How do you enter the command for a cube root?
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    Ricky Smith
 el 7 de Sept. de 2016
  
    
    
    
    
    Respondida: Hamad  Al-Mulla
 el 24 de Nov. de 2021
            I'm re-working the volume of a sphere equation (V=(4*pi*r^3)/3) to solve for the radius(r).
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  John D'Errico
      
      
 el 7 de Sept. de 2016
        
      Editada: John D'Errico
      
      
 el 7 de Sept. de 2016
  
      Two simple options:
x^(1/3)
Or,
nthroot(x,3)
Be very careful though. If x is negative, it will return a complex number, because there are indeed THREE cube roots of a negative number. Two of them are complex. nthroot will give you the root you would expect however.
(-2)^(1/3)
ans =
      0.62996 +     1.0911i
nthroot(-2,3)
ans =
      -1.2599
In your case, it is not relevant, since the number will be non-negative.
2 comentarios
  James Tursa
      
      
 el 7 de Nov. de 2018
				
      Editada: James Tursa
      
      
 el 7 de Nov. de 2018
  
			"... there are indeed THREE cube roots of a negative number ..."
To complete John's thought, there are three distinct cube roots of every non-zero number (positive real, negative real, complex), not just of the negative real numbers. And as John points out, some of these roots are complex, so you need to know how the tools you are using behave in order to get the answer(s) you want. (In general, there are n distinct n'th roots of every non-zero real or complex number)
  John D'Errico
      
      
 el 17 de Nov. de 2020
				Good completion/correction. My statement was sloppy as I wrote it.
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