Returns the least common multiple of the specified numbers. Returns the natural logarithm of a number, the power to which e must be raised to result in the number. Returns the logarithm of a number using a specified base. Returns the base‑10 logarithm of a number. Returns the remainder from a division.
My system is Mac OSX 10.11.6 El Capitan using Numbers for Mac version 3.6.2.
- Below is a graph of the natural log logarithm: The natural logarithm function and exponential function are the inverse of each other, as you can see in the graph below: This inverse relationship can be represented with the formulas below, which the input to the LN function is the output of the EXP function.
- Jun 01, 2016 You can use the logarithmic scale (log scale) in the Format Axis dialogue box to scale your chart by a base of 10. What this does is it multiplies the vertical axis units by 10, so it starts at 1, 10, 100, 1000, 10000, 100000, 1000000 etc. This scales the chart.
I am trying to create a 2D logarithmic line chart.
When the Y axis scale is set to linear (see image 1 below) it is possible to adjust the max and minimum values and the steps between. And this scale shows on the left hand margin of the chart.
When I set the Y axis scale to Logarithmic (see image 2 below) I can only set the scale maximum to 10, 100 or 1000, which leaves a huge area of empty chart as the maximum level should be in 350 or thereabouts. And the steps in between aren't marked on the left hand margin. All of which makes the logarithmic chart almost unusable.
Many thanks
Julian
Image 1, linear scale
Image 2, Logarithmic scale
MacBook Pro, OS X El Capitan (10.11.6), Numbers for Mac version 3.6.2
Logarithmic Functions
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