0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.
Quote from: [email protected] on March 17, 2013, 12:05:42 pmHP calculators are wayyyy different from any device I am used to o.0 It seems to have lots and lots of functionality/programmability. Perhaps there is an HPcalc.org? That was the goal of HP : teach students programming. Unlike TI who makes their calcs less and less programmer friendly.
HP calculators are wayyyy different from any device I am used to o.0 It seems to have lots and lots of functionality/programmability. Perhaps there is an HPcalc.org?
Quote from: Streetwalker on March 17, 2013, 12:24:05 pmQuote from: [email protected] on March 17, 2013, 12:05:42 pmHP calculators are wayyyy different from any device I am used to o.0 It seems to have lots and lots of functionality/programmability. Perhaps there is an HPcalc.org? That was the goal of HP : teach students programming. Unlike TI who makes their calcs less and less programmer friendly. TI panders to tests. I hate that. I mostly used Symbloic, Omnicalc, and other math apps for my tests last week.
What is the most favored calculator on this website, by majority?Go ahead and say your favorite calcs for which purpose, and how often you use it
The Nspire requires a PC to program it in ASM/C and Lua so don't think about it.
The TI-68k series has ASM, C, BASIC and NewProg (like Axe for this series of calcs). Only the last two are on calc though.
They are just underdocumented and nobody likes them for programming.
Axe isn't native! It requires to have it on calc, or even requires some shell of some kind, unless you compile fo noshell (which is the way to go unless speed or memory is a main concern.).
Programming on the computer does, indeed, bother me. An oncalc program editor or even a simple text editor combined with a compiler would be the absolute LEAST I would require. Maybe some days I would write down an idea and then type it up on the computer, but I really prefer oncalc programming. The two long posts about the calculators were extremely helpful. I already know a lot about the Ti8x series, and have 4 members. A Ti82 of mine is hiding in my brother's room. So the nSpire has some nice UI tricks that I can pick up to make MATH significantly easier, and unless I get serious about programming, those things are best left to the experts, whereas the Casio Prizm is great for the whole oncalc programming thing. 68k calculators will never enter my home unless I have every other kind of calculator out there. I do not, I repeat DO NOT, care about them. They are just underdocumented and nobody likes them for programming.
Axe isn't native! It requires to have it on calc, or even requires some shell of some kind, unless you compile fo noshell (which is the way to go unless speed or memory is a main concern.). But I see that variables work the same way on the CX CAS as they do in Axe. HELPFUL! What is the maximum size integer and most precise number that you can work with on each calculator?I'm getting a lot of feedback from a lot of people!!