Added in 3.3
$calcint(operations)
Returns the result of the specified operations. You can perform multiple operations.
Can calculate extremely high numbers, but can only be used on whole numbers, not decimal/float/fractions. Does not have the limitation in $calc() where any term or output value 2^96 or higher is zero.
Any term containing non-zero fraction replaced by zero. Output has any fraction removed.
Operations can be grouped with parentheses.
Same operators as $calc() uses except:
// floor divide operator behaves like / operator, being an 'int divide' that's identical for positive results but not for negatives.
Parameters
Parameter | Description |
operations | The calculations to perform. |
Example
accurate result for extremely large integers //echo -ag $calcint( ((2 ^ 256) - 1) * ((2 ^ 256) +1) ) fraction removed from output. not affected by fraction being zero //echo -ag $calcint(48.0 / 10.0) is same as $int($calc(48 / 10)) term with fraction treated as if zero //echo -ag $calcint(5 + 2.5) is same as 5 + 0 not affected by value 2^96 or greater //var %ag 79228162514264337593543950335 | echo -a $calcint(1+%a) vs $calc(1+%a) is 79228162514264337593543950336 vs 0 fractional terms created by parenthesis can affect output //echo -ag $calcint(2 * (48 / 10)) vs $calcint(2 * 48 / 10) is 8 vs 9 If you need floordivide for negative numbers, you must calculate it using / (divide) and % (modulo). Note that $calc() is accurate for a smaller range: //var -s %numerator -10 , %denominator 3 , %intdivide $calcint(%numerator / %denominator) , %mod $calcint(%numerator % %denominator) , %floordiv %intdivide | if (%intdivide < 0) var -s %floordiv $calcint(%floordiv - $iif(%mod,1,0)) | echo -a %floordiv vs $calc(%numerator // %denominator)
Updated by Per Amundsen almost 2 years ago · 4 revisions