Skip to content

d-sauer/JCalcAPI

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

46 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

JCalc API Build status

Fluent Java API for easier writing formula and calculations in Java.
For more detail, features, documentation and examples visit project homepage.

Feature:

* Simplify calculation by reducing code size and provide beter readability
* Small size (jar < 100KB)
* Fast evaluation (converted in postfix notation)
* High precision (using BigDecimal)
* Includes common math functions and operations
* Support for strings and parsing formula
* Support for assignment expressions (x = 5)
* Extendable through user defined functions and operators
* Support for custom type conversion
* Basic configuration throught properties file
* Fluent API
* Overview of calculation steps
* Easiest exception handling with equation overview
* Java 1.6 compatible
* Apache 2.0 License
* Basic calculator implementations: 
    - Calculator - basic arithmetic operations
    - CalculatorTrig - basic arithmetic and trigonometric calculations

Example

If we want to calculate fixed monthly payment for a fixed rate mortgage in Java,
using equation c = (r * P) / (1 - (1 + r)^(-N))

In plain Java we would write this (15 LoC)

BigDecimal interestRate = new BigDecimal("6.5");    // fixed yearly interest rate in %
BigDecimal P = new BigDecimal(200000);
BigDecimal paymentYears = new BigDecimal(30);

// monthly interest rate => 6.5 / 12 / 100 = 0.0054166667
BigDecimal r = interestRate.divide(new BigDecimal(12), 10, BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_UP).divide(new BigDecimal(100), 10, BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_UP);

// numerator
// => 0.005416666 * 200000 = 1083.3333400000
BigDecimal numerator = r.multiply(P);

// denominator
r = r.add(new BigDecimal(1));   // => 1.0054166667
BigDecimal pow = new BigDecimal(30 * 12);   // N = 30 * 12

// => 1.0054166667 ^ (-30 * 12)  ===> 1 / 1.005416666 ^ (30 * 12) 
BigDecimal one = BigDecimal.ONE;
BigDecimal r_pow = r.pow(pow.intValue());   // => 1.0054166667 ^ 360 = 6.99179805731691416804....
r_pow = one.divide(r_pow, 10, BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_UP);  // => 1 / 6.991798.. = 0.1430247258

// => 1 - 0.1430247258 =  0.8569752742
BigDecimal denominator = new BigDecimal(1);
denominator = denominator.subtract(r_pow);

// => 1083.3333400000 / 0.8569752742 = 1264.1360522464
BigDecimal c = numerator.divide(denominator, 10, BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_UP);

c = c.setScale(2, BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_UP);

System.out.println("c = " + c);

If we write *same* equation **with JCalc**, code look more readable and shorter (*8 LoC*) ```java Num interestRate = new Num(6.5); // fixed yearly interest rate in % Num P = new Num(200000); Num paymentYears = new Num(30);

// monthly interest rate : r = 6.5 / 100 / 12 Num r = Calculator.builder().openBracket().val(interestRate).div(100).closeBracket().div(12).calculate();

// N = 30 * 12 * -1 Num N = Calculator.builder().val(paymentYears).mul(12).mul(-1).calculate();

// c = (r * P) / (1 - (1 + r)^N Calculator c = new Calculator()
.openBracket() .val(r).mul(P) .closeBracket() // numerator .div() // --------------- .openBracket() // denumerator .val(1).sub().openBracket().val(1).add(r).closeBracket().pow(N) .closeBracket();

Num result = c.calculate().setScale(2);

System.out.println("c = " + result);


or even shorter (*6 LoC*):
```java
Num interestRate = new Num("A", 6.5);
Num P = new Num("B", 200000);
Num paymentYears = new Num("C", -30);

Calculator c = Calculator.builder("((A / 100 / 12) * B) / (1 - ((1 + (A / 100 / 12)) ^ (C * 12)))", interestRate, P, paymentYears);

Num result = c.calculate();

System.out.println("c = " + result.setScale(2));

Releases:

* 2014.05.10 - 0.4 beta
* 2014.04.21 - 0.3 beta
* 2014.04.11 - 0.2 beta
* 2014.03.24 - First beta release

Roadmap:

* Support for Java 8 (lambda functions)
* Optimizations
* Add new functions (like sum, avg, min, max)

About

Fluent Java API for easier writing formula and calculations in Java

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages