RMATH 1
NAME
rmath - a computer algebra system with functions and readline
matho - a computer algebra system with functions
SYNOPSIS
rmath [
input_files
]
matho [ input_files ]
DESCRIPTION
Mathomatic is a general-purpose computer algebra system (CAS)
that can symbolically solve, simplify, combine, and compare algebraic equations,
perform standard, complex number, modular, and polynomial arithmetic, etc.
It does some calculus and handles all elementary algebra, except logarithms.
Plotting expressions with
gnuplot is also supported.
rmath and
matho are shell scripts that allow you
to use Mathomatic with input of functions like
sin (x) and
sqrt (x) automatically expanded to equivalent algebraic expressions
by the
m4 macro preprocessor.
A matching pair of parentheses is required around the parameters for all functions in m4 Mathomatic; m4 requires this.
rmath also runs the
rlwrap readline wrapper utility if available, to provide readline input editing support similar to
that provided by
mathomatic (1).
rmath and
matho define and enable named math functions in Mathomatic.
Most functions enabled here should be real number, complex number, and symbolically capable.
One exception is the
abs (x) function, which doesn't work with complex numbers, because it is defined
in Mathomatic as (((x)^2)^.5).
The following general functions are defined when using
rmath or
matho: sqrt (x), cbrt (x), exp (x), pow (x,y), abs (x), sgn (x), factorial (x), gamma (x), floor (x), ceil (x), int (x), and
round (x).
The following standard trigonometric functions are defined:
sin (x), cos (x), tan (x), cot (x), sec (x), and
csc (x). sinc (x) is the normalized sinc function, defined as
sin (pi*x) /(pi*x) .
The following standard hyperbolic trigonometric functions are defined:
sinh (x), cosh (x), tanh (x), coth (x), sech (x), and
csch (x).
The following universal constants are defined:
pi, e, i (the imaginary unit),
euler (the Euler-Mascheroni constant),
omega, and
phi (the golden ratio).
GENERAL
Text files may be specified on the shell command line
that will be automatically read in through the m4 preprocessor into Mathomatic.
After any files are read in, Mathomatic prompts for input from the console.
Mathomatic is best run from within a terminal emulator.
It uses console line input and output for the user interface.
First you type in your mathematical equations in standard algebraic notation,
then you can solve them by typing in the variable name at the prompt, or
perform operations on them with simple English commands.
Type "help" or "?" for the help command,
"help examples" to get started.
If the command name is longer than 4 letters, you only need
to type in the first 4 letters.
Most commands operate on the current equation by default.
Complete documentation is available in HTML and PDF formats;
see the local documentation directory or online at "http://mathomatic.org/math/doc/"
for the latest Mathomatic documentation.
FILES
~/.mathomaticrc Optional startup file containing Mathomatic set command options. It should be a text file with one or more set options per line. For example, the line "no color" will make Mathomatic default to non-color mode, which is useful if you aren't using a supported color device.
AUTHOR
Mathomatic has been written by George Gesslein II (gesslein@mathomatic.org),
with help from the Internet community.
"REPORTING BUGS"
Please report any bugs to the author or
on the Launchpad website: "https://launchpad.net/mathomatic".
"SEE ALSO"
mathomatic (1), matho-primes (1), primorial (1), matho-mult (1), matho-sum (1), matho-pascal (1), matho-sumsq (1)