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First, let me put my flak jacket on under my flame retardant suit...
I still have my 5-1/4" disk of Mathcad 1.0 from 1987. I LOVE Mathcad. It has served me well my entire career. For a long time I have been right there with the other Mathcad 15 zealots on this forum. I had the opportunity for a face-to-face meeting with the Mathcad product managers and developers about 10 years ago in Latham, MA and I told them across the conference table, "Until Prime can provide the basic requirements of a high school 2D plot (Title, labels, legend, readable axis, etc.), Mathcad Prime will be nothing more than a toy!". There was palpable silence in the room, I can tell you. Reflecting back, I was seriously angry because I could see that my beloved Mathcad was coming to an end and the only replacement for it was inadequate.
Then I waited. Ten years. Nothing.
I teach a corporate Mathcad course to get our engineers to use Mathcad to hep document their work, avoid errors, and be more efficient. Although I evangelized "real Mathcad", I made Mathcad Prime 3.0 available to our corporate users, and later Prime 4.0, so they could "try it out". Well, last year, several of my students showed up for class and were seriously disappointed that I was not teaching Prime. Really? Monitoring our our license server, I can see that we have 33% of our user base (in the hundreds, closer to a thousand) using Prime. What!?!? Time for a paradigm shift.
I made a decision to stop teaching Mathcad 15 and convert all my training material (hands on .xmcd files) to Prime format. I also made the decision to start using Prime exclusively for my own work. If I was going to teach it, I needed to immerse, get proficient, find work around solutions to limitations, and provide leadership by example. It was a risk. I have not looked back. I actually enjoy the more modern font presentation and printing. Was it painful? Sure! But I have found work around solutions to just about everything.
The tipping point for me was the new release of Prime 6.0 with a spell checker, hyperlinks, and enhancements to the new 2D Chart Tool. I'm now pushing hard for full corporate adoption of Prime so we can stop supporting Mathcad 15. As an internal corporate trainer, I have successfully converted all my training material to Prime files with only minor issues. As an open-source developer for the CoolProp materials library, I have no trouble with converting demo worksheets and surprisingly little effort to compile add-ins for Prime instead of Mathcad 15.
Sure, an eBook viewer would be brilliant, but I've found work-around solutions by posting our Prime handbooks on our intranet with html front-ends. Are there little annoying things that Prime falls short on, sure. But it's not Mathcad 15; it's something new. When Microsoft moves their buttons around on every single forced update of Office, we don't go down and picket outside Bill Gates' house. We adjust and adopt the way we work and eventually get used to it. Did PTC take too long? Sure. Should PTC have worked harder to retain the product experts and developers from MathSoft? Maybe. However, to get a new china pattern, you have to break the dishes; otherwise, you're just rearranging the plates.
I've started to notice a few forum users getting annoyed that every single post degrades into a diatribe on the shortcomings of Prime. I'm tired of it myself. It's probably why PTC no longer pays attention to this forum anymore and why the enhancements forum is locked down tight (the Creo enhancement forum works just fine). They are tired of all the negativity and frankly, I don't blame them.
It's time. Mathcad 15 is not moving forward. It is only a Windows update away from not running at all. It's 32-bit, it's old, and it's tired. Get over it.
Who's with me?
Well written, well said.
I discovered Mathcad about the same time as you did. (I started Mathcad on a Macintosh SE.) And I used the program as a working engineer until I retired (in 2017.) I never was a trainer, except when somebody asked directly; there were no Mathcad classes--the person in charge of maintaining the program for the company could never get enough people interested to justify an on-site class. (All of our new hires came from college with a firm MATLAB foundation; the fact that I was doing in Mathcad with units what they were doing in MATLAB didn't convert them.) Despite a significant difference in per seat cost, many engineers continued to demand MATLAB while the Mathcad seats were under used. (My administrator would have been thrilled at a 33% useage rate.)
I too skipped Prime 1 and 2, not useable for calculations, and supported version 3. We never installed 3.1 (I don't think) and version 4 was rolled out just as I left; I don't know what they're using now.
Most of the new hires chose to use Prime. Since I was monitoring, training, and teaching them I was "forced" to learn Prime, although I tended to reach for version 15 for my own calculations, especially if a quick answer was needed, or something special was required. (Ever do a waterfall plot of an FFT over time?)
I agree with you that Prime is now useable, although my argument that Mathcad can do most of what MATLAB can would suffer badly. And I agree that Mathcad 15 life span is nearly over. PTC has really "dragged their feet" in bringing Prime up to where 15 was; there is still a lot missing. (The ebook I put together for our group's specific needs is nearly useless now since it would require 15 to use it.)
Feels like we're putting down a faithful, trusted, loyal old dog!
I also first used Mathcad when it was a DOS based program. I even did testing on the earlier versions of Prime. While I don't need to use all the in depth math functions, I find Prime fits most of my needs. Your comments on Prime's pluses and minuses are very similar to mine. As I have done a few e-books using Mathcad it is the one feature I miss the most. What I find inexcusable is the ability to save a Prime document to an earlier version of Mathcad, and to not be able to import xmcd document directly into Prime.
My biggest problem with Mathcad Prime is the licensing process is a mess. The last two years it took me several weeks and several hours (after I purchased the license) with tech support to get a license that worked.
Though I have a perpetual license for Mathcad 15, I still pay every year to use Prime because it has become so easy for me to use and I now have 10 years of Prime worksheets.
I have tried Matlab (yuk), Mathematica (to steep a learning curve) and SMath (ok for a tablet) and found them wanting. So JeffH1, I too have settled on Prime and will continue to use it as long as I can justify the cost.
OK, here goes...
Some of you may recall my post a while back about the history of Prime development, and how PTC ignored our technical committee voice for their "Prime" effort. I have used Mathcad since 1991 or so, and have a significant number of files that conduct a very wide variety of calculations - most all of which have been validated. As most of you long-time users know, many of these files cannot be converted without extra effort - some functionality cannot convert at all! This is how PTC's efforts differ from how you characterized it:
PTC didn't just move their buttons around, they left-out functionality! What would you think if MS Word removed all lower case characters, or the bullet or number list option from a newer, "more modern" version? What if they left-out paragraph formatting, or margin adjustment, or font choice or page breaks? What if MS took plots away from Excel? That one actually is equivalent to what PTC did with the first few versions of Prime! I could go on...but I won't. Yes, Prime has improved since v1, and you are correct to say it took too long - shamefully too long. I will admit I have not yet given Prime 6 time enough to pass judgement yet, but I will attempt to convert some significant tools I created a number of years ago to see how it works...or doesn't.
There will be a time when I do move on and migrate to Prime - I really do want to. PTC has added some very nice features we never had in Mathcad. But, I find it hard to think I'll need to fix most every file I've created. Admittedly, my dislike of this software does have somewhat to do with PTC's approach - remember, I was part of a very significant customer voice (CAE Technical Committee), which they virtually ignored...and it was a very vocal voice indeed! That's what boiled my blood more than anything - they had the input from very seasoned users to make Prime roll-out and move ahead quickly without much issue. I'll provide a follow-up when I've had enough time to put Prime 6 through its paces. But for now, Windows 10 is still planned to be supported by Microsoft until Oct., 2025, so we have some time left (maybe I'll try to figure out how to retire by then 😀).
All of what you said is true; but that doesn't change the reality that Mathcad 15 is not the future. Prime is not now and may never be the replacement we hoped and expected it to be.
I suspect that PTC bought Mathcad intending to integrate it into their modeling software (now Creo?) and did not expect the outcry from those of us who used Mathcad for the engineering/computation engine it was. That goal has not changed.
The sense of this post, I believe, is that it's time to recognize this: Prime is a different animal than "old" Mathcad. It can still be used for calculations and presentations but it will never easily interface with the the information and calculations from the previous versions. It will also always required annual payments for upgrade and will not "save back" to older versions of itself--PTC is in it for the money!
This series of posts is recognizing that: If you can't accept this situation then you need to move on! (Retirement ain't so bad. . . .)
They had quite forceful comments from others in the wider community as well (anyone recall the Super Users Forum?). You are right that it did cause some resentment; indeed, it felt like there was a group sitting down and saying, "What do the more experienced and forward-looking users want? OK, take all their suggestions and put them in File 13. <You>, find out what would really annoy them and make sure that it's a priority in our development path.".
However, there was g r a d u a l improvement in Prime and several of us felt a sigh of relief when they dropped static type checking (*), and some aspects of program/data entry are definitely better. So big ticks, there.
1991? I feel like a newbie. I think I only started in 1996 and didn't become active in the Collaboratory until about 2000. 🚼
I shouldn't have said that. I feel old now and like the world has regressed around me. 🙁
-------------
(*) Nothing against type-checking in principle, but it broke a lot of things and the implementation never properly supported it. ISTR that Mathcad compiled a worksheet down to an underlying Mathcad symbolic language based on what looked like ML or Haskell. Whatever it was had proper support for static typing and, IIRC, supported currying as it should be done, thus allowing variable length arguments to functions ... currying is another good idea that got removed because it confused some people.
Im with you. Totally tired of every post starting with "real Mathcad". I have been using prime for four years now and have no issues for what I need it for. The quality of final document produced is much better and I much prefer the user interface and modern look.
We are on windows 10 and all apps should be 64 bit now people.
In addition to the features you mentioned, the new custom margin and footer option is great for making the Mathcad document match any type of existing report template. Also, ability to now automate printing to a PDF through expsoure of the API is huge. I still have to test this....
I have 30% Mathcad and 60% Prime in my new English book
2⁵ Problems for STEM Education
(10% - Maple, Mathematica & SMath)
There were 50% - 50% on the origin Russian book!
Привет Валерий, как ты?
I don't blame the developer. I just have a 'little' difficulty with the way the development program went and the things that were or were not included in that development, and, usually, those things are set higher up.
How long was it until we could load an image, manipulate and display it, all within the Prime environment in the same way that we could in Mathcad 15?
There is still appears to be no multidimensional array support, not even an empty array to aid in programmatically constructing arrays.
I realize that PTC's priorities have a wider footprint, but these are the kind of things that should have been going on in parallel.
I'm looking forward to giving Prime 6 a go, to see what can be done with it, but I think, from what I've seen, that there is still some way to go before it gets on an equal footing with most of its numerical competitors.
счастливо,
Стюарт
(would Ура be OK as a sign-off instead of счастливо, or is there anything better that means the equivalent of "Cheers" in in Russian?)
What do you regard as a multi-dimensional array?
Stuart
By "multi-dimensional array," (Stuart, excuse me while I step on your favorite gripe) Stuart means an array with more than two indices required to address a single element. (Not arrays with members with different units, one of the nicer improvements from Prime.)
Hi, I'm afraid that.....
I'm probably one of those old Mathcad guys. I, too, starting using it in the old DOS days and it has become my primary computational tool. Like everyone else, I was appalled at the amateur efforts that produced the early versions of Prime. I have hung on to V15 for the simple reason that it did what I needed and Prime sometimes didn't.
My only reason for avoiding Prime 5 was bad plot formatting. If it was only me, I would have made do, but I'm a professor and I didn't want to teach students bad habits. It looks like Prime 6 has finally fixed that, so I'm making the change. V15 is familiar and I really like it, but it's ancient and needs to go.
Like many of you, I've been baffled by how PTC has acted. However, I've been communicating with their customer support people and it's been positive. They truly seem to want to improve customer support. There's a lot to be done, but the buggy and byzantine web site is now much better. Also, I have a Webex next week so they can see what the customer experience looks like from my end. A company that didn't care wouldn't do this.
My only real concern at this point is licensing. I had been avoiding PTC in favor of one of their outsource vendors, EAC and that pretty much solved the problem. Still, the goofy, convoluted purchasing process is a hard sell to students who are used to Amazon and NetFlix.
If they have fixed the purchasing process - and I think they are trying to - my complaints will all have been addressed. Time to move on.
Mark
All cool. I have a bunch of live illustrations (a scipted Autocad object, parametrically driven from calculation results). What would be the workaround for me?
Bad news, I'm afraid!
Prime has been very slow at adding scripts and embedded objects,bad news: I'm not sure how far they've actually gotten.
And the REALLY bad news: PTC's major product is Creo, 3D modeling software; I doubt they're going to care to have you embed AutoCad objects. They are very proud that you can embed Mathcad in Creo.
Embedding Autocad illustrations in a Mathcad document is already a workaround, because PTC since the acquisition of Mathsoft, didn't do anything to allow embedding Creo drawings in a document.
Well, actually here's what they did: they killed the SmartSketch functionality. Very funny!
And that's my point!
I didn't use it much, so I never looked; does Prime 6 even allow an embedded object?
Only a static image or Excel with very bad formatting. That's it. Images have to be aligned to the grid, when you change the size of displayed grid- the image moves so it snaps to the new grid. Obviously, this ruins the layout of your page. I can even embed an Autocad drawing inside the Excel spreadsheet embedded inside a Prime document. It's displayed badly, but that's not a problem, that's a feature, Excel object has never been formatted properly inside Prime- circles are not round, squares are not squarish. Aesthetics aside, good luck passing any scripts from Prime to AC this way. Anyone got an idea?
I am not with you yet.
I have just started using mathcad prime 7.0. Nine or ten years ago I saw the negative reviews of prime on the PTC forum and simply ignored Prime,
I always maintained personal copies when mathsoft existed. I thought it was a great tool; worth buying for home. Couldn't afford to do that after PTC bought Mathsoft.
My company finally moved to Prime, I think for obsolescence. We didn't even have a license server for Prime until the middle of this year. I don't think anyone was interested.
I have gotten the conversion to work on a simple mathcad 15 file. But there are no real improvements for basic usage. I have many many mcd and xmcd files that I have accumulated over many years.
For the solver why do they draw this goofy blue box around the equations? I thought this was a free form input? Mathcad 15 was. I thought that was the point of Mathcad vs a scripting language. It doesn't seem to recognize some of the equations in the box and seems to work poorly compared to the old Mathcad 15. I haven't really spent much time with the symbolics, but it doesn't seem to be as easy as Mathcad 15. In 15 just click on a variable in an equation and solve for that variable. Fantastic! I don't really see how to do that, at least easily, in Prime.
Why be an apologist Prime? PTC has had 10 years,and tripled or quadrupled the price..
I will not use Smath for work because of its origin. But I will move on for home use. Likely to Smath studio or a open source symbolic solver with a graphical front end. There seem to be a few around.
Or just go with the flow and use matlab or octave, However, Mathcad still shines with respect to those tools for documenting calculations.
After 10 years you can't even do a ctrl mouse wheel zoom. Excusable for a so called tired old dog. But at least the old dog symbolics and solver worked well.
Prime looks like a "not invented here" exercise. PTC bought Mathsoft, and a team of developers with not much familiarity with Mathcad thought they could improve the interface.
I understand how you feel about the development progress of Mathcad Prime—and our development team would want nothing more than to be able to have closed every functionality gap by now along with adding brand-new features Mathcad 15 never had—but if you do want ctrl mouse wheel zoom, that was one of the multiple usability enhancements added to the latest version, Mathcad Prime 8.
Thank you for the quick response. I’ll work my way thorough the new interfaces. Hopefully, I will eventually be able to do everything that I used to do Pre-prime.
Best Regards,
Morley
I'm now using Prime 8 exclusively and it's mostly OK. I'm using it in my classes and my university has a site license, so it's widely available. I've had few problems, though I'm hardly a power user. I guess I'm satisfied with the result.
That said, the plotting still seems goofy to me . It feels like a downgrade from V15 and I can't imagine what design meeting led them to the current solution.
Also, the converter is not great. It doesn't seem to translate plots and leaves error notices that are hard to clear. The converted files still need a bunch of editing. It's a converter, but barely.
Overall, the Prime development process feels like a case study in what not to do. It needlessly irritated committed users, as the earliest versions of Prime were comically bad and it took several releases to even approximate the capabilities of V15. Also, it took way too long and the final product is not 10 years better than what it replaced - compare it to 10 years of development some other software package. For example, what did your favorite CAD package look like 10 years ago?
I'm amazed how many grey hairs are around that have been using Mathcad since it was a Dos Program. Likewise, I started in 1987 with version 1.0.
MathCad 15 was really a bug fix for version 14. Nothing really new in 15. Before version 14, I was lobbying MathSoft to upgrade their kernel to a modern operating system. The change was inevitable. Around Prime 3, I found that it was workable. I switched and tried to get over the grumbling. I think that the real problem we all bemoan is that PTC bought Mathcad as an add-on to their CAD software. It has always been the poor step-sister and not the flagship product it was under MathSoft.
I upgrade as soon as possible. I am pleased that PTC has finally committed to a version upgrade annually. Today, I use Primate. It still isn't everything I wish it was, but there is nothing like it on the market. Stop the whining and move forward. I just wish there was a MathCad group in the PTC meetings.
Bob (aka RantEng)
"Primate" - ROTFL
🤣
There is something like it on the market. However, PTC deletes all posts or threads related to it.
@prop_design wrote:
There is something like it on the market. However, PTC deletes all posts or threads related to it.
If that were true, it would be pretty bad behavior in my opinion!
I understand that PTC shies away from the competition (especially because of the inferior quality of their sad product Prime) and I also understand that PTC does not want to endure advertising for a competitor's product in a forum run by PTC. But that's not why posts should be deleted completely.
It would be sufficient to replace the names of the competing products with a number of asterisks and to delete any posted links leading to the competition in the post.
Maybe @Jaime_Lee can bring some enlightenment, whether here really such a strict censorship takes place.
My personal impression is that neither Maple Flow nor SMath Studio are serious competitors for Mathcad. Unfortunately, after more than ten years of development, Prime is also not a first-rate successor to Mathcad.
Therefore, unless you are a lucky owner of a perpetual Mathcad license, the only option is to choose the lesser of three evils, and depending on your needs, that may even be Prime.
@Werner_E It's true. I had it happen and so have others. PTC 'moves' the posts to someplace never to be seen again. This happens without warning. However, after it was brought up, they sent a message to me saying it was 'moved'. Hardly a difference. In any event, I was so pissed off that I only use the forum when I have to. Werner you have been a huge help to my technical woes. So I appreciate all of the help you have given to me wrt classic Mathcad.
I mentioned this before, on other threads. My main issues with Prime are that I used the earlier 'free' version to make documentation. Then they slapped huge watermarks all over the documents. There was no way to convert them to classic Mathcad. So I had to waste several days remaking them in classic Mathcad. That killed Prime for me. The rental fees on Prime are way to high for hobby use. There are other options that are affordable. So once I can't use classic Mathcad, I'll move on.
Hi, @Werner_E and @prop_design first of all I apologize for being mentioned publicly on this thread and not rising to the occasion to give an answer. We have been together for almost six years on the PTC Community and now we have some official moderators that are keeping our community an enjoyable place for all community members to ask questions about anything related to our PTC Products and Services. Sometimes even our competitors are mentioned. We do not have a policy to "heavy handed" censor conversations on any of our community spaces. Our moderators are instructed to edit or remove posts that do not follow our Community Terms of Service in which every community member agrees to when posting here on the PTC Community. Sometimes that includes when there are multiple posts created by the same individual at the same time that are of an "inflammatory" nature, it may be appropriate to remove the posts after the first one posted to maintain a positive community experience. If you search our competitors on our community, you will find lots of related posts. Posts that follow our Terms of Service are not removed from the community.
Here is a refresher:
Please reach out to me or any other Community Team Member directly if you feel like you have seen any posts overly censored that were compliant to the Terms of Service.
We do not have a policy to "heavy handed" censor conversations on any of our community spaces. Our moderators are i
I expected and hoped that you would confirm that.
So the problem with the vanished posts of @prop_design may have been a misinterpretation or misunderstanding and hopefully will clear up soon.