This is a tutorial that documents GiNaC @value{VERSION}, an open
framework for symbolic computation within the C++ programming language.
-Copyright (C) 1999 Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany
+Copyright (C) 1999-2000 Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
@page
@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
-Copyright @copyright{} 1999 Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany
+Copyright @copyright{} 1999-2000 Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany
@sp 2
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
@section License
The GiNaC framework for symbolic computation within the C++ programming
-language is Copyright @copyright{} 1999 Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz,
-Germany.
+language is Copyright @copyright{} 1999-2000 Johannes Gutenberg
+University Mainz, Germany.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
If you ever wanted to convert units in C or C++ and found this is
cumbersome, here is the solution. Symbolic types can always be used as
tags for different types of objects. Converting from wrong units to the
-metric system is therefore easy:
+metric system is now easy:
@example
> in=.0254*m;
* Fundamental containers:: The power, add and mul classes.
* Built-in functions:: Mathematical functions.
* Relations:: Equality, Inequality and all that.
+* Archiving:: Storing expression libraries in files.
@end menu
this.
-@node Relations, Important Algorithms, Built-in functions, Basic Concepts
+@node Relations, Archiving, Built-in functions, Basic Concepts
@c node-name, next, previous, up
@section Relations
@cindex relations (class @code{relational})
as arguments. There they provide an intuitive syntax for substitutions.
-@node Important Algorithms, Polynomial Expansion, Relations, Top
+@node Archiving, Important Algorithms, Relations, Basic Concepts
+@c node-name, next, previous, up
+@section Archiving Expressions
+@cindex archives (class @code{archive})
+
+GiNaC allows creating @dfn{archives} of expressions which can be stored
+to or retrieved from files. To create an archive, you declare an object
+of class @code{archive} and archive expressions in it, giving each
+expressions a unique name:
+
+@example
+#include <ginac/ginac.h>
+#include <fstream>
+using namespace GiNaC;
+
+int main()
+@{
+ symbol x("x"), y("y"), z("z");
+
+ ex foo = sin(x + 2*y) + 3*z + 41;
+ ex bar = foo + 1;
+
+ archive a;
+ a.archive_ex(foo, "foo");
+ a.archive_ex(bar, "the second one");
+ // ...
+@end example
+
+The archive can then be written to a file:
+
+@example
+ // ...
+ ofstream out("foobar.gar");
+ out << a;
+ out.close();
+ // ...
+@end example
+
+The file @file{foobar.gar} contains all information that is needed to
+reconstruct the expressions @code{foo} and @code{bar}.
+
+The tool @command{viewgar} that comes with GiNaC can be used to view
+the contents of GiNaC archive files:
+
+@example
+$ viewgar foobar.gar
+foo = 41+sin(x+2*y)+3*z
+the second one = 42+sin(x+2*y)+3*z
+@end example
+
+The point of writing archive files is of course that they can later be
+read in again:
+
+@example
+ // ...
+ archive a2;
+ ifstream in("foobar.gar");
+ in >> a2;
+ // ...
+@end example
+
+And the stored expressions can be retrieved by their name:
+
+@example
+ // ...
+ lst syms;
+ syms.append(x); syms.append(y);
+
+ ex ex1 = a2.unarchive_ex(syms, "foo");
+ ex ex2 = a2.unarchive_ex(syms, "the second one");
+
+ cout << ex1 << endl; // prints "41+sin(x+2*y)+3*z"
+ cout << ex2 << endl; // prints "42+sin(x+2*y)+3*z"
+ cout << ex1.subs(x == 2) << endl; // prints "41+sin(2+2*y)+3*z"
+ // ...
+@}
+@end example
+
+Note that you have to supply a list of the symbols which are to be inserted
+in the expressions. Symbols in archives are stored by their name only and
+if you don't specify which symbols you have, unarchiving the expression will
+create new symbols with that name. E.g. if you hadn't included @code{x} in
+the @code{syms} list above, the @code{ex1.subs(x == 2)} statement would
+have had no effect because the @code{x} in @code{ex1} would have been a
+different symbol than the @code{x} which was defined at the beginning of
+the program, altough both would appear as @samp{x} when printed.
+
+
+
+@node Important Algorithms, Polynomial Expansion, Archiving, Top
@c node-name, next, previous, up
@chapter Important Algorithms
@cindex polynomial