4.6 KiB
id | title |
---|---|
math-numbers-tez | Math, Numbers & Tez |
LIGO offers three built-in numerical types: int
, nat
and tez
.
Addition
Addition in ligo is acomplished by using the +
operator. Some type constraints apply; for example you can't add tez + nat
.
In the following example you can find a series of arithmetic operations, including various numerical types. However, some bits of the example won't compile because adding an int
to a nat
produces an int
, not a nat
. Similiar rules apply for tez
:
// int + int produces int
const a: int = 5 + 10;
// nat + int produces int
const b: int = 5n + 10;
// tez + tez produces tez
const c: tez = 5mutez + 10mutez;
// you can't add tez + int or tez + nat, this won't compile
// const d: tez = 5mutez + 10n;
// two nats produce a nat
const e: nat = 5n + 10n;
// nat + int produces an int, this won't compile
// const f: nat = 5n + 10;
const g: int = 1_000_000;
Pro tip: you can use underscores for readability when defining large numbers
const g: int = 1_000_000;
// int + int produces int
let a: int = 5 + 10
// nat + int produces int
let b: int = 5n + 10
// tez + tez produces tez
let c: tez = 5mutez + 10mutez
// you can't add tez + int or tez + nat, this won't compile
// const d: tez = 5mutez + 10n
// two nats produce a nat
let e: nat = 5n + 10n
// nat + int produces an int, this won't compile
// const f: nat = 5n + 10
let g: int = 1_000_000
Pro tip: you can use underscores for readability when defining large numbers
let g: int = 1_000_000;
(* int + int produces int *)
let a: int = 5 + 10;
(* nat + int produces int *)
let b: int = 5n + 10;
(* tez + tez produces tez *)
let c: tez = 5mutez + 10mutez;
(* you can't add tez + int or tez + nat, this won't compile:
let d: tez = 5mutez + 10n; *)
(* two nats produce a nat *)
let e: nat = 5n + 10n;
(* nat + int produces an int, this won't compile:
let f: nat = 5n + 10; *)
let g: int = 1_000_000;
Pro tip: you can use underscores for readability when defining large numbers
let g: int = 1_000_000;
Subtraction
The simpliest substraction looks like this:
⚠️ Even when subtracting two
nats
, the result is anint
const a: int = 5 - 10;
// substraction of two nats, yields an int
const b: int = 5n - 2n;
// won't compile, result is an int, not a nat
// const c: nat = 5n - 2n;
const d: tez = 5mutez - 1mutez;
let a: int = 5 - 10
// substraction of two nats, yields an int
let b: int = 5n - 2n
// won't compile, result is an int, not a nat
// const c: nat = 5n - 2n
let d: tez = 5mutez - 1mutez
let a: int = 5 - 10;
(* substraction of two nats, yields an int *)
let b: int = 5n - 2n;
(* won't compile, result is an int, not a nat *)
(* let c: nat = 5n - 2n; *)
let d: tez = 5mutez - 1mutez;
Multiplication
You can multiply values of the same type, such as:
const a: int = 5 * 5;
const b: nat = 5n * 5n;
// you can also multiply `nat` and `tez`
const c: tez = 5n * 5mutez;
let a: int = 5 * 5
let b: nat = 5n * 5n
// you can also multiply `nat` and `tez`
let c: tez = 5n * 5mutez
let a: int = 5 * 5;
let b: nat = 5n * 5n;
(* you can also multiply `nat` and `tez` *)
let c: tez = 5n * 5mutez;
Division
In LIGO you can divide int
, nat
, and tez
. Here's how:
⚠️ Division of two
tez
values results into anat
const a: int = 10 / 3;
const b: nat = 10n / 3n;
const c: nat = 10mutez / 3mutez;
let a: int = 10 / 3
let b: nat = 10n / 3n
let c: nat = 10mutez / 3mutez
let a: int = 10 / 3;
let b: nat = 10n / 3n;
let c: nat = 10mutez / 3mutez;
From int
to nat
and back
You can cast an int
to a nat
and vice versa, here's how:
const a: int = int(1n);
const b: nat = abs(1);
let a: int = int(1n);
let b: nat = abs(1);