Texas Instruments TI-36X Pro Engineering/Scientific Calculat... - 2024 report by Whydis
Texas Instruments TI-36X Pro Engineering/Scientific Calculator
Size:Handheld
Calculator is perfect for advanced algebra, trigonometry, computer science, chemistry and statistics. One- and two-variable statistics include results for linear regression and trend line analysis. Adds, subtracts, multiplies and divi...
very difficult to read the silvered keys - they reflect light too much, can not read the key function.
Some functions, such as with vectors, are cumbersome to produce.4
It has many more functions than other scientific calculators, yet it's still easy to use
While most of the keys are highly readable, the 4-function keys (add, subtract, multiply and divide) are silvered so that the key functions can only be seen by putting the calculator in just the right angle to the light
so many useful functions rather than carrying around a TI 84 Calculator
I've just gone back to college after 13 years, and the last thing I would have needed was a big headache trying to apply chemistry and physics equations to an overly complicated calculator
TI is perfect as alway, i got this calculator for the FE exam, and for a little cheap thing it does far more than i though it would
The best little bang for a little buck!Does some incredible things for being such a small calculator!Only sad thing: no double derivatives done.
If your not allowed to use a graphing calculator, this is the next best thing
Best for the accreditation exams! whoot this a great thing
Although I like this calculator, my main grievance with this and similar calculators such as the Casio fx-115es plus, is their half-hearted complex number support
n’t work
Complex number support is marginal
that if T.I. is going to put "Pro" on the name of their flagship scientific calculator, it should have more than marginal complex number support
Although I like this calculator, my main grievance with this and similar calculators such as the Casio fx-115es plus, is their half-hearted complex number support
You are reading snippets from reviews of Texas Instruments TI-36X Pro Engineering/Scientific Calculator
Works as you'd expect of a more complex, but sub-graphing calculator
Ordered the calculator for a course that required matrix operations and complex number calculations - Works very well!I am glad I did not purchase a new graphing calculator, because the TI-36X Pro has all the functions I need
Pros: Improper fraction conversion to proper fraction, Decimal to Fraction conversion, creating a short calculations with X,Y,Z,T,a,b,c,d variables that you are prompted to fill in
I much prefer the TI-36X Pro Scientific Calculator primarily because of the options for manipulating fractions, exponential numbers and repetitive calculations
The four line display alone makes it highly usable, and the calculations are very fast
I had to go back to my TI89 even though I run the risk of fail my class if they find anything fishy inside the TI89
Works as you'd expect of a more complex, but sub-graphing calculator
I'm an engineering student and can't use any graphing calculators (TI-80 series) for any of my hardest classes
I am an engineering student and this thing has been SOOOOOO helpful in all my mathematically-intense classes
The only thing this calculator is missing from our stats course is the ability to check confidence intervals and hypothesis testing (our class does the work by hand and using tables, so this works for us, but wouldn't work if your calculator is supposed to do all those computations for you).
only gave it 4 stars because for what ever reason the built in temp converter going from F to C gave me a wrong answer
It does get the integral answer, but depending on the calculation it crashs due to the massive calculation needed
The calculator will round off your numbers and give you the wrong answer to your problem
This calculator is fantastic; having the ability to work with fractions, radicals, imaginary numbers, and numbers including π has been critical especially in electrical engineering courses, where decimal answers are inappropriate.
This especially helpful for engineering and physics classes where the third decimal place on a seven digit number is the difference between a right and wrong answer
Solving complex numbers and matrices is very simple that I even taught a 4th grader to use this function properly
This calculator has everything I need for my engineering classes like complex numbers and systems of equations.
In most scientific calculators you type in the equation and the numbers are, of course, pixelated, but smaller in height, then when you hit `enter' the answer is in very crisp and clean numbers, non-pixelated. .
Not so with the 36X Pro, all of the LCD numbers are pixelated, and in low light conditions the pixelated numbers are not very fun to read.2
The only con I've found, it's not the best with complex numbers.