math - perform mathematics calculations¶
Synopsis¶
math [-sN | --scale=N] [-bBASE | --base=BASE] [--] EXPRESSION
Description¶
math
performs mathematical calculations. It supports simple operations such as addition, subtraction, and so on, as well as functions like abs()
, sqrt()
and ln()
.
By default, the output is a floating-point number with trailing zeroes trimmed. To get a fixed representation, the --scale
option can be used, including --scale=0
for integer output.
Keep in mind that parameter expansion happens before expressions are evaluated. This can be very useful in order to perform calculations involving shell variables or the output of command substitutions, but it also means that parenthesis (()
) and the asterisk (*
) glob character have to be escaped or quoted. x
can also be used to denote multiplication, but it needs to be followed by whitespace to distinguish it from hexadecimal numbers.
Parentheses for functions are optional - math sin pi
prints 0
. However, a comma will bind to the inner function, so math pow sin 3, 5
is an error because it tries to give sin
the arguments 3
and 5
. When in doubt, use parentheses.
math
ignores whitespace between arguments and takes its input as multiple arguments (internally joined with a space), so math 2 +2
and math "2 + 2"
work the same. math 2 2
is an error.
The following options are available:
-sN
or--scale=N
sets the scale of the result.N
must be an integer or the word "max" for the maximum scale. A scale of zero causes results to be rounded down to the nearest integer. So3/2
returns1
rather than2
which1.5
would normally round to. This is for compatibility withbc
which was the basis for this command prior to fish 3.0.0. Scale values greater than zero causes the result to be rounded using the usual rules to the specified number of decimal places.-b BASE
or--base BASE
sets the numeric base used for output (math
always understands hexadecimal numbers as input). It currently understands "hex" or "16" for hexadecimal and "octal" or "8" for octal and implies a scale of 0 (other scales cause an error), so it will truncate the result down to an integer. This might change in the future. Hex numbers will be printed with a0x
prefix. Octal numbers will have a prefix of0
and aren't understood bymath
as input.
Return Values¶
If the expression is successfully evaluated and doesn't over/underflow or return NaN the return status
is zero (success) else one.
Syntax¶
math
knows some operators, constants, functions and can (obviously) read numbers.
For numbers, .
is always the radix character regardless of locale - 2.5
, not 2,5
. Scientific notation (10e5
) and hexadecimal (0xFF
) are also available.
Operators¶
math
knows the following operators:
+
for addition and-
for subtraction.*
orx
for multiplication,/
for division. (Note that*
is the glob character and needs to be quoted or escaped,x
needs to be followed by whitespace or it looks like0x
hexadecimal notation.)^
for exponentiation.%
for modulo.(
and)
for grouping. (These need to be quoted or escaped because()
denotes a command substitution.)
They are all used in an infix manner - 5 + 2
, not + 5 2
.
Constants¶
math
knows the following constants:
e
- Euler's number.pi
- π. You know this one. Half of Tau.tau
. Equivalent to 2π, or the number of radians in a circle.
Use them without a leading $
- pi - 3
should be about 0.
Functions¶
math
supports the following functions:
abs
- the absolute value, with positive signacos
- arc cosineasin
- arc sineatan
- arc tangentatan2
- arc tangent of two variablesbitand
,bitor
andbitxor
to perform bitwise operations. These will throw away any non-integer parts and interpret the rest as an int.ceil
- round number up to nearest integercos
- the cosinecosh
- hyperbolic cosineexp
- the base-e exponential functionfac
- factorial - also known asx!
(x * (x - 1) * (x - 2) * ... * 1
)floor
- round number down to nearest integerln
- the base-e logarithmlog
orlog10
- the base-10 logarithmlog2
- the base-2 logarithmmax
- returns the larger of two numbersmin
- returns the smaller of two numbersncr
- "from n choose r" combination function - how many subsets of size r can be taken from n (order doesn't matter)npr
- the number of subsets of size r that can be taken from a set of n elements (including different order)pow(x,y)
returns x to the y (and can be written asx ^ y
)round
- rounds to the nearest integer, away from 0sin
- the sine functionsinh
- the hyperbolic sinesqrt
- the square root - (can also be written asx ^ 0.5
)tan
- the tangenttanh
- the hyperbolic tangent
All of the trigonometric functions use radians (the pi-based scale, not 360°).
Examples¶
math 1+1
outputs 2.
math $status - 128
outputs the numerical exit status of the last command minus 128.
math 10 / 6
outputs 1.666667
.
math -s0 10.0 / 6.0
outputs 1
.
math -s3 10 / 6
outputs 1.666
.
math "sin(pi)"
outputs 0
.
math 5 \* 2
or math "5 * 2"
or math 5 "*" 2
all output 10
.
math 0xFF
outputs 255, math 0 x 3
outputs 0 (because it computes 0 multiplied by 3).
math bitand 0xFE, 0x2e
outputs 46.
math "bitor(9,2)"
outputs 11.
math --base=hex 192
prints 0xc0
.
math 'ncr(49,6)'
prints 13983816 - that's the number of possible picks in 6-from-49 lotto.
Compatibility notes¶
Fish 1.x and 2.x releases relied on the bc
command for handling math
expressions. Starting with fish 3.0.0 fish uses the tinyexpr library and evaluates the expression without the involvement of any external commands.
You don't need to use --
before the expression, even if it begins with a minus sign which might otherwise be interpreted as an invalid option. If you do insert --
before the expression, it will cause option scanning to stop just like for every other command and it won't be part of the expression.