I have 3 questions for you Jow Forums:

I have 3 questions for you Jow Forums:
> which calculator app you use?
> how big is it?
> why?

objective calculator
9MB
it has tabs

Attached: calculator.png (2048x1536, 132K)

Other urls found in this thread:

github.com/shagr4th/droid48
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

>none
>zero bytes
>I use a dedicated calculator like a normal person

>dedicated calculator
it's shit.

Patrician post.

Win10 calc
8.77Mb
3 flavors:
Casual
Scientific
Programmer
Date calculation
Built-in converter for 13 value types.
Navigatable history.
Visible memory.

> which calculator app you use?
the one that comes with kde neon

/thread

python
too big
it's useful

>HP Prime emulator
>102 MB
>Neat for school tasks when I forget my calculator

>Date calculation
Data cultivation*

>102 MB
what are you doing user?

> which calculator app you use?
ti48
> how big is it?
about 7 inches
> why?
it does everything

PCalc is kinda comfy

Attached: 85EE9D62-D545-46DE-AD65-621EE6459AD4.png (640x1136, 66K)

We are using CAS calculators in school, for both math and physics classes. Try doing something like that on a default calc app

Attached: Screenshot_20180510-101316.png (1080x1920, 863K)

>casio fx300ms
>4 x 6 in.
>phoneposters fuck off

> paid shit

Attached: IMG_9121.png (640x1136, 52K)

I use Google as my calculator

damn, that's ugly.

HAHA I GET IT BECAUSE KDE NEON HAS NO CALCULATOR XDDDD

Well the real one we use is at least a bit more aesthetic

Attached: downloadfile.jpg (450x450, 21K)

cool, are there any free CAS calculators? octave and scilab etc. aren't so friendly

go49gp

Attached: Screenshot_20180510-113125.png (1080x1920, 267K)

Well this one is called "HP Prime Free"

Attached: Screenshot_20180510-113006.png (1080x1920, 757K)

> which calculator app you use?
Droid48
> how big is it?
1.51 MB
> why?
Because it's a glorious emulation of a glorious calculator, and it's almost free (I didn't find the source code).

Attached: a2558532c1dcab6d2bc2f962493441e646cec2cb.png (720x1280, 67K)

Sorry I just found something (probably the source code).
github.com/shagr4th/droid48

>name
ielm
>size
Don't know size as it's integrated, don't really care, but would expect it to be somewhat large.
>why
Easy to extend by writing functions that can be reused, can integrate with other parts of operating system to generate plots and other shit, can fetch remote datasets and do operations on them easily.

>> which calculator app you use?
Windows 10
>> how big is it?
about 7 inches when erect
>> why?
I think it is genetic

Pic related it's Chad Thimblecock

Attached: 4BFB476C00000578-5704543-image-a-25_1525793125813.jpg (306x502, 23K)

> physical calculator layout in touchscreen
the lack of creativity of some people amazes me

It's an emulator of a real existing device.

>like a normal person
Except I have never seen anyone carry a calculator around.

>doing enough maths that you care about what calculator app to use

> not doing enough maths that you care about what calculator app to use

Attached: 48483948356.png (504x529, 216K)

If it ever gets to that point, I'd just carry around my TI-84, dumb slut.

I just use irb and when I need floating points I type .to_f after every literal

Matlab

Thx for the tip.

HP prime emulator for android - 35 mb

&

HP prime emulator windows - 119 mb


Didn't know they're so big :-)

>4you

Attached: HP_Prime_graphing_calculator_2013.jpg (2048x1536, 492K)

python
preinstalled on ubuntu
command line interface is comfy

>fucking windows vista
lmfao

>the spotlight one
>i have absolutely no idea 2bh
>just press ctrl+space, type in ur equation or whatever, can also press cmd+c to copy the result. it's simple and fast.

Attached: .png (792x542, 39K)

Mathlab's graphing calculator is pretty flexible, has multiple workspaces, can handle ridiculous equations (useful in engineering mechanics)...

But it's got an ad banner. I'm not buying the "pro" version for something I only use when I don't have a real calculator handy.

Attached: Screenshot_20180510-115610.png (1440x2560, 459K)

kcalc
2,476.0 kB on AMD64
it came with kubuntu.

Attached: kcalc.png (535x461, 29K)

simple calculator
3M
has a widget

Why are you contradicting yourself?

Do svidaniya.

I have a ti nspire cx with the cas software loaded onto it but the sad thing is using a phone calculator is so much quicker and easier Ncalc is pretty decent. Used to have an iOS exclusive one on mg iPhone 5 but can't remember what it was called, it was by far the best mobile calculator I've ever used though

python

Attached: screenshot.png (464x270, 10K)

HP prime was a regretful purchase.

Nah, but CAS is the future. Majority of my professors agree that when CAS becomes a standard we won't need to remember how to do hard integrations. All the guys in the math department agree it's only a matter of time till all students go out to buy a CAS calculator.

mate-calc, it came with the Xubuntu desktop (they started to introduce mate application in their last version of xubuntu, which is the first step before actually switching to mate and killing Xfce for real).

i installed plasma desktop but still use this little calc application, it just works, whatever...

Attached: Screenshot 2018-05-10 18:19:45.png (1920x1080, 1.07M)

Interactive R
55MB
Programmable and isn't shit, alternatively SpeedCrunch

There are other modes like "advanced", "financial", or "programming", which I don't use.

Attached: Screenshot 2018-05-10 18:24:50.png (1886x581, 756K)