Problem with HP 17bii+
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10-10-2023, 01:45 PM
Post: #1
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Problem with HP 17bii+
I am having an issue that is driving me crazy! seems so simple but I'm stumped...when I type in "11%+4%" the calculator is converting this to ".1100+.0044" - why on earth is 4% not converting to .04, and where is the .0044 coming from?
Thanks in advance! |
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10-10-2023, 02:33 PM
Post: #2
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RE: Problem with HP 17bii+
The initial % is just the number divided by 100, but in the second case, it is giving you 4% of .11 since it believes you want to add [some number] plus 4% (of that number).
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10-10-2023, 03:29 PM
Post: #3
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RE: Problem with HP 17bii+
(10-10-2023 02:33 PM)Dave Hicks Wrote: The initial % is just the number divided by 100, but in the second case, it is giving you 4% of .11 since it believes you want to add [some number] plus 4% (of that number). thank you. I have no idea why it would do that, more importantly, is there a way to stop this? its such a basic calculation, why would it not intuitively translate to .11+.04? |
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10-10-2023, 03:48 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-10-2023 03:49 PM by Dave Hicks.)
Post: #4
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RE: Problem with HP 17bii+
As an RPN/scientific kind of guy, if I wanted to add 11% to 4% I would just add the 11 and 4 and ignore the symbol. Or if I intended to take the resulting percentage of some other number, then I would just shift the decimal in my head like you did and add .11 and .04. (As such, I don’t use percent keys much – if humanity had decided that perthirtyseven was interesting, then I’d use that key!)
However, I do think that bankers/businessmen/investment advisors like to speak in terms of adding 4% in the way that the calculator does it. |
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10-10-2023, 06:19 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-10-2023 06:21 PM by Dave Hicks.)
Post: #5
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RE: Problem with HP 17bii+
For amusement I tried a few other calculators. The RPN models always took the percentage of the preceding number in the stack. So, (clear stack) 11% -> 0 as does 4% since we’re taking fractions of zero.
The RPL machines did so as well, but with one distinction: If you start with an empty stack and enter 11%, you get the error message “Too few arguments”. So, same behavior but with an error message that would have probably alerted you that % didn’t do what you assumed. (ie: it is not a divide by 100 button.) The only non-HP algebraic calculator I had handy was the Windows calculator (in standard mode) and I found it to be confusing. Invoke calculator (so it’s cleared): 11% -> 0 (not too shocking but then continue on…) 5+3 = (displays 8, now press) 11% -> .88. (which is 11% of 8) 5*3 = (displays 15, now press) 11% -> .11 (which is 11% converted to decimal) So, it has 3 behaviors of the % key??? I tried this on both Windows 10 and 11. |
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10-10-2023, 06:19 PM
Post: #6
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RE: Problem with HP 17bii+
(10-10-2023 03:48 PM)Dave Hicks Wrote: As an RPN/scientific kind of guy, if I wanted to add 11% to 4% I would just add the 11 and 4 and ignore the symbol. Or if I intended to take the resulting percentage of some other number, then I would just shift the decimal in my head like you did and add .11 and .04. (As such, I don’t use percent keys much – if humanity had decided that perthirtyseven was interesting, then I’d use that key!) Thanks, this is for a financial exam I'm preparing for. I know I can easily convert to a decimal before inputting, but for simplicity, it would be nice to use the % sign, as that is consistent with my studies. I am still baffled the calculator does this, I cannot see the use case why converting to 11% of 4 makes any sense at all? |
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10-14-2023, 05:52 PM
Post: #7
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RE: Problem with HP 17bii+
(10-10-2023 06:19 PM)mod220 Wrote: [quote='Dave Hicks' pid='178314' dateline='1696952929'] Because y+x% is converted to y+(y*x%), for example: 10+4% → 10+(10*4%) → 10+(10*0.4) → 10+0.4 Also x% with no operator to the left is converted to (x*0.01), for example: 11% → (11*0.01) → 0.11 Combining the above: 11%+4% → (11*0.01)+4% → 0.11+4% → 0.11+(0.11*4%) → 0.11+(0.11*0.04) → 0.11+0.0044 If you want to avoid that behaviour, use parentheses: (11+4)% → 15% → 0.15 You can even drop the opening parenthesis in this case: 11+4)% → 15% → 0.15 — Ian Abbott |
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