i believe that the definition of a constant multiplier is when you are obviously multiplying thing more than once
It is a scalar multiplier.
It depends on the mathematical context. Usually it is considered to be the "scalar", however sometimes it may be known as the "coefficient", or in some cases it will be a "constant". The name for a multiplier is "multiplicand."
1- close economy 2- no full e 3-mployment 4-constant MPC
force
i believe that the definition of a constant multiplier is when you are obviously multiplying thing more than once
It is a scalar multiplier.
There is a typo in your question as it is missing an operation or variable. However, if you mean the constant multiplier for (2\sin(x)) then the constant would be 2.
It depends on the mathematical context. Usually it is considered to be the "scalar", however sometimes it may be known as the "coefficient", or in some cases it will be a "constant". The name for a multiplier is "multiplicand."
1- close economy 2- no full e 3-mployment 4-constant MPC
The numerical multiplier of any term in an algebraic expression is a coefficient. The constant term is a coefficient which does not have a variable associated with it.
tree multiplier CSA (carry select adder) multiplier shift & add multiplier Higher radix multiplier
force multiplier
super multiplier refers to interaction of the multiplier and accelerator.
Force Multiplier
finite population multiplier finite population multiplier
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