Wolfram Alpha Mod Apk

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Theodor Urena

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Aug 3, 2024, 4:39:23 PM8/3/24
to boongecogbi

Is it possible to wait a very short amount of time after the last keystroke before string is submitted to wolfram? It seems to submit as soon as I start typing, but without allowing me to finish typing (even when typing pretty fast). This means that I waste time waiting for the results to come back from (obviously) unfinished queries before it gets to submitting the finished query. Try a currency conversion like "10USD in GBP" to see what I mean.

Right now, the workflow waits until at least three characters have been entered (as suggested by David Ferguson). I would love it if I could throttle the script, but I can't. Andrew might add a feature like this later on; it has been suggested by a few people ( -throttle-script-filters/).

I can't get this to work. I enter my AppID, alfred tells me it's saved and then when I invoke the command it keeps telling me to provide an appID. It's been this way for a couple days now so it doesn't seem to be an issue waiting for something on WA's end.

I don't even have the tylereich.wolframalpha folder. Even after deleting and reinstalling the workflow. When I log into the wolfram alpha dev site it says that there has been 4 queries on my appid. Odd. I'm not sure if this will help but it's caused a couple other Alfred related issues for me so far. My startup disk is on different drive than my home folder. Both internal drives but one SSD, one traditional.

I'm not sure what could be causing your issue . I deleted my tylereich.wolframalpha folder and it was immediately recreated when I launched the script. It could be an issue with David Ferguson's Workflows class, or with PHP itself, but I sincerely doubt either is at fault.

I doubt this will help, but could you try running the script from the terminal? Open Alfred's preferences > workflows, right-click the WolframAlpha entry, 'Show in Finder', and locate the script called 'wolfram.php'. Open Terminal and type 'php -f ', drag 'wolfram.php' into Terminal to load its path, then type '-- "hello world"'. Hit enter and see what comes out.

Thanks for this workflow, but I'm having a problem with it. When I do a search, the results show up properly in the search window if I wait before hitting enter but whenever I press enter the Growl notification looks like this:

If you want a better way to include Growl in NC, try Bark ( ). I forget which apps use NC and which ones use Growl because Bark does such a good job integrating the two. Plus, you can decide which apps you want to appear in NC and which apps you want to use a normal Growl style for (like Alfred )

As I mentioned, I am used to just entering my searches and hitting enter in the V1 extension. It seems the workflow requires the parsing of the search to be complete before hitting enter in order for the proper results to appear in the growl notification.

"Each Mathematica license includes a generous monthly allowance of WolframAlpha function calls from within the application. Automated and non-automated usage of free-form input (= and Ctrl=), WolframAlpha queries (==), the WolframAlpha function, semantic functions, and entity value functions use WolframAlpha API calls and are subject to the WolframAlpha"

As mentioned in the other answer, if basic analysis is all that you need, you have performance advantages with alpha, plus the hosted model, plus the app... but if you have a decent i7 laptop with enough RAM, you can do so much more with Mathematica app on your local machine.

I want to modify an HP 10bll+ calculator with something like an Audrino mini to include the Wolfgram alpha program. For those who don't know Wolfgram alpha is a calculator App and website that shows you how to solve any math problem step by step, if I could make that program run on a modified calculator it would make my maths easier to calculate and more understandable, it would just be very handy in general . The thing is Im far far far from a pro at Audrino projects and I dont know how much effort it would take or what to really do to make it work.

Since Wolfram Alpha program is on Android and Windows and can also be used from their website. So I guess I would just need to rip out the circuit board in the calculator and install an Audrino mini in it. Then I would need to code it so that the Audrino would boot up in the Wolfram Alpha program or code it in web-based API linked to their site. Then make the numbers on the calculator input the proper numbers and symbols in the display, since the answer is solved and shown step by step I would need to make the steps scrollable on two up and down buttons.

The problem I have with this is that I most importantly am unsure of how to make the buttons on the calculator send an input to the Audrino since the buttons on the calculator will be hard to make functional after I rip out the normal circuit board and if I try to modify the buttons on the circuit board by connecting the circuit board to the Audrino it wouldnt be enough space.

2nd problem is, of course, making the code, I only understand the very basics of LUA and Phyton so coding it would be a challenge for me but something I hopefully think I Could overcome... with a bit of help. I wouldnt think that it would be that hard to make the Audrino boot up into something like the android version of Wolfram Alpha and give a display output with two scrollable up and down buttons.

I know Im asking for how to do basically every step in my DIY Wolfram alpha calculator and for strangers to offer their time to help a stranger on the internet is asking for a lot. Therefore Im willing to pay by Paypal 150 Dollar for giving me clear instructions on how to make the Calculator buttons connect to the Audrino and writing the code for the Audrino to be able to run Wolfgram Alpha and connect to the display

Even if you could find an Arduino (or other board) that would give you internet access it would require you to find the pinout of the keypad matrix as well as how to interface the 12 digits LCD display of that calculator. These, even if they could be reversed engineer, would not be easy to find yet alone write the code for it. You would probably spend weeks if not months just on that task.

Let's say that you have the 2 challenges above solved. You need to find a way to connect the aparentus to the wifi network where you are at to use it. That means entering an alphanumerical SSID and password. Not easy to have something to work on a 12 digits display that is made to display numbers and a keypad of a calculator..

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