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XCALC(1)                                                                                 XCALC(1)



NAME
       xcalc - scientific calculator for X

SYNOPSIS
       xcalc [-stipple] [-rpn] [-toolkitoption...]

DESCRIPTION
       xcalc  is a scientific calculator desktop accessory that can emulate a TI-30 or an HP-10C.

OPTIONS
       xcalc accepts all of the standard toolkit command line options along with  two  additional
       options:


       -stipple
               This  option indicates that the background of the calculator should be drawn using
               a stipple of  the  foreground  and  background  colors.   On  monochrome  displays
               improves the appearance.


       -rpn    This  option  indicates that Reverse Polish Notation should be used.  In this mode
               the calculator will look and behave like an HP-10C.  Without this  flag,  it  will
               emulate a TI-30.

OPERATION
       Pointer  Usage:  Operations may be performed with pointer button 1, or in some cases, with
       the keyboard.  Many common calculator operations have  keyboard  accelerators.   To  quit,
       press  pointer button 3 on the AC key of the TI calculator, or the ON key of the HP calcu-
       lator.

       Calculator Key Usage (TI mode): The numbered keys, the +/- key, and the +, -, *, /, and  =
       keys  all do exactly what you would expect them to.  It should be noted that the operators
       obey the standard rules of precedence.  Thus, entering "3+4*5=" results in "23", not "35".
       The  parentheses can be used to override this.  For example, "(1+2+3)*(4+5+6)=" results in
       "6*15=90".

       The entire number in the calculator display can be selected, in order to paste the  result
       of a calculation into text.

       The  action procedures associated with each function are given below.  These are useful if
       you are interested in defining a custom calculator.  The action used for all digit keys is
       digit(n), where n is the corresponding digit, 0..9.

       1/x       Replaces  the  number  in  the  display  with its reciprocal.  The corresponding
                 action procedure is reciprocal().

       x^2       Squares the number in  the  display.   The  corresponding  action  procedure  is
                 square().

       SQRT      Takes  the  square  root of the number in the display.  The corresponding action
                 procedure is squareRoot().

       CE/C      When pressed once, clears the number in the display without clearing  the  state
                 of  the machine.  Allows you to re-enter a number if you make a mistake.  Press-
                 ing it twice clears the state, also.  The corresponding action procedure for  TI
                 mode is clear().

       AC        Clears  the  display,  the  state,  and  the memory.  Pressing it with the third
                 pointer button turns off the calculator, in that  it  exits  the  program.   The
                 action procedure to clear the state is off(); to quit, quit().

       INV       Invert function.  See the individual function keys for details.  The correspond-
                 ing action procedure is inverse().

       sin       Computes the sine of the number in the display, as interpreted  by  the  current
                 DRG  mode  (see  DRG, below).  If inverted, it computes the arcsine.  The corre-
                 sponding action procedure is sine().

       cos       Computes the cosine, or arccosine when inverted.  The corresponding action  pro-
                 cedure is cosine().

       tan       Computes  the  tangent,  or  arctangent when inverted.  The corresponding action
                 procedure is tangent().

       DRG       Changes the DRG mode, as indicated by 'DEG', 'RAD', or 'GRAD' at the  bottom  of
                 of  the  calculator  ``liquid crystal'' display.  When in 'DEG' mode, numbers in
                 the display are taken as being degrees.  In 'RAD' mode, numbers are in  radians,
                 and in 'GRAD' mode, numbers are in grads.  When inverted, the DRG key has a fea-
                 ture of converting degrees to radians to grads and  vice-versa.   Example:   put
                 the  calculator into 'DEG' mode, and enter "45 INV DRG".  The display should now
                 show something along the lines of ".785398", which is 45  degrees  converted  to
                 radians.  The corresponding action procedure is degree().

       e         The constant 'e'.  (2.7182818...).  The corresponding action procedure is e().

       EE        Used  for  entering  exponential  numbers.   For example, to get "-2.3E-4" you'd
                 enter "2 . 3 +/- EE 4 +/-".  The corresponding action procedure is scientific().

       log       Calculates  the  log  (base 10) of the number in the display.  When inverted, it
                 raises "10.0" to the number in the display.  For example, entering "3  INV  log"
                 should result in "1000".  The corresponding action procedure is logarithm().

       ln        Calculates  the  log  (base  e) of the number in the display.  When inverted, it
                 raises "e" to the number in the display.  For example, entering  "e  ln"  should
                 result in "1".  The corresponding action procedure is naturalLog().

       y^x       Raises  the  number  on  the  left to the power of the number on the right.  For
                 example "2 y^x 3 =" results in "8",  which  is  2^3.   For  a  further  example,
                 "(1+2+3)  y^x  (1+2)  =" equals "6 y^x 3" which equals "216".  The corresponding
                 action procedure is power().

       PI        The constant 'pi'.  (3.1415927....)  The corresponding action procedure is pi().

       x!        Computes  the factorial of the number in the display.  The number in the display
                 must be an integer in the range 0-500, though, depending on your  math  library,
                 it  might overflow long before that.  The corresponding action procedure is fac-
                 torial().

       (         Left parenthesis.  The corresponding action  procedure  for  TI  calculators  is
                 leftParen().

       )         Right  parenthesis.   The  corresponding  action procedure for TI calculators is
                 rightParen().

       /         Division.  The corresponding action procedure is divide().

       *         Multiplication.  The corresponding action procedure is multiply().

       -         Subtraction.  The corresponding action procedure is subtract().

       +         Addition.  The corresponding action procedure is add().

       =         Perform calculation.  The TI-specific action procedure is equal().

       STO       Copies the number in the display to  the  memory  location.   The  corresponding
                 action procedure is store().

       RCL       Copies  the  number  from the memory location to the display.  The corresponding
                 action procedure is recall().

       SUM       Adds the number in the display to the number in the memory location.  The corre-
                 sponding action procedure is sum().

       EXC       Swaps  the  number  in  the display with the number in the memory location.  The
                 corresponding action procedure for the TI calculator is exchange().

       +/-       Negate; change sign.  The corresponding action procedure is negate().

       .         Decimal point.  The action procedure is decimal().


       Calculator Key Usage (RPN mode): The number keys, CHS (change sign), +, -, *, /, and  ENTR
       keys  all do exactly what you would expect them to do.  Many of the remaining keys are the
       same as in TI mode.  The differences are detailed below.  The  action  procedure  for  the
       ENTR key is enter().


       <-        This  is a backspace key that can be used if you make a mistake while entering a
                 number.  It will erase digits from the display.  (See BUGS).  Inverse  backspace
                 will clear the X register.  The corresponding action procedure is back().

       ON        Clears  the  display,  the  state,  and  the memory.  Pressing it with the third
                 pointer button turns off the calculator, in that it exits the program.  To clear
                 state, the action procedure is off; to quit, quit().

       INV       Inverts  the  meaning  of  the function keys.  This would be the  f key on an HP
                 calculator, but xcalc does not display multiple legends on each  key.   See  the
                 individual function keys for details.

       10^x      Raises  "10.0"  to the number in the top of the stack.  When inverted, it calcu-
                 lates the log (base 10) of the number in the display.  The corresponding  action
                 procedure is tenpower().

       e^x       Raises  "e" to the number in the top of the stack.  When inverted, it calculates
                 the log (base e) of  the  number  in  the  display.   The  action  procedure  is
                 epower().

       STO       Copies  the  number  in the top of the stack to a memory location.  There are 10
                 memory locations.  The desired memory is specified by following this key with  a
                 digit key.

       RCL       Pushes the number from the specified memory location onto the stack.

       SUM       Adds  the number on top of the stack to the number in the specified memory loca-
                 tion.

       x:y       Exchanges the numbers in the top two stack positions, the  X  and  Y  registers.
                 The corresponding action procedure is XexchangeY().

       R v       Rolls the stack downward.  When inverted, it rolls the stack upward.  The corre-
                 sponding action procedure is roll().

       blank     These keys were used for programming functions on the HP-10C.  Their functional-
                 ity has not been duplicated in xcalc.

       Finally,  there  are  two  additional action procedures: bell(), which rings the bell; and
       selection(), which performs a cut on the entire number in the calculator's ``liquid  crys-
       tal'' display.

ACCELERATORS
       Accelerators  are  shortcuts  for  entering commands.  xcalc provides some sample keyboard
       accelerators; also users can customize accelerators.  The numeric keypad accelerators pro-
       vided  by  xcalc  should be intuitively correct.  The accelerators defined by xcalc on the
       main keyboard are given below:

            TI Key    HP Key    Keyboard Accelerator     TI Function    HP Function

            SQRT SQRT r              squareRoot()   squareRoot()
            AC   ON   space               clear()        clear()
            AC   <-   Delete              clear()        back()
            AC   <-   Backspace      clear()        back()
            AC   <-   Control-H      clear()        back()
            AC        Clear               clear()
            AC   ON   q              quit()         quit()
            AC   ON   Control-C      quit()         quit()

            INV  i    i              inverse()      inverse()
            sin  s    s              sine()         sine()
            cos  c    c              cosine()       cosine()
            tan  t    t              tangent() tangent()
            DRG  DRG  d              degree()       degree()

            e         e              e()
            ln   ln   l              naturalLog()   naturalLog()
            y^x  y^x  ^              power()        power()

            PI   PI   p              pi()      pi()
            x!   x!   !              factorial()    factorial()
            (         (              leftParen()
            )         )              rightParen()

            /    /    /              divide()       divide()
            *    *    *              multiply()     multiply()
            -    -    -              subtract()     subtract()
            +    +    +              add()          add()
            =         =              equal()

            0..9 0..9 0..9           digit()        digit()
            .    .    .              decimal() decimal()
            +/-  CHS  n              negate()       negate()

                 x:y  x                        XexchangeY()
                 ENTR Return                        enter()
                 ENTR Linefeed                      enter()


CUSTOMIZATION
       The application class name is XCalc.

       xcalc has an enormous application defaults file which specifies the position,  label,  and
       function  of  each key on the calculator.  It also gives translations to serve as keyboard
       accelerators.  Because these resources are not specified in the source code, you can  cre-
       ate  a  customized  calculator  by  writing a private application defaults file, using the
       Athena Command and Form widget resources to specify the size and position of buttons,  the
       label for each button, and the function of each button.

       The foreground and background colors of each calculator key can be individually specified.
       For the TI calculator, a classical color resource specification might be:

       XCalc.ti.Command.background:  gray50
       XCalc.ti.Command.foreground:  white

       For each of buttons 20, 25, 30, 35, and 40, specify:
       XCalc.ti.button20.background: black
       XCalc.ti.button20.foreground: white

       For each of buttons 22, 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 32, 33, 34, 37, 38, and 39:
       XCalc.ti.button22.background: white
       XCalc.ti.button22.foreground: black

WIDGET HIERARCHY
       In order to specify resources, it is useful to know the hierarchy  of  the  widgets  which
       compose  xcalc.  In the notation below, indentation indicates hierarchical structure.  The
       widget class name is given first, followed by the widget instance name.

       XCalc xcalc
            Form  ti  or  hp    (the name depends on the mode)
                 Form  bevel
                      Form  screen
                           Label  M
                           Toggle  LCD
                           Label  INV
                           Label  DEG
                           Label  RAD
                           Label  GRAD
                           Label  P
                 Command  button1
                 Command  button2
                 Command  button3
       and so on, ...
                 Command  button38
                 Command  button39
                 Command  button40

APPLICATION RESOURCES
       rpn (Class Rpn)
               Specifies that the rpn mode should be used.  The default is TI mode.

       stipple (Class Stipple)
               Indicates that the background should be  stippled.   The  default  is  ``on''  for
               monochrome displays, and ``off'' for color displays.

       cursor (Class Cursor)
               The name of the symbol used to represent the pointer.  The default is ``hand2''.

COLORS
       If  you  would  like xcalc to use its ti colors, include the following in the #ifdef COLOR
       section of the file you read with xrdb:

       *customization:                 -color

       This will cause xcalc to pick up the colors in the app-defaults color customization  file:
       /etc/X11/app-defaults/XCalc-color.

SEE ALSO
       X(7), xrdb(1), the Athena Widget Set

BUGS
       HP  mode  is  not  completely  debugged.  In particular, the stack is not handled properly
       after errors.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 1994 X Consortium
       See X(7) for a full statement of rights and permissions.

AUTHORS
       John Bradley, University of Pennsylvania
       Mark Rosenstein, MIT Project Athena
       Donna Converse, MIT X Consortium



X Version 11                               xcalc 1.0.2                                   XCALC(1)

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