![]() partially due to instructors who I'm convinced had a bit of a sadistic streak in requiring us to do repetitive numeric calcs by handheld calculator which were much better suited to PC's already available at that time. I spent a lot of time using and programming with HP41CV many years ago. Droid48 = free program for Androids to emulate HP48 handheld calculators. There is one App that wasn't mentioned in this thread that should be of interest to some engineers particularly the older ones. I'll be fiddling around with my Android to see if there is a way to do that.I'm still a newbiew in handling files on this thing (In meantime, does anyone know if Quicksheet reads normal xls files?). I guess if there's a way to get spreadsheets from PC into smartphone, it would make a lot of sense to use spreadsheets developed on pc and transferred to smartphone, rather than developing them on the smartphone. (I guess you could type in the cell address, but that seems silly to me). The odd thing is that if you enter a formula you find yourself in a keypad entry screen with absolutely no way to "point" to other cells to make them part of your formula. It was clearly not suitable to programming. I tried the Quicksheet that came pre-loaded. Added optional session persistence (console messages, command history, and variables are automatically saved when exiting, and restored when opening) Fixed reboot/system error when trying to copy the last result at a point when Eigenmath was yet to run Version 1.I could not read the link of the 5 ASME Apps even after cutting/pasting. Usage of a specific folder in storage memory for all Eigenmath data files, including the startup script Roots (anything with exponent in the form 1/x) are pretty-printed, along with brackets Greek letter names (alpha, beta, pi, theta, etc.) are shown as actual Greek characters Command history entries doubled from 20 to 40, and maximum command length reduced from 1000 characters to a sensible 500. Support for partial command input (press Shift+EXE) Better text input (for example, the cursor is no longer locked at the right of the screen when editing long commands) Different memory management, basically there are two 128 KB heaps now (the OS one plus another on the stack), each is used for different kinds of data. The current input is no longer cleared when pressing a custom key (and the handler is on), or when loading a script Fixed nroots function (broken since at least Beta 8, possibly since Beta 5 or earlier, had to do with compiler (mis)optimizations so I'm not sure if the older binaries had the problem) Fixed excessive memory usage/possible overflow when recording a script Fixed bug where graph mode would not be completely left when the user exited it Practical takeout: there is now space for more symbols and more complex contents on those symbols, without taking out space for computations with them. Usage instructions: see (lots of screenshots!) Many other bug fixes, optimizations and cosmetic changes. Migrating from previous versions: apart from replacing the g3a, if you have a startup script, you need to create a folder called on the root of the storage memory (that is, out of any folders) and move the startup script there. The folder will also contain two files needed for session persistence. the same thing, but packaged in a nice ZIP with readme, license and startup script: (which doesn't include the startup script or a readme, it's just the g3a) To disable session persistence (doesn't automatically delete the storage memory files), press Shift then Menu and change the "Save Session" setting. ![]() ![]() Or soon, from your favorite calculator archives.Īs I explained before, since this is a stable release, feel free to redistribute it - but, if uploading e.g. to file archives, please redistribute the ZIP and not just the g3a. For transferring from one calc to another, sending just the g3a is fine, of course. If you're still using a really old version, like the first Betas, it will look like a massive upgrade to your calculator. Especially, if you are still using the Beta 1 (which certain sites were still redistributing until recently), it will look like a upgrade from a almost-falling-apart-bike to a solid supersonic jet (make sure to read the usage instructions so you don't miss any feature).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |