Talk:Introduction to functions: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "I made two small mistakes that I only noticed now. The sum of the arithmetic progression requires three variables to work with any sequence, not just 1 + 2 + ... + n. In the last algorithm the sum is an integer, but it's storing the result of a division of two integers. It's losing digits at each iteration.")
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I made two small mistakes that I only noticed now. The sum of the arithmetic progression requires three variables to work with any sequence, not just 1 + 2 + ... + n.
I made two small mistakes that I only noticed now. The sum of the arithmetic progression requires three variables to work with any sequence, not just 1 + 2 + ... + n. The function was defined as int, which means that if the result was non integer we would lose digits.


In the last algorithm the sum is an integer, but it's storing the result of a division of two integers. It's losing digits at each iteration.
In the last algorithm the sum is an integer, but it's storing the result of a division of two integers. It's losing digits at each iteration.

Revision as of 23:05, 21 January 2025

I made two small mistakes that I only noticed now. The sum of the arithmetic progression requires three variables to work with any sequence, not just 1 + 2 + ... + n. The function was defined as int, which means that if the result was non integer we would lose digits.

In the last algorithm the sum is an integer, but it's storing the result of a division of two integers. It's losing digits at each iteration.