Consider the boys and girls separately. Firstly, place the boys every second position, and consider their possible combinations. (Ignore the spaces, treat it as you would a normal circle of people) Secondly, consider the remaining places for the girls to be seated in, assuming the boys have all been seated."In how many different ways can 3 boys and 3 girls sit in a circle if:
a) the boys and girls alternate
"
Just need this one also explained, thanks.
Either that, or there's not too many 2016'ers who can be bothered to answer Q's on these marathons.
Please just attempt these, they are not that difficult, and they are all straightforward.
I feel like people aren't taught to be unafraid of new problems, instead are taught to rote everything, then freak out when they encounter something foreign.
Can someone use Newton's method on "sin(x) = x/5" starting at x = 2.5.
"form f(x)=0"
Again with Newton's method:
"Consider the function y= -x^3 +x^2 +x +0.5"
"Starting with the initial value of Xo=0 use Newton's method to find the next 3 approximations.
So when I use the method and put x=0, I keep getting -0.5 which according to the answers is the second approximation. How do I get the initial one they're asking for? (Answer is 0).
Ohh. I did not realise Xo=0 was them telling us that's the first value. I thought they meant sub that in. But you do that to get the next one anyway.
It's convention for 0 in the subscript to be the initial. Kinda like series actually, except T1 is the first term there cause you don't have a zero-th termOhh. I did not realise Xo=0 was them telling us that's the first value. I thought they meant sub that in. But you do that to get the next one anyway.
Thanks I understand now.
Again with Newton's method:
"Consider the function y= -x^3 +x^2 +x +0.5"
"Starting with the initial value of Xo=0 use Newton's method to find the next 3 approximations.
So when I use the method and put x=0, I keep getting -0.5 which according to the answers is the second approximation. How do I get the initial one they're asking for? (Answer is 0).
Differentiate sin^-1 x/3
I thought I knew how to do these, but am not getting the answer for this one.
Differentiate sin^-1 x/3
I thought I knew how to do these, but am not getting the answer for this one.
Yes but can someone show working out please, I know the answer, just don't know how to reach the answer.
It's a standard differentiation formula as davidgoes4wce showed in his post.Yes but can someone show working out please, I know the answer, just don't know how to reach the answer.
Oh thanks. I don't remember being taught that rule. Only that sin^-1 x = 1/root(1-x^2).
Oh thanks. I don't remember being taught that rule. Only that sin^-1 x = 1/root(1-x^2).
Makes sense knowing that though now.
Need to memorise that, that's one of the formulas not listed on the 2016 Formulae Sheet.Oh thanks. I don't remember being taught that rule. Only that sin^-1 x = 1/root(1-x^2).
Makes sense knowing that though now.