<p>Their calculator ran out of batteries in the middle of the exam? LOl?</p>
<p>My worst fear -__-</p>
<p>Or worst, your calculator should have been set to radians instead of degrees lol</p>
<p>That would be bad. Granted, my teacher talks about a sophomore who got a 4 on BC (5 on AB subscore) without a calculator. He didn’t know how to use a graphing calculator and wasn’t allowed to use scientific, so he just took it without calculator at all.</p>
<p>epic fail. not knowing how to use a graphing calculator? lol</p>
<p>anyway, just bring extra batteries</p>
<p>lol i have nightmares of accidentally setting my calculator to degrees while taking a calc test. thank goodness i’m not taking physics this year, so i don’t have to ever set my calc to degrees</p>
<p>Having your batteries would suck like no other.</p>
<p>Thankfully, it hasn’t happened yet.</p>
<p>But now that I’ve said that, watch my calculator run out of batteries on Wednesday…</p>
<p>“Or worst, your calculator should have been set to radians instead of degrees lol”</p>
<p>lol, that happened to me on a physics test once. Now this reminds me that I better have another set of batteries for wednesday…</p>
<p>I just went to 7-11 to buy triple A batteries.</p>
<p>This happened to me last year during the AP Calculus AB exam.</p>
<p>Fortunately, I was doing the calculator FRQ which was ridiculously easy and I had plenty of time to switch in my new batteries :D</p>
<p>Wait, so you can’t use a scientific calculator on the test? Only graphing?</p>
<p>:(</p>
<p>i’m just gonna bring extra batteries or just replace it in the morning before the exam. :]</p>