On Thu, 31 Aug 2006 aliensrcooluk at yahoo.co.uk wrote:
Yeah, but it's often hidden.
Not by default.
If it has been hidden, it is because somebody explicitly and deliberately
was trying to keep you away from it.
Without user intervention Win2K installations will have it in accessories.
Until a few months ago I had no idea there
was a Calculator available on Windows 2K
(the company I work for generally uses
Windows from 5 years ago as we have loads
of computers to pay licenses for?).
ALL Windoze versions from 3.0 on (and possibly
before) have a calculator.
Sometime, on Windoze 3.10 or 3.11 (Windoze for Workgroups), use that
calculator to subtract 3.10 from 3.11 to see what the Windoze differences
are.
It's hidden (along with other applications) in
the "sys32/" (?) directory somewhere in the
OS files (I'm no windows expert, though I
know W95 beta version inside out from when
I went on work experience).
Only hidden, if somebody has deliberately chosen to
remove it from the
Start/Programs/Accessories menu.
Now whenever I need it and it's not listed
under applications (we move about alot in the
lab and use diff computers each week), I just
do a quick filesearch, dump it on the desktop
and on the main drop-up (?) menu that appears
when you click on the Start button, incase
I have a screen full of windows.
Now almost everyone uses it (largely because
calc's are so hard to find in the lab).
WHY BOTHER??
Go to Start/Run and type Calc.
or
Go to the command line, and type Calc.
The "scientific" mode includes binary,
octal,
hex and decimal, aswell as proper maths
functions.
Yes, but it refuses to do anything but integers in anything other than
decimal!
3.0h/2.0h gives 1.8h, NOT 1.0
11 binary/10 binary is 1.1 binary, NOT 1
3.14159decimal is NOT 3h.