Bc (programming language)
bc for basic calculator, is "an arbitrary-precision calculator language" with syntax similar to the C programming language. bc is typically used as either a mathematical scripting language or as an interactive mathematical shell. OverviewA typical interactive usage is typing the command Historybc first appeared in Version 6 Unix in 1975. It was written by Lorinda Cherry of Bell Labs as a front end to dc, an arbitrary-precision calculator written by Robert Morris and Cherry. dc performed arbitrary-precision computations specified in reverse Polish notation. bc provided a conventional programming-language interface to the same capability via a simple compiler (a single yacc source file comprising a few hundred lines of code), which converted a C-like syntax into dc notation and piped the results through dc. In 1991, POSIX rigorously defined and standardized bc. Four implementations of this standard survive today: The first is the traditional Unix implementation, a front-end to dc, which survives in Unix and Plan 9 systems. The second is the free software GNU bc, first released in 1991 by Philip A. Nelson. The GNU implementation has numerous extensions beyond the POSIX standard and is no longer a front-end to dc (it is a bytecode interpreter). The third is a re-implementation by OpenBSD in 2003. The fourth is an independent implementation by Gavin Howard[1] that is included in Android (operating system),[2][3] FreeBSD as of 13.3-RELEASE,[4][5][6] and macOS as of 13.0.[7][8][9] ImplementationsPOSIX bcThe POSIX standardized bc language is traditionally written as a program in the dc programming language to provide a higher level of access to the features of the dc language without the complexities of dc's terse syntax. In this form, the bc language contains single-letter variable, array and function names and most standard arithmetic operators, as well as the familiar control-flow constructs ( Functions are defined using a All numbers and variable contents are arbitrary-precision numbers whose precision (in decimal places) is determined by the global The numeric base of input (in interactive mode), output and program constants may be specified by setting the reserved Output is generated by deliberately not assigning the result of a calculation to a variable. Comments may be added to bc code by use of the C Mathematical operatorsExactly as CThe following POSIX bc operators behave exactly like their C counterparts: + - * / += -= *= /= ++ -- < > == != <= >= ( ) [ ] { } Similar to CThe modulus operators, $ bc
bc 1.06
Copyright 1991-1994, 1997, 1998, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.
For details type `warranty'.
scale=0; 5%3
2
scale=1; 5%3
.2
scale=20; 5%3
.00000000000000000002
Conflicting with CThe operators ^ ^= superficially resemble the C bitwise exclusive-or operators, but are in fact the bc integer exponentiation operators. Of particular note, the use of the "Missing" operators relative to CThe bitwise, Boolean and conditional operators: & | ^ && || &= |= ^= &&= ||= << >> <<= >>= ?: are not available in POSIX bc. Built-in functionsThe The Standard library functionsbc's standard math library (defined with the -l option) contains functions for calculating sine, cosine, arctangent, natural logarithm, the exponential function and the two parameter Bessel function J. Most standard mathematical functions (including the other inverse trigonometric functions) can be constructed using these. See external links for implementations of many other functions.
The -l option changes the scale to 20,[10] so things such as modulo may work unexpectedly. For example, writing Plan 9 bcPlan 9 bc is identical to POSIX bc but for an additional GNU bcGNU bc derives from the POSIX standard and includes many extensions. It is entirely separate from dc-based implementations of the POSIX standard and is instead written in C. Nevertheless, it is fully backwards compatible as all POSIX bc programs will run unmodified as GNU bc programs. GNU bc variables, arrays and function names may contain more than one character, some more operators have been included from C, and notably, an Output is achieved either by deliberately not assigning a result of a calculation to a variable (the POSIX way) or by using the added Furthermore, a In addition to C-style comments, a The value of the last calculation is always stored within the additional built-in Extra operatorsThe following logical operators are additional to those in POSIX bc: && || ! They are available for use in conditional statements (such as within an FunctionsAll functions available in GNU bc are inherited from POSIX. No further functions are provided as standard with the GNU distribution. Example codeSince the bc A "power" function in POSIX bc /* A function to return the integer part of x */
define i(x) {
auto s
s = scale
scale = 0
x /= 1 /* round x down */
scale = s
return (x)
}
/* Use the fact that x^y == e^(y*log(x)) */
define p(x,y) {
if (y == i(y)) {
return (x ^ y)
}
return ( e( y * l(x) ) )
}
Calculating π to 10000 digitsCalculate pi using the builtin arctangent function, a(): $ bc -lq
scale=10000
4*a(1) # The atan of 1 is 45 degrees, which is pi/4 in radians.
# This may take several minutes to calculate.
A translated C functionBecause the syntax of bc is similar to that of C, published numerical functions written in C can often be translated into bc quite easily, which immediately provides the arbitrary precision of bc. For example, in the Journal of Statistical Software (July 2004, Volume 11, Issue 5), George Marsaglia published the following C code for the cumulative normal distribution: double Phi(double x)
{
long double s=x,t=0,b=x,q=x*x,i=1;
while(s!=t)
s=(t=s)+(b*=q/(i+=2));
return .5+s*exp(-.5*q-.91893853320467274178L);
}
With some necessary changes to accommodate bc's different syntax, and noting that the constant "0.9189..." is actually log(2*PI)/2, this can be translated to the following GNU bc code: define phi(x) {
auto s,t,b,q,i,const
s=x; t=0; b=x; q=x*x; i=1
while(s!=t)
s=(t=s)+(b*=q/(i+=2))
const=0.5*l(8*a(1)) # 0.91893...
return .5+s*e(-.5*q-const)
}
Using bc in shell scriptsbc can be used non-interactively, with input through a pipe. This is useful inside shell scripts. For example: $ result=$(echo "scale=2; 5 * 7 /3;" | bc)
$ echo $result
11.66
In contrast, note that the bash shell only performs integer arithmetic, e.g.: $ result=$((5 * 7 /3))
$ echo $result
11
One can also use the here-string idiom (in bash, ksh, csh): $ bc -l <<< "5*7/3"
11.66666666666666666666
See alsoReferences
External linksThe Wikibook Guide to Unix has a page on the topic of: Commands
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