Forums / Setup & design / Mathematics Operators : power of - ^ - superior [Resolved]
Paul Etienney
Wednesday 15 October 2008 2:11:50 am
Hello everyone,
Is there a mean to use math formulas including power of
For exemple
{def $nine = 3|powerof(3)}{$nine}
would display :
27
Thank youHave a good day
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André R.
Wednesday 15 October 2008 3:17:24 am
Are you sure?Cause last time I checked 3*3*3 was somewhere around 27 :)
You'll need to do a custom template operator if you want it to be fully flexible.But if you always use ^3, then something like this will do:
{def $in = 3 $out = $in|mul( $in, $in )} {$out}
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Wednesday 15 October 2008 3:59:27 am
Sure this is 27 !
Do you know if there is contribution to do this ? I am not a developper at all and my english is not perfect. I did not find anything.
Wednesday 15 October 2008 4:10:03 am
Not that I know of, you could solve it in template if you want to, but performance wise it's not the best solution of course:
{def $in = 3 $powerof = 3 $out = $in} {for 1 to $powerof as $counter} {set $out = $out|mul( $in )} {/for} {$out}
Wednesday 15 October 2008 4:28:29 am
I found in /lib/ezmath/classes/mathhandlers/ezphpmath.php the pow function(line : 77)
Is it working ?
I tried :
{def $neuf = 3|pow('3')}{$neuf}
but it displays 3 !
This function is not in the doc. May i use it ?
Wednesday 15 October 2008 5:03:24 am
As far as I can see it's not used by any template operators, so your code there probably generates a debug warning that there is no template operator named pow.
But you can use a setting called PHPOperatorList in template.ini* to register the php pow** function:
[PHP] PHPOperatorList[phppow]=pow
And use it like:
{def $nine = 3|phppow(3)} {$nine}
* place the setting in settings/override/template.ini.append.php** http://no2.php.net/pow
Wednesday 15 October 2008 5:19:02 am
The debug says :
pow() expects exactly 2 parameters, 1 given in C:\wamp\www\sphinx-extranet\lib\eztemplate\classes\eztemplatephpoperator.php on line 118
So i tried
{def $nine = phppow(3, 3)}{$nine}
The debug is the same
Wednesday 15 October 2008 5:25:38 am
Ok, then it seems that PHPOperatorList can only take 1 parameter, so only suitable for really simple functions.
Updated the template solution above now, so it should work.
Wednesday 15 October 2008 6:23:29 am
Ok I am trying with 'template' solution. The code is ok but my variable displays INF if I try :
{for 1 to 300 as $counter} {set $MensualiteBas = $MensualiteBas|mul( $MensualiteBas )}{/for}
What is it ?
Wednesday 15 October 2008 6:36:39 am
You have probably reached the ceiling of integer type*.But that can probably be avoided if you fix your code to do what I showed above (you used the example from before I updated it).
* http://no.php.net/int
The size of an integer is platform-dependent, although a maximum value of about two billion is the usual value (that's 32 bits signed).
Wednesday 15 October 2008 6:53:53 am
I used the last version of your post. I just adapted it.
{def $DureeMois = '300'}
{def $Taux = '0.055'}
{def $MensualiteBas = $Taux|sum(1)}
{for 1 to $DureeMois as $counter} {set $MensualiteBas = $MensualiteBas|mul( $MensualiteBas )}{/for}
{$MensualiteBas}
It displays INF
I love Exponential but this hard to calculate things.
Wednesday 15 October 2008 7:00:28 am
{def $DureeMois = 300 $Taux = 0.055 $MensualiteBas = $Taux|sum( 1 ) $outValue = $MensualiteBas} {for 1 to $DureeMois as $counter} {set $outValue = $outValue|mul( $MensualiteBas )} {/for} {$outValue}
In the code you have(and I had earlier) it will (if it was 3^3) be: 3*3 9*9= 81
Do that 'small' mistake 300 times and you end up with a very large number..
Thursday 16 October 2008 3:44:00 am
Thank you very much. This is fixed.