#help-49

1 messages · Page 289 of 1

proper swift
#

how about decrease

slate ferry
proper swift
#

(- infinity, + infinity)

#

wait

#

o

slate ferry
#

||(I see. I just suspected that the graph might be concave up)||

proper swift
#

no

slate ferry
proper swift
#

help

slate ferry
#

what is your thought process?

proper swift
#

i suck at math is what im thinking

slate ferry
#

where do you think the graph decreases

proper swift
#

everywhere

slate ferry
#

actually good point

#

that is true

#

but...

proper swift
#

but what

slate ferry
#

altho more famously written as R

#

the REAL numbers

#

I'm not sure which form your fill in the blank thing would accept

#

yeah so its always decreasing on R and never increases

#

you already figured the asym thing

#

what about the domain

proper swift
#
  • inf , pos inf
#

idk what that dot is i put neg inf first

slate ferry
slate ferry
proper swift
#

ok cool

slate ferry
#

y intercept

#

from the name, find where the graph intercepts with the y-axis

proper swift
#

this is where we're at

slate ferry
#

or "touches" it

proper swift
#

is the inc/dec the x values?

slate ferry
proper swift
#

Inc or decrease

#

is it the x value

slate ferry
#

yeah

#

that's how we write intervals

proper swift
#

its always x value?

slate ferry
proper swift
#

ok nice

slate ferry
#

I think?

#

I mean- I'm study functions and I've never used y-repreesntation for intervals

proper swift
#

ok

slate ferry
#

espiecally for functions like

#

y=3

proper swift
#

here we are

#

now what

slate ferry
#

the y-values thing is called the range

#

in fact, its asking for it!

slate ferry
#

pos is the part above the x-axis

#

and the neg is the part below

proper swift
#

so how do i write that

slate ferry
# proper swift so how do i write that

This algebra video tutorial provides a basic introduction into interval notation. It explains how to express the solution of an inequality using a number line and interval notation. Examples include compound inequalities. You should use the parentheses symbol next to an infinity symbol or for open circles on the number line. You should use b...

▶ Play video
#

intervals. they're a big deal 🙂

#

you sure learned how to do them but maybe forgot

#

so I'd def recommand watching the video.

proper swift
#

thats not what my teach has down on other questions

slate ferry
#

the said "other questions"

proper swift
slate ferry
#

these are intervals.

#

exactly whats in the video

#

do watch it 😔.

#

they will teach you how to represent hte "pos" and "neg"

#

and everything else really.

slate ferry
proper swift
#

but it doesnt have the u

#

what is the u for

slate ferry
#

yeah that's other stuff you def learned about

#

its when you want to combine two intervals

proper swift
#

do we want to do that here

slate ferry
#

no

#

but you will most def need it in the future

#

its still worth understnading.

proper swift
#

ill get to that when i need it

#

so that vid shows the greater than and less than signs, forgot what those are called, and looks easy, but how am i supposed to find that out from our question here

slate ferry
proper swift
#

i already learned that last semester

slate ferry
#

yes but you dont remember :((

proper swift
#

didnt understand that much

#

but whatever

#

dont need it right now

slate ferry
#

(1 , inf)

#

thats an interval

proper swift
#

ok

slate ferry
#

sigh

#

I can explain intervals myself

#

because they are what you need here

#

will you promise to stay focused?

proper swift
#

ill try

slate ferry
#

alright

#

so this is a not-to-scale numberline

#

its basically all the numbers you can think of (real numbers)

#

you know it!

#

it extends to infinity to the right and negative infinity to the left

#

are you with me so far

proper swift
#

so far yes

slate ferry
#

so

#

we'll call this number line the x axis (it represents x values i guess.)

proper swift
#

ok

slate ferry
#

alright! if I wanted to circle where x=1

#

where would I put the circle

proper swift
#

1

slate ferry
proper swift
#

eys

#

yes

slate ferry
#

if I wanted to circle x=-2

#

this would be it

proper swift
#

yes

slate ferry
#

alright

#

now what if i wanted to have x equal to many many things at once

#

for example

#

if I had a brother and I dont remember how old he is

#

but I siad

#

"my brother is in between 3 and 5 years old"

#

you can interpert that my brother is

#

3

#

3,5

#

4,5

#

one of those

#

5

proper swift
#

ok

slate ferry
#

give me a bit.

#

alright back

slate ferry
#

if i wanted to represent my brother's age in terms of x

#

I'll have to say

#

my brother is in ebtween x=3 and x=5

proper swift
#

ok

slate ferry
#

so he's in-between these two points

#

but now you see

proper swift
#

yes

slate ferry
#

its kinda hard to put a point on EVERY x-value my brother can be

#

like

#

my brother can be

#

3 and a half years old

#

3.75

#

3.599

#

4.512

#

like a ton of ages in between 3 and 5

#

in fact, there is an infinite amount of numbers between 3 and 5

#

yeah there is- a lot.

slate ferry
#

I dont have enough points or time for the amount of x-values i want to put here

#

so mathematicans created this NEW way of representation.

#

called intervals!

#

intervals are a way we represent values that are just too much to write down

proper swift
#

nice

slate ferry
#

so yeah

#

graphically

#

this is how we denote an interval;

#

with the brown filling denoting that

#

EVERY value between 3 and 5

#

can be my brother's age

#

can be my x values

#

and

#

on paper

#

the way we denote them...

#

differs for one country to another

#

I denote them with [ ] but you seem to be denoting them with ( )

#

im not sure how these work...

#

but yeah let me teach you how to read and type an interval

#

so

#

at last

proper swift
#

isint it always x vaules

slate ferry
#

I wanna say, every number between 3 and 5 could be my brother's age

slate ferry
slate ferry
#

(3 , 5)

#

with the 3 on one side and the 5 on the other

proper swift
#

i understand the basics of intervals

slate ferry
#

basically the** boundaries** of my x values

#

perfect

#

now

#

if i perhaps

#

wanted to say

#

I want my x values to be

#

in between 1 and 20

#

how would you write that downh

proper swift
#

(1,20)

slate ferry
#

good now

slate ferry
#

in ebtween

#

-2 and 4

proper swift
#

-2, 4

#

with the brackets

slate ferry
#

yes

#

notice soemthing very important here

#

the SMALLER number is ALWAYS on the left.

proper swift
#

ok

slate ferry
#

( 4, -2) doesnt make sense

#

we ALWAYS start with teh smaller number when it comes to intervals

#

alright

#

now lets make it a bit trickier

#

what If I wanted to say....

#

I want my x values to be bigger than 4.

#

think about it

#

how could we represent htis

proper swift
#

(4, infinity)

slate ferry
#

GOOD

slate ferry
#

but now here coems the part i dont fucking now

slate ferry
#

... you dont understand dont you

#

okay what If I said

#

a human being cant be 0 years old

#

and lets say they only live to 60 years old

#

if i wanted to write the interval for these x-values

#

ME

#

i would do this

#

]0 , 60]

#

the ] denotes that "my x value CANNOT be 0"

#

if i wanted to include 0 as a part of my x values

#

I would [0 , 60]

proper swift
#

what

slate ferry
#

but what do you with (0 , 60)

#

....

proper swift
#

give me 10 mins

neat coral
#

how muuch have you done

#

ima put this here so i dont gotta keep going up

slate ferry
#

I dont understand how people ues ( ) instead of [ ] for intervals.

civic lynx
#

and ofc infinity is never closed

proper swift
#

guess whos back

#

ok lets go

#

hello

#

@slate ferry

slate ferry
#

and when each is used

proper swift
#

bracket is when the number is included

slate ferry
#

alright so

#

I- thought ( ) was how we say included

proper swift
#

bruh

slate ferry
#

yeah so

#

its fine

#

we cna just rephrase my previous example to be "my brother's age is inbetween 3 and 5"

#

which would still be (3 , 5)

#

in any case

slate ferry
#

if x can equal to 2 and can be bigger than it

#

how would you write that

proper swift
#

x is greater than or equal to 2

slate ferry
#

TRUE

#

how would you put that in interval form

proper swift
#

x > line under it 2

slate ferry
#

😭 yes

#

good

#

perfect

#

amazing

#

so

#

we can go back to your original question.

proper swift
#

nice

slate ferry
#

for where it is postiive

#

you said

#

"where the graph is above the x axis"

proper swift
#

yes

slate ferry
#

so ALL of these values

#

and whats before -3

#

notice, pink area is where the graph goes below the x axis

#

we dont want that yet

#

we want the x values that gets the graph to be above the x axis.

#

which are the valeus i put in black + the values that are before -3 that we cannot see

#

are you with me?

proper swift
#

no

#

i am saying that positive values are where the graph line is above x

slate ferry
#

yes

proper swift
#

axis

slate ferry
#

true

#

but

#

we need to repreesnt that

#

in itnerval form

#

write it in the form of ( smth , smth )

#

or include stuff if we need to.

proper swift
#

(-inf, 0}

#

0]

#

"?

slate ferry
#

hmm

#

not quite

#

it sure does start with - infinity

#

but does it end with 0?

#

the graph is still abnove the x axis even when x=1

#

and 2

#

and 2.1

#

and 2.2

#

so 0 is def not the end of it.

proper swift
#

(-inf, 2.585]

slate ferry
#

PERFECT

#

exactly that

proper swift
#

bang

slate ferry
#

notice at x=3, the graph is-

#

wauit a minute

slate ferry
proper swift
#

idk when to use that

slate ferry
#

at the exact point of 2.585

#

the graph-

#

I might eb mistaken...

#

but yeah

#

in all

#

decaying

#

increasing

#

negative

#

positive

#

all these stuff

#

we only use ( )

proper swift
#

ok nice

slate ferry
#

only these stuff tho.

#

ranges and domains require [ ] sometimes!

slate ferry
proper swift
#

lets go

slate ferry
#

so now

#

for the nmegative part

proper swift
#

(2.585, inf)

slate ferry
#

and there you go

slate ferry
#

alright what's next

#

we already did domain, pos, neg, inmc, dec

#

asym

#

right?

proper swift
#

this is where we are

slate ferry
#

great

#

next on the list is range.

proper swift
#

range

slate ferry
#

so you know in intervals, we always use the x-values

#

well that was al lie 🙁

proper swift
#

i know range is y values

slate ferry
#

the range is the only execption of which we represent it with y values

#

oh-

#

amazing.

slate ferry
#

read from up to down.

#

let me make myself clearer

#

give me a bit

proper swift
#

(3, -inf)

slate ferry
#

LMAO

#

correct

#

you did skip me quite the yapping.

#

great job

proper swift
#

lets go

slate ferry
#

y-intercept, can you do that yourself?

proper swift
#

here we are

#

y int

#

is next

slate ferry
#

yes

#

now idk if you're supposed to approximat- actually, where is the y-intercept on the graph

proper swift
#

just from eyeballing it i would say it is (0, 2.5)

slate ferry
#

yeah

#

so-

#

idk if eyeballing is inteneded

#

if it is then sure

proper swift
#

i dont think it is

slate ferry
#

if its not, we need to solve for it algebriaclly

#

yes

proper swift
#

how

slate ferry
#

thats actually why we're given the function itself!

proper swift
#

do we plug something in

slate ferry
#

yes

proper swift
#

what

slate ferry
#

you see, y-intercepts are just where the graph touches the y axis. do you know the equation for the y-axis?

proper swift
#

theres an equation for the y axis?

slate ferry
#

yeah

#

a defining equation which

proper swift
#

so i dont

slate ferry
#

represnets soemthing that is applicant on all points of the y axis

#

ill give examples

#

( 0 , 3)

#

( 0 ,-1)

#

(0 , -9485)

#

(0 , 28)

#

these are all points on the y axis

#

notice a pattern?

proper swift
#

x is always 0

slate ferry
#

EXACTLY

#

sooo

#

the equation of the y axis is just

#

x=0

#

yeah.

proper swift
#

so plug 0 in

slate ferry
#

you plug in x=0

#

yes

#

for the x.

#

LMAO.

slate ferry
proper swift
#

ok nince

slate ferry
#

yeah

#

so whats the point

proper swift
#

here we are

slate ferry
#

do you know what f(1) means)

proper swift
#

plug in 1 for x

slate ferry
#

yes indeed

#

you can do that

#

or you can use the graph

proper swift
#

let me calculate it

slate ferry
#

you can use the graph.

proper swift
#

or yea i can use the graph

slate ferry
#

f(1) means the value of y when x=1

proper swift
#

so 2

slate ferry
#

look at x=1 and-

#

yes.

proper swift
#

next one is 2

#

here we are

slate ferry
#

perfect

#

now- what the fuck is end behavior 💀

proper swift
#

when x is approaching - inf what is y doing

slate ferry
#

can you show me your teacher's example

slate ferry
#

ok

proper swift
#

and when x in approachig inf what is y doing

slate ferry
#

do that

proper swift
#

seems easy

slate ferry
#

yes.

proper swift
#

is y going to 3

#

first one

neat coral
#

oh I highkey lost focus and got lost where are we in the problem

slate ferry
#

yes

proper swift
#

end behavior

slate ferry
#

very almost.

neat coral
proper swift
neat coral
slate ferry
slate ferry
proper swift
#

example from different questio

slate ferry
#

yeah

#

you dont need intervals

#

and indeed

proper swift
#

so first one is 3 and second one is - inf

neat coral
slate ferry
#

for x appraoches -inf the value y approaches is 3

slate ferry
#

I didnt even do that much pearl_slayed you did amazing pudgy.

neat coral
proper swift
slate ferry
#

any more questions?

proper swift
#

thats just one part of the quiz

slate ferry
#

well- solve each one and send them here

#

let people check your work

#

as for me...

#

I shall study catnod

#

great luck

proper swift
#

thank you very much

slate ferry
proper swift
#

will send grade as soon as i take the quiz tommor

#

w

slate ferry
#

you're welcome

slate ferry
#

keep your grade to yourself and fill yourself with pride

proper swift
#

what is there to be prideful of

neat coral
#

if you need any extra help you can bother me

slate ferry
#

this is where math gets fucking annoying with derivatives. you're almost there ❤️ (its not hard, its just an interesting process)

neat coral
#

Im writing 3 essays anyway so Id be up for it 😭

#

anything but working on my essays 🤣

slate ferry
#

alright, goodbye NE_kingpepewave

proper swift
#

why did teach write range is 1 , inf

neat coral
#

alright so look at the graph

proper swift
#

i would say it is inf to 1

#

or car said the lowest number always goes first

neat coral
proper swift
#

so teach is right?

neat coral
#

yea

#

lowest always first

#

infnity is not less than 1 so it goes after got it?

#

I'll have to go offline for a bit but any questions you can just dm me and il try to get to them later @proper swift

proper swift
#

ok tahnk yu

#

how to know when the graph is neither

#

anybody else

#

.close

midnight plankBOT
#
Channel closed

Closed by @proper swift

Use .reopen if this was a mistake.

proper swift
#

.end

slate ferry
proper swift
#

yes

slate ferry
#

isnt growing anmd isnt decarying

proper swift
#

well yes

slate ferry
#

is when

#

first

#

reopen the channel

proper swift
#

.open

slate ferry
#

type .reopen

proper swift
#

.reopen

midnight plankBOT
twilit jetty
#

didnt I just tell you what the difference was

slate ferry
#

Its my fault, I didnt see that you told him.

proper swift
#

its better here

twilit jetty
#

pudgy this is why youd dont open multiple channels

slate ferry
#

I told him to reopen catthumbsup you can go on tho.

proper swift
#

its my first time

twilit jetty
#

go read what I said then go back here

proper swift
#

here, f constantly heads downward instead of upward, so it wouldnt look like "growth", that could be why

you can tell it goes downward because its -(4)^x instead of +(4^x)
the - would mean youre subtracting larger and larger numbers as x gets larger

#

this doesnt make sense

twilit jetty
#

what about the picture

proper swift
twilit jetty
#

let me ask you about context clues

#

what do you think this is a graph of

proper swift
#

decay

twilit jetty
#

not what I meant

proper swift
#

ok nice

twilit jetty
#

what function is this graphing

proper swift
#

i dont know what that means

twilit jetty
#

you know how you need a function to graph something?

proper swift
#

yes

twilit jetty
#

and remember, this is what I said directly before that

proper swift
#

the one in the picture

twilit jetty
#

thats good

#

now heres the big problem with "growth" or "decay"

#

mathematically we call things getting faster and steeper "growth"

#

while we call things that settle or more lenient "decay"

#

so in this graph of 5 functions, all the ones going up or going down Id call "growth"

#

because its growing, two of them are growing up, two of them are growing down

#

this is different than what your teacher seems to be doing

#

more complicated I think

proper swift
#

it might just be that when a is negative it is neither

twilit jetty
#

yep

#

but it might not be

#

in this case it should be safe, |b| > 1 and a < 0 should be "neither"

proper swift
#

what

twilit jetty
#

you said "when a is negative", so youre using f(x) = ab^x in general

#

if |b| > 1 and a < 0, then that should mean "neither" to your teacher

slate ferry
#

neither

#

meant

#

for when f'(x) = 0

#

@twilit jetty

#

the slope of the tangent when its horizontal

twilit jetty
#

car, as I said earlier, the teacher is using a different, more complicated definition of growth/decay/neither

#

so we have to go with whatever the teacher is cooking

twilit jetty
#

sin(x) does not grow or decay as x -> ∞

#

sin(x)'s derivative though is cos(x), not 0

slate ferry
# twilit jetty also, this is not true

I meant for whatever values makes f'(x) = 0 aka when the slope of the tangent line is 0 at some point, at that specific point, the function doesnt increase or decrease 😟

twilit jetty
#

this is also not true, growth is not the same thing as increasing

slate ferry
#

oh...

#

OH

twilit jetty
#

this would mean sin(x) is "growing" when it goes up and "decaying" when it goes down

slate ferry
#

I was- helping this person earlier....

#

I interperted decaying as decreasing and increasing as growing

twilit jetty
#

growth/decay as math words are usually taught along exponentials, if they dont teach negative a then its easy to think thats what the words mean

slate ferry
#

panicat the function I described to him was an exponential one

#

give me a minute

#

oh... wait the growth part is out of the- okay nevermind

#

sorry.

midnight plankBOT
#

@proper swift Has your question been resolved?

midnight plankBOT
#
Channel closed

Closed due to timeout

Use .reopen if this was a mistake.

#
Available help channel!

Send your question here to claim the channel.

Remember:
Ask your math question in a clear, concise manner.
Show your work, and if possible, explain where you are stuck.
Do not immediately ping people or roles. After 15 minutes, feel free to ping <@&286206848099549185> once.
• Type the command .close to free the channel when you're done.
• Be polite and have a nice day!

Read #❓how-to-get-help for further information on how to ask a good question, and about conduct in the question channels.

blissful trench
#

heyo i need to make a proof of product rule and ill show some process I did

blissful trench
#

⁨```latex
\begin{align*}
p'(x) &= \lim_{h \to 0}\frac{p(x+h)-p(x)}{h}\
&=\lim_{h \to 0}\frac{f(x+h)g(x+h)-f(x)g(x)}{h}\
\end{align*}

grand pondBOT
#

# real car fan

blissful trench
#

what I can do after this?

fossil knot
#

I think something to try is expand out f'g + fg' with the limit definition

#

then see how you can maybe transform what you have into that

blissful trench
#

no idea

#

yes

blissful trench
#

can I just write $-f(x)g(x+h)+f(x)g(x+h)$?

grand pondBOT
#

# real car fan

fossil knot
#

Yes that's a good idea

slow tiger
#

go on

fossil knot
#

you can since it's just +0

#

but it helps you change it into what you want

blissful trench
#

alright i think I got it

#

ill continue the rest :)

#

thanks

#

.close

midnight plankBOT
#
Channel closed

Closed by @blissful trench

Use .reopen if this was a mistake.

midnight plankBOT
#
Available help channel!

Send your question here to claim the channel.

Remember:
Ask your math question in a clear, concise manner.
Show your work, and if possible, explain where you are stuck.
Do not immediately ping people or roles. After 15 minutes, feel free to ping <@&286206848099549185> once.
• Type the command .close to free the channel when you're done.
• Be polite and have a nice day!

Read #❓how-to-get-help for further information on how to ask a good question, and about conduct in the question channels.

fickle sierra
#

Hello, could someone check if this proof looks good please?
⁨```latex
\begin{Theorem}
Assume $a,b \in \bR$. If $a \in \bQ$ and $ab \notin \bQ$, then $b \notin \bQ$.
\end{Theorem}

\begin{proof}
Assume for a contradiction that $a \in \bQ$, $ab \notin \bQ$, and $b \in \bQ$.
Since $a$ and $b$ are rationals, we can express both as
$a = \frac{m}{n}$ and $b = \frac{p}{a}$
where $p,q,m$ and $n$ are integers.
Then, $$ab = \frac{m}{n} \cdot \frac{p}{q} = \frac{mp}{nq}$$
Since $mn$ and $pq$ are integers, $\frac{mp}{nq}$ is rational.
This is a contradiction, since we assumed that $ab$ is irrational.
Therefore, if $a \in \bQ$ and $b \notin \bQ$, then $b \notin \bQ$.
\end{proof}

grand pondBOT
#

Mor Bras

jaunty ivy
#

looks fine aside from the typo in the last line

#

also b=p/q

#

u wrote b=p/a

#

we need mp and nq to be integers, not mn and pq

#

and nq nonzero

midnight plankBOT
#

@fickle sierra Has your question been resolved?

fickle sierra
#

Here's the the fix
⁨```latex
\begin{proof}
Assume for a contradiction that $a \in \bQ$, $ab \notin \bQ$, and $b \in \bQ$.
Since $a$ and $b$ are rationals, we can express both as
$a = \frac{m}{n}$ and $b = \frac{p}{q}$
where $p$ and $m$ are integers, and $n$ and $q$ non zero integers.
Then, $$ab = \frac{m}{n} \cdot \frac{p}{q} = \frac{mp}{nq}$$
Since $mp$ are integers and $nq$ non zero integers, $\frac{mp}{nq}$ is rational.
This is a contradiction, since we assumed that $ab$ is irrational.
Therefore, if $a \in \bQ$ and $ab \notin \bQ$, then $b \notin \bQ$.
\end{proof}

grand pondBOT
#

Mor Bras

fickle sierra
#

.close

midnight plankBOT
#
Channel closed

Closed by @fickle sierra

Use .reopen if this was a mistake.

midnight plankBOT
#
Available help channel!

Send your question here to claim the channel.

Remember:
Ask your math question in a clear, concise manner.
Show your work, and if possible, explain where you are stuck.
Do not immediately ping people or roles. After 15 minutes, feel free to ping <@&286206848099549185> once.
• Type the command .close to free the channel when you're done.
• Be polite and have a nice day!

Read #❓how-to-get-help for further information on how to ask a good question, and about conduct in the question channels.

halcyon forge
#

Help for number 1 for slop and secant line equation

midnight plankBOT
#

Please only use the <@&286206848099549185> ping once if your question has not been answered for 15 minutes. Please do not ping or DM individual users about your question.

halcyon forge
#

Ok

cerulean oyster
#

,rccw

grand pondBOT
cerulean oyster
#

Well, to start with, m should be a coefficient, which doesnt seem to be the case here.

slow thorn
midnight plankBOT
#

@halcyon forge Has your question been resolved?

midnight plankBOT
#
Channel closed

Closed due to timeout

Use .reopen if this was a mistake.

#
Available help channel!

Send your question here to claim the channel.

Remember:
Ask your math question in a clear, concise manner.
Show your work, and if possible, explain where you are stuck.
Do not immediately ping people or roles. After 15 minutes, feel free to ping <@&286206848099549185> once.
• Type the command .close to free the channel when you're done.
• Be polite and have a nice day!

Read #❓how-to-get-help for further information on how to ask a good question, and about conduct in the question channels.

twilit field
midnight plankBOT
twilit field
#

Let the projection map be $\phi$. Then $\phi(p(x))= p(x) +((f(x)))$

grand pondBOT
twilit field
#

I suppose I now have to determine what $((f(x))$ looks like

grand pondBOT
twilit field
#

oops, I have a RA quiz today, guess have to study for that first

#

.close