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I am a licensed architect and, as youcanimagine, I work with feet and inch numbers all of the time.Ilooked at many feet and inch calculators and could not findonethat worked the way I work when calculating feet and inchnumbers.When I enter a number into a calculator, I want theflexibility touse a number that is feet and fractional inches, orfeet anddecimal feet, or feet and decimal inches - basically,however Ifeel is correct for the number I'm about to enter. I getfrustrated(irritated really) when I have to enter a number in theformat inwhich the calculator works - I feel the calculator shouldwork theway I work.I also want the numbers displayed the way I want. I prefer feetanddecimal inches. I may be the only person that feels this waybut,for me, it really helps me work with the numbers easily whichhelpsget my projects done correctly.Since I could not find a feet and inch calculator that workedmyway, I decided to make one. And here is is.This is just a regular calculator that also allows you to workwithfeet and inch numbers. You can easily add, subtract, divide,ormultiply feet and inch numbers as well as non-feet andinch(scalar) numbers. I've tried to make it as easy as possible tousethe calculator.First, you can enter feet and inch numbers in a more naturalway.For example:Regular feet and inch numbers: 1'2", or 1'2 1/2", or 1'2.5",or1'1/2" or 2'.5", all work.Or you can enter just feet: 1', or 1 1/2', or 1.5', or 1/2', or.5',all of these work.Or you can enter just inches: 1", or 1 1/2", or 1.5", or 1/2",or.5", all of these work too.A couple of notes about entering feet and inch numbers:1. If you enter a foot mark ('), the inch mark is optional.2. A space (└┘) is not needed between the foot andinchnumbers.3. A space (└┘) is required between everything and afraction.For this version, I have not included area calculations. Thismeansthat when you multiply a foot inch number with another footinchnumber the answer is not square feet or square inches. Topreventerrors, I made it work such that, when two foot inch numbersaremultiplied together, the second number is assumed to be ascalarnumber and the answer is based on this. For example: 9' times9"equals 81', and 9" times 9' is 81" (6'9"). A future releasewilladd area calculations as well as volume calculations.