Using Mathematical Functions With Lists - Texas Instruments TI-86 Manual Book

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Selecting
from the
SetLE
menu pastes
to the
SetLEdit
cursor location.
You can create new list
names as
SetLEdit
arguments.
Select(
xListName,
yListName
)
ãcolumn1ListName
SetLEdit
column2ListName
,
...
,
column20ListNameä
Form("
formula
",
listName

Using Mathematical Functions with Lists

You can use a list as a single argument for many TI-86 functions; the result is a list. The
function must be valid for every element in the list; however, when graphing, undefined
points do not result in an error.
When you use lists for two or more arguments in the same function, all lists must have the same
number of elements (equal dimension). Here are some examples of a list as a single argument.
returns
{1,2,3}+10
{11 12 13}
returns
{5,10,15}¹{2,4,6}
returns
3+{1,7,(2,1)}
{(4,0) (10,0) (5,1)}
Selects one or more specific data points from a scatter plot or
xyLine plot (only), then stores the selected data points to
xListName and yListName (Chapter 14)
,
Sets up the list editor;
them in the specified order;
all current list names from the list editor and enters the default
lists
xStat
,
yStat
, and
)
Attaches formula to listName; formula resolves to a list, which is
dynamically stored and updated in listName (page 162)
‡{4,16,36,64}
{10 40 90}
sin {7,5}
{1,15,36}<19
Chapter 11: Lists
SetLEdit
with one to 20 ListNames loads
SetLEdit
with no arguments removes
fStat
to columns 1, 2, and 3
returns
{2 4 6 8}
returns
{.656986598719 L.958924274663}
returns
{1 1 0}
161

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