Calculator .. the 'o' key?? Mathematicians ...?

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Load up calculator on Windows (start --> run 00> calc). Don't press any numbers.

Press the letter 'o'

the number '1' appears (!!)

Press the letter 'o' a load more times. A different sequence of numbers appears for a while, then stops!.


For 10 points and a chance to go for the car, what does the 'o' button do in the application 'calculator' in windows? I ain't got the foggiest!
 
Help said:
Using keyboard equivalents of Calculator buttonsThe following is an alphabetical list of Calculator buttons and their keyboard equivalents. You can print this list by clicking the Options menu, and then clicking Print. When using Calculator, you can see any Calculator button's keyboard equivalent by right-clicking the button, and then clicking What's This?.

Button Key Button Key
% % Hyp h
( ( Int ;
) ) Inv i
* * ln n
+ + log l
+/- F9 Lsh <
- - M+ CTRL+P
. . or , MC CTRL+L
/ / Mod %
0-9 0-9 MR CTRL+R
1/x r MS CTRL+M
= ENTER n! !
A-F A-F Not ~
And & Oct F7
Ave CTRL+A Or |(pipe)
Backspace BACKSPACE pi p
Bin F8 Qword F12
Byte F4 Radians F3
C ESC s CTRL+D
CE DEL sin s
cos o sqrt @
Dat INS Sta CTRL+S
Dec F6 Sum CTRL+T
Degrees F2 tan t
dms m Word F3
Dword F2 Xor ^
Exp x x^2 @
F-E v x^3 #
Grads F4 x^y y
Hex F5

KaHn
 
not on mine it doesnt. it just show inverse trig (etc) functions

nope still just Squares it, just changes the tig stuff.

Hmm, well I've tried it on XP and Vista and it works fine for me on both of those.

The help pages even say it works for the power functions

Calculator Help said:
Inv
Sets the inverse function for sin, cos, tan, PI, x^y, x^2, x^3, ln, log, Ave, Sum, and s. The functions automatically turn off the inverse function after a calculation is completed.

x^2
Squares the displayed number. To calculate the square root, use Inv+x^2.

x^3
Cubes the displayed number. To calculate the cube root, use Inv+x^3.

x^y
Computes x raised to the yth power. Use this button as a binary operator. For example, to find 2 raised to the 4th power, click 2 x^y 4 =, which equals 16. To calculate the yth root of x, use Inv+x^y.
 
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