381 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
381 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
JavaScript Expression Evaluator
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===============================
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[![npm](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/expr-eval.svg?maxAge=3600)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/expr-eval)
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[![CDNJS version](https://img.shields.io/cdnjs/v/expr-eval.svg?maxAge=3600)](https://cdnjs.com/libraries/expr-eval)
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[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/silentmatt/expr-eval.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/silentmatt/expr-eval)
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Description
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-------------------------------------
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Parses and evaluates mathematical expressions. It's a safer and more
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math-oriented alternative to using JavaScript’s `eval` function for mathematical
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expressions.
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It has built-in support for common math operators and functions. Additionally,
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you can add your own JavaScript functions. Expressions can be evaluated
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directly, or compiled into native JavaScript functions.
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Installation
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-------------------------------------
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npm install expr-eval
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Basic Usage
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-------------------------------------
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var Parser = require('expr-eval').Parser;
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var parser = new Parser();
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var expr = parser.parse('2 * x + 1');
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console.log(expr.evaluate({ x: 3 })); // 7
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// or
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Parser.evaluate('6 * x', { x: 7 }) // 42
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Documentation
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-------------------------------------
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* [Parser](#parser)
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- [Parser()](#parser-1)
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- [parse(expression: string)](#parseexpression-string)
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- [Parser.parse(expression: string)](#parserparseexpression-string)
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- [Parser.evaluate(expression: string, variables?: object)](#parserevaluateexpression-string-variables-object)
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* [Expression](#expression)
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- [evaluate(variables?: object)](#evaluatevariables-object)
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- [substitute(variable: string, expression: Expression | string | number)](#substitutevariable-string-expression-expression--string--number)
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- [simplify(variables: object)](#simplifyvariables-object)
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- [variables(options?: object)](#variablesoptions-object)
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- [symbols(options?: object)](#symbolsoptions-object)
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- [toString()](#tostring)
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- [toJSFunction(parameters: array | string, variables?: object)](#tojsfunctionparameters-array--string-variables-object)
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* [Expression Syntax](#expression-syntax)
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- [Operator Precedence](#operator-precedence)
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- [Unary operators](#unary-operators)
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- [Array literals](#array-literals)
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- [Pre-defined functions](#pre-defined-functions)
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- [Custom JavaScript functions](#custom-javascript-functions)
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- [Constants](#constants)
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### Parser ###
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Parser is the main class in the library. It has as single `parse` method, and
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"static" methods for parsing and evaluating expressions.
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#### Parser()
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Constructs a new `Parser` instance.
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The constructor takes an optional `options` parameter that allows you to enable or disable operators.
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For example, the following will create a `Parser` that does not allow comparison or logical operators, but does allow `in`:
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var parser = new Parser({
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operators: {
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// These default to true, but are included to be explicit
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add: true,
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concatenate: true,
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conditional: true,
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divide: true,
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factorial: true,
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multiply: true,
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power: true,
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remainder: true,
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subtract: true,
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// Disable and, or, not, <, ==, !=, etc.
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logical: false,
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comparison: false,
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// Disable 'in' and = operators
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'in': false,
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assignment: false
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}
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});
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#### parse(expression: string)
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Convert a mathematical expression into an `Expression` object.
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#### Parser.parse(expression: string)
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Static equivalent of `new Parser().parse(expression)`.
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#### Parser.evaluate(expression: string, variables?: object)
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Parse and immediately evaluate an expression using the values and functions from
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the `variables` object.
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Parser.evaluate(expr, vars) is equivalent to calling
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Parser.parse(expr).evaluate(vars).
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### Expression ###
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`Parser.parse(str)` returns an `Expression` object. `Expression`s are similar to
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JavaScript functions, i.e. they can be "called" with variables bound to
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passed-in values. In fact, they can even be converted into JavaScript
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functions.
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#### evaluate(variables?: object)
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Evaluate the expression, with variables bound to the values in {variables}. Each
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variable in the expression is bound to the corresponding member of the
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`variables` object. If there are unbound variables, `evaluate` will throw an
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exception.
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js> expr = Parser.parse("2 ^ x");
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(2^x)
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js> expr.evaluate({ x: 3 });
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8
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#### substitute(variable: string, expression: Expression | string | number)
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Create a new `Expression` with the specified variable replaced with another
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expression. This is similar to function composition. If `expression` is a string
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or number, it will be parsed into an `Expression`.
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js> expr = Parser.parse("2 * x + 1");
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((2*x)+1)
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js> expr.substitute("x", "4 * x");
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((2*(4*x))+1)
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js> expr2.evaluate({ x: 3 });
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25
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#### simplify(variables: object)
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Simplify constant sub-expressions and replace variable references with literal
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values. This is basically a partial evaluation, that does as much of the
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calculation as it can with the provided variables. Function calls are not
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evaluated (except the built-in operator functions), since they may not be
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deterministic.
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Simplify is pretty simple. For example, it doesn’t know that addition and
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multiplication are associative, so `((2*(4*x))+1)` from the previous example
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cannot be simplified unless you provide a value for x. `2*4*x+1` can however,
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because it’s parsed as `(((2*4)*x)+1)`, so the `(2*4)` sub-expression will be
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replaced with "8", resulting in `((8*x)+1)`.
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js> expr = Parser.parse("x * (y * atan(1))").simplify({ y: 4 });
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(x*3.141592653589793)
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js> expr.evaluate({ x: 2 });
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6.283185307179586
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#### variables(options?: object)
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Get an array of the unbound variables in the expression.
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js> expr = Parser.parse("x * (y * atan(1))");
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(x*(y*atan(1)))
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js> expr.variables();
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x,y
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js> expr.simplify({ y: 4 }).variables();
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x
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By default, `variables` will return "top-level" objects, so for example, `Parser.parse(x.y.z).variables()` returns `['x']`. If you want to get the whole chain of object members, you can call it with `{ withMembers: true }`. So `Parser.parse(x.y.z).variables({ withMembers: true })` would return `['x.y.z']`.
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#### symbols(options?: object)
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Get an array of variables, including any built-in functions used in the
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expression.
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js> expr = Parser.parse("min(x, y, z)");
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(min(x, y, z))
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js> expr.symbols();
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min,x,y,z
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js> expr.simplify({ y: 4, z: 5 }).symbols();
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min,x
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Like `variables`, `symbols` accepts an option argument `{ withMembers: true }` to include object members.
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#### toString()
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Convert the expression to a string. `toString()` surrounds every sub-expression
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with parentheses (except literal values, variables, and function calls), so
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it’s useful for debugging precedence errors.
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#### toJSFunction(parameters: array | string, variables?: object)
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Convert an `Expression` object into a callable JavaScript function. `parameters`
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is an array of parameter names, or a string, with the names separated by commas.
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If the optional `variables` argument is provided, the expression will be
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simplified with variables bound to the supplied values.
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js> expr = Parser.parse("x + y + z");
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((x + y) + z)
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js> f = expr.toJSFunction("x,y,z");
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[Function] // function (x, y, z) { return x + y + z; };
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js> f(1, 2, 3)
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6
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js> f = expr.toJSFunction("y,z", { x: 100 });
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[Function] // function (y, z) { return 100 + y + z; };
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js> f(2, 3)
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105
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### Expression Syntax ###
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The parser accepts a pretty basic grammar. It's similar to normal JavaScript
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expressions, but is more math-oriented. For example, the `^` operator is
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exponentiation, not xor.
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#### Operator Precedence
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Operator | Associativity | Description
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:----------------------- | :------------ | :----------
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(...) | None | Grouping
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f(), x.y, a[i] | Left | Function call, property access, array indexing
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! | Left | Factorial
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^ | Right | Exponentiation
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+, -, not, sqrt, etc. | Right | Unary prefix operators (see below for the full list)
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\*, /, % | Left | Multiplication, division, remainder
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+, -, \|\| | Left | Addition, subtraction, array/list concatenation
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==, !=, >=, <=, >, <, in | Left | Equals, not equals, etc. "in" means "is the left operand included in the right array operand?"
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and | Left | Logical AND
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or | Left | Logical OR
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x ? y : z | Right | Ternary conditional (if x then y else z)
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= | Right | Variable assignment
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; | Left | Expression separator
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var parser = new Parser({
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operators: {
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'in': true,
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'assignment': true
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}
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});
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// Now parser supports 'x in array' and 'y = 2*x' expressions
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#### Unary operators
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The parser has several built-in "functions" that are actually unary operators.
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The primary difference between these and functions are that they can only accept
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exactly one argument, and parentheses are optional. With parentheses, they have
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the same precedence as function calls, but without parentheses, they keep their
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normal precedence (just below `^`). For example, `sin(x)^2` is equivalent to
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`(sin x)^2`, and `sin x^2` is equivalent to `sin(x^2)`.
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The unary `+` and `-` operators are an exception, and always have their normal
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precedence.
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Operator | Description
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:------- | :----------
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-x | Negation
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+x | Unary plus. This converts it's operand to a number, but has no other effect.
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x! | Factorial (x * (x-1) * (x-2) * … * 2 * 1). gamma(x + 1) for non-integers.
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abs x | Absolute value (magnitude) of x
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acos x | Arc cosine of x (in radians)
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acosh x | Hyperbolic arc cosine of x (in radians)
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asin x | Arc sine of x (in radians)
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asinh x | Hyperbolic arc sine of x (in radians)
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atan x | Arc tangent of x (in radians)
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atanh x | Hyperbolic arc tangent of x (in radians)
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cbrt x | Cube root of x
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ceil x | Ceiling of x — the smallest integer that’s >= x
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cos x | Cosine of x (x is in radians)
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cosh x | Hyperbolic cosine of x (x is in radians)
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exp x | e^x (exponential/antilogarithm function with base e)
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expm1 x | e^x - 1
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floor x | Floor of x — the largest integer that’s <= x
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length x | String length of x
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ln x | Natural logarithm of x
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log x | Natural logarithm of x (synonym for ln, not base-10)
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log10 x | Base-10 logarithm of x
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log2 x | Base-2 logarithm of x
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log1p x | Natural logarithm of (1 + x)
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not x | Logical NOT operator
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round x | X, rounded to the nearest integer, using "grade-school rounding"
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sign x | Sign of x (-1, 0, or 1 for negative, zero, or positive respectively)
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sin x | Sine of x (x is in radians)
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sinh x | Hyperbolic sine of x (x is in radians)
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sqrt x | Square root of x. Result is NaN (Not a Number) if x is negative.
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tan x | Tangent of x (x is in radians)
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tanh x | Hyperbolic tangent of x (x is in radians)
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trunc x | Integral part of a X, looks like floor(x) unless for negative number
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#### Pre-defined functions
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Besides the "operator" functions, there are several pre-defined functions. You
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can provide your own, by binding variables to normal JavaScript functions.
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These are not evaluated by simplify.
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Function | Description
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:------------ | :----------
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random(n) | Get a random number in the range [0, n). If n is zero, or not provided, it defaults to 1.
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fac(n) | n! (factorial of n: "n * (n-1) * (n-2) * … * 2 * 1") Deprecated. Use the ! operator instead.
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min(a,b,…) | Get the smallest (minimum) number in the list.
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max(a,b,…) | Get the largest (maximum) number in the list.
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hypot(a,b) | Hypotenuse, i.e. the square root of the sum of squares of its arguments.
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pyt(a, b) | Alias for hypot.
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pow(x, y) | Equivalent to x^y. For consistency with JavaScript's Math object.
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atan2(y, x) | Arc tangent of x/y. i.e. the angle between (0, 0) and (x, y) in radians.
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roundTo(x, n) | Rounds x to n places after the decimal point.
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map(f, a) | Array map: Pass each element of `a` the function `f`, and return an array of the results.
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fold(f, y, a) | Array fold: Fold/reduce array `a` into a single value, `y` by setting `y = f(y, x, index)` for each element `x` of the array.
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filter(f, a) | Array filter: Return an array containing only the values from `a` where `f(x, index)` is `true`.
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indexOf(x, a) | Return the first index of string or array `a` matching the value `x`, or `-1` if not found.
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join(sep, a) | Concatenate the elements of `a`, separated by `sep`.
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if(c, a, b) | Function form of c ? a : b. Note: This always evaluates both `a` and `b`, regardless of whether `c` is `true` or not. Use `c ? a : b` instead if there are side effects, or if evaluating the branches could be expensive.
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#### Array literals
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Arrays can be created by including the elements inside square `[]` brackets, separated by commas. For example:
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[ 1, 2, 3, 2+2, 10/2, 3! ]
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#### Function definitions
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You can define functions using the syntax `name(params) = expression`. When it's evaluated, the name will be added to the passed in scope as a function. You can call it later in the expression, or make it available to other expressions by re-using the same scope object. Functions can support multiple parameters, separated by commas.
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Examples:
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square(x) = x*x
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add(a, b) = a + b
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factorial(x) = x < 2 ? 1 : x * factorial(x - 1)
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#### Custom JavaScript functions
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If you need additional functions that aren't supported out of the box, you can easily add them in your own code. Instances of the `Parser` class have a property called `functions` that's simply an object with all the functions that are in scope. You can add, replace, or delete any of the properties to customize what's available in the expressions. For example:
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var parser = new Parser();
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// Add a new function
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parser.functions.customAddFunction = function (arg1, arg2) {
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return arg1 + arg2;
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};
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// Remove the factorial function
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delete parser.functions.fac;
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parser.evaluate('customAddFunction(2, 4) == 6'); // true
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//parser.evaluate('fac(3)'); // This will fail
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#### Constants
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The parser also includes a number of pre-defined constants that can be used in expressions. These are shown
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in the table below:
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Constant | Description
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:----------- | :----------
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E | The value of `Math.E` from your JavaScript runtime
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PI | The value of `Math.PI` from your JavaScript runtime
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true | Logical `true` value
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false | Logical `false` value
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Pre-defined constants are stored in `parser.consts`. You can make changes to this property to customise the
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constants available to your expressions. For example:
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var parser = new Parser();
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parser.consts.R = 1.234;
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console.log(parser.parse('A+B/R').toString()); // ((A + B) / 1.234)
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To disable the pre-defined constants, you can replace or delete `parser.consts`:
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var parser = new Parser();
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parser.consts = {};
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### Tests ###
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1. `cd` to the project directory
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2. Install development dependencies: `npm install`
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3. Run the tests: `npm test`
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