Have you heard of an exapascal pressure? I hadn't (the Sun's core stops at ~26 PPa), but Qalculate! has no problem understanding the meaning of 1 EPa. Its use of units is far more intuitive than SpeedCrunch's and it understands common prefixes without problem.
It allows you to work with units, handle physical constants, create graphics, use complex numbers, matrices, and vectors, choose arbitrary precision, and more. The project offers a powerful library that can be used by other programs (the Plasma desktop can use it to perform calculations from krunner) and a graphical interface built on GTK3. Qalculate! (with the exclamation point) has a long and complex history.
#SPEEDCRUNCH LINUX CODE#
It works on Linux, Windows, and MacOS, and it's licensed under GPLv2 you can access its source code on Bitbucket. The list of available functions is really impressive.
More options are available on the Configuration menu.
With the F5 key, all results will turn into scientific notation ( 1.08e9 kilo meter / hour), while with F2 only numbers that are small enough or big enough will change. It supports working with units and comes loaded with all kinds of functions.īy default, SpeedCrunch delivers its results in the international unit system, but units can be transformed with the "in" instruction.ģ*10^8 meter / second in kilo meter / hour