4 2 3 5 1-+. + The next character scanned is '+', which is an operator, so pop its two operands from the stack. Pop 4 from the stack for the right operand and then pop 3 from the stack to make the left operand. MacDrop Download Cracked Mac Apps and Games for Free, Updated Daily with all the Best Most Popular Mac Apps in the Mac App Store.
AnalogX PCalc – Shareware
Pcalc 4 35Overview
AnalogX PCalc is a Shareware software in the category Miscellaneous developed by AnalogX PCalc. Avoid the circle mac os.
The latest version of AnalogX PCalc is currently unknown. It was initially added to our database on 10/30/2007.
AnalogX PCalc runs on the following operating systems: Windows.
AnalogX PCalc has not been rated by our users yet.
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September 15, 2013 at 10:01 PM by Dr. Drang
James Thomson released a new, iOS 7-ready version of PCalc on Friday. I have no interest in running down other iOS calculator apps—except Calcbot, which is an embarrassment—but I settled on PCalc as my everyday calculator years ago and have found no reason to change. If you’re a calculator person, you’ll probably think the same.
I’m not running iOS 7 yet,1 so I don’t have the new flat, thinly fonted icon on my home screen, but I have tried out the new iOS 7-style theme, Samurai.
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The big buttons are nice because they give the labels room to breathe, but I’m not sure about the color scheme. I’ve been a Twilight user since its introduction in version 1.3, and I like its muted tones.
I could live without the skeuomorphic LCD-green background of the display area, but I find the separate color for the Enter key and the red background of the delete keys helpful in directing my fingers. I’m not sure which theme I’ll settle on, but if James came out with a darker version of Samurai, I’d be all over it.
(I was, by the way, an absolutely worthless beta tester during the version 3.0 development. I was too busy with work to exercise all the features. I can say, though, that every function I normally use continued to work flawlessly on iOS 6.)
You may have noticed something a little odd about the screenshots above—no status bar. PCalc 3 has an option to turn the status bar off and have the calculator take over the whole screen. The extra pixels don’t make PCalc noticeably easier to read or to use, but I like having the calculator take over the phone fully.
Unlike version 2.8, version 3.0 doesn’t include a huge jump in functionality; most of the new features have to do with the display and adaptations to iOS 7. Still, I’d like to leave you with a usage tip. It’s one I mentioned a couple of years ago, but it bears repeating if you need to do calculations with fractions.
Pcalc 4 3rd
PCalc’s decimal point key changes to Frac when the 2nd key is active. This allows you to enter fractions and mixed numbers directly. The calculations aren’t done as fractions—PCalc converts them immediately to decimal—but you can enter them that way. More important, you don’t have to use the 2nd key to do it.
For example, to enter (3frac{5}{16}), you press
and the display will show
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When you tap Enter, PCalc converts the number to decimal form and shows it as 3.3125. If you wanted to enter just (frac{5}{16}), you’d could press either
or
I find this especially useful when adding or subtracting dimensions taken with a tape measure, which are typically in inches and fractions of an inch.2 I can enter the dimensions directly as I read them from the tape, with no need to convert in my head or do the division as a side calculation.
PCalc is filled with simple affordances like this. By themselves, none of them seem like a big deal, but together they show an attention to detail that makes PCalc both efficient and a pleasure to use.
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