fbpx
Wikipedia

HP 49/50 series

The HP 49/50 series are Hewlett-Packard (HP) manufactured graphing calculators. They are the successors of the popular HP 48 series.

HP 49G
HP 49G graphing calculator
Introduced1999
Discontinued2003
Latest firmwareofficial: HP49-C 1.18 (2000-05-27),[1]
beta: HP49-B 1.19-6 (2001-10-27),[2]
back-ported: HP48-C 2.09 (2006-06-03)[3]
PredecessorHP 48G+
SuccessorHP 49g+
Calculator
Entry modeRPN, Algebraic
Display size131×64 pixels
CPU
ProcessorMHz Yorke (Saturn core)
Programming
Programming language(s)RPL
User memoryMB flash memory and 512 KB RAM
Interfaces
PortsRS-232 (using the Kermit or XModem protocols, 2x5-pin proprietary connector)

There are five calculators in the 49/50 series of HP graphing calculators. These calculators have both algebraic and RPN entry modes, and can perform numeric and symbolic calculations using the built-in Computer Algebra System (CAS), which is an improved ALG48 and Erable combination from the HP 48 series.

HP 49G edit

Released in August 1999, the HP 49G (F1633A, F1896A) calculator was the first HP unit to break from the more traditional subdued coloration. In addition to having a metallic blue color, the keyboard material was rubber and did not have the traditional HP calculator hinged keyboard feel. In addition, it lacked a large ↵ Enter key which was seen by many as the defining characteristic of an HP calculator. These changes were disliked by many traditional HP calculator users.

The 49G incorporated many of the most powerful interface and mathematics tools available on the HP 48 series into the firmware of the new 49G, including the ability to easily decompile and compile both SysRPL and Saturn assembly code on the unit.

The 49G was the first HP calculator to use flash memory and have an upgradable firmware. In addition, it had a hard sliding case as opposed to the soft pouches supplied with the HP 48 series. Almost the same hardware is also used by the HP 39G and HP 40G.

The last officially supported firmware update for the 49G calculator was 1.18,[1] but several unofficial firmware versions were released by the developers. The final firmware version was 1.19-6.[2] Several firmware versions for the successor hp 49g+ and HP 50g calculators have also been released in builds intended for PC emulation software that lacked full utilization of the successors' ARM CPU. Until at least firmware version 2.09, those emulator builds could be installed on the original HP 49G as well.[3]

In 2003, the CAS source code of the 49G firmware was released under the LGPL. In addition, this release included an interactive geometry program and some commands to allow compatibility with certain programs written for the newer 49g+ calculator. Due to licensing restrictions, the recompiled firmware cannot be redistributed.

hp 49g+ edit

hp 49g+
 
hp 49g+ graphing calculator
Introduced2003
Discontinued2008
Latest firmwareHP49-C 2.15 (2009-04-21, 2006-09-19)[4]
PredecessorHP 49G
SuccessorHP 50g
Calculator
Entry modeRPN, Algebraic
Display size131×80 pixels
CPU
Processor75 MHz Samsung S3C2410X01 (with ARM920T core) (can be overclocked up to 203 MHz by certain user programs)
Programming
Programming language(s)RPL
User memoryMB flash memory, 512 KB RAM
External memorySDSC/MMC memory card (including miniSD/microSD/TransFlash with adapter; up to 2 GB formatted as FAT12/FAT16/FAT16B/FAT32; FAT32 only with firmware 2.00 and higher; size display and formatting limited to 1 GB)
Interfaces
PortsUSB Mini-B port (using the Kermit or XModem protocols), IrDA (infrared)

In August 2003, Hewlett-Packard released the hp 49g+ (F2228A). This unit had metallic gold coloration and was backward compatible with the HP 49G. Instead of the rubber keyboard found on the HP 49G, this calculator's keyboard had plastic hinges intended to return the feel of older HP calculators, and also included a pouch to protect the unit, similar to those included with older HP models. It was designed and manufactured by Kinpo Electronics for HP.

This calculator featured an entirely new processor architecture, USB (Mini-B) and IrDA (IrCOMM) infrared communication, memory expansion via an SD (SDSC/MMC) card, and a slightly larger screen, as well as other improvements over the previous model.

The calculator system did not run directly on the new ARM processor, but rather on an emulation layer for the older Saturn processors found in previous HP calculators. In principle, the firmware for the calculator is identical to that for the 49G, but it gets automatically patched in the course of development to replace some code sequences by special virtual "Saturn+" instructions which bypass the emulation and run natively on the underlying ARM processor in order to improve the calculator's speed.[5] This allowed the 49g+ to maintain binary-level compatibility with most of the programs written for the HP 49G calculator, as well as source code-level compatibility with many written for the HP 48 series.

Despite the emulation, the 49g+ was still much faster than any older model of HP calculator. The speed increase over the HP 49G is around 3–7 times depending on the task. It is even possible to run programs written for the ARM processor thus bypassing the emulation layer completely. A port of the GNU C compiler is also available (see HPGCC below).

hp 48gII edit

hp 48gII
 
hp 48gII graphing calculator
Introduced2003-10-20
Latest firmwareofficial: HP48-C 2.08 (2006) (not flashable),
emulator: HP48-C 2.09 (2006-06-03)[3]
PredecessorHP 49g+
SuccessorHP 50g
Calculator
Entry modeRPN, Algebraic
Display size131×64 pixels
CPU
Processor48 MHz Samsung S3C2410X01 (with ARM920T core) (can be overclocked up to 203 MHz by certain user programs)
Programming
Programming language(s)RPL
User memory128 KB RAM (original version) or 256 KB RAM (second revision)
Interfaces
Portsserial port (using the Kermit or XModem protocols, non-standard), and IrDA (infrared) (original revision); or USB Mini-B port, IrDA, and 3.3 V TTL-level asynchronous serial asynchronous serial (second revision).

The hp 48gII (F2226A), which was announced on 20 October 2003, was not a replacement for the HP 48 series as its name suggested. Rather it was a 49g+, also with an ARM processor (unlike the HP 48G), but with reduced memory, no expansion via an SD memory card, lower clock speed, a smaller screen, and a non-flashable firmware. This calculator seems to target users that desire mathematical capability, but have no desire to install many programs. The original 2003 version had 128 KB RAM and ran on 3 AAA batteries, whereas the second 2007 version (based on the Apple V2 platform) needs four AAA batteries and comes with 256 KB RAM, added a USB (Mini-B) port and features a better keyboard.

HP 50g edit

HP 50g
 
HP 50g graphing calculator, with the Equation Editor being used
Introduced2006
Discontinued2015[6][7][8]
Latest firmwareofficial: HP50-C 2.15 (2009-04-21, 2006-09-19) /
OS 4.02 (build 106)[4]
emulator: HP50-C 2.16 (2012-04-26, 2006-09-19)
EMU 3.1.29/3.1.30[9][10]
PredecessorHP 49g+
SuccessorHP Prime[6]
Calculator
Entry modeRPN, Algebraic
Display size131×80 pixels
CPU
Processor75 MHz Samsung S3C2410A[11] (ARM920T core) (can be overclocked up to 203 MHz by certain user programs)
Programming
Programming language(s)RPL
User memoryMB flash memory, 512 KB RAM
External memorySDSC/MMC memory card (including miniSD/microSD/TransFlash with adapter; up to 2 GB formatted as FAT12/FAT16/FAT16B/FAT32; size display and formatting limited to 1 GB)
Interfaces
PortsUSB Mini-B port (using the Kermit or XModem protocols), IrDA (infrared), and 3.3 V TTL-level asynchronous serial (4-pin proprietary connector).

The HP 50g (F2229A) is the latest calculator in the 49/50 series, introduced in 2006. The most apparent change is a revised color scheme, returning the unit to a more traditional HP calculator appearance. Using black plastic for the entire body, white, orange and yellow are used for function shift keys. The back shell is textured more deeply than the 49g+ to provide a more secure grip.

 
HP 50g in blue

In 2009/2010, a blue and white color scheme variant (NW240AA) specifically tailored for high-contrast was introduced as well. It was also designed to aid color-blind users.[12] In 2011/2012, a slightly different blue and white color scheme was introduced.[13]

The form and size of the calculator shell is identical to the 49g+ series, but four AAA batteries are used as opposed to three in previous models. In addition to all the features of the 49g+, the 50g also includes the full equation library found in the HP 48G series (also available for the 49g+ with firmware 2.06 and above), as well as the periodic table library originally available as a plug-in card for the 48S series, as of firmware 2.15/[4] 2.16[9][10] (the latest, as of 2015), and has a 3.3 V TTL-level asynchronous serial port in addition to IrDA and USB Mini-B ports of the 49g+. Like the 49g+, the range of the infrared port has been limited to about 10 cm (4 inches). Like for the 49g+, the firmware is in principle identical to that for the 49G, but gets automatically patched in the course of development.[5]

The asynchronous serial port is not a true RS-232 port as it uses different voltage levels and a non-standard connector. An external converter/adapter is required to interface with RS-232 equipment.

The keyboard, the most often criticized feature of the 49g+ calculators, uses the new design introduced on the very last 49g+ calculators (hinged keys) to eliminate previous problems.

A worldwide announcement regarding the availability of this calculator was made by HP in September 2006, and official details were available on the HP calculators webpage.[14] The calculator was officially discontinued in 2015.[6][7][8] It was HP's last calculator to support RPL, later calculators like the HP Prime support RPN only, although in a variant named Advanced RPN.

Programming edit

The HP 49/50 series of calculators support both algebraic and a stack-based programming language named RPL, a combination of Reverse Polish Notation (RPN) and Lisp. RPL adds the concepts of lists and functions to stack-based programming, allowing the programmer to pass unevaluated code as arguments to functions, or return unevaluated code from a function by leaving it on the stack.

The highest level language is User RPL, consisting of sequences of built-in postfix operations, optionally including loops and conditionals. Every User RPL command checks the stack for its particular arguments and returns an error if they are incorrect or not present.

Below User RPL is System RPL (SysRPL). Most System RPL commands lack argument checking and are defined only for specific argument types (e.g. short integer vs. long integer), making System RPL programs run dramatically faster than equivalent User RPL ones. In addition, System RPL includes many advanced functions that are not available in User RPL. System RPL programs can be created without the use of PC software (although it is available), thanks to the calculator's built-in compiler, MASD.[15] MASD also can compile Saturn assembly language and, with the latest firmware revision for the 49g+/50g, ARMv4T assembly language on the calculator itself. Many tools exist to assist programmers and make the calculator a powerful programming environment.

Saturn assembly, and, on the 49g+/50g, ARM assembly and C, are also programmable using desktop based compilers. See also the programs available for the HP 48 series.

No model of this series is programmable in HP PPL.

HPGCC for the 49g+/50g edit

HPGCC is an implementation of the GCC compiler, released under the GNU GPL. It is now mainly targeted at the ARM-based 49g+/50g calculators. Previous versions of HPGCC supported the other ARM-based calculator models (the 48gII, and the hp 39g+/HP 39gs/HP 40gs), but this was removed due to lack of interest and compatibility issues. Formally, HPGCC is a cross-compiler; it compiles code for the ARM-based HP calculators, but runs on a PC rather than the target system.

The latest version of HPGCC offers many enhancements from earlier versions. Most notably, the compiled code is now in ARM Thumb mode by default, resulting in great reduction in code size with little performance hit. Besides implementing most of ANSI C, there are device-specific libraries that allow access to things like the calculator's RPN stack, memory and piezoelectric buzzer. The GCC compiler itself is the property of the Free Software Foundation, and they state that its use does not impose any particular licensing restrictions on any of its output. However, the libraries included with HPGCC, including routines necessary to actually invoke any HPGCC-compiled program on an actual calculator, are released under a modified GPL license, contrary to GCC on many other platforms which use a more permissive license for their libraries. Thus any programs that link against them can only be distributed if they are also released under the GPL (with an exception for "non-profit" software).

Linux, Windows, and Mac OS X versions are available for download. The Windows version also includes a version of Programmer's Notepad for a basic IDE.

Emulators edit

There are several emulators available for the HP 49G calculator. A version of EMU48 is available in the Debug4x[16] IDE that allows emulation of most of the features of the 49g+/50g, but will not execute any ARM-based code.

An ARM-based emulator, x49gp,[17] has been released and allows the true emulation of the 49g+/50g ARM processor and successfully runs HPGCC 2 and 3 compiled programs. The emulator is only available for Linux and Mac OS X and must be compiled from the source. (See README.QUICKSTART[18] for details.)

The commercial version of the application m48 also supports HP 49G. So far, there are no 49g+/50g emulators for smartphones with the exception of HP 50g[19] for iPhone and iPad released in October 2012.

An emulator for Microsoft Windows Mobile (PPC, smartphones) is available.

Other 49G/49g+/50g emulators for Android (without ARM support).[20]

In 2012, Hewlett-Packard released an emulator named HP 50g Virtual Calculator (version 3.1.29/3.1.30 with firmware 2.16 and support for the StreamSmart 410) for Windows.[21][10]

Firmware updates edit

The 49/50 series allows the user to update the firmware to gain enhanced features or bug fixes. Official firmware updates are released by Hewlett-Packard. Unsupported unofficial firmware updates are also available at sites such as hpcalc.org.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hewlett-Packard (2000-05-27). "ROM - Flash update file to update the HP 49G's ROM to version C-1.18". hpcalc.org. 1.18. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  2. ^ a b Hewlett-Packard (2001-10-28). "Unsupported Beta ROM 1.19-6 - Flash update file to update the HP 49G's ROM to the unsupported beta version B-1.19-6". hpcalc.org. 1.19-6. from the original on 2018-07-07. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  3. ^ a b c Prange, James M. (2006-12-16). "Installing latest 49g+/50g (emulator) ROM on a 49G". comp.sys.hp48. Archived from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  4. ^ a b c Hewlett-Packard (2009-04-21). "ROM 2.15 - Flash update file to update the ROM of the HP 49g+ and HP 50g to version C-2.15". hpcalc.org. 2.15. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  5. ^ a b Rechlin, Eric (2023-10-05). "HP 50g ROM for Emu48". MoHPC - The Museum of HP Calculators. from the original on 2023-10-06. Retrieved 2023-10-06. The 49g+ and 50g have identical ROMs. The 49G ROM is the same, too, just without the ARM-related (Saturn+) patches. A 49g/50g ROM was made (by HP) by building a 49G ROM and patching it with a script after the fact.
  6. ^ a b c Kuperus, Klaas (2015-03-04). . Moravia. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02.
  7. ^ a b Kuperus, Klaas (2015-03-06). "HP 50g not so good news?". Moravia. from the original on 2017-12-11. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  8. ^ a b Wessman, Timothy "Tim" James (2015-12-26). "Windows 10 won't allow HP 50g USB drivers to be installed". HP Museum. from the original on 2017-12-14. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  9. ^ a b "Emulator of HP 50g with #2.16 ROM". hpmuseum.org. 2015-07-22. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  10. ^ a b c Hewlett-Packard. . www.calculatrices-hp.com. Archived from the original on 2017-09-17.
  11. ^ "Hewlett Packard HP 50g Scientific Calculator". ARM - The Architecture for the Digital World. ARM Ltd. Archived from the original on 2015-03-09. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  12. ^ Wessman, Timothy "Tim" James (2011-09-18). "Re: HP 50g trilogy. The new HP 50g Blue (and II)". MoHPC - The Museum of HP Calculators. from the original on 2022-05-25. Retrieved 2023-09-23.
  13. ^ Paul, Matthias R. (2015-08-30). "Different blue HP 50g model variants". MoHPC - The Museum of HP Calculators. from the original on 2023-09-23. Retrieved 2023-09-23.
  14. ^ "Powerful HP Graphing Calculator Delivers Greater Connectivity and Flexibility to Engineers and Scientists". News release. Palo Alto, CA, USA: Hewlett-Packard. 2006-09-19. Archived from the original on 2012-09-05. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  15. ^ HP 50G System RPL / SysRPL Configure and Test Step by Step, retrieved 2022-08-16
  16. ^ Graves, William G. "Welcome to the Debug4x download site". debug4x.com. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  17. ^ Dost, Eddie C. "x49gp - The HP49g+ Emulator". brainaid.de. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  18. ^ "HP49g+ Calculator Emulator README.QUICKSTART". sourceforge.net. 2015-11-04. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2018-07-07.
  19. ^ Zima, Marek. "Emu50g". Apple App Store. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  20. ^ De Smet, Olivier (2013) [2006]. "Topics". sites.google.com. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  21. ^ Hewlett-Packard. [Emulators]. www.calculatrices-hp.com (in French). Archived from the original on 2017-09-17.
  22. ^ Rechlin, Eric (2018) [1997]. "HP 49/50 ROM Updates". hpcalc.org. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2018-07-07.

Further reading edit

  • HP 50g graphing calculator user's manual (UM) (1 ed.). Hewlett-Packard. 2006-04-01. HP F2229AA-90001. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  • HP 50g graphing calculator user's guide (UG) (1 ed.). Hewlett-Packard. 2006-04-01. HP F2229AA-90006. from the original on 2018-02-19. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  • HP 50g / 49g+ / 48gII graphing calculator advanced user's reference manual (AUR) (2 ed.). Hewlett-Packard. 2009-07-14 [2005]. HP F2228-90010. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2015-10-10. Searchable
  • Rechlin, Eric; Parisse, Bernard [in French]; Avenard, Jean-Yves, eds. (2016-03-30) [2001-08-12]. "Bugs in Product HP 49/50 - 277 bugs found". Bugzilla. Archived from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2018-07-08. (NB. A database of known bugs and problems in the calculator's firmware, both solved and unresolved ones.)
  • O., Juraj (2012-11-06). "Simplify with sci/eng on hp 50g". HP Forum Archive 21. HP Museum. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2018-07-08. (NB. A thread on an unresolved problem in the calculator's firmware.)
  • Yohe, Jim (2011-02-04). "Is the HP-50g bug free now?". HP Forum Archive 20. HP Museum. from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2018-07-08. (NB. A thread on an unresolved problem in the calculator's firmware.)

External links edit

  • Official HP support for HP 49G, hp 48gII, hp 49g+, HP 50g
  • Rechlin, Eric. "Resources for HP 49/50 series at www.hpcalc.org". from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2018-07-08.
  • "Software packages for HP 50g by Software49". from the original on 2018-03-24. Retrieved 2018-07-08.
  • Heuson, Clemens. "Software packages for HP 50g by Heuson-Software". from the original on 2018-07-08. Retrieved 2018-07-08.

series, hewlett, packard, manufactured, graphing, calculators, they, successors, popular, series, 49ghp, graphing, calculatorintroduced1999discontinued2003latest, firmwareofficial, hp49, 2000, beta, hp49, 2001, back, ported, hp48, 2006, predecessorhp, successo. The HP 49 50 series are Hewlett Packard HP manufactured graphing calculators They are the successors of the popular HP 48 series HP 49GHP 49G graphing calculatorIntroduced1999Discontinued2003Latest firmwareofficial HP49 C 1 18 2000 05 27 1 beta HP49 B 1 19 6 2001 10 27 2 back ported HP48 C 2 09 2006 06 03 3 PredecessorHP 48G SuccessorHP 49g CalculatorEntry modeRPN AlgebraicDisplay size131 64 pixelsCPUProcessor4 MHz Yorke Saturn core ProgrammingProgramming language s RPLUser memory2 MB flash memory and 512 KB RAMInterfacesPortsRS 232 using the Kermit or XModem protocols 2x5 pin proprietary connector There are five calculators in the 49 50 series of HP graphing calculators These calculators have both algebraic and RPN entry modes and can perform numeric and symbolic calculations using the built in Computer Algebra System CAS which is an improved ALG48 and Erable combination from the HP 48 series Contents 1 HP 49G 2 hp 49g 3 hp 48gII 4 HP 50g 5 Programming 6 HPGCC for the 49g 50g 7 Emulators 8 Firmware updates 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHP 49G edit HP49 redirects here For the mathematical series HP49 n see Home prime Released in August 1999 the HP 49G F1633A F1896A calculator was the first HP unit to break from the more traditional subdued coloration In addition to having a metallic blue color the keyboard material was rubber and did not have the traditional HP calculator hinged keyboard feel In addition it lacked a large Enter key which was seen by many as the defining characteristic of an HP calculator These changes were disliked by many traditional HP calculator users The 49G incorporated many of the most powerful interface and mathematics tools available on the HP 48 series into the firmware of the new 49G including the ability to easily decompile and compile both SysRPL and Saturn assembly code on the unit The 49G was the first HP calculator to use flash memory and have an upgradable firmware In addition it had a hard sliding case as opposed to the soft pouches supplied with the HP 48 series Almost the same hardware is also used by the HP 39G and HP 40G The last officially supported firmware update for the 49G calculator was 1 18 1 but several unofficial firmware versions were released by the developers The final firmware version was 1 19 6 2 Several firmware versions for the successor hp 49g and HP 50g calculators have also been released in builds intended for PC emulation software that lacked full utilization of the successors ARM CPU Until at least firmware version 2 09 those emulator builds could be installed on the original HP 49G as well 3 In 2003 the CAS source code of the 49G firmware was released under the LGPL In addition this release included an interactive geometry program and some commands to allow compatibility with certain programs written for the newer 49g calculator Due to licensing restrictions the recompiled firmware cannot be redistributed hp 49g edithp 49g nbsp hp 49g graphing calculatorIntroduced2003Discontinued2008Latest firmwareHP49 C 2 15 2009 04 21 2006 09 19 4 PredecessorHP 49GSuccessorHP 50gCalculatorEntry modeRPN AlgebraicDisplay size131 80 pixelsCPUProcessor75 MHz Samsung S3C2410X01 with ARM920T core can be overclocked up to 203 MHz by certain user programs ProgrammingProgramming language s RPLUser memory2 MB flash memory 512 KB RAMExternal memorySDSC MMC memory card including miniSD microSD TransFlash with adapter up to 2 GB formatted as FAT12 FAT16 FAT16B FAT32 FAT32 only with firmware 2 00 and higher size display and formatting limited to 1 GB InterfacesPortsUSB Mini B port using the Kermit or XModem protocols IrDA infrared In August 2003 Hewlett Packard released the hp 49g F2228A This unit had metallic gold coloration and was backward compatible with the HP 49G Instead of the rubber keyboard found on the HP 49G this calculator s keyboard had plastic hinges intended to return the feel of older HP calculators and also included a pouch to protect the unit similar to those included with older HP models It was designed and manufactured by Kinpo Electronics for HP This calculator featured an entirely new processor architecture USB Mini B and IrDA IrCOMM infrared communication memory expansion via an SD SDSC MMC card and a slightly larger screen as well as other improvements over the previous model The calculator system did not run directly on the new ARM processor but rather on an emulation layer for the older Saturn processors found in previous HP calculators In principle the firmware for the calculator is identical to that for the 49G but it gets automatically patched in the course of development to replace some code sequences by special virtual Saturn instructions which bypass the emulation and run natively on the underlying ARM processor in order to improve the calculator s speed 5 This allowed the 49g to maintain binary level compatibility with most of the programs written for the HP 49G calculator as well as source code level compatibility with many written for the HP 48 series Despite the emulation the 49g was still much faster than any older model of HP calculator The speed increase over the HP 49G is around 3 7 times depending on the task It is even possible to run programs written for the ARM processor thus bypassing the emulation layer completely A port of the GNU C compiler is also available see HPGCC below hp 48gII edithp 48gII nbsp hp 48gII graphing calculatorIntroduced2003 10 20Latest firmwareofficial HP48 C 2 08 2006 not flashable emulator HP48 C 2 09 2006 06 03 3 PredecessorHP 49g SuccessorHP 50gCalculatorEntry modeRPN AlgebraicDisplay size131 64 pixelsCPUProcessor48 MHz Samsung S3C2410X01 with ARM920T core can be overclocked up to 203 MHz by certain user programs ProgrammingProgramming language s RPLUser memory128 KB RAM original version or 256 KB RAM second revision InterfacesPortsserial port using the Kermit or XModem protocols non standard and IrDA infrared original revision or USB Mini B port IrDA and 3 3 V TTL level asynchronous serial asynchronous serial second revision The hp 48gII F2226A which was announced on 20 October 2003 was not a replacement for the HP 48 series as its name suggested Rather it was a 49g also with an ARM processor unlike the HP 48G but with reduced memory no expansion via an SD memory card lower clock speed a smaller screen and a non flashable firmware This calculator seems to target users that desire mathematical capability but have no desire to install many programs The original 2003 version had 128 KB RAM and ran on 3 AAA batteries whereas the second 2007 version based on the Apple V2 platform needs four AAA batteries and comes with 256 KB RAM added a USB Mini B port and features a better keyboard HP 50g editHP 50g nbsp HP 50g graphing calculator with the Equation Editor being usedIntroduced2006Discontinued2015 6 7 8 Latest firmwareofficial HP50 C 2 15 2009 04 21 2006 09 19 OS 4 02 build 106 4 emulator HP50 C 2 16 2012 04 26 2006 09 19 EMU 3 1 29 3 1 30 9 10 PredecessorHP 49g SuccessorHP Prime 6 CalculatorEntry modeRPN AlgebraicDisplay size131 80 pixelsCPUProcessor75 MHz Samsung S3C2410A 11 ARM920T core can be overclocked up to 203 MHz by certain user programs ProgrammingProgramming language s RPLUser memory2 MB flash memory 512 KB RAMExternal memorySDSC MMC memory card including miniSD microSD TransFlash with adapter up to 2 GB formatted as FAT12 FAT16 FAT16B FAT32 size display and formatting limited to 1 GB InterfacesPortsUSB Mini B port using the Kermit or XModem protocols IrDA infrared and 3 3 V TTL level asynchronous serial 4 pin proprietary connector The HP 50g F2229A is the latest calculator in the 49 50 series introduced in 2006 The most apparent change is a revised color scheme returning the unit to a more traditional HP calculator appearance Using black plastic for the entire body white orange and yellow are used for function shift keys The back shell is textured more deeply than the 49g to provide a more secure grip nbsp HP 50g in blueIn 2009 2010 a blue and white color scheme variant NW240AA specifically tailored for high contrast was introduced as well It was also designed to aid color blind users 12 In 2011 2012 a slightly different blue and white color scheme was introduced 13 The form and size of the calculator shell is identical to the 49g series but four AAA batteries are used as opposed to three in previous models In addition to all the features of the 49g the 50g also includes the full equation library found in the HP 48G series also available for the 49g with firmware 2 06 and above as well as the periodic table library originally available as a plug in card for the 48S series as of firmware 2 15 4 2 16 9 10 the latest as of 2015 and has a 3 3 V TTL level asynchronous serial port in addition to IrDA and USB Mini B ports of the 49g Like the 49g the range of the infrared port has been limited to about 10 cm 4 inches Like for the 49g the firmware is in principle identical to that for the 49G but gets automatically patched in the course of development 5 The asynchronous serial port is not a true RS 232 port as it uses different voltage levels and a non standard connector An external converter adapter is required to interface with RS 232 equipment The keyboard the most often criticized feature of the 49g calculators uses the new design introduced on the very last 49g calculators hinged keys to eliminate previous problems A worldwide announcement regarding the availability of this calculator was made by HP in September 2006 and official details were available on the HP calculators webpage 14 The calculator was officially discontinued in 2015 6 7 8 It was HP s last calculator to support RPL later calculators like the HP Prime support RPN only although in a variant named Advanced RPN Programming editThe HP 49 50 series of calculators support both algebraic and a stack based programming language named RPL a combination of Reverse Polish Notation RPN and Lisp RPL adds the concepts of lists and functions to stack based programming allowing the programmer to pass unevaluated code as arguments to functions or return unevaluated code from a function by leaving it on the stack The highest level language is User RPL consisting of sequences of built in postfix operations optionally including loops and conditionals Every User RPL command checks the stack for its particular arguments and returns an error if they are incorrect or not present Below User RPL is System RPL SysRPL Most System RPL commands lack argument checking and are defined only for specific argument types e g short integer vs long integer making System RPL programs run dramatically faster than equivalent User RPL ones In addition System RPL includes many advanced functions that are not available in User RPL System RPL programs can be created without the use of PC software although it is available thanks to the calculator s built in compiler MASD 15 MASD also can compile Saturn assembly language and with the latest firmware revision for the 49g 50g ARMv4T assembly language on the calculator itself Many tools exist to assist programmers and make the calculator a powerful programming environment Saturn assembly and on the 49g 50g ARM assembly and C are also programmable using desktop based compilers See also the programs available for the HP 48 series No model of this series is programmable in HP PPL HPGCC for the 49g 50g editHPGCC is an implementation of the GCC compiler released under the GNU GPL It is now mainly targeted at the ARM based 49g 50g calculators Previous versions of HPGCC supported the other ARM based calculator models the 48gII and the hp 39g HP 39gs HP 40gs but this was removed due to lack of interest and compatibility issues Formally HPGCC is a cross compiler it compiles code for the ARM based HP calculators but runs on a PC rather than the target system The latest version of HPGCC offers many enhancements from earlier versions Most notably the compiled code is now in ARM Thumb mode by default resulting in great reduction in code size with little performance hit Besides implementing most of ANSI C there are device specific libraries that allow access to things like the calculator s RPN stack memory and piezoelectric buzzer The GCC compiler itself is the property of the Free Software Foundation and they state that its use does not impose any particular licensing restrictions on any of its output However the libraries included with HPGCC including routines necessary to actually invoke any HPGCC compiled program on an actual calculator are released under a modified GPL license contrary to GCC on many other platforms which use a more permissive license for their libraries Thus any programs that link against them can only be distributed if they are also released under the GPL with an exception for non profit software Linux Windows and Mac OS X versions are available for download The Windows version also includes a version of Programmer s Notepad for a basic IDE Emulators editThere are several emulators available for the HP 49G calculator A version of EMU48 is available in the Debug4x 16 IDE that allows emulation of most of the features of the 49g 50g but will not execute any ARM based code An ARM based emulator x49gp 17 has been released and allows the true emulation of the 49g 50g ARM processor and successfully runs HPGCC 2 and 3 compiled programs The emulator is only available for Linux and Mac OS X and must be compiled from the source See README QUICKSTART 18 for details The commercial version of the application m48 also supports HP 49G So far there are no 49g 50g emulators for smartphones with the exception of HP 50g 19 for iPhone and iPad released in October 2012 An emulator for Microsoft Windows Mobile PPC smartphones is available Other 49G 49g 50g emulators for Android without ARM support 20 In 2012 Hewlett Packard released an emulator named HP 50g Virtual Calculator version 3 1 29 3 1 30 with firmware 2 16 and support for the StreamSmart 410 for Windows 21 10 Firmware updates editThe 49 50 series allows the user to update the firmware to gain enhanced features or bug fixes Official firmware updates are released by Hewlett Packard Unsupported unofficial firmware updates are also available at sites such as hpcalc org 22 See also editComparison of HP graphing calculators HP calculators RPL character set newRPL for HP 49g and 50g or SwissMicros DM42 DB48X for SwissMicros DM42 References edit a b Hewlett Packard 2000 05 27 ROM Flash update file to update the HP 49G s ROM to version C 1 18 hpcalc org 1 18 Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2017 12 10 1 a b Hewlett Packard 2001 10 28 Unsupported Beta ROM 1 19 6 Flash update file to update the HP 49G s ROM to the unsupported beta version B 1 19 6 hpcalc org 1 19 6 Archived from the original on 2018 07 07 Retrieved 2017 12 10 2 a b c Prange James M 2006 12 16 Installing latest 49g 50g emulator ROM on a 49G comp sys hp48 Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2017 12 10 a b c Hewlett Packard 2009 04 21 ROM 2 15 Flash update file to update the ROM of the HP 49g and HP 50g to version C 2 15 hpcalc org 2 15 Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2017 12 10 3 a b Rechlin Eric 2023 10 05 HP 50g ROM for Emu48 MoHPC The Museum of HP Calculators Archived from the original on 2023 10 06 Retrieved 2023 10 06 The 49g and 50g have identical ROMs The 49G ROM is the same too just without the ARM related Saturn patches A 49g 50g ROM was made by HP by building a 49G ROM and patching it with a script after the fact a b c Kuperus Klaas 2015 03 04 HP 50g End of an era Moravia Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 a b Kuperus Klaas 2015 03 06 HP 50g not so good news Moravia Archived from the original on 2017 12 11 Retrieved 2016 01 01 a b Wessman Timothy Tim James 2015 12 26 Windows 10 won t allow HP 50g USB drivers to be installed HP Museum Archived from the original on 2017 12 14 Retrieved 2016 01 01 a b Emulator of HP 50g with 2 16 ROM hpmuseum org 2015 07 22 Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2017 12 10 a b c Hewlett Packard HP 50g Virtual Calculator www calculatrices hp com Archived from the original on 2017 09 17 Hewlett Packard HP 50g Scientific Calculator ARM The Architecture for the Digital World ARM Ltd Archived from the original on 2015 03 09 Retrieved 2017 12 10 Wessman Timothy Tim James 2011 09 18 Re HP 50g trilogy The new HP 50g Blue and II MoHPC The Museum of HP Calculators Archived from the original on 2022 05 25 Retrieved 2023 09 23 Paul Matthias R 2015 08 30 Different blue HP 50g model variants MoHPC The Museum of HP Calculators Archived from the original on 2023 09 23 Retrieved 2023 09 23 Powerful HP Graphing Calculator Delivers Greater Connectivity and Flexibility to Engineers and Scientists News release Palo Alto CA USA Hewlett Packard 2006 09 19 Archived from the original on 2012 09 05 Retrieved 2017 12 10 HP 50G System RPL SysRPL Configure and Test Step by Step retrieved 2022 08 16 Graves William G Welcome to the Debug4x download site debug4x com Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2017 12 10 4 5 Dost Eddie C x49gp The HP49g Emulator brainaid de Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2017 12 10 HP49g Calculator Emulator README QUICKSTART sourceforge net 2015 11 04 Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2018 07 07 Zima Marek Emu50g Apple App Store Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2017 12 10 De Smet Olivier 2013 2006 Topics sites google com Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2017 12 10 Hewlett Packard Emulateurs Emulators www calculatrices hp com in French Archived from the original on 2017 09 17 Rechlin Eric 2018 1997 HP 49 50 ROM Updates hpcalc org Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2018 07 07 Further reading editHP 50g graphing calculator user s manual UM 1 ed Hewlett Packard 2006 04 01 HP F2229AA 90001 Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2015 10 10 6 HP 50g graphing calculator user s guide UG 1 ed Hewlett Packard 2006 04 01 HP F2229AA 90006 Archived from the original on 2018 02 19 Retrieved 2015 10 10 7 HP 50g 49g 48gII graphing calculator advanced user s reference manual AUR 2 ed Hewlett Packard 2009 07 14 2005 HP F2228 90010 Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2015 10 10 8 Searchable Rechlin Eric Parisse Bernard in French Avenard Jean Yves eds 2016 03 30 2001 08 12 Bugs in Product HP 49 50 277 bugs found Bugzilla Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2018 07 08 NB A database of known bugs and problems in the calculator s firmware both solved and unresolved ones O Juraj 2012 11 06 Simplify with sci eng on hp 50g HP Forum Archive 21 HP Museum Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2018 07 08 NB A thread on an unresolved problem in the calculator s firmware Yohe Jim 2011 02 04 Is the HP 50g bug free now HP Forum Archive 20 HP Museum Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2018 07 08 NB A thread on an unresolved problem in the calculator s firmware External links editOfficial HP support for HP 49G hp 48gII hp 49g HP 50g Rechlin Eric Resources for HP 49 50 series at www hpcalc org Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2018 07 08 Software packages for HP 50g by Software49 Archived from the original on 2018 03 24 Retrieved 2018 07 08 Heuson Clemens Software packages for HP 50g by Heuson Software Archived from the original on 2018 07 08 Retrieved 2018 07 08 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HP 49 50 series amp oldid 1179498091, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.