overloading

overloading

display, functions and operators overloading capabilities

Description

In scilab, variable display, functions and operators may be defined for new objects using functions (scilab coded or primitives).

Display

The display of new objects defined by tlist structure may be overloaded (the default display is similar to list's one). The overloading function must have no output argument a single input argument. It's name is formed as follow %<tlist_type>_p where %<tlist_type> stands for the first entry of the tlist type component truncated to the first 9 characters.

Operators

Each operator which is not defined for given operands type may be defined. The overloading function must have a single output argument and one or two inputs according to the number of operands. The function name is formed as follow:

for binary operators: %<first_operand_type>_<op_code>_<second_operand_type>

for unary operators: %<operand_type>_<op_code>

extraction and insertion operators which are n-nary operators are described below.

Be careful, only the types registered by the typename function can be used in an overloading macros

<operand_type>, <first_operand_type>, <second_operand_type> are sequence of characters associated with each data type as described in the following table:

data type char code typeof comments
double matrix s constant  
polynomial matrix p polynomial  
boolean matrix b boolean  
sparse matrix sp sparse  
boolean sparse matrix spb boolean sparse  
Matlab sparse matrix msp Matlab sparse  
integer matrix i int8, int16,int32, uint8, uint16, uint32  
string matrix c string  
handle h handle  
compiled function fptr fptr  
script function mc function  
library l library  
list l list  
tlist tlist type tlist type the first string in the first tlist entry
mlist mlist type mlist type the first string in the first mlist entry
hypermatrix hm hypermat  
pointer ptr pointer  
cell ce ce  
structure st st  
rational r rational  
linear state space lss state-space  
implicit polynom ip size implicit 1:$

<op_code> is a single character associated with each operator as described in the following table:

op char code op char code
' t + a
- s * m
/ r / l
^ p .* x
./ d ./ q
.*. k ./. y
./. z : b
*. u /. v
/. w [a,b] c
[a;b] f () extraction e
() insertion i == o
<> n | g
& h .^ j
~ 5 .' 0
< 1 > 2
<= 3 >= 4
    iext 6

The overloading function for extraction syntax b=a(i1,...,in) has the following calling sequence: b=%<type_of_a>_e_(i1,...,in,a)

and the syntax [x1,..,xm]=a(i1,...,in) has the following calling sequence: [x1,..,xm]=%<type_of_a>_e_(i1,...,in,a)

 

The overloading function associated to the insertion syntax a(i1,...,in)=b has the following calling sequence: a=%<type_of_b>_i_<type_of_a>(i1,...,in,b,a).

 

The 6 char code may be used for some complex insertion algorithm like x.b(2)=33 where b field is not defined in the structure x. The insertion is automatically decomposed into temp=x.b; temp(2)=33; x.b=temp. The 6 char code is used for the first step of this algorithm. The 6 overloading function is very similar to the e's one.

Functions :

Some basic primitive function

may also be overloaded for new data type. When such a function is undefined for a particular data types the function %<type_of_an_argument>_<function_name> is called. User may add in this called function the definition associated with the input data types.

Examples

//DISPLAY
deff('[]=%tab_p(l)','disp([['' '';l(3)] [l(2);string(l(4))]])')
tlist('tab',['a','b'],['x';'y'],rand(2,2))

//OPERATOR
deff('x=%c_a_s(a,b)','x=a+string(b)')
's'+1

//FUNCTION
deff('x=%c_sin(a)','x=''sin(''+a+'')''')
sin('2*x')

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