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A math problem.

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by CloudBoii12, Jul 23, 2009.

  1. CloudBoii12

    CloudBoii12 Well-Known Member

    My friend told me to solve this, and I know there are a bunch of math experts on here, so yeah.
    It goes a little something like this ...
    If you subtract 3 from me, square the result, divide by 5 and then subtract 4 times me, the result is 11 minus me
     
  2. Hypr

    Hypr Well-Known Member

    Sub x for 'me':

    [(x-3)^2]/5 - 4 x = 11 - x

    Answer is 23 or -2 once you work it out algebraically and get a quadratic equation.

    EDIT: Here is your quadratic equation:

    (x^2)/5 - 21/5 x - 46/5 = 0
     
  3. jazzvile02

    jazzvile02 Member

    make sure you understand the question before taking consideration to it...
     
  4. CloudBoii12

    CloudBoii12 Well-Known Member

    So is that. I understand the question, I just can't be bothered with it :3
    Thanks Hypr!
     
  5. GlidingGoose

    GlidingGoose Well-Known Member

    Thats what i was going to say...:)
     
  6. Seph

    Seph Administrator Staff Member

    Weren't you supposed to square the result of x-3 not take the power of 2 of it? Logically to remove the square root call you'd have to take the power of 2 on the other side of the equation mark.
     
  7. tehuber1337

    tehuber1337 Well-Known Member

    Uh...huh? How is (x-3)^2 not squaring the result of x-3?
     
  8. dhanash

    dhanash Well-Known Member

    i hate math!
     
  9. CloudBoii12

    CloudBoii12 Well-Known Member

    I hate spam!
    thanks for the help Hypr, that'll show him :D
     
  10. Seph

    Seph Administrator Staff Member

    Well to me squaring = the square root, which is the opposite of the power of. But then again, I usually do maths in Danish, so it's very possible that it's just a term I'm not familiar with.
     
  11. Blade5406

    Blade5406 Well-Known Member

    "^" = used in common scientific calculators of now, "powers of 2..."
    " " = I can't find the symbol for the radical(used for acquiring the square root)

    EDIT: Found it:

    [​IMG]
     
  12. tehuber1337

    tehuber1337 Well-Known Member

    Ah, I see. In my experience, squaring has always been taking the power of two.
     
  13. bhatooth

    bhatooth Well-Known Member

    yeah squaring is taking the power of two by the way whats your education level?
     
  14. tehuber1337

    tehuber1337 Well-Known Member

    To whom is that question directed?
     
  15. kukuru

    kukuru Well-Known Member

    To all member...i think
     
  16. nomercy

    nomercy Well-Known Member

    a*a = squaring a
    sqrt(a) = square root of a

    And math doesn't suck. It simplifies.
     
  17. dhanash

    dhanash Well-Known Member

    sure sure, that what they all say
     
  18. ultra

    ultra Guest

    x-3=[[x^2]/5]-4x=11-x

    shift to one side you get, [x^2]-30x-70=0

    you can't factor in the result because you could get a multiple of 70 but you can't get a total of 30. this means the quadratic equation, which will result in a mixed number.

    i got [30+-sqrt[620]]/2
     
  19. dhanash

    dhanash Well-Known Member

    maybe i should let you guys toutor me, cause i suck at math and super smart at physics...... damn im weird i know
     
  20. kukuru

    kukuru Well-Known Member

    a man once proved 2=1 at the youtube
    but the truth is he's an idiot:

    1. Let a and b be equal non-zero quantities
    a = b \,

    2. Multiply through by a
    a^2 = ab \,

    3. Subtract b^2 \,
    a^2 - b^2 = ab - b^2 \,

    4. Factor both sides

    (a - b)(a + b) = b(a - b) \,

    5. Divide out (a - b) \,
    a + b = b \,

    6. Observing that a = b
    b + b = b \,

    7. Combine like terms on the left
    2b = b \,

    8. Divide by the non-zero b
    2 = 1 \,

    at the highlighted equation, the man actually divided both side by 0(a-b)