I love this beauty
or same looking HP 17BII of it but use mostly Casio calculators:
a few Casio fx-CG20
and
Casio fx-85GT Plus ones. Also got
a Casio fx-991EX (for Classwiz/QR testing) and
a Casio fx-3650PII as well as
a TI-83 Premium CE (French version of TI-84+CE)
Spenceboy98 wrote:
Also, here's what the internals of the patent pending calc look like compared to a normal one if you're interested (the patent pending one is on the right):
That's pretty cool.
Do you know the factory/datestamps/revision for those? (It's the few chars at the right of the serial number, on the back of the calculator).
On the left, I seem to recognize SG84A(-B?), which would correspond to a 84+SE, possibly from 2013 (The TI-83+.fr USB has the same) although revision Q 84+ have "SG84A" already.
The right is an earlier 84+, as recognized by the "GECKO" codename, until ≈ 2011.
(if you could remove the sticker to reveal the full name, that's be nice - it's probably "GECKO-TG2837/2867-ST-2442", as seen on Datamath etc.)
Adriweb wrote:
That's pretty cool.
Do you know the factory/datestamps/revision for those? (It's the few chars at the right of the serial number, on the back of the calculator).
On the left, I seem to recognize SG84A(-B?), which would correspond to a 84+SE, possibly from 2013 (The TI-83+.fr USB has the same) although revision Q 84+ have "SG84A" already.
The right is an earlier 84+, as recognized by the "GECKO" codename, until ≈ 2011.
(if you could remove the sticker to reveal the full name, that's be nice - it's probably "GECKO-TG2837/2867-ST-2442", as seen on Datamath etc.)
The one on the left is "K-0512W" and the one on the right is "P-0613R"
I can confirm that it is a B on the end after that backslash for the left one.
And here is the full name for the one on the right:
Instead of 2442 though, it's 2443.
Aha, thanks
I got my dates mixed up a bit apparently, which is somewhat easy since there are multiple factories
This is my calculator collection
Graphing: TI-84+SE, Casio fx-9750GII SH4-A upgraded to fx-9860GII, fx-9750G, HP Prime
Programmable: Casio: PB-100, fx-4800P, fx-3650PII
Scientific: Casio: fx-31, fx-82, fx-82SX, fx-991 SPX, fx-82 ES Plus (my first calc)
I have a TI-84+ CE. Someday, I hope to get a TI-Nspire.
I have a TI-84+ and am quite happy with it. I am not looking for another calculator in the near future, but at some point a CE or a CSE would be nice to have. I used to have several tiny, cheap, four-function calculators but I lost them all over the course of a few months.
I got this today!! Very pleased with how it performs, did some comparisons with my CSE and it is indeed substantially faster (And by this of course I mean it isn't a pain to use
) downloaded a handfull of cool things I'd been wanting to try out for a while like Cesium, Ice, some C games, etc. Now to start learning C
Congrats on this nice white calculator
(edited)
I've gotten rid of the scientific/four-function calculators simply because I had no use for them.
Left to right: TI-84 Plus CE, TI-83 Plus, CASIO fx-9750 GII, TI-73 Explorer
Murdered for project: TI-84 Plus SE
Hi. I'd like to program ADDIN for casio classpad. Can you give me an advice? Thanks
Search for superh based fx calculators by Simon (chm file) - it gives some info and code for classpad - i never tried or looked at it properly because I don't have any classpads, they seem to be banned from exams here
Thanks. I will try as soon as possible. Thanks again,
Fabio
Hi. Can you give me a CP330 source code to study? I'd like to learn how addins work. There are not so many Casio Classpad programmers. Thanks in advance,
Fabio
How do you want to program? In Casio Basic, C, or SuperH ASM
I don't know if its possible to program an addin in Casio Basic, but it is possible to execute the program from the homescreen.
If you want to program in casio basic, you are lucky, it is very easy, and there are tutorials.
In C, you will need a classpad SDK (text editor and super h compiler), it is difficult to find tutorials. Some time ago, I tried to program an addin for my upgraded fx-9750GII and you need 2 things:
-Knowledge about C.
-Bibliography for using the classpad libraries, and maybe for other standard libraries in the Hitachi compiler.
In ASM I don't have any idea.
Regards
frankmar98 wrote:
I don't know if its possible to program an addin in Casio Basic, but it is possible to execute the program from the homescreen
I don't use casio basic - do you mean normal add-ins can be executed from homescreen, or do you mean even programs in basic can be executed from homescreen? Or some prgm2 add-in way or combining c add in with casio basic?
This shall be moved to casio forum actually.
I mean that casio-basic programs can be executed from the homescreen.
My actual graphing calculator collection (my HP Prime and TI-84+SE are in my mother's house):
TI 84
TI 84+CE (weapon of choice)
TI 83
TI 83 (Broken)
Yeah. My collection is rather small, but I am proud of it nonetheless, as some of the calculators I have had for almost a decade! Looking at some of your guys', I noticed that there is a lot of CAISO calculators around. Are there some benefits to them, or is it just a coincidence?
Here's my collection in order of acquisition (left to right):
TI-83+ Silver Edition
TI-83+
TI-89 Titanium
TI Keyboard
TI-84+ Silver Edition
TI-84+
TI-92
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