recommend me a good calculator?

<p>I’m taking calc 2 and a graphing calculator is not allowed so i need a scientific calculator.
The one i have now really sucks so I need to get a better one. any ideas?</p>

<p>TI-36Pro, still does integrals and you can use it for the EIT.</p>

<p>Whatever feels comfortable to you. I used a solar Casio in the past, but recently switched to a battery TI.</p>

<p>I use a Casio fx-115, and it’s pretty good. But honestly, you can just go to an office store and look for a good one. It won’t be more than $20 anyways.</p>

<p>I have been using a TI-36X Pro and I love it. It’s great, and seems to do just about anything you need it to do. Also, it was super cheap on Amazon. The only downside is that I have yet to figure out how to get it to give me the exact square root of a number that isn’t a perfect square. For example, the calculator says that √15 = √15 which is obviously true, but if you’re looking for 3.87, I don’t suppose you can get it. I couldn’t anyway, and my professor couldn’t when he tried to on this calculator. It will, however, give you the cube root or any other root that you want. If your professors are like mine, they wont mind when you put down that the answer of √8 = 2√2 instead of 2.83.</p>

<p>Haha, JonJon after you hit enter and you get back √15, press the button above enter. That is the “approximately equal to” button.</p>

<p>I had the same problem before, just google everything you don’t know about it. Someone more than likely has already answered it.</p>

<p>Chucktown</p>

<p>Thanks. I just tested it and it worked. I never got around to looking it up because when I was at school using the calculator, I didn’t have google handy. I highly recommend the TI-36X Pro; even more so now.</p>