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calculator circuitry

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curli_top | 23:10 Wed 05th Oct 2005 | How it Works
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<P align=justify><FONT color=#ff0000>does anyone know how a calculator works electronically? i mean like, circuits and loads and all of that. i need it for a science project but i cant find it anywhere! please help ASAP!</FONT>

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Start with a 'PN' junction, progress through diodes to transistors and transistor configuration to bistable multivibrators and a 'JK' flip-flop.  Micro-miniaturise these and put thousands of them together and you have counting machine.  That's where it starts.....

Good luck.

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in lamens terms please!
is a lamen similar to a layman?
Basically (Very Bascially in fact) Numbers you enter into the calculator in Denary and converted into binary.  Each denary digit represented by 4 binary bits.  Binary is used as it can be represented digitally.  The numbers entered via the keypad and I/O IC are transfered via a data bus and are temperarily held within registers (which have and address) which are accessed by the Central Processing Unit.  The (ALU) Arithmatic Logic Unit of the CPU carries out a desired function on the numbers entered such as addition, subraction etc.  The result is then sent via the I/O IC to the display.  The firmware that interprets the commands you enter will be held on a non volatile memory device such as a PROM (Programmable Read Only Memory) or it will probably be Flash based these days.  Hope this helps a bit.  Jason. 

Curli-top, you won't get an answer in layman's terms because you asked for electronic and circuits type explanation.  There is a huge resource available on the net where you can chose what level of info you need.

Good luck.

Question Author
and what resource would that be??

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