Formula calculator

A formula calculator is a software calculator that can perform a calculation in two steps:

  1. Enter the calculation by typing it in from the keyboard.
  2. Press a single button or key to see the final result.

This is unlike button-operated calculators, such as the Windows calculator or the Mac OS X calculator, which require the user to perform one step for each operation, by pressing buttons to calculate all the intermediate values, before the final result is shown.

In this context, a formula is also known as an expression, and so formula calculators may be called expression calculators. Also in this context, calculation is known as evaluation, and so they may be called formula evaluators, rather than calculators.

How they work

Formulas as they are commonly written use infix notation for binary operators, such as addition, multiplication, division and subtraction. This notation also uses:

Also, formulas may contain:

Once a formula is entered, a formula calculator follows the above rules to produce the final result by automatically:

Types of calculator

The formula calculator concept can be applied to all types of calculator, including arithmetic, scientific, statistics, financial and conversion calculators.

The calculation can be typed or pasted into an edit box of:

It can also be entered on the command line of a programming language.

Related software packages

Although they are not calculators in themselves, because they have a much broader feature set, many software tools have a formula-calculation capability, in that a formula can be typed in and evaluated. These include:

Declarative and imperative tools

Button-operated calculators are imperative, because the user must provide details of how the calculation has to be performed.[1]

On the other hand, formula calculators are more declarative because the typed-in formula specifies what to do, and the user does not have to provide any details of the step-by-step order in which the calculation has to be performed.

Declarative solutions are easier to understand than imperative solutions,[1][2] and so there has been a long-term trend from imperative to declarative methods.[3][4] Formula calculators are part of this trend.

Many software tools for the general user, such as spreadsheets, are declarative. Formula calculators are examples of such tools.

Hybrid calculators

There are hybrid calculators that combine typed-in formula and button-operated calculation. For example:

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Harold Thimbleby. A new calculator and why it is necessary, Computing Science, Middlesex University, London, UK, September 1998. Available from: http://www.uclic.ucl.ac.uk/harold/srf/allcalcs.pdf Archived at: web.archive.org
  2. Roy E. Furman. Declarative Programming - Strategies for Solving Software Problems, http://www.articlesalley.com, July 2006. Available from: http://www.articlesalley.com/article.detail.php/7013/178/Education/Internet/36/Declarative_Programming_-_Strategies_for_Solving_Software_Problems
  3. David A. Watt. Programming language concepts and paradigms, Prentice Hall, 1990 (citation 13 at http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/context/14802/0)
  4. Tatsuru Matsushita. Expressive Power of Declarative Programming Languages, PhD thesis, Department of Computer Science, University of York, October 1998 (citation 13 at http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/context/14802/0)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 31, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.