Mathcad

Last updated
Mathcad
Developer(s) Mathsoft, PTC
Initial release1986 (1986)
Stable release
Prime 9 (9.0.0.0) / March 14, 2023;11 months ago (2023-03-14)
Operating system Microsoft Windows
Available in10 languages [1]
Type Computer algebra system
License Proprietary
Website www.mathcad.com

Mathcad is computer software for the verification, validation, documentation and re-use of mathematical calculations in engineering and science, notably mechanical, chemical, electrical, and civil engineering. [2] Released in 1986 on DOS, it introduced live editing (WYSIWYG) of typeset mathematical notation in an interactive notebook, combined with automatic computations. It was originally developed by Mathsoft, and since 2006 has been a product of Parametric Technology Corporation.

Contents

History

Mathcad was conceived and developed by Allen Razdow and Josh Bernoff at Mathsoft founded by David Blohm and Razdow. It was released in 1986. It was the first system to support WYSIWYG editing and recalculation of mathematical calculations mixed with text. [3] It was also the first to check the consistency of engineering units through the full calculation. Other equation solving systems existed at the time, but did not provide a notebook interface: Software Arts' TK Solver was released in 1982, and Borland's Eureka: The Solver was released in 1987. [4]

Mathcad was acquired by Parametric Technology in April 2006. [5]

Mathcad was named "Best of '87" and "Best of '88" by PC Magazine 's editors. [6]

Overview

Mathcad's central interface is an interactive notebook in which equations and expressions are created and manipulated in the same graphical format in which they are presented (WYSIWYG). This approach was adopted by systems such as Mathematica, Maple, Macsyma, MATLAB, and Jupyter.

Mathcad today includes some of the capabilities of a computer algebra system, but remains oriented towards ease of use and documentation of numerical engineering applications.

Mathcad is part of a broader product development system developed by PTC, addressing analytical steps in systems engineering. It integrates with PTC's Creo Elements/Pro, Windchill, and Creo Elements/View. Its live feature-level integration with Creo Elements/Pro enables Mathcad analytical models to be directly used in driving CAD geometry, and its structural awareness within Windchill allows live calculations to be re-used and re-applied toward multiple design models.

Summary of capabilities

The Mathcad interface allows users to combine a variety of different elements (mathematics, descriptive text, and supporting imagery) into a worksheet, in which dependent calculations are dynamically recalculated as inputs change. This allows for simple manipulation of input variables, assumptions, and expressions. Mathcad's functionality includes:

Although Mathcad is mostly oriented to non-programmers, it is also used in more complex projects to visualize results of mathematical modeling by using distributed computing and coupling with programs written using more traditional languages such as C++.

Current releases

As of 2022, the latest release from PTC is Mathcad Prime 8.0.0.0. This release is a freemium variant: if the software is not activated after a Mathcad Prime 30-day trial, it is possible to continue using PTC Mathcad Express for an unlimited time as "PTC Mathcad Express Free-for-Life Engineering Calculations Software". This freemium pilot is a new marketing approach for PTC. Review and markup of engineering notes can now be done directly by team members without them all requiring a full Mathcad Prime license. [8]

The last release of the traditional (pre "Prime") product line, Mathcad 15.0, came out in June 2010 and shares the same worksheet file structure as Mathcad 14.0. The last service release, Mathcad 15.0 M050, which added support for Windows 10, was released in 2017. Mathcad 15.0 is no longer actively developed but in "sustained support".

Computer operating system platforms

Mathcad only runs on Microsoft Windows. Mathcad Prime 6.0 requires a 64-bit version of Windows 7, Windows 8.1 or Windows 10. Until 1998, Mathcad also supported Mac OS. [9]

Support

Starting in 2011 (Mathcad 15.0) the first year of maintenance and support has been included in the purchase or upgrade price.

Release history

NameVersionRelease dateNotes
Mathcad 0.30.3beta on 5 1/4 floppy
Mathcad 2.5.22.5.21989Last DOS version
Mathcad 3.13.11992Windows version with notebook interface
Mathcad 4.04.0Windows version
Mathcad 5.05.0Added Maple based CAS features
Mathcad 5.55.5Windows version
Mathcad 6.0 [10] 6.01995Last Windows 3.1 version
Mathcad 7 [11] 7.01997
Mathcad 8 [12]
Mathcad 2000 [13]
Mathcad 2001i [14]
Mathcad 11 [15]
Mathcad 12 [16]
Mathcad 13.0 [17] 13.0September 15, 2005 [18]
Mathcad 13.1 [17] 13.1
Mathcad 14.0 [17] 14.0February 12, 2007 [18]
Mathcad 15.0 [19] 15.0 F000June 25, 2010 [18]
Mathcad 15.0 M010 [19] 15.0 M010June 29, 2011 [18]
Mathcad 15.0 M040 [18] 15.0 M040August 2015
Mathcad 15.0 M045 [20] November 2015 [20]
Mathcad 15.0 M050 [21] 15.0 M050December 2017
Mathcad Prime 1.0 [22] January 10, 2011 [18]
Mathcad Prime 2.0February 29, 2012 [18]
Mathcad Prime 3.0October 2, 2013 [18]
Mathcad Prime 3.1March 2, 2015 [18]
Mathcad Prime 4.0March 6, 2017 [18]
Mathcad Prime 5.05.0.0.0August 14, 2018 [23]
Mathcad Prime 6.06.0.0.0October 1, 2019 [24]
Mathcad Prime 77.0.0.0February 27, 2021 [25]
Mathcad Prime 88.0.0.0March 15, 2022 [26]
Mathcad Prime 99.0.0.0March 14, 2023 [27]

Screen captures of previous Mathcad versions

See also

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References

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  5. PTC buys Mathsoft for $63m  : April 2006 Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
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