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10:15
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Q: Mu Parser Dynamically define a function

Andrew of ScappooseIf you don't understand the muParser C/C++ library, or have not worked with it; This question is beyond your expertise. I am specifically encouraging people to consider your understanding before participating. If you don't even understand a library that a question is being asked about, your comp...

You want f(x)= x + x**2 + x**3, don't you? Shall I help with the formatting?
I appreciate the difficulty in getting assistance with an intricate problem, but you may get better results by rewording your question to better match the Code of Conduct. As it stands, it comes across as hostile. Further, you have several levels of questions rather than one single "How can I X using Y". Simpler questions do not preclude you from asking additional questions later, and makes it far simpler to answer in many cases.
Your six lines of comment which must always be kept, are only five lines. And they have a readability problem around ".them.".
I'm working on it. The formatiing problem, I'd appreciate help with. Even though it's in code quotes, pasting the code made it bold rather than gnuplot's exponent. Stackoverflow didn't honor the code quote. The comment close quote is the 6th line.
Out of curiosity: Is there a specific reason to set function identifiers in parentheses? I mean static inline __float128 (cos)( __float128 x ) { return cosq( x ); }. Why not static inline __float128 cos( __float128 x ) { return cosq( x ); }? It looks a bit strange as it is.
Btw. You first define inline __float128 (cos)( __float128 x ) { return cosq( x ); } then #undef cos - is this intentional? (If I #undef macros out of the way I do this usually before I want to re-use the resp. identifiers.) In general, your sample code is a bit long. For a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example, one of the functions would've been sufficient, wouldn't it? Sorry, if I overlooked something - it's far too much to see things on 1st, 2nd, or 3rd glance...
10:15
If you use the fourth magic blank then the code format is honored by StackOverflow engine. Fixed it for you, my pleasure.
Your five to six comment lines still have a readability problem around the end of the extremely long line, where the ".them." is.
Yes, because macros will overwrite the function defintions. The extra parenthesis was taught in my software engineering course as a portable way in C, to prevent macro expansion and define an actual function. It's necessary because gcc uses (and some people may say abuses) macros in their header files. The minimal examples are found above in the link I gave to the other site. The code I give is in order to actually work on the problem, which is impossible with the minimal answers. That's in fact why the trampoline code from StackExchange is wrong, it was not testable in a real situation.
Also I worry that you cannot avoid the license you have agreed to when making an account here, that all code you post here is now owned by StackOverflow. At least that is how I understand the matter. Maybe somebody with more licensing knowledge wants to comment.
The code was posted off stack overflow, first, and is GPL. People have been posting bits of GPL code on stack overflow for years.... I don't see how GPL code denies StackOverflow the right to publish the code. Note: The ".them" was a copy paste error, and I corrected it and cleaned up the grammar. The meaning of the copyright is the same. The formatiing was changed to help it look less "hostile."
Thanks, Yunnosh, I appreciate the edit; I couldn't figure out why it didn't work for me. @mitch, It's interesting about the code of conduct, for the original abuses I witnessed were by people clearly violating the code several times; Some people demanded that the poster follow rules that didn't even exist. That's exactly why I made the comments. Other sites behaved better, and didn't gang up on muParser question askers.
Are you aware of the StackOverflow feature to address a user as e.g. @Yunnosch, so that a notification will be sent? Twice I have only discovered your content addressed at me because I strolled by again.
If you directly reply to comments - please, address the author (so that it gets notified). E.g. this way: @AndrewofScappoose (though it's not necessary for OP).
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@scheff, Take the parenthesis off and try to compile my header with a C++ program using quadwords; it won't work. Compile the same header with the parenthesis, it will work. Should I post an example?
"I want to do the same thing with muParser or another C/C++ library." - Then why did you insist on muParser expertise up front?
@melpomene : Because I don't believe there is another open source package that will work. But I'm open to being proven wrong. That's the kind of person I am. Will you prove me wrong? (please).
"If you don't understand the muParser C/C++ library, or have not worked with it; This question is beyond your expertise." is pretty much the opposite of being open to being proven wrong. Also, is this question really just "how do I write a calculator with support for user-defined functions?"? Because you could just code that by hand, no library required.
@melpomene, If I code it, then it's not another package; for it doesn't exist. You're heckling me on technicalities that are way too fine. Is this respectful conduct on stackoverflow? If you know something about muparser, then just answer the question. All your complaints will be proven valid. But if you don't then you are exactly the kind of person that makes these sites a nighmare.
@AndrewofScappoose What do you mean by package? And what does that have to do with my question? Also, if you think people asking for clarification are heckling you / complaining / a nightmare, then why are you even posting here?
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When you feed this line f(x)=x+1 to muparser, is it supported out of the box? Or you have extended muparser to understand this line?
@scheff, you're absolutely right. Macro magic is very dangerous. It also happens to be part of the C/C++ standard for math.h and math. I don't like it any more than you do. But, ANSI C defined a way to prototype functions with a syntax that can't be ruined by #include order. eg: #define getc(x) macro can only be followed followed by a parenthesis prototype: int (getc)(FILE* stream); or int (getc*)(FILE *stream). Parenthesis guarantees getc is a pointer, without parenthesis it becomes a macro expansion.
@n.m I added the code shown on StachExchange for the linear trampoline. I can create a full patch, but there's not room enough to post it here. Since it was buggy, I figured it wasn't worth putting up as there's probably an easier way to do it. muparser is very powerful, it's just confusing as heck. Do you want me to produce a full patch, and do you have a preferred platform you want to experiment on? I'm willing to please.
I'm not asking about the trampoline or other implementation techniques. I'm asking about the language that muparser accepts. Have you extended it such that it understands user-defined functions?
@sceff, I must be tired. I meant int (*getc)(FILE *stream). My apology.
@n.m. MuParser ALREADY understands user defined functions. It's just that it passes them to a function pointer that has to be defined at the C/C++ level. Usually that's done in source code. I added an if statement to the parser that checks if an apparent function call is followed by an = sign. When that happens, I look for the variable and numerical coefficent and pass it to the trampoline as shown on stack-exchange. It's a very minimal test of the answer given on stack exchange.
int (*getc)(FILE *stream) does not declare a function, it declares a pointer named getc. It will conflict with a function with the same name if your implementation provides one. To declare a function named getc, you write int (getc)(FILE *stream).
Huh! I got your point. I modified the sample: Live Demo on wandbox. I didn't know that the compiler is able to recognize that a macro identifier without following parentheses is not a "function macro" call and just ignores it. (I have never thought about this detail. Actually, I never tried to do such things.)
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@n.m. Yes, you're correct. I'm tired. Thankfully, the header uses the correct form of the prototype definition as I was taught in class, to do, 25 years ago.
You are trying to tell me about functions that the application writer defines. I know about them. I'm asking you about functions that the application user can define. The latter requires a rather more significant extension to the oarser than you seem to realise. You need to introduce the notions of the call stack and scopes and local variables to the muparser language. Nothing of it is in muparser. Recognising the = sign is necessary but it only begins to scratch the surface of what you need to do.
@scheff This is one of the reasons it's hard to make a quadfloat header file that's portable. I put a hell of a lot of work into it, and it's still only beta quality. :D
@n.m. Um, yes, exactly. That's why the answers on stackexchange weren't very helpful. MuParser variables can be malloc'd, as they are created. It's also possible to create a second instance of a parser, which by definition would be a separate namespace. I'm not sure how to do that,as there are no examples in the manual; but if user functions were handled by a second parser that prefixed every variable name by the function name, no varaibles would ever conflict. eg: f(x,y,z)=x+y+z --> f(f_x,f_y,f_z)=f_x+f_y+f_z in a second parser instance. g(x,y,z)=x-y+z -->g(g_x,g_y,g_z)=g_x-g_y+g_z
If you create a separate instance for each function, you will need to propagate global variables between the instances somehow, or functions will not be able to use global variables.
@n.m. I just realized that user defined function prototypes in the muParser headers automatically require the parameter values to be copied onto the C/C++ stack. So, a copy of the parameter values already exists on the C stack even if a user function recursively called itself. Do you know of a way to exploit the existing stack? Then nothing else would have to be coded.
I think you are better off using a full fledged programming language for your calculations.
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Yes, globals wouln't be available in functions. BUt that's trivial to add. MuParser can have two parsers share the same variable storage space even for two different variable names. Variables are simply pointers looked up by a string. So, just use a special name in the parameter definition -- and then don't allocate a new variable in the second parser instance, but pass the pointer from the global instance. A function parameter of Global_x, then signals that the variable x is in the first parser instance. Any number of creative solutions would work.
@n.m. That's a reasonable opinion. But, think about why gnuplot doesn't force people to use a full programming language and compile their computations. I've tried c++, and it's not intuitive, and bugs are harder to fix than a simple calculator. I've tried python decimal class, but it's excessively slow. These languages also don't have curve fitting algorithms that are float agnostic.

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