forked from swissmicros/free42
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
README
181 lines (147 loc) · 9.54 KB
/
README
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Free42 is a software clone of the Hewlett-Packard 42S calculator. If you know
how to use an HP-42S, you know how to use Free42.
If you're new to the HP-42S and its clones, you may want to take a peek at the
manual. You can get a scan of the original manual, wrapped in a rather large
PDF file, by ordering the HP Museum CD/DVD-ROM set (highly recommended for any
HP calculator enthusiast). Go to http://hpmuseum.org/ to learn more.
Alternatively, you can get a free manual for the HP-42S and Free42 at
http://thomasokken.com/free42/42s.pdf.
The remainder of this README file covers some miscellaneous tidbits that I had
no other decent place to put.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Binary vs. Decimal
Starting with release 1.4, Free42 can be built with binary or with decimal
floating point. Building the binary versions works as always (just say "make");
to build the decimal versions, set the BCD_MATH environment variable, or use
"make -e BCD_MATH=1".
When switching between building the decimal and binary version (or vice versa),
be sure to do "make clean", to avoid linking the wrong objects.
When building the Windows version using Visual C++, choose the Free42Binary or
Free42Decimal projects; these projects are set up so that all output files are
written to separate directories (ReleaseBinary, ReleaseDecimal, DebugBinary,
DebugDecimal), so you can switch between these projects without having to worry
about cleaning up object files.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Building the Unix version:
Different operating systems require different compiler and linker flags. One
day I would like to use autoconf or something similar to make it easier to
provide a Free42 source package that builds easily on all sorts of different
flavors of Unix; until then, here are a few hints that may help in case simply
saying 'make' doesn't to the job for you.
One known source of confusion is the LIBS line in the Makefile. Depending on
your system's specifics, you may have to list more libraries there than I have
in my Makefile. Apparently, different linkers have different abilities to
automatically include required libs: on my system, -lXm (Motif) automatically
includes -lXp -lXmu -lXt -lX11, but on others, some or all of these may have
to be specified explicitly. Additional libraries may also be needed.
If your build fails due to a missing sincos(), add -DNO_SINCOS to the
CXXFLAGS in the Makefile.
The Makefiles were all written for GNU make. On Linux, this is usually the
default anyway, but if you're using FreeBSD or other BSD derivatives, you may
have to use 'gmake' instead of 'make'.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
About the character sets:
('bigchars' and 'smallchars' arrays in core_display.c)
The top half of the 256 character codes are like the bottom half,
with these exceptions:
0x80: thin colon (':') (looks different than regular colon),
while 0x00 is a calculator-style divide sign (superposition
of ':' and '-')
0x81: small 'Y'; 0x01: multiply sign
0x8a: displays 'LF' character (small 'L' and small 'F',
slightly offset, squeezed into one character cell);
0x0a: actual linefeed (move to next line of display).
The bigchars array contains 130 characters, in 5x8 pixel cells,
corresponding to codes 0-129. Char 10 is the 'LF' ligature.
Note: the 'x:' and 'y:' legends for the standard X and Y register display
are built from 0x78 (lowercase x), 0x81 (small 'Y'), and 0x80 (thin ':').
Note: 0x01 (multiply) is different than 0x78 (lowercase x) (it is 1 pixel
higher).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HP-42S bugs that I found:
If you activate the CUSTOM menu in KEYASN mode, go to its third row, and then
switch to LCLBL mode, you get a menu row with labels "L", "M", "N", "O", "@",
"XEQ"; these keys activate the commands XEQ ST Z, XEQ ST Y, XEQ ST X, XEQ ST L,
XEQ 117, XEQ 118.
These commands do actually work, but entering the corresponding labels into a
program is a bit tricky...
->POL and ->REC with a real number in X reject a string in Y (good), accept a
real number in Y (good), accept a complex number in Y but only use its real
part (undocumented and not very useful), and accept real and complex matrices
in Y with weird results. I'd say the complex and matrix cases are all bugs,
resulting from a missing parameter type check.
If MATA, MATB, or MATX is the indexed matrix, and SIMQ resizes it to a smaller
size, IJ aren't set to (1, 1) as they usually are when the indexed matrix is
resized (though DIM or SIZE). As a result, IJ can end up pointing outside the
allocated elements, and RCLEL and STOEL can then produce wacky results.
HP-42S bugs that others have found:
When COMB or PERM are invoked with bad arguments (e.g. X > Y), "Invalid Data"
is returned (good), but all subsequent invocations of those two functions also
yield that message, even if the parameters are now correct (bad). This
condition can be cleared up by performing an operation that affects LASTx (but
not STO ST L). Apparently some rev. B models do not have this bug; I have read
that the original problem was a hardware bug, for which rev. B introduced a
software workaround; somewhere in the rev. B production run the hardware bug
was fixed, but now the software workaround would *cause* the bug. The bug also
exists in all rev. C models, apparently (it does in mine, and in Emu42 when run
with a rev. C ROM!).
I'm curious as to why a couple of basic, straightforward instructions like COMB
and PERM would be sensitive to a hardware bug (and *only* they, apparently),
but who am I to question what I've heard others report? I'm not about to spend
weeks poring over ROM disassemblies to make sure...
In LINSigma mode, summing a matrix is buggy. I have seen it sum only the first
row, and report a bogus value back in X (8.47216900137e-489), and also seen it
say Insufficient Memory when that clearly wasn't true; I have heard a report
from someone else about the machine even locking up to the point where it needs
a hard reset.
In some versions, LINSigma mode, Sigma+ and Sigma- do not update LASTx.
I read about this in a manual addendum from HP; however, I cannot reproduce
this, neither on my real HP-42S nor on Emu42 (both rev. C ROM).
I have also heard a report that FCSTX is buggy in PWRF mode; I have not been
able to confirm this yet but there appears to be more I have to read about it.
Probably depends on your ROM version; I tested with rev. C but it seemed fine.
Not sure if this is a bug or not:
When KEYX or KEYG are used to reprogram the UP and DOWN keys, it would be nice
if the 'updown' annunciator in the display got turned on to tip the user off.
I'm not sure if the manual mentions this behavior (TODO - check), but the
Programming Examples and Techniques book does (page 34, bottom). I've seen
a discussion about this on the hpmuseum.org forum, and all were agreed it would
be a nice feature, but it doesn't actually seem to work. At least it doesn't on
my HP-42S, and I haven't heard anyone claim that it does work on theirs,
either.
Note: Free42 does turn on the 'updown' annunciator. Although my general rule is
to mimic the HP-42S as closely as possible, I felt that this was a nice feature
and that it's pretty unlikely to break anything. :-)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[MIN], [MAX], and [FIND]: undocumented HP-42S matrix functions
[MIN] finds the lowest element of the current column, starting at the current
row, of the indexed matrix, and returns the element to X and the row where it
was found to Y; [MAX] is like [MIN] except it finds the highest element; if the
minimum or maximum is not unique (it is found in more than one row), the
highest matching row is returned. [MIN] and [MAX] require the indexed matrix to
be a real matrix, and they do not allow string elements in the column being
searched.
[FIND] locates a specific value, searching the indexed matrix left to right and
top to bottom. The function works as a conditional: when a program is running,
the following instruction is executed if a match is found, and skipped if a
match is not found; when executed interactively, the display shows "Yes" if a
match is found and "No" if not.
Also, if a match is found, I and J are set to point to it.
The indexed matrix may be real or complex, and the search value may be real,
complex, or string; real or string values are only found in real matrices, and
complex values are only found in complex matrices; in other words, 5 is not
considered equal to 5 + 0i -- mathematically speaking this is wrong, but on the
other hand it is consistent with the behavior of the X=Y? and X!=Y? functions.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Differences between the Free42 printer emulation and the HP-42S/82240
Free42 prints programs differently in NORM or TRACE modes: in NORM mode, the
listing is right-justified, and in TRACE mode, the listing is compact (multiple
commands per line). The HP42S does not do this; Free42 "inherited" this
behavior from the HP-82143 printer, which the author remembers fondly. :-)
When the HP-42S has to print a line that is too long to fit on one physical
printer line (i.e., more than 24 characters), it takes no special action.
Whether the printer prints the overflow left- or right-justified remains to be
found out. I should check the 82240 specs to see how it behaves.
Free42 usually prints the overflow left-justified; the only exceptions are PRP
and LIST in NORM mode.