Fallback: As you know, the large character set includes everything required for echoing all our commands, so it's easy to switch character sets if needed. I don't expect this necessity for the reason stated above though.
Thanks.
Switching the fonts for numbers is trivial. Switching fonts for plaintext with all your foreign language support was not trivial. The small font contains many characters not available in the large font, which would require either font creation (for no good reason), or stretching the available fonts in real time as an easier compromise (which you can observe in the shape of the letters).
For reasons stated above, I'm not up to switch fonts, especially not for longer alphanumeric strings. The WP43S shall be a calculator, not a text processor. The text operations provided reflect just the functionality of the HP-42S and WP34S - we don't want to fall behind these.
WP43 SN00000, 34S, and 31S for obvious reasons; HP-35, 45, ..., 35S, 15CE, DM16L S/N# 00093, DM42β SN:00041
Switching fonts for plaintext with all your foreign language support was not trivial. The small font contains many characters not available in the large font, which would require either font creation (for no good reason)...
What you call "foreign language" may well be the native language of millions of people - so much about "no good reason". Actually, the WP43S contains two fonts designed for two different applications: calculating and text.
WP43 SN00000, 34S, and 31S for obvious reasons; HP-35, 45, ..., 35S, 15CE, DM16L S/N# 00093, DM42β SN:00041
Switching fonts for plaintext with all your foreign language support was not trivial. The small font contains many characters not available in the large font, which would require either font creation (for no good reason)...
What you call "foreign language" may well be the native language of millions of people - so much about "no good reason". Actually, the WP43S contains two fonts designed for two different applications: calculating and text.
It is clear that you have your reasons and I am not arguing for anything. I shared how my implementation differs and with that, this discussion should be over.
I now respond to the implication that I did not respectfully consider the millions. That is not true and the context of my ‘for no good reason’ was considering reasons to design new larger glyphs versus the easier way of stretching yours to fit.
There's an updated wp43s.exe in a gitlab next to you, also allowing you to calculate and play with times and dates now (thanks to Mihail!). And for flashing your DM4x, there's an updated wp43s.pgm as well. Enjoy!
And please report when you find something strange. (I know it's of no use but just keep asking.)
WP43 SN00000, 34S, and 31S for obvious reasons; HP-35, 45, ..., 35S, 15CE, DM16L S/N# 00093, DM42β SN:00041
We made quite some progress recently -- thanks to Martin and Mihail! So there's everything running for long and short integers, alphanumeric strings, times, and dates now. Almost everything for real numbers (incl. 1D statistics, normal, student, and chi-square distributions, zeta, incomplete gamma functions, Bernoulli numbers, etc.). Almost everything for complex numbers as well. Please check the Reference Manual: what's highlighted green should work.
Plenty of stuff for you to play, be it with the simulator or on your reflashed DM4x. Please find the new wp43s.exe for the simulator here: https://gitlab.com/Over_score/wp43s/-/t ... 20binaries and details in the manuals as usual.
WP43 SN00000, 34S, and 31S for obvious reasons; HP-35, 45, ..., 35S, 15CE, DM16L S/N# 00093, DM42β SN:00041
I put a new wp43s.exe at the same place were the previous one was. It's for your WP43S simulator. Please look, if you want to, what you can do more now.
WP43 SN00000, 34S, and 31S for obvious reasons; HP-35, 45, ..., 35S, 15CE, DM16L S/N# 00093, DM42β SN:00041