Well, =Exp(Log(.5)*22/15) gives 0.361817309360095
Log(.5) in Excel is the logarithm base 10. The Help file In Access mentions
the following.
The natural logarithm is the logarithm to the base e. The constant e is
approximately 2.718282.
You can calculate base-n logarithms for any number x by dividing the natural
logarithm of x by the natural logarithm of n as follows:
Logn(x) = Log(x) / Log(n)
The following example illustrates a custom Function that calculates base-10
logarithms:
Static Function Log10(X)
Log10 = Log(X) / Log(10#)
End Function, to get the
That means that to get the equivalent of Log(.5) in Excel, you'd need to use
(Log(.5)/Log(10#)) in Access. As well, Access doesn't have a Power function,
but all Power does is raise the first argument to the second argument, so
you can use a^b instead of Power(a, b)
In other words, the equivalent of POWER(10,LOG(.5)*(22)/15) in Access would
be 10#^((Log(.5)/Log(10#))*22/15) (You need the # there to ensure double
precision accuracy)