1.6 KiB
rpn
Instructions
Write a program which takes a string
which contains an equation written in Reverse Polish Notation
(RPN) as its first argument,
which evaluates the equation, and which prints the result on the standard output followed by a newline ('\n'
).
Reverse Polish Notation
is a mathematical notation in which every operator follows all of its operands. In RPN,
every operator encountered evaluates the previous 2 operands, and the result of this operation then becomes the first of
the two operands for the subsequent operator. Operands and operators must be spaced by at least one space.
The following operators must be implemented : +
, -
, *
, /
, and %
.
If the string
is not valid or if there is not exactly one argument, Error
must be printed on the standard output followed by a newline.
If the string
has extra spaces it is still considered valid.
All the given operands must fit in a i64
.
Examples of formulas converted in RPN:
3 + 4 >> 3 4 +
((1 * 2) * 3) - 4 >> 1 2 * 3 * 4 - or 3 1 2 * * 4 -
50 * (5 - (10 / 9)) >> 5 10 9 / - 50 *
Here is how to evaluate a formula in RPN:
1 2 * 3 * 4 -
2 3 * 4 -
6 4 -
2
Or:
3 1 2 * * 4 -
3 2 * 4 -
6 4 -
2
For receiving arguments from the command line you should use something like:
fn main() {
let args: Vec<String> = std::env::args().collect();
rpn(&args[1]);
}
Usage
$ cargo run "1 2 * 3 * 4 +"
10
$ cargo run "1 2 3 4 +"
Error
$ cargo run ""
Error
$ cargo run " 1 3 * 2 -"
1
$ cargo run " 1 3 * ksd 2 -"
Error
```