CTAN update: xint
Breaking changes: - \xintBezout macro from xintgcd.sty has a new output format. - \xintiiMod macro, and the /: (aka 'mod') operators, as well as the mod() function, and the division // operator are now associated with the _floored_, not the _truncated_ division. This matches convention of the Python language. This is breaking change for operands of opposite signs. New and improved: - the venerable \xintListWithSep macro got faster. - new divmod() function for the expression parsers. - \xintdefvar et al. now authorize simultaneous assignments. - the usual documentation fixes and polishes. See CHANGES.html for bug fixes and more details.
This package is located at http://mirror.ctan.org/macros/generic/xint More information is at http://www.ctan.org/pkg/xint We are supported by the TeX User Groups. Please join a users group; see http://www.tug.org/usergroups.html .
Thanks for the upload. For the CTAN Team Ina Dau
xint – Expandable arbitrary precision floating point and integer operations
Loading xintexpr provides \xinteval and \xintfloateval.
\xintfloateval evaluates numerical expressions. The floating point precision defaults to 16 decimal digits and can be set by user. Trigonometry, exponential and logarithms are implemented up to a maximal precision of 62 decimal digits.
\xinteval computes exactly with integers, fractions, and decimal numbers or numbers in scientific notation. Note though that multiplying two floating point numbers will about double the number of digits, and so on, because the algebra is done exactly.
Both are compatible with expansion-only context.
Loading xintexpr imports automatically various other modules that it depends upon. Among them:
- xinttools: utilities such as expandable and non-expandable loops,
- xint: macros implementing in particular the basic operations on arbitrarily long integers,
- xintbinhex: conversions between decimal and binary, octal, or hexadecimal bases for arbitrarily long integers,
- xintfrac: macros implementing in particular the basic operations on arbitrarily large fractions, decimal numbers, or numbers in scientific notation.
Further modules of independent interest include xintgcd, xintseries and xintcfrac.
You can use xintexpr (and the other components) with LaTeX (via \usepackage) or also with Plain TeX, OpTeX, or ConTeXt (via \input xintexpr.sty).
All the components are documented in the file xint.pdf, which also contains the commented source code.
Paket | xint |
Version | 1.4o 2025-09-06 |
Copyright | 2013–2022, 2025 Jean-François Burnol |
Betreuer | Jean-François Burnol |