Me when I see integrands name at the bottom of the page : *Rapidly types to finish solution so it doesn't all go to waste*Oh, didn't see IG in this thread
Feels. EverytimeMe when I see integrands name at the bottom of the page : *Rapidly types to finish solution so it doesn't all go to waste*
Lmao I didn't even see his name this time when I scrolled down.Me when I see integrands name at the bottom of the page : *Rapidly types to finish solution so it doesn't all go to waste*
Simplifying surdsHow do you do this with no calculator?? What's going on in the second to third line?
How the hell do I get 24^2-4*35^2 = 5476 in my head is the issue???Simplifying surds
If I had to do the whole thing I would've bashed it differently.How the hell do I get 24^2-4*35^2 = 5476 in my head is the issue???
Thank you I appreciate it.If I had to do the whole thing I would've bashed it differently.
24^2 - 4(-35)^2 = 2^2*12^2 + 2^2+35^2
Factorised out the 2 earlier, you're left with proving 12^2 + 35^2 = 37^2
I find it difficult to believe that this was a quiz question and not a final exam question. But this is my method of tackling square roots:
______________
12^2 = 144 from primary education
35^2 can be done as an algorithm.
35^2 = 35*30 + 35*5 = 1050 + 175 = 1225
1225 + 144 = 1369
I conjecture that 1369 is a perfect square.
Note: A number squared ends in 9 IFF the original number ended in 3 or 7
1369 is closer to 1600 (= 40^2) than it is to 900 (= 30^2)
I therefore conjecture 1369 = 37^2
Test: 37*37 = 1369 by actually computing it
Therefore found my required number
Very foolish move on their part.Thank you I appreciate it.
But damn what were they thinking, this is from test 2 algebra version 2b in 2014. Why would they even choose such large numbers.
Which question was this?How do you do this with no calculator?? What's going on in the second to third line?
Question 1 of test2 version2b 2014 algebra.Which question was this?
Conjugate pairs are ones where the angles add up to 0 (or any integer multiple of 2pi). If you convert all the arguments to principal arguments, the conjugate pairs are the ones where the angles are negatives of each other (i.e. add up to 0).How do I know which ones are the conjugate pairs to write them next to each other like they have here?
Where is the 37 coming from?If I had to do the whole thing I would've bashed it differently.
24^2 - 4(-35)^2 = 2^2*12^2 + 2^2+35^2
Factorised out the 2 earlier, you're left with proving 12^2 + 35^2 = 37^2
The negative doesn't belong in the squareWhere is the 37 coming from?
https://youtu.be/t7nVFnFougM?t=21m34s
He does it at that point of the video.
But firstly I don't understand why -4*(-35)^2 becomes entirely positive? (-35)^2 would be +, then +*-4, would result in -. Or what am I doing wrong here?
Then of course I don't get where 37 comes from. We take out 2, giving us 2(12^2-2*35^2). But obviously I'm going wrong here too somewhere. What is it I'm doing wrong?