It doesn't mean much, when you write two equations in n together like that. It's confusing.
If you had written just one, say, n=60, then it means that the pronumeral n is being assigned a value of 60 for the next part of the exercise. But to immediately reassign it a new value of 0.4 makes me ask why bother giving it that value of 60 to begin with?
It doesn't mean much, when you write two equations in n together like that. It's confusing.
If you had written just one, say, n=60, then it means that the pronumeral n is being assigned a value of 60 for the next part of the exercise. But to immediately reassign it a new value of 0.4 makes me ask why bother giving it that value of 60 to begin with?