• @[email protected]
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    632 months ago

    Problem is on some calculators C is clear all and CE is clear entry, on some C is clear entry and AC is clear all, and some have a C/AC or CE/C button where it’s press once to clear entry and press twice to clear all.

    So it’s safest to mash unless you really know your calculator, because the industry can’t get its shit together, and that’s the sole reason it died (I’m assuming.)

    • Rhaedas
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      282 months ago

      Why didn’t they just make one Clear and make another Backspace? The concept of erasing the last character had been in typewriters for a while by then, and this is far more obvious. Maybe erasing a single digit in earlier software/hardware was much harder than just clearing it all?

      • @RememberTheApollo_
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        162 months ago

        Some do that, too. Unfortunately the weight of tradition seems to enforce the C/CE/AC key preference.

        Even the iphone built in OS calculator has the “AC” button unless you manually tap the entry window, then you get a backspace.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 months ago

          but we got digital typewriters that still used paper and those added the obvious functions like backspace and actual text editing tools, why didn’t calculators progress the same?

    • @[email protected]
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      82 months ago

      Thanks I was looking at the answer and thinking it didn’t fit my memory. i’m sure most of mine were ACs. TBF with things like VPAM coming in the late 90s, you did have backspace and all sorts of stuff like that.

      I still remember doing linear regression in a stats exam on i think a casio fx-115W something like that . Excellent calculator - but just no, it was time for some things to be on a real computer.