xref: /freebsd/contrib/bc/manuals/dc/HN.1.md (revision f4c129f5fb1669b284d76a838b1e509f97c2d299)
1<!---
2
3SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
4
5Copyright (c) 2018-2021 Gavin D. Howard and contributors.
6
7Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
8modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
9
10* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
11  list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
12
13* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
14  this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
15  and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
16
17THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
18AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
19IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
20ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
21LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
22CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
23SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
24INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
25CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
26ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
27POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
28
29-->
30
31# Name
32
33dc - arbitrary-precision decimal reverse-Polish notation calculator
34
35# SYNOPSIS
36
37**dc** [**-hiPRvVx**] [**-\-version**] [**-\-help**] [**-\-interactive**] [**-\-no-prompt**] [**-\-no-read-prompt**] [**-\-extended-register**] [**-e** *expr*] [**-\-expression**=*expr*...] [**-f** *file*...] [**-\-file**=*file*...] [*file*...]
38
39# DESCRIPTION
40
41dc(1) is an arbitrary-precision calculator. It uses a stack (reverse Polish
42notation) to store numbers and results of computations. Arithmetic operations
43pop arguments off of the stack and push the results.
44
45If no files are given on the command-line, then dc(1) reads from **stdin** (see
46the **STDIN** section). Otherwise, those files are processed, and dc(1) will
47then exit.
48
49If a user wants to set up a standard environment, they can use **DC_ENV_ARGS**
50(see the **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section). For example, if a user wants the
51**scale** always set to **10**, they can set **DC_ENV_ARGS** to **-e 10k**, and
52this dc(1) will always start with a **scale** of **10**.
53
54# OPTIONS
55
56The following are the options that dc(1) accepts.
57
58**-h**, **-\-help**
59
60:   Prints a usage message and quits.
61
62**-v**, **-V**, **-\-version**
63
64:   Print the version information (copyright header) and exit.
65
66**-i**, **-\-interactive**
67
68:   Forces interactive mode. (See the **INTERACTIVE MODE** section.)
69
70    This is a **non-portable extension**.
71
72**-L**, **-\-no-line-length**
73
74:   Disables line length checking and prints numbers without backslashes and
75    newlines. In other words, this option sets **BC_LINE_LENGTH** to **0** (see
76    the **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section).
77
78    This is a **non-portable extension**.
79
80**-P**, **-\-no-prompt**
81
82:   Disables the prompt in TTY mode. (The prompt is only enabled in TTY mode.
83    See the **TTY MODE** section.) This is mostly for those users that do not
84    want a prompt or are not used to having them in dc(1). Most of those users
85    would want to put this option in **DC_ENV_ARGS**.
86
87    These options override the **DC_PROMPT** and **DC_TTY_MODE** environment
88    variables (see the **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section).
89
90    This is a **non-portable extension**.
91
92**-R**, **-\-no-read-prompt**
93
94:   Disables the read prompt in TTY mode. (The read prompt is only enabled in
95    TTY mode. See the **TTY MODE** section.) This is mostly for those users that
96    do not want a read prompt or are not used to having them in dc(1). Most of
97    those users would want to put this option in **BC_ENV_ARGS** (see the
98    **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section). This option is also useful in hash bang
99    lines of dc(1) scripts that prompt for user input.
100
101    This option does not disable the regular prompt because the read prompt is
102    only used when the **?** command is used.
103
104    These options *do* override the **DC_PROMPT** and **DC_TTY_MODE**
105    environment variables (see the **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section), but only
106    for the read prompt.
107
108    This is a **non-portable extension**.
109
110**-x** **-\-extended-register**
111
112:   Enables extended register mode. See the *Extended Register Mode* subsection
113    of the **REGISTERS** section for more information.
114
115    This is a **non-portable extension**.
116
117**-z**, **-\-leading-zeroes**
118
119:   Makes bc(1) print all numbers greater than **-1** and less than **1**, and
120    not equal to **0**, with a leading zero.
121
122    This can be set for individual numbers with the **plz(x)**, plznl(x)**,
123    **pnlz(x)**, and **pnlznl(x)** functions in the extended math library (see
124    the **LIBRARY** section).
125
126    This is a **non-portable extension**.
127
128**-e** *expr*, **-\-expression**=*expr*
129
130:   Evaluates *expr*. If multiple expressions are given, they are evaluated in
131    order. If files are given as well (see below), the expressions and files are
132    evaluated in the order given. This means that if a file is given before an
133    expression, the file is read in and evaluated first.
134
135    If this option is given on the command-line (i.e., not in **DC_ENV_ARGS**,
136    see the **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section), then after processing all
137    expressions and files, dc(1) will exit, unless **-** (**stdin**) was given
138    as an argument at least once to **-f** or **-\-file**, whether on the
139    command-line or in **DC_ENV_ARGS**. However, if any other **-e**,
140    **-\-expression**, **-f**, or **-\-file** arguments are given after **-f-**
141    or equivalent is given, dc(1) will give a fatal error and exit.
142
143    This is a **non-portable extension**.
144
145**-f** *file*, **-\-file**=*file*
146
147:   Reads in *file* and evaluates it, line by line, as though it were read
148    through **stdin**. If expressions are also given (see above), the
149    expressions are evaluated in the order given.
150
151    If this option is given on the command-line (i.e., not in **DC_ENV_ARGS**,
152    see the **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section), then after processing all
153    expressions and files, dc(1) will exit, unless **-** (**stdin**) was given
154    as an argument at least once to **-f** or **-\-file**. However, if any other
155    **-e**, **-\-expression**, **-f**, or **-\-file** arguments are given after
156    **-f-** or equivalent is given, dc(1) will give a fatal error and exit.
157
158    This is a **non-portable extension**.
159
160All long options are **non-portable extensions**.
161
162# STDIN
163
164If no files are given on the command-line and no files or expressions are given
165by the **-f**, **-\-file**, **-e**, or **-\-expression** options, then dc(1)
166read from **stdin**.
167
168However, there is a caveat to this.
169
170First, **stdin** is evaluated a line at a time. The only exception to this is if
171a string has been finished, but not ended. This means that, except for escaped
172brackets, all brackets must be balanced before dc(1) parses and executes.
173
174# STDOUT
175
176Any non-error output is written to **stdout**. In addition, if history (see the
177**HISTORY** section) and the prompt (see the **TTY MODE** section) are enabled,
178both are output to **stdout**.
179
180**Note**: Unlike other dc(1) implementations, this dc(1) will issue a fatal
181error (see the **EXIT STATUS** section) if it cannot write to **stdout**, so if
182**stdout** is closed, as in **dc <file> >&-**, it will quit with an error. This
183is done so that dc(1) can report problems when **stdout** is redirected to a
184file.
185
186If there are scripts that depend on the behavior of other dc(1) implementations,
187it is recommended that those scripts be changed to redirect **stdout** to
188**/dev/null**.
189
190# STDERR
191
192Any error output is written to **stderr**.
193
194**Note**: Unlike other dc(1) implementations, this dc(1) will issue a fatal
195error (see the **EXIT STATUS** section) if it cannot write to **stderr**, so if
196**stderr** is closed, as in **dc <file> 2>&-**, it will quit with an error. This
197is done so that dc(1) can exit with an error code when **stderr** is redirected
198to a file.
199
200If there are scripts that depend on the behavior of other dc(1) implementations,
201it is recommended that those scripts be changed to redirect **stderr** to
202**/dev/null**.
203
204# SYNTAX
205
206Each item in the input source code, either a number (see the **NUMBERS**
207section) or a command (see the **COMMANDS** section), is processed and executed,
208in order. Input is processed immediately when entered.
209
210**ibase** is a register (see the **REGISTERS** section) that determines how to
211interpret constant numbers. It is the "input" base, or the number base used for
212interpreting input numbers. **ibase** is initially **10**. The max allowable
213value for **ibase** is **16**. The min allowable value for **ibase** is **2**.
214The max allowable value for **ibase** can be queried in dc(1) programs with the
215**T** command.
216
217**obase** is a register (see the **REGISTERS** section) that determines how to
218output results. It is the "output" base, or the number base used for outputting
219numbers. **obase** is initially **10**. The max allowable value for **obase** is
220**DC_BASE_MAX** and can be queried with the **U** command. The min allowable
221value for **obase** is **0**. If **obase** is **0**, values are output in
222scientific notation, and if **obase** is **1**, values are output in engineering
223notation. Otherwise, values are output in the specified base.
224
225Outputting in scientific and engineering notations are **non-portable
226extensions**.
227
228The *scale* of an expression is the number of digits in the result of the
229expression right of the decimal point, and **scale** is a register (see the
230**REGISTERS** section) that sets the precision of any operations (with
231exceptions). **scale** is initially **0**. **scale** cannot be negative. The max
232allowable value for **scale** can be queried in dc(1) programs with the **V**
233command.
234
235**seed** is a register containing the current seed for the pseudo-random number
236generator. If the current value of **seed** is queried and stored, then if it is
237assigned to **seed** later, the pseudo-random number generator is guaranteed to
238produce the same sequence of pseudo-random numbers that were generated after the
239value of **seed** was first queried.
240
241Multiple values assigned to **seed** can produce the same sequence of
242pseudo-random numbers. Likewise, when a value is assigned to **seed**, it is not
243guaranteed that querying **seed** immediately after will return the same value.
244In addition, the value of **seed** will change after any call to the **'**
245command or the **"** command that does not get receive a value of **0** or
246**1**. The maximum integer returned by the **'** command can be queried with the
247**W** command.
248
249**Note**: The values returned by the pseudo-random number generator with the
250**'** and **"** commands are guaranteed to **NOT** be cryptographically secure.
251This is a consequence of using a seeded pseudo-random number generator. However,
252they *are* guaranteed to be reproducible with identical **seed** values. This
253means that the pseudo-random values from dc(1) should only be used where a
254reproducible stream of pseudo-random numbers is *ESSENTIAL*. In any other case,
255use a non-seeded pseudo-random number generator.
256
257The pseudo-random number generator, **seed**, and all associated operations are
258**non-portable extensions**.
259
260## Comments
261
262Comments go from **#** until, and not including, the next newline. This is a
263**non-portable extension**.
264
265# NUMBERS
266
267Numbers are strings made up of digits, uppercase letters up to **F**, and at
268most **1** period for a radix. Numbers can have up to **DC_NUM_MAX** digits.
269Uppercase letters are equal to **9** + their position in the alphabet (i.e.,
270**A** equals **10**, or **9+1**). If a digit or letter makes no sense with the
271current value of **ibase**, they are set to the value of the highest valid digit
272in **ibase**.
273
274Single-character numbers (i.e., **A** alone) take the value that they would have
275if they were valid digits, regardless of the value of **ibase**. This means that
276**A** alone always equals decimal **10** and **F** alone always equals decimal
277**15**.
278
279In addition, dc(1) accepts numbers in scientific notation. These have the form
280**\<number\>e\<integer\>**. The exponent (the portion after the **e**) must be
281an integer. An example is **1.89237e9**, which is equal to **1892370000**.
282Negative exponents are also allowed, so **4.2890e_3** is equal to **0.0042890**.
283
284**WARNING**: Both the number and the exponent in scientific notation are
285interpreted according to the current **ibase**, but the number is still
286multiplied by **10\^exponent** regardless of the current **ibase**. For example,
287if **ibase** is **16** and dc(1) is given the number string **FFeA**, the
288resulting decimal number will be **2550000000000**, and if dc(1) is given the
289number string **10e_4**, the resulting decimal number will be **0.0016**.
290
291Accepting input as scientific notation is a **non-portable extension**.
292
293# COMMANDS
294
295The valid commands are listed below.
296
297## Printing
298
299These commands are used for printing.
300
301Note that both scientific notation and engineering notation are available for
302printing numbers. Scientific notation is activated by assigning **0** to
303**obase** using **0o**, and engineering notation is activated by assigning **1**
304to **obase** using **1o**. To deactivate them, just assign a different value to
305**obase**.
306
307Printing numbers in scientific notation and/or engineering notation is a
308**non-portable extension**.
309
310**p**
311
312:   Prints the value on top of the stack, whether number or string, and prints a
313    newline after.
314
315    This does not alter the stack.
316
317**n**
318
319:   Prints the value on top of the stack, whether number or string, and pops it
320    off of the stack.
321
322**P**
323
324:   Pops a value off the stack.
325
326    If the value is a number, it is truncated and the absolute value of the
327    result is printed as though **obase** is **256** and each digit is
328    interpreted as an 8-bit ASCII character, making it a byte stream.
329
330    If the value is a string, it is printed without a trailing newline.
331
332    This is a **non-portable extension**.
333
334**f**
335
336:   Prints the entire contents of the stack, in order from newest to oldest,
337    without altering anything.
338
339    Users should use this command when they get lost.
340
341## Arithmetic
342
343These are the commands used for arithmetic.
344
345**+**
346
347:   The top two values are popped off the stack, added, and the result is pushed
348    onto the stack. The *scale* of the result is equal to the max *scale* of
349    both operands.
350
351**-**
352
353:   The top two values are popped off the stack, subtracted, and the result is
354    pushed onto the stack. The *scale* of the result is equal to the max
355    *scale* of both operands.
356
357**\***
358
359:   The top two values are popped off the stack, multiplied, and the result is
360    pushed onto the stack. If **a** is the *scale* of the first expression and
361    **b** is the *scale* of the second expression, the *scale* of the result
362    is equal to **min(a+b,max(scale,a,b))** where **min()** and **max()** return
363    the obvious values.
364
365**/**
366
367:   The top two values are popped off the stack, divided, and the result is
368    pushed onto the stack. The *scale* of the result is equal to **scale**.
369
370    The first value popped off of the stack must be non-zero.
371
372**%**
373
374:   The top two values are popped off the stack, remaindered, and the result is
375    pushed onto the stack.
376
377    Remaindering is equivalent to 1) Computing **a/b** to current **scale**, and
378    2) Using the result of step 1 to calculate **a-(a/b)\*b** to *scale*
379    **max(scale+scale(b),scale(a))**.
380
381    The first value popped off of the stack must be non-zero.
382
383**~**
384
385:   The top two values are popped off the stack, divided and remaindered, and
386    the results (divided first, remainder second) are pushed onto the stack.
387    This is equivalent to **x y / x y %** except that **x** and **y** are only
388    evaluated once.
389
390    The first value popped off of the stack must be non-zero.
391
392    This is a **non-portable extension**.
393
394**\^**
395
396:   The top two values are popped off the stack, the second is raised to the
397    power of the first, and the result is pushed onto the stack. The *scale* of
398    the result is equal to **scale**.
399
400    The first value popped off of the stack must be an integer, and if that
401    value is negative, the second value popped off of the stack must be
402    non-zero.
403
404**v**
405
406:   The top value is popped off the stack, its square root is computed, and the
407    result is pushed onto the stack. The *scale* of the result is equal to
408    **scale**.
409
410    The value popped off of the stack must be non-negative.
411
412**\_**
413
414:   If this command *immediately* precedes a number (i.e., no spaces or other
415    commands), then that number is input as a negative number.
416
417    Otherwise, the top value on the stack is popped and copied, and the copy is
418    negated and pushed onto the stack. This behavior without a number is a
419    **non-portable extension**.
420
421**b**
422
423:   The top value is popped off the stack, and if it is zero, it is pushed back
424    onto the stack. Otherwise, its absolute value is pushed onto the stack.
425
426    This is a **non-portable extension**.
427
428**|**
429
430:   The top three values are popped off the stack, a modular exponentiation is
431    computed, and the result is pushed onto the stack.
432
433    The first value popped is used as the reduction modulus and must be an
434    integer and non-zero. The second value popped is used as the exponent and
435    must be an integer and non-negative. The third value popped is the base and
436    must be an integer.
437
438    This is a **non-portable extension**.
439
440**\$**
441
442:   The top value is popped off the stack and copied, and the copy is truncated
443    and pushed onto the stack.
444
445    This is a **non-portable extension**.
446
447**\@**
448
449:   The top two values are popped off the stack, and the precision of the second
450    is set to the value of the first, whether by truncation or extension.
451
452    The first value popped off of the stack must be an integer and non-negative.
453
454    This is a **non-portable extension**.
455
456**H**
457
458:   The top two values are popped off the stack, and the second is shifted left
459    (radix shifted right) to the value of the first.
460
461    The first value popped off of the stack must be an integer and non-negative.
462
463    This is a **non-portable extension**.
464
465**h**
466
467:   The top two values are popped off the stack, and the second is shifted right
468    (radix shifted left) to the value of the first.
469
470    The first value popped off of the stack must be an integer and non-negative.
471
472    This is a **non-portable extension**.
473
474**G**
475
476:   The top two values are popped off of the stack, they are compared, and a
477    **1** is pushed if they are equal, or **0** otherwise.
478
479    This is a **non-portable extension**.
480
481**N**
482
483:   The top value is popped off of the stack, and if it a **0**, a **1** is
484    pushed; otherwise, a **0** is pushed.
485
486    This is a **non-portable extension**.
487
488**(**
489
490:   The top two values are popped off of the stack, they are compared, and a
491    **1** is pushed if the first is less than the second, or **0** otherwise.
492
493    This is a **non-portable extension**.
494
495**{**
496
497:   The top two values are popped off of the stack, they are compared, and a
498    **1** is pushed if the first is less than or equal to the second, or **0**
499    otherwise.
500
501    This is a **non-portable extension**.
502
503**)**
504
505:   The top two values are popped off of the stack, they are compared, and a
506    **1** is pushed if the first is greater than the second, or **0** otherwise.
507
508    This is a **non-portable extension**.
509
510**}**
511
512:   The top two values are popped off of the stack, they are compared, and a
513    **1** is pushed if the first is greater than or equal to the second, or
514    **0** otherwise.
515
516    This is a **non-portable extension**.
517
518**M**
519
520:   The top two values are popped off of the stack. If they are both non-zero, a
521    **1** is pushed onto the stack. If either of them is zero, or both of them
522    are, then a **0** is pushed onto the stack.
523
524    This is like the **&&** operator in bc(1), and it is *not* a short-circuit
525    operator.
526
527    This is a **non-portable extension**.
528
529**m**
530
531:   The top two values are popped off of the stack. If at least one of them is
532    non-zero, a **1** is pushed onto the stack. If both of them are zero, then a
533    **0** is pushed onto the stack.
534
535    This is like the **||** operator in bc(1), and it is *not* a short-circuit
536    operator.
537
538    This is a **non-portable extension**.
539
540## Pseudo-Random Number Generator
541
542dc(1) has a built-in pseudo-random number generator. These commands query the
543pseudo-random number generator. (See Parameters for more information about the
544**seed** value that controls the pseudo-random number generator.)
545
546The pseudo-random number generator is guaranteed to **NOT** be
547cryptographically secure.
548
549**'**
550
551:   Generates an integer between 0 and **DC_RAND_MAX**, inclusive (see the
552    **LIMITS** section).
553
554    The generated integer is made as unbiased as possible, subject to the
555    limitations of the pseudo-random number generator.
556
557    This is a **non-portable extension**.
558
559**"**
560
561:   Pops a value off of the stack, which is used as an **exclusive** upper bound
562    on the integer that will be generated. If the bound is negative or is a
563    non-integer, an error is raised, and dc(1) resets (see the **RESET**
564    section) while **seed** remains unchanged. If the bound is larger than
565    **DC_RAND_MAX**, the higher bound is honored by generating several
566    pseudo-random integers, multiplying them by appropriate powers of
567    **DC_RAND_MAX+1**, and adding them together. Thus, the size of integer that
568    can be generated with this command is unbounded. Using this command will
569    change the value of **seed**, unless the operand is **0** or **1**. In that
570    case, **0** is pushed onto the stack, and **seed** is *not* changed.
571
572    The generated integer is made as unbiased as possible, subject to the
573    limitations of the pseudo-random number generator.
574
575    This is a **non-portable extension**.
576
577## Stack Control
578
579These commands control the stack.
580
581**c**
582
583:   Removes all items from ("clears") the stack.
584
585**d**
586
587:   Copies the item on top of the stack ("duplicates") and pushes the copy onto
588    the stack.
589
590**r**
591
592:   Swaps ("reverses") the two top items on the stack.
593
594**R**
595
596:   Pops ("removes") the top value from the stack.
597
598## Register Control
599
600These commands control registers (see the **REGISTERS** section).
601
602**s**_r_
603
604:   Pops the value off the top of the stack and stores it into register *r*.
605
606**l**_r_
607
608:   Copies the value in register *r* and pushes it onto the stack. This does not
609    alter the contents of *r*.
610
611**S**_r_
612
613:   Pops the value off the top of the (main) stack and pushes it onto the stack
614    of register *r*. The previous value of the register becomes inaccessible.
615
616**L**_r_
617
618:   Pops the value off the top of the stack for register *r* and push it onto
619    the main stack. The previous value in the stack for register *r*, if any, is
620    now accessible via the **l**_r_ command.
621
622## Parameters
623
624These commands control the values of **ibase**, **obase**, **scale**, and
625**seed**. Also see the **SYNTAX** section.
626
627**i**
628
629:   Pops the value off of the top of the stack and uses it to set **ibase**,
630    which must be between **2** and **16**, inclusive.
631
632    If the value on top of the stack has any *scale*, the *scale* is ignored.
633
634**o**
635
636:   Pops the value off of the top of the stack and uses it to set **obase**,
637    which must be between **0** and **DC_BASE_MAX**, inclusive (see the
638    **LIMITS** section and the **NUMBERS** section).
639
640    If the value on top of the stack has any *scale*, the *scale* is ignored.
641
642**k**
643
644:   Pops the value off of the top of the stack and uses it to set **scale**,
645    which must be non-negative.
646
647    If the value on top of the stack has any *scale*, the *scale* is ignored.
648
649**j**
650
651:   Pops the value off of the top of the stack and uses it to set **seed**. The
652    meaning of **seed** is dependent on the current pseudo-random number
653    generator but is guaranteed to not change except for new major versions.
654
655    The *scale* and sign of the value may be significant.
656
657    If a previously used **seed** value is used again, the pseudo-random number
658    generator is guaranteed to produce the same sequence of pseudo-random
659    numbers as it did when the **seed** value was previously used.
660
661    The exact value assigned to **seed** is not guaranteed to be returned if the
662    **J** command is used. However, if **seed** *does* return a different value,
663    both values, when assigned to **seed**, are guaranteed to produce the same
664    sequence of pseudo-random numbers. This means that certain values assigned
665    to **seed** will not produce unique sequences of pseudo-random numbers.
666
667    There is no limit to the length (number of significant decimal digits) or
668    *scale* of the value that can be assigned to **seed**.
669
670    This is a **non-portable extension**.
671
672**I**
673
674:   Pushes the current value of **ibase** onto the main stack.
675
676**O**
677
678:   Pushes the current value of **obase** onto the main stack.
679
680**K**
681
682:   Pushes the current value of **scale** onto the main stack.
683
684**J**
685
686:   Pushes the current value of **seed** onto the main stack.
687
688    This is a **non-portable extension**.
689
690**T**
691
692:   Pushes the maximum allowable value of **ibase** onto the main stack.
693
694    This is a **non-portable extension**.
695
696**U**
697
698:   Pushes the maximum allowable value of **obase** onto the main stack.
699
700    This is a **non-portable extension**.
701
702**V**
703
704:   Pushes the maximum allowable value of **scale** onto the main stack.
705
706    This is a **non-portable extension**.
707
708**W**
709
710:   Pushes the maximum (inclusive) integer that can be generated with the **'**
711    pseudo-random number generator command.
712
713    This is a **non-portable extension**.
714
715## Strings
716
717The following commands control strings.
718
719dc(1) can work with both numbers and strings, and registers (see the
720**REGISTERS** section) can hold both strings and numbers. dc(1) always knows
721whether the contents of a register are a string or a number.
722
723While arithmetic operations have to have numbers, and will print an error if
724given a string, other commands accept strings.
725
726Strings can also be executed as macros. For example, if the string **[1pR]** is
727executed as a macro, then the code **1pR** is executed, meaning that the **1**
728will be printed with a newline after and then popped from the stack.
729
730**\[**_characters_**\]**
731
732:   Makes a string containing *characters* and pushes it onto the stack.
733
734    If there are brackets (**\[** and **\]**) in the string, then they must be
735    balanced. Unbalanced brackets can be escaped using a backslash (**\\**)
736    character.
737
738    If there is a backslash character in the string, the character after it
739    (even another backslash) is put into the string verbatim, but the (first)
740    backslash is not.
741
742**a**
743
744:   The value on top of the stack is popped.
745
746    If it is a number, it is truncated and its absolute value is taken. The
747    result mod **256** is calculated. If that result is **0**, push an empty
748    string; otherwise, push a one-character string where the character is the
749    result of the mod interpreted as an ASCII character.
750
751    If it is a string, then a new string is made. If the original string is
752    empty, the new string is empty. If it is not, then the first character of
753    the original string is used to create the new string as a one-character
754    string. The new string is then pushed onto the stack.
755
756    This is a **non-portable extension**.
757
758**x**
759
760:   Pops a value off of the top of the stack.
761
762    If it is a number, it is pushed back onto the stack.
763
764    If it is a string, it is executed as a macro.
765
766    This behavior is the norm whenever a macro is executed, whether by this
767    command or by the conditional execution commands below.
768
769**\>**_r_
770
771:   Pops two values off of the stack that must be numbers and compares them. If
772    the first value is greater than the second, then the contents of register
773    *r* are executed.
774
775    For example, **0 1>a** will execute the contents of register **a**, and
776    **1 0>a** will not.
777
778    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
779    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
780
781**>**_r_**e**_s_
782
783:   Like the above, but will execute register *s* if the comparison fails.
784
785    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
786    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
787
788    This is a **non-portable extension**.
789
790**!\>**_r_
791
792:   Pops two values off of the stack that must be numbers and compares them. If
793    the first value is not greater than the second (less than or equal to), then
794    the contents of register *r* are executed.
795
796    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
797    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
798
799**!\>**_r_**e**_s_
800
801:   Like the above, but will execute register *s* if the comparison fails.
802
803    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
804    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
805
806    This is a **non-portable extension**.
807
808**\<**_r_
809
810:   Pops two values off of the stack that must be numbers and compares them. If
811    the first value is less than the second, then the contents of register *r*
812    are executed.
813
814    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
815    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
816
817**\<**_r_**e**_s_
818
819:   Like the above, but will execute register *s* if the comparison fails.
820
821    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
822    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
823
824    This is a **non-portable extension**.
825
826**!\<**_r_
827
828:   Pops two values off of the stack that must be numbers and compares them. If
829    the first value is not less than the second (greater than or equal to), then
830    the contents of register *r* are executed.
831
832    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
833    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
834
835**!\<**_r_**e**_s_
836
837:   Like the above, but will execute register *s* if the comparison fails.
838
839    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
840    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
841
842    This is a **non-portable extension**.
843
844**=**_r_
845
846:   Pops two values off of the stack that must be numbers and compares them. If
847    the first value is equal to the second, then the contents of register *r*
848    are executed.
849
850    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
851    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
852
853**=**_r_**e**_s_
854
855:   Like the above, but will execute register *s* if the comparison fails.
856
857    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
858    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
859
860    This is a **non-portable extension**.
861
862**!=**_r_
863
864:   Pops two values off of the stack that must be numbers and compares them. If
865    the first value is not equal to the second, then the contents of register
866    *r* are executed.
867
868    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
869    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
870
871**!=**_r_**e**_s_
872
873:   Like the above, but will execute register *s* if the comparison fails.
874
875    If either or both of the values are not numbers, dc(1) will raise an error
876    and reset (see the **RESET** section).
877
878    This is a **non-portable extension**.
879
880**?**
881
882:   Reads a line from the **stdin** and executes it. This is to allow macros to
883    request input from users.
884
885**q**
886
887:   During execution of a macro, this exits the execution of that macro and the
888    execution of the macro that executed it. If there are no macros, or only one
889    macro executing, dc(1) exits.
890
891**Q**
892
893:   Pops a value from the stack which must be non-negative and is used the
894    number of macro executions to pop off of the execution stack. If the number
895    of levels to pop is greater than the number of executing macros, dc(1)
896    exits.
897
898**,**
899
900:   Pushes the depth of the execution stack onto the stack. The execution stack
901    is the stack of string executions. The number that is pushed onto the stack
902    is exactly as many as is needed to make dc(1) exit with the **Q** command,
903    so the sequence **,Q** will make dc(1) exit.
904
905## Status
906
907These commands query status of the stack or its top value.
908
909**Z**
910
911:   Pops a value off of the stack.
912
913    If it is a number, calculates the number of significant decimal digits it
914    has and pushes the result. It will push **1** if the argument is **0** with
915    no decimal places.
916
917    If it is a string, pushes the number of characters the string has.
918
919**X**
920
921:   Pops a value off of the stack.
922
923    If it is a number, pushes the *scale* of the value onto the stack.
924
925    If it is a string, pushes **0**.
926
927**z**
928
929:   Pushes the current depth of the stack (before execution of this command)
930    onto the stack.
931
932**y**_r_
933
934:   Pushes the current stack depth of the register *r* onto the main stack.
935
936    Because each register has a depth of **1** (with the value **0** in the top
937    item) when dc(1) starts, dc(1) requires that each register's stack must
938    always have at least one item; dc(1) will give an error and reset otherwise
939    (see the **RESET** section). This means that this command will never push
940    **0**.
941
942    This is a **non-portable extension**.
943
944## Arrays
945
946These commands manipulate arrays.
947
948**:**_r_
949
950:   Pops the top two values off of the stack. The second value will be stored in
951    the array *r* (see the **REGISTERS** section), indexed by the first value.
952
953**;**_r_
954
955:   Pops the value on top of the stack and uses it as an index into the array
956    *r*. The selected value is then pushed onto the stack.
957
958**Y**_r_
959
960:   Pushes the length of the array *r* onto the stack.
961
962    This is a **non-portable extension**.
963
964## Global Settings
965
966These commands retrieve global settings. These are the only commands that
967require multiple specific characters, and all of them begin with the letter
968**g**. Only the characters below are allowed after the character **g**; any
969other character produces a parse error (see the **ERRORS** section).
970
971**gl**
972
973:   Pushes the line length set by **DC_LINE_LENGTH** (see the **ENVIRONMENT
974    VARIABLES** section) onto the stack.
975
976**gz**
977
978:   Pushes **0** onto the stack if the leading zero setting has not been enabled
979    with the **-z** or **-\-leading-zeroes** options (see the **OPTIONS**
980    section), non-zero otherwise.
981
982# REGISTERS
983
984Registers are names that can store strings, numbers, and arrays. (Number/string
985registers do not interfere with array registers.)
986
987Each register is also its own stack, so the current register value is the top of
988the stack for the register. All registers, when first referenced, have one value
989(**0**) in their stack, and it is a runtime error to attempt to pop that item
990off of the register stack.
991
992In non-extended register mode, a register name is just the single character that
993follows any command that needs a register name. The only exceptions are: a
994newline (**'\\n'**) and a left bracket (**'['**); it is a parse error for a
995newline or a left bracket to be used as a register name.
996
997## Extended Register Mode
998
999Unlike most other dc(1) implentations, this dc(1) provides nearly unlimited
1000amounts of registers, if extended register mode is enabled.
1001
1002If extended register mode is enabled (**-x** or **-\-extended-register**
1003command-line arguments are given), then normal single character registers are
1004used *unless* the character immediately following a command that needs a
1005register name is a space (according to **isspace()**) and not a newline
1006(**'\\n'**).
1007
1008In that case, the register name is found according to the regex
1009**\[a-z\]\[a-z0-9\_\]\*** (like bc(1) identifiers), and it is a parse error if
1010the next non-space characters do not match that regex.
1011
1012# RESET
1013
1014When dc(1) encounters an error or a signal that it has a non-default handler
1015for, it resets. This means that several things happen.
1016
1017First, any macros that are executing are stopped and popped off the stack.
1018The behavior is not unlike that of exceptions in programming languages. Then
1019the execution point is set so that any code waiting to execute (after all
1020macros returned) is skipped.
1021
1022Thus, when dc(1) resets, it skips any remaining code waiting to be executed.
1023Then, if it is interactive mode, and the error was not a fatal error (see the
1024**EXIT STATUS** section), it asks for more input; otherwise, it exits with the
1025appropriate return code.
1026
1027# PERFORMANCE
1028
1029Most dc(1) implementations use **char** types to calculate the value of **1**
1030decimal digit at a time, but that can be slow. This dc(1) does something
1031different.
1032
1033It uses large integers to calculate more than **1** decimal digit at a time. If
1034built in a environment where **DC_LONG_BIT** (see the **LIMITS** section) is
1035**64**, then each integer has **9** decimal digits. If built in an environment
1036where **DC_LONG_BIT** is **32** then each integer has **4** decimal digits. This
1037value (the number of decimal digits per large integer) is called
1038**DC_BASE_DIGS**.
1039
1040In addition, this dc(1) uses an even larger integer for overflow checking. This
1041integer type depends on the value of **DC_LONG_BIT**, but is always at least
1042twice as large as the integer type used to store digits.
1043
1044# LIMITS
1045
1046The following are the limits on dc(1):
1047
1048**DC_LONG_BIT**
1049
1050:   The number of bits in the **long** type in the environment where dc(1) was
1051    built. This determines how many decimal digits can be stored in a single
1052    large integer (see the **PERFORMANCE** section).
1053
1054**DC_BASE_DIGS**
1055
1056:   The number of decimal digits per large integer (see the **PERFORMANCE**
1057    section). Depends on **DC_LONG_BIT**.
1058
1059**DC_BASE_POW**
1060
1061:   The max decimal number that each large integer can store (see
1062    **DC_BASE_DIGS**) plus **1**. Depends on **DC_BASE_DIGS**.
1063
1064**DC_OVERFLOW_MAX**
1065
1066:   The max number that the overflow type (see the **PERFORMANCE** section) can
1067    hold. Depends on **DC_LONG_BIT**.
1068
1069**DC_BASE_MAX**
1070
1071:   The maximum output base. Set at **DC_BASE_POW**.
1072
1073**DC_DIM_MAX**
1074
1075:   The maximum size of arrays. Set at **SIZE_MAX-1**.
1076
1077**DC_SCALE_MAX**
1078
1079:   The maximum **scale**. Set at **DC_OVERFLOW_MAX-1**.
1080
1081**DC_STRING_MAX**
1082
1083:   The maximum length of strings. Set at **DC_OVERFLOW_MAX-1**.
1084
1085**DC_NAME_MAX**
1086
1087:   The maximum length of identifiers. Set at **DC_OVERFLOW_MAX-1**.
1088
1089**DC_NUM_MAX**
1090
1091:   The maximum length of a number (in decimal digits), which includes digits
1092    after the decimal point. Set at **DC_OVERFLOW_MAX-1**.
1093
1094**DC_RAND_MAX**
1095
1096:   The maximum integer (inclusive) returned by the **'** command, if dc(1). Set
1097    at **2\^DC_LONG_BIT-1**.
1098
1099Exponent
1100
1101:   The maximum allowable exponent (positive or negative). Set at
1102    **DC_OVERFLOW_MAX**.
1103
1104Number of vars
1105
1106:   The maximum number of vars/arrays. Set at **SIZE_MAX-1**.
1107
1108These limits are meant to be effectively non-existent; the limits are so large
1109(at least on 64-bit machines) that there should not be any point at which they
1110become a problem. In fact, memory should be exhausted before these limits should
1111be hit.
1112
1113# ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
1114
1115dc(1) recognizes the following environment variables:
1116
1117**DC_ENV_ARGS**
1118
1119:   This is another way to give command-line arguments to dc(1). They should be
1120    in the same format as all other command-line arguments. These are always
1121    processed first, so any files given in **DC_ENV_ARGS** will be processed
1122    before arguments and files given on the command-line. This gives the user
1123    the ability to set up "standard" options and files to be used at every
1124    invocation. The most useful thing for such files to contain would be useful
1125    functions that the user might want every time dc(1) runs. Another use would
1126    be to use the **-e** option to set **scale** to a value other than **0**.
1127
1128    The code that parses **DC_ENV_ARGS** will correctly handle quoted arguments,
1129    but it does not understand escape sequences. For example, the string
1130    **"/home/gavin/some dc file.dc"** will be correctly parsed, but the string
1131    **"/home/gavin/some \"dc\" file.dc"** will include the backslashes.
1132
1133    The quote parsing will handle either kind of quotes, **'** or **"**. Thus,
1134    if you have a file with any number of single quotes in the name, you can use
1135    double quotes as the outside quotes, as in **"some 'dc' file.dc"**, and vice
1136    versa if you have a file with double quotes. However, handling a file with
1137    both kinds of quotes in **DC_ENV_ARGS** is not supported due to the
1138    complexity of the parsing, though such files are still supported on the
1139    command-line where the parsing is done by the shell.
1140
1141**DC_LINE_LENGTH**
1142
1143:   If this environment variable exists and contains an integer that is greater
1144    than **1** and is less than **UINT16_MAX** (**2\^16-1**), dc(1) will output
1145    lines to that length, including the backslash newline combo. The default
1146    line length is **70**.
1147
1148    The special value of **0** will disable line length checking and print
1149    numbers without regard to line length and without backslashes and newlines.
1150
1151**DC_SIGINT_RESET**
1152
1153:   If dc(1) is not in interactive mode (see the **INTERACTIVE MODE** section),
1154    then this environment variable has no effect because dc(1) exits on
1155    **SIGINT** when not in interactive mode.
1156
1157    However, when dc(1) is in interactive mode, then if this environment
1158    variable exists and contains an integer, a non-zero value makes dc(1) reset
1159    on **SIGINT**, rather than exit, and zero makes dc(1) exit. If this
1160    environment variable exists and is *not* an integer, then dc(1) will exit on
1161    **SIGINT**.
1162
1163    This environment variable overrides the default, which can be queried with
1164    the **-h** or **-\-help** options.
1165
1166**DC_TTY_MODE**
1167
1168:   If TTY mode is *not* available (see the **TTY MODE** section), then this
1169    environment variable has no effect.
1170
1171    However, when TTY mode is available, then if this environment variable
1172    exists and contains an integer, then a non-zero value makes dc(1) use TTY
1173    mode, and zero makes dc(1) not use TTY mode.
1174
1175    This environment variable overrides the default, which can be queried with
1176    the **-h** or **-\-help** options.
1177
1178**DC_PROMPT**
1179
1180:   If TTY mode is *not* available (see the **TTY MODE** section), then this
1181    environment variable has no effect.
1182
1183    However, when TTY mode is available, then if this environment variable
1184    exists and contains an integer, a non-zero value makes dc(1) use a prompt,
1185    and zero or a non-integer makes dc(1) not use a prompt. If this environment
1186    variable does not exist and **DC_TTY_MODE** does, then the value of the
1187    **DC_TTY_MODE** environment variable is used.
1188
1189    This environment variable and the **DC_TTY_MODE** environment variable
1190    override the default, which can be queried with the **-h** or **-\-help**
1191    options.
1192
1193# EXIT STATUS
1194
1195dc(1) returns the following exit statuses:
1196
1197**0**
1198
1199:   No error.
1200
1201**1**
1202
1203:   A math error occurred. This follows standard practice of using **1** for
1204    expected errors, since math errors will happen in the process of normal
1205    execution.
1206
1207    Math errors include divide by **0**, taking the square root of a negative
1208    number, using a negative number as a bound for the pseudo-random number
1209    generator, attempting to convert a negative number to a hardware integer,
1210    overflow when converting a number to a hardware integer, overflow when
1211    calculating the size of a number, and attempting to use a non-integer where
1212    an integer is required.
1213
1214    Converting to a hardware integer happens for the second operand of the power
1215    (**\^**), places (**\@**), left shift (**H**), and right shift (**h**)
1216    operators.
1217
1218**2**
1219
1220:   A parse error occurred.
1221
1222    Parse errors include unexpected **EOF**, using an invalid character, failing
1223    to find the end of a string or comment, and using a token where it is
1224    invalid.
1225
1226**3**
1227
1228:   A runtime error occurred.
1229
1230    Runtime errors include assigning an invalid number to any global (**ibase**,
1231    **obase**, or **scale**), giving a bad expression to a **read()** call,
1232    calling **read()** inside of a **read()** call, type errors (including
1233    attempting to execute a number), and attempting an operation when the stack
1234    has too few elements.
1235
1236**4**
1237
1238:   A fatal error occurred.
1239
1240    Fatal errors include memory allocation errors, I/O errors, failing to open
1241    files, attempting to use files that do not have only ASCII characters (dc(1)
1242    only accepts ASCII characters), attempting to open a directory as a file,
1243    and giving invalid command-line options.
1244
1245The exit status **4** is special; when a fatal error occurs, dc(1) always exits
1246and returns **4**, no matter what mode dc(1) is in.
1247
1248The other statuses will only be returned when dc(1) is not in interactive mode
1249(see the **INTERACTIVE MODE** section), since dc(1) resets its state (see the
1250**RESET** section) and accepts more input when one of those errors occurs in
1251interactive mode. This is also the case when interactive mode is forced by the
1252**-i** flag or **-\-interactive** option.
1253
1254These exit statuses allow dc(1) to be used in shell scripting with error
1255checking, and its normal behavior can be forced by using the **-i** flag or
1256**-\-interactive** option.
1257
1258# INTERACTIVE MODE
1259
1260Like bc(1), dc(1) has an interactive mode and a non-interactive mode.
1261Interactive mode is turned on automatically when both **stdin** and **stdout**
1262are hooked to a terminal, but the **-i** flag and **-\-interactive** option can
1263turn it on in other situations.
1264
1265In interactive mode, dc(1) attempts to recover from errors (see the **RESET**
1266section), and in normal execution, flushes **stdout** as soon as execution is
1267done for the current input. dc(1) may also reset on **SIGINT** instead of exit,
1268depending on the contents of, or default for, the **DC_SIGINT_RESET**
1269environment variable (see the **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section).
1270
1271# TTY MODE
1272
1273If **stdin**, **stdout**, and **stderr** are all connected to a TTY, then "TTY
1274mode" is considered to be available, and thus, dc(1) can turn on TTY mode,
1275subject to some settings.
1276
1277If there is the environment variable **DC_TTY_MODE** in the environment (see the
1278**ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section), then if that environment variable contains a
1279non-zero integer, dc(1) will turn on TTY mode when **stdin**, **stdout**, and
1280**stderr** are all connected to a TTY. If the **DC_TTY_MODE** environment
1281variable exists but is *not* a non-zero integer, then dc(1) will not turn TTY
1282mode on.
1283
1284If the environment variable **DC_TTY_MODE** does *not* exist, the default
1285setting is used. The default setting can be queried with the **-h** or
1286**-\-help** options.
1287
1288TTY mode is different from interactive mode because interactive mode is required
1289in the [bc(1) specification][1], and interactive mode requires only **stdin**
1290and **stdout** to be connected to a terminal.
1291
1292## Prompt
1293
1294If TTY mode is available, then a prompt can be enabled. Like TTY mode itself, it
1295can be turned on or off with an environment variable: **DC_PROMPT** (see the
1296**ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES** section).
1297
1298If the environment variable **DC_PROMPT** exists and is a non-zero integer, then
1299the prompt is turned on when **stdin**, **stdout**, and **stderr** are connected
1300to a TTY and the **-P** and **-\-no-prompt** options were not used. The read
1301prompt will be turned on under the same conditions, except that the **-R** and
1302**-\-no-read-prompt** options must also not be used.
1303
1304However, if **DC_PROMPT** does not exist, the prompt can be enabled or disabled
1305with the **DC_TTY_MODE** environment variable, the **-P** and **-\-no-prompt**
1306options, and the **-R** and **-\-no-read-prompt** options. See the **ENVIRONMENT
1307VARIABLES** and **OPTIONS** sections for more details.
1308
1309# SIGNAL HANDLING
1310
1311Sending a **SIGINT** will cause dc(1) to do one of two things.
1312
1313If dc(1) is not in interactive mode (see the **INTERACTIVE MODE** section), or
1314the **DC_SIGINT_RESET** environment variable (see the **ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES**
1315section), or its default, is either not an integer or it is zero, dc(1) will
1316exit.
1317
1318However, if dc(1) is in interactive mode, and the **DC_SIGINT_RESET** or its
1319default is an integer and non-zero, then dc(1) will stop executing the current
1320input and reset (see the **RESET** section) upon receiving a **SIGINT**.
1321
1322Note that "current input" can mean one of two things. If dc(1) is processing
1323input from **stdin** in interactive mode, it will ask for more input. If dc(1)
1324is processing input from a file in interactive mode, it will stop processing the
1325file and start processing the next file, if one exists, or ask for input from
1326**stdin** if no other file exists.
1327
1328This means that if a **SIGINT** is sent to dc(1) as it is executing a file, it
1329can seem as though dc(1) did not respond to the signal since it will immediately
1330start executing the next file. This is by design; most files that users execute
1331when interacting with dc(1) have function definitions, which are quick to parse.
1332If a file takes a long time to execute, there may be a bug in that file. The
1333rest of the files could still be executed without problem, allowing the user to
1334continue.
1335
1336**SIGTERM** and **SIGQUIT** cause dc(1) to clean up and exit, and it uses the
1337default handler for all other signals.
1338
1339# SEE ALSO
1340
1341bc(1)
1342
1343# STANDARDS
1344
1345The dc(1) utility operators are compliant with the operators in the bc(1)
1346[IEEE Std 1003.1-2017 (“POSIX.1-2017”)][1] specification.
1347
1348# BUGS
1349
1350None are known. Report bugs at https://git.yzena.com/gavin/bc.
1351
1352# AUTHOR
1353
1354Gavin D. Howard <gavin@yzena.com> and contributors.
1355
1356[1]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/bc.html
1357