F
flow guy
When I use very small numbers with LINEST it returns zeros. Please help me
solve this problem
solve this problem
When I use very small numbers with LINEST it returns zeros. Please help me
solve this problem
Thanks Harlan,Harlan Grove said:flow guy wrote...
Rescale. If your data is on the order of 1E-9, multiply it by 1E9, pass
the result through LINEST, then divide the results by 1E9.
If that's not practical, provide some sample data.
The data I use looks something like this ....
It is X and Y values and X values raised to different powers. This data is
anylized in to produce coefficeints for curve fits up to the 6th order. This
spread sheet worked well in office 2000, but is producing zeros for
coefficienets for the larger order fits.
Harlan Grove said:flow guy wrote...
....
As I said, rescale. I multiplied your C Factor values by 1E5 (100,000),
your Test^2 (C Factor squared) by 1E10, your Test^3 (C Factor cubed) by
1E15, etc. Then I called LINEST on your K Factor values as Y and the
rescaled C Factor and Test^# values as X getting
LINEST(Y,X,1,1):
-0.0001934 0.0008567 -0.0002688 -0.0039330 0.0071510 -0.0041250
0.0703100
0.0005494 0.0037450 0.0098640 0.0126100 0.0080140 0.0023030
0.0002191
0.8634398 6.595E-05 #N/A_____ #N/A____ #N/A_____ #N/A____ #N/A
13.6945294 13______ #N/A_____ #N/A____ #N/A_____ #N/A____ #N/A
3.5740E-07 5.655E-08 #N/A_____ #N/A____ #N/A_____ #N/A____ #N/A
The top line are the coefficient estimators and the constant term.
Multiply the first six, the coefficient terms in reverse order, by
1E30, 1E25, 1E20, 1E15, 1E10 and 1E5, respectively. The restulting
values are the coefficients applicable to the original C Factor and
Test^# values.