So I got her the fx-9750ii, which was on sale for something like $40-50. Nonsense I said, I'm not dropping a c-note for a "meh" calculator when she has wolfram alpha on her Pi, and I have a TI-85 sitting upstairs that never comes out of the drawer because I have an app on my phone that can do everything it can do. In 8th grade, by child was told that her advanced algebra 1 class needed TI-84s. This is as good as a guarantee that the calculator will meet the needs of the class, and that if there is a real question of how to do something on the calculator, there will never be a need to go to the technical documentation since some other math teacher in the faculty lounge will inevitably know how to do it. Here's how it works: New teacher A says to old teacher B, what calculator do you use in your class. It's because TI has a lock on the educational "risk averse" ecosphere. I have no idea why anyone would buy their kid a TI-84. I am also impressed with the keyboard and the color contrast. The fx-9750GIII's back has a 3D feel to it, which is nice. I really like the lighter feel of the fx-9750GIII. The fx-9750GIII has a lighter body as well. The fx-9750GIII's case is slightly smaller than the fx-9750GII, but the width is the same. In textbook mode, you can control whether output defaults to exact answers (fractions, square roots, terms of pi) or approximate answers. * The fx-9750GIII now has textbook input and output options. This is an addition to the about 61K of regular memory. * Storage memory of 3 MB is allocated to hold geometry, python, and flash files. * The spreadsheet and geometry modes are added It is an upgrade of the fx-9750GII in several ways: In the United States, we have a new graphing calculator from Casio, the fx-9750GIII. But what about its predecessor: fx-9750GII? Casio claims the fx-9750GIII is comparable to the TI-84 Plus.
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