jameszhang
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2009
- Messages
- 8
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2009
In the maths ext2 hsc exam, would you need to express modular-argument form in full? Or can you express it as "cis" without losing marks?
do it e^ix
train urself for uni. do cis in uni and u get marks taken off
Haha, +1OP
I've always had the same Q!
I always lean on just writing 2cis(pie/3) or whatever it is, then I got paranoid so I write Modulus = 2 Argument = pie/3, then I get even more paranoid and write the whole expansion (2cospie/3 + 2isinpi/3 ) then after I do that I realise wow, what an epic waste of time.
My advice: Avoid the headache/paranoia; just skip to step 3^^ straight away.
Hmm, don't think that will work, since different markers mark different questions.we had a conference thing with an mx2 marker and he said if you make some indication that cis = cos + isin then it's fine to use cis.
i'll write, eg. cis(pi/2) where cis(pi/2) = cos(pi/2) + isin(pi/2) and then use cis for the rest of the paper.
e^ix = cosx + isinxHelo; I don't think complex expressions in the form e^ix are in the hsc syllabus.
oh yeah, sorry, i meant the question.Hmm, don't think that will work, since different markers mark different questions.
haha yeah i remember whinging about having to do e^ix but now its second nature.It's just notation.. I don't see anything wrong with cis.. but e^(ix) is probably the better notation.