Write a program to calculate 1^1 + 2^2 + 3^3 + ... + 10^10. Without using ^.

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I am having trouble solving this. This is my code with the "^" symbol although can not figure out how to solve this problem without.
x = 0;
for i = 1:10
x = x + i^i;
end
disp(x);
Thank you.
  8 Comments
Guillaume
Guillaume on 24 Mar 2019
Edited: Guillaume on 24 Mar 2019
"My professor wants us to use a nesting loop, one for adding 1 to 10 and one loop for calculation exponentiation."
So, why don't you go ahead and do it? What is difficult about that?
On the other hand, you could complain to the professor thar asking you to use loops for things that shouldn't be done with loops is teaching you the wrong way to use matlab. (Something we spend a lot of time unteaching people on Answers, unfortunately).</rant over>
dpb
dpb on 24 Mar 2019
Edited: dpb on 25 Mar 2019
I gotcha' John... :)
Mayhaps too plebian an approach, indeed, but figured to push towards what figured was probably the expected solution.
OK, Seth, that's what I suspected was the desired solution--so how would you write a loop to have a variable number of iterations? If you get that step, then there's just one coding bookkeeping step you have to think of to get the exponentiated term to add to the previous sum...
HINT: What algebraic expression equals M**N on paper without using the power for the expression?

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Answers (1)

Anant Upadhyay
Anant Upadhyay on 27 Mar 2019
Hi Seth,
According to my understanding, the problem is to compute the sum of 1^1 + 2^2 + 3^3 +….+ 10^10 and you do not want to use “^” symbol for calculating the above sum.
Basically, any natural number ‘N’ raised to a power ‘K’ can be computed by performing the product of the natural number ‘N’ ‘K’ times. Therefore, to compute ‘N^K’, a “for-loop” can be used.
Now, to calculate the required sum, you will need an outer loop that will run from starting term (1 in this case) to ending term (10 in this case) of the sequence and for each term, calculate the required value by multiplying the term with itself ‘K’ times, where ‘K’ is the value of exponent.

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