05-09-2009 11:53 AM
I have two big equations in two unknowns. I want to soves the two equations two obtain the two unkowns.
Thanks
Regards
05-09-2009 12:53 PM
The answer is clearly known to be 42!
however, up to now the question is yet unknown...
LabVIEW is not yet scient...fill a feature request!
in the mean time, there is an express vi called "formula", that does what most scientific calculators do.
there is also the formula node, the math script, and the 2D evaluation. all in mathematics->script and formulas->...
05-09-2009 01:45 PM
The answer is 42, the question is derived here.
http://forums.ni.com/ni/board/message?board.id=170&message.id=360008#M360008
05-09-2009 01:59 PM
I agree with the 42 solution.
Still, I wonder: What's a "big equation"?
Can you give an actual example? How do you know there even is a solution and how do you know there is only one solution?
05-09-2009 05:13 PM
altenbach wrote:
Still, I wonder: What's a "big equation"?
I remember some of the field equations in my college dynamics class were pretty "big". As well as those in quantum mechanics.