Physical Constants for Excel
I would like to download a list of Physical functions for Excell which may be used in Formula by using the accepted symbol for that constant The value Pi is already included as PI() What I want is things like the gravitational Constant, The speed of light etc. the latest SI unit values would be nice. My simple Cassio Pocket calculator has this facility I expect a sophisticated application like Excell to also have some easy method of including SI Physical Constants in formula. This might be as an ADD IN but eventually this service should be a standard part of Excel |
Physical Constants for Excel
See:
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~pchem/chemacro.html -- Gary's Student "Cragy Heap" wrote: I would like to download a list of Physical functions for Excell which may be used in Formula by using the accepted symbol for that constant The value Pi is already included as PI() What I want is things like the gravitational Constant, The speed of light etc. the latest SI unit values would be nice. My simple Cassio Pocket calculator has this facility I expect a sophisticated application like Excell to also have some easy method of including SI Physical Constants in formula. This might be as an ADD IN but eventually this service should be a standard part of Excel |
Physical Constants for Excel
See
http://www.vbaexpress.com/forum/show...ht=quality+tip -- HTH Bob Phillips (replace somewhere in email address with gmail if mailing direct) "Cragy Heap" wrote in message ... I would like to download a list of Physical functions for Excell which may be used in Formula by using the accepted symbol for that constant The value Pi is already included as PI() What I want is things like the gravitational Constant, The speed of light etc. the latest SI unit values would be nice. My simple Cassio Pocket calculator has this facility I expect a sophisticated application like Excell to also have some easy method of including SI Physical Constants in formula. This might be as an ADD IN but eventually this service should be a standard part of Excel |
Physical Constants for Excel
Bob, how does this help the OP?
I can see nothing about physical constants at that site. -- Bernard V Liengme www.stfx.ca/people/bliengme remove caps from email "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... See http://www.vbaexpress.com/forum/show...ht=quality+tip -- HTH Bob Phillips (replace somewhere in email address with gmail if mailing direct) "Cragy Heap" wrote in message ... I would like to download a list of Physical functions for Excell which may be used in Formula by using the accepted symbol for that constant The value Pi is already included as PI() What I want is things like the gravitational Constant, The speed of light etc. the latest SI unit values would be nice. My simple Cassio Pocket calculator has this facility I expect a sophisticated application like Excell to also have some easy method of including SI Physical Constants in formula. This might be as an ADD IN but eventually this service should be a standard part of Excel |
Physical Constants for Excel
Depends upon what is meant by physical constants. I interpreted it as all
constants within an application. I actually answered the wrong thread, he posted earlier in excel.misc with this subject Wher can I download a table of Physical Constants for Excel with no text. I read that thread, got the link, and then inadvertently replied to this one without reading it. Reading it now I can see I might have mis-interpreted, but the thread I read gave no such indication. Bob "Bernard Liengme" wrote in message ... Bob, how does this help the OP? I can see nothing about physical constants at that site. -- Bernard V Liengme www.stfx.ca/people/bliengme remove caps from email "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... See http://www.vbaexpress.com/forum/show...ht=quality+tip -- HTH Bob Phillips (replace somewhere in email address with gmail if mailing direct) "Cragy Heap" wrote in message ... I would like to download a list of Physical functions for Excell which may be used in Formula by using the accepted symbol for that constant The value Pi is already included as PI() What I want is things like the gravitational Constant, The speed of light etc. the latest SI unit values would be nice. My simple Cassio Pocket calculator has this facility I expect a sophisticated application like Excell to also have some easy method of including SI Physical Constants in formula. This might be as an ADD IN but eventually this service should be a standard part of Excel |
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