• @Pavidus@lemmy.world
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    977 months ago

    There’s quite a few calculators that get this wrong. In college, I found out that Casio calculators do things the right way, are affordable, and readily available. I stuck with it through the rest of my classes.

    • Queue
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      527 months ago

      Casio does a wonderful job, and it’s a shame they aren’t more standard in American schooling. Texas Instruments costs more of the same jobs, and is mandatory for certain systems or tests. You need to pay like $40 for a calculator that hasn’t changed much if at all from the 1990’s.

      Meanwhile I have a Casio fx-115ES Plus and it does everything that one did, plus some nice quality of life features, for less money.

      • @cerement@slrpnk.net
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        7 months ago

        TI did the same thing Quark and Adobe did later on – got dominance in their markets, killed off their competition, and then sat back and rested on their laurels thinking they were untouchable

        EDIT: although in part, we should thank TI for one thing – if they hadn’t monopolized the calculator market, Commodore would’ve gone into calculators instead of computers

          • @somethingsnappy@lemmy.world
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            17 months ago

            Huge failure my ass. Come at me on munch man, Alpiner, or Tombstone City. Or coding vaguely racist things like Mr. Bojangles, one of the first codes in the early books.

            • uphillbothways
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              7 months ago

              Had one at home and used the hell out of it, don’t get me wrong. Was my first computer. Played the Zork series on that thing. But, it had issues and wasn’t a financial success.

              • @somethingsnappy@lemmy.world
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                27 months ago

                It had fewer issues than almost anything I’ve owned since. I bet it would still work if I got the right adaptors. Wasn’t a huge financial success though. They seemed content with early coding and games, and didn’t move into word processing etc.

      • Dizzy Devil Ducky
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        67 months ago

        If you’re lucky, you can find these TI calculators in thrift shops or other similar places. I’ve been lucky since I got both of my last 2 graphing calculators at a yard sale and thrift shop respectively, for maybe around $40-$50 for both.

      • @zourn@lemmy.world
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        47 months ago

        The TI equivalent to the Casio fx-115ES Plus is the TI-36X Pro, and they both cost $20 at Walmart.

    • Limitless_screaming
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      187 months ago

      My Casio calculators get this wrong, even the newer ones. BTW the correct answer is 16, right?

      • @cerement@slrpnk.net
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        527 months ago
        • 16 is the right answer if you use PEMDAS only: (8 ÷ 2) × (2 + 2)
        • 1 is the right answer if you use implicit/explicit with PEMDAS: 8 ÷ (2 × (2 + 2))
        • both are correct answers (as in if you don’t put in extra parentheses to reduce ambiguity, you should expect expect either answer)
        • this is also one of the reasons why postfix and prefix notations have an advantage over infix notation
          • postfix (HP, RPN, Forth): 2 2 + 8 2 ÷ × .
          • prefix (Lisp): (× (÷ 8 2) (+ 2 2))
        • @brian@programming.dev
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          37 months ago

          prefix notation doesn’t need parentheses either though, at least in this case. lisp uses them for readability and to get multiple arity operators. infix doesn’t have any ambiguity either if you parenthesize all operations like that.

        • 16 is the right answer if you use PEMDAS only: (8 ÷ 2) × (2 + 2)

          You added brackets and changed the answer. 2(2+2) is a single term, and if you break it up then you change the answer (because now the (2+2) is in the numerator instead of in the denominator).

          1 is the right answer

          The only right answer

          both are correct answers

          Nope, 1 is the only correct answer.

          this is also one of the reasons why postfix and prefix notations have an advantage over infix notation

          Except they don’t. This isn’t a notation problem, it’s a people don’t remember the rules of Maths problem.

          • synae[he/him]
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            7 months ago

            PEMDAS is actually (PE)(MD)(AS). Those that are grouped together have equal precedence and are evaluated left to right.

            8 / 2 * (2+2)

            8 / 2 * 4

            4 * 4

            16

            Edit to fix formatting, maybe?

      • @Th0rgue@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Depends on the system you use. Most common system worldwide and in the academic circles (the oldest of the two) has 1 as the answer.