Adding those four things does nothing.
Kinda like adding, watermelons, lemons, fish and cars.
It is meaningless.
->
http://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Performance/Conceptual/Man agingMemory/ManagingMemory.html
From ->
About.com - OS X Memory Usage
Free. This one is pretty straightforward. It's the RAM in your Mac that isn't currently in use, and can be freely assigned to any process or application that needs all or some portion of available memory.
Wired. This is memory your Mac has assigned to its own internal needs, as well as the core needs of applications and processes you're running. Wired memory represents the minimum amount of RAM your Mac needs at any point in time to keep running. You can think of this as memory that's off limits for everyone else.
Active. This is memory currently in use by applications and processes on your Mac, other than the special system processes assigned to Wired memory. You can see your Active memory footprint grow as you launch applications, or as currently running applications need and grab more memory to perform a task.
Inactive. This is memory that's no longer required by an application but hasn't yet been released to the Free memory pool."