.\" Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte .\" Copyright (c) 2024 DTB .\" .\" This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To see a copy of this license, .\" visit . .TH rpn 1 .SH NAME rpn \(en reverse polish notation evaluation .SH SYNOPSIS rpn .RB [numbers...]\ [operators...] .SH DESCRIPTION Rpn parses and and evaluates reverse polish notation either from the standard input or by parsing its arguments. See the STANDARD INPUT section. For information on for reverse polish notation syntax, see rpn(7). .SH STANDARD INPUT If rpn is passed arguments, it interprets them as an expression to be evaluated. Otherwise, it reads whitespace-delimited numbers and operations from the standard input. .SH CAVEATS Due to precision constraints and the way floats are represented in accordance with the IEEE Standard for Floating Point Arithmetic (IEEE 754), floating-point arithmetic has rounding errors. This is somewhat curbed by using the second-highest float that can be represented in line with this standard to round numbers to before outputting. .SH DIAGNOSTICS If encountering a syntax error, rpn will exit with the appropriate error code as defined by sysexits.h(3) and print an error message. .SH RATIONALE An infix notation calculation utility, bc(1p), is included in the POSIX standard, but it doesn’t accept expressions as arguments; in scripts, any predefined, non-interactive input must be piped into the program. A dc(1) pre-dates the standardized bc(1p), the latter originally being a preprocessor for the former, and was included in UNIX v2 onward. While it implements reverse polish notation, it still suffers from being unable to accept an expression as an argument. .SH AUTHOR Written by Emma Tebibyte . .SH COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte. License AGPLv3+: GNU AGPL version 3 or later . .SH SEE ALSO rpn(7), bc(1p), dc(1), IEEE 754