English
Noun
calculators
- Plural of calculator
A calculator is an
electronic device for
performing mathematical calculations, distinguished from a
computer by a limited problem
solving ability and an interface optimized for interactive
calculation rather than programming. Calculators can be hardware or
software, and mechanical or electronic, and are often built into
devices such as PDAs or
mobile
phones. Modern electronic calculators are generally small,
digital, (often pocket-sized) and usually inexpensive. In addition
to general purpose calculators, there are those designed for
specific markets; for example, there are
scientific
calculators which focus on advanced math like
trigonometry and
statistics. Modern
calculators are more portable than most computers, though most
PDAs are comparable in size to handheld calculators.
Overview
In the past, mechanical clerical aids such as
abaci,
comptometers,
Napier's
bones, books of
mathematical
tables,
slide rules,
or mechanical
adding
machines were used for numeric work. This semi-manual process
of calculation was tedious and error-prone.
Modern calculators are electrically powered
(usually by battery and/or
solar cell)
and vary from cheap, give-away, credit-card sized models to sturdy
adding machine-like models with built-in printers. They first
became popular in the late 1960s as decreasing size and cost of
electronics made possible devices for calculations, avoiding the
use of scarce and expensive computer resources. By the 1980s,
calculator prices had reduced to a point where a basic calculator
was affordable to most. By the 1990s they had become common in math
classes in schools, with the idea that students could be freed from
basic calculations and focus on the concepts.
Computer operating systems as far back as
early Unix have included interactive calculator programs such
as
dc
and
hoc,
and calculator functions are included in almost all
PDA-type
devices (save a few dedicated address book and dictionary
devices).
Electronic calculators
In the past, some calculators were
as large as today's
computers. The first
mechanical
calculators were mechanical desktop devices which were replaced
by electromechanical desktop calculators, and then by electronic
devices using first
thermionic
valves, then
transistors, then hard-wired
integrated
circuit logic. By the mid-1970s, pocket-sized calculators based
on ICs were routinely available, often at prices less than $100,
and by the early 1980s the LED displays of 1970s units had been
replaced by power-saving
liquid
crystal displays. Modern electronic calculators range in size
from keychain-sized units only a couple of centimeters long all the
way up to desktop calculators the size of a textbook, and in
complexity from very basic up to
graphing
calculators capable of video display and sometimes extensive
general-purpose programming capability.
Basic configuration
A simple modern calculator (usually
known colloquially as a "four function" calculator, even with the
presence of a square root button) might consist of the following
parts:
- A power source, such as a battery or a solar
panel or both
- A display, usually made from LED lights or liquid crystal (LCD),
capable of showing a number of digits (typically 8 or 10)
- Electronic circuitry (often a single chip and some other
components)
- A keypad containing:
- The ten digits, 0 to 9
- The decimal
point
- The equals sign, to prompt for the answer
- The four arithmetic functions (addition, subtraction,
multiplication and division)
- A Cancel (or clear) button, to clear the calculation
- On and off buttons
- Other basic functions, such as square root
and percentage (%) (desktop models will sometimes add tax functions
and significant
digit selectors to simplify work with money)
- A single-number memory,
which can be recalled where necessary. It might also have a Cancel
Entry button, to clear the numbers entered. (Many scientific
calculators have multiple variables available.)
Since the late-1980s, calculators have been
installed in other small devices, such as
mobile
phones,
pagers or
wrist watches.
Scientific and financial calculators
More complex
scientific
calculators support
trigonometric,
statistical and other
mathematical
functions. The most advanced modern calculators can display
graphics,
and include features of
computer
algebra systems. They are also programmable; calculator
applications include algebraic equation solvers, financial models
and even games. Most calculators of this type can print numbers up
to ten digits or decimal places in full on the screen.
Scientific
notation is used to notate numbers up to a limit chosen by the
calculator designer, such as 9.999999999×10. If a larger number or
a mathematical expression yielding a larger number than this is
entered (a common example comes from typing "100!", read as "100
factorial") then the
calculator might simply display "Error".
"Error" might also be displayed if a function or
an operation is undefined mathematically; for example,
division
by zero or even
roots of
negative numbers (most scientific calculators do not allow
complex
numbers, though a few do have a special function for working
with them). Some, but not most, calculators do distinguish between
these two types of "error", though when they do, it is not always
easy for the user to understand because they are often given as
"Error 1" or "Error 2".
Financial calculators are similar in overall
design to scientific calculators, but specialize in
time
value of money calculations and are used in the
accounting and
real estate
professions.
Only a few companies make professional
engineering and finance calculators. They include
Casio,
Sharp,
Hewlett-Packard
(HP),
Victor
and
Texas
Instruments (TI), as well as Chinese manufacturer
Karce, who provides
OEM calculators
for the
private
label market. Such calculators are examples of
embedded
systems.
Use in education
In most countries,
students use calculators for
schoolwork. There was some initial resistance to the idea out of
fear that
basic
arithmetic skills would suffer. There remains disagreement
about the importance of the ability to perform calculations by hand
or "in the head", with some curricula restricting calculator use
until a certain level of proficiency has been obtained, while
others concentrate more on teaching
estimation techniques and
problem-solving. Research suggests that inadequate guidance in the
use of calculating tools can restrict the kind of mathematical
thinking that students engage in. Others have argued that
calculator use can even cause core mathematical skills to atrophy,
or that such use can prevent understanding of advanced algebraic
concepts.
There are other concerns - for example, that a
pupil could use the calculator in the wrong fashion but believe the
answer because that was the result given. Teachers try to combat
this by encouraging the student to make an estimate of the result
manually and ensuring it roughly agrees with the calculated result.
Also, it is possible for a child to type in
−1 × −1 and obtain the
correct answer '1' without realizing the principle involved. In
this sense, the calculator becomes a
crutch rather than a learning
tool, and it can slow down students in exam conditions as they
check even the most trivial result on a calculator.
Other concerns on usage
Errors are not restricted to school
pupils. Any user could carelessly rely on the calculator's output
without double-checking the
magnitude
of the result — i.e., where the
decimal
point is positioned. This problem was all but nonexistent in
the era of
slide rules
and pencil-and-paper calculations, when the task of establishing
the magnitudes of results had to be done by the user. In addition,
algorithmic flaws and rounding techniques can sometimes lead to
minor precision errors.
Some fractions such as 2/3 are awkward to display
on a calculator display as they are usually rounded to 0.66666667.
Also, some fractions such as 1/7 which is 0.14285714285714 can be
difficult to recognize in decimal form; as a result, many
scientific calculators are able to work in
vulgar
fractions and/or
mixed
numbers.
Calculating vs. computing
The fundamental difference
between calculators and computers is that computers can be
programmed to perform different tasks while calculators are
pre-designed with specific functions built in, for example
addition, multiplication, logarithms, etc. While computers may be
used to handle numbers, they can also manipulate words, images or
sounds and other tasks they have been programmed to handle.
However, the distinction between the two is quite blurred; some
calculators have built-in programming functions, ranging from
simple formula entry to full programming languages such as
RPL
or
TI-BASIC. Graphing
calculators in particular can, along with
PDAs,
be viewed as direct descendants of the 1980s
pocket
computers, essentially calculators with full keyboards and
programming capability.
The market for calculators is extremely
price-sensitive, to an even greater extent than the personal
computer market; typically the user desires the least expensive
model having a specific feature set, but does not care much about
speed (since speed is constrained by how fast the user can press
the buttons). Thus designers of calculators strive to minimize the
number of logic elements on the chip, not the number of clock
cycles needed to do a computation.
For instance, instead of a hardware multiplier, a
calculator might implement
floating
point mathematics with code in
ROM, and
compute trigonometric functions with the
CORDIC algorithm
because CORDIC does not require hardware floating-point.
Bit serial
logic designs are more common in calculators whereas
bit parallel
designs dominate general-purpose computers, because a bit serial
design minimizes the chip complexity, but takes many more clock
cycles. (Again, the line blurs with high-end calculators, which use
processor chips associated with computer and embedded systems
design, particularly the
Z80,
MC68000, and
ARM
architectures, as well as some custom designs specifically made for
the calculator market.)
Personal
computers and
personal
digital assistants can perform general calculations in a
variety of ways:
- Most computer operating systems, at least those that support
some kind of multitasking, include
calculator programs, both text mode (such as the Unix bc (1)
language) and graphical mode (Mac
OS Calculator, Microsoft
Calculator, KCalc, Grapher). Most,
though not all, imitate the interface of a physical calculator.
Some shell
programs and interpreted programming languages also provide
interactive calculation functions.
- For more complex calculations requiring large amounts of
organized data, spreadsheet programs such as
Excel or
OpenOffice.org
Calc provide calculation and sometimes reporting functions.
- Computer
algebra programs such as Mathematica,
and
others can handle advanced calculations.
- Client-side
scripting can be used for calculations, e.g. by entering
"javascript:alert('calculation written in JavaScript')" in
a web
browser's address bar (as opposed to "http://website name").
Such calculations can be embedded in a separate Javascript or
HTML file as
well.
- Online calculators such as the
calculator feature of the Google search engine can perform
calculations server-side.
History
Origin: the abacus
The first calculators were abaci, and
were often constructed as a wooden frame with beads sliding on
wires. Abacuses were in use centuries before the adoption of the
written Arabic numerals system and are still used by some
merchants, fishermen and clerks in China and elsewhere.
The 17th century
William
Oughtred invents the slide rule in 1622 and is revealed by his
student Richard Delamain in 1630.
Wilhelm
Schickard built the first automatic calculator called the
"Calculating Clock" in 1623. Some 20 years later, in 1643, French
philosopher
Blaise
Pascal invented the calculation device later known as the
Pascaline, which
was used for taxes in France until 1799. The German philosopher
G.W.v.
Leibniz also
produced a
calculating
machine.
The 19th century
- In 1822 Charles
Babbage proposed a mechanical calculator, called a difference
engine, which was capable of holding and manipulating seven
numbers of 31 decimal digits each. Babbage produced two designs for
the difference engine and a further design for a more advanced
mechanical programmable computer called an analytical
engine. None of these designs were completely built by Babbage.
In 1991 the London
Science Museum followed Babbage's plans to build a working
difference engine using the technology and materials available in
the 19th century.
- In 1853 Per Georg
Scheutz completed a working difference engine based on
Babbage's design. The machine was the size of a piano, and was
demonstrated at the
Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1855. It was
used to create tables of logarithms.
- In 1872, Frank Baldwin in the U.S.A. invented the
pinwheel
calculator, which was also independently invented two years
later by W.T. Odhner in Russia. The Odhner
models, and similar designs from other companies, sold many
thousands into the 1970s.
- In 1875 Martin
Wiberg re-designed the Babbage/Scheutz difference engine and
built a version that was the size of a sewing machine.
- Dorr E. Felt, in the U.S.A., invented the
Comptometer in
1884, the first successful key-driven adding and calculating
machine ["key-driven" refers to the fact that just pressing the
keys causes the result to be calculated, no separate lever has to
be operated]. In 1886 he joined with Robert Tarrant to form the
Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company which went on to make
thousands of Comptometers.
- In 1891 William S. Burroughs began commercial manufacture of
his printing adding calculator. Burroughs
Corporation became one of the leading companies in the
accounting machine and computer businesses.
- The "Millionaire" calculator was introduced in 1893. It allowed
direct multiplication by any digit - "one turn of the crank for
each figure in the multiplier".
1900s to 1960s
Mechanical calculators reach their zenith
The first half of
the 20th century saw the gradual development of the mechanical
calculator mechanism.
The Dalton adding-listing machine introduced in
1902 was the first of its type to use only ten keys, and became the
first of many different models of "10-key add-listers" manufactured
by many companies. In 1948 the miniature
Curta calculator,
that was held in one hand for operation, was introduced after being
developed by
Curt
Herzstark in a Nazi concentration camp. This was an extreme
development of the stepped-gear calculating mechanism.
From the early 1900s through the 1960s,
mechanical calculators dominated the desktop computing market (see
History of computing hardware). Major suppliers in the USA
included
Friden,
Monroe,
and
SCM/Marchant.
(Some comments about European calculators follow below.) These
devices were motor-driven, and had movable carriages where results
of calculations were displayed by dials. Nearly all keyboards were
full — each digit that could be entered had its own column of nine
keys, 1..9, plus a column-clear key, permitting entry of several
digits at once. (See the illustration of a 1914 mechanical
calculator.) One could call this parallel entry, by way of contrast
with ten-key serial entry that was commonplace in mechanical adding
machines, and is now universal in electronic calculators. (Nearly
all Friden calculators had a ten-key auxiliary keyboard for
entering the multiplier when doing multiplication.) Full keyboards
generally had ten columns, although some lower-cost machines had
eight. Most machines made by the three companies mentioned did not
print their results, although other companies, such as Olivetti,
did make printing calculators.
In these machines,
Addition and
subtraction were
performed in a single operation, as on a conventional adding
machine, but
multiplication and
division
were accomplished by repeated mechanical additions and
subtractions.
Friden made
a calculator that also provided
square roots,
basically by doing division, but with added mechanism that
automatically incremented the number in the keyboard in a
systematic fashion. Friden and Marchant (Model SKA) made
calculators with square root. Handheld mechanical calculators such
as the 1948
Curta continued to be
used until they were displaced by electronic calculators in the
1970s.
The Facit, Triumphator, and Walther calculators
are typical European machines. Similar-looking machines included
the Odhner and Brunsviga. Although these are operated by
handcranks, there were motor-driven versions. Most machines that
look like these use the Odhner mechanism, or variations of it. The
Olivetti Divisumma did all four basic operations of arithmetic, and
has a printer. Full-keyboard machines, including motor-driven ones,
were also used in Europe for many decades. Some European machines
had as many as 20 columns in their full keyboards.
The development of electronic calculators
The first
main-frame
computers, using firstly
vacuum tubes
and later
transistors
in the logic circuits, appeared in the late 1940s and 1950s. This
technology was to provide a stepping stone to the development of
electronic calculators.
In 1954,
IBM, in the
U.S.A., demonstrated
a large all-
transistor calculator and, in
1957, the company released the first commercial all-transistor
calculator, the
IBM 608, though
it was housed in several cabinets and cost about $80,000
http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/vintage/vintage_4506VV2214.html.
The
Casio Computer Co.,
in
Japan,
released the Model 14-A calculator in 1957, which was the world's
first all-electric "compact" calculator. It did not use electronic
logic but was based on
relay technology, and was built
into a desk.
In October 1961, the world's first all-electronic
desktop calculator, the Bell Punch/Sumlock Comptometer
ANITA
(A New Inspiration To Arithmetic/Accounting) was announced. This
British designed-and-built machine used
vacuum tubes,
cold-cathode tubes and
Dekatrons in its
circuits, with 12 cold-cathode
"Nixie"-type
tubes for its display. Two models were displayed, The Mk VII for
continental Europe and the Mk VIII for Britain and the rest of the
world, both for delivery from early 1962. The Mk VII was a slightly
earlier design with a more complicated mode of multiplication and
was soon dropped in favour of the simpler Mark VIII version. The
ANITA had a full keyboard, similar to mechanical
Comptometers of
the time, a feature that was unique to it and the later
Sharp
CS-10A among electronic calculators. Bell Punch had been producing
key-driven mechanical calculators of the
Comptometer
type under the names "Plus" and "Sumlock", and had realised in the
mid-1950s that the future of calculators lay in electronics. They
employed the young graduate Norbert Kitz, who had worked on the
early British
Pilot ACE
computer project, to lead the development. The
ANITA
sold well since it was the only electronic desktop calculator
available, and was silent and quick.
The tube technology of the
ANITA
was superseded in June 1963, by the U.S. manufactured Friden
EC-130,
which had an all-transistor design, 13-digit capacity on a 5-inch
CRT,
and introduced reverse Polish notation (
RPN)
to the calculator market for a price of $2200, which was about
triple the cost of an electromechanical calculator of the time.
Like Bell Punch, Friden was a manufacturer of mechanical
calculators that had decided that the future lay in electronics. In
1964 more all-transistor elctronic calculators were introduced:
Sharp
introduced the
CS-10A, which
weighed 25 kg (55 lb) and cost 500,000 yen (~US$2500), and
Industria Macchine Elettroniche of Italy introduced the IME 84, to
which several extra keyboard and display units could be connected
so that several people could make use of it (but apparently not at
the same time).
There followed a series of electronic calculator
models from these and other manufacturers, including Canon,
Mathatronics, Olivetti, SCM (Smith-Corona-Marchant), Sony, Toshiba,
and Wang. The early calculators used hundreds of
Germanium
transistors, since these were then cheaper than
Silicon
transistors, on multiple circuit boards. Display types used were
CRT,
cold-cathode
Nixie tubes,
and
filament
lamps. Memory technology was usually based on the
delay
line memory or the
magnetic
core memory, though the Toshiba "Toscal" BC-1411 appears to use
an early form of
dynamic RAM
built from discrete components. Already there was a desire for
smaller and less power-hungry machines.
The
Olivetti Programma
101 was introduced in late 1965; it was a stored program
machine which could read and write magnetic cards and displayed
results on its built-in printer. Memory, implemented by an acoustic
delay line, could be partitioned between program steps, constants,
and data registers. Programming allowed conditional testing and
programs could also be overlaid by reading from magnetic cards. It
is regarded as the first personal computer produced by a company
(that is, a desktop electronic calculating machine programmable by
non-specialists for personal use). The Olivetti Programma 101 won
many industrial design awards.
The
Monroe Epic
programmable calculator came on the market in 1967. A large,
printing, desk-top unit, with an attached floor-standing logic
tower, it was capable of being programmed to perform many
computer-like functions. However, the only branch instruction was
an implied unconditional branch (GOTO) at the end of the operation
stack, returning the program to its starting instruction. Thus, it
was not possible to include any
conditional
branch (IF-THEN-ELSE) logic. During this era, the absence of
the conditional branch was sometimes used to distinguish a
programmable calculator from a computer.
The first handheld calculator was developed by
Texas
Instruments in 1967. It could add, multiply, subtract, and
divide, and its output device was a paper tape.
1970s to mid-1980s
The electronic calculators of the
mid-1960s were large and heavy desktop machines due to their use of
hundreds of
transistors on several
circuit boards with a large power consumption that required an AC
power supply. There were great efforts to put the logic required
for a calculator into fewer and fewer
integrated
circuits (chips) and calculator electronics was one of the
leading edges of
semiconductor development.
U.S. semiconductor manufacturers led the world in Large Scale
Integration (LSI) semiconductor development, squeezing more and
more functions into individual integrated circuits. This led to
alliances between Japanese calculator manufacturers and U.S.
semiconductor companies:
Canon
Inc. with
Texas
Instruments,
Hayakawa
Electric (later known as Sharp Corporation) with
North-American
Rockwell Microelectronics,
Busicom with
Mostek and
Intel, and
General
Instrument with
Sanyo.
Pocket calculators
By 1970 a calculator could be made using
just a few chips of low power consumption, allowing portable models
powered from rechargeable batteries. The first portable calculators
appeared in Japan in 1970, and were soon marketed around the world.
These included the Sanyo ICC-0081 "Mini Calculator", the Canon
Pocketronic, and the Sharp QT-8B "micro Compet". The Canon
Pocketronic was a development of the "Cal-Tech" project which had
been started at
Texas
Instruments in 1965 as a research project to produce a portable
calculator. The Pocketronic has no traditional display; numerical
output is on thermal paper tape. As a result of the "Cal-Tech"
project Texas instruments was granted master patents on portable
calculators.
Sharp put in great efforts in size and power
reduction and introduced in January 1971 the
Sharp EL-8,
also marketed as the Facit 1111, which was close to being a pocket
calculator. It weighed about one pound, had a vacuum fluorescent
display, rechargeable
NiCad batteries, and
initially sold for $395.
However, the efforts in integrated circuit
development culminated in the introduction in early 1971 of the
first "calculator on a chip", the MK6010 by
Mostek, followed by
Texas Instruments later in the year. Although these early hand-held
calculators were very expensive, these advances in electronics,
together with developments in display technology (such as the
vacuum
fluorescent display,
LED, and
LCD), lead within a few
years to the cheap pocket calculator available to all.
The first truly pocket-sized electronic
calculator was the
Busicom
LE-120A "HANDY", which was marketed early in 1971. Made in
Japan, this was also the first calculator to use an
LED display, the first
hand-held calculator to use a single integrated circuit (then
proclaimed as a "calculator on a chip"), the
Mostek MK6010, and
the first electronic calculator to run off replaceable batteries.
Using four AA-size cells the LE-120A measures 4.9x2.8x0.9 in
(124x72x24 mm).
The first American-made pocket-sized calculator,
the Bowmar 901B (popularly referred to as The Bowmar Brain),
measuring 5.2×3.0×1.5 in (131×77×37 mm), came out in the fall of
1971, with four functions and an eight-digit red
LED
display, for $240, while in August 1972 the four-function
Sinclair
Executive became the first slimline pocket calculator measuring
5.4×2.2×0.35 in (138×56×9 mm) and weighing 2.5 oz (70g). It
retailed for around $150 (
GB£79). By
the end of the decade, similar calculators were priced less than
$10 (GB£5).
The first Soviet-made pocket-sized calculator,
the "Elektronika B3-04" was developed by the end of 1973 and sold
at the beginning of 1974.
One of the first low-cost calculators was the
Sinclair
Cambridge, launched in August 1973. It retailed for
£29.95, or
some £5 less in kit form. The Sinclair calculators were successful
because they were far cheaper than the competition; however, their
design was flawed and their accuracy in some functions was
questionable. The scientific programmable models were particularly
poor in this respect, with the programmability coming at a heavy
price in
transcendental
accuracy.
Meanwhile
Hewlett
Packard (HP) had been developing its own pocket calculator.
Launched in early 1972 it was unlike the other basic four-function
pocket calculators then available in that it was the first pocket
calculator with scientific functions that could replace a
slide rule.
The $395
HP-35, along with all
later HP engineering calculators, used
reverse
Polish notation (RPN), also called postfix notation. A
calculation like "8 plus 5" is, using RPN, performed by pressing
"8", "Enter↑", "5", and "+"; instead of the algebraic
infix
notation: "8", "+", "5", "=").
The first Soviet scientific pocket-sized
calculator the "B3-18" was completed by the end of 1975.
In 1973,
Texas
Instruments(TI) introduced the
SR-10, (SR signifying
slide
rule) an algebraic entry pocket calculator for $150. It was
followed the next year by the
SR-50 which added log
and trig functions to compete with the HP-35, and in 1977 the
mass-marketed
TI-30 line which is
still produced.
The first programmable pocket calculator was the
HP-65, in
1974; it had a capacity of 100 instructions, and could store and
retrieve programs with a built-in magnetic card reader. A year
later the
HP-25C introduced
continuous memory, i.e. programs and data were retained in
CMOS memory during
power-off. In 1979, HP released the first
alphanumeric, programmable,
expandable calculator, the
HP-41C. It could be
expanded with
RAM
(memory) and
ROM
(software) modules, as well as peripherals like
bar code
readers,
microcassette and
floppy disk
drives, paper-roll
thermal
printers, and miscellaneous communication interfaces (
RS-232,
HP-IL,
HP-IB).
The first Soviet programmable calculator
Elektronika
"
B3-21" was
developed by the end of 1977 and sold at the beginning of 1978. The
successor of B3-21, the
Elektronika
B3-34 wasn't backward compatible with B3-21, even if it kept
the
reverse
Polish notation (RPN). Thus B3-34 defined a new command set,
which later was used in all programmable soviet calculators. There
are hundreds of developed programs for science, business and even
games for these machines. The
Elektronika
MK-52 calculator (using the extended B3-34 command set, and
featuring internal
EEPROM memory for
storing programs and external interface for EEPROM cards and other
periphery) was used in soviet spacecraft program (for
Soyuz TM-7
flight) as a backup of the board computer.
Mechanical calculators continued to be sold,
though in rapidly decreasing numbers, into the early 1970s, with
many of the manufacturers closing down or being taken over.
Comptometer
type calculators were often retained for much longer to be used for
adding and listing duties, especially in accounting, since a
trained and skilled operator could enter all the digits of a number
in one movement of the hands on a
Comptometer
quicker than was possible serially with a 10-key electronic
calculator. The spread of the computer rather than the simple
electronic calculator put an end to the
Comptometer.
Also, by the end of the 1970s, the
slide rule had
become obsolete.
Technical improvements
Through the 1970s the hand-held
electronic calculator underwent rapid development. The red LED and
blue/green
vacuum-fluorescent
displays consumed a lot of power and the calculators either had
a short battery life (often measured in hours, so rechargeable
Nickel-Cadmium
batteries were common) or were large so that they could take
larger, higher capacity batteries. In the early 1970s
Liquid
crystal displays (LCDs) were in their infancy and there was a
great deal of concern that they only had a short operating
lifetime. Busicom introduced the Busicom LE-120A "HANDY"
calculator, the first pocket-sized calculator and the first with an
LED display,
and announced the Busicom LC with
LCD display. However,
there were problems with this display and the calculator never went
on sale. The first successful calculators with
LCDs were manufactured
by
Rockwell
International and sold from 1972 by other companies under such
names as: Dataking LC-800, Harden DT/12, Ibico 086, Lloyds 40,
Lloyds 100, Prismatic 500 (aka P500), Rapid Data Rapidman 1208LC.
The
LCDs were
an early form with the numbers appearing as silver against a dark
background. To present a high-contrast display these models
illuminated the
LCD using a filament
lamp and solid plastic light guide, which negated the low power
consumption of the display. These models appear to have been sold
only for a year or two.
A more successful series of calculators using the
reflective LCD display was launched in 1972 by
Sharp Inc with
the Sharp EL-805, which was a slim pocket calculator. This, and
another few similar models, used Sharp's "COS" (Crystal on
Substrate) technology. This used a glass-like circuit board which
was also an integral part of the
LCD. In operation the
user looked through this "circuit board" at the numbers being
displayed. The "COS" technology may have been too expensive since
it was only used in a few models before Sharp reverted to
conventional circuit boards, though all the models with the
reflective
LCD
displays are often referred to as "COS".
In the mid-1970s the first calculators appeared
with the now "normal"
LCDs with dark numerals
against a grey background, though the early ones often had a yellow
filter over them to cut out damaging
UV rays. The big
advantage of the
LCD is that it is
passive and reflects light, which requires much less power than
generating light. This led the way to the first credit-card-sized
calculators, such as the
Casio Mini Card LC-78
of 1978, which could run for months of normal use on a couple of
button cells.
There were also improvements to the electronics
inside the calculators. All of the logic functions of a calculator
had been squeezed into the first "Calculator on a chip"
integrated
circuits in 1971, but this was leading edge technology of the
time and yields were low and costs were high. Many calculators
continued to use two or more
integrated
circuits (ICs), especially the scientific and the programmable
ones, into the late 1970s.
The power consumption of the integrated circuits
was also reduced, especially with the introduction of
CMOS technology.
Appearing in the Sharp "EL-801" in 1972, the
transistors in the logic
cells of
CMOS
ICs only used any apreciable power when they changed state. The
LED and
VFD displays
had often required additional driver transistors or
ICs, whereas the
LCD displays
were more amenable to being driven directly by the calculator
IC itself.
With this low power consumption came the
possibility of using
solar cells
as the power source, realised around 1978 by such calculators as
the Royal Solar 1, Sharp EL-8026, and Teal Photon.
A pocket calculator for everyone
At the beginning of the
1970s hand-held electronic calculators were very expensive, costing
two or three weeks' wages, and so were a luxury item. The high
price was due to their construction requiring many mechanical and
electronic components which were expensive to produce, and
production runs were not very large. Many companies saw that there
were good profits to be made in the calculator business with the
margin on these high prices. However, the cost of calculators fell
as components and their production techniques improved, and the
effect of economies of scale were felt.
By 1976 the cost of the cheapest 4-function
pocket calculator had dropped to a few dollars, about one twentieth
of the cost five years earlier. The consequences of this were that
the pocket calculator was affordable, and that it was now difficult
for the manufacturers to make a profit out of calculators, leading
to many companies dropping out of the business or closing down
altogether. The companies that survived making calculators tended
to be those with high outputs of higher quality calculators, or
producing high-specification scientific and programmable
calculators.
Mid-1980s to present
The first calculator capable of
symbolic computation was the
HP-28, released in
1987. It was able to, for example, solve quadratic equations
symbolically. The first
graphing
calculator was the
Casio fx7000G
released in 1985.
The two leading manufacturers, HP and TI,
released increasingly feature-laden calculators during the 1980s
and 1990s. At the turn of the millennium, the line between a
graphing calculator and a
handheld
computer was not always clear, as some very advanced
calculators such as the
TI-89, the
Voyage 200
and
HP-49G
could
differentiate
and
integrate functions,
solve
differential
equations, run
word
processing and
PIM software, and connect by wire or
IR to other
calculators/computers.
The
HP 12c financial
calculator is still produced. It was introduced in 1981 and is
still being made with few changes. The HP 12c featured the
reverse
Polish notation mode of data entry. In 2003 several new models
were released, including an improved version of the HP 12c, the "HP
12c platinum edition" which added more memory, more built-in
functions, and the addition of the algebraic mode of data
entry.
Online calculators are programs designed to work
just like a normal calculator does. Usually the keyboard (or the
mouse clicking a virtual numpad) is used, but other means of input
(e.g. slide bars) are possible.
Thanks to the Internet, many new types of
calculators are possible for calculations that would otherwise be
much more difficult or impossible, such as for real time currency
exchange rates, loan rates and statistics.
See also
References
Patents
- – Complex computer – G. R.
Stibitz, Bell
Laboratories, 1954 (filed 1941, refiled 1944),
electromechanical (relay) device that could calculate complex
numbers, record, and print results by teletype
- – Miniature electronic calculator – J. S. Kilby,
Texas
Instruments, 1974 (originally filed 1967), handheld (3 lb, 1.4
kg) battery operated electronic device with thermal printer
- The Japanese Patent Office granted a patent in June 1978 to
Texas Instruments (TI) based on US patent 3819921, notwithstanding
objections from 12 Japanese calculator manufacturers. This gave TI
the right to claim royalties retroactively to the original
publication of the Japanese patent application in August 1974. A TI
spokesman said that it would actively seek what was due, either in
cash or technology cross-licensing agreements. Nineteen other
countries, including the United Kingdom, had already granted a
similar patent to Texas Instruments. – New Scientist, 17 Aug. 1978
p455, and Practical Electronics (British publication), October 1978
p1094.
- – Floating Point Calculator With RAM Shift Register - 1977
(originally filed GB Mar 1971, US Jul 1971), very early single chip
calculator claim.
- – Extended Numerical Keyboard with Structured Data-Entry
Capability – J. H. Redin,
1997 (originally filed 1996), Usage of Verbal Numerals as a way to
enter a number.
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