# hp ## Command-line calculator This is an *rpn* calclulator with a maximum stack size of 5. It has full support for real and complex numbers and will calculate summary statistics for a set of reals of real pairs. Spaces are important since they are used to distinguish tokens. ## Building This code does not build with the default compiler on most systems and in fact is only known to build with *ifort* from Intel's OneAPI (you'll need both *basic* and *hpc* to get the Fortran compiler): https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/tools/oneapi/overview.html Makefiles are provided that will build this application on Windows or Linux using either *nmake* or *make* respectively. ## Basic help ``` hp -h Command Calculator ================== Introduction ------------ This is a command-line calculator. It supports both real and complex modes, as well as degrees/radians selection and precision control. It can be run interactively or as an expression parser. This help is deliberately terse to encourage exploration. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Operators: + - * / ^ ^/x ^x ^2 ^/2 ^3 ^/3 ^*2 ^*10 || ! % Constants: pi e g G c two_pi pi_over_2 Functions: sin cos tan asin acos atan sinh cosh tanh log2 log lg len sq sqrt cb cbrt alog2 alog alog10 gamma ncr npr rem int nint Controls: fix[0-9] clx cl cla Modes: real complex verbose terse degrees radians Memories: n=0...9 st sw rc cl m+ m- m* m/ msh Complex: ri _ || to_pol to_cart Actions: 1/ -- R r ? > < split drop Stats: { x1 x2 ... } { x1,y1 x2,y2 ... } n ux sx mx lqx uqx uy sy my lqy uqy a b cov corr Quits: q = ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Examples -------- hp "fix2 18 2 - 8 2 / * =" -> 64.00 hp "2 -- complex sqrt =" -> (0.00000,-1.414214) hp -c "radians (1,pi_over_2)p ^ * degrees =" -> (1.000000,180.000000) p ``` ## Build and Test with FPM To build with fpm(1) ( as described at [Fortran Package Manager](https://github.com/fortran-lang/fpm) ) enter: ```bash git clone https://github.com/sgeard/hp.git cd hp fpm test --compiler ifort fpm run --compiler ifort # or using the response file (saves writing --compiler ifort everywhere) fpm @build fpm @test fpm @run ``` or just list it as a dependency in your fpm.toml project file. ```toml [dependencies] hp = { git = "https://github.com/sgeard/hp.git" } ```