The square of a number is the product of the number multiplied by itself. As examples, the square of 2 is 4 (2x2) and the square of 25 is 625 (25x25).
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Multiply the number by itself.
1: Calculate the square root, then calculate its square root; OR 2: Take the logarithm of the number, divide it by 4 then take the antilog.
There's no such thing as "the fifth square" of a number.To calculate any whole-number power of a number, write the number that many timesall on one line, then write the word "times" between them, get your pencil out, and getto work.The 5th power of a number 'N' is'N' times 'N' times 'N' times 'N' times 'N' .
The largest 3-digit number - not itself a perfect square - is 999. Calculate its square root, round the answer down, then square the answer again.
The square root of 58 is approximately 7.6 when rounded to one decimal place. This is because 7.6 multiplied by 7.6 equals 57.6, which is the closest perfect square to 58 without exceeding it. The square root of a number is the value that, when multiplied by itself, gives the original number.
Multiply the number by itself.
Mulitply the number by itself
1: Calculate the square root, then calculate its square root; OR 2: Take the logarithm of the number, divide it by 4 then take the antilog.
Multiply it by itself.
all you do is multiply a number x a number = the square!
Any positive number is the square root of its square. In other words, you need to calculate the square of 0.75.
sqrt is inbuilt function available in ABAP to calculate square root of any number.
Not quite sure what you mean. First of all, you need to specify, the square root of what number. Different numbers have different square roots. Just about any calculator can quickly calculate the square root of any number you want. The result is shown as a decimal.
You multiply the number by itself.
Try it out! For example, you can use a calculator to calculate the number's square root. If you get a whole number - no decimals - then the number is a perfect square.
Multiply the number of square meters by 10.7639 to get square feet.
-- Write down the number of kwh -- Write down the number of square feet -- Divide the first number by the second number. -- The answer is mathematically correct, but doesn't appear to have any physical significance in the real world.