hey daniel i think that means that you have three arrays of the B1:B7 Math.pow() series, with each array being a different value in the curly-bracketed list.
That is: B1:B7^{1,2,3} becomes var myArray1 = [ Math.pow(B1,1),...,Math.pow(B7,1)]; var myArray2 = [Math.pow(B1,2),...,Math.pow(B7,2)]; var myArray3 = [Math.pow(B1,3),...,Math.pow(B7,3)]; B1:B7^{5,10} becomes var myArray1 = [Math.pow(B1,5),...,Math.pow (B7,5)]; var myArray2 = [Math.pow(B1,10),...,Math.pow(B7,10)]; and so on hth g. On 7/1/07, Daniel Cascais <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi, Hi, I've stumbled upon this function call in Excel: =LINEST(A1:A7,B1:B7^{1,2,3}) And I'm having issues with this last bit: "B1:B7^{1,2,3}" Let's say B1:B7 is an array from 1 to 7 considering this Excel notation: "B1:B7" It would look like this in ActionScript: var n1:Number = 1; var n2:Number = 2; var n3:Number = 3; var n4:Number = 4; var n5:Number = 5; var n6:Number = 6; var n7:Number = 7; var myArray:Array = [n1, n2, n3, n4, n5, n6, n7]; Now, if I change this, considering the following Excel notation: "B1:B7^2" It would look like this ActionScript: var n1:Number = Math.pow(1, 2); var n2:Number = Math.pow(2, 2); var n3:Number = Math.pow(3, 2); var n4:Number = Math.pow(4, 2); var n5:Number = Math.pow(5, 2); var n6:Number = Math.pow(6, 2); var n7:Number = Math.pow(7, 2); var myArray:Array = [n1, n2, n3, n4, n5, n6, n7]; But what on earth happens to the array with this Excel notation??? "B1:B7^{1,2,3}" --Daniel
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