Ti-84 Programs

V-PV-P State College, PA Member
edited January 2007 in Internet & Media
So I just got my 84 Silver, and I got it mostly for Chem class. It has the periodic table and such, but an empirical formula calculator/stoiciometry calc can be helpful sometimes, but all the programs I find require a graphlink cable, and the one I bought with the calculator is the wrong one, so does anyone know of a website that offers the actual code so I can manually enter it in for this app, as well as others.

Comments

  • airbornflghtairbornflght Houston, TX Icrontian
    edited January 2007
    www.ticalc.org

    did you buy the silver usb cable? I have a TI-84 Plus Silver Edition and a TI-89. I use the usb cable for the TI-84, but I also have the cable that plugs into the TRS connector for my TI-89. I say just go buy the other cable, but you should be able to transfer programs with the USB cable.
  • V-PV-P State College, PA Member
    edited January 2007
    Been there but I can't seem to find the source codes; only the downloads.
  • airbornflghtairbornflght Houston, TX Icrontian
    edited January 2007
    What do you mean the source code, with the assembly programs that is the source. Assembly is a low level language. I have never had a problem opening a program and editing it. You are being a little bit vague.
  • V-PV-P State College, PA Member
    edited January 2007
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  • airbornflghtairbornflght Houston, TX Icrontian
    edited January 2007
    We've always had ads, but they are bugging me on the left hand side. I'm hoping that this is a clerical error.
  • LeonardoLeonardo Wake up and smell the glaciers Eagle River, Alaska Icrontian
    edited January 2007
    So I just got my 84 Silver, and I got it mostly for Chem class. It has the periodic table and such, but an empirical formula calculator/stoiciometry calc can be helpful sometimes
    Ouch, you make me feel old, Airborn. I had a 'high tech' Texas Instruments calculator in high school. It was something like TI-3.11 or TI-Sinclair. I thought it was hot stuff! But then, 30 years from now people will laugh at the 84. They'll have little watch-sized calculators to which you merely ask questions. Heck, the calculator will probably even give you pretests for exams to check your readiness!
  • airbornflghtairbornflght Houston, TX Icrontian
    edited January 2007
    Leonardo wrote:
    Ouch, you make me feel old, Airborn. I had a 'high tech' Texas Instruments calculator in high school. It was something like TI-3.11 or TI-Sinclair. I thought it was hot stuff! But then, 30 years from now people will laugh at the 84. They'll have little watch-sized calculators to which you merely ask questions. Heck, the calculator will probably even give you pretests for exams to check your readiness!


    lol. I like my TI-89 a whole lot better than the 84. and the 89 is older than the 84 plus silver edition that I have. They are really nice in trig, calculus, and physics. When my dad was in college he had something called a slide rule. My grand dad had a calculator but all it did was the primitive mathematics function like add subtract and multiply. And he was a petroleum engineer. My dad still uses a slide rule at the concrete plant because I guess they figure cubes really quickly...:eek3:
  • edited January 2007
    i used to write lots of programs for an 83. it's handy stuff for running through big equations in a hurry. my 83 came with an overview of whatever PL they use in the owner's manual, it was very basic and you could incorporate the built-in calculator functions in the language. whatever you download to the calculator will be the source code, you don't really download binaries for those programs.
  • shwaipshwaip bluffin' with my muffin Icrontian
    edited January 2007
    I remember feeling like hot **** because I could program in the quadratic formula into my 83.

    Although, too many people rely on calculators for integrals these days - my roommate had trouble understanding that if you integrate a cosine or sine over it's period, the answer is zero.
  • airbornflghtairbornflght Houston, TX Icrontian
    edited January 2007
    quadratic formula saves your ass!
  • ThermalfishThermalfish Melbourne, Australia
    edited January 2007
    mmm TI.

    My first PC was a TI99-4/A

    mmmm delicious old school
  • RWBRWB Icrontian
    edited January 2007
    Wow... I can't believe the Ti84 is still around, I'd have figured those would be ancient today. My mom got a Ti96 back when I was in high school. Looked like a game boy it was great. I had the Ti 83 though, I remember coding in all the programs by hand that I found online(like mech war) because I didn't have a link cable either. It's been too long though...
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