Calculatrice en français
Use this simple calculator with French labels. You can type decimals using either a comma (,) or a dot (.).
Historique rapide
- Aucun calcul pour le moment.
What does “calculator in French” mean?
If you searched for calculator in french, you might be looking for one of two things: the French word for calculator, or a working calculator interface that uses French vocabulary. The French word is calculatrice, and that is exactly what this page provides: a practical calculator with French operation names, plus a mini language guide to help you understand math terms quickly.
Essential French calculator vocabulary
When using a French calculator app or reading French math exercises, these words appear often:
- Calculatrice = calculator
- Nombre = number
- Addition = addition
- Soustraction = subtraction
- Multiplication = multiplication
- Division = division
- Pourcentage = percentage
- Puissance = exponent / power
- Résultat = result
- Effacer / Réinitialiser = clear / reset
How to use the French calculator above
1) Enter your numbers
Type a value into Nombre 1 and Nombre 2. You can enter values like 100, 4.75, or 4,75. The calculator accepts French-style decimal commas.
2) Select the operation
Choose one of the six operations. For percentage mode, the tool interprets it as “Nombre 1 % de Nombre 2”. Example: 20 and 150 returns 30.
3) Click “Calculer”
The result appears instantly, formatted in French number style. You also get a short history log so you can compare recent calculations.
French number formatting rules you should know
French formatting differs from English in small but important ways:
- French commonly uses a comma for decimals:
12,5instead of12.5. - Large numbers often use a space as a thousands separator:
10 000. - Currency labels can appear after numbers in many contexts:
25,00 €.
If you are studying French, practicing with numeric formatting is useful for shopping, invoices, travel budgets, and exam exercises.
Real-world examples
Shopping in France
You want to know 15% tip on a €38 meal. Use Pourcentage with 15 and 38. You’ll get 5,7.
Student homework
Need to verify multiplication quickly? Try 24 × 16. The calculator shows the result in a familiar French display style.
Budget planning
For monthly savings projections, use addition and subtraction repeatedly, then check your previous outputs in the history list.
Common mistakes (and easy fixes)
- Blank input: fill both number fields before calculating.
- Text instead of number: avoid letters or symbols that are not numeric.
- Division by zero: mathematically undefined, so the calculator returns a clear error.
- Wrong percentage expectation: remember it computes “A% of B,” not “A plus B%.”
Final thoughts
A good calculator in French should be easy to use, language-friendly, and accurate. This page gives you exactly that: a practical tool and a concise vocabulary reference. If you are learning French, keep practicing with everyday math problems—small daily use is one of the fastest ways to build confidence.