Upsilon
nesizm
Upsilon | nesizm | |
---|---|---|
7 | 3 | |
196 | 104 | |
7.1% | - | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
9 days ago | over 3 years ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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Upsilon
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Nesizm: NES emulator for Casio Prizm calculators
Both the CG50 and nspire has working Numworks ports (although very slow), if you wanted something more fancy on the same hardware.
https://github.com/UpsilonNumworks/Upsilon
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Casio fx-CG50 calculator comes with Python built-in
This is a bit ironic but have you tried the Numworks simulator app or any of its forks. They also have a webapp that runs the firmware translated in webassembly.
https://github.com/UpsilonNumworks/Upsilon
https://www.numworks.com/simulator/download/
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Transfer Python files from Numworks to GitHub
Another thing to mention is that I have an Upsilon calculator, so the omega editor tells me that something is wrong with it, even when turning off USB protection.
- [ Upsilon ] Simulateur
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I made geometry dash on my calculator
https://github.com/Lauryy06/Upsilon (regarde la partie installation automatique)
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Need something like TI-89 Titanium, but backlit, higher res, faster, rechargeable.
After that, install upsilon or omega (https://github.com/Lauryy06/Upsilon or https://getomega.dev)
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Any tips or tricks to get the most of the calculator?
Hi, recently returned my ti84ce and got myself a numworks. Luckily it came with v15, so I put https://github.com/Lauryy06/Upsilon on it as well. A few questions:
nesizm
- Nesizm: NES emulator for Casio Prizm calculators
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The SuperH-3, part 1: Introduction
SH also powers many of Casio's programmable calculators. Prizm is especially interesting in that it's a fairly traditional device (powered by AAA batteries!) with a decently large color screen that has a full-fledged C SDK available for it - and while Casio doesn't provide any official docs or other support, they don't block third party software, either. FX-CG50 is powerful enough to run a NES emulator (https://github.com/TSWilliamson/nesizm).
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TI-83 Plus One More
There's one thing that calculators can do that powerful modern gadgets cannot: run on AAA batteries.
It doesn't even have to be something as old as TI-83, too. For example, Casio Prizm FX-50 has a color screen, and can be mounted over USB as a storage device. And in terms of hardware power, it's fast enough to run a NES emulator: https://github.com/tswilliamson/nesizm.
(For the curious, here's a dev wiki for this platform: https://prizm.cemetech.net/index.php/Prizm_Programming_Porta...)
What are some alternatives?
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godot - Godot Engine – Multi-platform 2D and 3D game engine [Moved to: https://github.com/godotengine/godot]
ClickHouse - ClickHouse® is a free analytics DBMS for big data