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Feb 11th, 2007, 09:04 AM
#1
Thread Starter
New Member
Another question about absolute error
Hi again...
It is known that the absulute error of the quotient or product of a number of quantities is less than or equal to the sum of their absolute errors...(1)
and
Absolute error = Observed - Accepted value (2)
but absolute error can be < 0 in some of the quantities of the product or the quotient (if in (2), Observed < Accepted) and in some of the quantities it can be >= 0....if I folow (1) I have to sum the separate absolute errors but actually they can be for example:
-12+14+(-2), it is equal to 0...so is it true that the absulute error of the quotient or product is <= 0, and shall I accept 0 as the most possible absolute error of the quotient or product......or I have to use
|absolute error| every time when I compute it and in this way it is >=0 every time!!!
Thanks all!
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Feb 11th, 2007, 11:00 AM
#2
Re: Another question about absolute error
The absolute error cannot be less than zero.
Absolute Error = |Observed - Accepted Value|
See Approximation Error in Wikipedia.
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