Issue:
Every now and then I need to do simple arithmetic in a command-line environment. E.G. given the following output:
Disk /dev/sdb: 256GB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
Partition Table: gpt
Disk Flags:
Number Start End Size File system Name Flags
1 1049kB 106MB 105MB fat32 hidden, diag
2 106MB 64.1GB 64.0GB ext4
3 64.1GB 192GB 128GB ext4
5 236GB 256GB 20.0GB linux-swap(v1)
What’s a simple way to calculate on the command line the size of the unallocated space between partition 3 and 5?
What I’ve tried already:
bc
bc
bc 1.06.95
Copyright 1991-1994, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2004, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.
For details type `warranty'.
236-192
44
quit
where the bold above is all the stuff I need to type to do a simple 236-192 as bc 1+1 echoes File 1+1 is unavailable.
expr
expr 236 - 192
where I need to type spaces before and after the operator as expr 1+1 just echoes 1+1.
Answers:
Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.
Method 1
You can reduce the amount of verbosity involved in using bc:
$ bc <<<"236-192" 44 $ bc <<<"1+1" 2
(assuming your shell supports that).
If you’d rather have that as a function:
$ c() { printf "%sn" "<a href="https://getridbug.com/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection" class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="290d69">[email protected]</a>" | bc -l; }
$ c 1+1 22/7
2
3.14285714285714285714
(-l enables the standard math library and increases the default scale to 20.)
Store the c definition in your favourite shell startup file if you want to make it always available.
Method 2
Summary
There are several solutions listed (shell, awk, dc, perl, python, etc.).
A function may be defined with any option (gawk seems to be the most flexible to use)
c () { local in="$(echo " $*" | sed -e 's/[/(/g' -e 's/]/)/g')";
gawk -M -v PREC=201 -M 'BEGIN {printf("%.60gn",'"${in-0}"')}' < /dev/null
}
And use it like:
$ c 236- 192 44
Shell
The simplest calc in CLI is the CLI (shell) itself (If IFS is default):
$ echo $(( 22 + 333 )) 355
Spaces could be omitted:
$ echo $((22*333)) 7326
As it is part of POSIX almost all shells have it. And it includes most of C language math functionality (except that zsh has a different precedence, set C_PRECEDENCES to restore it to a compatible value):
$ echo $((22*333^2)) 7324
And some shells have most of the C language math syntax (including comma):
$ echo $((a=22,b=333,c=a*b,c)) 7326
But it is only integer math (and usually less than 263 in present day OSes) in some shells:
$ echo $((1234/3)) 411 $ zsh -c 'echo $((2**63))' -9223372036854775808
Some shells could do floating math:
$ ksh -c 'echo $((1234/3.0))' 411.333333333333333 $ ksh -c 'echo $((12345678901234567890123/3.0))' 4.11522630041152263e+21
Avoid zsh (zcalc has similar problems):
$ zsh -c 'echo $((12345678901234567890123 + 1))' zsh:1: number truncated after 22 digits: 12345678901234567890123 + 1 -1363962815083169259
I recommend you to avoid expr, it needs weird escapes sometimes:
$ expr 22 * 333 7326
bc
At the next level is (also POSIX)bc (cousin of RPN dc)
$ echo '22*333' | bc 7326 $ echo '22 333 * p' | dc 7326
The dc was (historically) used to implement bc and got excluded from POSIX in 2017.
Shorter if your shell supports it:
$ bc <<<'22*333' 7326
Or even:
$ <<<'22*333' bc 7326
Both are arbitrary precision calculators with some internal math functions:
$ bc <<<2^200 1606938044258990275541962092341162602522202993782792835301376 $ echo 's(3.1415/2)' | bc -l # sine function .99999999892691403749
awk
After those really basic calc tools, you need to go up to other languages
$ awk "BEGIN {print (22*33)/7}"
103.714
$ perl -E "say 22*33/7"
103.714285714286
$ python3 -c "print(22*33/7)"
103.71428571428571
$ php -r 'echo 22*33/7,"n";'
103.71428571429
function
You may define a function of any of the above options:
c ()
{
local in="$(echo " $*" | sed -e 's/[/(/g' -e 's/]/)/g')";
gawk -M -v PREC=201 -M 'BEGIN {printf("%.60gn",'"${in-0}"')}' < /dev/null
}
And use:
$ c 22* 33 /7 # spaces or not, it doesn't matter. 103.714285714285714285714285714285714285714285714285714285714
Method 3
Reading this pages comments, I see a UNIX/Linux program called calc that does exactly what you want. If on Debian / Ubuntu / derivatives:
sudo apt-get install apcalc
or on Fedora Linux:
sudo dnf install calc
then you can:
calc 236-192
and if you add an alias alias c='calc' to your .bashrc or /etc/bash.bashrc then it just becomes:
c 1+1
on the command line.
Method 4
In zsh:
$ autoload zcalc # best in ~/.zshrc $ zcalc 1> 1+1 2 2> ^D $ zcalc 5+5 1> 10 2>
Method 5
Personally, I like libqalculate (the command-line version of Qalculate).
$ qalc > 236-192 236 - 192 = 44
While the interface is certainly simple, (lib)qalculate is a powerful, full-fledged calculator. e.g.
> fibonacci(133) to hex fibonacci(133) = approx. 0x90540BE2616C26F81F876B9 > 100! factorial(100) = approx. 9.3326215E157 > sin(pi) sin(pi * radian) = 0
It also does useful things like tab completion, open/close parentheses when necessary, and prints its interpretation of the query.
> 18-2)/4 (18 - 2) / 4 = 4
To exit, I simply press Ctrl+d.
For even quicker access, set it to something like alias ca='qalc'.
Method 6
The units program, whilst not intended to be used as a calculator, actually works fairly well as one.
$ units "236-192"
Definition: 44
$
If there are spaces in the expression, then the expression must be quote-protected.
It supports exponentials and deep nesting of brackets
Method 7
As remarked in a comment to an earlier reply, the standard shell (ba)sh allows to evaluate arithmetic expressions within $((...)). I could not double-check whether this is part of the POSIX standard, but I did check that it also works on Cygwin and the Mingw32 shell.
To see the result, you’d indeed have to type echo $((...)), which makes some characters more than (interactive use of) bc. However, to use the result in a script, this will most probably be shorter than the bc solution (which could be, e.g., `echo ...|bc`).
Concerning verbosity, the bc command allows the option -q which suppresses output of the “normal GNU bc welcome”.
As a final, slightly borderline remark, let’s note that bc is not just a calculator but rather a full-fledged programming language (including user defined functions, while & for loops, etc etc). Another fact that suggests to prefer the build-in arithmetic capabilities for such simple calculations, rather than an external program. That said, extracting the data for given partition number(s) and dealing with “M”, “G” suffixes, as the original question seemed to ask for, might call for (g)awk rather than bc.
Sources: https://www.gnu.org/software/bc/manual/html_mono/bc.html
https://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/html_node/Getting-Started.html
Method 8
What I do in zsh is:
$ <<< $(( 236 - 192 )) 44
In bash, I’d have to explicitly mention cat:
$ cat <<< $(( 236 - 192 )) 44
If I wanted the result to include fractional digits (works in zsh, not in bash), I’d add a radix point to one of the operands
$ <<< $(( 236 / 128 )) 1 $ <<< $(( 236. / 128 )) 1.84375
Method 9
Python open in another tab?
Python 3.6.3 (v3.6.3:2c5fed8, Oct 3 2017, 17:26:49) [MSC v.1900 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> 3+3 6 >>>
Method 10
Have you tried concalc?
Description: console calculator concalc is a calculator for the Linux
console. It is just the parser-algorithm of extcalc packed into a
simple console program. You can use it if you need a calculator in
your shell. concalc is also able to run scripts written in a C-like
programming language.
$ concalc 1+1 2 $ concalc sqrt2 1.41421356237309505
Install with:
sudo apt-get install concalc
Method 11
Before any of the other brilliant answers were posted, I ended up creating the script /usr/local/bin/c containing:
#!/bin/sh
IFS=' ' # to be on the safe side, some shells fail to reset IFS.
if [ "$#" -eq 0 ]; then
echo "$(basename "$0"): a (very) simple calculator."
echo "type $(basename "$0") expression to evaluate (uses bc internally)"
fi
printf '%sn' "$*" | bc -l # safe for most shells
# we may use 'bc -l <<<"$*"` for ksh, bash, zsh
so: typing c 1+1 yields 2! 🙂
Note 1: I used c because that command does not exist on any Unix system that I could find. If you would have aliased that to your c compiler, use anything else that is short and you don’t use.
Note 2: Source
Method 12
dc -e '236 192-p'
… of course, if you’re not familiar with dc and you require more than subtracting two numbers, you’ll spend more time looking up how to use dc (and maybe RPN in general) than you’ll save with more familiar methods.
Method 13
If you have gradle installed then you have groovy…
If groovy is pathed correctly you should be able to use:
groovy -e "println 1+1"
This may seem a bit redundant with all the other examples, but:
- groovy is a powerful language
- possibly the best library support available
- powerful and simple math functions (Like arbitrary precision math)
- uses redirectable stdout for it’s output so it is amazingly flexible (great to use inside batch files with backticks “ and the like).
If you don’t have java installed it’s probably not worth installing groovy & java–it’s just an option if groovy is already available.
Method 14
Just because Python was mentioned a few times in other answers, here the generalized answer, summarizing the basic idea:
You can use many interpreted languages with a repl as your calculator. This saves you the learning curve for a “special” program, such as bc.
For example if you already happen to know lisp, you could use that as your quick
and dirty command line calculator:
sbcl --eval '(progn (print (+ 1 2 3 4)) (quit))'
Or Ocaml, as another example:
echo "let d = 553 - 226 in print_int d" | ocaml -noprompt -stdin
Whatever language deems you most convenient.
Method 15
2020 answer
Append
# Calc
c(){
echo "scale=2; $*" | bc -l
}
to your ~/.aliases, then
$ c 1/3 .33
(The original issue has been solved multiple times already. However, the title “Simple command-line calculator” may require division to some decimal points. The use of the -l option with bc seems to give 20 decimal points, which is perhaps too many for a ‘simple’ calculator. This answer, which frankensteins answers from @stephenKitt and @sjas was the simplest solution I found.)
Method 16
If python is installed, you can do a lot of mathematical operation through command line. I tried to provide some example below.
I have used python3 you can use python. The difference between python and python3 occur when divided(fractional) operation occur, to avoid the issue see below python vs python3.
Note: Latest all linux dist comes with both Python 2.7 and Python 3.5 by default. In case if require to install python click here.
Add, Subtract, Multiply & Divide:
$ python3 <<< "print(12+3)" 15 $ python3 <<< "print(12-3)" 9 $ python3 <<< "print(12*3)" 36 $ python3 <<< "print(12/3)" 4
Modulus -remainder of the division:
$ python3 <<< "print(14%3)" 2
Floor division:
$ python3 <<< "print(14//3)" 4
Exponent – x to the power of y (x^y):
$ python3 <<< "print(3**2)" 9
Square root (ex: √4 = 2):
$ python3 <<< "print(4**0.5)" 2
More scientific part, you will require import math library. Ex:
The natural logarithm of x = log(x):
$ python3 <<< "import math; print(math.log(4))" 1.386294361119890e6
The base-10 logarithm of x = log10(x):
$ python3 <<< "import math; print(math.log10(10))" 1.0
Factorial (ex: 3! = 3.2.1 = 6):
$ python3 <<< "import math; print(math.factorial(3))" 6
Trigonometry- sin(x), cos(x), tan(x):
$ python3 <<< "import math; print(math.sin(90))" 0.8939966636005579
Fore more math related functions check here.
pythonVspython3:
-For divide: (use float):
$ python <<< "print(10.0/3)" 3.33333333333
-instead of
$ python <<< "print(10/3)" 3
Also you can use direct terminal:
$ python3 Python 3.6.8 (default, Jan 14 2019, 11:02:34) [GCC 8.0.1 20180414 (experimental) [trunk revision 259383]] on linux Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> 1+3 4 >>> import math >>> math.log10(4) 0.6020599913279624 >>> math.sqrt(4) 2.0 >>>
That’s it. Happy coding!
Method 17
There are a lot of great answers here, I actually have written a small programming language with this problem in mind, where in typing in the command line
./Ascal 2+2
or
./Ascal "log(10)"
you will immediately get the result
Final Answer:
4
for 2+2, and I’m sure you can imagine for log base 10 of 10.
Just something to keep in mind, it’s also a full programming language with a bunch of useful functions built in, plotting in the console, and taking reimann sums of functions you have defined.
Check it out the project now comes with a build script so all you need to do is add it to your path variable, or add an alias in your bash config and you have an easy to use calculator!
https://github.com/andrewrubinstein/AscalLang
I’d also be really appreciative of any comments anyone interested enough to check it out might have, hope it can be useful.
Method 18
$ echo $((1+5)) 6
This is Bash’s Arithmetic Expansion
Method 19
Either bc or qalc.
To automatically have bc always rounding up to two digits: (running it with -l is unwieldy for day to day stuff)
Edit your ~/.bashrc:
alias bc="BC_ENV_ARGS=<(echo "scale=2") bc"
Open a new shell and run bc and be glad.
Method 20
Use perl / python under the hood.
The advantage?
You get the full power of all math operations
❯ calc 'log(e)' 1.0 ❯ calc 'pi*2' 6.283185307179586 ❯ calc 'pi**2' 9.869604401089358 ❯ calc 'pi**pi' 36.4621596072079
If you stick to string inputs, you don’t have to worry about glob expansions of your shell
For zsh or bash have a function something like
function calc {
python3 -c "from math import *; print(eval($*))"
}
For tcsh add alias something like
alias Calc 'python3 -c "from math import *; print(eval(!*))"'
Method 21
Creating a one-liner:
$ c () { echo $(( ${1} )) }
Now you can use simple integer math:
$ c 1+1 2 $ c 25*4 100 $ c 25*4-10 90 $ c 20*5/4 25
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0