I see a lot of wrong info on the the decimal slider. This is how it works:
A is for "Add-mode". This means that 2 decimals are always assumed. It's used for adding a lot of 2 decimal numbers, because you'll never have to press the decimal key.
If you've ever worked a credit card terminal and having to enter 200 to get 2.00$, that's how this setting works.
0-6 are fixed and rounded according to the rounding setting.
The decimal F is for floating. It'll use the most relevant amount of decimals.
Another funny button is MU which is Mark Up. It's used with the percentage button. It's a backward ass way to do percentages. You'll enter a value and then MU the percentage that you want from the result, instead of the input.
Say you have product that costs 100 and you'll want to mark it up, so you'll get 20% of your new sales price as profit. Press 100 MU 20% and it should show 125, which is your sales price, because 25 is the 20% of 125.
It doesn't make sense to me why anyone ever needed that button.
Actually I found
this site (in German) which says that the MU is for Impact Calculation. Which... I wouldn't even begin to try to understand how I'd use.
According to that site, it also has an item counter. Normally this also on the print, but without a printer I guess it needs a button for that. Perhaps the IC button?
Remember that on desktop calculators the operations are entered reverse of ordinary pocket calculators. First you press the number and then you press the operation.
So to do 100 - 50 you need to press "100 + 50 -"
Same for the MU. First you need a number to be added. Then MU some number as percentage and +=.
Most of the other buttons appears to be for the internal carrier (aka memory).
Lets say that the main display is one column in Excel. The memory is then a second column, where you can pull or push the displayed result in a variety of ways.
This allows you to do some calculation, throw the result into memory, clear he entry and do another calculation and add that to the previously stored result and such.
The slider labeled with the sum sign is a grand total. It'll cause all your results to be summarized. I'm not sure how to display it. Maybe it's only shown on the print.
The MU button doesn't "do" anything by itself. You'll need to press 100. Press MU. press 20. Press %. Or maybe the sequence is different. It would be nice with a manual.
K: Likely for a "constant mode," where the calculator uses one operand as a constant for repeated >calculations (e.g., multiplying several numbers by the same value).
The other position is likely "normal mode," disabling this feature.
Middle Switch ("A/2/4/6" etc.):
This could control decimal rounding or precision:
"A" might stand for "automatic" mode.
"0, 2, 3, 4, 6" refers to the number of decimal places displayed or used in calculations.
"F" likely stands for "full precision," using all available decimal places.
Right Switch ("Σ" setting):
Σ: Likely enables a "summation mode," where the calculator automatically adds results to a running total (useful for bookkeeping or repetitive additions).
The other position disables this mode.
Being Swedish the "constant mode" seems likely as we often used k (for "konstant") in school math to represent a constant (e.g. for the slope of a line).
Until I saw your post, I was going to guess the A,0,2,3,4,6,F switch would switch it into different numerical bases. Like, if you wanted to do math in binary, switch to the "2" position. "0" (or maybe "A") would be base 10. "F" would be hexadecimal. But what you have definitely makes more sense.
This looks mostly right. The precision slider is definitelyprobably only for the output, not calculations. The (up | 5/4 | down) is (always round up | round 5+ up and 4- down | always round down)
What I'd like to know is how the A and F settings are different.
Auto to me (if A is Auto) sounds like it'd truncate unnecessary digits (4 or 4.0 instead of 4.0000) maybe? Whereas if F is Full then you'd get full precision?
Idk seems logical but not especially useful, probably not a great guess.
Found some documentation listing the two middle switches as the rounding switch (up fraction down) and the decimal switch (auto? 0 to 6 then hex?). No idea on the other two.
Well, I see a round up, didn't round, or round down switch. The next one might be how many points if precision??. The last one has to do with sum vs series somehow.
That is interesting, though. Beyond me, that's for sure
I know. I'm in Sweden. Facit was a big thing in its day. This one's made by Sharp in Japan. It's a 2102. Or maybe that's when the manual will be released.