evalb
evaluate as a Boolean expression
Calling Sequence
Parameters
Description
Thread Safety
Examples
evalb(x)
x
-
expression
The evalb command forces the evaluation of expressions involving relational operators, using a three-valued logic system. The return values are true, false, and FAIL. If evaluation is not possible, an unevaluated expression is returned.
Normally expressions containing the relational operators =, <>, <, <=, >, and >= are treated as algebraic equations or inequalities by Maple. However, when passed as arguments to the evalb command (or when appearing in a Boolean context in an if or while statement), they are evaluated to true or false if possible.
Note that expressions involving > and >= are converted into equivalent expressions involving < and <=, respectively.
An evalb call using <, <=, >, or >= returns evaluated only with arguments of type extended_numeric, complex, or string. For more on string comparisons, see the section Operations on Entire Strings in Using Strings in Maple.
Important: The evalb command does not simplify expressions. It may return false for a relation that is true. In such a case, apply a simplification to the relation before using evalb.
Important: The evalb command does not perform arithmetic for inequalities involving <, <=, >, or >=. It may return unevaluated when a relation is true. In such a case, perform the arithmetic operations before using evalb.
The evalb command is thread-safe as of Maple 15.
For more information on thread safety, see index/threadsafe.
x=x
evalb⁡x=x
true
evalb⁡x=y
false
a≔2:
b≔2:
evalb⁡a=b
evalb⁡Float⁡∞<∞
evalb⁡Float⁡undefined<undefined
evalb⁡ℜ⁡x≠ℜ⁡x+1
The evalb command cannot be used in some cases.
evalb⁡y<x
y<x
evalb⁡2+3⁢I<3+4⁢I
FAIL
In some cases, you must subtract the right-hand side from the left-hand side before evaluating inequalities that use <, <=, >, or >=.
evalb⁡ℜ⁡x<ℜ⁡x+1
ℜ⁡x<1+ℜ⁡x
evalb⁡ℜ⁡x−ℜ⁡x+1<0
The evalb command uses address tests to determine equality.
evalb⁡ℜ⁡x≤ℜ⁡x
You must convert symbolic arguments to floating-point values when using the evalb command for inequalities that use <, <=, >, or >=.
evalb⁡2<sqrt⁡5
2<5
evalb⁡2<evalf⁡sqrt⁡5
Alternately, in this case you could use the is command to evaluate the boolean expression, without using evalf.
is⁡2<sqrt⁡5
The evalb command can be used in combination with any number of packages.
evalb⁡StringToolsSearch⁡2,This sentence does not contain any numbers.=0
The evalb command can be used to check if an equation has an x-term.
evalb⁡coeff⁡x3+2⁢x2−5,x≠0
evalb⁡coeff⁡x3+2⁢x2−5,x2≠0
See Also
boolean
is
testeq
type/complex
type/extended_numeric
Using Strings in Maple
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