Interrupting A Solve Calculation; Choosing Initial Guesses For Solve - HP 33s User Manual

Scientific
Hide thumbs Also See for 33s:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Interrupting a SOLVE Calculation

To halt a calculation, press
the unknown variable; use

Choosing Initial Guesses for SOLVE

The two initial guesses come from:
The number currently stored in the unknown variable.
The number in the X–register (the display).
These sources are used for guesses whether you enter guesses or not . If you enter
only one guess and store it in the variable, the second guess will be the same value
since the display also holds the number you just stored in the variable. (If such is
the case, the calculator changes one guess slightly so that it has two different
guesses.)
Entering your own guesses has the following advantages:
By narrowing the range of search, guesses can reduce the time to find a
solution.
If there is more than one mathematical solution, guesses can direct the SOLVE
procedure to the desired answer or range of answers. For example, the
equation of linear motion
can have two solutions for t . You can direct the answer to the required
solution by entering appropriate guesses.
T he example using this equation earlier in this chapter didn't require you to
enter guesses before solving for T because in the first part of that example
you stored a value for T and solved for D. The value that was left in T was a
good (realistic) one, so it was used as a guess when solving for T .
Å
¥
or
. The current best estimate of the root is in
º È
to view it without disturbing the stack.
1
2
d = v
t +
/
gt
0
2
Solving Equations
7–7

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

F2216a - 33s scientific calculator

Table of Contents