BreBreDoeCCx
24.03.2021 •
Mathematics
If the slope of a line is 3, what is the slope of the line that is parallel to it?
Solved
Show answers
More tips
- L Leisure and Entertainment How to Make a Crab Trap in Just a Few Minutes...
- H Health and Medicine How Much Does Abortion Cost? Expert Answers and Insights...
- S Sport How to Build Arm Muscles? Effective Exercises and Tips...
- H Health and Medicine When can it be said that a person has a normal pulse?...
- A Art and Culture When Will Eurovision 2011 Take Place?...
- S Style and Beauty How to Choose the Perfect Hair Straightener?...
- F Family and Home Why Having Pets at Home is Good for Your Health...
- H Health and Medicine How to perform artificial respiration?...
- H Health and Medicine 10 Tips for Avoiding Vitamin Deficiency...
- F Food and Cooking How to Properly Cook Buckwheat?...
Answers on questions: Mathematics
- M Mathematics How to find the height of a triangular prism...
- M Mathematics Find the Value of X (please don t just give me a fake answer)...
- H History When my dog eats it LWAYS WANTS MORE FOOD WHY IS MY DOG NOT GETTING FULL BELLY...
- C Chemistry The amino acid methionine can be used as fuel by being converted to succinyl coa. what would be the estimated atp yield for the breakdown of methionine in this way if the succinyl...
- B Business goods are those for which consumers compare alternative brands against one another or compare the same brands across multiple retail settings prior to making a purchase decision....
- B Business You plan to build an apartment building with a 12-month construction. The total project cost is $12,000,000 linearly spread out over the 12 months. The equity partners fund the first...
Ответ:
3
Step-by-step explanation: If they are parallel, the lines will always run the same distance apart and never intersect. If the slopes are different, they will intersect at some point
Ответ:
Ответ:
Math has the particularity that it is a logical construction.
This means that we can start with an expression X (where X is an equation, not a variable)
Now we can apply a lot of "math" to this equation in such a way that we can rewrite it, but the actual "meaning" of the equation will not change.
An example of this is factoring.
For example, we can write a quadratic equation as:
a*x^2 + b*x + c.
And we also can write this as:
n*(x - k)*(x - j)
where k and j are the solutions of the equation:
a*x^2 + b*x + c = 0.
What is the advantage of writing the equation in each form?
Well, both expressions actually represent the same thing, but the explicit information in each expression is different, so depending on what we want to do, we will choose one option or the other.
And we have lot's of different ways to express something, where we can find some ones really complex and useful, like the series of Taylor, where we can write a function as a summation of infinite terms.