12c/12c Platinum programming differences



#8

I was wondering if anyone who has bought the new Platinum 12c has noticed if programming is any different. Specifically, since the original 12c used up all 256 possible combinations for an 8-bit command, and the Platinum has some new keys (x^2, =, ALG, RPN), how are these accomodated? Come to think of it, with GTO 000 to GTO 399 taking up 400 combinations, and an 8 bit command allowing only 256, did they maybe take a new approach and have the GTO command take 2 bytes now?

Has anyone checked this out?

thanks,
Don Shepherd
Louisville, KY


#9

Don, programming is the same, using RPN. In my unit i cannot go over 253 lines though as then any earlier GTO cease to work.


#10

Thanks Tony. Based on your experience, it sounds like they goofed up the GTO command implementation. What good are 400 steps if you can't use them?

Don Shephed


#11

A good period of beta testing using people who really know what they're doing would have caught the GOTO problem.

FYI...I was a beta tester of sorts, but only got the unit about 6 weeks before it was sold on retail. That won't work, HP. Beta testing has to be early enough where you can fix things they find!

#12

Don wrote:

Quote:
What good are 400 steps if you can't use them?

I have a "classic" 12C (Singapore 1993), and find its programming capabilities suitable for little more than short, disposable routines. Its "GTO" goes to line numbers only, in the style of old BASIC -- no "GSB"/"XEQ" for execution of subroutines identified by a "LBL" (statement label/routine name). There is no capability to edit programs by inserting or deleting individual instructions.

If the 12C Platinum works the same way, perhaps a better question is, "What good is 400 steps of programming under this paradigm?"


#13

Or further,


why did HP use such a crippled version of RPN in the 12c in the first place? Does somebody have any clues to this? Did the built-in financial routines just take up too much space?


Perhaps another way to answer this would be to see how much space it would take on a 15c to implement all of the 12c financial routines. Perhaps it would not even fit on an 11c, or even a 15-c?


regards,


Bill


#14

It's not a crippled version of RPN per se but of RPN programming.

I thought all op codes were used in the 12c. If so, then there was no room for LBL, RTN, GSB, etc.

No excuse in the 12c plat however.

It is normally much too painful to write anything really useful on the 12c for me to do so.

I know that Valentin has done wonders, but I dont' have the patience any more to write things on feature-starved calculators when they should have more instructions.

My 2 cents.
Gene


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Silly me... I also bought a 12C and 15C Eelco Rouw 3 2,337 12-10-2013, 04:42 PM
Last Post: Stephan Matthys
  Trig vs hyperbolic handling differences in Prime CAS Michael de Estrada 3 1,649 11-08-2013, 06:26 PM
Last Post: Mark Hardman
  HP 12C Platinum Programming v. Gold Face Dean Lewis 10 3,528 11-03-2013, 07:30 PM
Last Post: Kimberly Thompson
  HP-12C batteries Yriarte 4 1,954 10-12-2013, 10:39 PM
Last Post: Yriarte
  Los Angeles Times on the HP-12C Peter Murphy (Livermore) 6 2,375 08-29-2013, 02:18 PM
Last Post: Matt Agajanian
  Value of 1981 HP 12C hctablet1024 1 1,298 08-06-2013, 09:28 AM
Last Post: Sylvain Cote
  HP12C Platinum PC software activation fails Russell Clinton 0 1,108 07-02-2013, 02:32 PM
Last Post: Russell Clinton
  JTAG on HP-12C and HP-15C LE Ingo 5 2,522 07-01-2013, 06:37 PM
Last Post: Paul Dale
  HP-12C: Missing Segments Stefan Ramonat 2 1,493 06-28-2013, 10:59 AM
Last Post: Stefan Ramonat
  2-battery 12c keyboard row quit Neil Hamilton (Ottawa) 1 1,105 06-23-2013, 10:46 AM
Last Post: Kimberly Thompson

Forum Jump: