evaluateAt now supports any number of arguments, so you can do something like:
myFunction = simpleFunction("a+b+c", "a", "b", "c")
n = myFunction.evaluateAt(1,2,3)
evaluateAt now supports any number of arguments, so you can do something like:
myFunction = simpleFunction("a+b+c", "a", "b", "c")
n = myFunction.evaluateAt(1,2,3)