158
Alphabetical Listing
series()
Catalog >
Point
defaults to 0.
Point
can be
∞
or
−∞
,
in which cases the expansion is through
degree
Order
in 1/(
Var
−
Point
).
series(...)
returns “
series(...)
” if it is unable
to determine such a representation, such as
for essential singularities such as sin(1/z)
at z=0, e
−
1/z
at z=0, or e
z
at z =
∞
or
−∞
.
If the series or one of its derivatives has a
jump discontinuity at
Point
, the result is
likely to contain sub-expressions of the
form sign(…) or abs(…) for a real expansion
variable or (-1)
floor(…angle(…)…)
for a complex
expansion variable, which is one ending
with “_”. If you intend to use the series only
for values on one side of
Point
, then
append the appropriate one of “|
Var
>
Point
”, “|
Var
<
Point
”, “| “
Var
≥
Point
”,
or “
Var
≤
Point
” to obtain a simpler result.
series()
can provide symbolic
approximations to indefinite integrals and
definite integrals for which symbolic
solutions otherwise can't be obtained.
series()
distributes over 1st-argument lists
and matrices.
series()
is a generalized version of
taylor()
.
As illustrated by the last example to the
right, the display routines downstream of
the result produced by series(...) might
rearrange terms so that the dominant term
is not the leftmost one.
Note:
See also
dominantTerm()
, page 58.
setMode()
Catalog >
setMode(
modeNameInteger
,
settingInteger
)
⇒
integer
setMode(
list
)
⇒
integer list
Valid only within a function or program.
Display approximate value of
π
using the
default setting for Display Digits, and then
display
π
with a setting of Fix2. Check to see
that the default is restored after the
program executes.
Summary of Contents for TI-Nspire CAS
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