« Reply #15 on: July 23, 2010, 10:12:56 pm »
0
Can you... half solve LHS and RHS?
I've always solved fully from one side, rather than lil bits from both sides until they are equal
This is true. That is the right way.
With a proof you should either start at the RHS or the LHS (whatever side looks the best to tackle) and then show that after manipulation it comes out to being what the other side states.
These proofs are probably the nicest you will ever see.
EDIT: I noticed ambiguity in my post.
« Last Edit: July 23, 2010, 10:22:07 pm by QuantumJG »

Logged
2008: Finished VCE
2009 - 2011: Bachelor of Science (Mathematical Physics)
2012 - 2014: Master of Science (Applied Mathematics/Mathematical Physics)
2016 - 2018: Master of Engineering (Civil)
Semester 1:[/b] Engineering Mechanics, Fluid Mechanics, Engineering Risk Analysis, Sustainable Infrastructure Engineering
Semester 2:[/b] Earth Processes for Engineering, Engineering Materials, Structural Theory and Design, Systems Modelling and Design