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 XCALC(1)                       X Version 11                        XCALC(1)
                                  Release 5



 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 calculator.

      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().




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 XCALC(1)                       X Version 11                        XCALC(1)
                                  Release 5



      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.  Pressing 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 corresponding 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 corresponding action
                procedure is sine().

      cos       Computes the cosine, or arccosine when inverted.  The
                corresponding action procedure 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 feature 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().



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 XCALC(1)                       X Version 11                        XCALC(1)
                                  Release 5



      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
                factorial().

      (         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 corresponding 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().



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 XCALC(1)                       X Version 11                        XCALC(1)
                                  Release 5



      +/-       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 calculates 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 location.

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




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 XCALC(1)                       X Version 11                        XCALC(1)
                                  Release 5



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

      blank     These keys were used for programming functions on the HP-
                10C.  Their functionality 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 crystal'' display.

 ACCELERATORS
      Accelerators are shortcuts for entering commands.  xcalc provides some
      sample keyboard accelerators; also users can customize accelerators.
      The numeric keypad accelerators provided 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()



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 XCALC(1)                       X Version 11                        XCALC(1)
                                  Release 5



           +/-  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 create 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



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 XCALC(1)                       X Version 11                        XCALC(1)
                                  Release 5



                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: /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/XCalc-color.

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

 BUGS
      HP mode:  A bug report claims that the sequence of keys 5, ENTER, <-
      should clear the display, but it doesn't.

 COPYRIGHT
      Copyright 1988, 1989, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
      See X(1) for a full statement of rights and permissions.

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








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