HSC Mathematics Marathon (7 Viewers)

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Hey you guys out there. If you are looking for a maths tutor and live in Bored's area, give him a go. He is not bad at all.
lol , I think everyone on this site already knows about the ad , but thanks anyway ( I guess ) .

Also majority of people seeing this are 4unit students.
 
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or you could say it equals -pi/2 from -4/pi <=x<0 so integral there = (4/pi ) x -pi/2

but it equals pi/2 from 0<x<=4/pi so integral there = (4/pi) x pi/2

they cancel to zero
 

jyu

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It isn't a constant function because a constant function cannot be odd.
 

jyu

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f(x) is the value of the function f at the point 'x'.
You are contradicting yourself.
Before you said f(x) is the rule of the function f.
Now you are saying f(x) is the value of the function f at the point 'x'.

A rule cannot be a value.
 

jyu

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Lol, if you're going to be all smart using notation not used in the HSC then at least get it all right. f(x) isn't a function; it's a rule.
Now I am looking at an example in a book.

'Graph the function f(x)=sinx+0.01cos100x'

Another example in the same book.

'f(x)=(x^2-x-2)/(x-2)
This function is discontinuous at a=2, since f(2) is not defined.'
 

cutemouse

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You are contradicting yourself.
Before you said f(x) is the rule of the function f.
Now you are saying f(x) is the value of the function f at the point 'x'.

A rule cannot be a value.
No I'm not.

f(x)=x^2+1 is a rule for the function f.

f(x) is the value of the function f at the point 'x'.
 

jyu

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No I'm not.

f(x)=x^2+1 is a rule for the function f.

f(x) is the value of the function f at the point 'x'.
Let me keep on reading:
...., it is common to abbreviate an expression such as "the function f defined by f(x) = x^2+x" to "the function f(x)=x^2+x".

A function f is a rule that assigns .....
 

jyu

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Lol, if you're going to be all smart using notation not used in the HSC then at least get it all right. f(x) isn't a function; it's a rule.
Here you said f(x) is a rule. The other post you said f(x) is a value. What is it?
 

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