From ftm
(→Values and Lists) |
(→Values and Lists) |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
* an element of an object | * an element of an object | ||
− | Examples of '''simple values''' are | + | Examples of ''''simple values'''' are |
* 1 ... an int | * 1 ... an int | ||
* -2 ... an int | * -2 ... an int |
Revision as of 12:19, 6 June 2007
FTM expressions are used in the following contexts
- the FTM message box (ftm.mess)
- the FTM definition (ftm.object)
- the expr class/object
The syntax is basically always the same appart from minor context dependent details.
Values and Lists
The values of FTM expressions can be int, float, symbol or references to FTM object. They values can be represended by the following terms:
- a simple value (int, float, symbol)
- a named value
- an element of an object
Examples of 'simple values' are
- 1 ... an int
- -2 ... an int
- 2.3 ... a float
- -4. ... a loat
- 5.67e-4 ... a float
- .89 ... a float
- ten ... a symbol
- 11-12 ... a symbol (because no space!)
- -thirteen ... a symbol
Named values are defined by FTM definitions using ftm.object. The names, always representing a single value, are used in expressions with a leading dollar – '$' – making for example:
- $x
- $myobject
An element
Parenthesis
Parenthesis in FTM expressions – '(' and ')' – always will (try to) evaluate the contained elements to a single value.
Inside parenthesis you'd have either one
- a value (in which case the parenthesis are useless)
- a simple infix expression
- a simple prefix expression