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Carrotsticks Retired Joined Jun 29, 2009 Messages 9,494 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Oct 21, 2012 #2 Better to do so, by writing down x rad.
R Riproot Addiction Psychiatrist Joined Nov 10, 2009 Messages 8,228 Location I don’t see how that’s any of your business… Gender Male HSC 2011 Uni Grad 2017 Oct 21, 2012 #3 They assume you've written your answer in radians if you don't put other units. Yay
Shadowless Member Joined May 3, 2010 Messages 342 Gender Male HSC 2012 Oct 21, 2012 #4 Carrotsticks said: Better to do so, by writing down x rad. Click to expand... Hmm... But isn't there also the other notation that goes something like... (BTW: can someone run me through the use of LaTeX here? I have: \mathbf({\frac{\pi}{6})^{c}})
Carrotsticks said: Better to do so, by writing down x rad. Click to expand... Hmm... But isn't there also the other notation that goes something like... (BTW: can someone run me through the use of LaTeX here? I have: \mathbf({\frac{\pi}{6})^{c}})
D94 New Member Joined Oct 5, 2011 Messages 4,423 Gender Male HSC N/A Oct 22, 2012 #5 Shadowless said: Hmm... But isn't there also the other notation that goes something like... View attachment 26769 (BTW: can someone run me through the use of LaTeX here? I have: \mathbf({\frac{\pi}{6})^{c}}) Click to expand... That's also the symbol for radians. But be careful you don't miswrite it as ° for degrees. Use Last edited: Oct 22, 2012
Shadowless said: Hmm... But isn't there also the other notation that goes something like... View attachment 26769 (BTW: can someone run me through the use of LaTeX here? I have: \mathbf({\frac{\pi}{6})^{c}}) Click to expand... That's also the symbol for radians. But be careful you don't miswrite it as ° for degrees. Use
Trebla Administrator Administrator Joined Feb 16, 2005 Messages 8,392 Gender Male HSC 2006 Oct 22, 2012 #6 By convention, an angle with no units is always assumed to be in radians given that you generally treat it as a real number.
By convention, an angle with no units is always assumed to be in radians given that you generally treat it as a real number.