src | ||
.gitignore | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
rustfmt.toml |
evalexpr
Evalexpr is a powerful arithmetic and boolean expression evaluator.
Documentation
Features
Supported binary operators:
Operator | Description |
---|---|
+ | Sum |
- | Difference |
* | Product |
/ | Division |
% | Modulo |
< | Lower than |
> | Greater than |
<= | Lower than or equal |
>= | Greater than or equal |
== | Equal |
!= | Not equal |
&& |
Logical and |
` |
Supported binary operators: !
!=
""
''
()
[]
,
>
<
>=
<=
==
+
unary/binary -
*
/
%
&&
||
n..m
.
Supported unary operators: ``
Built-in functions: min()
max()
len()
is_empty()
array()
converge()
.
See the builtin
module for a detailed description of each.
Where can eval be used?
- Template engine
- Scripting language
- ...
Usage
Add dependency to Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
evalexpr = "0.4"
In your main.rs
or lib.rs
:
extern crate evalexpr as eval;
Examples
You can do mathematical calculations with supported operators:
use eval::{eval, to_value};
assert_eq!(eval("1 + 2 + 3"), Ok(to_value(6)));
assert_eq!(eval("2 * 2 + 3"), Ok(to_value(7)));
assert_eq!(eval("2 / 2 + 3"), Ok(to_value(4.0)));
assert_eq!(eval("2 / 2 + 3 / 3"), Ok(to_value(2.0)));
You can eval with context:
use eval::{Expr, to_value};
assert_eq!(Expr::new("foo == bar")
.value("foo", true)
.value("bar", true)
.exec(),
Ok(to_value(true)));
You can access data like javascript by using .
and []
. []
supports expression.
use eval::{Expr, to_value};
use std::collections::HashMap;
let mut object = HashMap::new();
object.insert("foos", vec!["Hello", "world", "!"]);
assert_eq!(Expr::new("object.foos[1-1] == 'Hello'")
.value("object", object)
.exec(),
Ok(to_value(true)));
You can eval with function:
use eval::{Expr, to_value};
assert_eq!(Expr::new("say_hello()")
.function("say_hello", |_| Ok(to_value("Hello world!")))
.exec(),
Ok(to_value("Hello world!")));
You can create an array with array()
:
use eval::{eval, to_value};
assert_eq!(eval("array(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)"), Ok(to_value(vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5])));
You can create an integer array with n..m
:
use eval::{eval, to_value};
assert_eq!(eval("0..5"), Ok(to_value(vec![0, 1, 2, 3, 4])));
License
evalexpr is primarily distributed under the terms of the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.