Formula
A parser and evaluator of spreadsheet-like formulas
Formula is in its early stages and is not ready for production use.
So far we have the following features:
- 18 date time functions
- 26 text functions
- 26 math functions
- 7 logical functions
- 2 web functions
- plus all arithmetic and comparison operators
Installation and usage
Rust
Add this library to your project with cargo add formula
or add formula = "*"
to your Cargo.toml
file.
Use it similar to the following code:
use formula::{Formula, Expr, Result};
fn main() -> Result<()> {
let formula = Formula::new("=UPPER(TRIM(' Hello '))")?;
let value = formula.parse()?;
assert_eq!(value, Expr::String("HELLO".to_string()));
Ok(())
}
JavaScript
Add this library to your project with npm install formula-wasm
or add formula-wasm
to your package.json
file.
Use it similar to the following code:
import { parse } from 'formula-wasm';
const value = parse('=UPPER(TRIM(" Hello "))');
console.assert(value, "HELLO");
What we do not support, yet:
- We don't support all existing functions in the world, but we would like to add more of them, like Excel functions, Google Sheets functions, and so on
- At the moment, we don't support table data. It means you need to extract table data and pass theirs values to this library
- We do not support simple formulas like
1+1
or as argument likeAND(1>3, 1<3)
orSUM(2-1, 2)
. Instead, you can use ourF.
functions likeAND(F.GT(1, 3), F.LT(1, 3))
orSUM(F.SUB(2, 1), 2)
- We still do not support parentheses to change the order of operations, but you can use our
F.
functions. So for example instead of2*(1+1)
, you should useF.MUL(2, F.ADD(1, 1))
Contributing
We would love to have your contribution! Please read our contributing guidelines to get started.
Inspired by
License
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.