Nope. It isn't. You're mixing up two different notations. In the current context, 10e isn't a number. In another context, it would be the (natural) exponential number e multiplied by 10. This however isn't the context of the Wikipedia page about scientific notation, which Alejandro linked to but which you left out on purpose to confuse people.

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On 9/4/2013 03:56, Dr. Hawkins wrote:
On Tue, Sep 3, 2013 at 2:50 PM, Mark Schonewille
<m.schonewi...@economy-x-talk.com> wrote:
I'd say that 10e isn't a number because the exponent is missing.

Sure it's a number.

Roughly 28 . . .

:)




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