Formulas, Operators, Operands – Brother WP330MDS User Manual

Page 200

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Formulas

A formula is made of operators, operands, and possibly pairs of parentheses to

change the order of calculation.

Operators

The operators that are recognized by the word processor are, in order of

precedence:

Symbol

Operator

+ -

Positive and negative sign

#

Exponentiation

Multiplication, division

+ -

Addition, subtraction

The + and operators are considered as the sign of the following operand when

they come first in a formula, immediately after a left parenthesis or another

operator.

The # operator performs only integer exponentiation. If the exponent (the next

operand after #) has a decimal value, it will be rounded to the closest integer

before exponentiation is performed. Therefore, this operator cannot be used to

calculate roots (although roots can always be written as a decimal exponent in

math). Zero with any positive exponent gives zero. Zero with a negative

exponent gives “Invalid entry.”

Division by zero is invalid.

A sequence of three or more operators makes a formula invalid (2+*-1 is

invalid),

A sequence of two operators is valid only if the second operator is a sign + or -
(5*-2 is valid and gives -10 while 1-*2 is invalid).

Operands

An operand can be a valid number, the address of a cell containing numeric data, a
function, or a valid formula included in a pair of parentheses.

Examples of valid operands

123

direct number

A1 oral

cell address; A1 must contain numeric data

@SUM(A1..B6)

valid function

(A1+5*@SUM(B1..B12))

valid formula included in a pair of parentheses

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