math-codegen
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Generates JavaScript code from mathematical expressions
Table of Contents * generated with DocToc *
Description
An interpreter for mathematical expressions which allows the programmer to change the usual semantic of an operator bringing the operator overloading polymorphism to JavaScript (emulated with function calls), in addition an expression can be evaluated under any adapted namespace providing expression portability between numeric libraries
Lifecycle
-
parse
: a mathematical expression is parsed withmr-parse
, in the ideal scenario it would use math.js expression parser however it's not modularized yet and including all math.js is just an overkill, probablymr-parse
will be replaced with math.js expression parser when it reaches npm as a module :) -
compile
: the parsed string is compiled against a namespace producing executable JavaScript code -
eval
: the executable JavaScript code is evaluated against a context
Parse
For example let's consider the following expression with the variable x
which is defined by the user:
'1 + 2 * x'
the expression can be emulated with function calls instead of operators, math-codegen will map many mathematical operators to callable methods
'add(1, mul(2, x))'
now we can introduce the namespace ns
where add
and multiply
come from
'ns.add(1, ns.mul(2, x))'
the variables (which for the parser are symbols
come from a context called scope
but they might also be constant values defined in the namespace:
'ns.add(1, ns.mul(2, (scope["x"] || ns["x"]) ))'
the constant values might have different meanings for different namespaces therefore a factory
is needed
on the namespace to transform these values into values the namespace can operate with
'ns.add(ns.factory(1), ns.mul(ns.factory(2), (scope["x"] || ns["x"]) ))'
Compile
Now that we have a parsed expression we have to compile it against a namespace to produce executable JavaScript code
parse('1 + 2 * x').compile(namespace)
// returns something like this
(function (definitions) {
var ns = definitions.namespace
return {
eval: function (scope) {
// scope processing
// ...
// the string parsed above goes here
return ns.add(ns.factory(1), ns.mul(ns.factory(2), (scope["x"] || ns["x"]) ))
}
}
})(definitions) // definitions created by math-codegen
Eval
The object returned above can be evaluated within a context
parse('1 + 2 * x').compile(namespace).eval(scope)
Differences with math.js expression parser
Math.js expression parser API is quite similar having the same lifecycle however there are some important facts I've found:
-
math.js
v1.x arrays can represent matrices withns.matrix
or as a raw arrays,math-codegen
doesn't make any assumptions of the arrays and treats them just like any other literal allowing the namespace to decide what to do with an array in itsfactory
method
Operators
The following operators recognized by mr-parser
are named as follows when compiled
'+': 'add'
'-': 'sub'
'*': 'mul'
'/': 'div'
'^': 'pow'
'%': 'mod'
'!': 'factorial'
// misc operators
'|': 'bitwiseOR'
'^|': 'bitwiseXOR'
'&': 'bitwiseAND'
'||': 'logicalOR'
'xor': 'logicalXOR'
'&&': 'logicalAND'
// comparison
'<': 'lessThan'
'>': 'greaterThan'
'<=': 'lessEqualThan'
'>=': 'greaterEqualThan'
'===': 'strictlyEqual'
'==': 'equal'
'!==': 'strictlyNotEqual'
'!=': 'notEqual'
// shift
'>>': 'shiftRight'
'<<': 'shiftLeft'
'>>>': 'unsignedRightShift'
// unary
'+': 'positive'
'-': 'negative'
'~': 'oneComplement'
Install
$ npm install --save math-codegen
Usage
var CodeGenerator = require('math-codegen');
new CodeGenerator([options]).parse(code).compile(namespace).eval(scope)
API
var instance = new CodeGenerator([options])
properties
-
statements
{Array} An array of statements parsed from an expression -
interpreter
{Interpreter} Instance of the Interpreter class -
defs
{Object} An object with additional definitions available during the compilation that exist during the instance lifespan
params
-
options
{Object} Options available for the interpreter-
[options.factory="ns.factory"]
{string} factory method under the namespace -
[options.raw=false]
{boolean} True to interpret OperatorNode, UnaryNode and ArrayNode in a raw way without wrapping the operators with identifiers e.g.-1
will be compiled as-1
instead ofns.negative(ns.factory(1))
-
[options.rawArrayExpressionElements=true]
{boolean} true to interpret the array elements in a raw way -
[options.rawCallExpressionElements=false]
{boolean} true to interpret call expression -
[options.applyFactoryToScope=false]
{boolean} true to apply the factory function on non-function values of the scope/namespace
-
instance.parse(code)
chainable params
-
code
{string} string to be parsed
Parses a program using mr-parse
, each Expression Statement is saved in
instance.statements
The documentation for the available nodes is described in mr-parse
instance.compile(namespace)
chainable params
-
namespace
{Object}
Compiles the code making namespace
's properties available during evaluation, it's required
to have the factory
property defined
returns {Object}
-
return.code
{string} the body of the function to be evaluated witheval
-
return.eval
{Function} Function to be evaluated under a context params-
scope
{Object}
-
instance.setDefs(defs)
params
-
defs
{Object}
An object whose properties will be available during evaluation, properties can be accessed by the property name in the program
Examples
built-in math
'use strict'
var CodeGenerator = require('math-codegen')
var numeric = {
factory: function (a) { return a },
add: function (a, b) { return a + b },
mul: function (a, b) { return a * b }
}
// 1 + 2 * 3 = 7
new CodeGenerator()
.parse('1 + 2 * x')
.compile(numeric)
.eval({x: 3})
)
imaginary
'use strict'
var CodeGenerator = require('math-codegen')
var imaginary = {
factory: function (a) {
// a = [re, im]
if (typeof a === 'number') {
return [a, 0]
}
return [a[0] || 0, a[1] || 0]
},
add: function (a, b) {
var re = a[0] + b[0]
var im = a[1] + b[1]
return [re, im]
},
mul: function (a, b) {
var re = a[0] * b[0] - a[1] * b[1]
var im = a[0] * b[1] + a[1] * b[0]
return [re, im]
}
}
var instance = new CodeGenerator()
// [1, 0] + [2, 0] * [1, 1]
// [1, 0] + [2, 2]
// [3, 2]
instance
.parse('1 + 2 * x')
.compile(imaginary)
.eval({x : [1, 1]})
// because of the way the factory works it can also receive an array as a parameter
// [1, 0] + [2, 0] * [1, 1]
// [1, 0] + [2, 2]
// [3, 2]
instance
.parse('[1, 0] + [2, 0] * x')
.compile(imaginary)
.eval({x : [1, 1]});
interval arithmetic
'use strict'
var CodeGenerator = require('math-codegen')
var interval = {
factory: function (a) {
// a = [lo, hi]
if (typeof a === 'number') {
return [a, a]
}
return [a[0], a[1]]
},
add: function (x, y) {
return [x[0] + y[0], x[1] + y[1]]
},
mul: function (x, y) {
var ac = x[0] * y[0]
var ad = x[0] * y[1]
var bc = x[1] * y[0]
var bd = x[1] * y[1]
return [Math.min(ac, ad, bc, bd), Math.max(ac, ad, bc, bd)]
}
}
var instance = new CodeGenerator()
// [1, 1] + [2, 2] * [-1, 2]
// [1, 1] + [-2, 4]
// [-1, 5]
instance
.parse('1 + 2 * x')
.compile(interval)
.eval({x: [-1, 2]})
Inspiration projects
License
MIT