Since you have a clean view of what your balance is at any given moment, you’re unlikely to run afoul of your bank manager over things like misplaced decimal points. Tapecalc can save “tapes” as plain text files, and read them back as source files or as annexations. You can save out your “tape,” add on regular “tapes,” and generally edit or juggle to your heart’s desire. TapeCalc 2.1 could be downloaded from the developers website when we last checked. And tapecalc is not limited to adding and subtracting there are provisions for multiplying and dividing, as well as more complicated mathematical adventures. We cannot confirm if there is a free download of this software available. I only found tapecalc in Debian, although I don’t believe it will take much to build it elsewhere.įor all the points listed earlier this week, and for a unique take on the traditional console calculator, I’m willing to pass out a third gold star this week: ⭐ Three in a week! Another precedent broken! I expect this will take over from sc … as soon as I get tapecalc to run in Arch. One final point for thought: The source file and home page call this “add,” but it appears in Debian as “tapecalc.” As best I can tell from my unskilled perusal, the Debian patch just converts the name to tapecalc. On the home page the author explains why. *BSD users may have access to this as “add.
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