Programmer Guide/Command Reference/EVAL: Difference between revisions
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! Syntax !! Description !! Result | ! Syntax !! Description !! Datatype of<BR>Result | ||
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|y + | |''y+x<sub>S</sub>'' or ''x<sub>S</sub>+y'' | ||
|Add the scalar | |Add the scalar ''x<sub>S</sub>'' to all elements of ''y''. | ||
|same as y | |same as y | ||
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Revision as of 11:06, 31 March 2011
Contents
Introduction
The EVAL
command can be used to evaluate numerical expressions. These expressions may be built up from numerical constants, from scalar, vector, and matrix variables, and from a large number of functions and operators.
Syntax
An EVAL
command uses the following general syntax:
result := eval expression
or
result := evalcheck expression
- result
- This is the target to be assigned with the result of the evaluation of the numerical expression. The result can be a shell variable, a Programmer_Guide/Shell_Items or a numerical object
- expression
- The numerical expression to be evaluated. The expression consists of numerical objects, functions and operators.
Examples:
result := eval (5 * 10) % 3
result := eval init(10,1,1)
result := eval 5+max(fill(6,1,1))
If the expression is syntactically ill-formed an error (EVAL
) or warning (EVALCHECK
) is reported and the assignment is not performed (content of result is not changed). See the example script expression_check.sts
for details.
Numerical objects
The following numerical objects are known to the EVAL
command. The fields of the table item table are all numeric (extended table or parameter table). The value item value can contain numbers, vectors or matrices. The wave item wave is any wave item.
Syntax | Description | Data type |
---|---|---|
constant | a scalar constant. E.g. 4.5 or 4 | scalar |
table | the content of the whole table | vector, matrix |
table[i,*] or table[i,] | the i-th row of the table | scalar, vector |
table[*,j] or table[,j] | the j-th column of the table | scalar, vector |
table[i,j] | the value of the i-th row and j-th column of the table | scalar |
value | the content of the value item | scalar, vector, matrix |
value[i,*] or value[i,] | the i-th row of the value item | scalar, vector |
value[*,j] or value[,j] | the j-th column of the value item | scalar, vector |
value[i,j]
|
the value of the i-th row and j-th column of the value item | scalar |
wave[!signal,*] or wave[!signal,] | the signal from all channels | vector, matrix |
wave[!signal,ch] | the signal from channel ch (=1,2,...) | vector |
wave[!signal,*,b,l] | the signal from all channels from sample b (0 <= b < wave[!length]) to sample b+l-1 (l > 0) | vector, matrix |
wave[!signal,ch,b,l] | the signal from channel ch from sample b to sample b+l-1 | vector |
Notes:
- wave: If b is lower than 0 or b+l is greater than wave[!length] zero padding is applied to the result
Operators
Syntax | Description | Datatype of Result |
---|---|---|
y+xS or xS+y | Add the scalar xS to all elements of y. | same as y |
x + y | Add element xi to element yi. Both operands must be of the same type. | same as x,y |
y – xS | Subtract the scalar xS from each element in y. | same as y |
xS – y | Subtract all elements of y from the scalar xS. | same as y |
y * xS orxS * y | Multiply all elements of y with the scalar xS. | same as y |
xV * yV | The inner product of the vectors xV and yV. | scalar |
xM * yV | The product of the matrix xM and the vector yV. The length of the vector yV must be the same as the number of columns in the matrix xM. | vector(nrow(xM)) |
xM * yM | The product of the matrix xM and yM. The number of rows in yM must be the same as the number of columns in xM. | matrix(nrow(xM) x ncol(yM)) |
y / xS | Divide all elements of y through the scalar xS.xS may not be 0. | same as y |
xS / yM | Multiply all elements of the inverse matrix of yM with the scalar xS yM must be a square matrix.The special case 1 / yM returns the inverse matrix.Note that the function inv(y) can also be used to invert scalars and matrices. | same as yM |
y % xS | The rest of the division of every element in y through the scalar xS (modulo) | same as y |
y ^xS | Raise every element of y to the power of the scalar xS.Special cases: y^-1 is calculated like this 1/yy^2 is calculated like this y*y | same as y (see / and *) |
Notes:
- If one of the binary operands has the prefix ? (e.g. ?*) then the operation is carried out element per element.
Syntax | Description |
---|---|
<
|
less than |
>
|
greater than |
<=
|
less than or equal to |
>=
|
greater than or equal to |
==
|
equal to |
!=
|
not equal to |
Note that two numerical expressions/objects are considered equal if (and only if)
- their dimensions are the same; and
- all elements are numerically equal.
Syntax | Description |
---|---|
||
|
logical or |
&&
|
logical and |
!
|
unary not |
A C-like '? :'
selection operator is also supported:
result := eval 1 < 2 ? 1+2 : 1-2 // result is 3
Note that unlike C, nested uses of this operator must be surrounded by brackets, e.g.:
result := eval 1 > 2 ? (5 == 5 ? 5 : 0) : (4 == 5 ? 3 : 4) // result is 4
EVAL subcommands
- abs
- absmax
- absmin
- absv
- acos
- aseg1
- asin
- asp2osp
- atan
- avr
- cepstrum
- complex arithmetic
- corr
- corrfun
- cos
- cvphase
- dct
- density
- dev
- dft
- dist
- em
- exp
- f0ac
- f0sp
- fft
- fill
- fir1
- floor
- formants
- grand
- haclust
- hcomb
- hist
- hth
- hz2bark
- hz2cent
- hz2erb
- hz2mel
- ifft
- iir1
- imax
- imin
- init
- int
- interp
- inv
- ipeak
- limit
- log
- log2lin
- lpc
- map2map
- mapmind
- max
- median
- min
- modclust
- mul
- ncol
- npow2
- nrow
- optmm
- otrack1
- pgget
- pghull
- pgiline
- pginit
- pgitest
- pgsplit
- pgtrans
- pgxgrid
- pztf
- qdet
- qinterp
- rand
- rleqs
- round
- rpoly
- rpolyreg
- sample
- select
- shuffle
- sig2osp
- sign
- sin
- sinc
- smooth
- sort
- sqrt
- sum
- svd
- tan
- ticks2f1
- trn
- var
- vmcol
- vmrow
- vsubc
- vsubn
- vv
- vvcat
- vvget
- vvset
- wconvert
- window
- wsum
- ydiff
- yint
- zcross
Examples
For an extensive list of examples, see the script eval_examples.sts
:
Programmer Guide/Command Reference/EVAL Examples/EVAL Examples
History
The EVAL
command was added to the S_TOOLS-STx language in version 3.7.0. The EVAL
command replaces and extends the EVALUATE
command. If the EVAL
command is not assigning to an existing item, a table is assigned. Note that the current maximum number of arguments is 64 (S_TOOLS-STx version 3.8.0). As of version 3.7.0, S_TOOLS-STx has more numerical objects than just the scalars INT
and NUM
.