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There are several ways to "program" the Emacs Calculator, depending
on the nature of the problem you need to solve.
-
Keyboard macros allow you to record a sequence of keystrokes
and play them back at a later time. This is just the standard Emacs
keyboard macro mechanism, dressed up with a few more features such
as loops and conditionals.
-
Algebraic definitions allow you to use any formula to define a
new function. This function can then be used in algebraic formulas or
as an interactive command.
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Rewrite rules are discussed in the section on algebra commands.
See section Rewrite Rules. If you put your rewrite rules in the variable
EvalRules
, they will be applied automatically to all Calc
results in just the same way as an internal "rule" is applied to
evaluate `sqrt(9)' to 3 and so on. See section Automatic Rewrites.
-
Lisp is the programming language that Calc (and most of Emacs)
is written in. If the above techniques aren't powerful enough, you
can write Lisp functions to do anything that built-in Calc commands
can do. Lisp code is also somewhat faster than keyboard macros or
rewrite rules.
Programming features are available through the z and Z
prefix keys. New commands that you define are two-key sequences
beginning with z. Commands for managing these definitions
use the shift-Z prefix. (The Z T (calc-timing
)
command is described elsewhere; see section Troubleshooting Commands.
The Z C (calc-user-define-composition
) command is also
described elsewhere; see section User-Defined Compositions.)
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