A TI-Nspire CX II python library to evaluate arbitrary TI-Basic expressions.
TI provides useful functions in their ti_system module.
Among those, there is eval_function("name",value)
which "evaluates a predefined OS function at the specified value".
That's good but not good enough to evaluate any function that takes more than a single argument, for instance... And it seems to be restricted to numerical stuff only, too. How are we supposed to do fancy math stuff from Python? :(
In fact, people have started asking this question on TI-Planet for instance, where someone wanted to have access to specfunc for Laplace transforms. That's when I started to dig in and see if there was any way to do more than just eval_function
...
Well, it turns out that the ti_system
module also has some internal/lower-level functions exposed (but not listed in the menus), like writeST
and readST
(which I guess is used by other higher-level functions like store_value
and recall_value
), which interact with the Symbol Table which is basically where variables are stored and shared.
Interestingly, recall_value
seems to be able to evaluate the input and return the output, with much less restrictions!
So, the library leverages that, with some pre- and post-processing to work around some quirks, but it seems to work relatively well.
- Download the .tns file from the latest release page.
- Transfer it to your calculator, in the PyLib folder.
- Enjoy!
Just import the module and use the functions it provides: eval_expr
and call_func
.
If you just need the eval_expr
function, you can just do this: from eval_expr import eval_expr
.
Aliases (caseval
, eval_native
) to eval_expr
are provided for convenience, for compatibility purposes, if you import the whole module.
This is the main function of the library. Pass a TI-Basic expression (you'll probably want to make that a string) in the first argument and it will try to evaluate it and return the result as a native Python type, otherwise a string.
If you pass True
as the 2nd argument (optional, it's False
by default), it will try to actually evaluate the output in Python. This can be useful for numerical results.
For instance, on an exact-math Nspire (CX II-T) or a CAS model, eval_expr("sqrt(90)")
would give you '3*sqrt(10)'
. But eval_expr("sqrt(90)", True)
returns 9.486832980505138
.
Notes: complex numbers uses the i
math symbol (looks like 𝒊
) but in Python it's just the letter j
. Substitution from Basic to Python is handled automatically, just like for other symbols (√
, π
, 𝒆
).
This builds on top of eval_expr
in order to provide a more powerful eval_function
that the ti_system
module offers.
This is a variadic function, meaning you can pass any number of arguments you want, for instance call_func("log", 2, 3.0)
which will give 0.63093
.
The function returns None
if the output is the same as the input, meaning it couldn't be evaluated. This allows you to easily handle this case in your scripts.
- TI-Basic lists (
{...}
) aren't automatically converted to/from Python lists[...]
. In a next version? - No automatic substitution is done from Python to Basic. In a next version?
If you find a bug, a weird behavior, or if you want to submit feedback or give ideas in general, please open an issue here :)
Here's a screenshot with a few expressions: (note that @i
is a way on the Nspire software to quickly get the complex i symbol)
Well, I've contacted TI to see if they could add this kind of feature natively so that we don't need to resort to weird tricks, and they've replied that they're analyzing my feedback, so there's hope for a future update :)