The Museum of HP Calculators

HP Forum Archive 19

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x^Y vs. y^X
Message #1 Posted by Gerardo Rincon on 20 Dec 2010, 7:00 p.m.

I never realized until just recently that the HP-35 exponential function was X^Y. I noticed that it was changed to Y^X on the next models the HP-80 and HP-45. Good thing they did.

Edited: 20 Dec 2010, 7:02 p.m.

      
Re: x^Y vs. y^X
Message #2 Posted by Karl Schneider on 20 Dec 2010, 7:28 p.m.,
in response to message #1 by Gerardo Rincon

Quote:
I never realized until just recently that the HP-35 exponential function was X^Y. I noticed that it was changed to Y^X on the next models the HP-80 and HP-45. Good thing they did.

Gerardo --

This was covered a few years ago, but I didn't bookmark the discussion.

"Y^X" is indeed more consistent with other operations such as division and subtraction, which perform Y/X and Y-X, respectively.

Unlike the HP-45, the HP-35 lacked a "10^X" key. "X^Y" saved a keystroke over "Y^X" when finding common antilogarithms of a computed value on the HP-35:

(value) 10 X^Y

This is mentioned on the Museum page for the HP-35.

Also, "x raised to the y", like "y over x", may have been considered to be more visually intuitive from the stack representation.

-- Karl

Edited: 21 Dec 2010, 7:11 p.m. after one or more responses were posted

            
Re: x^Y vs. y^X
Message #3 Posted by bill platt on 20 Dec 2010, 8:31 p.m.,
in response to message #2 by Karl Schneider

Aha!


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