Thank you for your video. I know this is a few years old now, but perhaps someone can help me. When I square the standard deviation using the x^2 button, the default display is a fraction (1700/3) instead of the 566 2/3 format. I know the answer is the same, but how do I change the default answer format so that it displays it like yours? I had to manually type 1700/3 again and hit Enter to get to the decimal, instead of using the button. To confirm - I'm am using the TI-36x Pro. Thanks for your help.
Hi There! If you are getting (1700/3) as you said and want to get 566 2/3 format you can do this with the following buttons. Once you have the (1700/3) from the standard deviation squared on your screen press: [MATH] [1] (this should select an option that looks something like: >n/d U n/d) [enter] You should now have converted (1700/3) to 566 2/3 on your screen, which can then be converted to the decimal and back using the button To see a video of this conversion being done in another example see 2:32 in this video : ruclips.net/video/CYzyEp80UQQ/видео.html I hope this helps, let me know if this answers your question, or if there is anything else. Good Luck!
Thank you for your video. I know this is a few years old now, but perhaps someone can help me.
When I square the standard deviation using the x^2 button, the default display is a fraction (1700/3) instead of the 566 2/3 format. I know the answer is the same, but how do I change the default answer format so that it displays it like yours? I had to manually type 1700/3 again and hit Enter to get to the decimal, instead of using the button. To confirm - I'm am using the TI-36x Pro. Thanks for your help.
Hi There! If you are getting (1700/3) as you said and want to get 566 2/3 format you can do this with the following buttons. Once you have the (1700/3) from the standard deviation squared on your screen press:
[MATH]
[1] (this should select an option that looks something like: >n/d U n/d)
[enter]
You should now have converted (1700/3) to 566 2/3 on your screen, which can then be converted to the decimal and back using the button
To see a video of this conversion being done in another example see 2:32 in this video : ruclips.net/video/CYzyEp80UQQ/видео.html
I hope this helps, let me know if this answers your question, or if there is anything else. Good Luck!
Bravo, Rick! /Regards
Merci
Brah... wtf? Thank you!