Guide complet

Guide de la calculatrice d'expressions mathématiques

Exploitez la calculatrice d'expressions : parenthèses, puissances, fonctions courantes et vérifications numériques rapides en notation naturelle.

Ouvrir la calculatrice

Guide complet

What This Calculator Does

This expression calculator is ideal for the kind of numeric problem that is a little more complex than a basic calculator, but nowhere near complex enough to justify opening full math software. If you want parentheses, powers, roots, logs, and common functions inside one expression, this page is a very practical fit.

It supports standard arithmetic, parentheses, powers, several common math functions, and the constants pi and e. After each successful calculation, it also keeps a short recent history so you can review, copy, or build on previous answers.

When to Use It

  • You want to evaluate a moderately complex expression quickly.
  • You need parentheses, powers, roots, logs, or common functions.
  • You are checking homework, validating code, or doing UI-level numeric tests.
  • You want recent history without switching to a heavier tool.

Inputs Explained

Expression Input

You can type expressions directly, for example:

  • 2+3*4
  • (10+5)*2
  • sqrt(25)+sqrt(16)
  • 2pi
  • (1+2)(3+4)

That kind of direct input is what makes the page so convenient: you do not have to break everything into separate keypad steps.

Supported Operations and Functions

The page supports:

  • basic operations: +, -, *, /
  • power: ^
  • parentheses: ()
  • common functions: sin(), cos(), tan(), sqrt(), log(), ln(), abs(), ceil(), floor(), round(), exp()
  • constants: pi, e

How the Calculation Works

Before evaluating the expression, the page does a layer of preprocessing. Constants such as pi and e are turned into numeric values, supported function names are mapped to the right math operations, ^ is treated as exponentiation, and common implicit-multiplication forms such as 2pi or 2(3+4) are handled automatically.

That is why it feels more natural than a basic calculator for one-line formulas. Instead of breaking the problem into many separate button steps, you can often type the expression in a way that already resembles normal math writing.

Example

Suppose you enter:

  • sqrt(16) + 2pi

The page returns a numeric result and also saves that expression and result into history.

This is a good example of the page's sweet spot: you can mix a function, a constant, and implicit multiplication in one short expression without switching to a much heavier tool.

How to Understand the Result

Current Result

The page records the result for the expression you just entered, making it easy to confirm what that exact input produced.

History

History is especially useful when you are working through several expressions in a row and want to look back without retyping.

Copy Result

The copy action is handy when you need to paste an answer into notes, homework, code comments, or another tool.

Common Mistakes

  • Thinking in degrees for trig input instead of radians.
  • Entering syntax the page does not support, such as variables, equations, or more advanced symbolic forms.
  • Leaving parentheses unbalanced.
  • Assuming the answer was lost when the input clears, even though it was saved into history.

FAQ

How is this different from a scientific calculator?

A scientific calculator behaves more like a keypad tool, while this page is better when you want to type an entire expression and evaluate it in one go.

What is the difference between log and ln?

log() is the common logarithm, while ln() is the natural logarithm. That difference matters a lot in homework and verification.

Can it solve equations or simplify algebra symbolically?

No. This page is designed for numeric expression evaluation, not symbolic math.

Is the history meant for long-term storage?

Not really. It works best as a short-term workspace for ongoing calculations rather than as permanent storage for important results.

Notes

This mathematical expression calculator is best for lightweight numeric work, not for symbolic algebra, matrix analysis, statistics modeling, or high-precision scientific computation. Its strength is that it feels natural to type into and fast to use for repeated checks.

A practical way to use it is as a lightweight expression workbench: get the number quickly, then move to a more specialized tool only when the problem truly requires it.

Questions fréquentes

À quoi cet outil sert-il le mieux ?

Il convient surtout aux expressions numériques de complexité moyenne : parenthèses, puissances, racines, logarithmes et fonctions courantes, peu pratiques sur une calculatrice de base.

Puis-je taper des formes comme 2pi ou 2(3+4) ?

Oui. Ce type de multiplication implicite est l'un des aspects les plus pratiques de la page.

Les fonctions trigonométriques utilisent-elles les degrés ou les radians ?

Le plus sûr est de considérer ici les saisies trigonométriques en radians. Si vous raisonnez en degrés, convertissez avant d'évaluer.

Pourquoi la saisie s'efface-t-elle après le calcul ?

Parce que la page déplace le calcul terminé dans l'historique, pour que vous enchaîniez plus facilement avec l'expression suivante.