My maths in this area is a bit shaky. Does anybody know how I can calculate a power such as 10^2.2 using no maths functions other than */-+ and a for loop? I don't have access to a maths library (and can't import/include it), but need to calculate these things. Hmm.. maybe I should just look how the math library does it.
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You can compute logs & exponentials using only basic arithmetic with a Taylor (or Maclaurin) series expansion. So, you should be able to take advantage of certain identities:
See what you can make of all of this... |
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You can use this method - http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ContinuedFraction.html to get a very close approximation. |
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Given that:
Convert your exponent to a fraction, then compute the nth root, and then raise the result to the mth power. (You'll have to write your own |
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Express the exponent as fraction and separate both parts (if the numbers get too big, you can use continued fraction expansion to get a good approximation): 2.2 = 22/10 = 11/5 10^2.2 = 10^(11/5) = (10^11)^(1/5) The integer parts shouldn't be a problem (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponentiation_by_squaring). Then you can calculate the root by one of the algorithms described here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nth_root_algorithm |
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