yes.
They will not - unless you make a mistake.
According to the calculator on my computer the square root of 15000 is 122.4745 (rounded up to four decimal places).
According to the desktop calculator on my computer the square root of 4733 is 68.7968 to four decimal places.
ewan quh sa computer....
hmm... okay, if I understand you correctly, 2 times the square root of 3 times the square root of 12? = 2(1.73)(3.46) = 11.9716. If you aren't using the approximations, then just simplifying is... [sorry, I can't do the square root sign on the computer...] 2(square root of 3)(square root of 12) = 2(square root of 3)(square root of 4*3) = 4(square root of 3)(square root of 3) = 4(3) = 12!!! HOPE I HELPED!! :-)
Please tell me in which computer language you want the answer.
There are different answers for different expressions but essentially, you can either evaluate the expression and then find the square root using a calculator, computer or numerical methods, or you can work out the square root algebraically.
go to system tools and click on Character Map. Select the font "symbol" and then click on the square root
20.61552812808830274910704927987 (Doesn't your dumb computer have a calculator???)
The most common notation is sqrt(#)
Yes and no. It depends on your definition of square root. By the actual one, yes. All non-negative numbers have a square root. That square root might be irrational but it has a square root, nonetheless. 10 isn't a square number because there's no integer that can be squared to make ten but 10 definitely has a square root: 3.16227766....... If by square root you mean an integer square root, then no. If a number has an integer as its square root then you could square that integer to get the number, making it a square number.
The square root can be indicated by a check mark. √49 = 7, -7