Onevar – Texas Instruments PLUS TI-89 User Manual

Page 492

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Appendix A: Functions and Instructions 475

8992APPA.DOC TI-89 / TI-92 Plus: Appendix A (US English) Susan Gullord Revised: 02/23/01 1:48 PM Printed: 02/23/01 2:21 PM Page 475 of 132

OneVar

MATH/Statistics menu

OneVar

list1

[

[,

list2

] [,

list3

] [,

list4

]

]

Calculates 1-variable statistics and updates
all the system statistics variables.

All the lists must have equal dimensions
except for

list4

.

list1

represents xlist.

list2

represents frequency.

list3

represents category codes.

list4

represents category include list.

Note:

list1

through

list3

must be a variable

name or c1–c99 (columns in the last data
variable shown in the Data/Matrix Editor).

list4

does not have to be a variable name and

cannot be c1–c99.

{0,2,3,4,3,4,6}! L1 ¸

OneVar L1 ¸

Done

ShowStat ¸

or

MATH/Test menu

Boolean expression1

or

Boolean expression2

Boolean expression

Returns true or false or a simplified form of
the original entry.

Returns true if either or both expressions
simplify to true. Returns false only if both
expressions evaluate to false.

Note:

See

xor

.

x

‚3 or x‚4 ¸

x

‚ 3

Program segment:

©

If x<0 or x

‚5

Goto END

©

If choice=1 or choice=2
Disp "Wrong choice"

©

integer1

or

integer2

integer

Compares two real integers bit-by-bit using
an

or

operation. Internally, both integers are

converted to signed, 32-bit binary numbers.
When corresponding bits are compared, the
result is 1 if either bit is 1; the result is 0 only
if both bits are 0. The returned value
represents the bit results, and is displayed
according to the

Base

mode.

You can enter the integers in any number
base. For a binary or hexadecimal entry, you
must use the 0b or 0h prefix, respectively.
Without a prefix, integers are treated as
decimal (base 10).

If you enter a decimal integer that is too large
for a signed, 32-bit binary form, a symmetric
modulo operation is used to bring the value
into the appropriate range.

Note:

See

xor

.

In Hex base mode:

0h7AC36 or 0h3D5F ¸

0h7BD7F

In Bin base mode:

0b100101 or 0b100 ¸ 0b100101

Note:

A binary entry can have up to 32

digits (not counting the 0b prefix). A
hexadecimal entry can have up to 8 digits.

Important: Zero, not the letter O.

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