HP 32SII and HP Prime:
Throwing Dice
Note: Symbols that are produced by Unicode
should, but may not show up on all browsers. Please make sure your browsers are
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⚀ ⚁ ⚂ ⚃ ⚄ ⚅
Let Em’ Roll
One way to simulate a pair of dice being thrown is to
generate two random integers between 1 through 6. The integers are either shown as a pair or
vector of integers. For calculators that
do not have a list capacity or want a more compact representation, the program
for the HP 32S II (which can easily apply almost to any other programming
calculator), in the format A.0B, where A is one die and B is the other. For example, 3.06 represents a 3 and a 6
being thrown.
The formula would be:
RandInt(1,6) + RandInt(1,6)/100
On certain Sharp calculators, such as the Sharp EL-W516T, the
R.DICE function generates a single digit between 1 and 6.
HP
32 SII Program: Dice Generator
D01 LBL D
D02 RANDOM
D03 6
D04 *
D05 1
D06 +
D07 IP
D08 1
D09 %
D10 RANDOM
D11 6
D12 *
D13 1
D14 +
D15 IP
D16 +
D17 RTN
HP Prime: Graphical
Representation of Dice
We can also use the Unicode representation of dice.
Unicode Character
|
Decimal
|
Hexadecimal
|
⚀
|
9856
|
2680
|
⚁
|
9857
|
2681
|
⚂
|
9858
|
2682
|
⚃
|
9859
|
2683
|
⚄
|
9860
|
2684
|
⚅
|
9861
|
2685
|
Unicode characters need to be in strings. The HP Prime program RDICE returns a list,
the roll in compact format, along with the Unicode representation. This is only one of many ways to do it.
An example output of RDICE is {4.02, “⚃”, “⚁”}
HP Prime Program:
RDICE
EXPORT RDICE()
BEGIN
// rolling dice A.0B
LOCAL A, B, C, D;
A≔RANDINT(1,6); C≔9855+A;
B≔RANDINT(1,6); D≔9855+B;
RETURN {A+B/100,
CHAR(C), CHAR(D)};
END;
Have fun and roll those dice,
Eddie
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