Provided by: orpie_1.6.1-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       orpierc - is the configuration textfile for the orpie(1) console calculator.

INTRODUCTION

       CAUTION:  while  this manpage should be suitable as a quick reference, it may be subject to miscellaneous
       shortcomings in typesetting. The definitive documentation is the user manual provided with Orpie  in  PDF
       format.

       Orpie  reads a run-configuration textfile (generally /etc/orpierc or /usr/local/etc/orpierc) to determine
       key and command bindings. You can create a personalized configuration file in $HOME/.orpierc, and  select
       bindings  that  match  your  usage patterns. The recommended procedure is to ``include'' the orpierc file
       provided with Orpie (see INCLUDING OTHER RCFILES), and add or remove settings as desired.

ORPIERC SYNTAX

       You may notice that the orpierc syntax is similar to the syntax used in the configuration  file  for  the
       Mutt email client (muttrc).

       Within  the  orpierc  file,  strings  should  be enclosed in double quotes (").  A double quote character
       inside a string may be represented by \" .  The backslash character must be represented  by  doubling  it
       (\\).

   INCLUDING OTHER RCFILES
       Syntax: include filename_string
       This syntax can be used to include one run-configuration file within another.  This command could be used
       to load the default orpierc file (probably found in /etc/orpierc) within your personalized rcfile,
        {/.orpierc}. The filename string should be enclosed in quotes.

   SETTING CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
       Syntax: set variable=value_string
       Several configuration variables  can  be  set  using  this  syntax;  check  the  CONFIGURATION  VARIABLES
       description to see a list. The variables are unquoted, but the values should be quoted strings.

   CREATING KEY BINDINGS
       Syntax: bind key_identifier operation
       This  command  will  bind  a  keypress  to execute a calculator operation.  The various operations, which
       should not be enclosed in quotes, may be found in the section on CALCULATOR OPERATIONS.  Key  identifiers
       may  be specified by strings that represent a single keypress, for example "m" (quotes included). The key
       may be prefixed with "\\C" or "\\M" to represent Control or Meta (Alt) modifiers, respectively; note that
       the  backslash  must  be  doubled. A number of special keys lack single-character representations, so the
       following strings may be used to represent them:

       *      "<esc>"

       *      "<tab>"

       *      "<enter>"

       *      "<return>"

       *      "<insert>"

       *      "<home>"

       *      "<end>"

       *      "<pageup>"

       *      "<pagedown>"

       *      "<space>"

       *      "<left>"

       *      "<right>"

       *      "<up>"

       *      "<down>"

       *      "<f1>" to "<f12>"

       Due to differences between various terminal emulators, this key identifier syntax may not be adequate  to
       describe every keypress. As a workaround, Orpie will also accept key identifiers in octal notation. As an
       example, you could use \024 (do not enclose it in quotes) to represent Ctrl-T.

       Orpie includes a secondary executable, orpie-curses-keys, that prints out the key identifiers  associated
       with keypresses. You may find it useful when customizing orpierc.

       Multiple keys may be bound to the same operation, if desired.

   REMOVING KEY BINDINGS
       Syntax:
       unbind_function key_identifier
       unbind_command key_identifier
       unbind_edit key_identifier
       unbind_browse key_identifier
       unbind_abbrev key_identifier
       unbind_variable key_identifier
       unbind_integer key_identifier
       These  commands  will  remove  key bindings associated with the various entry modes (functions, commands,
       editing operations, etc.). The key identifiers should be  defined  using  the  syntax  described  in  the
       previous section.

   CREATING KEY AUTO-BINDINGS
       Syntax: autobind key_identifier
       In  order  to  make repetitive calculations more pleasant, Orpie offers an automatic key binding feature.
       When a function or command is executed using its abbreviation, one of the keys selected by  the  autobind
       syntax  will  be  automatically bound to that operation (unless the operation has already been bound to a
       key). The current set of autobindings can be viewed in the help  panel  by  executing  command_cycle_help
       (bound to 'h' by default).

       The syntax for the key identifiers is provided in the previous section.

   CREATING OPERATION ABBREVIATIONS
       Syntax: abbrev operation_abbreviation operation
       You can use this syntax to set the abbreviations used within Orpie to represent the various functions and
       commands. A list of available operations  may  be  found  in  the  CALCULATOR  OPERATIONS  section.   The
       operation abbreviations should be quoted strings, for example "sin" or "log".

       Orpie  performs autocompletion on these abbreviations, allowing you to type usually just a few letters in
       order to select the desired command. The order of the autocompletion matches will  be  the  same  as  the
       order in which the abbreviations are registered by the rcfile--so you may wish to place the more commonly
       used operation abbreviations earlier in the list.

       Multiple abbreviations may be bound to the same operation, if desired.

   REMOVING OPERATION ABBREVIATIONS
       Syntax: unabbrev operation_abbreviation
       This syntax can be used to remove an operation abbreviation. The operation abbreviations should be quoted
       strings, as described in the previous section.

   CREATING MACROS
       Syntax: macro key_identifier macro_string
       You  can  use this syntax to cause a single keypress (the key_identifier) to be interpreted as the series
       of keypresses listed in macro_string.  The syntax for defining a keypress is the same as that defined  in
       the  section  on  CREATING  KEY  BINDINGS.   The  macro  string  should be a list of whitespace-separated
       keypresses, e.g.  "2 <return> 2 +" (including quotes).

       This macro syntax provides a way to create small programs; by way of example, the  default  orpierc  file
       includes  macros  for  the  base  2  logarithm  and  the  binary  entropy  function  (bound  to  L and H,
       respectively), as well as ``register'' variable shortcuts (<f1> to <f12>).

       Macros may call other macros  recursively.  However,  take  care  that  a  macro  does  not  call  itself
       recursively; Orpie will not trap the infinite loop.

       Note  that  operation  abbreviations  may  be accessed within macros. For example, macro "A" "' a b o u t
       <return>" would bind A to display the ``about Orpie'' screen.

   CREATING UNITS
       Syntax:
       base_unit unit_symbol preferred_prefix
       unit unit_symbol unit_definition
       Units are defined in a two-step process:

       1.     Define a set of orthogonal ``base units.'' All other units must be expressible in terms  of  these
              base  units.  The  base  units can be given a preferred SI prefix, which will be used whenever the
              units are standardized (e.g. via ustand).  The unit symbols and preferred prefixes should  all  be
              quoted strings; to prefer no prefix, use the empty string ("").

       It is expected that most users will use the fundamental SI units for base units.

       2.     Define all other units in terms of either base units or previously-defined units.  Again, the unit
              symbol and unit definition should be quoted strings. The definition should  take  the  form  of  a
              numeric value followed by a units string, e.g.  "2.5_kN*m/s". See the UNITS FORMATTING section for
              more details on the unit string format.

   CREATING CONSTANTS
       Syntax: constant constant_symbol constant_definition
       This syntax can be used to define a physical constant. Both the constant symbol and  definition  must  be
       quoted  strings.  The  constant  definition  should be a numeric constant followed by a units string e.g.
       "1.60217733e-19_C".  All units used in the constant definition must already have been defined.

CONFIGURATION VARIABLES

       The following configuration variables may be set as described  in  the  SETTING  CONFIGURATION  VARIABLES
       section.

       *      datadir
              This  variable  should be set to the full path of the Orpie data directory, which will contain the
              calculator state save file, temporary buffers, etc.  The default directory is "\~/.orpie/".

       *      editor
              This variable may be set to the fullscreen editor of your choice. The default value is "vi". It is
              recommended  that you choose an editor that offers horizontal scrolling in place of word wrapping,
              so that the columns of large matrices can be properly aligned. (The Vim editor could  be  used  in
              this fashion by setting editor to "vim -c 'set nowrap'".)

       *      hide_help
              Set  this  variable  to  "true"  to hide the left help/status panel, or leave it on the default of
              "false" to display the help panel.

       *      conserve_memory
              Set this variable to "true" to minimize memory usage, or leave it on the  default  of  "false"  to
              improve  rendering  performance.  (By default, Orpie caches multiple string representations of all
              stack elements. Very large integers in  particular  require  significant  computation  for  string
              representation, so caching these strings can make display updates much faster.)

CALCULATOR OPERATIONS

       Every  calculator  operation  can  be  made  available to the interface using the syntax described in the
       sections on CREATING KEY BINDINGS and CREATING OPERATION ABBREVIATIONS.  The following is a list of every
       available operation.

   FUNCTIONS
       The  following operations are functions--that is, they will consume at least one argument from the stack.
       Orpie will generally abort the computation and provide an informative error message if a function  cannot
       be  successfully  applied  (for  example,  if you try to compute the transpose of something that is not a
       matrix).

       For the exact integer data type, basic arithmetic operations will yield an exact integer result. Division
       of  two  exact  integers  will  yield  the  quotient of the division. The more complicated functions will
       generally promote the integer to a real number, and as such the arithmetic will no longer be exact.

       *      function_10_x
              Raise 10 to the power of the last stack element (inverse of function_log10).

       *      function_abs
              Compute the absolute value of the last stack element.

       *      function_acos
              Compute the inverse cosine of the last stack  element.  For  real  numbers,  The  result  will  be
              provided either in degrees or radians, depending on the angle mode of the calculator.

       *      function_acosh
              Compute the inverse hyperbolic cosine of the last stack element.

       *      function_add
              Add last two stack elements.

       *      function_arg
              Compute  the argument (phase angle of complex number) of the last stack element. The value will be
              provided in either degrees or radians, depending on the current angle mode of the calculator.

       *      function_asin
              Compute the inverse sine of the last stack element. For real numbers, The result will be  provided
              either in degrees or radians, depending on the angle mode of the calculator.

       *      function_asinh
              Compute the inverse hyperbolic sine of the last stack element.

       *      function_atan
              Compute  the  inverse  tangent  of  the  last  stack element. For real numbers, The result will be
              provided either in degrees or radians, depending on the angle mode of the calculator.

       *      function_atanh
              Compute the inverse hyperbolic tangent of the last stack element.

       *      function_binomial_coeff
              Compute the binomial coefficient (``n choose k'') formed by the last two stack elements. If  these
              arguments are real, the coefficient is computed using a fast approximation to the log of the gamma
              function, and therefore the result is subject to rounding errors. For exact integer arguments, the
              coefficient is computed using exact arithmetic; this has the potential to be a slow operation.

       *      function_ceiling
              Compute the ceiling of the last stack element.

       *      function_convert_units
              Convert stack element 2 to an equivalent expression in the units of element 1. Element 1 should be
              real-valued, and its magnitude will be ignored when computing the conversion.

       *      function_cos
              Compute the cosine of the last stack element. If the argument is real, it will be  assumed  to  be
              either degrees or radians, depending on the angle mode of the calculator.

       *      function_cosh
              Compute the hyperbolic cosine of the last stack element.

       *      function_conj
              Compute the complex conjugate of the last stack element.

       *      function_div
              Divide element 2 by element 1.

       *      function_erf
              Compute the error function of the last stack element.

       *      function_erfc
              Compute the complementary error function of the last stack element.

       *      function_eval
              Obtain the contents of the variable in the last stack position.

       *      function_exp
              Evaluate the exponential function of the last stack element.

       *      function_factorial
              Compute  the  factorial  of  the last stack element. For a real argument, this is computed using a
              fast approximation to the gamma function, and therefore the result  may  be  subject  to  rounding
              errors  (or  overflow).  For  an  exact  integer  argument,  the factorial is computed using exact
              arithmetic; this has the potential to be a slow operation.

       *      function_floor
              Compute the floor of the last stack element.

       *      function_gamma
              Compute the Euler gamma function of the last stack element.

       *      function_gcd
              Compute the greatest common divisor of the last two stack elements. This operation may be  applied
              only to integer type data.

       *      function_im
              Compute the imaginary part of the last stack element.

       *      function_inv
              Compute the multiplicative inverse of the last stack element.

       *      function_lcm
              Compute  the  least  common multiple of the last two stack elements. This operation may be applied
              only to integer type data.

       *      function_ln
              Compute the natural logarithm of the last stack element.

       *      function_lngamma
              Compute the natural logarithm of the Euler gamma function of the last stack element.

       *      function_log10
              Compute the base-10 logarithm of the last stack element.

       *      function_maximum
              Find the maximum values of each of the columns of a real NxM matrix, returning a 1xM matrix  as  a
              result.

       *      function_minimum
              Find  the  minimum values of each of the columns of a real NxM matrix, returning a 1xM matrix as a
              result.

       *      function_mean
              Compute the sample means of each of the columns of a real NxM matrix, returning a 1xM matrix as  a
              result.

       *      function_mod
              Compute element 2 mod element 1. This operation can be applied only to integer type data.

       *      function_mult
              Multiply last two stack elements.

       *      function_neg
              Negate last stack element.

       *      function_permutation
              Compute  the  permutation  coefficient  determined by the last two stack elements 'n' and 'k': the
              number of ways of obtaining an ordered subset of k elements from a set of n  elements.   If  these
              arguments are real, the coefficient is computed using a fast approximation to the log of the gamma
              function, and therefore the result is subject to rounding errors. For exact integer arguments, the
              coefficient is computed using exact arithmetic; this has the potential to be a slow operation.

       *      function_pow
              Raise element 2 to the power of element 1.

       *      function_purge
              Delete the variable in the last stack position.

       *      function_re
              Compute the real part of the last stack element.

       *      function_sin
              Compute  the  sine  of  the  last stack element. If the argument is real, it will be assumed to be
              either degrees or radians, depending on the angle mode of the calculator.

       *      function_sinh
              Compute the hyperbolic sine of the last stack element.

       *      function_solve_linear
              Solve a linear system of the form Ax = b, where A and b are the last two elements on the stack.  A
              must  be  a  square  matrix and b must be a matrix with one column. This function does not compute
              inv(A), but obtains the solution by a more efficient LU decomposition method.   This  function  is
              recommended  over  explicitly  computing  the inverse, especially when solving linear systems with
              relatively large dimension or with poorly conditioned matrices.

       *      function_sq
              Square the last stack element.

       *      function_sqrt
              Compute the square root of the last stack element.

       *      function_standardize_units
              Convert the last stack element to an equivalent expression using the SI standard base  units  (kg,
              m, s, etc.).

       *      function_stdev_unbiased
              Compute  the  unbiased  sample  standard  deviation  of  each of the columns of a real NxM matrix,
              returning a 1xM matrix as a result. (Compare to HP48's sdev function.)

       *      function_stdev_biased
              Compute the biased (population) sample standard deviation of each of the columns  of  a  real  NxM
              matrix, returning a 1xM matrix as a result. (Compare to HP48's psdev function.)

       *      function_store
              Store element 2 in (variable) element 1.

       *      function_sub
              Subtract element 1 from element 2.

       *      function_sumsq
              Sum the squares of each of the columns of a real NxM matrix, returning a 1xM matrix as a result.

       *      function_tan
              Compute  the  tangent of the last stack element. If the argument is real, it will be assumed to be
              either degrees or radians, depending on the angle mode of the calculator.

       *      function_tanh
              Compute the hyperbolic tangent of the last stack element.

       *      function_to_int
              Convert a real number to an integer type.

       *      function_to_real
              Convert an integer type to a real number.

       *      function_total
              Sum each of the columns of a real NxM matrix, returning a 1xM matrix as a result.

       *      function_trace
              Compute the trace of a square matrix.

       *      function_transpose
              Compute the matrix transpose of the last stack element.

       *      function_unit_value
              Drop the units of the last stack element.

       *      function_utpn
              Compute the upper tail probability of a normal distribution.
              UTPN(m, v, x) = Integrate[ 1/Sqrt[2 Pi v] Exp[-(m-y)^2/(2 v)], {y, x, Infinity}]

       *      function_var_unbiased
              Compute the unbiased sample variance of each of the columns of a real NxM matrix, returning a  1xM
              matrix as a result. (Compare to HP48's var function.)

       *      function_var_biased
              Compute  the  biased  (population)  sample  variance  of each of the columns of a real NxM matrix,
              returning a 1xM matrix as a result. (Compare to HP48's pvar function.)

   COMMANDS
       The following operations are referred to as commands; they differ from functions because they do not take
       an argument. Many calculator interface settings are implemented as commands.

       *      command_about
              Display a nifty ``about Orpie'' credits screen.

       *      command_begin_abbrev
              Begin entry of an operation abbreviation.

       *      command_begin_browsing
              Enter stack browsing mode.

       *      command_begin_constant
              Begin entry of a physical constant.

       *      command_begin_variable
              Begin entry of a variable name.

       *      command_bin
              Set the base of exact integer representation to 2 (binary).

       *      command_clear
              Clear all elements from the stack.

       *      command_cycle_base
              Cycle the base of exact integer representation between 2, 8, 10, and 16 (bin, oct, dec, and hex).

       *      command_cycle_help
              Cycle  through multiple help pages. The first page displays commonly used bindings, and the second
              page displays the current autobindings.

       *      command_dec
              Set the base of exact integer representation to 10 (decimal).

       *      command_deg
              Set the angle mode to degrees.

       *      command_drop
              Drop the last element off the stack.

       *      command_dup
              Duplicate the last stack element.

       *      command_enter_pi
              Enter 3.1415...  on the stack.

       *      command_hex
              Set the base of exact integer representation to 16 (hexadecimal).

       *      command_oct
              Set the base of exact integer representation to 8 (octal).

       *      command_polar
              Set the complex display mode to polar.

       *      command_rad
              Set the angle mode to radians.

       *      command_rand
              Generate a random real-valued number between 0 (inclusive) and 1  (exclusive).  The  deviates  are
              uniformly distributed.

       *      command_rect
              Set the complex display mode to rectangular (cartesian).

       *      command_refresh
              Refresh the display.

       *      command_swap
              Swap stack elements 1 and 2.

       *      command_quit
              Quit Orpie.

       *      command_toggle_angle_mode
              Toggle the angle mode between degrees and radians.

       *      command_toggle_complex_mode
              Toggle the complex display mode between rectangular and polar.

       *      command_undo
              Undo the last calculator operation.

       *      command_view
              View the last stack element in an external fullscreen editor.

       *      command_edit_input
              Create a new stack element using an external editor.

   EDIT OPERATIONS
       The  following  operations  are  related  to  editing  during  data  entry. These commands cannot be made
       available as operation abbreviations, since abbreviations are not accessible while entering  data.  These
       operations should be made available as single keypresses using the bind keyword.

       *      edit_angle
              Begin  entering  the  phase  angle  of a complex number. (Orpie will assume the angle is in either
              degrees or radians, depending on the current angle mode.)

       *      edit_backspace
              Delete the last character entered.

       *      edit_begin_integer
              Begin entering an exact integer.

       *      edit_begin_units
              Begin appending units to a numeric expression.

       *      edit_complex
              Begin entering a complex number.

       *      edit_enter
              Enter the data that is currently being edited.

       *      edit_matrix
              Begin entering a matrix, or begin entering the next row of a matrix.

       *      edit_minus
              Enter a minus sign in input.

       *      edit_scientific_notation_base
              Begin entering the scientific notation exponent of a real number, or the base of an exact integer.

       *      edit_separator
              Begin editing the next element of a complex number or matrix. (This will insert  a  comma  between
              elements.)

   BROWSING OPERATIONS
       The  following  list  of  operations  is  available  only  in  stack browsing mode.  As abbreviations are
       unavailable while browsing the stack, these operations should be bound to  single  keypresses  using  the
       bind keyword.

       *      browse_echo
              Echo the currently selected element to stack level 1.

       *      browse_end
              Exit stack browsing mode.

       *      browse_drop
              Drop the currently selected stack element.

       *      browse_dropn
              Drop all stack elements below the current selection (inclusive).

       *      browse_keep
              Drop all stack elements except the current selection. (This is complementary to browse_drop.

       *      browse_keepn
              Drop  all  stack  elements  above the current selection (non-inclusive). (This is complementary to
              browse_dropn.

       *      browse_next_line
              Move the selection cursor down one line.

       *      browse_prev_line
              Move the selection cursor up one line.

       *      browse_rolldown
              Cyclically ``roll'' stack elements downward, below the selected element (inclusive).

       *      browse_rollup
              Cyclically ``roll'' stack elements upward, below the selected element (inclusive) .

       *      browse_scroll_left
              Scroll the selected element to the left (for viewing very large entries such as matrices).

       *      browse_scroll_right
              Scroll the selected element to the right.

       *      browse_view
              View the currently selected stack element in a fullscreen editor.

       *      browse_edit
              Edit the currently selected stack element using an external editor.

   ABBREVIATION ENTRY OPERATIONS
       The following list of operations is available only while entering a function or command abbreviation,  or
       while  entering  a  physical constant. These operations must be bound to single keypresses using the bind
       keyword.

       *      abbrev_backspace
              Delete a character from the abbreviation string.

       *      abbrev_enter
              Execute the operation associated with the selected abbreviation.

       *      abbrev_exit
              Cancel abbreviation entry.

   VARIABLE ENTRY OPERATIONS
       The following list of operations is available only while entering a variable name. As  abbreviations  are
       unavailable  while  entering  variables,  these operations should be bound to single keypresses using the
       bind keyword.

       *      variable_backspace
              Delete a character from the variable name.

       *      variable_cancel
              Cancel entry of the variable name.

       *      variable_complete
              Autocomplete the variable name.

       *      variable_enter
              Enter the variable name on the stack.

   INTEGER ENTRY OPERATIONS
       The following operation is available only while entering an integer; it can be made accessible by binding
       it to a single keypress using the bind keyword.

       *      integer_cancel
              Cancel entry of an integer.

SEE ALSO

       orpie(1), orpie-curses-keys(1)

AUTHOR

       This manpage is written by Paul J. Pelzl <pelzlpj@gmail.com>.