By brute force.You've got the right answer. Care to share your solution method?
By brute force.You've got the right answer. Care to share your solution method?
Did you end up killing the equation?By brute force.
Brute force is not a computer term. Quite commonly used in maths solutions. It is often used for workman-like approach. No elegance whatsoever. I cross-multiplied the 2 sides and painstakingly cancelled out all the common terms - but I was very careful, numbering each pair I cancelled out so I could easily recheck should I falter.Did you end up killing the equation?
Brute force a type of trial and error? It's a bit of a computer term
I always do shit the hard way.Brute force is not a computer term. Quite commonly used in maths solutions. It is often used for workman-like approach. No elegance whatsoever. I cross-multiplied the 2 sides and painstakingly cancelled out all the common terms - but I was very careful, numbering each pair I cancelled out so I could easily recheck should I falter.
I wonder what an elegant solution would look like.
I think more generally "brute force" refers to any approach to problem-solving that is crude like using a sledgehammer, unsubtle, unelegant.Oh..thought it might be related to the brute force method in hacking
Polynomials:Post a new question please.
5/3, -5/3, -18/12 = -3/2 and 8/12 = 2/3Given that two roots of the equation are equal in absolute value but different in sign, write down the relations between the roots and coefficients and hence solve the equation.
Not sure, haven't done most of polynomials. Though I presume it shouldn't be too challenging.5/3, -5/3, -18/12 = -3/2 and 8/12 = 2/3
Method, sub c and -c or whatever pronumeral you give it.
Is this as hard as polynomials get? I haven't done it yet
Then integrate the function.Let:
Nop. The question just asked to express it in that formThen integrate the function.
I'm just extending that previous question. =]Nop. The question just asked to express it in that form
Then integrate the function.
Draw it, it forms a rhombus, z+r is a diagonal, diagonals of rhombuses bisect angles.If z is a complex number such that z = r(cosθ +isinθ), where r is real, show that arg(z+r) = (1/2)θ .