Scientific notation (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Scientific notation" in English language version.

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  • Jim Davidson coined decapower and recommended the "D" separator in the 65 Notes newsletter for Hewlett-Packard HP-65 users, and Richard C. Vanderburgh promoted these in the 52-Notes newsletter for Texas Instruments SR-52 users.
    Davidson, Jim (January 1976). Nelson, Richard J. (ed.). "[title unknown]". 65 Notes. 3 (1). Santa Ana, CA: 4. V3N1P4.

    Vanderburgh, Richard C., ed. (November 1976). "Decapower" (PDF). 52-Notes – Newsletter of the SR-52 Users Club. 1 (6). Dayton, OH: 1. V1N6P1. Retrieved 2017-05-28. Decapower – In the January 1976 issue of 65-Notes (V3N1p4) Jim Davidson (HP-65 Users Club member #547) suggested the term "decapower" as a descriptor for the power-of-ten multiplier used in scientific notation displays. I'm going to begin using it in place of "exponent" which is technically incorrect, and the letter D to separate the "mantissa" from the decapower for typewritten numbers, as Jim also suggests. For example, 123−45 [sic] which is displayed in scientific notation as 1.23 -43 will now be written 1.23D-43. Perhaps, as this notation gets more and more usage, the calculator manufacturers will change their keyboard abbreviations. HP's EEX and TI's EE could be changed to ED (for enter decapower). [1] "Decapower". 52-Notes – Newsletter of the SR-52 Users Club. Vol. 1, no. 6. Dayton, OH. November 1976. p. 1. Retrieved 2018-05-07. (NB. The term decapower was frequently used in subsequent issues of this newsletter up to at least 1978.)

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  • "floating point literal". cppreference.com. Retrieved 2017-03-11. The hexadecimal floating-point literals were not part of C++ until C++17, although they can be parsed and printed by the I/O functions since C++11: both C++ I/O streams when std::hexfloat is enabled and the C I/O streams: std::printf, std::scanf, etc. See std::strtof for the format description.

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  • Savard, John J. G. (2018) [2005]. "Computer Arithmetic". quadibloc. The Early Days of Hexadecimal. Retrieved 2018-07-16.

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  • Jim Davidson coined decapower and recommended the "D" separator in the 65 Notes newsletter for Hewlett-Packard HP-65 users, and Richard C. Vanderburgh promoted these in the 52-Notes newsletter for Texas Instruments SR-52 users.
    Davidson, Jim (January 1976). Nelson, Richard J. (ed.). "[title unknown]". 65 Notes. 3 (1). Santa Ana, CA: 4. V3N1P4.

    Vanderburgh, Richard C., ed. (November 1976). "Decapower" (PDF). 52-Notes – Newsletter of the SR-52 Users Club. 1 (6). Dayton, OH: 1. V1N6P1. Retrieved 2017-05-28. Decapower – In the January 1976 issue of 65-Notes (V3N1p4) Jim Davidson (HP-65 Users Club member #547) suggested the term "decapower" as a descriptor for the power-of-ten multiplier used in scientific notation displays. I'm going to begin using it in place of "exponent" which is technically incorrect, and the letter D to separate the "mantissa" from the decapower for typewritten numbers, as Jim also suggests. For example, 123−45 [sic] which is displayed in scientific notation as 1.23 -43 will now be written 1.23D-43. Perhaps, as this notation gets more and more usage, the calculator manufacturers will change their keyboard abbreviations. HP's EEX and TI's EE could be changed to ED (for enter decapower). [1] "Decapower". 52-Notes – Newsletter of the SR-52 Users Club. Vol. 1, no. 6. Dayton, OH. November 1976. p. 1. Retrieved 2018-05-07. (NB. The term decapower was frequently used in subsequent issues of this newsletter up to at least 1978.)

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