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The μWatch, an open-source DIY scientific calculator watch Casio CMD-40 calculator watch with built-in remote control The Casio TC500 touch sensor calculator watch from 1983. It uses a capacitive touch screen for the calculator and function buttons. A calculator watch is a digital watch with a built-in calculator, usually including buttons on ...
Casio graphic calculators use Casio BASIC, a programming language based on BASIC. Variable names are restricted to single letters A-Z, which are shared by all programs including subroutines which are stored as separate programs. This means there are no local variables; they are all global. These variables are also shared by other functions of ...
TI's long-running TI-30 series being one of the most widely used scientific calculators in classrooms. Casio, Canon, and Sharp, produced their graphing calculators, with Casio's FX series (beginning with the Casio FX-1 in 1972 [9]). Casio was the first company to produce a Graphing calculator (Casio fx-7000G).
The Casio CA-53W is a digital calculator watch manufactured by the Japanese electronics company Casio and was introduced in 1988 [1] as a successor to the CA-50. It became famous for its appearance in the American science fiction films Back to the Future Part II (1989) and Back to the Future Part III (1990) [2] and later for appearing in the American TV series Breaking Bad (2008–2013).
CASIO ClassPad Europa de – Official ClassPad 300 Web site for Casio Europe. Universal Casio Forum – Forum for Casio calculators. Casiopeia – English Casio Calculators Forum; ClassPad Yahoo Group – Another related forum. AULA MATEMATICA DIGITAL – website in Spanish. ClassPad Help Series – Tutorial with movies to start learning about ...
A Casio WVA-200 radio controlled data bank (right) Casio C-80 is the first calculator watch to be ever produced. The Databank CD-40 and CD-401 are the first Databank watches, debuting in 1983. It is one of the first digital watches developed in the 1980s that allows the user to store information, following a Pulsar model released in 1982. [1]
Casio V.P.A.M. calculators are scientific calculators made by Casio which use Casio's Visually Perfect Algebraic Method (V.P.A.M.), Natural Display or Natural V.P.A.M. input methods. V.P.A.M. is an infix system for entering mathematical expressions, used by Casio in most of its current scientific calculators.
Casio also makes label printers which can be used with rolls of paper for the Casio BASIC calculators. [2] Programs, variables, data, and other items can be exchanged from one calculator to another (via SB-62 cable) and to and from a computer (via USB cable). All new models of Casio graphing calculators have both ports and include both cables.