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-   -   did you get experience from programming on a calculator? (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=41985)

gondorf 16-01-2006 15:40

did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
my best programming is on a calculator as i am a calculator fanatic.

i own 6

Astronouth7303 16-01-2006 16:28

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
[reminise]What I have made on my trusty 83+...[/reminise]

A calculator can be a good platform for programming. But frankly, TI-BASIC is lame, and I haven't seen a powerful, high-level language for it. (ASM or BASIC.)

Rickertsen2 16-01-2006 16:56

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
well if you mean programming my 89 in assembly then yes. TI-Basic no.

iamthetallpaul 16-01-2006 18:42

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
Only thing I've ever done on a calculator was a program to do basic operations in different bases

scitobor 617 16-01-2006 19:41

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
I programmed my Casio 9500+ all the time before I learned JavaScript and then C. I always got my best work done during Geometry class when I zoned-out. If my teacher had noticed me I'm not sure what she would done, but I think she would not have been as mad if I explained that I was progamming games rather than playing them.

gondorf 16-01-2006 19:53

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
3 83 pluses,2 83's, and an 82

my geometry teacher actually gave me an excuse for my class an home work because of my calc programming. still working on it.

as for what type. i program in basic but prefer to use assembly.

JBotAlan 16-01-2006 19:56

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
Last year I wrote some very *lame* games for the TI-84, then swapped them during World Geography (the most pointless class in the whole school) with my little link cable...gosh I'm a nerd!

I haven't had much time or interest lately, though. It would be interesting to write an assembler program for the TI-84 to act as a dashboard, but I just know I'd screw up my calc trying...not to mention I'm too lazy.

I don't really program the thing now. No need to. Oh well...

JBotAlan

Greg Marra 16-01-2006 19:58

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
The quadratic equation solver I wrote in 8th grade is still serving me well.

Ryan M. 16-01-2006 19:59

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
I've of course done the classic lame games, have a few actually sweet games, and then there's always the amazing physics ones which take 8 variables (on a nice, easy to use menu where you can move up and down in the list to change values, just like the equation solver), ask a few questions to select the correct equation, and finally solves the problem, displaying the answer along with the original input values and the rearranged equation it used to solve it.

gondorf 16-01-2006 20:01

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JBotAlan
Last year I wrote some very *lame* games for the TI-84, then swapped them during World Geography (the most pointless class in the whole school) with my little link cable...gosh I'm a nerd!

I haven't had much time or interest lately, though. It would be interesting to write an assembler program for the TI-84 to act as a dashboard, but I just know I'd screw up my calc trying...not to mention I'm too lazy.

I don't really program the thing now. No need to. Oh well...

JBotAlan

oh a nerd you are probably not. at least in the lame sense. my calc programs get me girlfriends.

as for not needing to program i was trying this little program to hook into the robot. imagine that.

if you are a nerd then i am the nerd of the entire universe because i spend an average of 15 hours a day in front of my calc.

gondorf 16-01-2006 20:02

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ryan M.
I've of course done the classic lame games, have a few actually sweet games, and then there's always the amazing physics ones which take 8 variables (on a nice, easy to use menu where you can move up and down in the list to change values, just like the equation solver), ask a few questions to select the correct equation, and finally solves the problem, displaying the answer along with the original input values and the rearranged equation it used to solve it.

oooh where did you get that solver? i want it on my calc so i can use it in physics myself

JBotAlan 16-01-2006 20:12

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by gondorf
oh a nerd you are probably not. at least in the lame sense. my calc programs get me girlfriends.

as for not needing to program i was trying this little program to hook into the robot. imagine that.

if you are a nerd then i am the nerd of the entire universe because i spend an average of 15 hours a day in front of my calc.

Girlfriends, eh? Where did you say you live? Just kidding... :yikes:

I seriously wonder if the TI-84 can go up to 114...umm...whatever baud rate the RC and camera operate at. It seems very slow just doing graphs and stuff, but that could be decieving...might toy with this this summer.

Did you get anywhere with that program? Not that it matters...

And I am a nerd. I go to 4 honors classes, have 3 hours of computer maintenence (a co-op job, working on all the computers in the school), practice classical piano, and when it gets cold outside I cram myself in a shop with a laptop and a case or two of pepsi and make a robot, complete with vision. And you know what? I'm dang proud of it!

Where I'm from, nerds aren't really lame, they just aren't accepted by more...umm...athletically-talented kids. I wear "nerd" as a badge of honor! :)

JBotAlan

gondorf 16-01-2006 20:36

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JBotAlan
Girlfriends, eh? Where did you say you live? Just kidding... :yikes:

I seriously wonder if the TI-84 can go up to 114...umm...whatever baud rate the RC and camera operate at. It seems very slow just doing graphs and stuff, but that could be decieving...might toy with this this summer.

Did you get anywhere with that program? Not that it matters...

And I am a nerd. I go to 4 honors classes, have 3 hours of computer maintenence (a co-op job, working on all the computers in the school), practice classical piano, and when it gets cold outside I cram myself in a shop with a laptop and a case or two of pepsi and make a robot, complete with vision. And you know what? I'm dang proud of it!

Where I'm from, nerds aren't really lame, they just aren't accepted by more...umm...athletically-talented kids. I wear "nerd" as a badge of honor! :)

JBotAlan

i have 6 honors classes,1 ap class, 6+ computers,6 calcs,5 hours a day for computer programming class, 4 half empty gallons of water(imported from 20 miles away) at my computer desk,3 cd racks,2 copies of star trek, and err...a partridge in a computer case?

ok the last one was made up but the others are real. and at north high in worcester nerds are the main target for girls

also as far as the program went it didnt work because my calc kept crashing.

try the geek calculator in the chitchat forum. its a very useful tool

EDIT: sry for being so pushy. i just got over the same conversation with parents

b_mallerd 17-01-2006 00:20

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
Wow, a place where all nerd can converge (hey! that almost rhymed)

I only program my calc to do boring repetitive math questions...that's pretty much it. Why program a calculator when you can mess around on a computer? =D

sciencenerd 17-01-2006 00:33

Re: did you get experience from programming on a calculator?
 
My crowning glory on my TI-83+ is DDR. That's right, DDR for a calc. I had a TA period last year where the teacher had absolutely nothing for me to do, so I spent my time messing around with my calculator. It has a life bar and different difficulty levels and everything. The real challenge was making it real-time without a built-in clock or anything (that feature was introduced on the 84), but I got it working in the end.


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