XCALC(1) User Commands XCALC(1)
NAME
xcalc - scientific calculator for X
SYNOPSIS
xcalc [
-stipple] [
-rpn] [-
toolkitoption...]
xcalc -version xcalc -helpDESCRIPTION
xcalc is a scientific calculator desktop accessory that can emulate a
TI-30 or an HP-10C.
OPTIONS
xcalc accepts all of the standard toolkit command line options along
with these additional options:
-stipple This option indicates that the background of the calculator
should be drawn using a stipple of the foreground and
background colors. On monochrome displays improves the
appearance.
-rpn This option indicates that Reverse Polish Notation should be
used. In this mode the calculator will look and behave like
an HP-10C. Without this flag, it will emulate a TI-30.
-help This option indicates that
xcalc should print its usage
message and exit.
-version This option indicates that
xcalc should print its version and
exit.
OPERATION
Pointer Usage: Operations may be performed with pointer button 1, or
in some cases, with the keyboard. Many common calculator operations
have keyboard accelerators. To quit, press pointer button 3 on the
AC key of the TI calculator, or the ON key of the HP calculator.
Calculator Key Usage (TI mode): The numbered keys, the +/- key, and
the +, -, *, /, and = keys all do exactly what you would expect them
to. It should be noted that the operators obey the standard rules of
precedence. Thus, entering "3+4*5=" results in "23", not "35". The
parentheses can be used to override this. For example,
"(1+2+3)*(4+5+6)=" results in "6*15=90".
The entire number in the calculator display can be selected, in order
to paste the result of a calculation into text.
The action procedures associated with each function are given below.
These are useful if you are interested in defining a custom
calculator. The action used for all digit keys is
digit(n), where
n is the corresponding digit, 0..9.
1/x Replaces the number in the display with its reciprocal.
The corresponding action procedure is
reciprocal().
x^2 Squares the number in the display. The corresponding
action procedure is
square().
SQRT Takes the square root of the number in the display. The
corresponding action procedure is
squareRoot().
CE/C When pressed once, clears the number in the display without
clearing the state of the machine. Allows you to re-enter
a number if you make a mistake. Pressing it twice clears
the state, also. The corresponding action procedure for TI
mode is
clear().
AC Clears the display, the state, and the memory. Pressing it
with the third pointer button turns off the calculator, in
that it exits the program. The action procedure to clear
the state is
off(); to quit,
quit().
INV Invert function. See the individual function keys for
details. The corresponding action procedure is
inverse().
sin Computes the sine of the number in the display, as
interpreted by the current DRG mode (see DRG, below). If
inverted, it computes the arcsine. The corresponding
action procedure is
sine().
cos Computes the cosine, or arccosine when inverted. The
corresponding action procedure is
cosine().
tan Computes the tangent, or arctangent when inverted. The
corresponding action procedure is
tangent().
DRG Changes the DRG mode, as indicated by 'DEG', 'RAD', or
'GRAD' at the bottom of the calculator ``liquid crystal''
display. When in 'DEG' mode, numbers in the display are
taken as being degrees. In 'RAD' mode, numbers are in
radians, and in 'GRAD' mode, numbers are in grads. When
inverted, the DRG key has a feature of converting degrees
to radians to grads and vice-versa. Example: put the
calculator into 'DEG' mode, and enter "45 INV DRG". The
display should now show something along the lines of
".785398", which is 45 degrees converted to radians. The
corresponding action procedure is
degree().
e The constant 'e'. (2.7182818...). The corresponding
action procedure is
e().
EE Used for entering exponential numbers. For example, to get
"-2.3E-4" you'd enter "2 . 3 +/- EE 4 +/-". The
corresponding action procedure is
scientific().
log Calculates the log (base 10) of the number in the display.
When inverted, it raises "10.0" to the number in the
display. For example, entering "3 INV log" should result
in "1000". The corresponding action procedure is
logarithm().
ln Calculates the log (base e) of the number in the display.
When inverted, it raises "e" to the number in the display.
For example, entering "e ln" should result in "1". The
corresponding action procedure is
naturalLog().
y^x Raises the number on the left to the power of the number on
the right. For example "2 y^x 3 =" results in "8", which
is 2^3. For a further example, "(1+2+3) y^x (1+2) ="
equals "6 y^x 3" which equals "216". The corresponding
action procedure is
power().
not Performs a bitwise not. The corresponding action procedure
is
not().
and Performs a bitwise and. The corresponding action procedure
is
and().
or Performs a bitwise or. The corresponding action procedure
is
or().
xor Performs a bitwise exclusive or. The corresponding action
procedure is
xor().
trunc Truncates the number in the display to an integer. The
corresponding action procedure is
trunc().
PI The constant 'pi'. (3.1415927....) The corresponding
action procedure is
pi().
x! Computes the factorial of the number in the display. The
number in the display must be an integer in the range
0-500, though, depending on your math library, it might
overflow long before that. The corresponding action
procedure is
factorial().
( Left parenthesis. The corresponding action procedure for
TI calculators is
leftParen().
) Right parenthesis. The corresponding action procedure for
TI calculators is
rightParen().
base Changes the number base, as indicated by 'DEC', 'HEX, or
'OCT' at the bottom of the calculator display. When in
'DEC' mode, numbers in the display are taken as being
decimal (base 10). In 'HEX' mode, numbers are in
hexadecimal (base 16), and in 'OCT' mode, numbers are in
octal (base 8). The corresponding action procedure is
base().
shl Performs an arithmetic bitwise shift left, For example,
entering "1 shl 2" should result in "4". The corresponding
action procedure is
shl().
shr Performs an arithmetic bitwise shift right, For example,
entering "8 shr 1" should result in "4". The corresponding
action procedure is
shr().
mod Performs the modulo operation, which calculates the
remainder when dividing the first number by the second.
For example, entering "14 mod 8" should result in "6". The
corresponding action procedure is
mod().
/ Division. The corresponding action procedure is
divide().
* Multiplication. The corresponding action procedure is
multiply().
- Subtraction. The corresponding action procedure is
subtract().
+ Addition. The corresponding action procedure is
add().
= Perform calculation. The TI-specific action procedure is
equal().
STO Copies the number in the display to the memory location.
The corresponding action procedure is
store().
RCL Copies the number from the memory location to the display.
The corresponding action procedure is
recall().
SUM Adds the number in the display to the number in the memory
location. The corresponding action procedure is
sum().
EXC Swaps the number in the display with the number in the
memory location. The corresponding action procedure for
the TI calculator is
exchange().
+/- Negate; change sign. The corresponding action procedure is
negate().
. Decimal point. The action procedure is
decimal().
Calculator Key Usage (RPN mode): The number keys, CHS (change sign),
+, -, *, /, and ENTR keys all do exactly what you would expect them
to do. Many of the remaining keys are the same as in TI mode. The
differences are detailed below. The action procedure for the ENTR
key is
enter().
<- This is a backspace key that can be used if you make a
mistake while entering a number. It will erase digits from
the display. (See BUGS). Inverse backspace will clear the
X register. The corresponding action procedure is
back().
ON Clears the display, the state, and the memory. Pressing it
with the third pointer button turns off the calculator, in
that it exits the program. To clear state, the action
procedure is
off; to quit,
quit().
INV Inverts the meaning of the function keys. This would be
the
f key on an HP calculator, but
xcalc does not display
multiple legends on each key. See the individual function
keys for details.
10^x Raises "10.0" to the number in the top of the stack. When
inverted, it calculates the log (base 10) of the number in
the display. The corresponding action procedure is
tenpower().
e^x Raises "e" to the number in the top of the stack. When
inverted, it calculates the log (base e) of the number in
the display. The action procedure is
epower().
STO Copies the number in the top of the stack to a memory
location. There are 10 memory locations. The desired
memory is specified by following this key with a digit key.
RCL Pushes the number from the specified memory location onto
the stack.
SUM Adds the number on top of the stack to the number in the
specified memory location.
x:y Exchanges the numbers in the top two stack positions, the X
and Y registers. The corresponding action procedure is
XexchangeY().
R v Rolls the stack downward. When inverted, it rolls the
stack upward. The corresponding action procedure is
roll().
blank These keys were used for programming functions on the
HP-10C. Their functionality has not been duplicated in
xcalc.
Finally, there are two additional action procedures:
bell(), which
rings the bell; and
selection(), which performs a cut on the entire
number in the calculator's ``liquid crystal'' display.
ACCELERATORS
Accelerators are shortcuts for entering commands.
xcalc provides
some sample keyboard accelerators; also users can customize
accelerators. The numeric keypad accelerators provided by
xcalc should be intuitively correct. The accelerators defined by
xcalc on
the main keyboard are given below:
TI Key HP Key Keyboard Accelerator TI Function HP Function
---------------------------------------------------------------------
SQRT SQRT r squareRoot() squareRoot()
AC ON space clear() clear()
AC <- Delete clear() back()
AC <- Backspace clear() back()
AC <- Control-H clear() back()
AC Clear clear()
AC ON q quit() quit()
AC ON Control-C quit() quit()
INV i i inverse() inverse()
sin s s sine() sine()
cos c c cosine() cosine()
tan t t tangent() tangent()
DRG DRG d degree() degree()
e e e()
ln ln l naturalLog() naturalLog()
y^x y^x ^ power() power()
PI PI p pi() pi()
x! x! ! factorial() factorial()
( ( leftParen()
) ) rightParen()
/ / / divide() divide()
* * * multiply() multiply()
- - - subtract() subtract()
+ + + add() add()
= = equal()
0..9 0..9 0..9 digit() digit()
+/- CHS n negate() negate()
x:y x XexchangeY()
ENTR Return enter()
ENTR Linefeed enter()
CUSTOMIZATION
The application class name is XCalc.
xcalc has an enormous application defaults file which specifies the
position, label, and function of each key on the calculator. It also
gives translations to serve as keyboard accelerators. Because these
resources are not specified in the source code, you can create a
customized calculator by writing a private application defaults file,
using the Athena Command and Form widget resources to specify the
size and position of buttons, the label for each button, and the
function of each button.
The foreground and background colors of each calculator key can be
individually specified. For the TI calculator, a classical color
resource specification might be:
XCalc.ti.Command.background: gray50
XCalc.ti.Command.foreground: white
For each of buttons 20, 25, 30, 35, and 40, specify:
XCalc.ti.button20.background: black
XCalc.ti.button20.foreground: white
For each of buttons 22, 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 32, 33, 34, 37, 38, and
39:
XCalc.ti.button22.background: white
XCalc.ti.button22.foreground: black
WIDGET HIERARCHY
In order to specify resources, it is useful to know the hierarchy of
the widgets which compose
xcalc. In the notation below, indentation
indicates hierarchical structure. The widget class name is given
first, followed by the widget instance name.
XCalc xcalc
Form ti
or hp
(the name depends on the mode) Form bevel
Form screen
Label M
Toggle LCD
Label INV
Label DEG
Label RAD
Label GRAD
Label P
Command button1
Command button2
Command button3
and so on, ... Command button38
Command button39
Command button40
APPLICATION RESOURCES
rpn (Class
Rpn)
Specifies that the rpn mode should be used. The default is
TI mode.
stipple (Class
Stipple)
Indicates that the background should be stippled. The
default is ``on'' for monochrome displays, and ``off'' for
color displays.
cursor (Class
Cursor)
The name of the symbol used to represent the pointer. The
default is ``hand2''.
COLORS
If you would like xcalc to use its ti colors, include the following
in the #ifdef COLOR section of the file you read with xrdb:
*customization: -color
This will cause xcalc to pick up the colors in the app-defaults color
customization file:
/usr/share/X11/app-defaults/XCalc-color.
SEE ALSO
X(7),
xrdb(1), the Athena Widget Set
BUGS
HP mode is not completely debugged. In particular, the stack is not
handled properly after errors.
AUTHORS
John Bradley, University of Pennsylvania
Mark Rosenstein, MIT Project Athena
Donna Converse, MIT X Consortium
X Version 11 xcalc 1.1.2 XCALC(1)