<p>Do proctors force you to delete programs that you have on your calculator?</p>
<p>in my school they didnt :)</p>
<p>No, they don't; it is allowable.</p>
<p>So what stuff would you have on it?</p>
<p>Are there any programs people recommend?</p>
<p>i think the trapezoid program is pretty helpful. Especially if they ask you to use subintervals of 50 or 100. I haven't run across something that obscene in two full length practice tests. So knock on wood but better to be safe than sorry</p>
<p>There is nothing you should really add if you have a TI-89T.</p>
<p>So it is fair to assume that the proctoring rules are generally the same as that used for the SATs?</p>
<p>They don't check calculators. For calculator programs just go to ticalc.org and go through their math program archives for your specific calculator and find programs that might be useful. </p>
<p>Glucose, I have a TI-89T and there is an amazing program called 'Calculus Tools' which does.... calculus stuff. It can do all of the area approximations, implicit differentiation, and other stuff - I think this program is only available from the TI website though - it's free.</p>
<p>I think the TI-89T is maxing out the calculator.</p>
<p>You are allowed to have anything on your calculator, as long it is one of the approved ones. But, you can only have it out on half the test, so they design the test so you will only have a very slight advantage of storing programs.</p>
<p>do they clear the memory for stat?</p>
<p>Nope, not for stat either.</p>
<p>how are u guys doing trapezoidal or reimann sums using the calculator? i have calc tools but im not too sure on how to use it..differntial equations arent working for me either on that, its proly because i dont know how to do it.</p>
<p>but some questions while i was reviewing was like a chart..and it tells u to do like for ex. a left approx. for the intervals given, is there any way to calculate that also into the calc??</p>