Version 8 of Estimating Mountain Height Using Look Angles, Etcl Console Example

Updated 2011-06-12 05:28:09 by RLE

Estimating Mountain Height Using Look Angles, Etcl Console Example

This page is under development. Comments are welcome, but please load any comments in the comments section at the middle of the page. Thanks,gold


gold Here is an eTCL script on estimating mountain height for the etcl console.


In planning any software, there is a need to develop testcases. With back of envelope calculations, we can develop a number of peg points to check output of program.


 Testcases
quantityunitsratio angle unitsmethod
8.0 palms 7/8 41.1degreesti30 hand calculation
9.0 palms 7/9 37.87degreesti30 hand calculation
10.0 palms 7/10 34.9degreesti30 hand calculation
11.0palms 7/11 32.47degreesti30 hand calculation

Screenshots Section


Due size of following jpgs, leaving pictures as point and click.


Comments Section

Please place any comments here, Thanks.

Why do you utilize meaningless variable names in many of your procedures? I.e., aa, bb, cc as the inputs to mountain. Absent external explanations, aa, bb , cc have no meaning and therefore the names themselves do not help to guide a reader as to their meaning. Additionally, nom, denom have some meaning, numerator, denominator, but that meaning is self evident by being utilized in a division operation, so in the end, those names also convey zero additional meaning. Your example would be far easier to understand if you picked variable names that related to the real-world values that aa, bb, cc, nom, and denom actually represented.


References:


Appendix TCL programs and scripts

* Pretty Print Version

        # Pretty print version from autoindent
        # and ased editor
        # written on Windows XP on eTCL
        # code from TCL WIKI, eTCL console script
        # 8jun2011, [gold]  
        console show 
        proc deg {} {return [ expr {180./[pi]}  ]}        
        proc pi {} {expr acos(-1)}
        set counter 1
        proc mountain { aa bb cc } {
            global counter past
            set aa [ expr { [deg]*$aa } ]
            set bb [ expr { [deg]*$bb } ]
            set nom [ expr { $cc*sin($aa)*sin($bb) } ]
            set denom [ expr { sin($aa)*sin($aa)-sin($bb)*sin($bb)  } ]
            set denom [ expr { sqrt($denom)  } ]            
            set xheight [ expr { $nom/$denom } ]
            puts "$counter  $aa   $bb distance $cc moun $xheight  "
            incr counter
            wm title . "estimating mountain height"
        }
        mountain 30 20 10

Code scraps