Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
I belive handheld calculators will stay until technology is so interconnected that the teacher or school can disable stuff on your personal devices with no workarounds. Also I like them more. The physical buttons and dedicated device are much better than any keyboard and mouse or touchscreen.
Handheld calculators with large cases : r/calculators. From the basics to indefinite integrals and gameboy emulators. A community for collectors, fans, and users of all types of calculators. The title pretty much says it all, but I'll elaborate. I'm looking for a cheap handheld calculator with a high-res screen (something like a Casio FX9860 G2 ...
Of all the Calculus calculators, the HP prime probably has enough memory to run indefinite integrals with the best chance of completion under worst case scenario, but obviously that's not assured. The Casio cg50 is probably the next best in terms of capable hardware, so khicasio seems like a good choice.
Hewlet Packard Hp 15C Program [Original Version.Made in USA ] Advanced Scientific Calculator (Amazon) Also 1 or 2 Casio maybe... TrippyTrolls. • 24 days ago. Not that I know of, especially NCEES approved calculators. There are some that are not made in China but none made here. true.
I can't use my phone as a calculator in class, but every calculator I'm familiar with looks like crap compared to Desmos Scientific. Please recommend if you know of one that works/looks the same. the Casio classpad 2 has a big screen. Hi, do any of you know what calculator I could buy with an input / display that is similar to Desmos Scientific ...
The TI-84 is the best calculator if you need graphing, because it's the easiest to learn to work with. It's the standard in alot of physics classes and I teach physics. Phones/computers are not allowed during tests or exams so they *must* learn to use a hand-held. I teach at an IB school.
Never, seen one of these. Any reason they don't exist. Pretty frequently, I have to switch from using my TI-Nspire™ CX II CAS graphing calculator to…
Exactly. The TI-nspire CX CAS is the mac daddy TI calculator and literally is like handheld matlab. If you are proficient in programming, you can write entire libraries of functions and programs with documentation included with them.
The 1 dollar calculator from the store. If your requirements are simply small, durable, and trig, then the Casio fx-260 Solar. It never needs batteries, and you can get them for under $10. I love my TI-36X Pro. It is solar+battery backup for memory retention and low-light operation.
A great segue into my most powerful calculator: Uconsole cyberdeck with Pi 4 lite running Mathematica. And I also agree that the HP 42 CX "computer" extended complexity and programming flexibility to its humanly-reasonable limits. I haven't tapped the edges of my DM42's capabilities yet.