Expression¶
A class that stores an expression you can execute.
Description¶
An expression can be made of any arithmetic operation, built-in math function call, method call of a passed instance, or built-in type construction call.
An example expression text using the built-in math functions could be sqrt(pow(3,2) + pow(4,2))
.
In the following example we use a LineEdit node to write our expression and show the result.
onready var expression = Expression.new()
func _ready():
$LineEdit.connect("text_entered", self, "_on_text_entered")
func _on_text_entered(command):
var error = expression.parse(command, [])
if error != OK:
print(expression.get_error_text())
return
var result = expression.execute([], null, true)
if not expression.has_execute_failed():
$LineEdit.text = str(result)
Methods¶
execute ( Array inputs=[ ], Object base_instance=null, bool show_error=true ) |
|
get_error_text ( ) const |
|
has_execute_failed ( ) const |
|
parse ( String expression, PoolStringArray input_names=PoolStringArray( ) ) |
Method Descriptions¶
Variant execute ( Array inputs=[ ], Object base_instance=null, bool show_error=true )
Executes the expression that was previously parsed by parse and returns the result. Before you use the returned object, you should check if the method failed by calling has_execute_failed.
If you defined input variables in parse, you can specify their values in the inputs array, in the same order.
String get_error_text ( ) const
Returns the error text if parse has failed.
bool has_execute_failed ( ) const
Returns true
if execute has failed.
Error parse ( String expression, PoolStringArray input_names=PoolStringArray( ) )
Parses the expression and returns an Error code.
You can optionally specify names of variables that may appear in the expression with input_names
, so that you can bind them when it gets executed.