Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nicolás Hatcher
ffe5d1a158 UPDATE: Adds bindings to update timezone and locale
UPDATE: Update "generate locale" utility

FIX: Minor fixes to UI and proper support for locales/timezones

UPDATE: Adds "display language" setting to core
2025-12-13 08:12:11 +01:00
Nicolás Hatcher Andrés
1edfb2df1c FIX: Correct order when stringify -(A1^1.22) and (-A1)^1.22 (#484)
Fixes #483
2025-10-27 19:09:31 +01:00
Nicolás Hatcher
429615ae85 FIX: Fixes stringify with parentheses 2025-08-09 10:43:19 +02:00
Brian Hung
e420f7e998 fix intermediate rows cols 2025-07-26 10:37:03 +02:00
BrianHung
c2777c73ac feat: implement move column move row with tests 2025-07-26 10:37:03 +02:00
Nicolás Hatcher
0be7d9b85a FIX: Make clippy happy 2025-06-29 11:07:05 +02:00
Nicolás Hatcher
e5ec75495a UPDATE: Introducing Arrays
# This PR introduces:

## Parsing arrays:

{1,2,3} and {1;2;3}

Note that array elements can be numbers, booleans and errors (#VALUE!)

## Evaluating arrays in the SUM function

=SUM({1,2,3}) works!

## Evaluating arithmetic operation with arrays

=SUM({1,2,3} * 8) or =SUM({1,2,3}+{2,4,5}) works

This is done with just one function (handle_arithmetic) for most operations

## Some mathematical functions implement arrays

=SUM(SIN({1,2,3})) works

This is done with macros. See fn_single_number
So that implementing new functions that supports array are easy


# Not done in this PR

## Most functions are not supporting arrays

When that happens we either through #N/IMPL! (not implemented error)
or do implicit intersection. Some functions will be rather trivial to "arraify" some will be hard

## The final result in a cell cannot be an array

The formula ={1,2,3} in a cell will result in #N/IMPL!

## Exporting arrays to Excel might not work correctly

Excel uses the cm (cell metadata) for formulas that contain dynamic arrays.
Although the present PR does not introduce dynamic arrays some formulas like =SUM(SIN({1,2,3}))
is considered a dynamic formula

## There are not a lot of tests in this delivery

The bulk of the tests will be added once we start going function by function# This PR introduces:

## Parsing arrays:

{1,2,3} and {1;2;3}

Note that array elements can be numbers, booleans and errors (#VALUE!)

## Evaluating arrays in the SUM function

=SUM({1,2,3}) works!

## Evaluating arithmetic operation with arrays

=SUM({1,2,3} * 8) or =SUM({1,2,3}+{2,4,5}) works

This is done with just one function (handle_arithmetic) for most operations

## Some mathematical functions implement arrays

=SUM(SIN({1,2,3})) works

This is done with macros. See fn_single_number
So that implementing new functions that supports array are easy


# Not done in this PR

## Most functions are not supporting arrays

When that happens we either through #N/IMPL! (not implemented error)
or do implicit intersection. Some functions will be rather trivial to "arraify" some will be hard

## The final result in a cell cannot be an array

The formula ={1,2,3} in a cell will result in #N/IMPL!

## Exporting arrays to Excel might not work correctly

Excel uses the cm (cell metadata) for formulas that contain dynamic arrays.
Although the present PR does not introduce dynamic arrays some formulas like =SUM(SIN({1,2,3}))
is considered a dynamic formula

## There are not a lot of tests in this delivery

The bulk of the tests will be added once we start going function by function

## The array parsing does not respect the locale

Locales that use ',' as a decimal separator need to use something different for arrays

## The might introduce a small performance penalty

We haven't been benchmarking, and having closures for every arithmetic operation and every function
evaluation will introduce a performance hit. Fixing that in he future is not so hard writing tailored
code for the operation
2025-03-17 20:04:47 +01:00
Nicolás Hatcher
da017b6113 UPDATE: Implement the implicit Intersection Operator
The II operator takes a range and returns a single cell that is in the same column or the same row
as the present cell.

This is needed for backwards compatibility with old Excel models and as a first step towards dynamic arrays.

In the past Excel would evaluate `=A1:A10` in cell `C3` as `A3`, but today in results in an array containing all
values in the range. To be compatible with old workbooks Excel inserts the II operator
on those cases.

So this PR performs an static analysis on all formulas inserting on import automatically the II operator
where necessary. This we call the _automatic implicit operator_. When exporting to Excel the operator is striped away.
You can also manually use the II. For instance `=SUM(@A1:A10)` in cell `C3`.
This was not possible before and such a formula would break backwards compatibility with Excel. To Excel that "non automatic"
form of the II is exported as `_xlfn.SINGLE()`.

Th static analysis has to be done for all arithmetic operations and all functions.
This is a bit of a daunting task and it is not done fully in this PR. We also need to implement arrays and dynamic arrays.
My believe is that once the core operations have been implemented we can go formula by formula writing proper tests and documentation.

After this PR formulas like `=A1:A10` for instance will return `#N/IMPL!` instead of performing the implicit intersection
2025-03-03 21:59:42 +01:00
Nicolás Hatcher
e455ed14ea UPDATE: API for defined names 2024-12-26 10:21:21 +01:00
Nicolás Hatcher
23814ec18c FIX: Several fixes on the FV function
(1+x)^(1+y) was stringifyfied incorrectly
We still need work on this

FV now returns currency

FV(-1,-2,1) should return #DIV/0! not #NUM!
2024-12-14 22:08:44 +01:00
Nicolás Hatcher
c5b8efd83d UPDATE: Dump of initial files 2023-11-20 10:46:19 +01:00