A zero-dependency advanced math parsing library written in pure, idiomatic nim
Go to file
Nocturn9x 81e95feea4 Beautified code and moved visitor methods to camelCase naming convention 2022-03-01 14:55:27 +01:00
examples NimKalc 0.2.5: Exported all API for easier use 2021-07-25 18:03:49 +02:00
src Beautified code and moved visitor methods to camelCase naming convention 2022-03-01 14:55:27 +01:00
.gitignore Added extra exception to gitignore 2021-03-12 10:49:55 +01:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2021-03-11 11:06:18 +01:00
README.md NimKalc 0.2.5: Exported all API for easier use 2021-07-25 18:03:49 +02:00
nimkalc.nimble Bumped version number 2021-11-11 12:20:47 +01:00

README.md

NimKalc - A math parsing library

NimKalc is a simple implementation of a recursive-descent top-down parser that can evaluate mathematical expressions.

Disclaimer: This library is in beta and is not fully tested yet. It will be soon, though. If you find any bugs or issues, please report them so we can fix them and make a proper test suite!

Features:

  • Support for the following mathematical constants:
    • pi
    • tau (pi * 2)
    • e (Euler's number)
    • inf (Infinity)
    • nan (Not a number)
  • Support for the following of nim's math library functions:
    • sin
    • cos
    • tan
    • sinh
    • tanh
    • cosh
    • arccos
    • arcsin
    • arctan
    • arcsinh
    • arccosh
    • arctanh
    • hypot
    • sqrt
    • cbrt
    • log10
    • log2
    • ln
    • log
  • Parentheses can be used to enforce different precedence levels
  • Easy API for tokenization, parsing and evaluation of AST nodes

Note: Some procedures were not implemented because for any of the following reasons:

  • They return booleans or other custom types that we don't support, like classify
  • They weren't useful enough or their functionality was already implemented in other ways (such as pow which we use as the ^ operator)
  • They just haven't made their way into the library yet, be patient!

Current limitations

  • No equation-solving (coming soon)

How to use it

NimKalc parses mathematical expressions following this process:

  • Tokenize the input
  • Generate an AST
  • Visit the nodes

Each of these steps can be run separately, but for convenience a wrapper eval procedure has been defined which takes in a string and returns a single AST node containing the result of the given expression.

Supported operators

Beyond the classical 4 operators (+, -, / and *), NimKalc supports:

  • % for modulo division
  • ^ for exponentiation
  • unary - for negation

Exceptions

NimKalc defines various exceptions:

  • NimKalcException is a generic superclass for all errors
  • ParseError is used when the expression is syntactically invalid
  • MathError is used when there is an arithmetical error such as division by 0 or domain errors (e.g. log(0))
  • EvaluationError is used when the runtime evaluation of an expression fails (e.g. trying to call something that isn't a function)

Design

NimKalc treats all numerical values as float to simplify the implementation of the underlying operators. To tell integers from floating point numbers the AstNode object has a kind discriminant which will be equal to NodeKind.Integer for ints and NodeKind.Float for decimals. It is advised that you take this into account when using the library, since integers might start losing precision when converted from their float counterpart due to the difference of the two types. Everything should be fine as long as the value doesn't exceed 2 ^ 53, though

Note: The string representation of integer nodes won't show the decimal part for clarity

Some other notable design choices (due to the underlying simplicity of the language we parse) are as follows:

  • Identifiers are checked when tokenizing, since they're all constant
  • Mathematical constants are immediately mapped to their real values when tokenizing with no intermediate steps or tokens
  • Type errors (such as trying to call an integer) are detected statically at parse time

String representations

All of NimKalc's objects implement the $ operator and are therefore printable. Integer nodes will look like Integer(x), while floats are represented with Float(x.x). Unary operators print as Unary(operator, right), while binary operators print as Binary(left, operator, right). Parenthesized expressions print as Grouping(expr), where expr is the expression enclosed in parentheses (as an AST node, obviously). Token objects will print as Token(kind, lexeme): an example for the number 2 would be Token(Integer, '2'). Function calls print like Call(name, args) where name is the function name and args is a list of arguments

Example

Here is an example of a REPL using all of NimKalc's functionality to evaluate expressions from stdin (can be found at examples/repl.nim)

import nimkalc

import strformat
import strutils


proc repl() =
  ## A simple REPL to demonstrate NimKalc's functionality
  var line: string
  var result: AstNode
  var tokens: seq[Token]
  let lexerObj = initLexer()
  let parserObj = initParser()
  let visitor = initNodeVisitor()
  echo "Welcome to the NimKalc REPL, type a math expression and press enter"
  while true:
    try:
      stdout.write("=> ")
      line = stdin.readLine()
      echo &"Parsing and evaluation of {line} below:"
      tokens = lexerObj.lex(line)
      # No-one cares about the EOF token after all
      echo &"Tokenization of {line}: {tokens[0..^2].join(\", \")}"
      result = parserObj.parse(tokens)
      echo &"AST for {line}: {result}"
      result = visitor.eval(result)
      case result.kind:
        # The result is an AstNode object, specifically
        # either a node of type NodeKind.Float or a NodeKind.Integer
        of NodeKind.Float:
          echo &"Value of {line}: {result.value}"
        of NodeKind.Integer:
          echo &"Value of {line}: {int(result.value)}"
        else:
          discard  # Unreachable
    except IOError:
      echo "\nGoodbye."
      break
    except ParseError:
      echo &"A parsing error occurred: {getCurrentExceptionMsg()}"
    except MathError:
      echo &"An arithmetic error occurred: {getCurrentExceptionMsg()}"
    except OverflowDefect:
      echo &"Value overflow/underflow detected: {getCurrentExceptionMsg()}"


when isMainModule:
  repl()

Note: If you don't need the intermediate representations shown here (tokens/AST) you can just import nimkalc and use the eval procedure, which takes in a string and returns the evaluated result as a primary AST node like so:

import nimkalc

echo eval("2+2")  # Prints Integer(4)

Installing

You can install the package via nimble with this command: nimble install nimkalc

Note: Nim 1.2.0 or higher is required to build NimKalc! Other versions are likely work if they're not too old, but they have not been tested