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Turns out the ARM32 version is still officially maintained, despite W11 requiring ARM64. |
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In [[Windows 3.0]], a scientific mode was added, which included [[exponent]]s and [[Nth root|root]]s, [[logarithm]]s, [[factorial]]-based functions, [[trigonometry]] (supports [[radian]], [[degree (angle)|degree]] and [[gradian]]s angles), base conversions (2, 8, 10, 16), logic operations, [[statistics|statistical]] functions such as single variable statistics and linear regression.
===Windows 9x and Windows NT 4.0===
Until [[Windows 95]], it uses an [[IEEE 754-1985]] [[double-precision floating-point]], and the highest representable number by the calculator is 2<sup>1024</sup>, which is slightly above 10<sup>308</sup> (~1.80 × 10<sup>308</sup>).
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