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That is if you are a programmer, but we are a minority of users. I am the only calc programmer at my entire school.
The main thing keeping me from getting any of their newer calculators is the "lack" of native assembly support. To be honest, having a color screen to play with sounds like a lot of fun, but being locked out of assembly (and, by extension, C), just sucks. I think that was always one of the biggest attractions of their calculators: browsing the massive amounts of programs available and then learning to program them and do things you thought you never'd be able to do. That and knowing that a large number of people would have immediate access to and actually use/enjoy your programs. I guess for ARM programming there are a lot of other communities/platforms out there, i guess you'd just reach a different audience.The 82-83+ (even the 89) will always be special to me, but not because of the math problems i solved on them Programming them was the reason i bought my first (and second, and third, and fourth, etc.) calculator
240*(3/4+1/2*1/4)=210 then?
Sadly same for me. 3 times. (I dont count people making "Input A; Disp A") Probably a total of 1000+ students.