<p>Are there any good ones for the SAT which will help me?</p>
<p>Such as this (i dont know where to get it?)
SAT</a> calculator program - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</p>
<p>Are there any good ones for the SAT which will help me?</p>
<p>Such as this (i dont know where to get it?)
SAT</a> calculator program - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</p>
<p>It’s pretty sad if you actually need a program for easy stuff like that. :</p>
<p>These programs are pathetically simple, I can’t believe that there is a wikipedia article about them.</p>
<p>The math is so easy that these programs are a huge waste of time, not to mention that they definitely constitute cheating.</p>
<p>Also SAT math problems are so simple that you don’t even need a calculator, the hard part is decoding the wording and figuring out how to solve it. In order for these programs to work you need to be able to decipher the problem on your own and at that point the program is useless.</p>
<p>Do you ever actually need to know formulas for the SAT?
I’ve never used formulas on an SAT.</p>
<p>This thread is fail. I doubt you need a program to do SAT… 6th grade math is harder than SAT math…</p>
<p>You do not need a calculator let alone a calculator with programs.</p>
<p>The only program I’d ever use is the quadratic. It could only save you about 5 seconds though…as for the others, much faster done in your head or on paper with calculator.</p>
<p>Wow, some of you guys are arrogant losers (something better I would like to say ). Anyway, like the guy above me says the most useful program would be for the quadratic formula, but otherwise they’re probably pretty useless.</p>
<p>what about biquadratic equison equations
2(x)^4 + 5(x)^2 - 40 = 0 ;]</p>
<p>those seem harder to use than your brain(:</p>
<p>I ended up not using my calculator other than for basic calculations, but it helps as a support to fall back into if you suddenly forget, say…the geometric sum formula or something.</p>