tiny-bignum-c
calc
tiny-bignum-c | calc | |
---|---|---|
2 | 9 | |
410 | 322 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.2 | |
12 months ago | 3 months ago | |
C | C | |
The Unlicense | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
tiny-bignum-c
-
How to calculate large factorial number in C ?
Large? Factorials get very large very quickly. Do you need pointers to a bignum library? https://github.com/kokke/tiny-bignum-c
-
Library for arithmetic operations on integers represented by arrays
tiny-bignum-c looks what you want.... the code is also very small and hackable
calc
- Calc: C-style arbitrary precision calculator
- Desmos 3D graphing calculator (beta)
-
Introducing: calc a complex numbers, graphing, cli calculator
http://www.isthe.com/chongo/tech/comp/calc/index.html not sure why you chose exactly the same name as the original calc. Even if you plan to create a drop in replacement. It's not good practise to use exactly the same name than another active project in the same problem domain
my benchmarks againts qalc and c-calc shows that c-calc takes about 0.8ms mean to run a calculation,qalc takes about 96.4ms to run a calculation,and mine takes 0.5ms to run a calculation, of course this is pretty much just the startup time however i cant measure the runtime speed againts c-calc because it does not allow multiple arguments like mine does.
-
How to do math in linux?
I like calc myself, works quite well. Doesn't have e preloaded as a constant, to my knowledge at least, but otherwise it is very good.
-
What Are The Best Linux Apps?
calc: a command line calculator with arbitrary precision. GNU bc is good too, but calc has more built-in commands (combinatorial, number theory functions for example). You can use it interactively, or simply to provide the results of a calculation. Try this: in your terminal, enter
- Calc - C-style arbitrary precision calculator
- Windows 95 – How Does It Look Today?
-
Announcing calc: a powerful CLI calculator app
There's also another calc: https://github.com/lcn2/calc
What are some alternatives?
nim-stint - Stack-based arbitrary-precision integers - Fast and portable with natural syntax for resource-restricted devices.
rofi-calc - 🖩 Do live calculations in rofi!
LibTomMath - LibTomMath is a free open source portable number theoretic multiple-precision integer library written entirely in C.
kalk - Scientific calculator with math syntax that supports user-defined variables and functions, complex numbers, and estimation of derivatives and integrals
arb - Arb has been merged into FLINT -- use https://github.com/flintlib/flint/ instead
arpra - Arpra is a C library for analyzing the propagation of numerical error in arbitrary precision IEEE-754 floating-point computations.
insect - High precision scientific calculator with support for physical units
break_infinity.js - A replacement for decimal.js for incremental games who want to deal with very large numbers (bigger in magnitude than 1e308, up to as much as 1e(9e15) ) and want to prioritize speed over accuracy.
percollate - A command-line tool to turn web pages into readable PDF, EPUB, HTML, or Markdown docs.
gmp-wasm - Fork of the GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic Library (GMP), suitable for compilation into WebAssembly.
prime-spirals - Creates images of prime numbers in various spiral patterns.