more | ||
f.go | ||
makefile | ||
README.md |
A minimalist calculator for fermi estimation
This project contains a minimalist command-line calculator for Fermi estimation. For now, it just multiplies lognormals.
Motivation
Sometimes, Squiggle, simple squiggle or squiggle.c are still too complicated and un-unix-like.
Usage
Here is an example
$ go run f.go
5000000 12000000
=> 5000000.0 12000000.0
0.002 0.01
=> 13859.5 86583.4
30 180
=> 706832.8 9167656.0
/ 48 52
=> 14139.1 183614.7
/ 5 6
=> 2573.1 33632.0
/ 6 8
=> 368.4 4893.5
/ 60
=> 6.1 81.6
Perhaps this example is more understandable with comments and better units:
$ sed -u "s|#.*||" | sed -u 's|M|000000|g' | go run f.go
5M 12M # number of people living in Chicago
=> 5000000.0 12000000.0
0.002 0.01 # fraction of people that have a piano
=> 13859.5 86583.4
30 180 # minutes it takes to tune a piano, including travel time
=> 706832.8 9167656.0
/ 48 52 # weeks a year that piano tuners work for
=> 14139.1 183614.7
/ 5 6 # days a week in which piano tuners work
=> 2573.1 33632.0
/ 6 8 # hours a day in which piano tuners work
=> 368.4 4893.5
/ 60 # minutes to an hour
=> 6.1 81.6
# ^ piano tuners in Chicago
Installation
make build
sudo make install
f # rather than the previous go run f.go
Why use make instead of the built-in go commands? Because the point of make is to be able to share command-line recipes.
Usage together with standard Linux utilities
f
sed -u "s|#.*||" | sed -u 's|M|000000|g' | f
cat more/piano-tuners.f | f
cat more/piano-tuners-commented.f | sed -u "s|#.*||" | sed -u 's|M|000000|g' | f
tee -a input.log | go run f.go | tee -a output.log
tee -a io.log | go run f.go | tee -a io.log
function f(){
sed -u "s|#.*||" |
sed -u "s|//.*||" |
sed -u 's|K|000|g' |
sed -u 's|M|000000|g' |
sed -u 's|B|000000000|g' |
/usr/bin/f
}
Tips & tricks
Conceptually clearer to have all the multiplications first and then all the divisions
Roadmap
- Write README
- Add division?
- Read from file?
- Save to file?
- Allow comments?
- Use a sed filter?
- Add show more info version
- Program into a small device, like a calculator?
- Think of some way of calling bc
- Think how to integrate with squiggle.c to draw samples
- Think about how to draw a histogram from samples