Nailgun
Cole World
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2014
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- 2,190
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- 2016
If you're that bored, go finish my question on the 2U marathon.Was bored
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I've tried it so many times lelelIf you're that bored, go finish my question on the 2U marathon.
I did suggest the use of Simpson's Rule. Try that.I've tried it so many times lelel
I always end up with pronumerals in the ratio rather than just 4/3
That's what I was using lelI did suggest the use of Simpson's Rule. Try that.
Pretty sure the area of the triangle has 4, not 8.That's what I was using lel
btw was the triangle area correct?
it almost cancels out perfectly to 4/3 so i think ive made a mistake somewhere
The question is obviously trivial
Obviously I can tell how they got their answer. But would there be any reason as to mine being incorrect here and do I have to give my answer the same way they did?
To add to the discussion:
The question is obviously trivial
Obviously I can tell how they got their answer. But would there be any reason as to mine being incorrect here and do I have to give my answer the same way they did?
Yea problem, we haven't. So I wouldn't have been able to spot that lambda=-2 gives two contradictions just by looking at the matrixWhen lambda=-2, the bottom two rows will give you contradictory expressions for z.
Not sure if you have learned about determinants yet, but they give you a v. quick way of determining when a matrix is invertible (ie when Ax=y has a unique solution). This reduces such problems to checking the isolated values of lambda that make A singular to check whether the resulting systems have no solutions or infinitely many.
Don't need to know about determinants for this. Sub. lambda = -2, then equation 2 (row 2) says that -z = 1, whilst row 3 says that -12z = 3, a contradiction.Yea problem, we haven't. So I wouldn't have been able to spot that lambda=-2 gives two contradictions just by looking at the matrix
Yea but I wouldn't have seen that just by staring at my matrixDon't need to know about determinants for this. Sub. lambda = -2, then equation 2 (row 2) says that -z = 1, whilst row 3 says that -12z = 3, a contradiction.
What do you mean? Plug. in lambda = 2 to the matrix you posted. Then interpret the rows as equations as usual.Yea but I wouldn't have seen that just by staring at my matrix
Because then the denominator of the RHS would be 0, and we can't divide by 0.quick question:
for 1/|x-1| > 1/|x+1|
I got the answer as x>0 and x≠1 or x≠-1
but the answer is just x>0 and x≠1
why can x=-1?