Erable

Erable is a computer algebra system (CAS) for a family of Hewlett-Packard graphing scientific calculators of the HP 40, 48 and HP 49/50 series.

Erable
Developer(s)Bernard Parisse,
Mika Heiskanen,
Claude-Nicolas Fiechter
Initial release1993 (1993)
Stable release
4.20060919 (2006-09-19) / 2009-04-21/2012-04-26
Written inSystem RPL
TypeComputer algebra system
LicenseLGPL
Websitewww-fourier.ujf-grenoble.fr/~parisse/english.html#hpcalc

History

Originally named ALGB in 1993, it was developed by the French mathematician Bernard Parisse for the HP 48SX. Over time, the system integrated a lot of functionality from another math pack for the HP 48 series, ALG48 by Mika Heiskanen and Claude-Nicolas Fiechter. At some point, ALGB was renamed into Erable, a French play-on-words on another CAS named Maple. Compatible with the HP 48S, 48SX, 48G, 48G+, 48GX, Erable became one of the "must-have" software packages to be installed by advanced users of these calculators.

When Hewlett-Packard developed the HP 49G in 1999, the Erable and ALG48 packages became an integral part of the calculator's firmware, now just named HP49 CAS.

As HP CAS it also showed up in the HP 40G, 40gs, 49g+, 48gII and 50g and was maintained by Parisse up to 2006.

Based on his experiences with Erable, Parisse started developing a new and more general CAS system named Xcas / Giac in 2000. It is written in C++ rather than System RPL. This system was integrated into the HP Prime in 2013 under a dual-license scheme.

Versions

The last stable stand-alone version of Erable for the HP 48 series is 3.024 (1998-08-06),[1] with source code as of 1998-07-14 available under the GNU GPL.[2] The latest beta versions for these calculators are 3.117 (1998-10-17)[3] and 3.201 (1999-02-07).[4]

Parts of the CAS system for the HP 49/50 series (version 4) were released as open-source under the LGPL (since some parts of the CAS, which are copyrighted by Hewlett-Packard, remain proprietary software) and were maintained by Parisse up to 2006-02-02 (for firmware 2.14),[5] and 2006-09-19 (for firmware 2.15 (2009-04-21)[6] and 2.16 (2012-04-26)).

gollark: https://gist.github.com/SquidDev/6fa444798bbe01f4068bf82a76ac273f
gollark: <@490656381662396418> It is actually on github. It's just that "making your own BIOS" with no understanding of what that is or means is moronically stupid.
gollark: <@490656381662396418> Latest one, 1.86.0 or something.
gollark: my flight script, a "krist miner", potatoplex, chronometer, etc.
gollark: PotatOS has from 6_4's list: VFS, multitasking, networking, sandboxing, compatibility with normal CC programs, not encryption yet but limited compression, backup system, antivirus, optional code signing requirement, sort of IPC (not really, planning to do it properly), authorization system, running on a variety of screen sizes / color palettes (grayscale mapping), error handling (stacktrace thing), password / security, uninstallation, specific area for config / user data, cloud, security profiles, lots of libraries, able to turn off certain parts, daemons, caches, documentation (loosely), bootloader (ish), file encoding, securing the OS/kernel, and TLCO.

See also

  • Comparison of computer algebra systems

References


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