Annotation of loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Tolerance.tex, revision 1.1
1.1 ! bowersj2 1: A \textbf{tolerance\index{tolerance}} parameter determines how closely
! 2: the system will require the student's answer to be in order to count it correct.
! 3:
! 4:
! 5: For technical reasons, it is almost never a good idea to set this parameter
! 6: to zero. Computers can only approximate computations involving real numbers. For instance,
! 7: a computer's {[}decimal{]} answer to the simple problem $\frac{1}{3}$ is
! 8: {}``0.33333333333333331''. It \emph{should} be an infinite series of 3's,
! 9: and there certainly shouldn't be a {}``1'' in the answer, but no computer
! 10: can represent an infinitely long, infinitely detailed real number. Therefore,
! 11: for any problem where the answer is not a small integer, you \emph{need}
! 12: to allow a tolerance factor, or the students will find it nearly impossible
! 13: to exactly match the computers idea of the answer. You may find the
! 14: default too large for some problems.
! 15:
! 16: There are
! 17: two kinds of tolerance. For some answer $a$ and a tolerance $t$,
! 18:
! 19: \begin{enumerate}
! 20: \item an \textbf{Absolute} tolerance\index{absolute tolerance}\index{tolerance, absolute}
! 21: will take anything in the range $a\pm t$. So if $a=10$ and $t=2$, then
! 22: anything between 8 and 12 is acceptable.
! 23: Any number in the tolerance field \emph{without} a \textbf{\%} symbol is
! 24: an absolute tolerance.
! 25: \item a \textbf{Relative} tolerance\index{relative tolerance}\index{tolerance, relative}
! 26: will take anything in the range $a\pm at$, where \emph{t} is interpreted
! 27: as a percentage. Any number in the tolerance field \emph{followed by} a \textbf{\%}
! 28: symbol is a relative tolerance. For example, $a=10$ and $t=10\%$ will accept
! 29: anything between 9 and 11.
! 30: \end{enumerate}
FreeBSD-CVSweb <freebsd-cvsweb@FreeBSD.org>