Storing data to variables, Creating a variable name – Texas Instruments TI-86 User Manual

Page 51

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Chapter 2: The

CATALOG

, Variables, and Characters

39

02CATVAR.DOC TI-86, Chap 2, US English Bob Fedorisko Revised: 02/13/01 2:18 PM Printed: 02/13/01 3:00 PM Page 39 of 10

02CATVAR.DOC TI-86, Chap 2, US English Bob Fedorisko Revised: 02/13/01 2:18 PM Printed: 02/13/01 3:00 PM Page 39 of 10

Storing Data to Variables

On the TI

-86, data can be stored to variables in several ways. You can:

Use X to store a value to a variable.

Use

=

to store an unevaluated expression to an equation variable.

Use an editor’s

Name=

prompt to store several types of data to a variable.

Change TI

-86 settings or reset defaults and memory to the factory settings.

Execute functions that cause the TI

-86 to store data automatically to built-in variables.

The TI

-86 has built-in variable names with specific purposes, such as equation variables, list

names, statistical result variables, window variables, and

Ans

. You can store values to some

of them. They are introduced in the appropriate chapters of this guidebook.

Creating a Variable Name

You can create your own variable name when you use X,

=

, or a

Name=

prompt to store

data. When you create a user-created variable name, follow these guidelines.

The user-created variable name can be from one to eight characters long.

The first character must be a letter, which includes all

CHAR

GREEK

menu items, as well

as С, с, З, and ç from the

CHAR

MISC

menu.

A user-created variable name cannot replicate a TI

-86 feature symbol or built-in

variable. For example, you cannot create

abs

, because

abs

is the absolute value

function symbol. You cannot create

Ans

, because it is already a built-in variable name.

The TI

-86 distinguishes between uppercase and lowercase characters in variable

names. For example,

ANS

,

Ans

, and

ans

are three different variable names. Therefore,

only

Ans

is a built-in variable name;

ANS

and

ans

can be user-created variable names.

This chapter describes the
first two data storage
methods listed here. The
other methods are described
in the appropriate chapters.

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