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I know one problem with this
See also Mathcad PM (Prime Minister)
One semisolution
Mathcad 15
Mathcad Prime
Solved! Go to Solution.
Just for meters, and probably for others. What do you have in mind with that, Valery? Which physical significance is, as LucMeekes ask?
Best regards.
Alvaro.
Simply because it treats m as an undefined symbol. I can do the same in Mathcad 11:
Please give a physical or mathematical example where it is necessary to have an exponent that carries a unit (is not unitless).
Luc
LucMeekes написал(а):
Please give a physical or mathematical example where it is necessary to have an exponent that carries a unit (is not unitless).
Luc
Sorry, later!
I must now go...
Units^Units = Nonsense = No Physical Sense.
If you chase down thru and find Val's sheet, there's a cute little expression near the top
m := 1
He's not raising units to units, he's raising 1 to the first power.
Fred Kohlhepp wrote:
If you chase down thru and find Val's sheet, there's a cute little expression near the top
m := 1
He's not raising units to units, he's raising 1 to the first power.
Yes, I noticed that. But he seems to insist that unit^unit should make sense in a math or physical way.