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Talk:Feigenbaum constant calculation: Difference between revisions
Talk:Feigenbaum constant calculation (view source)
Revision as of 02:37, 16 November 2018
, 5 years ago→degree of accuracy with more precision during computing: added some comments about what a true value is, albeit rounded to the number of decimal digits being used for the run.
Walterpachl (talk | contribs) m (→degree of accuracy with more precision during computing: are these 'true values'?) |
m (→degree of accuracy with more precision during computing: added some comments about what a true value is, albeit rounded to the number of decimal digits being used for the run.) |
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true value= 4.66920160910299067185320382046620161725818557747576863274565
true value= 4.669201609102990671853203820466201617258185577475768632745651343004134<pre>
::: The ''true value'' shown (for each program execution) is the true value (taken from a value that is assigned), rounded to the number of decimal digits in use for the program. For the true value, the actual constant within the program is accurate to '''115''' decimal digits. All computed values shown for the output are, by definition, approximations, limited by the number of decimal digits and the number of iterations. -- ~~~~
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