When was mathcad 15 release




















Our favorite capability is Roarks Formulas for Stress and Strain is great add-on package. We also like the units which is great and many of the curve fitting functions and the contour ploltting capability.

Makes our life much easire. PTC has been a disaster in our opinion. TS is miserable and time consuming. I recently bought a new computer — 64 bit and was trying to reinstall MCAD on this machine. Could not because we are dummys when it comes to this stuff. Finally I got an email to upgrade our paid TS. I wrote a complianing email said I was looking for a new program and got an email repsonse and phone call from a very helpful lady. It is helpful but cumbersome to use.

Many of our clients manufacturers also use MCAD and we write design tools for them to use and they are veruy pleased with these tools. Does anyone know if other programs will import MCAD sheets? I am certianly willing to look and new programs. It looked like mainly a programming tool, not a live math calculator.

I would see the main drawback to swithcing would be the thousands of MCAD sheets we already have and how to easily and painlessly convert to a new program. Any comments would be greatly appreciated. The old 2. I have never been happy with any of the Windows versions. There is a fortune awaiting the person who presents the equivalent of my old friend that can run on my XP machine. Formatting was a no-brainer. Documentation was near-perfect. A savvy user could gin up more complex functions as needed.

I even learned how to do recursive calculations with that old sweetheart of a program. It was the best self-documentating calculator ever. I used it for design and analysis of inertial instruments and preliminary orbit and trajectory work. And I have never ceased missing it. I have been using Mathcad since version 1. Because of the clarity of expression, Mathcad worksheets are much easier to debug than program code and Mathcad worksheets tend to be correct far more often than spreadsheets.

The output is presentable, and that can be important. I am a structural engineer, and I have to submit calculations for review by public authorities. Mathcad worksheets are perfectly acceptable to building officials. The units feature of Mathcad is a killer idea that has saved me from countless errors, spared me a lot of work and made my output a lot prettier and more legible.

Why nobody else has latched onto this is beyond me. Mathcad got better over time, but not without some hiccups. I have always needed to multi-task, so Mathcad 5, on Windows, seemed to me a major breakthrough. Mathcad 6 was OK, too. Mathcad 7 was a disaster, though, a crash-o-matic, memory-leaking piece of junk.

There was a change in the keystroke language at one point that I resented at the time. I felt I could compose any notation without hesitation in the old language. At long I feel just about the same about the new language. The switch to the XML file format had a terrible influence on robustness for a time, but that phase is over. Most of the problems are in the past.

Instead, I print to PDF. This work about as well as print preview. I use the symbolic capabilities MuPad, did you say a fair amount, and they seem more capable that the Maple engine was. I am told that Mathcad 15 is about the same as After that, it appears, the whole thing went to heck. Mathcad Prime appears to be a horrendous strategic error, and may indeed signal the early death throes of a classic software product.

Sad, I say. PTC had proved an incompetent manager of Mathcad, and they should sell it off. In the right hands it could be saved.

First priority, ditch Mathcad Prime and go back to the full-featured approach. Third, but not least in importance, reduce the price. Has anyone found a fix for this? It worked fine on Windows XP. I do extensive product development work and simulation. Mathcad is by far my preferred simulation tool, because of its readability and easy of use with full documentation incorporated.

However, I also write product application code that we sell in Matlab. Hopefully Mathcad will survive and thrive! I own Mathcad 11, 12 and 13 but after a computer crash I could not reinstall even though I had the code that came with the original product.

PTC would not activate the product. I have been draping in Mathcad on and off more than 20 years now, mostly off; I started with Mathcad 5. After a long hiatus, now I came back to i again. But the damage was done. Word is out that the new MathCAD prime is a total crock, all it does is change the look of the interface. You have to keep MathCAD 15 installed in order to use the Prime file converted to convert your old files to the new format.

All that effort for no gain? Microsoft Word has gotten smart er about having this capability but entering equations on your sheet is a lot slower and clunkier in Word and text placement is less flexible. In MatCAD, I like the ability to create a text box, be able to drag it anywhere you like on the worksheet, and easily re-size it by grabbing an edge or corner of the text box.

It was much easier than thumbing through old notes and textbooks. Have a company buy it that will actually keep it up to date intelligently and fix the bugs. The big mistake that software companies make is that they often try to turn a program like MathCAD into something that will do everything. What actually happens is that the software becomes something that does nothing well, tries to do too many things, and does then all half-assed. Concentrate on fixing and improving what it does right now instead of adding a bunch of crap that nobody cares about.

Learn from the mistakes of the MathCAD 7 release. Adobe Acrobat is no more functional than it was in but the hard-drive space and RAM that it occupies has grown exponentially.

What they need to do is make MathCAD affordable enough that normal people can buy it again. That is total crap. When you do that crap, all you do is drive a black market of hacked copies. I got lucky because my work bought us all licenses of MathCAD I have it on my work computer and home computer.

You can only use the license in one place at one time in other words, my work computer or home computer, not both at the same time, and why would you? Probably not, it was posted last year and I downloaded it this week. Holy smokes, PTC did something right. Symbolic math comes to mind, I get the idea that the Maple interface was developed in about and not a damn thing was done with it since.

But, the main reason you should upgrade is that Mathcad Prime 7 is the best engineering calculation software on the market today. It will change the way you work for the better.

Mathcad Prime has always been the industry standard for engineering mathematics software. The engineering community loves how it helps them solve complex problems, share engineering calculations and so much more. The newest version, Mathcad Prime 7, was released in March It brings new functions and capabilities, with over a dozen enhancements to the symbolic engine.

Mathcad Prime 7 is your comprehensive yet intuitive solution, performing complex calculations with accuracy and precision, showing your work and enabling traceability. Understand the different variable which will have the most influence on the experiment. DoE also assists in identifying critical factors and optimal settings for a complex process. It supplies the structure for less, yet more intelligent experiments which are invaluable when testing multiple variables. Mathcad CAD calculations allows easy communication of values across applications and the organisation, without any reduction in quantity or integrity of the number.



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