|
Shop Edmonds Elements for Unique Educational Resources, Toys and Games
|
|
Graphing Calculator
Author Patrik Lundin,
plundin@javathings.com,
http://www.javathings.com
Description
The GraphApplet 1.0 is a full featured Graphing Calculator with some rare features added. It is recommended that you use Netscape 4.x
or higher or IE 4.x or higher for this applet and The GraphApplet has all the common
operators and functions as expected from any scientific The GraphApplet supports juxtaposition
which means you can write your expressions just as you The GraphApplet has support for symbolic differentiation using the diff function. To use the applet as a calculator click on
the buttons or use the keyboard to form your expression To draw a function enter the function by
clicking on the buttons or enter them with the keyboard To clear the input field click the Clear
button, to clear a individual drawed function double click on the To enter something into memory first click
the M-> button and click on either m1 or m2,
Follow these steps to setup the applet on your webpage: 1. Copy the file called
gapplet.jar to the same folder as your web pages are in. 2. Copy this applet HTML tag to the page where you want to use the applet : <applet archive="gapplet.jar"
code="GraphApplet.class" width=655 height=360> 3. Open the page in a
webbrowser that supports Java and start to use the GraphApplet.
Calculator Controls Eval - Evaluates
an expression, the calculator first tries to evaluate the expression, Clear - Clears the input area. PlotF - Plots a function of type y=f(x) ZOut - Zooms out the
current area with a factor of x2. Reset - Reset the bounds to the original x:[-10,10] y:[-10,10] Cls -
Clears the whole drawing area and all functions. M-> - Enters an expression or a value into memory, first click this button and then chose either m1 or m2 MCls - Clears the memory,
first click this button and then on either m1 or m2 to clear that
memory. m1 - Memory 1 m2 -
Memory 2 Operators and Functions sqrt - sqrt of a value or expression. sin - sin of a value or expression. cos - cos of a value or expression. tan - tan of a value or expression. atan - atan of a value or expression. acos - acos of a value or expression. asin - asin of a value or expression. acotan - acotan of a value or expression. exp - The constant euler raised to a value or expression. ln - The natural logarithm. 10log - The 10 logarithm of a value or expression. fac - The faculty of a value or expression. diff - Symbolically differentiates an expression of one variable pi - The constant PI euler - The Euler constant, base for the natural logarithm. + - Addition operator. - - Subtraction operator. * - Multiplication operator. / - Division operator. ^
- Raised to operator. The calculator also supports the following functions when entered through the keyboard: sinh - Hyperbolic sine cosh - Hyperbolic cosine tanh - Hyperbolic tangens abs - Absolute value of value or expression. ceil
- Returns the smallest (closest to negative infinity) floor
- Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity) sfac - Semifaculty of value or expression. round
- rounds the argument to the closest mathematical integer. fpart - returns the decimalvalue of its argument [base]log(..) - any logaritm. Example: 10log(10) = 1.0, exp(1)log(exp(1)) = 1.0 % - Modulo. == - Equal, returns 1.0 if it's arguments are equal or 0.0 othervise. != - Not Equal, returns 1.0 if it's arguments are not equal or 0.0 othervise. && - And, returns 1.0 if both arguments evaluates to 1.0, or 0.0 othervise. || - Or, returns 1.0 if any of it's arguments evaluates to 1.0, or 0.0 othervise. >
- Larger than, returns 1.0 if the value of the argument to the left is larger
<
- Less than, returns 1.0 if the value of the argument to the left is less
>=
- Larger than or equal to, returns 1.0 if the value of the argument to the left
is larger <=
- Less than or equal to, returns 1.0 if the value of the argument to the left is
less !
- Not, returns 0.0 if it's argument evaluates to 1.0 and returns 1.0 if
Author Patrik Lundin,
plundin@javathings.com,
http://www.javathings.com
|