Author | Comment |
PiepsoDJ Probe Posted: 15 Jun 2008 01:12 GMT Total Posts: 1 | Hi all,
If I buy a TI-Nspire with a 84 Keypad on it, will it be able to run all the programs made for a TI-84, or does it have restrictions? And will I be able to program with the commands available in the TI-84, or do I have to work with the badly commands of the Nspire?
Your help is appreciated
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BrandonW Goliath Posted: 15 Jun 2008 02:41 GMT Total Posts: 100 | For all intents and purposes, it is an 84+SE when you have that keypad snapped in. Some of the hardware emulation may be quirky, so some games might behave kind of funky or have a blurry LCD, but if you're just looking for math functionality, it's all there 100%. |
haveacalc Guardian
Posted: 15 Jun 2008 10:44 GMT Total Posts: 1111 | (BASIC programming works fine, Assembly uses some opcodes differently)
--- -quoted directly from most movies that don't exist (and some that do). |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 15 Jun 2008 10:56 GMT Total Posts: 100 | They're not used differently, it just doesn't support some of the undocumented instructions, like the ones that use IXH/IXL.
If you stick to programs that don't do screwy stuff, you're going to be fine in that regard. |
rowdy Probe Posted: 11 Sep 2008 21:23 GMT Total Posts: 1 | What if my spiffy new TI-nspire merely has its own keyboard? Can I still use the 84+SE programs?
Are there any programs/apps (math related, even) for the nspire? |
haveacalc Guardian
Posted: 11 Sep 2008 21:32 GMT Total Posts: 1111 | You mean like a CAS? No 84+SE for you. You don't get any apps, but there is a Linear Algebra library that you can download. Or, non-CAS
--- -quoted directly from most movies that don't exist (and some that do). |