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Excel question
When I calculate -4^-4 in Excel, I get a positive answer. When I
calculate -4^-4 on my hand held Casio Algebra FX 2.0, I get a negative answer. This is in a home schooling test where the correct answer is negative.. Calculating 4^-4 results in a positive answer also. Expanation? Thanks, Ed |
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Or did you mean...
=-(4^-4) -- Garry Free usenet access at http://www.eternal-september.org ClassicVB Users Regroup! comp.lang.basic.visual.misc |
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... When I calculate -4^-4 in Excel, I get a positive answer. When I calculate -4^-4 on my hand held Casio Algebra FX 2.0, I get a negative answer. This is in a home schooling test where the correct answer is negative.. Calculating 4^-4 results in a positive answer also. Expanation? Thanks, Ed Ed, Here is the explanation. The correct answer CANNOT be negative. Any number, whether positive or negative, multiplied by itself an even number of times MUST be positive ! The home schooling exam result IS wrong. The only way it could be negative would be if it was written as Garry suggested, -(-4^-4). eg: 4^4 is equivalent to 1 x 4 x 4 x 4 x 4 = 256 4^-4 is equivalent to 1 / 4 x 4 x 4 x 4 = 1/256 = 0.00390625 -4^-4 is equivalent to 1 / -4 x-4 x-4 x -4 = 1/256 = 0.00390625 HTH On the Casio Algebra FX 2.0, when you press the following buttons in this exact sequence : 4 +/- x^y 4 +/- = you receive a negative number ??? If so, get your money back for the Casio Algebra FX 2.0 !!! It's wrong also. Cheers, MB |
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wrote:
When I calculate -4^-4 in Excel, I get a positive answer. When I calculate -4^-4 on my hand held Casio Algebra FX 2.0, I get a negative answer. This is in a home schooling test where the correct answer is negative.. [....] Expanation? In mathematics, -4^-4 is written with a superscript -4, so it is evaluated as -(4^-4). That is how you should write it if you want the result to conform to standard mathematics notation. In Excel, -4^-4 is evaluated as (-4)^-4. Note that a negative number raised to an even power is always positive. Some people like to say that Excel is "wrong" because it does not conform to mathematics. But really, they are two difference languages, and they have different ordering rules, just like natural languages that might use the same alphabet. As long as you understand Excel's rules for the order of operations, you can get away without using parentheses. But in general, you should parenthesize sub-expression to ensure that they are evaluated as you intend them to be. You could write -(4^(-4)). However, I think it is prudent to minimize the use parentheses in order to improve readability. Since ...^-4 can only be interpreted one way, you can avoid the extra set of parentheses. |
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PS.... I wrote:
In mathematics, -4^-4 is written with a superscript -4, so it is evaluated as -(4^-4). I forgot to say: obviously the Casio Algebra FX 2.0 has chosen the mathematical interpretation. (In fact, it might even display the superscript -4. I don't know.) There is nothing wrong with the Casio calculator. In fact, many people insist the opposite: Excel is "wrong". As I mentioned previously: in fact, neither is wrong. |
Excel question
When I calculate -4^-4 in Excel, I get a positive answer.
When I calculate -4^-4 on my hand held Casio Algebra FX 2.0, I get a negative answer. This is in a home schooling test where the correct answer is negative.. I think I disagree with the answer being negative. The idea of that calculation looks, to me, to be to raise "negative four" to the "negative four" power. To do that on a calculator, you would enter the number 4 first, then you would press the "plus/minus" key to change its value to "-4" in the display, then you would press the "raise to a power" key, then you would press the 4 key followed again by the "plus/minus" key and finish it off with the Enter key. If you do it that way, I think your calculator will report a positive answer. Rick Rothstein (MVP - Excel) |
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"Rick Rothstein" wrote:
When I calculate -4^-4 on my hand held Casio Algebra FX 2.0, I get a negative answer. This is in a home schooling test where the correct answer is negative.. I think I disagree with the answer being negative. [....] To do that on a calculator, you would enter the number 4 first, then you would press the "plus/minus" key to change its value to "-4" in the display, then [....] Only because you imposed your own sense of precedence on the operation. In the language of mathematics, -4^-4 would be interpreted as -(4^-4). There is no operator called "change sign" in mathematics. Instead, a unary minus has the lowest precedence (among these operations, anyway) so that -4^-4 has the same result as 0-4^-4. It is axiomatic that 0+e=e. (In fact, if you enter =0-4^-4 into Excel, you do indeed get a negative result.) I'm not familiar with the Casio Algebra FX 2.0 calculator, but some "algebraic" calculators actual permit us to enter superscript powers. And some make a point of allowing the student to enter mathematical formulas exactly as they appear in textbooks and evaluating according to the commonly accepted rules of mathematics. None of this should be misinterpreted that either precedence ordering is "wrong" or "right". They are both right for their respective languages. |
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