.
35483
35484@c 34
35485@item
35486Default is to scan for nearest formula delimiter symbols. With a
35487prefix of zero, formula is delimited by mark and point. With a
35488non-zero prefix, formula is delimited by scanning forward or
35489backward by that many lines.
35490
35491@c 35
35492@item
35493Parse the region between point and mark as a vector. A nonzero prefix
35494parses @var{n} lines before or after point as a vector. A zero prefix
35495parses the current line as a vector. A @kbd{C-u} prefix parses the
35496region between point and mark as a single formula.
35497
35498@c 36
35499@item
35500Parse the rectangle defined by point and mark as a matrix. A positive
35501prefix @var{n} divides the rectangle into columns of width @var{n}.
35502A zero or @kbd{C-u} prefix parses each line as one formula. A negative
35503prefix suppresses special treatment of bracketed portions of a line.
35504
35505@c 37
35506@item
35507A numeric prefix causes the current language mode to be ignored.
35508
35509@c 38
35510@item
35511Responding to a prompt with a blank line answers that and all
35512later prompts by popping additional stack entries.
35513
35514@c 39
35515@item
35516Answer for @cite{v} may also be of the form @cite{v = v_0} or
35517@cite{v - v_0}.
35518
35519@c 40
35520@item
35521With a positive prefix argument, stack contains many @cite{y}'s and one
35522common @cite{x}. With a zero prefix, stack contains a vector of
35523@cite{y}s and a common @cite{x}. With a negative prefix, stack
35524contains many @cite{[x,y]} vectors. (For 3D plots, substitute
35525@cite{z} for @cite{y} and @cite{x,y} for @cite{x}.)
35526
35527@c 41
35528@item
35529With any prefix argument, all curves in the graph are deleted.
35530
35531@c 42
35532@item
35533With a positive prefix, refines an existing plot with more data points.
35534With a negative prefix, forces recomputation of the plot data.
35535
35536@c 43
35537@item
35538With any prefix argument, set the default value instead of the
35539value for this graph.
35540
35541@c 44
35542@item
35543With a negative prefix argument, set the value for the printer.
35544
35545@c 45
35546@item
35547Condition is considered ``true'' if it is a nonzero real or complex
35548number, or a formula whose value is known to be nonzero; it is ``false''
35549otherwise.
35550
35551@c 46
35552@item
35553Several formulas separated by commas are pushed as multiple stack
35554entries. Trailing @kbd{)}, @kbd{]}, @kbd{@}}, @kbd{>}, and @kbd{"}
35555delimiters may be omitted. The notation @kbd{$$$} refers to the value
35556in stack level three, and causes the formula to replace the top three
35557stack levels. The notation @kbd{$3} refers to stack level three without
35558causing that value to be removed from the stack. Use @key{LFD} in place
35559of @key{RET} to prevent evaluation; use @kbd{M-=} in place of @key{RET}
35560to evaluate variables.@refill
35561
35562@c 47
35563@item
35564The variable is replaced by the formula shown on the right. The
35565Inverse flag reverses the order of the operands, e.g., @kbd{I s - x}
35566assigns @c{$x \coloneq a-x$}
35567@cite{x := a-x}.
35568
35569@c 48
35570@item
35571Press @kbd{?} repeatedly to see how to choose a model. Answer the
35572variables prompt with @cite{iv} or @cite{iv;pv} to specify
35573independent and parameter variables. A positive prefix argument
5d67986c 35574takes @i{@var{n}+1} vectors from the stack; a zero prefix takes a matrix
d7b8e6c6
EZ
35575and a vector from the stack.
35576
35577@c 49
35578@item
35579With a plain @kbd{C-u} prefix, replace the current region of the
35580destination buffer with the yanked text instead of inserting.
35581
35582@c 50
35583@item
35584All stack entries are reformatted; the @kbd{H} prefix inhibits this.
35585The @kbd{I} prefix sets the mode temporarily, redraws the top stack
35586entry, then restores the original setting of the mode.
35587
35588@c 51
35589@item
35590A negative prefix sets the default 3D resolution instead of the
35591default 2D resolution.
35592
35593@c 52
35594@item
35595This grabs a vector of the form [@var{prec}, @var{wsize}, @var{ssize},
35596@var{radix}, @var{flfmt}, @var{ang}, @var{frac}, @var{symb}, @var{polar},
35597@var{matrix}, @var{simp}, @var{inf}]. A prefix argument from 1 to 12
35598grabs the @var{n}th mode value only.
35599@end enumerate
35600
35601@iftex
35602(Space is provided below for you to keep your own written notes.)
35603@page
35604@endgroup
35605@end iftex
35606
35607
35608@c [end-summary]
35609
35610@node Key Index, Command Index, Summary, Top
35611@unnumbered Index of Key Sequences
35612
35613@printindex ky
35614
35615@node Command Index, Function Index, Key Index, Top
35616@unnumbered Index of Calculator Commands
35617
35618Since all Calculator commands begin with the prefix @samp{calc-}, the
35619@kbd{x} key has been provided as a variant of @kbd{M-x} which automatically
35620types @samp{calc-} for you. Thus, @kbd{x last-args} is short for
35621@kbd{M-x calc-last-args}.
35622
35623@printindex pg
35624
35625@node Function Index, Concept Index, Command Index, Top
35626@unnumbered Index of Algebraic Functions
35627
35628This is a list of built-in functions and operators usable in algebraic
35629expressions. Their full Lisp names are derived by adding the prefix
35630@samp{calcFunc-}, as in @code{calcFunc-sqrt}.
35631@iftex
35632All functions except those noted with ``*'' have corresponding
35633Calc keystrokes and can also be found in the Calc Summary.
35634@end iftex
35635
35636@printindex tp
35637
35638@node Concept Index, Variable Index, Function Index, Top
35639@unnumbered Concept Index
35640
35641@printindex cp
35642
35643@node Variable Index, Lisp Function Index, Concept Index, Top
35644@unnumbered Index of Variables
35645
35646The variables in this list that do not contain dashes are accessible
35647as Calc variables. Add a @samp{var-} prefix to get the name of the
35648corresponding Lisp variable.
35649
35650The remaining variables are Lisp variables suitable for @code{setq}ing
35651in your @file{.emacs} file.
35652
35653@printindex vr
35654
35655@node Lisp Function Index, , Variable Index, Top
35656@unnumbered Index of Lisp Math Functions
35657
35658The following functions are meant to be used with @code{defmath}, not
35659@code{defun} definitions. For names that do not start with @samp{calc-},
35660the corresponding full Lisp name is derived by adding a prefix of
35661@samp{math-}.
35662
35663@printindex fn
35664
35665@summarycontents
35666
35667@c [end]
35668
35669@contents
35670@bye
35671
35672