Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
Fraction Calculator Plus
The app puts 3 keypads on the screen so that you can directly enter the integer portion, the
numerator and the denominator.
1 15/32 + 3 5/8 = 5 3/32
If you want, you can tap a button to see a scratchpad type screen showing a "handwritten"
breakdown of the steps required to get the answer. That screen also shows you the decimal
version of the answer, e.g. 5.09375
On Friday, January 19, 2018 at 3:26:54 PM UTC-5, DerbyDad03 wrote:
> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
>
> Fraction Calculator Plus
>
> The app puts 3 keypads on the screen so that you can directly enter the integer portion, the
> numerator and the denominator.
>
> 1 15/32 + 3 5/8 = 5 3/32
>
> If you want, you can tap a button to see a scratchpad type screen showing a "handwritten"
> breakdown of the steps required to get the answer. That screen also shows you the decimal
> version of the answer, e.g. 5.09375
P.S. Their website says "#1 Top Rated by Woodworker's" ;-)
On Friday, January 19, 2018 at 4:20:55 PM UTC-5, Scott Lurndal wrote:
> DerbyDad03 <[email protected]> writes:
> >On Friday, January 19, 2018 at 3:26:54 PM UTC-5, DerbyDad03 wrote:
> >> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
> >> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
> >>
> >> Fraction Calculator Plus
> >>
> >> The app puts 3 keypads on the screen so that you can directly enter the integer portion, the
> >> numerator and the denominator.
> >>
> >> 1 15/32 + 3 5/8 = 5 3/32
> >>
> >> If you want, you can tap a button to see a scratchpad type screen showing a "handwritten"
> >> breakdown of the steps required to get the answer. That screen also shows you the decimal
> >> version of the answer, e.g. 5.09375
> >
> >P.S. Their website says "#1 Top Rated by Woodworker's" ;-)
>
> Don't they teach fractions in school anymore?
I'm too busy cleaning up the router shavings with a broom to do any math.
On Friday, January 19, 2018 at 2:26:54 PM UTC-6, DerbyDad03 wrote:
> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
>
> Fraction Calculator Plus
I use the Dewalt Mobile Pro app. Its free and has lots of addins for carpentry and construction work.
On Sunday, January 21, 2018 at 1:21:20 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:
> On 1/21/2018 12:06 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
> > J. Clarke <[email protected]> wrote in
> > news:[email protected]:
> >
> >>
> >> Just a note on the level in the phone. Coworker used a level on his
> >> phone to make sure that some posters we hung in the office were level.
> >> They looked crooked. More investigation revealed that (according to
> >> his phone anyway) the whole building is about 2 degrees out of plumb.
> >>
> >
> > I just downloaded the Ridgid branded level. Nice program, actually. One
> > of the first things I had to do was use the calibration function. ;-)
> > Funny, my shelves were about 2 degrees out before calibration.
> >
> > I wonder if I can turn that line in camera mode so it goes straight up and
> > down.
>
>
>
>
> It'd be great for checking whether a post is plumb or not.
>
> Few posts on this news group are plumb. ;~)
>
Very good...very, very good. ;-)
On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 12:21:11 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
wrote:
>On 1/21/2018 12:06 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
>> J. Clarke <[email protected]> wrote in
>> news:[email protected]:
>>
>>>
>>> Just a note on the level in the phone. Coworker used a level on his
>>> phone to make sure that some posters we hung in the office were level.
>>> They looked crooked. More investigation revealed that (according to
>>> his phone anyway) the whole building is about 2 degrees out of plumb.
>>>
>>
>> I just downloaded the Ridgid branded level. Nice program, actually. One
>> of the first things I had to do was use the calibration function. ;-)
>> Funny, my shelves were about 2 degrees out before calibration.
>>
>> I wonder if I can turn that line in camera mode so it goes straight up and
>> down.
>
>
>
>
>It'd be great for checking whether a post is plumb or not.
>
>Few posts on this news group are plumb. ;~)
How many of yours are on the level, Leon? ;-)
[email protected] (Scott Lurndal) wrote in
news:[email protected]:
>
> Don't they teach fractions in school anymore?
People seem afraid of fractions, maybe it's part of the abyss that stares
back at them called "premature optimization." That cold feeling when
you're messing with lowest common denominator when any common denominator
will do? It's the dark soulless abyss staring back at you.
Get a nice answer like 4/32? Hey look, your rule reads in 32nds, you can
just count four lines! What do you mean you've reduced to 1/8? Do you
WANT the abyss to consume your mathematical soul?
Puckdropper
--
http://www.puckdroppersplace.us/rec.woodworking
A mini archive of some of rec.woodworking's best and worst!
J. Clarke <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
>
> Just a note on the level in the phone. Coworker used a level on his
> phone to make sure that some posters we hung in the office were level.
> They looked crooked. More investigation revealed that (according to
> his phone anyway) the whole building is about 2 degrees out of plumb.
>
I just downloaded the Ridgid branded level. Nice program, actually. One
of the first things I had to do was use the calibration function. ;-)
Funny, my shelves were about 2 degrees out before calibration.
I wonder if I can turn that line in camera mode so it goes straight up and
down. It'd be great for checking whether a post is plumb or not.
Puckdropper
--
http://www.puckdroppersplace.us/rec.woodworking
A mini archive of some of rec.woodworking's best and worst!
DerbyDad03 <[email protected]> writes:
>On Friday, January 19, 2018 at 3:26:54 PM UTC-5, DerbyDad03 wrote:
>> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
>> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
>>
>> Fraction Calculator Plus
>>
>> The app puts 3 keypads on the screen so that you can directly enter the integer portion, the
>> numerator and the denominator.
>>
>> 1 15/32 + 3 5/8 = 5 3/32
>>
>> If you want, you can tap a button to see a scratchpad type screen showing a "handwritten"
>> breakdown of the steps required to get the answer. That screen also shows you the decimal
>> version of the answer, e.g. 5.09375
>
>P.S. Their website says "#1 Top Rated by Woodworker's" ;-)
Don't they teach fractions in school anymore?
On 1/19/2018 2:26 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
>
> Fraction Calculator Plus
>
> The app puts 3 keypads on the screen so that you can directly enter the integer portion, the
> numerator and the denominator.
>
> 1 15/32 + 3 5/8 = 5 3/32
>
> If you want, you can tap a button to see a scratchpad type screen showing a "handwritten"
> breakdown of the steps required to get the answer. That screen also shows you the decimal
> version of the answer, e.g. 5.09375
>
I am actually using the Calculated Industries Master Measure Pro on my
phone. Works just like the calculates you see at HD and Lowes and much
less expensive.
On 1/19/2018 3:51 PM, Leon wrote:
> On 1/19/2018 2:26 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
>> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I
>> found a few months
>> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
>>
>> Fraction Calculator Plus
>>
>> The app puts 3 keypads on the screen so that you can directly enter
>> the integer portion, the
>> numerator and the denominator.
>>
>> 1 15/32 + 3 5/8 = 5 3/32
>>
>> If you want, you can tap a button to see a scratchpad type screen
>> showing a "handwritten"
>> breakdown of the steps required to get the answer. That screen also
>> shows you the decimal
>> version of the answer, e.g. 5.09375
>>
>
> I am actually using the Calculated Industries Master Measure Pro on my
> phone. Works just like the calculates you see at HD and Lowes and much
> less expensive.
I'll check the one you are pointing out.
This is the one I am using.
https://www.calculated.com/prd473/Measure-Master-Pro-App.html
Since I use a lot of Festool I can easily convert imperial into metric
and visa versa.
On 1/21/2018 12:06 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
> J. Clarke <[email protected]> wrote in
> news:[email protected]:
>
>>
>> Just a note on the level in the phone. Coworker used a level on his
>> phone to make sure that some posters we hung in the office were level.
>> They looked crooked. More investigation revealed that (according to
>> his phone anyway) the whole building is about 2 degrees out of plumb.
>>
>
> I just downloaded the Ridgid branded level. Nice program, actually. One
> of the first things I had to do was use the calibration function. ;-)
> Funny, my shelves were about 2 degrees out before calibration.
>
> I wonder if I can turn that line in camera mode so it goes straight up and
> down.
It'd be great for checking whether a post is plumb or not.
Few posts on this news group are plumb. ;~)
>
> Puckdropper
>
On Sunday, January 21, 2018 at 8:02:15 AM UTC-5, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> On 1/20/2018 7:08 PM, Gramps' shop wrote:
> > I have an app called stud finder. I tried to open it to get more info to share and got message that the developer needs to update it to work on current version of
> > iOS. When I used it last year it worked well.
> >
>
> Still does. When I opened the app it showed my picture.
Oh...it's one of those fantasy game apps.
On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 07:43:23 -0800 (PST), Bob <[email protected]>
wrote:
>On Friday, January 19, 2018 at 2:26:54 PM UTC-6, DerbyDad03 wrote:
>> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
>> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
>>
>> Fraction Calculator Plus
>
>I use the Dewalt Mobile Pro app. Its free and has lots of addins for carpentry and construction work.
Just a note on the level in the phone. Coworker used a level on his
phone to make sure that some posters we hung in the office were level.
They looked crooked. More investigation revealed that (according to
his phone anyway) the whole building is about 2 degrees out of plumb.
In rec.woodworking, DerbyDad03 <[email protected]> wrote:
> Fraction Calculator Plus
>
> The app puts 3 keypads on the screen so that you can directly enter
> the integer portion, the numerator and the denominator.
Interesting UI choice. My old "scientific" calculator uses one keypand
and has you push a button between each part.
> If you want, you can tap a button to see a scratchpad type screen
> showing a "handwritten" breakdown of the steps required to get the
> answer. That screen also shows you the decimal version of the answer,
> e.g. 5.09375
If it could only convert yards to meters and inches to mm, my wife would
love it (she needs both fractions and those conversions for (writing)
sewing patterns).
Elijah
------
made her a chart of inches to cm/mm from 1/8" to 5"
On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 11:25:41 -0500, J. Clarke
<[email protected]> wrote:
>On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 07:43:23 -0800 (PST), Bob <[email protected]>
>wrote:
>
>>On Friday, January 19, 2018 at 2:26:54 PM UTC-6, DerbyDad03 wrote:
>>> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
>>> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
>>>
>>> Fraction Calculator Plus
>>
>>I use the Dewalt Mobile Pro app. Its free and has lots of addins for carpentry and construction work.
>
>Just a note on the level in the phone. Coworker used a level on his
>phone to make sure that some posters we hung in the office were level.
>They looked crooked. More investigation revealed that (according to
>his phone anyway) the whole building is about 2 degrees out of plumb.
I worked for a government contractor that was like that.
On 1/20/2018 7:08 PM, Gramps' shop wrote:
> I have an app called stud finder. I tried to open it to get more info to share and got message that the developer needs to update it to work on current version of
> iOS. When I used it last year it worked well.
>
Still does. When I opened the app it showed my picture.
On 1/19/2018 3:26 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
> Mike's mention of the level app on his phone reminded me of an app I found a few months
> ago and have been using quite often for my bookcase project.
>
> Fraction Calculator Plus
>
> The app puts 3 keypads on the screen so that you can directly enter the integer portion, the
> numerator and the denominator.
>
> 1 15/32 + 3 5/8 = 5 3/32
>
> If you want, you can tap a button to see a scratchpad type screen showing a "handwritten"
> breakdown of the steps required to get the answer. That screen also shows you the decimal
> version of the answer, e.g. 5.09375
>
I like Tapeulator
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tapeulator-tape-measure-calculator/id482504435?mt=8
On Fri, 19 Jan 2018 22:24:43 GMT, Puckdropper <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Get a nice answer like 4/32? Hey look, your rule reads in 32nds, you can
>just count four lines! What do you mean you've reduced to 1/8? Do you
>WANT the abyss to consume your mathematical soul?
But math is my first and only language I am fluent in (I suck at
english). ;~)