- scientific calculator



scientific calculator

This Day in History

Today's Birthday

Quotation of the Day

A modern scientific calculator
A modern basic calculator

A calculator is a device for performing calculations. Although modern calculators often incorporate a general purpose computer, the device as a whole is designed for ease of use to perform specific operations, rather than for flexibility. Also, modern calculators are more portable than most computers, though some PDAs are comparable in size to handheld calculators.

Contents

  • 1 Overview
  • 2 Electronic calculators
    • 2.1 A basic calculator
    • 2.2 Advanced electronic calculators
  • 3 Use in education
  • 4 Other concerns on usage
  • 5 Calculators vs. computing
  • 6 Abbreviations found on a calculator
  • 7 History
    • 7.1 Origin: The Abacus
    • 7.2 The 17th century
    • 7.3 The 19th century
    • 7.4 1930s to 1960s
    • 7.5 1970s to mid-1980s
    • 7.6 Mid-1980s to present
  • 8 Trivia
  • 9 See also
  • 10 Patents
  • 11 External links

Overview

In the past, mechanical clerical aids such as abacuses, comptometers, Napier's bones, books of mathematical tables, slide rules, or adding machines were used for numeric work. The word "calculator" denoted a person who did such work for a living using such aids as well as pen and paper. This semi-manual process of calculation was tedious and error-prone.

Modern calculators are electrically powered and come in countless shapes and sizes varying from cheap, give-away, credit-card sized models to more sturdy adding machine-like models with built-in printers.

Electronic calculators

In the past, some calculators were as large as today's computers. The first mechanical calculators were mechanical desktop devices, which were soon replaced by electromechanical desktop calculators, and then by electronic devices using first thermionic valves, then transistors, then hard-wired integrated circuit logic. Today, most calculators are handheld microelectronic devices.

A basic calculator

The complexity of calculators varies with the intended purpose. A simple modern calculator might consist of the following parts:

  • A power source, such as a battery or a solar panel
  • A display, usually made from LED lights or liquid crystal (LCD), capable of showing a number of digits (typically 8 or 10)
  • Electronic circuitry
  • A keypad containing:
    • The ten digits, 0 through 9
    • The decimal point
    • The equals sign, to prompt for the answer
    • The four arithmetic functions (namely, addition, subtraction, multiplication and division)
    • A Cancel button, to clear the current calculation
    • On and off buttons
    • Other basic functions, such as square root and percentage (%).
  • More advanced models may have a single-number memory, which can be recalled where necessary.

Since the late-1980s, simple calculators have been installed in other small devices, such as mobile phones, pagers or wrist watches.

Advanced electronic calculators

A screenshot of a 3D wire frame graph on a TI-89 calculator.

More complex scientific calculators support trigonometric, statistical and other mathematical functions. The most advanced modern calculators can display graphics, and include features of computer algebra systems. They are also programmable; calculator applications include algebraic equation solvers, financial models and even games. Most calculators of this type can print numbers up to ten digits or decimal places in full on the screen. Scientific notation is used to notate numbers up to 9.999999999*1099. If a larger number or a mathematical expression yielding a larger number than this is entered (a common example comes from typing "100!", read as "100 factorial") then the calculator will simply display "error". It is very difficult to store the memory necessary to calculate larger numbers in so small an instrument.

"Error" is also displayed if a function or an operation is undefined mathematically; for example, division by zero or even roots of negative numbers (most scientific calculators do not allow complex numbers, though a few expensive ones have a special function for working with them). Some, but not most, calculators do distinguish between these two types of "error", though when they do, it is not easy for the user to understand because they are usually given as "error 1" or "error 2".

Only a few companies develop and make modern professional engineering and finance calculators: The most well-known are Casio, Sharp, Hewlett-Packard (HP) and Texas Instruments (TI). Such calculators are good examples of embedded systems.

Use in education

A student using a calculator.

In most developed countries, students use calculators for schoolwork. There was some initial resistance to the idea out of fear that basic arithmetic skills would suffer. There remains disagreement about the importance of the ability to perform calculations by hand or "in the head", with some curricula restricting calculator use until a certain level of proficiency has been obtained, while others concentrate more on teaching estimation techniques and problem-solving.

There are other concerns - for example, that a pupil could use the calculator in the wrong fashion but believe the answer because that was the result given by the calculator. Teachers try to combat this by encouraging the student to make an estimate of the result manually and ensuring it roughly agrees with the calculated result. Also, it is possible for a child to type in −1 × −1 and obtain the correct answer '1' without realizing the principle involved. In this sense, the calculator becomes a crutch rather than a learning tool, and it can slow down students in exam conditions as they check even the most trivial result on a calculator.

Other concerns on usage

Errors are not restricted to school pupils. Any user could carelessly rely on the calculator's output without double-checking the magnitude of the result - i.e., where the decimal point is positioned. This problem was all but nonexistent in the era of slide rules and pencil-and-paper calculations, when the task of establishing the magnitudes of results had to be done by the user.

Most everyday calculators are not completely accurate. There is a level of detail beyond which they truncate the number in memory, a symptom called arithmetic underflow. This essentially reduces the accuracy of the calculation, and this error can accumulate (for example, if the number is multiplied by itself, the error doubles). It is therefore possible for the calculator to show 51.999999 on the display when the accurate result is, in fact, 52. Also, most everyday calculators do not follow the proper order of operations in mathematics; therefore, if someone were to type (on an average calculator) "2+4×2", they may get 12 (i.e., the answer to "(2+4)×2"), instead of 10, the correct answer (i.e., the answer to "2+(4×2)").

Some fractions such as ⅔ are awkward to display on a calculator display as they are usually rounded to 0.66666667. Also, some fractions such as 0.14285714... can be difficult to recognize in decimal form - in fact, this number is 1/7. Some of the more advanced scientific calculators are able to work in vulgar fractions, although the operation in practice is somewhat awkward.

Basic calculator

Calculators vs. computing

A fundamental difference between a calculator and most computers is that calculators typically operate in Binary-coded decimal rather than binary as do computers.

The market for calculators is extremely price-sensitive; typically the user cares primarily about what is the least expensive model having a specific feature set, but does not care much about speed (since speed is primarily constrained by how fast the user can press the buttons). Thus designers of calculators strive to minimize the number of logic elements on the chip, not the number of clock cycles needed to do a computation.

For instance, instead of a hardware multiplier, a calculator might implement floating point mathematics with code in ROM, and compute trigonometric functions with the CORDIC algorithm because CORDIC does not require floating-point. For similar reasons, bit-serial logic designs are more common in calculators whereas bit-parallel designs dominate general-purpose computers: a bit-serial design minimizes the chip complexity but takes many more clock cycles.

Personal computers and personal digital assistants can perform general calculations in a variety of ways:

  • Many programs exist for performing calculations, from simple calculator emulators, to scientific calculators such as Microsoft Calculator, to advanced spreadsheet programs such as Excel or OpenOffice.org Calc.
  • Computer algebra programs such as Mathematica, Maple or Matlab can handle advanced calculations.
  • Client-side scripting can be used for calculations, e.g. by entering "javascript:alert(calculation written in Javascript)" in a web browser's address bar (as opposed to "http://website name"). Such calculations can be embedded in a separate Javascript or HTML file as well.
  • Online calculators such as the calculator feature of the Google search engine can perform calculations server-side.

Abbreviations found on a calculator

A   alpha mode

ALG   algebraic mode

AMRT   amortization

APD   automatic power down (Texas Instruments--turns off calculator after 5 minutes)

BEVN   break-even calculation

BIN   binary

C   clear

CE   clear entry

CMPD   compound interest

CNVR   interest-rate conversion

D   date (displays the current date)

DEG   degree

DMS   degrees, minutes, and seconds (for coordinates)

DRG   degrees, radians, and grads

E   error

ENG   engineering notation

EXC   exchanges display for memory value

EXP   exponent

FLO   floating (standard) notation

GPM   Gross profit margin (calculates the selling price and profit or loss amount on an item)

GT   grand total

HEX   hexadecimal (a sixteen-digit system using 0 through 9 as well as A through F)

HYP   hyperbolic function

IC   item count mode (counts the number of times the addition key has been pressed)

LOG   logarithm

LS   left shift

M-   remove from memory

M+   add to memory

MC   memory cancel

MDY   month-day-year

MR   memory recall

MRC   memory recall

MS   memory store

MU   multiple use

OCT   octal (A number system using the base of eight [a byte is composed of eight bits])

P   print mode

RS   right shift

S   shift

SMPL   simple interest

STO   store (in memory)

STR   store (in memory)

TVM   time value of money

History

Origin: The Abacus

Chinese abacus.
Main article: Abacus

The first calculators were abacuses, and were often constructed as a wooden frame with beads sliding on wires. Abacuses were in use centuries before the adoption of the written Arabic numerals system and are still widely used by merchants and clerks in China and elsewhere.

The 17th century

Wilhelm Schickard built the first automatic calculator called the "Calculating Clock" in 1623. Some 20 years later, in 1643, French philosopher Blaise Pascal invented the calculation device later known as the Pascaline, which was used for taxes in France until 1799. The German philosopher G.W.v.Leibniz also produced a calculating machine.

The 19th century

Charles Babbage developed the concept further, leading the way to programmable computers, but the machine he built was too heavy to be operable.

1930s to 1960s

Mechanical calculator from 1914

From the 1930s through the 1960s, mechanical calculators dominated the desktop computing market (see History of computing hardware). Major suppliers included Friden, Monroe, and SCM/Marchant. These devices were motor-driven and had multiple columns of keys for each digit. Addition and subtraction were performed in a single operation, as on a conventional adding machine, but multiplication and division were accomplished by repeated mechanical additions and subtractions. Handheld mechanical calculators such as the 1948 Curta continued to be used until they were displaced by electronic calculators in the 1970s.

In 1954, IBM demonstrated a large all-transistor calculator and, in 1957, they released the first commercial all-transistor calculator (the IBM 608). In early 1961, the world's first all-electronic desktop calculator, the Bell Punch/Sumlock Comptometer ANITA (A New Inspiration To Arithmetic) Mk.VII was released. This British designed-and-built machine used vacuum tubes in its circuits and cold-cathode nixie tubes for its display. This model was somewhat error-prone, and was replaced in September 1961 with the much more successful Mark VIII version. It was superseded technologically in June 1963, by the Friden EC-130, which had an all-transistor design, 13-digit capacity on a 5-inch CRT, and introduced reverse Polish notation (RPN) to the calculator market for a price of $2200, which was about triple the cost of an electromechanical calculator of the time. In 1964 Sharp introduced the CS-10A, also an all-transistor desktop calculator, which weighed 25 kg (55 lb) and cost 500,000 yen (~US$2500).

Facit NTK (1954)
Triumphator CRN1 (1958)
Walther WSR160 (1960)
Olivetti Divisumma 24 (1964)

1970s to mid-1980s

In the early 1970s, the Monroe EPIC programmable calculator came on the market. A large desk-top unit, with an attached floor-standing logic tower, it was capable of being programmed to perform many computer-like functions. However, the only branch instruction was an implied unconditional branch (GOTO) at the end of the operation stack, returning the program to its starting instruction. Thus, it was not possible to include any conditional branch (IF-THEN-ELSE) logic. During this era, the absence of the conditional branch was sometimes used to distinguish a programmable calculator from a computer.

The first hand-held calculator, introduced in January, 1971, was the Sharp EL-8, also marketed as the Facit 1111. It weighed about one pound, had a vacuum fluorescent display, rechargeable NiCad batteries, and initially sold for $395. The first American-made pocket-sized calculator, the Bowmar 901B (popularly referred to as The Bowmar Brain), measuring 5.2×3.0×1.5 in (131×77×37 mm), came out in the fall of 1971, with four functions and an eight-digit red LED display, for $240, while in August 1972 the four-function Sinclair Executive became the first slimline pocket calculator measuring 5.4×2.2×0.35 in (138×56×9 mm) and weighing 2.5 oz (70g). It retailed for around $150 (GB£79). By the end of the decade, similar calculators were priced less than $10 (GB£5).

The CASIO CM-602 Mini Electronic Calculator provided basic functions in the 1970's

The first pocket calculator with scientific functions that could replace a slide rule was 1972's $395, HP-35 from Hewlett Packard (HP). Along with all later HP engineering calculators, it used reverse Polish notation (RPN), also called postfix notation. A calculation like "8 plus 5" is, using RPN, performed by pressing "8", "Enter↑", "5", and "+"; instead of the algebraic infix notation: "8", "+", "5", "=").

In 1973, Texas Instruments (TI) introduced the SR-10, (SR signifying slide rule) an algebraic entry pocket calculator, which was later followed by the SR-11 and eventually the TI-30.

The first programmable pocket calculator was the HP-65, in 1974; it had a capacity of 100 instructions, and could store and retrieve programs with a built-in magnetic card reader. A year later the HP-25C introduced continuous memory, i.e. programs and data were retained in CMOS memory during power-off. In 1979, HP released the first alphanumeric, programmable, expandable calculator, the HP-41C. It could be expanded with RAM (memory) and ROM (software) modules, as well as peripherals like bar code readers, microcassette and floppy disk drives, paper-roll thermal printers, and miscellaneous communication interfaces (RS-232, HP-IL, HP-IB).

Mid-1980s to present

The first calculator capable of symbolic computation was the HP-28, released in 1987. It was able to, for example, solve quadratic equations symbolically. The first graphing calculator was the Casio fx7000G released in 1985.

A TI-89 graphing calculator from Texas Instruments.

The two leading manufacturers, HP and TI, released increasingly feature-laden calculators during the 1980s and 1990s. At the turn of the millennium, the line between a graphing calculator and a PDA/handheld computer was not always clear, as some very advanced calculators such as the TI-89 and HP-49G could differentiate and integrate functions, run word processing and PIM software, and connect by wire or IR to other calculators/computers.

In March 2002, HP announced that the company would no longer produce calculators, which was hard to fathom for some fans of the company's products; the HP-48 range in particular had an extremely loyal customer base. HP restarted their production of calculators in late 2003. The new models, however, reportedly didn't have the mechanical quality and sober design of HP's earlier calculators for which HP calculators were once famous (instead featuring the more "youthful" look and feel of contemporary competing designs from TI). In the early days of the calculator, HP sales reps were famous for starting demonstrations by slamming the calculator on the floor. But today calculators are regarded as cheap, disposable gadgets.

The HP 12c financial calculator is still produced. It was introduced in 1981 and is still being made with few changes. The HP 12c featured the reverse Polish notation mode of data entry. In 2003 several new models were released, including an improved version of the HP 12c, the "HP 12c platinum edition" which added more memory, more built-in functions, and the addition of the algebraic mode of data entry.

Trivia

  • The word "calculator" is occasionally used as a pejorative term to describe an inadequately capable general-purpose microcomputer. The synonym of this meaning is "bitty box", as discussed in the Jargon File.
  • Some words and simple phrases can be written using an ordinary seven-segment display calculator; this involves entering certain numbers and then viewing the resulting words by turning the calculator display upside-down. For example, entering 0.7734 and then turning the display upside-down will form the word 'hello'. See List of calculator words.

See also

Online calculators

  • Online calculators

General interest:

  • Category:Calculators
  • Category:Programmable calculators
  • History of computing hardware
  • Beghilos - (Spelling by reading displayed characters upside-down.)

Mechanical calculators:

  • Abacus
  • Napier's bones
  • Comptometer
  • Mercedes (calculator)
  • Adding machine
  • Addiator
  • Curta

Electronic calculators:

  • List of calculators
  • Machinist calculator
  • Programmable calculators

Patents

  • U.S. Patent 2668661 – Complex computer – G. R. Stibitz, Bell Laboratories, 1954 (filed 1941, refiled 1944), electromechanical (relay) device that could calculate complex numbers, record, and print results by teletype
  • U.S. Patent 3819921 – Miniature electronic calculator – J. S. Kilby, Texas Instruments, 1974 (originally filed 1967), handheld (3 lb, 1.4 kg) battery operated electronic device with thermal printer
  • U.S. Patent 5623433 – Extended Numerical Keyboard with Structured Data-Entry Capability – J. H. Redin, 1997 (originally filed 1996), Usage of Verbal Numerals as a way to enter a number.
  • U.S. Patent 4001566 – Floating Point Calculator With RAM Shift Register - 1977 (originally filed GB Mar 1971, US Jul 1971), very early single chip calculator claim.

External links

current models

  • Texas Instruments Calculators
  • TICALCS Support, Programs, Tutorials, More
  • Universal Casio Network – A Casio calculator forum with downloads
  • HP Calculator Wiki
  • International Casio Calculator Community
  • Machinist Calculator

history

  • On TI's US Patent No. 3819921 – From TI's own website
  • 30th Anniversary of the Calculator – From Sharp's web presentation of its history; including a picture of the CS-10A desktop calculator
  • The Old Calculator Web Museum
  • Calculator Museum
  • Museum of Soviet Calculators
  • Soviet Calculators Collection
  • Vintage Calculators
  • The Museum of HP Calculators (slide rules/mech. section)
  • MyCalcDB : 70's and 80's calculators database
  • Pico and General Instrument's Single Chip Calculator processor

Pen based calculator

  • [1] gives a novel pen-based calculator that will work on whiteboards or tablets.

Virtual calculators

  • 12Calc.com – Universal programmable calculator covering mathematichs, units of measure and realtime currency.
  • WebCalc
  • Online Calculators and Converters
  • Online Calculator Software
  • Online deep space SETI range calculator
  • JavaScript Scientific Calculator – Scientific notation, hex, octal, decimal, binary, and mathematical functions; requires JavaScript (from ostermiller.org)
  • GraphCalc – an Open Source graphing calculator program
  • Console Calculator – powerful scientific calculator program
  • Online math tool - powerful online mathematic calculator.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Category:Calculators
Search Term: "Calculator"

scientific calculator news and scientific calculator articles

Here's our top rated scientific calculator links for the day:

Ancient scientific tool for sale 

BBC News - Feb 14 1:25 PM
A 14th Century scientific tool found in Kent is given an auction guide price of between £60,000 and £100,000.
Save

GREAT MODEL SHOWS ENGINEERS HOW TO PREPARE FOR FLOODS 
Science News - Feb 16 1:27 PM
High on the Vicksburg bluffs, overlooking the great, muddy inland sea that normally is the Mississippi River, stands the scientific laboratory that provides the nation's best information on flood control and prevention.
Save

NiceCalc2 (Symbian v9 UIQ3) 
All About Symbian - Feb 14 10:07 AM
NiceCalc2 - genuine scientific calculator for Symbian. Avoid replicas! Now Supports UIQ3! NiceCalc2 - genuine scientific calculator for Symbian. Avoid replicas!
Save

South East news: Week in Review 
BBC News - Feb 17 2:25 AM
BBC News looks back at some of the stories making the headlines in the South East over the past week.
Save

Projects Probe Mysteries of Science 
The Signal - Feb 17 1:52 AM
How exactly does chlorine damage hair? This question is one many swimmers would like to answer in order to understand how to protect their locks from harsh chemicals in which they are submerged.
Save

Quest for knowledge drives local students 
Montana Standard - Feb 14 11:25 PM
ENNIS Young scientists had reason to smile at this years 14th Annual Ennis Schools Science Fair. With nearly $1,700 in cash and prizes up for grabs, budding scientists had an extra incentive to impress the judges with their scientific knowledge and experimentation.
Save

Creek doubles as a lab at school Pinckney High students test the waters 
The Ann Arbor News - Feb 16 8:01 AM
One of the benefits of going to a rural high school is the likelihood that a natural science lab will be located right across the parking lot.
Save

Weight-loss industry's latest hope 
Baltimore Sun - Feb 16 12:41 AM
Africa's poor may profit from appetite-suppressing plant called hoodia -- if they can get in on game When fully grown, the plant resembles something from The Day of the Triffids or some other science-fiction creation: a squat succulent with thick, spiky arms, purple fleshy petals and seedpods like rhino horns.
Save

Duncan, can I ever apologise enough? 
Times Online Sunday - Feb 14 4:16 PM
Where am I?
Save

Global Cool to Host Worldwide Concert Series to Combat Global Warming 
Gay Wired - Feb 13 12:13 AM
Global warming just suddenly got very cool. Enlisting the resources of science and entertainment to launch a global communications effort aimed at engaging billions of individuals to defeat global warming, the newly launched movement Global Cool recently held simultaneous press briefings in London and Los Angeles to introduce its international coalition of scientific and entertainment leaders, ...
Save

Last Update: 2007-02-17 20:47:44

Thank you for reading the scientific calculator page - online scientific calculator. 

1. scientific calculater
2. scientific calulator

As an extra bonus here are the top searched terms over the past month for scientific calculator. Now you can see what everyone else is searching for in regards to scientific calculator.

1. online scientific calculator
2. scientific calculator
3. scientific calculators
4. scientific calculators scientific calculators
5. sharp scientific calculators sharp scientific calculators
6. free online scientific calculator
7. scientific graphing calculators
8. hp 48g plus scientific calculator
9. sharp scientific calculators
10. scientific notation calculator
11. how to use a scientific calculator
12. scientific calculator instructions
13. tutorial for using scientific calculator
14. casio scientific calculator
15. free scientific calculator
16. learning to use a scientific calculator
17. scientific calculator online
18. casio scientific calculator watch
19. scientific calculator texas instrument t84+ silver edition
20. durabrand 828 graphing scientific calculator manual
21. free online scientific calculator beta version
22. pocket pc scientific calculator
23. casino and texas instruments scientific calculators
24. online scientific calculators
25. a scientific calculator
26. fractional scientific calculators
27. how to teach the use of scientific calculators
28. how to teach using a scientific calculator
29. scientific calculator walmart
30. scientific calculators on screen
31. sliderule scientific calculator software
32. functions of a scientific calculator
33. graphing scientific calculators
34. handheld scientific calculators with flourescent displays
35. hp 15c scientific calculator
36. programable scientific calculators
37. scientific calculator for windows sidebar
38. sharp scientific calculator
39. super fx series casio scientific calculator
40. texas instruments ti-30xiib scientific calculator
41. where can i find cheap scientific calculator
42. windows mobile scientific calculator free
43. download a scientific calculator
44. free online scientific calculator for pocket pc
45. free scientific calculator + pocket pc
46. freeware calculators scientific
47. how to use scientific calculators
48. hp 33 scientific calculator
49. hp 33s scientific calculator
50. java scientific calculator
51. order scientific calculator watches
52. programmable scientific calculator for rf engineering
53. scientific calculator download
54. scientific calculator for pocket pc
55. scientific calculators teaching ppts
56. scientific math calculator
57. texas instruments ti30xa scientific calculator
58. ti-30x11s scientific calculator
59. windows mole free scientific calculator
60. a free online useable scientific calculator
61. activities for the classroom fx - 300 scientific calculator
62. best scientific calculator
63. buy scientific calculator watches
64. casio and texas instruments scientific calculators
65. casio scientific calculators
66. casio? fx-300es scientific calculator
67. code of scientific calculator
68. download scientific calculator
69. how to use a texas instruments scientific calculator
70. how to use scientific calculator
71. hp 33s programmable scientific calculator
72. instructions to using scientific calculator
73. making a scientific calculator gui in matlab
74. microsoft scientific calculator
75. palm lifedrive scientific calculator free software
76. palm scientific calculator
77. pocket scientific calculator
78. report on scientific calculator
79. scientific calculator comparison reviews
80. scientific calculator download pda
81. scientific calculator freeware
82. scientific calculator interface
83. scientific calculator keys
84. scientific calculators ppts
85. scientific calculators uk
86. scipod large display scientific calculator
87. smallest scientific calculator
88. teacher's favorite scientific calculator
89. teachers prefered scientific calculators
90. texas instruments ti30xa scientific calculator user group
91. ti scientific calculator
92. ti-35x scientific calculator
93. ti-83 scientific calculator
94. windows mobile scientific calculator
95. 828 graphing scientific calculator
96. best scientific calculator for children
97. best scientific graphing calculator for middle school
98. casino vs texas instruments scientific calculators
99. casio fx250hc basic scientific calculator
100. compare texas instrument scientific calculators 34ii and 30x
101. cool math scientific calculator
102. desktop scientific calculators
103. download a free scientific calculator
104. free scientific calculator program
105. freeware pocket pc scientific calculator
106. graphing systems of equations on a scientific calculator
107. hewlett packard scientific calculator
108. hewlett packard scientific calculators
109. how show decimal places on scientific calculators
110. how to buy a scientific calculator
111. hp 97 scientific calculator
112. internet scientific calculator
113. palm scientific calculator freeware
114. pda free scientific calculator software
115. programmable scientific calculator hp20s
116. project report on scientific calculator
117. radio shack ec-4033 scientific calculator
118. scientific algebraic calculators
119. scientific calculator download dell pda
120. scientific calculator for palm tx
121. scientific calculator for pda freeware
122. scientific calculator for pocket pc freeware
123. scientific calculator for qt, lbs, gms, oz
124. scientific calculator functions
125. scientific calculator metal case
126. scientific calculator on line
127. scientific calculator palm download binary
128. scientific calculator ppts
129. scientific calculator project using visual basic code
130. scientific calculator software
131. scientific graphing calculator
132. scientific notation converter calculator
133. scientific numbers and calculator
134. sharp el-556g scientific calculator manual
135. show all decimal places on a scientific calculator
136. siena catholic academy scientific calculator
137. t1-84 scientific calculator
138. talking scientific calculator
139. teacher prefered scientific calculator
140. texas instruments scientific calculator
141. ti 36x scientific calculator operation instructions
142. ti scientific calculators 36x
143. victor 930-2 scientific calculator user manuals
144. virtual scientific calculator
145. what do the symbols mean on a scientific calculator