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From the picture, it is obvious that this is NOT a graph modal. The Punished 20:25, 15 September 2006 (UTC)
- I have to agree that the picture does not look like a graphing calc., but HP's offical website says so and I think the manufactuer knows more than we do. Michael Greiner 20:30, 15 September 2006 (UTC)
HP 9g and other animals
editThe HP 9g is indeed a programmable graphics calculator. Half of the screen displays graphs (small but perfectly usable) with the other half showing numeric results, indicators and a line of dot matrix text/numbers at the top. Features include graphing, lines, plotting, 26 memory locations and most importantly, the ability to be programmed using a basic-like syntax. Also limited, but perfectly usable. It is one of the many "clone" models of the original CASIO 6300g graphics calculator from the early-mid 90s. It is not manufactured by HP directly but comes from a far east company who brand the motherboard for different companies. Other models which are essentially the same calculator include the Citizen srp-325g, the duraband 828 and some models by texet.
The manual from HP is almost identical to the citizen manual. The programming memory available on this calculator is only 400 bytes (steps) and not 256k as suggested in the article.
A very capable calculator!
Being new to wikipedia, I leave it to others to decide how much, if any, of this goes into the main article. Best wishes all - Sam, Kent, UK — Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.20.201.159 (talk) 01:15, 25 December 2012 (UTC)
- It's indeed a Citizen SRP-325G in a different case. At least the display and the keyboard layout is the same. Siealex (talk) 23:32, 22 May 2020 (UTC)
External links modified
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Battery for the HP-9g
editWere there two versions of the HP-9g?
The one I have uses two 357/AG13/LR44 batteries instead of the CR2025 currently shown in the main page. Just wondering if a note or correction is needed? (Perhaps the Citizen variant uses the lithium CR2025 and HP's variants uses AG13s like other HP calculators?) Writetheship (talk) — Preceding undated comment added 20:28, 17 November 2024 (UTC)