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bc(1)			    General Commands Manual			 bc(1)

NAME
       bc - An arbitrary precision calculator language

SYNTAX
       bc [ -hlwsqv ] [long-options] [	file ... ]

DESCRIPTION
       bc  is a	language that supports arbitrary precision numbers with	inter-
       active execution	of statements.	There are  some	 similarities  in  the
       syntax  to  the	C  programming	language.   A standard math library is
       available by command line option.  If requested,	the  math  library  is
       defined before processing any files.  bc	starts by processing code from
       all  the	 files	listed on the command line in the order	listed.	 After
       all files have been processed, bc reads from the	standard  input.   All
       code  is	executed as it is read.	 (If a file contains a command to halt
       the processor, bc will never read from the standard input.)

       This version of bc contains several extensions  beyond  traditional  bc
       implementations and the POSIX draft standard.  Command line options can
       cause these extensions to print a warning or to be rejected.  This doc-
       ument  describes	 the  language accepted	by this	processor.  Extensions
       will be identified as such.

   OPTIONS
       -h, --help
	      Print the	usage and exit.

       -i, --interactive
	      Force interactive	mode.

       -l, --mathlib
	      Define the standard math library.

       -w, --warn
	      Give warnings for	extensions to POSIX bc.

       -s, --standard
	      Process exactly the POSIX	bc language.

       -q, --quiet
	      Do not print the normal GNU bc welcome.

       -v, --version
	      Print the	version	number and copyright and quit.

   NUMBERS
       The most	basic element in bc is the number.  Numbers are	arbitrary pre-
       cision numbers.	This precision is both in the  integer	part  and  the
       fractional part.	 All numbers are represented internally	in decimal and
       all  computation	 is  done in decimal.  (This version truncates results
       from divide and multiply	operations.)  There are	two attributes of num-
       bers, the length	and the	scale.	The length is the total	number of dec-
       imal digits used	by bc to represent a number and	the scale is the total
       number of decimal digits	after the decimal point.  For example:
	       .000001 has a length of 6 and scale of 6.
	       1935.000	has a length of	7 and a	scale of 3.

   VARIABLES
       Numbers are stored in two types of variables, simple variables and  ar-
       rays.   Both simple variables and array variables are named.  Names be-
       gin with	a letter followed by any number	of letters, digits and	under-
       scores.	All letters must be lower case.	 (Full alpha-numeric names are
       an  extension.  In  POSIX bc all	names are a single lower case letter.)
       The type	of variable is clear by	the context because all	array variable
       names will be followed by brackets ([]).

       There are four special variables, scale,	ibase, obase, and last.	 scale
       defines how some	operations use digits after the	 decimal  point.   The
       default value of	scale is 0. ibase and obase define the conversion base
       for input and output numbers.  The default for both input and output is
       base  10.   last	(an extension) is a variable that has the value	of the
       last printed number.  These will	be discussed in	further	 detail	 where
       appropriate.   All  of these variables may have values assigned to them
       as well as used in expressions.

   COMMENTS
       Comments	in bc start with the characters	/* and end with	the characters
       */.  Comments may start anywhere	and appear as a	single	space  in  the
       input.	(This causes comments to delimit other input items.  For exam-
       ple, a comment can not be found in the  middle  of  a  variable	name.)
       Comments	 include  any newlines (end of line) between the start and the
       end of the comment.

       To support the use of scripts for bc, a single line  comment  has  been
       added  as  an extension.	 A single line comment starts at a # character
       and continues to	the next end of	the line.  The end of  line  character
       is not part of the comment and is processed normally.

   EXPRESSIONS
       The  numbers  are manipulated by	expressions and	statements.  Since the
       language	was designed to	be interactive,	statements and expressions are
       executed	as soon	as possible.  There is no  "main"  program.   Instead,
       code is executed	as it is encountered.  (Functions, discussed in	detail
       later, are defined when encountered.)

       A  simple expression is just a constant.	bc converts constants into in-
       ternal decimal numbers using the	current	input base, specified  by  the
       variable	ibase. (There is an exception in functions.)  The valid	values
       for  ibase  are 2 through 36. (Bases greater than 16 are	an extension.)
       Assigning a value outside this range to ibase will result in a value of
       2 or 36.	 Input numbers may contain the characters 0-9 and A-Z.	(Note:
       They must be capitals.  Lower case letters are variable names.)	Single
       digit  numbers  always  have  the  value	of the digit regardless	of the
       value of	ibase. (i.e. A = 10.)  For multi-digit numbers,	bc changes all
       input digits greater or equal to	ibase to the value of  ibase-1.	  This
       makes  the number ZZZ always be the largest 3 digit number of the input
       base.

       Full expressions	are similar to many other high level languages.	 Since
       there is	only one kind of number, there are no rules for	mixing	types.
       Instead,	there are rules	on the scale of	expressions.  Every expression
       has  a  scale.  This is derived from the	scale of original numbers, the
       operation performed and in many cases, the value	of the variable	scale.
       Legal values of the variable scale are 0	to the maximum	number	repre-
       sentable	by a C integer.

       In  the following descriptions of valid expressions, "expr" refers to a
       complete	expression and "var" refers to a simple	or an array  variable.
       A simple	variable is just a
	      name
       and an array variable is	specified as
	      name[expr]
       Unless  specifically  mentioned	the scale of the result	is the maximum
       scale of	the expressions	involved.

       - expr The result is the	negation of the	expression.

       ++ var The variable is incremented by one and the new value is the  re-
	      sult of the expression.

       -- var The  variable is decremented by one and the new value is the re-
	      sult of the expression.

       var ++ The result of the	expression is the value	of  the	 variable  and
	      then the variable	is incremented by one.

       var -- The  result  of  the expression is the value of the variable and
	      then the variable	is decremented by one.

       expr + expr
	      The result of the	expression is the sum of the two expressions.

       expr - expr
	      The result of the	expression is the difference of	 the  two  ex-
	      pressions.

       expr * expr
	      The  result  of the expression is	the product of the two expres-
	      sions.

       expr / expr
	      The result of the	expression is the quotient of the two  expres-
	      sions.   The  scale  of  the result is the value of the variable
	      scale.

       expr % expr
	      The result of the	expression is the "remainder" and it  is  com-
	      puted  in	 the following way.  To	compute	a%b, first a/b is com-
	      puted to scale digits.  That result is used to compute a-(a/b)*b
	      to the scale of the maximum of scale+scale(b) and	scale(a).   If
	      scale  is	set to zero and	both expressions are integers this ex-
	      pression is the integer remainder	function.

       expr ^ expr
	      The result of the	expression is the value	of the first raised to
	      the second. The second expression	must be	an integer.   (If  the
	      second  expression is not	an integer, a warning is generated and
	      the expression is	truncated to get an integer value.)  The scale
	      of the result is scale if	the exponent is	negative.  If the  ex-
	      ponent is	positive the scale of the result is the	minimum	of the
	      scale  of	 the  first expression times the value of the exponent
	      and the maximum of scale and the scale of	the first  expression.
	      (e.g.  scale(a^b)	= min(scale(a)*b, max( scale, scale(a))).)  It
	      should be	noted that expr^0 will always return the value of 1.

       ( expr )
	      This alters the standard precedence to force the	evaluation  of
	      the expression.

       var = expr
	      The variable is assigned the value of the	expression.

       var <op>= expr
	      This  is	equivalent to "var = var <op> expr" with the exception
	      that the "var" part is evaluated only once.   This  can  make  a
	      difference if "var" is an	array.

       Relational  expressions	are  a	special	kind of	expression that	always
       evaluate	to 0 or	1, 0 if	the relation is	false and 1 if the relation is
       true.  These may	appear in any valid expression.	  (POSIX  bc  requires
       that  relational	expressions are	used only in if, while,	and for	state-
       ments and that only one relational test may be done in them.)  The  re-
       lational	operators are

       expr1 < expr2
	      The result is 1 if expr1 is strictly less	than expr2.

       expr1 <=	expr2
	      The result is 1 if expr1 is less than or equal to	expr2.

       expr1 > expr2
	      The result is 1 if expr1 is strictly greater than	expr2.

       expr1 >=	expr2
	      The result is 1 if expr1 is greater than or equal	to expr2.

       expr1 ==	expr2
	      The result is 1 if expr1 is equal	to expr2.

       expr1 !=	expr2
	      The result is 1 if expr1 is not equal to expr2.

       Boolean operations are also valid.  (POSIX bc does NOT have boolean op-
       erations).  The result of all boolean operations	are 0 and 1 (for false
       and true) as in relational expressions.	The boolean operators are:

       !expr  The result is 1 if expr is 0.

       expr && expr
	      The result is 1 if both expressions are non-zero.

       expr || expr
	      The result is 1 if either	expression is non-zero.

       The expression precedence is as follows:	(lowest	to highest)
	      || operator, left	associative
	      && operator, left	associative
	      !	operator, nonassociative
	      Relational operators, left associative
	      Assignment operator, right associative
	      +	and - operators, left associative
	      *, / and % operators, left associative
	      ^	operator, right	associative
	      unary - operator,	nonassociative
	      ++ and --	operators, nonassociative

       This precedence was chosen so that POSIX	compliant bc programs will run
       correctly. This will cause the use of the relational and	logical	opera-
       tors to have some unusual behavior when used  with  assignment  expres-
       sions.  Consider	the expression:
	      a	= 3 < 5

       Most C programmers would	assume this would assign the result of "3 < 5"
       (the  value 1) to the variable "a".  What this does in bc is assign the
       value 3 to the variable "a" and then compare 3 to 5.  It	is best	to use
       parenthesis when	using relational and logical operators	with  the  as-
       signment	operators.

       There  are  a  few  more	 special  expressions that are provided	in bc.
       These have to do	with user defined functions  and  standard  functions.
       They  all  appear  as "name(parameters)".  See the section on functions
       for user	defined	functions.  The	standard functions are:

       length (	expression )
	      The value	of the length function is the  number  of  significant
	      digits in	the expression.

       read ( )
	      The  read	 function  (an	extension) will	read a number from the
	      standard input, regardless of where the  function	 occurs.   Be-
	      ware,  this  can cause problems with the mixing of data and pro-
	      gram in the standard input.  The best use	for this  function  is
	      in  a previously written program that needs input	from the user,
	      but never	allows program code to be input	from  the  user.   The
	      value  of	the read function is the number	read from the standard
	      input using the current value of the variable ibase for the con-
	      version base.

       scale ( expression )
	      The value	of the scale function is the number  of	 digits	 after
	      the decimal point	in the expression.

       sqrt ( expression )
	      The value	of the sqrt function is	the square root	of the expres-
	      sion.  If	the expression is negative, a run time error is	gener-
	      ated.

   STATEMENTS
       Statements  (as	in most	algebraic languages) provide the sequencing of
       expression evaluation.  In bc statements	are executed "as soon as  pos-
       sible".	 Execution  happens when a newline in encountered and there is
       one or more complete statements.	 Due to	this immediate execution, new-
       lines are very important	in bc. In fact,	both a semicolon and a newline
       are used	as statement separators.  An improperly	 placed	 newline  will
       cause a syntax error.  Because newlines are statement separators, it is
       possible	 to  hide a newline by using the backslash character.  The se-
       quence "\<nl>", where <nl> is the newline appears to bc	as  whitespace
       instead of a newline.  A	statement list is a series of statements sepa-
       rated by	semicolons and newlines.  The following	is a list of bc	state-
       ments  and what they do:	(Things	enclosed in brackets ([]) are optional
       parts of	the statement.)

       expression
	      This statement does one of two things.  If the expression	starts
	      with "<variable> <assignment> ...", it is	considered  to	be  an
	      assignment  statement.   If  the expression is not an assignment
	      statement, the expression	is evaluated and printed to  the  out-
	      put.   After  the	 number	is printed, a newline is printed.  For
	      example, "a=1" is	an assignment statement	and "(a=1)" is an  ex-
	      pression	that has an embedded assignment.  All numbers that are
	      printed are printed in the base specified	by the variable	obase.
	      The valid	values for obase are 2 through BC_BASE_MAX.  (See  the
	      section  LIMITS.)	  For  bases 2 through 16, the usual method of
	      writing numbers is used.	For bases greater than 16, bc  uses  a
	      multi-character  digit method of printing	the numbers where each
	      higher base digit	is printed as a	base 10	 number.   The	multi-
	      character	 digits	 are separated by spaces.  Each	digit contains
	      the number of characters required	 to  represent	the  base  ten
	      value  of	 "obase-1".  Since numbers are of arbitrary precision,
	      some numbers may not be  printable  on  a	 single	 output	 line.
	      These  long  numbers will	be split across	lines using the	"\" as
	      the last character on a line.  The maximum number	of  characters
	      printed  per  line  is 70.  Due to the interactive nature	of bc,
	      printing a number	 causes	 the  side  effect  of	assigning  the
	      printed value to the special variable last. This allows the user
	      to  recover  the last value printed without having to retype the
	      expression that printed the number.  Assigning to	last is	 valid
	      and  will	 overwrite  the	 last  printed value with the assigned
	      value.  The newly	assigned value will remain until the next num-
	      ber is printed or	another	value is assigned to last.  (Some  in-
	      stallations  may	allow  the use of a single period (.) which is
	      not part of a number as a	short hand notation for	last.)

       string The string is printed to the output.  Strings start with a  dou-
	      ble  quote  character  and contain all characters	until the next
	      double quote character.  All characters are take literally,  in-
	      cluding  any newline.  No	newline	character is printed after the
	      string.

       print list
	      The print	statement (an extension) provides  another  method  of
	      output.	The  "list" is a list of strings and expressions sepa-
	      rated by commas.	Each string or expression is  printed  in  the
	      order  of	the list.  No terminating newline is printed.  Expres-
	      sions are	evaluated and their value is printed and  assigned  to
	      the variable last. Strings in the	print statement	are printed to
	      the  output and may contain special characters.  Special charac-
	      ters start with the backslash character (\).  The	special	 char-
	      acters  recognized  by  bc  are  "a" (alert or bell), "b"	(back-
	      space), "f" (form	feed), "n" (newline), "r"  (carriage  return),
	      "q"  (double  quote), "t"	(tab), and "\" (backslash).  Any other
	      character	following the backslash	will be	ignored.

       { statement_list	}
	      This is the compound statement.  It allows  multiple  statements
	      to be grouped together for execution.

       if ( expression ) statement1 [else statement2]
	      The  if  statement  evaluates the	expression and executes	state-
	      ment1 or statement2 depending on the value  of  the  expression.
	      If  the  expression  is  non-zero,  statement1  is executed.  If
	      statement2 is present and	the value of the expression is 0, then
	      statement2 is executed.  (The else clause	is an extension.)

       while ( expression ) statement
	      The while	statement will execute the statement while the expres-
	      sion is non-zero.	 It evaluates the expression before each  exe-
	      cution of	the statement.	Termination of the loop	is caused by a
	      zero expression value or the execution of	a break	statement.

       for ( [expression1] ; [expression2] ; [expression3] ) statement
	      The  for statement controls repeated execution of	the statement.
	      Expression1 is evaluated before the loop.	 Expression2 is	evalu-
	      ated before each execution of the	statement.  If it is non-zero,
	      the statement is evaluated.  If it is zero, the loop  is	termi-
	      nated.   After  each  execution of the statement,	expression3 is
	      evaluated	before the reevaluation	of  expression2.   If  expres-
	      sion1  or	 expression3  are missing, nothing is evaluated	at the
	      point they would be evaluated.  If expression2 is	missing, it is
	      the same as substituting the value 1 for expression2.  (The  op-
	      tional expressions are an	extension. POSIX bc requires all three
	      expressions.)   The  following  is  equivalent  code for the for
	      statement:
	      expression1;
	      while (expression2) {
		 statement;
		 expression3;
	      }

       break  This statement causes a forced exit of the most recent enclosing
	      while statement or for statement.

       continue
	      The continue statement (an extension)  causes  the  most	recent
	      enclosing	for statement to start the next	iteration.

       halt   The  halt	statement (an extension) is an executed	statement that
	      causes the bc processor to quit only when	it is  executed.   For
	      example,	"if  (0	== 1) halt" will not cause bc to terminate be-
	      cause the	halt is	not executed.

       return Return the value 0 from a	function.  (See	the section  on	 func-
	      tions.)

       return (	expression )
	      Return  the  value  of the expression from a function.  (See the
	      section on functions.)  As an extension, the parenthesis are not
	      required.

   PSEUDO STATEMENTS
       These statements	are not	statements in the traditional sense.  They are
       not executed statements.	 Their	function  is  performed	 at  "compile"
       time.

       limits Print  the  local	 limits	 enforced  by the local	version	of bc.
	      This is an extension.

       quit   When the quit statement is read, the bc processor	is terminated,
	      regardless of where the quit statement is	found.	 For  example,
	      "if (0 ==	1) quit" will cause bc to terminate.

       warranty
	      Print a longer warranty notice.  This is an extension.

   FUNCTIONS
       Functions  provide  a method of defining	a computation that can be exe-
       cuted later.  Functions in bc always compute a value and	return	it  to
       the  caller.   Function	definitions  are "dynamic" in the sense	that a
       function	is undefined until a definition	is encountered in  the	input.
       That  definition	is then	used until another definition function for the
       same name is encountered.  The new definition then replaces  the	 older
       definition.  A function is defined as follows:
	      define name ( parameters ) { newline
		  auto_list   statement_list }
       A function call is just an expression of	the form "name(parameters)".

       Parameters are numbers or arrays	(an extension).	 In the	function defi-
       nition, zero or more parameters are defined by listing their names sep-
       arated by commas.  All parameters are call by value parameters.	Arrays
       are specified in	the parameter definition by the	notation "name[]".  In
       the  function  call,  actual parameters are full	expressions for	number
       parameters.  The	same notation is used for passing arrays as for	defin-
       ing array parameters.  The named	array is passed	by value to the	 func-
       tion.   Since  function	definitions are	dynamic, parameter numbers and
       types are checked when a	function is called.  Any mismatch in number or
       types of	parameters will	cause a	runtime	error.	A runtime  error  will
       also occur for the call to an undefined function.

       The  auto_list  is  an  optional	list of	variables that are for "local"
       use.  The syntax	of the auto list (if present) is "auto name,  ...  ;".
       (The  semicolon	is  optional.)	Each name is the name of an auto vari-
       able.  Arrays may be specified by using the same	notation  as  used  in
       parameters.   These  variables have their values	pushed onto a stack at
       the start of the	function.  The variables are then initialized to  zero
       and  used  throughout the execution of the function.  At	function exit,
       these variables are popped so that the original value (at the  time  of
       the function call) of these variables are restored.  The	parameters are
       really  auto  variables that are	initialized to a value provided	in the
       function	call.  Auto variables are  different  than  traditional	 local
       variables because if function A calls function B, B may access function
       A's  auto  variables by just using the same name, unless	function B has
       called them auto	variables.  Due	to the fact that  auto	variables  and
       parameters are pushed onto a stack, bc supports recursive functions.

       The  function  body  is a list of bc statements.	 Again,	statements are
       separated by semicolons or newlines.  Return statements cause the  ter-
       mination	 of  a function	and the	return of a value.  There are two ver-
       sions of	the return statement.  The first form, "return",  returns  the
       value  0	to the calling expression.  The	second form, "return ( expres-
       sion )",	computes the value of the expression and returns that value to
       the calling expression.	There is an implied "return (0)" at the	end of
       every function.	This allows a function to terminate and	return 0 with-
       out an explicit return statement.

       Functions also change the usage of the variable ibase.	All  constants
       in  the function	body will be converted using the value of ibase	at the
       time of the function call.  Changes of ibase will be ignored during the
       execution of the	function except	for the	standard function read,	 which
       will always use the current value of ibase for conversion of numbers.

       Several	extensions have	been added to functions.  First, the format of
       the definition has been slightly	relaxed.  The  standard	 requires  the
       opening	brace  be on the same line as the define keyword and all other
       parts must be on	following lines.  This version of bc  will  allow  any
       number  of newlines before and after the	opening	brace of the function.
       For example, the	following definitions are valid.
	      define d (n) { return (2*n); }
	      define d (n)
		{ return (2*n);	}

       Functions may be	defined	as void.  A void funtion returns no value  and
       thus  may not be	used in	any place that needs a value.  A void function
       does not	produce	any output when	called by itself  on  an  input	 line.
       The  key	 word void is placed between the key word define and the func-
       tion name.  For example,	consider the following session.
	      define py	(y) { print "--->", y, "<---", "\n"; }
	      define void px (x) { print "--->", x, "<---", "\n"; }
	      py(1)
	      --->1<---
	      0
	      px(1)
	      --->1<---
       Since py	is not a void function,	the call of py(1) prints  the  desired
       output and then prints a	second line that is the	value of the function.
       Since  the  value  of  a	 function that is not given an explicit	return
       statement is zero, the zero is printed.	For px(1), no zero is  printed
       because the function is a void function.

       Also,  call  by	variable  for  arrays was added.  To declare a call by
       variable	array, the declaration of the array parameter in the  function
       definition  looks like "*name[]".  The call to the function remains the
       same as call by value arrays.

   MATH	LIBRARY
       If bc is	invoked	with the -l option, a math library  is	preloaded  and
       the  default  scale  is	set  to	20.  The math functions	will calculate
       their results to	the scale set at the time of their call.  The math li-
       brary defines the following functions:

       s (x)  The sine of x, x is in radians.

       c (x)  The cosine of x, x is in radians.

       a (x)  The arctangent of	x, arctangent returns radians.

       l (x)  The natural logarithm of x.

       e (x)  The exponential function of raising e to the value x.

       j (n,x)
	      The Bessel function of integer order n of	x.

   EXAMPLES
       In /bin/sh,  the	following will assign the value	of "pi"	to  the	 shell
       variable	pi.
	       pi=$(echo "scale=10; 4*a(1)" | bc -l)

       The following is	the definition of the exponential function used	in the
       math library.  This function is written in POSIX	bc.
	      scale = 20

	      /* Uses the fact that e^x	= (e^(x/2))^2
		 When x	is small enough, we use	the series:
		   e^x = 1 + x + x^2/2!	+ x^3/3! + ...
	      */

	      define e(x) {
		auto  a, d, e, f, i, m,	v, z

		/* Check the sign of x.	*/
		if (x<0) {
		  m = 1
		  x = -x
		}

		/* Precondition	x. */
		z = scale;
		scale =	4 + z +	.44*x;
		while (x > 1) {
		  f += 1;
		  x /= 2;
		}

		/* Initialize the variables. */
		v = 1+x
		a = x
		d = 1

		for (i=2; 1; i++) {
		  e = (a *= x) / (d *= i)
		  if (e	== 0) {
		    if (f>0) while (f--)  v = v*v;
		    scale = z
		    if (m) return (1/v);
		    return (v/1);
		  }
		  v += e
		}
	      }

       The  following  is code that uses the extended features of bc to	imple-
       ment a simple program for calculating checkbook balances.  This program
       is best kept in a file so that it can be	used many times	without	having
       to retype it at every use.
	      scale=2
	      print "\nCheck book program!\n"
	      print "  Remember, deposits are negative transactions.\n"
	      print "  Exit by a 0 transaction.\n\n"

	      print "Initial balance? "; bal = read()
	      bal /= 1
	      print "\n"
	      while (1)	{
		"current balance = "; bal
		"transaction? "; trans = read()
		if (trans == 0)	break;
		bal -= trans
		bal /= 1
	      }
	      quit

       The following is	the definition of the recursive	factorial function.
	      define f (x) {
		if (x <= 1) return (1);
		return (f(x-1) * x);
	      }

   READLINE AND	LIBEDIT	OPTIONS
       GNU bc can be compiled (via a configure option) to use the GNU readline
       input editor library or the BSD libedit library.	 This allows the  user
       to do editing of	lines before sending them to bc.  It also allows for a
       history	of previous lines typed.  When this option is selected,	bc has
       one more	special	variable.  This	special	variable, history is the  num-
       ber  of	lines  of history retained.  For readline, a value of -1 means
       that an unlimited number	of history lines are  retained.	  Setting  the
       value  of  history to a positive	number restricts the number of history
       lines to	the number given.  The value of	0 disables  the	 history  fea-
       ture.   The  default  value is 100. For more information, read the user
       manuals for the GNU readline, history and BSD libedit  libraries.   One
       can not enable both readline and	libedit	at the same time.

   DIFFERENCES
       This version of bc was implemented from the POSIX P1003.2/D11 draft and
       contains	 several  differences and extensions relative to the draft and
       traditional implementations.  It	is not implemented in the  traditional
       way  using  dc(1).   This  version is a single process which parses and
       runs a byte code	translation of the  program.   There  is  an  "undocu-
       mented"	option (-c) that causes	the program to output the byte code to
       the standard output instead of running it.  It was mainly used for  de-
       bugging the parser and preparing	the math library.

       A  major	 source	 of  differences is extensions,	where a	feature	is ex-
       tended to add more functionality	and additions, where new features  are
       added.  The following is	the list of differences	and extensions.

       LANG environment
	      This  version does not conform to	the POSIX standard in the pro-
	      cessing of the LANG environment  variable	 and  all  environment
	      variables	starting with LC_.

       names  Traditional and POSIX bc have single letter names	for functions,
	      variables	and arrays.  They have been extended to	be multi-char-
	      acter  names  that  start	with a letter and may contain letters,
	      numbers and the underscore character.

       Strings
	      Strings are not allowed to contain NUL characters.   POSIX  says
	      all characters must be included in strings.

       last   POSIX bc does not	have a last variable.  Some implementations of
	      bc use the period	(.) in a similar way.

       comparisons
	      POSIX  bc	allows comparisons only	in the if statement, the while
	      statement, and the  second  expression  of  the  for  statement.
	      Also,  only one relational operation is allowed in each of those
	      statements.

       if statement, else clause
	      POSIX bc does not	have an	else clause.

       for statement
	      POSIX bc requires	all expressions	 to  be	 present  in  the  for
	      statement.

       &&, ||, !
	      POSIX bc does not	have the logical operators.

       read function
	      POSIX bc does not	have a read function.

       print statement
	      POSIX bc does not	have a print statement .

       continue	statement
	      POSIX bc does not	have a continue	statement.

       return statement
	      POSIX bc requires	parentheses around the return expression.

       array parameters
	      POSIX  bc	does not (currently) support array parameters in full.
	      The POSIX	grammar	allows for arrays in function definitions, but
	      does not provide a method	to specify an array as an actual para-
	      meter.  (This is most likely an oversight	in the grammar.)  Tra-
	      ditional implementations of bc have only call by value array pa-
	      rameters.

       function	format
	      POSIX bc requires	the opening brace on the same line as the  de-
	      fine key word and	the auto statement on the next line.

       =+, =-, =*, =/, =%, =^
	      POSIX bc does not	require	these "old style" assignment operators
	      to be defined.  This version may allow these "old	style" assign-
	      ments.  Use the limits statement to see if the installed version
	      supports	them.	If  it does support the	"old style" assignment
	      operators, the statement "a =- 1"	will decrement a by 1  instead
	      of setting a to the value	-1.

       spaces in numbers
	      Other  implementations of	bc allow spaces	in numbers.  For exam-
	      ple, "x=1	3" would assign	the value 13 to	the variable  x.   The
	      same statement would cause a syntax error	in this	version	of bc.

       errors and execution
	      This  implementation  varies from	other implementations in terms
	      of what code will	be executed when syntax	and other  errors  are
	      found  in	the program.  If a syntax error	is found in a function
	      definition, error	recovery tries to  find	 the  beginning	 of  a
	      statement	and continue to	parse the function.  Once a syntax er-
	      ror  is found in the function, the function will not be callable
	      and becomes undefined.  Syntax errors in the interactive	execu-
	      tion code	will invalidate	the current execution block.  The exe-
	      cution  block is terminated by an	end of line that appears after
	      a	complete sequence of statements.  For example,
	      a	= 1
	      b	= 2
       has two execution blocks	and
	      {	a = 1
		b = 2 }
       has one execution block.	 Any runtime error will	terminate  the	execu-
       tion of the current execution block.  A runtime warning will not	termi-
       nate the	current	execution block.

       Interrupts
	      During an	interactive session, the SIGINT	signal (usually	gener-
	      ated  by	the  control-C character from the terminal) will cause
	      execution	of the current execution block to be interrupted.   It
	      will display a "runtime" error indicating	which function was in-
	      terrupted.  After	all runtime structures have been cleaned up, a
	      message  will be printed to notify the user that bc is ready for
	      more input.  All previously defined functions remain defined and
	      the value	of all non-auto	variables are the value	at  the	 point
	      of interruption.	All auto variables and function	parameters are
	      removed  during  the clean up process.  During a non-interactive
	      session, the SIGINT signal will terminate	the entire run of bc.

   LIMITS
       The following are the limits currently in place for this	bc  processor.
       Some  of	them may have been changed by an installation.	Use the	limits
       statement to see	the actual values.

       BC_BASE_MAX
	      The maximum output base is at least  10^9.   The	maximum	 input
	      base is 16.

       BC_DIM_MAX
	      This  is	currently  an arbitrary	limit of 65535 as distributed.
	      Your installation	may be different.

       BC_SCALE_MAX
	      The number of digits after  the  decimal	point  is  limited  to
	      INT_MAX  digits.	 Also, the number of digits before the decimal
	      point is limited to INT_MAX digits.

       BC_STRING_MAX
	      The limit	on the number of characters in	a  string  is  INT_MAX
	      characters.

       exponent
	      The  value of the	exponent in the	raise operation	(^) is limited
	      to LONG_MAX.

       variable	names
	      The current limit	on the number of unique	 names	is  32767  for
	      each of simple variables,	arrays and functions.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables are processed by bc:

       POSIXLY_CORRECT
	      This is the same as the -s option.

       BC_ENV_ARGS
	      This is another mechanism	to get arguments to bc.	 The format is
	      the  same	 as  the  command line arguments.  These arguments are
	      processed	first, so any files listed in  the  environment	 argu-
	      ments  are  processed  before  any  command line argument	files.
	      This allows the user to set up "standard"	options	and  files  to
	      be  processed at every invocation	of bc.	The files in the envi-
	      ronment variables	would typically	contain	 function  definitions
	      for functions the	user wants defined every time bc is run.

       BC_LINE_LENGTH
	      This should be an	integer	specifying the number of characters in
	      an output	line for numbers. This includes	the backslash and new-
	      line characters for long numbers.	 As an extension, the value of
	      zero  disables  the multi-line feature.  Any other value of this
	      variable that is less than 3 sets	the line length	to 70.

DIAGNOSTICS
       If any file on the command line can not be opened, bc will report  that
       the file	is unavailable and terminate.  Also, there are compile and run
       time diagnostics	that should be self-explanatory.

BUGS
       Error recovery is not very good yet.

       Email  bug  reports  to	bug-bc@gnu.org.	  Be  sure to include the word
       ``bc'' somewhere	in the ``Subject:'' field.

AUTHOR
       Philip A. Nelson
       philnelson@acm.org

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       The author would	like to	thank  Steve  Sommars  (Steve.Sommars@att.com)
       for  his	extensive help in testing the implementation.  Many great sug-
       gestions	were given.  This is a much better product due to his involve-
       ment.

GNU Project			  2025-01-05				 bc(1)

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