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Discover LudwigThe phrase "able to compute" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when describing someone's or something's capability to perform calculations or process information.
Example: "The new software is able to compute complex algorithms in a matter of seconds."
Alternatives: "capable of calculating" or "equipped to process".
Exact(60)
Moreover, the server is able to compute the desired computations for recommendations without compromising the true rating information.
In the late 1980's, artificial intelligence researchers seized on Bayesian techniques in part because more powerful computers were able to compute large networks of many variables quickly.
Now a computer is not able to compute formulae that are not among those in the vocabulary of its machine table.
Having them, he was then able to compute x.
The brain is able to compute trajectories based on past experience.
"But lo and behold, we have been able to compute without using energy".
"We were able to compute exactly the state of ripeness of the vine from the temperature," he said.
"Even thinking about losing any games has always been something I've never been able to compute," he said.
After wrapping it, the salesgirl proceeded to consult the chart, and then the floor manager before she was able to compute the city sales tax.
The machine would be able to compute both standard Oracle structured data as well as unstructured data like e-mails, he said.
While anyone with an eighth-grade education is quite able to compute his or her taxes, many people feel stumped when asked to reason about numbers and calculations.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com