I'm using this code to evaluate mathematical expressions from strings. And it works:
#!/usr/bin/env python
from __future__ import division
from math import *
expression = raw_input()
# Math functions
safe_list = ['math', 'factorial', 'acos', 'asin', 'atan', 'atan2', 'ceil', 'cos', 'cosh', 'degrees', 'e', 'exp', 'fabs', 'floor', 'fmod', 'hypot', 'log', 'log10', 'modf', 'pi', 'pow', 'radians', 'sin', 'sinh', 'sqrt', 'tan', 'tanh']
# Create safe directory
safe_dict = dict([(key, locals().get(key, None)) for key in safe_list])
safe_dict['abs'] = abs
result = eval(expression, {"__builtins__": None}, safe_dict)
print result
I wrapped it in a function like this:
#!/usr/bin/env python
from __future__ import division
from math import *
def calculate(expression):
# Math functions
safe_list = ['math', 'factorial', 'acos', 'asin', 'atan', 'atan2', 'ceil', 'cos', 'cosh', 'degrees', 'e', 'exp', 'fabs', 'floor', 'fmod', 'hypot', 'log', 'log10', 'modf', 'pi', 'pow', 'radians', 'sin', 'sinh', 'sqrt', 'tan', 'tanh']
# Create safe directory
safe_dict = dict([(key, locals().get(key, None)) for key in safe_list])
safe_dict['abs'] = abs
result = eval(expression, {"__builtins__": None}, safe_dict)
if isinstance(result, float) and result.is_integer():
result = int(result)
print result
expr = raw_input()
calculate(expr)
And it still works for the basic operations, but none of the functions defined in safe_dict
are working. 5**5
works with both programs, but sin(pi)
worked with the first sample of code and it's not working with the second one. The traceback is
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "stack.py", line 20, in <module>
calculate(expression)
File "stack.py", line 14, in calculate
result = eval(expression, {"__builtins__": None}, safe_dict)
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not callable
__builtins__
, and you named your listsafe_list
, but you are not safe. If you don't trust the input, don't useeval
.eval
is dangerous but I couldn't really think of any other way that would let me use Python math functions.ast
might get you there. docs.python.org/library/ast.html'[', ']', '_'
or';'
. But I'll giveast
a try.