1# `bc` 2 3***WARNING: New user registration for <https://git.gavinhoward.com/> is disabled 4because of spam. If you need to report a bug with `bc`, email gavin at this site 5minus the `git.` part for an account, and I will create one for you. Or you can 6report an issue at [GitHub][29].*** 7 8***WARNING: This project has moved to [https://git.gavinhoward.com/][20] for 9[these reasons][21], though GitHub will remain a mirror.*** 10 11This is an implementation of the [POSIX `bc` calculator][12] that implements 12[GNU `bc`][1] extensions, as well as the period (`.`) extension for the BSD 13flavor of `bc`. 14 15For more information, see this `bc`'s full manual. 16 17This `bc` also includes an implementation of `dc` in the same binary, accessible 18via a symbolic link, which implements all FreeBSD and GNU extensions. (If a 19standalone `dc` binary is desired, `bc` can be copied and renamed to `dc`.) The 20`!` command is omitted; I believe this poses security concerns and that such 21functionality is unnecessary. 22 23For more information, see the `dc`'s full manual. 24 25This `bc` also provides `bc`'s math as a library with C bindings, called `bcl`. 26 27For more information, see the full manual for `bcl`. 28 29## License 30 31This `bc` is Free and Open Source Software (FOSS). It is offered under the BSD 322-clause License. Full license text may be found in the [`LICENSE.md`][4] file. 33 34## Prerequisites 35 36This `bc` only requires either: 37 381. Windows 10 or later, or 392. A C99-compatible compiler and a (mostly) POSIX 2008-compatible system with 40 the XSI (X/Open System Interfaces) option group. 41 42Since POSIX 2008 with XSI requires the existence of a C99 compiler as `c99`, any 43POSIX and XSI-compatible system will have everything needed. 44 45POSIX-compatible systems that are known to work: 46 47* Linux 48* FreeBSD 49* OpenBSD 50* NetBSD 51* macOS 52* Solaris* (as long as the Solaris version supports POSIX 2008) 53* AIX 54* HP-UX* (except for history) 55 56In addition, there is compatibility code to make this `bc` work on Windows. 57 58Please submit bug reports if this `bc` does not build out of the box on any 59system. 60 61## Build 62 63This `bc` should build unmodified on any POSIX-compliant system or on Windows 64starting with Windows 10 (though earlier versions may work). 65 66For more complex build requirements than the ones below, see the [build 67manual][5]. 68 69### Windows 70 71There is no guarantee that this `bc` will work on any version of Windows earlier 72than Windows 10 (I cannot test on earlier versions), but it is guaranteed to 73work on Windows 10 at least. 74 75Also, if building with MSBuild, the MSBuild bundled with Visual Studio is 76required. 77 78**Note**: Unlike the POSIX-compatible platforms, only one build configuration is 79supported on Windows: extra math and history enabled, NLS (locale support) 80disabled, with both calculators built. 81 82#### `bc` 83 84To build `bc`, you can open the `vs/bc.sln` file in Visual Studio, select the 85configuration, and build. 86 87You can also build using MSBuild with the following from the root directory: 88 89``` 90msbuild -property:Configuration=<config> vs/bc.sln 91``` 92 93where `<config>` is either one of `Debug` or `Release`. 94 95On Windows, the calculators are built as `vs/bin/<platform>/<config>/bc.exe` and 96`vs/bin/<Platform>/<Config>/dc.exe`, where `<platform>` can be either `Win32` or 97`x64`, and `<config>` can be `Debug` or `Release`. 98 99**Note**: On Windows, `dc.exe` is just copied from `bc.exe`; it is not linked. 100Patches are welcome for a way to do that. 101 102#### `bcl` (Library) 103 104To build the library, you can open the `vs/bcl.sln` file in Visual Studio, 105select the configuration, and build. 106 107You can also build using MSBuild with the following from the root directory: 108 109``` 110msbuild -property:Configuration=<config> vs/bcl.sln 111``` 112 113where `<config>` is either one of `Debug`, `ReleaseMD`, or `ReleaseMT`. 114 115On Windows, the library is built as `vs/lib/<platform>/<config>/bcl.lib`, where 116`<platform>` can be either `Win32` or `x64`, and `<config>` can be `Debug`, 117`ReleaseMD`, or `ReleaseMT`. 118 119### POSIX-Compatible Systems 120 121On POSIX-compatible systems, `bc` is built as `bin/bc` and `dc` is built as 122`bin/dc` by default. 123 124#### Default 125 126For the default build with optimization, use the following commands in the root 127directory: 128 129``` 130./configure.sh -O3 131make 132``` 133 134#### One Calculator 135 136To only build `bc`, use the following commands: 137 138``` 139./configure.sh --disable-dc 140make 141``` 142 143To only build `dc`, use the following commands: 144 145``` 146./configure.sh --disable-bc 147make 148``` 149 150#### Debug 151 152For debug builds, use the following commands in the root directory: 153 154``` 155./configure.sh -g 156make 157``` 158 159#### Install 160 161To install, use the following command: 162 163``` 164make install 165``` 166 167By default, `bc` and `dc` will be installed in `/usr/local`. For installing in 168other locations, use the `PREFIX` environment variable when running 169`configure.sh` or pass the `--prefix=<prefix>` option to `configure.sh`. See the 170[build manual][5], or run `./configure.sh --help`, for more details. 171 172#### Library 173 174To build the math library, pass the `-a` or `--library` options to 175`configure.sh`: 176 177``` 178./configure.sh -a 179``` 180 181When building the library, the executables are not built. For more information, 182see the [build manual][5]. 183 184The library API can be found in [`manuals/bcl.3.md`][26] or `man bcl` once the 185library is installed. 186 187#### Package and Distro Maintainers 188 189This section is for package and distro maintainers. 190 191##### Out-of-Source Builds 192 193Out-of-source builds are supported; just call `configure.sh` from the directory 194where the actual build will happen. 195 196For example, if the source is in `bc`, the build should happen in `build`, then 197call `configure.sh` and `make` like so: 198 199``` 200../bc/configure.sh 201make 202``` 203 204***WARNING***: The path to `configure.sh` from the build directory must not have 205spaces because `make` does not support target names with spaces. 206 207##### Recommended Compiler 208 209When I ran benchmarks with my `bc` compiled under `clang`, it performed much 210better than when compiled under `gcc`. I recommend compiling this `bc` with 211`clang`. 212 213I also recommend building this `bc` with C11 if you can because `bc` will detect 214a C11 compiler and add `_Noreturn` to any relevant function(s). 215 216##### Recommended Optimizations 217 218I wrote this `bc` with Separation of Concerns, which means that there are many 219small functions that could be inlined. However, they are often called across 220file boundaries, and the default optimizer can only look at the current file, 221which means that they are not inlined. 222 223Thus, because of the way this `bc` is built, it will automatically be slower 224than other `bc` implementations when running scripts with no math. (My `bc`'s 225math is *much* faster, so any non-trivial script should run faster in my `bc`.) 226 227Some, or all, of the difference can be made up with the right optimizations. The 228optimizations I recommend are: 229 2301. `-O3` 2312. `-flto` (link-time optimization) 232 233in that order. 234 235Link-time optimization, in particular, speeds up the `bc` a lot. This is because 236when link-time optimization is turned on, the optimizer can look across files 237and inline *much* more heavily. 238 239However, I recommend ***NOT*** using `-march=native`. Doing so will reduce this 240`bc`'s performance, at least when building with link-time optimization. See the 241[benchmarks][19] for more details. 242 243##### Stripping Binaries 244 245By default, non-debug binaries are stripped, but stripping can be disabled with 246the `-T` option to `configure.sh`. 247 248##### Using This `bc` as an Alternative 249 250If this `bc` is packaged as an alternative to an already existing `bc` package, 251it is possible to rename it in the build to prevent name collision. To prepend 252to the name, just run the following: 253 254``` 255EXECPREFIX=<some_prefix> ./configure.sh 256``` 257 258To append to the name, just run the following: 259 260``` 261EXECSUFFIX=<some_suffix> ./configure.sh 262``` 263 264If a package maintainer wishes to add both a prefix and a suffix, that is 265allowed. 266 267**Note**: The suggested name (and package name) when `bc` is not available is 268`bc-gh`. 269 270##### Karatsuba Number 271 272Package and distro maintainers have one tool at their disposal to build this 273`bc` in the optimal configuration: `scripts/karatsuba.py`. 274 275This script is not a compile-time or runtime prerequisite; it is for package and 276distro maintainers to run once when a package is being created. It finds the 277optimal Karatsuba number (see the [algorithms manual][7] for more information) 278for the machine that it is running on. 279 280The easiest way to run this script is with `make karatsuba`. 281 282If desired, maintainers can also skip running this script because there is a 283sane default for the Karatsuba number. 284 285## Status 286 287This `bc` is robust. 288 289It is well-tested, fuzzed, and fully standards-compliant (though not certified) 290with POSIX `bc`. The math has been tested with 40+ million random problems, so 291it is as correct as I can make it. 292 293This `bc` can be used as a drop-in replacement for any existing `bc`. This `bc` 294is also compatible with MinGW toolchains. 295 296In addition, this `bc` is considered complete; i.e., there will be no more 297releases with additional features. However, it *is* actively maintained, so if 298any bugs are found, they will be fixed in new releases. Also, additional 299translations will also be added as they are provided. 300 301### Development 302 303If I (Gavin D. Howard) get [hit by a bus][27] and future programmers need to 304handle work themselves, the best place to start is the [Development manual][28]. 305 306## Vim Syntax 307 308I have developed (using other people's code to start) [`vim` syntax files][17] 309for this `bc` and `dc`, including the extensions. 310 311## `bc` Libs 312 313I have gathered some excellent [`bc` and `dc` libraries][18]. These libraries 314may prove useful to any serious users. 315 316## Comparison to GNU `bc` 317 318This `bc` compares favorably to GNU `bc`. 319 320* This `bc` builds natively on Windows. 321* It has more extensions, which make this `bc` more useful for scripting. (See 322 [Extensions](#extensions).) 323* This `bc` is a bit more POSIX compliant. 324* It has a much less buggy parser. The GNU `bc` will give parse errors for what 325 is actually valid `bc` code, or should be. For example, putting an `else` on 326 a new line after a brace can cause GNU `bc` to give a parse error. 327* This `bc` has fewer crashes. 328* GNU `bc` calculates the wrong number of significant digits for `length(x)`. 329* GNU `bc` will sometimes print numbers incorrectly. For example, when running 330 it on the file `tests/bc/power.txt` in this repo, GNU `bc` gets all the right 331 answers, but it fails to wrap the numbers at the proper place when outputting 332 to a file. 333* This `bc` is faster. (See [Performance](#performance).) 334 335### Performance 336 337Because this `bc` packs more than `1` decimal digit per hardware integer, this 338`bc` is faster than GNU `bc` and can be *much* faster. Full benchmarks can be 339found at [manuals/benchmarks.md][19]. 340 341There is one instance where this `bc` is slower: if scripts are light on math. 342This is because this `bc`'s intepreter is slightly slower than GNU `bc`, but 343that is because it is more robust. See the [benchmarks][19]. 344 345### Extensions 346 347Below is a non-comprehensive list of extensions that this `bc` and `dc` have 348that all others do not. 349 350* **The `!` operator has higher precedence than the `!` operator in other `bc` 351 implementations.** 352* An extended math library. (See [here][30] for more information.) 353* A command-line prompt. 354* Turning on and off digit clamping. (Digit clamping is about how to treat 355 "invalid" digits for a particular base. GNU `bc` uses it, and the BSD `bc` 356 does not. Mine does both.) 357* A pseudo-random number generator. This includes the ability to set the seed 358 and get reproducible streams of random numbers. 359* The ability to use stacks for the globals `scale`, `ibase`, and `obase` 360 instead of needing to restore them in *every* function. 361* The ability to *not* use non-standard keywords. For example, `abs` is a 362 keyword (a built-in function), but if some script actually defines a function 363 called that, it's possible to tell my `bc` to not treat it as a keyword, which 364 will make the script parses correctly. 365* The ability to turn on and off printing leading zeroes on numbers greater than 366 `-1` and less than `1`. 367* Outputting in scientific and engineering notation. 368* Accepting input in scientific and engineering notation. 369* Passing strings and arrays to the `length()` built-in function. (In `dc`, the 370 `Y` command will do this for arrays, and the `Z` command will do this for both 371 numbers and strings.) 372* The `abs()` built-in function. (This is the `b` command in `dc`.) 373* The `is_number()` and `is_string()` built-in functions. (These tell whether a 374 variable is holding a string or a number, for runtime type checking. The 375 commands are `u` and `t` in `dc`.) 376* For `bc` only, the `divmod()` built-in function for computing a quotient and 377 remainder at the same time. 378* For `bc` only, the `asciify()` built-in function for converting an array to a 379 string. 380* The `$` truncation operator. (It's the same in `bc` and `dc`.) 381* The `@` "set scale" operator. (It's the same in `bc` and `dc`.) 382* The decimal shift operators. (`<<` and `>>` in `bc`, `H` and `h` in `dc`.) 383* Built-in functions or commands to get the max of `scale`, `ibase`, and 384 `obase`. 385* The ability to put strings into variables in `bc`. (This always existed in 386 `dc`.) 387* The `'` command in `dc` for the depth of the execution stack. 388* The `y` command in `dc` for the depth of register stacks. 389* Built-in functions or commands to get the value of certain environment 390 variables that might affect execution. 391* The `stream` keyword to do the same thing as the `P` command in `dc`. 392* Defined order of evaluation. 393* Defined exit statuses. 394* All environment variables other than `POSIXLY_CORRECT`, `BC_ENV_ARGS`, and 395 `BC_LINE_LENGTH`. 396* The ability for users to define their own defaults for various options during 397 build. (See [here][31] for more information.) 398 399## Algorithms 400 401To see what algorithms this `bc` uses, see the [algorithms manual][7]. 402 403## Locales 404 405Currently, there is no locale support on Windows. 406 407Additionally, this `bc` only has support for English (and US English), French, 408German, Portuguese, Dutch, Polish, Russian, Japanese, and Chinese locales. 409Patches are welcome for translations; use the existing `*.msg` files in 410`locales/` as a starting point. 411 412In addition, patches for improvements are welcome; the last two messages in 413Portuguese were made with Google Translate, and the Dutch, Polish, Russian, 414Japanese, and Chinese locales were all generated with [DeepL][22]. 415 416The message files provided assume that locales apply to all regions where a 417language is used, but this might not be true for, e.g., `fr_CA` and `fr_CH`. 418Any corrections or a confirmation that the current texts are acceptable for 419those regions would be appreciated, too. 420 421## Other Projects 422 423Other projects based on this bc are: 424 425* [busybox `bc`][8]. The busybox maintainers have made their own changes, so any 426 bugs in the busybox `bc` should be reported to them. 427* [toybox `bc`][9]. The maintainer has also made his own changes, so bugs in the 428 toybox `bc` should be reported there. 429* [FreeBSD `bc`][23]. While the `bc` in FreeBSD is kept up-to-date, it is better 430 to [report bugs there][24], as well as [submit patches][25], and the 431 maintainers of the package will contact me if necessary. 432* [macOS `bc`][35]. Any bugs in that `bc` should be reported to me, but do 433 expect bugs because the version is old. 434* [Android Open Source `bc`][32]. Any bugs in that `bc` can be reported here. 435 436This is a non-comprehensive list of Linux distros that use this `bc` as the 437system `bc`: 438 439* [Gentoo][33]; it is a first-class alternative to GNU `bc`, but not exclusive. 440* [Linux from Scratch][34]. 441 442Other Linux distros package it as a second-class alternative, usually as `bc-gh` 443or `howard-bc`. 444 445## Language 446 447This `bc` is written in pure ISO C99, using POSIX 2008 APIs with custom Windows 448compatibility code. 449 450## Commit Messages 451 452This `bc` uses the commit message guidelines laid out in [this blog post][10]. 453 454## Semantic Versioning 455 456This `bc` uses [semantic versioning][11]. 457 458## AI-Free 459 460This repository is 100% AI-Free code. 461 462## Contents 463 464Items labeled with `(maintainer use only)` are not included in release source 465tarballs. 466 467Files: 468 469 .gitignore The git ignore file (maintainer use only). 470 .gitattributes The git attributes file (maintainer use only). 471 bcl.pc.in A template pkg-config file for bcl. 472 configure A symlink to configure.sh to make packaging easier. 473 configure.sh The configure script. 474 LICENSE.md A Markdown form of the BSD 2-clause License. 475 Makefile.in The Makefile template. 476 NEWS.md The changelog. 477 NOTICE.md List of contributors and copyright owners. 478 479Folders: 480 481 benchmarks A folder of benchmarks for various aspects of bc performance. 482 gen The bc math library, help texts, and code to generate C source. 483 include All header files. 484 locales Locale files, in .msg format. Patches welcome for translations. 485 manuals Manuals for both programs. 486 src All source code. 487 scripts A bunch of shell scripts to help with development and building. 488 tests All tests. 489 vs Files needed for the build on Windows. 490 491[1]: https://www.gnu.org/software/bc/ 492[4]: ./LICENSE.md 493[5]: ./manuals/build.md 494[7]: ./manuals/algorithms.md 495[8]: https://git.busybox.net/busybox/tree/miscutils/bc.c 496[9]: https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/toys/pending/bc.c 497[10]: http://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html 498[11]: http://semver.org/ 499[12]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/bc.html 500[17]: https://git.gavinhoward.com/gavin/vim-bc 501[18]: https://git.gavinhoward.com/gavin/bc_libs 502[19]: ./manuals/benchmarks.md 503[20]: https://git.gavinhoward.com/gavin/bc 504[21]: https://gavinhoward.com/2020/04/i-am-moving-away-from-github/ 505[22]: https://www.deepl.com/translator 506[23]: https://cgit.freebsd.org/src/tree/contrib/bc 507[24]: https://bugs.freebsd.org/ 508[25]: https://reviews.freebsd.org/ 509[26]: ./manuals/bcl.3.md 510[27]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_factor 511[28]: ./manuals/development.md 512[29]: https://github.com/gavinhoward/bc 513[30]: ./manuals/bc/A.1.md#extended-library 514[31]: ./manuals/build.md#settings 515[32]: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/bc/ 516[33]: https://github.com/gentoo/gentoo/blob/master/app-alternatives/bc/bc-0.ebuild#L8 517[34]: https://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/view/stable/chapter08/bc.html 518[35]: https://github.com/apple-oss-distributions/bc/tree/main/bc 519