The Definitive User's Guide to the HP 48g/49g/50g Calculators
HP provides an impressive quantity of user documentation, but quantity is no guarantee of quality! Tom Barber has been a professional programmer of the C/UNIX persuasion for more than 25 years, hooked on HP calculators since his college days when he implemented Gaussian quadrature on the HP25. The reputation of HP calculators as being somewhat difficult to use, has a lot to do with the user documentation. That is why he wrote this book.
Written primarily for novice users, experienced users who occasionally find themselves frustrated may also find help within the pages. The author takes a tutorial approach for certain topics such as the Equation Writer, and overall, his narrative explanations are better organized and more complete than HP's manuals. He uses tables and lists for topics where a more accessible summary of essential facts and behaviors is needed. He paid careful attention to the importance of writing in a clear, precise manner.
Topics covered include:
Essential Architectural Features
Keypad operation
Essential calculator modes
What the CAS modes Numeric and Approx actually do
Basic entry techniques using the command line
Techniques and commands to manage global variables
The text editor
The Equation Writer
Screen-based re-use of prior expressions
Lists
Custom menus
Unit objects, Units conversions and the Constants Library
Complex numbers and ordered pairs
Vectors and arrays
Binary integers and number bases
Character/Text Strings
The Matrix Writer
Statistics applications
The Equation Solver
The TVM Financial Solver
The numerical solvers for polynomials and systems of equations
Programmatic management of the stack in RPN mode
Recursive evaluation of the RPN command line and RPL programs
Programming the calculator in RPL
Techniques for manipulating algebraic expressions symbolically
Plotting
The File Manager
System Operation
8.5 x 11, 110 pages, equivalent to 250 pages in a more typical handbook format.