Update README docs for 2.0 release
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README.md
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README.md
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## Design Philosophy
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# CS-MIC
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CS‑MIC is a small, embeddable expression interpreter designed primarily for UI scenarios where a user types flexible input (e.g., 2+2+someVar) but the host application needs a validated, deterministic numeric value. The library focuses on predictable evaluation, strong validation and extensibility through developer‑supplied variables and coded functions.
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CS-MIC is a small, embeddable expression interpreter for .NET applications. It is designed for places where users need to enter flexible numeric input, while the host application needs a deterministic decimal result and a controlled extension surface.
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Goals
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The 2.0 release separates the project into two NuGet packages:
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- Numeric‑first: Expressions evaluate to a numeric result the host can trust.
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- Predictable semantics: No implicit coercions or surprising operator behavior.
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- Embeddable: Tiny surface area, easy to host inside C# applications.
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- Extensible: Developers inject variables and ICodedFunction implementations.
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- Clear errors: Friendly, actionable diagnostics for invalid input.
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- `CSMic`: the core parser, interpreter, variable store, and custom function API.
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- `CSMic.StandardLibrary`: optional constants and common math functions built on top of the core package.
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Core Principles
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CS-MIC targets `netstandard2.1`.
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- Determinism: The same input with the same variables/functions yields the same numeric output.
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- Minimalism: Keep the grammar and runtime small; add features only when they reinforce the numeric‑first mission.
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- Type clarity: Values carry explicit types; operators enforce type rules rather than auto‑converting.
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- Safe composition: Functions are pure from the interpreter’s perspective; side effects are the host’s responsibility.
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## Installation
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### Strings: Arguments‑Only, Numeric‑First
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Install the core interpreter when you want to parse expressions and provide your own functions:
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CS‑MIC’s v2 scope treats strings as helpers for functions, not as first‑class expression values. This preserves the “numeric guarantee” while enabling rich, domain‑specific function usage.
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```sh
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dotnet add package CSMic
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```
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- Where strings are allowed: As literals in function argument lists (e.g., myFunc("key", 42)).
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- Where strings are not allowed: As standalone primaries, in arithmetic (e.g., "a" + 1), or in comparisons; string variables are out of scope for v2.
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- Function contract: ICodedFunction implementations may accept string arguments and should return a numeric result when the function’s value is used in an expression.
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- Grammar posture: The grammar recognizes quoted string tokens; the parser accepts them only in function argument positions.
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- Operator semantics: No string operators or concatenation; no implicit conversions from string to number.
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- Errors: If a string is used outside an argument position or produced where a number is required, the interpreter emits a clear type error (e.g., "strings are only valid as function arguments").
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Install the standard library when you also want built-in constants and math helpers:
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Rationale
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```sh
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dotnet add package CSMic.StandardLibrary
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```
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- Preserves the primary mission: turn flexible user input into a validated numeric value.
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- Keeps complexity low by avoiding general string semantics (concatenation, ordering, variables, etc.).
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- Maximizes developer power: functions can receive text payloads (formats, keys, expressions) and return numbers, leveraging CS‑MIC for parsing, validation and invocation.
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`CSMic.StandardLibrary` references `CSMic`, so applications that use the standard library do not need to install both packages explicitly.
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Developer Guidance
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## Basic Usage
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- Implementing ICodedFunction: Inspect FunctionArgument.Value.Type to branch on expected input. If a string is required, validate and produce a numeric FunctionValue.
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- Argument metadata: Optionally use ExpectedArguments to document names and intended types for better diagnostics.
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- Error messaging: Prefer precise, actionable messages (e.g., "arg 'pattern' must be a string").
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```csharp
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using CSMic;
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Example
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var interpreter = new InputInterpreter();
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// Pseudocode / sketch
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// myFunc("HEX", 0xFF) → 255
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// myFunc("BIN", 1010b) → 10
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// sumWithLabel("groupA", 1, 2, 3) → 6 (label used for logging/selection)
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decimal result = interpreter.Interpret("2 + 3 * 4");
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// result == 14
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// interpreter.NumericValue == 14
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```
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Future Directions (Non‑Goals for v2)
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`Interpret` returns the numeric result and also stores the last output on the interpreter. Parse and runtime errors are soft errors: the interpreter returns `0` and writes the error message to `StringValue`.
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- First‑class strings: Allow strings as values, variables, or return types in general expressions (would require defining operators and comparisons).
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- Verbatim/opaque arguments: Special argument modes for embedding mini‑DSLs (higher parser complexity).
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- Value tagging: Optional metadata (e.g., OriginalLiteral) attached to FunctionValue for advanced scenarios.
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```csharp
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decimal result = interpreter.Interpret("1 / 0");
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if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(interpreter.StringValue))
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{
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Console.WriteLine(interpreter.StringValue);
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}
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```
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Create a new interpreter for an isolated evaluation context. Reuse an interpreter when variables, arrays, expression bindings, and registered functions should persist across calls.
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## Expressions
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CS-MIC evaluates numeric expressions with the usual precedence rules for parentheses, powers, multiplication, division, modulus, addition, and subtraction.
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| Input | Result |
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| --- | ---: |
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| `5 + 5` | `10` |
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| `1 + 2 * 3` | `7` |
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| `(1 + 2) * 3` | `9` |
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| `2 ^ 8` | `256` |
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| `7 % 4` | `3` |
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| `2(3 + 1)` | `8` |
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Comparison operators return numeric booleans: `1` for true and `0` for false.
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| Input | Result |
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| --- | ---: |
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| `2 == 2` | `1` |
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| `2 < 3` | `1` |
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| `3 < 2` | `0` |
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| `2 >= 2` | `1` |
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| `2 <= 1` | `0` |
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## Literals
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Numbers are decimal by default. Hexadecimal values use a `0x` prefix, and binary values use a `b` suffix.
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| Input | Result |
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| --- | ---: |
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| `100` | `100` |
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| `0xFF` | `255` |
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| `1010b` | `10` |
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| `0xFF * 1010b` | `2550` |
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String literals are accepted only as function arguments. They are not standalone expression values, variables, or arithmetic operands.
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## Variables And Arrays
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Use `::` to assign a numeric value. Numeric variables are evaluated immediately and persist on the interpreter.
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```csharp
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interpreter.Interpret("x :: 4"); // 4
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interpreter.Interpret("x + 6"); // 10
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```
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Use `:=` to assign an expression binding. Expression bindings are evaluated when referenced, so they can reflect later changes to other variables.
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```csharp
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interpreter.Interpret("x :: 2");
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interpreter.Interpret("doubleX := 2 * x");
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interpreter.Interpret("doubleX"); // 4
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interpreter.Interpret("x :: 5");
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interpreter.Interpret("doubleX"); // 10
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```
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Use `->` to assign a numeric array, then index it with zero-based indexes.
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```csharp
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interpreter.Interpret("values -> [10, 20, 30]");
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interpreter.Interpret("values[1]"); // 20
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```
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## Standard Library
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Add `CSMic.StandardLibrary` and initialize the interpreter to register the standard functions and constants:
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```csharp
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using CSMic;
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using CSMic.StandardLibrary;
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var interpreter = new InputInterpreter();
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Initializer.InitializeAll(interpreter);
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decimal area = interpreter.Interpret("pi * 10^2");
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decimal angle = interpreter.Interpret("degrees(pi / 2)");
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```
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`InitializeAll` registers all functions and constants. You can also opt into smaller groups with `InitializeAllFunctions`, `InitializeConstants`, `InitializeBaseFunctions`, `InitializeAngleFunctions`, `InitializeRoundingFunctions`, `InitializeTrigonometryFunctions`, `InitializeNumberTheoryFunctions`, and `InitializeRandomFunctions`.
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The standard library includes:
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- Base functions: `abs`, `sign`, `min`, `max`
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- Angle helpers: `degrees`, `radians`, `wrapangle`
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- Rounding helpers: `floor`, `ceiling`, `truncate`, `frac`, `round`, `clamp`
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- Trigonometry: `sin`, `cos`, `tan`, `asin`, `acos`, `atan`, `atan2`
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- Hyperbolic trigonometry: `sinh`, `cosh`, `tanh`, `asinh`, `acosh`, `atanh`
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- Number theory: `fac`, `ncr`, `npr`, `gcd`, `lcm`
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- Random helpers: `flip`, `bern`, `rand`, `rands`, `randn`, `randns`
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- Constants: `pi`, `e`, `tau`, `phi`, `goldenratio`, `eurler`, `omega`
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## Custom Functions
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Register custom functions by implementing `ICodedFunction`.
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```csharp
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using CSMic;
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public sealed class Square : ICodedFunction
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{
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public string Name => "square";
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public IEnumerable<FunctionArgument> ExpectedArguments =>
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new[] { new FunctionArgument("value", FunctionValue.NUMBER) };
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public FunctionValue ReturnValue => FunctionValue.NUMBER;
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public FunctionValue Execute(params FunctionArgument[] args)
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{
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var value = (decimal)args[0].Value.Value!;
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return new FunctionValue(FunctionValueType.Numeric, value * value);
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}
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}
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var interpreter = new InputInterpreter();
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interpreter.RegisterFunction(new Square());
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decimal result = interpreter.Interpret("square(12)");
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// result == 144
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```
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Functions can accept numeric or string arguments. String arguments are useful for host-defined keys, modes, or labels while preserving CS-MIC's numeric-first expression model.
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## Building From Source
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```sh
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dotnet restore src/CsMic.sln
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dotnet test src/CsMic.sln
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dotnet pack src/Core/CSMic.Core.csproj -c Release
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dotnet pack src/StandardLibrary/CSMic.StandardLibrary.csproj -c Release
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```
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The core project uses Coco/R during build to generate parser and scanner code from `src/Core/cocor/Interpreter.atg`.
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@ -9,9 +9,14 @@
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<AssemblyName>CSMic.Core</AssemblyName>
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<Version>2.0.0</Version>
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<PackageId>CSMic</PackageId>
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<PackageReadmeFile>README.md</PackageReadmeFile>
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<LangVersion>latest</LangVersion>
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</PropertyGroup>
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<ItemGroup>
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<None Include="README.md" Pack="true" PackagePath="\" />
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</ItemGroup>
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<Target Name="PreBuild" BeforeTargets="PreBuildEvent">
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<Exec Command="dotnet tool run coco -namespace CSMic.Interpreter -frames $(ProjectDir)cocor $(ProjectDir)cocor/Interpreter.atg" />
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</Target>
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99
src/Core/README.md
Normal file
99
src/Core/README.md
Normal file
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# CSMic
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`CSMic` is the core CS-MIC package. It provides the expression parser, interpreter runtime, variable storage, array support, expression bindings, soft-error reporting, and the custom function API.
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Install it when you want the parser and runtime without the optional standard-library functions.
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```sh
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dotnet add package CSMic
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```
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## What It Provides
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- `InputInterpreter`, the main API for parsing and evaluating input.
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- Numeric expression support for arithmetic, powers, modulus, parentheses, comparisons, implicit multiplication, decimal literals, hexadecimal literals, and binary literals.
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- Persistent interpreter state for numeric variables, expression variables, and numeric arrays.
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- Soft-error behavior through `StringValue` instead of throwing for normal parse and evaluation failures.
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- `ICodedFunction`, `FunctionArgument`, and `FunctionValue` for host-provided functions.
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## Basic Usage
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```csharp
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using CSMic;
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var interpreter = new InputInterpreter();
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decimal result = interpreter.Interpret("2 + 3 * 4");
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// result == 14
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```
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`Interpret` returns the latest numeric value and updates these properties:
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- `NumericValue`: the numeric result of the latest successful expression, or `0` for a soft error.
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- `StringValue`: empty for a successful numeric expression, or an error message for a soft error.
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- `LastExecutionTime`: elapsed time for the latest interpretation.
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- `Variables`: the current numeric, expression, and array variables.
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## Variables
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Numeric variables use `::`.
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```csharp
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interpreter.Interpret("x :: 4");
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interpreter.Interpret("x + 1"); // 5
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```
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Expression variables use `:=` and are evaluated when referenced.
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```csharp
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interpreter.Interpret("x :: 2");
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interpreter.Interpret("y := x + 1");
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interpreter.Interpret("y"); // 3
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interpreter.Interpret("x :: 5");
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interpreter.Interpret("y"); // 6
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```
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Numeric arrays use `->` and zero-based indexes.
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```csharp
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interpreter.Interpret("values -> [1, 2, 3]");
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interpreter.Interpret("values[2]"); // 3
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```
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## Custom Functions
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Implement `ICodedFunction` and register it with the interpreter.
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```csharp
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using CSMic;
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public sealed class Square : ICodedFunction
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{
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public string Name => "square";
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public IEnumerable<FunctionArgument> ExpectedArguments =>
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new[] { new FunctionArgument("value", FunctionValue.NUMBER) };
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public FunctionValue ReturnValue => FunctionValue.NUMBER;
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public FunctionValue Execute(params FunctionArgument[] args)
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{
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var value = (decimal)args[0].Value.Value!;
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return new FunctionValue(FunctionValueType.Numeric, value * value);
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}
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}
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var interpreter = new InputInterpreter();
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interpreter.RegisterFunction(new Square());
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interpreter.Interpret("square(5)"); // 25
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```
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Functions can accept numeric and string arguments. String literals are only valid in function argument positions; general expression results remain numeric-first.
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## When To Use This Package
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Use `CSMic` directly when your application owns the function set, wants a small expression runtime, or needs to keep end-user functions tightly scoped to your domain.
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Use `CSMic.StandardLibrary` when you also want ready-made constants and common math functions.
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<Nullable>enable</Nullable>
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<Version>2.0.0</Version>
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<PackageId>CSMic.StandardLibrary</PackageId>
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<PackageReadmeFile>README.md</PackageReadmeFile>
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<LangVersion>latest</LangVersion>
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</PropertyGroup>
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<ItemGroup>
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<ProjectReference Include="..\Core\CSMic.Core.csproj" />
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<None Include="README.md" Pack="true" PackagePath="\" />
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</ItemGroup>
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<Import Project="NuGetPublish.targets" Condition="Exists('NuGetPublish.targets')" />
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|
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116
src/StandardLibrary/README.md
Normal file
116
src/StandardLibrary/README.md
Normal file
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# CSMic.StandardLibrary
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`CSMic.StandardLibrary` adds optional functions and constants to the core CS-MIC interpreter. It is intended for applications that want end-user convenience functions without having to implement and register each one manually.
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This package references `CSMic`.
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```sh
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dotnet add package CSMic.StandardLibrary
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```
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## Basic Usage
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```csharp
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using CSMic;
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using CSMic.StandardLibrary;
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var interpreter = new InputInterpreter();
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Initializer.InitializeAll(interpreter);
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decimal result = interpreter.Interpret("max(10, abs(-12))");
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// result == 12
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```
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`Initializer.InitializeAll` registers every standard function and constant. Use a narrower initializer when you only want part of the library:
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- `InitializeAllFunctions`
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- `InitializeConstants`
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- `InitializeBaseFunctions`
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- `InitializeAngleFunctions`
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- `InitializeRoundingFunctions`
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- `InitializeTrigonometryFunctions`
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- `InitializeNumberTheoryFunctions`
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- `InitializeRandomFunctions`
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## Constants
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`InitializeConstants` registers:
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- `pi`
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- `e`
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- `tau`
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- `phi`
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- `goldenratio`
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- `eurler`
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- `omega`
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Constants are stored as interpreter variables, so they can be used in normal expressions:
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```csharp
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interpreter.Interpret("2 * pi");
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interpreter.Interpret("tau / pi");
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```
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## Functions
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Base functions:
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- `abs(value)`
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- `sign(value)`
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- `min(left, right)`
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- `max(left, right)`
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Angle functions:
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- `degrees(radians)`
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- `radians(degrees)`
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- `wrapangle(value, minimum, maximum)`
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Rounding functions:
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- `floor(value)`
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- `ceiling(value)`
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- `truncate(value)`
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- `frac(value)`
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- `round(value, precision)`
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- `clamp(value, minimum, maximum)`
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Trigonometry functions:
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- `sin(value)`
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- `cos(value)`
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- `tan(value)`
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- `asin(value)`
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- `acos(value)`
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- `atan(value)`
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- `atan2(y, x)`
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Hyperbolic trigonometry functions:
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- `sinh(value)`
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- `cosh(value)`
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- `tanh(value)`
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- `asinh(value)`
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- `acosh(value)`
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- `atanh(value)`
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Number theory functions:
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- `fac(value)`
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- `ncr(n, r)`
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- `npr(n, r)`
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- `gcd(left, right)`
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- `lcm(left, right)`
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Random functions:
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- `flip()`
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- `bern(probability)`
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- `rand()`
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- `rands(minimum, maximum)`
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- `randn()`
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- `randns(minimum, maximum)`
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## Package Role
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`CSMic.StandardLibrary` does not replace the core interpreter. It extends an `InputInterpreter` instance by registering `ICodedFunction` implementations and assigning constants. You can combine these functions with your own custom functions on the same interpreter.
|
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