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JEP is a Java library for parsing and evaluating mathematical expressions.

There is a newer version: 2.4.2
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/*****************************************************************************

  JEP 2.4.1, Extensions 1.1.1
       April 30 2007
       (c) Copyright 2007, Nathan Funk and Richard Morris
       See LICENSE-*.txt for license information.

 *****************************************************************************/

package org.nfunk.jepexamples;

/**
 * This class tests the thread safety of the JEP package with a brute force
 * approach. 1000 threads are started, and each one invokes the evaluate method.
 * The evaluate method creates 10 JEP instances. Note that running this class
 * successfully does not necessarily ensure that no errors will ever occur.
 * 

* Thanks to Matthew Baird and Daniel Teng for this code. */ public class ThreadTest { static long time = 0; /** * Main method. Launches many threads. */ public static void main(String[] args) { int n = 1000; System.out.println("Starting " + n + " threads..."); ThreadTest test = new ThreadTest(); for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { ThreadTestThread t = new ThreadTestThread(test); t.start(); } System.out.println("Returned from starting threads. Threads may still need to terminate."); // TODO: check why application appears to end before all thread exit } public ThreadTest() { } /** * Perform a simple evaluation using a new JEP instance. This method is * called by all ThreadTestThreads at very much the same time. */ public void evaluate() { for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) { org.nfunk.jep.JEP myParser = new org.nfunk.jep.JEP(); String fooValue = null; Math.random(); if (Math.random() > 0.5) { fooValue = "NLS"; } else { fooValue = "NLT"; } // TODO: add more involved calculations so the execution time of the // evaluation is longer (leading to more possible thread conflicts) myParser.addVariable("foo", fooValue); myParser.parseExpression("foo == \"" + fooValue + "\""); if (myParser.getValue() != 1.0) System.out.println("Wrong value returned"); if (myParser.hasError()) System.out.println(myParser.getErrorInfo()); } } }





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