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variable |
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variableIn mathematics, a changing quantity (one that can take various values), as opposed to a constant. For example, in the algebraic expression y = 4x3 + 2, the variables are x and y, whereas 4 and 2 are constants. A variable may be dependent or independent. Thus if y is a function of x, written y = f(x), such that y = 4x3 + 2, the domain of the function includes all values of the independent variable x while the range (or co-domain) of the function is defined by the values of the dependent variable y. variableIn computing, a quantity that can take different values. Variables can be used to represent different items of data in the course of a program. A computer programmer will choose a symbol to represent each variable used in a program. The computer will then automatically assign a memory location to store the current value of each variable, and use the chosen symbol to identify this location. For example, the letter P might be chosen by a programmer to represent the price of an article. The computer would automatically reserve a memory location with the symbolic address P to store the price being currently processed. Different programming languages place different restrictions on the choice of symbols used to represent variables. Some languages only allow a single letter followed, where required, by a single number. Other languages allow a much freer choice, allowing, for example, the use of the full word ‘price’ to represent the price of an article. A global variable is one that can be accessed by any program instruction; a local variable is one that can only be accessed by the instructions within a particular subroutine. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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The model included three exogenous variables, five endogenous variables, and five error variables, one for each of the endogenous variables. Therefore, although modest, the path between intimacy Time I and father competence should be considered significant, as it explains about 7 percent of the variance in the endogenous variable. The results of this study clearly show that the presence of bloody diarrhea is an endogenous variable in the model showing predictors of hemolytic uremic syndrome, in that the diarrhea is shown to be predicted by, and therefore strongly correlated with, several other variables used to predict hemolytic uremic syndrome. |
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