Login

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

February 22, 2026, 04:42:12 am

Author Topic: VCE Methods Question Thread!  (Read 5943325 times)  Share 

0 Members and 18 Guests are viewing this topic.

cosine

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3042
  • Respect: +273
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7065 on: December 04, 2014, 10:59:19 am »
0
Hi

Can anyone explain to me the trick where you convert 2x-3/5-2x to    -2/(2x-5) -1 in like 2 steps or something?
Thanks!  :D
Okay, so

Step 1:
Assure that the denominator is in the form of (x-a), that is, the x is positive and there is no coefficient infront:






Step 2: Now, what we have is . We have to do something about the - but lets leave it out for now and continue. Now do your normal synthetic division, or whatever you use to divide polynomials. After doing so, you should yield 2 and 2.

Step 3: Take the second number and that is your remainder, so the factor always goes under the remainder as:

- ()

Step 4: Now, get rid of the - by multiplying the whole term by it. This should get you

-1

Hope it helped, and credit goes to EulerFan and Brightsky for teaching me this method :)
« Last Edit: December 04, 2014, 11:09:50 am by sir.jonse »
2016-2019: Bachelor of Biomedicine
2015: VCE (ATAR: 94.85)

Zues

  • Guest
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7066 on: December 05, 2014, 12:46:48 pm »
0
can someone show me how to use long division using x + 3 as a factor. because i know p(-3) gets 0

im not getting the same answer here.

brightsky

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3136
  • Respect: +200
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7067 on: December 05, 2014, 12:53:32 pm »
0
           3x^2 - 6x
         --------------------------
x + 3 | 3x^3 + 3x^2 - 18x
           3x^3 + 9x^2
          ------------------
                        -6x^2 - 18x
                        -6x^2 - 18x
                        ---------------
                                       0

Hence, 3x^3 + 3x^2 - 18x = (x+3)(3x^2 - 6x) = (x+3)[3x(x - 2)] = 3x(x-2)(x+3).
2020 - 2021: Master of Public Health, The University of Sydney
2017 - 2020: Doctor of Medicine, The University of Melbourne
2014 - 2016: Bachelor of Biomedicine, The University of Melbourne
2013 ATAR: 99.95

Currently selling copies of the VCE Chinese Exam Revision Book and UMEP Maths Exam Revision Book, and accepting students for Maths Methods and Specialist Maths Tutoring in 2020!

keltingmeith

  • Honorary Moderator
  • Great Wonder of ATAR Notes
  • *******
  • Posts: 5493
  • he/him - they is also fine
  • Respect: +1292
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7068 on: December 05, 2014, 01:00:06 pm »
0
I feel I should note you should only use polynomial division when you absolutely have to, as it's very time consuming. Always venture to take x out as a common factor when you can immediately, because it will simplify things:



So now, all we have to do is factorise the quadratic - something we can do by inspection:



(factors of -6: (-2,3), (-3,2), (-1,6), (-6,1) ===> 3-2=+1, therefore (x-2)(x+3))

AirLandBus

  • Guest
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7069 on: December 05, 2014, 03:45:54 pm »
0
When completing questions from the textbook related to find the domain and range, is says we are allowed to use the CAS to graph it. Now, is it expected in the exams that every questions we will have to hand graph it? Or are we fine to graph it on the CAS during the exercises, but still know how to graph them by hand? As it would be very time consuming to do it by hand during the exercises.

keltingmeith

  • Honorary Moderator
  • Great Wonder of ATAR Notes
  • *******
  • Posts: 5493
  • he/him - they is also fine
  • Respect: +1292
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7070 on: December 05, 2014, 03:48:31 pm »
0
When completing questions from the textbook related to find the domain and range, is says we are allowed to use the CAS to graph it. Now, is it expected in the exams that every questions we will have to hand graph it? Or are we fine to graph it on the CAS during the exercises, but still know how to graph them by hand? As it would be very time consuming to do it by hand during the exercises.

As long as you know you can do them by hand, you'll be fine.

If you do the exercises via CAS because you don't know how to do them by hand, though, you're just sabotaging yourself.

AirLandBus

  • Guest
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7071 on: December 05, 2014, 03:52:09 pm »
0
Yeah, sweet. Im planning to do a bunch of exercises practicing all the graphs from quads to the absolute values and the square root functions again to refresh the memory. Thanks buddy :)

AirLandBus

  • Guest
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7072 on: December 05, 2014, 03:57:32 pm »
0
As long as you know you can do them by hand, you'll be fine.

If you do the exercises via CAS because you don't know how to do them by hand, though, you're just sabotaging yourself.

Sorry, another question. When writing out the domain and range, do the examiners prefer set or interval notation? Which is better?

Zues

  • Guest
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7073 on: December 05, 2014, 04:02:18 pm »
0
i see my book do it like y < 3 but id usually go (-infinity, 3)

cosine

  • Victorian
  • ATAR Notes Legend
  • *******
  • Posts: 3042
  • Respect: +273
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7074 on: December 05, 2014, 04:04:38 pm »
0
It doest really matter, I think. As long as they are all correct, they have the same meaning but different notation
2016-2019: Bachelor of Biomedicine
2015: VCE (ATAR: 94.85)

keltingmeith

  • Honorary Moderator
  • Great Wonder of ATAR Notes
  • *******
  • Posts: 5493
  • he/him - they is also fine
  • Respect: +1292
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7075 on: December 05, 2014, 04:09:13 pm »
0
It doest really matter, I think. As long as they are all correct, they have the same meaning but different notation

^this. Use the one you're more confident with.

AirLandBus

  • Guest
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7076 on: December 05, 2014, 04:11:58 pm »
0
Is this also the right notation for set?

For say, y=square root of (3+x)

Then the domain would be {x:x>_ -3}
Range would be {y:y>_ 0}

keltingmeith

  • Honorary Moderator
  • Great Wonder of ATAR Notes
  • *******
  • Posts: 5493
  • he/him - they is also fine
  • Respect: +1292
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7077 on: December 05, 2014, 04:15:56 pm »
0
Yes, that looks fine.

SE_JM

  • Guest
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7078 on: December 05, 2014, 05:03:24 pm »
0
I really need HELP!!!

It's a logarithmic/exponential question :-\

solve for x:

1.4^(x+2) = 25(0.9)^x

I keep getting the wrong answer. Please answer in much detail as possible (otherwise I won't understand :P)

Thanks!!

keltingmeith

  • Honorary Moderator
  • Great Wonder of ATAR Notes
  • *******
  • Posts: 5493
  • he/him - they is also fine
  • Respect: +1292
Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7079 on: December 05, 2014, 05:13:11 pm »
0
I really need HELP!!!

It's a logarithmic/exponential question :-\

solve for x:

1.4^(x+2) = 25(0.9)^x

I keep getting the wrong answer. Please answer in much detail as possible (otherwise I won't understand :P)

Thanks!!

This was a doozy, and definitely wouldn't expect it from a VCE exam (not to say you shouldn't know how to do it anyway. :P):

So, first we look at our equation and say, "I don't like those powers. Let's log it all to get rid of them":



Note the use of log rules to separate the 25 and 0.9, because otherwise I would not have been able to pull the x out the front with the logarithms magical "turn an exponent into a multiple" power.

Now you do this as normal - collect like terms, factorise, simplify:



You can then get a numerical answer via calculator.