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Indefinite Integral On Ti 84

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Topic: TI-84 program for indefinite integrals?  (Read 86765 times)

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hey guys,

the symbolic app has a feature to summate derivatives (the d( function)
could a part similar this also be programmed for indefinite integrals?

i've been searching for a function like this for almost a week now and it'due south driving me crazy :mad:
any aid would be appreciated :thumbsup:

« Last Edit: April 12, 2014, 06:34:36 am past TheCoder1998 »


No, unfortunately this is almost impossible except for basic integrals of polynomials like x^2. Mathematica solves indefinite integrals using the Risch algorithm, which is quite difficult to implement.

Sorry for my bad English. I'm German language.


ZoomMath 500. Be prepared to shed out 100 dollars though.

I bet they have only sold a few copies.

I'm not a nerd but I pretend:


There isn't a costless ane out there as far as I know, feel free to make one :)


ZoomMath 500. Exist prepared to shed out 100 dollars though.

I bet they take only sold a few copies.

It depends. Since information technology's math-related and maths are 99% of TI calc userbase, information technology might be selling more than than we recollect, although there'due south the issue about overly paranoid parents when information technology comes to online transaction security, and virtually students are under 18 so no credit card nor Paypal account. Too wasn't in that location a version of ZoomMath that costed $500?


ugh, i'thousand not ownership zoommath, i only hate the fact that they accuse money for it :mad:
i'd rather spend my summer vacation trying to program one myself (even if it's impossible)


ugh, i'm not buying zoommath, i just detest the fact that they charge money for information technology :mad:
i'd rather spend my summer holiday trying to program 1 myself (even if it's impossible)

Well, at any rate if Zoommath does it, information technology shows itself to be at least partially possible.


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i was wondering, does anyone here actually own zoommath?
is it illegal to (partially) share the code?

« Final Edit: March 06, 2014, 11:49:54 am by TheCoder1998 »



i was wondering, does anyone here actually ain zoommath?
is it illegal to (partially) share the code?

ZoomMath is free to download then you could look through the code yourself. What y'all purchase is a cardinal to unlock all of the features.


ZoomMath would not be at all impossible to rewrite. Accept Symbolic and work from there to make a full-fledged CAS. In the stop it would probably have more features.


ZoomMath is free to download so you could await through the code yourself. What you buy is a key to unlock all of the features.

really?
does anyone know how i could decompile an app and look through the lawmaking?


The primary concern would exist speed. You tin can't afford to spend 5 minutes waiting on a outcome from your estimator.
Decompiling an app is elementary. The are online disassemblers, you can find em under 'tools' on the frontpage. You'll take to figure out which code does what,  though, considering comments aren't compiled ;)

« Last Edit: March 06, 2014, 01:21:20 pm by aeTIos »

I'm non a nerd but I pretend:


so, information technology's been a while at present, and i've decided that i nonetheless want to summate my indefinite integrals
so how do i decompile zoommath?



For the most part, decompiling an app and determining the construction of and purposes and functions of the code is elementary. In fact, I used to do this without actually decompiling (although information technology was slower) and only reading bytecode.
According to aeTIos, at that place is a tool at Omni for information technology...

Keep trying.


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Indefinite Integral On Ti 84,

Source: https://www.omnimaga.org/math-and-science/ti-84-program-for-indefinite-integrals/

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