I was surprised with the amount of recent articles about 0.10.1, complete with screenshots and non-copied-and-pasted text.
#Speedcrunch 0.10.1 code#
If not, please let us know your thoughts.īeing really tired to code anything on a Friday evening while the TV tries to force me to watch Dick Tracy in vain, I decided to do a web search on reviews about SpeedCrunch. I hope that the new features, user interface tuning and new translations please you, as well as the bugs fixed. Special thanks to Alessandro, Andreas, Ariya and Wolf, who help me in keeping this project alive despite the slow progress in the past year.
#Speedcrunch 0.10.1 free#
Please feel free to participate in our mailing list or contact me directly. Like usually, contributors of any kind are more than welcome to help this project (developers, translators, testers, etc). Also, there are some old requests still not implemented in this version, so if your particular wish matches that case, I'm sorry for that. Will try to include them for the final 0.11, but can't promise.
And these are the issues still to solve and targeted at final 0.11.įor the many people who requested business-oriented built-in functions, sorry for not having worked on it yet. I apologize for the lack of a proper and up-to-date change log, but you can check most of the changes here. You can give us feedback through our mailing list, but if you are sure about the existence of a bug, please fill it on our bug tracker. If the term alpha does not ring a bell for you, please be aware that it might contain numerous bugs.Īlthough it should function quite well for the majority of users, the goal of this release is precisely to give people a new version to play with and report back the issues encountered during usage. It's long long due, but I finally got a small amount of available time to release this test version. Would like to help the project? You can translate it, file a feature request or bug you found, or contribute with source code.
#Speedcrunch 0.10.1 update#
Linux users will have to wait for their distribution to update their included version. Grab your Windows or OS X package from the usual place, which has just been heavily revamped. But for now, I hope you'll enjoy and find this release useful. Thanks to Tey, we're getting there and it will certainly be available in the next version. One of them is the long awaited ability to define user functions. I'm already thinking about 0.12 (or 1.0) and the features that should have priority. I see this feature in the same category and usefulness as RPN support. I'll consider re-adding a keypad in the future IFF a significant user base asks for it and a good and scalable design is found. The old keypad was both ugly and not very functional. The reason for this is that it goes against the SpeedCrunch philosophy and main goal - to be a keyboard-oriented, fast to use scientific calculator. Now for some bad news for some of you: the virtual keypad is gone.