im prob very wrong but for ii could u use one of the points on either line, and have the difference of direction vectors be the resultant direction? or have any point on both lines and just have that difference as the direction vector?
nah it was in my school trials, u basically let some parameter equal each of the components, so for x => 2a+2 then u get ur vector line, and show direction vectors are parallel which implies same plane
a lot of the times there are free 3ish marks on 16 for like subbing in numbers so don't just not even look at it but yh I leave some of it unattempted id rather make sure I didn't do anything stupid on 11-13 and do some harder 14-15 then just waste and prob still get 0 for 16
its accurate as a calculator by itself, meaning if u did the hsc 2022 and used those raw marks the atar is accurate, no one can predict the difficulty of this years hsc, or accurately compare ur trials to hsc 2022