I would use 40 for the 38 and 50 for the 51. 90 would be my estimate.
5.6261
3.8667
11
To find the sum of all odd numbers from 1 to 499, we can use the formula for the sum of an arithmetic series. The formula is n/2 * (first term + last term), where n is the number of terms. In this case, there are 250 odd numbers from 1 to 499. So, the sum would be 250/2 * (1 + 499) = 125 * 500 = 62,500.
17 and 4: sum is 21.
I would use 40 for the 38 and 50 for the 51. 90 would be my estimate.
you can use whole numbers
You could use 250 and 750.
When working with very large numbers or very small numbers and they would use a system of numeracy known as scientific notation.
Well, honey, if you wanna estimate the sum of 17 and 75, you could round them both to the nearest ten. So, 17 rounds up to 20 and 75 rounds down to 70. Add those together and you get a rough estimate of 90. But hey, who needs estimates when you can just do the math and get the exact sum of 92?
5.6261
5678 + 8765 = 14443 would yield the largest possible sum.
50.0000.000
To draw a flowchart for the sum of even numbers within 0 to 20, you would typically start with a terminal or start/end symbol. Then, you would use a process symbol to initialize variables for the sum and a counter. Next, you would use a decision symbol to check if the current number is even. If it is, you would use a process symbol to add it to the sum. Finally, you would loop back to check the next number until reaching 20, then output the sum using an output symbol before reaching the terminal symbol.
Hm well you can use whole numbers. Now my boy do you get it? Get that brain working!
the answer is yes because you can estimate any numbers