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November 08, 2025, 05:41:18 am

Author Topic: VCE Methods Question Thread!  (Read 5782194 times)  Share 

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Zues

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7575 on: December 31, 2014, 09:06:38 pm »
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Hey Guys, so me and my friend where talking and he came up with this new way of evaluating answers, heres what he said.

"i was doing 1.b) which involves the equation y=x^2-1, and i noticed that when you put in an x value, for example 7, the answer will be the product of the values above and below the number. i.e. 7^2-1=48, and 6X8=48. so in other words if you want to find the square of a number, which is hard with big numbers by hand, you use the rule y=(x-1)(x+1)+1...for instance if you can't figure out the square of 23 and you aren't allowed a calculator, you go 22X24+1 which is doable by hand and you get the answer..the plus one is because the product of the numbers above and below equals 1 less than the number squared, so you have to add the 1...ie. 7^2=49 and 6X8=48..same as 12^2=144 and 11X13=143.

i also figured out one for cubes, you use y=x(x-1)(x+1)+x, i.e 7^3=343, so you go 6X7X8+7 which equals 343"


so ?
« Last Edit: December 31, 2014, 09:44:25 pm by Zues »

pi

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7576 on: December 31, 2014, 09:14:28 pm »
+1
No offence to your mate, but 23x23 seems like less effort to me rather than 22x24+1.

Zues

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7577 on: December 31, 2014, 09:45:42 pm »
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none the less, its a bit interesting?

grannysmith

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7578 on: December 31, 2014, 10:42:35 pm »
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Hey Guys, so me and my friend where talking and he came up with this new way of evaluating answers, heres what he said.

"i was doing 1.b) which involves the equation y=x^2-1, and i noticed that when you put in an x value, for example 7, the answer will be the product of the values above and below the number. i.e. 7^2-1=48, and 6X8=48. so in other words if you want to find the square of a number, which is hard with big numbers by hand, you use the rule y=(x-1)(x+1)+1...for instance if you can't figure out the square of 23 and you aren't allowed a calculator, you go 22X24+1 which is doable by hand and you get the answer..the plus one is because the product of the numbers above and below equals 1 less than the number squared, so you have to add the 1...ie. 7^2=49 and 6X8=48..same as 12^2=144 and 11X13=143.

i also figured out one for cubes, you use y=x(x-1)(x+1)+x, i.e 7^3=343, so you go 6X7X8+7 which equals 343"


so ?
When trying to mentally calculate e.g. I just break it up and go 23x20 + 3x20 + 3x3 = 529.

keltingmeith

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7579 on: January 01, 2015, 03:18:32 am »
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none the less, its a bit interesting?

When trying to mentally calculate e.g. I just break it up and go 23x20 + 3x20 + 3x3 = 529.

Look, I reckon both of these are weird... But if you think it cool/you find it easier to calculate cubes/squares these ways, don't let anybody else tell you other ways! There are wrong ways to do things, but there is no one right way to do them either.

catherine_mimi

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7580 on: January 01, 2015, 09:49:37 am »
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Hello,
someone please help me graph the equation y= e2x-1/2
. It confuses me because there is a power of x. I would know how to graph y= e2x. I know its something of an exponential graph, but I cannot seem to find the asymptotes or the shape correctly.
Please help me
« Last Edit: January 01, 2015, 09:53:46 am by catherine_mimi »

knightrider

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7581 on: January 01, 2015, 12:26:37 pm »
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Hello i have a question about the update for the casio classpad 400.

In the picture attached it says now with sliders etc etc. How do you actually get the sliders to appear on the graph as shown in the photo. So from this it looks like you can change the a,h and k values.How do you actually get this feature to appear on the graphs as shown in the photo.

Thanks :)

Zues

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7582 on: January 01, 2015, 12:46:07 pm »
+1
Hello,
someone please help me graph the equation y= e2x-1/2
. It confuses me because there is a power of x. I would know how to graph y= e2x. I know its something of an exponential graph, but I cannot seem to find the asymptotes or the shape correctly.
Please help me

if you mean
y=e^(2x-0.5)

then you change it into "transformation form" which is
y=e^2(x-0.25)

- exponential graph
- horizontal asy at y=0
-dilated from the x axis by a factor of 1 and from y by a factor of 1/2
- horizontal translation of 1/4 units

if you mean
y=e^2x^-1/2 i dont know if this is possible but my calc produces a graph which i am not familiar with (the shape yes, the equation no)
« Last Edit: January 01, 2015, 12:54:04 pm by Zues »

keltingmeith

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7583 on: January 01, 2015, 01:52:01 pm »
0
Hello,
someone please help me graph the equation y= e2x-1/2
. It confuses me because there is a power of x. I would know how to graph y= e2x. I know its something of an exponential graph, but I cannot seem to find the asymptotes or the shape correctly.
Please help me

You take comfort in knowing that VCAA will never ask this on a tech-free exam, then you turn on your calculator and use that to graph it. ;) Where did you pull this question from?

Zues

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7584 on: January 01, 2015, 02:16:58 pm »
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You take comfort in knowing that VCAA will never ask this on a tech-free exam, then you turn on your calculator and use that to graph it. ;) Where did you pull this question from?

how would you even graph it?

keltingmeith

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7585 on: January 01, 2015, 02:48:02 pm »
+2
how would you even graph it?

You go to the graphing page, and after the "f(x)=" you put the function in.

knightrider

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7586 on: January 01, 2015, 03:14:40 pm »
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i have a question relating to the binomial theorem.

In my books the notes say something i don't understand.Could someone explain what this means?

Thanks :)

Zues

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7587 on: January 01, 2015, 04:03:30 pm »
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You go to the graphing page, and after the "f(x)=" you put the function in.

By hand

AirLandBus

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7588 on: January 01, 2015, 07:32:17 pm »
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i have a question relating to the binomial theorem.

In my books the notes say something i don't understand.Could someone explain what this means?

Thanks :)

Check out this. this is what I followed when learning it.

https://www.khanacademy.org/math/algebra2/polynomial_and_rational/binomial_theorem/v/binomial-theorem


keltingmeith

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Re: VCE Methods Question Thread!
« Reply #7589 on: January 01, 2015, 09:03:51 pm »
+1
By hand

You're not expected to know this for methods.

Indeed, there are a lot of ways that you could sketch a graph having never seen it before (namely through the use of calculus), however you are not expected to know of or use these methods in either methods or specialist maths.