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Precision Software Appli…tions Silver Collection 4
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Precision Software Applications Silver Collection Volume 4 (1993).iso
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math1pad.arj
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MATHPAD.DOC
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1993-03-08
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MathPad 1.0, Copyright (C) 1993 by Duane Bailey
Requirements: IBM PC or compatible
80x25 display (80 columns by 25 rows)
probably needs DOS 2.1 or higher.
A maximum of about 85 Kilobytes of free RAM is all I need.
I recommend: A hard drive
Color display (makes any color program easier to understand).
Not used: MathPad does not need nor will it use a math co-processor. It
is screamingly fast as is.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Most of the help you'll probably need comes up every time you choose a
subroutine, except for subroutines 1 thru 10, where you compute the volume or
radius of a right circular cylinder. Say you choose F, "surfsphr". Well, the
algebra involved first must compute the radius, because radius is always what
circles are based on. So you enter the surface area of your sphere in
"square" units. You first get the automatic readout of the other measurements
of your sphere. Then you get a prompt to enter a height for a right circular
cylinder. This cylinder has the same diameter as the sphere. The file
"cylinder.exe" can illustrate this. The picture supposes that the cylinder is
transparent. It is a side view. The height could also be less than the
diameter. Same for a right circular cone. Press a key to exit the picture. If
you need more help, mail questions to me. I can offer phone support only to
registered users. For the 10 programs which use Pi, I have plugged in Pi
accurate to 10 decimal places, which is 3.1415926535. This package can be
registered for $10.00. This software is copyrighted! If you like it, send me
$10.00 check or money order. Then I can keep you on record for special deals
on other software I make. (See registration information at the end of this
document).
A scientific calculator can be had for about 17 to 20 dollars these days, and
they can do a few things MathPad can't. Correspondingly, MathPad can do some
things a calculator can't. With how many calculators can you dump 15 numbers
into the register at once, press a key, and it adds or multiplies them? How
about enter any one thing computable about a circle or sphere and instantly
find out everything else computable about it. And a calculator can't keep a
text log file viewable at leisure and printable on a printer. So it's a
tradeoff, actually you need both, and you're only 30 dollars behind.
The log file: If you decide to keep a log file, MathPad asks you to name it.
Any valid DOS path and/or file name goes. Be careful not to name a log file
the same thing next time you use MathPad without first viewing, making use
of, or moving or renaming the previous one or whatever, because it would be
overwritten according to standard DOS rules. It is a "plain-Jane" ASCII text
file, and its contents are self-explanatory and easy to understand.
To set up MathPad as a Windows 3.x application: Highlight the group
Applications. A bar will appear across the top. From Program Manager, choose
File New. Choose Program Item. For the description type MathPad. For the
path, that's up to you where you keep MathPad, but the executable file is
MathPad.Exe. So for your command line you might type in something like
C:\MATHPAD\MATHPAD.EXE. You click OK once or twice, and Windows gives you a
generic icon. Click once on the icon to highlight it, then choose File,
Properties, Change Icon. Windows will probably tell you no new icon is
available. Ignore this, click OK, and just start typing something like
C:\MATHPAD\MATHPAD.ICO, a file I have provided. Click OK a couple times.
Note that the program counts your entries, -except- when you make some sort
of input error. When this happens, you'll get a text message instead of a
number answer. These errors are not counted. There is -one- exception,
however, in the one named "quadrati" (choice P). If you get a message saying
that your solution set is empty, that entry is counted as valid, since if you
knew your problem had no real solutions, you wouldn't need my program! This
is the only case when an entry that results in text instead of numbers is
counted. Note also that in the three temperature conversion choices, (K, L,
M) that if you enter a temperature too low, you get a message. These aren't
counted. If you want to know the lowest possible temperature that can exist
(absolute zero), enter zero for kelvin. Usually in nature the coldest places
in the universe are at about 2.7 degrees k. Note also that a kelvin degree is
the same unit size as Celsius, but offset by 273.15 degrees k (or c).
MathPad is an outgrowth of my previous shareware number-cruncher: "MyMath".
It consisted of no less than 22 executables, and it ran stick, baling wire,
and gum fashion by a long batch file. Its approximate length on disk,
"PKlited", was about 150 KB. Uncompressed it was about 250 KB long! The
uncompressed program file MathPad.Exe is only about 85 KB long. If yours is
smaller, it's been compressed. It expands in RAM when run. If you ever used
"MyMath", you may remember that the only logging function available was
Ctrl-PrintScreen. The days of those horrors are long gone. (See "The log
file", above, line 47 of page 1). "MyMath" will go the way of masterpieces
like Edlin and Algol-68 (flowers and "Taps", please).
I am author of all files. If you distribute this software, always include
-ALL- files. They are: "Mathpad.Exe", "Mathpad.Ico", "Mathpad.Doc", and
"Cylinder.Exe". No-one may collect more than $5.00, and you must inform the
person that it's only a "disk charge". You must also inform them that if they
keep the program after 30 days evaluation, they must mail me $10.00 check or
money order. This is fair for all. Professional shareware distributors: If
you can't sneak in at $5.00 or under before tax, you can't distribute
MathPad. (And you need to visit a reformed man named Scrooge for advice).
MathPad may be included with other shareware as long as all four files are
present and unaltered. I will be concentrating on distribution mainly by
bulletin boards, which skips the middleman and saves people up to 5 of their
hard earned dollars.
Registration entitles a person to:
Phone support (on their nickel), "almost free" upgrades, (I would compute the
exact price of the diskette and postage, and charge only that, in order to
break even). Notices of other programs I write, and 20% off on those if you
buy. This is for registered users only. So if John Doe writes the check for
MathPad, and his daughter wants some program I write in the future, and she
did not register MathPad too, she does not get 20% off. But if she registers
the new program, then she gets 20% off of any other program I write (and that
includes MathPad 1.0, this program). Please don't send cash. I can accept
only checks or money orders. I am not authorized to accept credit card
numbers either.
Site usage of MathPad:
1 to 5 copies: $10.00 each
6 to 10 copies: $ 8.00 each
over 10 copies: $ 7.00 each
All registrations will be added and the sum reported to the IRS come January
of each year. (I don't have to like it, but I do like life outside of four
walls pretty good).
Duane Bailey
409 W. First St, Apt. C
Winston-Salem, NC 27101