Questions and Comments:
Changing the Walking Rate
Friday, September 28, 2007
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This quote has evolved over time into the quote you see above. The orginal Shakespeare Quote is: "Though this be madness, yet there is method in 't." --From Hamlet (II, ii, 206)
3 comments:
I was confused in chapter 2.2. The addition of real numbers was easy. But the thing I thought was confusing a little bit was at the end of a problem, there was a ; symbol. This confused me because it was the substitution for the variable, but the way it was put into the problem, it looked like it was part of the ewuation.-A.L.
k.a. to a.l. prob
first of all...you posted in the wrong 2.2...and second of all a solution to that problem is that there is no ; in any math problem that i know of so just ignore it and think of for ex.) 7+7x;5 just think that the ; means x= so it'll be x=5
DGT
The ; at the end just means that the equation has ended and that it is defining "x", or which ever letter it has inserted into the equation.
enjoy :D
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