HP 33s User Manual

Page 102

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6–10

Entering and Evaluating Equations

Because many equations have two sides separated by "=", the basic value of an
equation is the difference between the values of the two sides. For this calculation,
"=" in an equation essentially treated as "ಥ". The value is a measure of how well
the equation balances.

The HP 33s has two keys for evaluating equations:

‘

and

X

. Their

actions differ only in how they evaluate assignment equations:

„

X

returns the value of the equation, regardless of the type of equation.

„

‘

returns the value of the equation — unless it's an assignment–type

equation. For an assignment equation,

‘

returns the value of the right

side only, and also "enters" that value into the variable on the left side — it
stores the value in the variable.

The following table shows the two ways to evaluate equations.

Type of Equation

Result for

‘

Result for

X

Equality: g(x) = f(x)
Example: x

2

+ y

2

= r

2

g(x)

f(x)

x

2

+ y

2

r

2

Assignment: y = f(x)
Example: A = 0.5

× b x h

f(x)

¼

0.5

× b × h

¼

y

f(x)

A

– 0.5

× b × h

Expression: f(x)
Example: x

3

+ 1

f(x)

x

3

+ 1

¼

Also stores the result in the left–hand variable, A for example.

To evaluate an equation:

1.

Display the desired equation. (See "Displaying and Selecting Equations"

above.)

2.

Press

‘

or

X

. The equation prompts for a value for each variable

needed. (If you've changed the number base, it's automatically changed back
to base 10.)

3.

For each prompt, enter the desired value:

„

If the displayed value is good, press

g

.

„

If you want a different value, type the value and press

g

. (Also see

"Responding to Equation Prompts" later in this chapter.)

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