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On 5/10/2010 9:34 PM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
The computer program should know its limits. Anytine a program allows the data entered to be too large or small for the calculations, it should be flagged as being out of range. Also many computer programs will use simplified formulars that can mast the true outcome. Usually it is not very much, but as all errors start to add up the end results may be way off. I often enter data that I know will be difficult for programs to use. If the program gives an answer then I usually don't use that program expecting a exect answer. Back in the Windows 3.1 and 3.11 days the simple calculator would give wrong answers to simple problems. I think if you entered 3.11 and subtracted 3.1 from it you got the wrong answer. That program was not corrected by Microsoft. I disagree. The program cannot "know" its limits if the problem it's modeling is complex enough. So the user must understand the program and especially the math related to what the program is modeling. Blaming the program for giving you the "wrong" answer is like blaming the tires for hitting the guard rail because you exceeded their limits. Those limits are not the same under varying conditions and must be filtered by experience and understanding. tom K0TAR |
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