Difference between revisions of "Manuals/calci/POWER"
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*Power is also called Exponents or Indices. | *Power is also called Exponents or Indices. | ||
*Anything raised to the power 0 is equal to 1. i.e. POWER(7,0) = 1. | *Anything raised to the power 0 is equal to 1. i.e. POWER(7,0) = 1. | ||
− | *We can use the <math>^</math> operator instead of POWER function. | + | *We can use the <math>'''^'''</math> operator instead of POWER function. |
==Examples== | ==Examples== |
Revision as of 03:16, 22 January 2014
POWER(n,p)
- is the base value
- is the power value
Description
- This function gives the value of a number raised to a power.
- The power of a number indicating how many times we have to multiply the number.
- For e.g =POWER(4,3) = 4*4*4 = 63.
- In , is the base value. It can be + or - .
- is the power(exponent) value to which the is raised.
- Power is also called Exponents or Indices.
- Anything raised to the power 0 is equal to 1. i.e. POWER(7,0) = 1.
- We can use the Failed to parse (Conversion error. Server ("https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_") reported: "Cannot get mml. TeX parse error: Prime causes double exponent: use braces to clarify"): {\displaystyle '''^{'}''} operator instead of POWER function.
Examples
- POWER(17,4)=83521
- POWER(26,1)=26
- POWER(5.2,3)=140.608
- POWER(6,0.2)=1.430969081
- POWER(2,3/4)=1.681792831
- POWER(50,0)=1
- POWER(7,-2)=0.020408163
See Also