HeroicPandas
Heroic!
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2012
- Messages
- 1,547
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2013
True that, LOLRHS is defined to be integer lol.
True that, LOLRHS is defined to be integer lol.
ye but if and only if proof so need to be proven both waysRHS is defined to be integer lol.
yeah this was on of the questions in the discrete final, did exactly like you so far but cant get the opposite wayIF x is an integer, then it can be odd or even
Suppose x is odd, then there exists an integer M such that x = 2M + 1
Suppose x is even, then there exists an integer M such that x = 2M
So
ONLY IF, not sure atm, thinking about the contrapositive
I have this:
Let x be p/q such that p and q are integers and q is not 0 or 1
LHS = x = p/q
RHS = floor(x/2) + ceil(x/2)
= floor(p/2q) + ceil(p/2q)
So what? The claim is not that the RHS function outputs an integer iff x is an integer, the claim is that the RHS expression is EQUAL to x iff x is an integer.RHS is defined to be integer lol.
Alternatively, a simpler way to do it would be to use complex numbers.
Ok I gave this a crack but nah got nowhere. Non-linear, non-separable ODE's is something I've never encountered before. Tried substitutions, not exact, not separable, integrating factor does not work. Can anyone give me a tip on what can be done for this (do keep in mind I'm only in first year so I have never touched an ODE like this before)?solve or find the ananytic solution of
Make a thread on this if you feel necessary.hey y'all. how would you say 1st year maths stacks up against HSC 4U? harder? about the same? more crammed syllabus?
Dividing both sides by 'y', we can use some kind of substitution (involving that fact that y'/y = d(lny)/dy) to reduce the LHS into something easier (I guess it might a substitution involving logs)Ok I gave this a crack but nah got nowhere. Non-linear, non-separable ODE's is something I've never encountered before. Tried substitutions, not exact, not separable, integrating factor does not work. Can anyone give me a tip on what can be done for this (do keep in mind I'm only in first year so I have never touched an ODE like this before)?
I'll try it again now.Dividing both sides by 'y', we can use some kind of substitution (involving that fact that y'/y = d(lny)/dy) to reduce the LHS into something easier (I guess it might a substitution involving logs)