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Nov 5, 2019
4:48
:12
pm
StrongBad
All-American
Your link doesn't directly address offsets.
The relationship between x and y is linearly proportional in the first 2. You can argue that the the offset make it so that it is no longer DIRECTLY proportional, that's why I said I'm not sure about that one.
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StrongBad
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StrongBad
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Nov 24, 2008
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May 7, 2024
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4,530 (2 FO)
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Messages
Author
Time
Can someone help me with math homework? I just don't know the definition of
crack
11/5/19 4:26pm
No, No, Yes, Yes, Yes, No
garyfan
11/5/19 4:28pm
Is it because of the +1 or -1 at the end of the equations in the first two?
crack
11/5/19 4:29pm
Yes, I think they're trying to get at whether you can multiply one number by an
garyfan
11/5/19 4:32pm
The last one is inversely proportional; as x gets bigger, y gets smaller
ThetaSigma
11/5/19 4:37pm
Yeah it sounds like I assumed these terms mean something they don't.
garyfan
11/5/19 4:39pm
Yes, Yes, Yes, Yes, Yes, No
Phasor
11/5/19 4:29pm
Misread E; it is also directly proportional (updated above)
Phasor
11/5/19 4:34pm
Yes on all but the last one. The last one is inversely proportional.
StrongBad
11/5/19 4:31pm
No, the + and - 1 does matter.
ThetaSigma
11/5/19 4:40pm
Source:
ThetaSigma
11/5/19 4:41pm
Your link doesn't directly address offsets.
StrongBad
11/5/19 4:48pm
Alternate Link:
Phasor
11/5/19 4:58pm
This is wrong. Directly proportional means that y/x is constant.
ThetaSigma
11/5/19 6:28pm
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