📊 Calculate Your Success with Style!
The HP Prime Graphing Calculator II is a sleek, exam-approved device designed for the modern student. Featuring a 3.5-inch multi-touch display, it combines a stylish brushed metal design with powerful performance, including a rechargeable lithium-ion battery and 256 MB of flash memory. Perfect for STEM education, it integrates seamlessly with HP's unique ecosystem.
Number of Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
Display Type | LCD |
Power Source | Battery Powered |
Screen Size | 3.5 Inches |
Calculator Type | Graphing |
Item Dimensions L x W | 7.27"L x 3.66"W |
Material | Plastic |
Color | Silver |
A**R
Unlock Your Calculator’s Power
Set Amazon search category to Books. Type “HP Prime Calculator”. Find textbook quality Arithmetic, Algebra, and College Math resources for the cost of a fast-food meal. Don’t let the inexpensive prices fool you. These are great resources that help you unlock your calculator’s power.Best Math Tool in Today’s Classroom.Most powerful Math assistant allowed in today’s classroom. With phones and other Internet electronic devices being banned, the HP Prime Calculator will give you a virtual assistance that allows to acquire and become proficient with any math skill from arithmetic to advanced calculus.HP Prime Calculator is a real sleeper, the usefulness of Matlab or Wolfram Mathmatica in a tool that is easy to use. Textbook style input by templates with vibrant color touch screen allow for easy entry of math problem, plus flyout popup menus and soft key tabs make work a pleasure. Its textbook output with built-in power functions and applications is easy augmented by your functions.Start your understanding of your calculator by using your familiarity with Arithmetic to concentrate on the Prime’s interface and textbook style input and output feature.After the quick review of your Arithmetic, use the Algebra and College Math textbooks to learn advanced features of your calculator be viewing their hundreds of applications. The same applications can serve as invaluable aid for High School Algebra, Advanced Algebra, and Statistic courses.Let the eBook listed serve as a handy reference. It can be viewed on your phone, tablet, or computer.Note that the Arithmetic and College Math paperbacks found includes references to YouTube videos using screenshots and virtual emulator. These screenshots and emulator allow you to see your calculator in action. A web reference is given in the paperbacks for free parallel web-based material that is digital linked to all the paperbacks’ references and their YouTube videos.See Amazon Book HP Prime Calculator. Search listing for explanations of the shown screens in this review.HP Prime Calculator has a download identical virtual version for Windows and Mac and plus HP connectivity program that allows you to use your computer for work at home and then easily transfer your work to your handheld HP Prime Calculator for classroom use.To augment your HP Prime handheld classroom Calculator, there is a free/lite version of the HP Prime Calculator for iPhone and Android phones and tablets. Plus, a paid Pro version with programming.The phone and tablet free/lite and Pro version allow you to have a HP Prime with you at all times. Using variables for functions and nested functions you can accomplish limited programming but extremely powerful programming tasks on any versions of HP Prime, free/lite, Pro, virtual, or physical calculator. Below, we give you some possible starting points for variable creations in math courses. We like programming through variables as it works for handheld, virtual, pro, and free/lite versions. Search the internet for text and video instructions on how to use these powerful variables.You can easily add these variables to your handheld. Using copy and paste highlight the desired collections of functions you wish to add. Transfer them to your virtual Window or Mac HP Prime Calculator. Next backup the virtual and use this backup to restore your handheld HP Prime Calculator. Remember to rename handheld as it now has virtual name. Note for copy and paste are in computer form but will show in calculator in textbook form.College Algebra Plus Algebra of CalculusLinesslopeln(x1,y1,x2,y2):=((y2-y1)/(x2-x1))lineptm(x1,y1,m):=(m*('x'-x1)+y1)linept1pt2(x1,y1,x2,y2):=lineptm(x1,y1,slopeln(x1,y1,x2,y2))(line for two, points, linept1pt1, requires slopeln and lineptm)Rational Expressions - Algebra of Calculusmsec(a,h):=((F1(a+h)-F1(a))/h)mtan(a):=limit(simplify((F1(a+h)-F1(a))/h),h,0)mtan2(a):=limit(simplify((F1(x)-F1(a))/(x-a)),x,a)secline(x1,h):=simplify(lineptm(x1,F1(x1),msec(x1,h))))tanline(x1):=simplify(lineptm(x1,F1(x1),mtan(x1)))(all functions use F1)(secline requires slope of secline, msec)(tanline requires slope of tanline, mtan)(secline and tanline requires Finite Math line point slope, lineptm)AlgebraAbsolute Value and Distancedistrnl(a,b):=ABS(b-a)dist(d,r,t):=solve(d=r*t,x)arithn(d,f,n):=(f+(n-1)*d)arithsum(f,l,n):=(n/2*(f+l))arithsum1(d,f,n):=(n/2*(f+arithn(d,f,n)))TrigonometryComplex NumbersP_to_R(r,a):= (r*COS(a)+r*SIN(a)*i)R_to_P(x,y):=(CAS(collect(ABS(x+y*i)))+"∡"+CAS(collect(ARG(x+y*i))))Finite MathFinancesint(a,p,r,t):=ROUND(solve(a=p*(1+r*t),x),2)cpint(fv,pv,r,m,t):=ROUND(solve(fv=pv*(1+r/m)^(m*t),x),2)loan(pv,pmt,r,m,t):=ROUND(solve(pv=pmt*((1-(1+r/m)^(-m*t))/(r/m)),x),2)ira(fv,pmt,r,m,t):=ROUND(solve(fv=pmt*(((1+r/m)^(m*t)-1)/(r/m)),x),2)Linear Programming - Step by Step to check manual workpivmat(m,r,c):=CAS(pivot(CAS(mRow(1/m(r,c),m,r)),r,c))Sets and ProbabilitiesprsubL1(a,b):=DIFFERENCE(a,b)prsubL2(a,b):=DIFFERENCE(a,b)complement(a,b):=DIFFERENCE(a,b)For these added powerful programming examples, there are free text/screenshot webpages and YouTube videos with emulator instructions to get you started with these. The internet search function is your friend.Lastly, we not that the HP Prime Calculator is two calculators in one. A quick startup would be to use the simpler HOME calculator arithmetic side. The other calculator is the CAS, Computer Algebra System, an algebraic, calculus, and advanced math calculator that requires more time and resources to master.With Covid-19 and the use of virtual schooling students have fallen behind. As there are two calculators in one with the HP Prime Calculator the HP Prime HOME side can be used to learn the calculator for students in Algebra and Advanced Math courses but can also be used as a bridge to help upper elementary middle school student with gaps in their arithmetic knowledge. Search Amazon and the web for resources on using the HOME HP Prime Calculator side for these younger students. Giving them a crutch to temporarily plug their gaps while preventing them from falling further behind is valuable use of the HP Prime physical Calculator.
J**B
The One Calculator to Rule Them All
After doing a hell of a lot of research on graphing calculators, and also having a bit of experience with Wolfram Mathematica and Desmos, I decided to purchase this calculator. I'm not going to lie, I was very nervous in making such a large investment in a graphing calculator. And it wasn't exactly aided by the fact that a desktop (with the right software) and the Desmos mobile app could do everything a TI calculator could do and so much more and so much faster. Would this graphing calculator also be a waste of money, even with its CAS?Well, after using it for about a month, let me just put it this way. Mathematica may be a mathematical beast, but learning it is VERY akin to learning an entire programming language, so the learning curve is very steep. The freeform input makes it better for sure, but even then, that won't handle everything, and sooner or later, you're going to have to take the time to really learn the language.Desmos is light and powerful. It will graph anything in a second and do simple calculations as well. It's also dead easy to use. Type in a function or list and boom, you got a graph. It will of course also tell you precise x and y intercept locations and other intercept locations (with one or two exceptions). But... Therein lies the issue. That's all it really does. No CAS. No anything else. Oh, and no saving functions or really anything whatsoever without an online account. (Booo... )This is why, at the end of the day, the HP Prime (especially the G2) is still worth its weight in gold, even though graphing calculators are quickly becoming obsolete. Not only can it do almost everything Mathematica does (seriously, in terms of features, it's like having Mathematica Lite in your pocket), it's also very intuitive. You don't need to learn an entire language to use it. Unless you want to! The HP Prime is also completely programmable just like the TI calculators. And even further, it even allows you to write in super quick functions without ever having to touch the editor, and it will check the code for you right on the calculator.I could go on and on and on, but I don't want to sound like some television commercial so I'm just gonna stop here, but I really can't say enough how impressed I am with this piece of tech, not only as just another graphing calculator, but as a general mathematical tool, period. HP KNEW their stuff when they made this calculator.So is there anything bad about it at all? Unfortunately, yes. The biggest issue by far is that, if you mistype in a command or equation for it to work on, more often than not, it will fail and NOT EVEN TELL YOU WHY. Even the TI calculators will tell you where it went wrong. Now don't get me wrong. Sometimes the error message is descriptive and there's no issue, but it seems like a 50/50 thing. In that vein, it also has an idiosyncrasy of sometimes needing "4*x" instead of just allowing you to put in "4x". The (very) good news is that the HP Prime has a built in Help system that, most of the time, will get you out of your particular issue.Beyond all that though, if you're going into any sort of advanced math subject at all or if you really need a light and easy-to-use version of Mathematica, then get this calculator. Hands down. It's definitely nuclear overkill for anything in High School or lower, but anything else... Worth it.
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