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Maths
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When a price changes from £15 to £20. By how much percentage has the price changed?

If a price goes up from £15 to £20, the price has increased. The rate of increased is solved by finding the difference in the change which is £5 (£20-£15). The percentage is gotten by £5/£15 *100% and the...

BI
Answered by Benjamin I. Maths tutor
3071 Views

What is 'completing the square' and how can I use it to find the minimum point of a quadratic curve?

Completing the square is a process used to put a quadratic curve into a particularly nice form. The form we want is y(x) = r(x+s)^2 + t for some numbers r,s, and t. A 'general' quadratic we would expect t...

TP
Answered by Thomas P. Maths tutor
4876 Views

Intergrate ln(x) with resepct to x

To integrate this, we use the product rule. Think of it as intergrate [ 1 x ln (x)]. As by the product rule we chose one to intergrate and one to differentiate. We intergrate 1 to get x. We differentiate ...

LP
Answered by Leo P. Maths tutor
4254 Views

How do I multiply indices together?

Multiplying indices is much easier then it first seems. First you need to undertand what an index or power is, A^2 (A to the power of 2) means AxA, A^3 (A to the power of 3) means AxAxA and so on. The dif...

FC
Answered by Freya C. Maths tutor
12949 Views

What is meant by 'the degree of a polynomial'?

The degree of a polynomial is the highest degree of the polynomials in your equation. For example, if you had (x^4 + 3x^2 + 5x), then the degree of the polynomial would be 4, as the largest polynomial in ...

EH
Answered by Ellen H. Maths tutor
4303 Views

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