When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. NumWorks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NumWorks

    The NumWorks graphing calculator was the first graphing calculator to be programmable using the Python language. It features a 320x240 IPS display with a 2.8″ diagonal. Internally, it is powered by a 216 MHz Cortex-M7 processor and 8 MB of Quad-SPI Flash memory. The calculator has a 1450 mAh lithium polymer battery. The calculator weights 5.9 ...

  3. List of open-source software for mathematics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open-source...

    Xcas/Giac is an open-source project developed at the Joseph Fourier University of Grenoble since 2000. Written in C++, maintained by Bernard Parisse's et al. and available for Windows, Mac, Linux and many others platforms. It has a compatibility mode with Maple, Derive and MuPAD software and TI-89, TI-92 and Voyage 200 calculators.

  4. Genius (mathematics software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genius_(mathematics_software)

    Genius (also known as the Genius Math Tool) is a free open-source numerical computing environment and programming language, [2] similar in some aspects to MATLAB, GNU Octave, Mathematica and Maple. Genius is aimed at mathematical experimentation rather than computationally intensive tasks. It is also very useful as just a calculator.

  5. List of Python software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Python_software

    Codelobster, a cross-platform IDE for various languages, including Python. EasyEclipse, an open source IDE for Python and other languages. Eclipse,with the Pydev plug-in. Eclipse supports many other languages as well. Emacs, with the built-in python-mode. [1] Eric, an IDE for Python and Ruby; Geany, IDE for Python development and other languages.

  6. List of arbitrary-precision arithmetic software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_arbitrary...

    dc: "Desktop Calculator" arbitrary-precision RPN calculator that comes standard on most Unix-like systems. KCalc, Linux based scientific calculator; Maxima: a computer algebra system which bignum integers are directly inherited from its implementation language Common Lisp. In addition, it supports arbitrary-precision floating-point numbers ...

  7. SciPy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SciPy

    SciPy (pronounced / ˈ s aɪ p aɪ / "sigh pie" [2]) is a free and open-source Python library used for scientific computing and technical computing. [3]SciPy contains modules for optimization, linear algebra, integration, interpolation, special functions, FFT, signal and image processing, ODE solvers and other tasks common in science and engineering.

  8. Programmable calculator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Programmable_calculator

    Projects in development by third parties include on-board and/or computer-side converters, interpreters, code generators, macro assemblers, or compilers for Fortran, other Basic variants, awk, C, Cobol, Rexx, Perl, Python, Tcl, Pascal, Delphi, and operating system shells like DOS/Win95 batch, OS/2 batch, WinNT/2000 shell, Unix shells, and DCL.

  9. List of free and open-source software packages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_free_and_open...

    OpenFOAM – open-source software used for computational fluid dynamics (or CFD). FlightGear-atmospheric and orbital flight simulator with a flight dynamics engine (JSBSim) that is used in a 2015 NASA benchmark [2] to judge new simulation code to space industry standards. SimPy – Queue-theoretic event-based simulator written in Python